The upcoming podcast from our sister department group discusses a significant shift in how legal trials are prepared, indicating a departure from past methods. This transformation is driven by the emergence of advanced tools, which are fundamentally changing the approach to trial readiness. As a result, a growing disparity is observed between conventional, often experience-based preparation and newer, scientifically-backed methodologies. Relying on outdated, anecdotal strategies is becoming i...
All content for Get in the Game Podcast from Jury Analyst is the property of Brian Panish 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.
The upcoming podcast from our sister department group discusses a significant shift in how legal trials are prepared, indicating a departure from past methods. This transformation is driven by the emergence of advanced tools, which are fundamentally changing the approach to trial readiness. As a result, a growing disparity is observed between conventional, often experience-based preparation and newer, scientifically-backed methodologies. Relying on outdated, anecdotal strategies is becoming i...
California Burning: Holding Utilities Accountable for Wildfire Devastation
Get in the Game Podcast from Jury Analyst
29 minutes
11 months ago
California Burning: Holding Utilities Accountable for Wildfire Devastation
This podcast episode discusses California wildfire litigation, focusing on the legal claims, evidence, and challenges in proving liability against utility companies. Plaintiff attorneys describe common claims (negligence and inverse condemnation), damages (property destruction, landscaping, economic and non-economic losses), and the difficulties of proving liability due to destroyed evidence. The bankruptcy of PG&E is examined as a case study, highlighting the unfairness of the bankruptcy...
Get in the Game Podcast from Jury Analyst
The upcoming podcast from our sister department group discusses a significant shift in how legal trials are prepared, indicating a departure from past methods. This transformation is driven by the emergence of advanced tools, which are fundamentally changing the approach to trial readiness. As a result, a growing disparity is observed between conventional, often experience-based preparation and newer, scientifically-backed methodologies. Relying on outdated, anecdotal strategies is becoming i...