Sealed
Testimony From Justice Dept's Case Against the Tobacco Industry
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Testimony from Former Tobacco Insider Sealed and Removed From Web Because It Quotes Sensitive Internal Memo |
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>>> As part of the Justice Department's historic lawsuit against the tobacco industry (US v. Philip Morris, et al.), a Justice attorney examined Frederick Gulson under oath in Australia. Gulson used to be legal counsel for Australian tobacco company W.D. & H.O. Wills, a subsidiary of BATCo [British American Tobacco (Investments) Limited]. In the testimony, the Justice attorney repeatedly quotes an Australian court decision that contains extracts of the "Foyle memorandum," an extremely sensitive internal document concerning Wills' policy of destroying potentially damaging documents so that they cannot be uncovered during court cases. Attorneys for the industry argue that the Foyle memorandum can't be introduced - directly or indirectly, in whole or in part - into the proceedings, so they asked Judge Gladys Kessler to seal Gulson's testimony. Kessler has complied, at least temporarily, by sealing the testimony until all the legal questions can be answered, at which point the testimony may be unsealed or may stay sealed permanently. [Read the order]. Gulson's testimony was also removed from the Justice Dept's website, but not before The Memory Hole grabbed a copy. It's posted at the link at the top of this page. It's worth reading not just for the Foyle quotes but because the whole thing is so damning. (It should be noted that Gulson testified a second time - in DC court on 17 February 2005. This was after the seal had been granted, which means that this second testimony was sealed from the moment it occurred and never appeared on the Web.) |
Passages From the Elusive Foyle Memo, as Quoted During Gulson's First Testimony
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"Wills' current document retention policy was introduced on the
30th |
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"The wording of the policy (coupled with timing of its introduction) |
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"Aspects of the implementation of the policy might support that |
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"The retention of the BATCO reports might encourage a plaintiff
to |
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"Wills access to the BATCO computer gives them the de facto right
to |
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"It should be assumed that Wills' documents (what is in them
and what |
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"1. To what extent is there a risk that the destruction of
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"3. Should changes be made to the way in which the policy is |
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"4. What should be done about the copies of the BATCO research
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25 Feb 2005 original text and site copyright 2002-5 Russ Kick |