A key document in Uber's court battle with Google Inc. driverless car division Waymo was finally made public Monday evening. Waymo, which pushed for months to gain access to a due diligence report, has claimed the report could show that Uber knowingly acquired stolen intellectual property with its August 2016 purchase of Otto.

With an Oct. 2 filing, it's now become apparent what Uber execs, including some in the legal department, knew ahead of the acquisition. The due diligence report, prepared by forensics firm Stroz Friedberg, said that former Waymo manager Anthony Levandowski had Google information, met with Uber execs about forming a new company while still a Google employee and destroyed highly confidential Google proprietary information.

Earlier filings in the case show that a number of attorneys from Uber's legal department, including chief legal officer Salle Yoo, associate general counsel Angela Padilla and legal director Justin Suhr, saw the due diligence report leading up to the Otto acquisition. And in a couple of late September court filings, Waymo alleged that Yoo was heavily involved in the due diligence process and possesses information that's “central to Waymo's case—among other things, her top-down view of the diligence conducted by Stroz[.]”