
    In re E.I. DU PONT DE NEMOURS AND COMPANY—Benlate® Litigation. The BUSH RANCH, INC., a Georgia corporation, and William R. Lawson, Individually, Yellow River Growers, a partnership whose partners are Roy Phillip Barber, Carol H. Barber and Gregory Phillip Barber, and Carol H. Barber, and C. Raker & Sons, Inc., a Michigan corporation, Petitioners, v. E.I. DU PONT DE NEMOURS AND COMPANY, a Delaware corporation, Respondent.
    No. 4:95-cv-36 (JRE).
    United States District Court, M.D. Georgia, Columbus Division.
    Aug. 21, 1995.
    
      ,C. Neal Pope, Columbus, Georgia, and Richard H. Gill, Montgomery, Alabama, for. petitioners.
    Dow N. Kirkpatrick, II and John K. Train, III, Columbus, Georgia and Arthur J. England, Miami, Florida, for respondent.
   OPINION AND ORDER

ELLIOTT, District Judge.

A hearing which began on Tuesday, May 2, 1995,' and ended on Friday, May-12, 1995, was conducted by the'Gourt.in connection with the matter above identified. Following the suggestion made by the Court; counsel for the respective parties have filed proposed findings of fact and conclusions of law. The Court now files this opinion in' which the Court’s findings of fact and conclusions of law, although not separately categorized, will be readily apparent. The Court will enter a separate order with respect to and deciding all motions of the Petitioners and of DuPont which are still pending.

The Petitioners in this matter are nurserymen who previously were among the named Plaintiffs in separate actions against E.I. du Pont de Nemours and Company (hereafter DuPont) tried as consolidated cases in this court. A total, of 14 such actions were filed, and all of the cases were consolidated for the purposes of discovery prior to trial of the consolidated cases. At all times, however, the first four of those actions (the “Bush Ranch cases”) clearly were the “lead” cases. The Plaintiffs in those cases contended that DuPont’s product, Benlate 50DF, a fungicide, was defective and was contaminated with, among other things, highly toxic herbicides generically called sulfonylureas (“SUs”), manufactured, formulated and/or warehoused by DuPont at the same Belle, West Virginia, plant where benomyl, the active ingredient in Benlate 50DF, is manufactured. It was claimed that such SU-contaminated Benlate caused damages to the ornamental plants and the soils and waters of their nurseries, Therefore, the testing for the presence of SU contamination was the most critical evidence for both the Plaintiffs and the Defendant in the Bush Ranch, cases.

This Petition to Show Cause was filed with the Court on March 22, 1995. The Petitioners, three of the four Plaintiffs in the original lead consolidated cases (hereafter “Büsh Ranch” cases), are alleging that DuPont, through its conduct, engaged in acts of misrepresentation and concealment as to critical evidence which constituted a fraud on the Court and a contempt of the. Court’s orders. On reviewing the petition, as well as the memorandum appendix in support and attached Exhibits 1-75, this Court on March 23, 1995, entered an order directing DuPont to show cause on April 24, 1995, why it should not be sanctioned for the conduct described in the petition.

Among the motions filed by DuPont was a motion to recuse this District Court Judge before whom the wrongful conduct stated in the petition was alleged to have occurred. DuPont also filed motions to dismiss and to vacate the show cause order. Thereafter, considering these motions, the Court continued the hearing to May 1, 1995, and, at the request of DuPont’s counsel, the Court continued the hearing to May 2,1995.

On April 26, 1995, the Court denied DuPont’s motion to recuse. On April 28, 1995, the Court denied DuPont’s motion to stay all proceedings pending review in the appellate court, that motion having been filed on April 27, 1995. DuPont then filed an emergency motion for stay in the United States Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit on April 28, 1995, along with a petition for a writ of mandamus and a writ of prohibition. These motions were denied by the Court of Appeals on Monday, May 1, 1995. As already noted, the hearing on the show cause order began on Tuesday, May 2, 1995, and ended on Friday, May 12, 1995. The sole purpose of the hearing was to determine whether sanctions should be imposed on the Respondent DuPont.

The show cause order was issued following consideration of a petition and voluminous exhibits, which alleged that DuPont had committed a fraud on this Court in connection with discovery matters, trial conduct, and a post-settlement application to the Court to vacate previous, sanctions orders. As set out in detail in this opinion, the Court finds and concludes that DuPont did commit the fraud, the discovery abuses, and the violations of this Court’s orders averred in the petition. DuPont has failed to show any. sufficient cause why it should not be sanctioned for the conduct detailed herein.

The Court has heard the testimony and has reviewed the documentary evidence. The Court takes judicial notice of all of the pleadings, submissions, hearing transcripts, orders, and trial transcripts in the Bush Ranch cases. The Court has observed the demeanor of the witnesses and considered any inconsistencies in the evidence. The Court has determined that evidence from other cases involving allegations that DuPont’s Benlate 50DF caused damages, which evidence in most instances consists of trial or deposition transcripts, court orders, or in judicio statements by DuPont, properly should be considered where it concerns what happened in this court, or where it concerns actions or positions taken by or on' behalf of DuPont with respect to the Alta data and documents, or where it bears on the credibility of DuPont. The essentially identical conduct of DuPont in concealing and misrepresenting Alta tests and documents in other courts immediately after the Bush Ranch trial is, however, strong evidence of DuPont’s intent and motive, and establishes a pattern of concealment and false representations on this crucial issue. That pattern of concealment has continued through the show cause hearing here.

It is without dispute that the core, almost the ultimate, issue in the Bush Ranch trials was whether or not the soils and or waters of the Bush Ranch Plaintiffs’ lands where their nursery businesses were conducted were contaminated by the use of DuPont’s Benlate product which itself was defective due to contamination by sulfonylureas (“SUs”) which were also manufactured by DuPont. DuPont was confronted with hundreds of claims and lawsuits throughout the United States alleging damage by Benlate, thus establishing a significant economic risk for DuPont if Benlate was found to be defective through contamination. While there was much circumstantial and indirect evidence of SU-contamination, throughout the bulk of the pretrial discovery- Plaintiffs had not been able to produce direct test results of their soils and waters. This was due principally to the fact that such testing could not generally be performed on scientific equipment available to Plaintiffs’ experts. The Plaintiffs agreed to allow agents of DuPont onto their properties where their nurseries were locate ed. for the purpose of taking soil samples. The Defendant agreed, however, that in return for being allowed access to the soils, waters, and plants of the Plaintiffs for purposes of taking samples, DuPont would furnish Plaintiffs with all materials generated in connection with any tests conducted on those soil, water, and plant samples.

In an effort to bolster the defense contention that there were no SUs in Plaintiffs’ soils or waters, DuPont engaged Alta Laboratories, Inc. (hereinafter “Alta”) to perform sophisticated analytical chemistry tests, which few other laboratories, if any, in the country could perform. Although all materials generated in connection with such tests were to be furnished to Plaintiffs, both as a matter of discovery and pursuant to order of this Court, and as a matter of conditions made clear as a predicate to the entry of DuPont onto Plaintiffs’ lands to obtain samples for' these tests, the only documentary materials ever furnished were some tables or charts which the Defendant referred to and called “Summaries.” Some of those summaries were given to Plaintiffs on the eve of trial. The remainder of them were not furnished until after Plaintiffs had rested their ease and not until just before the Defendant was about to call its only witness through whom it would seek to elicit the information which was purportedly contained in the tables. It is the conduct of DuPont surrounding the preparation and use of these “summaries,” when taken together with the conduct generally of the agents and attorneys of DuPont, which gives rise to many of the allegations of fraud upon the Court currently before the Court.

For a year preceding the Alta tests, the Bush Ranch Plaintiffs and DuPont had been engaged in a protracted series of discovery disputes, as the result of which this Court had repeatedly found DuPont to be in flagrant violation of discovery orders and duties. This Court had found Dupont’s conduct to be the most serious abuse in its years on the bench and the most serious abuse reflected in the legal precedents. A conditional sanction of, first, $500,000.00, then $1,000,000.00 had been set, without, it is now clear, altering DuPont’s conduct toward the Court, the civil justice system, or the opposing parties.

During the lengthy discovery period in this case this Court was forced by the obstructive practices of DuPont to hold numerous hearings. Those hearings took place on the following dates: July 8, 1992; August 5, 1992; August 26, 1992; October 9, 1992; February 19, 1993; April 9, 1993; May 14, 1993; May 27, 1993; June 11, 1993; and June 29, 1993. As a result of the hearings held, the Court entered orders on the following dates:

(1) Memorandum opinion and order on Plaintiffs’ motion to compel discovery dated June 24,1992;

(2) Order dated July 21,1992;

(3) Order dated August 7, 1992;

(4) Supplemental order dated September 25,1992;

(5) Order granting Plaintiffs motion to adopt report of special master dated October 15,1992;

(6) Order on pending motions dated October 23,1992;

(7) Order dated November 16,1992;

(8) Order dated December 10,1992;

(9) Order imposing sanctions dated March 15,1993;

(10) Supplemental order imposing sanctions dated April 14,1993;

(11) Memorandum and order on hearings of May 14, 1993, and May 27, 1993, dated June 7,1993; and .

(12)Order on continuation of Plaintiffs’ motion for sanctions hearing held June 11, 1993, dated June 15,1993.

This Court had never experienced the kind of deliberate refusal to comply with discovery orders that was evidently taking place during this period of time. It became apparent to the Court that DuPont was using its in-house legal staff, local Wilmington, Delaware, counsel, national coordinating counsel, and others to carry out a deliberate effort to restrict legitimate discovery in these and similar cases. The Court entered an order making such a finding on March 15,1993. Efforts by the Court to bring DuPont into compliance involved requiring an affidavit from, and subsequently the appearance of the Defendant’s Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer, Edgar S. Woolard, Jr. Mr. Woolard assured this Court that DuPont understood what its discovery obligations were and that it would produce all documents responsive to the Plaintiffs requests. In spite of these assurances, the Defendant continued to refuse to honor the Plaintiffs legitimate requests and its earlier assurances to the Court that it would produce all responsive documents. Because of the repeated refusals of DuPont to comply with the orders of the Court, and in order to make an appropriate impression on DuPont, the Court was constrained to enter a conditional order imposing a monetary sanction of $500,000.00. As the case approached trial, the Court entered an order on June 7, 1993, addressing both the May 14, 1993, hearing and the May 27, 1993, hearing, and found, among other things, that:

By way of preface, the Court notes that DuPont’s prior non-compliance with the Court’s discovery orders is exemplified by the fact that Mr. George Frank, DuPont’s corporate counsel, submitted an affidavit on behalf of DuPont on January 4, 1993, wherein he certified to the Court that DuPont had fully complied with this Court’s orders in that full production of documents had been made pursuant to the Plaintiffs’ first requests for production even though he testified on cross-examination at the May 27 hearing that he never read through those requests. The Court finds such conduct to be typical of the Defendant’s attitude toward discovery throughout the history of this ease.

The monetary sanction against DuPont was increased in that order from $500,000.00 to $1,000,000.00 and was again reserved for later ruling by the Court following a future assessment of DuPont’s discovery conduct.

A fifth sanctions hearing was held on June 11, 1993, at which time the Court received evidence that DuPont had intentionally withheld documents related to the crucial issue in the case, crossrcontamination of Benlate with sulfonylureas. At that fifth sanction’s hearing, the Court received evidence that over one month prior to the hearing on May 6, 1993, DuPont scheduled the deposition of John Olsen, the contamination prevention coordinator at the Belle, West Virginia, DuPont plant. In connection with that deposition, the Court received evidence of the following:

(a) On May 5,1993, the evening before his deposition, Mr. Olsen was in the Atlanta office of Alston & Bird with Elizabeth Gilley preparing for his deposition. He presented her with additional documents from the Belle, West Virginia, DuPont facility, which had not previously been produced to the Bush Ranch Plaintiffs, but which related to the cross-contamination of Benlate.

(b) Rather than produce the documents and go forward with the deposition, DuPont’s counsel, on the eve of the Olsen deposition, falsely represented that Mr. Olsen was unavailable, and that the deposition would have to be canceled.

(e) Mr. Olsen’s deposition was rescheduled for June 4, 1993, and it was not until the evening of June 3, 1993, that these same documents, already in the possession of DuPont counsel Gilley since May 5, 1993, were produced to the Bush Ranch Plaintiffs.

(d) In the interim between May 5, 1993, and June 3,1993, representatives of DuPont, including Dr. David Johnson and Edgar S. Woolard represented to this Court that all responsive documents had been produced by May 14,1993,

(e) DuPont recognized that documents concerning- cross-contamination of Benlate with sulfonylureas generated after the Bush Ranch Plaintiffs’ initial requests were responsive to and subject to production pursuant to Plaintiffs’ request for supplementation (filed on May 24, 1993) to supplement the earlier document production.

As a result of the evidence presented at the June 11, 1993, hearing, the Court found as follows:

Well, the Court finds that the Defendant, DuPont, continues to take every means possible to obstruct discovery to which the Plaintiffs are entitled. This is just a con- ■ tinuation of what has been going on for months.
... Now, having stated as I did just a moment ago that the Court finds that the Defendant continues to take every means possible to obstruct discovery to which Plaintiffs were entitled, immediately the idea comes to mind, of course, well, just increase the monetary sanctions from a million to two million, or five million, or what not. But it’s obvious that money does not make an impression on the Defendant.
Now, with regard to what has been presented here today, the Court finds that it is without question now that the Plaintiffs have been clearly — have ■ clearly demonstrated that the Defendant has intentionally withheld documents relevant to the issue of cross-contamination of Benlate by Sulfonyl, however you pronounce that, ureas.
..'. (I)t prejudices the Plaintiffs in the presentation of their case for these documents to have been withheld until 30 days before the beginning of the trial, when under the Court’s order the documents should have been produced long ago. In other words, the Plaintiffs’ ease is clearly prejudiced by this action, inaction on the part of the Defendant. It is simply an abuse of the discovery process. And during the recent weeks, since this is the worst case of this nature that I have ever had anything to do with, I have been interested in other eases that have déalt with abuse of the discovery process, and I haven’t found a case that approaches this. In other words, I haven’t found a case where the deliberate actions on the part of a defendant to obstruct the discovery process approach what has happened here. There may be some, but I haven’t found any. (Emphasis added.)

