Blue Cross Blue Shield of Ct. v. Dimartino, No. 30 06 42 (Jul. 2, 1991)

1991 Conn. Super. Ct. 5948
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedJuly 2, 1991
DocketNo. 30 06 42
StatusUnpublished

This text of 1991 Conn. Super. Ct. 5948 (Blue Cross Blue Shield of Ct. v. Dimartino, No. 30 06 42 (Jul. 2, 1991)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Connecticut Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Blue Cross Blue Shield of Ct. v. Dimartino, No. 30 06 42 (Jul. 2, 1991), 1991 Conn. Super. Ct. 5948 (Colo. Ct. App. 1991).

Opinion

[EDITOR'S NOTE: This case is unpublished as indicated by the issuing court.] MEMORANDUM OF DECISION The plaintiff, Blue Cross Blue Shield of Connecticut , Inc. ("BC BS"), brought this action against the defendant, Carmen DiMartino, seeking temporary injunctive relief, money damages, attorney's fees and costs relating to the theft and misuse of confidential and proprietary information stored in BC BS's computer systems. The court granted BC BS's request for immediate temporary injunctive relief on June 8, 1990. At a show cause hearing on June 21, 1990, the parties entered into an agreement in accordance with which the defendant returned confidential and proprietary information of BC BS and was enjoined from using, disseminating or selling BC BS's confidential and proprietary information.

This case was tried to the court on April 24, 1991, on the basis of stipulated exhibits; affidavits of Robert Bown, Richard Ihmels and Steven Zerio; oral stipulations and testimony of Steven Zerio on behalf of BC BS. Defendant rested without introducing any evidence, and the parties have stipulated to the entry of a permanent injunction.

I. Facts

Based on a preponderance of the evidence, the court finds the following facts proven: DiMartino was a Group Sales Representative in BC BC's Fairfield, Connecticut, Group Sales Office until March 23, 1990, when his employment was terminated. He was responsible for soliciting employer groups to purchase health insurance plans and for acting as BC BS's representative to some existing groups in the Fairfield area.

In the course of his employment, DiMartino was given a confidential personal access code with which he could obtain information about BC BS group accounts for Connecticut. This information, which is stored in the BC BS computer system, is confidential and proprietary. It includes the identity of groups, their specific policies, their addresses, the size of the groups, the renewed date, and information from which their premium rate can be calculated.

As part of his training, the defendant was instructed concerning the confidentiality of company records and conflict of interest. He was given an employee handbook which contained CT Page 5950 specific provisions relating to the confidentiality of company information and conflicts of interest.

On or about March 1, 1990, BC BS initiated an audit of DiMartino's personal computer access code number. As a result of the audit, BC BS generated a printout of information accessed by DiMartino and learned that DiMartino had obtained a large quantity of information about hundreds of BC BS group accounts all over the state.

Without authorization, defendant removed from BC BS thousands of pages of documents containing information concerning a vast number of BC BS group accounts. The information included the names and addresses of the group accounts, contact persons, telephone numbers, billing and premium information, and payments records. Defendant violated company policy in obtaining this information by using his own confidential access code for improper purposes and by using the confidential computer access codes of other employees. Much of the material taken by defendant included computer printouts which far exceeded the scope of his sales territory and which were printed by him on numerous days. Several of these days were Saturdays, which were not part of defendant's work week. On one of these Saturdays, March 3, defendant used his personal access code continuously from approximately 8 A.M. until around 1:00 P.M., accessing and printing a different computer screen at an average rate of seven times per minute, throughout this five-hour period.

In addition, defendant removed from BC BS's offices a confidential listing of group account information (the "Pool Rated Group Report,") compiled in connection with a special telephone blitz conducted by BC BS in the fall of 1989. This document was used only for that limited purpose for approximately two weeks at only one BC BS location which had restricted access. Although removal and possession of this report by the defendant was unauthorized, a copy was retrieved from his apartment on March 23, 1990, by BC BS representatives. Despite his sworn statement on March 23, 1990, and other representations to Mr. Ihmels that he had either fully returned or had destroyed all such information, he returned another copy to BC BS at the show cause hearing on June 21, 1990.

Defendant has admitted misappropriating confidential and proprietary information. This information was available to Customer Service Consultants but not to the public or to agents and brokers of BC BS. The information is the product of significant investment by BC BS in its computer system. Because the integrity of the information is critical, BC BS took reasonable precautions to protect it, including limiting access, maintaining confidential compute access codes for employees, and CT Page 5951 conducting employee training on the importance of maintaining the confidentiality of this information.

DiMartino signed a sworn statement admitting that he had used his personal access code on BC BS's computer system, and the confidential personal access codes of two other employees, to obtain a list of BC BS's group accounts that he later disclosed and offered for sale to two independent insurance agents for his personal benefit and future financial gain.

After March 23, 1990, DiMartino continued to market the information for his personal financial gain by offering to sell portions of the list to agents so that they might become "agent of record" for BC BS group accounts and thereby be entitled to commissions.

At the onset of this action, the court ordered the defendant to return all documents taken, retained, or converted by him from BC BS within 48 hours after service and to disclose within the same time period all persons to whom disclosure of such information had been made. The defendant failed to comply with this order but did appear at the show cause hearing on BC BS's request for temporary injunction set down for June 21, 1990. At the show cause hearing on June 21, DiMartino turned over additional confidential and proprietary information that he had wrongfully taken from BC BS's computer system. DiMartino admitted that he had possession of BC BS confidential and proprietary information and had disclosed portions of the confidential and proprietary information to Ralph Gagliardi, Michael Coppola, James Murphy, and Kenneth Morrissey, all of whom are independent agents.

The threat to BC BS from the theft and disclosure of its confidential and proprietary information was substantial. With this information, defendant contacted brokers and agents in order to solicit those BC BS accounts without designated "agents of record" so that they could become "agent of record" and thereby earn a commission on new and existing business.

BC BS has approximately a forty percent market share of the group insurance business throughout the State of Connecticut, representing annual premiums of approximately $550 million. Commissions paid to agents and brokers of BC BS for 1989 totaled $3.6 million and amounted to $46.6 million for 1990. With approximately 11,000 group accounts, only forty percent of which had agent of record designations, BC BS had millions of dollars of exposure to additional commissions which could have resulted from the improper use of the information which defendant misappropriated. These were commissions that the company paid out of general revenues of the company, rather than as charges on the CT Page 5952 premium of the particular account.

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Bluebook (online)
1991 Conn. Super. Ct. 5948, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blue-cross-blue-shield-of-ct-v-dimartino-no-30-06-42-jul-2-1991-connsuperct-1991.