Your Bank’s Printer Just Leaked Your Entire Life
The Betrayal You Never Saw Coming
You trust your credit union. You give them your Social Security number, your address, your account details. You assume this is a secure transaction. What you don’t know is that your financial institution, like Boeing Employeesโ Credit Union (BECU), often hands that data over to third-party vendors you’ve never heard of. Companies like Kaye-Smith Enterprises, a “marketing execution and supply chain company,” become the custodians of your entire financial identity.
According to a class-action lawsuit filed in federal court, this chain of trust was broken. In May 2022, Kaye-Smith discovered that cybercriminals had successfully plundered its systems. The haul wasn’t just marketing data. It was the personal and financial DNA of “hundreds of thousands” of people, including BECU customers. The lawsuit alleges this catastrophic failure was preventable, accusing BECU of negligence for handing sensitive information to a company that “lacked adequate security systems.”
The Non-Financial Ledger: A Life Sentence of Anxiety
The damage from a data breach isn’t a one-time event. It’s a life sentence. The lawsuit makes it brutally clear: for the victims, the fight is permanent. The thieves who now hold your Social Security number and credit score aren’t just going to use it once. They can use it next week, next year, or a decade from now to open credit cards, file fraudulent tax returns, or commit crimes in your name.
This is the real cost. It’s the gnawing anxiety every time you get a strange email. It’s the unpaid hours spent freezing your credit, monitoring your accounts, and proving you are who you say you are. The complaint documents that victims “have incurred and will continue to incur damages in the form of, among other things, identity theft, attempted identity theft, lost time and expenses mitigating harms, [and] increased risk of harm.” Corporations write off data breaches as a cost of doing business. For you, it’s a permanent, unpaid job you never asked for.
Legal Receipts: The Allegations in Black and White
This isn’t speculation. The allegations laid out in the legal complaint against Kaye-Smith and BECU are a direct indictment of corporate priorities. The language is precise, accusing the companies of failing their most basic duty: to protect the people whose data they profit from.
โDue to Defendantsโ negligence, cybercriminals obtained everything they need to commit identity theft and wreak havoc on the financial and personal lives of Plaintiff and the Class Members.โ
Class Action Complaint, Page 3
โThis class action seeks to redress Kaye-Smithโs unlawful, willful and wanton failure to protect the personally identifiable information of hundreds of thousands of individualsโฆโ
Class Action Complaint, Page 2
“It was negligent of BECU to provide Plaintiffโs and Class Membersโ PII and financial information to a third-party who lacked adequate security systems.”
Class Action Complaint, Page 3
The “Cost of Business” Metrics
When a corporation fails to invest in basic security, it makes a calculated decision. The potential cost of a breach is weighed against the guaranteed cost of robust protection. The people whose lives are upended are just numbers on a spreadsheet. Here is the true scale of what was lost.
Societal Impact Mapping
Economic Inequality
A data breach is a tax on the poor and middle class. Wealthy individuals can afford expensive identity theft protection services and lawyers to clean up the mess. For everyone else, the burden is crushing. It means taking time off work you can’t afford, battling automated call centers, and fighting collection agencies for debts you never incurred. The lawsuit acknowledges this, citing “lost time and expenses” as a primary form of damage. This is a direct transfer of cost from a negligent corporation to the working people it was supposed to serve.
Public Health
The constant, low-grade stress of knowing your identity is compromised is a public health crisis in waiting. The threat of financial ruin, of having your name attached to crimes, of seeing your credit score destroyed overnightโthis is a profound psychological burden. The complaint states victims are at an “immediate and heightened risk of all manners of identity theft,” a state of perpetual vulnerability that takes a real toll on mental and physical well-being.
What Now? The Watchlist.
Accountability doesn’t come from press releases offering a year of free credit monitoring. It comes from sustained pressure. The individuals and systems that allowed this to happen must be watched.
Corporate Roles on Watch
- Chief Executive Officer, Kaye-Smith Enterprises, Inc.
- Board of Directors, Boeing Employeesโ Credit Union
- Chief Information Security Officer (CISO), at both Kaye-Smith and BECU
Regulatory Bodies on Watch
- The Federal Trade Commission (FTC)
- The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB)
- Washington State Attorney General’s Office
Do not wait for these institutions to protect you. Your data is your life, and corporations have proven they see it as nothing more than a commodity. The only path forward is grassroots resistance. Demand stronger federal data privacy laws with real teeth. Support consumer advocacy groups fighting for your rights. Organize locally, share information, and build networks of mutual aid. They count on your silence and isolation. Do not give it to them.

Kaye-Smith can be emailed at info@kayesmith.com
๐ก Explore Corporate Misconduct by Category
Corporations harm people every day โ from wage theft to pollution. Learn more by exploring key areas of injustice.
- ๐ Product Safety Violations โ When companies risk lives for profit.
- ๐ฟ Environmental Violations โ Pollution, ecological collapse, and unchecked greed.
- ๐ผ Labor Exploitation โ Wage theft, worker abuse, and unsafe conditions.
- ๐ก๏ธ Data Breaches & Privacy Abuses โ Misuse and mishandling of personal information.
- ๐ต Financial Fraud & Corruption โ Lies, scams, and executive impunity.