CRISSEN v. GUPTA et al
Filing
231
ORDER - granting 195 Motion to Dismiss or for Other or Further Sanctions for Violation of Protective Order, to the extent that it sanctions Mr. Rochman as specifically set forth above for violating the Protective Order as amended by the Magistrate Judge. (See Order.) Signed by Judge Jane Magnus-Stinson on 4/14/2014. (RSF)
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF INDIANA
TERRE HAUTE DIVISION
JOSHUA B. CRISSEN,
Plaintiff,
vs.
VINOD C. GUPTA, SATYABALA V. GUPTA,
WIPER CORPORATION, and VIVEK V. GUPTA,
Defendants.
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2:12-cv-00355-JMS-WGH
ORDER
Presently pending before the Court is a Motion to Dismiss or for Other or Further
Sanctions for Violation of Protective Order (the “Sanctions Motion”) filed by Defendants Vinod
Gupta, Satyabala Gupta, and Wiper Corporation (“Wiper”) (collectively, “the Gupta
Defendants”), [Filing No. 195]. The Court held a hearing on the pending Sanctions Motion on
February 28, 2014.
I.
BACKGROUND
On June 19, 2013, the Court entered a Protective Order submitted by Plaintiff Joshua
Crissen. [Filing No. 47.] On September 23, 2013, after several discovery disputes arose, Vinod
Gupta filed a Motion for Protective Order, in which he argued that he should not be required to
respond to certain requests for production because, among other reasons, Barrett Rochman, the
father of Jesse Rochman who is one of Mr. Crissen’s attorneys in this case, is Mr. Gupta’s
business competitor.
[Filing No. 115.]
Mr. Gupta argued that any value in Mr. Crissen
obtaining the requested information was “heavily outweighed by potential prejudice to Mr.
Gupta if this information is ultimately released to Gupta’s business competitors.” [Filing No.
115, at ECF pp. 2-3.] The Magistrate Judge granted the motion in part and denied it in part on
November 7, 2013, and the pending Sanctions Motion, [Filing No. 195], relates to a portion of
1
the Magistrate Judge’s November 7, 2013 Order which amended paragraph 8(b) of the Protective
Order to read:
Other than Court personnel (including court reporters), access to Protected
Material shall be limited to:
*
*
*
(b) Counsel of record for the named parties – except for Jesse Rochman – and
staff (clerical, secretarial and paralegal) employed by said counsel….
[Filing No. 47, at ECF p. 3; Filing No. 148, at ECF pp. 6-7.]
The Protective Order defines “Protected Material” as “non-public confidential
documents, proprietary trade information or documents that raise a privacy concern, which
documents or information are so designated in good faith by any party to the Crissen Litigation.”
[Filing No. 47, at ECF p. 1.] It further provides that “[t]o the extent that any document produced
or filed by any party or person in the Crissen Litigation contains Protected Material, the
disclosing, producing or filing party may designate the pages containing the Protected Material
by marking the words “CONFIDENTIAL – SUBJECT TO PROTECTIVE ORDER” or similar
words which clearly indicate the document is being treated as confidential on the face of the
original of the document and each page so designated, or on the face of the photocopy of the
document delivered by the disclosing party or person to the party to which the document is
produced, and on the photocopies of each page so designated.” [Filing No. 47, at ECF p. 2.]
The Magistrate Judge articulated the reasons for excluding Mr. Rochman from having
access to Protected Material as follows:
At the very least, Barrett Rochman operates a competing business, and his shadow
over the litigation is palpable, if only because his son is representing Plaintiff.
While the Court appreciates Plaintiff’s confidence in the existing protective order
and the Court’s ability to enforce it, the Court finds that the circumstances warrant
some additional measure protecting Vinod’s financial and proprietary information
against disclosure to Barrett Rochman. At the same time, Vinod’s financial
2
records strike the Court as potential sources of information relevant to the
questions of whether, and in what amount, Vinod incurred notice and title
expenses and compensated his son for providing those services. While it might be
appropriate to add an additional layer of protection, to render these documents
wholly undiscoverable would be to throw the baby out with the bathwater.
