North American Science Associates, LLC v. Conforti

U.S. District Court, District of Minnesota

North American Science Associates, LLC v. Conforti

Trial Court Opinion

                UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT                             
                    DISTRICT OF MINNESOTA                                



North American Science Associates, LLC,  Case No. 24-cv-287 (JWB/ECW)    
an Ohio limited liability company also                                   
known as NAMSA, and NAMSA Holdco,                                        
LLC, a Delaware limited liability company,                               

          Plaintiffs,                                                    

v.                                           ORDER                       

Michael Conforti, Pamela Conforti, and                                   
Phoenix Preclinical Labs, LLC, a Minnesota                               
limited liability company,                                               

          Defendants.                                                    


    This case is before the Court on Plaintiffs North American Science Associates, 
LLC and NAMSA Holdco, LLC’s (collectively, “NAMSA entities”) Motion for   
Sanctions Against Defendants Michael Conforti and Pamela Conforti for Evidence 
Spoliation (Dkt. 151).  The Court heard oral argument on the Motion on June 28, 2024 
(Dkt. 319), and the matter is now ready for decision.1                    

1    The NAMSA entities have filed several motions since filing the instant Motion, 
including a Motion for Leave to File a Second Amended Complaint.  (Dkts. 160, 279, 
340, 355.)  They have not sought to expand the record as to the instant Motion, so the 
Court makes its decision based on the record that existed as of the conclusion of the June 
28, 2024 hearing.                                                         
         I.   FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND                          
A.   Michael and Pamela Conforti and American Preclinical Services        
    Defendants Michael Conforti (“Michael”) and Pamela Conforti (“Pamela”)2 

married in 1993.  (Dkt. 242 ¶ 2.)  Michael earned his Bachelor’s and Master’s degrees in 
Biology from the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign in 1991 and 1993, 
respectively; his Doctorate in Veterinary Medicine from the University of Wisconsin-
Madison in 1997; and his Master’s in Business Administration in 2003.  (Dkt. 242 ¶ 2.)  
Pamela earned a Bachelor of Science in Accounting from the University of Illinois 

Urbana-Champaign and a Master of Science in Business Education from the University 
of Wisconsin-Whitewater.  (Dkt. 250 ¶ 2.)  She earned her CPA license from the State of 
Wisconsin.  (Dkt. 250 ¶ 2.)  Pamela worked for over 12 years, beginning while earning 
her Master’s degree, as a public accountant, financial analyst, and consultant, until she 
began working at American Preclinical Services (“APS”) in August 2005.  (Dkt. 250 

¶¶ 3, 8.)                                                                 
    Michael started APS in 2005.  (Dkt. 242 ¶ 3.)  APS was a preclinical medical 
technology contract research organization (“CRO”) that performed testing of medical 
devices, pharmaceuticals, and other various biotechnology using animal and cell-based 
models.  (Dkt. 242 ¶ 4.)  Michael was the sole owner of APS and served as its President 

from 2005 to 2021, when North American Science Associates, LLC (“NAMSA”)  
acquired APS.  (Dkt. 242 ¶¶ 3, 7.)  Pamela served as APS’s Chief Financial Officer and 

2    For readability, the Court refers to Defendant Michael Conforti as “Michael” and 
Defendant Pamela Conforti as “Pamela” in this Order.                      
Chief Information Officer from 2005 to 2021, and as its Human Resources from 2005 to 
2011.  (Dkt. 250 ¶ 8.)  Michael and Pamela operated APS together, having started the 

business “from scratch,” and grew the business to over 300 employees.  (Dkt. 242 ¶¶ 3, 5, 
6.)                                                                       
B.   NAMSA’s Acquisition of APS                                           
    In February 2021, NAMSA purchased APS for approximately $44 million.  (Dkt. 
242 ¶ 7; Dkt. 245 at 17:18-19.)3  Michael and Pamela signed Employment Agreements, 
on or about February 15, 2021, with their employment conditioned on their execution of 

Confidentiality Agreements with respect to “confidential and proprietary” information 
belonging to NAMSA, where their confidentiality obligations continued after their 
employment ended.  (Dkt. 180 ¶ 7; Dkt. 180-5 at 3-4; Dkt. 180-6 at 3-4.)4  Michael and 
Pamela also agreed not to compete with NAMSA for certain periods of time.  (Dkt. 180 
¶¶ 7-8; Dkt. 180-5 at 8; Dkt. 180-6 at 8; Dkt. 181-3; Dkt. 217 ¶ 2.)  Michael also signed a 

Restricted Covenant Agreement (“RCA”) in connection with NAMSA’s purchase of 
APS.  (Dkt. 180 ¶ 8.)  Michael stayed on after the sale as the Vice President of ISR 
Laboratory Operations.  (Dkt. 242 ¶ 8.)  However, NAMSA removed him from executive 
leadership within three months after the purchase and, within the first eight months after 
the sale, Michael became an “individual contributor” without any managerial 



3    Pin citations to transcripts are in the page:line format.            

4    Unless otherwise noted, page citations to materials filed on the docket are to the 
CM/ECF pagination.                                                        
responsibilities.  (Dkt. 242 ¶ 8.)  Pamela stayed on as the Director of Finance after the 
purchase.  (Dkt. 97 ¶ 26; see Dkt. 180-4 at 2.)                           

C.   NAMSA Terminates Pamela’s Employment and Pamela Copies Certain       
    NAMSA Files                                                          
    On May 18, 2022, NAMSA told Pamela that it was terminating her employment, 
where her last day of employment would be May 31, 2022.  (Dkt. 39 ¶ 5; Dkt. 242 ¶ 9.)  
Pamela planned to use her paid time off until May 31, 2022, and consequently NAMSA 
and Pamela agreed that her termination would be effective as of June 3, 2022.  (Dkt. 39 
¶ 5.)                                                                     
    On June 1, 2022, Pamela used a 5-terabyte (“TB”) Seagate Portable Drive (“the 
Pamela Seagate Drive”) to access NAMSA’s “Q:\APSNetwork.”  (Dkt. 28 ¶¶ 14-19; Dkt. 

185-3 ¶¶ 9, 62-63, 67.)  This folder contained NAMSA’s Minnesota facility’s 
QuickBooks accounting records, including what NAMSA describes as its financial and 
accounting database, comprising detailed customer and vendor financial records and 
contacts, financial analytics regarding profitability, and the general ledger.  (Dkt. 28 ¶ 19; 
Dkt. 185-3 ¶¶ 9, 62-63, 67; Dkt. 186 ¶ 16.)  She copied files from this location to the 

Pamela Seagate Drive, creating corresponding folders on the Pamela Seagate Drive.  
(Dkt. 185-3 ¶¶ 9, 62-63, 67.)                                             
    The NAMSA entities state that NAMSA used the QuickBooks accounting   
software until November 1, 2023.  (Dkt. 186 ¶ 16.)  They further state that “[b]ecause 
these QuickBooks records contain highly sensitive financial information that could erode 

NAMSA’s competitive advantage if disclosed to a competitor, NAMSA keeps them 
confidential and takes measures to protect them.”  (Dkt. 186 ¶ 20.)  The NAMSA entities 
explained that NAMSA “preserves its historic QuickBooks accounting records, including 

backup copies for several years” because “they are still relevant and sometimes needed 
for ongoing business and client relationships.”  (Dkt. 186 ¶ 21.)  NAMSA states that 
these records “would still be enormously valuable for a startup CRO hoping to compete 
with NAMSA for talent and clients.”  (Dkt. 186 ¶ 23.)                     
    Pamela testified during her April 11, 2024 deposition that she downloaded 
NAMSA’s QuickBooks file to the Pamela Seagate Drive and took it with her when she 

left NAMSA.  (Dkt. 185 at 92:18-22, 94:4-10.)  She further testified that she did so in 
case NAMSA lost access to QuickBooks after it transitioned to the new accounting 
software, but no one instructed her to do so and she did not tell anybody that she was 
doing so.  (Dkt. 185 at 93:17-94:3.)  In a declaration signed on May 24, 2024, Pamela 
stated under penalty of perjury that:                                     

    I downloaded a QuickBooks file prior to my departure, but it had nothing to 
    do with any competitive activity. Around the time of my departure from 
    NAMSA,  I understood  that NAMSA  was transitioning  their  accounting 
    software away from QuickBooks to a different system and would no longer 
    have access to QuickBooks files. Given this, it was necessary to preserve the 
    QuickBooks file to provide support for my personal tax returns and also the 
    tax returns for APS, if Mike or I were to be audited. I did not download or 
    preserve the QuickBooks file for any competitive purpose, and in fact have 
    not accessed this file since I downloaded it while still employed at NAMSA 
    in early June 2022.                                                  

(Dkt. 250 ¶ 19.)                                                          
    NAMSA’s forensic expert Kevin Faulkner stated in a declaration signed on 
February 2, 2024 that on June 2, 2022, the files and folders containing this accounting 
information on the Pamela Seagate Drive were accessed and interacted with.  (Dkt. 28 
¶ 23.)  Pamela and Michael’s forensic expert Mark Lanterman stated in a declaration filed 

on May 24, 2024 that the June 2, 2022 access occurred from Pamela’s NAMSA laptop.  
(Dkt. 230 ¶ 34.)  Lanterman further stated that there is no evidence that these files were 
accessed after June 2, 2022, accessed from Pamela’s personal laptop, or copied to any 
other source or computer.  (Dkt. 230 ¶¶ 33-35.)  Although the NAMSA entities describe 
this copying and access in their brief, they do not appear to argue that these files were 
accessed after June 2, 2022, nor do they allege Pamela spoliated these files.  (See Dkt. 

153 at 12-13 (describing copying and access), 24-25 (not identifying QuickBooks files as 
spoliated evidence).)                                                     
    According to the February 2, 2024 declaration of NAMSA’s expert Faulkner, 
between June 2 and 10, 2022, Pamela and IT staff at NAMSA exported or attempted to 
export several PST5 (Outlook) files to the Pamela Seagate Drive and other external 

devices.  (Dkt. 28 ¶¶ 24-27.)  Ultimately, on June 10, 2022, a member of NAMSA’s IT 
staff exported email from one folder in Pamela’s email mailbox named “Emails/Folders 
to Export” to a PST file named “exportofemail.pst” (“the PST file”) at 5:05 p.m.  (Dkt. 28 
¶ 26.)  On the same day, the PST file was copied to an external USB SanDisk drive 
having a serial number containing “5045” (the “5045 SanDisk Drive”).  (Dkt. 28 ¶ 26.)  

Then, on June 14, 2022, the PST file was copied to Pamela’s personal laptop and opened.  
(Dkt. 230 ¶¶ 36-37.)  A copy of the PST file continued to reside on Pamela’s NAMSA 

5    A PST file is a storage container for email messages, attachments, contacts, and 
other email mailbox related information.  (Dkt. 28 ¶ 24.)                 
laptop and was available for Faulkner’s examination to determine what email messages 
and attachments were included.  (Dkt. 28 ¶ 26.)  In total, the export contained 2.68 

gigabytes (“s”) of data, consisting of 6,387 email messages and 3,679 attachments.  (Dkt. 
28 ¶ 28.)  The files included information that NAMSA considers to be confidential and 
trade secret business information.  (Dkt. 185-4 ¶ 12.)                    
    Pamela attached emails to her May 24, 2024 declaration showing her   
communications about these exports with NAMSA’s IT staff between June 1, 2022 to 
June 3, 2022.  (See Dkt. 218.)  NAMSA’s expert Faulkner stated in his February 2, 2024 

declaration that the IT staff reported to Pamela (Dkt. 28 ¶ 24), but Pamela stated in her 
May 24, 2024 declaration that they did not report to her (Dkt. 250 ¶ 21; see also Dkt. 185 
98:5-9 (Pamela testifying that IT staff did not report to her after the sale because she was 
no longer the Chief Information Officer)).  Pamela testified during her deposition that she 
did not seek permission from NAMSA management or leadership to take such files from 

NAMSA, but that she “submit[ted] an IT request through the proper channels,” that is by 
submitting a ticket to IT, and that “IT management would have known what the IT staff 
on the site were doing through the ticketing system.”  (Dkt. 185 at 98:22-100:9.)  She 
further testified that, while IT staff reported to her before the sale of APS to NAMSA 
because she was APS’s Chief Information Officer, they did not report to her after the 

sale.  (Dkt. 185 at 97:17-98:9.)  In short, the parties dispute whether Pamela obtained 
these files by improper means.  (See Dkt. 319 at 111:5-19.)  However, the NAMSA 
entities stated at the June 28, 2024 hearing on the Motion that the PST file is “not the 
focus on the spoliation motion” because “they have it.”  (Dkt. 319 at 111:5-8.)  It is 
unclear whether the earlier export attempts were successful, and in any event, they also 
are not the subject of this Motion.                                       

D.   Michael Resigns from NAMSA and Copies Certain Files                  
    Michael submitted his resignation from NAMSA on July 18, 2022.  (Dkt. 39 ¶ 8; 
Dkt. 185-1 at 41:17-20.)  Michael’s last day at NAMSA was August 19, 2022.  (Dkt. 39 
¶ 8; see also Dkt. 242 ¶ 11.)                                             
    Based on Faulkner’s February 2, 2024 declaration, between May 1, 2022 and 
August 18, 2022, Michael accessed tens of thousands of files on his NAMSA laptop and 

copied them to a 5-TB Seagate external drive (“the Michael Seagate Drive”).  (Dkt. 28 
¶¶ 34-47.)  Faulkner states in a declaration signed April 26, 2024 that it appears Michael 
copied more than 26,000 of NAMSA’s Controlled Documents, which NAMSA      
characterizes as documents reflecting its proprietary knowledge of how it executes 
various activities and carries out many preclinical services, and over 39,000 of NAMSA’s 

biocompatibility files to the Michael Seagate Drive.  (Dkt. 185-3 ¶ 56; see Dkt. 185-4 
¶ 13 (describing Controlled Documents).)  However, according to Lanterman, some of 
the Controlled Documents were copied to the Michael Seagate Drive in December 2020.  
(Dkt. 247 ¶ 36.)                                                          
    Consistent with Lanterman’s opinion regarding copying in December 2020, 

Michael stated in a declaration signed under penalty of perjury on May 24, 2022, that 
“[p]rior to the sale of APS to NAMSA, I had stored many APS documents on a personal 
Seagate 5-terabyte external hard drive” and after that sale, he “kept these documents on 
that Seagate hard drive.”  (Dkt. 242 ¶ 13.)  Michael further stated in the May 24, 2022 
declaration:                                                              

    Additionally, I do not dispute NAMSA’s forensic expert, Kevin Faulkner’s, 
    declaration to the extent that he outlines that I interacted with certain files in 
    the weeks leading to my departure from NAMSA. I do not recall all of the 
    specifics of those interactions, but by Mr. Faulkner’s testimony, there were 
    several instances where files were created, some of which were not related 
    to NAMSA documents. If I did copy any NAMSA documents at that time, I 
    am  confident  that  it  was  a  limited  number.  As  I  testified  during  my 
    deposition,  I  saved  these  documents  at  that  time  because  they  were 
    personally meaningful to me for various reasons. As with any of the NAMSA 
    documents I retained, Pam did not know I had these documents. I stored 
    many of them in a folder I called “APS Nostalgia.” I very rarely opened any 
    of these documents and if I did, it was to reminisce on the “old days”—that 
    is, 16 years of building a very successful business from scratch with my wife 
    and friends . . .                                                    

(Dkt. 242 ¶ 14.)                                                          
    As to certain files relating to “business plans and specifications,” Michael stated in 
the May 24, 2024 declaration that because his company Conforti Holdings owns the 
building rented by NAMSA, he was entitled or otherwise permitted to review and 
approve any new construction NAMSA wanted to do on the property.  (Dkt. 242 ¶¶ 15-
18.)  Michael stated: “I needed to have plans to review for approval pursuant to the terms 
of the lease, which is why I had the building plans and specifications for buildings I own” 
and: “There is nothing in the lease agreements that prevents me from retaining a set of as-
built documents for my buildings and my expectation is that the retention of the as-built 
drawings is within my rights and is industry standard.”  (Dkt. 242 ¶ 18.) 
    Michael testified during his April 12, 2024 deposition that he knew the Controlled 
Documents folder contained highly sensitive and confidential materials, and that he was 
not permitted to take the files from NAMSA.  (Dkt. 185-1 at 57:2-5, 59:7-13, 60:1-11.)  
He further testified that he copied content from the Controlled Documents folder to the 

Michael Seagate Drive because they “just had special meaning to” him, and at the time, 
they were particular documents he was reminiscing about, and the documents were a 
“life’s work that he felt akin to” and “just had a hard time getting rid of.”  (Dkt. 185-1 at 
59:15-25.)                                                                
E.   August 2023 Interactions between NAMSA and the Confortis             
    In approximately late July, NAMSA learned of “Pam or Michael Conforti from 

APS starting up a new preclinical business.”  (Dkt. 227 at 3.)  Soon thereafter, NAMSA 
observed that it had “strong protections in the [purchase agreement] impacting Mike 
through Feb 2026; less so with his wife, Pam.”  (Dkt. 227 at 2.)          
    At some point, NAMSA’s CEO Christophe Berthoux and General Counsel Kevin 
Slattery asked Michael to attend an August 9, 2023 telephonic meeting with them.  (Dkt. 

242 ¶ 26.)  According to Michael, during that call, Berthoux and Slattery “stated that they 
suspected I was engaged in assisting Pam in creating a competing business, but they were 
unable to articulate a basis for this belief other than the fact that we are married.”  (Dkt. 
242 ¶ 26.)  Michael states that he “made clear to NAMSA during this call that I was 
complying in all respects with my non-competition agreement.”  (Dkt. 242 ¶ 26.)  A 

lawyer from Dorsey & Whitney LLP (“Dorsey”), which represented Michael at that time, 
also attended the call.  (See Dkt. 221 at 4 (referencing call).)          
    NAMSA’s counsel at Latham & Watkins LLP (“Latham”) sent a letter on August 
28, 2023 “to follow up on recent discussions between our client [NAMSA] and Dr. 
Conforti regarding his obligations under his Restrictive Covenant Agreement.”  (Dkt. 221 
at 2.)  That letter stated in relevant part:                              

    This  firm  [Latham  &  Watkins]  represents  North  American  Science 
    Associates, Inc. (“NAMSA” or the “Company”). We understand that you  
    represent  Dr.  Michael  Conforti. We  are  writing  to  follow  up  on  recent 
    discussions between our client and Dr. Conforti regarding his obligations 
    under his Restrictive Covenant Agreement (the “RCA”).                

                             * * *                                       

    Earlier this month, NAMSA heard a rumor that Dr. Conforti and his wife, 
    Pamela Conforti, may be preparing to provide pre-clinical veterinary services 
    in Minneapolis in the near future and were even looking at a building near 
    NAMSA for the new business. NAMSA was troubled by Dr. Conforti’s     
    potential breach of the RCA and scheduled a meeting with Dr. Conforti to 
    find out whether there was any truth to the rumor. On August 9, 2023, 
    NAMSA’s  CEO  and  General  Counsel  had  a  conference  call  with  Dr. 
    Conforti and you to discuss Dr. Conforti’s and his wife’s intentions. We 
    understand that Dr. Conforti denied being “personally” involved in starting 
    a competing business. However, when NAMSA clarified that the rumor was 
    that Ms. Conforti was also starting the competing business, you objected and 
    that the Minnesota Human Rights Act (“MHRA”) protects spouses from   
    enforcement of restricted covenants in Minnesota or words to that effect.  The 
    call ended soon after.                                               

    Dr. Conforti’s response that he was not “personally” involved and your 
    defensive  reaction  regarding  Mrs.  Conforti’s  plans,  suggests  that  Dr. 
    Conforti’s  wife  is  planning  to  open  a  competing  preclinical  veterinary 
    services  business  in  Minneapolis.  Mrs.  Conforti,  however,  is  not  a 
    veterinarian and it seems unlikely that she would open an operate a business 
    similar to the one Dr. Conforti sold without his advice, assistance or support. 
    The RCA does not just prohibit Dr. Conforti from preparing to form or 
    operate a competing business himself, it also prohibits him from assisting or 
    supporting anyone else, which includes Mrs. Conforti, from developing or 
    operating any competing business during the Restricted Period. RCA §2.2. 
    Dr. Conforti may not circumvent his obligations under the RCA by forming 
    or operating a competing business through or with his wife.          

                             * * *                                       
    Please inform Mr. and Ms. Conforti that NAMSA will be monitoring     
    their business activities very closely. If our client has reason to believe 
    that Dr. Conforti is violating, or is about to violate, his obligations under 
    the RCA, whether directly or indirectly, then it will take all appropriate 
    action against him and anyone who is involved to protect its rights.  

(Dkt. 221 at 2, 4-5 (emphasis added); see also Dkt. 243.)  The letter also notified Michael 
of his continuing duty to abide by his confidentiality obligations.  (Dkt. 221 at 4 n.5.)   
    NAMSA’s August 28, 2023 letter questioned the likelihood that Pamela would 
open a “business similar to” APS without Michael’s “advice, assistance or support” 
because she is not a veterinarian.  (Dkt. 221 at 4.)  The letter did not suggest that Pamela 
would be breaching any contractual obligations to NAMSA if she did so.  (See id.)  
Michael received no further communication from NAMSA until NAMSA filed this 
lawsuit.  (Dkt. 242 ¶ 29.)                                                
    Pamela testified at her deposition that she was aware NAMSA had contacted 
Michael in August 2023, but she was not involved in the conversations.  (Dkt. 185 at 
232:19-223:17.)  She testified that she was not aware of any dispute between NAMSA 
and Michael, but instead was aware “that they had contacted Mike and were looking to 
confirm rumors they had heard.”  (Dkt. 185 at 233:18-23.)  Pamela further testified that 
she read NAMSA’s August 28, 2023 letter sometime “within a few weeks” of when it 
was received and by that time, knew that NAMSA had concerns that she was planning to 

open a competing preclinical veterinary services business in Minneapolis.  (Dkt. 185 at 
236:2-237:1, 238:10-14.)                                                  
    Dorsey responded to the August 28, 2023 letter on August 30, 2023.  (Dkt. 242-5.)  
The August 30, 2023 letter first addressed NAMSA’s belief that Pamela likely would be 
relying on Michael to start up a competing business because she was not a veterinarian, 
pointing out that “there are many preclinical facilities, including NAMSA, that have been 

founded and operated by non-veterinarians.”  (Dkt. 242-5 at 2.)  The August 30, 2023 
letter further stated: “As Mike Conforti made clear to NAMSA on our call earlier this 
month, he has not and will not violate his RCA.”  (Dkt. 242-5 at 2.)  Pamela reviewed 
Dorsey’s August 30, 2023 letter within a few weeks of it being drafted.  (Dkt. 185 at 
238:15-22.)  As of the end of August 2023, NAMSA had not contacted Pamela regarding 
any dispute between her and NAMSA.  (Dkt. 185 at 240:2-20.)               

    Pamela testified that she understood that NAMSA was saying in August 2023 that 
it would take appropriate action against Michael and anyone else involved to protect its 
rights.  (Dkt. 185 at 241:20-242:1.)  She also testified that she and Michael were 
considering a joint defense arrangement at that time in view of this dispute with 
NAMSA.  (Dkt. 185 at 242:3-243:3.)  However, Pamela took no steps from August to 

November 2023 to preserve evidence at this time because was she “was not in a dispute, 
[and] was not notified that I needed to be preserving any evidence.”  (Dkt. 185 at 243:17-
245:1.)                                                                   
    Pamela stated in her May 24, 2024 declaration that as of the August 9, 2023 
meeting between Michael and NAMSA, “my non-competition agreement with NAMSA 

had concluded at least two months previously on June 3, 2023.”  (Dkt. 217 ¶ 2.)  She 
further stated:                                                           
    At the time of this call, I had not made a decision as to whether I would open 
    a preclinical contract research organization, and when I ultimately decided 
    to open Phoenix Preclinical Labs, LLC, Dr. Conforti had no involvement in 
    the process.                                                         

(Dkt. 217 ¶ 2.)  Instead, based on another declaration Pamela submitted under penalty of 
perjury, she decided to form a new company to conduct pre-clinical research “[i]n or 
about September of 2023”—that company being Phoenix Preclinical Labs, LLC 
(“Phoenix Preclinical”).  (Dkt. 250 ¶ 35.)                                
F.   NAMSA Circulates a Preservation Notice in December 2023              
    On December 12, 2023, NAMSA circulated a “Document Preservation and Hold 
Notice” (“Preservation Notice”) to certain of its employees, including Michael Jorgenson 
and Emily Markuson.  (Dkt. 298-3 at 2; Dkt. 298-4 at 161:23-162:7.)  The Preservation 
Notice stated, among other things, that the matter arose from Michael’s potential 

violations of his contractual obligations to NAMSA, including certain commitments not 
to compete, as well as his and Pamela’s “potential unlawful use of NAMSA’s 
confidential information and other unlawful conduct.”  (Dkt. 286-1 at 3.)  NAMSA also 
stated in the Preservation Notice that it “anticipates that the dispute may lead to a lawsuit 
against Dr. and Ms. Conforti.”  (Dkt. 286-1 at 3.)                        

    On December 12, 2023, Michael had a call with “Emily Markuson” and “Michael 
Jorgnsn [sic].”  (Dkt. 298 ¶¶ 7-8; Dkt. 298-5; Dkt. 298-6.)  Text messages sent from 
Pamela to another person on December 12, 2023 state “Markuson called Mike and we’re 
on the phone with her” and “I’m listening to her and Mike talk – she knows I’m on 
speaker.”  (Dkt. 298 ¶ 9; Dkt. 298-7 at 3-4.)                             
    On December 13, 2023, Michael and Pamela had a call with Dorsey regarding 
“potential litigation.”  (Dkt. 184-1, PRIV006394; Dkt. 184-2, PL02040-41; Dkt. 185 at 

255:3-4.)  Pamela testified that she was “aware that there were rumors swirling,” but not 
of any potential litigation at that time.  (Dkt. 185 at 252:1-253:2.)  On December 16, 
2023, Dorsey emailed “draft declarations” to the Confortis, and Pamela later testified that 
she “was working on a declaration in December.”  (Dkt. 184-1, PRIV006412-414; Dkt 
184-2, PL02043-45; Dkt. 185 at 255:10-15.)  On December 17, 2023, Michael emailed 
Dorsey and Pamela a “draft declaration.”  (Dkt 184-2, PL02046-47.)  Michael again 

emailed a “draft declaration” on December 18, 2023.  (Dkt. 184-1, PRIV006419-420; 
Dkt. 184-2 at PL02048.)  Pamela also emailed Dorsey a “draft declaration” on December 
18, 2023.  (Dkt. 184-1, PRIV006424-425.)  Pamela and Michael continued to correspond 
with Dorsey regarding these “draft declarations” and exchanged more drafts that day.  
(Dkt. 184-1, PRIV006435-440.)  Michael’s privilege log identified these declarations as 

protected work product and as prepared in anticipation of litigation.  (Dkt. 184-2, 
PL02044-45, PL02047.)  On January 8, 2024, Michael had another call with Dorsey 
regarding “potential litigation.”  (Dkt 184-2 at 3, PL02079.)             
G.   NAMSA’s “Town Hall” and Michael and Pamela’s Destruction of USB      
    Devices in January 2024                                              
    Pamela’s Counterclaims assert that NAMSA held a “town hall” meeting on 
January 10, 2024, during which NAMSA made several false and defamatory statements 
about her and Michael—including that they were “dirty” and had violated their 

agreements.  (Dkt. 142 ¶¶ 35-42.)  The Counterclaims further state: “Word of the town-
hall meeting spread quickly.  Ms. Conforti was approached by several people in the 
MedTech community, who alerted her about NAMSA’s false and defamatory statements 

made against her and Phoenix.”  (Dkt. 142 ¶ 43.)                          
    Phoenix Preclinical employee Danielle McCarthy testified during her April 17, 
2024 deposition that she had heard from “friends in the industry,” specifically NAMSA 
employees, that NAMSA was conducting an investigation into potential misconduct by 
Pamela and Michael in “early January of 2024.”  (Dkt. 298-8 at 112:4-12.)  McCarthy 
further testified that she could not recall if she first heard about the investigation before 

or after January 19, 2024.  (Dkt. 298-8 at 115:2-17.)  McCarthy spoke with Pamela in 
person after she heard about the investigation, but did not know if Pamela was aware of 
the investigation before they spoke and could not remember how the conversation went.  
(Dkt. 298-8 at 117:5-22.)  In short, the record is unclear as to when Pamela and Michael 
learned about the “town hall” meeting or “investigation.”                 

    Pamela and Michael both testified that they were cleaning their house in January 
2024 and destroyed USB drives while doing so.6  (Dkt. 185-1 at 105:16-106:1; Dkt. 185 
at 161:13-24.)  Pamela testified that she decided to convert their adult son’s room into a 
visitor room given that he was in college, and she asked him to clean up his room over 
the 2023 “Christmas break” so she could replace his “lofted bunk bed” with a “more 

traditional bed set up” and put a new dresser in his room.  (Dkt. 185 at 160:7-161:12.)  


6    Although the last access date of each USB drive is known, the precise destruction 
date is not.  No party has argued the precise date of destruction matters for purposes of 
this Motion.                                                              
Their son is a software development major and had “a lot of IT things in his bedroom.”  
(Dkt. 185 at 161:17-19.)  Pamela found the USB drives in his room while cleaning it, and 

after their son said the drives “were nothing to him,” she “plugged them all in to see if 
there was anything in terms of family photos or anything that we would need to retain.”  
(Dkt. 185 at 161:13-22.)  Pamela testified that some of the USB drives were corrupted, 
“some didn’t have anything of value on them,” and she “disposed of them all” by 
smashing them with a hammer.  (Dkt. 185 at 161:22-25, 164:10-13.)  Michael testified 
they “went through USB drives to see what was on them and destroyed them and g[o]t rid 

of them.”  (Dkt. 185-1 at 105:16-106:1.)  He also used a hammer “[b]ecause it’s an 
electronic device and you don’t usually, typically, throw electronic devices out without 
destroying them.”  (Dkt. 185-1 at 107:3-108:1.)  NAMSA’s expert Faulkner testified that 
he would not throw a USB drive into the trash to dispose of it without reviewing what 
was on the drive and “forensically wip[ing]” the drive first.  (Dkt. 225 at 60:11-23.)  He 

also acknowledged that “physically damaging” a drive might cause a user (as compared 
to a forensic expert like himself) to “think that they’re getting rid of their data,” although 
physical damage “may or may not actually work.”  (Dkt. 225 at 60:24-61:15.) 
    Forensic examination shows that Michael’s personal HP laptop and Pamela’s 
personal laptop were used to access several USB devices in January 2024.  (Dkt. 185-3 at 

15 § IV.A.7; Dkt. 185-3 at 16 § IV.B.1.)  Michael connected several USB devices to his 
personal HP laptop.  (Dkt. 185-3 at 15 § IV.A.7.)  NAMSA’s expert Faulkner 
summarized those devices in a table reproduced below.                     
              □□□               ge          pee      yi    Reels 
              Other                                  457046 
               as                        KINGSTON    co     10/31/2022 
               Phone    RFCR60NLGLX     Michael's $21+                     8/2/2023 
              Other              General USB Flash Disk          FCEF8 
               Disks   0520000000000046    USB Device               FIC      1/3/2024 
              Other              Generic Flash Disk USB           68D48C 
               Disks   12345678       Device         NO NAME    C4      1/3/2024 
              Other              Generic Flash Disk USB          48A4C 
              Disks   OQO0ADCA00       Device                  AEE     1/6/2024 
                   0901 f0e4d98c5bd6d69a 
                   73£7365 f6a5596de 1 fSaa 
              Other   3c00labSe3427ccee3e3  USB SanDisk 3.2Gen1           1C6FB1 
               Disks   do           USB Device       USB Drive    17      1/6/2024 
              Other              Generic Flash Disk USB           102BD8 
               Disks   ESCOFFS8       Device                  81      1/7/2024 
              Card              Generic- SD/MMC USB 
               Reader   058F 84688461      Device                        1/11/2024 
              Card              NORELSYS 1081CS1 
               Reader   0123456789ABCDE   USB Device                      1/14/2024 

(Dkt. 185-3 at 15 § IV.A.7.)  As shown in the table, two devices were connected to 
Michael’s HP personal laptop on January 3, 2024; two were connected on January 6, 
2024; one was connected on January 7, 2024; one was connected on January 11, 2024; 
and one was connected on January 14, 2024.  (Dkt. 185-3 at 15 § IV.A.7.)  The January 
11 and January 14, 2024 devices are described by NAMSA’s expert Faulkner as “Card 
Readers” while the five connected in  January, before NAMSA’s January 10, 2024 “town 
hall” meeting, are “Other Disks.”  (Dkt. 185-3 at 15 § IV.A.7.) 
     Michael did not produce these USB devices in this litigation.  He testified that the 
“Card Readers” were docking stations, one of which was eaten by one of their two 
puppies.  (Dkt. 185-1 at 106:17-23.)  As for the USB drives, Michael testified that he and 
Pam looked at some of the USB drives together, some separately, but he could not 
remember which they looked at together and which they looked at separately.  (Dkt. 185- 
1 at 108:2-23.)  Michael stated in his May 24, 2024 declaration that he destroyed the USB 
drives “with a hammer because I couldn’t think of a more efficient way to destroy them.” 
(Dkt. 242 § 34.) 

                                     18 

    NAMSA’s expert Faulkner does not state the USB drives contained any NAMSA 
information.  (Dkt. 185-3 § 38.)  According to Michael and Pamela’s expert Lanterman, 
the General USB Flash Disk USB Device bearing Serial Number 0520000000000046 had 
135 files that were accessed from Michael’s laptop between December 17, 2022 and 
January 3, 2024, and primarily existed within a folder called “FxS,” which relate to a 
software company (FlexSchema) owned by Michael.  (Dkt. 242 9 22; Dkt. 247 4 28; see 
also Dkt. 247-1 at 20-22 (list of file names accessed).)  Lanterman also provided a 
summary of what was accessed on the other USB devices and opined that “based on the 
materials that have been provided to me (including my understanding of what constitutes 
NAMSA data), there is no evidence to indicate that these devices were used to store and 
access NAMSA Confidential Information.”  (Dkt. 247 49] 28-29.) 
    NAMSA’s expert Faulkner also identified eleven USB devices which had been 
plugged into Pamela’s personal computer.  (Dkt. 185-3 at 16  § IV.B.1.)  His summary 
table is reproduced below. 

