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Sawyer v. Sirius XM Radio Inc.

United States District Court, S.D. New York
Sep 14, 2021
1:21-cv-00176-RA-BCM (S.D.N.Y. Sep. 14, 2021)

Opinion

1:21-cv-00176-RA-BCM

09-14-2021

VICTORIA SAWYER AND JOSEPH ROBERTS, individually and on behalf of all others similarly situated, Plaintiffs, v. SIRIUS XM RADIO INC., Defendant.

For Plaintiffs: Jeffrey S. Arons Arons & Arons, LLC Patrick H. Peluso Woodrow & Peluso, LLC Counsel for Plaintiffs and the alleged Classes For Defendant: Lee A. Armstrong Allison L. Waks JONES DAY Thomas Demitrack (admitted pro hac vice) JONES DAY Counsel for Sirius XM Radio Inc.


For Plaintiffs: Jeffrey S. Arons Arons & Arons, LLC Patrick H. Peluso Woodrow & Peluso, LLC Counsel for Plaintiffs and the alleged Classes

For Defendant: Lee A. Armstrong Allison L. Waks JONES DAY Thomas Demitrack (admitted pro hac vice) JONES DAY Counsel for Sirius XM Radio Inc.

STIPULATED PROTECTIVE ORDER

BARBARA MOSES, United States Magistrate Judge.

The Court having found that good cause exists for issuance of an appropriately tailored confidentiality order governing the pre-trial phase of this action, and the parties having stipulated to the following provisions, it is hereby ORDERED that any person subject to this Order -including without limitation the parties to this action, their attorneys, representatives, agents, experts and consultants, acting as such, all third parties providing discovery in this action, and all other interested persons with actual or constructive notice of this Order shall adhere to the following terms, upon pain of contempt:

Discovery Materials May Be Designated as Confidential

1. Any person subject to this Order who receives from any other person any “Discovery Material” (i.e., information of any kind provided in the course of discovery in this action) that is designated as “Confidential” pursuant to the terms of this Order shall not disclose such Confidential Discovery Material to anyone else except as expressly permitted hereunder.

2. The person producing Discovery Material may designate as “Confidential” any portion thereof that contains non-public business, commercial, financial, or personal information, the public disclosure of which is either restricted by law or would likely, in the good faith opinion of the producing person, seriously harm the producing person's business, commercial, financial, or personal interests or cause the producing person to violate his, her, or its privacy or confidentiality obligations to others. Where the confidential portion is reasonably separable from the non-confidential portion, via redaction or otherwise, only the confidential portion shall be so designated.

3. With respect to the confidential portion of any Discovery Material other than deposition transcripts and exhibits, the producing person or that person's counsel may designate such portion as “Confidential” by stamping or otherwise clearly marking as “Confidential” the document or protected portion in a manner that will not interfere with legibility or audibility. Deposition testimony may be designated as “Confidential” either on the record during the deposition or in writing within five (5) business days of receipt of the transcript. If so designated, the final transcript of the designated testimony shall be bound in a separate volume and marked “Confidential Information Governed by Protective Order” by the reporter.

4. If at any time prior to the trial of this action, a producing person realizes that some portion of Discovery Material that that person previously produced without limitation should be designated as “Confidential, ” the producing person may so designate that portion by promptly notifying all parties in writing. Such designated portion of the Discovery Material will thereafter be treated as Confidential under the terms of this Order. In addition, the producing person shall provide each other party with replacement versions of such Discovery Material that bears the “Confidential” designation within two (2) business days of providing such notice.

Who May Receive Confidential Materials

5. No person subject to this Order, other than the producing person, shall disclose any Confidential Discovery Material to any other person whomsoever, except to:

(a) the parties to this action;
(b) counsel retained specifically for this action, including any paralegal, clerical or other assistant employed by such counsel and assigned specifically to work on this action;
(c) as to any document, its author, its addressee, and any other person shown on the face of the document as having received a copy;
(d) any witness who counsel for a party in good faith believes may be called to testify at trial or deposition in this action, provided such person has first executed a Non-Disclosure Agreement in the form annexed hereto;
(e) any person retained by a party to serve as an expert witness or consultant or otherwise provide specialized advice to counsel in connection with this action, provided such person has first executed a Non-Disclosure Agreement in the form annexed hereto;
(f) stenographers and video technicians engaged to transcribe or record depositions conducted in this action;
(g) independent photocopying, graphic production services, or other litigation support services employed by the parties or their counsel to assist in this action, including computer service personnel performing duties in relation to a computerized litigation system;
(h) the Court and its staff; and
(i) any other person whom the producing person, or other person designating the Discovery Material “Confidential, ” agrees in writing may have access to such Confidential Discovery Material.

6. Prior to the disclosure of any Confidential Discovery Material to any person referred to in subparagraphs 5(d) or 5(e) above, such person shall be provided by counsel with a copy of this Protective Order and shall sign a Non-Disclosure Agreement, in the form annexed hereto, stating that that person has read this Order and agrees to be bound by its terms. Counsel shall retain each signed NonDisclosure Agreement, hold it in escrow, and produce it to opposing counsel either prior to such person being permitted to testify (at deposition or trial) or at the conclusion of the case, whichever comes first.

Filing Confidential Materials in this Action

7. Any person who either objects to any designation of confidentiality, or who, by contrast, requests still further limits on disclosure (such as “attorneys' eyes only, ” reserved for extraordinary circumstances), may at any time prior to the trial of this action serve upon the designating person and all other parties a written notice stating with particularity the grounds of the objection or request. If agreement cannot be reached promptly, counsel for all affected persons shall request a joint telephone call with the Court to obtain a ruling.

