Google
employees
liberally
labeled
their
emails
as
“privileged
and
confidential”
and
spoke
“off
the
record”
over
chat
messages,
even
after
being
told
to
preserve
their
communications
for
investigators,
lawyers
for
the
Justice
Department
have
told
a
Virginia
court
over
the
past
couple
of
weeks.
That
strategy
could
backfire
if
the
judge
in
Google’s
second
antitrust
trial
believes
the
company
intentionally
destroyed
evidence
that
would
have
looked
bad
for
it.
The
judge
could
go
as
far
as
giving
an
adverse
inference
about
Google’s
missing
documents,
which
would
mean
assuming
they
would
have
been
bad
for
Google’s
case.
Documents
shown
in
court
regularly
display
the
words
“privileged
and
confidential”
as
business
executives
discuss
their
work,
occasionally
with
a
member
of
Google’s
legal
team
looped
in.
On
Friday,
former
Google
sell-side
ad
executive
Chris
LaSala
said
that
wasn’t
the
only
strategy
Google
used.
He
testified
that
after
being
placed
on
a
litigation
hold
in
connection
with
law
enforcers’
investigation,
Google
chat
messages
had
history
off
by
default,
and
his
understanding
was
that
needed
to
be
changed
for
each
individual
chat
that
involved
substantive
work
conversations.
Multiple
former
Google
employees
testified
to
never
changing
the
default
setting
and
occasionally
having
substantive
business
discussions
in
chats,
though
they
were
largely
reserved
for
casual
conversations.
LaSala
also
used
that
default
to
his
advantage
at
times,
documents
shown
by
the
government
in
court
revealed.
In
one
2020
chat,
an
employee
asked
LaSala
if
they
should
email
two
other
Google
employees
about
an
issue
and,
soon
after,
asked,
“Or
too
sensitive
for
email
so
keep
on
ping?”
LaSala
responded,
instructing
the
employee
to
“start
a
ping
with
history
turned
off.”
In
a
separate
2020
exchange,
LaSala
again
instructed
his
employee
to
“maybe
start
an
off
the
record
ping
thread
with
Duke,
you,
me.”
A
chat
discussion
between
Google
employees
about
how
to
communicate
potentially
sensitive
information.DOJ
exhibit
“It
was
just
how
we
spoke.
Everyone
used
the
phrase
‘off
the
record
ping,’”
LaSala
testified.
“My
MO
was
mostly
off
the
record,
so
old
tricks
die
hard.”
“It
was
just
how
we
spoke.
Everyone
used
the
phrase
‘off
the
record
ping.’”
Still,
LaSala
said
he
“tried
to
follow
the
terms
of
the
litigation
hold,”
but
he
acknowledged
he
“made
a
mistake.”
Shortly
after
a
training
about
the
hold,
he
recalled
receiving
a
chat
from
a
colleague.
Though
LaSala
said
he
turned
history
on,
he
wasn’t
sure
the
first
message
would
be
preserved.
LaSala
said
he
put
that
message
in
an
email
just
in
case.
In
general,
LaSala
said,
“We
were
really
good
at
documenting
...
and
to
the
extent
I
made
a
mistake
a
couple
times,
it
was
not
intentional.”
A
2019
document
addressed
to
two
business
leaders
labeled
“PRIVILEGED
&
CONFIDENTIAL.”Image:
DOJ
exhibit
Brad
Bender,
another
Google
ad
tech
executive
who
testified
earlier
in
the
week,
described
conversations
with
colleagues
over
chat
as
more
akin
to
“bumping
into
the
hall
and
saying
‘hey
we
should
chat.’”
The
DOJ
also
questioned
former
Google
executive
Rahul
Srinivasan
about
emails
he
marked
privileged
and
confidential,
asking
what
legal
advice
he
was
seeking
in
those
emails.
He
said
he
didn’t
remember.
Google
employees
were
well
aware
of
how
their
written
words
could
be
used
against
the
company,
the
DOJ
argued,
pointing
to
the
company’s
“Communicate
with
Care”
legal
training
for
employees.
In
one
2019
email,
Srinivasan
copied
a
lawyer
on
an
email
to
colleagues
about
an
ad
tech
feature
and
reminded
the
group
to
be
careful
with
their
language.
“We
should
be
particularly
careful
when
framing
something
as
a
‘circumvention,’”
he
wrote.
“We
should
assume
that
every
document
(and
email)
we
generate
will
likely
be
seen
by
regulators.”
The
email
was
labeled
“PRIVILEGED
and
CONFIDENTIAL.”
An
email
from
a
Google
sell-side
executive
reminding
colleagues
to
“communicate
with
care”
about
sensitive
topics.DOJ
exhibit
While
the
many
documents
shown
by
the
DOJ
demonstrate
that
Google
often
discussed
business
decisions
in
writing,
at
other
times,
they
seemed
to
intentionally
leave
the
documentation
sparse.
“Keeping
the
notes
limited
due
to
sensitivity
of
the
subject,”
a
2021
Google
document
says.
“Separate
privileged
emails
will
be
sent
to
folks
to
follow
up
on
explicit
[action
items].”
“We
take
seriously
our
obligations
to
preserve
and
produce
relevant
documents,”
Google
spokesperson
Peter
Schottenfels
said
in
a
statement.
“We have
for
years
responded
to
inquiries
and
litigation,
and we
educate
our
employees
about
legal
privilege. In
the
DOJ
cases
alone,
we
have
produced
millions
of
documents
including
chat
messages
and
documents
not
covered
by
legal
privilege.”
The
judge
in
Google’s
first
antitrust
battle
with
the
DOJ
over
its
search
business
declined
to
go
as
far
as
an
adverse
inference,
even
though
he
ruled
against
Google
in
most
other
ways.
Still,
he
made
clear
he
wasn’t
“condoning
Google’s
failure
to
preserve
chat
evidence”
and
said,
“Any
company
that
puts
the
onus
on
employees
to
identify
and
preserve
relevant
evidence
does
so
at
its
own
peril.
Google
avoided
sanctions
in
this
case.
It
may
not
be
so
lucky
in
the
next
one.”
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