                Bisel           pee  iy                 Ay!         EV 
                0901 be21a0047bd37860 
                2a7368341844084f75al 
           Other   O0f6b64c2cc1640aa5045d 
           Disks   31             USB SanDisk 3.2Gen1   NO NAME     2ED77DC6    6/14/2022 
           Other                Lexar USB Flash Drive 
           Disks   AA6TZHIP3OXPWBIT  USB Device       Lexar       89302B87    10/14/2023 
           Other   22121210173839445156  General UDisk USB 
           Disks   07             Device                   00014D30    10/24/2023 
           Card                Generic- SD/MMC 
           Reader  _058F84688461       USB Device                          1/2/2024 
           Other   001CCOEC2F39EAC095  Kingston DT 100 G2 
           Disks   CB0042          USB Device       KINGSTON    AOEFAICI    1/11/2024 
           Other   0013729945E6EAC0951  Kingston DT 100 G2 
           Disks   30087           USB Device       KINGSTON    A70DDDDB   1/11/2024 
           Other                USB MEMORY BAR 
           Disks       fa7b3ece        USB Device                          1/11/2024 
           Other   SNDK2F07152A447074  SanDisk Cruzer Micro 
           Disks   07             USB Device                 3B691AFD    1/11/2024 
           Other                Memorex Travel Drive 
           Disks   07A609030AAEB193   CL USB Device      TRAVELDRIVE  —89EF31F1     1/11/2024 
           Other   60A44C3FAC-       Kingston DataTraveler 
           Disks   DBF 160796E0CF6     3.0 USB Device      KINGSTON             1/11/2024 
                                         AmericanPre- 
           Other                SanDisk Cruzer Glide   clinica_Video- 
           Disks   04001217081320202042  USB Device       Export       4893F1BD    1/11/2024 

                                     19 

(Dkt. 185-3 at 16 § IV.B.1.)                                              
    As the table indicates, a “Card Reader” was accessed on January 2, 2024 and 

seven “Other Disks” were accessed on January 11, 2024.  (Dkt. 185-3 at 16 § IV.B.1.)  
The seven USB devices accessed on January 11, 2024 were a Kingston USB drive 
bearing Serial Number 0013729945E6EAC095130087 and volume number A70DDDDB 
(“Kingston Drive”), two other Kingston USB drives; a USB Memory Bar USB Device, a 
Memorex Travel Drive CL USB Device, and two SanDisk Cruzer USB devices, one of 
which had a volume name of “AmericanPreclinica_Video-Export.”  (Dkt. 185-3 at 16 § 

IV.B.1.)  In addition, a USB SanDisk 3.2Gen1 was accessed on June 14, 2022; a Lexar 
USB Flash Drive USB Device was accessed on October 14, 2023; and a General UDisk 
USB device was accessed on October 24, 2023.  (Dkt. 185-3 at 16 § IV.B.1.) 
    As to the SanDisk Cruzer USB device connected on January 11, 2024 with the 
volume name “American Preclinica_Video-Export,” Pamela testified that it contained 

only one video, which “was a very old marketing video” that used to be on the APS 
website, was still available on YouTube, and “talked about the facility probably 
somewhere circa 2012.”  (Dkt. 185 at 162:15-163:23.)  According to Pamela, she “said 
we don’t need this, it’s not relevant to anyone at this point because NAMSA has its own 
website.”  (Dkt. 185 at 163:1-2.)  Pamela’s brief provided the link for the YouTube 

video.  (Dkt. 215 at 25 n.5.)  Pamela also testified that she found the other SanDisk 
Cruzer USB device in February 2024 and this USB device (described by Latham counsel 
as having “Cabo” as a volume name or label) contained photos of a family trip to Cabo 
San Lucas in December 2021, which she provided it to her lawyer in February 2024.  
(Dkt. 185 at 168:8-20.)                                                   

    Based on analysis of USB and file/folder artifacts on Pamela’s personal laptop, 
NAMSA’s expert Faulkner identified the Kingston Drive as containing NAMSA 
information.  (Dkt. 185-3 ¶¶ 42, 44.)  Faulkner states that Pamela opened the following 
folders from the Kingston Drive on January 11, 2024:                      
      •    D:\Biocompatibility\Final Report Templates                    

      •    D:\General - Sample Prep (S-GN-SP)                            
      •    D:\In-Life Research- Biocompatibility - Animal Care (S-IL-BC-AC) 
      •    D:\In-Life Research - Biocompatibility - Operations (S-IL-BC-OP) 
      •    D:\In-Life Research - Toxicology (S-IL-TX)                    
      •    D:\In-Vitro Testing - General (S-IV-GN)                       

      •    D:\In-Vitro Testing - Cytotoxicity Operations (S-IV-CY-OP)    
      •    D:\In-Vitro Testing - Hemocompatibility (S-IV-HE-OP)          
(Dkt. 185-3 ¶ 42.)  On the same day, Pamela opened a Controlled Document named “S-
GN-SP-001 Rev B ISO Sample Preparation 09.18.12.docx” from the Kingston Drive.  

(Dkt. 185-3 ¶ 43.)                                                        
    Faulkner states in his April 26, 2024 declaration that the opened folders bear 
“similar names to files and folders on the NAMSA servers” and the “file name matches 
the name of a file on the NAMSA servers.”  (Dkt 185-3 ¶¶ 42-43.)  However, the 
NAMSA entities asserted in their brief that the “folders and file names [] precisely match 
the names of folders and files on NAMSA’s servers.”  (Dkt. 153 at 14.)  At the hearing, 
Latham counsel first described the folders as “match[ing] NAMSA folders on its 
confidential repository” (Dkt. 319 at 34:6-7) but later stated: 
     I was reminded on the break that I misspoke earlier. I said that those titles 
     matched the  names  of folders  on NAMSA’s  servers.  They  are  not  exact 
     matches. They are close. It was the best Mr. Faulkner was able to do was to 
     line them up, say these look a  lot like the folders that NAMSA keeps. 
     And I was mistaken to  say they exactly or to  suggest they exactly match 
     before. They don’t, but they are very, very close, but that’s also part of what 
     illustrates the problem. We just don’t know exactly what’s on them, and we 
     can’t simply go look at the NAMSA versions of the documents to know. 
(Dkt. 319 at 110:5-16.) 
     Lanterman states in his May 24, 2024 declaration that these eight folders and 
document were created on the Kingston Drive in 2012.  (Dkt. 230 4 44.)  The eight 
folders and the file accessed on January 11, 2024 were as follows: 

             Accessed                             Created on  | Modified 
                                                USB drive 
             04:38:12 PM_ | Templates                    04:22:34 PM 
             01/11/2024  |D:\In-Life Research - Biocompatibility-  | 10/03/2012  |N/A 
             oiges0PM  [animal     SLBA      [oxsoaor  | 
             04:39:01 PM _ | Operations (S-IL-BC-OP)            04:59:48 PM 
             04:39:04 PM                            05:00:24 PM 
             04:39:05 PM                            05:02:16 PM 
             04:39:07 PM_|  Operations (S-IV-CY-OP)            05:02:16 PM 
                      eee 
             04:39:21 PM                            04:55:12 PM 
             04:39:21 PM_ | GN-SP-001 Rev B ISO Sample Preparation | 04:58:11 PM | 2? 03:09:54 
                      09.18.12.docx                           PM 
             04:39:54 PM _ | (S-IV-HE-OP)         _          05:02:16 PM 
(Dkt. 230 ¥ 43.) 

                                    22 

    Lanterman further states that the Kingston Drive was disconnected from Pamela’s 
laptop 2 minutes and 40 seconds after it was connected.  (Dkt. 230 ¶ 45.)  Lanterman 

further opines that of the USB devices not produced by Pamela, only two may contain 
NAMSA data—the 5045 SanDisk Drive containing the PST file and the Kingston Device 
from which the eight folders and single file from 2012 were accessed.  (Dkt. 230 ¶ 48; 
see also id. ¶ 47.)                                                       
    Pamela and Michael’s expert Lanterman provided the following information 
regarding the other USB devices that were connected to Pamela’s personal laptop.  (Dkt. 

230 ¶ 47.)  One of them was the 5045 SanDisk Drive containing the PST file, which was 
only attached to her personal laptop on June 14, 2022.  (Dkt. 230 ¶ 47.)  One was a Lexar 
USB Flash Drive USB Device, last connected and only connected to the laptop on 
October 14, 2023, which contained two .mp4 files.  (Dkt. 230 ¶ 47.)  Another was a 
General UDisk USB Device, last connected and only connected to the laptop on October 

24, 2023, which contained two .mp4 files, each bearing a woman’s name as a filename.  
(Dkt. 230 ¶ 47.)  Pamela states these video files were used to prepare a tribute video for 
her mother’s memorial service.  (Dkt. 217 ¶ 7.)  Another was a “Generic SD/MMC USB 
Device” (“highly like[ly] an SD card reader”), which was only connected to Pamela’s 
personal laptop on January 4, 2024 with nothing to indicate files were accessed from this 

device.  (Dkt. 230 ¶ 47.))  Pamela stated this was a docking station used to allow her 
laptop to display to a monitor.  (Dkt. 217 ¶ 6.)                          
    Lanterman also discussed three Kingston USB devices that were last connected 
and only connected to the laptop on January 11, 2024.  (Dkt. 230 ¶ 47.)  One of them was 
the Kingston Drive containing the eight folders and file having NAMSA information.  
(Dkt. 230 ¶ 47.)  As to the second, no files were accessed from Pamela’s laptop.  (Dkt. 

230 ¶ 47.)  As to the third, the following three folders were accessed from Pamela’s 
laptop on January 11, 2024:                                               
              o  D:\Job Documents                                        
              o  D:\Training Videos                                      
              o  D:\Handouts                                             

(Dkt. 230 ¶ 47.)  NAMSA has not argued that these folders contained NAMSA 
information or that their destruction constituted spoliation.             
    There were two SanDisk Cruzer USB devices.  (Dkt. 230 ¶ 47.)  Based on the 
serial numbers, one of them contained the APS video accessed on January 11, 2024.  
(Dkt. 230 ¶ 47; Dkt. 185-3 at 16 § IV.B.1.)  The other contained two .jpg photo files 
accessed on January 11, 2024, and based on the serial number, is the SanDisk Cruzer 
USB device that Pamela produced in February 2024 containing the Cabo vacation photos.  
(Dkt. 230 ¶ 47; Dkt. 217 ¶ 8; Dkt. 185-3 at 16 § IV.B.1.)                 
    Finally, Lanterman identified a Memorex Travel Drive CL USB Device and a 
Memory Bar USB Device.  (Dkt. 230 ¶ 47.)  Both were last and only connected on 
January 11, 2024, and no files were accessed from those devices.  (Dkt. 230 ¶ 47.)  
    Lanterman opined that there was no evidence that the Michael Seagate Drive 

(serial number NABAFEDS) had ever been connected to Pamela’s personal laptop.  (Dkt. 
230 ¶ 49; see also Dkt. 185-3 ¶ 4 (identifying the Michael Seagate Drive by serial 
number “NABAFEDS”).)                                                      
H.   NAMSA Files Suit                                                     
    NAMSA filed this action against Pamela, Michael, and Phoenix Preclinical on 

February 2, 2024.  (See generally Dkt. 1.)  The initial Complaint alleged that Pamela and 
Phoenix Preclinical engaged in misappropriation of trade secrets under the Defend Trade 
Secrets Act, 
18 U.S.C. § 1836
 et seq.; Michael and Pamela breached their respective 
Confidentiality Agreements; and Michael engaged in commercial defamation.  (See 
generally Dkt. 1.)  Also on February 2, 2024, the NAMSA entities sued Michael in the 
District of Delaware asserting claims for breach of contract (where the contract at issue 

has a Delaware forum selection clause), trade secret misappropriation, and related causes 
of action.  (See Dkt. 81 at 2.)  The Delaware action was transferred to the District of 
Minnesota and consolidated with the Minnesota action.  (Dkts. 81, 84.)  The NAMSA 
entities filed an Amended Complaint reflecting this consolidation (Dkt. 97), which is the 
operative pleading.                                                       

I.   Michael Copies and Destroys Data and Devices over the Weekend of     
    February 2, 2024                                                     

    Michael testified at his deposition that on February 2, 2024, after NAMSA filed 
this lawsuit, he purchased a Lenovo laptop for the sole purpose of wiping the data from 
Michael Seagate Drive.  (Dkt. 185-1 at 78:18-79:21.)  He testified that he also reset the 
operating system of the Lenovo laptop, which “didn’t make any sense” (presumably 
because “there was no data on that computer” since its “only purpose” was wiping the 
Michael Seagate Drive), but he wanted “to make sure that there was no [sic] lingering 
anything on the computer.”  (Dkt. 185-1 at 78:4-21, 80:4-17.)  He also testified that he 
had purchased a 2-TB Western Digital Passport Drive.  (Dkt. 185-1 at 83:5-18.)  
According to Michael:                                                     

    The Seagate hard drive had a compilation of personal and NAMSA-related 
    documents. At the time, again, I was not thinking straight and I wanted to 
    wipe the Seagate drive clean, and, therefore, I transferred all the documents 
    over to Passport. Which made no sense whatsoever, but that’s what I did. So 
    now I have a Passport hard drive that has the same material that the Seagate 
    hard drive had on it. Didn’t help myself.                            

(Dkt. 185-1 at 84:9-17.)                                                  
    Michael further testified that he used a Lenovo computer purchased on February 2, 
2024 to wipe some, but not all, of the Seagate files off the Western Digital Passport 
Drive.  (Dkt. 185-1 at 85:17-87:22.)  He testified that he wanted to retain personal 
pictures and be more selective in wiping the “things that I knew I should not have had.”  
(Dkt. 185-1 at 88:4-13.)  Michael testified that he knew, when he wiped the Michael 
Seagate Drive and deleted all the evidence on it, that he had a duty to preserve evidence 
relevant to the lawsuit he had just been served with.  (Dkt. 185-1 at 63:9-13.)  He also 
testified that he knew that his agreement with NAMSA included returning its property 
(including files) when his employment with NAMSA ended and that he failed to do so.  
(Dkt. 185-1 at 35:6-37:11, 38:10-14.)                                     
    After his deposition, the NAMSA entities sent Madel PA (“Madel”), which at 
some point took over Michael’s representation from Dorsey, an email asking about a 
Lenovo computer having a serial number containing “2861” (“2861 Lenovo Computer”).  
(Dkt. 184-3 ¶ 5; Dkt. 244-1; Dkt. 244-2.)  In a declaration dated April 22, 2024, Michael 
stated that he was only asked about “a Lenovo computer” and “your Lenovo computer” 
during his deposition, that NAMSA did not ask him about “specific computers” during 
his deposition even though they had referred to the 2861 Lenovo Computer in a letter 
marked as an exhibit during his deposition,7 and that he was not trying to evade the truth 

during his deposition.  (Dkt. 184-3 ¶¶ 5-6.)  He then stated:             
    After the lawsuit was filed, I purchased a Western Digital Passport external 
    hard drive and a Lenovo laptop on February 2, 2024 from Best Buy, which I 
    assume to be the “2861 Computer.” I did not put any data on this Computer. 
    I used it only as a passthrough to move documents from the 5-terabyte 
    Seagate  hard  drive  to  the  Western  Digital  Passport  external  hard  drive 
    (forensic images of both of which have been produced to NAMSA in this 
    litigation). After transferring all the data from drive to drive, I played around 
    with  the  settings  as  the  computer  was  very  slow  to  respond  and  not 
    functioning well before wiping the Seagate drive and resetting the operating 
    system on the 2861 Computer. After resetting the operating system, the 2861 
    Computer froze up with a blue screen and was not functional even with 
    turning on and off.                                                  

    I then disposed of the “2861 Computer” in a construction dumpster in a 
    commercial area near my house in Maple Grove the morning of Saturday, 
    February 3. I regret doing this, too, but again, I was in a state of panic, not 
    doing things that made any sense.                                    

(Dkt. 184-3 ¶¶ 7-8; see also Dkt. 242-3 ¶¶ 7-8.)  Michael was unable to retrieve the 2861 
Lenovo Computer.  (Dkt. 184-3 ¶ 8.)                                       
    Michael then stated in the April 22, 2024 declaration that he had purchased a 
second Lenovo laptop (“5951 Lenovo Computer”), which he used to wipe the Western 
Digital Passport Drive.  (Dkt. 184-3 ¶ 7.)  Michael stated that he purchased the 5951 
Lenovo Computer on February 3, 2024, acknowledged that NAMSA has questioned the 

7    The Court understands the reference to this letter to be making the point that 
NAMSA was aware of the 2861 Lenovo Computer before Michael’s deposition and 
therefore could have asked him about it more specifically.                
purchase date because a website shows its warranty was activated in November 2023, and 
said he has “no idea why the warranty would have begun on November 26, 2023.”8  (Dkt. 

184-3 ¶¶ 9-10.)                                                           
    According to NAMSA’s expert Faulkner, the disposal of the 2861 Lenovo 
Computer means he cannot determine what information “may have been stored, 
transferred, accessed, or used on this Lenovo computer,” and the destroyed data could 
have provided additional information regarding other USB devices connected to the 2861 
Lenovo Computer.  (Dkt. 185-3 ¶ 26.)  Based on Faulkner’s review of the Western 

Digital Passport Drive, between February 3 and February 4, 2024, approximately 120,000 
of the over 140,000 files that had been copied onto that drive had been wiped, rendering 
their data and file metadata irretrievable.  (Dkt. 185-3 ¶ 29.)  Faulkner also opined that an 
additional wiping process was run on February 4, 2024, which overwrote 264 GB of data 
on the Western Digital Passport Device.  (Dkt. 185-3 ¶ 29.)  According to Faulkner, “due 

to this wipe process, I am not able to fully determine what NAMSA Confidential 
Information may have been stored, transferred, accessed, or used on the 2TB Western 
Digital drive directly,” although he “was able to reconstruct some information about the 
2TB Western Digital drive and the files it contained prior to wiping by using some active 
files and some of the limited, recoverable forensic artifacts that remained on the 2TB 

Western Digital drive.”  (Dkt. 185-3 ¶ 31.)  This includes evidence that Michael may 


8    The NAMSA entities have not made arguments regarding the warranty activation 
date and the purchase date in connection with this Motion.                
have copied more than 26,000 of NAMSA’s Controlled Documents and over 39,000 of 
NAMSA’s biocompatibility files.  (Dkt. 185-3 ¶¶ 48-56.)                   

    Michael provided the Michael Seagate Drive and Western Digital Passport Drive 
to Faulkner on February 5, 2024.  (Dkt. 185-3 ¶¶ 16, 30.)  Faulkner also has images of the 
5951 Lenovo Computer (which Michael reset on February 4, 2024) and Michael’s 
personal HP laptop.  (Dkt. 185-3 ¶¶ 4, 18-19.)                            
    Michael testified as to why he wiped the Michael Seagate Drive:      

    When the lawsuit came to our attention on Friday, I panicked, lost my mind. 
    This was something that I had on this drive that nobody knew about; not even 
    Pam, my wife. So, at that point in time, I felt, obviously, not good about 
    having material that I shouldn’t have had. I felt not good about having 
    material that was a secret to my wife, and knew that, based on her activities, 
    that this was not going to be good for what she was working towards and 
    very excited about in her personal life.                             

(Dkt. 185-1 at 61:25-62:9.)                                               
    In his April 22, 2024 declaration, Michael stated under penalty of perjury he 
“deleted these files because he panicked when the lawsuit was filed,” in particular 
because he “was afraid” that Pamela’s business, Phoenix Preclinical, “would be 
wrongfully threatened” by his retention of those files—“which she had no idea” that 
Michael had kept.  (Dkt. 184-3 ¶ 11.)  He further acknowledged that he had no reason to 
have those files, “for the most part, except my own nostalgia about build[ing] and 
running American Preclinical Services (‘APS’) for over 16 years.”  (Dkt. 184-3 ¶ 11.)  He 
further stated that he has never shared any APS or NAMSA documents with Pamela or 
anyone associated with, working with, or employed by Phoenix Preclinical.  (Dkt. 184-3 
¶ 12.)                                                                    
    Pamela was in Illinois with her father, who was undergoing cancer treatment, 
during the weekend of February 2, 2024, when Michael engaged in this conduct.  (Dkt. 

242 ¶ 31.)  Michael stated under penalty of perjury that Pamela had no role in his 
activities during the weekend of February 2, 2024.  (Dkt. 242 ¶ 31.)  Pamela stated under 
penalty of perjury that she did not hear about Michael’s actions until she returned to 
Minnesota from assisting her father, on February 5, 2024.  (Dkt. 217 ¶ 15.) 
J.   Michael’s iPhone                                                     
    Michael had his iPhone imaged on February 13, 2024 in “an abundance of 

caution.”  (Dkt. 242 ¶ 35.)  NAMSA’s expert Faulkner states that all text messages on the 
iPhone had been deleted before imaging.  (Dkt. 185-3 ¶ 34.)  Faulkner was able to 
ascertain that Michael’s iPhone had sent/received approximately 44,000 text messages 
between when it was first put into use on April 16, 2023 and February 13, 2024, when it 
was turned in for purposes of this litigation.  (Dkt. 185-3 ¶ 34.)  But “[t]he exact date and 

time when text messages were deleted is unknown.”  (Dkt. 185-3 ¶ 35.)  Based on 
Faulkner’s forensic review, one chat thread had an artifact showing that the most recent 
text message was sent on February 2, 2024, and two other chat threads had artifacts 
showing their most recent message was sent on February 10, 2024.  (Dkt. 185-3 ¶ 35.)  
“A total of 25 chat threads” (including those three) had artifacts indicating their most 

recent message was sent after December 13, 2023.  (Dkt. 185-3 ¶ 35.)  From this, 
Faulkner could conclude that those chat threads had been deleted after the date of the 
most recent message, e.g., that the 25 chat threads had been deleted on or after December 
13, 2023.  (See Dkt. 185-3 ¶¶ 35-37.)                                     
    When questioned about this, Michael testified that “[t]here shouldn’t have been 
any text messages on [his] phone” because he deletes his text messages after he receives 

a text, and this has “always” been his practice.  (Dkt. 185-1 at 89:7-90:20; see also Dkt. 
242 ¶ 35.)  He further testified that he did not delete any text messages during the period 
he was panicked about this lawsuit.  (Dkt. 185-1 at 90:21-24.)            
K.   Michael and Pamela’s Limited Waiver of the Marital Communications    
    Privilege                                                            

    Because the NAMSA entities seek to impute the consequences of Michael’s 
conduct the weekend of February 2, 2024 to Pamela (and thus to Phoenix Preclinical), the 
Court revisits the Confortis’ limited waiver of the marital communications privilege.  On 
April 5, 2024, Michael and Pamela agreed to waive the marital communications privilege 
for three categories of communications between them, one of which was “regarding 
alleged ‘spoliation’ of evidence up to and including the date and time it allegedly 
occurred with respect to that specific alleged ‘spoliation.’”  (Dkt. 130-3 at 5-6; Dkt. 130-
7 at 2.)  This means that to the extent Michael and Pamela had communications regarding 
the alleged spoliation, those communications before and including the date of each such 

instance are and were discoverable by NAMSA.                              
L.   Specific Sanctions Sought                                            
    The NAMSA entities seek sanctions in the form of adverse inferences as to 
Michael and Pamela and “terminating sanctions” as to Michael for the alleged spoliation.  
(Dkt. 153 at 7-8.)  All of the alleged spoliation relates to electronically stored information 

(“ESI”), namely the information contained on the USB drives destroyed by Pamela and 
Michael, Michael’s text messages, and the information contained on the Lenovo 
Computers, the Michael Seagate Drive, and the Western Digital Passport Drive.  (See 

Dkt. 153 at 24-26 (NAMSA entities identifying “intentionally destroyed evidence”).) 
    As to the adverse inferences, the NAMSA entities shifted their request from the 
specific inferences sought in their papers to a more general adverse inference against 
Michael and Pamela that the evidence destroyed was favorable to NAMSA and 
unfavorable to Defendants, stating this was sufficient to cure the prejudice.9  (Compare 


9    The NAMSA entities originally sought the following adverse inferences as to 
Michael:                                                                  

    1. Dr. Conforti had a duty to preserve evidence relating to NAMSA’s claims. 
    After that duty arose, he intentionally destroyed and thus failed to preserve 
    such evidence. These actions constitute spoliation.                  
     2. The evidence spoliated by Dr. Conforti was favorable to NAMSA and 
    unfavorable to Defendants, including because it would show:          
      a.  The spoliated evidence contained confidential, proprietary, and trade 
         secret information belonging to NAMSA;                          
      b.  Dr.  Conforti  misappropriated  NAMSA’s  confidential,  proprietary, 
         and trade secret information for prohibited purposes, including to 
         support the competitive business of Phoenix; and                
      c.  In  doing  so,  Dr.  Conforti  breached  his  RCA  and  Employment 
         Agreement.                                                      

    As to Pamela, the NAMSA entities also originally sought the following adverse 
inferences:                                                               

    1.  Ms. Conforti had a duty to preserve evidence relating to NAMSA’s 
      claims. After that duty arose, she intentionally destroyed and thus failed 
      to preserve such evidence. These actions constitute spoliation.    
    2.  The evidence spoliated by Ms. Conforti was favorable to NAMSA and 
      unfavorable to Defendants, including because it would show:        

      a.  The spoliated evidence contained confidential, proprietary, and trade 
         secret information belonging to NAMSA;                          
(Dkt. 153 at 29-30, with Dkt. 319 at 46:25-48:10.)  This more general request still seeks 
an adverse inference that the evidence destroyed by Michael was unfavorable to Pamela 

and Phoenix Preclinical.  (Dkt. 319 at 50:24-51:4.)  The “terminating sanction” sought 
against Michael is default judgment.  (Dkt. 153 at 30-34.)                
                    II.  LEGAL STANDARD                                  
    This case involves claims under both federal and state law.  (See generally Dkt. 
97.)  Nevertheless, “federal law applies to the imposition of sanctions for the spoliation of 
evidence.”  Sherman v. Rinchem Co., 
687 F.3d 996, 1006
 (8th Cir. 2012).   

    Rule 37 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure governs spoliation of ESI, as it is 
“intended to preempt use of other sources of sanctions – such [as] state law or the long-
established ‘inherent power’ doctrine.”  Alsadi v. Intel Corp., No. CV-16-03738-PHX-
DGC, 
2020 WL 4035169
, at *3 (D. Ariz. July 17, 2020) (quoting Stevens v. Brigham 
Young University-Idaho, No. 4:16-CV-530-BLW, 
2019 WL 6499098
, at *3 (D. Idaho 

Dec. 3, 2019)); see also 
28 U.S.C. § 2072
(b) (“All laws in conflict with such rules shall 
be of no further force or effect after such rules have taken effect.”); Fed. R. Civ. P. 
37(e)(1) advisory committee’s notes to 2015 amendment (“Federal circuits have 
established significantly different standards for imposing sanctions or curative measures 
on parties who fail to preserve [ESI] . . . Rule 37(e) . . . authorizes and specifies measures 


      b.  Ms. Conforti misappropriated NAMSA’s confidential, proprietary, 
         and trade secret information for prohibited purposes, including to 
         support the competitive business of Phoenix; and                
      c.  In doing so, Ms. Conforti breached her Employment Agreement.   

(Dkt. 153 at 29-30.)                                                      
a court may employ if information that should have been preserved is lost, and specifies 
the findings necessary to justify these measures.  It therefore forecloses reliance on 

inherent authority or state law to determine when certain measures should be used.”); 
Blazer v. Gall, No. 1:16-CV-01046-KES, 
2019 WL 3494785
, at *2 (D.S.D. Aug. 1, 
2019) (noting that application of Rule 37(e) “forecloses reliance on inherent authority”); 
see also Schlafly v. Eagle F., 
970 F.3d 924, 936
 (8th Cir. 2020) (stating a “court 
ordinarily should rely on the Federal Rules rather than its inherent power” to impose 
sanctions) (citation omitted); Sentis Grp., Inc. v. Shell Oil Co., 
559 F.3d 888, 899
 (8th 

Cir. 2009) (stating “the guidance from the Court is clear, and we emphasize that the 
better practice is to apply Rule 37 where appropriate and not allow an exercise of 
inherent power to obscure the Rule 37 analysis”) (cleaned up).            
    However, if a court determines “in its informed discretion” that a Rule is “not up 
to the task” to address bad-faith conduct, then it “may safely rely on its inherent power” 

to impose sanctions.  Schlafly, 
970 F.3d at 936
 (cleaned up).  In this case, “the best 
practice is to keep the structured analysis for a particular rule separate from the relatively 
unstructured analysis associated with inherent authority.”  Sentis, 
559 F.3d at 900
. 
    Rule 37(e) provides:                                                 
    (e) Failure to Preserve Electronically Stored Information. If electronically 
    stored information that should have been preserved in the anticipation or 
    conduct of litigation is lost because a party failed to take reasonable steps to 
    preserve  it,  and  it  cannot  be  restored  or  replaced  through  additional 
    discovery, the court:                                                

         (1)  upon  finding  prejudice  to  another  party  from  loss  of  the 
         information, may order measures no greater than necessary to cure the 
         prejudice; or                                                   
         (2) only upon finding that the party acted with the intent to deprive 
         another party of the information’s use in the litigation may:   

            (A) presume  that  the  lost  information was unfavorable  to  the 
               party;                                                    

            (B) instruct the jury that it may or must presume the information 
               was unfavorable to the party; or                          

            (C) dismiss the action or enter a default judgment.          

Fed. R. Civ. P. 37(e).  “The rule does not apply when information is lost before a duty to 
preserve arises” “in the anticipation or conduct of litigation.”  Fed. R. Civ. P. 37(e) 
advisory committee’s notes to 2015 amendment.                             
    As to Rule 37(e)(1), a court may award sanctions under that subdivision only if: 
(1) the information at issue should have been preserved in the anticipation or conduct of 
litigation; (2) a party failed to take reasonable steps to preserve the information; 
(3) information was lost as a result and the information cannot be restored or replaced by 
additional discovery; and (4) “upon finding prejudice to another party from loss of the 
information.”  Fed. R. Civ. P. 37(e)(1) advisory committee’s notes to 2015 amendment; 
see also Kramer v. Ford Motor Co., No. 12-1149 (SRN/FLN), 
2016 WL 7163084
, at *2 
(D. Minn. Feb. 3, 2016) (rejecting sanctions under Rule 37(e)(1), finding that “[a]s 
Plaintiffs have been given the information requested, it is clear that the information is 
(1) not lost, and (2) can be restored or replaced through additional discovery”).  
“Prejudice likely exists from lost or destroyed ESI if the lost or missing evidence would 
be different or more helpful to the party claiming spoliation than the evidence already in 
existence,” but “prejudice does not exist when there is no support for the speculation that 
the lost evidence would have affected the litigation.”  FA ND CHEV, LLC v. Kupper, No. 
1:20-CV-138, 
2022 WL 16699304
, at *3 (D.N.D. Aug. 31, 2022) (cleaned up).  

Destroyed evidence does not need to contain information that can be classified as a 
“smoking-gun” for prejudice to exist.  See Stevenson v. Union Pac. R.R. Co., 
354 F.3d 739, 748
 (8th Cir. 2004).  In some cases, prejudice can be satisfied by the nature of the 
evidence itself.  
Id.
                                                     
    Sanctions awarded under Rule 37(e)(1) should be no greater than necessary to cure 
any resulting prejudice.  See Fed. R. Civ. P. 37(e)(1) advisory committee’s notes to 2015 

amendment.  The range of sanctions available under Rule 37(e)(1) is “quite broad” and 
“[m]uch is entrusted to the court’s discretion.”  
Id.
                     
    As to Rule 37(e)(2), this subdivision “does not include a requirement that the court 
find prejudice to the party deprived of the information” to impose a sanction of an 
adverse inference or default judgment.  See Fed. R. Civ. P. 37(e)(2) advisory committee’s 

notes to 2015 amendment.  “This is because the finding of intent required by the 
subdivision can support not only an inference that the lost information was unfavorable to 
the party that intentionally destroyed it, but also an inference that the opposing party was 
prejudiced by the loss of information that would have favored its position.”  Fed. R. Civ. 
P. 37(e)(2) advisory committee’s notes to 2015 amendment.                 

    However, Rule 37 (e)(2) does require “a finding that the party acted with the intent 
to deprive another party of the information’s use in the litigation.”  
Id.
  “This finding may 
be made by the court when ruling on a pretrial motion, when presiding at a bench trial, or 
when deciding whether to give an adverse inference instruction at trial.”  
Id.
  It is 
important to emphasize that “[n]egligent or even grossly negligent behavior does not 
logically support that inference.”  Id.; see also EPAC Techs., Inc. v. HarperCollins 

Christian Publ’g, Inc., No. 3:12-CV-00463, 
2018 WL 1542040
, at *18 (M.D. Tenn. Mar. 
29, 2018) (“Rule 37(e)(2)’s drafters included its intent standard with a specific purpose: 
to reject cases that had authorized an adverse-inference instruction ‘on a finding of 
negligence or gross negligence.’”) (quoting Rule 37(e)(2) advisory committee’s note to 
2015 amendment); Wolff v. United Airlines, Inc., No. 1:18-CV-00591-RM-SKC, 
2019 WL 4450255
, at *4 (D. Colo. Sept. 17, 2019) (declining to impose a severe sanction 

under Rule 37(e)(2) where Plaintiff “produced no evidence to suggest that Defendant, 
when failing to suspend its automatic deletion of emails, acted with the intent to deprive 
Plaintiff of that evidence”) (citations omitted).                         
    The Eighth Circuit has explained that Rule 37(e)(2) requires “a finding” of “intent 
to deprive” and does so for a specific reason: “Precisely because deciding a case based on 

hypothesized evidence is strong medicine, Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 37(e)(2)(A) 
expressly states that an adverse presumption requires a finding that electronically stored 
information was lost because one party ‘acted with the intent to deprive another party of 
the information’s use in the litigation.’”  Auer v. City of Minot, 
896 F.3d 854, 858
 (8th 
Cir. 2018) (citation omitted); see also Scott v. Plummer, No. 5:19-CV-00079 BSM-PSH, 

2020 WL 13801523
, at *1 (E.D. Ark. Jan. 29, 2020) (citation omitted) (“Scott has also 
not shown that the defendants acted in bad faith by destroying the video, a showing 
necessary to impose stronger sanctions under Rule 37(e)(2) such as a spoliation 
instruction or default judgment.”).                                       
    “However, because intent ‘rarely is proved by direct evidence,’ a court imposing 
spoliation sanctions ‘has substantial leeway to determine intent through consideration of 

circumstantial evidence, witness credibility, motives of the witness in a particular case, 
and other factors.’”  Kelley as Tr. of BMO Litig. Tr. v. BMO Harris Bank N.A., 
657 B.R. 475
, 485 (D. Minn. 2022) (quoting Morris v. Union Pac. R.R., 
373 F.3d 896, 901
 (8th 
Cir. 2004)); see also Paisley Park Enters., Inc. v. Boxill, 
330 F.R.D. 226
, 236 (D. Minn. 
2019) (same).  In sum, the intent to deprive (sometimes referred to as “bad faith”) “can be 
proved indirectly” and a party need not “find a smoking gun” before seeking sanctions 

under this section.  Auer, 
896 F.3d at 858
.  “[A] party’s conduct satisfies Rule 37(e)(2)’s 
intent requirement when the evidence shows or it is reasonable to infer that [the] party 
purposefully destroyed evidence to avoid its litigation obligations.”  Est. of Hill by & 
through Grube v. NaphCare, Inc., No. 2:20-CV-00410-MKD, 
2022 WL 1464830
, at *11 
(E.D. Wash. May 9, 2022) (citation omitted).                              

