An employee worked for a military contractor, performing mailroom services at a naval station. One day, after

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An employee worked for a military contractor, performing mailroom services at a naval station. One day, after the end of work and when the mailroom was closed, she returned to retrieve something from the refrigerator. In the process, she discovered 14 opened and undelivered Christmas cards in the wastebasket. She immediately reported the situation to her supervisor. When the supervisor investigated, she found a pay stub among the pieces of undelivered mail. The stub was from the pay check of another employee who had been working at the front desk for most of that day. All of the mailroom employees were subsequently asked to submit to a polygraph exam. They were told that the exam was voluntary and they were asked to sign general release forms. These forms were not signed by any official of the company and did not specifically mention the mail incident or provide the basis for testing each employee. All of the employees signed the form. The prime suspect was polygraphed first and the exam suggested deception in his responses. The contractor said that it still wanted to polygraph the other employees. By this time, the employee who had discovered the undelivered mail refused to take the exam. Less than a week later, she was fired on the grounds that she had accepted package deliveries through the mailroom’s back door in violation of naval security procedures. The employee sued, challenging both the polygraph request and her termination. What should the court decide? Why?
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