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Motion Practice Reimagined: This Firm Dramatically Reduced Review Times with Transcript Genius

Steno

The Challenge of Complex Litigation "I drafted what would have probably been a five- or six-hour project in maybe two hours. As head of the litigation department at McMullin Injury Law, Nate Langston handles a demanding caseload. It was a big time saver."

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Litigators with a Data Fetish: Moneyballing Testimony

The Cloud Court Blog

If you’re involved in litigation, and if you care about outcomes, then the importance of testimony is difficult to overstate. We see whether attorneys regularly and strategically talk over a witness mid-sentence to garble testimony they don’t like, trying to deprive the opposing party of a clean quote to use in motion practice or at trial.

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Amendments to CR 26 and 30 Will Change Discovery and Deposition Practice

WA Bar News

This article will explain the changes effected by the rule amendments and, with respect to CR 26, provide context considered by the Civil Litigation Rules Revision Work Group in drafting the proposed amendments to illustrate their impact. This is no different. He has tried over 50 jury trials in state and U.S.

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An Open Letter to Litigators (i.e., Unreliable Witnesses)

The Cloud Court Blog

Dear Litigation Friends: It is with regret that I write to inform you that you are a profoundly unreliable witness. And you realized—too late—that you failed to use it in motion practice or settlement or witness outlines or impeachment. Thankfully, emerging technologies can help. Alas, so is mine. AI tools can help.

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Money as a Tactical Disadvantage: Don't Pitch Mountains of Cash into a Dumpster Fire

The Cloud Court Blog

Having spent two decades of my life litigating and managing litigation, I’ve noticed a few persistent trends. One is this: smaller parties often leverage technology and data to beat their adversaries because it’s the only option. Is money useful in litigation? It doesn’t. But only to a point.

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Deposition Misconduct: Rules, Risks, and Remedies

WA Bar News

A lawyer attempts to improperly “coach” a witness through “speaking” objections that suggest the “correct” answer, 2 or by signaling an answer to a witness through “old fashioned” facial gestures 3 or kicks under the table, 4 or through newer technologically enabled techniques such as off-camera whispers during “remote” depositions.