[Filing No. 148, at ECF p. 6.]1
On December 13, 2013, Banco Popular produced documents on a disk that included
“certain of Mr. Gupta’s personal income tax returns, personal financial statements and other
personal financial information that were in the bank’s files and apparently utilized in
underwriting Mr. Gupta’s line of credit with the bank. Some of those documents are the subject
of Mr. Gupta’s pending [Objection].” [Filing No. 196, at ECF p. 9.] On December 18, 2013,
after the Magistrate Judge had modified the Protective Order to prevent Mr. Rochman from
reviewing Protected Material, in part of a string of emails regarding whether Banco Popular
could produce a blank loan application like the one the Guptas would have completed, Mr.
Rochman sent an email to counsel for Banco Popular which discussed his reason for requesting
the blank application. [Filing No. 196-3, at ECF pp. 5-6.] He stated “I have also started
reviewing the most recent production from [Banco Popular]. Section 4…looks to be the section
containing the Gupta’s financial statements, but it does not appear any financial statements were
produced. Is [Banco Popular] producing the financial statements?” [Filing No. 196-3, at ECF p.
6.] The next day, counsel for Banco Popular copied counsel for the Gupta Defendants on his
email string with Mr. Rochman, stating “I think your primary dispute here is with Guptas, who
1
In Mr. Gupta’s Motion for Protective Order, he expressed his concern with the lengths to which
Barrett Rochman would go to compete with him. Barrett Rochman recently pled guilty and
received a sentence of sixteen months in federal prison for entering into a scheme with former
Madison County, Illinois Treasurer Fred Bathon whereby property tax sales were structured “in a
way that eliminated competition and increased interest rates for Rochman and other tax buyers in
exchange for campaign contributions.” Rochman gets 16 months, $30,000 fine, THE SOUTHERN
ILLINOISAN, March 25, 2014; see also United States v. Barrett R. Rochman, 3:13-cr-30222-DRH.
This development lends credence to Mr. Gupta’s concerns.
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obtained the original protective order. I’m going to defer to their counsel (now copied on this
email) to respond to you on this issue.” [Filing No. 196-3, at ECF p. 4.] Mr. Rochman
responded “Just for everyone’s information, we agree that if the bank produces the financial
statements, it may do so under the more limited protective order created by the Magistrate’s
ruling and produce the documents directly to John [Sandberg, Mr. Rochman’s co-counsel]. That
way there will be no concern about me viewing the documents.” [Filing No. 196-3, at ECF p. 4.]
Counsel for the Gupta Defendants responded the same day to Mr. Rochman, stating
“How can you possibly be reviewing documents recently produced by [Banco Popular]? All
bank documents in this case have been designated as confidential and protected material
pursuant to the June 19, 2013 Protective Order in this case, and the Magistrate Judge’s
November 7 Order modified that protective order to expressly deny you access to those
documents. Why are you reviewing the most recent production from [Banco Popular]?” [Filing
No. 196-3, at ECF p. 3.] After a subsequent email from the Gupta Defendants’ counsel again
asking why Mr. Rochman was reviewing the documents, Mr. Rochman’s colleague, John
Sandberg, responded “We disagree.
However, Jesse will refrain from looking at [Banco
Popular’s] documents til the 30th [the date of a scheduled discovery conference with the
Magistrate Judge].” [Filing No. 196-3, at ECF p. 2.] The pending Sanctions Motion followed,
and in its Order scheduling a hearing on the motion the Court stated “Attorney Jesse Rochman
must attend the hearing in person, and be prepared to answer any questions the Court may have.”
[Filing No. 198, at ECF p. 1.]
At the February 28, 2014 hearing, the Court questioned Mr. Rochman regarding his
review of the documents from Banco Popular. Mr. Rochman stated that he reviewed up to the
document Bates-numbered BPNA0016889, [Filing No. 222, at ECF p. 91], and admitted that
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some of the documents he reviewed were marked “Confidential,” [Filing No. 222, at ECF p. 90].
Mr. Rochman estimated that he reviewed 800 to 1,000 documents on the disk produced by
Banco Popular. [Filing No. 222, at ECF p. 92.] When counsel for the Gupta Defendants advised
that BPNA0016889 was only approximately 50 pages into the documents produced on the Banco
Popular disk, Mr. Rochman did not attempt to correct his estimate of either the Bates number he
reviewed up to or the number of documents he reviewed.
