Archive for the ‘EDRM’ Category

A Judicial Perspective: Q&A With Former United States Magistrate Judge Ronald J. Hedges Regarding Possible Discovery Related Rule Changes

Friday, September 9th, 2011

If you have been following my previous posts regarding possible amendments to the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure (Rules), then you know I promised a special interview with former United States Magistrate Judge Ron Hedges.  The timing of the discussion is perfect considering that a “mini-conference” is being hosted by a Federal Rules Discovery Subcommittee today (September 9th) in Dallas, TX.  The debate will focus on whether or not the Rules should be amended to address evidence preservation and sanctions.  I am attending the mini-conference and will summarize my observations as part of my next post.  In the meantime, please enjoy reading the dialogue below for a glimpse into Judge Hedges’ perspective regarding possible Rule amendments.

Nelson: You were recently quoted in a Law Technology News (LTN) article written by Evan Koblentz as saying, “I don’t see a need to amend the rules” because these rules haven’t been around long enough to see what happens.  Isn’t almost five years long enough?

Judge Hedges: No.  For the simple reason that both attorneys and judges continue to need education on the 2006 amendments and, more particularly, they need to understand the technologies that create and store electronic information.  The amendments establish a framework within which attorneys and judges make daily decisions on discovery.  I have not seen any objective evidence that the framework is somehow failing and needs further amendment.

Nelson: You also said the “big problem” is that people don’t talk enough.  What did you mean?  Hasn’t the Sedona Cooperation Proclamation made a difference?

Judge Hedges: The centerpiece of the 2006 amendments (at least in my view) is Rule 26(f).  I think it is fair to say that the legal community’s response to 26(f) has been, to say the least, varied. Civil actions with large volumes of ESI that may be discoverable under Rule 26(b)(1) cry out for extensive 26(f) meet-and-confer discussions that may take a number of meetings and require the presence of party representatives from, for example, IT.  There is an element of trust required between adversary counsel (with the concurrence of the parties they represent) that may be difficult to establish – but some cooperation is necessary to make 26(f) work.  Overlay that reality with our adversary system and the duty of attorneys to zealously advocate on behalf of their clients and you can understand why cooperation isn’t always a top priority for some attorneys.

However, “transparency” in discussing ESI is essential, along with advocacy and the need to maintain appropriate confidentiality. That’s where the Sedona Conference Proclamation can make a big difference. Has the Proclamation done that? It’s too early to reach a conclusion on that question, but the Proclamation is often cited and, as education progresses in eDiscovery, I am confident that the Proclamation will be recognized as a means to realize the just, speedy, and inexpensive resolution of litigation, as articulated under Rule 1.

Nelson: You also mentioned that the Federal Rules Advisory Committee might be running afoul of the Rules Enabling Act.  Can you explain?

Judge Hedges: There is a distinction between “procedural” and “substantive” rules.  The Rules Enabling Act governs the adoption of the former.  Rule 502 of the Federal Rules of Evidence is an example of a substantive rule that was proposed by the Judicial Conference.  However, since Rule 502 is a rule dealing with substantive privilege and waiver issues, it had to be enacted into law through an Act of Congress.  I am concerned that proposals to further amend the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure may cross the line from procedural to substantive.  I am not prepared to suggest at this time, however, that anything I have seen has crossed the line.  Stay tuned.

Nelson: If you had to select one of the three options currently being considered (see page 264), which option would you select and why?

Judge Hedges: To start, I would not choose option 1, which presumes that the Rules can reach pre-litigation conduct consistent with the Rules Enabling Act.  My concern here is also that, in the area of electronic information, a too-specific rule risks “overnight” obsolescence, just as the Electronic Communications Privacy Act, enacted in 1986, is considered by a number of commentators to be, at best, obsolescent.  Note also that I did not use the word “stored” when I mentioned electronic information, as courts have already required that so-called ephemeral information be preserved.  Nor would I choose option 2.  Absent seeing more than the brief description of the category on page 264, it seems to me that option 2 is likely to do nothing more than be a restatement of the existing law on when the duty to preserve is “triggered.”

So, by default, I am forced to choose option 3.  I presume a rule would say something like, “sanctions may not be imposed on a party for loss of ESI (or “EI”) if that party acted reasonably in making preservation decisions.”  There are a number of problems here. First, in a jurisdiction which allows the imposition of at least some sanction for negligence, all the rule would likely do is be interpreted to foreclose “serious” sanctions. Isn’t that correct? Or is the rule intended to supersede existing variances in the law of sanctions?  At that point, does the rule become “substantive”?   Second, how will “reasonableness” be defined?  Reasonableness supposes the existence of a duty – in this case, a duty to preserve.  For example, is there a duty to preserve ephemeral data that a party knows is relevant?  We come back full circle to where we began.

Remember, Rule 37(f) (now 37(e)) was intended to provide some level of protection against the imposition of sanctions, just as the categories are intended to.  Right?  And five years later 37(e) remains defined variously to be a “safe harbor” or a “lighthouse” by some lawyers such as Jonathan Redgrave or an “uncharted minefield” by others like me.

Nelson: What about heightened pleading standards after the Iqbal and Twombly decisions?  Do these decisions have any relevance to electronic discovery and the topic at hand?

Judge Hedges: Let me begin by saying that I am no fan of Twombly or Iqbal. The decisions, however well intended, have led to undue cost and delay all too often.  Not only is motion to dismiss practice costly for parties, but it imposes great burdens on the United States Courts and, as often as not, leads to at least one other round of motion practice as plaintiffs are given leave to re-plead.  All the while, parties have preservation obligations to fulfill and, in the hope of saving expense, discovery is often stayed until a motion is “finally” decided.  I would like to see objective evidence of the delay and cost of this motion practice (and I expect that the Administrative Office of the United States has statistical evidence already).  I would also like to see objective evidence from defendants distinguishing between the cost of motion practice and later discovery costs.

Putting all that aside, and if I had to accept one option, I would choose to allow some discovery that is integrated to the motion practice.  First, even without the filing of a responsive pleading, there should be a 26(f) meet-and-confer to discuss, if nothing else, the nature and scope of preservation and the possibility of securing a Rule 502(d) order. Second, while I have serious concerns about “pre-answer discovery” for a number of reasons, I would have the parties make 26(a)(1) disclosures while a motion to dismiss is pending or leave to re-plead has been granted in order to address the likely “asymmetry of information” between a plaintiff and a moving defendant.  Once the disclosures are made, I would allow the plaintiff to secure some information identified in the disclosures to allow re-pleading and perhaps obviate the need for continued motion practice.

All of this would, of course, require active judicial management.  And one would hope that Congress, which seems so interested in conserving resources, would recognize the vital role of the United States Courts in securing justice for everyone and give adequate funding to the Courts.

Remembering the Past: Deploying Technology to Ensure eDiscovery Compliance

Tuesday, September 6th, 2011

A famous quote from intellectual George Santayana provides an appropriate backdrop for organizations to better understand why they should deploy technology to strengthen their litigation response effort.  As Santayana explained in The Life of Reason: Reason in Common Sense, “[t]hose who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it.”

The “past” can be a powerful playbook in the game of eDiscovery.  Fortunately for organizations, the lessons of eDiscovery history abound.  Indeed, the decisions that courts issue every day across the United States and in other countries provide substantial guidance on what organizations should and should not do to properly prepare for the discovery phase of litigation.

One of the principal lessons that can be gleaned from American court cases in 2011 is that technology can help organizations address the demands of eDiscovery in litigation.  Technology has assumed such a significant role because it facilitates the oversight process that lawyers must engage in to ensure that pertinent documents are preserved for discovery.  This year alone, the failure to exercise that oversight has in many instances culminated in evidence destruction and sanctions.

That message was emphasized this summer by a Virginia based federal court in a hotly contested trade secret dispute.  In E.I. du Pont de Nemours v. Kolon Industries (E.D. Va. July 21, 2011), the court determined that it would issue an adverse inference jury instruction against defendant Kolon Industries as a sanction for its evidence spoliation.  The spoliation at issue occurred when Kolon deleted emails and other records relevant to DuPont’s trade secret claims.  After being apprised of the lawsuit and then receiving multiple litigation hold notices, several Kolon executives and employees met together and identified emails and other documents that should be deleted.  The ensuing destruction was staggering.  Nearly 18,000 files and emails were deleted.  Furthermore, many of these materials went right to the heart of DuPont’s claim that key aspects of its Kevlar© formula were allegedly misappropriated to improve Kolon’s competing product line.

