What if the most important part of your email evidence is the message you didn’t receive? We dig into a timely antitrust class action centered on formulary placement for a multiple sclerosis drug and unpack a pivotal ruling on whether parties must produce non-inclusive emails within threads. The debate sounds technical—threading, metadata fields, inclusive versus non-inclusive—but the stakes are practical: searchability, fairness, and how close your evidence is to the way it’s ordinarily main...
All content for Meet and Confer with Kelly Twigger is the property of Kelly Twigger and is served directly from their servers
with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
What if the most important part of your email evidence is the message you didn’t receive? We dig into a timely antitrust class action centered on formulary placement for a multiple sclerosis drug and unpack a pivotal ruling on whether parties must produce non-inclusive emails within threads. The debate sounds technical—threading, metadata fields, inclusive versus non-inclusive—but the stakes are practical: searchability, fairness, and how close your evidence is to the way it’s ordinarily main...
Thank you for tuning in to Meet and Confer with Kelly Twigger. If you found today’s discussion helpful, don’t forget to subscribe, rate, and leave a review wherever you get your podcasts. For more insights and resources on creating cost-effective discovery strategies leveraging ESI, visit Minerva26 and explore our practical tools, case law library, and on-demand education from the Academy.
Meet and Confer with Kelly Twigger
What if the most important part of your email evidence is the message you didn’t receive? We dig into a timely antitrust class action centered on formulary placement for a multiple sclerosis drug and unpack a pivotal ruling on whether parties must produce non-inclusive emails within threads. The debate sounds technical—threading, metadata fields, inclusive versus non-inclusive—but the stakes are practical: searchability, fairness, and how close your evidence is to the way it’s ordinarily main...