On Mon, 2009-06-22 at 22:32 -0700, Jim March wrote: > Not exactly Linux but then not exactly "not" either. > > Got a friend who got involved in a business deal that went south, now > he's suing. The guy he's suing sounds like a real winner and is > claiming there's a couple grand worth of expenses my friend never > agreed to. Except the guy we'll call "the bad guy" for now has what > he claims is an EMail in which my friend authorized the expenses in > question. > > The bad guy has produced this EMail for a court. It doesn't include > header data - just the timestamp received at COX (late Jan. 2009), > to/from info (allegedly from my friend's MSN.COM account to their > COX.NET account), subject line and text. > > He says the EMail in question is fake, he never sent it. > > They could have easily faked it any number of ways, but the header > data would of course be much harder to fake, and these guys ain't all > that smart. Right now he's telling the court it's a fake EMail (under > oath on his part, sworn declaration) and he's doing a request for > document production for the header data. > > Now assuming he's telling me the truth and he never sent that, I would > assume the other side will claim they purged their electronic copy so > they have no header data, if they're at all smart. > > Can he ask his paid ISP (msn bleah on a dial-up account paid to them > gag) to show that they have no log for his outgoing mail of that > subject line at that time, and that there would be one if the message > is fake? I would guess that as an MSN customer he doesn't need a > court order to track data he allegedly sent? OR if MSN doesn't keep > such logs, is it possible COX does and he gets a court order for their > logs, would COX keep that kind of thing? > > Any other thoughts on cracking this? > > I'm BCCing the friend... ---- I would tend to doubt that they would keep the logs longer than 90 days. I would think that this would fall under hearsay rules and be largely inadmissible. Even e-mail headers can be forged (and still entered into a mail system). Therefore, an e-mail does not represent a contractual document. I also would think that given the relative ease with which one can forge an e-mail, including sender, recipient and headers, that there is little credibility to the document...regardless of any 'sworn declaration' I mean, I have already won lotteries in Europe more than 500 times so why do I still need income? Seriously though, the real issue is the written contract/agreement that they have between them. Craig -- This message has been scanned for viruses and dangerous content by MailScanner, and is believed to be clean. --------------------------------------------------- PLUG-discuss mailing list - PLUG-discuss@lists.plug.phoenix.az.us To subscribe, unsubscribe, or to change your mail settings: http://lists.PLUG.phoenix.az.us/mailman/listinfo/plug-discuss