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Electronic Communication “ Litigation Holds” Steven Raskovich University Counsel California State University PSSOA Conference – March 23, 2006
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New Rules that Develop to Govern Electronic Information Are Applicable to Hard Copy
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The “Litigation Hold” Doctrine Applies wherever litigation is “reasonably foreseeable” Requires that a “hold” be placed on all relevant information Risk an adverse inference at trial for any missing information
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When is litigation reasonably foreseeable? Not a bright line A government claim, tort claim, special investigation, or regulatory audit Contractual performance issues A major accident or injury Incident that results in a police report When an employee is terminated Whistleblower and whistleblower retaliation claims Third party requests indemnification A party says that s/he is going to sue
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Other Situations Multiple complaints about the same practice Experience with similar situations Investigations that corroborate complaints Where the party holding information is contemplating its own lawsuit
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Other Considerations There must be actual notice of a specific and definite claim The value of the claim is irrelevant The scope or nature of the claim is irrelevant personal injury cases - 24% intellectual property cases - 20% contract cases - 18% employment cases - 15% other - 23%
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What to do when circumstances call for a “Litigation Hold” Must preserve evidence Interrupt regular document retention/destruction schedules Includes all forms of electronic communication in all locations and forms Must protect against overwriting What to do about “deleted” data? Back-up tapes? Best to have a team to set up a unique plan Must instruct all who hold evidence Must repeat instructions Must hold all evidence until litigation is resolved
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Issues Laptops and home computers People forget – need repeated instructions Failure to do a complete enough inventory at the start – voice information Remember that some information will be “redacted” prior to production Failure to appreciate technical issues - metadata
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Consequences Attorneys’ fees and costs Preclusion of evidence at trial Instructions to jury to draw adverse inference Dismissal or default judgment
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Case Law Coleman Holdings Inc. v. Morgan Stanley - 2005 Failure to coordinate search for backup tapes led to late discovery of more than 2,500 tapes, and partial default judgment, which contributed to a jury verdict of $1.5 billion United States v. Philip Morris USA, Inc. - 2004 Eleven senior executives failed to follow internal procedures for preservation of evidence; court barred witnesses from testifying at trial and imposed total sanctions of $2,750,000 Zubulake v. UBS Warburg -- 2004 Failure to communicate within organization and with counsel led to late production and loss of data, warranted adverse inference instructions; jury returned $29,000,000 verdict
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Lessons Learned Importance of having regular document retention/destruction policies Importance of putting together a team to establish a plan for each unique case Importance of good communication throughout process with the right persons
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The Future The End of the Adversary Discovery Process?
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