InfoTek Corporation v. Preston

CourtDistrict Court, D. Maryland
DecidedSeptember 9, 2022
Docket1:18-cv-01386
StatusUnknown

This text of InfoTek Corporation v. Preston (InfoTek Corporation v. Preston) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
InfoTek Corporation v. Preston, (D. Md. 2022).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF MARYLAND __.

INFOTEK CORPORATION, :

v. Civil Action No. CCB-18-1386

DWAYNE PRESTON

MEMORANDUM

Now pending is a motion for partial summary judgment filed by InfoTek Corporation seeking to establish the liability of its former employee, Dwight Preston, for violating the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act, 18 U.S.C. § 1030 (Count I), trespassing upon InfoTek’s chattels (Count IV), tortiously interfering with InfoTek’s business relations (Count VI), and tortiously interfering with InfoTek’s economic relations (Count VII). InfoTek’s motion has been fully briefed (ECF 80, Pl. Mot. Partial Summ. J.; ECF 84, Def. Opp’n; ECF 85, Pl. Reply), and the court heard oral argument on August 3, 2022. After oral argument, Mr. Preston moved to reopen discovery (ECF 93, Def. Mot. to Reopen Disc.), which InfoTek opposed (ECF 94, InfoTek Opp’n to Def. Mot. to Reopen Disc.) For the following reasons, InfoTek’s motion for partial summary judgment will be denied, and Mr. Preston’s motion to reopen discovery will be granted. BACKGROUND

For nearly a decade, Dwayne Preston served as the Chief Financial Officer of InfoTek, a Maryland-based information technology company. (ECF 80-4, Non-Prosecution Agreement Statement of Facts, at J 1.) Mr. Preston joined InfoTek in 2008 after being recruited by InfoTek’s

1 .

founders, Jacky McComber and her then-husband Robert Kimmel.! (ECF 85-2, Preston Dep. 3 l :20—32:21.) Mr. Preston was no stranger to Ms. MeComber or Mr. Kimmel when he was offered the CFO position. Mr. Preston went to high schoo! with Mr. Kimmel, and the two became close friends. (/d. at 19:3-20:21.) The list of personal relationships in the company grew even . longer when Mr. Preston’s wife, Jamie Preston, began working at InfoTek in May 2015. (Id. at 56:11-57:3; ECF 80-4, Non-Prosecution Agreement Statement of Facts, at { 4.) Mr. Preston’s duties as CFO included managing InfoTek’s accounting department and maintaining the company’s books, records, and payroll. InfoTek, like most companies, had a suite of network-based programs and applications to assist with these processes. A system called Unanet, for example, tracked the hours of InfoTek’s employees and their accrued paid time off.

_ CFO, Mr. Preston had administrative privileges granting him broad access to the.Unanet

_ system. An employee with a standard Unanet account could access only their own time entries, while an administrative account could view and edit the timesheets of every employee. (ECF 85- 2, Preston Dep. 105:17~—106:9.) Mr. Preston was not the only InfoTek executive with administrative access to Unanet; Ms. McComber, who became InfoTek’s sole owner’ after her and Mr. Kimmel’s divorce, had an account with identical Unanet privileges. (/d. at 106:10-20.) During Mr. Preston’s tenure as CFO, Ms. McComber gave Mr. Preston her password so he could help set up Unanet reports tailored to her account (id. at 102:2-15; see also ECF 80-4, Non-Prosecution Agreement Statement of Facts, at Ms. McComber’s Unanet password was saved on Mr. Preston’s cell phone as a result. (ECF 85-2, Preston Dep. 102:13-18, 107:7-16.)

' Jacky McComber was previously known as Jacky Kimmel > Ms. McComber, as the sole shareholder of the company, made her and InfoTek essentially “one in the same.” (See ECF 84-2, InfoTek Corporate Designee Dep. 135:14-20.)

