Center for Media and Democracy Alec Model Legislation Resolution in Favor of Non-bank Consumer Anti-profiling Protection
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Exposed Search ABOUT GO MEMBERS EVENTS & MEETINGS By the Center for Media and Democracy www.prwatch.org D I D Y O U K N O W ? Corporations VOTED to adopt this. Through ALEC, global companies LOGIN | LOGOUT | HOME | JOIN ALEC | CONTACT work as “equals” in “unison” with politicians to write laws to govern your life. Big MODEL LEGISLATION ALEC INITIATIVES PUBLICATIONS Business has “a VOICE TASK and aFORCES VOTE,” according to newly exposed documents. DO YOU? NEWS Resolution in Favor of Non-Bank Consumer Anti-Profiling Protection WHEREAS, approximately 25 million Americans obtain loans at more than 15,000 pawnshops across the United States to meet their emergency financial needs; and WHEREAS, state legislatures have enacted statutes requiring pawnbrokers to make and keep transaction records that include personal information about each customer and a description of the property pledged to secure payment of the pawn loaned or sold to the pawnbroker; and WHEREAS, the percentage of property that law enforcement claims to be stolen has been reduced to less than one-tenth of one percent of items pledged or sold to pawnbrokers nationwide; and WHEREAS, the focus of law enforcement has now shifted from identification and recovery of stolen property to identification and profiling of consumers; and WHEREAS, law enforcement increasingly uses technology to profile pawn customers based on their gender, name, age, residence zip code, and frequency of pawn transactions; and WHEREAS, law enforcement data-mining and profiling practices afford pawn customers less protection against unreasonable searches and warrant-less property seizures than they are guaranteed under the United States Constitution, federal privacy laws, and state constitutions; and WHEREAS, unless curtailed by appropriate legislation, data-mining and profiling is likely to increase dramatically, further eroding constitutional and statutory privacy protections. THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED that the ALEC Criminal Justice Task Force should draft, sponsor, and work toward passage of model legislation designed to limit the receipt of personal information obtained during the course of financial or commercial information to (1) circumstances covered by the federal Right to Financial Privacy Act of 1978, the federal Bank Secrecy Act, or the USA PATRIOT Act; (2) circumstances when an enforcement agency establishes a nexus between a property crime and the individual consumer by opening a formal investigation; or (3) cases in which law enforcement obtains a properly authorized subpoena or the pawnbroker responds to a court order or grand jury subpoena. Adopted by the Criminal Justice Task Force at the States and Nation Policy Summit December 9, 2006. Approved by the ALEC Board of Directors January 8, 2007. ALEC EXPOSED ALEC’s’Corporate Board --in recent past or present • AT&T Services, Inc. • centerpoint360 • UPS • Bayer Corporation • GlaxoSmithKline • Energy Future Holdings • Johnson & Johnson • Coca-Cola Company • PhRMA • Kraft Foods, Inc. • Coca-Cola Co. • Pfizer Inc. • Reed Elsevier, Inc. • DIAGEO • Peabody Energy • Intuit, Inc. • Koch Industries, Inc. • ExxonMobil • Verizon • Reynolds American Inc. • Wal-Mart Stores, Inc. • Salt River Project • Altria Client Services, Inc. • American Bail Coalition • State Farm Insurance For more on these corporations, search at www.SourceWatch.org. About Us and ALEC EXPOSED. The Center for Media and Democracy reports on corporate spin and government propaganda.! We are located in Madison, Wisconsin, and publish www.PRWatch.org, www.SourceWatch.org, and now www.ALECexposed.org. For more information contact: editor@prwatch.org or 608-260-9713. “ALEC” has long been a secretive collaboration between Big Business and “conservative” politicians. Behind closed doors, they ghostwrite “model” bills to be introduced in state capitols across the country. This agenda--underwritten by global corporations-includes major tax loopholes for big industries and the super rich, proposals to offshore U.S. jobs and gut minimum wage, and efforts to weaken public health, safety, and environmental protections. Although many of these bills have become law, until now, their origin has been largely unknown. With ALEC EXPOSED, the Center for Media and Democracy hopes more Americans will study the bills to understand the depth and breadth of how big corporations are changing the legal rules and undermining democracy across the nation.