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No Clawback of Confidential Discovery Material Inadvertently Disclosed to Reporter
From today's decision by Magistrate Judge Jolie Russo in Cahill v. Nike, Inc. (D. Or.):
Plaintiffs … brought this action seeking class action status alleging that defendant Nike systematically discriminates against them and other similarly situated women regarding salary and promotions…. [A] group of non-party media organizations[] moved to intervene seeking access to those sealed documents…. [T]he Court granted the media organizations' motion to unredact a number of documents. However, defendant appealed the order, and the Ninth Circuit granted a temporary stay pending the appeal.
On January 25, 2024, plaintiffs' counsel notified the Court she inadvertently disclosed to an Oregonian reporter (appearing in this action as Advance Local Media LLC) confidential discovery material obtained from the defendant. Despite plaintiffs' request, Advance Local Media [the Oregonian] refused to return the material. Accordingly, plaintiffs moved this Court for the return of the documents. Given the confidential nature of the material and the Ninth Circuit's stay regarding the redactions, on January 26, 2024, the Court issued an order requiring the Oregonian to return the inadvertently disclosed confidential material, to not disseminate those materials, and destroy any copies in its possession by January 31, 2024….
This Court initially ordered the Oregonian to return the inadvertently disclosed documents pursuant to Fed. R. Civ. P. 26(b)(5)(B) which requires parties, after notice of a claim of protection, to promptly return or destroy the specified information. The Oregonian asserts it is not a party in this action and has intervened only as a non-party for a limited purpose—albeit for a purpose directly related to unsealing the documents it inadvertently obtained from a party in this case.
After careful review of the record, the Court agrees the Oregonian is not a party to this action for purposes of the protective order. As noted above, the Oregonian intervened as a non-party to unseal records in this case and make them public. Intervention was granted well after the Court entered the stipulated protective order to which plaintiffs' and defendant agreed. While the Oregonian intervened in this case for the limited purpose of unsealing non-public portions of the record, it did not intervene to challenge or revise the protective order. Moreover, the parties did not seek to alter the protective order to bind the Oregonian to its parameters.
The Oregonian as a limited purpose intervenor to this action lacks the status of a full party. In addition, the Oregonian never joined in the protective order agreement as demonstrated by the enforced lack of access to the sealed documents in the docket. Cf., Univ. of Kansas Ctr. for Rsch., Inc. v. United States (D. Kan. 2010) (finding invalid a provision that binds a non-party to the jurisdiction of the court for purposes of enforcing a protective order). Accordingly, while plaintiffs' counsel violated the protective order in place in this case, purportedly inadvertently, the Oregonian has not violated any orders to which it is bound. Moreover, the protective order did not restrict "the disclosure or use of any information or documents lawfully obtained by the receiving party through means or sources outside of this litigation."
To the extent the Court has any authority to direct the conduct of the Oregonian as a case participant, rather than as a party litigant, in its use of the improperly disclosed documents, it must comply with the parameters of the First Amendment. Cf., Seattle Times Co. v. Rhinehart (1984) ("A litigant has no First Amendment right of access to information made available only for purposes of trying his suit.").
Although, at first glance, it is tempting to conclude that Kish, but for the discovery process, would not have obtained the documents at issue, the Oregonian's possession of these documents did not involve any Court process emanating from this case. Despite plaintiffs' counsel's failure to guard confidential materials in her possession, the Court cannot impute any violation of the protective order to Kish or to the Oregonian.
Accordingly, before the Court can restrain the Oregonian from publishing any information contained in the documents or compel their return, it must determine that this is an exceptional case justifying such prior restraint. Neither defendant, nor plaintiffs, have identified such extraordinary circumstances. At best, privacy concerns of Nike employees and former employees are at stake. And while those interests are significant, they are not sufficient to justify prior restraint on First Amendment rights. See Org. for a Better Austin v. Keefe (1971) (no prior decisions support prior restraint based on the claimed interest of an individual in being free from public criticism of his business practices or free from invasion of privacy).
To the extent Kish was aware the documents were confidential, and that Owens should not have disclosed them based on the protective order, such awareness does not overcome First Amendment protections afforded the Oregonian. See Bartnicki v. Vopper (2001) ("stranger's illegal conduct does not suffice to remove the First Amendment shield from speech about a matter of public concern"); N.Y. Times Co. v. United States (1971) (declining to enforce prior restraint of publication of illegally acquired information by newspaper's source). Therefore, plaintiffs' motion requesting the return of inadvertently disclosed materials is denied….
