Chapter 069
2011 -- S 0179
Enacted 06/08/11
A N A C T
RELATING TO COMMERCIAL LAW - GENERAL REGULATORY PROVISIONS - UNFAIR SALES PRACTICES - CONSUMER EMPOWERMENT AND IDENTITY THEFT PREVENTION ACT
Introduced By: Senators Ruggerio, Perry, Nesselbush, Jabour, and Ottiano
Date Introduced: February 09, 2011
It is enacted by the
General Assembly as follows:
SECTION 1. Sections 6-13-15, 6-13-17 and 6-13-19 of the
General Laws in Chapter 6-13
entitled "Unfair Sales Practices" are hereby amended
to read as follows:
6-13-15.
Prohibition against recording credit card or social security numbers on
checks. -- It
shall be unlawful, during a sale at retail of any goods or merchandise, to
record any
credit card or all or part of a social security
number obtained from a purchaser as a means of
identification upon the check of the purchaser tendered for the
sale. Any person, firm or
corporation that shall violate the provisions of this section
shall be punished by a fine of not more
than one hundred dollars ($100). This section does not
prohibit any person from requesting
production of, or recording, a credit card number as a condition
for cashing or accepting a check,
provided the person has agreed with the credit card issuer to
cash or accept checks from card
holders of the issuer, the issuer has agreed to guarantee
card holder checks cashed or accepted by
that person, and the card holder has given actual,
apparent, or implied authority for the use of his
or her card number in the manner and for the purpose
described in this section.
6-13-17. Requiring consumers to furnish social security numbers. --
(a) Unless
otherwise required by federal law, no person shall require that
a consumer of goods or services
disclose all or part of a social security number
incident to the sale of consumer goods or services;
provided, however, that:
(1) Insurance companies
and institutions licensed by the state or federal government for
financial services may require applicants for those services to
disclose their social security
number;
(2) Social security
numbers may be required for the providing and billing of health care
or pharmaceutical-related services, including the
issuance of identification cards and account
numbers for users of health care or pharmaceutical-related
services; and
(3) Disclosure may be
required of a consumer as a condition of applying for a credit card
for the purchase of goods or services.
(b) Any person
violating the provisions of this section shall be guilty of a misdemeanor,
and upon conviction, shall be fined not more than five
hundred dollars ($500).
(c) In any civil action
alleging a violation of this section, the court may award damages,
reasonable attorney's fees, and costs to a prevailing consumer,
and afford injunctive relief against
any person or business that commits or proposes to commit
a violation of this section.
6-13-19. Requiring consumers to furnish social security numbers. --
No person, firm,
corporation or other business entity which offers discount cards
for purchases made at any
business maintained by the offeror
shall require that a consumer of goods who applies for a
discount card furnish all or part of his or her social
security number as a condition precedent to
the application for the consumer discount card. No
information obtained on the application or by
use of a discount card can be sold or given to any other
person, firm, corporation or business
entity provided, that the person, firm, corporation or other
business may: (a) disclose such
information to its affiliates, to service providers that perform
services for it, or as required by law;
and/or (b) transfer such information
in connection with the sale of its business operations.
SECTION 2. Section 6-48-8 of the General Laws in Chapter
6-48 entitled "Consumer
Empowerment and Identity
Theft Prevention Act of 2006" is hereby amended to read as follows:
6-48-8.
Social security number protection -- Effective January 1, 2008.
-- (a) Except
as provided in subsection (c) of this section a person
or entity, including a state or local agency,
may not do any of the following:
(1) Intentionally
communicate or otherwise make available to the general public all or
part of an
individual's social security number;
(2) Print all or
part of an individual's social security number on any card required for the
individual to access products or services provided by the person
or entity;
(3) Require an
individual to transmit all or part of his or her social security number
over
the Internet, unless the connection is secure or the
social security number is encrypted;
(4) Require an
individual to use all or part of his or her social security number to
access
an Internet Website, unless a password or unique
personal identification number or other
authentication device is also required to access the Internet
Website; and
(5) Print all or
part of an individual's social security number on any materials that are
mailed to the individual, unless state or federal law
requires the social security number to be on
the document to be mailed.
Notwithstanding this
paragraph, social security numbers may be included in applications
and forms sent by mail, including documents sent as part
of an application or enrollment process,
or to establish, amend or terminate an account, contract
or policy, or to confirm the accuracy of
the social security number. A social security number that
is permitted to be mailed under this
section may not be printed, in whole or in part, on a
postcard or other mailer not requiring an
envelope, or visible on the envelope or without the envelope
having been opened.
(b) The provisions of
this section do not apply to documents that are recorded or required
to be open to the public pursuant to the
does not apply to records that are by statute or case law
required to be made available to the
public by entities provided for in the Rhode Island
Constitution.
(c) This section does
not prevent the collection, use, or release of a social security
number as required by state or federal law or the use of a
social security number for internal
verification or administrative purposes.
(d) The penalties for
violating this section shall be:
(1) Any person who
violates this section is responsible for the payment of a civil fine of
not more than three thousand dollars ($3,000).
(2) A person who
knowingly violates this section is guilty of a misdemeanor punishable
by imprisonment for not more than thirty (30) days, or a
fine of not more than five thousand
dollars ($5,000), or both.
SECTION 3. This act shall take effect upon passage.
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LC00855
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