Preserve Evidence
Preservation before acquisition — always.
You cannot subpoena what no longer exists. The inventory names every custodian and data source in the case, orders the volatile and at-risk ones first, and produces preservation letters that say exactly what they are — a notice to the other side through counsel, or a voluntary request to a third party that never pretends to compel. When something disappears anyway, the spoliation monitor frames the two questions that matter: what did the loss cost, and what does the timeline show?
The custodian & data-source inventory
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The preservation letter
A notice to the other side goes through counsel. A letter to a third party is a request — it says so, plainly.
The spoliation monitor
Something disappeared anyway? Pick the trigger — the analysis frames the two questions Florida courts actually ask.
Preservation is lawful; acquisition runs through the rules — and for sensitive sources, through the Escalation Zone. Your inventory stays in this browser. Legal information, not legal advice.