Adverse inference applies in United States civil trials, but not criminal trials; criminal defendants are protected by the
Fifth Amendment, which guarantees a right against self-incrimination (including self-incrimination by way of silence). In civil trials, adverse inference may be imposed as a sanction by the court in reaction to
spoliation, such as willful destruction of relevant emails. In this case, the court may direct a jury to assume that the evidence that was destroyed was negative for the destroying party, i.e., that it was destroyed to hide something. This applies not only to evidence destroyed but also to evidence existing but not produced by the party as well as to evidence under a party's control but not produced. See
Notice to produce. The adverse inference is based upon the presumption that the party who controls the evidence would have produced it if it had been supportive to their case. Adverse inference can also apply to a witness who is known to exist whom a party refuses to identify or produce. In such a case it is also known as the Missing-Witness Rule, or the Empty-Chair Doctrine. == In English law ==