This Continuing Legal Education presentation covers electronic discovery and the related ethical duty of competence. Drawing on guidance from the State Bar, recent e-discovery cases, and our own experience assisting attorneys, the presentation outlines the main risks to counsel and client of failing to properly understand e-discovery obligations in litigation.
As law firms increasingly transition from paper-based disbursements to electronic payment systems&md...
Many law firms now rely on AI?driven research, drafting, and workflow tools without fully understand...
ChatGPT is rapidly entering law firm workflows, including drafting, summarizing, brainstorming, lega...
Effective representation depends on trust, communication, and responsiveness, yet these can break do...
This course will provide a detailed overview of the Medicare Secondary Payer act as well as provide ...
This program is geared towards lawyers, experts, commercial property owners, and others in the envir...
The Fair Debt Collection Practices Act (FDCPA) remains one of the most important consumer protection...
This program examines the role of psychosocial evaluations in spousal abuse-based immigration petiti...
Disasters, whether natural or manmade, happen. Disasters can impact the practice of law and, among o...
Philip A. Greenberg, Esq., who has been a litigator in the State and Federal Courts for 52 years, ha...