Police blotter: Ex-employee faces suit over file deletion

"Police blotter" is a weekly report on the intersection of technology and the law.

What: International Airport Centers sues former employee, claiming use of a secure file deletion utility violated federal hacking laws.

When: Decided March 8 by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 7th Circuit.

Outcome: Federal hacking law applies, the court said in a 3-0 opinion written by Judge Richard Posner.

What happened, according to the court: Jacob Citrin was once employed by International Airport Centers and given a laptop to use in his company's real estate related business. The work consisted of identifying "potential acquisition targets."

At some point, Citrin quit IAC and decided to continue in the same business for himself, a choice that IAC claims violated his employment contract.

Normally that would have been a routine business dispute. But the twist came when Citrin dutifully returned his work laptop--and IAC tried to undelete files on it to prove he did something wrong.

IAC couldn't. It turned out that (again according to IAC) Citrin had used a "secure delete" program to make sure that the files were not just deleted, but overwritten and unrecoverable.

In most operating systems, of course, when a file is deleted only the reference to it in the directory structure disappears. The data remains on the hard drive.

But a wealth of programs like PGP, open-source programs such as Wipe, and a built-in feature in Apple Computer's OS X called Secure Empty Trash will make sure the information has truly vanished.

Inevitably, perhaps, IAC sued. The relevance for Police Blotter readers is that the company claimed that Citrin's alleged secure deletion violated a federal computer crime law called the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act.

That law says whoever "knowingly causes damage without authorization" to a networked computer can be held civilly and criminally liable.

The 7th Circuit made two remarkable leaps. First, the judges said that deleting files from a laptop counts as "damage." Second, they ruled that Citrin's implicit "authorization" evaporated when he (again, allegedly) chose to go into business for himself and violate his employment contract.

The implications of this decision are broad. It effectively says that employees better not use OS X's Secure Empty Trash feature, or any similar utility, because they could face civil and criminal charges after they leave their job. (During oral argument last October, one judge wondered aloud: "Destroying a person's data--that's as bad as you can do to a computer.")

Citrin pointed out that his employment contract permitted him to "destroy" data in the laptop when he left the company. But the 7th Circuit didn't buy it, and reinstated the suit against him brought by IAC.

Excerpts from Posner's opinion (click here for PDF), with parentheses in the original: The provision of the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act on which IAC relies provides that whoever "knowingly causes the transmission of a program, information, code or command, and as a result of such conduct, intentionally causes damage without authorization, to a protected computer (a defined term that includes the laptop that Citrin used)," violates the Act. Citrin argues that merely erasing a file from a computer is not a "transmission." Pressing a delete or erase key in fact transmits a command, but it might be stretching the statute too far (especially since it provides criminal as well as civil sanctions for its violation) to consider any typing on a computer keyboard to be a form of "transmission" just because it transmits a command to the computer...

Citrin's breach of his duty of loyalty terminated his agency relationship (more precisely, terminated any rights he might have claimed as IAC's agent--he could not by unilaterally terminating any duties he owed his principal gain an advantage!) and with it his authority to access the laptop, because the only basis of his authority had been that relationship...

Citrin points out that his employment contract authorized him to "return or destroy" data in the laptop when he ceased being employed by IAC (emphasis added). But it is unlikely, to say the least, that the provision was intended to authorize him to destroy data that he knew the company had no duplicates of and would have wanted to have--if only to nail Citrin for misconduct. The purpose of the provision may have been to avoid overloading the company with returned data of no further value, which the employee should simply have deleted.

More likely the purpose was simply to remind Citrin that he was not to disseminate confidential data after he left the company's employ--the provision authorizing him to return or destroy data in the laptop was limited to "Confidential" information. There may be a dispute over whether the incriminating files that Citrin destroyed contained "confidential" data, but that issue cannot be resolved on this appeal. The judgment is reversed with directions to reinstate the suit, including the supplemental claims that the judge dismissed because he was dismissing IAC's federal claim.

