By Ann G. Fort | March 20, 2007
The first electronic database I supervised in litigation ended up costing a dollar a page. And that was before a single lawyer had looked at any of it.Making TIFF images, using Optical Chara
By Asher Hawkins | January 4, 2006
A Philadelphia judge has certified as a class all Pennsylvania Wal-Mart employees who believe they were not compensated for rest and meal breaks they allegedly missed over the course of the past se
Special To Law.Com
By Harold K. Gordon and Tracy V. Schaffer | July 30, 2007
Have the rampant and highly publicized insider trading scandals of the 1980s, now almost three decades behind us, been forgotten by today's generation of business executives, traders, bankers and l
By Jason McLure | November 30, 2005
Of all the calamities caused by Hurricane Katrina, perhaps the least appetizing was the one that befell New Orleans Cold Storage and Warehouse Co. The storm knocked out power to three of its f
By Kevin F. Brady and Matthew I. Cohen | July 26, 2005
In the aftermath of the recent $1.4 billion damages judgment in a case where Morgan Stanley was sanctioned for its failure to preserve and produce certain electronic records, members of senior
By Chip Rice | December 2, 2005
Complex litigation often comes down to a battle of expert witnesses. When the facts are hard to understand, a judge, jury or arbitrator will be heavily influenced by anyone who can guide them
By Susan Beck | March 20, 2009
Wednesday we reported that law firms might rest a little easier in the wake of a decision by Manhattan federal district co
By Marisa McQuilken | June 5, 2009
A group of former George W. Bush administration officials gathered at O'Melveny & Myers Wednesday evening to discuss the current enforcement envir
By Tom Allman | August 30, 2007
When is enough preservation too much? Many legal professionals cringed when Magistrate Judge Jacqueline Chooljian of the U.S. District Court for the Central District of California, held that the du
The Bankruptcy Strategist
By Luis Salazar | September 8, 2006
On June 23, 2006, the jurisdiction that invented the "zone of insolvency" delivered its latest lesson on the fiduciary duties of directors and officers of insolvent companies. The Delaware Bankrupt
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