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Lawsuit Update 10-30-16

We aren’t commenting on the lawsuit, but that doesn’t mean we can’t point out the best source for news for the lawsuit, Fan Film Factor, the blog by Jonathan Lane. He follows the lawsuit and has a couple of top notch lawyers who give him feedback on the case. Fan Film Factor is the best source of news on the lawsuit.  So here is Jonathan’s latest:

ALEC PETERS’ attorney fires back hard at CBS/PARAMOUNT legal team in AXANAR LAWSUIT!

A guest blog by Jonathan Lane.

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Last Thursday, the plaintiffs in the Axanar copyright infringement lawsuit filed a massive 122-page ex parte (emergency) application for order requesting three judicial rulings from Magistrate Judge Charles Eick:

  1. Alec Peters must sit for additional deposition questions concerning new e-mails that were just discovered by the plaintiffs last Saturday.
  2. The financials submitted by the defense should be de-designated by the court from “Highly Confidential” (lawyers’-eyes-only) to publicly available.
  3. Defense must provide a privilege log.

In the long filing, the plaintiffs made a litany of accusations against the defendant and his legal team, including failure to turn over e-mails, refusal of the defendant’s attorney to provide a privilege log, attempting to hide previous communications between Alec and other attorneys prior to the filing of the lawsuit, not responding to communications from the plaintiffs’ attorneys, refusing to provide text messages and social media postings, and a whole slew of other items that I won’t bother listing due to blog length considerations (just read the first 18 pages of the application).


Well, it didn’t take long for defense attorney Erin Ranahan to file a response, and let me tell ya, she pulled NO punches in hitting back and hitting back hard!  In short, Erin Ranahan did the following:

  1. Accused the plaintiffs of violating the court’s rules for procedure.
  2. Pointed out that, in doing so, the plaintiffs were wasting the court’s time and resources.
  3. Accused the plaintiffs of violating confidentiality on multiple occasions (and not just leaking stuff to the Axanar detractors).
  4. Accused the plaintiffs of misrepresenting facts (i.e. lying) in an ex parte filing…which is a huge no-no.
  5. Asked the judge for sanctions against the plaintiffs for doing the above.

Also–and you know how I love the word “bombshell”–but there was a HUGE bombshell from the filing which I am FINALLY able to share with all of you (and hopefully it will reach the detractor “peanut gallery, as well)…

ALEC PETERS DID NOT WITHHOLD A SINGLE E-MAIL FROM THE PLAINTIFFS!

Yep, you read that right.  I’ve kinda known the behind-the-scenes story for a while, but I didn’t feel comfortable saying anything until I saw Ms. Ranahan mention the e-mail production process in her latest filing (see page 14).  So now it can be revealed how I am so certain that Alec did not withhold sending any e-mails to the plaintiffs.

Ready?

Alec WASN’T THE ONE who sent the e-mails to the plaintiffs!!!

So here’s what usually happens in cases where a whole bunch of e-mails need to be turned over to another party (or their attorneys) during discovery.  Except in very rare instances, the actual defendant (or plaintiff) doesn’t send anything directly to the other side.  To quote Ghostbusters, “That would be BAD.”  Attorneys know best what should and should not be shared, and so their clients are mostly kept off of the legal battlefield.  Instead, they hand everything over to their attorneys and the attorneys decide what is relevant and what is not.

How do they do this?

Well, it depends on how many e-mails we’re talking about.  In the case of Paramount (who has, to my knowledge, still turned over ZERO e-mails), there are WAAAAAY too many employees and e-mails to search through every one.  So if you look at pages 117-118 of Thursday’s application filing, you’ll see that, at least for Paramount, 20 employees (custodians) were determined to have been most likely to have discussed Axanar, Alec Peters, and/or Star Trek fan films.  Now, each of these people probably had tens of thousands of e-mails (possibly hundreds) to sort through.  So to save time, certain keywords were searched for.  We don’t know what words they used (although the defense definitely WANTS to know because, well, ZERO e-mails produced!), but it’s likely to include “Axanar,” “Alec Peters,” S”tar Trek,” and “fan films”…among others.

