Source: https://docs.justia.com/cases/federal/district-courts/california/candce/3:2015cv05534/293430/37
Timestamp: 2018-09-23 01:09:51
Document Index: 306400907

Matched Legal Cases: ['§ 308', '§ 6801', 'arty 6', '§552', 'art 309', 'arty 4', 'arty 5', 'arty 28', 'arty 11', 'arty 25']

STIPULATION AND ORDER re 36 STIPULATION WITH PROPOSED ORDER Protective Order filed by Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation as Receiver for AmTrust Bank for Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation as Receiver for AmTrust Bank v. RPM Mortgage, Inc. :: Justia Dockets & Filings
Justia Dockets & Filings Ninth Circuit California California Northern District Court Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation as Receiver for AmTrust Bank v. RPM Mortgage, Inc. Filing 37
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation as Receiver for AmTrust Bank v. RPM Mortgage, Inc.
STIPULATION AND ORDER re 36 STIPULATION WITH PROPOSED ORDER Protective Order filed by Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation as Receiver for AmTrust Bank. Signed by Judge Edward M. Chen on 9/30/16. (bpf, COURT STAFF) (Filed on 9/30/2016)
1 MORTGAGE RECOVERY LAW GROUP LLP 2 3 4 5 6 PAUL A. LEVIN (State Bar No. 229077) DANA J. CLAUSEN (State Bar No. 223212) 700 North Brand Boulevard, Suite 830 Glendale, California 91203 TELEPHONE: (818) 630-7900  FACSIMILE: (818) 630-7920 E-mail: paul.levin@mortgagerecoveries.com dana.clausen@mortgagerecoveries.com 7 Attorneys for Plaintiff Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation 8 as Receiver for AmTrust Bank 9 UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT 10 NORTHERN DISTRICT OF CALIFORNIA, SAN FRANCISCO DIVISION 11 12 FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION as Receiver for AMTRUST 13 BANK, Case No. 15-cv-05534-EMC 14 STIPULATED PROTECTIVE ORDER Plaintiff, Judge: Edward M. Chen 15 v. 16 RPM MORTGAGE, INC., a California corporation d/b/a RESIDENTIAL PACIFIC 17 MORTGAGE, f/k/a NL, INC., 18 Defendant. 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 RSPM\53134\1005593.1 -1STIPULATED PROTECTIVE ORDER Case No. 15-cv-05534-EMC 1 This Stipulated Protective Order (“Protective Order”) is submitted by the Plaintiff, 2 FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION as Receiver for AMTRUST BANK 3 (“FDIC-R” or “Plaintiff”), and Defendant RPM MORTGAGE, INC., d/b/a RESIDENTIAL 4 PACIFIC MORTGAGE (“RPM” or “Defendant”) (collectively, the “Parties”). 5 RECITALS 6 WHEREAS, on December 3, 2015, the FDIC-R filed an action in the United States 7 District Court for the Central District of California, Civil Action No. 2:15-cv-09363-ODW-E (the 8 “Action”), against Defendant seeking damages (the “FDIC-R Claims”); and 9 WHEREAS, this case necessarily involves confidential bank information and personally 10 identifiable information of borrowers that are confidential and generally protected from disclosure 11 under FDIC rules and regulation (12 C.F.R. §§ 308 and 309), the information privacy provisions 12 of the Graham-Leach-Bliley Act (15 U.S.C. § 6801, et seq.) and/or the laws of the State of 13 California or other federal or state laws and in anticipation of producing or otherwise revealing 14 other such documents, jointly submit this Protective Order, which shall govern the production and 15 treatment of confidential material (as defined herein) in this Action. 16 Accordingly, pursuant to Rule 26(c) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, it is hereby: 17 ORDERED and ADJUDGED that this Protective Order shall govern the production and 18 handling of information exchanged by both the Parties and by third parties in these proceedings as 19 follows: 20 1. Purpose. This Protective Order is entered for the purpose of the Parties exchanging 21 confidential documents and information in connection with this litigation. This Protective Order 22 also shall apply to and govern the production of confidential documents by third parties in 23 connection with the litigation. The Protective Order is necessary because some documents 24 produced hereunder contain information protected from disclosure by law, including private and 25 protected financial information about consumers (such as protected by the Gramm-Leach-Bliley 26 Act (Pub L 106-102) and its implementing regulations) (“Non-Party Borrower Information”), 27 confidential regulatory information, proprietary work product, or commercially sensitive 28 [468384/1] RSPM\53134\1005593.1 -2STIPULATED PROTECTIVE ORDER Case No. 15-cv-05534-EMC 1 information, disclosure of which could result in violation of law, or harm to individual consumers, 2 third parties, or the Parties. 