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Vol. 73, No. 3, March 2000 |
Managing Risk
Does the New "Dumpster Diving"
Law Apply to You?
Negligent disposal of medical and financial information
could land your firm in hot water.
by Ann Massie Nelson
Lawyers who do not properly dispose of clients' personal medical
and financial information could be subject to civil and criminal
penalties under Wisconsin's new "dumpster diving" rules,
which became law Feb. 1, 2000.
The new law for disposing of confidential medical and financial
information was enacted by the Wisconsin Legislature to bolster
individuals' rights to privacy, according to Scott B. Franklin,
an attorney and tax manager with Kohler & Franklin CPAs,
Milwaukee. A similar federal law is slated to take effect in
November 2000.
Three
types of enterprise were identified in the new law (Wis. Stat.
section
895.505): financial institutions, medical "businesses,"
and tax preparation businesses. The rule also applies to persons
under contract with these types of businesses. Law firms were
not specifically named in the new rule, but then, neither were
hospitals nor clinics, Franklin points out.
"Certainly, a law firm that prepares individual tax returns
would qualify under this law," Franklin says. "Broadly
interpreted, the law could apply to any law firm that handles
personal injury, tax, bankruptcy, debt collection, divorce, estate
planning, or other representation involving confidential medical
or financial information."
The new law requires that personally identifiable records
containing financial, medical, and tax information be shredded,
erased, made unreadable, or otherwise disposed of so that no
unauthorized person has access to the information. Businesses
that fail to comply with the law are liable for any damages sustained
by the person whose personal information was revealed and forfeitures
of up to $1,000 per violation. Any person who possesses a disposed
record with intent to use personal information (aka, the dumpster
diver) is liable both to the individual and to the business for
any resulting damages. The dumpster diver also may be fined up
to $1,000 and imprisoned for up to 90 days.
Ethical Duty Hasn't Changed
"You may question whether the dumpster diving law applies
to you, but keep in mind that - but for the new civil or criminal
penalties imposed - nothing has changed vis-a-vis a lawyer's
professional responsibility to maintain, dispose of, and destroy
client files in an appropriate manner," according to Sally
E. Anderson, claims counsel at Wisconsin Lawyers Mutual Insurance
Co. (See SCR
20:1.6, Confidentiality of Information.)
Nonclient documents also may qualify under the new rule, Anderson
says. For example, an insurance defense attorney in a personal
injury case may be liable for carelessly discarding the claimant's
medical records.
The new Wisconsin law elevates the disposal of all client
records to a higher standard of care, according to Franklin.
"Are you going to leave it to your support staff to determine
if a file contains personally identifiable medical or financial
information?" he asks. "Law firms need to shred everything
before disposal so nothing falls through the cracks."
Your ethical and legal duty to safeguard documents from desktop
to landfill begins with the first act of representation and continues
through file closing and disposal. Paper you churn out during
the representation - draft documents, photocopies, handwritten
notes of conversations, telephone message slips - needs to be
treated with the same care as a divorce decree or bankruptcy
petition.
Recommendations to Consider
Anderson and Franklin offer the following observations.
- Develop a firm policy for document retention and disposal.
Educate all members of your firm about your ethical and legal
obligations to protect client confidentiality.
- Discuss file disposal with clients at the time they retain
you. In your letter of disengagement, describe your file retention
policy. Before destroying files, attempt to obtain clients' written
consent.
- Purchase a high-capacity, electric shredder and install it
where lawyers and staff members can access it easily. Make sure
the shredded product is unrecognizable. The new rule does not
define "shred," but ripping a paper in half or quarters
probably doesn't cut it.
- Shred as you go. The new rule does not state when "disposal"
occurs. When you toss documents in a "to-shred" box
under your desk, are you disposing of them? Or, does disposal
occur when the documents leave your locked premises? Personal
shredders that fit over wastebaskets may be convenient but won't
suffice for big shredding jobs.
- If you have a large volume of shredding to do, contract with
a mobile shredding service to send a truck to your parking lot
and shred documents in your presence. Consider sharing this expense
with other tenants in your office building.
- Hire a bonded waste management company that uses locked dumpsters.
- Deliver disposed records to a bonded recycling service that
allows you to watch the shredding.
- Emphasize to all members of your firm that simply pressing
the delete key does not destroy an electronic document. If you
are selling or disposing of computer equipment, make sure hard
drives are reconfigured so that no records remain.
- Educate clients on their need to maintain confidentiality
of legal documents and correspondence from your law firm.
- Keep an inventory of destroyed records. It will save you
time spent later looking for documents that no longer exist.
Ann Massie Nelson
is communications director at Wisconsin Lawyers Mutual Insurance
Co., Madison. |
Anderson cautions law firms to avoid simply shredding or erasing
all records after a set length of time. The Wisconsin statute
of limitation for legal malpractice claims is six years from
the date of discovery, which means an error or omission may not
come to light until long after the client file - often the only
documentation - is destroyed.
Need More Information?
For information about the new rule and what it means for your
clients, see Scott B. Franklin's article, "Disposing
Medical, Financial Records," in the December 1999 Wisconsin
Lawyer.
For staff training, consider purchasing "Law Office Confidentiality,"
one of the State Bar of Wisconsin's Law Office Videotape series.
You may order videos online
or by calling the State Bar toll-free at (800) 728-7788.
For recommendations about file management, see Wisconsin
Ethics Opinion E-98-1: Disposition of Closed Client Files,
July 1998 Wisconsin Lawyer; "Closed Files are Best
Defense in Malpractice Claim," June 1995 Wisconsin Lawyer;
and "File
Custody Battles are Common When Lawyers Leave Firms,"
September 1998 Wisconsin Lawyer.
For a copy of the new law, see Wisconsin Statutes section
895.505.
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