JAMES S. MOODY, Jr., District Judge.
To expedite the flow of discovery material, facilitate the prompt resolution of disputes over the confidentiality of information, adequately protect material entitled to be kept confidential, and ensure that protection is afforded material so entitled, it is, upon agreement of the parties and pursuant to the Court's authority under Fed. R. Civ. P. 26(c), IT IS ORDERED as follows:
"Confidential Information" or "Documents," as used in this Order, means any information and documentation that is seen as confidential, which is supplied by a party to an opposing party or their counsel during discovery in response to a discovery request or is revealed during a deposition. For purposes of this Order, the following categories of documents are understood by the parties to be "Confidential:"
Documents not specifically covered by these categories may be stamped and thereby designated as "Confidential" upon production where a party believes in good faith that the document contains secret, confidential, or proprietary information. The presence of this stamp or mark on a particular document shall signify that the designating party holds the opinion in good faith that the document is legitimately confidential and/or proprietary and merits protection from disclosure under this Order. The absence of such a designation does not necessarily preclude a document from being subject to this Protective Order. For purposes of this Order, the term "document" includes all written, recorded, computerized, or graphic material, including interrogatory answers and deposition testimony, produced or created by a party, including its experts, consultants and/or outside vendors. An entire document production, or any portion thereof, may be designated confidential on an interim basis to expedite discovery, in which case the producing party will have twenty (20) days after entry of this Order or from production, whichever is later, to identify the documents as to which confidentiality is asserted and the receiving party shall affix a stamp designating the document as confidential. Counsel for a party claiming confidentiality at a deposition or proceeding may designate the information as confidential by making a statement on the record, or by having the court reporter label the information appropriately, or within ten (10) business days after receipt of a transcript or ten (10) days after entry of this Order, whichever is later, by informing opposing counsel in writing of the confidential designation. Similarly, counsel for a party may designate documents produced by a non-party as confidential within ten (10) business days after receipt of the production by informing opposing counsel in writing of the confidential designation.
3. Plaintiff's counsel and their employees agree to respect the rights of privacy of persons not named as parties to this action when showing, revealing or disclosing "Confidential Information" to "witnesses."
1. If an attorney desires to give, show, make available, or communicate properly designated Confidential Information by an opposing party to any "experts" or "witnesses," each person to whom the matter is to be given, shown, made available, or communicated, must agree in writing in the form attached hereto as Exhibit A not to disclose to anyone who is not a Qualified Person any of the information set forth or contained in the material received and to be bound by the terms of this Order. An executed copy of Exhibit A from each such individual shall be maintained by the attorney who obtained them.
2. Pursuant to this Order, the attorney of record for Plaintiff, their employees and agents, and Plaintiff also agree to be bound by the terms of this Order; no further written consent is required of them.
3. Persons obtaining access to or knowledge of items designated as "Confidential" shall use the information solely for preparation for or conduct of deposition, trial, settlement, or post-trial proceedings related to this action and shall not use such information for any other purpose, including personal, business, governmental, commercial, or other administrative or judicial proceedings or engage in any activity or action where knowledge of the confidential information could be prejudicial to Defendants.
4. No copies of documents, testimony, or other information designated as "Confidential" shall be received, kept, or maintained by individuals other than the Qualified Persons listed above.
5. Filing Confidential Information with the Court
If an attorney files Confidential Information with the Court opposing counsel may request leave of Court to have it filed it under seal, to be made available only to Qualified Persons, Judges of the Court and their staff, and the Clerk of the Court and his or her staff, and employees of the Court subject to continued filing under seal or unsealing upon further Order of the Court.
6. In the event an attorney seeks to show any documents or other information denominated as "Confidential" to any category of persons other than those described in Paragraph B as "Qualified Persons," that attorney shall first advise opposing counsel and seek to reach an informal resolution of or agreement on this matter. In the event that agreement or resolution cannot be reached, the attorney seeking to show the "Confidential Information" to anyone other than a "Qualified Person" shall apply to the Court for relief from this Order. In the event attorneys for the parties to this litigation agree that the "Confidential Information" may be disclosed to anyone other than a "Qualified Person," that person shall sign the Disclosure Agreement set forth in Exhibit A.
The parties' consent to this Order shall not be construed as a waiver of any privilege or objection any party may have as to the discoverability of any information, material or document, and it shall not be construed as a waiver of any party's right to move to compel any information, material or document. The inadvertent disclosure of any document, communication or other material protected from disclosure and discovery by the attorney-client privilege, the attorney work-product doctrine, or other judicially recognized protections or privileges or which are otherwise not subject to discovery under applicable law, regulation or the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure shall not be deemed to be a waiver of the applicable protections or privileges as to either: (i) the document, communication or materials disclosed, and (ii) other protected or privileged documents, communications or materials relating to or concerning the same subject matter; any documents inadvertently produced, and all copies and records thereof, shall be immediately returned to the producing party.
Nothing in this Order shall prevent any party or other person from seeking modification of this Order or to present a motion to the Court under Fed. R. Civ. P. 26(c) for a separate protective order as to any particular document or information, including restrictions differing from those specified herein. Likewise, nothing in this Order shall prevent any party or other person from moving to compel production of any document or information. Finally, the parties may make exceptions, modifications, and/or additions to this Order by written agreement so long as all parties, either personally or through their counsel, sign the written agreement.
This Order shall survive the final termination of this action and the Court shall retain jurisdiction for sixty (60) days to resolve any dispute concerning the use of information disclosed hereunder. Upon termination of this Court's jurisdiction over this case, counsel for the parties shall assemble and return, within sixty (60) days, all Confidential Information and all copies of same and any photocopies of the documents, summaries, notes, and memoranda made from or about the documents. The parties' counsel shall make certification of compliance herewith and shall deliver the same to the parties' counsel within ninety (90) days of termination of this Court's jurisdiction over this case.