3 2. Definition of Confidential Material. For purposes of this Protective Order, 4 “Confidential Material” shall mean certain documents, records, and information composed or 5 stored in written, electronic, digital, or any other medium, provided by any Party or third party 6 pursuant to this Protective Order, and to any information identifying any names, addresses, 7 account information, personal information (such as social security number, date of birth, and any 8 other personal identification information) recognized by law as, or required to be maintained as, 9 confidential, including, without limitation, the following: 10 (a) Regulatory: Confidential Material related in any way to the regulation or 11 supervision of AmTrust Bank (“AmTrust” or the “Bank”), NL, Inc., and RPM, in whatever 12 form, whether preliminary or final, including reports of examination or inspection, 13 regulatory correspondence, reports, orders, memoranda, or agreements by, from or with the 14 FDIC in its corporate capacity, or any other federal or state regulatory authority, and any 15 documents containing confidential information obtained from any documents and records 16 related to the supervision or regulation of the Bank and RPM. The Parties understand and 17 agree that the release of such regulatory information may require approval from 18 independent government agencies, and that no regulatory documents, however obtained, 19 will be disclosed to third parties not covered by this Protective Order. 20 (b) Statutory: Confidential Material includes documents that are confidential 21 pursuant to the Freedom of Information Act, 5 U.S.C. §552, 12 C.F.R. Part 309, the laws 22 of the State of California, or any other applicable federal or state laws. 23 (c) Bank, RPM, NL, Inc., and Bank, NL, Inc., and RPM Customers. 24 Confidential Material related to the Bank, RPM, NL, Inc., their customers, any trading 25 company involved in placing orders for commodities futures or options, or any other 26 entity, including Automated Clearing House items or transactions, chargebacks, merchant 27 processing, bank account information, signature cards, bank statements, general ledger 28 [468384/1] RSPM\53134\1005593.1 -3STIPULATED PROTECTIVE ORDER Case No. 15-cv-05534-EMC 1 entries, deposit or reserve information, commodity trading statements, loans and lending 2 transactions, loan applications, financial statements and credit reports, business and 3 personal state and federal income tax forms, correspondence, and related loan 4 documentation relating to any extension of credit or loan to any borrower. Examples of 5 “Confidential Material,” without limitation, include documents containing a customer’s 6 account number, credit card number, personal identification number, account balance, 7 information relating to a deposit account, loan, or borrower relationship and loan 8 application materials, and documents or information that contain the customer’s name, 9 address, social security number, date of birth or other similar identifying information. 10 (d) Receivership. Confidential Material related to the receivership of the Bank, 11 including any information on loss or estimates of such loss on the Bank’s assets not 12 publicly available. Notwithstanding the provisions of paragraphs 6(a) - (i), no such 13 Confidential Material shall be disclosed to any person or entity known to have any current 14 or prospective interest in such assets, whether or not that person or entity would otherwise 15 be allowed access to documents and information under the terms of this Protective Order. 16 This subparagraph (d), however, does not prevent such documents from being shared with 17 experts or others listed in paragraphs 6(a) - (i). 18 (e) Third Parties. Confidential Material produced by independent contractors, 19 outside accountants or auditors, or other entities or individuals who performed work for the 20 Bank, NL, Inc., or RPM. 21 Notwithstanding the foregoing paragraphs (a) - (e), no Party is estopped or in any way 22 prevented from later challenging the confidentiality designation of any document. 3. 23 Confidential Designation and Treatment of Confidential Material. Documents 24 provided by any Party or third party pursuant to this Protective Order that are deemed and 25 denominated by any Party or producing third party as “Confidential” pursuant to this Protective 26 Order shall be deemed to be Confidential Material, unless and until that designation is challenged 27 pursuant to paragraph 4, below. Confidential Material may be designated as such by affixing to 28 [468384/1] RSPM\53134\1005593.1 -4STIPULATED PROTECTIVE ORDER Case No. 15-cv-05534-EMC 1 the material the legend “Confidential.” The failure to designate any documents with such legend 2 shall not constitute a waiver by any Party or producing third party of the right to assert that such 3 documents contain protected Confidential Material. In the event that any Party or third party 4 produces Confidential Material without designating it as such, the producing Party or third party 5 may notify the receiving Parties that the documents or information should have been designated 6 Confidential Material, and the Parties will treat the documents as Confidential Material under this 7 Protective Order. Confidential Material shall only mean and shall be limited to the documents 8 produced in this Action marked with a Bates Stamp number. In the event a Party obtains a 9 duplicate copy of a document produced in discovery in this litigation from a publicly available 10 source, the Party acquiring the document shall not be required to comply with the terms of this 11 Order regarding the use of the duplicate document, and the use of such duplicate document shall 12 not be subject to the provisions of the Order. 