Author Archives: ligitsec

Computer Forensics Expert

Computer Forensics Expert Can Save You Money in Litigation

Computer Forensics ExpertWhen a business has to call for the services of a Computer Forensics Expert, CFE, people are as involved as the computers. Long before filing a lawsuit, you need to make some choices including how best to handle situations which may involve employees. Finding out from a competitor that your employees are accused of stealing proprietary information is bad. A visit by law enforcement regarding misconduct by employees is worse. Both are times when you need to carefully think about what your next course of action will be. Taking action as early in the process as possible will be cost-effective and help make sure that the correct data is saved and protected.

A first step would be to consult with your company’s attorney. Your lawyer may also be able to put you in touch with a computer forensics expert. Bringing the expert in during the very early part of an investigation doesn’t mean that an unlimited amount of money has to be spent. A initial window of opportunity can be used for determining which parts of the system are relevant and how to best preserve them. While deeper analysis and processing may come later, getting a snapshot of where everything stands in the beginning can provide you and your team with a good map to follow as the investigation unfolds. Having some direction in place will also save you some money.

If you and your business are the defendants in a case of computer fraud or the loss of confidential business information, then the forensics expert you hire becomes more important. One overlooked task of your expert is to have them interface with the plaintiff’s computer forensics expert. Together, they can lay out a course of investigation which may allow for being on site at the same time and, with the requirement that the prosecution provide you with the evidence, you may also save some extra money with the two working together.

Regardless if your expert is able to work with the other side’s expert, you need to work out and negotiate an efficient and effective protocol for inspection. Another consideration such as saving mobile data or dealing with encryption challenges are two situations with which your expert should help you deal with during the pre-litigation phase or later in discovery projects.

Invest some of your time in talking with IT administrators and custodians to ensure you are knowledgeable of how well legal hold instructions are being followed. Your expert can provide a trained eye to supervise non-lawyers which are conducting discovery tasks. Monitoring the legal hold process, documenting systems and tracking data sources will give you more tools with which to respond if future attacks are made on your preservation steps.

Your CFE should be involved in the entire process. Forensic analysis that is performed with the work being done by your team may help lead to success. Often, discovery and analysis are seen as separate steps in the process. Your team has the best grasp of issues as they work through your system, so it is important that your expert also work closely with your team members.

A main key to staying within budget during the stressful investigation and subsequent actions is to work closely with your CFE at each stage and make sure you get the most effective analysis without unnecessarily running up the bill.

civil litigation

Civil Litigation Lawyers – Do You Need One?

civil litigationIf you find that you should take some legal action and just aren’t sure how to go about it, you probably want to get in touch with a civil litigation lawyer. A lawsuit can be a tricky, intricate process and a knowledgeable attorney’s advice can save you time — and money.

What to Expect From a Civil Litigation Lawyer

A civil litigation lawyer will walk you down the path of filing and following up a non-criminal lawsuit. A lawyer can best advise you about where your case is best suitable. Not all civil lawsuits need to end up in court. Some situations where a civil litigation attorney would come in handy are:

  • Alimony
  • Personal injury
  • Debt settlement
  • Discrimination

The filing of criminal cases, as opposed to civil cases, are normally handled by governmental agencies such as the prosecutor’s office.

Find Out if You Need a Civil Litigation Lawyer

If you’re thinking about beginning a lawsuit, it’s always a good idea to get advice from an attorney. They can tell if you the odds of your case being successful as well as the procedures and required paperwork that will need to be completed. The attorney can also tell you if your case is one of those that are better off being handled through an alternate method of conflict resolution such as mediation.

What Does it Cost

Attorneys approach the question of billing in different ways. How they invoice and how much they ask in payment is left, within guidelines, up to each lawyer. Some civil litigation lawyers charge by the hour and others charge a contingency fee. If an attorney accepts your case on contingency, they you don’t pay anything until the case is settled and the lawyer gets a percentage of any winnings. Of course, you and the attorney will agree to their percentage prior to them taking the case.

If your attorney agrees to take you on as a client on a contingency fee basis, then they feel you have a fairly strong case. Regardless, make sure you ask about rates, charges and how they’re arrived at, up-front.

