Court Rules Failure to Copy Files on Flash Drive Prior to Failure of the Drive Violated Duty to Preserve : Electronic Discovery Law

Wilson v. Thorn Energy, LLC, 2010 WL 1712236 (S.D.N.Y. Mar. 15, 2010)

In this case, the court ordered sanctions for defendants’ failure to preserve relevant data where defendants failed to back up a flash drive containing all relevant financial records and where that data was lost as the result of the flash drive’s failure.

In short, a dispute arose between the parties related to plaintiffs’ loans to and investment in defendants’ petroleum-related project in Africa.  In the course of litigation, plaintiffs sought an accounting of defendants’ use of their funds.

At an initial pretrial conference, defendants’ counsel agreed to provide the accounting.  Despite a subsequent court order compelling its production and defendants’ continued promises to comply, the accounting was never provided.  Seven months after defense counsel promised to provide the accounting, defendants’ 30(b)(6) deponent testified that “all of the LLC’s records concerning the monies that allegedly were sent to Africa had been stored on a USB ‘flash drive’ that she maintained” and that the drive failed in the summer of 2008 – long before the promised production of the accounting.  The deponent further asserted that efforts to recover the information in a useable form were unsuccessful and the drive was eventually discarded.  Accordingly, plaintiff sought an order finding defendants in contempt and for sanctions.

For sanctions to be imposed, plaintiffs needed to show that defendant had a duty to preserve the data, that the data was lost or destroyed with a “culpable state of mind”, and that the evidence was relevant.  As to the first element, the court determined a duty to preserve arose upon plaintiffs’ demand for payment of their money, “well before the flash drive allegedly failed.”  Addressing defendants’ state of mind, the court noted that negligence was sufficient to warrant sanctions and, citing the recent case, Pension Comm. of Univ. of Montreal Pension Plan v. Bank of Am. Secs., LLC, 2010 WL 184312 (S.D.N.Y. Jan. 15, 2010), found that “the failure to collect evidence in a timely manner from a key witness, such as [the 30(b)(6) deponent], constitutes ‘gross negligence or willfulness’” and that “[i]t was consequently at least grossly negligent for the Defendants not to have made a copy of the flash drive before it allegedly failed.”  The lost data was also found to have been relevant.

via Court Rules Failure to Copy Files on Flash Drive Prior to Failure of the Drive Violated Duty to Preserve : Electronic Discovery Law.

Gibson Dunn, Davis Polk Lead as HP Snags Palm | The American Lawyer

Image representing Hewlett-Packard as depicted...
Image via CrunchBase

Hewlett-Packard has swooped in and acquired Palm Inc. for $1.2 billion amid rampant speculation that Asian companies were the leading contenders to acquire the hand-held device maker, according to Bloomberg.

And for its final major deal, Palm turned to Davis Polk & Wardwell instead of its traditional deal counsel at Wilson Sonsini Goodrich & Rosati, a move our colleagues at The Recorder first reported on two weeks ago.

The switch isn’t that sudden, though, according to William Kelly, who led the Davis Polk team on the deal. The firm began doing work for Palm several years ago, at about the time that a management shake-up at the company saw Eric Benhamou leave his position as chair of the Palm board; Benhamou is close with Wilson chair Larry Sonsini, according to The Recorder, which helps explain why the company had turned to Wilson Sonsini for several of its prior landmark deals.

Not this time, says Kelly, whose relationship with Palm started when he answered an unexpected call from company executives. “I just answered my phone,” he says. “That’s always good business.” Davis Polk subsequently advised Palm on a December 2008 agreement with private equity firm Elevation Partners, which pumped $100 million into Palm and became the company’s lead investor, Kelly says.

Hewlett-Packard, represented in the Palm deal by Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher, has already secured Elevation Partners’ support for the acquisition, according to a source familiar with the matter. A team from Simpson, Thacher & Bartlett advised Elevation in those talks, the sources say. (For you U2 fans out there, Bono serves as a managing director for Elevation, and we can’t help but note that he’s wearing his trademark sunglasses even in the photograph used on his Elevation Web bio).

via Law.com – Gibson Dunn, Davis Polk Lead as HP Snags Palm.

Google, Viacom Don’t Hold Back in Dueling Motions – Law Blog – WSJ

We find pretty amusing this notion that a bunch of Viacom employees secretly uploaded hordes of their own copyrighted videos to YouTube in order to bolster their copyright lawsuit against YouTube’s parent company, Google.

We have no idea if it’s true, of course, but the allegation is out there, as of Thursday.