13 4. Challenge of Confidentiality Designation. A Party shall not be obligated to 14 challenge the propriety of a designation of confidentiality at the time made, and a failure to do so 15 shall not preclude a subsequent challenge thereto. In the event that any Party disagrees at any 16 stage of these proceedings with the confidentiality designation by the producing Party or third 17 party, the Parties shall first try to dispose of such dispute in good faith on an informal basis. If 18 after fifteen (15) days the dispute cannot be resolved, the Party objecting to the designation may, 19 at any time thereafter, seek appropriate relief from the Court in which this Action is pending. The 20 challenged designation shall be maintained and shall remain in full force and effect pending the 21 Court’s determination on the challenged designation. 22 5. Non-disclosure of Confidential Material. All Confidential Material provided 23 pursuant to this Protective Order is provided solely and exclusively for purposes of litigating this 24 Action. Absent further written agreement between the Parties or further court order, all such 25 materials shall be maintained confidential pursuant to this Protective Order and shall not be 26 disclosed, discussed, or in any way divulged to any person for any other purpose, except as 27 permitted under this Protective Order. 28 [468384/1] RSPM\53134\1005593.1 -5STIPULATED PROTECTIVE ORDER Case No. 15-cv-05534-EMC 1 6. Exceptions to Non-disclosure. The Parties agree that the Confidential Material 2 shall be used only to investigate, analyze, litigate, and resolve this Action. The Parties may 3 disclose Confidential Material received pursuant to this Protective Order to the following persons 4 or entities, provided that each person or entity, required to do so, complies with paragraph 7 5 below: 6 (a) counsel signing this Protective Order (together with any employees of 7 counsel) engaged by any Party to assist or participate in the evaluation and resolution of 8 the FDIC-R Claims; 9 (b) vendors, consulting experts, testifying experts and consultants engaged by 10 any Party to assist or participate in the investigation, analysis and defense of the FDIC-R 11 Claims; 12 (c) any potential insurer and potential insurer's counsel. A potential insurer 13 may disclose Confidential Material to any of the insurer's reinsurers, regulators, auditors, 14 or other entities to whom the insurer may be required to respond or report to in the 15 ordinary course of business regarding the subject matter of the FDIC-R Claims, each of 16 which are exempt from the requirements of paragraph 7 but only so long as such persons 17 or entities are already subject to confidentiality obligations that are substantially similar to 18 those set forth in this Order; 19 (d) the individual Defendant in this Action; 20 (e) other Bank officers, directors, employees, independent contractors, or 21 outside accountants or auditors who performed work for the Bank; 22 (f) FDIC (in any of its capacities) personnel, including, but not limited to, its 23 Chairman, Board of Directors, attorneys, investigators, senior executives, and others) 24 conducting, assisting, monitoring, reviewing, or making determinations with regard or 25 related to the FDIC-R Claims, or the Action; 26 (g) 27 any witness or third party contacted by counsel for a party to investigate this case, whether such witness or third party will or will not testify at trial or in deposition, in 28 [468384/1] RSPM\53134\1005593.1 -6STIPULATED PROTECTIVE ORDER Case No. 15-cv-05534-EMC 1 this Action, provided, however, that no disclosure of Confidential Material to such persons 2 shall be made unless and until the witness or third party has executed the agreement to 3 maintain confidentiality; 4 (h) Court officials involved in this Action including court reporters, certified 5 translators or interpreters, and other Court personnel as are necessarily incident to the 6 conduct of discovery, the preparation for the trial or the trial itself; and 7 (i) officers, employees, representatives, and agents of the Party that produced 8 the Confidential Material may see any and all Confidential Material produced by that 9 Party. 10 In no event shall any Confidential Material be disclosed to any party, by consent or by 11 identification in the foregoing list, without such person first having executed the appropriate 12 acknowledgments and agreements required herein. Notwithstanding this paragraph 6, Material 13 that is Confidential pursuant to paragraph 2(d) shall not be disclosed to any person or entity 14 known by Defendant to have any interest in Bank assets, whether or not that person or entity 15 would otherwise be allowed access to documents and information under the terms of this 16 Protective Order, without seeking and obtaining the permission of the Court in this Action. 