JULY 25, 2007
| Do not forget to protect your company's paper records
and properly destroy the ones you don't need anymore! This is
still one of the easiest ways to commit identity theft, yet one
of the easiest to safeguard against.
In recent
years, there have been many stories of electronic data breaches,
including some that exposed the personal information of
millions. With breaches as notable as these, sometimes the loss
of hard copy information paper is forgotten.
The use of
physical records to commit identity theft, purge a bank account,
or access someone elses credit card account is still a threat
to anyone who receives a paper receipt for a purchase or
provides documents containing personal information to another
party. Consumers expect these records will be protected or
properly destroyed by the businesses they trust.
Proper
document destruction is finally on the front burner in at least
one state. Texas Attorney General Greg Abbott has begun
aggressively enforcing two Texas identity
theft laws in an effort to crack down on businesses that
fail to protect and properly dispose of consumers' personal
information.
The Texas
2005 Identity Theft Enforcement and Protection Act requires
businesses to protect customer records containing sensitive
information, and to thoroughly destroy the records that are no
longer needed. It allows for fines of up to $50,000 for each
violation.
In addition,
Chapter 35 of the Texas Business and Commerce Code requires
businesses to store and dispose of customers' personal
information appropriately and to develop retention and disposal
procedures upon penalty of fines as large as $500 per
unprotected record.
To date, the
state has taken legal action against five companies. In April,
Abbott took action against CVS/Pharmacy and RadioShack for
exposing hundreds of customers to identity theft by failing to
properly dispose of records that contained sensitive
information. One of these records allegedly belonged to a
customer who had previously purchased a shredder to protect
herself from identity theft.
In March, the
Texas Attorney General filed enforcement actions against Jones
Beauty College for improperly discarding student financial aid
forms containing Social Security numbers and other personal
information. It also filed an action against On Track Modeling,
which allegedly abandoned more than 60 boxes containing hundreds
of confidential client records.
In another
case, Texas agreed to a temporary injunction against EXCORP,
which was accused of discarding business records containing
personal information in trash cans outside several of its
locations. Abbott allowed EXCORP to implement an interim
process that will protect sensitive personal and financial
information contained in customer records while the Attorney
General moves forward with the case.
What lessons
can other businesses learn from the Texas cases? First, do not
forget about physical records - companies have a duty to
protect these records and dispose of them properly. Second,
educate your employees on the risks associated with improper
disposal and train them on how to handle it the right way.
Third, if the
burden for proper document disposal is too great, outsource the
task to a third party that specializes in document destruction.
And fourth, audit your practices. All of these policies,
training courses, and shredders will do little good unless the
company verifies that proper procedures are being followed and
documents are being properly disposed of.
An important
note: The Texas laws apply to electronic records as well, which
means finding proper methods for destroying online data that is
no longer needed. We'll look at this issue in the next column.