Another Pregnancy Discrimination / Computer Fraud and Abuse Act Case?

That’s right, we have another one!

Do you recall Lee v. PMSI, Inc.—the case that burned up the blogs and Twitter feeds last week because it involved Facebook? You remember, the case in which the court found that an employee’s using Facebook and checking personal email at work was not a violation of the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act (“CFAA”)?

Wait a minute—you ARE one of the 4 people reading my blog regularly, aren’t you??? (If not go read this: Facebooking at Work Does Not Violate Computer Fraud and Abuse Act)

Shame on you. Do you know what this is doing for my self esteem?

Well anyway, where was I? Oh, ok …

A case that was handed down on May 17, 2011 that also involved both a pregnancy discrimination claim and a Computer Fraud and Abuse Act claim, though in a different context than Lee v. PMSI, Inc. The case is  Co. Ltd., 2011 WL 1883113 (W.D.N.C. May 17, 2011) and the facts are fairly straightforward and are as follows:

The employee believed the company was descriminating against her because she had taken maternity leave. She decided to investigate into the matter by using her company laptop and managerial-level access to access personnel data in the company database–purportedly in violation of company policy. She used the information to compile an analysis that she presented to the company to show the pattern of discriminatory conduct. Apparently the company didn’t see the injustice in this. Instead, upon learning of her accessing the off-limits data, it fired her for violating the company policy by accessing the data.

Plaintiff then sued the employer for pregnancy discrimination, among other things. The company, understanding that the best defense is a good offense, filed a counter claim against the Plaintiff for violating the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act by using her company laptop to access the prohibited database in violation of company policy.

Both parties moved for summary judgment on each others’ affirmative claims. The Court denied Plaintiff’s MSJ on the employer’s CFAA claim “[b]ecause the issue of whether Plaintiff exceeded her authorized access to the compensation data remains a disputed fact to be resolved by the jury, . . . .” That was the extent of the court’s analysis of the CFAA claim.

What do you think? Did you ever imagine that pregnancy and computer fraud would go hand-in-hand like this?

p.s. yes, I picked the ugliest color I could find for this!

Published by Shawn E. Tuma

Shawn Tuma is an attorney who is internationally recognized in cybersecurity, computer fraud and data privacy law, areas in which he has practiced for nearly two decades. He is a Partner at Spencer Fane, LLP where he regularly serves as outside cybersecurity and privacy counsel to a wide range of companies from small to midsized businesses to Fortune 100 enterprises. You can reach Shawn by telephone at 972.324.0317 or email him at stuma@spencerfane.com.

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