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The Most Important E-Discovery Rule
Posted By DiscoveryResources.org Reporter On May 22, 2009 @ 4:13 pm In Case Law & Rules,Federal Rules,Home Page Latest,Uncategorized | No Comments
To regain a class’s focus on a certain subject that they may not have been studying hard enough otherwise, teachers will often use a Pop Quiz. Ronald Hedges, former United States Magistrate Judge in the District of New Jersey, is a believer in the pop quiz as well. In the most recent New Jersey Law Journal, Hedges writes:
“Time for a pop quiz. Can you name the most important of the so-called “e-discovery” amendments to the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure [1]adopted in 2006? Candidates include, among others, Rule 26(b)(2)(B), which introduced the concept of “not reasonably accessible” electronically stored information; Rule 26(b)(5)(B), which established a uniform procedure among the United States district courts to assert claims of inadvertent production; Rule 34(b), which addressed form of production of ESI; and Rule 37(e), which purported to create a “safe harbor” from sanctions for loss of ESI under certain circumstances” Continue reading… [2]
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[1] Federal Rules of Civil Procedure : http://www.jureeka.net/Jureeka/US.aspx?doc=FRCP&rule=undefined&bUrl=http://www.discoveryresources.org/wp-admin/post-new.php
[2] Continue reading…: http://www.law.com/jsp/legaltechnology/PubArticleFriendlyLT.jsp?id=1202430799151
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