    Sanctions in the form of an adverse inference instruction or entry of default 
judgment are extreme and should not be given lightly.  Rao v. St. Jude Med. S.C., Inc., 
631 F. Supp. 3d 678
, 712 (D. Minn. 2022) (quoting Zubulake v. UBS Warburg LLC, 
220 F.R.D. 212, 219-20
 (S.D.N.Y. 2003)).  This is because “[i]n practice, an adverse 
inference instruction often ends litigation-it is too difficult a hurdle for the spoliator to 

overcome.”  
Id.
  The advisory committee’s notes to the 2015 amendment to Rule 37(e)(2) 
state: “Courts should exercise caution, however, in using the measures specified in 
(e)(2).”  Fed. R. Civ. P. 37(e)(2) advisory committee’s notes to 2015 amendment.  
Indeed, “[f]inding an intent to deprive another party of the lost information’s use in the 
litigation does not require a court to adopt any of the measures listed in subdivision 
(e)(2).”  
Id.
                                                             

    “The initial determination the court must make is a determination of when the 
defendant’s duty to preserve evidence was triggered.”  E*Trade Secs. LLC v. Deutsche 
Bank AG, 
230 F.R.D. 582, 587
 (D. Minn. 2005) (citation omitted).  “A party is obligated 
to preserve evidence once the party knows or should know that the evidence is relevant to 
future or current litigation.”  Paisley Park, 330 F.R.D. at 232 (citations omitted); see also 
Cooley v. Target Corp., No. 20-2152 (DWF/DTS), 
2022 WL 3647859
, at *3 (D. Minn. 

Aug. 24, 2022) (same), appeal dismissed, No. 22-3251, 
2023 WL 3115399
 (8th Cir. Jan. 
18, 2023); The Valspar Corp. v. Millennium Inorganic Chems., Inc., No. 13-CV-
3214(ADM/LIB), 
2016 WL 6902459
, at *4 (D. Minn. Jan. 20, 2016) (“The courts of this 
District have phrased this standard as holding the obligation to preserve evidence begins 
when a party knows or should have known that the evidence is relevant to future or 

current litigation.”) (cleaned up).  This duty arises when litigation is “reasonably 
foreseeable.”  Fed. R. Civ. P. 37(e) advisory committee’s notes to 2015 amendment. 
    “The duty to preserve evidence extends to those persons likely to have relevant 
information – the key players in the case, and applies to unique, relevant evidence that 
might be useful to the adversary.”  Rao, 631 F. Supp. 3d at 712 (cleaned up).  This duty 

“must be viewed from the perspective of the party with control of the evidence.”  Id. at 
711 (quoting Paisley Park, 330 F.R.D. at 233); see also Vogt v. MEnD Corr. Care, 
PLLC, No. 21-CV-1055 (WMW/TNL), 
2023 WL 2414551
, at *8 (D. Minn. Jan. 30, 
2023), R. & R. adopted sub nom., 
2023 WL 2414531
 (D. Minn. Mar. 8, 2023).  “The 
court should be sensitive to the party’s sophistication with regard to litigation in 
evaluating preservation efforts; some litigants, particularly individual litigants, may be 

less familiar with preservation obligations than others who have considerable experience 
in litigation.”  Fed. R. Civ. P. 37(e) advisory committee’s notes to 2015 amendment.  As 
noted by the advisory committee:                                          
    A variety of events may alert a party to the prospect of litigation. Often these 
    events provide only limited information about that prospective litigation, 
    however, so that the scope of information that should be preserved may 
    remain uncertain. It is important not to be blinded to this reality by hindsight 
    arising from familiarity with an action as it is actually filed.     

Id.
                                                                       
    To be clear, Rule 37(e) “recognizes that ‘reasonable steps’ to preserve suffice; it 
does not call for perfection.”  Id.; see also Paisley Park, 330 F.R.D. at 233 (“The next 
question the Court must consider is whether the RMA Defendants took reasonable steps 
to preserve relevant ESI.  Even when litigation is reasonably foreseeable, a party is under 
no obligation to keep every shred of paper, every e-mail or electronic document and 
every backup tape.”) (marks and citation omitted).  That said, “when litigation is 
imminent or has commenced, a party cannot ‘blindly destroy documents and expect to be 
shielded by a seemingly innocuous document retention policy.’”  Kelley as Tr. of BMO 
Litig. Tr., 657 B.R. at 487 (quoting E*Trade Secs., 
230 F.R.D. at 589
).   
    “If spoliation is determined, the Court has broad discretion in determining an 
appropriate sanction and considers the culpability of the party and timing of the actions.”  
Peterson v. Washington Cnty., No. 18-2640 (DWF/ECW), 
2021 WL 2686119
, at *3 (D. 
Minn. June 30, 2021) (citing Dillon v. Nissan Motor Co., Ltd., 
986 F.2d 263, 268
 (8th 
Cir. 1993)).  Due to the severity of sanctions under Rule 37(e)(2), when discovery is 
ongoing, courts have found it appropriate to defer ruling until the record is complete: 

    The  Court  believes  that  Plaintiffs’  request  for  an  order  presuming  the 
    evidence destroyed was unfavorable to the RMA Defendants and/or for an 
    adverse inference instruction may well be justified. But given the fact that 
    discovery is still on-going, the record is not yet closed, and the case is still 
    some  time  from  trial,  the  Court  believes  it  more  appropriate  to  defer 
    consideration of those sanctions to a later date, closer to trial. See Monarch 
    Fire Protection Dist. v. Freedom Consulting & Auditing Servs., Inc., 
644 F.3d 633, 639
 (8th Cir. 2011) (holding that it is not an abuse of discretion to 
    defer sanction considerations until trial). At that point, the trial judge will 
    have the benefit of the entire record and supplemental briefing from the 
    parties regarding the parameters of any such instruction or presumption. 

Paisley Park, 330 F.R.D. at 237.                                          
    Finally, under some circumstances, a court may impute the destruction of evidence 
to parties who did not personally cause the spoliation under an agency theory.  See Vogt, 
2023 WL 2414551
, at *13; see also Danielson v. Huether, No. 4:18-CV-04039-RAL, 
2021 WL 217706
, at *6 n.7 (D.S.D. Jan. 21, 2021) (“Courts ordinarily analyze the 
attribution of fault to one party for another’s spoliation under principles of agency”), 
aff’d, No. 21-1556, 
2022 WL 259455
 (8th Cir. Jan. 28, 2022); Am. Builders & 
Contractors Supply Co. v. Roofers Mart, Inc., No. 1:11-CV-19 (CEJ), 
2012 WL 2992627
, 
at *6 (E.D. Mo. July 20, 2012) (“The Court agrees that general agency principals [sic] 
apply in determining whether to impose sanctions against a party for spoliation by its 
employees.”).                                                             
                        III.  ANALYSIS                                   
A.   When the Duty to Preserve Began                                      

    A prerequisite for Rule 37(e) sanctions is that the ESI at issue “should have been 
preserved in the anticipation or conduct of litigation.”  Fed. R. Civ. P. 37(e).  The 
NAMSA entities first argue that Michael and Pamela’s duty to preserve in this case arose 
no later than August 9, 2023, when Michael and his Dorsey counsel “spoke directly with 
NAMSA’s CEO and General Counsel about NAMSA’s concerns that both Dr. and Ms. 
Conforti were engaging in contractually and legally prohibited activities.”  (Dkt. 153 at 

23.)  Michael and Pamela disagree.  Michael argues that in August 2023, NAMSA only 
communicated a mere suspicion that he was helping Pamela create a competing business, 
but NAMSA’s sole basis for this belief was “the fact that they are married” and he made 
clear at that time that he was complying with his non-competition agreement.  (Dkt. 241 
at 8-9.)  Pamela makes the point that she did not attend this August 9, 2023 meeting.  

(Dkt. 215 at 25.)  She also argues that while this meeting “might” have put her on notice 
of a future claim by NAMSA alleging that Michael was in breach of his non-competition 
agreement, it in no way gave her notice that NAMSA was contemplating suing her for 
misappropriation of trade secrets or suggested that she had a duty to preserve evidence 
potentially relevant to any such claim.  (Id.)                            

    The August 28, 2023 letter sent by Latham counsel after the August 9, 2023 
meeting indicates that even NAMSA did not believe litigation was “reasonably 
foreseeable.”  (See Dkt. 221.)  This letter states that NAMSA contacted Michael because 
NAMSA had heard a “rumor” that Michael and Pamela “may be preparing to provide 
pre-clinical veterinary services in Minneapolis in the near future and were even looking 
at a building near NAMSA for the new business.”  (Id. at 4.)  This “rumor” prompted 

NAMSA to schedule a meeting with Michael.  (Id.)  In the letter, NAMSA acknowledged 
Michael’s denials that he was involved in Pamela’s business plans, reminded Michael of 
his obligations under the RCA, and closed with a request that Dorsey counsel inform 
Michael and Pamela “that NAMSA will be monitoring their business activities very 
closely.”  (Id. at 4-5.)  The August 28, 2023 letter also cautioned that if NAMSA “has 
reason to believe that Dr. Conforti is violating, or is about to violate, his obligations 

under the RCA, whether directly or indirectly, then it will take all appropriate action 
against him and anyone who is involved to protect its rights.”  (Id. at 5.)   
    These statements make clear that NAMSA did not believe it had a basis to file suit 
against Michael and Pamela at that time or that litigation was imminent.  This belief is 
confirmed by the fact that NAMSA did not circulate a Preservation Notice in August 

2023, but instead waited until December 12, 2023.  (Dkt. 298-3 at 2.)  NAMSA has not 
identified any reason why, when NAMSA did not believe litigation was imminent based 
on the August 2023 meeting and correspondence, Michael and Pamela would have done 
so.  The Court concludes that Michael and Pamela did not have a duty to preserve 
relevant evidence in anticipation of litigation in August 2023.  See Keller v. Pepsi 

Bottling Grp., Inc., No. CV 07-1473 (MJD/AJB), 
2007 WL 9735622
, at *1, 5 (D. Minn. 
Aug. 27, 2007) (finding letter threatening criminal proceedings based on failure to timely 
give plaintiff his vacation pay did not “constitute[] a clear sign of imminent litigation” for 
lawsuit alleging “(1) obstruction of workers’ compensation benefits, (2) retaliation for 
filing workers’ compensation claims, (3) failure to pay wages/vacation pay, (4) failure to 
timely pay wages/vacation pay, (5) failure to permit inspection of personnel record, 

(6) defamation, and (7) intentional infliction of emotional distress” where “[t]he letter 
stated that Plaintiff’s counsel wanted to review Plaintiff’s personnel file to examine a 
potential civil claim, but a letter sent the next day to Defendants only discussed vacation 
pay” and the plaintiff never asked to review his file over the next two and a half months). 
    The NAMSA entities contend, in the alternative, that Michael and Pamela’s duty 
to preserve evidence arose as of December 2023.  (Dkt. 153 at 9; Dkt. 319 at 15:13-15.)  

This is based on the following events on December 12-13, 2023:            
    •  On December 12, 2023, NAMSA circulated a Preservation Notice to certain of 
      its employees, including Jorgenson and Markuson, regarding the Confortis, and 
      stating that “the matter” arose from Michael’s potential violations of his 
      contractual obligations to NAMSA, including certain commitments not to 
      compete, and also his and Pamela’s “potential unlawful use of NAMSA’s 
      conditional information and other unlawful conduct.”  (Dkt. 286-1 at 3; Dkt. 
      298-3 at 2.)                                                       
    •  Michael and Pamela spoke with Jorgenson and Markuson on the same day that 
      NAMSA issued the Preservation Notice.  (Dkt. 298 ¶¶ 7-9; Dkt. 298-5; Dkt. 
      298-6; Dkt. 298-7.)                                                
    •  The day after NAMSA issued the Preservation Notice, on December 13, 2023, 
      Michael and Pamela met with Dorsey regarding “potential litigation” and, 
      within the next few days, were working on draft declarations over which they 
      assert the work-product protection.  (Dkt. 184-1 at 2-4, PRIV006394-95, 6412-
      14, PRIV006419-20, PRIV006424-26, PRIV006435-39; Dkt. 184-2 at 2,  
      PL02040-41, PL02043-48; Dkt. 185 at 254:2-22, 255:3-15.)10         

10   It appears that the parties exchanged their document preservation notices with an 
agreement that doing so would not constitute a waiver of the attorney client privilege 
(Dkt. 319 at 14:11-17), but the Confortis have not filed any preservation notice or 
provided any for in camera review.  During the June 28, 2024 hearing, the Court 
    Based on the record, the Court finds that Pamela and Michael reasonably foresaw 
litigation as of December 2023.  In addition to their conversations with Jorgenson and 

Markuson on December 12, 2023, the day NAMSA issued its Preservation Notice, 
Pamela and Michael had a conversation with Dorsey counsel about “potential litigation” 
the next day, began drafting declarations as of December 16, 2023, and have asserted that 
those December 2023 declarations are protected by the work product doctrine.  Courts 
have concluded that the duty to preserve attaches on the date a party begins asserting 
work product protection.  See Escamilla v. SMS Holdings Corp., No. 09-2120 

(ADM/JSM), 
2011 WL 13243580
, at *37 (D. Minn. June 28, 2011) (“Under this 
timeline, this Court finds that SMS’s duty to preserve relevant documents was triggered 
as early as March 11, 2008, when Zuniga filed her charge, as that is the date that SMS 
has asserted the work product privilege attached, and certainly no later than August 2009, 
when she commenced her suit.  Yet, SMS took no steps to preserve Gonzalez’s work 

computer at either time.  Instead, it was not until April 2010, that SMS located and 
preserved Gonzalez’s work computer, and it took no steps to preserve the information on 
the SMS file and print server and email Exchange server until July 2010.  In short, SMS 
cannot have it both ways.  It cannot assert that it was anticipating litigation as early as 
March 2008, upon the filing of the EEOC charge, and then maintain it had no duty to 

preserve documents bearing on that anticipated litigation.”), aff’d, No. 09-2120 

discussed provision of the draft declarations for in camera review with Dorsey counsel 
and directed counsel to meet and confer regarding any agreements as to waiver.  (Dkt. 
319 at 116:8-118:17.)  The draft declarations were not provided to the Court for in 
camera review.                                                            
ADM/JSM, 
2011 WL 5025254
 (D. Minn. Oct. 21, 2011); see generally PepsiCo, Inc. v. 
Baird, Kurtz & Dobson LLP, 
305 F.3d 813, 817
 (8th Cir. 2002) (“In order to protect work 

product, the party seeking protection must show the materials were prepared in 
anticipation of litigation, i.e., because of the prospect of litigation.”).  Here, Michael and 
Pamela cannot reasonably assert they did not anticipate litigation when they have asserted 
work product protection—which requires the materials at issue to be prepared in 
anticipation of litigation—over documents drafted on December 16, 2023 and when they 
were speaking to Markuson and Jorgenson the same day NAMSA issued its Preservation 

Notice to its employees (including Markuson and Jorgenson) and speaking with Dorsey 
counsel the next day.                                                     
    Nevertheless, Pamela argues she did not have a duty to preserve as of December 
2023 because the only potential claim she and Michael were aware of was a claim that 
Michael was breaching his non-competition agreement and she did not know that 

NAMSA might sue her until NAMSA actually did so on February 2, 2024.  (See Dkt. 215 
at 25-27; see also Dkt. 217 ¶¶ 12-13.)  This is really a two-part argument, first that 
Pamela did not know NAMSA might sue her at all and second that any duty to preserve 
was limited by the type of claim she thought NAMSA was asserting against Michael.  
Consistent with Pamela’s second argument, Michael also suggests the scope of any duty 

to preserve before February 2, 2024 should be limited because: “Trade secrets and 
confidential information were never discussed, and we had no clue that NAMSA had any 
concerns about these issues.”  (Dkt. 242 ¶ 29.)                           
    The Court is not persuaded by Pamela’s argument that she had no duty to preserve 
because she did not realize in December 2023 she might be a defendant.  It is true that as 

of August 2023, NAMSA appeared to be concerned only about Michael’s potential 
breach of contract, as demonstrated by the fact that NAMSA did not seek a meeting with 
Pamela and did not mention any alleged breach by Pamela in the August 28, 2023 
letter—even though it was Pamela’s business activities that gave rise to NAMSA’s 
concerns.  But “[t]he duty to preserve evidence extends to those persons likely to have 
relevant information – the key players in the case.”  Rao, 631 F. Supp. 3d at 712 (citation 

omitted).  Pamela—whose anticipated business was a topic of the August 9, 2023 
meeting and subsequent correspondence—clearly would be a key player in a potential 
future case.  Indeed, NAMSA threatened to take action in the August 28, 2023 letter 
against Michael and “anyone who is involved” if it believed he was violating his 
obligations under the RCA.  (Dkt. 221 at 4-5.)  While the Court finds that litigation was 

not reasonably foreseeable as of August 2023, NAMSA’s “anyone who is involved” 
statement at that time provides context for the events of December 2023.  Moreover, 
Michael’s declaration acknowledges that he and Pamela “believed that all of NAMSA’s 
allegations were about Pam, me, or both of us violating our non-compete restrictions.”  
(Dkt. 242 ¶ 29.)  This contradicts Pamela’s argument that she did not know NAMSA 

might sue her, at least as of December 2023.                              
    The Court also rejects Pamela and Michael’s distinction between potential non-
compete claims and the trade secret and other claims asserted in NAMSA’s February 2, 
2024 Complaint.  The Court understands the Confortis to be arguing that they did not 
have a duty to preserve evidence before February 2, 2024 unless it was relevant to a non-
compete claim against Michael.  Even if the Court accepted that the only claim 

contemplated by Pamela and Michael in December 2023 was a non-compete claim 
against Michael, the Court does not see how this duty would not include preservation of 
NAMSA information retained by Michael and Pamela after their employment ended.  
Whether Michael or Pamela had kept NAMSA information is plainly relevant to such a 
claim.  See Lexis-Nexis v. Beer, 
41 F. Supp. 2d 950, 952, 954
 (D. Minn. 1999) (stating 
defendant former employee “either knew or should have known that the Lexis-Nexis 

material he possessed was relevant to reasonably foreseeable litigation” when he started 
work at direct competitor a week after leaving plaintiff Lexis-Nexis).  To the extent there 
could be some evidence relevant to a trade secret claim but not a non-compete claim 
against Michael, Michael and Pamela have not articulated any reason why the NAMSA 
information at issue in this Motion falls into that category.  Moreover, Michael and 

Pamela—while not lawyers—are both highly educated and experienced business 
professionals who were consulting with Dorsey regarding potential litigation as of 
December 13, 2023.  See Fed. R. Civ. P. 37(e) advisory committee’s notes to 2015 
amendment (“The court should be sensitive to the party’s sophistication with regard to 
litigation in evaluating preservation efforts; some litigants, particularly individual 

litigants, may be less familiar with preservation obligations than others who have 
considerable experience in litigation.”); see generally In re Uponor, Inc., F1807 
Plumbing Fittings Prods. Liab. Litig., No. 11-MD-2247 ADM/JJK, 
2012 WL 2325798
, 
at *3 (D. Minn. June 19, 2012) (“As a general rule, an attorney’s knowledge is imputed to 
[their] client.”), aff’d, 
716 F.3d 1057
 (8th Cir. 2013).                  

    For all these reasons, the Court finds that Michael and Pamela’s duty to preserve 
evidence relevant to NAMSA’s breach of non-compete and confidentiality obligations 
and trade secret misappropriation claims began no later than December 13, 2023. 
B.   USB Drives Destroyed in January 2024                                 
    The first instance of alleged spoliation occurred in January 2024, when, as the 
NAMSA entities put it, Michael and Pamela “smashed with hammers numerous USB 

devices that had interacted with computers they used to access stolen NAMSA 
information in the weeks and months prior.”11  (Dkt. 153 at 24.)  NAMSA contends that 
“the timing of their destruction—well after they were aware of and preparing for future 
litigation—gives rise to a presumption of bad faith intent in destroying them.”  (Id. at 28.) 
    The Court begins with this “presumption of bad faith” argument.  The NAMSA 

entities cite E*Trade Securities LLC v. Deutsche Bank AG, 
230 F.R.D. 582, 589
 (D. 
Minn. 2005), to support their argument that the Court may presume the requisite intent 
from the timing of the destruction.  (Id. at 28.)  It is true that in E*Trade, the court relied 


11   The NAMSA entities make much of the fact that the Confortis destroyed the USB 
drives with a hammer.  The Court does not find the use of a hammer particularly 
persuasive as to an intent to deprive the NAMSA entities of information—rather than 
anyone else who might find the USB devices in the trash.  The NAMSA entities have 
never articulated why smashing the devices with a hammer before throwing them in the 
trash is so much more damning than throwing the USB drives in an operable form in the 
trash.  Either way, the USB devices would be unavailable to NAMSA.  In any event, 
based on NAMSA’s expert Faulkner’s testimony, it is not unreasonable for an innocent 
person to review data on a USB drive and try to delete the information it contains before 
disposing of the drive.  (See Dkt. 225 at 60:11-61:15.)                   
on Stevenson v. Union Pacific Railroad Co. for the proposition that where “the 
destruction of evidence occurs after litigation is imminent or has begun, no bad faith need 

be shown by the moving party.”  
230 F.R.D. at 589
 (citing Stevenson, 
354 F.3d at 747
-
48).  However, Stevenson did not go so far with respect to a presumption as the E*Trade 
language suggests or NAMSA argues.  Rather, the Eighth Circuit in Stevenson identified 
the timing of the destruction as one factor—among others—that a court should consider 
when making a “bad faith” determination for spoliation purposes:          

     The district court’s bad faith determination is supported by Union Pacific’s 
     act  of  destroying  the  voice  tape  pursuant  to  its  routine  policy  in 
     circumstances where Union Pacific had general knowledge that such tapes 
     would be important to any litigation over an accident that resulted in serious 
     injury or death, and its knowledge that litigation is frequent when there has 
     been an accident involving death or serious injury. While these are quite 
     general considerations, an important factor here is that a voice tape that is 
     the only contemporaneous recording of conversations at the time of the 
     accident  will  always  be  highly  relevant  to  potential  litigation  over the 
     accident. We conclude that this weighs heavier in this case than the lack of 
     actual knowledge that litigation was imminent at the time of the destruction. 
     Additionally, the record indicates that Union Pacific made an immediate 
     effort to preserve other types of evidence but not the voice tape, and the 
     district court noted that Union Pacific was careful to preserve a voice tape 
     in other cases where the tape proved to be beneficial to Union Pacific. The 
     prelitigation  destruction  of  the  voice  tape  in  this  combination  of 
     circumstances, though done pursuant to a routine retention policy, creates a 
     sufficiently strong inference of an intent to destroy it for the purpose of 
     suppressing evidence of the facts surrounding the operation of the train at 
     the time of the accident.                                           

354 F.3d at 747-48
.                                                       
    Further, the Stevenson decision is more nuanced that E*Trade suggests.   The 
sanctions imposed by the district court and upheld by the Eighth Circuit in Stevenson 
were “for the destruction of track maintenance records after the commencement of 
litigation and the filing of the plaintiffs’ request for production of documents on October 
25, 1999,” where the “most relevant” records would have been available as of the date of 

the request for production.  
Id. at 749
.  The Eighth Circuit also concluded that a finding 
of bad faith based on pre-litigation destruction of track records was an abuse of discretion 
where: “Union Pacific knew that litigation is possible when there has been a serious 
accident but did not consider whether, when the prelitigation destruction was occurring, 
there had been any notice in this case of potential litigation or that the track maintenance 
would be an issue or an alleged cause of the accident,” and “Union Pacific was not on 

notice that the track maintenance records should be preserved until it received the 
October 1999 request for production of documents, and the condition of the track was not 
formally put into issue until the second amendment to the complaint in May 2000.”  
Id.
   
    There is another reason why reliance on Stevenson and E*Trade is not persuasive 
as to a presumption: both decisions predate the 2015 amendment to Rule 37(e).  As 

discussed in Section II, Rule 37(e)(2) allows a court to impose sanctions “only upon 
finding that the party acted with the intent to deprive another party of the information’s 
use in the litigation.”  Fed. R. Civ. P. 37(e)(2) (emphasis added).  The advisory 
committee notes to the 2015 amendment to Rule 37 explain in detail why this language 
changed, including:                                                       

    Adverse-inference instructions were developed on the premise that a party’s 
    intentional loss or destruction of evidence to prevent its use in litigation gives 
    rise to a reasonable inference that the evidence was unfavorable to the party 
    responsible for loss or destruction of the evidence. Negligent or even grossly 
    negligent behavior does not logically support that inference.        

                             * * *                                       
    Similar reasons apply to limiting the court’s authority to presume or infer 
    that the lost information was unfavorable to the party who lost it when ruling 
    on a pretrial motion or presiding at a bench trial. Subdivision (e)(2) limits 
    the ability of courts to draw adverse inferences based on the loss of 
    information in these circumstances, permitting them only when a court 
    finds that the information was lost with the intent to prevent its use in 
    litigation.                                                          

Fed. R. Civ. P. 37(e)(2) advisory committee’s notes to the 2015 amendment (emphasis 
added).                                                                   
    The NAMSA entities cited several cases in a slide presentation provided at the 
June 28, 2024 hearing to support their argument that a court need not find intent to 
deprive to find spoliation after the duty to preserve arose.  Many of these cases issued 
before the 2015 amendment to Rule 37(e), do not address the 2015 amendment, imposed 
sanctions under inherent authority rather than Rule 37(e), or relied on conduct in addition 
to the destruction of evidence after a duty to preserve arose before relieving a court of its 
obligation to make a “bad faith” finding.  See, e.g., Gallagher v. Magner, 
619 F.3d 823, 845
 (8th Cir. 2010) (stating “a district court does not abuse its discretion by imposing 
sanctions, even absent an explicit bad faith finding, where a party destroys specifically 
requested evidence after litigation has commenced”) (emphasis added); In re Petters, 
606 B.R. 803
, 828, 828 n.221 (Bankr. D. Minn. 2019) (citing Ramirez-Cruz v. Chipotle 
Servs., LLC, No. 15-CV-4514-ADM-KMM, 
2017 WL 8947191
, at *4 (D. Minn. May 11, 
2017), which addressed spoliation sanctions under a court’s inherent authority); Valspar, 
2016 WL 6902459
, at *9 (did not address the effect of the 2015 amendment to Rule 
37(e)); see also Evenson v. Johnson Bros. Liquor Co., No. 18-CV-3188 (JRT/LIB), 
2020 WL 12948541
, at *11 (D. Minn. Nov. 12, 2020) (citing Valspar).            

    Further, to the extent these cases permit a court to impose an adverse inference 
based on timing alone (whether through a “presumption” of bad faith or otherwise), they 
do not require a court to do so.  Indeed, the Eighth Circuit has discussed what is required 
to find this “serious and specific sort of culpability,” explaining in one case that 
“allegations that incriminating voicemails, emails, and other electronic communications 
were lost because the city failed to properly search some computers, tablets, and phones; 

waited too long to search others; and generally failed to take basic steps necessary to find 
and preserve files that could be relevant to [the plaintiff’s] case” only “would at most 
prove negligence in the city’s handling of electronic information, not the sort of 
intentional, bad-faith misconduct required to grant an adverse presumption.”  Auer, 
896 F.3d at 858
.  The Court considers the timing of the destruction of the USB devices as one 

factor when determining intent.  See Paisley Park, 330 F.R.D. at 236 (“Intent rarely is 
proved by direct evidence, and a district court has substantial leeway to determine intent 
through consideration of circumstantial evidence, witness credibility, motives of the 
witnesses in a particular case, and other factors.”) (cleaned up).  But the Court will not 
use a presumption based on the timing of destruction as a shortcut for making a finding as 

to intent when there is additional relevant evidence before the Court.    
    As discussed in Section I.G, supra, Pamela and Michael both testified that they 
were cleaning their house in January 2024, including converting their college-age son’s 
room into a guest room, and they destroyed the USB drives while doing so.  (Dkt. 185 at 
160:7-161:24; Dkt. 185-1 at 105:16-106:1.)  With this backdrop, the Court turns to the 
USB devices accessed by Michael.  Over five days between January 3 and January 14, 

2024, Michael connected seven USB devices to his personal HP laptop, two of which 
were identified by NAMSA’s expert Faulkner as “Card Readers” (apparently docking 
stations) and five of which were USB drives for storage.  (Dkt. 185-3 at 15 § IV.A.7; Dkt. 
185-1 at 106:18-23.)  Two USB drives were accessed on January 3, two USB drives were 
accessed on January 6, and one USB drive was accessed on January 7, 2024.  (Dkt. 185-3 
at 15 § IV.A.7.)                                                          

    As an initial matter, the Court questions whether there was any duty to preserve 
the devices destroyed by Michael, as is required by Rule 37(e).  See Auer, 
896 F.3d at 858
 (finding that the duty to preserve pertains to relevant information).  NAMSA’s expert 
Faulkner did not state these USB drives contained NAMSA information or that anyone 
accessed NAMSA information from them.  (Dkt. 185-3 ¶ 38.)  Michael and Pamela’s 

expert Lanterman provided a summary of what files were accessed on these USB devices 
and opined that “based on the materials that have been provided to me (including my 
understanding of what constitutes NAMSA data), there is no evidence to indicate that 
these devices were used to store and access NAMSA Confidential Information.”  (Dkt. 
247 ¶¶ 28-29; see also Dkt. 247-1 at 20-22 (list of file names accessed).)  There is no 

evidence in the record from which the Court can conclude that the USB drives destroyed 
by Michael contained information that “should have been preserved.”  The NAMSA 
entities also do not identify any evidence demonstrating Michael had the requisite intent 
to deprive the NAMSA entities of whatever was on those USB drives when he destroyed 
them.  Instead, the NAMSA entities focus on the fact that they were destroyed after 
December 13, 2023 and lump the USB drives destroyed by Michael with those destroyed 

by Pamela a few days later—after the January 10, 2024 “town hall” meeting.  (See Dkt. 
153 at 23 (referring to “the now-smashed USB devices”); id. at 24 (“As one example . . . 
they smashed with hammers numerous USB devices.”).                        
    It is true that, as the NAMSA entities argue, no one can be certain what was on 
those USB drives because Michael destroyed them.  (See id. at 14, 23-25.)  But that can 
be true as to ESI deleted by any party in any lawsuit—including NAMSA.  Here, two 

USB drives were connected to Michael’s laptop on January 3, 2024; two were connected 
on January 6, 2024; and one was connected on January 7, 2024.  (Dkt. 185-3 at 15 § 
IV.A.7.)  The fact that Michael accessed the USB drives over several days in the 
beginning of January 2024 is consistent with Pamela and Michael’s explanation that they 
were cleaning house in conjunction with redecorating their son’s room after his 

Christmas break from college.  Nothing about this timing or the manner in which Michael 
accessed the USB drives—intermittently over a four-day period in early January 2024—
suggests he was acting in a panic or with the goal of destroying relevant evidence.  For 
the Court to conclude both that the USB drives contained information that should have 
been preserved and that Michael destroyed them to deprive NAMSA of their information 

based solely on the timing of their destruction would amount to the “hindsight” that Rule 
37(e) cautions against.  See Fed. R. Civ. P. 37(e) advisory committee’s notes to 2015 
amendment (“Often these events [that give rise to a duty to preserve] provide only limited 
information about that prospective litigation, however, so that the scope of information 
that should be preserved may remain uncertain.  It is important not to be blinded to this 
reality by hindsight arising from familiarity with an action as it is actually filed.”).  The 

Court finds that these two requirements of Rule 37(e)(2) are not met as to these USB 
drives.                                                                   
    As to Pamela, NAMSA’s expert Faulkner identified eleven USB devices which 
had been plugged into Pamela’s personal computer, one of which was a “Card Reader” 
accessed on January 2, 2024 and seven of which were “Other Disks” (e.g., USB drives) 
accessed on January 11, 2024.12  (Dkt. 185-3 at 16 § IV.B.1.)  The NAMSA entities state: 

“At least one of these drives contained at least nine confidential NAMSA folders on it—
relating to biocompatibility, animal care, operations, toxicology cytotoxicity operations, 
and hemocompatibility—but it is impossible to know how many others.”  (Dkt. 153 at 
24.)  In addition, one of the SanDisk Cruzer USB drives contained an APS marketing 
video from 2012 (Dkt. 185 at 162:15-163:23), which appears to be publicly available on 

YouTube (Dkt. 215 at 31 n.5 (providing YouTube link)).13  NAMSA also argues that the 
evidence on these USB drives “cannot be restored or replaced through additional 
discovery.”  (Dkt. 153 at 25.)                                            
    The NAMSA entities argue that Pamela destroyed these USB drives on January 
11, 2024 because she had learned about NAMSA’s January 10, 2024 “town hall” meeting 



12   The NAMSA entities do not allege spoliation based on the three USB drives 
plugged in on June 14, 2022; October 14, 2023; and October 24, 2023.      