What Should You Expect

The outcome can depend on many factors, but that’s why you have an attorney. They can advice you at each step of the process. With their assistance, your case might be determined privately, out of court, or you may end up in court. If you win, you might receive financial compensation.

Since litigation attorneys know the local law and the procedures used locally, their expertise will put you in a good position to win your lawsuit. Definitely a much better position than if you try to handle the matter on your own.

civil litigation

Civil Litigation Histories and the Hiring Practice

civil litigationSince Edward Snowden became a household world, people are becoming more aware of background checks. Anyone with more curiosity is also learning what components make up the typical background check. Criminal convictions, driving records, credit histories and drug testing are some of the areas investigators are interested in knowing about. There’s still one item that isn’t often understood, except by lawyers. The power of civil litigation histories for employment purposes.

Civil litigation histories are usually not understood by layman and often even businessmen. While criminal convictions, driver’s license checks and credit reports can be easy to spot based on information such as date of birth, social security number and physical description, civil litigation histories don’t contain any of these normal identifiers.

Define “Civil Lawsuit”

A civil lawsuit is simply a concern between two people, or parties, where one individual claims wrongdoing against someone else. Civil lawsuits run the range from dog bites to car accidents to evictions. Wrongful death claims can also be tied up in civil lawsuits.

As civil disputes are between two parties, they usually don’t involve anything that would effect public policy. The disputes tend to be between the two parties involved and may end up being a matter of public record. It is up to the investigator looking into civil filings to tell whether any civil lawsuits are pertinent to the company’s hiring practices.

A Brief History of Litigation Screenings

In the past, the decision to investigate litigation histories started with banks who wanted to determine if a person to whom they were interested in lending money was litigious. If the recipient of the loan was found to be litigious, then the bank was concerned that their money was at risk of being attached by a third party who was engaged in a civil suit with the borrower.

As this was going on, the law community felt that this research was also important to lawyers who wanted to determine the “litigation posture” of either a potential client or opponent. This eventually evolved into a very important part of the Due Diligence process. From there, businessmen started scrutinizing litigation records when they were involved in business related dealings such as acquisition, sale of a business or before taking a privately held company public. From there it grew to be included in the screening process of job candidates.

Understanding the Costs

Since the normal identifiers, birth dates, social security numbers and the like, are not usually available in civil litigation files, the cost and confusion has risen. If a lawsuit is discovered that involves a party with the same or similar name as the proposed job candidate, then extra effort must be made to either include, or exclude, the potential new hire. The challenge became bigger with the Gramm-Leach Bliley Act and other statues and this has driven up the cost of a legitimate suit. To hold down costs, most searches now consist of two parts:

1. The index search which identifies all suits attached to the name in question.

2. The second is the file review and retrieval process which will authorize the researcher to get a copy of the file to read for the purpose of determining if any information contained refers to the subject in question.

Part one is billed on a per unit basis and part two is billed on either a per unit basis or an hourly basis, depending on the jurisdiction.

The Bottom Line

With the plethora of screening tools available, civil litigation checks should be used wisely and performed by research firms that thoroughly understand what information is being searched for and for what intended purpose. Civil litigation histories should only be used as one tool in the screening toolbox of a business seeking to hire a candidate.

An attorney experienced in business law should be consulted for further information on how to avoid minefields as well as cut related costs.

divorce

Getting a Divorce if Your Ex Has a Gambling Addiction

divorceGoing through a divorce is never easy. If an addiction is involved, it can be even harder. Gambling addiction can be one of the most difficult addictions since the addicted won’t be leaving whiskey bottles laying around. With a little effort, it can be done though.

Pathological gambling may resolve over time with some, rare individuals. Regardless, the effects it can have on a marriage can be devastating. The financial and emotional costs can be enormous and can even ruin what was once the best of relationships.

If you are already in the process of litigating custody and need to prove that your ex has a gambling addiction, you have some work ahead. There are methods to obtain the evident and show it to the court to support your custody case. YOU may know the ex has a gambling problem, but the courts will want evidence and won’t settle just for accusations. Actually, if you make too many accusations and can’t back them up with proof, your creditability may be shot and it can work against you.

