The president of the Scottsdale, Arizona, school board had a Google Drive full of private information, including Social Security numbers, of parents who had expressed their opposition to school mask mandates.
The drive, which the Washington Examiner reviewed, contains numerous financial records from several of the parents involved in the group, including mortgage statements, bankruptcy filings, and divorce filings. Included on those forms are portions of Social Security numbers, addresses, and phone numbers of parents who had expressed opposition to school mask mandates and critical race theory.
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The drive is available to anyone who has the link and otherwise mostly contains screenshots of the social media activity of parents involved with a local concerned parent Facebook group. Subfolders include labels such as “ANTI MASK LUNATICS” and “SUSD WACKOS.” The drive was last updated Sunday morning.
Besides the screenshots and financial documents, the drive includes numerous photos of the parents and their underage children.
The drive’s existence was discovered by a parent who received an email from School Board President Jann-Michael Greenburg that contained a screenshot of the URL, the Daily Caller reported.
The Arizona Daily Independent reported Wednesday that the school board responded to initial reports of the drive by attempting to reassure parents that their information was safe while laying the blame for the Google Drive on Mark Greenburg, the school board president’s father.
Amy Carney, one of the parents featured prominently in the drive’s contents, called on Jann-Michael Greenburg to resign. Carney is a 2022 candidate for the Scottsdale school board.
“We cannot allow anyone in a leadership position to secretly compile personal documents and information on moms and dads who have dared speak out publicly or on social media about their grievances with the district,” Carney said.
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The elder Greenburg shares a home and a computer with his son, making it unclear who actually uploaded the documents onto the drive, the Independent reported. The files were all uploaded by an anonymous user with the name “Sach mat,” which translates from Czech to “checkmate.”