13   As of the date of this Order, the YouTube video was publicly available.  See 
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Z6ZrPknC1Gk (last accessed November 27, 2024). 
regarding its investigation and preparation for litigation.  (See Dkt. 296 at 15-16 
(“Knowing she and Phoenix were implicated in a dispute with NAMSA and that 

NAMSA was investigating her use of NAMSA information, Ms. Conforti destroyed 
seven USB devices on January 11, 2024, two of which she confirmed contained NAMSA 
information.”).)  They rely on Pamela’s Counterclaims and the testimony of Phoenix 
Preclinical employee Danielle McCarthy to support this “town hall” theory.  (See id.)  
But, as explained below, the record does not support the NAMSA entities’ claim that 
Pamela knew about the investigation based when she destroyed the USB drives. 

    First, while the Counterclaims state word of this “town hall” meeting “spread 
quickly” (Dkt. 142 ¶¶ 35-43), they do not state Pamela or Michael learned of it on or 
before January 11, 2024.  Second, McCarthy’s testimony as to what Pamela knew about 
this meeting and the investigation and when she knew it is ambiguous.  McCarthy 
testified that she had heard from NAMSA employees that NAMSA was conducting an 

investigation into potential misconduct by Pamela and Michael in “early January of 
2024.”  (Dkt. 298-8 at 115:2-5.)  But McCarthy then testified that she could not recall if 
she first heard about the investigation before or after January 19, 2024.  (Dkt. 298-8 at 
115:13-17.)  And while McCarthy remembered speaking with Pamela about the 
investigation, she did not remember any details of the conversation, including whether 

Pamela knew about it before they talked.  (Dkt. 298-8 at 117:5-22.)  The Court finds that 
this muddled record does not support the NAMSA entities’ argument that Pamela knew 
of the January 10, 2024 “town hall” meeting when she accessed and destroyed the USB 
drives.                                                                   

    In evaluating intent, the Court has also considered the credibility of Michael and 
Pamela’s explanation for why they destroyed USB drives in January 2024.  (See Dkt. 185 
at 160:7-161:24; Dkt. 185-1 at 105:16-106:1 (describing house cleaning after son’s visit 
over Christmas break).)  As discussed in connection with Michael, there is nothing about 
the timing or manner in which he accessed the drives that supports a finding of intent to 
deprive.  And while the NAMSA entities focus on the January 11, 2024 date of Pamela’s 

access, the Court cannot reasonably infer from the record that she knew about NAMSA’s 
“town hall” meeting as of that date.                                      
    Other evidence supports Pamela’s credibility.  Pamela testified that some of the 
USB drives she disposed of were corrupted and “some didn’t have anything of value on 
them.”  (Dkt. 185 at 161:22-24, 163:24-164:6.)  She testified that she “plugged them all 

in to see if there was anything in terms of family photos or anything that we would need 
to retain.”  (Dkt. 185 at 161:20-22.)  Consistent with this testimony, one of the USB 
drives at issue—a SanDisk Cruzer—found in February 2024 had family photos from a 
trip to Cabo San Lucas.  (Dkt. 185 at 168:8-20.)  Pamela also stated in a declaration that 
two drives contained videos used to prepare a tribute video for her mother’s memorial 

service (Dkt. 217 ¶ 7), which is consistent with the fact that two drives contained .mp4 
video files, and two of those files bore women’s names as the filename (see Dkt. 230 ¶ 
47).                                                                      
    As to the eight folders and single file accessed from the Kingston Drive, the 
NAMSA entities have not disputed that those folders and documents were created in 

2012, years before NAMSA acquired APS.  (See Dkt. 230 ¶ 44 (describing creation date 
of folders and files); Dkt. 242 ¶ 7 (sale of APS to NAMSA closed on February 26, 
2021).)  The file and folders’ age does not mean they should not have been preserved, but 
it does support ie disposed of the USB drives because some were corrupted and in her 
view, “some didn’t have anything of value on them.”  (Dkt. 185 at 161:22-25, 163:24-
164:6; see also Dkt. 217 ¶ 10 (“I recall viewing the documents [on the Kingston Drive] 

briefly and determining that they were no longer relevant to anyone.”).)  Further, the 
NAMSA entities say that those files either “match” or are “similar” to files on the 
NAMSA servers.  (Dkt 185-3 ¶¶ 42-43; Dkt. 153 at 14; Dkt. 319 at 34:6-7, 110:5-16).  
This causes the Court to question whether the information contained in those 2012 
folders and the file “cannot be restored or replaced through additional discovery” such 

that Rule 37(e) sanctions are appropriate.  See Lexis-Nexis, 
41 F. Supp. 2d at 955
 
(declining to award sanctions where, among other things, “the vast majority of the 
information” on the disk at issue had been preserved on other devices).  Further, given 
the age of the files and the fact that NAMSA appears to have the files or very similar 
versions of them, the Court finds Pamela’s testimony that she did not think APS files 

from 2012 were of value credible.  The same is true for Pamela’s decision to dispose of 
the USB drive containing the APS marketing video from 2012.  It is unclear why anyone 
would need it and if anyone does, it is still available on YouTube.       
    The NAMSA entities make the point that it is “impossible to know how many 
other[]” files on the USB drives constitute NAMSA information.  (Dkt. 153 at 24.)  This 

is a fair point, and the Court does not mean to dismiss it—nor does the Court dismiss the 
fact that the destruction of the USB drives has limited its ability to determine this fact or 
whether the USB drives had been plugged into other devices.  Certainly, it is theoretically 
possible that Pamela and Michael plugged in each USB drive, ascertained that the USB 
drive contained NAMSA information without actually accessing a folder or file on that 
USB drive, and disposed of the USB drive so that NAMSA would not discover that fact, 

perhaps also copying the USB drives to computers or other devices that they also have 
not produced—and then perjured themselves to cover up their conduct.  But based on the 
record, the Court finds there is insufficient evidence (circumstantial or otherwise) to 
support this conclusion or for the Court to reasonably infer as much.  See Lexis-Nexis, 
41 F. Supp. 2d at 955
 (“The moving party must establish a reasonable possibility, based on 

concrete evidence rather than a fertile imagination, that access to the destroyed material 
would have produced evidence favorable to [their] cause.”) (cleaned up).  
    In sum, based on the Court’s careful consideration of the record with respect to 
Pamela’s destruction of these USB drives, there is an insufficient basis for the Court to 
find that Pamela destroyed the USB drives in January 2024 with the intent to deprive the 

NAMSA entities of the use of the information they contained.  To the extent the NAMSA 
entities argue that “bad faith” can be presumed because these USB drives were destroyed 
after the duty to preserve relevant evidence arose, the Court does not believe presuming 
that intent to deprive is reasonable in view of Pamela and Michael’s credible explanation 
for the destruction of these USB devices.  Finally, even if the Court did find the requisite 
intent, the Court is not persuaded that NAMSA has made enough of a showing to warrant 

an adverse inference based on the deletion of an APS video from 2012, several APS 
folders and files from 2012 (which it appears NAMSA has in a very similar form), and 
speculation about what the other USB devices contained.  See Fed. R. Civ. P. 37(e)(2) 
(“The remedy should fit the wrong, and the severe measures authorized by this 
subdivision should not be used when the information lost was relatively unimportant or 
lesser measures such as those specified in subdivision (e)(1) would be sufficient to 

redress the loss.”); FA ND CHEV, 
2022 WL 16699304
, at *3 (“Alternatively, prejudice 
does not exist when there is no support for the speculation that the lost evidence would 
have affected the litigation.”) (cleaned up).  The Court denies the Motion as to the USB 
devices destroyed in January 2024 insofar as it seeks sanctions under Rule 37(e)(2). 
    NAMSA also makes a cursory assertion that sanctions are appropriate under Rule 

37(e)(1).  (Dkt. 153 at 28 n.9 (“Sanctions are also appropriate under Rule 37(e)(1) 
because NAMSA has suffered prejudice from the Confortis’ spoliation of evidence.”).)  
As to the USB devices, it would be premature to award sanctions under Rule 37(e)(1) 
because NAMSA has not shown prejudice as to the folders and files on those USB 
devices.  As of the date of this Order, the YouTube video is publicly available.  And even 

if the folders and files on the Kingston Drive “cannot be restored or replaced through 
additional discovery,” given their similarity (or matching) to existing NAMSA folders 
and files, it is hard to see how the NAMSA entities are prejudiced by the disposal of the 
Kingston Drive for purposes of this lawsuit.                              
    It may be that additional evidence obtained through discovery will support 
findings of intent to deprive or prejudice.  If that is the case, nothing in this Order 

precludes the NAMSA entities from renewing their motion should they discover such 
information.  But based on the record, and for the reasons stated above, the Court finds 
that the requisite intent to deprive has not been shown as to the USB devices and that any 
request for sanctions under Rule 37(e)(1) is premature given the underdeveloped record 
as to both prejudice and the ability to restore or replace the information through 
additional discovery.  Consequently, the Court denies the Motion—without prejudice—as 

to the USB devices.                                                       
C.   Michael’s Spoliation Related to the Michael Seagate Drive, Western Digital 
    Passport Drive, and 2861 and 5951 Lenovo Computers                   

    NAMSA also seeks sanctions based on Michael’s destruction and wiping of the 
Michael Seagate Drive, Western Digital Passport Drive, and 2861 and 5951 Lenovo 
Computers.  (Dkt. 153 at 25-26.)  For the reasons stated below, the Court finds a sanction 
under Rule 37(e)(2) in the form of an adverse inference as to Michael based on his 
destruction of evidence over the weekend of February 2, 2024 is appropriate, but finds 
that there is no basis at this time for imputing any adverse inference to Pamela or Phoenix 
Preclinical.  The Court also finds that the language of the adverse inference and which 
parties and claims it applies to should be decided after the close of discovery and after the 
parties have fully briefed the issues.                                    
    1.   Michael’s Intent                                                
    Michael argues that he kept NAMSA information for “nostalgic” purposes, not 

business purposes, and that he destroyed evidence to prove he never used it for any 
business purpose rather than suppressing the truth.  (Dkt. 241 at 19-20.)  The first 
question is not why Michael kept NAMSA information, but whether he destroyed the 
information on the Michael Seagate Drive, the Western Digital Passport Drive, and the 
2861 and 5951 Lenovo Computers with “the intent to deprive another party of the 
information’s use in the litigation.”  See Fed. R. Civ. P. 37(e)(2).      

    In the Court’s view, there is no doubt that Michael had the requisite intent to 
deprive with respect to his destruction of evidence over the weekend of February 2, 2024.  
First, Michael testified:                                                 
    When the lawsuit came to our attention on Friday, I panicked, lost my 
    mind. This was something that I had on this drive that nobody knew about; 
    not even Pam, my wife. So, at that point in time, I felt, obviously, not good 
    about having material that I shouldn’t have had. I felt not good about 
    having material that was a secret to my wife, and knew that, based on her 
    activities, that this was not going to be good for what she was working 
    towards and very excited about in her personal life.                 

(Dkt. 185-1 at 61:25-62:9 (emphases added).)  Michael’s intent to deprive NAMSA of 
evidence is further supported by his April 22, 2024 declaration, where Michael states he 
“deleted these files because he panicked when the lawsuit was filed,” in particular 
because he “was afraid” that Pamela’s business, Phoenix Preclinical, “would be 
wrongfully threatened” by his retention of those files.  (Dkt. 184-3 ¶ 11.)   
    Michael argued in his brief that the question of intent should be left to the jury.  
(Dkt. 241 at 20-21.)  However, Madel counsel at the June 28, 2024 hearing made clear 
that Michael was not disputing his February 2024 conduct constituted spoliation 
(although counsel said he still disputes whether his intent was to deprive NAMSA of 

information) and instead focused on the question of the appropriate remedy.  (Dkt. 319 at 
76:20-77:12.)                                                             
    There is no need for the question of Michael’s intent to go to the jury.  Whatever 
the reason for his panic, it is clear that he deleted, wiped, and disposed of information and 
devices over the weekend of February 2, 2024 because he did not want the NAMSA 
entities to know he had NAMSA information and use it in this lawsuit, thus satisfying the 

intent requirement of Rule 37(e)(2).                                      
    2.   Prejudice                                                       
    Michael also argues that no sanctions are required despite his actions because 
NAMSA has failed to demonstrate prejudice as the result of his actions.  (Dkt. 241 at 21-
23.)  Whether the NAMSA entities have shown prejudice as to Michael’s February 2024 

destruction of evidence does not matter for purposes of Rule 37(e)(2).  See Skanska USA 
Civ. Se. Inc. v. Bagelheads, Inc., 
75 F.4th 1290
, 1311 (11th Cir. 2023) (“What’s more, 
Rule 37(e)(2) sanctions do not require any further finding of prejudice.”) (marks and 
citation omitted).  Under Rule 37(e)(2), “the finding of intent required by the subdivision 
can support not only an inference that the lost information was unfavorable to the party 

that intentionally destroyed it, but also an inference that the opposing party was 
prejudiced by the loss of information that would have favored its position.”  Fed. R. Civ. 
P. 37(e)(2) advisory committee’s notes to 2015 amendment; see also Jones v. Riot Hosp. 
Grp. LLC, 
95 F.4th 730, 736
 (9th Cir. 2024) (finding that under Rule 37(e)(2) a finding 
of intent supports the inference of prejudice, even for the most severe of sanctions, 
including dismissal).                                                     

    3.   Appropriate Sanctions                                           
    Given the finding of spoliation under Rule 37(e)(2), the Court must determine the 
appropriate remedy.  “If spoliation is determined, the Court has broad discretion in 
determining an appropriate sanction and considers the culpability of the party and timing 
of the actions.”  Peterson, 
2021 WL 2686119
, at *3 (citing Dillon, 986 F.3d at 268); see 
also In re Petters Co., 606 B.R. at 821 (“The imposition of sanctions under Rule 37 is 

within the Court’s discretion.”) (citations omitted), aff’d sub nom. Kelley as Tr. of BMO 
Litig. Tr., 
657 B.R. 475
.                                                 
    The NAMSA entities argue that the appropriate sanction for Michael’s intentional 
spoliation is default judgment.  (Dkt. 153 at 30-34.)  “Courts should select the least harsh 
sanction that can provide an adequate remedy.”  Jonathan R. v. Just., No. 3:19-CV-

00710, 
2024 WL 1339522
, at *10 (S.D.W. Va. Mar. 28, 2024) (quoting Nat’l Fair Hous. 
All. v. Bank of Am., N.A., No. SAG-18-1919, 
2023 WL 4669560
, at *7 (D. Md. Jan. 23, 
2023)).  Indeed, Rule 37’s advisory committee’s notes state, “Courts should exercise 
caution, however, in using the measures specified in (e)(2).”  Fed. R. Civ. P. 37(e)(2) 
advisory committee’s notes to 2015 amendment.  “In order to serve the prophylactic, 

punitive, and remedial rationales underlying the spoliation doctrine, the sanction should 
be designed to: ‘(1) deter parties from engaging in spoliation; (2) place the risk of an 
erroneous judgment on the party who wrongfully created the risk; and (3) restore the 
prejudiced party to the same position he or she would have been in absent the wrongful 
destruction of evidence by the opposing party.’”  Jonathan R., 
2024 WL 1339522
, at *10 
(quoting Jenkins v. Woody, No. 3:15CV355, 
2017 WL 362475
, at *18 (E.D. Va. Jan. 21, 

2017)).                                                                   
    The NAMSA entities rely on Calsep A/S v. Dabral, 
84 F.4th 304, 311-12
 (5th Cir. 
2023), CrossFit, Inc. v. Nat’l Strength & Conditioning Ass’n, No. 14-CV-1191 JLS 
(KSC), 
2019 WL 6527951
 (S.D. Cal. Dec. 4, 2019), OmniGen Rsch. v. Wang, 
321 F.R.D. 367
 (D. Or. 2017), and Wm. T. Thompson Co. v. General Nutrition Corp., 
593 F. Supp. 1443
 (C.D. Cal. 1984), in support of their request for default judgment against Michael.  

(Dkt. 153 at 31-32.)  However, the conduct warranting sanctions in these cases not only 
involved spoliation, but also the failure of the offending party to follow court orders.  See 
Calsep, 
84 F.4th at 310-15
; CrossFit, 
2019 WL 6527951
, at *13; OmniGen Rsch., 
321 F.R.D. at 371, 373-75
; Wm. T. Thompson, 
593 F. Supp. at 1448-49
.  That is not the case 
here.                                                                     

    The NAMSA entities also point to what they claim are Michael’s attempts to hide 
his spoliation during discovery as support for default judgment against him.  (Dkt. 153 at 
33.)  Specifically, they argue: “Worse, Dr. Conforti lied under oath about his destruction 
of the 2861 Laptop.  When asked if there were any other devices from which he deleted 
data relevant to this lawsuit other than his 5951 Computer, the Seagate Drive, and the 

Western Digital Drive, Dr. Conforti answered unequivocally, ‘No.’”  (Dkt. 153 at 
33(citing Dkt. 185-1 at 88:14-20).)  An allegation that a witness lied under oath is 
extremely serious, and the Court has thoroughly reviewed the record to evaluate this 
assertion.                                                                
    The cited portion of Michael’s April 12, 2024 deposition reads as follows: 
    Q.   Okay.  We’ve  discussed  resetting  the  operating  system  on  your 
         Lenovo computer, your wiping of files from the Seagate hard drive 
         and your wiping of files from the Passport hard drive. Are there any 
         other devices from which you deleted data relevant to this lawsuit? 

    A.   No, those are the only two devices that I deleted data from or had any 
         data on.                                                        

(Dkt. 185-1 at 88:14-21.)                                                 
    On April 19, 2024, Latham counsel sent a letter to Dorsey and Madel counsel 
saying “[i]t had come to [Latham counsel’s] attention” that Michael had not produced the 
2861 Lenovo Computer.  (Dkt. 244-1 at 3.)  Madel counsel responded on April 22, 2024 
by correctly pointing out that Latham counsel had been aware of the 2861 Lenovo 
Computer and possessed a forensic image of the 5951 Lenovo Computer (described as 
CFS_2.1) since March 9, 2024, before Michael’s deposition, as Latham counsel 
referenced both in a letter sent on that date.  (Dkt. 244-1at 2; see also Dkt. 244-2 at 7 
(March 9, 2024 letter).)  Then, in a declaration dated April 22, 2024, Michael stated that 
he was only asked about “a Lenovo computer” and “your Lenovo computer” during his 
deposition, that NAMSA did not ask him about “specific computers” during his 
deposition, and that he was not trying to evade the truth during his deposition.  (Dkt. 184-
3 ¶¶ 5-6.)                                                                
    The Court agrees that, for whatever reason, the deposition questioning did not 
specify or differentiate between the two Lenovo computers—even though NAMSA knew 
at the time of the deposition about the 2861 Lenovo Computer (by serial number) and 
that there was another Lenovo computer (described as CFS 2_1 in the March 9, 2024 
letter).  Moreover, after counsel’s question describing Michael’s “resetting the operating 
system” as to “your Lenovo computer” and “wiping” as to the Michael Seagate and 

Western Digital Passport Drives, counsel asked if Michael had “deleted data” from any 
other devices and he responded, “those are the only two devices that I deleted data from” 
(Dkt. 185-1 at 88:14-21)—making it clear that Michael viewed “wiping” as deleting data 
and “resetting the operating system” on a computer as something different.  Counsel 
could have asked Michael why he responded that he had deleted data on “only two 
devices” when he was asked about three, but they did not, indicating they understood the 

distinction he was making.  In fact, Michael consistently testified that he did not delete 
data from “the Lenovo computer” because he had only used that computer to transfer 
files and he distinguished between deleting data and resetting an operating system.14  
(Dkt. 185-1at 78:1-21; 82:2-17.)  Michael’s declaration as to the 2861 Lenovo Computer 
is consistent with this testimony.  (Dkt. 184-3 ¶ 7 (“I did not put any data on this 

Computer.  I used it only as a passthrough to move documents from the 5-terabyte 
Seagate hard drive to the Western Digital Passport external hard drive (forensic images of 
both of which have been produced to NAMSA in this litigation).”).)  The NAMSA 
entities’ assertion that Michael “lied under oath” relies on imprecise questioning and 
ignores the difference between deleting data and resetting an operating system—which 




14   The Court recognizes that resetting an operating system does delete data of a kind; 
the point is that—as the NAMSA entities know—Michael distinguished between 
resetting and deleting during his testimony.                              
they knew Michael thought was meaningful based on his testimony—and is otherwise 
unsupported.15                                                            

    To return to the point of the Motion, the Court finds that Michael should be 
sanctioned under Rule 37(e)(2) for his destruction of evidence over the February 2, 2024 
weekend, and that the appropriate sanction is an adverse inference.  However, the Court 
also finds that the language of the instruction, including which claims and parties it 
applies to, should be decided after the close of discovery and the parties have fully 
briefed the issue.  This is for several reasons.  First, the NAMSA entities originally 

sought very specific adverse inferences as to Michael and Pamela.  (Dkt. 153 at 29-30.)  
Not until the June 28, 2024 hearing did they seek a more general adverse inference.  (See 
Dkt. 319 at 46:3-48:10, 76:5-11.)  In response, the Confortis objected to the last-minute 
revision and stated their belief that the language of any adverse inference instruction 
should wait until the close of discovery.  (Dkt. 319 at 71:3-22, 81:4-15.)  At this point, 

given the NAMSA entities’ shifting positions as to the adverse inference instruction and 
“the fact that discovery is still on-going, the record is not yet closed, and the case is still 
some time from trial, the Court believes it more appropriate to defer consideration of 
those sanctions to a later date, closer to trial.”  Paisley Park, 330 F.R.D. at 237; see also 
Monarch Fire Prot. Dist. of St. Louis Cnty., 
644 F.3d at 639
 (“Here, the district court 

withheld ruling on Monarch’s Rule 37 motion for sanctions until the case proceeded to 


15   The Court expects a party or lawyer who accuses a witness of lying under oath to 
be able to fully support this serious allegation—which the NAMSA entities have not 
done here.                                                                
trial, noting that the appropriate sanction for Indellicati’s actions would likely be an 
adverse inference jury instruction.”).                                    

    There is another reason the Court thinks it appropriate to defer crafting the 
language of any adverse inference instruction.  The NAMSA entities ask the Court to 
extend any adverse inference as to Michael against Pamela and Phoenix Preclinical.  
(See, e.g., Dkt. 153 at 29 (asking for adverse inference that “Dr. Conforti misappropriated 
NAMSA’s confidential, proprietary, and trade secret information for prohibited purposes, 
including to support the competitive business of Phoenix”) (emphasis added); Dkt. 

319 at 51:1-4, 51:11-52:13 (arguing at June 28, 2024 hearing for imputation of any 
adverse inference as to Pamela and Phoenix Preclinical).)  The problem is that the 
NAMSA entities have not identified any real legal or factual basis for doing so.   
    As to the law, the NAMSA entities supported their imputation argument at the 
June 28, 2024 hearing with citations to Vogt v. MEnD Corr. Care, PLLC, No. 21-CV-

1055 (WMW/TNL), 
2023 WL 2414551
 (D. Minn. Jan. 30, 2023), and Woods v. Scissons, 
No. CV-17-08038-PCT-GMS, 
2019 WL 3816727
 (D. Ariz. Aug. 14, 2019).  Both of 
these cases rely on agency principles in the employment context.  See Vogt, 
2023 WL 2414551
, at *14 (“The CO Defendants are in a similar special relationship with the 
County based on their employment.  The CO Defendants are represented by the same 

counsel as the County.”); Wood, 
2019 WL 3816727
, at *6 (imputing liability for 
spoliation of non-party police department to employee police officer).  Other courts have 
analyzed imputation of spoliation under agency principles.  See, e.g., Danielson, 
2021 WL 217706
, at *6 n.7 (“Courts ordinarily analyze the attribution of fault to one party for 
another’s spoliation under principles of agency”); Am. Builders & Contractors Supply, 
2012 WL 2992627
, at *6 (“The Court agrees that general agency principals [sic] apply in 

determining whether to impose sanctions against a party for spoliation by its 
employees.”).                                                             
    Here, the NAMSA entities have not articulated any agency theory that would 
apply to Pamela and Michael.  They suggest that their marital relationship and business 
relationship at APS means that Michael must be providing advice and counsel to Pamela 
with respect to Phoenix Preclinical.  But Pamela has denied under oath that he has done 

so or is doing so.  (Dkt. 185 at 109:5-112:20.)  The NAMSA entities have offered no 
evidence to the contrary—not from Michael and Pamela’s depositions, not from their 
emails or Pamela’s text messages, not from their personal laptops examined by Faulkner, 
and not from the deposition of Phoenix Preclinical employee McCarthy.  The Court finds 
that the record at this time does not support imputing liability for Michael’s February 

2024 conduct to Pamela and Phoenix Preclinical.                           
    The NAMSA entities also have offered no evidence that Pamela told Michael to 
destroy or wipe the Michael Seagate Drive, the Western Digital Passport Drive, or the 
Lenovo Computers or that she knew of and agreed with his decision to engage in any of 
that conduct.  Based on the record, Pamela was in Illinois with her father, who was 

undergoing cancer treatment, during the weekend of February 2, 2024, when Michael 
engaged in this conduct.  (Dkt. 242 ¶ 31.)  Michael stated under penalty of perjury that 
Pamela had no role in his activities during the weekend of February 2, 2024 and Pamela 
stated under penalty of perjury that she did not hear about Michael’s actions until she 
returned to Minnesota from assisting her father, on February 5, 2024.  (Dkt. 242 ¶ 31; 
Dkt. 217 ¶ 15.)  Indeed, it is unclear whether the NAMSA entities are taking the position 

that Michael and Pamela are lying, or if they simply believe that Pamela and Phoenix 
Preclinical should be liable for Michael’s conduct because Pamela and Michael are 
married and because Michael admitted he was trying to protect Pamela and Phoenix 
Preclinical.  If the latter is NAMSA’s position, it is not supported by any authority.  It 
goes too far to impute Michael’s bad conduct to Pamela—even if he was doing it for 
her—absent Pamela’s agreement or acquiescence in such conduct.            

    Let there be no question as to how the Court views Michael’s intentional 
destruction of evidence over the weekend of February 2, 2024.  His conduct is incredibly 
serious, not to mention harmful to the administration of justice, and requires a sanction 
that commensurate with the damage he has caused—in this case, an adverse inference.  
See TLS Mgmt. & Mktg. Servs., LLC v. Mardis Fin. Servs., Inc., No. 3:14-CV-00881-

CWR-LRA, 
2018 WL 3673090
, at *1 (S.D. Miss. Jan. 29, 2018) (“A court does justice 
by finding truth.  That search requires evidence.  Intentionally destroying evidence, then, 
is more than a devious litigation strategy but a lethal attack on a court’s purpose and must 
be responded to in kind.”).  But as other courts have recognized, an adverse inference is 
often a litigation-ending device that should not be given lightly.  Rao, 631 F. Supp. 3d at 

712.  The Court finds that the language of the adverse inference should be determined 
after the close of discovery and after the parties have had the opportunity to fully brief the 
adverse inference instruction.  For these reasons, the Court finds Michael intentionally 
spoliated evidence on February 2 to 4, 2024 and should be sanctioned for that conduct, 
but also finds that the language of that adverse inference—and to which parties and 
claims it should apply—should be decided after the close of discovery and after all 

parties have had a fair opportunity to make arguments.                    
D.   Michael’s iPhone Texts                                               
    Finally, the NAMSA entities seek sanctions due to “Dr. Conforti’s thousands of 
deleted text messages.”  (Dkt. 153 at 27.)  This appears to be an exaggeration, apparently 
based on NAMSA’s expert Faulkner statement that Michael’s iPhone had sent/received 
approximately 44,000 text messages “between April 16, 2023 when the phone was first 

put into use and February 13, 2024, when the phone was turned in.”  (Dkt. 185-3 ¶ 34 
(emphasis added).)  Based on Faulkner’s review, one chat thread had an artifact showing 
that the most recent text message was sent on February 2, 2024 and two other chat 
threads had artifacts showing their most recent message was sent on February 10, 2024.  
(Dkt. 185-3 ¶ 35.)  “A total of 25 chat threads” (including those three) had artifacts 

indicating their most recent message was sent after December 13, 2023.  (Dkt. 185-3 ¶ 
35.)  From this, Faulkner could conclude that those chat threads had been deleted after 
the date of the most recent message, e.g., that the 25 chat threads had been deleted on or 
after December 13, 2023.16  (See id. ¶¶ 35-37.)  According to Faulkner: “The exact date 
and time when text messages were deleted is unknown.”  (Dkt. 185-3 ¶ 35.)     

    Michael testified that “[t]here shouldn’t have been any text messages on [his] 
phone” because he deletes his text messages after he receives a text, and this has 

16   It is unclear to the Court if other text messages (perhaps not a part of chat threads) 
were deleted after December 13, 2024 or after February 2, 2024.           
“always” been his practice.  (Dkt. 185-1 at 89:7-90:20; see also Dkt. 242 ¶ 35.)  He 
further testified that he did not delete any text messages during the period he was 

panicked about this lawsuit (that is, February 2 to 4, 2024).  (Dkt. 185-1 at 90:21-24.) 
    NAMSA argues that even accepting that it was Michael’s practice to delete his 
iPhone texts on a regular basis, it is not credible that he maintained this practice in good 
faith once he was made aware of this litigation and when he was panicking and 
destroying other evidence.  (Dkt. 153 at 27.)  Michael should have stopped deleting his 
text messages—to the extent they contained information that should have been preserved 

in anticipation of this lawsuit—as of December 2023.  See Kelley as Tr. of BMO Litig. 
Tr., 657 B.R. at 487.  But there are several problems with awarding sanctions under Rule 
37(e)(2) at this time.                                                    
    First, the NAMSA entities have not made any showing that the deleted text 
messages are not available from the persons who sent and received them—including 

Pamela.  Thus, it is unclear whether they “cannot be restored or replaced through 
additional discovery.”  See Fed. R. Civ. P. 37(e).  Second, the NAMSA entities try to 
show intent to deprive based on Michael’s destruction of evidence over the February 2, 
2024 weekend, but the Court finds this reasoning insufficient given the undisputed 
evidence that Michael regularly deleted his text messages before NAMSA filed this 

lawsuit.  Further, the forensic evidence does not show any message was deleted during 
the weekend of February 2, 2024, when Michael was panicking.  At this point, Michael’s 
conduct with respect to text messages appears more akin to negligence or gross 
negligence, which will not support a finding of intent under Rule 37(e)(2).  For these 
reasons, the Court declines to find Michael intended to deprive the NAMSA entities of 
these text messages and will not award sanctions under Rule 37(e)(2) based on their 

deletion.                                                                 
    The NAMSA entities also claim in a fairly conclusory fashion that they are 
entitled to sanctions under Rule 37(e)(1) because they have suffered prejudice due to the 
destruction of evidence.  (Dkt. 153 at 28 n.9; Dkt. 296 at 19.)  Again, they have not even 
shown Michael’s text messages are not recoverable from the persons who sent and 
received them, whether Pamela, Jorgenson, Markuson, or others.  See Fed. R. Civ. P. 

37(e)(1) advisory committee’s notes to 2015 amendment; Kramer, 
2016 WL 7163084
, at 
*2 (rejecting sanctions under Rule 37(e)(1) where information can be restored or replaced 
through additional discovery).  The NAMSA entities have also made little to no argument 
as to how they are prejudiced by the messages’ deletion.  See FA ND CHEV, 
2022 WL 16699304
, at *3 (“Depending on the nature of the evidence lost, prejudice may be shown 

merely by how impactful the evidence is determined to be.  Prejudice likely exists from 
lost or destroyed ESI if the lost or missing evidence would be different or more helpful to 
the party claiming spoliation than the evidence already in existence.  Alternatively, 
prejudice does not exist when there is no support for the speculation that the [lost] 
evidence would have affected the litigation.”) (cleaned up).  And nowhere do the 

NAMSA entities set forth for the Court what sort of sanctions are appropriate under Rule 
37(e)(1).  They do not even seek sanctions under Rule 37(e)(1) in their proposed order.  
(Dkt. 157.)  This confirms that awarding Rule 37(e)(1) sanctions based on a partial record 
and the NAMSA entities’ abbreviated argument would be premature.          
E.   Sanctions Pursuant to the Court’s Inherent Authority                 
    The NAMSA entities also ask the Court to award sanctions pursuant to its inherent 

authority.  (Dkt. 153 at 30.)  The Court declines to award sanctions or find spoliation 
outside the bounds of Rule 37 at this time for two reasons.  First, “[t]he exclusive nature 
of Rule 37(e) sanctions for the loss of ESI has been widely recognized.”  Alsadi, 
2020 WL 4035169
, at *3 (collecting cases).  While the Court could rely on its inherent 
authority if it believed Rule 37(e) was insufficient to decide this Motion, nothing suggests 
Rule 37(e) is not “up to the task.”  See Schlafly, 
970 F.3d at 936
 (cleaned up).  Second, 

given that discovery is not complete and the Court’s findings that there is no showing of 
intent to deprive as to the USB devices and Michael’s text messages, not to mention the 
incomplete record as to prejudice and whether some of the evidence at issue can be 
restored or replaced through additional discovery, it would be premature to award 
sanctions under the Court’s inherent authority.                           

                         IV.  ORDER                                      
    For the reasons stated above, and based upon all the files, records, and proceedings 
herein, IT IS ORDERED THAT: Plaintiffs North American Science Associates, LLC 
and NAMSA Holdco, LLC’s Motion for Sanctions Against Defendants Michael Conforti 
and Pamela Conforti for Evidence Spoliation (Dkt. 151) is GRANTED IN PART AND 

DENIED IN PART as follows:                                                
    1.   The Motion is GRANTED insofar as the Court finds Defendant Michael 
Conforti should be sanctioned under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 37(e)(2) in the form 
of an adverse inference for his destruction of evidence relating to the Michael Seagate 
Drive, Western Digital Passport Drive, and the 2861 and 5951 Lenovo Computers over 
the weekend of February 2, 2024, with the language of the adverse inference and to 

which parties and claims it applies to be decided after discovery is complete and the 
parties have had the opportunity to brief the issue; and                  
    2.   The Motion is otherwise DENIED without prejudice.               

