Live Webcast
CC

Electronic Evidence 2025


  • City:
  • Start Date:2025-09-03 13:00:00
  • End Date:2025-09-03 16:15:00
  • Length:
  • Level:Intermediate
  • Topics:Trial Skills

$299.00 ProPass

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Credit States Status Credits Earn credit until

This program is eligible for 3 hours of CLE credit in 60-minute states. In 50-minute states, this program is eligible for 3.6 hours of CLE credit. Credit hours are estimated and are subject to each state’s approval and credit rounding rules.

Overview

In today’s digital-first world, social media, text messages, and electronic signatures are transforming how cases are built and won. This compelling CLE brings together two leading voices in electronic evidence: experienced trial attorney Pete Giglione and legal scholar Wesley Oliver.

Pete will walk attorneys through the latest case law, including landmark decisions like Crumbley, and share proven strategies for obtaining, authenticating, and admitting social media and text messages into evidence in both Pennsylvania and federal courts.

Wesley will turn the spotlight on digital signatures—how they are used in contracts and transactions, the growing risks of fraud, and the crucial role of metadata in authentication. He will provide practical guidance on how to evaluate the reliability of electronic signatures, identify red flags for forgery or manipulation, and admit digital signature evidence in litigation.

Attendees will gain practical insights on:

  • Discovery techniques for social media and text messages
  • Meeting authentication requirements under Rule 901
  • The role of metadata, circumstantial evidence, and expert testimony
  • Legal responsibilities for preserving digital evidence
  • Evaluating and authenticating digital signatures in court
  • Understanding how electronic signatures can be forged or challenged

Whether you’re handling civil litigation or criminal defense, this two-part program equips you with the tools you need to turn everyday digital interactions—and signatures—into admissible courtroom evidence.

Don’t miss this essential program for litigators navigating the evolving landscape of electronic evidence.

Faculty

Prof. Wesley M. Oliver

Prof. Oliver is director of the criminal justice program, and professor of law at Duquesne University School of Law. His teaching and scholarship have examined numerous aspects of criminal law, criminal procedure, and evidence. His multiple books and journal publications have addressed issues of search and seizure, interrogations, material witness detentions, wiretapping, plea bargaining, the doctrine of chances, approaches to defining terms in criminal statutes, and the history of policing. Most recently, he has focused on the light historical context can shed on the appropriate uses of constitutional criminal procedure decisions. In 2018, Oliver published a book, The Prohibition Era and Policing: A Legacy of Misregulation (Vanderbilt Univ. Press 2018), that demonstrates how America’s Noble Experiment played a pivotal role in creating many of the judicially created limits on modern police – and suggests that a system more responsive to concerns of police brutality and wrongful conviction would have been possible had state courts in the 1920s – and the United States Supreme Court in the 1960s – not been so bold in guarding against a distinctly Prohibition-Era concern, illegal searches and seizures. Professor Oliver has presented his current work, an artificial intelligence device to assist police officers in determining whether they have adequate suspicion to search a car during a drug interdiction stop, at national and international conferences on the intersection of computer science and law. He is also working on a popular history of a small Mississippi locale that saw some of the worst civil rights abuses in American history. Kemper County, Mississippi, is best known to lawyers as the location of the infamous tortured interrogation at issue in the Supreme Court case, Brown v. Mississippi (1936) but was already known at that time as the locus of uniquely extreme racial violence, from the ouster of Native Americans that led to its founding, to an extraordinary number of lynchings that doubled any other Mississippi county, to two separate massacres of black citizens that grabbed national headlines. The story of this small county provides a vehicle for describing many aspects of America’s sad history of race relations, from the Trail of Tears, to slavery, to reconstruction, Jim Crow, and the Civil Rights Era. Oliver earned J.S.D. and LL.M. degrees from Yale University and J.D. and B.A. degrees from the University of Virginia. He is licensed to practice law in Tennessee. He began his legal career as a criminal defense lawyer in Nashville and is licensed to practice law in Tennessee.

Peter D. Giglione, Esq.

Attorney Peter D. Giglione has 20 years of legal experience and an extensive winning record in the courtroom. Prior to joining Massa Butler Giglione & Dirlam, ‘Pete’ worked for a large, national law firm, where he tried multiple nursing home abuse and neglect cases and other types of lawsuits in numerous courts. Pete has won millions of Dollars in verdicts and settlements for his clients. While his practice has focused primarily on representing victims of nursing home abuse and neglect and their families, Pete also represents plaintiffs of all ages in other types of cases, including automobile collisions, premises liability, consumer protection, medical malpractice, vaccine injury, and products liability.
Starting in 2010 and continuing through 2017, Pete’s peers voted him as a “Rising Star” in the Pennsylvania Super Lawyers rankings. In 2018, he was named a Pennsylvania Super Lawyer – an honor awarded to no more than 2.5 percent of all practicing attorneys in Pennsylvania. In 2013, he was named a “Top 40 under 40” trial lawyers in the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania by The National Trial Lawyers organization. That same year he was inducted into the prestigious Academy of Trial Lawyers of Allegheny County, an invitation-only group limited to 200 active members.
Pete is licensed to practice law in Pennsylvania, Ohio, and West Virginia. He has successfully argued appeals before the Pennsylvania Superior and Supreme Courts. Pete frequently lectures at Legal Education seminars related to nursing home and medical malpractice cases, and he also speaks at healthcare ethics conferences. He has served as a faculty member of the Pennsylvania Bar Institute, the Allegheny County Bar Association, the Pennsylvania Association for Justice, the University of Pittsburgh Consortium Ethics Program, and in 2012 for the Pennsylvania Conference of State Trial Court Judges.
Pete is currently an adjunct Professor of Law at Duquesne University in Pittsburgh, where he serves as Director of the Trial Advocacy Program, overseeing all Trial Advocacy courses and the law school’s Trial Moot Court Program. He also teaches the Legal Issues in Healthcare course to undergraduates, Masters and Doctorate degree candidates, and Trial Advocacy courses to second and third-year law students, at Duquesne University School of Law.


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