First on the stand yesterday in
SCO v. Novell was James Tolonen, who you may
recall was Novell's CFO from 1989 to 1998 and was the chief business executive who provided direction for the APA and Amendment 2. And then they called Allison Amadia, the
Novell lawyer who drafted Amendment 2. Here's her
declaration [PDF] and
Tolonen's [PDF]. Tor Braham was mentioned in both of their testimonies, so here's
his declaration [PDF] as well.
So looking at the overview, Novell has both business people and several lawyers who were involved in the APA and the amendment; SCO has only business people and attorney Steve Sabbath and one paralegal, Kim Madsen, who contradicted each other somewhat.
SCO had said they might want to put another lawyer, Troy Keller, on as a witness, and they got the judge to
order a deposition, which happened yesterday we learn, but afterwards SCO decided they would not use him after all in their case in chief. What does that tell you?
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