Surprisingly, however, the court did not finger the Kolon employees as the principal culprits for spoliation.  Instead, the court laid the blame on Kolon’s attorneys and executives, reasoning they could have prevented the destruction of information through better oversight.  The hold process was particularly flawed.  The notices were either too limited in their distribution, ineffective since they were prepared in English for Korean-speaking employees, or too late to prevent or otherwise alleviate the spoliation.  Given the logistical challenges of implementing a hold in this instance, perhaps only the automated functions of technology such as archiving software might have strengthened the oversight process and obviated the spoliation that took place.

The lack of attorney oversight also factored into another pertinent sanctions order this year, this time from a federal court in Chicago.  In Northington v. H & M International (N.D.Ill. Jan. 12, 2011), the court issued an adverse inference jury instruction against a company that destroyed relevant emails and other data.  The spoliation occurred in large part because the company neglected to establish a global litigation response effort.  For example, there was no process for issuing or ensuring compliance with a litigation hold.  Nor was counsel engaged in the critical steps of preservation, identification or collection of electronically stored information (ESI).  Into this vacuum stepped rank and file employees – some of whom were accused by the plaintiff of harassment – who were tasked with identifying and collecting discoverable emails from their workstations.  Predictably, key documents were never found and the court had little choice but to promise to inform the jury that the company destroyed evidence.

The problems associated with the lack of oversight in DuPont and Northington are compelling reasons why organizations should consider using technology tools as part of their overall litigation response strategy.  One of the most helpful tools in this regard is archiving software.  Indeed, having the right archiving solution in place might have preserved the spoliated records in these actions.

For example, archiving software can be programmed to prevent employees from deleting emails and other electronically stored information.  By ingesting data into a central repository and leaving copies of the materials on local computers, employees could have access to their archived records.  They would not, however, be able to delete those documents from the software archive.  In addition, a litigation hold could have been placed on archived data to prevent automated retention rules from overwriting information.  Either of these features might have prevented much of the spoliation – and the resulting sanctions – that occurred in both the DuPont and Northington cases.

The automated functions of archiving technology can benefit a company’s litigation response in other ways.  For example, such a tool may limit the amount of potentially relevant information available for follow-on litigation.  Absent a legal hold, retention rules that are programmed into the software will ensure that ESI is expired once it reaches the end of a designated period.  In DuPont, such a feature could arguably have eliminated entire categories of older documents before a duty to preserve those materials ever ripened.  This facet not only has the potential to reduce legal exposure, but also the attendant costs associated with reviewing those documents in litigation.

DuPont, Northington and other cases from the recent past delineate the steps companies can take to address the challenges of eDiscovery.  Organizations do not have to “repeat” past mistakes that victimized clients and counsel alike.  Instead, they can implement the right technology tools as part of a thoughtful, proactive approach to litigation.  By so doing, organizations will avoid Santayana’s judgment by “remembering” the lessons of eDiscovery history.

Jumping the Gun? Three Approaches to Drafting New Federal Discovery Rules

Thursday, September 1st, 2011

In my last post I announced that discussions are taking place that could change the way preservation and sanctions issues are handled within the federal court system.  The next round of discussions about possible amendments to the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure (FRCP) is scheduled to take place on September 9th in Dallas, Texas as part of a “mini-conference” led by the Discovery Subcommittee – a committee appointed by the Advisory Committee on Civil Rules.  This post discusses three different rule amendment approaches that attendees have been asked to consider in order to help them prepare for the mini-conference.  A complete list of attendees, preparation materials, and questions the group will consider are included in the Advisory Committee’s June 29, 2011 memorandum to the participants.

The debate about whether or not rule amendments are even required is far from over.  A 452-page document located on the U.S. Courts’ website chronicles many of the meetings, notes, and submissions driving the current discussion.  Page 265 of the document contains a memorandum prepared by the Civil Rules Advisory Committee earlier this year, stating that:

“the Subcommittee has reached no conclusion on whether rule amendments would be a productive way of dealing with preservation/sanctions concerns, much less what amendment proposals would be useful.”

Despite concerns that amending the current rules now would amount to jumping the gun, there is an undeniable desire for more clarity around when the duty to preserve electronically stored information (ESI) is triggered, what must be preserved, and when the duty expires.  This momentum has resulted in the crafting of draft proposals that are likely to help frame the discussion on September 9th. The “proposals” are really draft approaches that have been broken down into three general categories described in the Civil Rules Advisory Committee’s memorandum, titled: “PRESERVATION/SANCTIONS ISSUES” (see page 263).  The Category 1 approach can best be described as providing a higher degree of specificity than the other approaches.  For example, the Category 1 approach provides a fairly detailed explanation of the duty to preserve evidence (Rule 26.1(a)) and details possible triggers (26.1(b)), the scope of the duty to preserve (26.1(c)), and sanctions (Rule 37).  Category 2 proposes a more general preservation rule, while Category 3 only addresses sanctions as a tool for influencing behavior.  The three categories are discussed in more detail below.

Category 1: Specific Rule

This draft includes many different exemplary lists, alternative approaches, and footnotes that highlight the fact that one of the key challenges with drafting a specific rule is trying to foresee all of the challenges that might lie in the road ahead.  For example, the draft rule provides a long list of events that could trigger the duty to preserve evidence, including everything from serving a pleading to taking “any other action” in anticipation of litigation.   The rule also provides a list of information types that are “presumptively excluded” from the preservation duty, such as deleted data on hard drives, temporary internet files, and physically damaged media.

The lists are helpful in that they provide guidance.  However, each list also includes a “catch-all” provision to address scenarios that might not be foreseeable.  The inclusion of catch-all provisions highlights the inherent challenge of providing more clarity and certainty without creating rules that are so inflexible that they are difficult to apply to unforeseen factual scenarios or technological developments.  Some might argue that trying to provide a laundry list of examples will make passage of new rules difficult because each item on the list will stir debate.  Others contend that the lists add little value because the catch-all provisions will still require litigators to pass the sniff test of “reasonableness.”

Despite the inherent challenges related to drafting rules with specificity, most practitioners would likely support the inclusion of lists or examples that provide at least some direction.  What is likely to be far more controversial with respect to Category 1 is the use of alternative language proposing fixed limits around custodians and litigation holds.  For example, one alternative would limit data preservation requirements to a fixed number of custodians and the duty to preserve evidence would similarly expire after a fixed number of years.  Bright line rules like these may be easier to understand, but they also tend to be controversial since they lack the flexibility necessary to fairly address every conceivable situation.

Category 2: General Rule

Like the Category 1 proposal, the Category 2 proposal uses lists and outlines several alternative approaches throughout the rule.  However, the Category 2 proposal fundamentally differs from Category 1 by outlining a more general approach.  For example, one of the alternatives essentially states that the duty to preserve evidence is triggered whenever a “reasonable person” would expect to be a party to an action.  Similarly, the ongoing duty to preserve information after the duty has been triggered would be evaluated based on what is described as a “reasonable period” under the circumstances.

The beauty of this more general approach lies in its simplicity and flexibility.  The idea is that evaluating conduct based on the “reasonableness” of a person’s actions is much easier than attempting to draft bright line legal guidelines that account for every possible factual scenario.  The flip side is that reasonable minds could differ and results could be inconsistent if there are no bright line rules.  What this means in the context of the federal rule discussion is that one judge might find a party’s conduct with respect to data preservation efforts reasonable, while another judge might issue sanctions based on the same set of facts.  In large part, it is this lack of certainty and guidance in the current rules that sparked the current debate in the first place.

Category 3: Sanctions-Based Rule

Unlike the first two categories, the Category 3 approach focuses only on sanctions and would act like more of a “back-end” rule.  In other words, the rule would not contain any specific directives about preservation, but it would provide direction in the areas of when and how sanctions might be applied.

