In Episode 176, Kelly Twigger discusses how the rules of self-collection apply to experts, and the failure to supervise the collection of documents from an expert led to misrepresentations to the court, the exclusion of key evidence at trial and the sanctions of more than $3 million for discovery violations in the October 23, 2024,| Minerva26 | Your strategic edge in litigation
In Episode 175, Kelly Twigger discusses how the intentional destruction of data from a voice recorder in an aircraft, and the court's reluctance to impose meaningful sanctions—even when the record arguably justified them—calls into question whether Rule 37(e)(2) can protect parties in Sky Jet M.G. Inc. v. VSE Aviation Servs., LLC. Introduction Welcome to our| Minerva26 | Your strategic edge in litigation
In Episode 173, Kelly Twigger discusses the imposition of sanctions and what those sanctions were following the submission of AI generated hallucinated citations in a brief to the Special Master... The post Episode 173: Fake Citations, Real Sanctions: AI Hallucinations Spark $31K in Sanctions first appeared on Minerva26.| Minerva26
American YouTuber Armon Wiggins went viral on X after referring to Tyla as an “uppity African,” an insult with which the broadcaster and rapper Joe Budden concurred. Wiggins writes: “Hey I don’t think I like TYLA’s personality I think someone needs to check her cus she doesn’t understand American Culture AT ALL…she almost gives off…| Blog of the APA
In Episode 148, Kelly Twigger discusses whether a party’s failure to preserve WeChat messages on a mobile device that may have been relevant to two overlapping litigation matters resulted in sanctions in Two Canoes LLC v. Addian Inc. (April 30, 2024). Introduction Welcome to this week's episode of our Case of the Week series brought| eDiscovery Assistant | eDiscovery Begins Here
In Episode 146, Kelly Twigger discusses how the failure to preserve text messages from a terminated employee’s supervisor led to sanctions and a denial of the employer’s motion for summary judgment, and the impact the decision has on government agencies’ obligations to preserve data from mobile devices in Maziar v. City of Atlanta (June 18,| eDiscovery Assistant | eDiscovery Begins Here