If you’re seeking custody, joint or full, the court may want to have you and your ex both talk with a professional for evaluation. The service provider will look at many things in your past lives — including addictions. But a service provider may not be the only person delving into your past. In certain circumstances, an investigator might be tasked with uncovering gambling addictions as well as addictions to drugs, sex, or alcohol. Any evidence turned up, could be used in subsequent litigation.

The evaluated ordered by the court will consider addictions when determining the potential damage to children or instability in the home. If you can prove — again, with evidence — that your ex has a gambling addiction, you can win custody.

Gambling addictions can be fed almost anywhere. A person doesn’t just have to hit the casino. In 2014 there are hundreds, if not thousands, of internet gambling sites. Anyone with a gambling problem might have several accounts with online bookies to take care of sports betting, race betting and even online card gaming. Since the online sites require the use of a valid email address, investigators won’t have much of a problem tracing the email address back to the holder.

Once you, or an investigator, have determined which online gambling operations your ex has accounts with, it becomes a very easy thing for a divorce, or custody, attorney to get the financial records from the gambling site. The records will show the time and money spent on heir addiction and will prove to be valuable in court.

A knowledgeable attorney can advise you on the best route to take once the evidence of a gambling addiction has been gathered.

401(k)

Will the Real Beneficiary of Your 401(k) Please Stand Up

401(k)If it has been awhile since you last looked at the designation-form for your 401(k), you may be in for a surprise. As the years, since you designated a beneficiary, life has tossed some curves and changes. Without a good review, with a legal advisor, you may find that your retirement savings are going to a person that you’d rather not see them go to. It happens.

The wealthy telemarketer died suddenly last month. His last will and testament said that his estate was to go to his children and his new wife. Much of his money was in his 401(k) retirement plan. The ultimate recipient of those monies isn’t determined by his will and wishes. The recipient is determined by whose name was scrawled on the designation form years ago. His ex-wife of 22 years got all of his money.

It is a situation that happens frequently but is little-understood. A lifetime of putting money away is determined by what you inked on the document years ago when you designated your beneficiaries. If you haven’t updated the paperwork to reflect changes in life, you possibly will not be able to leave your wealth to the heirs of your choice. Instead, you could be leaving them a financial nightmare.

The executive who died could have asked his ex to sign a waiver and then name his children as the recipients of his 401(k). Since he failed to do that, his ex inherits it. By forgetting to update his forms, the executive basically disinherited his children and left his current wife penniless.

Law professors at Benjamin N. Cardoza School of Law in New York released a study which sheds light on the situation. Most Americans think their retirement will be divided along the lines laid out in their will — as are their other assets. Actually, the beneficiary of retirement savings is normally determined by what is said on beneficiary-designation forms that many people have either forgotten or lost.

With $6.5 trillion in IRAs, the amount of money is huge. Another $5.9 trillion in 401(k)s that may — or may not — go to the intended recipient. If you accidentally leave a former spouse designed as the beneficiary of your 401(k), they will be given the money from the fund, even if your will stipulates that those assets are excluded from the divorce settlement.

Lauren Lindsay, financial planning director at Personal Financial Advisors, worked with an insurance executive who had four children. He had given so much money to one child to help her fund a business that he told all of the children, including her, that it would not be fair to give her more. The insurance executive told Ms. Lindsay that he would be changing the designation forms on his 401(k) so the other three would inherit the money. Before he could get a chance to complete the changes, he was killed in an auto accident. His daughter, the one he had helped financially, was given 25 percent of his retirement assets.

It is past time that firms overhaul the rigid and outdated forms. Until they do, you need to double check how you filled those forms out years ago. A good attorney can help spot any discrepancies between your life now and how you saw it then.

AT&T v. FCC: 3rd Circuit Rules that Corporations May Invoke Personal Privacy Exception to FOIA Disclosure

DAVID NJOHNSONDigital media law update: Courts have long recognized that corporations have rights that are at least akin to individual privacy rights. Recognized corporate privacy rights include trade secrets and the exercise of the attorney-client privilege. However, the scope of corporate privacy rights is not nearly as broad as the scope of individual privacy rights. Many federal and state privacy laws only apply to individuals, not corporations. For example, the Federal Privacy Act only prohibits the government from collecting and disclosing certain types of information about “individuals” — a term defined to only include U.S. citizens and permanent resident aliens. See 5 U.S.C. § 552a(a)(2).

