Magna Legal Services Acquires Kim Tindall & Associates

Magna Legal Services Adds Kim Tindall & Associates to the Greatest One-Stop-Shop for Legal Support Services

Magna Legal Services (Magna LS) and Kim Tindall & Associates (KTA), two ALM award winning court reporting and medical record retrieval industry leaders, announced today the combination of their firms. KTA was founded in 2009 by Kim Tindall. The two companies will combine operations on April 1, 2021.

With more than 500 employees, 3,500 court reporters, 5,000 interpreters and 40 litigation consultants in 20 locations across the U.S., Magna LS and KTA together will be one of the largest litigation support and consulting firms based on both size and services offered.

Both companies are known for providing exceptional service to clients. The combined company is designed for customers — a company with increased capabilities and geographic reach coupled with a commitment to delivering outstanding service. “The combination will create 80 years of industry experience and match strength with strength in both our court reporting and medical record retrieval divisions. Additionally, our KTA clients will now gain access to a wide variety of litigation support and consulting services. I am very excited for our clients, staff and court reporters,” said Kim Tindall, President of KTA.

Tony Vaglica, COO of Magna LS, will be working closely with the KTA team. He added, “The addition of five KTA offices (San Antonio, Austin, Dallas, Houston and New Orleans) along with their team of freelance court reporters will streamline operations throughout Texas and Louisiana.” Magna LS has existing offices in Houston and New Orleans.

Founding Partner and Executive Vice President of Sales at Magna LS, Peter Hecht, added,

“The big winners in this merger are the clients from both Magna LS and KTA. We will be able to increase service levels to our Magna base in Texas while offering new powerful litigation support tools for the existing KTA clientele.”

Both Magna LS and KTA built their businesses to support clients from Discovery to Trial.

Magna Legal Services’ CEO, Mark Williams, is excited about the addition of KTA as well. “We are delighted to welcome the KTA team to the Magna family,” Williams said. “Kim and her team have extensive industry experience and have created one of the fastest growing companies in both the court reporting and record retrieval sector. Their success shows through their highly-positive customer reviews and ratings, as well as their rapid growth over the past few years.”

End-to-End Litigation Support Services:


Trials Open in Philadelphia with New Protocols

In-person trials are back in Philadelphia!

The Philadelphia Court of Common Pleas released new protocols, including on how counsel must present evidence at trial —

Counsel must display all documents and other evidence on a television or projection screen unless otherwise permitted by the presiding trial judge

— Philadelphia Court of Common Pleas

View all new protocols here

Trial Presentation


Whether it’s to a jury or a judge, it is vital to deliver your story to your audience the way they are best able to process it. Strategic use of presentation technology in the courtroom can make all the difference in trial.

  • Presenters who use visuals are more effective and make a better impression

  • Use of visual communication promotes group consensus because it helps members of a group to process and structure information in the same way

  • Visuals shape interpretation and perception of evidence and aid in the decision making process


Believe video evidence presentation technologies help them to understand the witness better

Believe video evidence presentation technologies improve their ability to question witnesses

Believe video evidence presentation technologies help them to understand the testimony better

Courtroom Technology

Magna’s Trial Technicians are the best in the business with significant experience in CCP! Let our Trial Techs take the stress out of your trial technology needs— so you can focus on your case.

We can tailor technology to fit your needs, from a simple presentation you can operate yourself, to a complex staging of video, animation and document enlargements operated by one of our seasoned on-site trial technicians.

Magna consultants use the latest industry leading software and multimedia technology to instantly display all of your trial documents, photos, deposition testimonies, demonstratives and videos etc. We can manipulate the materials in real-time during your presentation to best convey your message:

  • Zooming in on documents and photos to enlarge key text and visual elements
  • Highlighting key sections of documents to further accent key language
  • Annotation display on the presentation screen in various colors, allowing the attorney or witness to interact with the exhibits
  • Synchronized deposition video to text display


An experienced trial presentation consultant is more than a technician. Our staff will become an essential part of your trial team assisting and advising in every aspect of the trial process from the organization of documents to the final story telling through strategic deployment of visuals.

