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Be in the Driver’s Seat for E-discovery

According to a recent survey, only 7% of corporate counsel attorneys rate their companies as prepared for the e-discovery amendments to the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure.

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Litigation Preparedness and Support

The importance of data in your company is crucial to your litigation response plan. The law is built on facts, and the facts must be preserved in the form of documents, forms, waivers, and all the paperwork that acts as a shield between you and disaster.

IDS offers the following services designed to assist you in litigation preparedness.

Proactive ESI Management

E-discovery

Hosting and Review

For more information contact info@idsil.com
Latest News
Title: Law.com - Newswire
Link: http://www.law.com/newswire/
  • Consumer bankruptcy lawyers are "debt relief agencies" under a 2005 federal bankruptcy law and restrictions on the type of advice they can give clients are constitutional, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled on Monday. In a challenge brought by a Minnesota law firm, the justices unanimously held that the plain language of the Bankruptcy Abuse Prevention and Consumer Protection Act clearly indicates that lawyers function as debt relief agencies when they provide bankruptcy help to consumers covered by the law.

Title: Law.com - Legal Technology
Link: http://www.law.com/jsp/ltn/index.jsp
  • Opponents of Chicago's handgun ban in McDonald v. Chicago argued that the high court should solely rely on secondary sources and not digital searches of original material that aim to prevent "Barbie dolls in the archeological dig," where advocates read modern facts into the historical record.

Title: Law.com - In-House Counsel
Link: http://www.law.com/jsp/ihc/index.jsp
  • Jenner and Block's Michael K. Lowman and Andrew F. Merrick examine SEC v. Founding Partners Capital Mgmt., a recent federal court ruling that significantly curtails the power of the Securities and Exchange Commission to pursue ill-gotten gains from relief defendants in an SEC enforcement action. The ruling is significant for practicing securities lawyers because it confirms that there are important boundaries that circumscribe the SEC's authority to pursue claims against relief defendants.