Subsequent to that June 11, 1998, hearing, DuPont produced over 225,000 documents responsive to the Bush Ranch Plaintiffs’ initial and supplemental requests, including many documents which were generated subsequent to Plaintiffs’ initial document requests. None of the Alta test materials concerning SU contamination was included in that production. ■

On June 26, 1993, Plaintiffs took the deposition of Nicholas Albergo, an expert witness named by DuPont. On that date, Mr. Alber-go testified, among other things, that Alta had conducted tests of the Bush Ranch Plaintiffs’ soils and waters for the presence of DuPont SUs. Based on the data, contained in the few charts available to him' from Alta at that time, Mr. Albergo testified that there was no evidence of SUs in any of the Bush Ranch Plaintiffs’ soils or waters which had been tested as reflected in the summaries.

A final sanctions hearing was held on June 29, 1993, less than one week before the trial of the Bush Ranch cases was to begin. At that time the Court received evidence concerning DuPont’s continued non-compliance with its obligations and the Court’s orders during the course of discovery, explicitly related to cross-contamination issues.

Present at the hearing as a corporate representative for DuPont was Dr. Joel Wom-mack, director of R & D and head of analytical chemistry for the Benlate Resolution Team since March, 1991. The Benlate Resolution Team was a group set up by DuPont to monitor, direct, and coordinate DuPont’s legal efforts with regard to all Benlate litigation. •

The Court’s June 29 hearing was at a time when Alta’s tests had already been conducted. None of the data or documents had been produced, nor had the attendant Alta documents, which disclose the history of the testing and the activities of DuPont in connection with the ultimate preparation of the Alta report and summaries, been produced. Those documents established that DuPont knew from at least early in the week before Mr. Albergo gave a discovery deposition on June 26,1993, that there had been numerous initial positive findings of SU contamination, findings which the chemist conducting the tests has testified he recognized as “potentially bad news for DuPont” which he assumed might establish liability for damage at the Bush Ranch Plaintiffs’ nurseries. These documents were withheld by Defendant from the Plaintiffs. While DuPont remained silent about the Alta data and documents, the Court made the following findings:

(a) “... but the Plaintiffs have been trying to get this information for a year. I’ve entered orders about producing tapes and producing results, and producing this, and producing another. And it’s just been an ongoing battle for the Plaintiffs and their efforts, legitimate efforts, to obtain discovery material, to get this information. Finally, they get some of it, here just a week before the case is supposed to go to trial, and haven’t got all of it yet.”
(b) “... And by withholding this evidence until just a few days before the case goes to trial, of course, the effect is that once again the Plaintiffs have been prejudiced in the presentation of their case because they have been prevented because of the time constraints which are upon us, from conducting the discovery which would be necessary to further develop evidence concerning these deletions, and who did it, and why, and so on.”
(c) “... the Court finds that the Defendant is not in compliance with the Court’s order, and is again ordered to produce to the Plaintiffs before the close of business on Friday of this week, all such information, and particularly the Shalaby information, which has been the focus of two or three of our hearings.” (Emphasis added.)

The record reveals that DuPont has taken several positions as to why no sanctions should be imposed in response to the show cause order. Among those positions, DuPont states that it was under no obligation to produce to Plaintiffs in the Bush Ranch eases the Alta data and documents. DuPont states that the Bush Ranch Plaintiffs’ discovery, including the Plaintiffs’ supplemental discovery served not long before trial, did not require the production of the Alta data and documents, and that if the discovery did so require, DuPont had no duty to supplement its discovery responses through trial. DuPont also states that there was no .outstanding order of the Court requiring DuPont to produce all Benlate-related documents, which orders Petitioners allege would include the Alta data and documents.

Further, DuPont, at times, has argued that the Alta data and documents were not subject to production because of a claim of work product protection.

Concerning the chronology of discovery in the Bush Ranch cases, as it bears on the petition and the show cause hearing and as it bears on the reasons urged by DuPont why no sanctions should be entered, the Court summarizes its findings and/or finds as follows:

(a) The conduct and strategy of DuPont in the discovery process was controlled either through its in-house counsel, national coordinating counsel, or Wilmington, Delaware, counsel and not solely by Alston Bird or other local counsel, and DuPont continues to knowingly approve, ratify and acquiesce in the past and present conduct of its counsel in this and subsequent' Benlate eases. DuPont, through its corporate officers and other officials, ratified, approved, and adopted this conduct and strategy and caused the same to be used by counsel representing DuPont in Benlate cases all across the country.
(b) The Court found a continuing and deliberate effort by DuPont to impede, delay, and otherwise restrict legitimate discovery by Plaintiffs in the underlying cases and a repeated failure to comply with the Court’s orders concerning discovery.
(e)Supplementation of discovery responses was both ordered by the Court and recognized by the parties; it is, moreover, encompassed within the civil rules.
(d) This Court maintained a continuing order outstanding through the trial of the Bush Ranch cases which required DuPont to produce all Benlate-related documents to Plaintiffs.
(e) Benlate-related documents included by definition all of the Alta data and documents.
(f) The Alta data and documents were not produced to Plaintiffs, were not offered to Plaintiffs, were not provided to this Court, or were not otherwise made available to this Court or Plaintiffs in the underlying Bush Ranch cases.
(g) DuPont made no claim of protection or privilege, either work product or attorney-client, to any of the Alta data and documents; and such a claim, if made, would not have been sustainable.
(h) DuPont engaged in a deliberate effort to obstruct discovery during the Bush Ranch eases.
(i) DuPont violated the rules of discovery, Court orders, and duty to participate in litigation in good, faith during the Bush Ranch cases,
(j) Court orders entered during these eases clearly required DuPont to produce all documents relevant to, or likely to lead to information relevant to, the contentions and defenses in those cases, including contamination of Benlate by SUs, the very subject of the Alta tests, and the hingepin of the Bush Ranch Plaintiffs’ eases.

. Whether or not Plaintiffs’ soils were actually and in fact contaminated with SUs was recognized by both parties as the critical issue in the case. The Defendant, in fact, argued strongly to the Court that DuPont should be allowed to introduce the Alta lab test “summaries” on that subject and that the Court’s failure to allow such evidence would be highly prejudicial to the Defendant on what DuPont characterized as “the critical issue in the case.” That “critical issue” is, however, not an issue which the Court need resolve here as a predicate to deciding whether or not Defendant’s conduct regarding the withholding of such evidence as claimed by the Petitioners here was conduct which should be sanctioned by the Court. Whether or not SUs were in fact present in the Plaintiffs’ soils was for the jury in the Bush Ranch cases to determine. Whether or not there was material evidence bearing upon the presence of SUs in the Plaintiffs’ soils which was improperly withheld by the Defendant is the question which this Court must determine. The Court must also determine at this time whether or not DuPont has even now told the truth about the circumstances surrounding the Alta data and documents. The evidence which actually went to the jury, with the exception of the Alta Labs evidence, as to the presence of SUs in the Plaintiffs’ soils was highly contested. DuPont presented the Alta Labs test summaries through its witness Albergo, and that unre-futed showing that the sole test results on that subject showed absolutely no SUs present in the Plaintiffs’ soils was the only direct evidence which the jury had as to the SU soil content resulting from analytical soil tests. All other evidence concerning the presence of SUs which the jury had before it, which evidence was circumstantial in nature, was contested by both sides, and the jury was left to weigh the relative merits of opposing witnesses testifying as to differing views of whether or not, for instance, whether the boxes of Benlate supplied to the Plaintiffs contained SUs or whether or not it was possible for cross-contamination to occur at the fabricating plant in West Virginia where both Benomyl and sulfonylureas were produced.

Both sides had recognized Alta Labs to be highly regarded in the scientific community and most likely the only lab in the country capable of performing these very intricate, highly technical, and almost prohibitively expensive scientific tests. The introduction of the unrefuted critical opinion testimony by Mr. Albergo, stating without qualification that the Alta charts supplied to him by.DuPont showed that no SUs were present in Plaintiffs' soils, effectively destroyed the Plaintiffs’ circumstantial case on that decisive issue, just as testimony to the contrary would have been devastating to the Defendant’s case had it been shown that its own experts at Alta Labs had reached an opposite finding that there were SUs present.

The evidence produced at this show cause hearing demonstrates clearly that DuPont’s Alta Lab scientists had in fact found in June of 199S substantial evidence as a result'of their testing that samples from each of the Bush Ranch Plaintiffs’ soils showed positive findings for SU contamination. Mr. Beth-em, one of the two scientists from Alta Labs, testified at his deposition in late 1994, which was admitted as evidence at the May 1995 healing, as follows:

Q: Does your data support a representation that there are no sulfonylureas in the Columbus, Georgia Plaintiffs soils, without a reference to the detection limit? .
A: No....
Q: And you could not state under oath or not under oath—
A: Okay
Q: —that sulfonylureas do not exist [sic] in the soil of the Bush Ranch Plaintiffs or the Columbus Plaintiffs at lower than fifty parts per trillion?
A: No, I could not state that with certainty.
Q: You have, in your data that reflect the presence of certain sulfonylureas in the extracts from certain samples at levels below that which you consider your detection limit, correct....
A: Yes, we do.
Q: When Mr. Celia asked you a question, if you had any factual basis for the presence of SUs in the Columbus, Georgia soils, I believe you said you had no basis for determining — that you had no factual basis for determining, for stating that there were SUs in the Columbus case soils; is that correct?
A: With the detection limit of fifty parts per trillion
Q: And, in fact, you do have a basis to believe that there were SUs in the extracts from those soils, don’t you?
A: Yes, I do.

(Emphasis added.)

Mr. Bethem also testified that, at the time he made his findings with Alta’s regard to SUs in the Plaintiffs’ soils, he considered those findings to be “bad news” for DuPont.

The Alta Labs personnel then promptly reported their findings to DuPont’s lawyers, Alston and Bird, in mid June, 1993, and the Court concludes from the evidence that DuPont’s Dr. David Johnson necessarily knew about these findings. The evidence was not communicated to the Plaintiffs despite DuPont’s clear duty to do so and in fact was deliberately and consciously kept by the Defendant from becoming a part of the evidence in the ease through the employment by the Defendant of a scheme which the Court finds that DuPont perpetrated for the very purpose of hiding and concealing this critical and pivotal evidence.

The Court finds that DuPont’s motive seems clear. Given the company’s great reliance on and belief in scientific testing, together with the potential economic exposure because of the large numbers of pending but unresolved cases, a finding by its own scientists that its Benlate was contaminated with its own SUs would be particularly grave. The evidence is undisputed, however, that following its reporting of its initial findings of SUs in mid June 1998, Alta Labs was ordered by the Defendant to go back, “after most of the work is done” and to “confirm (defirm)” the positive findings. The Alta documents containing this disclosure were not produced by DuPont. Testing procedures were changed. The minimum detection limit was raised. Tests were repeatedly redone and massaged. Soil samples that had been found to be positive were “homogenized” with other parts of the soil sample. Although the written data which comprised the Alta test procedures was highly complex and technical and incomprehensible to people without very specialized analytical chemical training, those documents were carefully concealed from the Plaintiffs and were, in fact, not made available to the only expert, Mr. Albergo, who the Defendant selected to testify with regai’d to the conclusions to be derived from that data.

DuPont never offered, proffered or produced the Alta data and documents to the Bush Ranch Plaintiffs, despite a clear duty to do so arising from repeated orders of this Court, from the Civil .Rules, and from its own commitments and representations. Those documents, in fact, only came to light after a ruling by the Hawaii Supreme Court forced DuPont months later to produce them. The documents establish that DuPont knew, from at least early in the week before Mr. Albergo gave his discovery deposition on June 26, 1993, that there had been numerous initial positive findings of SU contamination, findings which the chemist conducting the tests has testified he recognized as “potentially bad news for DuPont,” and which he assumed might establish liability for damage at the Bush Ranch Plaintiffs’ nurseries.

Rather than having the chemist who performed the tests testify as to the results of those tests, the Defendant chose instead to falsely present the results and conclusions of those tests through a witness untrained in analytical chemistry and incapable of interpreting the data showing the positive findings that Alta had made. Documents characterized by the Defendant as “Summaries” were supplied to Mr. Albergo, which documents purported to list in a table tests that Alta Labs had run on each of the Bush Ranch Plaintiffs’ soil. Only a portion of these summaries were supplied to Plaintiffs a few days before the trial began and the remainder were .withheld until after Plaintiffs had rested their cases and Defendant was well into its case. These “Summaries” were represented to be the results of the work of Bethem and Petersen of Alta Labs compiled in table form, and showing for each soil sample that no SUs were detected at the detection limit shown on the chart.

When the Defendant attempted to introduce the documents at trial through their witness Albergo who they had called as a remediation.expert, Plaintiffs objected to the introduction of the charts on the basis that the witness had not performed the work on the soil testing and was not competent to authenticate and vouch for the document.

