By Greg Land | January 27, 2021
As devastating as the COVID-19 pandemic has been, newly elected Fulton County State Court Chief Judge Susan Edlein said it nonetheless provided "a good kickstart for the court to get the technology we needed."
By Charles Toutant | January 22, 2021
Prosecutors say they remain opposed to virtual grand juries, and their current participation is merely a pragmatic decision made under difficult circumstances.
By Frank Ready | January 13, 2021
Martin Coen has been named as the new CEO of Opus 2, but his arrival doesn't necessarily indicate a change in the direction for the company. For starters, Coen is banking on remote hearings being part of the legal industry in cases big and small long after the pandemic has resolved.
By Frank Ready | December 23, 2020
While more complex cases may return to a physical courtroom just as soon as public health allows, cost savings and attorneys' increasing comfort with the tech involved may keep some aspects of virtual depositions and court applications alive well past 2021.
By Jacqueline Thomsen | December 15, 2020
Thirteen federal district courts will start offering audio livestreams of hearings in civil cases "of public interest" by February.
By Frank Ready | December 15, 2020
While new audio streaming platform Vurbl is hosting a free collection of thousands of oral legal arguments, the company may still have to contend with the same storage challenges that have plagued governments and court jurisdictions.
By Jacqueline Thomsen | December 8, 2020
Rep. Hank Johnson argued that the judiciary's claim that creating a free court records system could cost $2 billion was "to confuse and try to derail passage of this very common sense, necessary legislation that brings judicial records into the 21st century."
By Victoria Hudgins | December 7, 2020
With the court reporter shortage unlikely to end anytime soon, there are more court reporter work opportunities than ever. To meet those demands, court systems and court reporter agencies are requiring heavier usage of technology from their court reporters.
By Ross Todd | December 1, 2020
"It benefits a lawyer to be more conversational than the stemwinder, old-style fire and brimstone type of oratory because you're literally in the jurors' face," Alameda County Superior Judge Brad Seligman said during the second day of an online summit called "COVID, the Court, and the Future of the Jury Trial."
By Jane Wester | November 23, 2020
Janet DiFiore said judges and court staff are working to scale up virtual trials across the state while monitoring public health conditions to know when to bring jurors back.
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