DATED: November 27, 2024           s/Elizabeth Cowan Wright               
                                  ELIZABETH COWAN WRIGHT                 
                                  United States Magistrate Judge         

Trial Court Opinion

                UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT                             
                    DISTRICT OF MINNESOTA                                



North American Science Associates, LLC,  Case No. 24-cv-287 (JWB/ECW)    
an Ohio limited liability company also                                   
known as NAMSA, and NAMSA Holdco,                                        
LLC, a Delaware limited liability company,                               

          Plaintiffs,                                                    

v.                                           ORDER                       

Michael Conforti, Pamela Conforti, and                                   
Phoenix Preclinical Labs, LLC, a Minnesota                               
limited liability company,                                               

          Defendants.                                                    


    This case is before the Court on Plaintiffs North American Science Associates, 
LLC and NAMSA Holdco, LLC’s (collectively, “NAMSA entities”) Motion for   
Sanctions Against Defendants Michael Conforti and Pamela Conforti for Evidence 
Spoliation (Dkt. 151).  The Court heard oral argument on the Motion on June 28, 2024 
(Dkt. 319), and the matter is now ready for decision.1                    

1    The NAMSA entities have filed several motions since filing the instant Motion, 
including a Motion for Leave to File a Second Amended Complaint.  (Dkts. 160, 279, 
340, 355.)  They have not sought to expand the record as to the instant Motion, so the 
Court makes its decision based on the record that existed as of the conclusion of the June 
28, 2024 hearing.                                                         
         I.   FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND                          
A.   Michael and Pamela Conforti and American Preclinical Services        
    Defendants Michael Conforti (“Michael”) and Pamela Conforti (“Pamela”)2 

married in 1993.  (Dkt. 242 ¶ 2.)  Michael earned his Bachelor’s and Master’s degrees in 
Biology from the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign in 1991 and 1993, 
respectively; his Doctorate in Veterinary Medicine from the University of Wisconsin-
Madison in 1997; and his Master’s in Business Administration in 2003.  (Dkt. 242 ¶ 2.)  
Pamela earned a Bachelor of Science in Accounting from the University of Illinois 

Urbana-Champaign and a Master of Science in Business Education from the University 
of Wisconsin-Whitewater.  (Dkt. 250 ¶ 2.)  She earned her CPA license from the State of 
Wisconsin.  (Dkt. 250 ¶ 2.)  Pamela worked for over 12 years, beginning while earning 
her Master’s degree, as a public accountant, financial analyst, and consultant, until she 
began working at American Preclinical Services (“APS”) in August 2005.  (Dkt. 250 

¶¶ 3, 8.)                                                                 
    Michael started APS in 2005.  (Dkt. 242 ¶ 3.)  APS was a preclinical medical 
technology contract research organization (“CRO”) that performed testing of medical 
devices, pharmaceuticals, and other various biotechnology using animal and cell-based 
models.  (Dkt. 242 ¶ 4.)  Michael was the sole owner of APS and served as its President 

from 2005 to 2021, when North American Science Associates, LLC (“NAMSA”)  
acquired APS.  (Dkt. 242 ¶¶ 3, 7.)  Pamela served as APS’s Chief Financial Officer and 

2    For readability, the Court refers to Defendant Michael Conforti as “Michael” and 
Defendant Pamela Conforti as “Pamela” in this Order.                      
Chief Information Officer from 2005 to 2021, and as its Human Resources from 2005 to 
2011.  (Dkt. 250 ¶ 8.)  Michael and Pamela operated APS together, having started the 

business “from scratch,” and grew the business to over 300 employees.  (Dkt. 242 ¶¶ 3, 5, 
6.)                                                                       
B.   NAMSA’s Acquisition of APS                                           
    In February 2021, NAMSA purchased APS for approximately $44 million.  (Dkt. 
242 ¶ 7; Dkt. 245 at 17:18-19.)3  Michael and Pamela signed Employment Agreements, 
on or about February 15, 2021, with their employment conditioned on their execution of 

Confidentiality Agreements with respect to “confidential and proprietary” information 
belonging to NAMSA, where their confidentiality obligations continued after their 
employment ended.  (Dkt. 180 ¶ 7; Dkt. 180-5 at 3-4; Dkt. 180-6 at 3-4.)4  Michael and 
Pamela also agreed not to compete with NAMSA for certain periods of time.  (Dkt. 180 
¶¶ 7-8; Dkt. 180-5 at 8; Dkt. 180-6 at 8; Dkt. 181-3; Dkt. 217 ¶ 2.)  Michael also signed a 

Restricted Covenant Agreement (“RCA”) in connection with NAMSA’s purchase of 
APS.  (Dkt. 180 ¶ 8.)  Michael stayed on after the sale as the Vice President of ISR 
Laboratory Operations.  (Dkt. 242 ¶ 8.)  However, NAMSA removed him from executive 
leadership within three months after the purchase and, within the first eight months after 
the sale, Michael became an “individual contributor” without any managerial 



3    Pin citations to transcripts are in the page:line format.            

4    Unless otherwise noted, page citations to materials filed on the docket are to the 
CM/ECF pagination.                                                        
responsibilities.  (Dkt. 242 ¶ 8.)  Pamela stayed on as the Director of Finance after the 
purchase.  (Dkt. 97 ¶ 26; see Dkt. 180-4 at 2.)                           

C.   NAMSA Terminates Pamela’s Employment and Pamela Copies Certain       
    NAMSA Files                                                          
    On May 18, 2022, NAMSA told Pamela that it was terminating her employment, 
where her last day of employment would be May 31, 2022.  (Dkt. 39 ¶ 5; Dkt. 242 ¶ 9.)  
Pamela planned to use her paid time off until May 31, 2022, and consequently NAMSA 
and Pamela agreed that her termination would be effective as of June 3, 2022.  (Dkt. 39 
¶ 5.)                                                                     
    On June 1, 2022, Pamela used a 5-terabyte (“TB”) Seagate Portable Drive (“the 
Pamela Seagate Drive”) to access NAMSA’s “Q:\APSNetwork.”  (Dkt. 28 ¶¶ 14-19; Dkt. 

185-3 ¶¶ 9, 62-63, 67.)  This folder contained NAMSA’s Minnesota facility’s 
QuickBooks accounting records, including what NAMSA describes as its financial and 
accounting database, comprising detailed customer and vendor financial records and 
contacts, financial analytics regarding profitability, and the general ledger.  (Dkt. 28 ¶ 19; 
Dkt. 185-3 ¶¶ 9, 62-63, 67; Dkt. 186 ¶ 16.)  She copied files from this location to the 

Pamela Seagate Drive, creating corresponding folders on the Pamela Seagate Drive.  
(Dkt. 185-3 ¶¶ 9, 62-63, 67.)                                             
    The NAMSA entities state that NAMSA used the QuickBooks accounting   
software until November 1, 2023.  (Dkt. 186 ¶ 16.)  They further state that “[b]ecause 
these QuickBooks records contain highly sensitive financial information that could erode 

NAMSA’s competitive advantage if disclosed to a competitor, NAMSA keeps them 
confidential and takes measures to protect them.”  (Dkt. 186 ¶ 20.)  The NAMSA entities 
explained that NAMSA “preserves its historic QuickBooks accounting records, including 

backup copies for several years” because “they are still relevant and sometimes needed 
for ongoing business and client relationships.”  (Dkt. 186 ¶ 21.)  NAMSA states that 
these records “would still be enormously valuable for a startup CRO hoping to compete 
with NAMSA for talent and clients.”  (Dkt. 186 ¶ 23.)                     
    Pamela testified during her April 11, 2024 deposition that she downloaded 
NAMSA’s QuickBooks file to the Pamela Seagate Drive and took it with her when she 

left NAMSA.  (Dkt. 185 at 92:18-22, 94:4-10.)  She further testified that she did so in 
case NAMSA lost access to QuickBooks after it transitioned to the new accounting 
software, but no one instructed her to do so and she did not tell anybody that she was 
doing so.  (Dkt. 185 at 93:17-94:3.)  In a declaration signed on May 24, 2024, Pamela 
stated under penalty of perjury that:                                     

    I downloaded a QuickBooks file prior to my departure, but it had nothing to 
    do with any competitive activity. Around the time of my departure from 
    NAMSA,  I understood  that NAMSA  was transitioning  their  accounting 
    software away from QuickBooks to a different system and would no longer 
    have access to QuickBooks files. Given this, it was necessary to preserve the 
    QuickBooks file to provide support for my personal tax returns and also the 
    tax returns for APS, if Mike or I were to be audited. I did not download or 
    preserve the QuickBooks file for any competitive purpose, and in fact have 
    not accessed this file since I downloaded it while still employed at NAMSA 
    in early June 2022.                                                  

(Dkt. 250 ¶ 19.)                                                          
    NAMSA’s forensic expert Kevin Faulkner stated in a declaration signed on 
February 2, 2024 that on June 2, 2022, the files and folders containing this accounting 
information on the Pamela Seagate Drive were accessed and interacted with.  (Dkt. 28 
¶ 23.)  Pamela and Michael’s forensic expert Mark Lanterman stated in a declaration filed 

on May 24, 2024 that the June 2, 2022 access occurred from Pamela’s NAMSA laptop.  
(Dkt. 230 ¶ 34.)  Lanterman further stated that there is no evidence that these files were 
accessed after June 2, 2022, accessed from Pamela’s personal laptop, or copied to any 
other source or computer.  (Dkt. 230 ¶¶ 33-35.)  Although the NAMSA entities describe 
this copying and access in their brief, they do not appear to argue that these files were 
accessed after June 2, 2022, nor do they allege Pamela spoliated these files.  (See Dkt. 

153 at 12-13 (describing copying and access), 24-25 (not identifying QuickBooks files as 
spoliated evidence).)                                                     
    According to the February 2, 2024 declaration of NAMSA’s expert Faulkner, 
between June 2 and 10, 2022, Pamela and IT staff at NAMSA exported or attempted to 
export several PST5 (Outlook) files to the Pamela Seagate Drive and other external 

devices.  (Dkt. 28 ¶¶ 24-27.)  Ultimately, on June 10, 2022, a member of NAMSA’s IT 
staff exported email from one folder in Pamela’s email mailbox named “Emails/Folders 
to Export” to a PST file named “exportofemail.pst” (“the PST file”) at 5:05 p.m.  (Dkt. 28 
¶ 26.)  On the same day, the PST file was copied to an external USB SanDisk drive 
having a serial number containing “5045” (the “5045 SanDisk Drive”).  (Dkt. 28 ¶ 26.)  

Then, on June 14, 2022, the PST file was copied to Pamela’s personal laptop and opened.  
(Dkt. 230 ¶¶ 36-37.)  A copy of the PST file continued to reside on Pamela’s NAMSA 

5    A PST file is a storage container for email messages, attachments, contacts, and 
other email mailbox related information.  (Dkt. 28 ¶ 24.)                 
laptop and was available for Faulkner’s examination to determine what email messages 
and attachments were included.  (Dkt. 28 ¶ 26.)  In total, the export contained 2.68 

gigabytes (“s”) of data, consisting of 6,387 email messages and 3,679 attachments.  (Dkt. 
28 ¶ 28.)  The files included information that NAMSA considers to be confidential and 
trade secret business information.  (Dkt. 185-4 ¶ 12.)                    
    Pamela attached emails to her May 24, 2024 declaration showing her   
communications about these exports with NAMSA’s IT staff between June 1, 2022 to 
June 3, 2022.  (See Dkt. 218.)  NAMSA’s expert Faulkner stated in his February 2, 2024 

declaration that the IT staff reported to Pamela (Dkt. 28 ¶ 24), but Pamela stated in her 
May 24, 2024 declaration that they did not report to her (Dkt. 250 ¶ 21; see also Dkt. 185 
98:5-9 (Pamela testifying that IT staff did not report to her after the sale because she was 
no longer the Chief Information Officer)).  Pamela testified during her deposition that she 
did not seek permission from NAMSA management or leadership to take such files from 

NAMSA, but that she “submit[ted] an IT request through the proper channels,” that is by 
submitting a ticket to IT, and that “IT management would have known what the IT staff 
on the site were doing through the ticketing system.”  (Dkt. 185 at 98:22-100:9.)  She 
further testified that, while IT staff reported to her before the sale of APS to NAMSA 
because she was APS’s Chief Information Officer, they did not report to her after the 

sale.  (Dkt. 185 at 97:17-98:9.)  In short, the parties dispute whether Pamela obtained 
these files by improper means.  (See Dkt. 319 at 111:5-19.)  However, the NAMSA 
entities stated at the June 28, 2024 hearing on the Motion that the PST file is “not the 
focus on the spoliation motion” because “they have it.”  (Dkt. 319 at 111:5-8.)  It is 
unclear whether the earlier export attempts were successful, and in any event, they also 
are not the subject of this Motion.                                       

D.   Michael Resigns from NAMSA and Copies Certain Files                  
    Michael submitted his resignation from NAMSA on July 18, 2022.  (Dkt. 39 ¶ 8; 
Dkt. 185-1 at 41:17-20.)  Michael’s last day at NAMSA was August 19, 2022.  (Dkt. 39 
¶ 8; see also Dkt. 242 ¶ 11.)                                             
    Based on Faulkner’s February 2, 2024 declaration, between May 1, 2022 and 
August 18, 2022, Michael accessed tens of thousands of files on his NAMSA laptop and 

copied them to a 5-TB Seagate external drive (“the Michael Seagate Drive”).  (Dkt. 28 
¶¶ 34-47.)  Faulkner states in a declaration signed April 26, 2024 that it appears Michael 
copied more than 26,000 of NAMSA’s Controlled Documents, which NAMSA      
characterizes as documents reflecting its proprietary knowledge of how it executes 
various activities and carries out many preclinical services, and over 39,000 of NAMSA’s 

biocompatibility files to the Michael Seagate Drive.  (Dkt. 185-3 ¶ 56; see Dkt. 185-4 
¶ 13 (describing Controlled Documents).)  However, according to Lanterman, some of 
the Controlled Documents were copied to the Michael Seagate Drive in December 2020.  
(Dkt. 247 ¶ 36.)                                                          
    Consistent with Lanterman’s opinion regarding copying in December 2020, 

Michael stated in a declaration signed under penalty of perjury on May 24, 2022, that 
“[p]rior to the sale of APS to NAMSA, I had stored many APS documents on a personal 
Seagate 5-terabyte external hard drive” and after that sale, he “kept these documents on 
that Seagate hard drive.”  (Dkt. 242 ¶ 13.)  Michael further stated in the May 24, 2022 
declaration:                                                              

    Additionally, I do not dispute NAMSA’s forensic expert, Kevin Faulkner’s, 
    declaration to the extent that he outlines that I interacted with certain files in 
    the weeks leading to my departure from NAMSA. I do not recall all of the 
    specifics of those interactions, but by Mr. Faulkner’s testimony, there were 
    several instances where files were created, some of which were not related 
    to NAMSA documents. If I did copy any NAMSA documents at that time, I 
    am  confident  that  it  was  a  limited  number.  As  I  testified  during  my 
    deposition,  I  saved  these  documents  at  that  time  because  they  were 
    personally meaningful to me for various reasons. As with any of the NAMSA 
    documents I retained, Pam did not know I had these documents. I stored 
    many of them in a folder I called “APS Nostalgia.” I very rarely opened any 
    of these documents and if I did, it was to reminisce on the “old days”—that 
    is, 16 years of building a very successful business from scratch with my wife 
    and friends . . .                                                    

(Dkt. 242 ¶ 14.)                                                          
    As to certain files relating to “business plans and specifications,” Michael stated in 
the May 24, 2024 declaration that because his company Conforti Holdings owns the 
building rented by NAMSA, he was entitled or otherwise permitted to review and 
approve any new construction NAMSA wanted to do on the property.  (Dkt. 242 ¶¶ 15-
18.)  Michael stated: “I needed to have plans to review for approval pursuant to the terms 
of the lease, which is why I had the building plans and specifications for buildings I own” 
and: “There is nothing in the lease agreements that prevents me from retaining a set of as-
built documents for my buildings and my expectation is that the retention of the as-built 
drawings is within my rights and is industry standard.”  (Dkt. 242 ¶ 18.) 
    Michael testified during his April 12, 2024 deposition that he knew the Controlled 
Documents folder contained highly sensitive and confidential materials, and that he was 
not permitted to take the files from NAMSA.  (Dkt. 185-1 at 57:2-5, 59:7-13, 60:1-11.)  
He further testified that he copied content from the Controlled Documents folder to the 

Michael Seagate Drive because they “just had special meaning to” him, and at the time, 
they were particular documents he was reminiscing about, and the documents were a 
“life’s work that he felt akin to” and “just had a hard time getting rid of.”  (Dkt. 185-1 at 
59:15-25.)                                                                
E.   August 2023 Interactions between NAMSA and the Confortis             
    In approximately late July, NAMSA learned of “Pam or Michael Conforti from 

APS starting up a new preclinical business.”  (Dkt. 227 at 3.)  Soon thereafter, NAMSA 
observed that it had “strong protections in the [purchase agreement] impacting Mike 
through Feb 2026; less so with his wife, Pam.”  (Dkt. 227 at 2.)          
    At some point, NAMSA’s CEO Christophe Berthoux and General Counsel Kevin 
Slattery asked Michael to attend an August 9, 2023 telephonic meeting with them.  (Dkt. 

242 ¶ 26.)  According to Michael, during that call, Berthoux and Slattery “stated that they 
suspected I was engaged in assisting Pam in creating a competing business, but they were 
unable to articulate a basis for this belief other than the fact that we are married.”  (Dkt. 
242 ¶ 26.)  Michael states that he “made clear to NAMSA during this call that I was 
complying in all respects with my non-competition agreement.”  (Dkt. 242 ¶ 26.)  A 

lawyer from Dorsey & Whitney LLP (“Dorsey”), which represented Michael at that time, 
also attended the call.  (See Dkt. 221 at 4 (referencing call).)          
    NAMSA’s counsel at Latham & Watkins LLP (“Latham”) sent a letter on August 
28, 2023 “to follow up on recent discussions between our client [NAMSA] and Dr. 
Conforti regarding his obligations under his Restrictive Covenant Agreement.”  (Dkt. 221 
at 2.)  That letter stated in relevant part:                              

    This  firm  [Latham  &  Watkins]  represents  North  American  Science 
    Associates, Inc. (“NAMSA” or the “Company”). We understand that you  
    represent  Dr.  Michael  Conforti. We  are  writing  to  follow  up  on  recent 
    discussions between our client and Dr. Conforti regarding his obligations 
    under his Restrictive Covenant Agreement (the “RCA”).                

                             * * *                                       

    Earlier this month, NAMSA heard a rumor that Dr. Conforti and his wife, 
    Pamela Conforti, may be preparing to provide pre-clinical veterinary services 
    in Minneapolis in the near future and were even looking at a building near 
    NAMSA for the new business. NAMSA was troubled by Dr. Conforti’s     
    potential breach of the RCA and scheduled a meeting with Dr. Conforti to 
    find out whether there was any truth to the rumor. On August 9, 2023, 
    NAMSA’s  CEO  and  General  Counsel  had  a  conference  call  with  Dr. 
    Conforti and you to discuss Dr. Conforti’s and his wife’s intentions. We 
    understand that Dr. Conforti denied being “personally” involved in starting 
    a competing business. However, when NAMSA clarified that the rumor was 
    that Ms. Conforti was also starting the competing business, you objected and 
    that the Minnesota Human Rights Act (“MHRA”) protects spouses from   
    enforcement of restricted covenants in Minnesota or words to that effect.  The 
    call ended soon after.                                               

    Dr. Conforti’s response that he was not “personally” involved and your 
    defensive  reaction  regarding  Mrs.  Conforti’s  plans,  suggests  that  Dr. 
    Conforti’s  wife  is  planning  to  open  a  competing  preclinical  veterinary 
    services  business  in  Minneapolis.  Mrs.  Conforti,  however,  is  not  a 
    veterinarian and it seems unlikely that she would open an operate a business 
    similar to the one Dr. Conforti sold without his advice, assistance or support. 
    The RCA does not just prohibit Dr. Conforti from preparing to form or 
    operate a competing business himself, it also prohibits him from assisting or 
    supporting anyone else, which includes Mrs. Conforti, from developing or 
    operating any competing business during the Restricted Period. RCA §2.2. 
    Dr. Conforti may not circumvent his obligations under the RCA by forming 
    or operating a competing business through or with his wife.          

                             * * *                                       
    Please inform Mr. and Ms. Conforti that NAMSA will be monitoring     
    their business activities very closely. If our client has reason to believe 
    that Dr. Conforti is violating, or is about to violate, his obligations under 
    the RCA, whether directly or indirectly, then it will take all appropriate 
    action against him and anyone who is involved to protect its rights.  

(Dkt. 221 at 2, 4-5 (emphasis added); see also Dkt. 243.)  The letter also notified Michael 
of his continuing duty to abide by his confidentiality obligations.  (Dkt. 221 at 4 n.5.)   
    NAMSA’s August 28, 2023 letter questioned the likelihood that Pamela would 
open a “business similar to” APS without Michael’s “advice, assistance or support” 
because she is not a veterinarian.  (Dkt. 221 at 4.)  The letter did not suggest that Pamela 
would be breaching any contractual obligations to NAMSA if she did so.  (See id.)  
Michael received no further communication from NAMSA until NAMSA filed this 
lawsuit.  (Dkt. 242 ¶ 29.)                                                
    Pamela testified at her deposition that she was aware NAMSA had contacted 
Michael in August 2023, but she was not involved in the conversations.  (Dkt. 185 at 
232:19-223:17.)  She testified that she was not aware of any dispute between NAMSA 
and Michael, but instead was aware “that they had contacted Mike and were looking to 
confirm rumors they had heard.”  (Dkt. 185 at 233:18-23.)  Pamela further testified that 
she read NAMSA’s August 28, 2023 letter sometime “within a few weeks” of when it 
was received and by that time, knew that NAMSA had concerns that she was planning to 

open a competing preclinical veterinary services business in Minneapolis.  (Dkt. 185 at 
236:2-237:1, 238:10-14.)                                                  
    Dorsey responded to the August 28, 2023 letter on August 30, 2023.  (Dkt. 242-5.)  
The August 30, 2023 letter first addressed NAMSA’s belief that Pamela likely would be 
relying on Michael to start up a competing business because she was not a veterinarian, 
pointing out that “there are many preclinical facilities, including NAMSA, that have been 

founded and operated by non-veterinarians.”  (Dkt. 242-5 at 2.)  The August 30, 2023 
letter further stated: “As Mike Conforti made clear to NAMSA on our call earlier this 
month, he has not and will not violate his RCA.”  (Dkt. 242-5 at 2.)  Pamela reviewed 
Dorsey’s August 30, 2023 letter within a few weeks of it being drafted.  (Dkt. 185 at 
238:15-22.)  As of the end of August 2023, NAMSA had not contacted Pamela regarding 
any dispute between her and NAMSA.  (Dkt. 185 at 240:2-20.)               

    Pamela testified that she understood that NAMSA was saying in August 2023 that 
it would take appropriate action against Michael and anyone else involved to protect its 
rights.  (Dkt. 185 at 241:20-242:1.)  She also testified that she and Michael were 
considering a joint defense arrangement at that time in view of this dispute with 
NAMSA.  (Dkt. 185 at 242:3-243:3.)  However, Pamela took no steps from August to 

November 2023 to preserve evidence at this time because was she “was not in a dispute, 
[and] was not notified that I needed to be preserving any evidence.”  (Dkt. 185 at 243:17-
245:1.)                                                                   
    Pamela stated in her May 24, 2024 declaration that as of the August 9, 2023 
meeting between Michael and NAMSA, “my non-competition agreement with NAMSA 

had concluded at least two months previously on June 3, 2023.”  (Dkt. 217 ¶ 2.)  She 
further stated:                                                           
    At the time of this call, I had not made a decision as to whether I would open 
    a preclinical contract research organization, and when I ultimately decided 
    to open Phoenix Preclinical Labs, LLC, Dr. Conforti had no involvement in 
    the process.                                                         

(Dkt. 217 ¶ 2.)  Instead, based on another declaration Pamela submitted under penalty of 
perjury, she decided to form a new company to conduct pre-clinical research “[i]n or 
about September of 2023”—that company being Phoenix Preclinical Labs, LLC 
(“Phoenix Preclinical”).  (Dkt. 250 ¶ 35.)                                
F.   NAMSA Circulates a Preservation Notice in December 2023              
    On December 12, 2023, NAMSA circulated a “Document Preservation and Hold 
Notice” (“Preservation Notice”) to certain of its employees, including Michael Jorgenson 
and Emily Markuson.  (Dkt. 298-3 at 2; Dkt. 298-4 at 161:23-162:7.)  The Preservation 
Notice stated, among other things, that the matter arose from Michael’s potential 

violations of his contractual obligations to NAMSA, including certain commitments not 
to compete, as well as his and Pamela’s “potential unlawful use of NAMSA’s 
confidential information and other unlawful conduct.”  (Dkt. 286-1 at 3.)  NAMSA also 
stated in the Preservation Notice that it “anticipates that the dispute may lead to a lawsuit 
against Dr. and Ms. Conforti.”  (Dkt. 286-1 at 3.)                        

    On December 12, 2023, Michael had a call with “Emily Markuson” and “Michael 
Jorgnsn [sic].”  (Dkt. 298 ¶¶ 7-8; Dkt. 298-5; Dkt. 298-6.)  Text messages sent from 
Pamela to another person on December 12, 2023 state “Markuson called Mike and we’re 
on the phone with her” and “I’m listening to her and Mike talk – she knows I’m on 
speaker.”  (Dkt. 298 ¶ 9; Dkt. 298-7 at 3-4.)                             
    On December 13, 2023, Michael and Pamela had a call with Dorsey regarding 
“potential litigation.”  (Dkt. 184-1, PRIV006394; Dkt. 184-2, PL02040-41; Dkt. 185 at 

255:3-4.)  Pamela testified that she was “aware that there were rumors swirling,” but not 
of any potential litigation at that time.  (Dkt. 185 at 252:1-253:2.)  On December 16, 
2023, Dorsey emailed “draft declarations” to the Confortis, and Pamela later testified that 
she “was working on a declaration in December.”  (Dkt. 184-1, PRIV006412-414; Dkt 
184-2, PL02043-45; Dkt. 185 at 255:10-15.)  On December 17, 2023, Michael emailed 
Dorsey and Pamela a “draft declaration.”  (Dkt 184-2, PL02046-47.)  Michael again 

emailed a “draft declaration” on December 18, 2023.  (Dkt. 184-1, PRIV006419-420; 
Dkt. 184-2 at PL02048.)  Pamela also emailed Dorsey a “draft declaration” on December 
18, 2023.  (Dkt. 184-1, PRIV006424-425.)  Pamela and Michael continued to correspond 
with Dorsey regarding these “draft declarations” and exchanged more drafts that day.  
(Dkt. 184-1, PRIV006435-440.)  Michael’s privilege log identified these declarations as 

protected work product and as prepared in anticipation of litigation.  (Dkt. 184-2, 
PL02044-45, PL02047.)  On January 8, 2024, Michael had another call with Dorsey 
regarding “potential litigation.”  (Dkt 184-2 at 3, PL02079.)             
G.   NAMSA’s “Town Hall” and Michael and Pamela’s Destruction of USB      
    Devices in January 2024                                              
    Pamela’s Counterclaims assert that NAMSA held a “town hall” meeting on 
January 10, 2024, during which NAMSA made several false and defamatory statements 
about her and Michael—including that they were “dirty” and had violated their 

agreements.  (Dkt. 142 ¶¶ 35-42.)  The Counterclaims further state: “Word of the town-
hall meeting spread quickly.  Ms. Conforti was approached by several people in the 
MedTech community, who alerted her about NAMSA’s false and defamatory statements 

made against her and Phoenix.”  (Dkt. 142 ¶ 43.)                          
    Phoenix Preclinical employee Danielle McCarthy testified during her April 17, 
2024 deposition that she had heard from “friends in the industry,” specifically NAMSA 
employees, that NAMSA was conducting an investigation into potential misconduct by 
Pamela and Michael in “early January of 2024.”  (Dkt. 298-8 at 112:4-12.)  McCarthy 
further testified that she could not recall if she first heard about the investigation before 

or after January 19, 2024.  (Dkt. 298-8 at 115:2-17.)  McCarthy spoke with Pamela in 
person after she heard about the investigation, but did not know if Pamela was aware of 
the investigation before they spoke and could not remember how the conversation went.  
(Dkt. 298-8 at 117:5-22.)  In short, the record is unclear as to when Pamela and Michael 
learned about the “town hall” meeting or “investigation.”                 

    Pamela and Michael both testified that they were cleaning their house in January 
2024 and destroyed USB drives while doing so.6  (Dkt. 185-1 at 105:16-106:1; Dkt. 185 
at 161:13-24.)  Pamela testified that she decided to convert their adult son’s room into a 
visitor room given that he was in college, and she asked him to clean up his room over 
the 2023 “Christmas break” so she could replace his “lofted bunk bed” with a “more 

traditional bed set up” and put a new dresser in his room.  (Dkt. 185 at 160:7-161:12.)  


6    Although the last access date of each USB drive is known, the precise destruction 
date is not.  No party has argued the precise date of destruction matters for purposes of 
this Motion.                                                              
Their son is a software development major and had “a lot of IT things in his bedroom.”  
(Dkt. 185 at 161:17-19.)  Pamela found the USB drives in his room while cleaning it, and 

after their son said the drives “were nothing to him,” she “plugged them all in to see if 
there was anything in terms of family photos or anything that we would need to retain.”  
(Dkt. 185 at 161:13-22.)  Pamela testified that some of the USB drives were corrupted, 
“some didn’t have anything of value on them,” and she “disposed of them all” by 
smashing them with a hammer.  (Dkt. 185 at 161:22-25, 164:10-13.)  Michael testified 
they “went through USB drives to see what was on them and destroyed them and g[o]t rid 

of them.”  (Dkt. 185-1 at 105:16-106:1.)  He also used a hammer “[b]ecause it’s an 
electronic device and you don’t usually, typically, throw electronic devices out without 
destroying them.”  (Dkt. 185-1 at 107:3-108:1.)  NAMSA’s expert Faulkner testified that 
he would not throw a USB drive into the trash to dispose of it without reviewing what 
was on the drive and “forensically wip[ing]” the drive first.  (Dkt. 225 at 60:11-23.)  He 

also acknowledged that “physically damaging” a drive might cause a user (as compared 
to a forensic expert like himself) to “think that they’re getting rid of their data,” although 
physical damage “may or may not actually work.”  (Dkt. 225 at 60:24-61:15.) 
    Forensic examination shows that Michael’s personal HP laptop and Pamela’s 
personal laptop were used to access several USB devices in January 2024.  (Dkt. 185-3 at 

15 § IV.A.7; Dkt. 185-3 at 16 § IV.B.1.)  Michael connected several USB devices to his 
personal HP laptop.  (Dkt. 185-3 at 15 § IV.A.7.)  NAMSA’s expert Faulkner 
summarized those devices in a table reproduced below.                     
              □□□               ge          pee      yi    Reels 
              Other                                  457046 
               as                        KINGSTON    co     10/31/2022 
               Phone    RFCR60NLGLX     Michael's $21+                     8/2/2023 
              Other              General USB Flash Disk          FCEF8 
               Disks   0520000000000046    USB Device               FIC      1/3/2024 
              Other              Generic Flash Disk USB           68D48C 
               Disks   12345678       Device         NO NAME    C4      1/3/2024 
              Other              Generic Flash Disk USB          48A4C 
              Disks   OQO0ADCA00       Device                  AEE     1/6/2024 
                   0901 f0e4d98c5bd6d69a 
                   73£7365 f6a5596de 1 fSaa 
              Other   3c00labSe3427ccee3e3  USB SanDisk 3.2Gen1           1C6FB1 
               Disks   do           USB Device       USB Drive    17      1/6/2024 
              Other              Generic Flash Disk USB           102BD8 
               Disks   ESCOFFS8       Device                  81      1/7/2024 
              Card              Generic- SD/MMC USB 
               Reader   058F 84688461      Device                        1/11/2024 
              Card              NORELSYS 1081CS1 
               Reader   0123456789ABCDE   USB Device                      1/14/2024 

(Dkt. 185-3 at 15 § IV.A.7.)  As shown in the table, two devices were connected to 
Michael’s HP personal laptop on January 3, 2024; two were connected on January 6, 
2024; one was connected on January 7, 2024; one was connected on January 11, 2024; 
and one was connected on January 14, 2024.  (Dkt. 185-3 at 15 § IV.A.7.)  The January 
11 and January 14, 2024 devices are described by NAMSA’s expert Faulkner as “Card 
Readers” while the five connected in  January, before NAMSA’s January 10, 2024 “town 
hall” meeting, are “Other Disks.”  (Dkt. 185-3 at 15 § IV.A.7.) 
     Michael did not produce these USB devices in this litigation.  He testified that the 
“Card Readers” were docking stations, one of which was eaten by one of their two 
puppies.  (Dkt. 185-1 at 106:17-23.)  As for the USB drives, Michael testified that he and 
Pam looked at some of the USB drives together, some separately, but he could not 
remember which they looked at together and which they looked at separately.  (Dkt. 185- 
1 at 108:2-23.)  Michael stated in his May 24, 2024 declaration that he destroyed the USB 
drives “with a hammer because I couldn’t think of a more efficient way to destroy them.” 
(Dkt. 242 § 34.) 

                                     18 

    NAMSA’s expert Faulkner does not state the USB drives contained any NAMSA 
information.  (Dkt. 185-3 § 38.)  According to Michael and Pamela’s expert Lanterman, 
the General USB Flash Disk USB Device bearing Serial Number 0520000000000046 had 
135 files that were accessed from Michael’s laptop between December 17, 2022 and 
January 3, 2024, and primarily existed within a folder called “FxS,” which relate to a 
software company (FlexSchema) owned by Michael.  (Dkt. 242 9 22; Dkt. 247 4 28; see 
also Dkt. 247-1 at 20-22 (list of file names accessed).)  Lanterman also provided a 
summary of what was accessed on the other USB devices and opined that “based on the 
materials that have been provided to me (including my understanding of what constitutes 
NAMSA data), there is no evidence to indicate that these devices were used to store and 
access NAMSA Confidential Information.”  (Dkt. 247 49] 28-29.) 
    NAMSA’s expert Faulkner also identified eleven USB devices which had been 
plugged into Pamela’s personal computer.  (Dkt. 185-3 at 16  § IV.B.1.)  His summary 
table is reproduced below. 