The Court did not allow the introduction of the charts but did allow the witness to give his opinion as an expert based upon the hearsay conclusions evidenced in the tables. The Court.now finds that Mr. Albergo on. voir dire falsely represented to the Court his role in the oversight and supervision of the Alta tests which led to the preparation of those so-called summaries. During that voir dire and argument by counsel as to whether or not the Court should admit the tables or the information which the tables purported to show, the Court finds counsel for DuPont misrepresented to the Court and misled the Court and Plaintiffs counsel as to the true facts surrounding what the Alta Labs tests showed with regard to the presence of SUs in the soil samples tested by Alta. The Court further finds that the evidence which the Court permitted to go to the jury, based upon the false and misleading testimony of Albergo and upon the false and misleading representations and arguments of DuPont’s counsel, provided the false basis for the Defendant to argue throughout the remainder of the case, without contradiction, that the test evidence showed that no SUs were present in the soils of the Plaintiffs. The Court further finds that the evidence is now clear that, had the Plaintiffs been given the information which the Alta tests disclosed and had not been led to believe that those tests showed no presence of SUs, the trial of the case may have been materially altered. The presentation of Plaintiffs witnesses, the cross examination of Defendant’s witnesses, Plaintiffs rebuttal case, opening statements, and closing arguments, at the very least would have been entirely different. Specifically, the Court finds:

That DuPont’s expert, Nicholas Albergo, testified falsely and misled the Court as to ,his role in the supervising, directing, and controlling of the Alta Lab scientists, and in his understanding of the basis for the summaries in connection with the testing of the Plaintiffs’ soils in the Bush Ranch tests. In order to bolster his own credibility, Mr. Albergo testified to the Bush Ranch jury that, “I visited the labs that I used, personally discussed the results with the analytical chemists, and personally looked at the raw data.” These statements were false. In reality, it is clear that Mr. Albergo and others have now testified that Mr. Albergo had little, if any, contact with the Alta analytical chemists, did not see or review any of their raw data, nor did he consult with them about the methodology or results. Mr. Albergo testified by deposition January 19, 1995, that he was not actually involved in these tests; that he had not hired Alta; that he had not discussed the results or methodology with the Alta chemists or DuPont’s counsel, that he had not reviewed any raw data; that he was never provided any data by DuPont, Alta, or DuPont lawyers; that he only saw summaries of the test results; and that, in fact, he had never even asked about the results or the underlying data.
That DuPont’s counsel, Elizabeth Gilley, misrepresented to the Court during argument on the voir dire of the witness, Mr. Albergo, what the role of that witness was in procuring, supervising, directing, and controlling the Alta Labs scientists in the conduct of the testing of the Plaintiffs’ soils in the Bush Ranch tests.
That Ms. Gilley, in conjunction with DuPont’s expert Nicholas Albergo, represented to this Court that Mr. Albergo worked closely with the analytical chemists at Alta running these tests and consulted with them concerning the methodology of the tests; the results of the tests, and data underlying the tests. Ms. Gilley then stated:
No, Your Honor, but they were conducted under his direction. He selected the labs to perform the analysis, he directed them as to what analysis should be performed, he told them what to look for, told them what methods to use, and they did everything under his direction and control.... So, Your Honor, we would . submit that he would be entitled to testify to the results, to submit the data in support of those results because he is entitled to rely on that information as an expert in that field. All this information is documentary evidence that he testified about in his deposition.
That DuPont’s counsel, Dow N. Kirkpatrick, Jr. misrepresented to the Court during argument on the voir dire of the witness, Mr. Albergo, what the role of that witness was in procuring, supervising, directing, and controlling the Alta Lab scientists in the conduct of the testing of the Plaintiffs’ soils in the Bush Ranch tests.

That in arguing to allow Albergo to testify and to permit the introduction of the Alta summaries into evidence, Mr. Kirkpatrick said:

This is the only expert in the entire case who has actually taken these samples and had them analyzed, and this is the issue because Plaintiffs have claimed that they have contamination on their property although they have no proof. And we have now got someone that has analyzed all of the samples, and will come in here and tell this Court and this jury that there are no SUs [sulfony-lureas] on the property, in the plants, or in the product. And we believe that that testimony is critical. (Emphasis added.)
and
The point simply is that we have the evidence that there are no SUs out there That is the issue in the case....
and
Your Honor, we’re talking about the. crucial issue in the case....
That DuPont’s counsel, Dow N. Kirkpatrick, Jr. misrepresented to the Court during closing argument to the jury what the witness, Albergo, actually did and what the findings of the Alta Labs scientists actually were.
That in argument to the jury in closing Mr. Kirkpatrick said:
... Nick Albergo went out and tested soil and other samples. He didn’t find any SUs in the soil or any of the samples out there. Those are our tests. Where are their tests? Do you recall when everybody went out, they dig up a shovel of dirt. We’d get half of it, they’d get half of it. We brought our test results in here. Where are their test results. Dr. Jones found plant disease. Mr. Albergo found no SUs.
... And our tests, the ones Mr. Albergo did, show there are not any SUs out there. What about Bush Ranch who plants his plants in the ground? He can’t claim sulfonylureas damage either. We tested for that. Mr. Albergo gave you the results in that test.
... All of this factual scientific information is in contrast to the Plaintiffs in these cases who are talking about some minute, very small sulfonylureas contamination in Benlate which they think has wiped out their plants. The evidence shows that sulfonylureas are not present in Plaintiffs’ Benlate soil.
... On the other hand, what did DuPont do? We asked Nick Albergo, a remediation specialist from Tampa to make a complete assessment. He visited each site, studied the property, took numerous samples, soil, water, air, other materials. He had them analyzed. You heard the results. There is no contamination. There are no SUs in the soil, water, or anywhere. (Emphasis added.)
That DuPont presented testimony, evidence, and argument that there was no evidence of SUs in the Plaintiffs’ soils and waters, knowing the same to be false and misleading to the Court and jury.
That in relying on a summary of the Alta data and documents, DuPont’s expert Albergo inherently relied on the data and documents generated by Alta Labs.
That DuPont’s conduct with respect to this self-described “most critical” evidence was in violation of the Court’s orders, the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, a litigant’s duty of good faith and DuPont’s express agreements and representations, and, in and of itself, and in connection with the other conduct which occurred in the Bush Ranch cases deprived those Plaintiffs of a fair trial and constituted a willful, deliberate fraud on this Court.
That DuPont precluded, through its willful misconduct, meaningful cross-examination of witnesses, meaningful scientific debate within the courtroom and meaningful argument to the jury on this self-described “most critical issue in the ease.”
That DuPont improperly valued its own ■views of “science” to the exclusion of having the “science” tested in the crucible of the courtroom.
That DuPont has now acknowledged that, as to the Alta data and documents, scientists can and do disagree concerning the ultimate conclusion and effect of Alta’s tests. In fact, DuPont acknowledged that the Alta data and documents were subject to scientific opinion that SUs were in the Bush Ranch Plaintiffs’ soils and water.
That Todd David, one of Defendant’s lawyers, testified:
Q. [Mr. Gill] Okay, and similarly there is a disagreement as to what the Bush Ranch initial findings mean or don’t mean, right? There could be a scientific dispute about that.
A. [Mr. David] Well, I know that Mr. Bethem stands by his report from Alta as to the Bush Ranch samples.
Q. Can you answer the question?
A. I know that Dr. Jodie Johnson disagrees with Mr. Bethem’s conclusion.
Q. Right. So, if you have the raw data, there could be a scientific disagreement about what all that means, right?
A. Yes, and had Mr. Pope’s folks—
Q. You explicitly said to Judge Roberts, speaking about Bush Ranch that there is a scientific disagreement about what all that means, right?
A. Absolutely, sir.

While the Bush Ranch jury was deliberating the parties reached agreement on a settlement. The parties approached the Court and DuPont presented to this Court a motion. to vacate the sanctions orders. DuPont represented there that, “Plaintiffs have agreed that, during the course of the case, DuPont did come in compliance with the Court’s orders and its discovery obligation.” While Plaintiffs could not and did not know that this representation was false, DuPont did. In reliance upon those representations, this Court vacated the discovery and sanctions orders. DuPont obtained that order through a deliberate and willful fraud on the Court, concealing and continuing its prior pattern of abuse. In so doing, DuPont has made this Court an instrument of its continuing fraud.

Within a month after the conclusion of the Bush Ranch cases, DuPont went to trial in another Benlate case, this time in Florida (Lambert v. DuPont). See Lambert, et al. v. E.I. DuPont, et al., Civil Action No. CA-92-067, In the Circuit Court, In and For Hardee County, Florida. A third such trial occurred. approximately four months after the end of the Bush Ranch cases, again in Florida (Ritter-Whitworth v. DuPont). See Whitworth, et al. v. Harrell’s, Inc., et al., Civil Action GC-G-92-1293 and Ritter, et al. v. Growers Fertilizer Corp., et al., Civil Action No. GCG-1374, In the Circuit Court of the Tenth Judicial Circuit In and For Polk County, Florida. In each of those cases, an identical pattern emerged. Alta was called on to conduct tests for the presence of SUs through the same analytical method used in Bush Ranch, and, in each instance, obtained positive results. In Lambert, the Alta chemist has (after completion of the trial) testified that he found the positive SU results to be conclusive. In both instances, DuPont intentionally withheld from the plaintiffs those test data and, as in Bush Ranch, was able to argue to the Court and the jury that the evidence established that there were no SUs in the Plaintiffs’ soils or waters. See re Lambert, the following: May 3, 1995, Hearing Transcript, at pp. 465-467; May 9, 1995, Hearing Transcript, pp. 760-765; May 8, 1995, Hearing Transcript, at pp. 656-670, 694; May 9, 1995, Hearing Transcript, at pp. 761-784; May 11, 1995, Hearing Transcript, at pp. 1460-1461; Dr. Richard Browner, December 2, 1994, Kawamata. Farms, Trial Transcript (PX 10); Dr. J. Johnson, August 22, 1994, Hashimoto Trial Transcript at pp. 36-37 (PX 11). See also, PX 80 and 81. See, re Ritter-Whitworth, the following: May 8, 1995, Hearing Transcript at pp. 579-583, 606-620, 642-648. See also, PX 97 and 98.

Following a bitter discovery dispute in another Benlate trial, Kawamata Farms v. DuPont, Civil Action No. 91-437 (Kona) and 920247K (Kona) In the Circuit Court of the Third Circuit, State of Hawaii. The Hawaii Court ordered DuPont to produce data and documents from Alta, which included the Bush Ranch data and documents, draft reports, and telephone memoranda. For the first time, the test data containing those parts indicating positive findings were disclosed, along with notes from Alta showing Defendant’s directive to “confirm (defirm)” the positive results. DuPont strenuously resisted production both in the trial court and through mandamus in the Supreme Court of Hawaii, and asserted a claim of privilege as to the Alta data and documents, whieh claim is directly opposite to DuPont’s assertions to this Court in the show cause hearing. As set out, infra, this Court has concluded that DuPont has presented false positions here when contrasted "with its judicial admissions and assertions elsewhere.

For example, DuPont has maintained here:
(1) that it was not required by court order, rule or discovery request to produce the Alta data and documents;
(2) that the Alta data and documents were shielded by a work product privilege despite DuPont’s representations to the Court that the Alta people were fact witnesses, and despite having never claimed a privilege or logged such documents in the required privilege logs;
(3) that the Bush Ranch Plaintiffs never requested the Alta data and documents;
(4) that DuPont “absolutely” did offer the data and documents to Plaintiffs’ counsel in the Bush Ranch proceedings, but that Plaintiffs’ counsel declined them;
(5) that DuPont would have produced the Alta data and documents if the Bush Ranch Plaintiffs had made a Rule 1006 “objection” to the misleading “summaries;”
(6) that some part of the Alta data and documents were “available” in the courtroom after the Bush Ranch Plaintiffs rested, but that riot all of those papers were present, and DuPont cannot say what parts were and what were not present, although it is now clear that a number of the most damaging parts were not present, assuming any of them were, since DuPont never advised the Court or opposing counsel of the claimed availability of a box of such papers in the courtroom. In Hawaii, however, DuPont argued that the Bush Ranch Alta data and documents were subject to a privilege whieh had never been waived, and that those papers had never been offered, proffered, tendered, or used in the Bush Ranch or any other Benlate trial.

The Circuit Court in Hawaii, like this Court, found DuPont’s discovery abuses to be unprecedented, and imposed a sanction of $1,500,000.00. This Court is not engaged in determining whether a sanction should be imposed for DuPont’s conduct in other courts, but its clear pattern of concealment and misrepresentation concerning the same issues bears on DuPont’s intent, willfulness, and motive, and relates to the credibility to be given to its current professions of a corporate intent or desire to conform to the discovery rules and court orders.

The Hawaiian production led plaintiffs in other Benlate cases to take the depositions of the Alta witnesses, Mr. Albergo and others, thereby disclosing much of the history of the events surrounding the Alta tests. This Court is not persuaded that DuPont has even now told the full truth of its conduct in that regard.

In the proceedings before this Court on the show cause order, the Court finds that DuPont, when confronted with the allegations of the petition, which were supported by transcripts from other court proceedings, depositions, and court orders, has not fully and truthfully responded to those charges. Instead, it has engaged in evasion, equivocation, and falsehood; through its witnesses such as Mr. David and Mrs. Gilley, DuPont refused to give straightforward answers to questions about its conduct in regard to the Alta documents and its positions before other courts, refused to give words their plain and ordinary meanings, and refused to respond candidly or directly; it has sought to give a distorted reading to the plain meaning of words; it has created a whole series of after-the-fact excuses which are not supported by the facts and events; it has put forward legally and factually inconsistent éfforts at justifying its conduct; it has contradicted its own solemn representations to other courts, made to induce those courts to rule favorably to DuPont; it has resisted producing witnesses before this Court who have knowledge of -the facts, and those witnesses who did testify for DuPont were not credible; it has sought to avoid answering for its conduct by making irrelevant ad hominem attacks on Petitioners, Petitioners’ counsel, and the Court; it has filed affidavits based on incomplete or inaccurate recitals of the predicate facts; it has distorted the rules of evidence and the Civil Rules; it is clear that DuPont continues to evidence an attitude of contempt for the Court’s orders and processes, and to view itself as not subject to the rules and orders affecting all other litigants.

