Recent News Articles

Judge Finds Contradictions in Ancestry.com Complaint

30 Aug 2022 10:39 AM | Anonymous

Ancestry.com DNA user Carolyn Bridges of St. Clair County petitioned U.S. appellate judges to review rejection of a claim that purchase of the website by Blackstone Group violated privacy of every user in Illinois.

She posted an appeal notice on the docket of District Judge David Dugan on Aug. 23, a week after he entered judgment.

He granted leave to amend the complaint in July but Bridges didn’t amend.

Attorney Gregory Shevlin, of Bruce Cook’s firm in Belleville, filed the complaint in St. Clair County circuit court last year.

He alleged Blackstone violated Illinois law on privacy of genetic information by taking possession without consent and proposed to certify Bridges as leader of a statewide class action for perhaps hundreds of thousands of users.

He listed three Chicago area lawyers as associates and one from Pennsylvania.

He claimed Bridges wouldn’t have provided genetic information to Ancestry if she had known Blackstone would compel disclosure.

Blackstone counsel Martin Roth of Chicago removed the complaint to district court on the basis of diverse citizenship.

He moved to dismiss it and Bridges amended it.

Her team wrote, “Defendant disclosed on Ancestry’s website that customer’s genetic information would be released or disclosed to defendant for its own use.”

They claimed Blackstone paired genetic information with first and last name, email address, home address, and other information.

“Blackstone disclosed in regulatory findings that agreements to share information between its affiliated entities have already been implemented and that its effort to package and sell data to unaffiliated third parties is underway," the suit claimed.

You can read more in an article by Steve Korris published in the madisonrecord.com web site at: https://bit.ly/3AXOgGV.


Eastman's Online Genealogy Newsletter









































Powered by Wild Apricot Membership Software