EFTA00075004.pdf
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UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF NEW YORK
X
Plaintiff,
v.
GHISLAINE MAXWELL,
Defendant.
X
15-cv-07433-LAP
Ms. Maxwell's Objections to Unsealing Docket Entries 143. 173. and 199 and to
Unsealing Docket Entries 164 and 230 at This Time.
Laura A. Menninger
Jeffrey S. Pagliuca
Ty Gee
HADDON, MORGAN AND FOREMAN, P.C.
150 East 10th Avenue
Denver, CO 80203
EFTA00075004
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Defendant Ghislaine Maxwell, through her counsel and pursuant to this Court's Order
and Protocol for Unsealing Decided Motions, DE 1044, as clarified by DE 1053, objects to the
unsealing of the Sealed Items contained in:
•
DE 143 (and related DEs 142, 144, 144-1, 149, 150, 150-1, 151, 152, 153, and 153-
1);
•
DE 172 (and related DEs 171, 173, 173-1, 189, 190, 190-1, 202, 203, 204-1, 211,
212, 212-1, and 224) and;
•
DE 199 (and related DEs 200, 200-1, 228,2 29, 229-1, 284, 249, and 249-1).
The reasons for her objections are stated in her accompanying memorandum of law.
Ms. Maxwell, does not object to the potential unsealing of the Sealed Items contained in
DEs 164 and related DEs 165, 165-8, 185-3, 185-11, 185-14, 185-15 or DE 230 and related DEs
235, 235-5, 235-7, 235-11, 235-13 at a future date. However, unsealing of these Sealed Items
would be premature at this time because multiple Non-Party Does are referenced in these items,
as described in the accompanying memorandum of law, and should be provided Notice and an
opportunity to object pursuant to the Protocol.
Dated: June 10, 2020.
Respectfully submitted,
/s/Jeffrey S. Pagliuca
Laura A. Menninger (LM-1374)
Jeffrey S. Pagliuca (pro hac vice)
Ty Gee (pro hac vice)
Haddon, Morgan and Foreman, P.C.
150 East 10th Avenue
Denver, CO 80203
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CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE
I certify that on June 10, 2020, I electronically served this Ms. Maxwell's Objections to
Unsealing Docket Entries 143, 173, and 199 and to Unsealing Docket Entries 164 and 230 at
This Time. via ECF on the following:
Is/ Nicole Simmons
Nicole Simmons
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UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF NEW YORK
X
Plaintiff,
v.
GHISLAINE MAXWELL,
Defendant.
X
15-cv-07433-LAP
Ms. Maxwell's Memorandum Brief In Support Of Her
Objections to Unsealing Sealed Materials
Laura A. Menninger
Jeffrey S. Pagliuca
Ty Gee
HADDON, MORGAN AND FOREMAN, P.C.
150 East 10th Avenue
EFTA00075007
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Pursuant to this Court's Order and protocol for Unsealing Decided Motions, Defendant
Ghislaine Maxwell, through her counsel objects to the unsealing of documents for the reasons
stated.
I. Overview
Docket Entries ("DEN") 143, 164, 172, 199, and 230 ("Sealed Material[s]" or "Sealed
Item[s]") have been selected by the Court, with respect to Does 1 and 2, to begin the process of
individualized review of these selected Sealed Materials to determine (a) the weight of
presumption of public access that should be afforded to an item, (b) the identification and weight
of any countervailing interests supporting continued sealing/redaction of the item, and (c) whether
the countervailing interests rebut the presumption of public access to the item. n.
Maxwell,
No. 15-CV-07433-LAP, 2020 WL 1547377, at *1 (S.D.N.Y. Mar. 31, 2020); DE 1044.' Based on
the Court's clarification of its March 31, 2020 Order, DE 1053, ("the Protocol"), Non-Parties
Does 1 and 2 have been served with the approved Notice and, pursuant to the Protocol, additional
Non-Parties will be notified prior to any unsealing of the selected Sealed Materials.
