Advanced Micro Devices, Inc. v. Intel Corp.

258 F.R.D. 280, 2008 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 43920
CourtDistrict Court, D. Delaware
DecidedJune 4, 2008
DocketCivil Action Nos. 05-441-JJF, 05-485-JJF; MDL No. 05-1717-JJF
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 258 F.R.D. 280 (Advanced Micro Devices, Inc. v. Intel Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Advanced Micro Devices, Inc. v. Intel Corp., 258 F.R.D. 280, 2008 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 43920 (D. Del. 2008).

Opinion

ORDER

JOSEPH J. FAENAN, Jr., District Judge.

WHEREAS, the Special Master issued a Report and Recommendation (D.I. 641 in Civ. Act. No. 05-441; D.I. 743 in Civ. Act. No. 05-485; D.I. 903 in MDL No. 05-1717) concerning the Motion of AMD and Class Plaintiffs to compel Intel to produce the notes of Intel’s counsel investigation interviews of designated employees conducted by Intel’s counsel concerning Intel’s compliance with its evidence preservation obligations (“DM 4A”);

WHEREAS, the Special Master also issued sealed Findings and Recommendations Regarding The Declaration Of David J. Lender (D.I. 642 in Civ. Act. No. 05-441; D.I. 744 in Civ. Act. No. 05-485; D.I. 904 in MDL No. 05-1717) in connection with DM 4A;

WHEREAS, objections to the Report and Recommendation were due by May 16, 2008, and none have been filed;

NOW THEREFORE, IT IS HEREBY ORDERED that:

1. The Special Master’s Report and Recommendation concerning DM 4A (D.I. 641 in Civ. Act. No. 05-441; D.I. 743 in Civ. Act. No. 05 — 485; D.I. 903 in MDL No. 05-1717) is ADOPTED.

2. The Special Master’s sealed Findings and Recommendations Regarding The Declaration Of David J. Lender (D.I. 642 in Civ. Act. No. 05 — 441; D.I. 744 in Civ. Act. No. 05-485; D.I. 904 in MDL No. 05-1717) are ADOPTED.

SPECIAL MASTER’S REPORT AND RECOMMENDATION — (DM 4A)

VINCENT J. POPPITI, Special Master.

The captioned eases are brought against the Intel Corporation (“Intel”) as the manufacturer of microprocessors that run the Microsoft Windows and Linux families of operating systems (the “x86 Microprocessor Market”), a market in which Intel is alleged to hold revenues. The 05 — 441 action is brought by Advanced Micro Devices, Inc. and AMD International Sales & Service, Ltd. (collectively, “AMD”), an American-based manufacturer and competitor of Intel in the x86 Microprocessor Market.

The 05-485 action is brought on behalf of a class of consumers (the “Class Plaintiffs”) who allege economic injury resulting from Intel’s alleged anticompetitive and monopolistic'practices. The 05 — 485 action has been consolidated with over 70 other consumer-related actions by the Judicial Panel on Mul-tidistrict Litigation and assigned to this Court, where it is docketed as MDL Docket No. 05-1717 (collectively, the “Class Litigation”). As used herein, the term “Parties” refers to Intel, AMD and the Class Plaintiffs. Presently before the Special Master is the Motion of AMD and the Class Plaintiffs to compel Intel to produce the notes of Intel’s counsel investigation interviews (‘Weil Mate[282]*282rials”)1 of designated employees (“custodians”) conducted by Intel’s counsel, Weil Gotshal & Manges, LLC (“Weil”) concerning Intel’s compliance with its evidence preservation obligations. (D.I. 467).2

Having read and considered the papers submitted by the parties, having heard and considered the parties respective oral arguments made before the Special Master in a hearing on December 27, 2007, and having conducted an exhaustive in camera review of all Weil Material, including notes, the Special Master recommends that the requested Weil Materials, as redacted by the Special Master, be produced.3

BACKGROUND

On June 27, 2005, AMD filed its complaint (the “Complaint”) against Intel.4 On the same date, upon learning of the filing of the Complaint, Intel assembled a team to put into place a process to “identify and preserve relevant paper and electronic documents” across six different continents. (D.I. 321 at 1-13). Intel describes its document retention plan (the “Plan”) as being tiered and having multiple layers of retention. The Plan included:

• The day after the Complaint was filed, Intel began to preserve a company-wide snapshot of e-mail and other electronic documents stored in Intel servers as of the week the Complaint was filed (“Complaint Freeze Tapes”).
• Two days after the Complaint was filed, Intel sent a hold notice bulletin to 4,000 sales and marketing group employees with instructions to retain documents related to competition with AMD and competition concerning the sale of CPUs generally.
• Four days after the Complaint was filed, Intel distributed a more detailed litigation hold notice to 629 employees and now has provided such notices to approximately 1,500 employees.
• Within days of the filing of the Complaint, Intel began collecting the electronic and hard copy documents from certain employees.
• In the Fall of 2005, Intel began a process of preserving, on a weekly basis, the backup tapes containing e-mails of employees identified as having potential relevance to the lawsuit (‘Weekly Backup Tapes”). These tapes were not the primary preservation method, but [rather] a mechanism to fall back on in the event documents could not be obtained directly from the individual employees who originally generated or received e-mails.

(D.I. 321 at 1-2).

Absent from Intel’s preservation activities was its decision not to suspend, that is turn off, the so-called “auto delete” function of its e-mail system, which automatically deletes emails remaining in an employees mailbox after they have aged for 35 days.5 (D.I. 489 [283]*283at Ex. 2 at 1). In this regard, Intel claims that the ongoing operation of auto delete would not interfere with its preservation obligations because: (1) it had instructed all custodians subject to the hold to preserve all relevant e-mails and (2) Intel would move all custodians to a group of isolated exchange servers that would backup on a regular weekly interval and would, in turn, preserve backup tapes through the litigation. (D.I. 489 at 1-2).

AMD, the Class Plaintiffs and Intel recognize that this litigation could be the “largest electronic production in history” (Jan. 25, 2007 Tr. at 10-11) resulting in Intel’s production of “somewhere in the neighborhood of a pile 137 miles high.” (Apr. 20, 2006 Tr. at 43:22). Given this expectation the parties negotiated and ultimately agreed to the production of documents by Order dated May 17, 2006. (D.I. 124). The parties agreement is described as a three-step approach:

• Step 1 — AMD and Intel were required to exchange custodian lists accompanied by a representation that after reasonable investigation, the individuals on the list comprised all of their personnel in possession of an “appreciable quantity of non-duplicative documents and things responsive to [the party’s document request]” (“Custodian List”). Intel guaranteed that its Custodian List would include no fewer than 1,000 custodians and AMD guaranteed that its Custodian List would include no fewer than 400 custodians.
• Step 2 — Each party then agreed to designate no fewer than 20% of the custodians on its own Custodian List “whose paper and electronic files will be reviewed and produced in the first instance in response to the other parties’ initial document requests” (“Party Designated Production Custodian List”).

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Bluebook (online)
258 F.R.D. 280, 2008 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 43920, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/advanced-micro-devices-inc-v-intel-corp-ded-2008.