Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:OMG, huge red flag. I'm a lawyer with lots of securities litigation experience and if I were on the other side of that company in litigation, and we found that out, it would be a gold mine. And by the way, using your personal email will just mean that if your company gets involved in litigation and the other side finds that out (which they will) that all of your personal emails will be subject to discovery in litigation, too. Be very, very wary OP and do not use your personal email for this purpose.
Agreed!
Seriously. I read that and thought, "oooh, discovery in any case against this company would be awesome!" In short -- don't do it. It may not even just be your personal emails; depending on the extent of the communications and what is sent and downloaded, it could be your personal devices, too -- computers, flash drives, whatever. Anything that reasonably could have company documents on it.
Not sure how large a company it is (sounds like probably not very) but if the company has a general counsel or a legal department, and you can let them know that you've been told to do this (anonymously perhaps, if you are worried about repercussions), you may save the company a great deal of money and embarrassment down the road. Because any competent lawyer there will immediately advise her clients never to do this.