17 7. Protective Order Certificate. Confidential Material may only be disclosed to 18 persons or entities identified in subparagraphs 6(a) - (i). Persons or entities identified in 19 subparagraphs 6(c) (with counsel signing for any potential insurer and counsel's own law firm), 20 6(b), (d), (e), and (g) must sign a written Agreement to Maintain Confidentiality, in the form 21 attached as Attachment A. The Parties shall keep all of their respective Agreements to Maintain 22 Confidentiality containing original signatures. 23 8. Demands by Others for Confidential Materials. If any other person or entity 24 demands, by subpoena or other judicial process, or by operation of law production of documents 25 produced and marked as Confidential pursuant to this Protective Order, the Party receiving such 26 demand shall promptly notify the producing Party or third party of such demand. At its option, the 27 producing Party or third party may elect to challenge the demand and assert any applicable 28 [468384/1] RSPM\53134\1005593.1 -7STIPULATED PROTECTIVE ORDER Case No. 15-cv-05534-EMC 1 protections. The objecting Party or third party shall notify the other Parties hereto and issuing 2 court or tribunal of its challenge as required by law, the subpoena, or other judicial process. The 3 burden of proving that Confidential Material is entitled to protection from disclosure shall be with 4 the Party or third party making the claim. When such a challenge is made, the Party who received 5 the demand shall not produce any Confidential Material in the absence of consent by the 6 producing Party or third party or an order by the issuing court or tribunal compelling production. 7 9. No Waiver of Objections to Use; Filing Under Seal. The Parties hereto shall not 8 contend or assert that a Party’s production of Confidential Material pursuant to this Protective 9 Order in any way acts as a waiver of any privilege, work product doctrine, or discovery or 10 evidentiary objections by the producing Party, or otherwise entitles the receiving Party to obtain or 11 use Confidential Material in a manner contrary to this Protective Order. In the event any party, 12 who has designated a document (the “Designating Party”) as Confidential Material pursuant to this 13 Order, wishes to file under seal the Confidential Material, the Designating Party shall first consult 14 with the Non-Designating Party to determine whether agreement may be reached on an informal 15 basis. After consulting with the Non-Designating Party, the Designating Party shall file a motion 16 with the Court demonstrating good cause for the sealing with a request that the Confidential 17 Material be filed under seal pursuant to Court rules and remain under seal until such time as the 18 Court orders otherwise. The Court will then determine whether the document should be filed 19 under seal and enter an appropriate order. In the event a Non-Designating Party wants to include 20 in a court filing Confidential Material, which will not be the subject of a motion by the Non21 Designating Party seeking the Court’s permission to file the document under seal, the Non22 Designating Party must give the Designating Party at least three days advance notice to allow the 23 Designating Party to file its own motion seeking a Court determination of whether the document 24 should be filed under seal. The Non-Designating Party must not file the Confidential Material 25 with the Court until the Court has ruled upon the Designating Party’s motion to file under seal. In 26 the event the Designating Party fails to file a motion to seal within three days after notification by 27 the Non-Designating Party of its intent to file Confidential Material, the Non-Designating Party 28 [468384/1] RSPM\53134\1005593.1 -8STIPULATED PROTECTIVE ORDER Case No. 15-cv-05534-EMC 1 shall not then be required to file the Confidential Material under seal. Any Confidential Material 2 filed under seal shall remain under seal until such time as the Court orders otherwise. 3 10. Reservation of Rights. Nothing in this Protective Order confers upon the Parties 4 any further right or access to documents or information not provided by the other Parties, 5 including but not limited to any documents a Party or third party withholds on the basis of any 6 applicable privilege or immunity, regardless of whether such withheld document(s) may otherwise 7 qualify as Confidential Material if produced rather than withheld. With respect to Confidential 8 Material produced, each Party reserves its rights under this Protective Order, and otherwise under 9 law. Any documents withheld on this basis or any other basis must be identified on a privilege log 10 to be provided by the Party or third party asserting the privilege or other protection within two 11 weeks of the date the document(s) would have been produced had it not been privileged or 12 otherwise protected from disclosure. 