DuPont’s actions and representations concerning the Alta data and documents, and its ultimate false representation concerning compliance with the order of this Court, constituted a fraud on the Court and a contempt of the Court’s orders. DuPont’s conduct of concealment and misrepresentation has continued through the show cause hearing. This conduct merits, indeed requires, vigorous action by the Court and the imposition of severe sanctions.

The Court’s Authority

DuPont has questioned the authority of this Court to issue the show cause order and conduct the hearing which ensued, contending also that the Court does not have the power to impose sanctions.

This Court has the power, the authority, and the jurisdiction to investigate allegations of a fraud on the Court and a fraud on the judicial system, particularly where the alleged fraud was accomplished by concealing highly relevant and discoverable information and evidence, bearing on the most critical issue in the case, from the opposing parties and their counsel, from a testifying expert witness, and from the Court and the jury; where the production of such information and evidence was, pursuant to court orders, subject to both initial and supplemental discovery requests, was required by the Court’s orders, and had been promised by DuPont’s Chief Executive Officer, DuPont’s legal department, and DuPont’s trial counsel; where the alleged fraud ultimately involved the knowing and willful presentation to the Court and/or to the jury of false testimony and false argument; and where the alleged fraud involved the presentation to the Court of a motion containing materially untrue statements for the purpose of, and with the result of, obtaining an order from this Court vacating prior “findings of discovery misconduct, and relieving DuPont of an obligation to pay monetary sanctions. Such final action of-presenting a false representation to the Court to obtain relief had the effect of using the Court as an instrument to further the misconduct and fraud of DuPont.

The Bush Ranch Plaintiffs and DuPont agreed in the pretrial order in those eases (see PX 1) that this Court had jurisdiction over the parties and the subject matter there involved. The alleged fraud occurred in this Court, and this Court is the proper, if not the only, forum in which the matters raised in the present petition can, in the first instance, be determined. See Ex parte Bradley, 7 Wall. 364, 372, 74 U.S. 364, 372, 19 L.Ed. 214, 217 (1868) (it is anomalous for one court to take cognizance of an alleged contempt committed before and against another court; the court wherein the contempt occurred possesses ample powers to take care of its own dignity and punish the offender). See also Chambers v. NASCO, Inc., 501 U.S. 32, 111 S.Ct. 2123, 115 L.Ed.2d 27 (1991) (power to punish for contempts inherent in all courts). This Court has the power, the authority, and the jurisdiction to sanction DuPont, to hold DuPont in civil contempt, and otherwise to act to enforce the authority of this Court, if the allegations are shown by clear and convincing evidence to be true. This Court relies on its inherent powers, 28 U.S.C. § 1651 and 18 U.S.C. § 401, Federal Rules of Civil Procedure 11, 26, 33, 34, and 37, and case authority, including Chambers v. NASCO, Inc., supra; Roadway Express, Inc. v. Piper, 447 U.S. 752, 100 S.Ct. 2455, 65 L.Ed.2d 488 (1980); National Hockey League v. Metropolitan Hockey Club, Inc., 427 U.S. 639, 96 S.Ct. 2778, 49 L.Ed.2d 747 (1976); Link v. Wabash Railroad Company, 370 U.S. 626, 82 S.Ct. 1386, 8 L.Ed.2d 734 (1962); Hazel-Atlas Glass Co. v. Hartford-Empire Co., 322 U.S. 238, 64 S.Ct. 997, 88 L.Ed. 1250 (1944); Shillitani v. United States, 384 U.S. 364, 86 S.Ct. 1531, 16 L.Ed.2d 622 (1966); Universal Oil Products Co. v. Root Refining Co., 328 U.S. 575, 66 S.Ct. 1176, 90 L.Ed. 1447 (1946); Cooter & Gell v. Hartmarx Corp., 496 U.S. 384, 110 S.Ct. 2447, 110 L.Ed.2d 359 (1990), Kokkonen v. Guardian Life Ins. Co., 511 U.S. -, 114 S.Ct. 1673, 128 L.Ed.2d 391 (1994); Ex parte Wall, 17 Otto 265, 107 U.S. 265, 2 S.Ct. 569, 27 L.Ed. 552 (1883); Ex parte Robinson, 19 Wall, 505, 86 U.S. 505, 22 L.Ed. 205 (1873); Ex parte Bradley, 7 Wall 364, 74 U.S. 364, 19 L.Ed. 214 (1868); Malautea v. Suzuki Motor Co., 987 F.2d 1536 (11th Cir.), cert. denied, — U.S. -, 114 S.Ct. 181, 126 L.Ed.2d 140 (1993); BankAtlantic v. Blythe Eastman Paine Webber, 12 F.3d 1045 (11th Cir.1994); Harre v. A.H. Robins Co., 750 F.2d 1501 (11th Cir.1985), opinion vacated in part on reconsideration, 866 F.2d 1303 (11th Cir.1989); Sizzler Fam. Steak Houses v. Western Sizzlin Steak, 793 F.2d 1529 (11th Cir.1986); Carlucci v. Piper Aircraft Corp., Inc., 775 F.2d 1440 (11th Cir.1985); Brandt v. Vulcan, Inc., 30 F.3d 752, 757 n. 7 (7th Cir.1994); Properties International Ltd. v. Turner, 706 F.2d 308 (11th Cir.1983); Southerland v. Irons, 628 F.2d 978 (6th Cir.1980); Town of Columbus v. Barringer, 85 F.2d 908 (4th Cir.1936); Porcelli v. Joseph Schlitz Brewing Co., 78 F.R.D. 499 (E.D.Wis.1978); and United States v. Pendergast, 35 F.Supp. 593 (W.D.Mo.1940).

“The power to punish for contempts is inherent in all courts; its existence is essential to the preservation of order in judicial proceedings, and to the enforcement of the judgments, orders, and writs of the courts, and consequently to the due administration of justice.” Ex parte Robinson, supra at 510. By statute, summary punishment for contempts may be inflicted: “1st, where there has been misbehavior of a person in the presence of the courts, or so near thereto as to obstruct the administration of justice; 2nd, where there has been misbehavior of any officer of the courts in his official transactions; and, 3rd, where there has been disobedience or resistance by any officer, party, juror, witness, or other person, to any lawful writ, process, order, rule, decree, or command of the courts.” Id. at 511.

“The power to punish, as contempt, misbehavior committed in the presence of the court is an inherent power. Congress has not limited the time within which it may be punished. Perhaps there is an inherent limitation in the inherent power, a limitation arising out of laches — the punishment must not be unreasonably delayed. Certainly it is not unreasonably delayed if a proceeding for punishment is begun as soon as the misbehavior is discovered, particularly if the mis-behavants, by concealment and fraud, have prevented the discovery.” United States v. Pendergast, 35 F.Supp. 593, 599 (W.D.Mo.1940). The Pendergast Court explained apparently limiting language in Ex parte Robinson, supra, which is not ■ quoted above.

If any doubt at all could arise from the language of the Supreme Court in Ex parte Robinson, supra, it certainly was entirely dissipated in the later opinion in Toledo Newspaper Co. v. United States, 247 U.S. 402, 38 S.Ct. 560, 62 L.Ed. 1186 [ (1918) ]. It was made perfectly clear by the opinion in that ease that contempt was not restricted to interference with ‘order and decorum.’ When the opinion is read in connection with the opinion of the district court in the same case (220 F. 458) it is clear that it is the effect on the administration of justice which is the test of whether’ misbehavior is contempt. If the tendency of the misbehavior is to affect the administration of justice, it is contempt, whether it is in the presence of the court or at some point away from the presence of the court, whether it affects the order and decorum of the courtroom or does not affect them.

Pendergast, 35 F.Supp. at 596.

Civil contempt has a remedial purpose, not the least of which is to give force and vitality'to judicial decrees. “The private or public rights that the decree sought to protect are an important measure of the remedy.” McComb v. Jacksonville Paper Co., 336 U.S. 187, 191, 69 S.Ct. 497, 499-500, 93 L.Ed. 599 (1949). See also, Universal Cooperatives, Inc. v. Tribal Co-Operative Marketing. Development Federation of India, Ltd., 45 F.3d 1194, 1196 (8th Cir.1995) (“Sanctions are on occasion necessary ‘not merely to penalize those whose conduct may be deemed to warrant such a sanction, but to deter those who might be tempted to such conduct in the absence of such a deterrent.’ National Hockey League v. Metropolitan Hockey Club, 427 U.S. 639, 643, 96 S.Ct. 2778, 2781, 49 L.Ed.2d 747, 751 (1976)”).

“There can be no question that courts have inherent power to enforce compliance with their lawful orders through civil contempt.” Shillitani v. United States, 384 U.S. 364, 370, 86 S.Ct. 1531, 1535, 16 L.Ed.2d 622 (1966). Here, DuPont violated not just one court order, but an entire series of court orders, and misrepresented its conduct to the Court. DuPont breached its discovery obligations, its ■ duty to proceed in good faith, and its representations to the Court and counsel. DuPont elicited and presented false testimony from a key witness. DuPont argued falsely to the Court and the jury. DuPont discredited the Bush Ranch Plaintiffs’ witnesses with the Alta tests. DuPont’s contemptuous fraud on this Court was brought to the attention of this Court as soon as practicable after the discovery of the conduct. DuPont’s conduct constitutes contempt of this Court.

The Court of Appeals of this circuit recently considered and addressed a situation where, like here, the defendant “stubbornly withheld discoverable information.... ” Malautea v. Suzuki Motor Co., Ltd., 987 F.2d 1536, 1539 (11th Cir.1993). There, the district court specifically found four methods whereby the Defendants had resisted discovery: first, the defendants played word games, saying that certain words and phrases were not defined; second, the defendants unilaterally limited the meaning or scope of discovery requests; third, the defendants failed to produce documents ordered to be produced and in so failing showed disdain for the Court’s orders; and fourth, the defendants deliberately covered up damaging evidence. See id. at 1540-41. A review of the evidence here reveals all of the discovery avoidance methods shown in Malautea. Even more egregious misconduct occurred here than occurred in Malautea.

In Malautea the district court chose to strike the defendants’ answers and enter a default judgment against them on the issue of liability. The Court of Appeals affirmed, despite the defendants’ contentions that the suppressed evidence referenced by the Court was not encompassed by the Court’s discovery orders, that the discovery orders were vague, and that any failure to comply was simply a misunderstanding. See id. at 1542. The Court of Appeals held that the Federal Rules (there Rule 37(b)(2)(C)) “give district judges broad discretion to fashion appropriate sanctions for violation of discovery or-ders_” Malautea, 987 F.2d at 1542. This Court also recognizes, in accord with the Court of Appeals’ directions, that any sanction must be just, that is, it must comport with the requirements of due process, and that certain sanctions may only be imposed where the district court finds a willful or bad faith failure to obey discovery orders. Id.

In this matter, DuPont, like Suzuki in Ma-lautea, has argued that the Alta data and documents were not encompassed by the Court’s orders, that the orders were vague, or that DuPont simply misunderstood the orders. As reflected by this Court’s preceding findings, those arguments are not supported by any credible evidence. To the contrary, the clear and convincing evidence directly contradicts DuPont’s positions in this regard.

Observations About Discovery

The obvious and overall purpose of discovery under the Federal Rules is to require the disclosure of all relevant information, so that the ultimate resolution of disputed issues in any civil action may be based on a full and accurate understanding of the true facts, and therefore embody a fair and just result. United States v. The Procter & Gamble Company, 356 U.S. 677, 682, 78 S.Ct. 983, 986, 2 L.Ed.2d 1077; Hickman v. Taylor, 329 U.S. 495, 500-01, 67 S.Ct. 385, 388-89, 91 L.Ed. 451 (1947). It is intended to operate with minimal judicial supervision unless a dispute arises and one of the parties files a motion invoking judicial intervention. The rules require that discovery be accomplished voluntarily; that is, the parties should affirmatively disclose relevant information without the necessity of court orders compelling disclosure. This is because lawyers are expected to act in good faith, follow the rules and do their duty as officers of the court seeking the truth. Malautea, supra; Pesaplastic, C.A. v. Cincinnati Milacron Co., 799 F.2d 1510, 1521-23 (11th Cir.1986).

In cases involving claims of injury to person or property caused by defective products the subject matter is complex. Discovery is necessarily complex as well.

Adversarial machinations surrounding the discovery process are often at odds with the stated purpose of the Federal Rules of securing the just, speedy and inexpensive determination of every action. But procedural manipulation designed to frustrate resolution of disputes on their merits has become a common strategy.

It is the obligation of counsel under the rules, as officers of the court, to cooperate with one another so that in the pursuit of truth the judicial system operates as intended; so that neither the Court nor the litigants are put to unnecessary trouble and expense in pursuit of the truth; and disputes, are resolved on their merits as promptly and economically as the circumstances of the case permit. A litigant should not be allowed to play games with the court by concealing, denying, or giving an evasive answer to what he knows to be true. Malautea, supra; Pesaplastic, C.A. v. Cincinnati Milacron Co., supra.

The rules are binding on the parties as well, and they must comply with their obligations. Malautea, supra. Attorneys have a continuing duty to advise their clients of their duty to make honest, complete, non-evasive discovery disclosures, as well as the spectrum of sanctions they face for violating that duty. Fed.R.Civ.P. 26(g).

