Electronic Discovery and How This Practice Finds Term Paper

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electronic discovery and how this practice finds lawyers balancing a very thin line of appropriate applications of electronic evidence within the legal framework of court. The article entitled "Party Plagued by Electronic Discovery Missteps Loses at Trial" was written by Christopher A. Lewis, Mary Ann Mullaney and Stephen A. Orlofsky and can be found in May 3, 2005 edition of The Legal Intelligencer. This source was found courtesy of Law.com.

Electronic discovery can be described as the process during litigation that happens during the traditional discovery of information before going to a trial but it involves the procurement of all electronic information and not just information available on paper. During the last two decades we have nearly seen all forms of data migrate to the digital realm. Craig Ball surmises, "Statisticians estimate that only 5 to 7% of all information is born outside of the computer, and very little even finds its way to paper" (1). Ironically, this process has never really been in the limelight during its last twenty years of involvement in the legal process. It has just been recently that electronic discovery has fallen under scrutiny.

Today we live in a world set at the speed of light due to increased telecommunication and computer technologies used in business practice. Despite the central role that electronic information plays within the business world and the legal framework in which businesses are ran, electronic data discovery efforts ran an ambiguous process for attorneys. Either the process is completely disregarded or "pursued in such epic proportions that discovery dethrones the merits as the focal point of the case" (Ball 1). Few attorneys understand the ramifications of not using electronic discovery not only to the benefit of the client and case but also failure to use it correctly.

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As a result much of discovery resorts to physical items or paper trails.

The changing face of the discovery process has proposed changes in the rules of the procedure and this will require lawyers to discuss new ways of preserving electronic evidence important to a case like databases, spreadsheets, voicemail, video and email. Basically this opens discovery up to including an insurmountable amount of information that must be presented in court during a trial. This leaves the attorneys on both sides facing a very time-consuming, expensive and arduous process of profiling data. This has brought up another issue in this complex arena; what is accessible and therefore, required during discovery? One particular case put the issue of electronic discovery on the map. This case is Zubulake v. UBS Warburg, L.L.C., 217 F.R.D. 309 and this case will be discussed in the paragraphs below.

The case of Zubulake v. UBS Warburg was supposed to be a typical routine employment discrimination dispute. It turned into a landmark case where the jury awarded an equities trader formerly employed by the defendant $9.1 million in compensatory damages and almost $20.2 million in punitive damages (Lewis, Mullaney and Orlofsky 1) based on mistakes during of….....

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"Electronic Discovery And How This Practice Finds" (2005, May 25) Retrieved June 13, 2025, from
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