E-discovery nightmare
Counsel reponsibility
Need for an expert
Experience
E-discovery strategist
Unreliable evidence
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The truth about computer
date and time stamps. Do
you know what Creation
Dates, Last Modified and
Access Dates really
mean? Probably not. This
free report explains all.
Click here to get your free
copy.
Contact Jerry Saperstein
Resolve your ediscovery problems economically, efficiently and effectively.
As trial counsel, you are responsible for knowing what Electronically
Stored Information (ESI) to seek and determining what Information
Technology (IT) and ESI your opponent is likely to have. It is up to you to
make pre-trial conferences and resultant discovery requests effective. Without a
thorough understanding of the technology, this will not happen.
In today’s IT environment, ESI can be found in dozens, sometimes hundreds or
thousands of physical locations. ESI comes in many forms. Frequently the ESI is
not in the exclusive possession, custody or control of your opponent, but is
accessible by them. In fact, different parts of the adversary’s organization may not
know what IT resources other units have implemented. I f you don’t thoroughly
understand the technology, you can get lost – and lose – real fast.
Expensive discovery contests can be avoided if you understand, from the
outset, your opponent’s IT architecture and infrastructure. If you’ve become
involved in a discovery dispute and are still within the discovery cutoff, it is rarely
too late to recover and put your adversary on the defensive and get the discovery
production you are entitled to if you understand the technology.