According to Apple, Samsung intentionally destroyed documents that the South Korea-based electronics giant was obligated to preserve because of the litigation between the companies. This is a very serious charge for Apple to levy, but according to the heavily redacted motion viewed by NetworkWorld, Apple said that Samsung has a history of such practices.
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Apple pointed to an investigation in South Korea by the Korea Fair Trade Commission (KFTC). As part of that investigation, the KFTC issued a press release accusing Samsung of having security personnel physically block investigators from entering an office while documents were destroyed, computers were replaced, and emails were deleted.
“Samsung employees from the department subject to the investigation destroyed relevant data and replaced the computers of those employees who were subject to investigation,” the KFTC wrote in its release.
Apple has also already leveled a similar accusation against Samsung with the U.S. International Trade Commission (ITC) relating to a different patent dispute.
Back in Judge Lucy Koh’s Federal District Court, Apple is accusing Samsung of engaging in this behavior again, and withholding documents that Apple says would prove its claims that Samsung willfully infringed on its patents.
To offer a specific example, Apple said that the above-mentioned KFTC investigation in Korea uncovered a 2011 email to one of Samsung’s executive vice presidents that allegedly discussed the deletion of files regarding “Korean roadmap iPhone countermeasures,” as well as other data.
Samsung did not produce this email when subpoenaed by Apple in this court case, and Apple said this was an example of Samsung withholding a document it was obligated to both preserve and produce.
For its part, Samsung has dismissed Apple’s charges as baseless, and the firm has also asked for an extension for when it must respond to Apple’s motion for spoiliation inference instructions.
If Judge Koh finds in favor of Apple’s motion, she could take any of the following actions, as noted by NetworkWorld:
- Samsung had a duty to preserve relevant evidence, failed to do so, and acted in bad faith in failing to meet its legal duty.
- The jury may infer that documents Samsung failed to produce would have been advantageous to Apple’s position.
- If the jury finds Samsung liable for infringement, they may presume that the infringement was “intentional, willful, without regard to Apple’s rights.”
These would all be very serious remedies that would likely benefit Apple in the case.
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