Robbins Geller Rudman & Dowd has been at the center of what I've
previously called the confidential witness conundrum: the
pervasive phenomenon in which former employees cited in
securities class action complaints refute their statements to
plaintiffs' lawyers when they're contacted by defense lawyers.
Securities class action lawyers, as you know, aren't permitted
to serve discovery demands on defendants until they've gotten
past dismissal motions, so their complaints rely heavily on
allegations by confidential informants. But former employees are
often subject to confidentiality provisions in severance
agreements. Depending on which side you believe, plaintiffs'
lawyers routinely misrepresent the information their
investigators have received from confidential witnesses - or
former employees get scared and recant when their identity is
revealed and their severance is endangered.
Defense lawyers have claimed that just about every
significant plaintiffs' firm has lied about information obtained
from former employees, but Robbins Geller (which, after all,
files more cases than anyone else in the securities class action
bar) has been on the receiving end of more defense accusations
than anyone else. That was a dangerous dynamic for the firm,
since every new accusation refers back to the old ones.
But Robbins Geller just got good news in a hard-fought fight
over confidential witnesses in a case in Georgia, continuing the
firm's run of success in fending off allegations of
misrepresentation. Last week, U.S. District Judge William Duffey
of Atlanta decided to forgo any action against the plaintiffs' firm, even though Robbins Geller's own investigator in the case
he was overseeing, a class action against SunTrust Banks, had
contacted the court to contradict what the firm told the judge
about its lawyers' contacts with a recanting informant. Duffey
said Robbins Geller's behavior was not "in keeping with the
conduct expected of attorneys practicing before this court," but
concluded that the firm hadn't committed misconduct amounting to
"an actionable violation of the Federal Rules of Civil
Procedure."
Duffey's order ended a five-month headache for Robbins
Geller that started last September, when Desiree Torres, an
independent investigator working on the SunTrust case for the
firm, contacted the judge's clerk to say that she was troubled
by information Robbins Geller had presented to the court.
(Duffey explained the backstory in an order in October.)
Plaintiffs' lawyers had supposedly told the judge that they
didn't know one of their witnesses had left the bank before
events alleged in their pleadings. But Torres said that wasn't
true. She told the court that Robbins Geller lawyers were
present when she interviewed the former SunTrust employee. Not
only did Robbins Geller know when he left the bank, she said,
but also knew that he had disavowed knowledge of the bank's
conduct after his departure.
Duffey ordered a hearing on the apparent discrepancy between
the firm's assurances and Torres's account. (That order, in
turn, prompted problems for defense counsel in another Robbins
Geller case, an ongoing class action against Regions Financial
in federal court in Birmingham, Alabama. A lawyer for individual
defendants in the Regions case sent a letter to Duffey, claiming
that there were similar allegations against Robbins Geller in
the Alabama case and asking the judge to keep the SunTrust
hearing open to the public. The letter sparked an angry response
from the federal judge overseeing the Regions case, who had
already certified a class despite defense arguments that five
confidential informants had recanted their purported statements
to the plaintiffs' firm.) At the Dec. 18 hearing before Duffey
in the SunTrust case, Torres testified about "her concerns about
the manner in which the information she collected from fact
witnesses in this action was presented to the court," according
to last week's order. Robbins Geller then offered its version of
its litigation and case-management strategy, the judge said.
Duffey wasn't happy about what he heard. "The court remains
troubled by the conduct of plaintiffs' counsel in failing to
correct representations made in their pleadings," he wrote. "The
decision not to correct the record after counsel became aware of
the court's reliance on plaintiffs' representations is
perplexing and disappointing." Nevertheless, he said, Robbins
Geller hadn't committed an actionable violation, and since he
had already dismissed the class action, he decided not to take
further action. Torres has resigned as an investigator, Duffey
noted in a footnote.
Duffey is the second federal judge to hold a hearing on
confidential witnesses in a Robbins Geller securities class
action. As we've reported, U.S. Senior District Judge Jed Rakoff
ordered testimony last fall from recanting witnesses in a case
against Lockheed. After a seven-hour session, Rakoff told both
sides that he found the plaintiffs' investigator (not Torres, in
this case) to be credible but was concerned about relying on
double-hearsay evidence from the informants. The Lockheed case
subsequently settled in December, though terms have not yet been
disclosed.
Robbins Geller hasn't heard the last of the confidential
witness issue. The 7th Circuit Court of Appeals is considering
the firm's appeal of the dismissal of a class action against
Boeing, which was tossed after a confidential witness recanted
statements attributed to him. Both Robbins Geller and Boeing
have already sent Judge Duffey's order to the appeals court.
Robbins partner Patrick Coughlin told me the firm is
"satisfied" with Duffey's order. "We believe we reacted as
quickly as we could under the circumstances to make the record
clear," he said. SunTrust counsel Timothy Mast of Troutman
Sanders declined to comment.
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