Despite the draconian image a “sanctions” based rule might conjure up, the Category 3 rule may seem surprisingly lenient to some.  For example, absent extraordinary circumstances, the court would be prohibited from imposing any of the sanctions listed in Rule 37(b)(2) or from giving an adverse-inference instruction unless:

“the party’s failure to preserve discoverable information was willful or in bad faith and caused [substantial] prejudice in the litigation.”

The sanctions based approach would almost certainly have an impact on how parties handle upstream preservation related issues.  However, the key ingredients that will impact what kind of behavior this rule drives are the severity of the threatened sanction as well as the applicable standard.  For example, a party facing severe sanctions for conduct that is either negligent, willful or in bad faith is likely to take their preservation obligations seriously.  On the other hand, if the realm of possible sanctions is trivial, parties are less likely to take their preservation related obligations seriously.

Conclusion

The three rule approaches represent very early attempts at framing possible approaches to amending the FRCP.  If the Discovery Subcommittee chooses to recommend rule amendments following the September 9th mini-conference in Dallas, the proposed language is likely to be closer to final form and easier to assess than the current proposals.  I will continue to monitor the rule making discussion and provide commentary in future posts.  Stay tuned for my next post where former US Magistrate Judge Ron Hedges explains why he thinks the rule changes are unnecessary and why the current proposals might run afoul of the Rules Enabling Act.

Clearwell Doubles Down on Review

Monday, August 22nd, 2011


(Editor’s note: This special guest post was written by Chitran
g Shah, Clearwell Principal Product Manager. He is an RIT alum and avid hiker who works with our engineering team and lead customers to optimize the product for large-scale review. – Kurt)

As we’ve previously shared, our product strategy throughout 2009 and 2010 was to expand the product footprint across the EDRM as customers were demanding a single, end-to-end eDiscovery product. During this period we successfully expanded from our roots in processing, search and analysis to review and production (August 2009), identification and collection (September 2010) and legal hold workflow (March 2011). Over the last several months, our focus has been to go deep in each of these modules and provide features that deliver even greater return on investment to our customers.

Today, I am excited to announce significant new features and feature enhancements to the Clearwell Review and Production Module and say a few words about what motivated us to build these features and how they enable our customers to further streamline their legal review workflow.

There are several exciting features in this release, but I would to like to highlight three in particular:

1. Ability to seamlessly import production load files

Most matters require reviewing relevant documents alongside the documents received from third parties, opposing parties, and even previous litigations. With the new load file import feature, users can now streamline the process of importing load files with three simple steps.

In Step 1, a step-by-step wizard-like interface guides users though the selection of formatting information such as field delimiters and nested value delimiters, metadata information such as bates numbers, family relationships, tags, folders and any number of custom attributes, and content information such as images, extracted text and native files. When the load file has both extracted texts and native files, the wizard gives users an option to specify which content should be used for searching.

In Step 2, the system performs a deep validation of the load file and generates a report documenting any inconsistencies such as missing bates numbers or missing values for required fields found in the load file. As a result, customers have the ability to quickly find and fix any issues with the load file before the import begins.

In Step 3, the system imports the documents and builds analytics. Once this step completes, the imported documents, including all metadata and content, are available for viewing and searching.

All the analytics capabilities customers are familiar with, such as discussion threads and concept search, are also available for documents imported from load files. This allows users to quickly discover documents in the load file that are conceptually similar to natively processed documents, for example.

2. Support for large scale reviews and productions

As the volume of electronically stored information (ESI) continues to grow, our customers find themselves reviewing and exporting more and more documents, and they need a solution that can cope with the massive growth in data. At the same time, they don’t want to spend large sums of money building a server farm in anticipation of the growth. They want the flexibility to add capacity when needed and remove it when not needed.

Clearwell’s scale-out architecture enables administrators to easily add appliances and allocate them to a particular matter and to a specific task using a point-and-click interface.

For example, if an administrator needs to increase the number of reviewers from 200 to 400 in order to meet a tight deadline, he or she can easily add 2 appliances to the cluster and assign them for review. Once the review completes, the administrator can now easily re-assign these appliances for production, allowing users to easily meet deadlines while reducing their overall hardware costs.

This flexibility allows our customers to maximize the use of their hardware resources while providing infinite review, export and production scalability.

3. Streamlined management of exports and productions

Clearwell provides powerful export options, and while our customers use them extensively for creating a variety of different production formats, they typically standardize on a few. Clearwell’s new case export and production templates provide a quick and easy way for case administrators to define the export format once and use it across multiple cases. When exporting documents, users can simply select a template from the list of visible templates in that case. This capability significantly reduces the overhead associated with managing export formats and allows our customers to produce documents in a consistent format across multiple matters.

Additionally, new production pre-mediation reports automatically identify problem documents and group them by issue type for quick resolution. This enables users to preemptively identify and resolve document production issues without delaying entire productions.

Says Wendy Butler Curtis, chair of Orrick, Herrington & Sutcliffe’s eDiscovery Working Group, “Legal review is one of the most challenging phases of the eDiscovery process. As electronic data volumes continue to grow, it is increasingly important to leverage technologies that can streamline and improve legal review, ensure defensibility and reduce costs. Solutions like the Clearwell eDiscovery Platform enable legal teams to create an iterative eDiscovery workflow that allows for more efficient and effective large-scale review.”

We will be showcasing the new features at ILTA (Booth 816) this week in Nashville, so come see us and let us know what you think.

(Chitrang Shah is a Principal Product Manager at Clearwell Systems, now a part of Symantec, and the lead Product Manager for Clearwell’s Processing & Analysis and Review & Production Modules)

Gibson Dunn’s Mid-Year eDiscovery Report Highlights Changes in Sanctions Landscape

Monday, August 15th, 2011

In past years we’ve covered Gibson Dunn’s Mid-Year E-Discovery Report which is always a good read, chock full of take-aways about the eDiscovery market.  In my mind, they do an excellent job of synthesizing the ever-expanding volume of case law and comparing those trends with historical averages.  This year’s report is no exception, and for those who don’t get to read all the cases, this is a stellar way to keep up on eDiscovery trends.  Without trying to summarize the entire 23 page document, there were a number of findings that stood out and should be perused by anyone with even a passing interest in the space.

Legal Holds/Preservation. As we all know, eDiscovery sanctions (at least here in the US) are critical business/legal drivers, particularly with regard to the legal hold area (which is the riskiest part of the EDRM).  As the Gibson report points out, the actual award of sanctions has remained relatively flat (56% in the first half of 2011 versus 55% for the full year in 2010) –  but, more important than this relatively stable metric, it’s very clear that the plaintiff’s bar has caught on to the ability to win cases by revealing shoddy (or just undocumented) legal hold procedures, even in some instances where data isn’t lost.  This is why the report notes a dramatic increase in the seeking of eDiscovery sanctions – 68 at mid-year 2011 versus 31 at mid-year 2010.  This doubling of attempts to pierce an entity’s legal hold regime should be a wake-up call to in-house practitioners and chief legal officers, since the attempt and success rates will likely only increase over time.

While there is still some considerable debate, at least for those following Judge Scheindlin’s Pension Committee logic, anything less than a formal, written legal hold policy is per se negligent.  Although it’s conceivable that  a reviewing court won’t use this rigorous standard, anything less formal will strike most organizations as simply too risky.  Ongoing compliance with the legal hold process is also another difficult task for many organizations, one which is considerably easier with an automated solution that is able to track acknowledgements and send reminders over time.  It’s all too easy for companies to think that once they’ve discharged their initial legal hold duty they’re in the clear – but as these obligations morph (with more custodians/data types) and elongate (from months to years) over time, keeping on top of the legal hold processes becomes that much more important.

Sanctions. The Gibson report also importantly points out that there’s currently a split in jurisdictions where some courts can levy sanctions for bad faith, while others can merely require proof of negligence.  Here, the important take-away is that a defendant entity doesn’t typically get to forum shop and therefore they can’t really tell which type of jurisdiction they’ll end up in as a litigant.  So, they need to build their eDiscovery processes to meet the high water (i.e., most rigorous) standard.  In most cases, it’s therefore prudent to be prepared to be sanctioned for merely negligent conduct – anything less can potentially be safe but that risk calculation needs to be considered carefully.

