AB 793

  • California Assembly Bill
  • 2023-2024 Regular Session
  • Introduced in Assembly
  • Passed Assembly Jun 01, 2023
  • Senate
  • Governor

Privacy: reverse demands.

Bill Subjects

Privacy Reverse Demands

Abstract

The United States Constitution generally requires a state to give full faith and credit to the public acts, records, and judicial proceedings of every other state. Existing law sets forth procedures by which a person may enforce a judgment for the payment of money issued by the court of a state other than California. Existing law, the Electronic Communications Privacy Act, determines how governmental entities may access information on electronic devices and from electronic communication service providers, as defined. Existing law requires a California corporation that provides electronic communication services or remote computing services to the general public to comply with a warrant issued by another state to produce records that would reveal the identity of the customers using those services, data stored by, or on behalf of, the customer, the customer's usage of those services, the recipient or destination of communications sent to or from those customers, or the content of those communications as if that warrant had been issued by a California court, except as specified. This bill would prohibit any government entity from seeking, or any court from enforcing, assisting, or supporting, a reverse-keyword or reverse-location demand, as defined, issued by a government entity or court in this state or any other state. The bill would prohibit a person or California entity from complying with a reverse-keyword or reverse-location demand. The bill would require a court to suppress any information obtained or retained in violation of these provisions, the United States Constitution, or California Constitution. The bill would authorize the Attorney General to commence a civil action for compliance with these provisions. The bill would require a government entity to immediately notify any person whose information was obtained in violation of these provisions of the violation and of the legal recourse available, as specified. The bill would authorize an individual whose information was obtained, or a service provider or other recipient of the reverse-keyword or reverse-location demand to file a petition to void or modify the demand or order the destruction of information obtained in violation of these provisions. The bill would authorize an individual whose information was obtained by a government entity in violation of these provisions to bring a civil suit against the government entity for damages, injunctive or declaratory relief, or other relief that the court deems proper. The California Constitution provides for the Right to Truth-in-Evidence, which requires a 23 vote of the Legislature to exclude any relevant evidence from any criminal proceeding, as specified. Because the bill would require any information obtained or retained in violation of the bill's provisions to be suppressed in a trial, hearing, or other proceeding, it would require a 23 vote. The bill would make these provisions severable.

Bill Sponsors (8)

Votes


Actions


Jun 30, 2023

Senate

In committee: Set, first hearing. Hearing canceled at the request of author.

Jun 28, 2023

Senate

From committee: Do pass and re-refer to Com. on JUD. (Ayes 4. Noes 1.) (June 27). Re-referred to Com. on JUD.

  • Committee-Passage
  • Committee-Passage-Favorable
  • Referral-Committee
Com. on JUD.

Jun 14, 2023

Senate

Referred to Coms. on PUB S. and JUD.

  • Referral-Committee
Coms. on PUB S. and JUD.

Jun 01, 2023

Senate

In Senate. Read first time. To Com. on RLS. for assignment.

Assembly

Read third time. Passed. Ordered to the Senate. (Ayes 54. Noes 15. Page 2144.)

May 26, 2023

Assembly

Measure version as amended on April 19 corrected.

May 18, 2023

Assembly

From committee: Do pass. (Ayes 12. Noes 2.) (May 18).

Assembly

Read second time. Ordered to third reading.

Assembly

Coauthors revised.

May 10, 2023

Assembly

In committee: Set, first hearing. Referred to APPR. suspense file.

  • Referral-Committee
APPR APPR. suspense file.

Apr 20, 2023

Assembly

Re-referred to Com. on APPR.

  • Referral-Committee
Com. on APPR.

Apr 19, 2023

Assembly

Read second time and amended.

Apr 18, 2023

Assembly

From committee: Amend, and do pass as amended and re-refer to Com. on APPR. (Ayes 8. Noes 0.) (April 18).

Apr 12, 2023

Assembly

From committee: Do pass and re-refer to Com. on JUD. (Ayes 7. Noes 0.) (April 11). Re-referred to Com. on JUD.

  • Committee-Passage
  • Committee-Passage-Favorable
  • Referral-Committee
Com. on JUD.

Assembly

Coauthors revised.

Mar 20, 2023

Assembly

Re-referred to Com. on PUB. S.

  • Referral-Committee
Com. on PUB. S.

Mar 16, 2023

Assembly

From committee chair, with author's amendments: Amend, and re-refer to Com. on PUB. S. Read second time and amended.

Assembly

Referred to Coms. on PUB. S. and JUD.

  • Referral-Committee
Coms. on PUB. S. and JUD.

Feb 14, 2023

Assembly

From printer. May be heard in committee March 16.

Feb 13, 2023

Assembly

Read first time. To print.

Bill Text

Bill Text Versions Format
AB793 HTML
02/13/23 - Introduced PDF
03/16/23 - Amended Assembly PDF
04/19/23 - Amended Assembly PDF

Related Documents

Document Format
04/10/23- Assembly Public Safety PDF
04/14/23- Assembly Judiciary PDF
05/08/23- Assembly Appropriations PDF
05/22/23- ASSEMBLY FLOOR ANALYSIS PDF
06/24/23- Senate Public Safety PDF

Sources

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