13 11. Return of Documents. Within ninety (90) days after final adjudication of this 14 Action, including any resolution through settlement, unless otherwise agreed to in writing by 15 Counsel for all Parties, the Parties shall either (a) assemble and return all Confidential Materials, 16 including all copies thereof, to the producing Party or third party, or (b) certify in writing that all 17 such information has been destroyed. The persons and entities identified in subparagraphs 6(a)-(c) 18 and (g) may retain copies of any Confidential Material produced to them as reasonably necessary 19 to comply with future requests for review by reinsurers, auditors, regulators, or as necessary to 20 exercise or enforce any subrogation rights, or as necessary to meet other business requirements. 21 When such retention is no longer needed, such persons and entities shall return to the producing 22 party the retained documents or destroy those documents in accordance with their standard 23 document or data destruction procedures, subject to any applicable litigation hold or any other 24 document or information hold imposed by any governmental body or court order. Any person or 25 entity retaining such Confidential Material shall maintain its confidentiality in accordance with 26 this Protective Order until such documents are returned or destroyed. The Parties’ counsel are also 27 permitted to retain copies of Confidential Material provided to them in the course of their 28 [468384/1] RSPM\53134\1005593.1 -9STIPULATED PROTECTIVE ORDER Case No. 15-cv-05534-EMC 1 representation of the Parties. This paragraph does not apply to any documents or information 2 ordered produced by a court without the limitations set forth in this Protective Order, or to work 3 product generated by counsel. The Parties further agree that all documents generated by them that 4 summarize or otherwise include Confidential Material are governed by all other sections and 5 subsections of this Order. To the extent any Party retains any Confidential Material pursuant to a 6 separate written agreement, the terms of this Protective Order will continue to govern. 7 12. Remedies. To enforce rights under this Protective Order or in the event of an 8 alleged violation of this Protective Order, the Parties and/or any producing third party shall first 9 seek to resolve the alleged violation through prompt and reasonable discussion. In the event such 10 efforts fail to promptly resolve the alleged violation, the Parties and/or any producing third party 11 reserve the right to seek relief from the Court in the action for, inter alia, money damages, 12 injunctive relief, or any other relief as appropriate. 13 13. No Waiver of Privileges. Pursuant to Federal Rule of Evidence 502(d), the 14 production of information that is subject to the attorney-client privilege, work product doctrine, or 15 other claimed privileges, doctrines, exemptions, or restrictions that the producing party might cite 16 in good faith as a basis for withholding such information from production to any other party shall 17 not be deemed, and shall not constitute, in this or any other federal or state proceeding, a waiver of 18 any otherwise applicable privilege or protection. The Parties shall not have to meet the 19 requirements of Fed. R. Evid. 502(b)(1)-(3). With respect to the FDIC, in any of its capacities, 20 these privileges include, but are not limited to, any privilege that the Bank may have had or any 21 federal or state regulatory agency may hold. The Parties’ production of Confidential Material is 22 not intended to, and shall not, waive or diminish in any way the confidentiality of such material or 23 its continued protection under the attorney-client privilege, work product doctrine, or any 24 applicable privilege as to any other third party. 25 Furthermore, in the event that a Party or third party produces attorney-client privileged or 26 otherwise privileged documents or information, or other documents protected by law from 27 disclosure even under a Protective Order, and if the Party or third party subsequently notifies the 28 [468384/1] RSPM\53134\1005593.1 -10STIPULATED PROTECTIVE ORDER Case No. 15-cv-05534-EMC 1 receiving Party that the privileged documents or information should not have been produced, the 2 receiving Party shall immediately return the originals and all copies of the inadvertently produced 3 privileged documents and information. Nothing in this Protective Order shall prevent the FDIC 4 from using any Confidential Material that it produces to the Defendant in any of its capacities for 5 any lawful purposes. 