10 Uber In-House Attorneys Saw Due Diligence Report in Battle With Alphabet

Uber sticker on a parked car on Capitol Hill in Washington, D.C. September 4, 2015. Photo by Diego M. Radzinschi/THE NATIONAL LAW JOURNAL.

At the center of Alphabet Inc.'s battle with Uber Technologies Inc. over alleged stolen technology is a due diligence report prepared ahead of Uber's acquisition of a company called Otto. This report, which Alphabet claims may prove the ride-hailing giant knowingly acquired stolen intellectual property, was seen by a number of Uber's in-house attorneys, according to a recently filed document in the case.

The situation at Uber underscores the role of in-house counsel in the due diligence process. Attorneys who have not worked with Uber said a due diligence report can be critical in a merger or acquisition and one of the key roles for in-house counsel throughout the process is to be mindful of protecting privilege.

What the Lawyers Saw

In a complaint filed on Feb. 23 in U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California in San Francisco, Alphabet subsidiary Waymo went after Uber, claiming that former Waymo manager Anthony Levandowski downloaded more than 14,000 confidential files and then formed his own self-driving car company called Otto, which Uber acquired last August. Since filing the complaint, Alphabet has moved to compel Uber to produce a due diligence report from that acquisition. In early June, U.S. Magistrate Judge Jacqueline Corley ordered Uber to turn over the report, and U.S. District Judge William Alsup, who is presiding over the case, later rejected Uber's attempts to overturn the decision based on attorney-client privilege arguments.

Now, over four months and 700 filings in, a document filed on June 23 and updated five days later by Uber details who looked at the due diligence report created by forensics firm Stroz Friedberg. According to the filing, 10 individuals from Uber's internal legal team, including chief legal officer Salle Yoo and associate general counsel Angela Padilla, received copies of the due diligence report without exhibits, some as early as last August.

In response to request for comment, Uber pointed Corporate Counsel to a June 28 filing and said the company took precautions to ensure that no former Google employees, including Levandowski, brought Google IP with them to Uber and it worked. It was added: After searching through terabytes of data, deposing numerous employees and spending 55 hours with free reign to inspect our facilities, Waymo has turned up exactly zero evidence that any of the 14,000 files came to Uber.