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Fair Credit Reporting Act
As a
public service, the staff of the Federal
Trade Commission (FTC) has prepared the
following complete text of the Fair Credit
Reporting Act (FCRA), 15 U.S.C. § 1681 et
seq., which is reproduced in full below for
the convenience of the clients, employees of
BackgroundsUSA. Although the FTC staff
generally followed the format of the U.S.
Code as published by the Government Printing
Office, the format of this text does differ
in minor ways from the Code (and from West's
U.S. Code Annotated). For example, this
version uses FCRA section numbers (§§
601-625) in the headings. (The relevant U.S.
Code citation is included with each section
heading and each reference to the FCRA in
the text.)
This version
of the FCRA is complete as of January 7,
2002. It includes the amendments to the FCRA
set forth in the Consumer Credit Reporting
Reform Act of 1996 (Public Law 104-208, the
Omnibus Consolidated Appropriations Act for
Fiscal Year 1997, Title II, Subtitle D,
Chapter 1), Section 311 of the Intelligence
Authorization for Fiscal Year 1998 (Public
Law 105-107), the Consumer Reporting
Employment Clarification Act of 1998 (Public
Law 105-347), Section 506 of the
Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act (Public Law 106-102),
and Sections 358(g) and 505(c) of the
Uniting and Strengthening America by
Providing Appropriate Tools Required to
Intercept and Obstruct Terrorism Act of 2001
(USA PATRIOT Act) (Public Law 107-56).
TABLE OF
CONTENTS
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§ 601
Short title
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§ 602
Congressional
findings and statement of purpose
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§ 603
Definitions; rules
of construction
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§ 604
Permissible
purposes of consumer reports
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§ 605
Requirements
relating to information contained in
consumer reports
-
§ 606
Disclosure of
investigative consumer reports
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§ 607
Compliance
procedures
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§ 608
Disclosures to
governmental agencies
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§ 609
Disclosures to
consumers
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§ 610
Conditions and
form of disclosure to consumers
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§ 611
Procedure in case
of disputed accuracy
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§ 612
Charges for
certain disclosures
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§ 613
Public record
information for employment purposes
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§ 614
Restrictions on
investigative consumer reports
-
§ 615
Requirements on
users of consumer reports
-
§ 616
Civil liability
for willful noncompliance
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§ 617
Civil liability
for negligent noncompliance
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§ 618
Jurisdiction of
courts; limitation of actions
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§ 619
Obtaining
information under false pretenses
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§ 620
Unauthorized
disclosures by officers or employees
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§ 621
Administrative
enforcement
-
§ 622
Information on
overdue child support obligations
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§ 623
Responsibilities
of furnishers of information to consumer
reporting agencies
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§ 624
Relation to State
laws
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§ 625
Disclosures to FBI
for counterintelligence purposes
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§ 626
Disclosures to
governmental agencies for
counterterrorism purposes
§ 601.
Short title
This title
may be cited as the Fair Credit Reporting
Act.
§
602.
Congressional findings and statement of
purpose [15 U.S.C. § 1681]
(a) Accuracy
and fairness of credit reporting. The
Congress makes the following findings:
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(1) The
banking system is dependent upon fair
and accurate credit reporting.
Inaccurate credit reports directly
impair the efficiency of the banking
system, and unfair credit reporting
methods undermine the public confidence
which is essential to the continued
functioning of the banking system.
(2) An elaborate mechanism has been
developed for investigating and
evaluating the credit worthiness, credit
standing, credit capacity, character,
and general reputation of consumers.
-
- (3)
Consumer reporting agencies have assumed
a vital role in assembling and
evaluating consumer credit and other
information on consumers.
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- (4)
There is a need to insure that consumer
reporting agencies exercise their grave
responsibilities with fairness,
impartiality, and a respect for the
consumer's right to privacy.
(b)
Reasonable procedures. It is the purpose of
this title to require that consumer
reporting agencies adopt reasonable
procedures for meeting the needs of commerce
for consumer credit, personnel, insurance,
and other information in a manner which is
fair and equitable to the consumer, with
regard to the confidentiality, accuracy,
relevancy, and proper utilization of such
information in accordance with the
requirements of this title.
§
603. Definitions; rules of
construction [15 U.S.C. § 1681a]
(a)
Definitions and rules of construction set
forth in this section are applicable for the
purposes of this title.
(b) The term
"person" means any individual, partnership,
corporation, trust, estate, cooperative,
association, government or governmental
subdivision or agency, or other entity.
(c) The term
"consumer" means an individual.
(d) Consumer
report.
- (1) In
general. The term "consumer report"
means any written, oral, or other
communication of any information by a
consumer reporting agency bearing on a
consumer's credit worthiness, credit
standing, credit capacity, character,
general reputation, personal
characteristics, or mode of living which
is used or expected to be used or
collected in whole or in part for the
purpose of serving as a factor in
establishing the consumer's eligibility
for
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-
- (A)
credit or insurance to be used
primarily for personal, family, or
household purposes;
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- (B)
employment purposes; or
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- (C)
any other purpose authorized under
section 604 [§ 1681b].
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- (2)
Exclusions. The term "consumer report"
does not include
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- (A)
any
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(i) report containing
information solely as to
transactions or experiences
between the consumer and the
person making the report;
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(ii) communication of that
information among persons
related by common ownership or
affiliated by corporate control;
or
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(iii) communication of other
information among persons
related by common ownership or
affiliated by corporate control,
if it is clearly and
conspicuously disclosed to the
consumer that the information
may be communicated among such
persons and the consumer is
given the opportunity, before
the time that the information is
initially communicated, to
direct that such information not
be communicated among such
persons;
-
-
- (B)
any authorization or approval of a
specific extension of credit
directly or indirectly by the issuer
of a credit card or similar device;
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-
- (C)
any report in which a person who has
been requested by a third party to
make a specific extension of credit
directly or indirectly to a consumer
conveys his or her decision with
respect to such request, if the
third party advises the consumer of
the name and address of the person
to whom the request was made, and
such person makes the disclosures to
the consumer required under section
615 [§ 1681m]; or
-
-
- (D)
a communication described in
subsection (o).
(e) The term
"investigative consumer report" means a
consumer report or portion thereof in which
information on a consumer's character,
general reputation, personal
characteristics, or mode of living is
obtained through personal interviews with
neighbors, friends, or associates of the
consumer reported on or with others with
whom he is acquainted or who may have
knowledge concerning any such items of
information. However, such information shall
not include specific factual information on
a consumer's credit record obtained directly
from a creditor of the consumer or from a
consumer reporting agency when such
information was obtained directly from a
creditor of the consumer or from the
consumer.
(f) The term
"consumer reporting agency" means any person
which, for monetary fees, dues, or on a
cooperative nonprofit basis, regularly
engages in whole or in part in the practice
of assembling or evaluating consumer credit
information or other information on
consumers for the purpose of furnishing
consumer reports to third parties, and which
uses any means or facility of interstate
commerce for the purpose of preparing or
furnishing consumer reports.
(g) The term
"file," when used in connection with
information on any consumer, means all of
the information on that consumer recorded
and retained by a consumer reporting agency
regardless of how the information is stored.
(h) The term
"employment purposes" when used in
connection with a consumer report means a
report used for the purpose of evaluating a
consumer for employment, promotion,
reassignment or retention as an employee.
(i) The term
"medical information" means information or
records obtained, with the consent of the
individual to whom it relates, from licensed
physicians or medical practitioners,
hospitals, clinics, or other medical or
medically related facilities.
(j)
Definitions relating to child support
obligations.
- (1)
Overdue support. The term "overdue
support" has the meaning given to such
term in section 666(e) of title 42
[Social Security Act, 42 U.S.C. §
666(e)].
-
- (2)
State or local child support enforcement
agency. The term "State or local child
support enforcement agency" means a
State or local agency which administers
a State or local program for
establishing and enforcing child support
obligations.
(k) Adverse
action.
- (1)
Actions included. The term "adverse
action"
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-
- (A)
has the same meaning as in section
701(d)(6) of the Equal Credit
Opportunity Act; and
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-
- (B)
means
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(i) a denial or cancellation of,
an increase in any charge for,
or a reduction or other adverse
or unfavorable change in the
terms of coverage or amount of,
any insurance, existing or
applied for, in connection with
the underwriting of insurance;
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(ii) a denial of employment or
any other decision for
employment purposes that
adversely affects any current or
prospective employee;
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(iii) a denial or cancellation
of, an increase in any charge
for, or any other adverse or
unfavorable change in the terms
of, any license or benefit
described in section
604(a)(3)(D) [§ 1681b]; and
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(iv) an action taken or
determination that is
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(I) made in connection with
an application that was made
by, or a transaction that
was initiated by, any
consumer, or in connection
with a review of an account
under section
604(a)(3)(F)(ii)[§ 1681b];
and
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(II) adverse to the
interests of the consumer.
