Illinois Central Railroad Company v. Belcher

CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Indiana
DecidedSeptember 15, 2023
Docket2:22-cv-00353
StatusUnknown

This text of Illinois Central Railroad Company v. Belcher (Illinois Central Railroad Company v. Belcher) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Indiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Illinois Central Railroad Company v. Belcher, (N.D. Ind. 2023).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT NORTHERN DISTRICT OF INDIANA HAMMOND DIVISION ILLINOIS CENTRAL RAILROAD COMPANY, Plaintiff, v. CAUSE NO.: 2-22-cv-353-PPS-JPK MICHAEL BELCHER, Defendant. OPINION AND ORDER

Plaintiff, Illinois Central Railroad Company (“IC”), filed a motion for contempt sanctions and attorney fees because of Michael Belcher’s alleged violation of the Court’s October 25, 2022 Temporary Restraining Order and destruction of key evidence. [DE 37.] Because I find Belcher directly violated the parameters of the TRO, the motion for contempt sanctions and attorney fees [DE 37] is GRANTED. Background

Defendant, Michael Belcher, is a former employee of IC. He worked at IC from 2002 until he was fired on October 19, 2022. During his tenure there, Belcher became proficient in programming languages, and he took it upon himself to automate and streamline the company’s internal auditing functions. Among other applications, Belcher created the Program Management Application (“PMA”) for IC - the thing at the heart of this dispute.

As time went on with the company, Belcher was starting to feel underpaid and underappreciated by IC. About 400 employees per year used the PMA, and it helped budget owners review and monitor their costs and responsibility, as well as the auditors of costs and financial planners in the company. At the same time Belcher was

feeling over worked and disgruntled, IC began investigating some reportedly questionable behavior of his at the office. Following an investigation regarding his relationship with a subordinate, Belcher sent the following e-mail to his manager on October 17, 2022: This company has failed to do the right thing by me over and over again, as such I am no longer allowing the use of my intellectual properties with out fair market compensation. I am not relinquishing my position as Financial senior manager and as such it is my duty to inform you that many of our finance systems are no longer functioning. I will be out of the office for the rest of the day but can be reached on my cell phone with a reasonable offer for compensation in this matter. As info the longer this take the higher the price, if I am offered something offensive the higher the price. Hope that you have a great rest of the day. [DE 58-3 at 5.] After receiving this e-mail, IC began investigating its systems and confirmed that Belcher had removed source code and files across three systems, disabling the use of the applications he created. Id. While Mr. Belcher later testified at the hearing held before me on August 31, 2023, that he was in the process of transferring access to the PMA to another person when he was locked out of the system by IC (and that is why the PMA was not working at the time); nevertheless, from IC’s perspective, the system was down. IC sent Belcher an email on October 19, 2022, terminating Belcher’s employment and demanding he return the company’s property and restore its systems. [Id. at 6.] 2 At this point, IC filed suit and sought its first temporary restraining order against Belcher. This case was originally assigned to my colleague, Judge Damon Leichty, and he held a hearing in this matter on October 25, 2022. Belcher didn’t have time to secure

counsel yet, so he represented himself at the TRO hearing. During that hearing, Belcher repeatedly told the Court that he no longer possessed IC’s source code and related materials because he shipped them back to IC on his Company-issued laptop: • “I have returned most of CN’s property. The only thing left in my possession is a docking station, company cell phone, and some documents.” [DE 22-2, TRO Tr., at 30-31.] • “I no longer have the source code, Your Honor. It was on CN’s PC, which I shipped on October 22nd at 9:30 in the morning” [Id. at 32.] • “THE COURT: All right. Do you know where CN could look for that source code on that computer? MR. BELCHER: … On that PC, it would be under users; my user pin number, 141290; I believe the next folder is source; and then repo.” Id. The Court relied on Mr. Belcher’s testimony. [See id. at 37; DE 15, TRO, at 4 (“To his credit, Mr. Belcher has already returned certain information to ICRC’s parent company, including the computer where he apparently stored the source code.”). Judge Leichty granted IC’s Motion for TRO and ordered Mr. Belcher “to do the following immediately,” among other things: • “Return to ICRC all source code, files, materials related to the company’s financial systems, and any other ICRC documents and materials, including without limitation any electronic copies of source code for any ICRC applications that exist on any external hard drive and any hard copies that might exist.” [DE 15 at 9.] • “Return ICRC’s laptop, cellphone, access card, and any other ICRC property to ICRC….” Id. 3 • “Refrain from accessing, retaining, disclosing, or using ICRC’s trade secrets and confidential information, including without limitation its files, source code, and any other such protectible materials.” Id. • “Preserve, and not destroy or otherwise alter, all paper and electronic records that concern or relate to ICRC.” Id. • “Submit computers utilized in the performance of his employment with ICRC, and any accounts, devices, and storage locations used during his employment or as part of his actions in creating, storing, or removing ICRC property (including PMA and its source code) or utilizing or disabling the company’s systems for forensic inspection conducted by ICRC’s forensic professionals to review and confirm deletion of all materials.” Id. • “Mr. Belcher must file with the court, in writing and under oath, a signed statement (a) that he has returned all ICRC property in his possession, custody, or control to ICRC, (b) that he no longer possesses any ICRC property, (c) that he has removed from any public locations, including LinkedIn, any ICRC trade secrets or other confidential information, and (d) identifying any other site to which or third-party to whom he disclosed ICRC’s trade secret or other confidential information.” Id. at 10. In sum, Judge Leichty basically ordered Belcher to return all of IC’s property, and submit any devices that might have contained IC files on them for forensic review. He cautioned the parties “including Mr. Belcher, that the failure to comply with this order could result in additional sanctions, including without limitation a finding that the party should be held in contempt of court.” [DE 15 at 10.] While Belcher told Judge Leichty that he had sent the materials back to IC on the company’s laptop, when IC received the laptop, it discovered there was no hard drive and no IC materials. [DE 37-1.] By mid-November, IC learned that Belcher changed his story – he now claimed he destroyed the laptop’s hard drive with a hammer, lit it on fire, and placed the remains in a garbage bin in a parking lot of a grocery store on 4 October 19 or 20, 2022 (several days before the TRO hearing). [DE 37-5 at 2.] Belcher’s counsel has admitted in a written memorandum: “It is true Mr. Belcher lied to the court. He has advised this counsel that he was afraid the court would throw him in jail if it

knew he destroyed the drive.” [DE 24 at 3.] Belcher admitted the same in a personal affidavit: “I was fearful that if I told the court about my destroying the hard drive, I would go to jail, so I lied to the court.” [DE 52-1 at 2.] Belcher did send IC a USB drive containing materials (including the PMA source code), and filed a sworn statement that he complied with the TRO. [DE 37-1 at 3; DE 21.]

The Court therefore declined to extend the TRO. [DE 26 at 2.] At this point in time, Belcher filed a motion to transfer the case due to improper divisional venue, and the case was assigned to me. Once IC got the USB drive from Belcher on November 2, 2022, it began its forensic investigation.

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Illinois Central Railroad Company v. Belcher, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/illinois-central-railroad-company-v-belcher-innd-2023.