The Federal Rules require that counsel make a reasonable investigation and effort to assure that the client has provided all information and documents available to it which are responsive to the discovery request. It is also required that counsel certify that the responses to discovery requests are complete and correct, and that objections are well grounded in fact and law and not interposed for delay or other improper purpose. Fed.R.Civ.P. 26(g); Federal Rules Advisory Committee Notes, 1983 Amendments, Fed. R.Civ.P. 26(g).

The courts do not have the time to micromanage discovery in every case. They must depend on their officers, the lawyers, to keep faith with their primary duty to the court as its officers, and so make the discovery system work by voluntarily making the required disclosures. Counsel should not be allowed to “sell put” to their clients. Malautea, supra; Pesaplastic, C.A. v. Cincinnati Milacron Co., supra.

Sometimes the source of the problem is the litigants themselves, as is its cure. In some types of litigation the motivation to resist discovery is so great that offenders will not comply with discovery unless they know in advance that the cost of “stonewalling” will be greater than the benefits. Only by imposing harsh sanctions against a -willfully deceitful and evasive litigant do the courts take the advantage out of such misbehavior and turn it into a decided disadvantage. Only by. doing so can the courts empower their officers to refuse involvement in such- misconduct, and give them.the power to persuade their clients that such is not in their best interests. There will be no point in paying lavish litigation fees and costs to a lawyer to suppress the truth if the swift and certain punishment will follow. The choice can and should be made simple and clear: Litigate in our courts honestly and by the rules, or suffer the consequences. The public expects and deserves no less if confidence in our judicial system is to be preserved, as it must be. Hogue v. Fruehauf Corp., 151 F.R.D. 635 (C.D.Ill.1993); Baker v. General Motors Corp., 159 F.R.D. 519 (W.D.Mo.1994).

The Court’s Orders and the Federal Rules

This Court, in a series of orders dating from June 24, 1992, required, and the parties understood, that DuPont was obligated to produce all Benlate related documents to the Bush Ranch Plaintiffs. Those orders extended through and included the trial of the Bush Ranch cases. Those orders required the production of the Alta data and documents, and DuPont’s failure to produce such data and documents constitutes a conscious, willful, and deliberate violation of this Court’s orders. See PX 29-40.

Furthermore, under the circumstances presented here, DuPont had a duty under the Federal Rules to reveal the contents of and to produce all of the Alta data and documents stemming from the tests conducted on the Bush Ranch Plaintiffs’ soils and waters. As in force during the pertinent period, Fed.R.Civ.P. 26(e)(3) provided that:

(e) Supplementation of Responses; A party who has responded to a request for discovery with a response that was complete when made is under no duty to supplement his response to include information thereafter acquired, except as follows:
(1) A party is under a duty seasonably to supplement his response with respect to any question directly addressed to (a) the identity and location of persons having knowledge of discoverable matters, and (b) the identity of each person expected to be called as an expert witness at trial, the subject matter on which he is expected to testify, and the substance of his testimony.
(2) A party is under a duty seasonably to amend a prior response if he obtains information upon the-basis of which (a) he knows that the response was incorrect when made, or (b) he knows that the response though correct when made is no longer true and the circumstances are such that a failure to amend the response is in substance a knowing concealment.
(3) A duty to supplement responses may be imposed by order of the Court, agreement of the parties, or at any time prior to trial through new requests for supplementation of prior responses.

See Anderson v. Cryovac, Inc., 862 F.2d 910, 927 n. 12 (1st Cir.1988). See also McNally v. Yellow Cab Co., 16 F.R.D. 460 (E.D.Pa.1954) (notwithstanding any attempt to make the duty to supplement continuing, “it may not' be out of place for the Court to say at this time what should be obvious, namely, that the Defendant is bound to give truthful answers to the interrogatories and that both good faith and the spirit of the Rule require it to see to it that its answers are truthful as of the time of the trial as well as the time when the interrogatories are answered”).

Pursuant to Rules 26(e)(1), (2), because the substance of the witness Albergo’s testimony was misrepresented at his deposition, and because the response that the Alta data and documents showed no evidence of SUs in the Bush Ranch Plaintiffs’ soils and waters was incorrect when made and/or became no longer true such that DuPont’s failure to amend that response constituted a knowing concealment, under Rule 26(e)(3), because “[a] duty to supplement responses [had ] been imposed by [orders] of [this Court], agreement of the parties, [and] ... through new requests for supplementation of prior responses[,]” DuPont had a duty to supplement its discovery responses, including those, responses concerning the data obtained from tests conducted on Plaintiffs’ soils and waters. See Anderson, supra. DuPont violated both the letter and the spirit of the Federal Rule, and the duty to perform its discovery obligations in good faith, by failing to supplement its discovery responses and by failing to respond completely and accurately to discovery requests. See McNally, supra.

Courts broadly interpret what constitutes an “order” for the purpose of imposing sanctions. See Brandt v. Vulcan, Inc., 30 F.3d 752, 756 n. 7 (7th Cir.1994), citing Metropolitan Life Ins. Co. v. Cammon, No. 88 C 5549, 1989 WL 153558, at 4 (N.D.Ill. November 7, 1989) (violation of an “order” found where a party failed to deliver documents it promised to turn over by á certain date), and Properties Int’l., Ltd. v. Turner, 706 F.2d 308, 310 (11th Cir.1983) (order found where a court directed a party to provide its opponent “with complete discovery”). Notwithstanding the valid order of this Court in place at the time DuPont’s malfeasance occurred, and DuPont’s obligation to supplement its discovery responses with this clearly discoverable information and relevant evidence, this Court concludes that the correspondence between DuPont and the Bush Ranch Plaintiffs, and the representations made during Albergo’s deposition, both constitute agreements binding DuPont and requiring it to produce the Alta data and documents. These agreements are clear to the Court, despite DuPont’s contentions here that the correspondence reflected some other intent and despite the evasiveness of DuPont’s counsel at Albergo’s deposition. A fair reading of both the correspondence and the deposition shows the Bush Ranch Plaintiffs’ requested all data and documents generated by the Alta tests, including “hard copy” and “analytical 'data.” Those agreements made by and with officers of the Court, considering the discovery background in the Bush Ranch cases, constitute, for the purposes of this matter, “orders” of this Court. R.F. Wehner v. Syntex Corporation, 107 F.R.D. 248 (E.D.Mo.1985) (as a condition for the taking of samples, which in Wehner were in the possession of the EPA, one can condition such taking on an agreement to make the results available to the person or party from whom the samples were taken). DuPont represented as early as August 26, 1992, that DuPont would produce “everything related to Benlate.” DuPont acknowledged during the hearing that, at the time the May and June of 1993 correspondence occurred, and at the time of Albergo’s deposition, outstanding Court orders required the production of all Benlate-related documents. These representations and acknowledge-ments clearly indicate that DuPont knew of its duty and makes its subsequent failure to produce the Alta data and documents a violation of Court orders.

All prior orders of this Court were supported by the facts and the law and were valid Court orders. “ ‘Discovery orders must be obeyed even by those foreseeing ultimate success in the district court.’ ” Malautea v. Suzuki Motor Co., Ltd., 987 F.2d 1536, 1544 (11th Cir.1993), quoting United States v. $239,500 in U.S. Currency, 764 F.2d 771, 773 (11th Cir.1985). DuPont disagreed with this Court’s discovery and sanctions orders in the Bush Ranch litigation, though during the hearing on the present petition, DuPont’s CEO acknowledged that the Court was justified in its earlier orders. In any event, whether DuPont agrees or disagrees with the Court’s orders, DuPont was compelled to obey those orders absent relief from the appellate court, which it sought to no avail.

The “Summaries” and Rule 1006

The “summaries” which DuPont sought to have admitted as evidence were not summaries of all of the findings produced by the Alta tests, but were selected charts and tables showing only parts of the findings which DuPont believed to be adequate to lead an expert witness to testify that there was no evidence of Benlate contamination of the Bush Ranch Plaintiffs’ property. As already noted, the Court. did not allow the summaries to be admitted in evidence but did allow the witness Albergo to use them as hearsay as a basis for his opinion.

Federal Rule of Evidence 1006 provides as follows:

The contents of voluminous writings, recordings, or photographs which cannot conveniently be examined in court may be presented in the form of a chart, summary, or calculation. The originals, or duplicates, shall be made available for examination or copying, or both by other parties at [a] reasonable time and place. The court may order that they be produced in court.

The plain language of this rule makes it clear that Rule 1006, if used according to its terms, may be a vehicle to introduce charts, summaries, or calculations into evidence. Common sense reveals, and the ease law indicates, that the proponent of such summary must invoke and rely upon the rule. See United States v. Atchley, 699 F.2d 1055, 1059 (11th Cir.1983) (chart introduced pursuant to Rule 1006); United States v. Harmas, 974 F.2d 1262 (11th Cir.1992) (introduction of summary evidence not error because proponent laid the proper predicate and the information summarized was before the jury in the form of documentary evidence). See also United States v. Meyers, 847 F.2d 1408, 1412 (9th Cir.1988) (proponent of summary of voluminous writings must establish that the underlying materials upon which the summaries are based are admissible into evidence, though such voluminous writings need not always themselves be admitted); United States v. Bakker, 925 F.2d 728, 736-37 (4th Cir.1991) (original voluminous material need not be introduced into evidence, but it must be made .available to the other party); Nichols v. The Upjohn Co., 610 F.2d 293 (5th Cir.1980) (documents from which summaries created had been provided to Plaintiff prior to trial for examination).

The summaries which DuPont sought to introduce into evidence through Mr. Albergo were hearsay. Albergo did not prepare them, and he could not authenticate them, other than to say he received them. Nor could Albergo vouch for the truthfulness, accuracy, or completeness of the summaries. Further, Albergo could not authenticate or otherwise testify at all about the underlying Alta data and documents, in that he did not receive them, did not prepare them, did not review them and, according to his qualifications and testimony, could not understand them. In short, Albergo was a mouthpiece through which DuPont furthered its fraudulent scheme.

Upon the Bush Ranch Plaintiffs’ objections to the introduction of those summaries into evidence, DuPont was obliged, if it sought to pursue the introduction of the summaries into evidence, to raise Rule 1006 as a possible vehicle for such introduction. The Bush Ranch Plaintiffs clearly had no duty to nor interest in raising Rule 1006 as an “objection” to the summaries so as to give DuPont a possible assist in introducing evidence which was, on its face, contrary to the Plaintiffs’ interests. Only if DuPont had raised Rule 1006 as a basis for the introduction of the summaries into evidence would the Bush Ranch Plaintiffs have had any incentive or need to invoke the remaining aspects of that Rule, i.e., their right to examine and/or copy the original underlying writings. Contrary to DuPont’s argument, the evidence does not support a finding or conclusion that the Bush Ranch Plaintiffs’ counsel made some strategic choice to forego use of or review of the Alta data and documents.

Finally, Rule, 1006 emphasizes that the originals, or duplicates of the originals, shall be made available at a reasonable time and place. The Bush Ranch Plaintiffs were justified in relying on DuPont’s obligations and promises to produce the Alta data and documents. The Bush Ranch Plaintiffs had no way of knowing prior to July 29, 1993, or August 2, 1993, that DuPont intended to introduce the summaries into evidence. Even if DuPont had made some offer to produce the Alta data and documents during the Bush Ranch trial, which DuPont did not, such production would not have satisfied the mandatory requirements of Rule 1006. In court, after the opposing party has rested and just prior to an effort to introduce the summaries through a witness who did not prepare and who could not testify about the underlying data and documents, is not a reasonable time and place.

No evidence suggests that DuPont genuinely intended at any time to invoke Fed. R.Evid. 1006 as the basis for introducing the summaries into evidence through Mr. Alber-go. DuPont never uttered “Rule 1006;” DuPont never offered, much less offered at a reasonable time and place, the Bush Ranch Plaintiffs an opportunity to examine and/or copy the Alta data and documents such that DuPont could invoke Rule 1006. DuPont clearly has created this Rule 1006 issue after an after-the-fact effort at justification for its wrongful conduct, and as such, its position in this regard is another DuPont subterfuge.

DuPont’s Claims of Privilege

Dupont has contended that the Alta data was protected from disclosure by the attorney-client privilege and/or the work product privilege.

This Court takes judicial notice of all matters of record in the Bush Ranch cases, including but not limited to, all pleadings, all motions, all briefs, all memoranda, all hearing transcripts, all trial transcripts and all orders.

An expert bases his opinion or inference on “facts or data.” See Fed.R.Evid. 703. Thus, Albergo, if he relied on the summaries prepared by Alta, also as a matter of law relied on the facts and data generated by these tests. The Court concludes that, as a matter of law, the data generated during and by the tests are facts, as opposed to a scientist’s opinion formed after a review. Therefore, whether or not Mr. Albergo relied on them, the Alta data and documents were responsive to the Bush Ranch Plaintiffs’ discovery requests, were subject to this Court’s orders, were not protected or privileged, and had to be produced. Further, this Court concludes that, as a matter of law, an expert who relies on a summary of data or facts, by definition relies upon the underlying data and the facts which form the basis for the summary. Any other conclusion negates the responsibility of the expert to demand, and then to foim his opinion on, truthful and accurate information. See Marsee v. United States Tobacco Co., 866 F.2d 319, 323 (10th Cir.1989) (pursuant to Rule 703, an expert relies upon facts or data when giving an opinion; such opinion is admissible only if it is based on facts that meet the criteria of the rule, that is, facts reasonably relied on by experts in the field).

