1 Spotlight on Electronic Discovery: What Every Records Manager Needs to Know
The Importance of Communication The single biggest problem in communication is the illusion that it has taken place. ---George Bernard Shaw 2
The Importance of Communication 3
Agenda Introduction to Electronic Discovery Applicable Electronic Discovery Law Federal Rules of Civil Procedure and the Proposed Changes Duty to Preserve California Approach The Electronic Discovery Process Sedona Conference, ABA EDDE and EDRM Best Practices Information Management Data Identification Preservation of Relevant ESI Effective Data Collections Data Processing Techniques Document Review Goals and Predictive Coding Data Analysis Managing Productions Presentation at Trial Lessons Learned 4
Introduction to Electronic Discovery Electronic Discovery, or "e-discovery", is simply the extension of discovery to include data in electronic format referred to as Electronically Stored Information "ESI". Recent University of California at Berkeley Analysis: 93% of data created in 2003 is digital; Cohasset Survey: today probably 96% Over 70% of electronic data is not printed. Civil litigation: 75% discovery orders require the production of email (Almost) All Discovery is ediscovery From the smallest of cases the question should not be, Is ediscovery relevant in my case, but How can I better manage my case by using ediscovery. Paper Discovery originates online 5
Unique Characteristics of ESI Technical 1. ESI can be incomprehensible when separated from the systems that created it 2. ESI is dynamic, can be shifted just by turning a computer on/off 3. ESI is stored in much greater volume than paper documents 4. Metadata: data about the data Logs when, how and who engaged the ESI Social People tend to be more informal interacting with a computer. 6
Federal Rules of Civil Procedure Amendments FRCP was amended by in December 2006 to include digital evidence Goal How to incorporate ESI to the discovery process. Set standards and avoid piecemeal approach. 7
Early ESI Planning a. Meet and Confer Conference (Rule 26 (f)) must include (for example) Format of production Issues relating to preserving discoverable information Privilege claims Any party negotiated quick peek or claw back agreements b. Pretrial Scheduling Court Order (Rule 16) c. Depositions (Rule 30 (b)(6)) d. Duty of Early ESI Disclosure (Rule 26 (a)) without awaiting a discovery request for each claim and defense 26(a) initial disclosures must include category and location of ESI 8
What is ESI? Common ESI Locations Computers hard drives (desktops and laptops) Email systems Portable devices: Blackberries, cell phones, PDA s, flash drives, CD-ROM s etc. Voice Mail and VOIP All company servers: Shared, Individual, User Specific General Company Third party and offsite systems Preceding company systems such as backup tapes Rule 26(b)(2): Accessible v. Inaccessible ESI Sliding Scale Accessible ESI: Emails/thumb drives. Inaccessible ESI: Damaged/erased/fragmented data. Raise particular objections. Perhaps shift costs. Starbucks Corp. v. ADT Security Servs., Inc., 2009 WL 4730798 (W.D. Wash. Apr. 30, 2009)(Don t exaggerate costs). 9
Format of ESI Production FRCP Rule 34 Parties choose the form for production Requesting party can specify the format, but other party can object If form not specified by requesting party, must produce in the form in which it is ordinarily maintained OR reasonably usable form. Reasonably Usable includes access to metadata. Accessdata Corp. v. ALSTE Tech. GMBH, 2010 WL 3184777 (D. Utah Jan. 21, 2010) Parties need not produce in more than one form Importance Be proactive to prevent default format Can impact scope/cost of later data processing and review to be conducted 10
Unplanned ESI Disclosure FRCP Rule 26(b)(5) If privileged information inadvertently produced, producing party may notify receiving party Receiving party must promptly return, sequester, or destroy the specified materials and cannot use or disclose the materials until claim is resolved FRE 502 Receiving party may promptly present the information to the court under seal to test the privilege Protects against the disclosure of privileged information. 11
ESI Safe Harbor/Sanctions Rule 37: Sanctions cannot be imposed for loss of ESI resulting from routine, good faith operation of an electronic information system Pension Comm. of Univ. of Montreal Pension Plan v. Bank of Am. Secs., 2010 WL 184312 (S.D.N.Y. Jan. 15, 2010) (Amen. Order) Zubulake revisited. (sanctions for lack of litigation hold to preserve ESI) Common Sanctions a. Monetary: Zubulake v. UBS Warburg, 2004 WL 1620866 (S.D.N.Y. July 20 2004) b. Attorney Fees: Wachtel v. Health Net, Inc., 239 F.R.D. 81 (D.N.J. 2006). c. Evidence Preclusion: United States v. Philip Morris USA Inc., 2004 WL 1627252 (D.D.C. July 21, 2004) d. Adverse Inference: Zubulake V e. Default Judgment: QZO Inc. v. Moyer, 594 S.E.2d 541 (S.C. Ct. App. 2004) f. Code of Ethics: Qualcomm, Inc. v. Broadcom Corp., Case No. 5cv1958(BLM)(S.D.Cal.)(January 7, 2008) 12