                Bisel           pee  iy                 Ay!         EV 
                0901 be21a0047bd37860 
                2a7368341844084f75al 
           Other   O0f6b64c2cc1640aa5045d 
           Disks   31             USB SanDisk 3.2Gen1   NO NAME     2ED77DC6    6/14/2022 
           Other                Lexar USB Flash Drive 
           Disks   AA6TZHIP3OXPWBIT  USB Device       Lexar       89302B87    10/14/2023 
           Other   22121210173839445156  General UDisk USB 
           Disks   07             Device                   00014D30    10/24/2023 
           Card                Generic- SD/MMC 
           Reader  _058F84688461       USB Device                          1/2/2024 
           Other   001CCOEC2F39EAC095  Kingston DT 100 G2 
           Disks   CB0042          USB Device       KINGSTON    AOEFAICI    1/11/2024 
           Other   0013729945E6EAC0951  Kingston DT 100 G2 
           Disks   30087           USB Device       KINGSTON    A70DDDDB   1/11/2024 
           Other                USB MEMORY BAR 
           Disks       fa7b3ece        USB Device                          1/11/2024 
           Other   SNDK2F07152A447074  SanDisk Cruzer Micro 
           Disks   07             USB Device                 3B691AFD    1/11/2024 
           Other                Memorex Travel Drive 
           Disks   07A609030AAEB193   CL USB Device      TRAVELDRIVE  —89EF31F1     1/11/2024 
           Other   60A44C3FAC-       Kingston DataTraveler 
           Disks   DBF 160796E0CF6     3.0 USB Device      KINGSTON             1/11/2024 
                                         AmericanPre- 
           Other                SanDisk Cruzer Glide   clinica_Video- 
           Disks   04001217081320202042  USB Device       Export       4893F1BD    1/11/2024 

                                     19 

(Dkt. 185-3 at 16 § IV.B.1.)                                              
    As the table indicates, a “Card Reader” was accessed on January 2, 2024 and 

seven “Other Disks” were accessed on January 11, 2024.  (Dkt. 185-3 at 16 § IV.B.1.)  
The seven USB devices accessed on January 11, 2024 were a Kingston USB drive 
bearing Serial Number 0013729945E6EAC095130087 and volume number A70DDDDB 
(“Kingston Drive”), two other Kingston USB drives; a USB Memory Bar USB Device, a 
Memorex Travel Drive CL USB Device, and two SanDisk Cruzer USB devices, one of 
which had a volume name of “AmericanPreclinica_Video-Export.”  (Dkt. 185-3 at 16 § 

IV.B.1.)  In addition, a USB SanDisk 3.2Gen1 was accessed on June 14, 2022; a Lexar 
USB Flash Drive USB Device was accessed on October 14, 2023; and a General UDisk 
USB device was accessed on October 24, 2023.  (Dkt. 185-3 at 16 § IV.B.1.) 
    As to the SanDisk Cruzer USB device connected on January 11, 2024 with the 
volume name “American Preclinica_Video-Export,” Pamela testified that it contained 

only one video, which “was a very old marketing video” that used to be on the APS 
website, was still available on YouTube, and “talked about the facility probably 
somewhere circa 2012.”  (Dkt. 185 at 162:15-163:23.)  According to Pamela, she “said 
we don’t need this, it’s not relevant to anyone at this point because NAMSA has its own 
website.”  (Dkt. 185 at 163:1-2.)  Pamela’s brief provided the link for the YouTube 

video.  (Dkt. 215 at 25 n.5.)  Pamela also testified that she found the other SanDisk 
Cruzer USB device in February 2024 and this USB device (described by Latham counsel 
as having “Cabo” as a volume name or label) contained photos of a family trip to Cabo 
San Lucas in December 2021, which she provided it to her lawyer in February 2024.  
(Dkt. 185 at 168:8-20.)                                                   

    Based on analysis of USB and file/folder artifacts on Pamela’s personal laptop, 
NAMSA’s expert Faulkner identified the Kingston Drive as containing NAMSA 
information.  (Dkt. 185-3 ¶¶ 42, 44.)  Faulkner states that Pamela opened the following 
folders from the Kingston Drive on January 11, 2024:                      
      •    D:\Biocompatibility\Final Report Templates                    

      •    D:\General - Sample Prep (S-GN-SP)                            
      •    D:\In-Life Research- Biocompatibility - Animal Care (S-IL-BC-AC) 
      •    D:\In-Life Research - Biocompatibility - Operations (S-IL-BC-OP) 
      •    D:\In-Life Research - Toxicology (S-IL-TX)                    
      •    D:\In-Vitro Testing - General (S-IV-GN)                       

      •    D:\In-Vitro Testing - Cytotoxicity Operations (S-IV-CY-OP)    
      •    D:\In-Vitro Testing - Hemocompatibility (S-IV-HE-OP)          
(Dkt. 185-3 ¶ 42.)  On the same day, Pamela opened a Controlled Document named “S-
GN-SP-001 Rev B ISO Sample Preparation 09.18.12.docx” from the Kingston Drive.  

(Dkt. 185-3 ¶ 43.)                                                        
    Faulkner states in his April 26, 2024 declaration that the opened folders bear 
“similar names to files and folders on the NAMSA servers” and the “file name matches 
the name of a file on the NAMSA servers.”  (Dkt 185-3 ¶¶ 42-43.)  However, the 
NAMSA entities asserted in their brief that the “folders and file names [] precisely match 
the names of folders and files on NAMSA’s servers.”  (Dkt. 153 at 14.)  At the hearing, 
Latham counsel first described the folders as “match[ing] NAMSA folders on its 
confidential repository” (Dkt. 319 at 34:6-7) but later stated: 
     I was reminded on the break that I misspoke earlier. I said that those titles 
     matched the  names  of folders  on NAMSA’s  servers.  They  are  not  exact 
     matches. They are close. It was the best Mr. Faulkner was able to do was to 
     line them up, say these look a  lot like the folders that NAMSA keeps. 
     And I was mistaken to  say they exactly or to  suggest they exactly match 
     before. They don’t, but they are very, very close, but that’s also part of what 
     illustrates the problem. We just don’t know exactly what’s on them, and we 
     can’t simply go look at the NAMSA versions of the documents to know. 
(Dkt. 319 at 110:5-16.) 
     Lanterman states in his May 24, 2024 declaration that these eight folders and 
document were created on the Kingston Drive in 2012.  (Dkt. 230 4 44.)  The eight 
folders and the file accessed on January 11, 2024 were as follows: 

             Accessed                             Created on  | Modified 
                                                USB drive 
             04:38:12 PM_ | Templates                    04:22:34 PM 
             01/11/2024  |D:\In-Life Research - Biocompatibility-  | 10/03/2012  |N/A 
             oiges0PM  [animal     SLBA      [oxsoaor  | 
             04:39:01 PM _ | Operations (S-IL-BC-OP)            04:59:48 PM 
             04:39:04 PM                            05:00:24 PM 
             04:39:05 PM                            05:02:16 PM 
             04:39:07 PM_|  Operations (S-IV-CY-OP)            05:02:16 PM 
                      eee 
             04:39:21 PM                            04:55:12 PM 
             04:39:21 PM_ | GN-SP-001 Rev B ISO Sample Preparation | 04:58:11 PM | 2? 03:09:54 
                      09.18.12.docx                           PM 
             04:39:54 PM _ | (S-IV-HE-OP)         _          05:02:16 PM 
(Dkt. 230 ¥ 43.) 

                                    22 

    Lanterman further states that the Kingston Drive was disconnected from Pamela’s 
laptop 2 minutes and 40 seconds after it was connected.  (Dkt. 230 ¶ 45.)  Lanterman 

further opines that of the USB devices not produced by Pamela, only two may contain 
NAMSA data—the 5045 SanDisk Drive containing the PST file and the Kingston Device 
from which the eight folders and single file from 2012 were accessed.  (Dkt. 230 ¶ 48; 
see also id. ¶ 47.)                                                       
    Pamela and Michael’s expert Lanterman provided the following information 
regarding the other USB devices that were connected to Pamela’s personal laptop.  (Dkt. 

230 ¶ 47.)  One of them was the 5045 SanDisk Drive containing the PST file, which was 
only attached to her personal laptop on June 14, 2022.  (Dkt. 230 ¶ 47.)  One was a Lexar 
USB Flash Drive USB Device, last connected and only connected to the laptop on 
October 14, 2023, which contained two .mp4 files.  (Dkt. 230 ¶ 47.)  Another was a 
General UDisk USB Device, last connected and only connected to the laptop on October 

24, 2023, which contained two .mp4 files, each bearing a woman’s name as a filename.  
(Dkt. 230 ¶ 47.)  Pamela states these video files were used to prepare a tribute video for 
her mother’s memorial service.  (Dkt. 217 ¶ 7.)  Another was a “Generic SD/MMC USB 
Device” (“highly like[ly] an SD card reader”), which was only connected to Pamela’s 
personal laptop on January 4, 2024 with nothing to indicate files were accessed from this 

device.  (Dkt. 230 ¶ 47.))  Pamela stated this was a docking station used to allow her 
laptop to display to a monitor.  (Dkt. 217 ¶ 6.)                          
    Lanterman also discussed three Kingston USB devices that were last connected 
and only connected to the laptop on January 11, 2024.  (Dkt. 230 ¶ 47.)  One of them was 
the Kingston Drive containing the eight folders and file having NAMSA information.  
(Dkt. 230 ¶ 47.)  As to the second, no files were accessed from Pamela’s laptop.  (Dkt. 

230 ¶ 47.)  As to the third, the following three folders were accessed from Pamela’s 
laptop on January 11, 2024:                                               
              o  D:\Job Documents                                        
              o  D:\Training Videos                                      
              o  D:\Handouts                                             

(Dkt. 230 ¶ 47.)  NAMSA has not argued that these folders contained NAMSA 
information or that their destruction constituted spoliation.             
    There were two SanDisk Cruzer USB devices.  (Dkt. 230 ¶ 47.)  Based on the 
serial numbers, one of them contained the APS video accessed on January 11, 2024.  
(Dkt. 230 ¶ 47; Dkt. 185-3 at 16 § IV.B.1.)  The other contained two .jpg photo files 
accessed on January 11, 2024, and based on the serial number, is the SanDisk Cruzer 
USB device that Pamela produced in February 2024 containing the Cabo vacation photos.  
(Dkt. 230 ¶ 47; Dkt. 217 ¶ 8; Dkt. 185-3 at 16 § IV.B.1.)                 
    Finally, Lanterman identified a Memorex Travel Drive CL USB Device and a 
Memory Bar USB Device.  (Dkt. 230 ¶ 47.)  Both were last and only connected on 
January 11, 2024, and no files were accessed from those devices.  (Dkt. 230 ¶ 47.)  
    Lanterman opined that there was no evidence that the Michael Seagate Drive 

(serial number NABAFEDS) had ever been connected to Pamela’s personal laptop.  (Dkt. 
230 ¶ 49; see also Dkt. 185-3 ¶ 4 (identifying the Michael Seagate Drive by serial 
number “NABAFEDS”).)                                                      
H.   NAMSA Files Suit                                                     
    NAMSA filed this action against Pamela, Michael, and Phoenix Preclinical on 

February 2, 2024.  (See generally Dkt. 1.)  The initial Complaint alleged that Pamela and 
Phoenix Preclinical engaged in misappropriation of trade secrets under the Defend Trade 
Secrets Act, 
18 U.S.C. § 1836
 et seq.; Michael and Pamela breached their respective 
Confidentiality Agreements; and Michael engaged in commercial defamation.  (See 
generally Dkt. 1.)  Also on February 2, 2024, the NAMSA entities sued Michael in the 
District of Delaware asserting claims for breach of contract (where the contract at issue 

has a Delaware forum selection clause), trade secret misappropriation, and related causes 
of action.  (See Dkt. 81 at 2.)  The Delaware action was transferred to the District of 
Minnesota and consolidated with the Minnesota action.  (Dkts. 81, 84.)  The NAMSA 
entities filed an Amended Complaint reflecting this consolidation (Dkt. 97), which is the 
operative pleading.                                                       

I.   Michael Copies and Destroys Data and Devices over the Weekend of     
    February 2, 2024                                                     

    Michael testified at his deposition that on February 2, 2024, after NAMSA filed 
this lawsuit, he purchased a Lenovo laptop for the sole purpose of wiping the data from 
Michael Seagate Drive.  (Dkt. 185-1 at 78:18-79:21.)  He testified that he also reset the 
operating system of the Lenovo laptop, which “didn’t make any sense” (presumably 
because “there was no data on that computer” since its “only purpose” was wiping the 
Michael Seagate Drive), but he wanted “to make sure that there was no [sic] lingering 
anything on the computer.”  (Dkt. 185-1 at 78:4-21, 80:4-17.)  He also testified that he 
had purchased a 2-TB Western Digital Passport Drive.  (Dkt. 185-1 at 83:5-18.)  
According to Michael:                                                     

    The Seagate hard drive had a compilation of personal and NAMSA-related 
    documents. At the time, again, I was not thinking straight and I wanted to 
    wipe the Seagate drive clean, and, therefore, I transferred all the documents 
    over to Passport. Which made no sense whatsoever, but that’s what I did. So 
    now I have a Passport hard drive that has the same material that the Seagate 
    hard drive had on it. Didn’t help myself.                            

(Dkt. 185-1 at 84:9-17.)                                                  
    Michael further testified that he used a Lenovo computer purchased on February 2, 
2024 to wipe some, but not all, of the Seagate files off the Western Digital Passport 
Drive.  (Dkt. 185-1 at 85:17-87:22.)  He testified that he wanted to retain personal 
pictures and be more selective in wiping the “things that I knew I should not have had.”  
(Dkt. 185-1 at 88:4-13.)  Michael testified that he knew, when he wiped the Michael 
Seagate Drive and deleted all the evidence on it, that he had a duty to preserve evidence 
relevant to the lawsuit he had just been served with.  (Dkt. 185-1 at 63:9-13.)  He also 
testified that he knew that his agreement with NAMSA included returning its property 
(including files) when his employment with NAMSA ended and that he failed to do so.  
(Dkt. 185-1 at 35:6-37:11, 38:10-14.)                                     
    After his deposition, the NAMSA entities sent Madel PA (“Madel”), which at 
some point took over Michael’s representation from Dorsey, an email asking about a 
Lenovo computer having a serial number containing “2861” (“2861 Lenovo Computer”).  
(Dkt. 184-3 ¶ 5; Dkt. 244-1; Dkt. 244-2.)  In a declaration dated April 22, 2024, Michael 
stated that he was only asked about “a Lenovo computer” and “your Lenovo computer” 
during his deposition, that NAMSA did not ask him about “specific computers” during 
his deposition even though they had referred to the 2861 Lenovo Computer in a letter 
marked as an exhibit during his deposition,7 and that he was not trying to evade the truth 

during his deposition.  (Dkt. 184-3 ¶¶ 5-6.)  He then stated:             
    After the lawsuit was filed, I purchased a Western Digital Passport external 
    hard drive and a Lenovo laptop on February 2, 2024 from Best Buy, which I 
    assume to be the “2861 Computer.” I did not put any data on this Computer. 
    I used it only as a passthrough to move documents from the 5-terabyte 
    Seagate  hard  drive  to  the  Western  Digital  Passport  external  hard  drive 
    (forensic images of both of which have been produced to NAMSA in this 
    litigation). After transferring all the data from drive to drive, I played around 
    with  the  settings  as  the  computer  was  very  slow  to  respond  and  not 
    functioning well before wiping the Seagate drive and resetting the operating 
    system on the 2861 Computer. After resetting the operating system, the 2861 
    Computer froze up with a blue screen and was not functional even with 
    turning on and off.                                                  

    I then disposed of the “2861 Computer” in a construction dumpster in a 
    commercial area near my house in Maple Grove the morning of Saturday, 
    February 3. I regret doing this, too, but again, I was in a state of panic, not 
    doing things that made any sense.                                    

(Dkt. 184-3 ¶¶ 7-8; see also Dkt. 242-3 ¶¶ 7-8.)  Michael was unable to retrieve the 2861 
Lenovo Computer.  (Dkt. 184-3 ¶ 8.)                                       
    Michael then stated in the April 22, 2024 declaration that he had purchased a 
second Lenovo laptop (“5951 Lenovo Computer”), which he used to wipe the Western 
Digital Passport Drive.  (Dkt. 184-3 ¶ 7.)  Michael stated that he purchased the 5951 
Lenovo Computer on February 3, 2024, acknowledged that NAMSA has questioned the 

7    The Court understands the reference to this letter to be making the point that 
NAMSA was aware of the 2861 Lenovo Computer before Michael’s deposition and 
therefore could have asked him about it more specifically.                
purchase date because a website shows its warranty was activated in November 2023, and 
said he has “no idea why the warranty would have begun on November 26, 2023.”8  (Dkt. 

184-3 ¶¶ 9-10.)                                                           
    According to NAMSA’s expert Faulkner, the disposal of the 2861 Lenovo 
Computer means he cannot determine what information “may have been stored, 
transferred, accessed, or used on this Lenovo computer,” and the destroyed data could 
have provided additional information regarding other USB devices connected to the 2861 
Lenovo Computer.  (Dkt. 185-3 ¶ 26.)  Based on Faulkner’s review of the Western 

Digital Passport Drive, between February 3 and February 4, 2024, approximately 120,000 
of the over 140,000 files that had been copied onto that drive had been wiped, rendering 
their data and file metadata irretrievable.  (Dkt. 185-3 ¶ 29.)  Faulkner also opined that an 
additional wiping process was run on February 4, 2024, which overwrote 264 GB of data 
on the Western Digital Passport Device.  (Dkt. 185-3 ¶ 29.)  According to Faulkner, “due 

to this wipe process, I am not able to fully determine what NAMSA Confidential 
Information may have been stored, transferred, accessed, or used on the 2TB Western 
Digital drive directly,” although he “was able to reconstruct some information about the 
2TB Western Digital drive and the files it contained prior to wiping by using some active 
files and some of the limited, recoverable forensic artifacts that remained on the 2TB 

Western Digital drive.”  (Dkt. 185-3 ¶ 31.)  This includes evidence that Michael may 


8    The NAMSA entities have not made arguments regarding the warranty activation 
date and the purchase date in connection with this Motion.                
have copied more than 26,000 of NAMSA’s Controlled Documents and over 39,000 of 
NAMSA’s biocompatibility files.  (Dkt. 185-3 ¶¶ 48-56.)                   

    Michael provided the Michael Seagate Drive and Western Digital Passport Drive 
to Faulkner on February 5, 2024.  (Dkt. 185-3 ¶¶ 16, 30.)  Faulkner also has images of the 
5951 Lenovo Computer (which Michael reset on February 4, 2024) and Michael’s 
personal HP laptop.  (Dkt. 185-3 ¶¶ 4, 18-19.)                            
    Michael testified as to why he wiped the Michael Seagate Drive:      

    When the lawsuit came to our attention on Friday, I panicked, lost my mind. 
    This was something that I had on this drive that nobody knew about; not even 
    Pam, my wife. So, at that point in time, I felt, obviously, not good about 
    having material that I shouldn’t have had. I felt not good about having 
    material that was a secret to my wife, and knew that, based on her activities, 
    that this was not going to be good for what she was working towards and 
    very excited about in her personal life.                             

(Dkt. 185-1 at 61:25-62:9.)                                               
    In his April 22, 2024 declaration, Michael stated under penalty of perjury he 
“deleted these files because he panicked when the lawsuit was filed,” in particular 
because he “was afraid” that Pamela’s business, Phoenix Preclinical, “would be 
wrongfully threatened” by his retention of those files—“which she had no idea” that 
Michael had kept.  (Dkt. 184-3 ¶ 11.)  He further acknowledged that he had no reason to 
have those files, “for the most part, except my own nostalgia about build[ing] and 
running American Preclinical Services (‘APS’) for over 16 years.”  (Dkt. 184-3 ¶ 11.)  He 
further stated that he has never shared any APS or NAMSA documents with Pamela or 
anyone associated with, working with, or employed by Phoenix Preclinical.  (Dkt. 184-3 
¶ 12.)                                                                    
    Pamela was in Illinois with her father, who was undergoing cancer treatment, 
during the weekend of February 2, 2024, when Michael engaged in this conduct.  (Dkt. 

242 ¶ 31.)  Michael stated under penalty of perjury that Pamela had no role in his 
activities during the weekend of February 2, 2024.  (Dkt. 242 ¶ 31.)  Pamela stated under 
penalty of perjury that she did not hear about Michael’s actions until she returned to 
Minnesota from assisting her father, on February 5, 2024.  (Dkt. 217 ¶ 15.) 
J.   Michael’s iPhone                                                     
    Michael had his iPhone imaged on February 13, 2024 in “an abundance of 

caution.”  (Dkt. 242 ¶ 35.)  NAMSA’s expert Faulkner states that all text messages on the 
iPhone had been deleted before imaging.  (Dkt. 185-3 ¶ 34.)  Faulkner was able to 
ascertain that Michael’s iPhone had sent/received approximately 44,000 text messages 
between when it was first put into use on April 16, 2023 and February 13, 2024, when it 
was turned in for purposes of this litigation.  (Dkt. 185-3 ¶ 34.)  But “[t]he exact date and 

time when text messages were deleted is unknown.”  (Dkt. 185-3 ¶ 35.)  Based on 
Faulkner’s forensic review, one chat thread had an artifact showing that the most recent 
text message was sent on February 2, 2024, and two other chat threads had artifacts 
showing their most recent message was sent on February 10, 2024.  (Dkt. 185-3 ¶ 35.)  
“A total of 25 chat threads” (including those three) had artifacts indicating their most 

recent message was sent after December 13, 2023.  (Dkt. 185-3 ¶ 35.)  From this, 
Faulkner could conclude that those chat threads had been deleted after the date of the 
most recent message, e.g., that the 25 chat threads had been deleted on or after December 
13, 2023.  (See Dkt. 185-3 ¶¶ 35-37.)                                     
    When questioned about this, Michael testified that “[t]here shouldn’t have been 
any text messages on [his] phone” because he deletes his text messages after he receives 

a text, and this has “always” been his practice.  (Dkt. 185-1 at 89:7-90:20; see also Dkt. 
242 ¶ 35.)  He further testified that he did not delete any text messages during the period 
he was panicked about this lawsuit.  (Dkt. 185-1 at 90:21-24.)            
K.   Michael and Pamela’s Limited Waiver of the Marital Communications    
    Privilege                                                            

    Because the NAMSA entities seek to impute the consequences of Michael’s 
conduct the weekend of February 2, 2024 to Pamela (and thus to Phoenix Preclinical), the 
Court revisits the Confortis’ limited waiver of the marital communications privilege.  On 
April 5, 2024, Michael and Pamela agreed to waive the marital communications privilege 
for three categories of communications between them, one of which was “regarding 
alleged ‘spoliation’ of evidence up to and including the date and time it allegedly 
occurred with respect to that specific alleged ‘spoliation.’”  (Dkt. 130-3 at 5-6; Dkt. 130-
7 at 2.)  This means that to the extent Michael and Pamela had communications regarding 
the alleged spoliation, those communications before and including the date of each such 

instance are and were discoverable by NAMSA.                              
L.   Specific Sanctions Sought                                            
    The NAMSA entities seek sanctions in the form of adverse inferences as to 
Michael and Pamela and “terminating sanctions” as to Michael for the alleged spoliation.  
(Dkt. 153 at 7-8.)  All of the alleged spoliation relates to electronically stored information 

(“ESI”), namely the information contained on the USB drives destroyed by Pamela and 
Michael, Michael’s text messages, and the information contained on the Lenovo 
Computers, the Michael Seagate Drive, and the Western Digital Passport Drive.  (See 

Dkt. 153 at 24-26 (NAMSA entities identifying “intentionally destroyed evidence”).) 
    As to the adverse inferences, the NAMSA entities shifted their request from the 
specific inferences sought in their papers to a more general adverse inference against 
Michael and Pamela that the evidence destroyed was favorable to NAMSA and 
unfavorable to Defendants, stating this was sufficient to cure the prejudice.9  (Compare 


9    The NAMSA entities originally sought the following adverse inferences as to 
Michael:                                                                  

    1. Dr. Conforti had a duty to preserve evidence relating to NAMSA’s claims. 
    After that duty arose, he intentionally destroyed and thus failed to preserve 
    such evidence. These actions constitute spoliation.                  
     2. The evidence spoliated by Dr. Conforti was favorable to NAMSA and 
    unfavorable to Defendants, including because it would show:          
      a.  The spoliated evidence contained confidential, proprietary, and trade 
         secret information belonging to NAMSA;                          
      b.  Dr.  Conforti  misappropriated  NAMSA’s  confidential,  proprietary, 
         and trade secret information for prohibited purposes, including to 
         support the competitive business of Phoenix; and                
      c.  In  doing  so,  Dr.  Conforti  breached  his  RCA  and  Employment 
         Agreement.                                                      

    As to Pamela, the NAMSA entities also originally sought the following adverse 
inferences:                                                               

    1.  Ms. Conforti had a duty to preserve evidence relating to NAMSA’s 
      claims. After that duty arose, she intentionally destroyed and thus failed 
      to preserve such evidence. These actions constitute spoliation.    
    2.  The evidence spoliated by Ms. Conforti was favorable to NAMSA and 
      unfavorable to Defendants, including because it would show:        

      a.  The spoliated evidence contained confidential, proprietary, and trade 
         secret information belonging to NAMSA;                          
(Dkt. 153 at 29-30, with Dkt. 319 at 46:25-48:10.)  This more general request still seeks 
an adverse inference that the evidence destroyed by Michael was unfavorable to Pamela 

and Phoenix Preclinical.  (Dkt. 319 at 50:24-51:4.)  The “terminating sanction” sought 
against Michael is default judgment.  (Dkt. 153 at 30-34.)                
                    II.  LEGAL STANDARD                                  
    This case involves claims under both federal and state law.  (See generally Dkt. 
97.)  Nevertheless, “federal law applies to the imposition of sanctions for the spoliation of 
evidence.”  Sherman v. Rinchem Co., 
687 F.3d 996, 1006
 (8th Cir. 2012).   

    Rule 37 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure governs spoliation of ESI, as it is 
“intended to preempt use of other sources of sanctions – such [as] state law or the long-
established ‘inherent power’ doctrine.”  Alsadi v. Intel Corp., No. CV-16-03738-PHX-
DGC, 
2020 WL 4035169
, at *3 (D. Ariz. July 17, 2020) (quoting Stevens v. Brigham 
Young University-Idaho, No. 4:16-CV-530-BLW, 
2019 WL 6499098
, at *3 (D. Idaho 

Dec. 3, 2019)); see also 
28 U.S.C. § 2072
(b) (“All laws in conflict with such rules shall 
be of no further force or effect after such rules have taken effect.”); Fed. R. Civ. P. 
37(e)(1) advisory committee’s notes to 2015 amendment (“Federal circuits have 
established significantly different standards for imposing sanctions or curative measures 
on parties who fail to preserve [ESI] . . . Rule 37(e) . . . authorizes and specifies measures 


      b.  Ms. Conforti misappropriated NAMSA’s confidential, proprietary, 
         and trade secret information for prohibited purposes, including to 
         support the competitive business of Phoenix; and                
      c.  In doing so, Ms. Conforti breached her Employment Agreement.   

(Dkt. 153 at 29-30.)                                                      
a court may employ if information that should have been preserved is lost, and specifies 
the findings necessary to justify these measures.  It therefore forecloses reliance on 

inherent authority or state law to determine when certain measures should be used.”); 
Blazer v. Gall, No. 1:16-CV-01046-KES, 
2019 WL 3494785
, at *2 (D.S.D. Aug. 1, 
2019) (noting that application of Rule 37(e) “forecloses reliance on inherent authority”); 
see also Schlafly v. Eagle F., 
970 F.3d 924, 936
 (8th Cir. 2020) (stating a “court 
ordinarily should rely on the Federal Rules rather than its inherent power” to impose 
sanctions) (citation omitted); Sentis Grp., Inc. v. Shell Oil Co., 
559 F.3d 888, 899
 (8th 

Cir. 2009) (stating “the guidance from the Court is clear, and we emphasize that the 
better practice is to apply Rule 37 where appropriate and not allow an exercise of 
inherent power to obscure the Rule 37 analysis”) (cleaned up).            
    However, if a court determines “in its informed discretion” that a Rule is “not up 
to the task” to address bad-faith conduct, then it “may safely rely on its inherent power” 

to impose sanctions.  Schlafly, 
970 F.3d at 936
 (cleaned up).  In this case, “the best 
practice is to keep the structured analysis for a particular rule separate from the relatively 
unstructured analysis associated with inherent authority.”  Sentis, 
559 F.3d at 900
. 
    Rule 37(e) provides:                                                 
    (e) Failure to Preserve Electronically Stored Information. If electronically 
    stored information that should have been preserved in the anticipation or 
    conduct of litigation is lost because a party failed to take reasonable steps to 
    preserve  it,  and  it  cannot  be  restored  or  replaced  through  additional 
    discovery, the court:                                                

         (1)  upon  finding  prejudice  to  another  party  from  loss  of  the 
         information, may order measures no greater than necessary to cure the 
         prejudice; or                                                   
         (2) only upon finding that the party acted with the intent to deprive 
         another party of the information’s use in the litigation may:   

            (A) presume  that  the  lost  information was unfavorable  to  the 
               party;                                                    

            (B) instruct the jury that it may or must presume the information 
               was unfavorable to the party; or                          

            (C) dismiss the action or enter a default judgment.          

Fed. R. Civ. P. 37(e).  “The rule does not apply when information is lost before a duty to 
preserve arises” “in the anticipation or conduct of litigation.”  Fed. R. Civ. P. 37(e) 
advisory committee’s notes to 2015 amendment.                             
    As to Rule 37(e)(1), a court may award sanctions under that subdivision only if: 
(1) the information at issue should have been preserved in the anticipation or conduct of 
litigation; (2) a party failed to take reasonable steps to preserve the information; 
(3) information was lost as a result and the information cannot be restored or replaced by 
additional discovery; and (4) “upon finding prejudice to another party from loss of the 
information.”  Fed. R. Civ. P. 37(e)(1) advisory committee’s notes to 2015 amendment; 
see also Kramer v. Ford Motor Co., No. 12-1149 (SRN/FLN), 
2016 WL 7163084
, at *2 
(D. Minn. Feb. 3, 2016) (rejecting sanctions under Rule 37(e)(1), finding that “[a]s 
Plaintiffs have been given the information requested, it is clear that the information is 
(1) not lost, and (2) can be restored or replaced through additional discovery”).  
“Prejudice likely exists from lost or destroyed ESI if the lost or missing evidence would 
be different or more helpful to the party claiming spoliation than the evidence already in 
existence,” but “prejudice does not exist when there is no support for the speculation that 
the lost evidence would have affected the litigation.”  FA ND CHEV, LLC v. Kupper, No. 
1:20-CV-138, 
2022 WL 16699304
, at *3 (D.N.D. Aug. 31, 2022) (cleaned up).  

Destroyed evidence does not need to contain information that can be classified as a 
“smoking-gun” for prejudice to exist.  See Stevenson v. Union Pac. R.R. Co., 
354 F.3d 739, 748
 (8th Cir. 2004).  In some cases, prejudice can be satisfied by the nature of the 
evidence itself.  
Id.
                                                     
    Sanctions awarded under Rule 37(e)(1) should be no greater than necessary to cure 
any resulting prejudice.  See Fed. R. Civ. P. 37(e)(1) advisory committee’s notes to 2015 

amendment.  The range of sanctions available under Rule 37(e)(1) is “quite broad” and 
“[m]uch is entrusted to the court’s discretion.”  
Id.
                     
    As to Rule 37(e)(2), this subdivision “does not include a requirement that the court 
find prejudice to the party deprived of the information” to impose a sanction of an 
adverse inference or default judgment.  See Fed. R. Civ. P. 37(e)(2) advisory committee’s 

notes to 2015 amendment.  “This is because the finding of intent required by the 
subdivision can support not only an inference that the lost information was unfavorable to 
the party that intentionally destroyed it, but also an inference that the opposing party was 
prejudiced by the loss of information that would have favored its position.”  Fed. R. Civ. 
P. 37(e)(2) advisory committee’s notes to 2015 amendment.                 

    However, Rule 37 (e)(2) does require “a finding that the party acted with the intent 
to deprive another party of the information’s use in the litigation.”  
Id.
  “This finding may 
be made by the court when ruling on a pretrial motion, when presiding at a bench trial, or 
when deciding whether to give an adverse inference instruction at trial.”  
Id.
  It is 
important to emphasize that “[n]egligent or even grossly negligent behavior does not 
logically support that inference.”  Id.; see also EPAC Techs., Inc. v. HarperCollins 

Christian Publ’g, Inc., No. 3:12-CV-00463, 
2018 WL 1542040
, at *18 (M.D. Tenn. Mar. 
29, 2018) (“Rule 37(e)(2)’s drafters included its intent standard with a specific purpose: 
to reject cases that had authorized an adverse-inference instruction ‘on a finding of 
negligence or gross negligence.’”) (quoting Rule 37(e)(2) advisory committee’s note to 
2015 amendment); Wolff v. United Airlines, Inc., No. 1:18-CV-00591-RM-SKC, 
2019 WL 4450255
, at *4 (D. Colo. Sept. 17, 2019) (declining to impose a severe sanction 

under Rule 37(e)(2) where Plaintiff “produced no evidence to suggest that Defendant, 
when failing to suspend its automatic deletion of emails, acted with the intent to deprive 
Plaintiff of that evidence”) (citations omitted).                         
    The Eighth Circuit has explained that Rule 37(e)(2) requires “a finding” of “intent 
to deprive” and does so for a specific reason: “Precisely because deciding a case based on 

hypothesized evidence is strong medicine, Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 37(e)(2)(A) 
expressly states that an adverse presumption requires a finding that electronically stored 
information was lost because one party ‘acted with the intent to deprive another party of 
the information’s use in the litigation.’”  Auer v. City of Minot, 
896 F.3d 854, 858
 (8th 
Cir. 2018) (citation omitted); see also Scott v. Plummer, No. 5:19-CV-00079 BSM-PSH, 

2020 WL 13801523
, at *1 (E.D. Ark. Jan. 29, 2020) (citation omitted) (“Scott has also 
not shown that the defendants acted in bad faith by destroying the video, a showing 
necessary to impose stronger sanctions under Rule 37(e)(2) such as a spoliation 
instruction or default judgment.”).                                       
    “However, because intent ‘rarely is proved by direct evidence,’ a court imposing 
spoliation sanctions ‘has substantial leeway to determine intent through consideration of 

circumstantial evidence, witness credibility, motives of the witness in a particular case, 
and other factors.’”  Kelley as Tr. of BMO Litig. Tr. v. BMO Harris Bank N.A., 
657 B.R. 475
, 485 (D. Minn. 2022) (quoting Morris v. Union Pac. R.R., 
373 F.3d 896, 901
 (8th 
Cir. 2004)); see also Paisley Park Enters., Inc. v. Boxill, 
330 F.R.D. 226
, 236 (D. Minn. 
2019) (same).  In sum, the intent to deprive (sometimes referred to as “bad faith”) “can be 
proved indirectly” and a party need not “find a smoking gun” before seeking sanctions 

under this section.  Auer, 
896 F.3d at 858
.  “[A] party’s conduct satisfies Rule 37(e)(2)’s 
intent requirement when the evidence shows or it is reasonable to infer that [the] party 
purposefully destroyed evidence to avoid its litigation obligations.”  Est. of Hill by & 
through Grube v. NaphCare, Inc., No. 2:20-CV-00410-MKD, 
2022 WL 1464830
, at *11 
(E.D. Wash. May 9, 2022) (citation omitted).                              

