What happens when law changes but courts and lawyers ignore the changes? On December 1, 2015, amendments to the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure went into effect. One of those amendments includes a sweeping change to Rule 37(e), dealing with the availability of sanctions in federal courts for lost or destroyed electronically stored information (ESI). In the last few years, however, a number of courts have interpreted the amended rule in ways at odds with its plain language and underlying policies, and a surprising number of courts continue to ignore the amended rule altogether. This article examines those trends and recommends ways in which to avoid relegating the amended rule to the same fate as its failed predecessor. Not long after its p...
The Federal Rules of Civil Procedure (the Rules) have long sought to limit abuses that developed und...
The debate over the necessity, substance, and form of the proposed e-Discovery amendments to the Fed...
The 2006 amendments to the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, which were enacted to address the poten...
What happens when law changes but courts and lawyers ignore the changes? On December 1, 2015, amendm...
What happens when law changes but courts and lawyers ignore the changes? On December 1, 2015, amendm...
[Excerpt] “The increase in e-discovery, e-discovery‘s impact on litigation, and the courts‘ unavoida...
The ever-increasing importance of digital technology in today’s commercial environment has created s...
In 1938, the passage of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure (FRCP) established discovery practice. ...
At the federal level, the Civil Rules Advisory Committee has responded to the unique and necessary ...
In 2003 the Zubulake case became the catalyst of change in the world of e-discovery. In that case Ju...
This Article highlights a growing problem for litigants who are involved in electronic data discover...
The Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, even though they were amended in 2006 specifically to address ...
There are currently various sources of authority that federal courts can invoke to sanction attorney...
In today\u27s world an increasing proportion of the information subject to discovery under the Feder...
This Article takes a critical look at the e-discovery amendments to Rule 26(b)(2) that provide that ...
The Federal Rules of Civil Procedure (the Rules) have long sought to limit abuses that developed und...
The debate over the necessity, substance, and form of the proposed e-Discovery amendments to the Fed...
The 2006 amendments to the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, which were enacted to address the poten...
What happens when law changes but courts and lawyers ignore the changes? On December 1, 2015, amendm...
What happens when law changes but courts and lawyers ignore the changes? On December 1, 2015, amendm...
[Excerpt] “The increase in e-discovery, e-discovery‘s impact on litigation, and the courts‘ unavoida...
The ever-increasing importance of digital technology in today’s commercial environment has created s...
In 1938, the passage of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure (FRCP) established discovery practice. ...
At the federal level, the Civil Rules Advisory Committee has responded to the unique and necessary ...
In 2003 the Zubulake case became the catalyst of change in the world of e-discovery. In that case Ju...
This Article highlights a growing problem for litigants who are involved in electronic data discover...
The Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, even though they were amended in 2006 specifically to address ...
There are currently various sources of authority that federal courts can invoke to sanction attorney...
In today\u27s world an increasing proportion of the information subject to discovery under the Feder...
This Article takes a critical look at the e-discovery amendments to Rule 26(b)(2) that provide that ...
The Federal Rules of Civil Procedure (the Rules) have long sought to limit abuses that developed und...
The debate over the necessity, substance, and form of the proposed e-Discovery amendments to the Fed...
The 2006 amendments to the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, which were enacted to address the poten...