A 10-year employee of the U.S. Postal Service filed a lawsuit Monday in Seattle accusing the agency of selling personal information of its workers to credit-card and other companies without consent.Uncle Sam the monopoly man feels that your privacy hinders his money making ability.Imagine that.
Lance McDermott, a mechanic for mail-processing equipment, said in the U.S. District Court complaint that he has been inundated with credit-card, cellphone and life-insurance offers in the past two years — but that's not what most troubles him.
In some instances, it appears the Postal Service gave the companies eight-digit employee-identification numbers, used for sensitive tasks such as accessing health-care records, the complaint said.
McDermott said he was deluged with offers from Visa, Sprint Nextel and others.
The suit seeks class-action status on behalf of other Postal Service workers, the return of any money the Postal Service may have made by violating the federal Privacy Act, and other damages.
An agency spokesman in Seattle said he could not immediately comment.
"His major concern is that he doesn't want to take the risk that his personal information is going to be released to a third party and be subject to identity theft," said McDermott's lawyer, Steve Berman. "And he doesn't think his employer should be benefiting from his personal information without his permission."
Tuesday, July 31, 2007
Postal Service staffer sues, says employer sold personal data
The AP reports: