(Washington, D.C.) –
Vietnam Veterans of America has joined with four other
national organizations and several individual veterans in filing a
class-action lawsuit seeking judicial oversight and protection of the
VA computer files with personal information about 26.5 million
veterans.
“It is appalling to all veterans
that their personal information–information that is supposed to be
held in confidence–is potentially in the hands of individuals who can
wreak identity-theft havoc,” said John Rowan, National President of
VVA and a plaintiff in the lawsuit.
“VA Secretary Nicholson has said
he is ‘mad as hell’ over this incident and the breakdown in command
and control of his department, and we believe him. However, he has
yet to answer some critical questions: What was an employee of the VA
doing with the names, Social Security numbers, and dates of birth of
all these veterans, the vast majority of whom have never availed
themselves of VA services? Why is the VA collecting this information
in the first place?”
VVA is joined by four other
national organizations and individual veterans in the lawsuit, which
was filed in federal district court today by attorney Douglas Rosinski
of the law firm Ogletree, Deakins, Nash, Smoak & Stewart, P.C. They
are the National Gulf War Resource Center, Radiated Veterans of
America, Citizen Soldier, and Veterans for Peace.
“Saying ‘We’re sorry’ is hardly
comforting to veterans and their families,” Rowan said. “The VA has
been criticized for years about lax information security and that
includes criticism from the VA’s own Inspector General. The VA still
hasn’t properly secured all the personal information under its
control. We’ve just seen the largest known unauthorized disclosure of
Social Security numbers in history. We hope this lawsuit will help
Secretary Nicholson correct the known vulnerabilities in how the VA
protects private information. If the VA can’t solve the problem,
maybe the courts can help. Since all previous attempts at protecting
privacy of individual veterans by heads of the VA have failed, perhaps
the weight of the judiciary can make the difference. This lawsuit
seeks to insure that no harm will come to veterans as a result of this
theft, and that such an incident can never occur again.”
The veterans’ complaint, filed in
the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia, seeks:
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A declaratory judgment that the VA’s loss of these
records violated and continues to violate both the Privacy and
Administrative Procedure Acts.
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A court order that the VA disclose the exact nature
of its compromised records system and to individually inform each
veteran of every record it maintains on him/her.
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An injunction preventing the VA from altering any
data storage system and prohibiting any further use of these data
until a court-appointed panel of experts determines how best to
implement safeguards to prevent any further breaches.
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A judgment awarding $1,000 to each veteran who can
show that he/she has been harmed by the VA’s violation of the
Privacy Act.
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