In this moot court competition bench memo, the Supreme Court the state of Marshall has to decide whether the monitoring and recording of a voice mail message in the work environment constitutes a violation of the Electronic Communications Privacy Act ( ECPA ) or an invasion of privacy. Plaintiff\u27s brother is an employee of a for-profit corporation that provides a digital telephone system that allows employee use features such as voice mail. Employees can access their voice mail both at their desks or other location within the company. The company, however, implements a policy of random phone conversation monitoring to avoid abuse of the system and gives the Chief Information Officer (CIO) sole discretion to monitor such conversation. The...
SUMMARY OF THE ARGUMENT: As encroaching technologies shrink the realm of privacy and expose intimate...
When Congress foresaw the need for privacy protection for personal and commercial communications, it...
The legality of electronic surveillance of conversations and accessing of e-mail is complicated. Sev...
In this bench memo, the high court is asked to decide two issues: whether the information disseminat...
Every year The Center for Information Technology and Privacy Law of the John Marshall Law School hos...
In this moot court competition bench memo, the Supreme Court the state of Marshall has three issues ...
Petitioner, Aaron Murphy, appeals to the Marshall Supreme Court from a decision affirming the grant ...
In this bench memo, the Supreme Court of the state of Marshall is asked to decide whether the action...
Petitioner, Phillip Nevilson, appeals to the Marshall Supreme Court from a decision affirming the gr...
Petitioner, Alex Romero (“Romero”), appeals to the Marshall Supreme Court from an order granting sum...
This is a Bench memorandum for the 1995 John Marshall National Moot Court Competition in Information...
In Quon v. Arch Wireless Operating Co., a panel of the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth ...
The circuit court erred when it granted summary judgment in favor of MarshCODE because Mr. Murphy ha...
This bench memorandum details the issues from both the plaintiff\u27s and defendant\u27s perspective...
The First District Court of Appeals properly affirmed summary judgment on behalf of MarshCODE becaus...
SUMMARY OF THE ARGUMENT: As encroaching technologies shrink the realm of privacy and expose intimate...
When Congress foresaw the need for privacy protection for personal and commercial communications, it...
The legality of electronic surveillance of conversations and accessing of e-mail is complicated. Sev...
In this bench memo, the high court is asked to decide two issues: whether the information disseminat...
Every year The Center for Information Technology and Privacy Law of the John Marshall Law School hos...
In this moot court competition bench memo, the Supreme Court the state of Marshall has three issues ...
Petitioner, Aaron Murphy, appeals to the Marshall Supreme Court from a decision affirming the grant ...
In this bench memo, the Supreme Court of the state of Marshall is asked to decide whether the action...
Petitioner, Phillip Nevilson, appeals to the Marshall Supreme Court from a decision affirming the gr...
Petitioner, Alex Romero (“Romero”), appeals to the Marshall Supreme Court from an order granting sum...
This is a Bench memorandum for the 1995 John Marshall National Moot Court Competition in Information...
In Quon v. Arch Wireless Operating Co., a panel of the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth ...
The circuit court erred when it granted summary judgment in favor of MarshCODE because Mr. Murphy ha...
This bench memorandum details the issues from both the plaintiff\u27s and defendant\u27s perspective...
The First District Court of Appeals properly affirmed summary judgment on behalf of MarshCODE becaus...
SUMMARY OF THE ARGUMENT: As encroaching technologies shrink the realm of privacy and expose intimate...
When Congress foresaw the need for privacy protection for personal and commercial communications, it...
The legality of electronic surveillance of conversations and accessing of e-mail is complicated. Sev...