When dealing with a law that provides protection for privacy rights, attorneys and judges are often unsure whether the law applies only to individuals or covers corporations, as well. An opportunity for such line-drawing has recently arisen as to the scope of a “personal privacy” exception to the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA). 5 U.S.C. §552(b)(7).
Under FOIA, a government agency is generally obligated to produce any records in its possession upon a request form any person. 5 U.S.C. § 552(a)(3). However, there are many exceptions to this rule. Among these are, matters that are:

• Exception 4: trade secrets and commercial or financial information obtained from a person and privileged or confidential (5 U.S.C. § 552(b)(4));

• Exception 6: personnel and medical files and similar files the disclosure of which would constitute a clearly unwarranted invasion of personal privacy (Id. at § 552(b)(6));

• Exception 7(C): records or information compiled for law enforcement purposes, but only to the extent that the production of such law enforcement records or information . . . (C) could reasonably be expected to constitute an unwarranted invasion of personal privacy (Id. at § 552(b)(7)(C)).
Prior decisions in the D.C. Circuit, which handles the plurality of FOIA appeals, have held that Exception 4, for “trade secrets,” does apply to business entities, such as corporations. Judicial Watch, Inc. v. U.S. Dept. of Energy, 310 F.Supp.2d 271 (D.D.C. 2004), affm’d in part, 412 F.3d 125 (D.D.C. 2004) (§(b)(4) exemption “serves the interest of the government in operating efficiently and effectively by enabling it to obtain necessary commercial and financial information from private persons and business entities”).

However, Exception 6, for “personal and medical files,” has so far only been applied to individuals. For example, in Multi Ag Media LLC v. Dept. of Agriculture, 515 F.3d 1224 (D.D.C. 2008), the Court stated that “Exemption 6 “has not been extended to protect the privacy interests of businesses or corporations”. Of course, this statement does not necessarily mean that Exception 6 might not also one day be extended to cover corporations as well.
Similar laconic statements have been made about Exception 7(C). However, the restriction of Exception 7(C) to individuals has now been soundly rejected by the 3rd Circuit.
The case is AT&T, Inc. v. FCC, 3rd Cir., No. 08-4024 (Sept. 22, 2009). AT&T had participated in a federal program administered by the FCC called E-Rate. Under this program, AT&T provided telecommunications equipment to elementary and secondary schools and then billed the government for the cost. In August 2004, AT&T discovered that it might have overcharged the government for work for a Connecticut school district. It voluntarily reported the matter and the FCC conducted an investigation. The matter was resolved, like many FCC enforcement actions, with a consent decree.
During the course of the investigation, the FCC ordered AT&T to produced invoices, internal emails and billing information, responses to interrogatories, names of employees involved in the alleged overbilling, and AT&T’s own assessment of the extent to which its employees’ actions violated its internal code of conduct.

In 2005, a trade association of AT&T’s competitors submitted a FOIA request that demanded “all pleadings and correspondence” in the FCC’s AT&T E-rate investigation file. The FCC collected the documents that AT&T had produced. AT&T objected to the disclosure based on Exception 7(C).
The FCC rejected AT&T’s objection on public policy grounds. The FCC argued that a corporation lacks personal privacy under FOIA Exception 7(C). A corporation might have privacy interests in other contexts, such as under Fourth Amendment search and seizure law and under the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure (e.g., for trade secrets). However, those privacy interests had no bearing on Exception 7(C), which was primarily enacted to protect key players in an investigation from the “literal embarrassment and danger” than an individual would suffer, rather than the “more abstract danger” that a corporation might suffer.”
On appeal, the 3rd Circuit disagreed. The 3rd Circuit’s reasoning was based on simple statutory construction grounds: Exception 7(C) shields from disclosure, “records or information compiled for law enforcement purposes” to the extent that the production “could reasonably be expected to constitute an unwarranted invasion of personal privacy.” FOIA does not define “personal privacy.” But it does specifically define “person” to include “an individual, partnership, corporation, association, or public or private organization other than an agency.” 5 U.S.C. § 551(2). The 3rd Circuit reasoned that “[i]t would be very odd indeed for an adjectival form of a defined term not to refer back to that defined term.” Moreover, when Congress wanted to limit a FOIA exception just to individuals, it specifically did so — as in Exception 7(F), which exempts law enforcements records from disclosure to protect the “life and safety of any individual.” Accordingly, the 3rd Circuit found that Exception 7(C) can be applied to business corporations like AT&T.