Does I and 2 did not respond to the Notice. The absence of a response, however, does not
end the analysis. Although the Court's Protocol requires consideration of objections from the
other Non-Parties yet to be noticed, the Court could (and should) determine, based on the
circumstances of the Sealed Materials selected here, that the items are appropriately sealed
without the need for additional Non-Party objections.
' Pursuant to paragraph 2.g of the Order "any memorandum in support of a ... Party
Objection to unsealing a particular Sealed Item shall be no longer than 6 double-spaced pages in
12 point, Times New Roman Font. Ms. Maxwell has lodged objections to the identified
documents in 14 pages in compliance with the Order, i.e., this pledge is one-half of the authorized
length.
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Applying the three-part analysis set forth by the Court in its March 31, 2020 Order to the
selected Sealed Materials in Des 143, 172, and 1992 results in a determination that: (a) the
selected Sealed Materials relate solely to five-year-old discovery disputes and therefore, at most,
begin with a presumption of public access "somewhat lower than the presumption applied to
material introduced at trial, or in connection with dispositive motions such as motions for
dismissal or summary judgment." Brown v. Maxwell, 929 F.3d 41, 50 (2d Cir. 2019) (citing
United States v. Amodeo, 71 F.3d 1044, 1049-50 (2d Cir. 1995) ("Amodeo II")); (b) any minimum
presumption of public access is subject to many countervailing interests supporting continued
sealing; and (c) the countervailing interests rebut any minimal presumption of public access.
IL DE 143 and Related DEs 142, 144, 144-1-7, 149, 150, 150-1, 151, 152, 153, and 153-1
are afforded the lowest presumption of public access and these Sealed Materials
should remain sealed.
This series of pleadings concerns Plaintiff's attempt to compel Ms. Maxwell to answer
intrusive questions about her sex life.34 DE 143 quotes extensively, selectively, and misleadingly
from Ms. Maxwell's first seven-hour deposition. DE 144-1-7 contains 7 exhibits: 1, 2, and 4-7 are
2 As discussed in Sections VII at VIII, infra, consideration of DEs 164 and 230 is
premature at this time.
DE 142 is a letter notice; DE 143 is the initial motion; DE 144 is a lawyer
declaration referencing the exhibits in DE 144-1-7. The declarations accompanying the
various Sealed Materials often identify a Non-Party. The Court may wish to simply redact
all of the Non-Party names from the declarations as a means of streamlining review and
Notice problems. DE 149 is Defendant's Response, 150 is a lawyer declaration
referencing the exhibit in DE 150-1. DE 151 is another letter notice. DE 152 is Plaintiff's
Reply. DE 153 is another lawyer declaration referencing the exhibits in DE 153-1-7. The
name of Doe 1 appears in DEs 152, p. 6 and 153 p. 2 ¶9[ 7 and 8. Doe 2 does not appear in
any DE 143 related pleading.
4 The following DEs contain references to Non-Parties: DE 143 references 2 non-parties;
DE 144-1-7 references 7 non-parties; DE 150-1 references 9 non-parties.
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excerpts from Ms. Maxwell's deposition. Exhibit 3 contains pages from the Palm Beach Police
Report. DE 149 is Ms. Maxwell's response to DE 143.
Page 2 of DE 149 contains a summary of Ms. Maxwell's deposition testimony. DE 150-1
contains pages of Ms. Maxwell's deposition necessary to place Plaintiff's submission into
context. DE 153 is Plaintiff's reply which, again quotes from Ms. Maxwell's deposition and
references numerous Non-Parties. DE 153-1 contains 7 exhibits. Exhibit I is a portion of Ms.
Maxwell's deposition. Exhibit 2 contains a "Flight Log Summary Chart" prepared by Plaintiff's
counsel and flight logs that contain the names of numerous Non-Party Does. Exhibit 3 purports to
be 88 pages of Palm Beach Police Reports, some redacted, some unredacted, with multiple
references to Non-Party Does. Exhibit 4 and 7 are inadmissible hearsay transcripts from an
unreliable deceased individual never deposed by Ms. Maxwell. Exhibits 5 and 6 concern J. Doe I.