The other perilous part of the equation is that once sanctions are deemed warranted, the court has almost unlimited discretion to levy whatever blend of sanctions it thinks is appropriate.  In Green v. Blitz, for example, the court ordered a laundry list of sanctions, some of which were pretty unfathomable:

1. Defendant had to pay plaintiff $250,000

2. Defendant had to provide a copy of the court’s order to plaintiffs “in every lawsuit proceeding against it” for the past two years

3. Defendant had to file the court’s order in every case that it is involved in for the next 5 years

The bottom line is that sanctions, despite the fear factor, can be used to drive positive proactive conduct – namely in the shape of eDiscovery best practices.

Outside Counsel Duties. Here, the Gibson report notes that outside counsel’s Zubulake duties continue to increase over time, with a number of cases continuing the trend of holding attorneys responsible for ensuring that their clients properly implement legal holds, institute sound sampling protocols and conduct sufficient quality control steps.  This line of discussion can be useful when talking to outside counsel where we’re starting to see how their increasing responsibilities can lead to malpractice exposure, as seen in the recent McDermott case.

Search/Analysis. Lately there’s been a ton of buzz about predictive coding, but (despite the hype) it still doesn’t appear ready for prime time yet.  The Gibson report noted that there were no reported cases that addressed the use of predictive coding or other advanced search technologies.  My sense is that without some semblance of judicial approval or strong client backing, outside counsel (who are concerned about their malpractice exposure, per above) aren’t quickly going to be the first ones into the pool.  Unless an enterprise client demands that they use this type of technology, most will wait for judicial approval and that’s probably still a way off.  While next generation search technologies are more promise than reality right now, there is still a mandate to implement a defensible search methodology.  These are needed initially to demonstrate transparency in the eDiscovery process and to then withstand the challenges levied by counsel in the case of an inadvertent production.

In sum, the Gibson report shows the ongoing maturation of the eDiscovery space.  But, any niche market led by case law and/or attorneys deciding to adopt new technologies won’t be quick to change.  In many instances, therefore, the best practices will be decided a combination of standards bodies and vendors who are being pushed by their more forward thinking clients to get and stay on the cutting edge.

Patents and Innovation in Electronic Discovery

Monday, June 13th, 2011

In the world of technology we live in, a huge amount of benefit is created when people apply certain well-known techniques to solve problems and create value to the broader community. Such techniques are often the result of painstakingly long and laborious research, driven primarily by academic institutions with private industry either funding such research directly or by co-opting them in their own work. When the industry as a whole recognizes a certain methodology, it gains popular usage.

In information retrieval, searching and retrieving relevant content from unstructured text has been a vexing problem, and we’ve had decades of the brightest minds applying their collective intelligence and the rigors of peer review to validate and establish the most effective way to solve a retrieval problem. And, research forums such as TREC, SIGIR and other information retrieval conferences establish a venue for advancing the state of the art. So, when Recommind announced that they have been issued a patent on Predictive Coding, I took notice, especially since it touches a nerve with those who believe research should be openly shared.

The patent lists six claims that describe a workflow whereby humans review and code a document and the coding decisions applied to the document sample are projected or applied to the larger collection of documents. Anyone who has even the slightest exposure to information retrieval research will recognize this as a very common interactive relevance feedback mechanism. Relevance feedback as a way to perform information retrieval has been studied for well over forty years, with a paper as early as 1968 by Rocchio J.J., titled Relevance Feedback in Information Retrieval. It falls under a category of methods broadly known as machine learning.

Any supervised machine learning system involves creating a training sample and using that sample to project into a larger population. The fact that one could claim patentable ideas on something that is so widely known and used is puzzling.  Any workflow that employs machine learning would include the steps of creating an initial control set, coding that by human review, and applying the learned tags to a larger population.  In fact, the Wiki article Learning to rank describes precisely the workflow that is claimed in the patent and as part of our participation in the TREC Legal Track 2009, Clearwell submitted a paper with iterative sampling based evaluation and automatic expansion of initial query.  In that paper, we describe exactly the workflow postulated by the six claims of the patent.

In terms of other prior art that would potentially invalidate the patent, the list is long. Let’s start with Text Classification. Text Classification using Support Vector Machines (SVM) was first published by Thorsten Joachims in 1998, in the Proceedings of Sixteenth International Conference on Machine Learning, as well as his book Learning to Classify Text Using Support Vector Machines: Methods, Theory and Algorithms, published by The Springer International Series in Engineering and Computer Science.  Now a well-recognized Professor of Computer Science at Cornell University, that work is widely cited as a seminal work on the area of machine learning and text classification. Interestingly, this work was cited by the Patent Examiner as prior art, but the inventors missed listing it. Nevertheless, that work and further work by several academics such as Leopold and Kindermann has already established the use of Support Vector Machines as a useful technique for machine learning. To claim the novelty of its use in automatically coding documents is, in my opinion, a hollow claim.

Another technology mentioned in passing is Latent Semantic Indexing (LSI). This is proposed as a retrieval technique by Deerwester, S., Dumais, S.T., Furnas, G.W.,Landauer, T.K., Harshman R. in their paper, Indexing by Latent Semantic Analysis, in Journal of the ASIS, 41(6):391-407, 1990. The use of LSI for semantic analysis, concept searching and text classification is also very widespread, and once again, it seems ridiculous to claim that it is something novel or innovative.

Next, let’s examine the use of sampling to validate the initial control set. Use of sampling for validation of a control set of documents is in fact such a widely known technique that most e-discovery productions employ sampling. In fact, the Sedona Commentary on Achieving Quality and the EDRM Search Guide recommend use of sampling to validate automated searches. Furthermore, several E-discovery opinions such as Judge Grimm’s opinion in Victor Stanley [Victor Stanley, Inc. v. Creative Pipe, Inc. , 2008 WL 2221841 (D. Md., May 29, 2008)]  suggests that any technique that reduces the universe of documents produced must employ sampling to validate automated searches.

In short, we think the claims issued in the patent and the associated workflow are so commonly used that the workflow is neither novel nor non-obvious to a trained practitioner, and there is enough prior art on each of the individual technologies to warrant a re-examination and eventual invalidation of the patent. In any event, it is fairly easy for anyone to pick up existing prior art and devise a similar workflow that achieves the same or better outcome, and attempt to enforce the patent will likely be challenged.

But there is an even bigger issue at stake here beyond the status of Recommind’s patent: namely, shouldn’t the e-discovery vendor community continue to work, as it has for years, toward what is in the best interest of the legal community and, more broadly, the justice system? Recommind’s thinly veiled threats about requiring industry participants to license their technology are an affront to those who have invested years developing the technology and practicing the approach in real-world e-discovery cases. Spend a few minutes trolling (no pun intended) around on archive.org and you’ll see that early predictive coding companies like H5 were practicing machine learning and predictive workflows in e-discovery over two years before Recommind announced their first version of Axcelerate.

Wouldn’t a better outcome be for corporations and law firms to benefit from the innovation that comes from free competition in the marketplace, while still honoring the sort of novel, non-obvious innovation that warrants patent protection? Legitimate patents that actually encourage and protect investments by an organization are fine, but process patents that attempt to patent a workflow are bad for business. With such an approach, the full promise of automated document review (which, as any truly honest vendor should admit, still has much more room to grow and develop) can be fully realized in a way that both provides vendors with the fair and just economic rewards they deserve while helping the legal system become radically more efficient.

Clearwell Signs Agreement To Be Acquired By Symantec

Thursday, May 19th, 2011

I am thrilled to announce that Clearwell has signed an agreement to be acquired by Symantec for $410 million ($390 million, net of our cash balance of $20 million). By bringing together Clearwell’s market leading e-discovery platform with Symantec’s market-leading archiving solution, we are uniquely positioned to provide customers with the next generation of information management solutions.

The e-discovery software industry has matured rapidly in the 6 years since Clearwell was founded. As electronic information has become a key part of all litigation, regulatory inquiries, and internal investigations, companies have had no choice but to adopt e-discovery software to keep their costs down. Some have done so by bringing e-discovery in-house; others prefer to work with law firms and litigation support companies who provide cloud-based solutions. Either way, e-discovery software has become widely adopted by corporations, government agencies, and law firms around the world.