While the 3rd Circuit did not rule on policy grounds, it noted that there were solid policy grounds for extending the reach of Exception 7(C) to corporations: “Corporations, like human beings, are routinely involved in law enforcement investigations. Corporations, like human beings, face public embarrassment, harassment, and stigma because of their involvement. Reading “personal privacy” to exclude corporations would disserve Exception 7(C)’s purpose of encouraging corporations – like human beings — to cooperate and be forthcoming in investigations.”
While this ruling was a victory for corporate privacy rights, it was a victory only in principle. Because the FCC had rejected AT&T’s request for an exemption on purely statutory grounds, it had never made a factual determination as to whether the records in question would have qualified for Exception 7(C). Accordingly, the 3rd Circuit remanded the case to the FCC for a reconsideration as to whether the requested documents qualified for the exception.
This ruling provides corporations with one more arrow in their quiver that they can use to protect corporation documents from competitors or other who might do them harm.
David johnson is a business lawyer whose practice focuses on litigation and other issues relating to digital media and consumer electronics companies. David can be contacted at (310) 785-5371 or DJohnson@jmbm.com.

 

nlrb

NLRB Ruling Opens Door to College Athletes Unionizing

nlrbIn a recent ruling that may have far-flung repercussions which settle on college gridirons across the nation, the National Labor Relations Board, NLRB, ruled that Northwestern University football players who get certain scholarships have the right to unionize. The ruling, which means that the college’s football players should be considered employees has received national attention. Some of the more important aspects have been ignored by the media.

College Football is Profitable

The ruling looked at the ledger sheet for Northwestern University and released its findings on the cost structure of the sports program. While many observers have felt that a football program, like that at Northwestern, may be money-losers, the football program actually created revenue for the school to the tune of $30.1 million. With expenses coming in at $21.7 million, the school made a cool profit of $8.5 million off of the football program.All of the previous claims that allowing the team to unionize would force the school to shut the program down, flailed in the face of basic finances. Closing the football program would hit the school with too much lost revenue.

Football Players Make Significant Time Commitment

The NLRB made plain that football at Northwestern is not a leisure time activity, but more like a job. In the ruling, on page 6, the NLRB points out that the players spend 45-50 hours each week on activities related to football, including travel time for games. The ruling points out that players are required to skip class on Friday’s to travel for away games, creating a problem for any attempts to register for classes.

College Maintains Control of Players

Many collegiate football fans don’t understand the level of “big brother” treatment which some colleges exercise over their players. Even when football is not in season, players at Northwestern have very few personal freedoms. First and second year students are required to reside on campus while upperclassman have to submit their lease to the coaching staff for approval prior to moving into off-campus housing.All Northwestern players must give information about the car they drive and are limited on what they can say on their personal social media accounts.

Sports Over Scholastics

Another disturbing aspect of the NLRB decision is its revelation of how athletics and academics impact each other. While the NCAA enjoys promoting the myth of the student-athlete, players at Northwestern are discouraged from pursuing the more rigorous academic regimen. Kain Colter, Northwestern quarterback said that his coaches suggested he forgo taking a pre-med course one semester because it would interfere with morning practices.

Northwestern University Engages in Interstate Commerce

One of the most ignored legal conclusions from the ruling is the finding that the college’s football program engages actively in interstate commerce. The National Collegiate Athletic Association has long maintained the position that it is immune from antitrust scrutiny because it does not participate in commerce, and court decisions in two federal circuits have seemed to agree. The NLRB rejected that argument in its ruling.

Employer (Northwestern University) Sells Merchandise

Jerseys with a player’s name and number, bobble head dolls based on player’s likenesses and other memorabilia are sold at home and away games. This is relevant to the variety of antitrust cases currently filed against the NCAA. One of the more prominent cases being heard is the litigation where the NCAA has denied the sale of team jerseys with player’s numbers represent actual likenesses.