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- (2)
Applicable findings, decisions,
commentary, and orders. For purposes of
any determination of whether an action
is an adverse action under paragraph
(1)(A), all appropriate final findings,
decisions, commentary, and orders issued
under section 701(d)(6) of the Equal
Credit Opportunity Act by the Board of
Governors of the Federal Reserve System
or any court shall apply.
(l) Firm
offer of credit or insurance. The term "firm
offer of credit or insurance" means any
offer of credit or insurance to a consumer
that will be honored if the consumer is
determined, based on information in a
consumer report on the consumer, to meet the
specific criteria used to select the
consumer for the offer, except that the
offer may be further conditioned on one or
more of the following:
- (1) The
consumer being determined, based on
information in the consumer's
application for the credit or insurance,
to meet specific criteria bearing on
credit worthiness or insurability, as
applicable, that are established
-
-
- (A)
before selection of the consumer for
the offer; and
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- (B)
for the purpose of determining
whether to extend credit or
insurance pursuant to the offer.
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- (2)
Verification
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- (A)
that the consumer continues to meet
the specific criteria used to select
the consumer for the offer, by using
information in a consumer report on
the consumer, information in the
consumer's application for the
credit or insurance, or other
information bearing on the credit
worthiness or insurability of the
consumer; or
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-
- (B)
of the information in the consumer's
application for the credit or
insurance, to determine that the
consumer meets the specific criteria
bearing on credit worthiness or
insurability.
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- (3) The
consumer furnishing any collateral that
is a requirement for the extension of
the credit or insurance that was
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- (A)
established before selection of the
consumer for the offer of credit or
insurance; and
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- (B)
disclosed to the consumer in the
offer of credit or insurance.
(m) Credit or
insurance transaction that is not initiated
by the consumer. The term"credit or
insurance transaction that is not initiated
by the consumer" does not include the use of
a consumer report by a person with which the
consumer has an account or insurance policy,
for purposes of
- (1)
reviewing the account or insurance
policy; or
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- (2)
collecting the account.
(n) State.
The term "State" means any State, the
Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, the District of
Columbia, and any territory or possession of
the United States.
(o) Excluded
communications. A communication is described
in this subsection if it is a communication
- (1)
that, but for subsection (d)(2)(D),
would be an investigative consumer
report;
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- (2) that
is made to a prospective employer for
the purpose of
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- (A)
procuring an employee for the
employer; or
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- (B)
procuring an opportunity for a
natural person to work for the
employer;
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- (3) that
is made by a person who regularly
performs such procurement;
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- (4) that
is not used by any person for any
purpose other than a purpose described
in subparagraph (A) or (B) of paragraph
(2); and
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- (5) with
respect to which
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- (A)
the consumer who is the subject of
the communication
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(i) consents orally or in
writing to the nature and scope
of the communication, before the
collection of any information
for the purpose of making the
communication;
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(ii) consents orally or in
writing to the making of the
communication to a prospective
employer, before the making of
the communication; and
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(iii) in the case of consent
under clause (i) or (ii) given
orally, is provided written
confirmation of that consent by
the person making the
communication, not later than 3
business days after the receipt
of the consent by that person;
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-
- (B)
the person who makes the
communication does not, for the
purpose of making the communication,
make any inquiry that if made by a
prospective employer of the consumer
who is the subject of the
communication would violate any
applicable Federal or State equal
employment opportunity law or
regulation; and
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- (C)
the person who makes the
communication
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(i) discloses in writing to the
consumer who is the subject of
the communication, not later
than 5 business days after
receiving any request from the
consumer for such disclosure,
the nature and substance of all
information in the consumer's
file at the time of the request,
except that the sources of any
information that is acquired
solely for use in making the
communication and is actually
used for no other purpose, need
not be disclosed other than
under appropriate discovery
procedures in any court of
competent jurisdiction in which
an action is brought; and
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(ii) notifies the consumer who
is the subject of the
communication, in writing, of
the consumer's right to request
the information described in
clause (i).
(p) Consumer
reporting agency that compiles and maintains
files on consumers on a nationwide basis.
The term "consumer reporting agency that
compiles and maintains files on consumers on
a nationwide basis" means a consumer
reporting agency that regularly engages in
the practice of assembling or evaluating,
and maintaining, for the purpose of
furnishing consumer reports to third parties
bearing on a consumer's credit worthiness,
credit standing, or credit capacity, each of
the following regarding consumers residing
nationwide:
- (1)
Public record information.
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- (2)
Credit account information from persons
who furnish that information regularly
and in the ordinary course of business.
§
604. Permissible purposes
of consumer reports [15 U.S.C.
§ 1681b]
(a) In
general. Subject to subsection (c), any
consumer reporting agency may furnish a
consumer report under the following
circumstances and no other:
- (1) In
response to the order of a court having
jurisdiction to issue such an order, or
a subpoena issued in connection with
proceedings before a Federal grand jury.
-
- (2) In
accordance with the written instructions
of the consumer to whom it relates.
- (3) To a
person which it has reason to believe
-
-
- (A)
intends to use the information in
connection with a credit transaction
involving the consumer on whom the
information is to be furnished and
involving the extension of credit
to, or review or collection of an
account of, the consumer; or
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-
- (B)
intends to use the information for
employment purposes; or
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- (C)
intends to use the information in
connection with the underwriting of
insurance involving the consumer; or
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- (D)
intends to use the information in
connection with a determination of
the consumer's eligibility for a
license or other benefit granted by
a governmental instrumentality
required by law to consider an
applicant's financial responsibility
or status; or
-
-
- (E)
intends to use the information, as a
potential investor or servicer, or
current insurer, in connection with
a valuation of, or an assessment of
the credit or prepayment risks
associated with, an existing credit
obligation; or
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- (F)
otherwise has a legitimate business
need for the information
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(i) in connection with a
business transaction that is
initiated by the consumer; or
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(ii) to review an account to
determine whether the consumer
continues to meet the terms of
the account.
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- (4) In
response to a request by the head of a
State or local child support enforcement
agency (or a State or local government
official authorized by the head of such
an agency), if the person making the
request certifies to the consumer
reporting agency that
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-
- (A)
the consumer report is needed for
the purpose of establishing an
individual's capacity to make child
support payments or determining the
appropriate level of such payments;
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-
- (B)
the paternity of the consumer for
the child to which the obligation
relates has been established or
acknowledged by the consumer in
accordance with State laws under
which the obligation arises (if
required by those laws);
-
-
- (C)
the person has provided at least 10
days' prior notice to the consumer
whose report is requested, by
certified or registered mail to the
last known address of the consumer,
that the report will be requested;
and
-
-
- (D)
the consumer report will be kept
confidential, will be used solely
for a purpose described in
subparagraph (A), and will not be
used in connection with any other
civil, administrative, or criminal
proceeding, or for any other
purpose.
-
- (5) To
an agency administering a State plan
under Section 454 of the Social Security
Act (42 U.S.C. § 654) for use to set an
initial or modified child support award.
(b)
Conditions for furnishing and using consumer
reports for employment purposes.
- (1)
Certification from user. A consumer
reporting agency may furnish a consumer
report for employment purposes only if
-
-
- (A)
the person who obtains such report
from the agency certifies to the
agency that
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(i) the person has complied with
paragraph (2) with respect to
the consumer report, and the
person will comply with
paragraph (3) with respect to
the consumer report if paragraph
(3) becomes applicable; and
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(ii) information from the
consumer report will not be used
in violation of any applicable
Federal or State equal
employment opportunity law or
regulation; and
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- (B)
the consumer reporting agency
provides with the report, or has
previously provided, a summary of
the consumer's rights under this
title, as prescribed by the Federal
Trade Commission under section
609(c)(3) [§ 1681g].
-
- (2)
Disclosure to consumer.
-
-
- (A)
In general. Except as provided in
subparagraph (B), a person may not
procure a consumer report, or cause
a consumer report to be procured,
for employment purposes with respect
to any consumer, unless--
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-
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(i) a clear and conspicuous
disclosure has been made in
writing to the consumer at any
time before the report is
procured or caused to be
procured, in a document that
consists solely of the
disclosure, that a consumer
report may be obtained for
employment purposes; and
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(ii) the consumer has authorized
in writing (which authorization
may be made on the document
referred to in clause (i)) the
procurement of the report by
that person.
