Contents
DTSA Ex Parte Civil Seizure Overview
- The Defend Trade Secrets Act (DTSA) allows courts to order ex parte civil seizure of stolen trade secrets.
- Federal marshals may seize and secure misappropriated materials.
- Intended for use only in “extraordinary circumstances.”
- Courts have generally applied this remedy narrowly.
- Several courts have denied seizure requests where:
- Rule 65 injunctions were deemed sufficient.
- Plaintiffs relied on bare assertions that defendants would destroy evidence.
First Civil Seizure Order Under DTSA
- Case: Mission Capital Advisors LLC v. Romaka (S.D.N.Y. July 29, 2016).
- Court ordered seizure of:
- Contact lists
- Electronically stored confidential information
- Defendant was a former employee accused of misappropriation.
Key Facts of the Case
- Defendant allegedly downloaded:
- Entire 65,000-person client/contact list
- Confidential finance and deal documents
- Employee and broker information
- Information took over a decade to compile.
- Defendant:
- Initially claimed deletion of files.
- Was later found to possess a “trove” of misappropriated data.
- Stopped responding to communications.
- Failed to appear in court.
- Evaded service and ignored court orders.
Court’s Reasoning for Granting Seizure
- Rule 65 injunction was deemed inadequate.
- Court believed Defendant would:
- Evade or not comply with a court order.
- Court emphasized:
- Defendant’s failure to appear and evasion of service.
- High business value of the trade secrets.
- Plaintiff’s significant time and financial investment.
- Risk of irreparable harm if information were disseminated.
Guidance on “Extraordinary Circumstances”
- Plaintiffs must show:
- Defendant is unlikely to comply with a court order.
- Mere speculation is insufficient.
- Evidence of past evasion or noncompliance is critical.
- Must satisfy requirements under 18 U.S.C. § 1836(b)(2)(A)(ii).
Practical Takeaways for Companies
- Civil seizure is available but rarely granted.
- Strong evidence of defendant misconduct is required.
- Companies should:
- Diligently seek return of misappropriated materials.
- Document failures to return materials.
- Record any attempts by defendant to evade court orders.
- Courts are more likely to grant seizure where clear evasion is demonstrated.
