The Electronic Discovery Blog of K & L Gates has an informative post on a recent electronic discovery decision out of the Northern District of Georgia.
In the case the court found that deleted emails were not reasonably accessible and the defendant had no duty to search backup tapes for emails of a sexual nature.
Lessons from this decision:
- DIscovery requests for emails should be relevent, specific and limited by time, sender and recipient.
- Following a written document retention and destruction schedule can prevent spoilation sanctions.
- Plaintiffs should request company-wide email perservation and not rely solely on the fact litigation has commenced. Requests should also include the names of individuals from whom you want the emails.
- If the costs of retrieving emails on backup tapes are too high, judges are reluctant to order production.
Read the entire decision here.
Jon simply has one of most informative employment law blogs around. Here are his highlights of the new regulations:
Welcome to a
as a twenty year old when law school hadn’t yet entered his mind and the biggest
About 15 miles down the road Charlie takes a break and starts getting an earful from New Yorker Eric Turkewitz about
makes him wonder whether
Sox First tells Charlie that Sarbanes-Oxley not only failed to stop the subprime meltdown,
As he enters Tama (or is it Toledo), John Phillips of the Word on Employment Law almost runs smack into a little beagle that darts in front of him. The incident causes John to conclude that
discusses
Charlie decides to join the
A .300 batting average may get you into Major League Baseball’s Hall of Fame but winning only 30 percent of your employment lawsuits won’t do the trick.