Monday, May 11, 2009

Personal and Corporate Responsibility for Searching, Preserving and Producing Information

In March of this year, a court noted that a corporation’s failure to adopt appropriation information polices can results in potentially costly legal sanctions. While sanctions themselves may or may not be substantial, the legal fees leading up to the sanctions will likely to be weighty. See, Phillip M. Adams & Assoc. L.L.C. v. Dell, Inc., 2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 26964 (N.D. Utah. Mar. 27, 2009). This decision and other recent holdings serve notice that it is in technologist’s best interest to bring potentially sub-standard retention policies or irresponsible data retention practices that may result in loss of data to the attention of their legal and business archiving/eDiscovery counterparts. The courts, by holding corporations responsible, are certainly acting within the dictates of logic. A corporation deploying a solution that seamlessly allows for additional search, preservation, or production burdens without imposing additional burdens individual employees may be in a stronger position to assert that they fall within the ambit of safe harbor.

Technologists who knowingly withhold such information from their legal and business counterparts, place their employers and their employment at risk. While many grey areas exist as to what constitutes a failure of policies/practices to synchronize with systems, there seems to be clarity on one thing: when policies and practices are in-place, but the systems fail to retain data, a potentially sizable legal problem may arise for the entity.


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Source: ciozone.com
By: Daniel Garrie

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