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ABA Section of Litigation
Product Liability Committee
Women in Product Liability Sub-Committee Regional CLE Workshop
November 12, 2010 at offices of Kaye Scholer NY, NY - HB Litigation Conferences Presents: Judicial Teleconference Series with Hon. Marina Corodemus-CPSIA-Buyer Beware October 5, 2010
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ABA Section of Litigation-ABA November Drug and Medical Device Seminar Johnson & Jonson Headquarters New Brunswick, NJ November 11, 2010
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ABA Section of Litigation
Product Liability Committee
Women in Product Liability Sub-Committee Regional CLE Workshop
November 11, 2010 at offices of Kaye Scholer NY, NY
SPEAKER: Judge Marina Corodemus (Ret.)
- ACI's National Advanced Forum on
- Devising Novel End-Game Strategies in Bet-the-Company Litigation
- September 29-30, 2010 | The Helmsley Park Lane Hotel - New York, NY
- MASS TORT PRODUCTS
- LIABILITY CLAIMS
- Mass Torts Judicial Forum with Judge Marina Corodemus
Judges, Plaintiff & Defense Lawyers Discuss & Debate Hot Topics in Mass Tort Litigation
Date: June 28, 2010
Time: 8:00am - 5:30pm, including 2 networking events
Price: $795 per registrant
Location: The Hub Cira Centre at 30th Street Train Station, Philadelphia
Moderator: Hon. Marina Corodemus (Ret.), Corodemus & Corodemus Law, Iselin, NJ
CLE Credit: 6.5-7.5 CLE credits, including 1 ETHICS credit (CPD and CPCU credits also available), depending on state requirements.
• Protective Orders in Mass Torts: Sufficient or Substandard?
Recording Date: April 14, 2010
Duration: 105 minutes
Self Study/Alternate Format CLE: Self-study credit may be available in AZ, CA, CO, FL, GA, ID, LA, ME, NV, NH, TX, UT, VT, WA, WV and WY for watching a video or listening to an audio recording. Refer to your state bar's MCLE guidelines for the number of reportable credits permissible via these formats.
A Judicial Dialogue with Hon. Marina Corodemus (Ret.)
Plaintiffs want protective orders that are adjustable as discovery progresses, while defendants want rigid protective orders to guard intellectual assets. The press wants full access to documents filed in public court systems. "Sunshine in Litigation" initiatives oppose "abusive" secrecy orders. But corporations plead the need to guard their reputations and their ability to create life-saving products. Federal and state rules are changing. The arguments are heating up. Where do you line up?














