NEWS & EVENTS > MANPOWER'S RETENTION OF FORENSICON TO SEARCH FOR DELETED EMAILS KEY IN AVOIDING HARSH SANCTIONS
Forensicon Helps Manpower, Inc. Avoid Harsh Sanctions
Pinstripe, Inc. v. Manpower, Inc., 2009 U.S. Dist.
LEXIS 66422, 2009 WL 2252131 (N.D. Okla. July 28, 2009)
Chicago,
Illinois - July 28th, 2009:
Pinstripe, Inc., d/b/a AcctKnowledge, is a staffing firm
who previously provided employees for IBM. On Oct. 25, 2007, Pinstripe filed
suit against Manpower, Inc. and IBM for breach of contract and to prevent
the transition of its employees to Manpower, a competitor. Attorneys for
Manpower immediately drafted a litigation hold, but in January 2009,
in-house counsel for Manpower realized the company had failed to issue the
hold. Further investigation revealed that two employees may have deleted
pertinent email data.
Upon learning of the oversight, Manpower sought to recover the documents.
When initial efforts by Manpower's IT staff were unsuccessful, Forensicon
was hired to conduct a forensic search of the various computer media in an
attempt to find any retrievable data, which likewise did not result in any
relevant salvageable emails. Manpower then contacted the recipients of the
emails to re-acquire as many documents as possible, resulting in a late
production of more than 700 messages.
Plaintiff filed a motion for sanctions, in addition to an entry of default
judgment -- or alternatively, an adverse inference instruction -- for
failing to preserve and actively destroying relevant documents. The Court
held that Manpower clearly failed to meet its preservation obligations but
did not agree it was a result of intentional conduct. In order for
Manpower's actions to warrant such an extreme remedy, Pinstripe would also
need to demonstrate that Manpower acted with a "culpable state of mind,"
which based on 10th circuit precedent requires a showing of bad faith.
Even though Forensicon was ultimately unable to successfully locate the
specific deleted emails, the Court held that Manpower's combined endeavors
to retrieve the ESI and willingness to incur additional expense constituted
a "special effort." As a result of its diligence and demonstration of good
faith to rectify the situation, Manpower was merely ordered to pay for any
necessary retaking of depositions due to late-produced evidence, and to
contribute $2,500 to the local Bar Association “to support a seminar program
on litigation hold orders, and preservation of electronic data.”
Read the complete published
opinion
About Forensicon
Specializing in trade secrets, employment litigation, and internal
investigations, Forensicon is a computer forensics firm that provides
expertise to the top law firms in the U.S. as well as corporations large and
small. Forensicon offers nationwide computer forensics services for
plaintiff, defense, as well as special master neutral third party
representation. The firm has represented numerous Fortune 500 companies and
other large privately held corporations wanting to defend against or
prosecute claims of intellectual property theft. For more information,
contact Forensicon at 888.427.5667, email us at
contact@forensicon.com or visit
our web site at:
http://www.forensicon.com.