6 14. Disclosure of Non-Party Borrower Information. To the extent any federal or state 7 law or other legal authority governing the disclosure or use of Non-Party Borrower Information 8 (“Non-Party Borrower Information Law”) permits disclosure of such information pursuant to an 9 order of a court, this Protective Order shall constitute compliance with such requirement. To the 10 extent any Non-Party Borrower Information Law requires a producing party to obtain a court11 ordered subpoena or give notice to or obtain consent, in any form or manner, from any person or 12 entity before disclosure of any Non-Party Borrower Information, the Court finds that, in view of 13 the protections provided for the information disclosed in this Protective Order, the volume of 14 documents to be produced and the ongoing oversight of the Court, there is good cause to excuse 15 such requirement, and this Protective Order shall constitute an express direction that the producing 16 party is exempted from obtaining a court-ordered subpoena or having to notify and/or obtain 17 consent from any person or entity prior to the disclosure of Non-Party Borrower Information in the 18 Action. To the extent that any Non-Party Borrower Information Law requires that any person or 19 entity be notified prior to disclosure of Non-Party Borrower Information except where such notice 20 is prohibited by court order, the Court directs that, in view of the protections provided for the 21 information disclosed in this Protective Order, the volume of documents to be produced and the 22 ongoing oversight of the Court, producing parties are explicitly prohibited from providing such 23 notice in the Action; provided, however, that this Protective Order shall not prohibit any 24 producing party from contacting any person or entity for any other purpose. Any producing party 25 may seek additional orders from this Court that such party believes may be necessary to comply 26 with any Non-Party Borrower Information Law. 27 28 [468384/1] RSPM\53134\1005593.1 -11STIPULATED PROTECTIVE ORDER Case No. 15-cv-05534-EMC 1 15. Binding Effect; Assignment. The Protective Order shall be binding upon and inure 2 to the benefit of the Parties hereto, their affiliates, their representatives, and the Parties’ respective 3 successors or assigns. No Party may assign any right or delegate any duty under this Protective 4 Order other than to an affiliate without the other Party’s prior written consent. 5 16. Notice. All notices required to be given under the Protective Order shall be in 6 writing and delivered to the addressees set forth below. Notice shall be sent by overnight delivery 7 or registered or certified mail, return receipt requested, and shall be considered delivered and 8 effective three days after mailing. If to FDIC-R: Dana J. Clausen MORTGAGE RECOVERY LAW GROUP LLP 700 N. Brand Blvd., Suite 830 Glendale, CA 91203 Counsel for Plaintiff FDIC as Receiver for AmTrust Bank 9 10 11 12 13 If to Defendant: David E. Harris MILLER STARR REGALIA, P.C. 1331 N. California Blvd., 5th Floor Walnut Creek, California 94596 Counsel for Defendant RPM Mortgage Inc., d/b/a Pacific Mortgage, Inc. 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 [468384/1] RSPM\53134\1005593.1 -12STIPULATED PROTECTIVE ORDER Case No. 15-cv-05534-EMC 1 It is so Stipulated: 2 3 Dated: September 27, 2016 MORTGAGE RECOVERY LAW GROUP LLP 4 5 By: 6 7 8 /s/ Dana J. Clausen PAUL A. LEVIN DANA J. CLAUSEN FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION as Receiver for AMTRUST BANK 9 10 Dated: September 27, 2016 MILLER STARR REGALIA 11 12 By: 13 14 15 /s/ David E. Harris DAVID E. HARRIS Attorneys for RPM MORTGAGE, INC., a California corporation d/b/a RESIDENTIAL PACIFIC MORTGAGE, INC. 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 [468384/1] RSPM\53134\1005593.1 -13STIPULATED PROTECTIVE ORDER Case No. 15-cv-05534-EMC 30th Sept. 1 APPROVED AND SO ORDERED this ____ day of ____________, 2016. 2 RT 8 dwa Judge E ER 10 A H 9 hen rd M. C NO 7 R NIA 6 D Hon. Edward M.O ORDERE Chen IT IS S United States District Judge FO 5 LI By: UNIT ED 4 S DISTRICT TE C TA RT U O S 3 N F D IS T IC T O R C 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 [468384/1] RSPM\53134\1005593.1 -14STIPULATED PROTECTIVE ORDER Case No. 15-cv-05534-EMC 1 ATTACHMENT A 2 AGREEMENT TO MAINTAIN CONFIDENTIALITY I hereby acknowledge that I have been provided and have read a copy of the 3 4 Stipulated Protective Order, (the “Protective Order”), a copy of which is annexed 5 6 hereto. I understand that any Confidential Material within the meaning of the 7 Protective Order shown to me is confidential, shall be used by me only as provided in 8 9 10 the Protective Order, and shall not be disclosed by me unless expressly permitted under the Protective Order. I agree to abide by the terms of the Protective Order. I 11 will return any such Confidential Material provided to me and will not retain any 12 copies of Confidential Material, including any notes or other documents generated 13 14 that include any content from the Confidential Material, pursuant to the terms of the 15 Protective Order. 16 Name: Date: (signature) 17 Name: 18 Telephone: (printed) 19 Company: 20 (Business) _________________________ (Home) 21 _________________________ (Cell) 22 23 Address: 24 City: 25 State/Zip Code: 26 27 28 [468384/1] RSPM\53134\1005593.1 -15STIPULATED PROTECTIVE ORDER Case No. 15-cv-05534-EMC