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ALM Staff & Law Journal Newsletters

The most recent news you need to know.

Features

'Back Channel Diplomacy' As a Litigation Technique Image

'Back Channel Diplomacy' As a Litigation Technique

Michael Brophy

In this writer's experience, the majority of medical malpractice cases involve a primary target defendant, usually a hospital or attending physician, often joined with multiple codefendants with less potential exposure. It is not uncommon to find three or more defense firms playing active roles in the discovery process, and, for purposes of this article, we shall refer to those defendants with lesser potential exposure as 'secondary defendants.'

Suit Charges 'Inhumane' Questions at Med-Mal Deposition Image

Suit Charges 'Inhumane' Questions at Med-Mal Deposition

Lisa Brennan

Rough spots are common on the road of civil litigation, but it's not every day that a plaintiff's attorney sues his adversary for asking 'inhumane' questions during a deposition that allegedly inflict 'grievous emotional distress.' That's the thrust of a suit filed July 11 in Essex County, NJ.

When Products Liability Intersects with Malpractice Strategy Image

When Products Liability Intersects with Malpractice Strategy

Lori G. Cohen & Sara K. Thompson

Medical device products liability litigation and medical malpractice litigation have intersected for as long as physicians have been prescribing and implanting medical devices, but that overlap continues to increase and become even more intricate as medical devices become more sophisticated and more widely utilized by physicians and the public, and as plaintiffs increasingly seek to keep their cases in state court by including local diversity-destroying defendants in suits.

Employer Violates FMLA: Termination of Employee Who Requested Leave Extension Image

Employer Violates FMLA: Termination of Employee Who Requested Leave Extension

Carla J. Rozycki & David K. Haase

Many employers find it difficult to administer their leave of absence policies within the parameters of the Family and Medical Leave Act ('FMLA').

Ethics Issues Arising Between the Law Firm and Its Client Image

Ethics Issues Arising Between the Law Firm and Its Client

Michael C. Ross

Jim Roethe, former General Counsel at Bank of America and litigation partner with Pillsbury Winthrop Shaw Pitman LLP, and I recently taped a Recorder Roundtable CLE program titled 'Professional Relationship and Ethics.' We discussed some ethical issues that may arise between the client and the law firm in billing, staffing, litigation discovery, lawyers' financial interests, and backdating documents. Here is a brief summary of our discussion.

Lessons Learned from Jury Duty Image

Lessons Learned from Jury Duty

Paula Campbell

When my jury summons arrived in the mailbox, I decided that performing my civic duty could function as professional development for <i>this</i> legal-specific software trainer. The three previous times that I had served (one other time as foreperson), I viewed the experience with different eyes. After eight weeks of active, civil case jury duty, the time spent and lessons learned compel me to reflect on the experience and offer personal insight as it relates to law firm ethics and how a firm may benefit.

Features

Orientation Revisited and Reinvented Image

Orientation Revisited and Reinvented

Phyllis Weiss Haserot

Many firms have instituted elaborate machinery for their recruiting (entry-level and lateral) and orientation, but there is a long way to go toward stellar results regarding orienting, integrating, and retaining those hard-won recruits. Some of the difficulties are generational; others can be traced to the traditions of partnership culture, which often lacks openness about management and how the firm handles the business of law.

HELP! Communicating During a Crisis Image

HELP! Communicating During a Crisis

John J. Buchanan

With corporate scandals, terrorism and economic chaos appearing regularly in the headlines of major newspapers and on broadcast news, now more than ever it seems that American business is in need of good crisis communications. No company is immune to crisis &mdash; so no company should be without some kind of plan to communicate in the midst of that crisis. Organizations that have good plans in place will weather crises far better than those that don't &mdash; or those that believe that not communicating will insulate them in some way from the effects of the crisis.

September issue in PDF format Image

September issue in PDF format

ALM Staff & Law Journal Newsletters

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