When your law partnership isn’t working Resolving partnership issues through executive coaching and mediation rather than litigation Deana Kardel From Issue: 2011 November
When customer lists are not trade secrets Making the case of whether a former employee has unlawfully solicited former customers Barbara Lawless Tanisha Shafer From Issue: 2011 November
The Big Four defense strategies in products-liability cases Blame the state of the technology, the plaintiff, his employer or a component manufacturer Larry Booth From Issue: 2011 November
Profile: Barbara and Therese Lawless Daughters of a law school dean, this sister act brings a passion for trial work to employment law Stephen Ellison From Issue: 2011 November
Lights and cameras; Tweets and Google With TV cameras in the courtroom, cutting off jurors from Web searches and social media is proving more difficult Anayat Durrani From Issue: 2011 November
When the defendant complains to the court that you have too many experts In highly technical cases like products liability, issues often arise about multiple experts in overlapping areas of expertise Eustace de Saint Phalle From Issue: 2011 November
The pincer move With more than one defendant at trial, the enemy of your enemy might be your friend Miles B. Cooper From Issue: 2011 November
Supreme Court puts plaintiffs through the Hamilton Meats grinder Many questions remain unanswered for personal-injury plaintiffs Gary SimmsMichael Danko From Issue: 2011 November
Mediation in the woodshed Navigating the jurisdictional dilemma Jeffrey Krivis From Issue: 2011 November
Appellate Reports and Cases in Brief Recent cases of interest to members of the plaintiffs’ bar Jeffrey I. Ehrlich From Issue: 2011 November