Welcome and Land Acknowledgement
Graham J. Underwood — Legal Services Branch, Ministry of Attorney General, Victoria
The Principles of eDiscovery Practice
- Sedona Canada
 
- BC Electronic Evidence Directive
 
- Ontario Rules of Civil Procedure for eDiscovery
 
- Uniform Law Conference of Canada
 
Crystal O’Donnell — CEO and Senior Counsel, Heuristica Discovery Counsel LLP, Toronto
Rule 7-1 Disclosure (The Legal Side)
- the scope of the obligation to disclose
 
- the Rule
 
- proportionality with electronically stored documents
 
- what is sufficient?
 
- legal obligations—and professional ethics aspect
 
Jonathan G. Penner — Ministry of Attorney General, Victoria
BREAK
Disclosure and Production of Electronic Documents (The Operational Side)
- sources and where to look
 
- defensible collection
 
- preserving the integrity of data
 
- reviewing e-docs for relevance and privilege
 
- precautions/litigation holds
 
- a defensible system of disclosure—documenting what's been done
 
Crystal O’Donnell — CEO and Senior Counsel, Heuristica Discovery Counsel LLP, Toronto
Brian Pel — COO and Senior Counsel, Heuristica Discovery Counsel LLP, Toronto
Using Electronic Documents at Trial
- pre-trial authentication of Electronically Stored Information (ESI)
 
- fundamental concepts of admissibility
 
- ESI and real evidence
 
- ESI as documentary evidence
 
- ESI as demonstrative evidence
 
- practical aspects
 
Graham J. Underwood — Legal Services Branch, Ministry of Attorney General, Victoria
NETWORKING LUNCH (provided)
Ethical Issues with Respect to Electronic Evidence
- role of counsel—legal advice in context of disclosure obligations/privilege
 
- properly advising the client with respect to disclosure
 
- ethical issues—preserving privilege while using outside vendors
 
Crystal O’Donnell — CEO and Senior Counsel, Heuristica Discovery Counsel LLP, Toronto
Challenging eDiscovery and Electronic Evidence
- applications to compel disclosure of ESI—social media and other sources of ESI
 
- requesting and disclosing metadata, ESI in native form
 
- preserving ESI for use as evidence
 
- challenging the admissibility of electronic evidence
 
- authenticity vs. reliability concerns
 
- admissibility vs. weight
 
Komal Jatoi — Dentons Canada LLP, Vancouver
David Wotherspoon — Dentons Canada LLP, Vancouver
BREAK
Digital Forensics
- forensics: acquiring data, preserving data
 
- digital forensics in criminal law—from child pornography to digital fraud
 
Ken Lew — Manager, IT Forensics and Litigation Support, MNP, Vancouver
Expert Evidence in the Use of Electronic Evidence
- meeting the legal requirements for admissibility
 
- when you need to call in an expert
 
- proving authenticity/reliability—expert evidence needed? 
 
- integrity—Canada Evidence Act
 
Moderator: Graham J. Underwood — Legal Services Branch, Ministry of Attorney General, Victoria
Jonathan G. Penner — Ministry of Attorney General, Victoria
David Wotherspoon — Dentons Canada LLP, Vancouver
Closing Remarks
Graham J. Underwood — Legal Services Branch, Ministry of Attorney General, Victoria