By Gerald Lebovits and Julian M. Rodriguez | June 18, 2019
Unanticipated evidentiary issues often arise during trial. How litigators deal with unexpected evidentiary issues will make all the difference. Litigators must be ready to object quickly and to respond to objections quickly.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Edward M. Spiro and Christopher B. Harwood | June 17, 2019
In their Southern District Civil Practice Roundup column, Edward Spiro and Christopher Harwood discuss the recent cases 'Barbini v. First Niagara Bank' and 'In re Keurig,' where Judge Nelson Roman and Magistrate Judge Henry Pitman addressed difficult privilege issues often arising in litigation such as evaluating whether a party has impliedly waived privilege through its litigation conduct, and the extent to which a party can use a privileged document that has been inadvertently produced.
By Tom McParland | June 12, 2019
After three trials that ended in setbacks for prosecutors, the Delaware Department of Justice has abandoned its case against the only remaining defendants charged in the 2017 takeover of James T. Vaughn Correctional Center.
By Tom McParland | June 12, 2019
Judge Paul Engelmayer said that should they choose to pursue the subpoena, brothers Aaron and Eric Goodwin would have to pay all of Los Angeles-based Loeb's costs,
By Rena Andoh and Kate Ross | June 7, 2019
Standing orders may cause issues by leaving undecided the allocation of attorney-client privilege and work product protection between the debtor and committee.
By Richard Binder | June 6, 2019
Thanks to a court win, Dwayne "The Rock" Johnson can call himself a journalist.
By Richard Binder | June 6, 2019
Scorpion King. G.I. Joe. Hercules. And now, thanks to a court win, "The Rock" can also call himself a journalist.
By Richard Binder | June 6, 2019
Scorpion King. G.I. Joe. Hercules. And now, thanks to a court win, "The Rock" can also call himself a journalist.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Onya Brinson | June 6, 2019
This type of privilege could become increasingly important in a post-'Janus' world.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Michael J. Hutter | June 5, 2019
In his Evidence column, Michael Hutter discusses 'Markel v. Pure Power Boot Camp,' a decision significant “because it addressed and resolved an issue of discoverability which had not been uniformly analyzed and decided by the trial courts.
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