I couldn't agree more with John, however I'll add that in the instance of records that do NOT have strict regulatory requirements, but rather someone simply thinks you should have kept them longer, the more transparent and consistent your program is the better off you'll be. Like in the recent Dupont
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On Sep 8, 2011, at 9:51 AM, John Montana <[log in to unmask]> wrote:
> If you put in place a retention period based on a reasonable average, and if in a case being litigated that reasonable average does not comply with a legally required trigger event/retention period combination (for example, based upon reasonable assumptions, you have chosen a liquidated retention period 10 years, while in this case, the real, actual retention period should have been 20 years because this is an outlier), it most certainly will not stand up in a court of law. The law mandated a particular retention period for this record and you didn't meet it. Legal retention requirements are almost always strict liability propositions. That means there aren't any excuses– the fact of noncompliance, regardless of the reason, makes you guilty. and on top of that of course, someone will probably claim spoliation, etc., etc.
>
> Part of the risk and cost you assume with the reasonable-average–strategy is the possibility that in such a case you will get a spanking from the judge or jury. The cost of the spanking and any other associated legal and regulatory fallout is a cost of doing business using the the strategy.
>
> That is why you are well served to employ an additional strategy such as that outlined by Larry Medina to avoid as much of this risk as possible.
>
> Best regards,
>
> John
> John Montaña
> Montaña & Associates
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>
>
>
> On Sep 7, 2011, at 6:40 PM, Dana Yanaway wrote:
>
>> Has anyone put into place such a retention period based on an assumed
>> average Knowing that there will be outliers? Have you ever been
>> called on it?
>>
>> For those who haven't, do you think such a policy could stand up in a
>> court of law as a reasonable attempt to address this issue?
>>
>>
>
>
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