8. Notwithstanding the designation of material as “Confidential” in discovery, there is no presumption that such Confidential Discovery Material will be filed with the Court under seal. The parties shall follow § 3 of Judge Moses's Individual Practices with respect to pretrial requests for filing under seal.

9. All persons are hereby placed on notice that the Court is unlikely to seal or otherwise afford confidential treatment to any Discovery Material introduced in evidence at trial, even if such material was previously designated as Confidential or sealed during pretrial proceedings.

10. Each person who has access to Confidential Discovery Material shall take all due precautions to prevent the unauthorized or inadvertent disclosure of such material.

Protection of Personally Identifying Information

11. Encryption. The receiving party shall encrypt all documents that contain consumer telephone numbers or other personally identifying information (“PII”), and which are produced by the producing party and identified pursuant to this paragraph. The producing party will identify to the receiving party when such documents contain data that shall be encrypted under this paragraph 11, either by inserting into the file name “CONTAINS CONSUMER PII” or by so indicating in any transmittal correspondence. The receiving party will encrypt such data using an algorithmic process to transform data into a form in which there is a low probability of assigning meaning without use of a confidential process or key and such algorithmic process meets the following requirements:

(a) Valid encryption processes for data at rest consistent with the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) Special Publication 800-111, Guide to Storage encryption Technologies for End User Devices.
(b) Valid encryption processes for data in motion that meets the requirements of Federal Information Processing Standards (FIPS) 140-2, Security Requirements for Cryptographic Modules. These include, as appropriate, standards described in NIST Special Publication 800-52, Guidelines for the Selection and Use of Transport Layer Security (TLS) Implementations; 800-77, Guide to IPsec VPNs; or 800-113, Guide to SSL VPNs, and may include others which are FIPS 140-2 validated.

12. Data Breach. In the event PII disclosed in this matter has been improperly released, the receiving party shall immediately notify counsel for the other party by telephone with an immediate confirmation in writing of the facts of the call, if the receiving party becomes aware of any actual or reasonably suspected unauthorized access to, use, or disclosure of PII either alone or with other information, including a notification of loss or suspected loss of data whether or not such data has been encrypted. The receiving party shall cooperate with the other party in any manner reasonably requested by the other party and in accordance with applicable law and regulations, including: conducting the investigation; and cooperating with authorities. Such cooperation shall include without limitation: (i) providing the other party access to the receiving party's relevant records and facilities; and (ii) providing all relevant data and reports to the other party.

Inadvertent Disclosure of Privileged Materials

13. If, in connection with this litigation, and despite having taken reasonable steps to prevent the disclosure of information that it claims is subject to a claim of attorneyclient privilege or attorney work product, a producing person inadvertently discloses information subject to a claim of attorney-client privilege or attorney work product protection (“Inadvertently Disclosed Information”), such disclosure, in itself, shall not constitute or be deemed a waiver or forfeiture of any claim of privilege or work product protection with respect to the Inadvertently Disclosed Information and its subject matter.

14. If a disclosing person makes a claim of inadvertent disclosure, all receiving persons shall, within five (5) business days, return or destroy all copies of the Inadvertently Disclosed Information, and provide a certification of counsel that all such information has been returned or destroyed.

15. Within five (5) business days of the notification that such Inadvertently Disclosed Information has been returned or destroyed, the disclosing person shall produce a privilege log with respect to the Inadvertently Disclosed Information.

16. If a receiving person thereafter moves the Court for an order compelling production of the Inadvertently Disclosed Information, that motion shall be filed under seal, and shall not assert as a ground for entering such an order the mere fact of the inadvertent production. The disclosing person retains the burden of establishing the privileged or protected nature of any Inadvertently Disclosed Information. Nothing in this Order shall limit the right of any party to request an in camera review of the Inadvertently Disclosed Information.

Termination of the Litigation

17. This Protective Order shall survive the termination of the litigation. Within 30 days of the final disposition of this action, all Confidential Discovery Material and all copies thereof, shall be promptly returned to the producing person, or, upon permission of the producing person, destroyed.

18. During the pendency of this case only, this Court shall retain jurisdiction over all persons subject to this Order to the extent necessary to enforce any obligations arising hereunder or to impose sanctions for any contempt thereof.

SO STIPULATED.

STIPULATED PROTECTIVE ORDER

I, _________________ [print name], acknowledge that I have read and understand the Protective Order in this action governing the non-disclosure of those portions of Discovery Material that have been designated as Confidential. I agree that I will not disclose such Confidential Discovery Material to anyone other than for purposes of this litigation and that at the conclusion of the litigation I will return all discovery information to the party or attorney from whom I received it. By acknowledging these obligations under the Protective Order, I understand that I am submitting myself to the jurisdiction of the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York for the purpose of any issue or dispute arising hereunder and that my willfiil violation of any term of the Protective Order could subject me to punishment for contempt of Court.


Summaries of

Sawyer v. Sirius XM Radio Inc.

United States District Court, S.D. New York
Sep 14, 2021
1:21-cv-00176-RA-BCM (S.D.N.Y. Sep. 14, 2021)
Case details for

Sawyer v. Sirius XM Radio Inc.

Case Details

Full title:VICTORIA SAWYER AND JOSEPH ROBERTS, individually and on behalf of all…

Court:United States District Court, S.D. New York

Date published: Sep 14, 2021

Citations

1:21-cv-00176-RA-BCM (S.D.N.Y. Sep. 14, 2021)