Any summary of the Alta data and documents-about which Albergo the expert was to form an opinion and testify was a summary which had to be based on facts. Stated otherwise, if Mr. Albergo relied on the summary of facts prepared by Alta, which a Rule 1006 summary must be, he relied on the data and documents underlying the summary, because a summary is, or should be, nothing more than a compilation of such facts. Because the Alta data and documents are facts, and/or because Albergo relied on the facts underlying the summary, which facts are the Alta tests and the data and documents generated thereby, the Alta data and documents had to be produced.

The case of United States Postal Service v. Phelps Dodge Refining Corp., 852 F.Supp. 156 (E.D.N.Y.1994), is remarkably similar to this ease as to this issue and is illustrative of this situation. There, the Court had to grapple with claims of attorney-client privilege as to data and documents generated by an engineering firm, Hart & Associates, and a consulting firm, Conestoga-Rovers, which together were hired to conduct environmental studies of soil, oversee remedial work and develop a supplementary remedial program. See id. at 161. The Court first stated that:

[T]he attorney-client privilege may cover “communications made to agents of an attorney ... hired to assist in the rendition of legal services.” United States v. Schwimmer, 892 F.2d 237, 243 (2d Cir.1989), cert. denied, 502 U.S. 810, 112 S.Ct. 55, 116 L.Ed.2d 31 (1991); United States v. Kovel, 296 F.2d 918 (2d Cir.1961). In Kovel, Judge Friendly ruled that “the attorney-client privilege can attach to reports of third parties made at the request of the attorney or the client where the purpose of the report was to put in usable form information obtained from the client.” Federal Trade Comm’n v. TRW, Inc., 628 F.2d 207, 212 (D.C.Cir.1980). The Kovel court “analogized the role of the accountant to that of a translator who puts the client’s information into terms that the attorney can use effectively.” Id.
As explained in 2 Jack B. Weinstein & Margaret A. Berger, Weinstein’s Evidence para. 503(a)(3)[01] at 503-31 to 38 (1993), the application of the privilege in Kovel is now recognized as extending to representatives of the attorney, such as accountants; administrative practitioners not admitted to the bar; and nontestifying experts. See also Edward M. Spiro & Caroline Rule, ‘Kovel’ Experts Cloaked by Attorney-Client Privilege, N.Y.L.J., Feb. 22, 1994, at SI, S10 (privilege has been applied to “communications with a psychiatrist assisting a lawyer informing a defense, a bail bondsman, and a polygraph operator”).
Neither Hart nor Conestoga-Rovers fall within any of these recognized categories of representatives or agents for purposes of the attorney-client privilege. They cannot be characterized as administrative practitioners since they were not employed by Phelps Dodge attorneys specifically to assist them in rendering legal advice. In fact, they were hired by defendants to formulate a remediation plan acceptable to the NYSDEC and to oversee remedial work at the Property. Their function was not to put information gained from defendants into usable form for their attorneys to render legal advice, but rather, to collect information not obtainable directly from defendants. Nor could the consultant be characterized as non-testifying experts. Earlier in this case, when defendants attempted to shield from discovery studies prepared by Conestoga-Rovers and Gitlen for other clients, defendants denied that these consultants served as experts and stated.that if either consultant testified at trial, it would do so as a factual witness and not as an expert.
* * ' * * * *
Defendants have made a claim of attorney-client privilege that goes well beyond the “outer boundary” of the privilege. Unlike the computer study at issue in TRW, which arguably was undertaken to assist the attorneys in litigation, the studies and work performed by Hart and Conestoga-Rovers clearly served other purposes. Moreover, these consultants based their opinions on factual and scientific evidence they generated through studies and collected through observation of the physical condition of the Property, information that did not come through client confidences. Such underlying factual data can never be protected by the attorney-client privilege and neither can the resulting opinions and recommendations. There are few, if any, conceivable circumstances where a scientist or engineer employed to gather data should be considered an agent within the scope of the privilege since the information collected will generally be factual, obtained from sources other than the client.
Because employees of. Hart and Conesto-gar-Rovers are outside the attorney-client privilege documents they have prepared are discoverable.

(Emphasis supplied.) United States Postal Service, 852 F.Supp. at 161-62.

This Court concludes likewise. The Alta data and documents are facts, and thus, the data and documents should have been produced for all of the reasons set forth herein. Alta is not an agent of the attorneys such that any protection from production properly could be asserted. These facts are not protected by any privilege, be it attorney-client or the work-product doctrine. DuPont identified Alta and its principals Bethem and Petersen as fact witnesses and as persons with knowledge. DuPont represented, in arguing that this Court allow Mr. Albergo to testify about the Alta tests, that the Alta personnel were fact witnesses. DuPont represented in other courts that Bethem and Petersen were fact witnesses. As in United States Postal Service, Albergo was hired to formulate a remediation plan and Alta was hired to collect information. Their function was not merely to put information gained from DuPont into usable form such that the attorney could use the information effectively. Alta generated factual and scientific evidence through testing; it did not obtain information through client confidences. In producing documents upon which Albergo relied for his opinion, DuPont was obligated and under court order to produce the Alta data and documents.

“Mutual knowledge of all the relevant facts ■ gathered by both parties is essential to proper litigation.” Hickman v. Taylor, supra. As the Bush Ranch cases developed, this Court held that either party could claim a protection from discovery based upon the work product doctrine only if the information or the documents for which such protection was asserted was properly identified in a timely prepared and served privilege log. Moreover, as the Bush Ranch eases developed, this Court held that the Plaintiffs had shown “substantial need” for, and had required DuPont to produce all information and documents related to tests, the results of which would be used in the “defense” of the litigation. DuPont'in fact waived its claim of work product protection to all information and documents related to test results which would be used in defense of the litigation.

DuPont did not assert on any log or at any other time a claim of work product protection as the basis for its non-production of the Alta data and documents. This Court did not alter its prior orders holding that the Bush Ranch Plaintiffs had shown substantial need for all information and documents related to tests where DuPont intended to use the results in defense of the litigation. DuPont did not retract its waiver of any claim of work product protection as to tests the results of which would be used in defense of the litigation. The Alta data and documents were not protected from production, therefore, on the ground of the work product doctrine. See United States Postal Service, supra. See also 4 Moore’s Federal Practice § 26-66, at 26-403 to 26-406 (1991) ((1) factual portions of expert’s report discoverable; (2) citing E.I. du Pont De Nemours & Co. v. Phillips Petroleum Co., 24 F.R.D. 416 (D.Del.1959), production of copies of memoranda and reports concerning the manner in which tests had been made is required; and (3) party engaging expert has no vested right in keeping secret any relevant facts).

The attorney-client privilege claim is invalid. The work product privilege claim is invalid.

DuPont’s “They Didn’t Ask for It” Defense

DuPont has contended that neither the discovery requests of the Bush Ranch Plaintiffs nor the orders of the Court required the production of the Alta data and documents and that since “they never asked for them” DuPont should not be faulted for not voluntarily producing them.

“It is well recognized that complete and accurate responses to discovery are imperative to the functioning of the modern trial process.” Averbach v. Rival Manufacturing Co., 879 F.2d 1196, 1201 (3rd Cir.1989), cert. denied, 493 U.S. 1023, 110 S.Ct. 726, 107 L.Ed.2d 745 (1989), citing Rozier v. Ford Motor Co., 573 F.2d 1332, 1346 (5th Cir.1978) (“It is axiomatic that ‘[discovery by interrogatory requires candor in responding.’ ”) (quoting Dollar v. Long Mfg., N.C., 561 F.2d 613, 616 (5th Cir.1977), cert. denied, 435 U.S. 996, 98 S.Ct. 1648, 56 L.Ed.2d 85 (1978)). The Averbach Court continued:

The pre-trial deposition-discovery mechanism established by Rules 26 to 37 is one of the most significant innovations of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. Under the prior federal practice, the pre-trial functions of notice giving, issue formulation and fact revelation were performed primarily and inadequately by the pleadings .... The new rules, however, invest the deposition-discovery process with a vital role in the preparation for trial. The various instruments of discovery now serve (1) as a device ... to narrow and clarify the basic issues between the parties, and (2) as a device for ascertaining the facts, or information as to the existence or whereabouts of facts, relative to those issues. Thus, civil trials in federal courts no longer need be carried on in the dark. The way is now clear ... for the parties to obtain the fullest possible knowledge of the issues and facts before trial. Hickman v. Taylor, 329 U.S. 495, 500-01, 67 S.Ct. 385, 388-89, 91 L.Ed. 451 (1947) (footnotes omitted). The “[m]odern instruments of discovery” are thus a principal means by which trials are rendered “less a game of blindman’s buff [sic] and more a fair contest with the basic issues and facts disclosed to the fullest practicable extent.” United States v. Procter & Gamble Co., 356 U.S. 677, 682, 78 S.Ct. 983, 986, 2 L.Ed.2d 1077 (1958). See generally C. Wright & A. Miller, Federal Practice and Procedure § 2001 at 15 (1970) (describing purposes and uses of discovery).
The Federal Rules themselves recognize the reliance aspect of discovery, permitting parties to request information inadmissible at trial where such request is “reasonably calculated to lead to the discovery of admissible evidence.” See Fed.R.Civ.P. 26(b)(1). Discovery could not serve the function of triggering subsequent inquiry if parties were not entitled to rely on the results obtained at each step. See Rozier, 573 F.2d at 1345 (“Our system of civil litigation cannot function if parties ... suppress information called for upon discovery.”)

Averbach, 879 F.2d at 1201.

The Averbach Court concluded that a party “certainly cannot be faulted for failing to pry further by discovery into the very same inquiry aborted by [the defendant’s] misleading answer.” Id. at 1201. The same legal and common sense principle applies to this situation: where DuPont provided to the Bush Ranch Plaintiffs at Albergo’s deposition a misleading summary which did not reflect the suspected positives where DuPont had agreed prior to and during Albergo’s deposition to provide all of the data generated by and during the Alta tests of the Bush Ranch Plaintiffs’ soils; where on July 28, 1993, DuPont belatedly produced to the Bush Ranch Plaintiffs, among numerous other documents including other laboratory summaries and some raw data, additional Alta summaries, but DuPont failed at that time to include any of the Alta data and documents which only subsequently came to fight in the Hawaii litigation; where, in any event, DuPont did not have available in Columbus, Georgia, during the trial all of the Alta data and documents, particularly those documents indicating the existence or presence of SUs in the Bush Ranch Plaintiffs’ soils and those revealing DuPont’s role in the creation of the misleading summaries; and where DuPont did not at any time after June 26, 1993, make available to Plaintiffs the Alta data and documents.

The Averbach Court discussed the duty of litigants to answer truthfully in discovery, and the propriety of opposing litigants to accept as true such answers and representations and then to act in reliance on such truthfulness.

A litigant is entitled to accept answers to previous interrogatories as true, and to refrain from seeking additional discovery directed to the same issue. Because the Federal .Rules of Civil Procedure are structured to elicit truthful answers given under oath, the opposing party, in circumstances such as presented here, may reasonably rely on interrogatory answers.
The Fifth Circuit in Rozier faced an analogous issue. After concluding that Ford Motor Company falsely stated in answers to interrogatories that it possessed no reports of the type the plaintiff inquired about, the court held that a new trial was warranted under a timely Rule 60(b)(3) motion because of Ford’s misrepresentation. The court stated that Ford’s nondisclosure prevented plaintiff from fully and fairly presenting her case because “[¡Inevitably, information developed in the discovery stages of the case influenced the decision as to which theories would be emphasized at trial.” 573 F.2d at 1342. The court thus concluded that, “[w]e are left with the firm conviction that disclosure of the [requested information] would ‘have made a difference in the way plaintiffs counsel approached the case or prepared for trial.’ ” Id. (citation omitted).
We noted in our earlier opinion in this case that the purpose of asking for information under penalty of false swearing in the court of discovery and of responding to such requests is “self-evident.” Averbach [v. Rival Manufacturing Co.], 809 F.2d [1016] at 1020 [ (3rd Cir.1987) ]. If the appellate courts recognize the discovery responses are calculated to elicit reliance, certainly we must uphold the jury’s specific finding that there was such reliance.

Averbach, 879 F.2d at 1201-02 (footnote omitted).

The Bush Ranch Plaintiffs had done all that any litigant reasonably can be expected to do to obtain the production of relevant information and to bring DuPont into compliance with this Court’s orders. Numerous motions, briefs, letters, hearings, and orders attest to those facts. The Bush Ranch Plaintiffs were entitled to rely on the factual accuracy of DuPont’s summary produced at Mr. Albergo’s deposition, and DuPont’s promises to produce the “hard copy” analytical data, on DuPont’s agreements and promises in correspondence to produce all of the data and documents generated by the soils and waters tests, on DuPont’s compliance with this Court’s outstanding orders. Unfortunately, DuPont was not candid, and it did not comply. The evidence sought was encompassed within the discovery requests; it was required to be produced by the Court’s orders and DuPont had promised that it would be produced. The Bush Ranch Plaintiffs were not then required to go to DuPont and ask on bended knee that it be produced. DuPont’s “didn’t ask” defense is not worthy of serious consideration.

In a case somewhat similar factually to the situation before this Court, though the relief sought was different, the Court of Appeals for the First Circuit discussed a defendant’s failure to inform plaintiff or to produce to plaintiff information and documents evidencing contamination of property. See Anderson v. Cryovac, Inc., 862 F.2d 910 (1st Cir.1988). Numerous conclusions of law set forth there are applicable here.

(a) “In the case of intentional misconduct, as where the concealment was knowing and purposeful, it seems fair to presume that suppressed evidence would have damaged the nondisclosing party.” Id. at 925, citing among other cases Nation-Wide Check Corp. v. Forest Hills Distributors, Inc., 692 F.2d 214, 217-19 (1st Cir.1982) (deliberate nonproduction or destruction of relevant documents is “evidence” that the party which has prevented production did so out of the well-founded fear that the contents would harm him).