Clearwell has been a major beneficiary of these trends. Our annual sales have grown rapidly to over $50 million, and the company has been profitable since 2009. Today, we have over 400 customers and 75 partners in 14 different countries.

Many of these customers are using Clearwell together with Symantec Enterprise Vault in a single integrated workflow, and they have often requested that we couple our products more tightly to better serve their information management needs. That’s what led us to partner with Symantec for the past several years and ultimately led to this transaction. Over time, we see corporations and government agencies increasingly seeking information management solutions that encompass both e-discovery and archiving, making the combination of Clearwell with Enterprise Vault incredibly compelling.

In the near term, we expect very little to change for our existing customers. The product will continue to be sold on a standalone basis and supported by the Clearwell team. We remain committed to serving law firms and litigation support partners, who are absolutely critical to our success in more ways than we can describe.

This is an exciting time for the e-discovery industry. Last week, Gartner published its first ever Magic Quadrant For eDiscovery Software. Today, Symantec and Clearwell join forces to deliver a seamless, integrated archiving and e-discovery management workflow, benefitting all our customers. You can find more information about the acquisition at: http://www.symantec.com/clearwell.  There are exciting times ahead.

Electronic Discovery Cases You Must Know

Tuesday, May 10th, 2011

I was at Sedona midyear meeting last week and during Ken Withers’ excellent discussion of recent e-discovery case law, a few thoughts occurred to me. First, there are so many cases coming out now each week it’s hard to stay above the fray and mine for useful nuggets. The task is a bit Sisyphean, so folks like Ken (who keep a rolling index of cases) are particularly helpful. Next, I was struck by how hot Pension Committee still is, even after almost a year and a half. Certainly, this ongoing spotlight wasn’t an accident, and it’s almost certain that Judge Scheindlin is pleased by the ongoing debate.

I frequently get questions from enterprise clients regarding which cases they should know about, and so I put together an EDRM oriented (left to right) list for folks who just can’t get to all the latest cases. While it’s not an annual roundup per se, I do think it’s a bit more functional for busy electronic discovery professionals who need to stay current. So, here’s the buzz index of cases arranged by topic:

Preservation: The Legal Hold Gold Standard

Case: Pension Committee of the Univ. of Montreal Pension Plan, et al., v. Banc of America Securities, LLC, et al. (S.D.N.Y. 2010).

Summary: The dispute focused on claims by a group of investors who brought an action to recover losses of $550 million dollars stemming from the liquidation of two British Virgin Islands based hedge funds. Unlike many typical e-discovery disputes, this instant action focused on the conduct of the plaintiffs as they attempted to deal with the often murky landscape of electronically stored information (ESI) preservation, collection and production. Judge Scheindlin goes out of her way to crystallize duties and identify the type of conduct that can cause an e-discovery breach. “After a discovery duty is well established, the failure to adhere to contemporary standards can be considered gross negligence. Thus, after the final relevant Zubulake opinion in July, 2004, the following failures support a finding of gross negligence, when the duty to preserve has attached:

  • to issue a written litigation hold;
  • to identify all of the key players and to ensure that their electronic and paper records are preserved;
  • to cease the deletion of email or to preserve the records of former employees that are in a party’s possession, custody, or control;
  • and to preserve backup tapes when they are the sole source of relevant information or when they relate to key players, if the relevant information maintained by those players is not obtainable from readily accessible sources.”

Why it’s (still) important: First of all, Pension Committee is written by Judge Scheindlin, who is the most famous electronic discovery jurist on the planet. Next, since she’s in the Southern District of New York, it means that folks even in other jurisdiction that aren’t bound by her opinions still must take heed given the fact that New York is home to so many multinational organizations. Finally, her opinion is the clearest (even if disputed) articulation regarding the standard of care for the issuance of legal holds and the duty to preserve ESI. She attempts to categorically define conduct that is grossly negligent and therefore susceptible to extreme sanctions, including spoliation inferences and terminating sanctions. Fortunately, she recognizes the numerous challenges associated with electronic discovery. And, so as to blend in a healthy dose of reality Judge Scheindlin also said: “In an era where vast amounts of electronic information is available for review, discovery in certain cases has become increasingly complex and expensive. Courts cannot and do not expect that any party can meet a standard of perfection.”

In the end, Pension Committee, was the case of the year in 2010 and even in 2011 it’s generating an unprecedented level of retrospectives (here and here). It may be because Judge Scheindlin’s relatively bright line standard has created so much debate, but in the end the Pension Committee discussion will likely continue for the foreseeable future (perhaps only ending when/if the culpability rules are amended to create a unified national standard).

Preservation: Why Preserve in Place is Risky?

Case: Wilson v. Thorn Energy, LLC, (S.D.N.Y. 2010).

Summary: In Wilson, the defendant corporation identified a flash drive that contained relevant ESI, but rather than copying that data safely to a centralized evidence repository, the defendant’s employee chose to hold on to the drive, putting it instead into a desk drawer. When the files were requested for review and production, the files could not be read from the drive. The defendant’s employee attempted to recover the ESI contained on it, but those efforts failed. Granting plaintiffs’ motion for sanctions, the court ordered that defendants would be precluded from offering evidence at trial concerning the data contained on the discarded drive.

Why it’s important: In today’s e-discovery world, many organizations are instituting hold processes via manual solutions and then waiting weeks or months to ultimately collect the ESI. Wilson shows the danger of simply preserving data and makes the argument that you should either “collect to preserve” or collect very shortly after the litigation hold notice goes out. While focusing on a certain media type (flash drive), this analysis can be extended to any digital system containing ESI that inherently has some set failure rates or can be imagined to fail without express, conscious action (due to loss, theft, recycling, etc.).

Identification & Collection: “Manual” Collections Come Under Fire

Case: Green v. Blitz U.S.A. (E.D. Tex. Mar. 1, 2011)

Summary: In this case, Plaintiff sought to re-open her lawsuit despite prior settlement upon learning that defendant had failed to produce relevant documents. Finding that defendant had committed discovery abuses, including failing to disclose relevant evidence and failing to issue a litigation hold, the court ordered defendant to pay plaintiff $250,000, to provide a copy of the court’s order to plaintiffs “in every lawsuit proceeding against it” for the past two years and to file the court’s order in every case that defendant is involved in for the next 5 years. It was revealed that the employee “solely responsible for searching for and collecting documents relevant to litigation” issued no litigation hold, conducted no electronic word searches for emails, and made no effort to speak with defendant’s IT department regarding how to search for electronic documents.

Why it’s important: Green is the latest in a line of cases [See also Ford Motor Co. v. Edgewood Properties Inc., 257 F.R.D. 418 (D.N.J. 2009) and Phillip M. Adams & Assoc., LLC v. Dell, Inc., 621 F. Supp. 2d 1173 (D. Utah 2009) ] that have been highly critical of manual (or self) collection efforts by the individual custodians. Historically, if the custodians were monitored/supervised enough by counsel, this manual collection process was largely deemed defensible, but it looks like this behavior is simply too risky for any conservative enterprise. The better practice is to leverage the custodians to point out where relevant ESI might exist and utilize software tools to conduct broad collections from key players. While it’s not necessary to use IT tools to collect data immediately for all custodians who have received a litigation hold notice, it’s probably unreasonable to not quickly collect ESI (via formal, IT based methods) from at least some subset of key players. The main point is that this isn’t an all or nothing calculation. Costs, risks and benefits should all be carefully evaluated and documented, in case there’s a downstream challenge.

Analysis & Review: Failure to Test Keywords and Sample

Case: Mt. Hawley Ins. Co. v. Felman Prod., Inc., (S.D. W. Va., 2010).

Summary: In this case the court examined the reasonableness of plaintiff’s precautions to prevent disclosure of email, which was inadvertently produced by the plaintiff amidst “a massive disclosure of e-discovery.” The Mt. Hawley court applied the five-factor test established in Victor Stanley, Inc. v. Creative Pipe, Inc. (D. Md. 2008) and found that the producing party had not taken reasonable steps during discovery. In particular, the court was unwilling to find that the inadvertent production of 377 privileged documents was “solely attributable” to a technological glitch and instead found that plaintiff and counsel “failed to perform critical quality control sampling to determine whether their production was appropriate and neither over inclusive nor under-inclusive.” This finding meant that their attorney client privilege was waived as to the subject documents.