Contact us anytime for FREE consultation and let us help you meet your trial technology needs!

Fill out the contact form below, or call us anytime at 866.624.6221

Court Re-Opening Tracker

Which courts are opening? Closing? What are the new restrictions?

Magna’s litigation consulting team has been tracking the reopening of courts throughout the country.
Stay up to date with the latest court activity by receiving weekly updates from Magna’s free Court Re-Opening Tracker.

COVID-19 Fears and the Juror Experience During This Time

COVID and the Juror Experience

Measures to address COVID safety while resuming jury trials will evolve based on what the courts and litigants learn in the early days, and on the surge and decrease of COVID rates in different venues.

Article By Hiliary Remick

PUBLISHED IN THE LEGAL INTELLIGENCER ON 2/16/2021

Without question, COVID-19 has overturned familiar patterns in every field including the legal system. When it comes to jury trials, courts around the country are trying to adapt to conduct fair and effective trials while keeping jurors, litigants and court staff safe from infection. As U.S. District Judge Karen Caldwell of Eastern District of Kentucky described her efforts to conduct a COVID-era trial, the process can be “like building an airplane while you’re flying it.” Measures to address COVID safety while resuming jury trials will evolve based on what the courts and litigants learn in the early days, and on the surge and decrease of COVID rates in different venues.

What are the practical implications for litigants of bringing jurors to the courtroom for in-person trials? And perhaps more important, what are the psychological effects on jurors, not just because of the COVID-19 pandemic, but because of the safety measures that are changing how trials work?

Jurors will see firsthand the practical safety precautions at every point of contact with the court, starting with the summons for jury duty and initial letters addressing new rules and possible hardship issues. Jurors might be vetted differently, for example receiving a questionnaire from the court addressing COVID-related risk or hardship. Likely screening measures include temperature checks and questioning at entry, mask and social distancing requirements, barriers, additional cleaning and special handling of exhibits and other materials. Many courts have also reworked outdoor air access and air exchange systems in addition to reconfiguring courtrooms by relocating juror seats and witness boxes and adding plexiglass barriers. For jury selection, trial courts may deploy jurors in smaller groups across separate, larger rooms, and often confine them to the first floor of the courthouse.

Every new decision made about how to organize prospective jurors and any information jurors receive from the court system about COVID-19, including  summons or initial questionnaires, could influence jurors’ trial reactions—reassuring some and rattling others.

This means that lawyers will face subtle but critical problems as they try to communicate with jurors during a civil trial weighed down with COVID-19 safety measures in place. Consider some of the other possible changes in the juror experience:

  • Jurors might object outright to being summoned for jury duty at all if their COVID-19 anxiety level is high. Jurors already tepid toward the idea of jury service might now have new doubts and questions about their health risks. Depending on their social and political views, jurors might feel resentful that the safety measures they do see are either excessive or inadequate.
  • Witnesses, including experts, may be more likely to be presented via live video feed instead of testifying in person. In addition to reducing both COVID-19 exposure and travel costs, jurors in both virtual and in-person trials conducted during the pandemic have reported that this format—as opposed to observing in-person witness testimony given through a mask and on the opposite end of the courtroom—often enhances their ability to visually assess a witness’s facial expressions and other nonverbal cues, which allows them to more easily and accurately evaluate a witness’s overall communication effectiveness and credibility. Some jurors may speculate as to why a particular witness was not physically present in court when jurors are required to be there. To address this speculation and to ameliorate any associated resentment jurors may harbor, litigants might request a  judicial admonishment at the outset of trial regarding the fact that some witnesses will testify remotely in order to reduce the number of individuals allowed in the courtroom and thereby minimize COVID-19 exposure for all.
  • Jurors could also be frustrated by their inability to see and gauge facial expressions of masked lawyers and witnesses as to credibility and demeanor. They might fail to develop a rapport with masked witnesses or attorneys, for example.
  • Where the court allows counsel to unmask at certain points (e.g., during oral argument) in the trial, jurors might question why the attorneys don’t have to follow the same rules and face the same dangers as them. As with remote witnesses, this could raise juror concerns about inconsistency and unfairness in the courtroom.