-
-
- (B)
Application by mail, telephone,
computer, or other similar means. If
a consumer described in subparagraph
(C) applies for employment by mail,
telephone, computer, or other
similar means, at any time before a
consumer report is procured or
caused to be procured in connection
with that application--
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(i) the person who procures the
consumer report on the consumer
for employment purposes shall
provide to the consumer, by
oral, written, or electronic
means, notice that a consumer
report may be obtained for
employment purposes, and a
summary of the consumer's rights
under section 615(a)(3); and
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(ii) the consumer shall have
consented, orally, in writing,
or electronically to the
procurement of the report by
that person.
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- (C)
Scope. Subparagraph (B) shall apply
to a person procuring a consumer
report on a consumer in connection
with the consumer's application for
employment only if--
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(i) the consumer is applying for
a position over which the
Secretary of Transportation has
the power to establish
qualifications and maximum hours
of service pursuant to the
provisions of section 31502 of
title 49, or a position subject
to safety regulation by a State
transportation agency; and
-
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(ii) as of the time at which the
person procures the report or
causes the report to be procured
the only interaction between the
consumer and the person in
connection with that employment
application has been by mail,
telephone, computer, or other
similar means.
-
- (3)
Conditions on use for adverse actions.
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-
- (A)
In general. Except as provided in
subparagraph (B), in using a
consumer report for employment
purposes, before taking any adverse
action based in whole or in part on
the report, the person intending to
take such adverse action shall
provide to the consumer to whom the
report relates--
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-
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(i) a copy of the report; and
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(ii) a description in writing of
the rights of the consumer under
this title, as prescribed by the
Federal Trade Commission under
section 609(c)(3).
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-
- (B)
Application by mail, telephone,
computer, or other similar means.
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(i) If a consumer described in
subparagraph (C) applies for
employment by mail, telephone,
computer, or other similar
means, and if a person who has
procured a consumer report on
the consumer for employment
purposes takes adverse action on
the employment application based
in whole or in part on the
report, then the person must
provide to the consumer to whom
the report relates, in lieu of
the notices required under
subparagraph (A) of this section
and under section 615(a), within
3 business days of taking such
action, an oral, written or
electronic notification--
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(I) that adverse action has
been taken based in whole or
in part on a consumer report
received from a consumer
reporting agency;
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(II) of the name, address
and telephone number of the
consumer reporting agency
that furnished the consumer
report (including a
toll-free telephone number
established by the agency if
the agency compiles and
maintains files on consumers
on a nationwide basis);
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(III) that the consumer
reporting agency did not
make the decision to take
the adverse action and is
unable to provide to the
consumer the specific
reasons why the adverse
action was taken; and
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(IV) that the consumer may,
upon providing proper
identification, request a
free copy of a report and
may dispute with the
consumer reporting agency
the accuracy or completeness
of any information in a
report.
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(ii) If, under clause
(B)(i)(IV), the consumer
requests a copy of a consumer
report from the person who
procured the report, then,
within 3 business days of
receiving the consumer's
request, together with proper
identification, the person must
send or provide to the consumer
a copy of a report and a copy of
the consumer's rights as
prescribed by the Federal Trade
Commission under section
609(c)(3).
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-
- (C)
Scope. Subparagraph (B) shall apply
to a person procuring a consumer
report on a consumer in connection
with the consumer's application for
employment only if--
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(i) the consumer is applying for
a position over which the
Secretary of Transportation has
the power to establish
qualifications and maximum hours
of service pursuant to the
provisions of section 31502 of
title 49, or a position subject
to safety regulation by a State
transportation agency; and
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-
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(ii) as of the time at which the
person procures the report or
causes the report to be procured
the only interaction between the
consumer and the person in
connection with that employment
application has been by mail,
telephone, computer, or other
similar means.
-
- (4)
Exception for national security
investigations.
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-
- (A)
In general. In the case of an agency
or department of the United States
Government which seeks to obtain and
use a consumer report for employment
purposes, paragraph (3) shall not
apply to any adverse action by such
agency or department which is based
in part on such consumer report, if
the head of such agency or
department makes a written finding
that--
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-
-
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(i) the consumer report is
relevant to a national security
investigation of such agency or
department;
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(ii) the investigation is within
the jurisdiction of such agency
or department;
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(iii) there is reason to believe
that compliance with paragraph
(3) will--
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(I) endanger the life or
physical safety of any
person;
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(II) result in flight from
prosecution;
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(III) result in the
destruction of, or tampering
with, evidence relevant to
the investigation;
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(IV) result in the
intimidation of a potential
witness relevant to the
investigation;
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(V) result in the compromise
of classified information;
or
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(VI) otherwise seriously
jeopardize or unduly delay
the investigation or another
official proceeding.
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-
- (B)
Notification of consumer upon
conclusion of investigation. Upon
the conclusion of a national
security investigation described in
subparagraph (A), or upon the
determination that the exception
under subparagraph (A) is no longer
required for the reasons set forth
in such subparagraph, the official
exercising the authority in such
subparagraph shall provide to the
consumer who is the subject of the
consumer report with regard to which
such finding was made--
-
-
-
-
(i) a copy of such consumer
report with any classified
information redacted as
necessary;
-
-
-
-
(ii) notice of any adverse
action which is based, in part,
on the consumer report; and
-
-
-
-
(iii) the identification with
reasonable specificity of the
nature of the investigation for
which the consumer report was
sought.
-
-
- (C)
Delegation by head of agency or
department. For purposes of
subparagraphs (A) and (B), the head
of any agency or department of the
United States Government may
delegate his or her authorities
under this paragraph to an official
of such agency or department who has
personnel security responsibilities
and is a member of the Senior
Executive Service or equivalent
civilian or military rank.
-
-
- (D)
Report to the congress. Not later
than January 31 of each year, the
head of each agency and department
of the United States Government that
exercised authority under this
paragraph during the preceding year
shall submit a report to the
Congress on the number of times the
department or agency exercised such
authority during the year.
-
-
- (E)
Definitions. For purposes of this
paragraph, the following definitions
shall apply:
-
-
-
-
(i) Classified information. The
term `classified information'
means information that is
protected from unauthorized
disclosure under Executive Order
No. 12958 or successor orders.
-
(ii) National security
investigation. The term
`national security
investigation' means any
official inquiry by an agency or
department of the United States
Government to determine the
eligibility of a consumer to
receive access or continued
access to classified information
or to determine whether
classified information has been
lost or compromised.
(c)
Furnishing reports in connection with credit
or insurance transactions that are not
initiated by the consumer.
- (1) In
general. A consumer reporting agency may
furnish a consumer report relating to
any consumer pursuant to subparagraph
(A) or (C) of subsection (a)(3) in
connection with any credit or insurance
transaction that is not initiated by the
consumer only if
-
-
- (A)
the consumer authorizes the agency
to provide such report to such
person; or
-
-
- (B)
(i) the transaction consists of a
firm offer of credit or insurance;
-
-
-
-
(ii) the consumer reporting
agency has complied with
subsection (e); and
-
-
-
-
(iii) there is not in effect an
election by the consumer, made
in accordance with subsection
(e), to have the consumer's name
and address excluded from lists
of names provided by the agency
pursuant to this paragraph.
-
- (2)
Limits on information received under
paragraph (1)(B). A person may receive
pursuant to paragraph (1)(B) only
-
-
- (A)
the name and address of a consumer;
-
-
- (B)
an identifier that is not unique to
the consumer and that is used by the
person solely for the purpose of
verifying the identity of the
consumer; and
-
-
- (C)
other information pertaining to a
consumer that does not identify the
relationship or experience of the
consumer with respect to a
particular creditor or other entity.
-
- (3)
Information regarding inquiries. Except
as provided in section 609(a)(5)
[§ 1681g], a consumer reporting agency
shall not furnish to any person a record
of inquiries in connection with a credit
or insurance transaction that is not
initiated by a consumer.
(d) Reserved.
(e) Election
of consumer to be excluded from lists.
- (1) In
general. A consumer may elect to have
the consumer's name and address excluded
from any list provided by a consumer
reporting agency under subsection
(c)(1)(B) in connection with a credit or
insurance transaction that is not
initiated by the consumer, by notifying
the agency in accordance with paragraph
(2) that the consumer does not consent
to any use of a consumer report relating
to the consumer in connection with any
credit or insurance transaction that is
not initiated by the consumer.
