Employers, Employees, Social Networks & the Law

Arizona Republic:  Social networking sites such as Twitter, Facebook and MySpace are great ways to communicate, but the legalities are  uncertain when employers monitor or restrict what employees say about employers online.

Valley attorneys say employers have the right to monitor and restrict employees’ social networking posts related to their business, including disciplining and terminating employees for negative posts via Arizona’s employment laws. But those same lawyers also caution that pursuing restrictive social networking policies can open a Pandora’s box of public relations and legal problems, including privacy and discrimination lawsuits.

Arizona Man Dons Monkey Masks to Elude Tickets

An Arizona man is making national news headlines, but he may not want the publicity.  The Associated Press reports:

A driver has racked up dozens of speeding tickets in photo-radar zones on Phoenix-area freeways while sporting monkey and giraffe masks, and is fighting every one by claiming the costumes make it impossible for authorities to prove he was behind the wheel.

monkey masked speeder

Parents Sue Walmart & AZ over Nude Pics of Kids

Peoria parents sue the State of Arizona and Walmart for an incident that caused Child Protective Services to take their children.  Lisa and Anthony “A.J.” Demaree’s three young children were taken from them because a Walmart employee saw several photos taken of the nude 5, 4 and 1 year old girls at bath time.  Walmart gave the photos to police.  It took a month for the Demarees to get their girls back.

Neither parent was charged with sexual abuse and they regained custody of their children, but the Demarees say the incident inflicted lasting harm.  In two separate lawsuits, the Demarees say the “slanderous claims” state officials made during the investigation caused them serious economic losses.  They also claim to have since suffered “emotional stress, headaches, nightmares, a general feeling of malaise, shock to their nervous system, grief and depression.”

Dennis Burke New US Attorney for Arizona

The United States Senate confirmed Dennis Burke to be the new U.S. Attorney for Arizona.  He served as Arizona governor Janet Napolitano’s chief of staff.  President Barack Obama selected Burke to succeed Diane Humetawa, who was appointed by President George W. Bush.

Charter-school Advocates Sue Arizona

Arizona Republic:  The Arizona Charter Schools Association, pro charter-school group, filed two lawsuits to force Arizona to equalize funds spent by the state on public schools, charter and district.

In both suits families claim the state’s funding system violates the Arizona Constitution, particularly in its mandate to provide all students with a uniform public-school education. Instead, an outdated formula leads to unequal funding of schools.

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