Because of the obvious discrepancy between which documents Mr. Rochman claimed he
reviewed and the number of documents he estimated he reviewed, the Court required Mr.
Rochman to file a Report stating which documents on the disk he reviewed and to address “his
statement at the hearing that he estimated he reviewed approximately 800 to one thousand
documents on the disk, and his statement that he only reviewed up to Bates number 16889
(which would be approximately fifty pages of the disk).” [Filing No. 220, at ECF p. 3.] Mr.
Rochman filed such a Report on March 10, 2014, stating that “based on [his] memory and review
of internal firm communications,” he reviewed up to approximately Bates number
BPNA0017511 (or from BPNA0016840 to BPNA0017511), which would be approximately 672
pages. [Filing No. 225, at ECF pp. 1-2.] He further stated that he “do[es] not know if [he]
reviewed any other documents on the disk with bates numbers higher than BPNA0017511,”
[Filing No. 225, at ECF p. 2], but that he “did not review any personal financial statements or tax
returns of the Gupta Defendants,” [Filing No. 225, at ECF p. 2].
Finally, Mr. Rochman
explained that at the hearing he looked at an email attached to the Sanctions Motion which made
him believe he only reviewed up to Bates number BPNA0016889, and that “[i]f [he] testified
[he] reviewed only documents up to BPNA0016889, [he] misspoke.” [Filing No. 225, at ECF p.
2.]
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Despite Mr. Rochman’s representation otherwise, the Court’s in camera review of the
Banco Popular disk revealed that Mr. Rochman did review some of Vinod Gupta’s financial
documents, according to the range of documents Mr. Rochman has provided. [See Filing No.
225, at ECF pp. 1-2 (Mr. Rochman stating he “likely reviewed most documents from the start of
the disk (bates number BPNA0016840) through bates number BPNA0017511”).] Just a few
pages into the range of documents he reviewed is an email chain between Vinod Gupta and an
officer at Popular Community Bank. The subject line is “Line of Credit Renewal” and the email
chain discusses, among other things, Mr. Gupta’s auto loans and specific items on his credit
report. Vinod Gupta’s Trans Union credit report is also included in the range of documents Mr.
Rochman admits he reviewed.
II.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
A district court may only impose sanctions “where a party displays wilfulness, bad faith,
or fault.” Am. Nat. Bank & Trust Co. of Chicago v. Equitable Life Assur. Soc’y of the U.S., 406
F.3d 867, 877 (7th Cir. 2005). “A district ‘court [does not] possess[] unfettered discretion to
impose sanctions upon a recalcitrant party.’…Accordingly, the method for arriving at the
sanction must be fair….The upshot is that, under the abuse of discretion standard, we will
reverse a discovery sanction if its imposition ‘strikes us as ‘fundamentally wrong,’ or is ‘clearly
unreasonable, arbitrary, or fanciful.’’”
Id. at 878 (citations omitted).
“A dismissal with
prejudice is a harsh sanction which should usually be employed only in extreme situations, when
there is a clear record of delay or contumacious conduct, or when other less drastic sanctions
have proven unavailing.” Webber v. Eye Corp., 721 F.2d 1067, 1069 (7th Cir. 1983). When the
sanction is dismissal, “[m]isconduct may exhibit such flagrant contempt for the court and its
processes that to allow the offending party to continue to invoke the judicial mechanism for its
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own benefit would raise concerns about the integrity and credibility of the civil justice system
that transcend the interests of the parties immediately before the court.” Barnhill v. United
States, 11 F.3d 1360, 1368 (7th Cir. 1993).
The Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals has upheld monetary and other types of sanctions
where parties have violated protective orders. See, e.g., Scott v. Chuhak & Tecson, P.C., 725
F.3d 772, 777 (7th Cir. 2013) (affirming district court’s order which closed discovery several
days early as a sanction for counsel’s disclosure of documents to attorney in state court
proceeding, which was prohibited by protective order); Grove Fresh Distributors, Inc. v. John
Labatt, LTD, 299 F.3d 635, 641-42 (7th Cir. 2002) (upholding $7,500 sanction and finding of
civil contempt against counsel who filed protected documents in bankruptcy proceeding that
referred to witness involved in the litigation who had invoked Fifth Amendment privilege).
III.
