private or public record?
pattyo
71 Posts
An employee accessed public records from the court system on-line. He found out about several employees with criminal records in their past. (10 years ago) I've called the inquiring employee in and talked to him about being discreet and not spreading this information around. If he talks to other employees about the information he found out, is the company open to a lawsuit?
Comments
One question though: Did the ee's he snooped on sign a release or an acknowledgement that the company could/would be doing background checks? If not, and he went about this on his own-doing, I'd be doing a lot more than just counseling him on being discreet about the information he found out.
1. How did you find out?
2. I don't believe you can do anything adverse to the ee's without a signed background consent.
3. If there are violent crimes on record and you now know about it, you may be in a pickle. I would talk to attorney if that is the case.
4. I would strongly counsel that employee that he is opening himself up to potential PERSONAL lawsuits that would be expensive to defend by doing this. He is also exposing the company to potential problems by doing this. Tell him if he does anything like this in the future he will be disciplined up to and including...
5. I bet he is going to say that he was doing it for the benefit of the co. and ask you what you are doing to ensure his safety if he is the one telling you about criminals in your midst. Most likely he is a busybody that needs a life. Your going to decide on that one.
>found out about several employees with criminal records in their past.
> (10 years ago) I've called the inquiring employee in and talked to
>him about being discreet and not spreading this information around.
>If he talks to other employees about the information he found out, is
>the company open to a lawsuit?
You say 'an employee accessed public records'. I trust from that you are saying he did it on his own and not as required by the company. If that is the case, why are you even concerned that he did it?
You say the records accessed were 'public records from the court system on line'. If that is the case, how is the company involved or at risk? And if the information is from court records available on request to the general public, how in the world could your company be open to liability if the employee accessed it out of personal curiosity and adventure? And what would any of this, as others have suggested, have to do with someone giving you permission to do a background check on them?
If I have all of this wrong and the employee was doing this in the course of business for the Human Resources Department or, by extension, for the Company as a method of checking out people for employment purposes, I would only hope that your application contains statements about the company's right to conduct certain background checks and that it is signed off on by applicants. On the other hand, if the inquiring employee was doing this strictly for his own curiosity using websites he learned were available to the general public, and was not doing so in the interest of or at the direction of the employer/company, I would simply tell the 'inquiring mind', "It's your own ass if this creates a problem."
I still stand by my stance that there could be co. liability if any of the ee's have a violent criminal record and workplace violence ensues. Have a great day. I'm going to CA this weekend to play Pebble Beach, Spanish Bay and Spyglass. Even being wrong can't ruin that.
You might also share with your employee (that did the snooping) that while truth is a defense in a defamation lawsuit, he/she may be on the hook for an invasion of privacy suit and/or a false light suit regardless of the fact that what he passed on was true or a part of public records.
Margaret Morford
theHRedge
615-371-8200
[email]mmorford@mleesmith.com[/email]
[url]http://www.thehredge.net[/url]