Employee Privacy
The objective of this study is to read the case Deal V. Spears United States Court Of Appeals, Eighth Circuit, 980 F. 2D 1153 (1992) and to answer the questions of whether it is lawful to monitor the telephone conversation of an employee if the employee has given prior consent and to answer if in this case whether Deal give her employer consent in this case? This study will additionally examine whether due to the recent burglary of the store, whether the employer had a legitimate business reason to record and review the employee's phone calls made or received at work. Finally, this study will consider what, under the Watkins precedent, is the extent to which an employer can monitor personal phone calls to employees within the ordinary course of business exemption of the federal wiretapping law where is no evidence of express consent here.
Background
The basis of the complaint filed in case Deal V. Spears United States Court Of Appeals, Eighth Circuit, 980 F. 2D 1153 (1992) is Title II of the Omnibus Crime control and Safe Streets Act of 1968, 18 U.S.C. § 2510-2520 (1988 & Supp. II 1990). It is reported that the Plaintiff, Sibbie Deal, and Calvin Lucas seek damages against Deal's former employers, namely the defendants, Newell, and Juanita Spears dba the White Oak Package Store, for the "intentional interception and disclosure of plaintiff's telephone." (United States Court Of Appeals, Eighth Circuit, 1992) Following a bench trial in this case, the District Court made a statutory award to Plaintiffs in the amount of $40,000 and the request for attorney fees in accordance with Title III's fee-shifting provision was granted. The Plaintiff cross-appealed the case on the issue of the court having refused to award punitive damages. The decision was affirmed by the higher court.
The Issues & The Decision of...
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