Today's Law As Amended


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AB-487 Vehicles: confidential home address.(2013-2014)



As Amends the Law Today


SECTION 1.

 Section 1808.4 of the Vehicle Code is amended to read:

1808.4.
 (a) For all of the following persons, the person’s  his or her  home address that appears in a record of the department is confidential if the person requests the confidentiality of that information:
(1) Attorney General.
(2) State Public Defender.
(3) A Member of the Legislature.
(4) An active or retired  A  judge or court commissioner.
(5) A district attorney.
(6) A public defender.
(7) An attorney employed by the Department of Justice, the office of the State Public Defender, or a county office of the district attorney or public defender.
(8) A city attorney, city prosecutor, or  attorney and  an attorney who submits verification from their  his or her  public employer that the attorney represents the city in matters that routinely place the attorney in personal contact with persons under investigation for, charged with, or convicted of, committing criminal acts, if that attorney is employed by a city attorney or city prosecutor. attorney. 
(9) A nonsworn police dispatcher.
(10) A child abuse investigator or social worker, working in child protective services within a social services department.
(11) An active or retired peace officer, as defined in Chapter 4.5 (commencing with Section 830) of Title 3 of Part 2 of the Penal Code.
(12) An employee of the Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation, Division of Juvenile Facilities, or the Prison Industry Authority specified in Sections 20403 and 20405 of the Government Code.
(13) A nonsworn employee of a city police department, a county sheriff’s office, the Department of the California Highway Patrol, a federal, state, or local detention facility, or a local juvenile hall, camp, ranch, or home, who submits agency verification that, in the normal course of the employee’s employment, the employee  his or her employment, he or she  controls or supervises inmates or is required to have a prisoner in the employee’s  his or her  care or custody.
(14) A county counsel assigned to child abuse cases.
(15) An investigator employed by the Department of Justice, a county district attorney, or a county public defender.
(16) A member of a city council.
(17) A member of a board of supervisors.
(18) A federal prosecutor, criminal investigator, or National Park Service Ranger working in this state.
(19) An active or retired city enforcement officer engaged in the enforcement of the Vehicle Code or municipal parking ordinances.
(20) An employee of a trial court.
(21) A psychiatric social worker employed by a county.
(22) A police or sheriff department employee designated by the chief of police of the department or the sheriff of the county as being in a sensitive position. A designation pursuant to this paragraph shall, for purposes of this section, remain in effect for three years subject to additional designations that, for purposes of this section, shall remain in effect for additional three-year periods.
(23) A state employee in one of the following classifications:
(A) Licensing-Registration  Licensing Registration  Examiner, Department of Motor Vehicles.
(B) Motor Carrier Specialist I, 1,  Department of the California Highway Patrol.
(C) Museum Security Officer and Supervising Museum Security Officer.
(D) Licensing Program Analyst, State Department of Social Services.
(24) (A) The spouse or child of a person listed in paragraphs (1) to (23), inclusive, regardless of the spouse’s or child’s place of residence.
(B) The surviving spouse or child of a peace officer, as defined in Chapter 4.5 (commencing with Section 830) of Title 3 of Part 2 of the Penal Code, if the peace officer died in the line of duty.
(C) The surviving spouse or child of a judge or court commissioner, if the judge or court commissioner died in the performance of their duties.
(D) (C)  (i) Subparagraphs (A), (B), and (C) do (A) and (B) shall  not apply if the person listed in those subparagraphs was convicted of a crime and is on active parole or probation.
(ii) For requests made on or after January 1, 2011, the person requesting confidentiality for their spouse or child listed in subparagraph (A), (B),  (A)  or (C) (B)  shall declare, at the time of the request for confidentiality, whether the spouse or child has been convicted of a crime and is on active parole or probation.
(iii) Neither the listed person’s employer nor the department shall be required to verify, or be responsible for verifying, that a person listed in subparagraph (A), (B),  (A)  or (C) (B)  was convicted of a crime and is on active parole or probation.
(E) (i) The department shall discontinue holding a home address confidential pursuant to this subdivision for a person specified in subparagraph (A), (B), or (C) who is the child or spouse of a person described in paragraph (4), (9), (11), (13), or (22) if the child or spouse is convicted of a felony in this state or is convicted of an offense in another jurisdiction that, if committed in California, would be a felony.
(ii) The department shall comply with this subparagraph upon receiving notice of a disqualifying conviction from the agency that employs or formerly employed the parent or spouse of the convicted person, or as soon as the department otherwise becomes aware of the disqualifying conviction.
(b) The confidential home address of a person listed in subdivision (a) shall not be disclosed, except to any of the following:
(1) A court.
(2) A law enforcement agency.
(3) The State Board of Equalization.
(4) An attorney in a civil or criminal action that demonstrates to a court the need for the home address, if the disclosure is made pursuant to a subpoena.
(5) A governmental agency to which, under any provision of  law, information is required to be furnished from records maintained by the department.
(c) (1) A record of the department containing a confidential home address shall be open to public inspection, as provided in Section 1808, if the address is completely obliterated or otherwise removed from the record.