    Sanctions in the form of an adverse inference instruction or entry of default 
judgment are extreme and should not be given lightly.  Rao v. St. Jude Med. S.C., Inc., 
631 F. Supp. 3d 678
, 712 (D. Minn. 2022) (quoting Zubulake v. UBS Warburg LLC, 
220 F.R.D. 212, 219-20
 (S.D.N.Y. 2003)).  This is because “[i]n practice, an adverse 
inference instruction often ends litigation-it is too difficult a hurdle for the spoliator to 

overcome.”  
Id.
  The advisory committee’s notes to the 2015 amendment to Rule 37(e)(2) 
state: “Courts should exercise caution, however, in using the measures specified in 
(e)(2).”  Fed. R. Civ. P. 37(e)(2) advisory committee’s notes to 2015 amendment.  
Indeed, “[f]inding an intent to deprive another party of the lost information’s use in the 
litigation does not require a court to adopt any of the measures listed in subdivision 
(e)(2).”  
Id.
                                                             

    “The initial determination the court must make is a determination of when the 
defendant’s duty to preserve evidence was triggered.”  E*Trade Secs. LLC v. Deutsche 
Bank AG, 
230 F.R.D. 582, 587
 (D. Minn. 2005) (citation omitted).  “A party is obligated 
to preserve evidence once the party knows or should know that the evidence is relevant to 
future or current litigation.”  Paisley Park, 330 F.R.D. at 232 (citations omitted); see also 
Cooley v. Target Corp., No. 20-2152 (DWF/DTS), 
2022 WL 3647859
, at *3 (D. Minn. 

Aug. 24, 2022) (same), appeal dismissed, No. 22-3251, 
2023 WL 3115399
 (8th Cir. Jan. 
18, 2023); The Valspar Corp. v. Millennium Inorganic Chems., Inc., No. 13-CV-
3214(ADM/LIB), 
2016 WL 6902459
, at *4 (D. Minn. Jan. 20, 2016) (“The courts of this 
District have phrased this standard as holding the obligation to preserve evidence begins 
when a party knows or should have known that the evidence is relevant to future or 

current litigation.”) (cleaned up).  This duty arises when litigation is “reasonably 
foreseeable.”  Fed. R. Civ. P. 37(e) advisory committee’s notes to 2015 amendment. 
    “The duty to preserve evidence extends to those persons likely to have relevant 
information – the key players in the case, and applies to unique, relevant evidence that 
might be useful to the adversary.”  Rao, 631 F. Supp. 3d at 712 (cleaned up).  This duty 

“must be viewed from the perspective of the party with control of the evidence.”  Id. at 
711 (quoting Paisley Park, 330 F.R.D. at 233); see also Vogt v. MEnD Corr. Care, 
PLLC, No. 21-CV-1055 (WMW/TNL), 
2023 WL 2414551
, at *8 (D. Minn. Jan. 30, 
2023), R. & R. adopted sub nom., 
2023 WL 2414531
 (D. Minn. Mar. 8, 2023).  “The 
court should be sensitive to the party’s sophistication with regard to litigation in 
evaluating preservation efforts; some litigants, particularly individual litigants, may be 

less familiar with preservation obligations than others who have considerable experience 
in litigation.”  Fed. R. Civ. P. 37(e) advisory committee’s notes to 2015 amendment.  As 
noted by the advisory committee:                                          
    A variety of events may alert a party to the prospect of litigation. Often these 
    events provide only limited information about that prospective litigation, 
    however, so that the scope of information that should be preserved may 
    remain uncertain. It is important not to be blinded to this reality by hindsight 
    arising from familiarity with an action as it is actually filed.     

Id.
                                                                       
    To be clear, Rule 37(e) “recognizes that ‘reasonable steps’ to preserve suffice; it 
does not call for perfection.”  Id.; see also Paisley Park, 330 F.R.D. at 233 (“The next 
question the Court must consider is whether the RMA Defendants took reasonable steps 
to preserve relevant ESI.  Even when litigation is reasonably foreseeable, a party is under 
no obligation to keep every shred of paper, every e-mail or electronic document and 
every backup tape.”) (marks and citation omitted).  That said, “when litigation is 
imminent or has commenced, a party cannot ‘blindly destroy documents and expect to be 
shielded by a seemingly innocuous document retention policy.’”  Kelley as Tr. of BMO 
Litig. Tr., 657 B.R. at 487 (quoting E*Trade Secs., 
230 F.R.D. at 589
).   
    “If spoliation is determined, the Court has broad discretion in determining an 
appropriate sanction and considers the culpability of the party and timing of the actions.”  
Peterson v. Washington Cnty., No. 18-2640 (DWF/ECW), 
2021 WL 2686119
, at *3 (D. 
Minn. June 30, 2021) (citing Dillon v. Nissan Motor Co., Ltd., 
986 F.2d 263, 268
 (8th 
Cir. 1993)).  Due to the severity of sanctions under Rule 37(e)(2), when discovery is 
ongoing, courts have found it appropriate to defer ruling until the record is complete: 

    The  Court  believes  that  Plaintiffs’  request  for  an  order  presuming  the 
    evidence destroyed was unfavorable to the RMA Defendants and/or for an 
    adverse inference instruction may well be justified. But given the fact that 
    discovery is still on-going, the record is not yet closed, and the case is still 
    some  time  from  trial,  the  Court  believes  it  more  appropriate  to  defer 
    consideration of those sanctions to a later date, closer to trial. See Monarch 
    Fire Protection Dist. v. Freedom Consulting & Auditing Servs., Inc., 
644 F.3d 633, 639
 (8th Cir. 2011) (holding that it is not an abuse of discretion to 
    defer sanction considerations until trial). At that point, the trial judge will 
    have the benefit of the entire record and supplemental briefing from the 
    parties regarding the parameters of any such instruction or presumption. 

Paisley Park, 330 F.R.D. at 237.                                          
    Finally, under some circumstances, a court may impute the destruction of evidence 
to parties who did not personally cause the spoliation under an agency theory.  See Vogt, 
2023 WL 2414551
, at *13; see also Danielson v. Huether, No. 4:18-CV-04039-RAL, 
2021 WL 217706
, at *6 n.7 (D.S.D. Jan. 21, 2021) (“Courts ordinarily analyze the 
attribution of fault to one party for another’s spoliation under principles of agency”), 
aff’d, No. 21-1556, 
2022 WL 259455
 (8th Cir. Jan. 28, 2022); Am. Builders & 
Contractors Supply Co. v. Roofers Mart, Inc., No. 1:11-CV-19 (CEJ), 
2012 WL 2992627
, 
at *6 (E.D. Mo. July 20, 2012) (“The Court agrees that general agency principals [sic] 
apply in determining whether to impose sanctions against a party for spoliation by its 
employees.”).                                                             
                        III.  ANALYSIS                                   
A.   When the Duty to Preserve Began                                      

    A prerequisite for Rule 37(e) sanctions is that the ESI at issue “should have been 
preserved in the anticipation or conduct of litigation.”  Fed. R. Civ. P. 37(e).  The 
NAMSA entities first argue that Michael and Pamela’s duty to preserve in this case arose 
no later than August 9, 2023, when Michael and his Dorsey counsel “spoke directly with 
NAMSA’s CEO and General Counsel about NAMSA’s concerns that both Dr. and Ms. 
Conforti were engaging in contractually and legally prohibited activities.”  (Dkt. 153 at 

23.)  Michael and Pamela disagree.  Michael argues that in August 2023, NAMSA only 
communicated a mere suspicion that he was helping Pamela create a competing business, 
but NAMSA’s sole basis for this belief was “the fact that they are married” and he made 
clear at that time that he was complying with his non-competition agreement.  (Dkt. 241 
at 8-9.)  Pamela makes the point that she did not attend this August 9, 2023 meeting.  

(Dkt. 215 at 25.)  She also argues that while this meeting “might” have put her on notice 
of a future claim by NAMSA alleging that Michael was in breach of his non-competition 
agreement, it in no way gave her notice that NAMSA was contemplating suing her for 
misappropriation of trade secrets or suggested that she had a duty to preserve evidence 
potentially relevant to any such claim.  (Id.)                            

    The August 28, 2023 letter sent by Latham counsel after the August 9, 2023 
meeting indicates that even NAMSA did not believe litigation was “reasonably 
foreseeable.”  (See Dkt. 221.)  This letter states that NAMSA contacted Michael because 
NAMSA had heard a “rumor” that Michael and Pamela “may be preparing to provide 
pre-clinical veterinary services in Minneapolis in the near future and were even looking 
at a building near NAMSA for the new business.”  (Id. at 4.)  This “rumor” prompted 

NAMSA to schedule a meeting with Michael.  (Id.)  In the letter, NAMSA acknowledged 
Michael’s denials that he was involved in Pamela’s business plans, reminded Michael of 
his obligations under the RCA, and closed with a request that Dorsey counsel inform 
Michael and Pamela “that NAMSA will be monitoring their business activities very 
closely.”  (Id. at 4-5.)  The August 28, 2023 letter also cautioned that if NAMSA “has 
reason to believe that Dr. Conforti is violating, or is about to violate, his obligations 

under the RCA, whether directly or indirectly, then it will take all appropriate action 
against him and anyone who is involved to protect its rights.”  (Id. at 5.)   
    These statements make clear that NAMSA did not believe it had a basis to file suit 
against Michael and Pamela at that time or that litigation was imminent.  This belief is 
confirmed by the fact that NAMSA did not circulate a Preservation Notice in August 

2023, but instead waited until December 12, 2023.  (Dkt. 298-3 at 2.)  NAMSA has not 
identified any reason why, when NAMSA did not believe litigation was imminent based 
on the August 2023 meeting and correspondence, Michael and Pamela would have done 
so.  The Court concludes that Michael and Pamela did not have a duty to preserve 
relevant evidence in anticipation of litigation in August 2023.  See Keller v. Pepsi 

Bottling Grp., Inc., No. CV 07-1473 (MJD/AJB), 
2007 WL 9735622
, at *1, 5 (D. Minn. 
Aug. 27, 2007) (finding letter threatening criminal proceedings based on failure to timely 
give plaintiff his vacation pay did not “constitute[] a clear sign of imminent litigation” for 
lawsuit alleging “(1) obstruction of workers’ compensation benefits, (2) retaliation for 
filing workers’ compensation claims, (3) failure to pay wages/vacation pay, (4) failure to 
timely pay wages/vacation pay, (5) failure to permit inspection of personnel record, 

(6) defamation, and (7) intentional infliction of emotional distress” where “[t]he letter 
stated that Plaintiff’s counsel wanted to review Plaintiff’s personnel file to examine a 
potential civil claim, but a letter sent the next day to Defendants only discussed vacation 
pay” and the plaintiff never asked to review his file over the next two and a half months). 
    The NAMSA entities contend, in the alternative, that Michael and Pamela’s duty 
to preserve evidence arose as of December 2023.  (Dkt. 153 at 9; Dkt. 319 at 15:13-15.)  

This is based on the following events on December 12-13, 2023:            
    •  On December 12, 2023, NAMSA circulated a Preservation Notice to certain of 
      its employees, including Jorgenson and Markuson, regarding the Confortis, and 
      stating that “the matter” arose from Michael’s potential violations of his 
      contractual obligations to NAMSA, including certain commitments not to 
      compete, and also his and Pamela’s “potential unlawful use of NAMSA’s 
      conditional information and other unlawful conduct.”  (Dkt. 286-1 at 3; Dkt. 
      298-3 at 2.)                                                       
    •  Michael and Pamela spoke with Jorgenson and Markuson on the same day that 
      NAMSA issued the Preservation Notice.  (Dkt. 298 ¶¶ 7-9; Dkt. 298-5; Dkt. 
      298-6; Dkt. 298-7.)                                                
    •  The day after NAMSA issued the Preservation Notice, on December 13, 2023, 
      Michael and Pamela met with Dorsey regarding “potential litigation” and, 
      within the next few days, were working on draft declarations over which they 
      assert the work-product protection.  (Dkt. 184-1 at 2-4, PRIV006394-95, 6412-
      14, PRIV006419-20, PRIV006424-26, PRIV006435-39; Dkt. 184-2 at 2,  
      PL02040-41, PL02043-48; Dkt. 185 at 254:2-22, 255:3-15.)10         

10   It appears that the parties exchanged their document preservation notices with an 
agreement that doing so would not constitute a waiver of the attorney client privilege 
(Dkt. 319 at 14:11-17), but the Confortis have not filed any preservation notice or 
provided any for in camera review.  During the June 28, 2024 hearing, the Court 
    Based on the record, the Court finds that Pamela and Michael reasonably foresaw 
litigation as of December 2023.  In addition to their conversations with Jorgenson and 

Markuson on December 12, 2023, the day NAMSA issued its Preservation Notice, 
Pamela and Michael had a conversation with Dorsey counsel about “potential litigation” 
the next day, began drafting declarations as of December 16, 2023, and have asserted that 
those December 2023 declarations are protected by the work product doctrine.  Courts 
have concluded that the duty to preserve attaches on the date a party begins asserting 
work product protection.  See Escamilla v. SMS Holdings Corp., No. 09-2120 

(ADM/JSM), 
2011 WL 13243580
, at *37 (D. Minn. June 28, 2011) (“Under this 
timeline, this Court finds that SMS’s duty to preserve relevant documents was triggered 
as early as March 11, 2008, when Zuniga filed her charge, as that is the date that SMS 
has asserted the work product privilege attached, and certainly no later than August 2009, 
when she commenced her suit.  Yet, SMS took no steps to preserve Gonzalez’s work 

computer at either time.  Instead, it was not until April 2010, that SMS located and 
preserved Gonzalez’s work computer, and it took no steps to preserve the information on 
the SMS file and print server and email Exchange server until July 2010.  In short, SMS 
cannot have it both ways.  It cannot assert that it was anticipating litigation as early as 
March 2008, upon the filing of the EEOC charge, and then maintain it had no duty to 

preserve documents bearing on that anticipated litigation.”), aff’d, No. 09-2120 

discussed provision of the draft declarations for in camera review with Dorsey counsel 
and directed counsel to meet and confer regarding any agreements as to waiver.  (Dkt. 
319 at 116:8-118:17.)  The draft declarations were not provided to the Court for in 
camera review.                                                            
ADM/JSM, 
2011 WL 5025254
 (D. Minn. Oct. 21, 2011); see generally PepsiCo, Inc. v. 
Baird, Kurtz & Dobson LLP, 
305 F.3d 813, 817
 (8th Cir. 2002) (“In order to protect work 

product, the party seeking protection must show the materials were prepared in 
anticipation of litigation, i.e., because of the prospect of litigation.”).  Here, Michael and 
Pamela cannot reasonably assert they did not anticipate litigation when they have asserted 
work product protection—which requires the materials at issue to be prepared in 
anticipation of litigation—over documents drafted on December 16, 2023 and when they 
were speaking to Markuson and Jorgenson the same day NAMSA issued its Preservation 

Notice to its employees (including Markuson and Jorgenson) and speaking with Dorsey 
counsel the next day.                                                     
    Nevertheless, Pamela argues she did not have a duty to preserve as of December 
2023 because the only potential claim she and Michael were aware of was a claim that 
Michael was breaching his non-competition agreement and she did not know that 

NAMSA might sue her until NAMSA actually did so on February 2, 2024.  (See Dkt. 215 
at 25-27; see also Dkt. 217 ¶¶ 12-13.)  This is really a two-part argument, first that 
Pamela did not know NAMSA might sue her at all and second that any duty to preserve 
was limited by the type of claim she thought NAMSA was asserting against Michael.  
Consistent with Pamela’s second argument, Michael also suggests the scope of any duty 

to preserve before February 2, 2024 should be limited because: “Trade secrets and 
confidential information were never discussed, and we had no clue that NAMSA had any 
concerns about these issues.”  (Dkt. 242 ¶ 29.)                           
    The Court is not persuaded by Pamela’s argument that she had no duty to preserve 
because she did not realize in December 2023 she might be a defendant.  It is true that as 

of August 2023, NAMSA appeared to be concerned only about Michael’s potential 
breach of contract, as demonstrated by the fact that NAMSA did not seek a meeting with 
Pamela and did not mention any alleged breach by Pamela in the August 28, 2023 
letter—even though it was Pamela’s business activities that gave rise to NAMSA’s 
concerns.  But “[t]he duty to preserve evidence extends to those persons likely to have 
relevant information – the key players in the case.”  Rao, 631 F. Supp. 3d at 712 (citation 

omitted).  Pamela—whose anticipated business was a topic of the August 9, 2023 
meeting and subsequent correspondence—clearly would be a key player in a potential 
future case.  Indeed, NAMSA threatened to take action in the August 28, 2023 letter 
against Michael and “anyone who is involved” if it believed he was violating his 
obligations under the RCA.  (Dkt. 221 at 4-5.)  While the Court finds that litigation was 

not reasonably foreseeable as of August 2023, NAMSA’s “anyone who is involved” 
statement at that time provides context for the events of December 2023.  Moreover, 
Michael’s declaration acknowledges that he and Pamela “believed that all of NAMSA’s 
allegations were about Pam, me, or both of us violating our non-compete restrictions.”  
(Dkt. 242 ¶ 29.)  This contradicts Pamela’s argument that she did not know NAMSA 

might sue her, at least as of December 2023.                              
    The Court also rejects Pamela and Michael’s distinction between potential non-
compete claims and the trade secret and other claims asserted in NAMSA’s February 2, 
2024 Complaint.  The Court understands the Confortis to be arguing that they did not 
have a duty to preserve evidence before February 2, 2024 unless it was relevant to a non-
compete claim against Michael.  Even if the Court accepted that the only claim 

contemplated by Pamela and Michael in December 2023 was a non-compete claim 
against Michael, the Court does not see how this duty would not include preservation of 
NAMSA information retained by Michael and Pamela after their employment ended.  
Whether Michael or Pamela had kept NAMSA information is plainly relevant to such a 
claim.  See Lexis-Nexis v. Beer, 
41 F. Supp. 2d 950, 952, 954
 (D. Minn. 1999) (stating 
defendant former employee “either knew or should have known that the Lexis-Nexis 

material he possessed was relevant to reasonably foreseeable litigation” when he started 
work at direct competitor a week after leaving plaintiff Lexis-Nexis).  To the extent there 
could be some evidence relevant to a trade secret claim but not a non-compete claim 
against Michael, Michael and Pamela have not articulated any reason why the NAMSA 
information at issue in this Motion falls into that category.  Moreover, Michael and 

Pamela—while not lawyers—are both highly educated and experienced business 
professionals who were consulting with Dorsey regarding potential litigation as of 
December 13, 2023.  See Fed. R. Civ. P. 37(e) advisory committee’s notes to 2015 
amendment (“The court should be sensitive to the party’s sophistication with regard to 
litigation in evaluating preservation efforts; some litigants, particularly individual 

litigants, may be less familiar with preservation obligations than others who have 
considerable experience in litigation.”); see generally In re Uponor, Inc., F1807 
Plumbing Fittings Prods. Liab. Litig., No. 11-MD-2247 ADM/JJK, 
2012 WL 2325798
, 
at *3 (D. Minn. June 19, 2012) (“As a general rule, an attorney’s knowledge is imputed to 
[their] client.”), aff’d, 
716 F.3d 1057
 (8th Cir. 2013).                  

    For all these reasons, the Court finds that Michael and Pamela’s duty to preserve 
evidence relevant to NAMSA’s breach of non-compete and confidentiality obligations 
and trade secret misappropriation claims began no later than December 13, 2023. 
B.   USB Drives Destroyed in January 2024                                 
    The first instance of alleged spoliation occurred in January 2024, when, as the 
NAMSA entities put it, Michael and Pamela “smashed with hammers numerous USB 

devices that had interacted with computers they used to access stolen NAMSA 
information in the weeks and months prior.”11  (Dkt. 153 at 24.)  NAMSA contends that 
“the timing of their destruction—well after they were aware of and preparing for future 
litigation—gives rise to a presumption of bad faith intent in destroying them.”  (Id. at 28.) 
    The Court begins with this “presumption of bad faith” argument.  The NAMSA 

entities cite E*Trade Securities LLC v. Deutsche Bank AG, 
230 F.R.D. 582, 589
 (D. 
Minn. 2005), to support their argument that the Court may presume the requisite intent 
from the timing of the destruction.  (Id. at 28.)  It is true that in E*Trade, the court relied 


11   The NAMSA entities make much of the fact that the Confortis destroyed the USB 
drives with a hammer.  The Court does not find the use of a hammer particularly 
persuasive as to an intent to deprive the NAMSA entities of information—rather than 
anyone else who might find the USB devices in the trash.  The NAMSA entities have 
never articulated why smashing the devices with a hammer before throwing them in the 
trash is so much more damning than throwing the USB drives in an operable form in the 
trash.  Either way, the USB devices would be unavailable to NAMSA.  In any event, 
based on NAMSA’s expert Faulkner’s testimony, it is not unreasonable for an innocent 
person to review data on a USB drive and try to delete the information it contains before 
disposing of the drive.  (See Dkt. 225 at 60:11-61:15.)                   
on Stevenson v. Union Pacific Railroad Co. for the proposition that where “the 
destruction of evidence occurs after litigation is imminent or has begun, no bad faith need 

be shown by the moving party.”  
230 F.R.D. at 589
 (citing Stevenson, 
354 F.3d at 747
-
48).  However, Stevenson did not go so far with respect to a presumption as the E*Trade 
language suggests or NAMSA argues.  Rather, the Eighth Circuit in Stevenson identified 
the timing of the destruction as one factor—among others—that a court should consider 
when making a “bad faith” determination for spoliation purposes:          

     The district court’s bad faith determination is supported by Union Pacific’s 
     act  of  destroying  the  voice  tape  pursuant  to  its  routine  policy  in 
     circumstances where Union Pacific had general knowledge that such tapes 
     would be important to any litigation over an accident that resulted in serious 
     injury or death, and its knowledge that litigation is frequent when there has 
     been an accident involving death or serious injury. While these are quite 
     general considerations, an important factor here is that a voice tape that is 
     the only contemporaneous recording of conversations at the time of the 
     accident  will  always  be  highly  relevant  to  potential  litigation  over the 
     accident. We conclude that this weighs heavier in this case than the lack of 
     actual knowledge that litigation was imminent at the time of the destruction. 
     Additionally, the record indicates that Union Pacific made an immediate 
     effort to preserve other types of evidence but not the voice tape, and the 
     district court noted that Union Pacific was careful to preserve a voice tape 
     in other cases where the tape proved to be beneficial to Union Pacific. The 
     prelitigation  destruction  of  the  voice  tape  in  this  combination  of 
     circumstances, though done pursuant to a routine retention policy, creates a 
     sufficiently strong inference of an intent to destroy it for the purpose of 
     suppressing evidence of the facts surrounding the operation of the train at 
     the time of the accident.                                           

354 F.3d at 747-48
.                                                       
    Further, the Stevenson decision is more nuanced that E*Trade suggests.   The 
sanctions imposed by the district court and upheld by the Eighth Circuit in Stevenson 
were “for the destruction of track maintenance records after the commencement of 
litigation and the filing of the plaintiffs’ request for production of documents on October 
25, 1999,” where the “most relevant” records would have been available as of the date of 

the request for production.  
Id. at 749
.  The Eighth Circuit also concluded that a finding 
of bad faith based on pre-litigation destruction of track records was an abuse of discretion 
where: “Union Pacific knew that litigation is possible when there has been a serious 
accident but did not consider whether, when the prelitigation destruction was occurring, 
there had been any notice in this case of potential litigation or that the track maintenance 
would be an issue or an alleged cause of the accident,” and “Union Pacific was not on 

notice that the track maintenance records should be preserved until it received the 
October 1999 request for production of documents, and the condition of the track was not 
formally put into issue until the second amendment to the complaint in May 2000.”  
Id.
   
    There is another reason why reliance on Stevenson and E*Trade is not persuasive 
as to a presumption: both decisions predate the 2015 amendment to Rule 37(e).  As 

discussed in Section II, Rule 37(e)(2) allows a court to impose sanctions “only upon 
finding that the party acted with the intent to deprive another party of the information’s 
use in the litigation.”  Fed. R. Civ. P. 37(e)(2) (emphasis added).  The advisory 
committee notes to the 2015 amendment to Rule 37 explain in detail why this language 
changed, including:                                                       

    Adverse-inference instructions were developed on the premise that a party’s 
    intentional loss or destruction of evidence to prevent its use in litigation gives 
    rise to a reasonable inference that the evidence was unfavorable to the party 
    responsible for loss or destruction of the evidence. Negligent or even grossly 
    negligent behavior does not logically support that inference.        

                             * * *                                       
    Similar reasons apply to limiting the court’s authority to presume or infer 
    that the lost information was unfavorable to the party who lost it when ruling 
    on a pretrial motion or presiding at a bench trial. Subdivision (e)(2) limits 
    the ability of courts to draw adverse inferences based on the loss of 
    information in these circumstances, permitting them only when a court 
    finds that the information was lost with the intent to prevent its use in 
    litigation.                                                          

Fed. R. Civ. P. 37(e)(2) advisory committee’s notes to the 2015 amendment (emphasis 
added).                                                                   
    The NAMSA entities cited several cases in a slide presentation provided at the 
June 28, 2024 hearing to support their argument that a court need not find intent to 
deprive to find spoliation after the duty to preserve arose.  Many of these cases issued 
before the 2015 amendment to Rule 37(e), do not address the 2015 amendment, imposed 
sanctions under inherent authority rather than Rule 37(e), or relied on conduct in addition 
to the destruction of evidence after a duty to preserve arose before relieving a court of its 
obligation to make a “bad faith” finding.  See, e.g., Gallagher v. Magner, 
619 F.3d 823, 845
 (8th Cir. 2010) (stating “a district court does not abuse its discretion by imposing 
sanctions, even absent an explicit bad faith finding, where a party destroys specifically 
requested evidence after litigation has commenced”) (emphasis added); In re Petters, 
606 B.R. 803
, 828, 828 n.221 (Bankr. D. Minn. 2019) (citing Ramirez-Cruz v. Chipotle 
Servs., LLC, No. 15-CV-4514-ADM-KMM, 
2017 WL 8947191
, at *4 (D. Minn. May 11, 
2017), which addressed spoliation sanctions under a court’s inherent authority); Valspar, 
2016 WL 6902459
, at *9 (did not address the effect of the 2015 amendment to Rule 
37(e)); see also Evenson v. Johnson Bros. Liquor Co., No. 18-CV-3188 (JRT/LIB), 
2020 WL 12948541
, at *11 (D. Minn. Nov. 12, 2020) (citing Valspar).            

    Further, to the extent these cases permit a court to impose an adverse inference 
based on timing alone (whether through a “presumption” of bad faith or otherwise), they 
do not require a court to do so.  Indeed, the Eighth Circuit has discussed what is required 
to find this “serious and specific sort of culpability,” explaining in one case that 
“allegations that incriminating voicemails, emails, and other electronic communications 
were lost because the city failed to properly search some computers, tablets, and phones; 

waited too long to search others; and generally failed to take basic steps necessary to find 
and preserve files that could be relevant to [the plaintiff’s] case” only “would at most 
prove negligence in the city’s handling of electronic information, not the sort of 
intentional, bad-faith misconduct required to grant an adverse presumption.”  Auer, 
896 F.3d at 858
.  The Court considers the timing of the destruction of the USB devices as one 

factor when determining intent.  See Paisley Park, 330 F.R.D. at 236 (“Intent rarely is 
proved by direct evidence, and a district court has substantial leeway to determine intent 
through consideration of circumstantial evidence, witness credibility, motives of the 
witnesses in a particular case, and other factors.”) (cleaned up).  But the Court will not 
use a presumption based on the timing of destruction as a shortcut for making a finding as 

to intent when there is additional relevant evidence before the Court.    
    As discussed in Section I.G, supra, Pamela and Michael both testified that they 
were cleaning their house in January 2024, including converting their college-age son’s 
room into a guest room, and they destroyed the USB drives while doing so.  (Dkt. 185 at 
160:7-161:24; Dkt. 185-1 at 105:16-106:1.)  With this backdrop, the Court turns to the 
USB devices accessed by Michael.  Over five days between January 3 and January 14, 

2024, Michael connected seven USB devices to his personal HP laptop, two of which 
were identified by NAMSA’s expert Faulkner as “Card Readers” (apparently docking 
stations) and five of which were USB drives for storage.  (Dkt. 185-3 at 15 § IV.A.7; Dkt. 
185-1 at 106:18-23.)  Two USB drives were accessed on January 3, two USB drives were 
accessed on January 6, and one USB drive was accessed on January 7, 2024.  (Dkt. 185-3 
at 15 § IV.A.7.)                                                          

    As an initial matter, the Court questions whether there was any duty to preserve 
the devices destroyed by Michael, as is required by Rule 37(e).  See Auer, 
896 F.3d at 858
 (finding that the duty to preserve pertains to relevant information).  NAMSA’s expert 
Faulkner did not state these USB drives contained NAMSA information or that anyone 
accessed NAMSA information from them.  (Dkt. 185-3 ¶ 38.)  Michael and Pamela’s 

expert Lanterman provided a summary of what files were accessed on these USB devices 
and opined that “based on the materials that have been provided to me (including my 
understanding of what constitutes NAMSA data), there is no evidence to indicate that 
these devices were used to store and access NAMSA Confidential Information.”  (Dkt. 
247 ¶¶ 28-29; see also Dkt. 247-1 at 20-22 (list of file names accessed).)  There is no 

evidence in the record from which the Court can conclude that the USB drives destroyed 
by Michael contained information that “should have been preserved.”  The NAMSA 
entities also do not identify any evidence demonstrating Michael had the requisite intent 
to deprive the NAMSA entities of whatever was on those USB drives when he destroyed 
them.  Instead, the NAMSA entities focus on the fact that they were destroyed after 
December 13, 2023 and lump the USB drives destroyed by Michael with those destroyed 

by Pamela a few days later—after the January 10, 2024 “town hall” meeting.  (See Dkt. 
153 at 23 (referring to “the now-smashed USB devices”); id. at 24 (“As one example . . . 
they smashed with hammers numerous USB devices.”).                        
    It is true that, as the NAMSA entities argue, no one can be certain what was on 
those USB drives because Michael destroyed them.  (See id. at 14, 23-25.)  But that can 
be true as to ESI deleted by any party in any lawsuit—including NAMSA.  Here, two 

USB drives were connected to Michael’s laptop on January 3, 2024; two were connected 
on January 6, 2024; and one was connected on January 7, 2024.  (Dkt. 185-3 at 15 § 
IV.A.7.)  The fact that Michael accessed the USB drives over several days in the 
beginning of January 2024 is consistent with Pamela and Michael’s explanation that they 
were cleaning house in conjunction with redecorating their son’s room after his 

Christmas break from college.  Nothing about this timing or the manner in which Michael 
accessed the USB drives—intermittently over a four-day period in early January 2024—
suggests he was acting in a panic or with the goal of destroying relevant evidence.  For 
the Court to conclude both that the USB drives contained information that should have 
been preserved and that Michael destroyed them to deprive NAMSA of their information 

based solely on the timing of their destruction would amount to the “hindsight” that Rule 
37(e) cautions against.  See Fed. R. Civ. P. 37(e) advisory committee’s notes to 2015 
amendment (“Often these events [that give rise to a duty to preserve] provide only limited 
information about that prospective litigation, however, so that the scope of information 
that should be preserved may remain uncertain.  It is important not to be blinded to this 
reality by hindsight arising from familiarity with an action as it is actually filed.”).  The 

Court finds that these two requirements of Rule 37(e)(2) are not met as to these USB 
drives.                                                                   
    As to Pamela, NAMSA’s expert Faulkner identified eleven USB devices which 
had been plugged into Pamela’s personal computer, one of which was a “Card Reader” 
accessed on January 2, 2024 and seven of which were “Other Disks” (e.g., USB drives) 
accessed on January 11, 2024.12  (Dkt. 185-3 at 16 § IV.B.1.)  The NAMSA entities state: 

“At least one of these drives contained at least nine confidential NAMSA folders on it—
relating to biocompatibility, animal care, operations, toxicology cytotoxicity operations, 
and hemocompatibility—but it is impossible to know how many others.”  (Dkt. 153 at 
24.)  In addition, one of the SanDisk Cruzer USB drives contained an APS marketing 
video from 2012 (Dkt. 185 at 162:15-163:23), which appears to be publicly available on 

YouTube (Dkt. 215 at 31 n.5 (providing YouTube link)).13  NAMSA also argues that the 
evidence on these USB drives “cannot be restored or replaced through additional 
discovery.”  (Dkt. 153 at 25.)                                            
    The NAMSA entities argue that Pamela destroyed these USB drives on January 
11, 2024 because she had learned about NAMSA’s January 10, 2024 “town hall” meeting 



12   The NAMSA entities do not allege spoliation based on the three USB drives 
plugged in on June 14, 2022; October 14, 2023; and October 24, 2023.      