-
- (2)
Manner of notification. A consumer shall
notify a consumer reporting agency under
paragraph (1)
-
-
- (A)
through the notification system
maintained by the agency under
paragraph (5); or
-
-
- (B)
by submitting to the agency a signed
notice of election form issued by
the agency for purposes of this
subparagraph.
-
- (3)
Response of agency after notification
through system. Upon receipt of
notification of the election of a
consumer under paragraph (1) through the
notification system maintained by the
agency under paragraph (5), a consumer
reporting agency shall
-
-
- (A)
inform the consumer that the
election is effective only for the
2-year period following the election
if the consumer does not submit to
the agency a signed notice of
election form issued by the agency
for purposes of paragraph (2)(B);
and
-
-
- (B)
provide to the consumer a notice of
election form, if requested by the
consumer, not later than 5 business
days after receipt of the
notification of the election through
the system established under
paragraph (5), in the case of a
request made at the time the
consumer provides notification
through the system.
-
- (4)
Effectiveness of election. An election
of a consumer under paragraph (1)
-
-
- (A)
shall be effective with respect to a
consumer reporting agency beginning
5 business days after the date on
which the consumer notifies the
agency in accordance with paragraph
(2);
-
-
- (B)
shall be effective with respect to a
consumer reporting agency
-
-
-
-
(i) subject to subparagraph (C),
during the 2-year period
beginning 5 business days after
the date on which the consumer
notifies the agency of the
election, in the case of an
election for which a consumer
notifies the agency only in
accordance with paragraph
(2)(A); or
-
-
-
-
(ii) until the consumer notifies
the agency under subparagraph
(C), in the case of an election
for which a consumer notifies
the agency in accordance with
paragraph (2)(B);
-
-
- (C)
shall not be effective after the
date on which the consumer notifies
the agency, through the notification
system established by the agency
under paragraph (5), that the
election is no longer effective; and
-
-
- (D)
shall be effective with respect to
each affiliate of the agency.
-
- (5)
Notification system.
-
-
- (A)
In general. Each consumer reporting
agency that, under subsection
(c)(1)(B), furnishes a consumer
report in connection with a credit
or insurance transaction that is not
initiated by a consumer, shall
-
-
-
-
(i) establish and maintain a
notification system, including a
toll-free telephone number,
which permits any consumer whose
consumer report is maintained by
the agency to notify the agency,
with appropriate identification,
of the consumer's election to
have the consumer's name and
address excluded from any such
list of names and addresses
provided by the agency for such
a transaction; and
-
-
-
-
(ii) publish by not later than
365 days after the date of
enactment of the Consumer Credit
Reporting Reform Act of 1996,
and not less than annually
thereafter, in a publication of
general circulation in the area
served by the agency
-
-
-
-
-
(I) a notification that
information in consumer
files maintained by the
agency may be used in
connection with such
transactions; and
-
-
-
-
-
(II) the address and
toll-free telephone number
for consumers to use to
notify the agency of the
consumer's election under
clause (I).
-
-
- (B)
Establishment and maintenance as
compliance. Establishment and
maintenance of a notification system
(including a toll-free telephone
number) and publication by a
consumer reporting agency on the
agency's own behalf and on behalf of
any of its affiliates in accordance
with this paragraph is deemed to be
compliance with this paragraph by
each of those affiliates.
-
- (6)
Notification system by agencies that
operate nationwide. Each consumer
reporting agency that compiles and
maintains files on consumers on a
nationwide basis shall establish and
maintain a notification system for
purposes of paragraph (5) jointly with
other such consumer reporting agencies.
(f) Certain
use or obtaining of information prohibited.
A person shall not use or obtain a consumer
report for any purpose unless
- (1) the
consumer report is obtained for a
purpose for which the consumer report is
authorized to be furnished under this
section; and
-
- (2) the
purpose is certified in accordance with
section 607 [§ 1681e] by a prospective
user of the report through a general or
specific certification.
(g)
Furnishing reports containing medical
information. A consumer reporting agency
shall not furnish for employment purposes,
or in connection with a credit or insurance
transaction, a consumer report that contains
medical information about a consumer, unless
the consumer consents to the furnishing of
the report.
§
605. Requirements relating
to information contained in consumer reports
[15 U.S.C. § 1681c]
(a)
Information excluded from consumer reports.
Except as authorized under subsection (b) of
this section, no consumer reporting agency
may make any consumer report containing any
of the following items of information:
- (1)
Cases under title 11 [United States
Code] or under the Bankruptcy Act that,
from the date of entry of the order for
relief or the date of adjudication, as
the case may be, antedate the report by
more than 10 years.
-
- (2)
Civil suits, civil judgments, and
records of arrest that from date of
entry, antedate the report by more than
seven years or until the governing
statute of limitations has expired,
whichever is the longer period.
-
- (3) Paid
tax liens which, from date of payment,
antedate the report by more than seven
years.
-
- (4)
Accounts placed for collection or
charged to profit and loss which
antedate the report by more than seven
years.(1)
-
- (5) Any
other adverse item of information, other
than records of convictions of crimes
which antedates the report by more than
seven years.1
(b) Exempted
cases. The provisions of subsection (a) of
this section are not applicable in the case
of any consumer credit report to be used in
connection with
- (1) a
credit transaction involving, or which
may reasonably be expected to involve, a
principal amount of $150,000 or more;
-
- (2) the
underwriting of life insurance
involving, or which may reasonably be
expected to involve, a face amount of
$150,000 or more; or
-
- (3) the
employment of any individual at an
annual salary which equals, or which may
reasonably be expected to equal $75,000,
or more.
(c) Running
of reporting period.
- (1) In
general. The 7-year period referred to
in paragraphs (4) and (6)(2)
of subsection (a) shall begin, with
respect to any delinquent account that
is placed for collection (internally or
by referral to a third party, whichever
is earlier), charged to profit and loss,
or subjected to any similar action, upon
the expiration of the 180-day period
beginning on the date of the
commencement of the delinquency which
immediately preceded the collection
activity, charge to profit and loss, or
similar action.
-
- (2)
Effective date. Paragraph (1) shall
apply only to items of information added
to the file of a consumer on or after
the date that is 455 days after the date
of enactment of the Consumer Credit
Reporting Reform Act of 1996.
(d)
Information required to be disclosed. Any
consumer reporting agency that furnishes a
consumer report that contains information
regarding any case involving the consumer
that arises under title 11, United States
Code, shall include in the report an
identification of the chapter of such title
11 under which such case arises if provided
by the source of the information. If any
case arising or filed under title 11, United
States Code, is withdrawn by the consumer
before a final judgment, the consumer
reporting agency shall include in the report
that such case or filing was withdrawn upon
receipt of documentation certifying such
withdrawal.
(e)
Indication of closure of account by
consumer. If a consumer reporting agency is
notified pursuant to section 623(a)(4)
[§ 1681s-2] that a credit account of a
consumer was voluntarily closed by the
consumer, the agency shall indicate that
fact in any consumer report that includes
information related to the account.
(f)
Indication of dispute by consumer. If a
consumer reporting agency is notified
pursuant to section 623(a)(3) [§ 1681s-2]
that information regarding a consumer who
was furnished to the agency is disputed by
the consumer, the agency shall indicate that
fact in each consumer report that includes
the disputed information.
§
606. Disclosure of
investigative consumer reports [15
U.S.C. § 1681d]
(a)
Disclosure of fact of preparation. A person
may not procure or cause to be prepared an
investigative consumer report on any
consumer unless
- (1) it
is clearly and accurately disclosed to
the consumer that an investigative
consumer report including information as
to his character, general reputation,
personal characteristics and mode of
living, whichever are applicable, may be
made, and such disclosure
-
-
- (A)
is made in a writing mailed, or
otherwise delivered, to the
consumer, not later than three days
after the date on which the report
was first requested, and
-
-
-
- (B)
includes a statement informing the
consumer of his right to request the
additional disclosures provided for
under subsection (b) of this section
and the written summary of the
rights of the consumer prepared
pursuant to section 609(c)
[§ 1681g]; and
-
- (2) the
person certifies or has certified to the
consumer reporting agency that
-
-
(A) the person has made the
disclosures to the consumer required
by paragraph (1); and
-
- (B)
the person will comply with
subsection (b).