III. DE 143, DE 144-1, exhibits 1, 2, and 4-7; DE 149, page 2, summary of Ms. Maxwell's
deposition testimony; DE 150-1; DE 153; and DE 153-1: Identification of
Countervailing Interests.
A. Countervailing Interests.
All of the above DEs are either quotes from, summaries of, or portions of transcripts from
Ms. Maxwell's deposition in this case. The subject matter of these DEs is extremely personal,
confidential, and subject to considerable abuse by the media. Countervailing interests include:
1. Reasonable reliance on a protective order by a party or non-party ("CI-1").
If a party or nonparty provides information in connection with a lawsuit in reasonable reliance
upon a Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 26(c) protective order, the information must remain
sealed. See Martindell v. Intl TeL & TeL Corp., 594 F.2d 291, 296 (2d Cir. 1979); see id. at 297-
98 (Medina, J., concurring) (noting "overriding policy in favor of enforcing the civil protective
order against federal prosecutor's request for deposition transcripts", and holding "[A] plaintiff in
a civil litigation is bound by the terms of an agreement he has made to restrict the access of non-
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parties, including the Government, to the products of discovery. This was the essence of Judge
Frankel's decision in GAF Corp. v. Eastman Kodak Co., 415 F.Supp. 129 (S.D.N.Y.1976), with
which I fully concur.") (footnote omitted). Martindeli was cited with approval in SEC v.
TheStreet.com, 273 F.3d 222, 232 (2d Cir. 2001), which was cited with approval in Brown, 929
F.3d at 51 n.40. Notably the Second Circuit in Brown held that redactions of sensitive, private
information disclosed by witnesses in depositions because of "a strong expectation of continued
confidentiality, "Brown, 929 F.3d at 48 n.22, and the Second Circuit itself redacted sensitive
personal references in Ms. Maxwell's deposition testimony excerpts.
Ms. Maxwell was the Defendant in this defamation action. She did not inject her personal
life into this case and was deposed under a court-ordered guarantee that her testimony would
remain confidential. She relied on that order and has a strong expectation of continued
confidentiality.
2. Prevention of the abuse of court records and tiles ("CI-2").
Courts must exercise their supervisory power over their own records and files to ensure
they "are not used to gratify private spite or promote public scandal" or "serve as reservoirs of
libelous statements for press consumption." Brown, 929 F.3d at 51 (quoting Nixon v. Warner
Commc'ns, Inc., 435 U.S. 589, 598 (1978)). The Brown court held: "District courts should
exercise the full range of their substantial powers to ensure their files do not become vehicles for
defamation. Id. at 53. The above DE's are textbook examples of materials that should not be
submitted to courts because of their potential for abuse.
3. Annoyance, embarrassment, oppression, undue burden ("CI-3").
Materials that cause annoyance, embarrassment, oppression or undue burden to an
individual should be sealed or redacted. See Brown, 929 F.3d at 51. The questions were intrusive
and embarrassing.
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4. Preserving the fundamental rights of suspects or others under criminal
investigation ("CI-4").
The preservation of the fundamental rights of suspects and others under criminal
investigation is a powerful countervailing interest weighing against the presumption of access.
See Nixon, 435 U.S. at 595, 602; Brown, 929 F.3d at 47 n.13; Martindell, 594 F.2d at 295-97. The
courts have an obligation to safeguard the integrity of criminal investigations and the privacy and
safety of witnesses and suspects that are part of those investigations. United States v. Longueuil,
567 F. App'x 13, 16 (2d Cir. 2014) (holding that district court properly sealed contested
documents "as they reflected sensitive information about cooperating witnesses, "and concluding
that sealing was justified in part "to safeguard the privacy of individuals involved in an
investigation"; "[title district court was in the best position to weigh these factors") (internal
quotations and citation omitted); Hardy, 697 Fed. App'x at 725 (2d Cir. 2017) (noting that courts
have found that the following can defeat presumption of access: protection of ongoing
investigations, safety of witnesses, national security, and trade secrets).
