By Emily M. McAdam | April 25, 2022
In the face of no controlling Arkansas case law on the matter, the Eighth Circuit made an "Erie-educated guess" as to what the Arkansas Supreme Court would do and held that Gerber could still establish proximate cause despite there being no resolution to the underlying case.
By Colleen Murphy | April 22, 2022
The appeals court said the lower court "erred by misapplying the foregone conclusion standard and importing Fourth Amendment principles into what is purely a Fifth Amendment inquiry."
By ALM Staff | April 19, 2022
The ruling and a summary by the Law Journal's decisions editors can be found here.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Edward M. Spiro and Christopher B. Harwood | April 18, 2022
In this edition of their Southern District Civil Practice Roundup, Edward M. Spiro and Christopher B. Harwood analyze the holding in 'United States v. Ray', in which Judge Liman recently addressed the application of the psychotherapist privilege to nonverbal communications. Although 'Ray' is a criminal case, its holdings apply equally to civil actions.
By John G. Browning and Jonathan Bailie | April 13, 2022
How significant is the threat of fabricated digital evidence that can alter the outcome of a case? In today's wired workplace, it's considerable.
By David J. Lender, Eric S. Hochstadt, Luna N. Barrington and Rebecca Jaeger | April 11, 2022
How can corporate in-house counsel prepare for—and defend—allegations that go to the heart of the company's business? One of the most critical steps is to identify the right company witnesses and prepare them to testify. In "bet-the-company" disputes, those witnesses should be high-ranking senior executives who can look the jury in the eye and explain the company's actions.
By John G. Browning and Jonathan Bailie | April 8, 2022
How significant is the threat of fabricated digital evidence that can alter the outcome of a case? In today's wired workplace, it's considerable.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Toby Kleinman and Daniel Pollack | April 7, 2022
Any and all potential evidence should be maintained, organized and useful for trial.
National Law Journal | Commentary
By Rayiner Hashem and Leonid Grinberg | April 6, 2022
Evidence is time-sensitive and attorneys thinking of relying on web snapshots would be well-advised to secure web-based documentation sooner rather than later.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Michael J. Hutter | April 6, 2022
There were many "under the radar" decisions which the bar might overlook but should be aware of and keep in its evidence toolbox along with a copy of the Guide to New York Evidence.
Presented by BigVoodoo
This conference aims to help insurers and litigators better manage complex claims and litigation.
Recognizing innovation in the legal technology sector for working on precedent-setting, game-changing projects and initiatives.
Legalweek New York explores Business and Regulatory Trends, Technology and Talent drivers impacting law firms.
McCarter & English is actively seeking a 5th-6th year trademark associate who has trademark prosecution, licensing and litigation experi...
**PLEASE READ THE COMPLETE AD BEFORE APPLYING***Established 25-year boutique Plaintiff's Personal Injury Law Firm in the Dadeland area seeki...
Our client, a multi-state full-service boutique, is seeking to add a senior construction litigation associate to their Florida team. Qualif...