The goal of this Article is to untangle some of the issues surrounding the recurring dilemmas posed by discovery of information held by former employees. Part II of this Article elucidates the competing interests of the litigators, their respective clients, the courts, and the potential witnesses when discovery is sought from former employees of a party. Part III provides a brief overview of the various legal authorities that govern an attorney\u27s discovery of former employees and the synergy created by these sources. Part IV examines the potential pitfalls attorneys encounter when pursuing informal discovery of former employees of a party. Part V presents specific issues that arise when an attorney uses formal discovery devices to obtain...
<p class="JDFSLParagraph">Most organizations and government agencies regularly become engaged in lit...
The current law governing public access to information generated through civil litigation is flawed ...
A fundamental tenet of the 2006 Amendments to the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure (the “2006 Amendm...
The role of former employees in litigated matters presents a variety of legal, ethical, and practica...
This Article identifies and critiques existing sources of confusion in the law and proposes revised ...
A unique handbook for litigators that describes and analyzes an often tricky area of discovery: deal...
At the core of every lawsuit is a mix of information-revealing documents that chronicle a party\u27s...
Parties litigant desire to obtain before trial all possible information relevant to the matter in is...
In completing one discovery we never fail to get an imperfect knowledge of others of which we had n...
This Article analyzes the use of after-acquired evidence to defeat a discrimination victim\u27s clai...
The focus of this Article is on the possibility that a lawyer informally seeking evidence about an e...
This Article contends that there is a bright side to being sued: organizational defendants can learn...
A company’s employee has sued for sexual harassment, age discrimination, or wrongful termination. Or...
Tension between open discovery practice under the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure and the adversari...
What is the relationship between access to information and access to justice? Private parties obviou...
<p class="JDFSLParagraph">Most organizations and government agencies regularly become engaged in lit...
The current law governing public access to information generated through civil litigation is flawed ...
A fundamental tenet of the 2006 Amendments to the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure (the “2006 Amendm...
The role of former employees in litigated matters presents a variety of legal, ethical, and practica...
This Article identifies and critiques existing sources of confusion in the law and proposes revised ...
A unique handbook for litigators that describes and analyzes an often tricky area of discovery: deal...
At the core of every lawsuit is a mix of information-revealing documents that chronicle a party\u27s...
Parties litigant desire to obtain before trial all possible information relevant to the matter in is...
In completing one discovery we never fail to get an imperfect knowledge of others of which we had n...
This Article analyzes the use of after-acquired evidence to defeat a discrimination victim\u27s clai...
The focus of this Article is on the possibility that a lawyer informally seeking evidence about an e...
This Article contends that there is a bright side to being sued: organizational defendants can learn...
A company’s employee has sued for sexual harassment, age discrimination, or wrongful termination. Or...
Tension between open discovery practice under the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure and the adversari...
What is the relationship between access to information and access to justice? Private parties obviou...
<p class="JDFSLParagraph">Most organizations and government agencies regularly become engaged in lit...
The current law governing public access to information generated through civil litigation is flawed ...
A fundamental tenet of the 2006 Amendments to the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure (the “2006 Amendm...