What can lawyers do to defuse juror concern or anxiety as we feel our way forward? Reassure jurors. Communicate with the court, counsel and jurors about the special measures in place. Acknowledge juror fears or doubts and honor their service in an exceptional time.

  • In pretrial conferences, encourage the court to make clear how voir dire and all courtroom contact will go for the sake of predictability for everyone in the courtroom, including jurors.
  • Recognize that courts are exploring creative solutions to reduce risk to all trial participants, and litigants must be ready to adapt. For example, in several jurisdictions, courts have required virtual jury selection followed by an in-person trial in the courtroom or an alternative space. While virtual jury selection is not a first choice when it comes to getting a feel for juror demeanor, it may be unavoidable in some jurisdictions.
  • Capitalize on any opportunity to include a COVID-related question or two in any pretrial questionnaire your judge might present to jurors. Learn what you can about individual jurors’ COVID-19 issues and concerns that need to be uncovered. Do highlight any special health concerns or vulnerabilities unique to a particular juror’s risk. Do any of the answers telegraph a reluctance to serve?
  • Look for opportunities during voir dire to ask one or two COVID-related questions. For example, how much personal impact has COVID-19 had on you? Has COVID-19 raised more concerns for you related to the economy, or related to your health or your family’s health?
  • Reinforce the judge’s guidance about jury service. Talk about the right to a jury trial, which is an integral part of our legal system, and about how important their service is, especially during a time of challenge for our jurors. Jurors can be compared to essential workers and reminded that the special measures in the courtroom are designed to keep jurors safe.
  • Prepare to hear more jurors request excusals on the basis of COVID-related hardship for themselves or their families. This can result in a lower yield from the pool and may require a larger pool as well as more time for the jury selection process. You should also allow for a higher risk of losing jurors during the trial and perhaps consider seating more alternates.
  • Reassure jurors by showing that you and your client take seriously—and follow—the rules, and that your team appreciates and champions the efforts of everyone in the courtroom to stay safe.
  • Recognize that some people just may not be able to get past their fears based on their psychological makeup or personal challenges and obligations at home—and that they should be excused for hardship.
  • Let jurors know you recognize their experience and realize it is not easy. Acknowledge their extra challenges of seeing, hearing, and feeling safe. Consider a clear face shield that at least allows jurors to see your expressions, even if you can’t see theirs.
  • Ask the court to explain any special arrangements whereby witnesses are remote, or counsel is unmasked, at certain points in the trial. Suggest a  specific instruction for jurors along these lines: “The special COVID-19 measures you have seen in the courtroom, including for example remote witnesses and counsel addressing jurors without masks during certain times in the trial, are measures the court has required, are necessary for the smooth administration of the trial, and are not the fault of any litigant in the case. You are not to consider those measures in evaluating your verdict in this case. The court has asked the parties to assist in reducing exposure for everyone in the courtroom, including for you as jurors, by encouraging remote testimony. This helps reduce exposure to witnesses who may otherwise have to travel in airplanes and through large airports, which could put all people inside the courtroom at greater risk.”

Conclusion

Showing jurors that you mean to work with the court and other parties to make the trial run smoothly through a combination of sacrifice and creativity will help build trust for jurors that they are participating in a fair process. Above all, make sure that your case is one that jurors can believe is consequential and plausible, so they know that their sacrifice in coming to the courthouse during the pandemic was made for a good reason.

Click to Read Article on Law.com >>

Court Reporting Philadelphia

Court Reporting Services — Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

Magna understands that a perfect deposition is the key to any winning case. To assure you every advantage at trial, we invest in the best and most experienced court reporters and arm them with the latest technology. We offer nationwide court reporting and 24-hour scheduling, assuring you reliable service at competitive rates.

