The hottest ticket on May 17, for the electronic data discovery community, wasn’t for a hockey or basketball playoff, but an event at Sullivan & Cromwell’s waterfront offices in Manhattan. Magistrate Judge Andrew Peck of the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York joined his colleague, Magistrate Judge Lisa Margaret Smith, at the May meeting of the Women in E-Discovery (WiE) New York chapter to offer advice and insight on EDD best practices when before the judiciary.
Peck, the recipient of the 2011 IT Champion of the Year award from Law Technology News for his advocacy of computer-aided coding (a.k.a. predictive coding), is currently adjudicating a closely watched case, Da Silva Moore v. Publicis Groupe, where he took the unusual step of ordering the use of predictive coding in the matter. Subsequently, the plaintiffs asked that Peck recuse himself, and the e-discovery phase has now become vitriolic.
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