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Federal Courts and Discovery of Electronically Stored Information Image

Federal Courts and Discovery of Electronically Stored Information

Connie A. Matteo, Esq., Timothy Coughlan, Esq., & David C. Uitti, Esq.

Although most medical malpractice actions are brought in state courts, some must be litigated in federal courts, usually because of diversity of citizenship. When it comes to discovery in these cases, it's important to understand the federal rules that come into play.

Features

Statistical Analysis Image

Statistical Analysis

Jerome M. Staller, Ph.D.

Complex statistical evidence -- based on huge samples, reams of academic and government studies and hours of testimony -- has been the weapon of choice in many epic battles. The list of major cases in which both sides have deployed legions of statistical experts is impressive: Bendectin, silicone breast-implants, Agent Orange and tobacco are just several of the many substances over which massive statistical battles have been waged. Currently, both sides of the debate over whether caps on non-economic damages help reduce medical malpractice insurance premiums are trading ground-shaking volleys of weapons-grade statistical analysis.

Expert Witnesses Disciplined By Their Own Ranks Image

Expert Witnesses Disciplined By Their Own Ranks

R. Collin Middleton

In last month's issue we looked at a pending complaint made against a forensic psychologist to the ethics committee of his professional organization by an examinee unhappy with the psychologist's recommendation. We also explored case law in the Seventh Circuit that holds the decisions of professional organizations are not reviewable by the courts as long as the person being disciplined was given procedural due process. In this month's installment, we see how this state of affairs not only negatively impacts the professional prospects of the medical expert but also the free expression of valid medical opinions in the courtroom and other comparable settings.

Features

Verdicts Image

Verdicts

ALM Staff & Law Journal Newsletters

Recent rulings you should know.

Note From the Editor Image

Note From the Editor

Elizabeth Anne "Betiayn" Tursi

Well we're off to another exciting year here at Marketing The Law Firm. I thought that I would give everyone a heads up on this year's "Best Of" competitions.

Features

Enhancing Your Firm's Web Presence Image

Enhancing Your Firm's Web Presence

Jose Rosa

Your law firm's Web site design has remained static for years. While it may be functional, it's not generating the traffic you originally envisioned, it's not interactive and the overall design is looking a tad dated. You may also not have anyone in-house who can devote the requisite time and effort needed to make the firm's site a productive new business and practice development 24/7/365 marketing tool. <br>Many law firms still don't understand that a poorly designed Web site can damage the firm's credibility and impair its image. So what's the solution? Seek the services of a Web-crafting firm that will not just be a vendor, but a Web partner and architectural strategist.

Media & Communications Corner: <b>How To Make The Most Of A Stale News Story</b> Image

Media & Communications Corner: <b>How To Make The Most Of A Stale News Story</b>

Cari Brunelle

All marketing directors have experienced it. They receive an e-mail that describes a terrific deal closed or case "just" won by an attorney at the firm. The attorney requests a press release and a full-blown public relations push to all media outlets. But curiously, nowhere in the e-mail does the attorney mention when the big case or deal happened. As it turns out, it is because it happened more than a month ago and, since the client did its own press release immediately after the fact, every media outlet known to man covered it then. So how can a marketing director say no, without actually saying it? The dilemma is that you cannot send the release to the media again, weeks after the fact, but you don't want to tell the attorney that he or she has no options either. So here are some suggestions of how to make the most of old news.

Features

The Year in Review: Our Look Back and Look Forward Image

The Year in Review: Our Look Back and Look Forward

Elizabeth Anne "Betiayn" Tursi

Last month we started our Year in Review, and made it up through June. In Part Two, we finish off the highlights of 2004.

Features

Litigation Image

Litigation

ALM Staff & Law Journal Newsletters

Recent rulings of importance to you and your practice.

Employment Taxes and Stock Options Image

Employment Taxes and Stock Options

Thomas R. White, 3rd

More than 2 years ago, the Internal Revenue Service published Revenue Ruling 2002-22, 2002-19 I.R.B. 849, in which it held that section 1041 of the Internal Revenue Code governed the transfer of stock options and interests in certain unfunded deferred compensation arrangements to the employee's spouse under a marital property settlement. As a result, the employee spouse was not taxable on the transfer. Instead, the spread on the options (the difference between the value of the employer 's stock at the time of exercise and the striking price) and the amount received as deferred compensation under unfunded arrangements were taxable to the nonemployee spouse in the same way and to the same extent as it would have been taxed to the employee. The ruling interpreted section 1041 to have established the rule that property transfers in divorce should be taxed as if the property conveyed were community property that had been transferred in settlement of the transferee's community property rights. As community property, stock options and interests in unfunded deferred compensation arrangements constituted "property" for section 1041 purposes, and the amounts received by the nonemployee spouse would be ordinary income to her (or him), taxable as compensation under IRC '83 and would be "wages" subject to employment taxes and withholding by the employer.

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