(b)
Disclosure on request of nature and scope of
investigation. Any person who procures or
causes to be prepared an investigative
consumer report on any consumer shall, upon
written request made by the consumer within
a reasonable period of time after the
receipt by him of the disclosure required by
subsection (a)(1) of this section, make a
complete and accurate disclosure of the
nature and scope of the investigation
requested. This disclosure shall be made in
a writing mailed, or otherwise delivered, to
the consumer not later than five days after
the date on which the request for such
disclosure was received from the consumer or
such report was first requested, whichever
is the later.
(c)
Limitation on liability upon showing of
reasonable procedures for compliance with
provisions. No person may be held liable for
any violation of subsection (a) or (b) of
this section if he shows by a preponderance
of the evidence that at the time of the
violation he maintained reasonable
procedures to assure compliance with
subsection (a) or (b) of this section.
(d)
Prohibitions.
- (1)
Certification. A consumer reporting
agency shall not prepare or furnish
investigative consumer report unless the
agency has received a certification
under subsection (a)(2) from the person
who requested the report.
- (2)
Inquiries. A consumer reporting agency
shall not make an inquiry for the
purpose of preparing an investigative
consumer report on a consumer for
employment purposes if the making of the
inquiry by an employer or prospective
employer of the consumer would violate
any applicable Federal or State equal
employment opportunity law or
regulation.
(3)
Certain public record information.
Except as otherwise provided in section
613 [§ 1681k], a consumer reporting
agency shall not furnish an
investigative consumer report that
includes information that is a matter of
public record and that relates to an
arrest, indictment, conviction, civil
judicial action, tax lien, or
outstanding judgment, unless the agency
has verified the accuracy of the
information during the 30-day period
ending on the date on which the report
is furnished.
- (4)
Certain adverse information. A consumer
reporting agency shall not prepare or
furnish an investigative consumer report
on a consumer that contains information
that is adverse to the interest of the
consumer and that is obtained through a
personal interview with a neighbor,
friend, or associate of the consumer or
with another person with whom the
consumer is acquainted or who has
knowledge of such item of information,
unless
-
-
- (A)
the agency has followed reasonable
procedures to obtain confirmation of
the information, from an additional
source that has independent and
direct knowledge of the information;
or
-
-
(B) the person interviewed is the
best possible source of the
information.
§
607. Compliance procedures
[15 U.S.C. § 1681e]
(a) Identity
and purposes of credit users. Every consumer
reporting agency shall maintain reasonable
procedures designed to avoid violations of
section 605 [§ 1681c] and to limit the
furnishing of consumer reports to the
purposes listed under section 604 [§ 1681b]
of this title. These procedures shall
require that prospective users of the
information identify themselves, certify the
purposes for which the information is
sought, and certify that the information
will be used for no other purpose. Every
consumer reporting agency shall make a
reasonable effort to verify the identity of
a new prospective user and the uses
certified by such prospective user prior to
furnishing such user a consumer report. No
consumer reporting agency may furnish a
consumer report to any person if it has
reasonable grounds for believing that the
consumer report will not be used for a
purpose listed in section 604 [§ 1681b] of
this title.
(b) Accuracy
of report. Whenever a consumer reporting
agency prepares a consumer report it shall
follow reasonable procedures to assure
maximum possible accuracy of the information
concerning the individual about whom the
report relates.
(c)
Disclosure of consumer reports by users
allowed. A consumer reporting agency may not
prohibit a user of a consumer report
furnished by the agency on a consumer from
disclosing the contents of the report to the
consumer, if adverse action against the
consumer has been taken by the user based in
whole or in part on the report.
(d) Notice
to users and furnishers of information.
- (1)
Notice requirement. A consumer reporting
agency shall provide to any person
-
-
- (A)
who regularly and in the ordinary
course of business furnishes
information to the agency with
respect to any consumer; or
-
-
(B) to whom a consumer report is
provided by the agency;
-
a
notice of such person's responsibilities
under this title.
-
(2)
Content of notice. The Federal Trade
Commission shall prescribe the content
of notices under paragraph (1), and a
consumer reporting agency shall be in
compliance with this subsection if it
provides a notice under paragraph (1)
that is substantially similar to the
Federal Trade Commission prescription
under this paragraph.
(e)
Procurement of consumer report for resale.
- (1)
Disclosure. A person may not procure a
consumer report for purposes of
reselling the report (or any information
in the report) unless the person
discloses to the consumer reporting
agency that originally furnishes the
report
-
-
- (A)
the identity of the end-user of the
report (or information); and
-
-
-
- (B)
each permissible purpose under
section 604 [§ 1681b] for which the
report is furnished to the end-user
of the report (or information).
-
- (2)
Responsibilities of procurers for
resale. A person who procures a consumer
report for purposes of reselling the
report (or any information in the
report) shall
-
-
(A) establish and comply with
reasonable procedures designed to
ensure that the report (or
information) is resold by the person
only for a purpose for which the
report may be furnished under
section 604 [§ 1681b], including by
requiring that each person to which
the report (or information) is
resold and that resells or provides
the report (or information) to any
other person
-
-
-
-
-
(i)
identifies each end user of the
resold report (or information);
-
-
-
-
-
(ii) certifies each purpose for
which the report (or
information) will be used; and
-
-
-
-
-
-
(iii) certifies that the report
(or information) will be used
for no other purpose; and
-
-
(B) before reselling the report,
make reasonable efforts to verify
the identifications and
certifications made under
subparagraph (A).
-
- (3)
Resale of consumer report to a federal
agency or department. Notwithstanding
paragraph (1) or
(2), a person who procures a
consumer report for purposes of
reselling the report (or any information
in the report) shall not disclose the
identity of the end-user of the report
under paragraph (1) or (2) if--
-
-
(A) the end user is an agency or
department of the United States
Government which procures the report
from the person for purposes of
determining the eligibility of the
consumer concerned to receive access
or continued access to classified
information (as defined in section
604(b)(4)(E)(i)); and
-
-
-
- (B)
the agency or department certifies
in writing to the person reselling
the report that nondisclosure is
necessary to protect classified
information or the safety of persons
employed by or contracting with, or
undergoing investigation for work or
contracting with the agency or
department.
§
608. Disclosures to
governmental agencies [15 U.S.C.
§ 1681f]
Notwithstanding the provisions of section
604 [§ 1681b] of this title, a consumer
reporting agency may furnish identifying
information respecting any consumer, limited
to his name, address, former addresses,
places of employment, or former places of
employment, to a governmental agency.
§
609. Disclosures to
consumers [15 U.S.C. § 1681g]
(a)
Information on file; sources; report
recipients. Every consumer reporting agency
shall, upon request, and subject to
610(a)(1) [§ 1681h], clearly and accurately
disclose to the consumer:
- (1) All
information in the consumer's file at
the time of the request, except that
nothing in this paragraph shall be
construed to require a consumer
reporting agency to disclose to a
consumer any information concerning
credit scores or any other risk scores
or predictors relating to the consumer.
-
- (2) The
sources of the information; except that
the sources of information acquired
solely for use in preparing an
investigative consumer report and
actually used for no other purpose need
not be disclosed: Provided, That in the
event an action is brought under this
title, such sources shall be available
to the plaintiff under appropriate
discovery procedures in the court in
which the action is brought.
-
- (3)(A)
Identification of each person (including
each end-user identified under section
607(e)(1) [§ 1681e]) that procured a
consumer report
-
-
-
-
(i)
for employment purposes, during
the 2-year period preceding the
date on which the request is
made; or
-
-
-
-
-
-
(ii) for any other purpose,
during the 1-year period
preceding the date on which the
request is made.
-
-
-
- (B)
An identification of a person under
subparagraph (A) shall include
-
-
-
-
-
(i)
the name of the person or, if
applicable, the trade name
(written in full) under which
such person conducts business;
and
-
-
-
-
-
-
(ii) upon request of the
consumer, the address and
telephone number of the person.
-
-
-
- (C)
Subparagraph (A) does not apply if--
-
-
-
-
-
(i)
the end user is an agency or
department of the United States
Government that procures the
report from the person for
purposes of determining the
eligibility of the consumer to
whom the report relates to
receive access or continued
access to classified information
(as defined in section
604(b)(4)(E)(i)); and
-
-
-
-
-
-
(ii) the head of the agency or
department makes a written
finding as prescribed under
section 604(b)(4)(A).
-
- (4) The
dates, original payees, and amounts of
any checks upon which is based any
adverse characterization of the
consumer, included in the file at the
time of the disclosure.
-
- (5) A
record of all inquiries received by the
agency during the 1-year period
preceding the request that identified
the consumer in connection with a credit
or insurance transaction that was not
initiated by the consumer.