In the case of Alec’s e-mails, there probably weren’t as many, but still a lot.  So I’m certain there was a keyword search done as well at the Winston & Strawn offices to pull out the most obvious ones.  And then they dove deeper to do a more thorough review.  In the end, Erin Ranahan and her team determined which e-mails were relevant and then turned those over to the plaintiffs’ attorneys.

So the only thing Alec did in all of this was to copy his entire e-mail and documents folders onto a flash drive and hand it over to his legal team.  Anyone attempting to accuse Alec Peters of some kind of shenanigans in purposefully refusing to or failing to turn over any e-mails that he had for discovery must now face the reality that such an action has never happened.

I hope the above 4-5 paragraphs will finally put this little tempest in a teapot to rest…although the cynic in me kinda doubts it.

Okay, back to the defense’s response…

To provide an idea of the hard-hitting tone of this filing (which was certainly matched by the hard-hitting tone of the previous filing from the plaintiffs), I’d like to share with you what I (and likely the judge, as well) saw first…

Plaintiffs’ Ex Parte Application is not only procedurally improper, it is wholly unnecessary. By their Ex Parte Application, Plaintiffs belatedly seek to raise discovery issues in contravention of the Court’s rules and are wasting the Court’s time and resources on issues that Defendants have already agreed on, or which Defendants have been trying to resolve with Plaintiffs while Plaintiffs have refused to engage in productive discussions. Even if the Court reaches the merits of the belatedly-raised discovery issues, the relief sought is mooted by offers made by Defendants—both in writing and in person—before Plaintiffs filed their Ex Parte Application. Indeed, Defendants have already offered to make Alec Peters available for a second deposition; have repeatedly attempted to meet and confer with Plaintiffs about parameters of the privilege log before preparing it; and Defendants informed Plaintiffs that they are making an additional production today that will moot the remaining issues. Plaintiffs’ counsel did not respond to these offers, making clear that Plaintiffs had committed to file their Ex Parte Application regardless of Defendants’ response. But Plaintiffs fall far short of demonstrating that they are entitled to the extraordinary relief.

To understand this first paragraph and much of the rest of this filing, we need to pause a moment and talk briefly about Magistrate Judge Eick.  A bit of an amusing coincidence happened the Saturday evening before the Friday Axanar hearing.  There was a dinner party for the parents of my son’s classmates, and one of the moms is an attorney.  She and my wife were talking shop, and I heard this woman mention that she’d be arguing in front of Judge Eick on Monday.  I came out of my glazed stupor to ask her, “Is that Judge Charles Eick?”  She said yes, and I suddenly perked up, joined the conversation, and asked her what she knew about him (explaining a little about the Axanar case, which she’d heard about but thought it had settled).

According to this woman, the judge is VERY thorough and doesn’t like any attorney to play fast and loose with the rules.  He’s fair but very strict, and he’s been known to chastise attorneys in open court.

The following Friday, I say exactly what she was talking about!  After the hearing was over, I later joked that Magistrate Judge Eick was four parts law professor and six parts Louis Gossett, Jr. in An Officer and a Gentleman (just more of an older white guy version).  Erin Ranahan spoke first, and during her 55 minute presentation, the judge interrupted her frequently and lectured her (often sternly) on the proper way she SHOULD have filled out the motion to compel discovery.  Every little mistake was examined under a microscope (or so it seemed to me), and as I watched the smackdown, I thought to myself, “Damn, Alec is soooo screwed!”  But then it was the plaintiffs’ turn, and Loeb & Loeb attorney Jonathan Zavin was given the same excruciating treatment.  By the end of the two-plus hours of this punishing endurance match, I didn’t know what would happen…and neither did either of the attorneys.  But I thanked my lucky stars that I wasn’t in their shoes!

And so, now that you know this, you can better understand the strategy of the defense response in this.  First of all, Erin Ranahan establishes that the three orders the plaintiffs are asking for are all essentially moot at :

  1. Alec Peters has already agreed to be deposed again (the only question is how long the plaintiffs get to question him).
  2. The proper financials that the plaintiff referred to, now that they’ve been properly prepared by an accountant, no longer need to be marked “Highly Confidential” and the defense team is allowing them to just be marked “Confidential.”  That means either party can see them…not just the attorneys.  Whether they’ll be de-designated from “Confidential” to totally open to the public is a question for the judge, but my legal source says it’s probably enough for the judge that the defense is stipulating to dropping the “Highly.”  It’s a good meet-in-the-middle compromise…and judges usually like those.
  3. The defense has repeatedly offered to produce a privilege log, so no special order is needed there either.