With much more discussion, and possibly courtroom time, to come, the NLRB ruling may not be the last word. But what it said in releasing its finding, does suggest that people pay attention. Especially colleges.

Things to Consider Before Blowing the Whistle

whistleblower

Even before Edward Snowden became an NSA whistleblower, people have often reported their companies for dangerous and fraudulent activity. While too lengthy to completely report here, a recent settlement against a California nursing home highlights some of the ins-and-outs of whistle blowing. The lessons learned is valuable information for anyone considering reporting their employer to a federal agency.

A nursing home operator in Mission Viejo has agreed to pay $48 million to settle accusations that it billed Medicare for medical procedures that were unnecessary. Two therapists had accused Ensign Group of permitting the rehabilitation therapy at half-a-dozen nursing facilities in California from 1999 until 2011.

The two whistleblowers, who have both since left Ensign, told officials with the Department of Justice that the company provided therapy to patients whose diagnoses did not call for it. While the company’s goal was old fashioned — greed, the whistleblowers will receive a portion of the $48 million fine.

The false claims were submitted by Atlantic Memorial Healthcare in Long Beach and other locations where Ensign has facilities throughout California. Stuart Delery, assistant attorney general said that nursing facility that place their own (financial) interests above the interests of their patients would be held accountable. “We will continue to advocate for the appropriate use of Medicare funds and the proper care of our senior citizens,” he said.

Ensign Group has denied any wrong doing and claimed to have settled to avoid the uncertainty and expense of protracted litigation. The prosecutor in the case credited the two whisleblowers involved for shedding light on the long-term fraud.

Are You a Potential Whistleblower?

If you’re thinking of engaging in whistle blowing, there are some things you need to keep in mind. Finding an attorney skilled in whistleblower laws before you take any action can save you grief later. Here are some tips to keep in mind if you’re considering taking action against your employer.

Find an Attorney

An attorney can tell you what activities are, and are not, protected by existing whistleblower laws. Be sure to use the internet and research online sources about Federal and state laws. Find out what agency will likely be responsible to act on your reports concerning an alleged violation.

Document

Keep a record of events to use as evidence to support your reporting of a violation. Be sure to include copies of all incriminating documentation. Keep a detailed report showing conversations about the violations, who you spoke with and when you spoke with them.

Employee Records

Gather copies of all your personnel files. Before you file a claim as a whistleblower, be sure to visit the human resource department for your records. In order to support firing you, some employers may try to change information in your file after you’ve filed a claim.

Prove

You will need to prove that the employer has acted against you for reporting misconduct. Before you can qualify for whistleblower protection, your employer must have acted, or retaliated, against you. Actions forbidden to the employer in retaliation for whistle blowing may include firing, demotion and generally any activity that could cost you money.

File

Be sure to file the claim with a lawyer’s help. Claims can be made in writing, faxed or orally, depending on what agency to whom you are reporting. Act immediately so the statute of limitations won’t run out.

Stay in Touch

Maintain open communication with your attorney even after you’ve filed. You may find that you are entitled to a settlement or have the option to file a civil claim and an attorney can best advise you on followup actions needed.

NYPD Won’t Allow the Public to See the Handbook Spelling Out the Freedom of Information Law

NYPDThe New York City Police Department’s policies dealing with Freedom of Information records requests are being kept secret. The handbook that guides the NYPD, and would inform the public, regarding operating policies and procedures is kept closed and unavailable based on certain regulations that forbid exposing.

A reporter, Shawn Musgrave, tired to see the NYPD’s handbook and was denied access. The New York State Freedom of Information Law allows for the release of certain public records. Musgrave’s request was apparently lawful under state law. Musgrave says the letter he received included this the explanation the records officer refused disclosure due to statues which prohibited revealing information of an attorney-client privilege. The letter, which Musgrave received February 28, was in response to a request submitted in December 2013.

In 2013, reporters found  that the NYPD has stamped “secret” on departmental records  that it wanted to keep from being released to the public. Arbitrarily stamping a document with a secret classification is not legally binding in New York State.