(b) Exempt
information. The requirements of subsection
(a) of this section respecting the
disclosure of sources of information and the
recipients of consumer reports do not apply
to information received or consumer reports
furnished prior to the effective date of
this title except to the extent that the
matter involved is contained in the files of
the consumer reporting agency on that date.
(c) Summary
of rights required to be included with
disclosure.
- (1)
Summary of rights. A consumer reporting
agency shall provide to a consumer, with
each written disclosure by the agency to
the consumer under this section
-
-
(A) a written summary of all of the
rights that the consumer has under
this title; and
-
-
(B) in the case of a consumer
reporting agency that compiles and
maintains files on consumers on a
nationwide basis, a toll-free
telephone number established by the
agency, at which personnel are
accessible to consumers during
normal business hours.
-
(2)
Specific items required to be included.
The summary of rights required under
paragraph (1) shall include
-
-
(A) a brief description of this
title and all rights of consumers
under this title;
-
-
(B) an explanation of how the
consumer may exercise the rights of
the consumer under this title;
-
-
(C) a list of all Federal agencies
responsible for enforcing any
provision of this title and the
address and any appropriate phone
number of each such agency, in a
form that will assist the consumer
in selecting the appropriate agency;
-
-
-
- (D)
a statement that the consumer may
have additional rights under State
law and that the consumer may wish
to contact a State or local consumer
protection agency or a State
attorney general to learn of those
rights; and
-
-
-
- (E)
a statement that a consumer
reporting agency is not required to
remove accurate derogatory
information from a consumer's file,
unless the information is outdated
under section 605 [§ 1681c] or
cannot be verified.
-
- (3)
Form of summary of rights. For purposes
of this subsection and any disclosure by
a consumer reporting agency required
under this title with respect to
consumers' rights, the Federal Trade
Commission (after consultation with each
Federal agency referred to in section
621(b) [§ 1681s]) shall prescribe the
form and content of any such disclosure
of the rights of consumers required
under this title. A consumer reporting
agency shall be in compliance with this
subsection if it provides disclosures
under paragraph (1) that are
substantially similar to the Federal
Trade Commission prescription under this
paragraph.
-
- (4)
Effectiveness. No disclosures shall be
required under this subsection until the
date on which the Federal Trade
Commission prescribes the form and
content of such disclosures under
paragraph (3).
§
610. Conditions and form
of disclosure to consumers [15
U.S.C. § 1681h]
(a) In
general.
- (1)
Proper identification. A consumer
reporting agency shall require, as a
condition of making the disclosures
required under section 609 [§ 1681g],
that the consumer furnish proper
identification.
-
(2)
Disclosure in writing. Except as
provided in subsection (b), the
disclosures required to be made under
section 609 [§ 1681g] shall be provided
under that section in writing.
(b) Other
forms of disclosure.
- (1) In
general. If authorized by a consumer, a
consumer reporting agency may make the
disclosures required under 609 [§ 1681g]
-
-
- (A)
other than in writing; and
-
-
-
- (B)
in such form as may be
-
-
-
(i)
specified by the consumer in
accordance with paragraph (2);
and
-
-
-
-
-
-
(ii) available from the agency.
-
- (2)
Form. A consumer may specify pursuant to
paragraph (1) that disclosures under
section 609 [§ 1681g] shall be made
-
-
(A) in person, upon the appearance
of the consumer at the place of
business of the consumer reporting
agency where disclosures are
regularly provided, during normal
business hours, and on reasonable
notice;
-
-
-
- (B)
by telephone, if the consumer has
made a written request for
disclosure by telephone;
-
-
-
- (C)
by electronic means, if available
from the agency; or
-
-
-
- (D)
by any other reasonable means that
is available from the agency.
(c)
Trained personnel. Any consumer reporting
agency shall provide trained personnel to
explain to the consumer any information
furnished to him pursuant to section 609
[§ 1681g] of this title.
(d) Persons
accompanying consumer. The consumer shall be
permitted to be accompanied by one other
person of his choosing, who shall furnish
reasonable identification. A consumer
reporting agency may require the consumer to
furnish a written statement granting
permission to the consumer reporting agency
to discuss the consumer's file in such
person's presence.
(e)
Limitation of liability. Except as provided
in sections 616 and 617 [§§ 1681n and 1681o]
of this title, no consumer may bring any
action or proceeding in the nature of
defamation, invasion of privacy, or
negligence with respect to the reporting of
information against any consumer reporting
agency, any user of information, or any
person who furnishes information to a
consumer reporting agency, based on
information disclosed pursuant to section
609, 610, or 615 [§§ 1681g, 1681h, or 1681m]
of this title or based on information
disclosed by a user of a consumer report to
or for a consumer against whom the user has
taken adverse action, based in whole or in
part on the report, except as to false
information furnished with malice or willful
intent to injure such consumer.
§ 611. Procedure in case
of disputed accuracy [15 U.S.C.
§ 1681i]
(a)
Reinvestigations of disputed information.
- (1)
Reinvestigation required.
-
-
- (A)
In general. If the completeness or
accuracy of any item of information
contained in a consumer's file at a
consumer reporting agency is
disputed by the consumer and the
consumer notifies the agency
directly of such dispute, the agency
shall reinvestigate free of charge
and record the current status of the
disputed information, or delete the
item from the file in accordance
with paragraph (5), before the end
of the 30-day period beginning on
the date on which the agency
receives the notice of the dispute
from the consumer.
-
-
-
- (B)
Extension of period to
reinvestigate. Except as provided in
subparagraph (C), the 30-day period
described in subparagraph (A) may be
extended for not more than 15
additional days if the consumer
reporting agency receives
information from the consumer during
that 30-day period that is relevant
to the reinvestigation.
-
-
-
- (C)
Limitations on extension of period
to reinvestigate. Subparagraph (B)
shall not apply to any
reinvestigation in which, during the
30-day period described in
subparagraph (A), the information
that is the subject of the
reinvestigation is found to be
inaccurate or incomplete or the
consumer reporting agency determines
that the information cannot be
verified.
-
- (2)
Prompt notice of dispute to furnisher of
information.
-
-
- (A)
In general. Before the expiration of
the 5-business-day period beginning
on the date on which a consumer
reporting agency receives notice of
a dispute from any consumer in
accordance with paragraph (1), the
agency shall provide notification of
the dispute to any person who
provided any item of information in
dispute, at the address and in the
manner established with the person.
The notice shall include all
relevant information regarding the
dispute that the agency has received
from the consumer.
-
-
-
- (B)
Provision of other information from
consumer. The consumer reporting
agency shall promptly provide to the
person who provided the information
in dispute all relevant information
regarding the dispute that is
received by the agency from the
consumer after the period referred
to in subparagraph (A) and before
the end of the period referred to in
paragraph (1)(A).
-
- (3)
Determination that dispute is frivolous
or irrelevant.
-
-
- (A)
In general. Notwithstanding
paragraph (1), a consumer reporting
agency may terminate a
reinvestigation of information
disputed by a consumer under that
paragraph if the agency reasonably
determines that the dispute by the
consumer is frivolous or irrelevant,
including by reason of a failure by
a consumer to provide sufficient
information to investigate the
disputed information.
-
-
-
- (B)
Notice of determination. Upon making
any determination in accordance with
subparagraph (A) that a dispute is
frivolous or irrelevant, a consumer
reporting agency shall notify the
consumer of such determination not
later than 5 business days after
making such determination, by mail
or, if authorized by the consumer
for that purpose, by any other means
available to the agency.
-
-
-
- (C)
Contents of notice. A notice under
subparagraph (B) shall include
-
-
-
(i)
the reasons for the
determination under subparagraph
(A); and
-
-
-
(ii) identification of any
information required to
investigate the disputed
information, which may consist
of a standardized form
describing the general nature of
such information.
-
- (4)
Consideration of consumer information.
In conducting any reinvestigation under
paragraph (1) with respect to disputed
information in the file of any consumer,
the consumer reporting agency shall
review and consider all relevant
information submitted by the consumer in
the period described in paragraph (1)(A)
with respect to such disputed
information.
-
- (5)
Treatment of inaccurate or unverifiable
information.
-
-
- (A)
In general. If, after any
reinvestigation under paragraph (1)
of any information disputed by a
consumer, an item of the information
is found to be inaccurate or
incomplete or cannot be verified,
the consumer reporting agency shall
promptly delete that item of
information from the consumer's file
or modify that item of information,
as appropriate, based on the results
of the reinvestigation.
-
-
-
- (B)
Requirements relating to reinsertion
of previously deleted material.