DISCUSSION
The Gupta Defendants argue that Mr. Rochman has violated the Protective Order – as
modified by the Magistrate Judge’s November 7, 2013 Order – by reviewing documents
produced by Banco Popular that are marked “Confidential.” [Filing No. 196, at ECF pp. 13-16.]
They also assert that Mr. Rochman’s firm has not implemented adequate safeguards to insure
that Mr. Rochman would not review the documents Banco Popular produced on the disk, which
are conspicuously marked “Confidential.”
[Filing No. 196, at ECF p. 14.]
The Gupta
Defendants request an order that Mr. Crissen and his representatives must return all copies of the
documents produced by Banco Popular on December 13, 2013, including notes or documents
created by Mr. Crissen’s counsel which recorded or analyzed any of those documents, that the
claims against the Gupta Defendants be dismissed with prejudice, and that the Gupta Defendants
be awarded their attorneys’ fees and expenses. [Filing No. 196, at ECF pp. 15-16.] In the
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alternative, the Gupta Defendants request an order requiring the return of the documents, and
barring Mr. Crissen or any class member, if the case is certified as a class action, from using any
of the documents for any purpose in the litigation. [Filing No. 196, at ECF p. 16.]
Mr. Crissen responds that the November 7, 2013 revision prohibiting Mr. Rochman from
viewing Protected Material applied only to documents produced subject to the November 7, 2013
Order and in response to the Third Request for Production. [Filing No. 203, at ECF pp. 3-4.] He
also argues that the Gupta Defendants have not shown that Mr. Rochman “violated an
unambiguous command that [he] not view documents produced by parties other than Vinod,” or
that “Plaintiff’s counsel did not try to reasonabl[y] and diligently comply with the Order.”
[Filing No. 203, at ECF pp. 4-5.] He asserts that the Gupta Defendants have not shown that Mr.
Crissen’s counsel willfully abused the judicial process or otherwise conducted litigation in bad
faith because: (1) Mr. Rochman’s review of the documents was based on a good faith
interpretation of the Magistrate’s Order; (2) even if the Order permitted Banco Popular to
produce the documents subject to Mr. Rochman not viewing them, the transmittal letter never
suggested it was attempting to do so; (3) Mr. Crissen’s counsel disagreed with the Gupta
Defendants’ interpretation of the Protective Order, but still agreed that Mr. Rochman would not
view the documents until the Court resolved the conflicting interpretations; and (4) the purpose
of the Magistrate’s Order was to prevent Barrett Rochman from having access to the documents,
and he does not have such access. [Filing No. 203, at ECF pp. 5-6.]
The Gupta Defendants reply by arguing that: (1) the modified Protective Order is not
limited to only documents produced by Vinod Gupta in response to Mr. Crissen’s Third Request
for Production, [Filing No. 208, at ECF pp. 2-8]; (2) it is Mr. Rochman’s responsibility to
comply with the modified Protective Order, and not the Gupta Defendants’ responsibility to
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direct him not to review certain documents, [Filing No. 208, at ECF pp. 8-9]; and (3) Mr.
Rochman’s review of the protected documents was not based on a good faith interpretation of the
Magistrate Judge’s ruling, [Filing No. 208, at ECF pp. 10-11].
Mr. Rochman admitted at the February 28 hearing that he reviewed some documents
produced by Banco Popular that were marked “Confidential.” [Filing No. 222, at ECF p. 90.]
This was a violation of the Protective Order as amended by the Magistrate Judge, plain and
simple. The Court flatly rejects Mr. Crissen’s arguments to the contrary.
First, any argument that the Magistrate Judge’s revision to the Protective Order which
prohibited Mr. Rochman from reviewing Protected Material only applied to the documents that
were being discussed in connection with the November 7, 2013 Order is simply not supported by
the language of the Protective Order as amended or the history of the Magistrate Judge’s
amendment.
The Protective Order provision as amended states that “[o]ther than Court
personnel (including court reporters), access to Protected Material shall be limited to:…(b)
Counsel of record for the named parties – except for Jesse Rochman – and staff (clerical,
secretarial and paralegal) employed by said counsel….” [Filing No. 47, at ECF p. 3; Filing No.
148, at ECF pp. 6-7.] The provision clearly applies to all “Protected Material.” The Magistrate
Judge could have limited the revision to “Protected Materials produced in response to the Third
Request for Production,” but he did not.
