President Bush Approves Federal Law
Against Telephone Pretexting
Press Release -
January 18, 2007
U.S.
president George W. Bush has signed the long-anticipated Telephone
Records and Privacy Protection Act of 2006, which makes it a criminal
act to fraudulently obtain confidential telephone records.
The measure allows for up to 10 years in prison for anyone who engages
in “pretexting” — that is impersonating a customer or employee in an
attempt to obtain confidential call records from a telephone company
or wireless carrier.
“Sales of fraudulently obtained phone records flourished because the
possibility of criminal prosecution was remote,” according to the
pretexting bill’s original sponsor, Lamar Smith (R-Texas), who sites
in the U.S. House of Representatives.
Before this bill, federal law already banned the practice of
fraudulently obtaining financial information, and some states such as
California had already taken a strong stand against the theft and sale
of call records. The legislation signed this week, however, is the
first to target telephone pretexting at a federal level.
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