New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Michael J. Hutter | April 3, 2024
Inquiries received from Michael J. Hutter's previous Evidence column, together with the Supreme Court's grant of certiorari and then subsequent dismissal of the appeal as improvidently granted in 'In re Grand Jury', suggest a discussion of the status if dual purpose communications in New York is both timely and appropriate.
Litigation Daily | Best Practices
By Ross Todd | March 27, 2024
Allison Rocker of Baker McKenzie says that's especially true in "document-heavy" cases with tons of exhibits.
New Jersey Law Journal | Commentary
By Michael A. Kaplan and Christopher Dernbach | March 26, 2024
"This is to demonstrate that the appropriate use of illustrative aids, demonstrative evidence, and summaries of voluminous materials remains unclear," write Michael A. Kaplan and Christopher Dernbach of Lowenstein Sandler.
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Jules Epstein | March 25, 2024
An expert with knowledge that jurors don't have should be permitted to testify when that knowledge will inform the decisionmaker and meets the basic relevance threshold.
By Alex Anteau | March 21, 2024
Before they filed suit, the plaintiffs asked Golden Pantry to preserve years of security footage for evidence. However, after consulting with its lawyers and insurance carrier, the company still chose to delete the video.
New Jersey Law Journal | Commentary
By Louis Locascio | March 21, 2024
"With our increased video technology, this decision represents a needed and welcomed addition to our evidentiary procedures," writes former Superior Court Judge Louis Locascio.
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By Aleeza Furman | March 12, 2024
"Today in the modern era of videotape and technology and the way discovery is conducted and trials are conducted, it makes sense," Joseph Messa Jr. said.
By ALM Staff | March 12, 2024
Exhibit J is the crux of the New York Times' copyright-infringement lawsuit that accuses Microsoft and OpenAI of using copyright-protected content to train their AI model GPT-4.
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Jules Epstein | March 11, 2024
Elevating religion over the right to a fair trial has no place in our constitutional scheme, even as the "wall" between church and state erodes. Putting religion first is not about fair trials but instead about protecting the right to despise "the other," regardless of cost.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Joshua Sohn and Jacob Zucker | March 8, 2024
It isn't news that eyewitness testimony is sometimes inaccurate. What might be news, however, is that significant research makes plain that it is often wrong, even when the eyewitness believes they are telling the truth. Lawyers and courts should reconsider how the rules of evidence treat eyewitness testimony.
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