Second, the Magistrate Judge’s amendment to the Protective Order is not limited to
documents produced by Mr. Gupta. Mr. Crissen has not pointed to any statements by the
Magistrate Judge or any language in the amendment to the Protective Order effectuating such a
limitation. And such a limitation would make no sense, given that the source of the Protected
9
Material is irrelevant. The Magistrate Judge sought to preclude Mr. Rochman from viewing all
Protected Material, not just Protected Material produced by Mr. Gupta.
Third, Mr. Crissen’s argument that the letter from Banco Popular transmitting the disk
did not state that the documents were being produced “subject to the more limited protective
order precluding Jesse Rochman from viewing the documents,” [Filing No. 203, at ECF p. 5], is
a non-starter. The Magistrate Judge amended the Protective Order on November 7, 2013, and
Banco Popular produced the disk on December 13, 2013.
Banco Popular was under no
obligation to set forth Mr. Rochman’s obligations under the Protective Order, and to try to blame
Banco Popular for Mr. Rochman’s misconduct is a flimsy effort at deflecting blame.
Finally, Mr. Crissen’s argument that Barrett Rochman never had access to the documents
on the disk is irrelevant. The Magistrate Judge found that the fact that Mr. Rochman is Barrett
Rochman’s son, and that Barrett Rochman “operates a competing business” and “his shadow
over the litigation is palpable, if only because his son is representing Plaintiff,” was enough to
warrant amendment of the Protective Order to prevent Mr. Rochman from viewing Protected
Material. The fact that Barrett Rochman did not have access to the Protected Material – which is
prohibited by the Protective Order with or without the Magistrate Judge’s amendment – does not
help Mr. Crissen.
The bottom line is that Mr. Rochman violated the Protective Order as amended by the
Magistrate Judge by – as he admits – reviewing documents on the Banco Popular disk that were
marked “Confidential.” [Filing No. 222, at ECF p. 90.] Documents marked “Confidential” are
considered “Protected Material” under the Protective Order. [Filing No. 47, at ECF pp. 1-2.]
Even if the documents marked “Confidential” were not financial records of Mr. Gupta, Mr.
10
Rochman’s review of those documents violated the plain language of the Magistrate Judge’s
amendment to the Protective Order.2
Further, even if (as Mr. Crissen argues) Mr. Rochman was only precluded from
reviewing the Gupta Defendants’ financial documents – and not all documents marked
“Confidential” – he still violated the Protective Order. As discussed above, an email string
between Mr. Gupta and Popular Community Bank discussing Mr. Gupta’s personal financial
information and Mr. Gupta’s Trans Union credit report are both contained within the range of
documents Mr. Rochman admits he reviewed, and are marked “Confidential.”
When Mr.
Rochman came across these documents – and one was only five pages in to the range of
documents he admits he reviewed – bells should have gone off that should have stopped him in
his tracks. Instead, he ignored the bells – or, equally as disturbing, the bells never went off – and
he stayed the course. Indeed, when he reached a section of the disk that was supposed to contain
Mr. Gupta’s financial documents, and no such documents were in that section, Mr. Rochman
then wrote an email to Mr. Gupta’s counsel asking where the financial documents were. [Filing
No. 196-3, at ECF p. 6 (“I have also started reviewing the most recent production from BPNA.
Section 4 (BPNA16889) looks to be the section containing the Gupta’s financial statements, but
it does not appear any financial statements were produced. Is BPNA producing the financial
statements?”).] Additionally, Mr. Rochman stated in his Report that he “do[es] not know if [he]
While the Magistrate Judge did refer to Mr. Gupta’s financial records in his November 7, 2014
Order, [Filing No. 148, at ECF p. 6 (“the Court finds that the circumstances warrant some
additional measure protecting Vinod’s financial and proprietary information against disclosure to
Barrett Rochman,” and “[t]he narrow function of this amendment is to preclude Barrett Rochman
from gaining access to Vinod’s financial and proprietary information by prohibiting Jesse
Rochman – but not other lawyers at Sandberg – from accessing these records”)], the plain text of
the amendment was not limited to just financial records. Rather, it applied to all of Paragraph 8
of the Protective Order which applies to “Protected Material.” [See Filing No. 47, at ECF p. 3;
Filing No. 148, at ECF pp. 6-7.]
