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By Matthew Walsh |
May 17, 2012
On April 20, 2010, the Deepwater Horizon disaster claimed the lives of 11 people and led to a devastating environmental catastrophe in the Gulf of Mexico. After an extensive 3-year investigation following the largest environmental disaster in U.S. history, one would have expected the first criminal charges to relate to...
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By Wayne Wong |
May 7, 2012
Today, e-discovery law and practices are in a continuous state of flux, which underscores the need for corporations to continually evolve in order to meet their ever-changing ESI obligations.
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By Alan Freeman, Paul M. Honigberg |
April 5, 2012
So much has been written about the duty to preserve electronic evidence that there is little room left for original scholarship. Simply stated, the duty arises when litigation is reasonably anticipated. Compliance can be shockingly expensive, yet counsel and litigants who fall short of the court’s expectations could pay a...
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By Daryl Shetterly, Howard Reissner |
November 22, 2011
If you attended an e-discovery legal conference recently, you probably noticed a common theme among corporate counsel, litigators and judges: There is an increased focus on bringing the cost of e-discovery into alignment with the stakes of the case.
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By Mark Diamond |
June 6, 2011
Sometimes, law firms’ interest conflicts with that of their clients’ when it comes to e-discovery.