We offer:

  • Nationwide Internet Scheduling
  • Interactive Internet Depositions
  • Realtime Court Reporting Services
  • Rough Disks
  • Videoconferencing
  • Conference Rooms
  • Complex Case Management
  • ASCll Disks
  • Condensed Transcripts

Court Reporting for Virtual / Zoom Depositions

With Magna LitigationVision (MLV), you can depose a witness from anywhere in the world. Magna provides clients with always reliable court reporting services and REAL-TIME video access to depositions, mediations, arbitrations, hearings, meetings and other proceedings. During the COVID crisis, we’re offering our MLV platform for FREE with a Magna court reporter.

  • Schedule a Court Reporter or Interpreter to Join Remotely
  • Connect Using Computers, Tablets or Even Smartphones
  • Display & Annotate Your Exhibits
  • Monitoring & Instant Tech Support
  • Free Platform Training Prior to Proceeding
  • Breakout Rooms (with remote facilitation)
  • Free Custom Virtual Backgrounds
  • Certified Trial Directors/ Exhibit Managers (MLV+)
  • Record Entire Session (mp4 format)
  • Reduced Costs & Time Efficient

Magna’s state-of-the-art video deposition services are complete with digitization and synchronization. Video testimony is one of the most effective tools for witness presentation and impeachment in the courtroom, and also makes your deposition review straightforward and more cost-effective than traditional paper review.


Tech Support for Virtual Depositions

You can be confident in hosting your event remotely— Magna will test equipment before the session and our tech support will be available from start to finish. The platform is fully encrypted & secure
Help is always just a click away. You could use MLV’s chat feature to ask tech support any questions you have and get immediate help.

Complete Deposition/ Exhibit Management

Magna LitigationVision Plus (MLV+) will provide you with full session management powered by one of Magna’s seasoned trial technicians. Combining years of courtroom tech experience with Magna’s virtual platform, MLV+ managers provide seamless support by:

  • Presenting exhibits, demonstratives and videos
  • Real-time management of annotations, zooming, blow-ups, highlights and markings
  • Creating and managing break-out rooms

Equipment Rental

Don’t have the equipment? No problem! Magna offers a state-of-the-art flight pack system: iPad & stand, bluetooth speaker, conference phone, hotspot & extension cable. We ship these flight packs hundreds of times per year, often to last-minute events.

Professional Virtual Backgrounds

Put your best face forward, no matter where you’re streaming from. Magna’s team of talented designers will create custom virtual backgrounds tailored to your firm’s branding. For FREE. Choose a design, and we’ll customize it with your firm’s logo and colors.

Certified Legal Videography

Certified legal videographers (CLV) are available for all MLV events and have the ability to swear in witnesses.
The videographer will provide you with an official copy of the event, for both on and off record.

Ready to Schedule a Deposition?

You can schedule court reporting services 24/7 online or by contacting us at [email protected] or 866.624.6221.

The GameStop Stock, Reddit, Robinhood Events Explained

Explained: The GameStop Stock, Reddit, Robinhood Events

Magna’s expert graphics team focuses on providing clients with demonstratives that effectively communicate technical, financial, medical and other complex information. Our experience, gained from thousands of hours of trial work, allows us to skillfully manage any presentation situation, from a high-stakes trial to a one-day mediation.

Click to read more about Litigation Graphics Services

Plaintiff Attorneys Often Use ‘Reptile Theory’ to Win Nuclear Trucking Jury Verdicts, Experts Say

In 2009, two prominent trial attorneys introduced a litigation tactic known as the “reptile theory,” a strategy that aims to stoke fear and anger in the minds of jurors and, ultimately, compel them to hand down massive verdicts in civil lawsuits. In trucking accident lawsuits, it’s a method plaintiff lawyers have deployed in pursuit of so-called “nuclear” jury verdicts, those resulting in judgments of $10 million or more against motor carriers.

