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Lawsuit: 29,000 say Kaiser hid security breach

Posted on October 15, 2009 by Dissent

Maria Dinzeo reports on a class action lawsuit stemming from a 2007 breach that was first reported earlier this year:

Twenty-nine thousand Kaiser employees say the company did not inform them for more than a year about a security breach that left their personal information vulnerable to thieves. One employee says a woman stole her identity and used it to run up credit-card charges and “commit crimes across the country.”

The class of employees and members of SEIU United Healthcare West, claims that Kaiser provided the union with their names, birthdates, addresses and Social Security numbers “in connection with remittance of union dues,” but failed to encrypt the information, which was exposed when burglars broke into the UHW offices in July 2007 and made off with computer files.

Lead plaintiff Monica Saenz says she found out in October 2008 that her identity had been stolen. Saenz says her credit report showed that someone had withdrawn money from her bank account and had opened and run up charges on 10 credit cards. Saenz claims that a woman was using her identity to “commit crimes across the country.”

The class claims that Kaiser did not notify its 29,000 employees that their records had been stolen until February 2009, and that it delayed for 19 months in order to “shift the burden” for the identity theft.

Read more on Courthouse News.

Category: Health DataID TheftOf NoteTheftU.S.

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