I received a fine gift this morning from U.S. District Judge Paul Grimm, and with the authors’ permission, I’m sharing it with you. It’s a splendid chart on admissibility of electronic evidence that any trial lawyer will want when going to Court. For younger readers, I will explain what “going to Court” means in a future post. 😉
The chart is the latest iteration of work by Paul Grimm and Kevin Brady, two I admire as much for their sterling characters and kindnesses as for their stunning lawyer intellects. Judge Grimm needs no introduction here. He’s the judge behind decisions like Victor Stanley v. Creative Pipe, Mancia v. Mayflower and Lorraine v. Markel, the last a virtual hornbook on admissibility of electronic evidence. He’s also masterfully guided the evolution of the federal rules of evidence and procedure, notably FRE 502 and FRCP 37(e). Paul Grimm is simply the finest judge–and gentleman–I know.
Kevin Brady is Of Counsel to Redgrave LLP. I’ve been privileged to work with Kevin over many years in support of the Georgetown E-Discovery Institute and E-Discovery Training Academy. Everyone who knows him likes and admires Keven Brady, and Kevin has quietly made countless contributions to e-discovery education. This chart is just one more instance of Kevin’s largesse.
The chart is handsome to look at and easy-to-use. It covers authentication, relevance, hearsay exceptions and the Original Writing rule (which some like to call the Best Evidence rule). Click HERE to get your free copy. Thank you Paul and Kevin!
kay walton said:
Craig, thanks to you and Judge Grimm for sharing an excellent and valuable resource.
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Ed Fiducia said:
HUGE thank you to Judge Grimm and Mr. Brady. As usual Craig… a terrific and useful post. I will be sharing a link to this post to my clients.
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Jere Ownby said:
Thank you for this very useful resource.
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