Showing posts with label Lawsuits. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lawsuits. Show all posts

Thursday, November 16, 2017

Social Media And YOUR Legal Proceeding?


In the United States, some 81 percent of people have some form of a social media profile. Social media is a great way to share your life with friends, but it is increasingly becoming a source of evidence in legal proceedings..

It is not uncommon to see that a Facebook post was the reason for the apprehension of a criminal suspect, but social media is also playing a large role in civil litigation.



Gathering The Evidence

The first mechanism an attorney or investigator may use in attempting to gather social media evidence is by simply searching an individual's name. Many people do not have their social media profiles set to private, which allows for a simple search of the individual's name on the leading social media websites to lead to a wealth of personal information, including information that may be damaging to your case.

However, many individuals do have some level of privacy enabled on their social media accounts. In this case, profiles can still be exposed by sharing content with friends who do not have strong privacy settings or through the ordinary means of discovery in a lawsuit.

In a civil proceeding, a party may obtain discovery regarding any matter that is relevant to the lawsuit, as long as such information is not protected by some form of privilege. Florida courts have already held that pictures from Facebook and other social media postings are discoverable in lawsuits. This is even true if the individual has enacted the strictest of privacy settings. Courts in Florida have effectively acknowledged that one who creates a social media account accepts that their personal information will be shared with others regardless of the user's privacy settings.



Authenticating The Evidence

In court proceedings, it is one thing to gather the evidence and another thing to get that evidence admitted into a proceeding to be used by the judge or jury to render a decision. While discovery allows for broad requests of information, admitting a social media post at a proceeding must meet a more exacting standard.

In order for any evidence to be admitted, including social media posts, the evidence must be authenticated.

The courts want to be as certain as possible that what is being admitted is not a forgery or altered in any way. This is usually done through a series of questions to a witness that include how the post was copied or saved from the website, who made the post and who has personal knowledge that a certain individual made the post. These questions can address any other identifying features of the proposed social media evidence. Additionally, Florida courts have begun to allow expert witnesses, such as internet consultants, to assist in the authentication of website evidence.



Protecting Your Information

The first thing everyone should do to better protect social media information is to make sure you take advantage of the privacy features offered by the service itself.

Just as important as your own privacy settings, it is also important to ensure that those who you share information with also have strict privacy settings activated.

However, as previously explained, privacy settings will not protect your information from discovery requests.

The only way to truly prevent a social media post form being used as evidence is to not make the post. If you are posting something that is related or could be related to a lawsuit, ask yourself if you would want the picture or post to be seen by a judge or jury.



If the answer is no, do not post it.

While we all want to share our lives with our friends and family, if, for example, you have a pending personal injury matter, the insurance company would likely be very interested in your vacation pictures as well.

Finally, once something is posted on the internet it is never really deleted as archives of the internet are being continuously made, taking snapshots of the internet at certain times. So even if your post is deleted it is likely archived and may still be discoverable.

Guest Authored By J. Matthew Kelly. J. Matthew is an attorney with the law firm Clark, Campbell, Lancaster & Munson, P.A. in Lakeland. A Florida based Law Firm that specializes in Corporate, Real Estate Law and Business Litigation. Follow J. Matthew Kelly on Twitter.




Social media is a great way to share your life with friends, but it is increasingly becoming a source of evidence in legal proceedings.

It is not uncommon to see that a Facebook post was the reason for the apprehension of a criminal suspect, but social media is also playing a large role in civil litigation.."



    • Authored by:
      Fred Hansen Pied Piper of Social Media Marketing at YourWorldBrand.com & CEO of Millennium 7 Publishing Co. in Loveland, Colorado. I work deep in the trenches of social media strategy, community management and trends.  My interests include; online business educator, social media marketing, new marketing technology, skiing, hunting, fishing and The Rolling Stones..-Not necessarily in that order ;)

    Saturday, May 6, 2017

    Social Media Lawsuit Sabotage?


    When David C. Williams Jr. was an undergraduate at the University of Alabama back in 2002, no one in Tuscaloosa had even heard of Facebook. “Posting” was a move in basketball and “Insta” was a prefix used on boxed mashed potatoes or grits..


    Fast forward 15 years to 2017, and these terms are synonymous with social media giants Facebook and Instagram.

    As of Dec. 31, 2016, there were 1.86 billion monthly active Facebook users and 600 million Instagram users. The volume of information posted by users and made available to billions of people is startling. Anything and everything is displayed on these sites for public consumption, i.e. photographs of the kids, the meal you cooked and, of course, duck-faced selfies. “TMI" – the millennial shorthand for “too much information” – is a reality.


    Just like every other aspect of life, the litigation business is no stranger to the effects of social media. Cases are built on evidence – i.e., testimony and documentation via business records, photographs and videos. In recent years, litigators, including myself, have been able to use social media as a discovery tool to access data and use that information to our advantage at trial.


    Before the days of social media, litigators would go to great lengths to gather information on an individual.

    I remember the days of searching for hours through actual court records at the courthouse to find out if someone had ever been arrested. I also hired private investigators to locate and to observe witnesses as a means to gather vital information, a tactic that rarely ever worked.

    It is no secret that lawyers gather information about their adversaries to evaluate how they will perform at trial or to use information against them to discredit their testimony.

    In today’s world of “swiping right” and brazen over-sharing, gathering personal information is easier, faster and more effective. The simple click of a “friend” or “follow” button on your computer can pull back the curtain and reveal enormous amounts of information people make available.



    Many people do not realize that posting information, pictures, or news articles could potentially cost them their case.

    For example, if a lawsuit is pending for a person’s neck injuries sustained in a slip and fall at the local grocery store, it is probably not a good idea to post a picture while dancing at the local club or while skiing in Colorado, both of which I have witnessed in cases on which I have worked.

    That information, if properly obtained and utilized, is vital to a jury at trial to demonstrate that the plaintiff is not as “injured” as he or she claims.

    Guest Authored By David C. Williams Jr. David is a senior attorney at Swift Currie (Birmingham) in the firm’s general litigation group, focusing on catastrophic injury & wrongful death; insurance coverage; premises liability, and trucking litigation.





    "Simply put, use discretion when sharing on social media.

    With the good comes the bad, and social media is no different.

    So, before posting that amazing wall-climbing video for all your “friends” to see, consider how that might impact your pending lawsuit alleging chronic lower back pain.

    You might put yourself in the uncomfortable position of having to explain to a jury that the video is just a “#tbt (Throw Back Thursday) to 2012” before the injury occurred.

    Good luck convincing the jury of that excuse without a bunch of rolling eyes."


      • Authored by:
        Fred Hansen Pied Piper of Social Media Marketing at GetMoreHere.com & CEO of Millennium 7 Publishing Co. in Loveland, Colorado. I work deep in the trenches of social media strategy, community management and trends.  My interests include; online business educator, social media marketing, new marketing technology, skiing, hunting, fishing and The Rolling Stones..-Not necessarily in that order ;)
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