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June 8th, 2007
The Honorable John J. Hughes, Magistrate Judge for the District of New Jersey, Robert L. Byman, Partner, Jenner & Block, and Montgomery N. Kosma, Attorney, Jones Day, will discuss the growing use and importance of e-discovery in modern day litigation.
(PRWEB) October 14, 2005 — In a free Xtalks webinar on November 8, 2005, from 1:00-3:00 p.m., The Honorable John J. Hughes, Magistrate Judge for the District of New Jersey, Robert L. Byman, Partner, Jenner & Block, and Montgomery N. Kosma, Attorney, Jones Day, will discuss the growing use and importance of e-discovery in modern day litigation. Joni Miller, from LIT Group, and Kathryn Hardie, from Attenex, will also be on hand for a workshop on using e-discovery.
There is still time to register for free at: http://www.xtalks.com/edisc.ashx
E-discovery is becoming increasingly important in litigation. The incorrect management of data can lead to overages in time and money. Each of the presenters will provide a different view of the topic and discuss such areas as:
- The importance of implementing a secure e-discovery system before any litigation issues arise
- How to prepare your e-data for presentation
- Knowing what data to keep and how to preserve it
The web conference is co-sponsored by Attenex and LIT Group, who will both host a workshop following the keynote presentation and before the Q&A session.
Registration for the event is currently open and free at: http://www.xtalks.com/edisc.ashx
About the Keynote Speakers
The Honorable John J. Hughes was appointed a United States Magistrate Judge for the District of New Jersey in 1991. Judge Hughes is the judicial advisor to the Joint Administrative Office of the United States Courts / Department of Justice Working Group on Electronic Technology in the Criminal Justice System. He also contributed advice to the Federal Judicial Center during the drafting of Effective Use of Courtroom Technology: A Judge's Guide to Pretrial and Trial. Since 2000, he has developed three electronic trial advocacy programs, CPR for Courtroom Lawyers and Judges, Discovery and Demonstrative Evidence for the Digitally Dumbfounded, and Digital Defense, for presentation to bar associations, government offices, inns of court, law firms, law schools, and other groups.
Robert L. Byman is a partner in Jenner & Block's Chicago office. He is a member of the Firm's Litigation & Dispute Resolution, Arbitration: Domestic and International, Intellectual Property and Technology Law, Securities Litigation, and Products Liability and Mass Tort Defense Practices. Mr. Byman has tried dozens of cases to jury or bench verdict in a gamut of substantive areas, including intellectual property, commodities and securities, trade practices, environmental, employment, land use, professional liability, civil rights, and a wide variety of complex contractual disputes with issues such as insurance, construction, franchising, licensing, and corporate acquisitions and reorganizations. In 2000, Mr. Byman was lead counsel for General Electric Capital Corporation in a six-week jury trial in a complex contractual dispute against General Motors Corp. and its subsidiary DirecTV, Inc. The result for GECC was the largest jury verdict ever in the State of Connecticut — $133,000,000 (The award was later increased to $181,000,000 as a result of offer-of-judgment interest and attorneys' fees.) He has also represented Hitachi, Sara Lee, Sunbeam, MacAndrews & Forbes/Revlon, General Dynamics and Bristol Myers. Honorable John J. Hughes was appointed a United States Magistrate Judge for the District of New Jersey in 1991. Judge Hughes is the judicial advisor to the Joint Administrative Office of the United States Courts / Department of Justice Working Group on Electronic Technology in the Criminal Justice System. He also contributed advice to the Federal Judicial Center during the drafting of Effective Use of Courtroom Technology: A Judge's Guide to Pretrial and Trial. Since 2000, he has developed three electronic trial advocacy programs, CPR for Courtroom Lawyers and Judges, Discovery and Demonstrative Evidence for the Digitally Dumbfounded, and Digital Defense, for presentation to bar associations, government offices, inns of court, law firms, law schools, and other groups.
Montgomery Kosma is an antitrust lawyer whose practice emphasizes mergers and acquisitions in addition to criminal and civil antitrust litigation. He has extensive experience relating to telecommunications, computer hardware, software, and consumer products. Monty has spearheaded efforts to maximize efficiencies in the Firm's handling of second requests and other substantial electronic discovery projects through the application of advanced software technologies and project management techniques. Along with antitrust, he has worked in related areas of governmental regulation, including electronic surveillance, privacy, the regulation of encryption, and false advertising. As lead counsel, he successfully won dismissal of a civil RICO and Sherman Act complaint filed against the Foundation for Research on Economics and the Environment. He also served as lead appellate counsel for defendants in CFTC v. R.J. Fitzgerald & Co., a regulatory case involving an allegedly misleading television commercial. Before joining Jones Day, Monty was an associate in the antitrust and appellate practice groups at Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher LLP. He founded The Green Bag: An Entertaining Journal of Law and continues to serve as its executive editor. His published articles include "Policing the Dormant Commerce Clause," Icarus 64 (ABA Antitrust Section, Summer/Fall 2003); "Our First Real War," 2 Green Bag 2d 169 (Winter 1999) (executive war powers in the 1801 war with Tripoli); and "Measuring the Influence of Supreme Court Justices," 27 J. Legal Studies 333 (June 1998). Before attending law school, Monty designed supercomputer software for stealth aircraft design at Lockheed. He also served as vice president of a human resources consulting firm in Kansas City and as a software engineer responsible for designing several Microsoft Windows applications. Monty is chairman of the Federalist Society's Antitrust Subcommittee, a member of the American Bar Association (Antitrust Law Section, Computer Industry & Internet Committee), and a member of Jones Day's E-Discovery Committee.
About the Workshop Sponsors
About Attenex:
In order to clarify things, it would be best to state what the term “Niche Market” means.
A niche is defined as a “specialized market” or “an area of the market specializing in one type of product or service”. In other words it is a narrowly defined group that have the same specialized interests and needs, where the group as a whole will have the following characteristics:
Xtalks (recently featured in the London Times article Conference call that spans the globe: http://business.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,16689-1364240,00.html) brings industry experts to executives’ desktops around the world in a web-based information network that provides insight into breaking business issues through interactive digital web conferences. By leveraging the best of hi-speed Internet and telecom technology, Xtalks provides a fantastic forum for highly interactive communication. Xtalks web conferences allow anyone with interest in a particular topic to participate in a web meeting by synchronizing their desktop computer and phone alongside industry experts. Xtalks is part of The Honeycomb Worldwide Group of Companies (www.honeycombworldwide.com), including Honeycomb Connect, a leader in executive networking, event management, web conferencing, publishing, and digital media with offices in North America and Europe.