Why it’s important: Mt. Hawley demonstrates why sampling and keyword search term formulation is critically important to any defensible discovery effort. In many instances where “blind” keyword strategies are used, the producing party is taking on an undue risk, in essence flirting with the “3rd rail” of electronic discovery (inadvertent production). Blind keyword searching (followed by brute force review and production) is sadly still a very common practice today. My hope is that cases like Mt. Hawley will force the blissfully ignorant practicioners to take stock of their risky practices and get with contemporary best practices like ECA, sampling, iterative search and the like.

Conclusion

Simply by creating such a list, I’m sure to leave off cases other folks think are more buzz worthy. But, for me, having a few good legal chestnuts is better than trying to boil the ocean and synthesize all the available case law. If you have any comments I’d be eager to hear (good, bad or indifferent).

I was at Sedona midyear meeting last week and during Ken Withers’ excellent discussion of recent e-discovery case law, a few thoughts occurred to me. First, there are so many cases coming out now each week it’s hard to stay above the fray and mine for useful nuggets. The task is a bit Sisyphean, so folks like Ken (who keep a rolling index of cases) are particularly helpful. Next, I was struck by how hot Pension Committee still is, even after almost a year and a half. Certainly, this ongoing spotlight wasn’t an accident, and it’s almost certain that Judge Scheindlin is pleased by the ongoing debate.

I frequently get questions from enterprise clients regarding which cases they should know about, and so I put together an EDRM oriented (left to right) list for folks who just can’t get to all the latest cases. While it’s not an annual roundup per se, I do think it’s a bit more functional for busy electronic discovery professionals who need to stay current. So, here’s the buzz index of cases arranged by topic:

Preservation: The Legal Hold Gold Standard

Case: Pension Committee of the Univ. of Montreal Pension Plan, et al., v. Banc of America Securities, LLC, et al. (S.D.N.Y. 2010).

Summary: The dispute focused on claims by a group of investors who brought an action to recover losses of $550 million dollars stemming from the liquidation of two British Virgin Islands based hedge funds. Unlike many typical e-discovery disputes, this instant action focused on the conduct of the plaintiffs as they attempted to deal with the often murky landscape of electronically stored information (ESI) preservation, collection and production. Judge Scheindlin goes out of her way to crystallize duties and identify the type of conduct that can cause an e-discovery breach. “After a discovery duty is well established, the failure to adhere to contemporary standards can be considered gross negligence. Thus, after the final relevant Zubulake opinion in July, 2004, the following failures support a finding of gross negligence, when the duty to preserve has attached:

· to issue a written litigation hold;

· to identify all of the key players and to ensure that their electronic and paper records are preserved;

· to cease the deletion of email or to preserve the records of former employees that are in a party’s possession, custody, or control;

· and to preserve backup tapes when they are the sole source of relevant information or when they relate to key players, if the relevant information maintained by those players is not obtainable from readily accessible sources.”

Why it’s (still) important: First of all, Pension Committee is written by Judge Scheindlin, who is the most famous electronic discovery jurist on the planet. Next, since she’s in the Southern District of New York, it means that folks even in other jurisdiction that aren’t bound by her opinions still must take heed given the fact that New York is home to so many multinational organizations. Finally, her opinion is the clearest (even if disputed) articulation regarding the standard of care for the issuance of legal holds and the duty to preserve ESI. She attempts to categorically define conduct that is grossly negligent and therefore susceptible to extreme sanctions, including spoliation inferences and terminating sanctions. Fortunately, she recognizes the numerous challenges associated with electronic discovery. And, so as to blend in a healthy dose of reality Judge Scheindlin also said: “In an era where vast amounts of electronic information is available for review, discovery in certain cases has become increasingly complex and expensive. Courts cannot and do not expect that any party can meet a standard of perfection.”

In the end, Pension Committee, was the case of the year in 2010 and even in 2011 it’s generating an unprecedented level of retrospectives (here and here). It may be because Judge Scheindlin’s relatively bright line standard has created so much debate, but in the end the Pension Committee discussion will likely continue for the foreseeable future (perhaps only ending when/if the culpability rules are amended to create a unified national standard).

Preservation: Why Preserve in Place is Risky?

Case: Wilson v. Thorn Energy, LLC, (S.D.N.Y. 2010).

Summary: In Wilson, the defendant corporation identified a flash drive that contained relevant ESI, but rather than copying that data safely to a centralized evidence repository, the defendant’s employee chose to hold on to the drive, putting it instead into a desk drawer. When the files were requested for review and production, the files could not be read from the drive. The defendant’s employee attempted to recover the ESI contained on it, but those efforts failed. Granting plaintiffs’ motion for sanctions, the court ordered that defendants would be precluded from offering evidence at trial concerning the data contained on the discarded drive.

Why it’s important: In today’s e-discovery world, many organizations are instituting hold processes via manual solutions and then waiting weeks or months to ultimately collect the ESI. Wilson shows the danger of simply preserving data and makes the argument that you should either “collect to preserve” or collect very shortly after the litigation hold notice goes out. While focusing on a certain media type (flash drive), this analysis can be extended to any digital system containing ESI that inherently has some set failure rates or can be imagined to fail without express, conscious action (due to loss, theft, recycling, etc.).

Identification & Collection: “Manual” Collections Come Under Fire

Case: Green v. Blitz U.S.A. (E.D. Tex. Mar. 1, 2011)

Summary: In this case, Plaintiff sought to re-open her lawsuit despite prior settlement upon learning that defendant had failed to produce relevant documents. Finding that defendant had committed discovery abuses, including failing to disclose relevant evidence and failing to issue a litigation hold, the court ordered defendant to pay plaintiff $250,000, to provide a copy of the court’s order to plaintiffs “in every lawsuit proceeding against it” for the past two years and to file the court’s order in every case that defendant is involved in for the next 5 years. It was revealed that the employee “solely responsible for searching for and collecting documents relevant to litigation” issued no litigation hold, conducted no electronic word searches for emails, and made no effort to speak with defendant’s IT department regarding how to search for electronic documents.

Why it’s important: Green is the latest in a line of cases [See also Ford Motor Co. v. Edgewood Properties Inc., 257 F.R.D. 418 (D.N.J. 2009) and Phillip M. Adams & Assoc., LLC v. Dell, Inc., 621 F. Supp. 2d 1173 (D. Utah 2009) ] that have been highly critical of manual (or self) collection efforts by the individual custodians. Historically, if the custodians were monitored/supervised enough by counsel, this manual collection process was largely deemed defensible, but it looks like this behavior is simply too risky for any conservative enterprise. The better practice is to leverage the custodians to point out where relevant ESI might exist and utilize software tools to conduct broad collections from key players. While it’s not necessary to use IT tools to collect data immediately for all custodians who have received a litigation hold notice, it’s probably unreasonable to not quickly collect ESI (via formal, IT based methods) from at least some subset of key players. The main point is that this isn’t an all or nothing calculation. Costs, risks and benefits should all be carefully evaluated and documented, in case there’s a downstream challenge.

Analysis & Review: Failure to Test Keywords and Sample

Case: Mt. Hawley Ins. Co. v. Felman Prod., Inc., (S.D. W. Va., 2010).

Summary: In this case the court examined the reasonableness of plaintiff’s precautions to prevent disclosure of email, which was inadvertently produced by the plaintiff amidst “a massive disclosure of e-discovery.” The Mt. Hawley court applied the five-factor test established in Victor Stanley, Inc. v. Creative Pipe, Inc. (D. Md. 2008) and found that the producing party had not taken reasonable steps during discovery. In particular, the court was unwilling to find that the inadvertent production of 377 privileged documents was “solely attributable” to a technological glitch and instead found that plaintiff and counsel “failed to perform critical quality control sampling to determine whether their production was appropriate and neither over inclusive nor under-inclusive.” This finding meant that their attorney client privilege was waived as to the subject documents.