Ms. Maxwell is aware, based on publicly reported statements by Plaintiff, Plaintiff's
counsel, the United States Attorney for the Southern District of New York, and the Attorney
General for the U.S. Virgin Islands, that investigations surrounding the alleged conduct of Mr.
Epstein survive his death. It is unclear who are witnesses or targets of any investigation. These
ongoing investigations are a powerful countervailing interest here. The sealed testimony or
summaries may inappropriately influence potential witnesses or alleged victims.
IV. DE 144-1- Exhibit 3 (police reports); DE 153; DE 153- Exhibit 2 "Flight Log
Summary Chart" prepared by Plaintiff's counsel and flight logs; Exhibit 3 (88 pages
of police reports): Identification of Countervailing Interests.
Numerous yet to be notified Non-Party Does are mentioned in these documents and it is
premature for the Court to make any decision to unseal these documents prior to Notice.
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However, these materials are subject to the following countervailing interests regardless of
additional Non-Party objections:
A. Countervailing Interests
1. Prevention of the abuse of court records and tiles (CI-2).
Brown, 929 F.3d at 5land 53, see section III.A.2, supra.
2. Improper submission of documents ("CI-5").
Documents that a party has submitted for a non-merits purpose, e.g., the confidentiality,
discoverability or admissibility of information, should remain sealed or redacted if there is any
interest in sealing or redaction. See TheSreet.Com, 273 F.3d at 233. The references to the various
attached exhibits were gratuitous and served no legitimate purpose related to the discovery
dispute. During the course of this litigation Plaintiff offered, on more than one occasion, various
iterations and compilations of the Palm Beach Police Reports in which no one identified Ms.
Maxwell as a suspect, a perpetrator, or participant. The attachment of alleged summaries of flight
logs, alleged flight logs, and police reports was simply a mechanism to attempt to bias the Court
and any potential future reader of the material. These issues were briefed in various undecided
motions in limine.
3. Untrustworthy, unreliable, and incorrect information ("CI-6").
Courts should continue the sealing or redaction of information that is or may be
untrustworthy, hearsay or incorrect or that simply is misinformation. United States v. Amodeo, 71
F.3d 1044, 1052 (2d Cir. 1995) ("Amedeo II") ("The nature of some parts of the Report militate
against unsealing, however. Portions of the Report are hearsay, and may contain misinformation.
There is a strong possibility that the report will contain material which is untrustworthy or simply
incorrect.") (internal quotations, brackets, citation and ellipsis omitted). Exhibits 4 and 7 are
inadmissible hearsay transcripts from an unreliable deceased individual never deposed by Ms.
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Maxwell. The exhibits could not be considered evidence and should not have been submitted to
the Court. The declarant suffered multiple felony convictions and had been involved in attempting
to obtain money from one of Plaintiff's lawyers in exchange for alleged evidence. These issues
were briefed in various undecided motions in limine.
V. DE 153-1 exhibits 4 and 7 and DE 153-1, exhibits 5 and 6: Identification of
Countervailing Interests
A. Countervailing Interests
1. Untrustworthy, unreliable, and incorrect information (CI-6).
Exhibits 5 and 6 concern J. Doe I. Both exhibits are hearsay statements made by J. Doe 1
in proceedings that did not involve Ms. Maxwell. J. Doe 1 was not examined by Ms. Maxwell's
counsel in that proceeding making the statements unreliable and inadmissible.
VI. DE 172 (and related DEs 171, 173, 173-1, 189, 190, 190-1, 202, 203, 204-1, 211, 212,
212-1, and 224) are afforded the lowest presumption of public access and this Sealed
Material should remain sealed.
These pleadings concern what should have been a straightforward request by Plaintiff to
exceed the presumptive 10 deposition limit set by the Court? It was not. Instead of simply asking
to exceed the presumptive limit, Plaintiff felt the urge to pack the record with deposition
testimony subject to the Protective Order and references to multiple Non-Party Does including
deposition testimony from Non-Party Does!'
