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By P.J. Dannunzio | February 6, 2018
After previously avoiding prosecution, the Amtrak train engineer involved in the fatal derailment in Philadelphia in 2015 will once again face charges now that a Philadelphia judge has revived the case against him.
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By The Legal Intelligencer | February 6, 2018
In the Legal's E-Discovery supplement, read about possession, custody or control; preserving wearable data and how when it come to ethics and e-discovery, attorneys must stay current.
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By Robert Storace | February 6, 2018
Federal judge rules in favor of Assa Abloy in trade secrets case and orders foreign-based company to pay more than $3.4 million in damages.
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By Cogan Schneier | February 6, 2018
A motion to dismiss Paul Manafort's civil case against DOJ bore the names of three career DOJ lawyers, but no political appointees.
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By Susan DeSantis | February 6, 2018
While announcing a dramatic reduction in backlogs in both civil and criminal courts from one corner of the state to the other, Chief Judge Janet DiFiore concentrated her remarks Tuesday on ways to make the system fairer and more efficient.
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By Robert Storace | February 5, 2018
Soon after stepping down as Connecticut Supreme Court chief justice, Chase Rogers announced she has accepted an offer to work for Day Pitney.
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By Cogan Schneier | February 5, 2018
The publication argues the release of a memo drafted by House Republicans that reveals the Justice Department sought and received warrants to spy on Page means records of those warrants should be disclosed.
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By Elie Francis | February 5, 2018
Data is duplicative by nature, but the way your operation stores and manages data is likely exposing it to unnecessary and costly redundancy. Most organizations handling e-discovery today could very well have a cumulative data set that is anywhere from five to 10 times bigger than necessary.
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By Samantha Joseph | February 5, 2018
The biggest obstacle was proving that a client with $3,550 in medical bills had suffered permanent, devastating injury worthy of a multimillion-dollar award.
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By David R. Cohen and Todd R. Fairman | February 5, 2018
Most lawyers know to advise their clients to preserve evidence in their “care, custody or control” relevant to pending or threatened litigation. But exactly how far does “control” go? Can a party be sanctioned for spoliation for failing to issue a legal hold notice to a third party who has no obligation to follow your legal hold instructions?
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