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.
Attorneys have begun to experience what can happen when safe, ethical and legal use of AI is not ado...
“Maybe I drink more than I should, but it isn’t affecting my life-I’m ‘High-...
Join Steve Herman on December 8, 2025, for "Maintaining Ethical Standards: Essential Strategies for ...
Scam typologies help legal professionals by providing a framework to understand, identify, and preve...
Cellphones represent one of the fastest-changing areas of legal practice. Mobile device evidence is ...
MODERATED-This course is designed to inform patent practitioners on the bounds of the Hatch-Waxman S...
MODERATED-Session 6 of 10 - Mr. Kornblum, a highly experienced trial and litigation lawyer for over ...
Bias and discrimination continue to shape workplace dynamics, legal practice, and professional respo...
A litigator’s role is to shape how key decision-makers - judges, jurors, and opposing counsel ...
Part 2 of 2 - Lawyers at all levels of experience and even sophisticated law firms and general couns...