By Craig Ball | September 25, 2006
Electronic data discovery costs less than paper discovery. Honest. In comparable volumes, it's cheaper to collect, index, store, copy, transport, search and share electronically stored information.
By Marcia Coyle | February 13, 2009
For years, businesses large and small viewed as unfair but unchangeable their potential liability for the entire cost of a Superfund site cleanup, no matter how tenuous their connection to the
By Michael P. Shea | April 25, 2007
What does cigarette maker Philip Morris USA Inc. have in common with a 19th century customs officer who is sued by New England ship owners to prevent him from enforcing an embargo on trade with Eng
The Associated Press
By Andrew DeMillo | September 18, 2006
Wyeth won the first case in a series of lawsuits over its hormone replacement drugs on Friday when a federal jury rejected a woman's claim the drugs caused her breast cancer. A jury ruled ag
By Zusha Elinson | January 17, 2007
Apparently, there's no vaccine for legal malpractice suits against IP lawyers.A fledgling San Diego biotech company is suing Foley & Lardner for allegedly missing the filing date on
By Kenneth A. Adams | February 26, 2009
Company law departments haven't been spared the pressures of the current economic crisis. According to a recent national survey by consulting firm Altman Weil, three-quarters of the law department
By Dionne Carney Rainey | November 28, 2005
Document review is one of the necessary evils of practicing law. It is not a glamorous job and can sometimes be boring. However, it can also be one of the most important parts of a case. Too oft
By Katheryn Hayes Tucker | September 9, 2008
The Association of Corporate Counsel celebrated two important developments last month in the protection of attorney-client privilege
By Justin Scheck | January 29, 2007
San Francisco's best-known white-collar defendant says he needs the cooperation of prosecutors to defend himself against charges of securities fraud. The government, unsurprisingly, doesn't see
The Associated Press
By Ken Maguire | January 10, 2007
Richard J. Hewett never heard "You're fired!" -- but he's suing Donald Trump anyway. The rejected applicant for NBC's "The Apprentice" is suing the real estate mogul, claiming he was turned
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