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COURT RULES VETERANS CAN SUE VA OVER
STOLEN
LAPTOP -- "The government's own evidence raises
serious
questions about the VA's computer safeguards."

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Vets Can Sue VA Over Stolen Laptop
By MATT APUZZO
WASHINGTON (AP) — A federal judge questioned the Veterans Affairs
Department's computer security and ruled Friday that lawsuits can go
forward over the theft of computer equipment containing data on 26.5
million veterans.
U.S. District Judge James Robertson dismissed several aspects of the case
but said the three lawsuits sufficiently made the claim that the agency
failed to safeguard personal information, as required by the Privacy Act.
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"The government's own evidence raises serious
questions about the VA's computer safeguards," Robertson wrote, citing
government reports that faulted the agency's computer security years
before the theft.
A laptop and hard drive were stolen last year during a burglary at the
home of a Veterans Affairs employee. The equipment contained the names,
Social Security numbers and birth dates of veterans discharged since 1975.
It was the worst-ever breach of government data.
The equipment was later recovered and the FBI said the sensitive files
were neither compromised nor accessed.
In the lawsuits, veterans said they suffered embarrassment, mental
distress, emotional trauma and the threat of future identity theft. Some
said they also had to pay for credit-monitoring services.
The Justice Department, which represents federal agencies in lawsuits, had
asked the case be dismissed. Robertson agreed on some counts: He threw out
claims of constitutional violations, said the theft did not qualify as an
"unauthorized disclosure" under the Privacy Act and said only individual
veterans — not organizations — can sue.
The lawsuits have been filed as potential class-action cases representing
every veteran whose data was released.
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