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Cite as: Pantalone v. County of Fulton, 6:10-CV-913, NYLJ 1202490643996, at *1 (NDNY, Decided April 15, 2011)Judge David N. HurdDecided:
Cite as: Bawa v. City of New York, 23462/08, NYLJ 1202489515688, at *1 (Sup. QU, Decided April 7, 2011)Justice Phyllis Orlikoff FlugDecid
Can E-Discovery Violate Due Process? Part 1
There are proposed changes to the federal rules applicable to e-discovery, which currently allow plaintiffs to propound broad and costly discovery requests on defendants before there is any finding of liability. Skadden Arps attorneys ask if the proposed changes account for plaintiffs' due process rights and what steps need to be taken to curb discovery abuse.Dissecting Dispositive Motions
Various dispositive motions are routinely filed in class-action litigation; however, courts frequently decline to rule on them until after class certification. The timing of such motions, and a court`s grant or denial, has different effects on the course of class litigation, with applicable reported decisions sparse and in conflict.Behind the Behind-the-Scenes of the O.J. TV Movie
Court documents suggest that CBS's upcoming miniseries about the inside machinations of the O.J. Simpson defense will benefit from Simpson's real-life lawyers whispering in the ears of their TV counterparts. One person who clearly believes the advance billing is Simpson, who lost a bid to block the production and is now suing to collect damages for violation of his attorney-client confidences.New York Statute Bars Media Industry Noncompetes
John Siegal, a partner at Baker Hostetler, writes that for the Broadcast Employees Freedom to Work Act, �202-k of the Labor Law, prohibits a broadly defined group of media industry employers from requiring or seeking to enforce postemployment noncompetes affecting all but "management employees."Quilts: Family Tradition or Copyright-Protected Images?
Say "quilt," and the usual image that arises is of sweet-faced grandmothers gossiping around a wooden frame in a church social hall. But these days quilts show up in court, and are hot items in copyright litigation. One such case, against San Francisco-based Pottery Barn Inc. on behalf of a designer alleging the retailer infringed on her work, will be tried in a New York federal court.Trending Stories
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