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SEC
& EEOC:
Attack Delays Investigations
By Margaret Cronin Fisk
National Law Journal
September 17, 2001
Additional details
emerged Friday about the effect of the collapse of 7 World Trade Center
on investigations being conducted by the New York offices of the
Securities and Exchange Commission and the Equal Employment Opportunity
Commission, both of which were housed in the building.
The SEC has not quantified the number of active cases in which
substantial files were destroyed. Reuters news service and the Los
Angeles Times published reports estimating them at 3,000 to 4,000.
They include the agency's major inquiry into the manner in which
investment banks divvied up hot shares of initial public offerings
during the high-tech boom.
The EEOC said documents from about 45 active cases were missing and
could not be easily retrieved from any backup system. One of these
cases was a sexual harassment charge filed on Sept. 10 against Morgan
Stanley, one of the prime corporate victims of the World Trade Center
disaster.
A statement from the commission said that "we are confident that we
will not lose any significant investigation or case as a result of the
loss of our building in New York. No one whom we have sued or whose
conduct we have been investigating should doubt our resolve to continue
our pursuit of justice in every such matters."
But the short-term problems will be immense, said Gregory Joseph of New
York's Law Offices of Gregory Joseph.
"Court papers can largely be reconstituted, but work product has to be
reconstructed," he said. "This will cause delays in court and will
require significant reduplication of effort." Some data, he added,
"won't be recreatable."
"Ongoing investigations at the New York SEC will be dramatically
affected because so much of their work is paper-intensive," said Max
Berger of New York's Bernstein Litowitz Berger & Grossmann. "This
is a disaster for these cases."
"The SEC will have some difficulty, but the bounce-back will come
relatively easily," predicts Harvey Goldschmid, Dwight professor of law
at Columbia University and former general counsel of the SEC. "It will
throw things off for a period of time, but most of what's important can
be regained. They will have to reconstruct these documents. But most of
this was backed up or in Washington. They've lost some transcripts but
even they're available."
EEOC Records Destroyed
The EEOC's New York office, which was housed in 7 World Trade Center,
sustained no loss of life. But all the agency's records were destroyed.
Many of the files are backed up in the computer system, but a
substantial number of documents are simply gone, said Spencer Lewis,
the EEOC district director. Depositions and notes were not scanned into
computers and are lost. With depositions and interviews, the agency
will be contacting court reporters "and hoping that they've got them so
we can reconstruct files," Lewis said. This covers about 45 active
cases, including a recent action against Morgan Stanley.
But employment litigators believe the effect here, too, will be
transitory.
"The EEOC is decimated as far as office space goes," but any problems
are "only short-term," said Michael Weber of the New York office of
Littler Mendelson. "They will get back to business." The agencies will
be seeking documents from the private law firms and defendants, Weber
notes. "My sense is that we will cooperate," he noted. "Our goal is not
to take advantage of this catastrophe."
"A lot of their records they'll have online, so they'll just reprint
them out," adds Harkins. "The EEOC is in a better position than the
SEC, because the SEC has a lot more confidential files."
Cached/copied 07-23-09 -
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