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action or later. Please see Debugging in WordPress for more information. (This message was added in version 6.7.0.) in /home1/wabzao0aa6qq/public_html/wp-includes/functions.php on line 6121The ridiculously high number of irrelevant materials and the large volume of privileged communications produced demonstrate a lack of reasonableness.<\/em><\/p>\n Robert C. Chambers, United States District Court Judge<\/p>\n Preparing electronic discovery takes careful review and following Judge Grimm\u2019s Victor Stanley<\/a><\/em> checklist.\u00a0 That did not happen in this case.<\/p>\n The Plaintiffs admitted that nearly 30% of their production was irrelevant.\u00a0 In the words of the Court, the production included, \u201ccar and camera manuals, personal photographs, and other plainly irrelevant documents, including offensive materials.\u201d Felman,<\/em> at *4.<\/p>\n The Defendants hired a 30 person team to slog through reviewing the Plaintiffs\u2019 production. Felman,<\/em> at *5.<\/p>\n Clicking through 300,000 irrelevant files probably did not go over well in the accounts receivable meeting with the client.\u00a0 In theory, if the 30 reviewers were each reviewing 480 records a day, thus a daily total of 14,000 a day, the review team could have spent 21.42 days reviewing all the car manuals and sometimes offensive material.<\/p>\n However, the Defendants’ possible discord and strife in their discovery review was rewarded with the pony they each wanted in early childhood: An email protected by the attorney-client privilege where the Plaintiff admitted 1) they did not have a sales contract regarding\u00a0an issue in the case\u00a0and 2) requested attorney advice on they needed to ask customers to backdate contracts for the Plaintiffs\u2019 insurance claim.\u00a0 Felman,<\/em> at *4-5.<\/p>\n The Defendants filed counter-claims for fraud and breach of contract within a week of discovering the attorney-client email.\u00a0 Felman,<\/em> at *5-6.<\/p>\n<\/a>The Plaintiffs produced over a million \u201cpages\u201d of ESI, which they marked \u201cConfidential.\u201d\u00a0 The production included nearly a thousand attorney-client communications.\u00a0 Felman Prod. v. Indus. Risk Insurers,<\/em> 2010 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 74970 (S.D. W. Va. July 23, 2010).<\/p>\n