On October 18, 2017, a federal district judge in Alaska ordered a former employee to pay nearly $170,000 of his ex-employer's legal fees as sanction for removing nine attorney-client privileged documents prior to his termination. The ruling was based on a decision this summer that the former employee willfully and deliberately disobeyed established norms of litigation conduct when he took, and then used in litigation, the nine privileged documents. In his decision over the summer, however, Judge Holland stopped short of dismissing the former employee's claims, finding monetary sanctions adequate to address the conduct. Read the full post on Proskauer's  Whistleblower Defense blog.

Sanctions Award Strengthens Fight To Protect Confidential Company Records

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