In March 2017, Mr. Preston resigned as CFO. (ECF 85-2, Preston Dep. 76: 14-15) On Mr. Preston’s last day, March 31, 2017, InfoTek revoked his Unanet account. (Jd. at 78:3-6.) Mr. Preston, however, continued to access InfoTek’s Unanet system from Ms. McComber’s account without permission Ud. at 82:4-17, 159:7-160:3.) The first time Mr. Preston logged into the system was, according to him, entirely incidental; he allegedly did not realize his phone had saved Ms. McComber’s password. (/d. at 159:1-6.) But Mr. Preston’s curiosity soon got the best of him. In April or May 2017, Mr. Preston began snooping into Ms. McComber’s time entries and invoices on Unanet to see if she was billing her time on days she was not working. Ud. at 159:15—.

160:3, 109:18-110:3.) Because of his illicit sleuthing, Mr. Preston allegedly discovered Ms. McComber was billing to a government contract on days she was participating in activities unrelated to work, such as golfing. (Ud. at 109:18-1 10:3.) This revelation was not entirely shocking _to Mr. Preston, who had allegedly questioned Ms. McComber’s billing practices while he was working at InfoTek. Ud. 108:16-109:17.) Ms. McComber had served as the project manager on the contract at issue, known as the IRONBRIDGE contract. (ECF 80-4, Non-Prosecution Agreement Statement of Facts, at {f[8, 11.) Mr. Preston allegedly made no changes to Ms. McComber’s recorded hours, which were used to generate invoices sent to, and paid by, the National Security Agency. (/d.) Until then, Mr. Preston had simply viewed information on InfoTek’s network. But his look- not-touch approach ended after InfoTek fired his wife, Jamie Preston, in June 2017. (ECF 85-2, Preston Dep..163:19-164:3.) Upset with his wife’s termination, Mr. Preston accessed and altered data stored on InfoTek’s Unanet system on July 19, 2017. Ud) Using Ms. McComber’s credentials, Mr. Preston gave several InfoTek employees extra paid time off (“PTO”), and edited InfoTek’s billing rates on several contracts, Cd. at 101:9~-102:1, 163:19-164:2.) During this

intrusion, which lasted around 42 minutes, Mr. Preston also viewed Ms. McComber’s time records, but made no changes to any of her information or invoices. (ECF 80-4, Non-Prosecution Agreement Statement of Facts, at 11.) Mr. Preston’s intrusion on July 19, 2017, was the final time Mr. Preston, accessed InfoTek’s Unanet system without authorization. (ECF 85-2, Preston. Dep. 156:8-13.) By late July 2017, InfoTek knew something was amiss when two employees reported their PTO information in Unanet had been changed. (ECF 84-2, InfoTek Corporate Designee Dep. 50:4- □

7.) With this notice, the company fixed the altered data (id. at 53:13-19), and a human resources representative for InfoTek? set out to determine how the PTO numbers were changed (id. at 51:13- 15). Although InfoTek knew someone must have inappropriately accessed the system, the culprit’s identity was still a mystery at that time. (/d. at 50:7-10.) But InfoTek soon had a much bigger problem than the unidentified Unanet intrusion. In late August 2017, the NSA received an anonymous whistleblower letter alleging Ms. McComber had fraudulently billed the NSA under the IRONBRIDGE contract. (ECF 85-2, Preston Dep. - 188:6-19.)* The NSA Inspector General ‘began investigating the issue, and interviewed Ms. . McComber on October 3, 2017. Faced with these two concerns—the Unanet intrusion and the NSA’s investigation— InfoTek hired a team of digital forensic agencies and other private entities to assist the company. (See ECF 84-2, InfoTek Corporate Designee Dep. 50:15-51:18.) The team included

3 InfoTek’s 30(b)(6) deponent described this HR representative as the “Director of Human Capital.” It appears this person was part of Ashton Group Services (ECF 84-2, InfoTek Corporate Designee Dep. 161:5-15), which is a company that provided personnel services for InfoTek. (/a. at 169:4-10.) Preston denies sending this letter. (ECF 85-2, Preston Dep. 188:12-13.) Sometime between July and September 2017, however,. Mr. Preston submitted an online whistleblower tip to the federal government describing Ms. McComber’s alleged misconduct related to billing and recordkeeping. (/d. at 155:19-156:19, 157:4-158:1.) The anonymous letter sent to the NSA, according to Mr. Preston, contained more detail than the online tip he submitted. (/d. at 189:9-18.) .

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