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Legaltech News

Gartner Ranks E-Discovery Vendors in Three Separate E-Discovery Use Cases

The “Critical Capabilities for E-Discovery Software” study scored 20 vendors in six different capabilities.
3 minute read

New Jersey Law Journal

Government Calls Bridgegate Defendant's Claim 'Offensive'

Bridgegate defendant William Baroni Jr.'s allegation that the government is trying to withhold potentially exculpatory evidence is "offensive and uninformed," prosecutors said in an Oct. 13 filing in the civil case over the September 2013 closure of local access lanes to the George Washington Bridge.
5 minute read

New Jersey Law Journal

Evaluating TAR: Can We Trust Technology?

Using TAR to review potentially privileged material.
5 minute read

New York Law Journal

New Commercial Division Deposition Rule to Take Effect

New rules that seek to encourage business and government agencies to produce deponents who can most effectively address inquiries about an entity's practices with respect to the issues in the case were announced Thursday and will take effect Dec. 1.
4 minute read

Legaltech News

Email Searches and Specialists: 2 More E-Discovery Cases Making Headlines

With the space still rapidly evolving, case law relating to e-discovery is as impactful as ever.
4 minute read

New York Law Journal

Talley v. Chautauqua Hills Ministry, Inc.

By | October 13, 2015
Plaintiff Hurt on Zip-Line Must Complete Vocational Examination by Camp's Operator
2 minute read

Daily Report Online

Protecting an Accountant's Confidential Information

Many attorneys, particularly tax practitioners, constantly utilize and collaborate with accountants, and every litigator has used accountants to determine damages or expose financial improprieties.
5 minute read

Daily Business Review

Why the 4th DCA Says Judge Shouldn't Have Released Photos in Woman's Fall

The Fourth District Court of Appeal sides with Port St. Lucie, which has withheld photos of the scene where a woman fell up to her knee on a uncovered sewer valve access pipe.
2 minute read

New York Law Journal

Panel Adopts 'Garner' Privilege Test for Fiduciary Situations

The Appellate Division, First Department, has adopted the "Garner test" for determining whether an attorney-client privilege claimed by a corporation and its lawyers may be overcome by the "fiduciary exception."
5 minute read

Law.com

What Notes? Gibson Dunn Subpoena Spat Highlights Common Practice

A year after Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher's Randy Mastro issued his findings on the so-called Bridgegate scandal, the firm is fighting a subpoena issued in the criminal case, claiming it possesses no notes beyond the memoranda included in the report. Defense attorneys appear skeptical, but eschewing traditional note-taking appears to be common practice.
5 minute read

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