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October 28, 2012Social Media Discovery Case Update and Tips for Those Seeking Discovery[Post by Venkat Balasubramani] I’m tired of social media discovery cases. Maybe I’m just tired of discovery (that’s civil discovery I’m talking about, not discovery in the conventional sense). Anyway, we keep seeing these cases, courts (and litigants) continue to struggle with the issues, and it doesn’t make sense to not post about them. (Here's the previous update from September 15th: "Social Media Discovery Roundup" (discussing Robinson v. Riverwalk Grill; Mailhoit v. Home Depot; and Robinson v. Jones Lang Lasalle).) Kregg v. Maldonado, 2012 WL 4469935 (N.Y. App. Div. Sept. 28, 2012): The plaintiff’s son was involved in a motorcycle accident. The defendants (Suzuki) learned that accounts had been created on behalf of plaintiff's son, and sought the “entire contents” of all social media accounts “maintained by or on behalf of the injured party [the son].” Plaintiff objected on the basis that this was a mere fishing expedition. The court denies defendants’ motion to compel without prejudice and says that they have to come back with some sort of factual predicate and more narrowly tailored requests. Howell v. The Buckeye Ranch, Inc., 2012 U.S. Dist LEXIS 141368 (S.D. Oh. Oct. 1, 2012): This is a sexual harassment and discrimination lawsuit. Defendants moved to compel plaintiff to turn over her user names and passwords “for each of the social media sites she uses.” The court says (familiarly) that social media evidence is not magically off-limits, but any discovery requests must be limited by relevance. In re White Tail Oilfield Services, L.L.C., 2012 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 146321 (E.D. La. Oct. 11, 2012): This discovery dispute was a back and forth between the parties and Facebook as to who could access the social media information sought by defendant. White Tail (the party issuing discovery) propounded fairly broad discovery requests that required Pellegrin (the injured party) to produce his “account data for the period of September 1, 2012, through present.” While Pellegrin could have probably objected to the scope of the discovery requests, he took the position that he couldn’t download all of this information from Facebook. Ultimately, the court recognizes that Facebook makes available a “download your information” link at which you can download the entire contents of your account. Pellegrin is ordered to do this. (See Eric’s post at Forbes on this case: A Dark Side of Data Portability: Litigators Love It). A few comments that these cases brings to mind, in the form of tips to people who are seeking discovery--most of these comments are just based on common sense, but the cases make me wonder how much common sense people employ when seeking discovery regarding a party's social media accounts: - make sure you have some sort of factual predicate for why you seek the information in question; [image credit: Kzenon/Shutterstock] Previous posts: "Social Media Discovery Roundup" Posted by Venkat at October 28, 2012 08:14 AM | Evidence/Discovery , Privacy/Security |