Meta shareholders seek sanctions for Sandberg, Zients for deleting
Cambridge Analytica emails
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[December 10, 2024] By
RANDALL CHASE
WILMINGTON, Del. (AP) — Attorneys for Meta shareholders asked a Delaware
judge Monday to sanction the company's former Chief Operating Officer
Sheryl Sandberg and fellow Facebook board member and current White House
chief of staff Jeff Zients for deleting emails related to the Cambridge
Analytica privacy scandal, despite being told to preserve such records.
The plaintiff attorneys contend that Sandberg and Zients used personal
email accounts to communicate about key issues relating to their 2018
shareholder lawsuit that alleged Facebook officers and directors
violated both the law and their fiduciary duties in failing for years to
protect the privacy of user data.
“Although Sandberg and Zients received a litigation hold requiring them
to preserve documents from these accounts, they both knowingly and
permanently destroyed electronically stored information from such
sources,” attorneys said in a court filing.
The plaintiffs say the former board members were either “reckless or
intentional” in destroying documents, noting that Sandberg deleted
communications to and from her Gmail account after only 30 days, even
after being notified of the “litigation hold” to preserve documents.
Zients never disabled an auto-delete function on his email account, even
though he, too, received a litigation hold and consulted with lawyers,
they said.
The plaintiffs argue that Sandberg and Zients should be prohibited from
testifying about information they sent or received using their personal
email accounts. They also say the burden of proof for any affirmative
defense they present should be raised to a standard of “clear and
convincing evidence,” instead of the lower standard of a “preponderance”
of the evidence.
Sandberg was deposed last week. Plaintiff attorney Max Huffman said
Zients is “busy” and will be deposed in February “after there’s an
effective transition in Washington.”
Defense attorney Berton Ashman described the email deletions as
“unfortunate” but argued that the plaintiffs have not shown that they
were prejudiced in any way.
“There’s no intent here to destroy relevant or responsive information,”
Ashman told Vice Chancellor J. Travis Laster, adding that there no
“trove of missing emails.”
“There’s no grand scheme or suggestion of bad behavior,” he added.
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Ashman said the vast majority of
emails that Sandberg and Zients sent or received using their
personal accounts were also received by other individuals at
Facebook. He suggested that any emails that may have been deleted
have been made available to the plaintiffs from other sources at
Facebook.
Huffman, the plaintiffs’ lawyer, said Sandberg does not deserve the
benefit of the doubt.
“She unilaterally controlled what was kept and what was destroyed,”
he told the judge.
Laster, who is scheduled to preside over a non-jury trial in April,
said he wanted to see a transcript of Sandberg’s deposition before
ruling on the motion for sanctions.
Last year, the judge rejected a defense motion arguing that the
lawsuit should be dismissed because the plaintiffs did not first
demand that Facebook’s board take legal action before filing
litigation themselves. He agreed with the plaintiffs that such a
demand would have been futile because of doubts that a majority of
the relevant Facebook board members, many with close personal and
business ties to Mark Zuckerberg, would be willing to confront the
CEO and founder of the company over its privacy failures.
Laster noted that, in deciding on a motion to dismiss, he was
required to accept the allegations in the complaint as true.
The complaint alleges that Facebook officials repeatedly and
continually violated a 2012 consent order with the Federal Trade
Commission under which Facebook agreed to stop collecting and
sharing personal data on platform users and friends without their
consent.
Facebook later sold user data to commercial partners in direct
violation of the consent order and removed disclosures from privacy
settings that were required under consent order, the lawsuit
alleges. The company’s conduct resulted in significant fines from
regulators in Europe and culminated in the Cambridge Analytica
scandal in 2018. That case involved a British political consulting
firm hired by Donald Trump’s 2016 presidential campaign that paid a
Facebook app developer for the personal information of tens of
millions Facebook users.
The fallout led to Facebook agreeing to pay unprecedented $5 billion
penalty to settle FTC charges that the company violated the 2012
consent order by deceiving users about their ability to protect
their personal information.
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