Proposed FRCP Changes: What s at Stake and When? US Courts Advisory Committee on Civil Rules seeks to cut down overall discovery. (P v. D) History: Duke Package 2010 Standing Committee 6/13 Public Comment Summer 2013 January 2014 Congress/Supreme Court 12/1/15 Earliest New Rules The 5 Proposed Changes: 1. Less Time: For service after claim is filed & schedule order issues. (Govt objections) 2. Narrow Rule 26 Scope: Nix court option to expand discovery to irrelevant case items 3. Enact Numerical Limits on Rule 30, 31 and 33: # Depositions 105; # Interrogatories 2515; Cap Requests for Admissions to 25 Caveat: Does not impose limits on Genuineness of Docs OR override party stip or ct order 4. Tighten rules for Rule 24 request for production of documents 5. Rule 37 Sanction (most heated). Unify national rules on higher standards for sanctions: To willful, bad faith, substantial prejudice or precludes party from making case 13
A Word on Seminal Zubulake During 2003-2004, United States District Court Judge Shira Scheindlin issued 5 groundbreaking opinions in the case of Zubulake v UBS Warburg. Zubulake deals with wide range of electronic discovery issues. Scope of a party's duty to preserve electronic evidence during the course of litigation Attorney duty to monitor client compliance with ESI preservation and production Data sampling Cost shifting The imposition of sanctions for the spoliation (or destruction) of ESI 14
Duty to Preserve 1. When litigation/investigation is reasonably anticipated Fujitsu v. Fed. Express 247 F.3d 423, 436 (2d Cir. 2001) Extent: Testa v. Walmart 2. When a Summons/Complaint are properly received Byrnie v. Town of Cromwell 243 F.3d 93, 108 (2d Cir. 2001) 3. When agents know that a lawsuit is a possibility Zubulake v. UBS Warburg, 217 F.R.D. 309 (S.D.N.Y. 2003) 4. When counsel anticipates a lawsuit or investigation Capellupo v. FMC Corp., 126 F.R.D. 545 (D.Minn. 1989) 5. When receiving a letter that credibly threatens litigation Fujitsu v. Fedl Express 247 F.3d 423, 436 (2d Cir. 2001) 15
What are the States doing? Source: Law Technology News 16
California Approach Effective July 2009, the California Electronic Discovery Act amends CCP s 2016.010 et seq to address ESI. The Act mostly parallels the FRCP and contains an urgency clause. Three Key Ways How California Differs From FRCP A. Scope: FRCP avoids defining ESI. California: "electrical, digital, magnetic, wireless, optical, electromagnetic, or similar capabilities. B. Data Produced Inadvertently: FRCP allows for Claw Back and Open Peak agreements. California does not; court to make determination. C. Inaccessible Data Burden: FRCP- Requesting party seeks leave of court to force the opposing party to produce. CA- Responding party requests court order to prevent producing data. 17
California and Cost Shifting Cost-shifting and computer backup tapes. Toshiba American Electronic Components, Inc. v. Superior Court (Lexar Media), 124 Cal.App.4th 762 (2004) A. The Facts Defendant Toshiba withheld from production hundreds of computer backup tapes Restoration costs set between $1.5 and $1.9 million Plaintiff Lexar would not agree to shoulder any of the restoration costs B. The Outcome Plaintiff Lexar must pay the "reasonable expense" for any "necessary translation" Reasonableness and necessity are factual issues found on a case by case basis C. The Lessons Demanding Parties: Have demands as narrowly tailored as possible. Courts have frequently punished overbroad demands with having to pay additional costs Responding Parties: Organize data prior having to prove reasonable accessibility Both Parties: Update backup and archival procedures to eliminate contentions that the costs to access them are unreasonable and should not be shifted 18
Electronic Discovery Models The Sedona Principles ESI best practices developed attorneys, technical consultants, members of the judiciary and other interested parties. Cited by U.S. courts as authority on most ediscovery issues. Contains practical glossary of terms related to ESI. American Bar Association ediscovery and Digital Evidence Committee (EDDE) The EDDE Committee brings together leading ediscovery thinkers and practitioners to bridge the gap between technology and law. The Section is viewed as an authoritative voice on ediscovery and technology law. The Electronic Discovery Reference Model Sets industry standards for consumers and providers in order to reduce the cost, time and manual work associated with ediscovery. EDRM is a conceptual procedural construct; each step need not apply. 19