2
11
reviewed any other documents on the disk with bates numbers higher than BPNA0017511,”
[Filing No. 225, at ECF p. 2], leaving open the question of whether he reviewed additional
financial records.3
The Court takes Mr. Rochman’s violation of the amended Protective Order very
seriously. Even if his tortured reading of the amendment to the Protective Order was somehow a
reasonable interpretation – which it was not – he should have proceeded with caution and asked
the Court for guidance regarding whether he could review the documents on the disk. Instead, he
reviewed documents clearly marked “Confidential” – including financial information of Mr.
Gupta’s – and stopped only when his email message discussing his review by chance made its
way to counsel for Mr. Gupta and counsel confronted him.
The Gupta Defendants request that the Court dismiss this case as a sanction for Mr.
Rochman’s conduct. Despite the seriousness of Mr. Rochman’s violation, the Court declines to
do so at this time. This is Mr. Rochman’s first personal violation of a Court order, and dismissal
as a sanction is usually reserved for situations “when other less drastic sanctions have proven
unavailing.” Webber v. Eye Corp., 721 F.2d 1067, 1069 (7th Cir. 1983). Mr. Rochman and his
co-counsel are on notice, however, that further violations of Court orders will not be tolerated.
The Court also declines to require Mr. Crissen to return the Banco Popular disk and not use those
documents in the litigation as a sanction for Mr. Rochman’s actions. Documents produced on
3
Interestingly, while sometimes unsure of the exact documents he reviewed, Mr. Rochman states
unequivocally in his Report that he “did not review any personal financial statements or tax
returns of the Gupta Defendants.” [Filing No. 225, at ECF p. 2.] As discussed above, however,
the Court’s in camera review of the documents Mr. Rochman claims he reviewed has proven this
statement to be false. To the extent Mr. Rochman would argue that the financial documents he
reviewed were not financial “statements,” the Court finds that to be a distinction without a
difference. The Magistrate Judge’s amendment to the Protective Order was intended to prevent
Mr. Gupta’s financial or proprietary information from reaching his competitors’ hands. The two
documents the Court has noted that Mr. Rochman reviewed undisputedly include such
information.
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the disk are the subject of Banco Popular’s Motion to Enforce Protective Order, and the Court
has already ordered the return of some of those documents in an Order entered this day. Further,
Mr. Gupta acknowledges that prohibiting Mr. Crissen from using any of those documents in the
litigation “may actually be more severe than dismissing this action,” [Filing No. 196, at ECF p.
16], which the Court does not find appropriate at this time.
However, based on the nature of the violation, and on the Court’s findings that Mr.
Rochman has not been completely forthright with the Court regarding which documents he has
reviewed and the nature of those documents, and that he disregarded the Magistrate Judge’s
Order, the Court does find that some type of sanction is appropriate. See United States v.
Johnson, 2014 WL 466084, *4 (7th Cir. 2014) (issuing public rebuke and sanctioning counsel
$2,000 for failing to comply with Circuit Rule 30 and filing a false certification with brief, and
stating “[counsel] may not have set out to develop a reputation as a lawyer whose word cannot
be trusted, but he has acquired it”). Accordingly, the Court:
ORDERS Mr. Rochman to pay the Gupta Defendants’ fees and costs in
connection with this motion. The Gupta Defendants shall file a Petition
setting forth their fees and costs within fourteen days of this Order, and Mr.
Rochman may file any response to the Petition within seven days thereafter;
SANCTIONS Mr. Rochman in the amount of $2000 for violating the
Protective Order as amended by the Magistrate Judge. Mr. Rochman shall
pay this amount to the Clerk of the Court within seven days of this Order; and
ORDERS Mr. Rochman to submit a copy of this Order to the General
Counsels of all state bars where he is admitted to practice, or to the
appropriate entity with jurisdiction over attorney discipline, within seven days
of this Order. Mr. Rochman must simultaneously file a Report with this Court
confirming he has done so, with copies of his submittals to the appropriate
authorities attached.
Should the Gupta Defendants suspect at any time, by the questioning of witnesses or
otherwise, that Jesse Rochman has reviewed or is relying upon documents he should not have
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reviewed, proceedings shall stop immediately and the Gupta Defendants shall notify the District
Court or Magistrate Judge.
