wiki/clients/current/asymmetric/2026-04-05-egan-litigation-strategy.md · 1024 words · 2026-04-05

Egan Litigation Strategy — 2026-04-05

Overview

Strategy session with [1] and outside counsel [2] and Brandon Conway (Wayne Law) to determine litigation path following new subpoena evidence confirming Egan's fraudulent access to client ad accounts. The team decided to pursue aggressive litigation targeting ~$648k in double damages, with criminal referral held as settlement leverage.

Attendees:
- Sam Wayne — Wayne Law (external counsel)
- Brandon Conway — Wayne Law (external counsel)
- Mark Hope — Asymmetric


Key Decisions

  1. Aggressive litigation chosen over walk-away settlement. The "walk away" option (Egan forfeits $120k equity, keeps stolen clients) was rejected as insufficient. Egan's theft of ~$324k in revenue far exceeds the $120k equity forfeiture.

  2. Amend complaint to add tort claims. The original complaint was filed without tortious interference claims to force a fast response. The amended complaint will add all tort claims and incorporate new facts from Axley and Tracti subpoenas (and Adava when received).

  3. Hybrid fee agreement adopted. $5k/month retainer plus a contingency percentage (less than 50% per ethics rules). Allows full litigation posture without prohibitive upfront cost.

  4. Criminal referral as settlement leverage. A formal settlement offer will be made by end of March. If rejected, Asymmetric will refer the matter to the District Attorney. The threat shifts Egan's calculus from financial risk to potential loss of liberty.

  5. Damages target: ~$648k+. Base calculation is ~$324k lost revenue (3 clients × ~$9k/month × 36-month average tenure), doubled under CFAA/DTSA, plus punitive damages and attorney fees. Judgment structured to be non-dischargeable in bankruptcy due to fraud.


Claim Basis
Computer Fraud and Abuse Act (CFAA) Federal — fraudulent Google account access
Defend Trade Secrets Act (DTSA) Federal — theft of proprietary ad methodologies
State computer crime laws State-level parallel to CFAA
Tortious Interference with Business Relationships Improper means used to poach clients during settlement
Breach of Covenant of Good Faith and Fair Dealing Damaged company asset while settlement terms were being finalized

Key legal distinction: The claim is not about ownership of client data (owned by Google) or raw ad performance data. It is about Asymmetric's proprietary methodologies — ad configurations, bid strategies, campaign structures — which constitute trade secrets independent of the underlying data.


Evidence & Proof of Causation

New Subpoena Evidence

AI Sentiment Analysis

Timing


Damages Analysis

Component Amount
Lost revenue (3 clients × $9k/mo × 36 months) ~$324,000
Double damages (CFAA/DTSA) ~$648,000
Punitive damages TBD (likely recoverable for malicious conduct)
Attorney fees Recoverable

Settlement vs. Trial

Option 1: Walk-Away Settlement (Rejected)

Option 2: Aggressive Litigation (Chosen)

Opposing counsel dynamic: Sam Wayne and Egan's attorney Nick Watt have a prior working relationship. Sam will have a direct conversation with Nick to gauge settlement interest and communicate the strength of the evidence and criminal exposure before formal steps escalate.


Action Items


Trial Preparation Steps

  1. Amend complaint to add tortious interference and other tort claims
  2. Conduct depositions (Egan + client witnesses)
  3. Retain damages expert
  4. Demand forensic disk image of Egan's computer (to neutral examiner; extract USB logs, cloud sync logs, browser history)
  5. Issue discovery requests (first draft already prepared)

Sources

  1. Index|Asymmetric
  2. Sam Wayne|Sam Wayne
  3. Index|Asymmetric — Client Overview
  4. Sam Wayne|Sam Wayne — Wayne Law