13   As of the date of this Order, the YouTube video was publicly available.  See 
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Z6ZrPknC1Gk (last accessed November 27, 2024). 
regarding its investigation and preparation for litigation.  (See Dkt. 296 at 15-16 
(“Knowing she and Phoenix were implicated in a dispute with NAMSA and that 

NAMSA was investigating her use of NAMSA information, Ms. Conforti destroyed 
seven USB devices on January 11, 2024, two of which she confirmed contained NAMSA 
information.”).)  They rely on Pamela’s Counterclaims and the testimony of Phoenix 
Preclinical employee Danielle McCarthy to support this “town hall” theory.  (See id.)  
But, as explained below, the record does not support the NAMSA entities’ claim that 
Pamela knew about the investigation based when she destroyed the USB drives. 

    First, while the Counterclaims state word of this “town hall” meeting “spread 
quickly” (Dkt. 142 ¶¶ 35-43), they do not state Pamela or Michael learned of it on or 
before January 11, 2024.  Second, McCarthy’s testimony as to what Pamela knew about 
this meeting and the investigation and when she knew it is ambiguous.  McCarthy 
testified that she had heard from NAMSA employees that NAMSA was conducting an 

investigation into potential misconduct by Pamela and Michael in “early January of 
2024.”  (Dkt. 298-8 at 115:2-5.)  But McCarthy then testified that she could not recall if 
she first heard about the investigation before or after January 19, 2024.  (Dkt. 298-8 at 
115:13-17.)  And while McCarthy remembered speaking with Pamela about the 
investigation, she did not remember any details of the conversation, including whether 

Pamela knew about it before they talked.  (Dkt. 298-8 at 117:5-22.)  The Court finds that 
this muddled record does not support the NAMSA entities’ argument that Pamela knew 
of the January 10, 2024 “town hall” meeting when she accessed and destroyed the USB 
drives.                                                                   

    In evaluating intent, the Court has also considered the credibility of Michael and 
Pamela’s explanation for why they destroyed USB drives in January 2024.  (See Dkt. 185 
at 160:7-161:24; Dkt. 185-1 at 105:16-106:1 (describing house cleaning after son’s visit 
over Christmas break).)  As discussed in connection with Michael, there is nothing about 
the timing or manner in which he accessed the drives that supports a finding of intent to 
deprive.  And while the NAMSA entities focus on the January 11, 2024 date of Pamela’s 

access, the Court cannot reasonably infer from the record that she knew about NAMSA’s 
“town hall” meeting as of that date.                                      
    Other evidence supports Pamela’s credibility.  Pamela testified that some of the 
USB drives she disposed of were corrupted and “some didn’t have anything of value on 
them.”  (Dkt. 185 at 161:22-24, 163:24-164:6.)  She testified that she “plugged them all 

in to see if there was anything in terms of family photos or anything that we would need 
to retain.”  (Dkt. 185 at 161:20-22.)  Consistent with this testimony, one of the USB 
drives at issue—a SanDisk Cruzer—found in February 2024 had family photos from a 
trip to Cabo San Lucas.  (Dkt. 185 at 168:8-20.)  Pamela also stated in a declaration that 
two drives contained videos used to prepare a tribute video for her mother’s memorial 

service (Dkt. 217 ¶ 7), which is consistent with the fact that two drives contained .mp4 
video files, and two of those files bore women’s names as the filename (see Dkt. 230 ¶ 
47).                                                                      
    As to the eight folders and single file accessed from the Kingston Drive, the 
NAMSA entities have not disputed that those folders and documents were created in 

2012, years before NAMSA acquired APS.  (See Dkt. 230 ¶ 44 (describing creation date 
of folders and files); Dkt. 242 ¶ 7 (sale of APS to NAMSA closed on February 26, 
2021).)  The file and folders’ age does not mean they should not have been preserved, but 
it does support ie disposed of the USB drives because some were corrupted and in her 
view, “some didn’t have anything of value on them.”  (Dkt. 185 at 161:22-25, 163:24-
164:6; see also Dkt. 217 ¶ 10 (“I recall viewing the documents [on the Kingston Drive] 

briefly and determining that they were no longer relevant to anyone.”).)  Further, the 
NAMSA entities say that those files either “match” or are “similar” to files on the 
NAMSA servers.  (Dkt 185-3 ¶¶ 42-43; Dkt. 153 at 14; Dkt. 319 at 34:6-7, 110:5-16).  
This causes the Court to question whether the information contained in those 2012 
folders and the file “cannot be restored or replaced through additional discovery” such 

that Rule 37(e) sanctions are appropriate.  See Lexis-Nexis, 
41 F. Supp. 2d at 955
 
(declining to award sanctions where, among other things, “the vast majority of the 
information” on the disk at issue had been preserved on other devices).  Further, given 
the age of the files and the fact that NAMSA appears to have the files or very similar 
versions of them, the Court finds Pamela’s testimony that she did not think APS files 

from 2012 were of value credible.  The same is true for Pamela’s decision to dispose of 
the USB drive containing the APS marketing video from 2012.  It is unclear why anyone 
would need it and if anyone does, it is still available on YouTube.       
    The NAMSA entities make the point that it is “impossible to know how many 
other[]” files on the USB drives constitute NAMSA information.  (Dkt. 153 at 24.)  This 

is a fair point, and the Court does not mean to dismiss it—nor does the Court dismiss the 
fact that the destruction of the USB drives has limited its ability to determine this fact or 
whether the USB drives had been plugged into other devices.  Certainly, it is theoretically 
possible that Pamela and Michael plugged in each USB drive, ascertained that the USB 
drive contained NAMSA information without actually accessing a folder or file on that 
USB drive, and disposed of the USB drive so that NAMSA would not discover that fact, 

perhaps also copying the USB drives to computers or other devices that they also have 
not produced—and then perjured themselves to cover up their conduct.  But based on the 
record, the Court finds there is insufficient evidence (circumstantial or otherwise) to 
support this conclusion or for the Court to reasonably infer as much.  See Lexis-Nexis, 
41 F. Supp. 2d at 955
 (“The moving party must establish a reasonable possibility, based on 

concrete evidence rather than a fertile imagination, that access to the destroyed material 
would have produced evidence favorable to [their] cause.”) (cleaned up).  
    In sum, based on the Court’s careful consideration of the record with respect to 
Pamela’s destruction of these USB drives, there is an insufficient basis for the Court to 
find that Pamela destroyed the USB drives in January 2024 with the intent to deprive the 

NAMSA entities of the use of the information they contained.  To the extent the NAMSA 
entities argue that “bad faith” can be presumed because these USB drives were destroyed 
after the duty to preserve relevant evidence arose, the Court does not believe presuming 
that intent to deprive is reasonable in view of Pamela and Michael’s credible explanation 
for the destruction of these USB devices.  Finally, even if the Court did find the requisite 
intent, the Court is not persuaded that NAMSA has made enough of a showing to warrant 

an adverse inference based on the deletion of an APS video from 2012, several APS 
folders and files from 2012 (which it appears NAMSA has in a very similar form), and 
speculation about what the other USB devices contained.  See Fed. R. Civ. P. 37(e)(2) 
(“The remedy should fit the wrong, and the severe measures authorized by this 
subdivision should not be used when the information lost was relatively unimportant or 
lesser measures such as those specified in subdivision (e)(1) would be sufficient to 

redress the loss.”); FA ND CHEV, 
2022 WL 16699304
, at *3 (“Alternatively, prejudice 
does not exist when there is no support for the speculation that the lost evidence would 
have affected the litigation.”) (cleaned up).  The Court denies the Motion as to the USB 
devices destroyed in January 2024 insofar as it seeks sanctions under Rule 37(e)(2). 
    NAMSA also makes a cursory assertion that sanctions are appropriate under Rule 

37(e)(1).  (Dkt. 153 at 28 n.9 (“Sanctions are also appropriate under Rule 37(e)(1) 
because NAMSA has suffered prejudice from the Confortis’ spoliation of evidence.”).)  
As to the USB devices, it would be premature to award sanctions under Rule 37(e)(1) 
because NAMSA has not shown prejudice as to the folders and files on those USB 
devices.  As of the date of this Order, the YouTube video is publicly available.  And even 

if the folders and files on the Kingston Drive “cannot be restored or replaced through 
additional discovery,” given their similarity (or matching) to existing NAMSA folders 
and files, it is hard to see how the NAMSA entities are prejudiced by the disposal of the 
Kingston Drive for purposes of this lawsuit.                              
    It may be that additional evidence obtained through discovery will support 
findings of intent to deprive or prejudice.  If that is the case, nothing in this Order 

precludes the NAMSA entities from renewing their motion should they discover such 
information.  But based on the record, and for the reasons stated above, the Court finds 
that the requisite intent to deprive has not been shown as to the USB devices and that any 
request for sanctions under Rule 37(e)(1) is premature given the underdeveloped record 
as to both prejudice and the ability to restore or replace the information through 
additional discovery.  Consequently, the Court denies the Motion—without prejudice—as 

to the USB devices.                                                       
C.   Michael’s Spoliation Related to the Michael Seagate Drive, Western Digital 
    Passport Drive, and 2861 and 5951 Lenovo Computers                   

    NAMSA also seeks sanctions based on Michael’s destruction and wiping of the 
Michael Seagate Drive, Western Digital Passport Drive, and 2861 and 5951 Lenovo 
Computers.  (Dkt. 153 at 25-26.)  For the reasons stated below, the Court finds a sanction 
under Rule 37(e)(2) in the form of an adverse inference as to Michael based on his 
destruction of evidence over the weekend of February 2, 2024 is appropriate, but finds 
that there is no basis at this time for imputing any adverse inference to Pamela or Phoenix 
Preclinical.  The Court also finds that the language of the adverse inference and which 
parties and claims it applies to should be decided after the close of discovery and after the 
parties have fully briefed the issues.                                    
    1.   Michael’s Intent                                                
    Michael argues that he kept NAMSA information for “nostalgic” purposes, not 

business purposes, and that he destroyed evidence to prove he never used it for any 
business purpose rather than suppressing the truth.  (Dkt. 241 at 19-20.)  The first 
question is not why Michael kept NAMSA information, but whether he destroyed the 
information on the Michael Seagate Drive, the Western Digital Passport Drive, and the 
2861 and 5951 Lenovo Computers with “the intent to deprive another party of the 
information’s use in the litigation.”  See Fed. R. Civ. P. 37(e)(2).      

    In the Court’s view, there is no doubt that Michael had the requisite intent to 
deprive with respect to his destruction of evidence over the weekend of February 2, 2024.  
First, Michael testified:                                                 
    When the lawsuit came to our attention on Friday, I panicked, lost my 
    mind. This was something that I had on this drive that nobody knew about; 
    not even Pam, my wife. So, at that point in time, I felt, obviously, not good 
    about having material that I shouldn’t have had. I felt not good about 
    having material that was a secret to my wife, and knew that, based on her 
    activities, that this was not going to be good for what she was working 
    towards and very excited about in her personal life.                 

(Dkt. 185-1 at 61:25-62:9 (emphases added).)  Michael’s intent to deprive NAMSA of 
evidence is further supported by his April 22, 2024 declaration, where Michael states he 
“deleted these files because he panicked when the lawsuit was filed,” in particular 
because he “was afraid” that Pamela’s business, Phoenix Preclinical, “would be 
wrongfully threatened” by his retention of those files.  (Dkt. 184-3 ¶ 11.)   
    Michael argued in his brief that the question of intent should be left to the jury.  
(Dkt. 241 at 20-21.)  However, Madel counsel at the June 28, 2024 hearing made clear 
that Michael was not disputing his February 2024 conduct constituted spoliation 
(although counsel said he still disputes whether his intent was to deprive NAMSA of 

information) and instead focused on the question of the appropriate remedy.  (Dkt. 319 at 
76:20-77:12.)                                                             
    There is no need for the question of Michael’s intent to go to the jury.  Whatever 
the reason for his panic, it is clear that he deleted, wiped, and disposed of information and 
devices over the weekend of February 2, 2024 because he did not want the NAMSA 
entities to know he had NAMSA information and use it in this lawsuit, thus satisfying the 

intent requirement of Rule 37(e)(2).                                      
    2.   Prejudice                                                       
    Michael also argues that no sanctions are required despite his actions because 
NAMSA has failed to demonstrate prejudice as the result of his actions.  (Dkt. 241 at 21-
23.)  Whether the NAMSA entities have shown prejudice as to Michael’s February 2024 

destruction of evidence does not matter for purposes of Rule 37(e)(2).  See Skanska USA 
Civ. Se. Inc. v. Bagelheads, Inc., 
75 F.4th 1290
, 1311 (11th Cir. 2023) (“What’s more, 
Rule 37(e)(2) sanctions do not require any further finding of prejudice.”) (marks and 
citation omitted).  Under Rule 37(e)(2), “the finding of intent required by the subdivision 
can support not only an inference that the lost information was unfavorable to the party 

that intentionally destroyed it, but also an inference that the opposing party was 
prejudiced by the loss of information that would have favored its position.”  Fed. R. Civ. 
P. 37(e)(2) advisory committee’s notes to 2015 amendment; see also Jones v. Riot Hosp. 
Grp. LLC, 
95 F.4th 730, 736
 (9th Cir. 2024) (finding that under Rule 37(e)(2) a finding 
of intent supports the inference of prejudice, even for the most severe of sanctions, 
including dismissal).                                                     

    3.   Appropriate Sanctions                                           
    Given the finding of spoliation under Rule 37(e)(2), the Court must determine the 
appropriate remedy.  “If spoliation is determined, the Court has broad discretion in 
determining an appropriate sanction and considers the culpability of the party and timing 
of the actions.”  Peterson, 
2021 WL 2686119
, at *3 (citing Dillon, 986 F.3d at 268); see 
also In re Petters Co., 606 B.R. at 821 (“The imposition of sanctions under Rule 37 is 

within the Court’s discretion.”) (citations omitted), aff’d sub nom. Kelley as Tr. of BMO 
Litig. Tr., 
657 B.R. 475
.                                                 
    The NAMSA entities argue that the appropriate sanction for Michael’s intentional 
spoliation is default judgment.  (Dkt. 153 at 30-34.)  “Courts should select the least harsh 
sanction that can provide an adequate remedy.”  Jonathan R. v. Just., No. 3:19-CV-

00710, 
2024 WL 1339522
, at *10 (S.D.W. Va. Mar. 28, 2024) (quoting Nat’l Fair Hous. 
All. v. Bank of Am., N.A., No. SAG-18-1919, 
2023 WL 4669560
, at *7 (D. Md. Jan. 23, 
2023)).  Indeed, Rule 37’s advisory committee’s notes state, “Courts should exercise 
caution, however, in using the measures specified in (e)(2).”  Fed. R. Civ. P. 37(e)(2) 
advisory committee’s notes to 2015 amendment.  “In order to serve the prophylactic, 

punitive, and remedial rationales underlying the spoliation doctrine, the sanction should 
be designed to: ‘(1) deter parties from engaging in spoliation; (2) place the risk of an 
erroneous judgment on the party who wrongfully created the risk; and (3) restore the 
prejudiced party to the same position he or she would have been in absent the wrongful 
destruction of evidence by the opposing party.’”  Jonathan R., 
2024 WL 1339522
, at *10 
(quoting Jenkins v. Woody, No. 3:15CV355, 
2017 WL 362475
, at *18 (E.D. Va. Jan. 21, 

2017)).                                                                   
    The NAMSA entities rely on Calsep A/S v. Dabral, 
84 F.4th 304, 311-12
 (5th Cir. 
2023), CrossFit, Inc. v. Nat’l Strength & Conditioning Ass’n, No. 14-CV-1191 JLS 
(KSC), 
2019 WL 6527951
 (S.D. Cal. Dec. 4, 2019), OmniGen Rsch. v. Wang, 
321 F.R.D. 367
 (D. Or. 2017), and Wm. T. Thompson Co. v. General Nutrition Corp., 
593 F. Supp. 1443
 (C.D. Cal. 1984), in support of their request for default judgment against Michael.  

(Dkt. 153 at 31-32.)  However, the conduct warranting sanctions in these cases not only 
involved spoliation, but also the failure of the offending party to follow court orders.  See 
Calsep, 
84 F.4th at 310-15
; CrossFit, 
2019 WL 6527951
, at *13; OmniGen Rsch., 
321 F.R.D. at 371, 373-75
; Wm. T. Thompson, 
593 F. Supp. at 1448-49
.  That is not the case 
here.                                                                     

    The NAMSA entities also point to what they claim are Michael’s attempts to hide 
his spoliation during discovery as support for default judgment against him.  (Dkt. 153 at 
33.)  Specifically, they argue: “Worse, Dr. Conforti lied under oath about his destruction 
of the 2861 Laptop.  When asked if there were any other devices from which he deleted 
data relevant to this lawsuit other than his 5951 Computer, the Seagate Drive, and the 

Western Digital Drive, Dr. Conforti answered unequivocally, ‘No.’”  (Dkt. 153 at 
33(citing Dkt. 185-1 at 88:14-20).)  An allegation that a witness lied under oath is 
extremely serious, and the Court has thoroughly reviewed the record to evaluate this 
assertion.                                                                
    The cited portion of Michael’s April 12, 2024 deposition reads as follows: 
    Q.   Okay.  We’ve  discussed  resetting  the  operating  system  on  your 
         Lenovo computer, your wiping of files from the Seagate hard drive 
         and your wiping of files from the Passport hard drive. Are there any 
         other devices from which you deleted data relevant to this lawsuit? 

    A.   No, those are the only two devices that I deleted data from or had any 
         data on.                                                        

(Dkt. 185-1 at 88:14-21.)                                                 
    On April 19, 2024, Latham counsel sent a letter to Dorsey and Madel counsel 
saying “[i]t had come to [Latham counsel’s] attention” that Michael had not produced the 
2861 Lenovo Computer.  (Dkt. 244-1 at 3.)  Madel counsel responded on April 22, 2024 
by correctly pointing out that Latham counsel had been aware of the 2861 Lenovo 
Computer and possessed a forensic image of the 5951 Lenovo Computer (described as 
CFS_2.1) since March 9, 2024, before Michael’s deposition, as Latham counsel 
referenced both in a letter sent on that date.  (Dkt. 244-1at 2; see also Dkt. 244-2 at 7 
(March 9, 2024 letter).)  Then, in a declaration dated April 22, 2024, Michael stated that 
he was only asked about “a Lenovo computer” and “your Lenovo computer” during his 
deposition, that NAMSA did not ask him about “specific computers” during his 
deposition, and that he was not trying to evade the truth during his deposition.  (Dkt. 184-
3 ¶¶ 5-6.)                                                                
    The Court agrees that, for whatever reason, the deposition questioning did not 
specify or differentiate between the two Lenovo computers—even though NAMSA knew 
at the time of the deposition about the 2861 Lenovo Computer (by serial number) and 
that there was another Lenovo computer (described as CFS 2_1 in the March 9, 2024 
letter).  Moreover, after counsel’s question describing Michael’s “resetting the operating 
system” as to “your Lenovo computer” and “wiping” as to the Michael Seagate and 

Western Digital Passport Drives, counsel asked if Michael had “deleted data” from any 
other devices and he responded, “those are the only two devices that I deleted data from” 
(Dkt. 185-1 at 88:14-21)—making it clear that Michael viewed “wiping” as deleting data 
and “resetting the operating system” on a computer as something different.  Counsel 
could have asked Michael why he responded that he had deleted data on “only two 
devices” when he was asked about three, but they did not, indicating they understood the 

distinction he was making.  In fact, Michael consistently testified that he did not delete 
data from “the Lenovo computer” because he had only used that computer to transfer 
files and he distinguished between deleting data and resetting an operating system.14  
(Dkt. 185-1at 78:1-21; 82:2-17.)  Michael’s declaration as to the 2861 Lenovo Computer 
is consistent with this testimony.  (Dkt. 184-3 ¶ 7 (“I did not put any data on this 

Computer.  I used it only as a passthrough to move documents from the 5-terabyte 
Seagate hard drive to the Western Digital Passport external hard drive (forensic images of 
both of which have been produced to NAMSA in this litigation).”).)  The NAMSA 
entities’ assertion that Michael “lied under oath” relies on imprecise questioning and 
ignores the difference between deleting data and resetting an operating system—which 




14   The Court recognizes that resetting an operating system does delete data of a kind; 
the point is that—as the NAMSA entities know—Michael distinguished between 
resetting and deleting during his testimony.                              
they knew Michael thought was meaningful based on his testimony—and is otherwise 
unsupported.15                                                            

    To return to the point of the Motion, the Court finds that Michael should be 
sanctioned under Rule 37(e)(2) for his destruction of evidence over the February 2, 2024 
weekend, and that the appropriate sanction is an adverse inference.  However, the Court 
also finds that the language of the instruction, including which claims and parties it 
applies to, should be decided after the close of discovery and the parties have fully 
briefed the issue.  This is for several reasons.  First, the NAMSA entities originally 

sought very specific adverse inferences as to Michael and Pamela.  (Dkt. 153 at 29-30.)  
Not until the June 28, 2024 hearing did they seek a more general adverse inference.  (See 
Dkt. 319 at 46:3-48:10, 76:5-11.)  In response, the Confortis objected to the last-minute 
revision and stated their belief that the language of any adverse inference instruction 
should wait until the close of discovery.  (Dkt. 319 at 71:3-22, 81:4-15.)  At this point, 

given the NAMSA entities’ shifting positions as to the adverse inference instruction and 
“the fact that discovery is still on-going, the record is not yet closed, and the case is still 
some time from trial, the Court believes it more appropriate to defer consideration of 
those sanctions to a later date, closer to trial.”  Paisley Park, 330 F.R.D. at 237; see also 
Monarch Fire Prot. Dist. of St. Louis Cnty., 
644 F.3d at 639
 (“Here, the district court 

withheld ruling on Monarch’s Rule 37 motion for sanctions until the case proceeded to 


15   The Court expects a party or lawyer who accuses a witness of lying under oath to 
be able to fully support this serious allegation—which the NAMSA entities have not 
done here.                                                                
trial, noting that the appropriate sanction for Indellicati’s actions would likely be an 
adverse inference jury instruction.”).                                    

    There is another reason the Court thinks it appropriate to defer crafting the 
language of any adverse inference instruction.  The NAMSA entities ask the Court to 
extend any adverse inference as to Michael against Pamela and Phoenix Preclinical.  
(See, e.g., Dkt. 153 at 29 (asking for adverse inference that “Dr. Conforti misappropriated 
NAMSA’s confidential, proprietary, and trade secret information for prohibited purposes, 
including to support the competitive business of Phoenix”) (emphasis added); Dkt. 

319 at 51:1-4, 51:11-52:13 (arguing at June 28, 2024 hearing for imputation of any 
adverse inference as to Pamela and Phoenix Preclinical).)  The problem is that the 
NAMSA entities have not identified any real legal or factual basis for doing so.   
    As to the law, the NAMSA entities supported their imputation argument at the 
June 28, 2024 hearing with citations to Vogt v. MEnD Corr. Care, PLLC, No. 21-CV-

1055 (WMW/TNL), 
2023 WL 2414551
 (D. Minn. Jan. 30, 2023), and Woods v. Scissons, 
No. CV-17-08038-PCT-GMS, 
2019 WL 3816727
 (D. Ariz. Aug. 14, 2019).  Both of 
these cases rely on agency principles in the employment context.  See Vogt, 
2023 WL 2414551
, at *14 (“The CO Defendants are in a similar special relationship with the 
County based on their employment.  The CO Defendants are represented by the same 

counsel as the County.”); Wood, 
2019 WL 3816727
, at *6 (imputing liability for 
spoliation of non-party police department to employee police officer).  Other courts have 
analyzed imputation of spoliation under agency principles.  See, e.g., Danielson, 
2021 WL 217706
, at *6 n.7 (“Courts ordinarily analyze the attribution of fault to one party for 
another’s spoliation under principles of agency”); Am. Builders & Contractors Supply, 
2012 WL 2992627
, at *6 (“The Court agrees that general agency principals [sic] apply in 

determining whether to impose sanctions against a party for spoliation by its 
employees.”).                                                             
    Here, the NAMSA entities have not articulated any agency theory that would 
apply to Pamela and Michael.  They suggest that their marital relationship and business 
relationship at APS means that Michael must be providing advice and counsel to Pamela 
with respect to Phoenix Preclinical.  But Pamela has denied under oath that he has done 

so or is doing so.  (Dkt. 185 at 109:5-112:20.)  The NAMSA entities have offered no 
evidence to the contrary—not from Michael and Pamela’s depositions, not from their 
emails or Pamela’s text messages, not from their personal laptops examined by Faulkner, 
and not from the deposition of Phoenix Preclinical employee McCarthy.  The Court finds 
that the record at this time does not support imputing liability for Michael’s February 

2024 conduct to Pamela and Phoenix Preclinical.                           
    The NAMSA entities also have offered no evidence that Pamela told Michael to 
destroy or wipe the Michael Seagate Drive, the Western Digital Passport Drive, or the 
Lenovo Computers or that she knew of and agreed with his decision to engage in any of 
that conduct.  Based on the record, Pamela was in Illinois with her father, who was 

undergoing cancer treatment, during the weekend of February 2, 2024, when Michael 
engaged in this conduct.  (Dkt. 242 ¶ 31.)  Michael stated under penalty of perjury that 
Pamela had no role in his activities during the weekend of February 2, 2024 and Pamela 
stated under penalty of perjury that she did not hear about Michael’s actions until she 
returned to Minnesota from assisting her father, on February 5, 2024.  (Dkt. 242 ¶ 31; 
Dkt. 217 ¶ 15.)  Indeed, it is unclear whether the NAMSA entities are taking the position 

that Michael and Pamela are lying, or if they simply believe that Pamela and Phoenix 
Preclinical should be liable for Michael’s conduct because Pamela and Michael are 
married and because Michael admitted he was trying to protect Pamela and Phoenix 
Preclinical.  If the latter is NAMSA’s position, it is not supported by any authority.  It 
goes too far to impute Michael’s bad conduct to Pamela—even if he was doing it for 
her—absent Pamela’s agreement or acquiescence in such conduct.            

    Let there be no question as to how the Court views Michael’s intentional 
destruction of evidence over the weekend of February 2, 2024.  His conduct is incredibly 
serious, not to mention harmful to the administration of justice, and requires a sanction 
that commensurate with the damage he has caused—in this case, an adverse inference.  
See TLS Mgmt. & Mktg. Servs., LLC v. Mardis Fin. Servs., Inc., No. 3:14-CV-00881-

CWR-LRA, 
2018 WL 3673090
, at *1 (S.D. Miss. Jan. 29, 2018) (“A court does justice 
by finding truth.  That search requires evidence.  Intentionally destroying evidence, then, 
is more than a devious litigation strategy but a lethal attack on a court’s purpose and must 
be responded to in kind.”).  But as other courts have recognized, an adverse inference is 
often a litigation-ending device that should not be given lightly.  Rao, 631 F. Supp. 3d at 

712.  The Court finds that the language of the adverse inference should be determined 
after the close of discovery and after the parties have had the opportunity to fully brief the 
adverse inference instruction.  For these reasons, the Court finds Michael intentionally 
spoliated evidence on February 2 to 4, 2024 and should be sanctioned for that conduct, 
but also finds that the language of that adverse inference—and to which parties and 
claims it should apply—should be decided after the close of discovery and after all 

parties have had a fair opportunity to make arguments.                    
D.   Michael’s iPhone Texts                                               
    Finally, the NAMSA entities seek sanctions due to “Dr. Conforti’s thousands of 
deleted text messages.”  (Dkt. 153 at 27.)  This appears to be an exaggeration, apparently 
based on NAMSA’s expert Faulkner statement that Michael’s iPhone had sent/received 
approximately 44,000 text messages “between April 16, 2023 when the phone was first 

put into use and February 13, 2024, when the phone was turned in.”  (Dkt. 185-3 ¶ 34 
(emphasis added).)  Based on Faulkner’s review, one chat thread had an artifact showing 
that the most recent text message was sent on February 2, 2024 and two other chat 
threads had artifacts showing their most recent message was sent on February 10, 2024.  
(Dkt. 185-3 ¶ 35.)  “A total of 25 chat threads” (including those three) had artifacts 

indicating their most recent message was sent after December 13, 2023.  (Dkt. 185-3 ¶ 
35.)  From this, Faulkner could conclude that those chat threads had been deleted after 
the date of the most recent message, e.g., that the 25 chat threads had been deleted on or 
after December 13, 2023.16  (See id. ¶¶ 35-37.)  According to Faulkner: “The exact date 
and time when text messages were deleted is unknown.”  (Dkt. 185-3 ¶ 35.)     

    Michael testified that “[t]here shouldn’t have been any text messages on [his] 
phone” because he deletes his text messages after he receives a text, and this has 

16   It is unclear to the Court if other text messages (perhaps not a part of chat threads) 
were deleted after December 13, 2024 or after February 2, 2024.           
“always” been his practice.  (Dkt. 185-1 at 89:7-90:20; see also Dkt. 242 ¶ 35.)  He 
further testified that he did not delete any text messages during the period he was 

panicked about this lawsuit (that is, February 2 to 4, 2024).  (Dkt. 185-1 at 90:21-24.) 
    NAMSA argues that even accepting that it was Michael’s practice to delete his 
iPhone texts on a regular basis, it is not credible that he maintained this practice in good 
faith once he was made aware of this litigation and when he was panicking and 
destroying other evidence.  (Dkt. 153 at 27.)  Michael should have stopped deleting his 
text messages—to the extent they contained information that should have been preserved 

in anticipation of this lawsuit—as of December 2023.  See Kelley as Tr. of BMO Litig. 
Tr., 657 B.R. at 487.  But there are several problems with awarding sanctions under Rule 
37(e)(2) at this time.                                                    
    First, the NAMSA entities have not made any showing that the deleted text 
messages are not available from the persons who sent and received them—including 

Pamela.  Thus, it is unclear whether they “cannot be restored or replaced through 
additional discovery.”  See Fed. R. Civ. P. 37(e).  Second, the NAMSA entities try to 
show intent to deprive based on Michael’s destruction of evidence over the February 2, 
2024 weekend, but the Court finds this reasoning insufficient given the undisputed 
evidence that Michael regularly deleted his text messages before NAMSA filed this 

lawsuit.  Further, the forensic evidence does not show any message was deleted during 
the weekend of February 2, 2024, when Michael was panicking.  At this point, Michael’s 
conduct with respect to text messages appears more akin to negligence or gross 
negligence, which will not support a finding of intent under Rule 37(e)(2).  For these 
reasons, the Court declines to find Michael intended to deprive the NAMSA entities of 
these text messages and will not award sanctions under Rule 37(e)(2) based on their 

deletion.                                                                 
    The NAMSA entities also claim in a fairly conclusory fashion that they are 
entitled to sanctions under Rule 37(e)(1) because they have suffered prejudice due to the 
destruction of evidence.  (Dkt. 153 at 28 n.9; Dkt. 296 at 19.)  Again, they have not even 
shown Michael’s text messages are not recoverable from the persons who sent and 
received them, whether Pamela, Jorgenson, Markuson, or others.  See Fed. R. Civ. P. 

37(e)(1) advisory committee’s notes to 2015 amendment; Kramer, 
2016 WL 7163084
, at 
*2 (rejecting sanctions under Rule 37(e)(1) where information can be restored or replaced 
through additional discovery).  The NAMSA entities have also made little to no argument 
as to how they are prejudiced by the messages’ deletion.  See FA ND CHEV, 
2022 WL 16699304
, at *3 (“Depending on the nature of the evidence lost, prejudice may be shown 

merely by how impactful the evidence is determined to be.  Prejudice likely exists from 
lost or destroyed ESI if the lost or missing evidence would be different or more helpful to 
the party claiming spoliation than the evidence already in existence.  Alternatively, 
prejudice does not exist when there is no support for the speculation that the [lost] 
evidence would have affected the litigation.”) (cleaned up).  And nowhere do the 

NAMSA entities set forth for the Court what sort of sanctions are appropriate under Rule 
37(e)(1).  They do not even seek sanctions under Rule 37(e)(1) in their proposed order.  
(Dkt. 157.)  This confirms that awarding Rule 37(e)(1) sanctions based on a partial record 
and the NAMSA entities’ abbreviated argument would be premature.          
E.   Sanctions Pursuant to the Court’s Inherent Authority                 
    The NAMSA entities also ask the Court to award sanctions pursuant to its inherent 

authority.  (Dkt. 153 at 30.)  The Court declines to award sanctions or find spoliation 
outside the bounds of Rule 37 at this time for two reasons.  First, “[t]he exclusive nature 
of Rule 37(e) sanctions for the loss of ESI has been widely recognized.”  Alsadi, 
2020 WL 4035169
, at *3 (collecting cases).  While the Court could rely on its inherent 
authority if it believed Rule 37(e) was insufficient to decide this Motion, nothing suggests 
Rule 37(e) is not “up to the task.”  See Schlafly, 
970 F.3d at 936
 (cleaned up).  Second, 

given that discovery is not complete and the Court’s findings that there is no showing of 
intent to deprive as to the USB devices and Michael’s text messages, not to mention the 
incomplete record as to prejudice and whether some of the evidence at issue can be 
restored or replaced through additional discovery, it would be premature to award 
sanctions under the Court’s inherent authority.                           

                         IV.  ORDER                                      
    For the reasons stated above, and based upon all the files, records, and proceedings 
herein, IT IS ORDERED THAT: Plaintiffs North American Science Associates, LLC 
and NAMSA Holdco, LLC’s Motion for Sanctions Against Defendants Michael Conforti 
and Pamela Conforti for Evidence Spoliation (Dkt. 151) is GRANTED IN PART AND 

DENIED IN PART as follows:                                                
    1.   The Motion is GRANTED insofar as the Court finds Defendant Michael 
Conforti should be sanctioned under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 37(e)(2) in the form 
of an adverse inference for his destruction of evidence relating to the Michael Seagate 
Drive, Western Digital Passport Drive, and the 2861 and 5951 Lenovo Computers over 
the weekend of February 2, 2024, with the language of the adverse inference and to 

which parties and claims it applies to be decided after discovery is complete and the 
parties have had the opportunity to brief the issue; and                  
    2.   The Motion is otherwise DENIED without prejudice.               

DATED: November 27, 2024           s/Elizabeth Cowan Wright               
                                  ELIZABETH COWAN WRIGHT                 
                                  United States Magistrate Judge         

Reference

Status
Unknown