In other words, everything the plaintiffs just tried to do with a 122-page filing was A COMPLETE WASTE OF THE COURT’S TIME (and the defense team’s).  Now, remember what I just said about Magistrate Judge Eick being totally by the book?  Well, take a look at another snippet from the response (page 4):

With less than a week left in discovery, Plaintiffs have not bothered to follow any of the Local Rule 37 or Local Court procedures governing discovery disputes and cannot satisfy the standard to obtain emergency relief. As the Court noted in In re Intermagnetics America Inc., 101 B.R. 191, 193 (C.D. Cal. 1989):
[E]x parte applications throw the system out of whack. They impose an unnecessary administrative burden on the court and an unnecessary adversarial burden on counsel who are required to make a hurried response under pressure, usually for no good reason. Such applications allow the applicant to jump ‘ahead of the pack’ and ‘cut in line ahead of those litigants awaiting determination of their properly noticed and timely filed motions.

But wait, there’s more.  Apparently, misusing the ex parte application process can result in sanctions (in fact, it’s rule #1):

If you have made it this far, please go to Fan Film Factor for the rest!

 

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Join the discussion 3 Comments

  • Mike Adams says:

    I’ve been thinking about the situation with Star Trek Fan films, and the CBS directives on them. It’s clear that CBS has decided that professional grade fan movies are a threat, and are unwanted by them.

    I disagree with CBS. These movies do nothing but support and expand the Trek fan base. It’s a weak point of view by weak management. Everything that has happened digitally has been treated as a dire threat, and every single time It’s turned out to be the opposite (and I equate the digital revolution to this because it is what has made high quality fan (i.e. small budget) movies possible).

    But the question I must ask is, why bother with Star Trek? And to be honest, I was asking that before this latest development. It’s not that I don’t like Star Trek. I started reading science fiction as soon as I could read, thanks to the influence of my older brothers. I still do today. I give credit to it for the fact that I’m approaching 60 years old, but seem to think more like a millennial. Science fiction expands what you believe is possible. And I have always loved Star Trek because it was pretty good science fiction. So, I like Star Trek, but I also know there is nearly an unlimited amount of good science fiction.

    Many of the people who make the “fan” films are experienced professionals in the industry, and the quality of the films reflects that. The Axanar trailer is stunning in its quality. The “Star Trek Continues” series is superb in both acting and production values; better than the originals on the production values side, equal on acting. The Phase II/New Voyages folks, who have quit the game now, also produced very high quality at the end, and the story telling has always been superb, just a little too much for what they could bring to the screen in the early years.

    I’ll get to my point. The talent and ability to produce is fantastic, so why work in a realm where you can never have commercial success? Why not invent something totally new, or work with an author who would support you in a commercial venture? David Weber was working with Evergreen studios to create an Honor Harrington movie. They went out of business, mostly to the failure of “Walking with Dinosaurs”. It wouldn’t surprise me at all if Mr. Weber would be very keen to work with you. The Honor Harrington universe has a lot of the things that you like about Star Trek, though it is light on aliens. Or, you could reach out to H. Paul Honsinger, who started writing late in life, but has produced three of the best space navy science fiction novels in the history of science fiction, and created a great universe to work in for storytelling and creation. I bet he would be wide open to it. There are many others. If you wanted to be very different from Star Trek, I bet the fan base for “Farscape Continues” would be massive (I know I would be right there).

    Honestly, let CBS have Trek, and move on to create something where you can be measured in the marketplace, and grow and prosper. Do that, and CBS will be asking you for a piece of the action in the future.

  • Brian Heite says:

    Honor Harrington done to the standard set by Prelude would be a smashing success. I understand your commitment to Trek, and I would like to have a way to contribute to keeping the lights on at Axanar until this case is one. Has there been any thought as to how we could donate to such a worthy cause?

  • Tim Hoover says:

    This really pissed me off! I thought I had heard they had worked things out,I really wanted to see axanar as the prelude clip looks awesome. Now I’m back to hating cbs-paramount and their new coming series can eat shit raw.

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