Corporate Privileges and Confidential Information"The single best source for attorneys to consult concerning issues dealing with the attorney-client privilege. It's a must have for any lawyer." --Michael Ross (practitioner and law school professor)Corporate Privileges and Confidential Information is designed to assist inside and outside counsel in negotiating obstacles to maintaining corporate secrecy. All rights to privacy and confidentiality that a corporation may assert are gathered in this useful volume, which also includes advice on how to protect information otherwise required to be disclosed to a government agency. This definitive treatment covers: attorney-client, work product and joint defense privileges; trade secrets; confidential submissions to federal and state authorities; financial privacy; and access to personnel files. It presents guidance on complex issues such as: the unique position of corporations in claiming privilege; application of the work product privilege to internal communications; the causes and scope of a waiver of the work product privilege; differentiating between inside counsel's business and legal functions to determine attorney-client privilege; insuring confidentiality of information supplied to a government agency; the dangers of intra-corporate discussions of confidential matters; inadvertent disclosures; and keeping results of a corporate internal investigation immune from discovery. Book ʊ looseleaf, one volume, 800 pages; published in 1999, updated as needed; no additional charge for updates during your subscription. Looseleaf print subscribers receive supplements. The online edition is updated automatically. ISBN: 978-1-58852-087-6 |
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Contenido
with Current and Former Employers 264 | 2-64 |
5 Auditors Inquiries About Pending | 3-57 |
CHAPTER 5 | 5-5 |
CHAPTER 6 | 6 |
CHAPTER 4 | 4 |
Joint Defense Privilege | x |
SelfEvaluation Privilege | xii |
Federal Rules of Civil Procedure | xvi |
CHAPTER 10 | 10-1 |
1 Federal Limitations on Discovery | 11-1 |
CHAPTER 7 | 12-1 |
3 Application of Foreign Privilege Law | 13-3 |
CHAPTER 14 | 14-1 |
APPENDICES | 14-13 |
Scope and Purpose of Rules | 14-17 |
LawyerClient Privilege | 3 |
Privileged Matter Disclosed Under Compulsion | xvii |
CHAPTER 11 | 11 |
CHAPTER 1 | 2-1 |
Privilege | 3-1 |
1 Standard and Computerized | 5-1 |
CHAPTER 2 | 5-2 |
Courts | 7-2 |
1 The AttorneyClient Privilege in Federal | 8-1 |
CHAPTER 9 | 9-1 |
2 Relationship Between Internal Revenue | 9-2 |
Comment upon or Inference from Claim | 4 |
Definition of Relevant Evidence | 1 |
Trade Secrets | 4 |
Freedom of Information Act 5 U S C 552 | 1 |
Federal Tax Confidentiality Statutes | 1 |
U S C 7525 Confidentiality Privileges Relating | 8 |
U S C 2515 Prohibition of Use as Evidence | 10 |
Uniform Trade Secrets Act with | 1 |
Trade Secrets Act 18 U S C 1905 | 7 |