This Continuing Legal Education presentation covers electronic discovery and the related ethical duty of competence. Drawing on guidance from the State Bar, recent e-discovery cases, and our own experience assisting attorneys, the presentation outlines the main risks to counsel and client of failing to properly understand e-discovery obligations in litigation.
The statistics are compelling and clearly indicate that 1 out of 3 attorneys will likely have a need...
Cellphones represent one of the fastest-changing areas of legal practice. Mobile device evidence is ...
This one-hour program will look at the key differences in policies available in the marketplace, dif...
Attorneys have begun to experience what can happen when safe, ethical and legal use of AI is not ado...
The always idiosyncratic Nassim Taleb likes to say, “Nothing is more permanent than ‘tem...
Mary Beth O'Connor will describe her personal history of 20 years of drug use and 30+ years of sobri...
Food, sex, exercise – all may involve a variety of commonly enjoyed experiences that are healt...
Whether the Federal Government or individual State Governments, fraud enforcement, especially in hea...
Join Steve Herman on December 8, 2025, for "Maintaining Ethical Standards: Essential Strategies for ...
Bias and discrimination continue to shape workplace dynamics, legal practice, and professional respo...