The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) on April 1
announced it had settled an enforcement action over an employer’s use of a
restrictive confidentiality agreement. The SEC brought the enforcement action
against KBR, Inc., which had a practice of requiring its employees to sign a confidentiality
agreement, when they were serving as witnesses in an internal company
investigation.
The SEC alleged that KBR’s standard confidentiality
agreements used in investigations were so restrictive that they potentially
discouraged employees from reporting any law violations to the SEC. The
agreements’ confidentiality provisions, according to the SEC, violated the
whistleblower protections of the Dodd-Frank Act. The confidentiality provisions
required any KBR employee-witness to agree to keep any matters being
investigated confidential and not to discuss any such matters with any outside
parties, unless the person obtained prior approval from the KBR legal
department. If the employee-witness violated the confidentiality provisions,
the employee faced discipline or termination.
The SEC considered the confidentiality provisions so
restrictive that they violated Rule 21F-17 of the Dodd-Frank Act. That rule
protects the rights of whistleblowers to report possible securities law
violations to the SEC without employer interference or retaliation. Even though
the SEC had no examples of KBR specifically preventing employees from going to
the SEC with any specific law violations, the SEC found that with these
agreements, KBR “potentially discouraged” employees from reporting violations.
KBR, a Houston-based technology and engineering firm,
denied any wrongdoing. The company did agree, however to pay a $130,000
penalty, and it agreed to revise its standard investigation agreements “to make
clear that its current and former employees will not have to fear termination
or retribution or seek approval from company lawyers” before contacting the
SEC.
Takeaway
Savvy employers
know that the SEC has begun an active review of such confidentiality
agreements. This effort is consistent with similar efforts by the National
Labor Relations Board and the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission. These
agencies have been reviewing critically the confidentiality provisions of
severance agreements and documents used as part of internal investigations.
This announcement from the SEC is a further reminder that
employers should have such confidentiality provisions reviewed by counsel or
risk similar consequences.
Source: Employee
Benefit News
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