Sources say that the NYPD has consistently lost court battles over the issue of avoiding simple records requests. The requests have been filed by many groups including reporters, activists and citizens. Some of the more famous battles the NYPD has lost happened when a judge compelled the department to provide statistics on the city’s unconstitutional stop-and-frisk law, handgun applications and hate crimes.

The executive director of the advocacy group, NY Committee on Open Government, Robert Freeman, called the handbook in question a “basic material” which the police department has no justification to hide from public reading.

It is in the public’s interest to know how the NYPD functions,” Freeman said. “If this guide represents the policy of the department, it is not privileged.

With his request for information turned down again, Musgrave intends to pursue litigation. Before being elected mayor last year, Bill de Blasio gave the department an “F” for their ignoring requests under the Freedom of Information Law. Only one other agency did as bad on the Public Advocate’s Transparency Report Card.

While encouraging agencies to post frequently requested information online, de Blasio also said that said that agencies that flagrantly fail to follow the law should be fined. De Blasio’s path to the mayor’s office last year was paved with transparency demands. Since being elected, de Blasio has been criticized by advocacy groups for not living up to his openness pledge. During his first month as mayor, de Blasio was taken to task by some groups for meeting behind closed doors with the American Israel Public Affairs Committee, a powerful lobbying group in the city. De Blasio has also had closed door meetings with developers and federal government staff causing some grief for transparency advocates.

Newly appointed NYPD commissioner, Bill Bratton, has spoken in favor of transparency. Bratton stated that he would ensure collaboration between police and the public to a level “unlike anything” that the city has seen.

There should be no secrets in the NYPD,” he said in front of the Citizens Crime Commission in February. “We’re going to do more to open up the organization.”

In the autumn of  2013, the NYPD brass ordered precincts to stop giving out crime data to the media. The precincts were told to redirect reports to a central public information officer.

Some see the overall policy as being further indication of the department’s antagonism towards public accountability.

Christopher Dunn, associate legal director of the New York Civil Liberties Union, said during the waning days of Mayor Bloomberg’s administration that he expected to see the department take a new approach to transparency. Pointing forward to January when de Blasio would take office, Dunn said the new policy would benefit the press and public in general.

Why More Businesses Choose to Resolve Business Disputes Through Arbitration?

A dispute regarding your business is extremely disruptive and can divert your attention from your customers as well as causing disruption of your services due to the other party’s breach or failure to deliver. Disputes can also negatively affect your business reputation and image in the community and create animosity and hostility between you and the other party that is involved in the dispute.

When disputes arise, you need a New York commercial litigation attorney to help you resolve the matter through negotiation, alternative dispute resolution or litigating the matter in court. However, many businesses are choosing to use alternative dispute resolution methods such as arbitration because it is a more cost effective method to resolve business disputes avoiding lengthy and costly ligation. Arbitration also helps to reduce the costs and time of appeal.

Arbitration can be used for matters regarding contracts, business fraud, torts and misrepresentation, breach of fiduciary duty, vendor disputes, partnership disputes, real estate and business lease disputes. Both small and large businesses find arbitration a preferred method to resolve their business legal dispute problems. .

How Arbitration Works

The parties choose a neutral third party to act as the arbitrator to make a decision on the case. This means that the decision arrived upon by the arbitrator is binding. The arbitration is handled outside the formal courtroom usually at the offices of the arbitrator. The procedure is less formal. The parties present and argue their case before the arbitrator rather than a jury and/or judge. Arbitration is much faster than waiting for a court hearing date so you can get back to doing business sooner. The arbitrator’s decision is confidential. In fact, more business contracts these days require the parties to choose arbitration as the preferred dispute method recognizing the advantages and savings to the parties by using arbitration.

Other Dispute Methods

Mediation is another form of dispute method that businesses use to resolve their differences. The difference between arbitration and mediation is that the mediator does not make a legally binding decision like the arbitrator. The commercial mediator just brings the parties together so that they discuss their differences and come to a mutually agreeable decision in resolving their issues. If they are unable to come to a resolution, the parties can still go to court and litigate the matter with the help of a New York commercial litigation attorney or settle at a later date.