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communicated in a mediation is subject to discovery, just as it | would be if the mediation had not taken place. |
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| There is no "fruit of the poisonous tree" doctrine in the | mediation privilege. For example, a party who learns about a | witness during a mediation is not precluded by the privilege | from subpoenaing that witness. This is a common exemption in | mediation privilege statutes, and is also found in Uniform | Rule of Evidence 408. See, e.g., Fla. Stat. Ann. Section | 44.102 (1999) (general); Minn. Stat. Ann. Section 595.02 | (1996) (general); Ohio Rev. Code Ann. Section 2317.023 (West | 1996) (general); Wash. Rev. Code Section 5.60.070 (1993) | (general). |
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| §10005.__Waiver and preclusion of privilege |
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| | 1.__Waiver.__A privilege under section 10004 may be waived | in a record or orally during a proceeding if it is expressly | waived by all parties to the mediation and: |
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| A.__In the case of the privilege of a mediator, it is | expressly waived by the mediator; and |
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| B.__In the case of the privilege of a nonparty | participant, it is expressly waived by the nonparty | participant. |
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| | 2.__Prejudice; precluded.__A person that discloses or makes | a representation about a mediation communication that | prejudices another person in a proceeding is precluded from | asserting a privilege under section 10004, but only to the | extent necessary for the person prejudiced to respond to the | representation or disclosure. |
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| | 3.__Crime or criminal activity; precluded.__A person that | intentionally uses a mediation to plan, attempt to commit or | commit a crime or to conceal an ongoing crime or ongoing | criminal activity is precluded from asserting a privilege | under section 10004. |
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| 1. Section 5(a) and (b). Waiver and preclusion. |
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| Section 5 provides for waiver of privilege, and for a party, | mediator, or nonparty participant to be precluded from | asserting the privilege in situations in which mediation | communications have been disclosed before the privilege has | been asserted. | Waiver must be express and either recorded through a writing | or electronic record or made orally during specified types of | proceedings. These rules further the principle of party | autonomy |
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