Skretny, William M., United States District Judge
Trial court granted defendants' motion to compel access to electronically stored information for one victim of a plane crash, including her social media accounts, emails, text messages and instant messages, to determine whether the victim was domiciled in the United States or China. The victim's domicile at the time of the crash determined what law applied to her claims against the airline.
The victim, together with the other 44 passengers and crew on board Flight 3407, died when the plane crashed into a house on final approach to the Buffalo Niagara International Airport. All pending actions resulting from the crash were consolidated for discovery in an MDL under Judge Skretny in the Western District of New York.
Defendants requested written authorizations permitting them obtain the victims electronic communications between 2004 and the crash date of February 12, 2009 that related to the victim's domicile. At the time of her death, the victim was living in New Jersey and working at PriceWaterhouseCoopers on an L-1 Visa.
The court rejected plaintiffs' argument that the requests were barred by statute, was an invasion of her privacy, sought irrelevant information and were overly broad:
The court denied defendants request for costs and fees on the motion.Defendants' request for production of Yao's electronic communications between 2004 and February 12, 2009, and each claimant's electronic communications from 2004 through the present, including social media accounts, emails, text messages, and instant messages, as they relate to Yao's domicile on February 12, 2009, and each claimant's loss of support claims, is granted. Defendants' request for written authorizations to obtain electronic communications is denied at this time, subject to renewal if Plaintiff's production is insufficient. This Court notes that Plaintiff has sworn that certain on-line accounts and electronic communications do not exist for himself, Yao, and the claimants, or that such accounts have been searched and do not contain responsive documents. (Pan Aff., ¶¶ 2–6.) This Court accepts those representations as true. Nonetheless, Plaintiff shall endeavor to find any responsive electronic communications that may exist and produce them to Defendants.