IV.
PATTERN OF CONTUMACIOUS AND DISHONEST CONDUCT
While the Court has focused on Mr. Rochman’s conduct alone in this entry since he is the
only counsel precluded from reviewing Protected Material under the amended Protective Order,
his co-counsel was aware of the amended Protective Order and presumably aware of how the
case is staffed and the specific work Mr. Rochman performs on the case. The Court declines to
jointly sanction Mr. Rochman’s firm or his co-counsel at this time, but notes that by additional
entry today it has found that Mr. Crissen’s counsel (collectively) have also violated the amended
Protective Order as it relates to the inadvertent production by Banco Popular.
The Court further finds that Mr. Crissen and his counsel have been disingenuous in Court
filings concerning Mr. Crissen’s wife’s involvement in the redemption of the property at issue.
[See Filing No. 222, at ECF pp. 4-8.] At one point Mr. Crissen represented to the Court that he
alone redeemed the property, [Filing No. 29, at ECF p. 6 (“Plaintiff, and Plaintiff alone, paid
Defendants to redeem Plaintiff’s Property…”)], then later testified to the contrary in his
deposition, [Filing No. 142-5, at ECF pp. 3-4 (“Q: [A] more accurate statement of the facts was
that Plaintiff’s property was redeemed by the Plaintiff, which is you, and your wife, Linda; is
that correct? A: Yeah”)]. Mr. Crissen’s counsel stated at the February 28, 2014 hearing that he
had a copy of the Crissens’ redemption papers from before the time the lawsuit was filed. [Filing
No. 222, at ECF pp. 8-9.] The redemption papers clearly indicate that both Mr. Crissen and Mrs.
Crissen redeemed the property. [See Filing No. 142-3 (stating in “Redemption Information”
section that property was redeemed by “Joshua & Linda Crissen”).] Despite the clarity of the
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redemption papers, Mr. Crissen’s counsel still refused to admit that the papers reflected that both
Mr. and Mrs. Crissen redeemed the property. [Filing No. 222, at ECF p. 10 (when the Court
stated “I think the documents do reflect that they both redeemed the property,” Mr. Crissen’s
counsel stated “[t]he documents reflect what the documents reflect. The question is, what is the
meaning of what the documents reflect?”]
The Court concludes that armed with the
documentation that Mr. and Mrs. Crissen redeemed the property together, the statement that Mr.
Crissen alone redeemed the property was a misrepresentation.
The context of the
misrepresentation is significant. The statement was made in opposition to a Motion to Dismiss
in which the Gupta Defendants argued that Mr. Crissen had failed to join an indispensable party.
While the Court understands that Mr. Crissen did not personally engage in the conduct at
issue here, he also did not attempt to correct, or distance himself from, his counsel’s
misrepresentation regarding the redemption of the property. Further, he is accountable for his
counsel’s conduct – including all of the conduct at issue in the Sanctions Motion and in this
litigation as a whole. See Reynolds v. Gen. Revenue Corp., 2013 WL 2456070, *2 (S.D. Ind.
2013) (“Petitioner voluntarily chose this attorney as [his] representative in the action, and [he]
cannot now avoid the consequences of the acts or omissions of this freely selected agent. Any
other notion would be wholly inconsistent with our system of representative litigation, in which
each party is deemed bound by the acts of his lawyer-agent and is considered to have ‘notice of
all facts, notice of which can be charged upon the attorney’”) (quoting Link v. Wabash R. Co.,
370 U.S. 626, 633-34 (1962)).
Mr. Crissen and his counsel are warned that this pattern of conduct has brought the case
to critical crossroads: both strict adherence to Court orders (and/or seeking guidance from the
15
Court) as well as complete honesty is required, and any further misconduct will result in the
dismissal of the case.
V.
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, the Court GRANTS the Gupta Defendants’ Motion to Dismiss
or for Other or Further Sanctions for Violation of Protective Order, [Filing No. 195], to the
extent that it sanctions Mr. Rochman as specifically set forth above for violating the Protective
Order as amended by the Magistrate Judge.
04/14/2014
_______________________________
Hon. Jane Magnus-Stinson, Judge
United States District Court
Southern District of Indiana
Distribution via ECF only to all counsel of record
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