In dueling summary-judgment motions unveiled Thursday in the long-running, heated battle between Google and YouTube, some new intriguing allegations were revealed. Among them, that Viacom that Google’s YouTube unit had sought to exploit copyrighted works for profit, and, yes, that Viacom itself had secretly uploaded copyrighted clips it later demanded YouTube remove. Click here for the WSJ story; here for the NYT story; here for Google’s summary judgment motion; here for Viacom’s SJ motion. (We’ve got a clash of the legal titans here: Google is represented by lawyers from Wilson Sonsini and Mayer Brown; Viacom is repped by Shearman & Sterling and Jenner & Block.) The case is in front of New York federal judge Louis Stanton.

via Google, Viacom Don’t Hold Back in Dueling Motions – Law Blog – WSJ.

Computer Generated Evidence | Ohio Supreme Court Justice Paul Pfeifer

The case referred to is: State v. Rivas, 121 Ohio St.3d 469, 2009-Ohio-1354. Case No. 2007-1611. Decided March 31, 2009. Majority opinion written by Justice Terrence O’Donnell.

By Ohio Supreme Court Justice Paul Pfeifer

On January 3, 2005, Detective Alonzo Wilson, a member of the Xenia Police Division’s Internet Child-Protection Unit, logged onto an Internet chat service posing as a 14-year-old female named Molly. A man named Jose Rivas – using the screen name JRivas123 – contacted “Molly” asking for her age, gender, and photograph.

The two carried on an online conversation, and eventually Wilson e-mailed Rivas a teenage photo of a Xenia police detective. Rivas e-mailed Molly an explicit photo which, he claimed, was of him. He then propositioned her and offered her $200 to engage in sexual activity with him. Rivas eventually arranged to meet Molly at a hotel. After police observed Rivas checking in, Wilson arrested him.

Prior to trial, Rivas filed a motion to preserve the state’s electronic evidence and he sought a mirror image of the hard drive of the state’s computer used by Wilson to communicate with him. The trial court ordered the state to allow Rivas to inspect the computer, but the prosecution refused to allow the defense to retrieve a mirror image of the hard drive, citing “security reasons.” The prosecution did provide a transcript of the conversations and a compact disc containing an electronic copy of the online communications.

Rivas then filed a motion to suppress the computer-generated evidence and to compel the state to provide a mirror image of the computer hard drive. But the trial court denied the motion, concluding that Criminal Rule 16 – one of the rules that govern the proceedings of a trial – did not require the state to produce an exact copy of its computer hard drive “in the absence of allegations and some evidence that what has been provided is not accurate.”

[continued] Judge James Kimblers Blog: Computer Evidence.

An Inside View of Wilson Sonsini’s Fabled Investment Fund

When John Roos left Wilson Sonsini Goodrich & Rosati in August to become U.S. ambassador to Japan, he was forced to leave behind his stake in the law firm's famed investment fund, WS Investment Co.

In the dot-com heyday, when the fund returned more than the annual salaries of some partners, this might have been a painful exercise. But in recent years, with the slowing economy, the hauls have been less spectacular.

Roos, who was CEO at Wilson Sonsini, was paid $2.37 million in salary and got $113,000 from WS Investment in 2008. That stands in stark contrast to the nearly unbelievable returns in the dot-com boom. In 2000, an average equity partner was paid $930,000 by the firm, while getting $1.3 million worth of stock distributed by WS Investment thanks to the blockbuster initial public offerings of companies like Juniper Networks Inc. and Avanex Corp.

Wilson Sonsini's fund, which the firm uses to invest in promising tech clients, is a thing of Silicon Valley legal lore. There are stories from the boom — when WS turned a $500,000 investment in Brocade Communications Systems Inc. into a $30 million paper profit — of litigation associates switching to become corporate lawyers so they could get a bigger stake in the firm's investments. And there is the never-dying debate about whether such a fund creates a conflict of interest for the law firm because a lawyer's judgment could be swayed by his investment interests in the client's eventual IPO.

Public disclosures Roos was required to make as an ambassador, and other documents reviewed by The Recorder, unveil the numbers behind the myths. These documents, combined with interviews with former and current Wilson Sonsini partners speaking on the condition of anonymity, give a much fuller picture of the law firm's investment fund.

The fund was in the right place (Silicon Valley) at the right time (the late '90s), with partners making prescient investment choices from among its clients, the cream of the Valley's fast-growing startups. Witness the $72,000 investment in Google Inc. that, a year after the company went public, was worth nearly $28 million. But with the fund's returns in recent years reflecting the so-so to poor performance of the broader market, the question is: Is it still worth it?

[continued] Law.com – An Inside View of Wilson Sonsini’s Fabled Investment Fund.