Article by Sue Reisinger posted on Law.com, Dec. 5, 2006: “It was June 2000, and Laura Kibbe, then an associate at Kaye Scholer’s New York office, had to deal with e-discovery for the first time. Her client, Pfizer Inc., had just acquired a company whose diabetes drug had been pulled off the market and was being attacked in civil suits. Kibbe, confronting her first mass tort case, had no formal tech background. She recalls that ‘the plaintiffs were already into discovery, making requests for e-mail and databases. I had to figure out how to get [that to them] and what to do with it. And I didn’t even know the language.’”