Why it’s important: Mt. Hawley demonstrates why sampling and keyword search term formulation is critically important to any defensible discovery effort. In many instances where “blind” keyword strategies are used, the producing party is taking on an undue risk, in essence flirting with the “3rd rail” of electronic discovery (inadvertent p

I was at Sedona midyear meeting last week and during Ken Withers’ excellent discussion of recent e-discovery case law, a few thoughts occurred to me. First, there are so many cases coming out now each week it’s hard to stay above the fray and mine for useful nuggets. The task is a bit Sisyphean, so folks like Ken (who keep a rolling index of cases) are particularly helpful. Next, I was struck by how hot Pension Committee still is, even after almost a year and a half. Certainly, this ongoing spotlight wasn’t an accident, and it’s almost certain that Judge Scheindlin is pleased by the ongoing debate.

I frequently get questions from enterprise clients regarding which cases they should know about, and so I put together an EDRM oriented (left to right) list for folks who just can’t get to all the latest cases. While it’s not an annual roundup per se, I do think it’s a bit more functional for busy electronic discovery professionals who need to stay current. So, here’s the buzz index of cases arranged by topic:

Preservation: The Legal Hold Gold Standard

Case: Pension Committee of the Univ. of Montreal Pension Plan, et al., v. Banc of America Securities, LLC, et al. (S.D.N.Y. 2010).

Summary: The dispute focused on claims by a group of investors who brought an action to recover losses of $550 million dollars stemming from the liquidation of two British Virgin Islands based hedge funds. Unlike many typical e-discovery disputes, this instant action focused on the conduct of the plaintiffs as they attempted to deal with the often murky landscape of electronically stored information (ESI) preservation, collection and production. Judge Scheindlin goes out of her way to crystallize duties and identify the type of conduct that can cause an e-discovery breach. “After a discovery duty is well established, the failure to adhere to contemporary standards can be considered gross negligence. Thus, after the final relevant Zubulake opinion in July, 2004, the following failures support a finding of gross negligence, when the duty to preserve has attached:

  • to issue a written litigation hold;
  • to identify all of the key players and to ensure that their electronic and paper records are preserved;
  • to cease the deletion of email or to preserve the records of former employees that are in a party’s possession, custody, or control;
  • and to preserve backup tapes when they are the sole source of relevant information or when they relate to key players, if the relevant information maintained by those players is not obtainable from readily accessible sources.”

Why it’s (still) important: First of all, Pension Committee is written by Judge Scheindlin, who is the most famous electronic discovery jurist on the planet. Next, since she’s in the Southern District of New York, it means that folks even in other jurisdiction that aren’t bound by her opinions still must take heed given the fact that New York is home to so many multinational organizations. Finally, her opinion is the clearest (even if disputed) articulation regarding the standard of care for the issuance of legal holds and the duty to preserve ESI. She attempts to categorically define conduct that is grossly negligent and therefore susceptible to extreme sanctions, including spoliation inferences and terminating sanctions. Fortunately, she recognizes the numerous challenges associated with electronic discovery. And, so as to blend in a healthy dose of reality Judge Scheindlin also said: “In an era where vast amounts of electronic information is available for review, discovery in certain cases has become increasingly complex and expensive. Courts cannot and do not expect that any party can meet a standard of perfection.”

In the end, Pension Committee, was the case of the year in 2010 and even in 2011 it’s generating an unprecedented level of retrospectives (here and here). It may be because Judge Scheindlin’s relatively bright line standard has created so much debate, but in the end the Pension Committee discussion will likely continue for the foreseeable future (perhaps only ending when/if the culpability rules are amended to create a unified national standard).

Preservation: Why Preserve in Place is Risky?

Case: Wilson v. Thorn Energy, LLC, (S.D.N.Y. 2010).

Summary: In Wilson, the defendant corporation identified a flash drive that contained relevant ESI, but rather than copying that data safely to a centralized evidence repository, the defendant’s employee chose to hold on to the drive, putting it instead into a desk drawer. When the files were requested for review and production, the files could not be read from the drive. The defendant’s employee attempted to recover the ESI contained on it, but those efforts failed. Granting plaintiffs’ motion for sanctions, the court ordered that defendants would be precluded from offering evidence at trial concerning the data contained on the discarded drive.

Why it’s important: In today’s e-discovery world, many organizations are instituting hold processes via manual solutions and then waiting weeks or months to ultimately collect the ESI. Wilson shows the danger of simply preserving data and makes the argument that you should either “collect to preserve” or collect very shortly after the litigation hold notice goes out. While focusing on a certain media type (flash drive), this analysis can be extended to any digital system containing ESI that inherently has some set failure rates or can be imagined to fail without express, conscious action (due to loss, theft, recycling, etc.).

Identification & Collection: “Manual” Collections Come Under Fire

Case: Green v. Blitz U.S.A. (E.D. Tex. Mar. 1, 2011)

Summary: In this case, Plaintiff sought to re-open her lawsuit despite prior settlement upon learning that defendant had failed to produce relevant documents. Finding that defendant had committed discovery abuses, including failing to disclose relevant evidence and failing to issue a litigation hold, the court ordered defendant to pay plaintiff $250,000, to provide a copy of the court’s order to plaintiffs “in every lawsuit proceeding against it” for the past two years and to file the court’s order in every case that defendant is involved in for the next 5 years. It was revealed that the employee “solely responsible for searching for and collecting documents relevant to litigation” issued no litigation hold, conducted no electronic word searches for emails, and made no effort to speak with defendant’s IT department regarding how to search for electronic documents.

Why it’s important: Green is the latest in a line of cases [See also Ford Motor Co. v. Edgewood Properties Inc., 257 F.R.D. 418 (D.N.J. 2009) and Phillip M. Adams & Assoc., LLC v. Dell, Inc., 621 F. Supp. 2d 1173 (D. Utah 2009) ] that have been highly critical of manual (or self) collection efforts by the individual custodians. Historically, if the custodians were monitored/supervised enough by counsel, this manual collection process was largely deemed defensible, but it looks like this behavior is simply too risky for any conservative enterprise. The better practice is to leverage the custodians to point out where relevant ESI might exist and utilize software tools to conduct broad collections from key players. While it’s not necessary to use IT tools to collect data immediately for all custodians who have received a litigation hold notice, it’s probably unreasonable to not quickly collect ESI (via formal, IT based methods) from at least some subset of key players. The main point is that this isn’t an all or nothing calculation. Costs, risks and benefits should all be carefully evaluated and documented, in case there’s a downstream challenge.

Analysis & Review: Failure to Test Keywords and Sample

Case: Mt. Hawley Ins. Co. v. Felman Prod., Inc., (S.D. W. Va., 2010).

Summary: In this case the court examined the reasonableness of plaintiff’s precautions to prevent disclosure of email, which was inadvertently produced by the plaintiff amidst “a massive disclosure of e-discovery.” The Mt. Hawley court applied the five-factor test established in Victor Stanley, Inc. v. Creative Pipe, Inc. (D. Md. 2008) and found that the producing party had not taken reasonable steps during discovery. In particular, the court was unwilling to find that the inadvertent production of 377 privileged documents was “solely attributable” to a technological glitch and instead found that plaintiff and counsel “failed to perform critical quality control sampling to determine whether their production was appropriate and neither over inclusive nor under-inclusive.” This finding meant that their attorney client privilege was waived as to the subject documents.

Why it’s important: Mt. Hawley demonstrates why sampling and keyword search term formulation is critically important to any defensible discovery effort. In many instances where “blind” keyword strategies are used, the producing party is taking on an undue risk, in essence flirting with the “3rd rail” of electronic discovery (inadvertent production). Blind keyword searching (followed by brute force review and production) is sadly still a very common practice today. My hope is that cases like Mt. Hawley will force the blissfully ignorant practicioners to take stock of their risky practices and get with contemporary best practices like ECA, sampling, iterative search and the like.

Conclusion

Simply by creating such a list, I’m sure to leave off cases other folks think are more buzz worthy. But, for me, having a few good legal chestnuts is better than trying to boil the ocean and synthesize all the available case law. If you have any comments I’d be eager to hear (good, bad or indifferent).

roduction). Blind keyword searching (followed by brute force review and production) is sadly still a very common practice today. My hope is that cases like Mt. Hawley will force the blissfully ignorant practicioners to take stock of their risky practices and get with contemporary best practices like ECA, sampling, iterative search and the like.

