Teledyne Technologies Incorpor v. Raj Shekar

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedJune 25, 2018
Docket17-2171
StatusUnpublished

This text of Teledyne Technologies Incorpor v. Raj Shekar (Teledyne Technologies Incorpor v. Raj Shekar) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Teledyne Technologies Incorpor v. Raj Shekar, (7th Cir. 2018).

Opinion

NONPRECEDENTIAL DISPOSITION To be cited only in accordance with Fed. R. App. P. 32.1

United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit Chicago, Illinois 60604

Argued May 15, 2018 Decided June 25, 2018

Before

FRANK H. EASTERBROOK, Circuit Judge

DIANE S. SYKES, Circuit Judge

AMY C. BARRETT, Circuit Judge

No. 17‐2171

TELEDYNE TECHNOLOGIES IN‐ Appeal from the United States CORPORATED, District Court for the Northern District Plaintiff‐Appellee, of Illinois, Eastern Division.

v. No. 1:15–cv–01392

RAJ SHEKAR, Ronald A. Guzmán, Defendant‐Appellant. Judge.

O R D E R

Teledyne Technologies fired Raj Shekar from his job as a marketing and sales man‐ ager. Shekar did not go quietly—he took Teledyne’s property with him and flouted the district court’s order that he return it. The court held him in civil contempt, but even that did not inspire his obedience. Instead of complying with the court’s order, Shekar en‐ gaged in a campaign of defiance, deceit, and delay. The court’s patience finally ran out: it found that Shekar had failed to purge himself of contempt and entered sanctions against him. Despite the utter lack of respect that Shekar has shown for the judicial process throughout this entire suit, he now asks us to reverse the district court’s judgment. We affirm it. No. 17‐2171 Page 2

I. Teledyne hired Raj Shekar as a sales and marketing manager in June 2013 and fired him less than two years later. Shortly after terminating his employment, Teledyne discovered that Shekar had contacted and threatened Teledyne’s potential customers; he had also initiated a large data transfer from Teledyne servers and retained posses‐ sion of electronic equipment and data belonging to Teledyne. Teledyne sued Shekar in federal court, asserting common‐law claims in tort and contract, as well as statutory claims under the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act, the Illinois Trade Secrets Act, and the Illinois Uniform Deceptive Trade Practices Act. It sought injunctive relief, compensatory and punitive damages, costs, and attorneys’ fees.

Four days after Teledyne filed the suit, the district court entered a temporary re‐ straining order directing Shekar to return his Teledyne‐issued laptop computer, VPN token, projector, printer/scanner, and iPhone. The order specified that Shekar was to turn over the property unaltered. In addition, the order compelled him to respond to interrogatories that asked him, among other things, to identify any devices or drives that had been in his possession during a period covering the majority of his employ‐ ment. The court gave Shekar five days to comply with the temporary restraining order. He did not do so.

The court scheduled a hearing on Teledyne’s motion for a preliminary injunc‐ tion, and when Shekar failed to appear, the court granted the motion. The preliminary injunction was broader than the temporary restraining order insofar as it required She‐ kar to produce all computers and other devices in his possession—not only those be‐ longing to Teledyne. This meant that Shekar was obliged to turn over his personal computer for inspection. When Shekar failed to comply yet again, the district court granted Teledyne’s motion for a show cause hearing to determine whether Shekar was in civil contempt.

As his first line of defense at the show cause hearing, Shekar made the far‐fetched claim that he had never received proper notice of either the temporary re‐ straining order or the preliminary injunction. But notice of the temporary restraining order had been sent to each of Shekar’s thirteen known email addresses and hand‐delivered to his home.1 Shekar claimed that none of the thirteen email addresses

1 Teledyne used a process server because FedEx said that Shekar’s past conduct was so egregious it would no longer deliver to his home. No. 17‐2171 Page 3

belonged to him; as a back‐up argument, he asserted that his email addresses block all communications originating from @winston.com, the domain of Teledyne’s counsel. The first argument was a blatant lie: Shekar had sent unauthorized ex parte communi‐ cations to the court from some of the thirteen email addresses after the temporary re‐ straining order had been issued. As for Shekar’s second argument, the district court noted that “Shekar can hardly expect to be rewarded for willfully evading notice.” Shekar’s protest that he never received notice of the preliminary injunction is equally implausible. Teledyne sent notice to Shekar’s home address, fifteen different email ad‐ dresses, and a PO Box that Shekar had specifically identified as his preferred address for service.

When the show cause hearing shifted from notice to substance, the lies kept on coming. Two witnesses testified: Shekar and Daniel Roffman, a forensic computer ex‐ pert whom Teledyne retained to analyze Shekar’s laptop and iPhone. Following com‐ mon forensic practice, Roffman analyzed Shekar’s Teledyne‐issued laptop by using an “image”—a verified exact replica—of it. (The physical laptop was in the possession of the Department of Defense Criminal Investigation Services for reasons not relevant to this appeal.) Roffman’s analysis of the laptop image revealed that eleven different de‐ vices had been connected to the laptop, three of them on or after the date that Teledyne had fired Shekar. The district judge found that Shekar had failed to account for any of the devices that had been connected to the laptop after his termination. Shekar falsely denied that he had ever possessed two of them. As for the third, a hard drive, Shekar turned over a fake: it was made by the same manufacturer, but not only did its serial number differ from the missing device, the court observed that it appeared to be “total‐ ly blank … turned over to Teledyne fresh from the electronics store.”

After hearing both witnesses, the court largely credited Roffman’s disinterested and professional testimony and discredited Shekar’s self‐serving, unsubstantiated tes‐ timony. It had plenty of reason to do so—the record is replete with Shekar’s flimsy, disingenuous, and contradictory explanations. For example, Shekar returned his com‐ pany‐issued iPhone, but the passcode he provided did not unlock it. The court found Roffman’s conclusion that Shekar locked the phone more credible than Shekar’s “con‐ spiracy theories” about why it was Teledyne’s fault that the passcode he provided did not work. Another example: after repeatedly insisting that he did not possess any Tele‐ dyne data or emails, Shekar offered a Teledyne email as an exhibit at the show cause hearing. Yet another: Shekar answered “none” to interrogatories inquiring whether he currently possessed any devices or hard drives that could be used to store data; this was demonstrably false based on Roffman’s credible forensic analysis of Shekar’s laptop. No. 17‐2171 Page 4

And if all of this weren’t enough, Shekar defiantly admitted that he had decided not to produce his personal computer for inspection, despite the court’s unambiguous com‐ mand that he do so. Shekar defended his choice by observing that the computer did not contain any Teledyne information. He appears to believe that this explanation serves as an excuse, rather than what it was: an outright admission that he failed to comply with the court’s order.

Based on the evidence presented at the show cause hearing, the court found Shekar in civil contempt. The court gave him two weeks to purge himself of contempt and comply with the directives of the preliminary injunction. Teledyne was awarded the attorneys’ fees and costs associated with the show cause hearing.

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Teledyne Technologies Incorpor v. Raj Shekar, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/teledyne-technologies-incorpor-v-raj-shekar-ca7-2018.