Archive for the 'Rules' Category
Friday, December 21st, 2007
Link to news posted on U.S. Courts Federal Rulemaking website:
On December 11, 2007, Senator Patrick Leahy, Chair of the Senate Judiciary Committee, introduced S. 2450, a bill adding new Evidence Rule 502 to the Federal Rules of Evidence. The legislation addresses waiver of the attorney-client privilege and work product protection and is identical to proposed Evidence Rule 502, which was approved by the Judicial Conference of the United States and transmitted to Congress for its consideration in September 2007.
Unlike other amendments to the federal rules of practice and procedure that take effect unless Congress acts affirmatively to modify, defer, or reject it, “[a]ny such rule creating, abolishing, or modifying an evidentiary privilege shall have no force or effect unless approved by Act of Congress.” See 28 U.S.C. § 2074(b).
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Friday, December 21st, 2007
Link to blog entry posted by Sharon Nelson on Ride the Lightning, December 19, 2007:
Effective on December 1, 2007, the new Federal Rules of Civil Procedure are often referred to as “the style rules” and some lawyers have complacently chosen not to take a close look at them. This way lies a minefield however – you really do need to look at the new rules because both numbering and captioning have been changed in some places, including some of the electronic discovery provisions. No one wants to make that mistake in a brief. A small number of the rules have been called “style-substance” amendments. Now THAT’s clear as mud. In any event, if you have the old rules, put them aside and work with the new rules, which may be found at http://cfr.law.cornell.edu/rules/frcp/index.html#toc.
E-mail: snelson@senseient.com Phone: 703-359-0700
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Thursday, December 20th, 2007
Link to news article by Beth Pariseau posted on SearchStorage.com, December 19, 2007:
A year ago, changes to the rules which federal courts use to prosecute civil cases went into effect. Those changes have since resulted in a wave of marketing hype from technology vendors, but only dim awareness among data managers about how the amendments to the Federal Rules of Civil Procedures (FRCP) affect them.
In a recent survey of 500 IT managers and a dozen in-house legal managers, conducted by backup and archiving vendor CommVault Systems Inc., half the respondents said they had been tasked with at least one e-discovery request in the last year. But only 20% were aware of the changes to the FRCP, and 82% responded that their organization had not yet started to address the challenges introduced by the amendments to the rules….
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Tuesday, December 11th, 2007
Link to press release: One Year Later, IT Departments Still Struggling to Address FRCP Requirements
OCEANPORT, N.J. — December 11, 2007 — It’s been one year since the US government overhauled the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure (FRCP) on December 1, 2006 in an effort to streamline the electronic discovery of information. A new study conducted by CommVault® (NASDAQ: CVLT), however, highlights some alarming statistics in the preparedness of enterprise companies to comply with these regulations. According to the survey of IT managers, only 20 percent are aware of the amendments governing e-discovery, and only 6 percent of the total respondents have actually implemented a solution to address the issue. The survey suggests that confusion still exists about the rules and that many firms are still struggling to clarify the roles IT departments should play in defining the procedures to address FRCP requirements. Read the rest of this entry »
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Friday, December 7th, 2007
Link to article by Stephen Whetstone and Michael Simon posted on IndustryWeek, December 7, 2007:
A year ago, the rules that govern litigation in our federal courts were amended to require lawyers and clients to deal head on with electronically stored information (ESI). On December 1, 2006, changes to the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure (FRCP) went into effect. Prior to the amendments, litigants routinely ignored ESI and, operating under a doctrine of “mutually assured destruction,” refrained from seeking it from their adversaries for fear they would be compelled to do the same.
But in the last few years, things changed. Government investigators and plaintiffs’ class action attorneys were not hampered by the same mutuality concerns; they had little to lose and everything to gain by aggressively pursuing ESI. So, Enron, Arthur Anderson, Tyco, Morgan Stanley, and many others were forced to turn over huge amounts of ESI under the glare of the media’s spotlight, spawning more investigations and demands for ESI….
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Wednesday, November 7th, 2007
Article by Lloyd B. Chinn posted on Law.com, November 7, 2007:
The shift toward electronic communications over the last 20 years has been well-documented; the courts have been wrestling with the challenges posed by electronic discovery ever since. Not until December 2006 did the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure (”the new rules”) specifically address the unique challenges presented by electronically stored information (ESI). While the new rules brought much-needed attention to these challenges, they also left many questions unanswered. Unfortunately, 10 months later, the decisions interpreting the new rules have raised more questions than they answer….
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Wednesday, October 24th, 2007
Article by Eric Sinrod posted on CNET News, October 17, 2007:
Almost a year ago the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure governing the discovery of electronic data were amended. While the changes were designed to reduce litigation costs, we’ve seen just the opposite.
The amendments broadened the definition of items subject to legal discovery, ranging from “documents” or “data compilations” to include all electronically stored information. Parties in a lawsuit can now demand from each other word processing documents, e-mails, voice mail and instant messages, blogs, backup tapes and database files….
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Friday, August 24th, 2007
Press release: August 2, 2007 – By some recent estimates, more than 90% of business information is now stored electronically. The state rules concerning discovery of information in civil cases were written at a time when information was mostly stored on paper. A new act approved today by a national law group addresses the growing concern over the rules of discovery that courts must follow to access electronic information in civil cases. The Uniform Rules Relating to Discovery of Electronically Stored Information was approved today by the Uniform Law Commission (ULC) at its 116th Annual Meeting in Pasadena, California. Read the rest of this entry »
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Saturday, August 18th, 2007
Article by Megan E. Burkhammer published in Bench & Bar of Minnesota, Vol. 64, No. 5, May/June 2007:
Is Columbus Day a “legal holiday” for the purposes of computing time under Rule 6 of the Minnesota Rules of Civil Procedure? Can I get a subpoena from a Minnesota court to compel discovery in an action pending in another jurisdiction? If these and other burning questions about the Minnesota Rules of Civil Procedure are keeping you awake at night, take heart! Thanks to the Minnesota Supreme Court Advisory Committee on the Rules of Civil Procedure (hereinafter “the advisory committee”), you will soon be able to rest peacefully.
Perhaps such mundane questions are of no concern to you, oh cavalier (and well-rested) one. But before you scoff and turn the page, consider this next question: To what extent must I produce emails, voicemails, instant message logs, and other electronically stored information in response to a request for production of documents? If you’re still feeling nonchalant, then you’ve either: (a) never used a computer and never had a client who has; or (b) already read the advisory committee’s report and feel satisfied that you are familiar with the newly promulgated amendments pertaining to electronic discovery….
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Friday, June 1st, 2007
Press release: Six Months After Amended Federal Rules Changes Take Effect, Survey Shows Companies Not Prepared for E-Discovery
SAN FRANCISCO, CA May 29, 2007 – Survey results announced today by DiscoveryBox and Strategic Discovery, Inc. reveal that 83 percent of technology decision makers are not prepared for litigation under the amended Federal Rules of Civil Procedure — because their companies do not have a comprehensive document preservation system. The survey was conducted with 336 senior technology executives at EMC World, EMC Corporation’s technology users’ conference held in Orlando, Fla. from May 21 through May 24, 2007. Read the rest of this entry »
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