-
-
-
-
-
(i)
Certification of accuracy of
information. If any information
is deleted from a consumer's
file pursuant to subparagraph
(A), the information may not be
reinserted in the file by the
consumer reporting agency unless
the person who furnishes the
information certifies that the
information is complete and
accurate.
-
-
-
-
-
-
(ii) Notice to consumer. If any
information that has been
deleted from a consumer's file
pursuant to subparagraph (A) is
reinserted in the file, the
consumer reporting agency shall
notify the consumer of the
reinsertion in writing not later
than 5 business days after the
reinsertion or, if authorized by
the consumer for that purpose,
by any other means available to
the agency.
-
-
-
-
-
-
(iii) Additional information. As
part of, or in addition to, the
notice under clause (ii), a
consumer reporting agency shall
provide to a consumer in writing
not later than 5 business days
after the date of the
reinsertion
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
(I) a statement that the
disputed information has
been reinserted;
-
-
-
-
(II) the business name and
address of any furnisher of
information contacted and
the telephone number of such
furnisher, if reasonably
available, or of any
furnisher of information
that contacted the consumer
reporting agency, in
connection with the
reinsertion of such
information; and
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
(III) a notice that the
consumer has the right to
add a statement to the
consumer's file disputing
the accuracy or completeness
of the disputed information.
-
-
C) Procedures to prevent
reappearance. A consumer reporting
agency shall maintain reasonable
procedures designed to prevent the
reappearance in a consumer's file,
and in consumer reports on the
consumer, of information that is
deleted pursuant to this paragraph
(other than information that is
reinserted in accordance with
subparagraph (B)(i)).
-
-
-
- D)
Automated reinvestigation system.
Any consumer reporting agency that
compiles and maintains files on
consumers on a nationwide basis
shall implement an automated system
through which furnishers of
information to that consumer
reporting agency may report the
results of a reinvestigation that
finds incomplete or inaccurate
information in a consumer's file to
other such consumer reporting
agencies.
-
- (6)
Notice of results of reinvestigation.
-
-
- (A)
In general. A consumer reporting
agency shall provide written notice
to a consumer of the results of a
reinvestigation under this
subsection not later than 5 business
days after the completion of the
reinvestigation, by mail or, if
authorized by the consumer for that
purpose, by other means available to
the agency.
-
-
-
- (B)
Contents. As part of, or in addition
to, the notice under subparagraph
(A), a consumer reporting agency
shall provide to a consumer in
writing before the expiration of the
5-day period referred to in
subparagraph (A)
-
-
-
-
-
(i)
a statement that the
reinvestigation is completed;
-
-
-
-
-
-
(ii) a consumer report that is
based upon the consumer's file
as that file is revised as a
result of the reinvestigation;
-
-
-
-
-
-
(iii) a notice that, if
requested by the consumer, a
description of the procedure
used to determine the accuracy
and completeness of the
information shall be provided to
the consumer by the agency,
including the business name and
address of any furnisher of
information contacted in
connection with such information
and the telephone number of such
furnisher, if reasonably
available;
-
-
-
-
-
-
(iv) a notice that the consumer
has the right to add a statement
to the consumer's file disputing
the accuracy or completeness of
the information; and
-
-
-
-
-
-
(v)
a notice that the consumer has
the right to request under
subsection (d) that the consumer
reporting agency furnish
notifications under that
subsection.
-
- (7)
Description of reinvestigation
procedure. A consumer reporting agency
shall provide to a consumer a
description referred to in paragraph
(6)(B)(iii) by not later than 15 days
after receiving a request from the
consumer for that description.
-
- (8)
Expedited dispute resolution. If a
dispute regarding an item of information
in a consumer's file at a consumer
reporting agency is resolved in
accordance with paragraph (5)(A) by the
deletion of the disputed information by
not later than 3 business days after the
date on which the agency receives notice
of the dispute from the consumer in
accordance with paragraph (1)(A), then
the agency shall not be required to
comply with paragraphs (2), (6), and (7)
with respect to that dispute if the
agency
-
-
- (A)
provides prompt notice of the
deletion to the consumer by
telephone;
-
- (B)
includes in that notice, or in a
written notice that accompanies a
confirmation and consumer report
provided in accordance with
subparagraph (C), a statement of the
consumer's right to request under
subsection (d) that the agency
furnish notifications under that
subsection; and
-
-
-
- (C)
provides written confirmation of the
deletion and a copy of a consumer
report on the consumer that is based
on the consumer's file after the
deletion, not later than 5 business
days after making the deletion.
(b)
Statement of dispute. If the reinvestigation
does not resolve the dispute, the consumer
may file a brief statement setting forth the
nature of the dispute. The consumer
reporting agency may limit such statements
to not more than one hundred words if it
provides the consumer with assistance in
writing a clear summary of the dispute.
(c)
Notification of consumer dispute in
subsequent consumer reports. Whenever a
statement of a dispute is filed, unless
there is reasonable grounds to believe that
it is frivolous or irrelevant, the consumer
reporting agency shall, in any subsequent
consumer report containing the information
in question, clearly note that it is
disputed by the consumer and provide either
the consumer's statement or a clear and
accurate codification or summary thereof.
(d)
Notification of deletion of disputed
information. Following any deletion of
information which is found to be inaccurate
or whose accuracy can no longer be verified
or any notation as to disputed information,
the consumer reporting agency shall, at the
request of the consumer, furnish
notification that the item has been deleted
or the statement, codification or summary
pursuant to subsection (b) or (c) of this
section to any person specifically
designated by the consumer who has within
two years prior thereto received a consumer
report for employment purposes, or within
six months prior thereto received a consumer
report for any other purpose, which
contained the deleted or disputed
information.
§
612. Charges for certain
disclosures [15 U.S.C. § 1681j]
(a)
Reasonable charges allowed for certain
disclosures.
- (1) In
general. Except as provided in
subsections (b), (c), and (d), a
consumer reporting agency may impose a
reasonable charge on a consumer
-
-
- (A)
for making a disclosure to the
consumer pursuant to section 609
[§ 1681g], which charge
-
-
-
-
-
(i)
shall not exceed $8;(3)
and
-
-
-
-
-
-
(ii) shall be indicated to the
consumer before making the
disclosure; and
-
-
-
- (B)
for furnishing, pursuant to 611(d)
[§ 1681i], following a
reinvestigation under section 611(a)
[§ 1681i], a statement,
codification, or summary to a person
designated by the consumer under
that section after the 30-day period
beginning on the date of
notification of the consumer under
paragraph (6) or (8) of section
611(a) [§ 1681i] with respect to the
reinvestigation, which charge
-
-
-
-
-
(i) shall not exceed the charge
that the agency would impose on
each designated recipient for a
consumer report; and
-
-
-
(ii) shall be indicated to the
consumer before furnishing such
information.
-
(2) Modification of amount. The Federal
Trade Commission shall increase the
amount referred to in paragraph
(1)(A)(I) on January 1 of each year,
based proportionally on changes in the
Consumer Price Index, with fractional
changes rounded to the nearest fifty
cents.
(b) Free
disclosure after adverse notice to consumer.
Each consumer reporting agency that
maintains a file on a consumer shall make
all disclosures pursuant to section 609
[§ 1681g] without charge to the consumer if,
not later than 60 days after receipt by such
consumer of a notification pursuant to
section 615 [§ 1681m], or of a notification
from a debt collection agency affiliated
with that consumer reporting agency stating
that the consumer's credit rating may be or
has been adversely affected, the consumer
makes a request under section 609 [§ 1681g].
(c) Free disclosure under certain other
circumstances. Upon the request of the
consumer, a consumer reporting agency shall
make all disclosures pursuant to section 609
[§ 1681g] once during any 12-month period
without charge to that consumer if the
consumer certifies in writing that the
consumer
- (1) is
unemployed and intends to apply for
employment in the 60-day period
beginning on the date on which the
certification is made;
-
- (2) is a
recipient of public welfare assistance;
or
-
- (3) has
reason to believe that the file on the
consumer at the agency contains
inaccurate information due to fraud.
(d) Other
charges prohibited. A consumer reporting
agency shall not impose any charge on a
consumer for providing any notification
required by this title or making any
disclosure required by this title, except as
authorized by subsection (a).