5 DE 171 is a letter notice; DE 172 is the initial motion; DE 173 is a lawyer declaration
referencing the exhibits in DE 173-1. DE 189 is Defendant's Response, 190 is a lawyer
declaration referencing the exhibit in DE 190-1. DE 202 is another letter notice. DE 203 is
Plaintiff's Reply. DE 204 is another lawyer declaration referencing the exhibits in DE 204-1.
DEs 211, 212, 212, 212-1 and 224 are amended/corrected versions of DEs 202, 203, and 204-1.
The name of Doe 1 appears in DEs 172, pp. i, 2, 6, 11, and 12; 173 p. 2 11 5 and 10; 173-6 pp. 71,
73, and 218; 189 p. 6; 203, pp. 2, and 5-6, 204, p. 115 ; 204-3, all; 211, see 203; 212, see 204;
212-3, see 204-1:3; 224, see 203. Doe 2 appears in DEs 172, pp. i, 2, and 12; and 189 p.5.
6 The following DEs contain references to Non-Parties: DE 172 references 14 non-parties;
DE 173-1 references 47 non-parties; DE 189 references 8 non-parties; DE 203 references 12 non-
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Given the repeated references to Non-Parties it is premature for the Court to make any
decision to unseal these documents prior to Notice. However, Countervailing interests exist that
warrant a decision to seal many of the Selected Materials regardless of any additional Non-Party
objections.
A. Identification of Countervailing Interests
1. Reasonable reliance on a protective order by a party or non-party (CI-1).
Prevention of the abuse of court records and files (CI-2). Annoyance,
embarrassment, oppression, undue burden (CI-3). Preserving the
fundamental rights of suspects or others under criminal investigation (CI-4).
DE 172 contains multiple references to Ms. Maxwell's deposition testimony and the
deposition testimony of one other Non-Party taken pursuant to the Protective Order. See pp. 2, 4-8
as to Ms. Maxwell and pp. 3, 4, 9, and 11 as to an additional Non-Party Doe. Reasonable reliance
on a protective order by a party or non-party, Prevention of the abuse of court records and files,
Annoyance, embarrassment, oppression, undue burden, Preserving the fundamental rights of
suspects or others under criminal investigation, all identified in section IILA.1-4 apply to these
pages of DE 172.
2. Non-Judicial Documents ("CI-7").
In defining "judicial records and documents," the Second Circuit "ha[s] emphasized that
'the mere filing of a paper or document with the court is insufficient to render that paper a judicial
document subject to the right of public access."' Brown v. Maxwell, 929 F.3d 41, 49 (2d Cir.
2019) (emphasis supplied; footnote omitted; quoting United States v. Amodeo, 44 F.3d 141, 145
(2d Cir. 1995) ("Amodeo r')). Amodeo I, the inception of the Second Circuit's principle that a file
stamp is not a judicial-document talisman, is instructive. There an appointed Court Officer tasked
parties; DE 204-1 references 4 non-parties; DE 211 references 12 non-parties; DE 202 references
2 non-parties; DE 202-1 references 2 non-parties; DE 224 references 8 non-parties.
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with an investigation for the District Court for the Southern District of New York prepared and
filed with the court a sealed report of her investigation. Newsday moved to unseal the report.
After the court released an edited and redacted copy of the report, Newsday appealed. See 44 F.3d
at 142-43.
