By iDiscovery Solutions
Gathering digital evidence is only half the battle. The other half — arguably the harder half — is making it count in court.
In the fourth and final installment of the Broken Covenants series on Lexology, iDS team member Timothy LaTulippe closes out a journey that has taken us from the invisible traces of IP theft, through the forensics of private messaging and non-compete violations, to the shadow competitor building a rival business on company time. This final article asks the question that underpins all of it: what happens when all that data needs to survive a courtroom?
If you’re joining mid-series, you can start from the beginning here.
The Battle of the Experts
LaTulippe frames the final stage of any employment law investigation as the battle of the experts — a phase where admissibility and narrative clarity can determine the outcome just as much as the evidence itself. Technical precision, he argues, must be matched by an equally high standard of storytelling. If the data cannot be explained clearly to a layperson or a judge, it cannot be used effectively as a weapon in litigation.
The global standard for forensic readiness has shifted accordingly. Presenting a spreadsheet of raw logs or system events is no longer sufficient. Legal teams are now expected to deliver a defensible chain of custody alongside a narrative the court can intuitively follow — one that demonstrates the evidence was captured using forensically sound methods, untainted from the moment of collection to the moment of trial.
Turning Metadata Into a Story
This demand for clarity has driven what LaTulippe describes as a revolution in data visualisation. Thousands of lines of complex metadata — registry keys, file system timestamps, network logs — are transformed into colour-coded timelines that pinpoint the exact moment an employee’s loyalty began to shift. Rather than asking a judge to interpret raw technical output, investigators present a visual map of behaviour that is far harder for a defendant to dismiss as a technical anomaly or innocent error.
That transformation, from binary data to coherent narrative, is what moves a forensic practitioner from data processor to critical storyteller.
The Settlement Advantage
LaTulippe also explores one of the most powerful — and often overlooked — tools in the forensic arsenal: the settlement catalyst. A well-constructed forensic report detailing an individual’s every digital move, including their failed attempts to scrub or delete evidence, frequently drives resolution long before the parties ever set foot in a courtroom. When the defence of “innocent mistake” becomes impossible to sustain, the appetite for a costly trial tends to disappear quickly.
The Proactive Forensic Hold
The series closes with a forward-looking argument: the best time to act is before a dispute arises. A proactive forensic hold — the early preservation of data as a matter of policy — is not just a technical safeguard. It is a strategic insurance policy and a deterrent against future misconduct. In an increasingly mobile workforce, securing the truth early gives organisations a solid foundation for whatever legal path they ultimately choose to follow.
At iDS, this end-to-end capability — from initial investigation through to courtroom-ready evidence — is central to what we offer. Our Digital Forensics, Investigations, eDiscovery & Disclosure, and Testimony practices are built to take clients from discovery to resolution with evidence that holds up under the most rigorous cross-examination.
To speak with an iDS expert, visit idsinc.com.
iDS provides consultative data solutions to corporations and law firms around the world, giving them a decisive advantage – both in and out of the courtroom. iDS’s subject matter experts and data strategists specialize in finding solutions to complex data problems, ensuring data can be leveraged as an asset, not a liability. To learn more, visit idsinc.com.
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