Information Management Evaluate Document Storage and Retention for Litigation Readiness. Address: 1. Policy for full record cycle: creation, retention and management 2. Common Questions: Address Email Deletion, Back Up Tapes & Metadata Companies Slow to Act: (Cohasset Survey, 2007) Only 60% have records retention schedules in 2007 that include ESI Only 56% have a formal plan to respond to discovery requests for their records Only 14% of companies always follow their policy, while 50% generally do so Sloppy policies create added risk and expense for company and employee 20
Identification Create a Data Map A. Media that may contain ESI B. Custodians connected to the ESI (Creators, Managers, Access) How to create an effective ESI data map A. Be Proactive B. Work With Key Personnel C. Create a Flexible Document D. Focus on Potentially Relevant Information 21
Preservation Assure that relevant ESI is properly retained. Obligation runs first to counsel, who then has a duty to advise.client its obligations. Telecom Int l Ltd. v. AT&T Corp., 189 F.R.D. 76, 81 (S.D.N.Y. 1999) Obligation to preserve runs also to senior corporate officers In re Prudential Ins. Co. of Am. Sales Practices, 169 F.R.D. 598 (D.N.J. 1997) Litigation Hold Notice: Compose a thorough litigation hold notice Notify owners, administrators, users of type and location of data Include acknowledgement of receipt and tracking features Suspend normal document retention policy. Consider Collect to Preserve. 22
Collection 1. List all key custodians 2. Note location of custodian data [Accessible, Inaccessible, Forensic, Paper] 3. Maintain Chain of Custody 23
Processing Taking large amounts of ESI & boiling it down to for legal team to present at trial. Find hidden data relationships Files amassed into a central database to allow for large-scale searches Common Steps Catalog and signature the files Uncompress any compressed files Flag duplicate files Remove content and metadata Eliminate program and operating system files Establish quality control procedure throughout 24
Review Document Review Goals Determine purpose of review and implement benchmarks Note privileged/responsive documents to be withheld from the opposing parties Capitalize on the productivity of the document reviewers Agreed on search terms and review methods/tools Document Review Platform Considerations Time and cost Culling and filtering options to minimize the data Concept search ability (diamond v. diamond) Capacity to handle various document volumes and formats Data security and integrity Overall project management lead 25
Analysis Evaluating ESI to determine total relevant summary information. New important data, people, specific vocabulary and jargon. Performed throughout the remainder of the process as new information is uncovered and issues of the case evolve. 26
Production Conveying non-privileged, relevant ESI to opposing parties Formats of Production Paper Quasi-Paper Native Quasi-Native Frequency of Production On going basis OR All in one shot 27
Presentation Displaying of ESI before an audience. Most common forums are at depositions, hearings and trials Native and near native are the dominant forms. Options to display ESI at trial Proprietary systems: Trial Director, Sanction and Trial Max Outsource to major vendors For smaller cases, can use power point or Adobe 28
Office Best Practices 1. Form interdisciplinary team to proactively address potential discovery issues. Legal, Team IT and Records management personnel Others professionals as necessary (Compliance, Audit etc.) 2. Engage IT department for targeted programs and solutions. Strong focus on litigation readiness, legal hold procedures and response planning Designation of ediscovery liaisons 3. Investment in the right technology to manage discovery cost and minimize risk. Email archiving systems; forensic data collection systems Shared document repositories for serial litigation 29
Top Ten Lessons Learned 1. Identify ESI 2. Awareness of Applicable Rules 3. Proactive Approach Throughout 4. Maximize Meet and Confer Conference 5. Create an ESI Data Map 6. Focus on Potentially Relevant, Accessible Data 7. Sources of Custodian Data 8. Maintain Chain of Custody 9. Carefully Select Document Review Platform 10.Protect Client Data 30
ediscovery Resources ediscovery Law: www.ediscoverylaw.com US Courts Advisory Committee: www.uscourts.gov/rulesandpolicies/rules/archives/advisorycommittee-reports/advisory-committee-rules-civilprocedure.aspx EDRM: www.edrm.net The Sedona Conference: www.thesedonaconference.org 31
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