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29 comments (Page 1 of 2)
WHAT IF I LOST THE LAPTOP?
by james_bondad March 10, 2006 10:58 AM PST
Let's say instead of returning a deleted laptop hard drive, Citrin "accidentally" lost the laptop. Or it was ran over by a truck followed by an SUV. Much like what happened to poor Ben Stiller in "Duplex". Then Citrin tells IAC that he'd compensate the loss. Will he still be in trouble?
Reply to this comment View all 3 replies
Posner should be too smart for this
by curtiscarmack March 10, 2006 12:00 PM PST
When a guy as smart as Richard Posner writes an opinion like this, it just serves to show that analysis disconnected from reality can lead to a lot of trouble. The honorable Mr. Posner should know better, given his law & economics background. I certainly hope that this does not become the law of the land in this country.
Reply to this comment
What if it's standard practice?
by inthewoods March 10, 2006 12:37 PM PST
I can't help but wonder how it might affect the case if he were able to show that every system he controlled ran scheduled or automatic secure deletes. That's the rule vs. exception in my system community.
Reply to this comment
The Courts screwed this one up...
by dargon19888 March 10, 2006 12:55 PM PST
Secure Delete vs Delete? It shouldn't matter. While the laptop is in the possession of the employee, it is his/her responsibility to maintain the integrity of the laptop. They are responsible for the data on the laptop. This includes deletion of the data. Unless the ICA had an explicit corporate policy governing the use of any such "secure" deletion software, then he should be in the clear. Of course, what's to say that he deleted the files and then downloaded copies of DVDs he rented to his hard drive? (repeatedly). The author is correct that normal deletes just remove the inode reference. (Unix) And the OS then reclaims the disk space. So if he used the normal delete and then reused the diskspace for something else, then ICA would still be out of luck.
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Use a clorox wipe, go to prison?
by gerhard_schroeder March 10, 2006 12:56 PM PST
Whats next? Using a clorox wipe to clean your desk results in prison time for "removing fingerprints"... uhhh... yeah...
Reply to this comment
I always Wipe
by joshuaguttman March 10, 2006 1:24 PM PST
I always wipe my computer when I leave a job. I make sure they have a copy of all my work. I never do anything wrong, but I'm the little guy and they are the big guys. So suing me, even without cause, would be a big waste of my time and money so I always wipe out anything personal before leaving.
Reply to this comment
Hype - this has no implications whatsoever
by chassoto March 10, 2006 2:11 PM PST
Honestly, I don't see a problem. The minute he terminated his employment, he should have handed over the laptop, nothing more (and courts decide matters of fact, not website "police blotters"). The act of deleting files was, probably a violation of his terms of employment, or even a violation of law. I take issue with this statement from the article: "Normally that would have been a routine business dispute. But the twist came when Citrin dutifully returned his work laptop-- and IAC tried to undelete files on it to prove he did something wrong." Proof that he deleted work he was hired to do is prima facie evidence that he destroyed the company's work, and by this judgement, violated the law. The implications for this are not broad at all. You are already not allowed to destroy your employer's data. Sorry, but it's no leap of logic to believe that deleting data (the company's work for hire) such that it's unrecoverable is legitimate damage. This ruling changes nothing, except perhaps for Citrin. News.com is again overhyping a non-issue. Charles
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News.com should avoid FUD.
by SmyersM March 11, 2006 1:15 AM PST
The data was the property of the company. He deleted data that he knew would have value to the company, that they paid him to acquire. He took their money and deleted what they paid him for. The tagline/summary is innacurate and an attempt to bring in more readers. He is at fault for destruction of company property. If he deleted his sexy pictures that would be a different story. One ***** in the armor -- How do they prove the data he deleted was company property -- how can they prove he didnt just secure delete his pr0n. Food for thought.
Reply to this comment View all 2 replies
News.com should avoid FUD.
by SmyersM March 11, 2006 1:17 AM PST
The data was the property of the company. He deleted data that he knew would have value to the company, that they paid him to acquire. He took their money and deleted what they paid him for. The tagline/summary is innacurate and an attempt to bring in more readers. He is at fault for destruction of company property. If he deleted his sexy pictures that would be a different story. One ***** in the armor -- How do they prove the data he deleted was company property -- how can they prove he didnt just secure delete his pr0n. Food for thought.
Reply to this comment
News.com should avoid FUD
by SmyersM March 11, 2006 1:18 AM PST
The data was the property of the company. He deleted data that he knew would have value to the company, that they paid him to acquire. He took their money and deleted what they paid him for. The tagline/summary is innacurate and an attempt to bring in more readers. He is at fault for destruction of company property. If he deleted his sexy pictures that would be a different story. One ***** in the armor -- How do they prove the data he deleted was company property -- how can they prove he didnt just secure delete his pr0n. Food for thought.
Reply to this comment
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