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Indiana Court Rules Melted Down Hard Drive Not Destruction of Evidence

An anonymous reader writes An Indiana court has ruled that a hard drive that was sent to recycling was not destruction of evidence. The ruling stems from a BitTorrent file-sharing case filed by Malibu Media where a defendant claimed that his hard drive had failed thanks to heavy use. Malibu claimed that the act was destruction of evidence and filed a motion demanding a default judgement. The court denied this motion suggesting that because the hard drive failed, there was no evidence to destroy in the first place.

5 of 181 comments (clear)

  1. I disagree... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    ...without knowing how the drive "failed" the court cannot prove that there was no evidence to destroy. I guess he never heard of drive recovery places that can recover some information from a majority of drives that "fail"

  2. Wow - interesting by xystren · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Lots of room for potential abuse, but an interesting judgement. I wonder if there will now be laws stating that dead hardware must be kept beyond the statute of limitation in case a lawsuit ensues. So what about all those "catastrophic failures" right before the suit if filed? A double edged sword none the less.

  3. Presumption of innocence by aepervius · · Score: 4, Insightful

    "without knowing how the drive "failed" the court cannot prove that there was no evidence to destroy."

    correct me if I am wrong, but AFAIR the US justice system, It is up to the prosecution side to prove there was evidence on teh HD, not on the side of the defense there was not. Therefore from the court in absence of proof of existence of evidence, the assumption should be by default there was no evidence. IF the prosecution has proof tehre was evidence they are free to provide them. But until then by presumption of innocence, the court has to assume the recyclage was lawful. Otherwise if the presumption was it was destruction of evidence, then it amounts of a presumption of guiltiness.

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    1. Re:Presumption of innocence by doubledown00 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Well, it's a little more than "probably". They have to show a preponderance of evidence. It's not enough to say, "this guy's a big movie fan and had 200gig of downloads every month and never rented a movie or went to a theater, so he probably was pirating movies".

      Preponderance of the evidence is a 51 percent standard......i.e. "more likely than not".
      Barring any statutorily necessary elements of the Plaintiff's claims, if the jury finds that to be sufficient then the dude can be found liable. It's all circumstantial, certainly. But I have guys doing decades of prison time based on circumstantial evidence, and that was "beyond a reasonable doubt". With what you lay out above, I could *easily* see a jury making a few key inferences and finding liability in that.

      Never try and predict what the 12 geniuses in the box will or will not do.

  4. Re:Hello microwave by tibit · · Score: 4, Insightful

    older non-PMR drives

    Those drives are now museum artifacts, so your concern is of no practical use. No mainstream 2.5/3.5 in. hard drive manufactured in the last 15 years is recoverable after a zero-out.

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