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“Inadvertently”
> "plaintiffs' counsel notified the Court she inadvertently disclosed to an Oregonian reporter confidential discovery material obtained from the defendant"
The First Amendment issues, while interesting in a limited sense, are predictable. Tell us about the OSC re sanctions for violation of the Court's protective order, and about the motion to disqualify and the state bar complaint.
It was a stipulated protective order, and plaintiff's counsel made a good faith effort to claw back what appear to be documents that Nike marked "confidential." It looks like Plaintiffs counsel inadvertently emailed the documents to a reporter, and then tried to get the court to unring the bell once she relaized her mistake. The court is not going to issue an OSC or report plaintiff's counsel to the bar.
If Nike thinks that the disclosure was deliberate, rather than accidental, it may end up moving for sanctions. But absent evidence that Plaintiffs counsel was in cahoots with the reporter or that her motion demanding return of the documents was a sham, the sanctions motion is likely to fizzle out.
Fuck off with that disingenuous shit. When public pressure is part of your legal strategy and you "inadvertently" reveal them to allied reporters there is no good faith to be found because the knowledge is already out (per plan) and can be recreated even if returned.
Now the legal apparatus may side with you about "honest mistakes" but that's just the protection of political allies.
It looks like Plaintiffs counsel inadvertently emailed the documents to a reporter
Pull the other one. I've been using email for forty years and I've sent an email to the wrong address once. And that was because I was aiming to send it to john.d.parkins and I sent it to john.d.perkins instead (names changed.)
Emailing stuff that's under a protective order and you're not going to check very carefully that it's going to the right place ? And whoopsy it just happens to go to ...... a reporter ?
Were you on the OJ jury ?
I have no idea what happened here, but as to the claim that you've only sent an email to the wrong person once in 40 years: pull the other one. There are typos. There are mistaken autocompletes. There are "reply all" mistakes. Over 35 years of personal and business email use, I've done one of those things numerous times. Nothing crucial, but once or twice a bit embarrassing. You know, such as Person A having sent me an email, and I meant to forward it to my wife or law partner and say, "Can you believe this clown?" but instead of hitting forward I hit reply.
Moreover, the claim wasn’t that they directed an email to the wrong person. It's that they inadvertently disclosed certain documents. That could mean that they did intend to email the reporter, but intended to include non-confidential Documents4312b.pdf as an attachment and mistakenly attached confidential Documents4312d.pdf instead, or in addition.
If you are typical of lawyers in thinking it’s so easy to make this kind of mistake with documents that you are supposed to be keeping confidential, then you have a system to prevent this kind of mistake.
When the system fails you are presumptively negligent ( at best) unless you have a real good story, and evidence to back it up, as to why on this occasion your system failed.
This is not the lawyers own confidential stuff, or even their clients confidential stuff. It’s the other sides confidential stuff that they have been obliged to provide you the plaintiffs lawyer with because you are suing them. On condition you keep it confidential.
Either it’s deliberate (which I favor) or it’s negligent or some amazing happenstance has intervened which will keep the Daily Mail amused for weeks.
What it’s not is meh, shrug, whatev - these things happen get over it. Except in lawyerland.
Yeah, that kind of thing happens. I recall a family trip to a destination where there were too many of us to use only one car. My daughter, in my car, sent a text noting that we'd be later than expected because she had forgotten "how effing slow Dad drives." She meant to send that to her husband in the other car but sent it to me by mistake. (I sort of wished she'd sent that to my car insurer by mistake.)
That's the point though, isn't it ?
If you - and the legal profession as a whole - regard the legal obligation to protect the confidentiality of other people's documents as a challenge of equal importance to that of aiming your own private texts about your Dad's driving correctly while travelling in a car then ..... the legal obligation is worth nothing. No one can rely on it.
Only if the lawyer faces - and gets - sanctions from the court and/or the bar will lawyers take the obligation seriously.
And if there's no sanction - it's a freebie. You can "discover" your enemy's confidential information by compulsion just by launching a lawsuit, and then publish it to the world with grin on your face. Oh...sorry ! No harm no foul, right ? Or at least no harm for me, ha ha.
I don't like the fact that the Court issued the order in the first place,