Conclusion

Simply by creating such a list, I’m sure to leave off cases other folks think are more buzz worthy. But, for me, having a few good legal chestnuts is better than trying to boil the ocean and synthesize all the available case law. If you have any comments I’d be eager to hear (good, bad or indifferent).

Clearwell’s New eDiscovery World Revolutionizes End-to-End E-Discovery

Friday, April 1st, 2011

At Clearwell, we’re constantly ruminating on innovative ways to help make our customers’ e-discovery process more efficient. Given the astronomical growth of social gaming, we began asking ourselves, “How can we harness the power and passion of millions of social gamers for the greater good?”

Questions like this really get our engineers cooking, and what they came back with is, to steal a word from one of our most popular product launches a year ago, simply “magical”.

Starting today, Clearwell’s eDiscovery World leverages the red-hot consumer social gaming trend to provide dramatic and previously unattainable increases in e-discovery technology training and productivity. In fact, the promise of eDiscovery World is so great that we have added social gaming as a core part of our product architecture across all Clearwell modules, from legal hold through production.

And we’re not stopping there. We believe that strategic social gaming delivers such powerful benefits to a best practices e-discovery process, that we’ve proposed modifying the EDRM diagram to account for this critical new requirement for truly end-to-end discovery.

Prior to today, unstructured obsession with social gaming has actually been an obstacle keeping end-to-end e-discovery from becoming a reality in many organizations. Interviews conducted across law firms, service providers, and every major enterprise vertical indicate that the time spent protecting crops from withering and urban blight from descending upon virtual cities has left insufficient hours with which to implement next-generation electronic discovery technology. As a result, legal costs have continued to rise and the risk of sanctions has grown substantially. One Director of E-Discovery at a Fortune 100 company, when grilled about his organization’s failure to implement a robust legal hold process, pleaded, “Can you spare some Facebook credits so I can buy a chicken?”

Now, Clearwell has turned this challenge into a tremendous opportunity. In eDiscovery World, we provide an alternative to traditional social gaming that allows users to perform end-to-end e-discovery in a virtual environment – first in training mode to gain e-discovery process knowledge and experience, and then working with live documents and high-stakes cases. All stages of the e-discovery process are functional in the eDiscovery World environment, which is backed by a robust cloud computing platform able to support the largest and most complex cases. Best of all, in addition to the substantial productivity gains our beta customers have already achieved, many have even found their employees clamoring to forego significant portions of their salaries in order to earn precious Facebook credits, thus delivering dramatic cost savings for the organization.

eDiscovery World is truly a win-win, and we couldn’t be more excited about it. Enjoy!

Clearwell Streamlines the Legal Hold Process with the New Clearwell Legal Hold Module

Monday, March 14th, 2011

(Editor’s note: This special guest post was written by Teddy Cha, Clearwell Senior Product Manager, MIT alum, and coffee connoisseur. Teddy was a key member of the team that developed our Legal Hold Module and has worked tirelessly with our engineering team and lead customers to bring the product to market. – Kurt)

Legal hold is a critical first step to any e-discovery process, but as recent experience has shown, enterprises are still struggling to perform them in a defensible and repeatable way. A judicial warning was heard as early as 2003 with Judge Sheindlin’s ruling in Zubulake v. UBS (and most recently in Pension Committee).  The need for change is not coming from only a single judge, however.  In 2010, the Duke Law Journal studied the level of sanctions compared to previous years and found that:

  1. Sanctions are at an all-time high (up 271% since 2005)
  2. Damages were as high as almost $9 million
  3. The most common misconduct was the failure to preserve data

Sending legal hold notices can start out simple, but it can quickly become unwieldy if not managed correctly. It’s like taxes. Everybody has to do them, and it typically starts out as a “simple” process. But as your assets grow, you may want to invest in more complex software or an online service to maintain efficiency. And once you start a family (or a small business), you’ll need to graduate to a much more robust process.

As companies grow their legal hold process evolves in the same way. Their progression can be described in the following distinct three stages:

Stage 1: Manual Legal Hold Process

Sending a litigation hold notification is as easy as…well, sending an email. But tracking these litigation matters and their responses in spreadsheets quickly grows out of hand once a poor paralegal has to manage a 10th, 20th and 50th simultaneous legal matter (or even multiple holds in a single case).  This manual process is difficult to repeat, error-prone, and likely doesn’t reflect the real-time status of compliance the second the spreadsheet is saved. Typical corporations are concurrently managing hundreds active legal holds, involving thousands of custodians, across multiple business units and groups. It becomes quickly apparent that a better solution is required.

Stage 2: Stand-Alone Legal Hold Software

Legal Hold solutions have been in the marketplace for a number of years. Typically they fall into two categories:

  1. Matter Management or Information Governance systems that help enterprises construct workflows and integrate record management policies and controls. Legal Hold notification capabilities are an appended component to these ambitious and holistic solutions. These systems are typically expensive and have long implementation cycles.
  2. Narrowly focused offerings aimed at managing just legal hold notification and survey tracking. These solutions typically cost less than the above and are delivered as a hosted service (SaaS).

Stand-alone legal hold software products are certainly an improvement on the Stage 1 manual process. But despite virtually all major enterprises needing some sort of legal hold process, they have not yet raced to embrace these Stage 2 solutions yet. Why not?

Following a typical e-discovery case quickly uncovers the problem. Sending and tracking legal holds is a necessary part of the e-discovery process, but it is only the first step. Soon after custodians are notified of their obligation, e-discovery teams must separately collect, process, analyze, review, and produce that data using other solutions. Stage 2 legal hold solutions are stuck just managing the holds.

This is where purchasing a stand-alone legal hold solution is a bit like buying an iPhone without the network plan: You can’t really do much with it (well, you could play Angry Birds, but only if you download it over a WiFi connection). You can’t obtain your goal of mobile communication without a phone and a network plan.

Stage 3: Integrated Legal Hold Software

To address to drawbacks of Stage 2, many companies today are looking for a more integrated approach – one that marries legal hold with the rest of the e-discovery process. This is where Clearwell’s new solution can help. Once custodians have acknowledged the legal hold notice, Clearwell can immediately reach across the enterprise network and collect those custodians’ data. Once the data is collected, a few clicks of the mouse prepare it for early case assessment (ECA), analysis, and review.

As any experienced corporate IT and legal executive will tell you, such a comprehensive solution has long been promised, but has not come with fast implementation (i.e., up and running in a day), ease of use (i.e., no training required), or in a single platform  (i.e., one login for users and no exporting or importing of data between e-discovery phases). With this in mind, we are delighted to announce the Clearwell Legal Hold Module, now available as part of the Clearwell E-Discovery Platform. Combined with Clearwell’s Identification & Collection, Processing & Analysis, and Review & Production modules, companies can now leverage a truly integrated e-discovery solution to lower the cost and risks of e-discovery. Key features of the new Module include:

  • Hold Notices: Hold notices can be quickly created and sent to relevant custodians and system administrators via email. Different notices can be sent to custodians and system administrators, streamlining the notification process. Notices can be sent immediately or scheduled for delivery.
  • Auto-Reminders and Auto-Escalations:  Reminders and escalation notices can be scheduled for delivery to non-responsive custodians, eliminating the need for manual follow-up.
  • Custodian Surveys: Surveys containing single-choice, multiple-choice, or free form text questions can be created and issued to key custodians so administrators can easily capture information critical to a case, thereby expediting the interview process. Surveys can also be saved as templates to the Notice Library and reused.
  • Automated Tracking and Reporting: Administrators have immediate visibility into the status of all legal hold notices across all cases through a single pane of glass. Administrators can drill-down by case to view the status across all custodians, including those who have received and responded to their hold notices, and those who haven’t.

Until today, corporations have been making do with manual or stand-alone legal hold solutions that are neither scalable nor integrated with the rest of the e-discovery process, assuming more and more risk and incurring greater costs – never an ideal combination. Fortunately, it no longer needs to be that way.

(Teddy Cha is a Senior Product Manager at Clearwell Systems and the lead Product Manager for Clearwell’s Legal Hold and Identification & Collection Modules.)