If its mere filing transformed the report into a judicial document, Arnodeo I would have
been categorical and succinct. It was neither. The decision turned on the Second Circuit's lengthy
discussion of the First and Third Circuits' divergent approaches to the question, when is a mere
document transformed into a judicial one? The Third Circuit's focus was "`on the technical
question of whether a document is physically on file with the court."' Amodeo 1, 44 F.3d at 145
(quoting Pansy v. Borough of Stroudsburg, 23 F.3d 772, 782 (3d Cir. 1994)). In that circuit if a
document is filed with a court, it is a judicial document; otherwise it is not. See id. (citing Pansy,
23 F.3d at 782). The Amodeo I court cited two other Third Circuit cases confirming that circuit's
litmus-test approach to identifying judicial documents: Bank of America National Trust and
Savings Association v. Hotel Rittenhouse Association, 800 F.2d 339, 344-45 (3d Cir. 1986)
("Once a settlement is filed in the district court, it becomes a judicial record, and subject to the
access accorded such records."); Leucadia, Inc. v. Applied Extrusion Technologies, Inc., 998 F.2d
157, 161-62 (3d Cir. 1993) (listing cases in which "other courts have also recognized the principle
that the filing of a document gives rise to a presumptive right of public access"). Amodeo 1, 44
F.3d at 145.
The First Circuit "has taken a somewhat different approach," id. In that circuit "documents
must have a role in the adjudication process in order to be accessible and . . . documents that have
no such role, such as those used in discovery, cannot be reached." Id. (citing Anderson v.
Cryovac, Inc., 805 F.2d 1, 13 (1st Cir. 1986)). Amodeo I found instructive F.T.C. v. Standard
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Financial Management Corp., 830 F.2d 404 (1st Cir. 1987). In F.T.C. a district court relied upon
financial records referenced in a proposed consent decree in deciding whether to approve the
decree. The First Circuit held the financial records were judicial documents because they were
submitted to the court as part of the decree-approval process, they were "'relevant and material"
to the process, and the district court "relied upon the documents in assessing the reasonableness of
the order, i.e., in determining the litigants' substantive rights, and in performing its adjudicatory
function." Id. (quoting F.T.C., 830 F.2d at 410).
The Second Circuit adopted the First Circuit's approach:
We think that the mere filing of a paper or document with the court is insufficient
to render that paper a judicial document subject to the right of public access. We
think that the item filed must be relevant to the performance of the judicial
function and useful in the judicial process in order for it to be designated a judicial
document.
Id. Brown was building on Amodeo /'s holding when it said, "As our precedent makes clear, a
court mperforrn[s] the judicial function' ... when it rules on motions currently before it." Brown,
929 F.3d at 49 (emphasis supplied; footnote omitted; quoting Arnodeo I, 44 F.3d at 145). And it
was building on Amodeo I when it said, "A document is thus `relevant to the performance of the
judicial function' if it would reasonably have the tendency to influence a district court's ruling on
a motion ...." Id. (emphasis supplied; footnote omitted; quoting Amodeo I, 44 F.3d at 145). Both
Brown accretions to the Amodeo I principle are themselves dependent upon the principle. If a
motion is not "currently before" the district court, then a fortiori the court is not "perform[ing] the
judicial function." And if a motion is not currently before the court, then a fortiori it cannot
"reasonably have [a] tendency to influence" the court.
Brown's holding was hardly a surprise. It followed S.E.C. v. TheStreet.Com, 273 F.3d 222,
233 (2d Cir. 2001). There the Second Circuit held that documents that "did not `directly affect an
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adjudication' nor . . . significantly `determine litigants' substantive rights' were not judicial
documents. (Brackets omitted; quoting United States v. Amodeo, 71 F.3d 1044, 1049 (2d Cir.
1995) ("Amodeo 111.)
DE 173, a declaration, references additional Non-Parties, generally those identified in
lawyer emails. The Court may wish to defer consideration of this DE. Redaction of the names
would eliminate any issue related to this document. DE 173-1 exhibits 1-4 identify additional
Non-Parties. Generally, these exhibits are a composite of various back and forth emails between
counsel which are hearsay, non-judicial, documents and which contain the identity of Non-Party
Does. This exhibit should not be considered a judicial document. The arguments of counsel in
self-serving emails are generally not reliable evidence upon which any judicial decision rests or
should rest.
3. Reasonable reliance on a protective order by a party or non-party (CI-1).
Prevention of the abuse of court records and files (CI-2). Annoyance,
embarrassment, oppression, undue burden (CI-3). Preserving the
fundamental rights of suspects or others under criminal investigation (CI-4).
