Leahy, Specter Introduce Bill
To Add And Toughen Penalties For
Identity Theft And Fraud
. . . Bill Would Provide New Tools For
Prosecuting Cyber Crime
WASHINGTON (Tuesday, Oct. 16) – Senate Judiciary
Committee Chairman Patrick Leahy (D-Vt.) and Ranking Member Arlen
Specter (R-Pa.) today introduced the bipartisan Identity Theft
Enforcement and Restitution Act of 2007 to give federal prosecutors
important new tools to combat the growing problem of identity theft and
cyber crime.
Leahy and Specter first introduced comprehensive
data privacy legislation in 2005, and the Judiciary Committee has twice
approved the Leahy-Specter Personal Data Privacy and Security Act (S.
495), most recently in May. Their new bill builds on earlier efforts to
protect Americans’ privacy. Leahy and Specter have worked with the
Department of Justice to craft the legislation.
“Protecting American consumers from identity theft
and fraud should be one of the Senate’s top priorities,” said Leahy.
“Cyber criminals are getting smarter and more effective in their online
efforts to strip Americans of their privacy, and their property. We
can’t afford to stand still while they find new ways to get around our
laws and our crime-fighting tactics. This is a bill to help us stay
ahead of the curve in prosecuting these cyber crimes. Senator Specter
and I are committed to moving forward with this aggressive and important
privacy legislation.”
“In 2006, some 8.4 million Americans became victims
to identity theft. Victims are often left with a bad credit report and
must spend months and even years regaining their financial health. In
the meantime, victims have difficulty getting credit, obtaining loans,
renting apartments, and even getting hired,” stated Specter. “The
Identity Theft Enforcement and Restitution Act will give federal
prosecutors the tools they need to combat identity theft. Perhaps most
importantly, the bill will enable federal prosecutors to seek
restitution for the time and money that victims spend restoring their
credit.”
The Identity Theft Enforcement and Restitution Act
of 2007 would:
- Give victims of identity theft the ability to
seek restitution for the loss of time and money spent restoring
credit and remedying the harms of identity theft;
- Expand the jurisdiction of federal computer
fraud statutes to cover small businesses and corporations;
- Eliminate the prosecutorial requirement that
sensitive identity information must have been stolen through an
interstate or foreign communication and instead focuses on whether
the victim’s computer is used in interstate or foreign commerce,
allowing for the prosecutions of cases in which both the identify
thief’s computer and the victim’s computer are located in the same
state;
- Make it a felony to employ spyware or
keyloggers to damage ten or more computers regardless of the
aggregate amount of damage caused, ensuring that the most egregious
identity thieves will not escape with a minimal, or no, sentence;
- Eliminate the requirement that the loss
resulting from damage to a victim’s computer must exceed $5,000;
under this bill violations resulting in less than $5,000 damage
would be criminalized as misdemeanors;
- Add the crime of threatening to obtain or
release information from a protected computer to the definition of a
cyber crime and expands the definition of a cyber crime to include
demanding money in relation to a protected computer, where the
damage to the victim computer was caused to facilitate the
extortion. By expanding this definition, violators of this
provision are subject to a criminal fine and up to five years in
prison.
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