(b) “It seems equally logical that where discovery material is deliberately suppressed, its absence can be presumed to have inhibited the unearthing of further admissible evidence adverse to the withholder, that is, to have substantially interfered with the aggrieved party’s trial preparation. See Alexander v. National Farmers Organization, 687 F.2d 1173, 1205-06 (8th Cir.1982) (where documents deliberately destroyed, court should draw factual inferences adverse to party responsible); Telectron, Inc. v. Overhead Door Corp., 116 F.R.D. 107, 134 (S.D.Fla.1987) (where destruction was motivated by ‘flagrant bad faith’ conduct “warrant[ed] the inference that the destroyed documents would have been harmful to [destroyer]’; resultant unavailability ‘must therefore be seen as prejudicial to [innocent party’s] interest in pursuing the full and fair litigation of its claims’); National Association of Radiation Survivors v. Turnage, 115 F.R.D. 543, 557 (N.D.Cal.1987) (.‘Where one party wrongfully denies another the evidence necessary to establish a fact in dispute, the court must draw the strongest allowable inferences in favor of the aggrieved party.’).’’ Anderson, 862 F.2d at 925.

DuPont’s “Releases” Defense

We have heretofore noted that while the Bush Ranch jury was deliberating the parties reached agreement on a settlement, and releases were signed. DuPont has contended that these releases bar the parties instituting this show cause proceeding.

Neither the releases nor the pre-release agreement put in evidence by DuPont bar the Court from considering the fraud on the Court alleged in the petition. No agreement between private parties can deprive the Court of its power to conduct an investigation into and rendering rulings on an alleged fraud upon this Court. See Hazel-Atlas Glass Co. v. Hartford-Empire Co., 322 U.S. 238, 64 S.Ct. 997, 88 L.Ed. 1250 (1944); Universal Oil Products Co. v. Root Refining Co., 328 U.S. 575, 66 S.Ct. 1176, 90 L.Ed. 1447 (1946). See also Glover v. Southern Bell Telephone & Telegraph Co., 229 Ga. 874, 195 S.E.2d 11 (1972) (release only effective absent fraud). Further, the conduct alleged in the petition and in the memorandum/appendix in support, and the evidence of such conduct heard and seen by this Court, is not conduct “released” by the parties. The language contained in such releases and prerelease agreement does not contain language specifically releasing matters arising from the misconduct alleged. See U.S. Anchor Mfg., Inc. v. Rule Industries, Inc., 27 F.3d 521 (11th Cir.1994). See also U.S. Anchor Mfg., Inc. v. Rule Industries, Inc., 7 F.3d 986, 1004 (11th Cir.1993).

Due Process

Due process of law requires that sanctions “not be assessed lightly or without fair notice and an opportunity for a hearing on the record.” Roadway Express Inc. v. Piper, 447 U.S. 752, 767, 100 S.Ct. 2455, 2464, 65 L.Ed.2d 488 (1980) (footnote omitted), citing Societe Internationale v. Rogers, 357 U.S. 197, 208-212, 78 S.Ct. 1087, 1094-1096, 2 L.Ed.2d 1255 (1958). DuPont received fair notice and has been afforded ample opportunity to be heard on the record. This Court has thoroughly reviewed and has given careful consideration to the evidence presented and to the arguments of counsel and to their post-hearing submissions. The Court is keenly aware of the seriousness of this matter. The Court concludes that due process of law has been afforded.

DuPont’s Responsibility

Although it was the lawyers for the Dupont corporation whose acts of concealment and misrepresentation were the immediate 'cause of damage, the circumstances may justify imposition of sanctions on the corporation. See Geller v. Randi, 40 F.3d 1300, 1304-05 (D.C.Cir.1994).

Counsel’s knowledge and behavior should be imputed to the client. The Supreme Court has said:

There is certainly no merit to the contention that dismissal of petitioner’s claim because of his counsel’s unexeused conduct imposes an unjust penalty on the client. Petitioner voluntarily chose this attorney as his representative in the action, and he cannot now avoid the consequences of the acts or omissions of this freely selected agent. Any other notion would be wholly inconsistent with our system of representative litigation, in which each party is deemed bound by the acts of his lawyer-agent and is considered to have “notice of all facts, notice of which can be charged upon the attorney.” Smith v. Ayer, 101 U.S. 320, 326, 25 L.Ed. 955 [ (1962) ].

Link v. Wabash Railroad Company, 370 U.S. 626, 633-34, 82 S.Ct. 1386, 1390, 8 L.Ed.2d 734 (1962) (footnote omitted).

“Under elementary agency principles, a corporation is personified through the acts of its agents. Thus, the acts of its agents become the acts of the corporation as a single entity.” United States v. Hartley, 678 F.2d 961, 970 (11th Cir.1982) (antitrust conspiracy case), cert. denied, 459 U.S. 1170, 103 S.Ct. 815, 74 L.Ed.2d 1014 (1983). “[T]he general rule is that a principal is chargeable with and bound by the knowledge of his agent while acting within the scope of his authority.” First Ala. Bank v. First State Ins. Co., Inc., 899 F.2d 1045, 1061 n. 8 (11th Cir.1990). The first and oldest theory explaining this general rule is in the legal identity of the agent with the principal during the continuance of the agency. “In other words, the agent, while acting within the scope of his agency is, as to the matter embraced within the agency, the principal himself or the alter ego of the principal. See Holmes, The Common Law, 232 (1890).” First Ala. Bank, 899 F.2d at 1061 n. 8.

The evidence presented during the hearing on the petition revealed that DuPont was Alta’s client and that DuPont paid Alta. The evidence revealed that Alta communicated with DuPont’s counsel, Alston & Bird, with regard to the tests conducted, their use in the Bush Ranch litigation, and the manner of their presentation. The evidence also reveals that DuPont’s scientist and legal liaison, Dr. David Johnson, was in the offices of Alston & Bird during the week or weeks during which expert depositions were scheduled, and that he was likely involved in meetings with Alston & Bird attorneys while conversations occurred involving such counsel and Alta. When questioned about contacts with DuPont with-regard to the Alta data and documents, the DuPont witness invoked the attorney-client privilege, which, by implication, indicates that some communications occurred. At Albergo’s deposition, DuPont’s witness Albergo produced to the Bush Ranch Plaintiffs’ counsel a document prepared by Alta and sent by facsimile to DuPont counsel, Alston & Bird. Alta entered into a confidentiality arrangement with DuPont counsel Alston & Bird. According to testimony at the hearing, DuPont had available in the courtroom during the Bush Ranch cases some of the disputed Alta data and documents. During this hearing, DuPont for the first time claimed Alta as a consultant rather than a fact witness.

Those facts mean that Alta was, at least for the purpose of conducting these tests and for the purposes of the matters raised'in the petition, an agent for, or sufficiently under the control of, or in privity with, DuPont. Likewise, so was Alston & Bird. DuPont CEO, Mr. Woolard, acknowledged as much at the hearing on the show cause petition. DuPont is charged with all of the knowledge which Alta and/or Alston & Bird possessed, and DuPont had sufficient possession, custody, or control over the Alta data and documents such that DuPont controlled the production, or non-production, of them. See also Pesaplastic, C.A. v. Cincinnati Milacron Co., 799 F.2d 1510, 1521-22 (11th Cir.1986) (selective production of documents and ability to obtain documents place the documents within the party’s possession, custody, and control).

The actions taken, and the statements made, by DuPont counsel and other representatives here in this court, and in other courts around the United States, properly may be considered in this matter pursuant to the doctrines and concepts of judicial and evidentiary admissions, estoppel and ratification. See, e.g., LWT, Inc. v. Childers, 19 F.3d 539 (10th Cir.1994) (inconsistent allegations contained in prior pleadings are admissible as evidence in subsequent litigation); Pullman v. Bullard, 44 F.2d 347 (5th Cir.1930) (admissions in pleadings may be admitted into evidence and, unless withdrawn or stricken, may work an estoppel to deny them on the party making them); W.T. Harvey Lumber Co. v. J.M. Wells Lumber Co., Inc., 104 Ga.App. 498, 122 S.E.2d 143 (1961) (attorney is such an agent of client that his declarations made during the course of his employment may be offered against his principal); Everitt v. Harris, 67 Ga.App. 64, 19 S.E.2d 545 (1942) (letter written by attorney on behalf of client may be considered as an admission by client); Jabaley v. Jabaley, 208 Ga.App. 179, 430 S.E.2d 119 (1993) (admissions can be found in motions); Foster v. State, 157 Ga.App. 554, 278 S.E.2d 136 (1981) (admissions in one action can be evidence in another action); Cox v. Administrator, 17 F.3d 1386 (11th Cir.1994) (principal can ratify even the unauthorized act of an agent purportedly done on behalf of principal either expressly or by implication through conduct that is inconsistent with an intent to repudiate the unauthorized act; proof of authorization or ratification can be through circumstantial evidence, and all. that need to be shown is knowing tolerance), modified, 30 F.3d 1347 (11th Cir.1994); Computel, Inc. v. Emery Air Freight Corp., 919 F.2d 678 (11th Cir.1990) (under general agency rules a corporation (principal) will be vicariously liable for wrongful acts of employees (agents) when the acts are related to and within the course of employment, committed in furtherance of the corporation’s business, and authorized or subsequently acquiesced in by the corporation). See also Fed.R.Evid. 801(d)(1) and (d)(2); O.C.G.A. §§ 24-3-30, 24-3-34, and 24-4-24.

This Court views the statements and representations made by. DuPont counsel and representatives, and the conduct shown by same, as evidentiary admissions subject to rebuttal. However, as regards rebuttal, as the findings here make clear, this Court finds and concludes that DuPont, through its representatives, agents, and/or counsel, is not credible as to the issues surrounding the Alta data and documents. Thus, DuPont’s statements, representations and conduct support the Petitioners’ contention that DuPont has violated this Court’s orders and has committed a fraud upon this Court.

The Court found that DuPont had directed the progress of the Bush Ranch cases. The Court also reiterates that DuPont’s CEO testified before this Court during the hearing on the present petition and he testified that he had been made aware of this Court’s orders throughout the Bush Ranch cases and that now, today, he fully supports the actions taken by and the conduct of DuPont’s representatives, agents, and/or counsel. Moreover, Mr. Woolard acknowledged that the responsibility for all such statements, representations and conduct rests with DuPont. In so doing, DuPont has endorsed, authorized directed, acquiesced in, and ratified what happened here.

As applied to this matter, the Court concludes that, because both Alta and DuPont’s counsel Alston & Bird had knowledge of the Alta information, and the possession of the Alta data and documents, DuPont had actual or constructive knowledge of the information contained in, and had actual or constructive possession of, the Alta data and documents, from prior to Albergo’s deposition through and including trial. Both Alta and Alston & Bird ultimately were employed by and/or paid by DuPont. During the hearing on the petition, DuPont witnesses invoked an attorney-client privilege when questioned about whether local counsel had discussed the Alta data and documents with DuPont Legal Department. The Alta data and documents were subject to seasonably propounded discovery requests, Court orders, and/or agreements between and among the parties. DuPont consciously, and, therefore, knowingly, purposefully, deliberately, willfully and in bad faith, concealed and suppressed the information and documents. This misconduct gives rise to a rebuttable presumption that the suppressed information and evidence would have led to other admissible evidence and that both the suppressed information and other evidence which may have been discovered would have been adverse to DuPont. DuPont has not rebutted this presumption and has not shown by clear and convincing evidence that its nondisclosure was unintentional or that the withheld material was inconsequential. In fact, credible testimony reveals that different scientists can reach and have reached different conclusions and could form and have formed different opinions with respect to the Alta data and documents. Other Courts have found that such other conclusions and opinions exist and have validity. DuPont witnesses, during the hearing on the show cause order, admitted that the matters revealed in, by and through the Alta data and documents were a subject of scientific debate and a question for the jury upon the presentation of both sides. The evidence and DuPont’s admissions make it clear that the Alta data and documents were manifestly relevant to the Bush Ranch cases. Thus, contrary to rebutting the presumption, the clear and convincing evidence reveals that the Alta data and documents were of significant consequence and that DuPont’s wrongful failure to produce the data and documents prejudiced the Bush Ranch Plaintiffs. See also O.C.G.A. § 24-4-22. The evidence also clearly reveals that not only did DuPont not make all reasonable efforts to comply with the Court’s orders requiring the production of the Alta data and documents, it also consciously, willfully, intentionally, and deliberately withheld and concealed that data and documents. Rather, if DuPont is to be believed, it caused and allowed that data and those documents, or part of them, to sit undisclosed in a box in the courtroom. To this date, neither the box nor the Alta data and documents have been produced by DuPont to this Court for the Court’s examination and review. Were it not for Petitioners having discovered the existence of that data and those documents and having brought them in for this Court to review, DuPont’s fraud on this Court would have gone undiscovered.

The Precedents

During the numerous hearings which were held prior to the Bush Ranch trial, in an effort to bring DuPont into compliance with its discovery obligation, the Court emphasized the egregiousness of DuPont’s conduct and the prejudice the Bush Ranch Plaintiffs had suffered on account of it. The Court imposed monetary sanctions of $500,000.00, which were later increased to $1,000,000.00, which amounts were subject to reconsideration, upward or downward, depending on DuPont’s conduct. The Court informed DuPont that the Court was seriously considering the sanction of default or of striking DuPont’s answer. In the face of all of the above, and more, DuPont still did not produce the Alta data and documents, which directly and critically concerned the presence of SUs in the Bush Ranch Plaintiffs’ soils and waters that allegedly were present there due to the contamination of Benlate, or benomyl, by DuPont’s SUs. This Court gives no credence to DuPont’s arguments that the Court’s orders did not encompass the Alta data and documents, or that those orders were vague, or that DuPont reasonably misunderstood the orders. In fact, those arguments seem little more than a continuation of the fraud on this Court.