“In trucking cases, the reptile strategy is almost a given,” Dr. Rachel York Colangelo, Magna’s National Managing Director of Jury Consulting, told Transport Topics. “And it’s been very effective with jurors.”

She added, “There are buzzwords that will be coming in cases that will always be a red flag — words like ‘safety,’ ‘training,’ ‘community,’ ‘accountability.’ They let you know that the plaintiff attorney is headed down the reptile road.”

On that road, they’ll typically examine not just the accident, but also a carrier’s safety profiles and procedures, ranging from driver hiring, training and supervision to truck maintenance and use of motor carrier data.

Click here to read the full Transport Topics article, originally published on 1/19/2021.

The Few Patent Jury Trials In 2020 Led To Enormous Verdicts

The few patent jury trials that were able to take place in 2020 had some of the largest verdicts of the past decade. Magna’s National Managing Director of Jury Consulting, Rachel York Colangelo, Ph.D., spoke with Law360 about the tendency of juries “to slap the defendant in a way that gets their attention” when they believe corporations have intentionally acted unethically.

In her article, published on 12/22/2020, Law360’s Dani Kass wrote:

The COVID-19 pandemic saw patent trial after patent trial delayed and ultimately pushed into 2021, but the few jury trials that did go forward across the nation had some of the largest verdicts of the last decade.

This year featured three jury verdicts that surpassed $500 million, along with a nearly $2 billion judgment from a bench trial. On top of that, Apple paid off a judgment worth nearly a half-billion dollars, and a $752 million verdict against Kite Pharma from 2019 surpassed $1 billion when final judgment was entered in April.

Click here to read the full Law360 article.

Effectively Communicating With Jurors In A Patent Case

Webinar originally aired live on 12.16.2020

Law.com covered a great webinar that aired live last week, hosted by Magna Legal Services and Winston & Strawn.

“I felt like I learned more about IP trial strategy in one hour Wednesday from Alan Albright, Tom Melsheimer, Matt Powers and Rachel York Colangelo than I did during the rest of 2020″, Law.com reporter, Scott Graham stated.

“Maybe it was Winston & Strawn partner Mike Tomasulo‘s easygoing style of moderating, or maybe it was Tensegrity Law partner Matt Powers‘ tranquil Zoom background. Whatever it was, Winston and Magna Legal Services‘ webinar, “Effectively Communicating With Jurors in a Patent Case,” had the feel of IP trial veterans sharing tricks of the trade over cocktails—with some jury research science thrown in for good measure.”

Click here to read key takeaways in the full Law.com article

Moderated by:
– Michael A Tomasulo, Partner, Winston & Strawn

Panelists include:
– Judge Alan D Albright, District Court Judge, Western District of Texas
– Tom Melsheimer, Dallas Managing Partner, Winston & Strawn
– Matt Powers, Partner, Tensegrity Law Group
– Rachel York Colangelo, Ph.D., National Managing Director Jury Consulting, Magna Legal Services

Hosted by:
– Peter Hecht, Partner & Executive Vice President of Sales, Magna Legal Services
– Meredith Cherry, Business Development Manager, Magna Legal Services

Click here to view more upcoming webinars and conferences by Magna

Epstein Case: Ghislaine Maxwell’s Deposition Transcript Unsealed

The 2016 transcript pertains to a defamation lawsuit filed in New York and was produced by Magna Legal Service’s Court Reporting.

Read Ghislaine Maxwell’s original deposition here.
PDF retrieved from The New York Times.

Magna Legal Services again gains national recognition for its good work in providing court reporting services in the deposition of Ghislaine Maxwell.

We are proud of our court reporters who give us the reputation as the international go-to court reporting and litigation consulting company for large, important and well-known cases.

Magna made its way into all of the top news stories through Ghislaine Maxwell’s deposition transcript that just got unsealed yesterday morning, October 22nd.

People can now read the 2016 transcript, which is all over the press and twitter, and has Magna’s logo on almost every page!. 

No matter the case, Magna always brings that same award-winning reliability.

Click to learn more about Magna’s in-person court reporting and virtual deposition services.