|
Judges, lawyers, and the new rules
Ken Withers, Ronald Hedges, John Carroll, and Steve Leben
Four months ago, amended rules governing discovery of electronically stored documents took effect. The changes have helped clarify some aspects of e-discovery and created new gray areas in others. They also require judges to take a more active, managerial approach to the discovery process. In this roundtable discussion, three judges and an e-discovery expert discuss this evolving role and how the rules affect lawyers, courtroom procedures, and the way judges work.
The perfect preservation letter
Craig Ball
When asking the defense to protect certain types of electronic evidence, a standard, catchall preservation letter wont work. You need to be specific, and you need to use the right terminology. The perfect preservation letter is both compelling and reasonable. Prepare it thoughtfully, and youll create an opportunity to educate your opponent, head off spoliation, and set the groundwork for reasonable discussion as the case progresses.
Sharpen your discovery from nonparties
Alan Blakley
At times you may need to get evidence from people who are connected to a case but arent parties to it; for instance, the operators of a stores security system may have the videotapes you want to use as evidence in a premises case. Many of the rule changes for electronic discovery are incorporated in the subpoena rules for nonparties, meaning nonparties can be held to the same standards of document preservation as defendants. Learn the best techniques for getting evidence from nonparties without imposing undue burdens on them.
Competence and credibility in
e-discovery
Charles R. Ragan and Lori Ann Wagner
The new electronic-discovery rules are as tough on plaintiffs as they are on defendants. Judges have always expected both sides to hold to high standards of professionalism in conducting discovery, but the new rules encourage sanctionsincluding dismissalwhen lawyers fall short of the mark. Dont let hardball tactics or loss of credibility, by you or your client, end your case before its resolved.
|
Feature
Try opening with a videotaped
deposition
Robert J. Mongeluzzi and David L. Kwass
Using parts of a taped deposition in your opening can make a strong impression on jurors, who have been conditioned by watching television to demand information delivery that is fast-paced and that incorporates many different images and sounds. It also meets their expectations that attorneys will use the latest technology to make dynamic courtroom presentations. Defense lawyers will object on several grounds, but most courts have allowed the use of video depositions in opening, so you should be able to counter those objections and give your case a powerful start.
|
News & Trends
New lawyer ad rules spark debate over public image, public
good
Nevada courts curb lawyers summation slamming plaintiffs
FDA vows transformation, better drug safety
Katrina suit against U.S. government moves forward
Public Citizen report debunks med-mal myths
Daubert hearing is not
a search for truth, Michigan court rules
Consumer protection act covers doctors care, Kansas
court rules
Departments
Presidents page
High time for a raise
Supreme Court review
Rights of passage
Tech brief
Reel in jurors with tech-savvy presentations
On message
Good counsel
Hearsay
Justice in motion
Michigan proposal to tax legal services
draws fire
Campaign reveals truth about Bush attacks,
corporate secrecy
Litigation resources arm attorneys for
e-discovery battles
Roundtable discussions bring business-minded
members together
Straight talk about companies moving overseas
Attorney Services
Experts & Professional Services
Classifieds
Lawyer Networking
Products & Services
|