In this situation there is ample precedent for the imposition of sanctions. We have earlier made reference to the decision of the Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit in Malautea v. Suzuki Motor Co., Ltd., supra. In that case the District Court outlined the various methods whereby the Defendants resisted discovery, and it will be noted that they were remarkably similar to the methods used by DuPont in this case. The District Court chose to strike the Defendants’ answers and entered a default judgment against them on the issue of liability. In the Court of Appeals the Defendants argued that the suppressed evidence referred to by the District Court was not encompassed by the Court’s discovery orders, that the discovery orders were vague, and that any failure to comply was simply a misunderstanding which, of course, are the same arguments made by DuPont in this case.

The Court of Appeals affirmed the decision of the District Court. The Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit likewise affirmed the District Court’s imposition of sanctions in BankAtlantic v. Blythe Eastman Paine Webber, 12 F.3d 1045 (11th Cir.1994). In that case the defendant, Paine Webber, promised during a hearing on a motion to compel, like DuPont through local and in-house counsel promised during an in-chambers hearing in the Bush Ranch cases, to produce all documents in its custody, control or possession relating to an issue before the Court. See id. at 1047. The BankAtlantic Court relied on Paine Webber’s representations, just as this Court has repeatedly relied on DuPont’s representations, including those made by DuPont’s CEO. Paine Webber argued that no court order directed it to produce the documents in dispute, that BankAtlantic had proved no prejudice, that BankAtlantic had failed to show that the documents were in Paine Webber’s possession and that the documents were irrelevant and immaterial. See id. at 1048. The District Court found against Paine Webber’s arguments and imposed sanctions.

In its opinion the Court of Appeals first observed that “ ‘the standard of review for an appellate court in considering an appeal of sanctions under Rule 37 is sharply limited to a search for an abuse of discretion and a determination that the findings of the trial court are fully supported by the record.’ ” Id. at 1048, quoting Pesaplastic C.A. v. Cincinnati Milacron Co., 799 F.2d 1510, 1519 (11th Cir.1986). The Court also cited Carlucci v. Piper Aircraft Corp., Inc., 775 F.2d 1440, 1446-47 (11th Cir.1985), for the proposition that federal courts have inherent power to impose appropriate sanctions for a party’s failure to comply with court orders. BankAtlantic, 12 F.3d at 1048.

The District Court found, and the Court of Appeals affirmed the finding, that Paine Webber’s counsel failed to meet its obligation to search Paine Webber’s corporate files and that counsel acted in complete disregard of its responsibilities. The District Court found that Paine Webber had custody and control over the documents at issue such that the documents should have been produced. The District Court found , the concealed documents manifestly relevant and concluded that BankAtlantic’s learning of the discovery violation on the eve of trial prejudiced the plaintiff. The Court of Appeals affirmed these findings.

This Court ordered DuPont to produce all Benlate-related documents. DuPont represented to this Court that it would produce all Benlate related documents. DuPont represented to the Bush Ranch Plaintiffs that, if it were allowed to come onto the Bush Ranch Plaintiffs’ properties to obtain samples for testing, it would produce to them all materials generated as a consequence of that testing. DuPont had access to and had custody and control of the Alta data and documents from mid-June, when the testing began, forward. The Alta data and documents should have been produced. That they were not produced violated this Court’s orders. The Alta data and documents were manifestly relevant, and DuPont’s failure to produce them clearly prejudiced the Bush Ranch Plaintiffs’ opportunity to obtain a fair trial and denied them a fair trial. At a minimum, the Bush Ranch Plaintiffs were deprived of an opportunity to review the Alta data and documents, to obtain scientific review of same, to present testimony and/or cross-examine witnesses about the significance of the suspected positive findings and the detection limits changes, and to argue to the jury about the meaning of the evidence. Had the' Alta data and documents been produced, DuPont could not have argued to the Court and to the jury that no evidence existed which showed the presence of DuPont’s SUs in the Bush Ranch Plaintiffs’ soils and waters. DuPont’s failure to come into compliance with the Court’s discovery and sanctions orders is now manifest, contrary to DuPont’s untrue representations which were made to this Court in a motion to vacate submitted at the end of the Bush Ranch trial. This Court engaged in the judicial act of vacating its orders and the sanctions imposed there, in reliance on the truthfulness of DuPont’s representations. DuPont’s fraudulent conduct warrants severe sanctions.

CONCLUSION

Having heai’d and reviewed all of the relevant evidence, the Court concludes that DuPont, in light of the hundreds of claims and lawsuits which had arisen out of the use of its product Benlate 50DF, decided that it would not reveal the potentially damaging evidence generated by the Alta tests. DuPont was faced with a difficult decision on the eve of the first Benlate-related .trial — to produce data and documents which would authorize a jury to conclude that the Bush Ranch Plaintiffs’ soils and waters contained DuPont SUs, data and documents which by their use in the Bush Ranch case would be available to claimants and plaintiffs all over the United States, or to conceal that data and those documents. DuPont made the wrong choice.

DuPont consciously and deliberately withheld the Alta data and documents from the Plaintiffs and the Court, and perhaps even from the witness Albergo, thereby withholding this information from future litigants as well. DuPont urged falsely to the Court and elicited false testimony about what Albergo had done, and what he knew, and what the evidence, in fact, arguably showed. DuPont deprived the Plaintiffs, the Court, and the jury of data and documents highly relevant to the issue which DuPont itself described as the most critical issue in the case. DuPont continued its concealment and deception to the extent of presenting to this Court knowingly untrue representations about DuPont’s compliance with its discovery obligations and with this Court’s, orders with the accomplished purpose of fraudulently obtaining an untrue order from this Court to absolve DuPont of its misconduct, and to relieve DuPont of sanctions it richly deserved.

DuPont’s conduct with regard to the Alta data and documents, beginning with conduct prior to Mr. Albergo’s deposition, and continuing through the Bush Ranch trial and to the present, was willful, deliberate, conscious, purposeful, deceitful, and in bad faith. That conduct affected the fairness of the trial and prevented the full and fair presentation and consideration of the evidence. DuPont’s conduct affected the course of the Bush Ranch trial from beginning to end — from opening statement to closing argument. DuPont’s conduct affected the Bush Ranch Plaintiffs’ trial preparation and trial conduct. DuPont’s conduct affected the rulings and the orders of this Court and interfered with the administration of justice. In short, DuPont’s conduct deprived the Bush Ranch Plaintiffs of a fair trial and made that trial, which lasted approximately six weeks and which consumed vast judicial resources, a farce. This Court has the power, authority, and jurisdiction to address such wrongful conduct.

DuPont’s conduct was and, in fact, remained during the hearing on the present petition, subject to censure. It has shown a lack of respect for the civil justice system in general, which disrespect was evidenced by the attitude of DuPont’s CEO, Mr. Edgar Woolard, that, and the Court paraphrases, “When DuPont says what the science means, that is what the science is.” No' party, be it an individual or a corporation, can disregard the authority of the judicial branch and disempower the American jury. No party, be it an individual or a corporation, can unilaterally decide the evidence.

Put in layperson’s terms, DuPont cheated. And it cheated consciously, deliberately and with purpose. DuPont has committed a fraud on this Court, and this Court concludes that DuPont should be, indeed must be, severely sanctioned if the integrity of the Court system is to be preserved.

As is this Court’s practice, at the close of the Show Cause hearing, the parties were directed to submit to the Court findings of fact and conclusions of law, which each party would propose that the Court enter as its final findings of fact and conclusions of law. Each party has submitted extensive proposed findings of fact and conclusions of law which the Court has carefully considered. Following such consideration, the Court finds that DuPont’s proposed findings of fact and conclusions of law are generally a continuation of the discredited positions urged during the hearing. On the other hand, the Court finds that the proposed findings of fact and conclusions of law submitted by the Petitioners are essentially trustworthy and correct and, though while not adopting them in then-entirety, the Court has relied heavily upon them and, where consistent with the Court’s findings, has adopted many of them as proposed.

Consistent with the foregoing, the Court assesses the following sanctions and enters the following orders:

1. Dupont is directed to send a copy of this opinion and order to each Plaintiff who filed an action against DuPont in this court and is also directed to deliver to each such Plaintiff a complete copy of all of the Alta data and documents which were withheld from production in this court by DuPont. This action by DuPont shall be completed within 15 days from the date of entry of this order.

2(a). On July 6, 1995, the Court directed Petitioners’ counsel in the underlying Bush Ranch eases to file with the Court a verified statement of the pretrial and trial expenses incurred by the Plaintiffs in those cases and in all cases that were consolidated for discovery in this court which were paid by the Plaintiffs through their counsel. Plaintiffs’ counsel in the Bush Ranch cases were further directed to file with the Court a verified statement of the legal fees incurred and paid by the Plaintiffs in all of the consolidated cases. Pursuant to those directions the Court has received a statement of the amounts requested properly verified and the Court now determines that the Plaintiffs in the underlying cases have paid through their counsel in connection with the preparation for and the trial of the underlying eases an amount of $6,843,837.53.

For its discovery abuses in the underlying and consolidated • cases, which abuses prolonged the trial of those cases and made a mockery of the preparation for and the conduct of that trial, the Court assesses a sanction against DuPont in the amount of $6,843,-837.53.

2(b). The Court determines that an amount equal to that immediately above specified in paragraph (a), that being $6,843,-837.53, should be paid by DuPont as a sanction for the wasted time, inconvenience, and waste of judicial resources inflicted upon the Court and the jury for the pretrial and trial of the consolidated cases.

DuPont is directed to pay the total amount of the sanctions imposed in the above paragraphs (a) and (b), that amount being $13,-687,675.06 into the registry of this court within 15 days from the date of the entry of this order.

3. For its contempt of this Court in obtaining the entry of the order of August 16, 1993, vacating prior discovery orders of this Court which had been entered in the consolidated cases, and for its continuing contempt evidenced in the show cause hearing, the Court, as a sanction for that civil contempt:

a) Vacates the order entered in the consolidated cases on August 16, 1993, and reinstates all orders finding discovery abuse by DuPont and imposing sanctions on DuPont prior to the trial of the consolidated cases. One of those orders so reinstated assesses a sanction of $1,000,000.00 against DuPont for the discovery abuse; and

b) Assesses a sanction against DuPont in the amount of $100,000,000.00.

The Court observes that DuPont in the past has been unresponsive to and unimpressed by previous impositions of sanctions in amounts of $500,000.00 and $1,000,000.00 and perhaps the' amount of this sanction will not be sufficient to make an impression on the Respondent, but it is hoped that it will be sufficient to make a party; * even with the financial resources possessed by DüPont, responsive to and respectful of the judicial system of the United States. By entering the monetary sanctions set forth herein it is the Court’s purpose to deter DuPont and others who might likewise engage in such misconduct from engaging in such egregious discovery practices in the future and to deter it and others from committing similar frauds upon this or any other Court.

The Court takes judicial notice of a commonly known fact (which was referred to during the testimony of DuPont’s Chief Executive Officer) that while the hearing in this matter was in progress DuPont caused to be published in the Wall Street Journal a full page advertisement which contained the following statement:

We categorically deny any and all allegations that DuPont has improperly withheld information, either in the courtroom or elsewhere. From the ouU set of this unfortunate situation, we have acted honorably, within the judicial process, with our customers, and in full accord with the law.

The Court will permit DuPont to purge itself of the $1,000,000.00 sanction imposed by Section 3(a) above and the $100,000,000.00 sanction imposed by Section 3(b) above by complying with all of the other orders herein imposed upon DuPont and by further publishing a full page advertisement in the Wall Street Journal and in the most widely circulated newspaper in the state of Georgia and in the state of Alabama and in the state of Michigan, acknowledging its wrongdoing and giving notice of these orders and sanctions in a form to be approved by the Court. These publications to occur within 20 days of the date of this order. DuPont is required to elect whether or not to purge the sanctions referred to within 15 days of the date of this order and to notify the Court of its election within that time, and if it elects not to purge the sanctions then DuPont is directed to deposit into the registry of the court the total of the two sanctions, that being $101,000,-000.00, within 15 days of the date of this order.

4. DuPont is directed to file on or before 25 days from the date of this order a certificate of compliance signed by its Chief Executive Officer stating that DuPont is in full compliance with all sections of this order. For each day thereafter that DuPont is not in compliance with all of the terms of this order DuPont will be directed to pay into the registry of this court, as a further sanction for its fraud upon this Court and for its noncomplianee with the provisions of this order, an amount of $30,000 per day until such certificate of compliance is so filed by its Chief Executive Officer and such compliance has in fact been accomplished.

In the post-hearing submissions to the Court the Petitioners have suggested that the Court receive input from the Petitioners concerning the potential disposition of any funds received by the Court as a result of any monetary sanction or sanctions which might be imposed by the Court, such disposition to possibly include a number of public purposes as well as those persons and entities directly affected by. DuPont’s conduct. The Court will hereafter set a hearing date at which it will address, among other things, disposition of any funds ordered paid by DuPont into the registry of the court, and the assessment of court costs, attorneys fees, and expenses associated "with this show cause proceeding and imposition of sanctions.

This order is an interim order and not a final order, and the Court hereby expressly reserves jurisdiction over the parties and all matters herein pending further orders of this court.

IT IS SO ORDERED. 
      
      . Wall Street Journal, May 5, 1995, Section A, p. 5.
     