-Caveat Lector-   <A HREF="http://www.ctrl.org/">
</A> -Cui Bono?-

Dave Hartley
http://www.Asheville-Computer.com/dave


Star Tribune
Tuesday, February 8, 2000


Subject: NWA Searches Home PCs over Sick Out?

http://www.startribune.com/viewers/qview/cgi/qview.cgi?template=biz_a&slug=
priv0208

Court authorizes search of Northwest employees' home computers
Eric Wieffering and Tony Kennedy


Northwest Airlines last week began court-authorized searches of the home
computers of between 10 and 20 flight attendants, looking for private
e-mail and other evidence that the employees helped to organize a sickout
at the airline over the New Year's holiday. The search has since been
suspended pending a temporary settlement of the airline's lawsuit against
Teamsters Local 2000, the union representing 11,000 flight attendants. But
privacy advocates and attorneys not involved with the case say Northwest's
action may embolden other companies to more aggressively monitor what
employees say and do online from their home computers.

"If Northwest succeeds in gaining access to the hard drives of the home
computers of its employees, it will certainly put a chill on the uses
employees everywhere make of their home computers," said Beth Givens,
director of the Privacy Rights Clearinghouse in San Diego. Northwest's
action comes at a time when bills to protect individual privacy have been
introduced at the state and national level. In addition, an increasing
number of employees are learning, to their dismay, that companies have the
right to monitor their online activities at work. Last month, for example,
the New York Times fired 23 employees for sharing bawdy e-mail messages.
Northwest defended the search, noting that a federal court had authorized
it.

"In the age we live in, the normal course of discovery includes taking
depositions, producing documents and these days more than ever looking
into the content of computers," said Jon Austin, a spokesman for
Northwest. "So many documents and communications these days are purely
electronic in nature," Austin said.

But companies have rarely sought to search the home computers of their
employees. In the past, most such searches usually have been limited to
cases involving workers who've been accused of stealing company files,
passing on trade secrets to competitors or using insider information to
profit  on the trading of company stock.

Nor is all speech on the Internet protected by the First Amendment.
Increasingly, courts have been willing to help companies crack down on
so-called "cybersmearing" -- bad-mouthing companies or their management
online.

"Business speech is not subject to the same protections as political
speech," said John Roberts, a Minneapolis attorney who specializes in
cyberlaw.  "You can't say whatever you want about a company." The
get-tough strategy is a new one for Northwest, too. In the spring of 1998,
the company's mechanics, frustrated by the pace of contract negotiations,
began an unauthorized work slowdown that forced flight delays and hundreds
of cancellations. Union leaders disclaimed any knowledge or authorization
of the campaign, which employees advocated on Web sites and message
boards.

Last month, however, Northwest sued the flight attendants union and some
of its members, alleging they had violated federal labor laws by
orchestrating a sickout. Judge Frank agreed with Northwest and issued a
temporary restraining order that prohibited the union from advocating any
work disruptions.

New legal ground Still, the Northwest case appears to break new ground
because, in addition to searching the office computers of union officials,
Northwest got permission to search their home computers and the home
computers of several rank-and-file employees, including Kevin Griffin and
Ted Reeve. The temporary settlement in the suit does not apply to Griffin
and Reeve. The judge agreed to put the suit on hold as it pertains to the
union and 19 individuals who are represented by the union's attorneys. But
Griffin and Reeve, who are not represented by union attorneys because they
are not union officers, are still subject to the company's discovery
efforts and to a possible injunction against them. "This kind of precedent
could have a very chilling effect on the exercise of speech rights, and
could set a very bad precedent for privacy," said Jerry Berman, executive
director for the Center for Democracy and Technology, a leading privacy
rights organization based in Washington, D.C. Like most flight attendants,
Griffin and Reeve do not use a computer at work. But they do operate
online message boards where flight attendants have vented their
frustration toward the company and the union leadership. Griffin's message
board, <http://www.nwaflightattendants.com, included anonymous postings
calling for a sickout, but they were usually followed by urgings from
Griffin that participants not advocate illegal activities.

Northwest hired two computer forensic experts from Ernst & Young to copy
the hard drives of the 21 individuals named in the lawsuit. The judge
limited the search to union activities relating to the sickout or e-mail
to 43 individuals, well beyond the number of people named in the original
lawsuit. "This is really an extension beyond established law," said
Marshall Tanick, a Minneapolis attorney who specializes in workplace and
privacy issues. "How different is this from wiretapping somebody's phone?"

PERSONAL DATA

Barbara Harvey, a Detroit-based attorney representing Griffin and Reeve,
said the situation has created tremendous anxiety about the possible loss
of "highly personal" information. "We are trusting them [Ernst & Young]
totally. We don't know them. We didn't hire them. In fact, they were hired
by Northwest. But we are put into the position of having to trust them,"
she said.

Griffin, a veteran Northwest flight attendant based in Honolulu,
surrendered his Packard Bell desktop and Fujitsu laptop at the Ernst &
Young office in Honolulu. He was met there by two forensic examiners who
flew to Honolulu from Washington, D.C., and Texas.

"I didn't think they had the right to come and get your home computer," he
said. The threat of a court-authorized search of home computers has
already had one measurable impact: Postings to a rank-and-file Web site
that was openly critical of both union management and the company have
slowed to a trickle.

"If you're Northwest Airlines, you're probably smiling about that," said
Paul Levy, a lawyer for Ralph Nader's Public Citizen Litigation Group,
which also represents Griffin and Reeve. Northwest might not be the only
party pleased to see the Web site go quiet.

Griffin's Web site and an organized e-mail campaign were instrumental in
rallying opposition that defeated a tentative contract agreement that was
reached last June and endorsed by the union's top leaders, including
Teamsters General President James Hoffa.

Asked why the union didn't fight harder against the effort to search
employees' home computers, Billie Davenport, president of Teamsters Local
2000, said the union complied with the discovery request because it felt
it had nothing to hide.

'WAS ENOUGH PROTECTION'

"We had voiced concern over people's privacy. There was an
invasion-of-privacy issue," Davenport said. "But we believe there was
enough privacy protection." She said Ernst & Young's computer forensic
examiners spent two full days in the union's offices last week, copying
hard drives. Griffin said his Web site has had more traffic than ever in
the past month, but far fewer postings from visitors. Of those who aren't
afraid to comment in the open forum section of the Web site, a much
smaller percentage of the writers are identifying themselves, Griffin
said. "It's like they are running scared, with good reason," Griffin said.


=================================


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