(2) Following termination of office or employment, a confidential home address shall be withheld from public inspection for three years, unless the termination is the result of conviction of a criminal offense. If the termination or separation is the result of the filing of a criminal complaint, a confidential home address shall be withheld from public inspection during the time in which the terminated individual may file an appeal from termination, while an appeal from termination is ongoing, and until the appeal process is exhausted, after which confidentiality shall be at the discretion of the employing agency if the termination or separation is upheld. Upon reinstatement to an office or employment, the protections of this section are available.
(3) With respect to a retired peace officer, the peace officer’s his or her  home address shall be withheld from public inspection permanently upon request of confidentiality at the time the information would otherwise be opened. The home address of the surviving spouse or child listed in subparagraph (B) of paragraph (24) of subdivision (a) shall be withheld from public inspection for three years following the death of the peace officer.
(4) The department shall inform a person who requests a confidential home address what agency the individual whose address was requested is employed by or the court at which the judge or court commissioner presides.
(d) (1) (A) A person who requests the confidentiality of his or her home address pursuant to this article shall provide the department with a current employment address for purposes of processing the service and collection of a traffic, parking, or toll road violation.
(B) The applicable statutory time periods for processing the service and collection of traffic, parking, or toll road violations are tolled until the department provides the law enforcement agency, governmental agency, or issuing agency with the person’s current employment address.
(C) Notwithstanding Sections 40500 and 40518 or any other law, the use of a person’s current employment address, whose home address is confidential, satisfies the requirement of the person’s home address for purposes of serving a notice to appear or a notice of violation pursuant to Article 2 (commencing with Section 40500) of Chapter 2 of Division 17.
(2) A person who has requested the confidentiality of his or her home address shall notify the department of any change in his or her employment address within 10 days.
(5) (3)  With respect to a retired judge or court commissioner, the retired judge or court commissioner’s home address shall be withheld from public inspection permanently upon request of confidentiality at the time the information would otherwise be opened. The home address of the surviving spouse or child listed in subparagraph (C) of paragraph (24) of subdivision (a) shall be withheld from public inspection for three years following the death of the judge or court commissioner. The department shall refuse to renew the registration of a vehicle if the person who has been served pursuant to this subdivision has been mailed a notice of delinquent parking violation or a failure to pay a traffic citation and the processing agency has filed or electronically transmitted to the department an itemization of the unpaid parking or traffic citation penalty, including the administrative fee, and the owner or lessee has not paid the penalty and administrative fee. 
(d) (e)  A violation of subdivision (a) by the disclosure of the confidential home address of a peace officer, as specified in paragraph (11) of subdivision (a), a nonsworn employee of the city police department or county sheriff’s office, a judge or court commissioner, as specified in paragraph (4) of subdivision (a), or  or  the spouses or children of these persons, including, but not limited to, the surviving spouse or child listed in subparagraph (B) or (C)  of paragraph (24) of subdivision (a), that results in bodily injury to the peace officer, employee of the city police department or county sheriff’s office, judge or court commissioner, or  or  the spouses or children of these persons is a felony.
(f) (1) The department shall update the form to request confidentiality of the person’s home address to include the requirement that the person requesting confidentiality provide a current employment address pursuant to paragraph (1) or (2) of subdivision (d) and shall distribute and make available copies of the updated form to the human resources office of each agency that employs any of the eligible persons listed pursuant to subdivision (a).
(2) The human resources office of a new employee requesting confidentiality or an employee who has an existing confidentiality application on file with the department shall do all of the following:
(A) Make the updated form available to new and current employees and require, on and after January 1, 2014, that all new employees requesting confidentiality or employees who have an existing confidentiality application on file with the department complete and return the form with their current employment address to their human resources office.
(B) Forward all new application forms to the Confidential Records Unit (CRU) of the department upon receipt from the employee and forward the completed updated forms of existing employees who have an application on file with the department to the CRU of the department by April 1, 2015.
(g) The department shall update the record of the persons subject to this section as his or her vehicle registration becomes due.
SEC. 2.
 No reimbursement is required by this act pursuant to Section 6 of Article XIII B of the California Constitution because the only costs that may be incurred by a local agency or school district will be incurred because this act creates a new crime or infraction, eliminates a crime or infraction, or changes the penalty for a crime or infraction, within the meaning of Section 17556 of the Government Code, or changes the definition of a crime within the meaning of Section 6 of Article XIII B of the California Constitution.