Untrustworthy, unreliable, and incorrect information (CI-6).
DE 172-1, exhibit 5, is an entire, 160-page, Non-Party deposition taken under the
guarantee of the Protective Order entered in this case and should be sealed by application of the
countervailing interests identified in [) above. Similarly DE 172-1, exhibit 6 is the entire, 418-
page, deposition of Ms. Maxwell taken under the guarantee of the Protective Order and should
remain sealed based on the countervailing interests identified above.
DE 172-1, exhibit 7, is yet another copy of the same 88 pages of police reports attached to
many other pleadings in this case. This exhibit should remain sealed for the reasons discussed in
section VI.A.2 and 3, supra.
DE 172-1, exhibit 8, is an identical copy of J. Doe l's hearsay statement attached to DE
153-1 and should be sealed for the same reasons discussed in section V.A.1.
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4. Non-Judicial Documents (CI-7)
DE 172-1, exhibit 9, is additional counsel generated, self-serving correspondence that is
not a judicial document as discussed in section VI.A.2 above.
5. Reasonable reliance on a protective order by a party or non-party (CI-1).
Prevention of the abuse of court records and files (CI-2). Annoyance,
embarrassment, oppression, undue burden (CI-3). Preserving the
fundamental rights of suspects or others under criminal investigation (CI-4).
DE 189 is Defendant's response to the motion. Page 5 of the response contains a
paragraph quoting the deposition testimony of a Non-Party taken pursuant to the Protective Order
which should remain sealed because of countervailing factors CI-1 through CI-4. The remaining
portions of that document can be unsealed, subject to any additional Non-Party objections.
DE 190 and 190-1 relate to deposition testimony by Plaintiff. Ms. Maxwell has no
objection to unsealing these documents, subject to any Non-Party objections.
6. Reasonable reliance on a protective order by a party or non-party (CI-1).
Prevention of the abuse of court records and files (CI-2). Annoyance,
embarrassment, oppression, undue burden (CI-3). Preserving the
fundamental rights of suspects or others under criminal investigation (CI-4).
DE 203, Plaintiff's reply, contains numerous quotes from the protected deposition
testimony taken from Non-Party Does and should remain sealed based on countervailing interests
discussed above.
7. Reasonable reliance on a protective order by a party or non-party (CI-1).
Prevention of the abuse of court records and files (CI-2). Annoyance,
embarrassment, oppression, undue burden (CI-3). Preserving the
fundamental rights of suspects or others under criminal investigation (CI-4).
DE 204 and 204-1 relate to the deposition testimony of three Non-Party Does including J.
Doe 1. All of the references to the Non-Parties and the testimony should remain sealed based on
the countervailing interests discussed above. Exhibit 1 to DE 204 is the testimony of a J. Doe, yet
to receive Notice, taken subject to the Protective Order which was relied on by the J. Doe. Exhibit
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2 to DE 204-1 is a "rough" transcript of a yet to be notice J. Doe also taken pursuant to the
Protective Order. Exhibit 3 to DE 204-1 is deposition testimony taken of J. Doe I pursuant to the
Protective Order. Although J. Doe 1 has not responded to the notice, J. Doe I made it clear in this
deposition that J. Doe 1 did not want any further involvement in this matter and that J. Doe 1 was
unable to accurately recall details of the events described as a result of a medical condition. DEs
211, 212, and 212-1 are the same as DEs 203, 201 and 204-1 and should be treated identically.
VII. DE 199 (and related DEs 200, 200-1, 228, 229, 229-1, 248, 249, and 249-1) are
afforded the lowest presumption of public access and this Sealed Material should
remain sealed.
1. Reasonable reliance on a protective order by a party or non-party (CI-1).
Prevention of the abuse of court records and files (CI-2). Annoyance,
embarrassment, oppression, undue burden (CI-3). Preserving the
fundamental rights of suspects or others under criminal investigation (CI.4)
and Redactions of Names.
