AMD claims Intel destroyed evidence

Posted on Tuesday, March 06 2007 @ 16:59 CET by Thomas De Maesschalck
In an unpublished statement to the U.S. District Court of Delaware, AMD alleges Intel allowed the destruction of evidence in the pending antitrust lawsuit.
According to the opening letter of the AMD statement, "Through what appears to be a combination of gross communication failures, an ill-conceived plan of document retention and lackluster oversight by outside counsel, Intel has apparently allowed evidence to be destroyed."

Intel's current email system automatically purges emails sent or received by its employees every 35 days. Senior executive data is purged every 45 to 60 days. Additionally, Intel's backup system recycles every other cycle -- immediately overwriting any backup data during tape rotation.

AMD alleges that more than a third of 1,027 case-specific Intel employees did not receive instructions to retain their data after the 2005 case initiation. Of the individuals who retained data, AMD alleges the majority did not retain "sent" emails. These employees, dubbed "custodians," are persons of interest in the legal proceedings.

According to Intel, 217 of these 1,027 custodians have been "identified," and must retain all data as per instruction of the court. AMD has the right to identify another 254 employees for court scrutiny of data -- to date AMD has already identified 74 of those 254.

Intel admits the data lapse, claiming "Intel does not have weekly back-up tapes for every custodian on the custodian list. Some were inadvertently not migrated to the server in 2005, and some, who were later identified, were not migrated on such identification. In addition, some weekly back-up tapes appear to have been recycled."


About the Author

Thomas De Maesschalck

Thomas has been messing with computer since early childhood and firmly believes the Internet is the best thing since sliced bread. Enjoys playing with new tech, is fascinated by science, and passionate about financial markets. When not behind a computer, he can be found with running shoes on or lifting heavy weights in the weight room.



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