The lawsuit, Nelson vs. NASA, was filed by 28 JPL employees. It challenges JPL’s implementation of a Homeland Security directive. The directive, known as HSPD 12, was signed by President Bush in August 2004. It requires “secure and reliable forms of identification issued by the Federal Government to its employees and contractors.”
This is not a litigious group of plaintiffs. They are all senior JPL employees with 20 to 30 years of employment. They are engineers and scientists with stellar records in their fields. They do not object to the goals of HSPD 12 and they note that they already have secure and reliable forms of identification — their JPL badges, passports, birth records and drivers licenses.
The lawsuit challenges the following release:
I authorize any investigator, special agent, or other duly accredited representative of the authorized Federal agency conducting my background investigation, to obtain any information relating to my activities from schools, residential management agents, employers, criminal justice agencies, retail business establishments, or other sources of information. This information may include, but is not limited to, my academic, residential, achievement, performance attendance, disciplinary, employment history, and criminal history record information.