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Social Networking Sites Can Hurt Your Injury Claim

By: Brenda Hollingsworth and Richard Auger

Many of us who are now beyond our teen years are starting to enjoy the novelty and interaction of social networking sites like Facebook and MySpace. (One of the lawyers at Auger Hollingsworth is hooked! We'll let you wonder which one.)

You may be under the impression that Facebook has no connection to an injury claim. Right? Think again.

Numerous court cases over the last year and a half in Ontario have held that an accident claimant is required to permit access to and save his or her Facebook materials to be shown to the insurer's lawyers.

The right to access this personal information has been considered to be part of the discovery process that forms part of every lawsuit. However, the advent of this new source of potential information about the accident victim's post-traumatic lifestyle has introduced a whole new invasive aspect to discovery.

An individual hired by the insurance company to to surveillance of a claimant will now automatically also do internet surveillance. If, like many people, you use your Facebook profile as a journal or chronical of your day, you could be providing significant fodder to the insurance company. Plus, because of the dynamic nature of the sites, you will not have a record of what you said six months ago on a particular day. However, if that is a day the insurance company was monitoring, the insurance company will have that record and may use it against you.

Using Facebook or MySpace, the insurance company can review your vacation photos, comments you make about your weekend or anything else that they may use to suggest that you are not as injured as you claim or that your injuries have not affected your life.

The difficulty for injured victims is that there is probably a very reasonable explanation for why you wrote "I danced until dawn" in your online profile. However, by the time you get to trial, you will have forgotten what it was! This admission by you will contrast sharply to the jury who is left to evaluate your disabilities.

Our lawyers ask accident victims not to use Facebook or MySpace. Where using these sites is unavoidable, the claimants must be wary of what is posted. This includes not only their own profiles, but also on friends and family members' profiles too.

Watch for photos "tagging you" too from parties or weddings.

You do not want to inadvertantly add the claims examiner or defence lawyer as your "friend".

Article Source: http://www.articlegoldmine.com

Richard Auger and Brenda Hollingsworth represent accident victims in Ontario, Canada. Their law firm is Auger Hollingsworth, located in Ottawa. They have written "An Injured Victim's Guide to Fair Compensation". To get free copy of this book, contact www.ottawalawfirm.ca ; email info@ottawalawfirm.ca or call 613.233.4529.

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