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Electronic Evidence as the Smoking Gun
By
Henry J. Fasthoff, IV
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NOTE: THIS IS ARTICLE IS FOR
INFORMATIONAL PURPOSES ONLY. IT IS NOT INTENDED TO BE
CONSTRUED AS LEGAL ADVICE.
Electronic communications--particularly email--may contain
a treasure trove of evidence in commercial litigation
matters. There are three key reasons for this fact. First,
email is a very informal means of communication. Why? I
don't know, it just is. Though I personally insist on
specific grammer and sentence structure in my
"hardcopy" written correspondence, court
pleadings, etc., in emails I sometimes choose not to
follow the rules of written English.
Second, though intellectually many of us know it is not,
email "feels" anonymous. I'm sure there have
been studies conducted in effort to understand why email
feels anonymous. Maybe it's because of the instantaneous
nature of email--you can simply vent your emotions and
knee-jerk reactions immediately and press the send button,
rather than having time to reflect on your written
thoughts as you otherwise would if you were forced to sit
down and write a letter; sign it with your own hand; put
it in an envelope; put a stamp on in it; and take it to
the mailbox and mail it. Whatever the reason(s), the fact
of the matter is that email does feel anonymous.
The third reason email evidence can contain critical
evidence in a commercial litigation case: permanence and
retrievability. Most people don't realize that when they
"delete" an email from their email program it
actually remains on the computer or network unless and
until the portions of the computer's memory containing the
email are overwritten by other information. You can be
certain, however, that every single electronic
commuincation you make--email or otherwise--is being
recorded somewhere. Perhaps on your company's network
server, perhaps at your Internet service provider, or
perhaps on your own computer's hard drive. Savvy
litigators know this fact and, depending the stakes of the
case, you could end up receiving a letter such as this
should your business find itself in a business dispute:
Dear Mr. John Doe:
This is a notice and demand that evidence identified below
in paragraphs 2 through 5 must be immediately preserved
and retained by you until further written notice from the
undersigned. This request is essential, as a paper
printout of text contained in a computer file does not
completely reflect all information contained within the
electronic file.
The continued operation of the computer systems identified
herein will likely result in the destruction of relevant
evidence due to the fact that electronic evidence can be
easily altered, deleted or otherwise modified. THE FAILURE
TO PRESERVE AND RETAIN THE ELECTRONIC DATA OUTLINED IN
THIS NOTICE CONSTITUTES SPOLIATION OF EVIDENCE AND WILL
SUBJECT YOU TO LEGAL CLAIMS FOR DAMAGES AND/OR EVIDENTIARY
AND MONETARY SANCTIONS.
For purposes of this notice, “Electronic Data” shall
include, but not be limited to, all text files (including
word processing documents), spread sheets, e-mail files
and information concerning e-mail (including logs of
e-mail history and usage, header information and
“deleted” files), Internet history files and
preferences, graphical image format (“GIF”) files, all
other graphical format images, data bases, calendar and
scheduling information, computer system activity logs, and
all file fragments and backup files containing Electronic
Data.
1. Please preserve and retain all Electronic Data
generated or received by the following persons:
John Doe, CEO
Mary Smith, CFO
Bill Brown, COO
2. Please preserve and retain all Electronic Data
containing any information about the following subjects:
Emails sent to or received from any employee or
representative of ABC Company, DEF Company, or XYZ
Company.
3. You must refrain from operating (or removing or
altering fixed or external drives and media attached
thereto) standalone personal computers, network
workstations, notebook and/or laptop computers operated by
the following persons:
John Doe, CEO
Mary Smith, CFO
Bill Brown, COO
4. You must retain and preserve all backup tapes or other
storage media, whether on-line or off-line, and refrain
from overwriting or deleting information contained
thereon, which may contain Electronic Data identified in
paragraphs 2 through 4.
In order to alleviate any burden upon you, we are prepared
to immediately enlist the services of a computer forensic
expert to image and examine all drives and media in your
custody and control which may contain Electronic Data
relevant to this matter. If you enlist your own computer
forensics expert to generate evidentiary images of all
electronic evidence identified above, demand is made that
such expert utilize industry standard computer forensic
software in order to facilitate and enable the processing
and exchange of such evidence in this matter.
Should your company receive a letter like this, you should
take it extremely seriously. Continuing to use any
computers or other devices identified in such a letter
will result in data being overwritten, which the courts
would interpret as destruction of evidence. Destroying
evidence can not only result in serious sanctions against
the company or individual in the case at hand, as we saw
during the Enron mess it can also result in criminal
prosecution.
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About
The Author
Mr.
Fasthoff is a commercial litigation
attorney by day, and an entrepreneur in
the marketing field by night. He
represents corporate clients and
individuals in the fields of commercial
litigation; entertainment litigation;
intellectual property litigation; arts
law; technology law; and a wide variety of
other business litigation matters. |
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