Key Phases of Document Review: Understanding Its Role in Antitrust Cases | PART 1

Document review is a formative component of litigation, especially in complex antitrust and competition law cases. With the various types of antitrust cases such as price fixing, bid rigging, monopolistic practices, and market allocation schemes, documents need to be reviewed for relevance, privilege, or confidentiality. Because antitrust laws involve competition practices, the legal teams must thoroughly examine communications between companies, financial records, and other documents to evaluate whether there were efforts to manipulate market conditions. Antitrust cases also frequently produce extensive amounts of data, so a well-organized and efficient document review process can significantly impact the outcome of a case. This data requires careful and strategic review to ensure compliance with legal standards and uncover key evidence. These cases typically involve reviewing years of internal communications, pricing strategies, sales records, and contracts. Understanding the key phases of document review is fundamental for legal teams to work on the case efficiently.

Phase 1: Identification and Collection of Documents

The first phase of document review involves identifying the relevant documents for the case. With antitrust investigations, this often means gathering internal company communications, emails, financial records, contracts, and other forms of documentation that might shed light on the company’s practices. Given the complexity and scope of antitrust cases, this initial phase often involves vast amounts of data.

Identifying all potentially relevant materials while excluding irrelevant ones can be laborious. Missing key documents could harm a legal team’s position, while including too many irrelevant documents can bog down the review process and risks producing sensitive company data unnecessarily. At this stage, legal teams may use eDiscovery solutions to narrow down the identification process by creating filters for specific keywords or terms related to the case.

Phase 2: Document Processing and Organization

Once the relevant documents have been collected, the next step is to process and organize them. This phase involves categorizing and indexing the documents to make them easier to review. In cases like antitrust litigation, where thousands or even millions of documents may be involved, a systematic approach is essential.

Documents are typically converted into a format that allows for easy searching, tagging, and sorting. The legal team may establish criteria for sorting documents by date, type, or source. Processing also involves checking for duplicates, incomplete files, and other issues that could slow down the review. This ensures that only clean, relevant data is passed on to the next phase.

These initial phases of document review—identification, collection, processing, and organization—are critical in antitrust litigation. Each step supports the legal teams in sifting through vast quantities of data to pinpoint crucial evidence that can clarify complex competitive behaviors. In Part 2, we’ll delve into the later stages of document review, including in-depth analysis and production, which are vital for compliance and strategy. By understanding and refining each of these key phases of document review, legal teams can effectively manage antitrust cases. For support on your antitrust case, contact Baer Reed today.

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