Oracle Judge Unseals Papers that Buttress Antitrust Verdict
The judge didn't hesitate Friday to unseal corporate records in the Oracle antitrust case if specific documents would help him reach a decision.
SAN FRANCISCOU.S. District Court Judge Vaughn Walker Friday made it clear that that he wouldnt hesitate to unseal confidential documents, especially if some of those documents addressed key points in his decision in the Oracle antitrust trial. A gaggle of high technology companies that had to offer up testimony and confidential documents in the Oracle Corp. antitrust trial pleaded with Walker not to release some of the more sensitive material into the public record. Lawyers for Accenture, Automatic Data Processing Inc., Bearing Point, Cap Gemini, Deloitte Consulting, Ford Motor Co., Fidelity Investments, IBM, Lawson Software Inc., Microsoft Corp., PeopleSoft Inc., Target Corp., Nextel Communications Inc. and Verizon Corp. each took their turn before Judge Walker asking him not to unseal their records.
Click here to read about how Judge Vaughn Walker closely questioned Oracle and government attorneys during the closing arguments in the Oracle antitrust trial.
Court observers believe it will be the end of the month at the earliest before Walker releases his decision.
A media attorney, Erica Craven of the San Francisco law firm of Levy, Ram and Olsen, LLP, asked Walker to keep the publics "common law right to access" legal documents in an important case as the Oracle antitrust case.
Craven, who was representing several newspapers such as the San Francisco Chronicle, the Los Angeles Times, and the Contra Costa Times, said the court shouldnt keep records sealed based on the "speculation of what may happen" if they are made public.
However, Walker said he could not "willy-nilly open up" documents to public access. He said he had to weigh the competing interests of the companies wishing to keep proprietary information private with the public desire to see the documents.
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John Pallatto is eWEEK.com's Managing Editor News/West Coast. He directs eWEEK's news coverage in Silicon Valley and throughout the West Coast region. He has more than 35 years of experience as a professional journalist, which began as a report with the Hartford Courant daily newspaper in Connecticut. He was also a member of the founding staff of PC Week in March 1984. Pallatto was PC Week's West Coast bureau chief, a senior editor at Ziff Davis' Internet Computing magazine and the West Coast bureau chief at Internet World magazine.