These pleadings relate to Plaintiff's request for additional time to complete the depositions
referenced in her pleadings related to her request for more depositions. Generally, the DEs
reference Non-Party Does and refer in some instances to Non-Party deposition testimony taken
under the guarantees of the Protective Order. The Court, prior to unsealing the Sealed Materials,
will require the responses of yet to be notified Non-Party Does.' However, it appears that the
volume of Sealed Material in these DEs is minimal. The Court could determine that the Sealed
Materials remain sealed by application of countervailing interests CI-1 through CI-4.
The following DEs contain references to Non-Parties: DE 228 references 14 non-parties;
DE 229 references 5 non-parties; DE 229-1 references 33 non-parties; DE 248 references 17 non-
parties; DE 249 references 9 non-parties; DE 249-1 references 18 non-parties.
13
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VIII. DE 164 (and related DEs 165, 165-8, 185-3, 185-11, 185-14, 185-15). Should Remain
Sealed Pending Additional Non-Party Notice and Responses Pursuant to The
Protocol.
The pleadings related to DE 164 concern discovery related to a waiver of Plaintiff's
attorney client privilege as a result of her lawyers' extrajudicial conduct and statements and
Plaintiff's statements in other matters.' Accordingly, these materials are afforded the lowest
presumption of public access. However, Ms. Maxwell anticipates that, subject to any objections
from, yet-to-be-noticed, Non-Party Does she has no objection to the release of these materials.
Release at this time is premature, because various Non-Parties may raise countervailing interests
that must be addressed by the Court pursuant to the Protocol.'
IX. DE 230 and (and related DEs 235, 235-5, 235-7, 235-11, 235-13). Should Remain
Sealed Pending Additional Non-Party Notice and Responses Pursuant to The
Protocol.
The Pleadings related to DE 230 concern the reopening of Plaintiff's deposition.
Accordingly, these materials are afforded the lowest presumption of public access10. However,
Ms. Maxwell anticipates that, subject to any objections from, yet-to-be-noticed, Non-Party Does
she has no objection to the release of these materials. Release at this time is premature, because
8 DE 165 is a lawyer declaration referencing the exhibit DE165-8; DE 185-3 is a Response
to Motion to Intervene; DE 185-11 are pgs. from Plaintiff's deposition; DE 185-14 are pages from
one of Plaintiffs lawyers' deposition; DE 185-15 is an interview between Plaintiff and two of her
lawyers.
9 The following DEs contain references to Non-Parties: DE 165 references 1 non-party;
DE 165-8 references 1 non-party; DE 185-3 references 12 non-parties; DE 185-11 references 8
non-parties; DE 185-14 references 1 non-party; DE 185-15 references 15 non-parties.
10 DE 235 is a redacted lawyer declaration referencing a non-party and exhibits DE 235-5,
235-7, 235-11, 235-13.; DE 235-5 contains letters between counsel; 235-7 is an expert from a
non-party deposition, 235-11 is a privilege log; 235-13 is an errata sheet from a deposition.
14
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various Non-Parties may raise countervailing interests that must be addressed by the Court
pursuant to the Protocol."
X. Conclusion
Substantial interests warrant a continued finding by the Court that the various Sealed
Documents at issue here remained sealed.
Dated: June 10, 2020.
Respectfully submitted,
/s/Jeffrey S. Pagliuca
Laura A. Menninger (LM-1374)
Jeffrey S. Pagliuca (pro hac vice)
Ty Gee (pro hac vice)
•
'III
I
" The following DEs contain references to Non-Parties: DE 235 references 1 non-party,
DE 235-5 references 3 non-parties; DE 235-7 references 1 non-party; DE 235-11 references 3
non-parties; DE 235-13 references 3 non-parties.
15
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CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE
I certify that on June 10, 2020, I electronically served this Ms. Maxwell's Memorandum Brief In
Support of Her Objections to Unsealing Sealed Materials via ECF on the following:
Is/ Nicole Simmons
Nicole Simmons
16
EFTA00075023
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