§
613. Public record
information for employment purposes
[15 U.S.C. § 1681k]
(a) In
general. A consumer reporting agency which
furnishes a consumer report for employment
purposes and which for that purpose compiles
and reports items of information on
consumers which are matters of public record
and are likely to have an adverse effect
upon a consumer's ability to obtain
employment shall
- (1) at
the time such public record information
is reported to the user of such consumer
report, notify the consumer of the fact
that public record information is being
reported by the consumer reporting
agency, together with the name and
address of the person to whom such
information is being reported; or
-
- (2)
maintain strict procedures designed to
insure that whenever public record
information which is likely to have an
adverse effect on a consumer's ability
to obtain employment is reported it is
complete and up to date. For purposes of
this paragraph, items of public record
relating to arrests, indictments,
convictions, suits, tax liens, and
outstanding judgments shall be
considered up to date if the current
public record status of the item at the
time of the report is reported.
(b) Exemption
for national security investigations.
Subsection (a) does not apply in the case of
an agency or department of the United States
Government that seeks to obtain and use a
consumer report for employment purposes, if
the head of the agency or department makes a
written finding as prescribed under section
604(b)(4)(A).
§
614. Restrictions on
investigative consumer reports [15
U.S.C. § 1681l]
Whenever a
consumer reporting agency prepares an
investigative consumer report, no adverse
information in the consumer report (other
than information which is a matter of public
record) may be included in a subsequent
consumer report unless such adverse
information has been verified in the process
of making such subsequent consumer report,
or the adverse information was received
within the three-month period preceding the
date the subsequent report is furnished.
§
615. Requirements on users
of consumer reports [15 U.S.C.
§ 1681m]
(a) Duties of
users taking adverse actions on the basis of
information contained in consumer reports.
If any person takes any adverse action with
respect to any consumer that is based in
whole or in part on any information
contained in a consumer report, the person
shall
- (1)
provide oral, written, or electronic
notice of the adverse action to the
consumer;
-
- (2)
provide to the consumer orally, in
writing, or electronically
-
-
- (A)
the name, address, and telephone
number of the consumer reporting
agency (including a toll-free
telephone number established by the
agency if the agency compiles and
maintains files on consumers on a
nationwide basis) that furnished the
report to the person; and
-
-
-
- (B)
a statement that the consumer
reporting agency did not make the
decision to take the adverse action
and is unable to provide the
consumer the specific reasons why
the adverse action was taken; and
-
- (3)
provide to the consumer an oral,
written, or electronic notice of the
consumer's right
-
-
- (A)
to obtain, under section 612
[§ 1681j], a free copy of a consumer
report on the consumer from the
consumer reporting agency referred
to in paragraph (2), which notice
shall include an indication of the
60-day period under that section for
obtaining such a copy; and
-
-
-
- (B)
to dispute, under section 611
[§ 1681i], with a consumer reporting
agency the accuracy or completeness
of any information in a consumer
report furnished by the agency.
(b) Adverse
action based on information obtained from
third parties other than consumer reporting
agencies.
- (1) In
general. Whenever credit for personal,
family, or household purposes involving
a consumer is denied or the charge for
such credit is increased either wholly
or partly because of information
obtained from a person other than a
consumer reporting agency bearing upon
the consumer's credit worthiness, credit
standing, credit capacity, character,
general reputation, personal
characteristics, or mode of living, the
user of such information shall, within a
reasonable period of time, upon the
consumer's written request for the
reasons for such adverse action received
within sixty days after learning of such
adverse action, disclose the nature of
the information to the consumer. The
user of such information shall clearly
and accurately disclose to the consumer
his right to make such written request
at the time such adverse action is
communicated to the consumer.
- (2)
Duties of person taking certain actions
based on information provided by
affiliate.
-
-
(A) Duties, generally. If a person
takes an action described in
subparagraph (B) with respect to a
consumer, based in whole or in part
on information described in
subparagraph (C), the person shall
-
-
-
(i) notify the consumer of the
action, including a statement
that the consumer may obtain the
information in accordance with
clause (ii); and
-
-
-
(ii) upon a written request from
the consumer received within 60
days after transmittal of the
notice required by clause (I),
disclose to the consumer the
nature of the information upon
which the action is based by not
later than 30 days after receipt
of the request.
-
-
-
- (B)
Action described. An action referred
to in subparagraph (A) is an adverse
action described in section
603(k)(1)(A) [§ 1681a], taken in
connection with a transaction
initiated by the consumer, or any
adverse action described in clause
(i) or (ii) of section 603(k)(1)(B)
[§ 1681a].
-
-
- (C)
Information described. Information
referred to in subparagraph (A)
-
-
-
-
-
(i) except as provided in clause
(ii), is information that
-
-
-
-
(I) is furnished to the
person taking the action by
a person related by common
ownership or affiliated by
common corporate control to
the person taking the
action; and
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
(II) bears on the credit
worthiness, credit standing,
credit capacity, character,
general reputation, personal
characteristics, or mode of
living of the consumer; and
-
-
-
(ii) does not include
-
-
-
-
(I) information solely as to
transactions or experiences
between the consumer and the
person furnishing the
information; or
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
(II) information in a
consumer report.
(c)
Reasonable procedures to assure compliance.
No person shall be held liable for any
violation of this section if he shows by a
preponderance of the evidence that at the
time of the alleged violation he maintained
reasonable procedures to assure compliance
with the provisions of this section.
(d) Duties of
users making written credit or insurance
solicitations on the basis of information
contained in consumer files.
- (1) In
general. Any person who uses a consumer
report on any consumer in connection
with any credit or insurance transaction
that is not initiated by the consumer,
that is provided to that person under
section 604(c)(1)(B) [§ 1681b], shall
provide with each written solicitation
made to the consumer regarding the
transaction a clear and conspicuous
statement that
-
-
- (A)
information contained in the
consumer's consumer report was used
in connection with the transaction;
-
-
-
- (B)
the consumer received the offer of
credit or insurance because the
consumer satisfied the criteria for
credit worthiness or insurability
under which the consumer was
selected for the offer;
-
-
(C) if applicable, the credit or
insurance may not be extended if,
after the consumer responds to the
offer, the consumer does not meet
the criteria used to select the
consumer for the offer or any
applicable criteria bearing on
credit worthiness or insurability or
does not furnish any required
collateral;
-
-
-
- (D)
the consumer has a right to prohibit
information contained in the
consumer's file with any consumer
reporting agency from being used in
connection with any credit or
insurance transaction that is not
initiated by the consumer; and
-
-
-
- (E)
the consumer may exercise the right
referred to in subparagraph (D) by
notifying a notification system
established under section 604(e)
[§ 1681b].
-
- (2)
Disclosure of address and telephone
number. A statement under paragraph (1)
shall include the address and toll-free
telephone number of the appropriate
notification system established under
section 604(e) [§ 1681b].
-
- (3)
Maintaining criteria on file. A person
who makes an offer of credit or
insurance to a consumer under a credit
or insurance transaction described in
paragraph (1) shall maintain on file the
criteria used to select the consumer to
receive the offer, all criteria bearing
on credit worthiness or insurability, as
applicable, that are the basis for
determining whether or not to extend
credit or insurance pursuant to the
offer, and any requirement for the
furnishing of collateral as a condition
of the extension of credit or insurance,
until the expiration of the 3-year
period beginning on the date on which
the offer is made to the consumer.
-
- (4)
Authority of federal agencies regarding
unfair or deceptive acts or practices
not affected. This section is not
intended to affect the authority of any
Federal or State agency to enforce a
prohibition against unfair or deceptive
acts or practices, including the making
of false or misleading statements in
connection with a credit or insurance
transaction that is not initiated by the
consumer.
§
616. Civil liability for
willful noncompliance [15 U.S.C.
§ 1681n]
(a) In
general. Any person who willfully fails to
comply with any requirement imposed under
this title with respect to any consumer is
liable to that consumer in an amount equal
to the sum of
- (1)(A)
any actual damages sustained by the
consumer as a result of the failure or
damages of not less than $100 and not
more than $1,000; or
-
-
- (B)
in the case of liability of a
natural person for obtaining a
consumer report under false
pretenses or knowingly without a
permissible purpose, actual damages
sustained by the consumer as a
result of the failure or $1,000,
whichever is greater;
-
- (2) such
amount of punitive damages as the court
may allow; and
-
- (3) in
the case of any successful action to
enforce any liability under this
section, the costs of the action
together with reasonable attorney's fees
as determined by the court.
(b) Civil
liability for knowing noncompliance. Any
person who obtains a consumer report from a
consumer reporting agency under false
pretenses or knowingly without a permissible
purpose shall be liable to the consumer
reporting agency for actual damages
sustained by the consumer reporting agency
or $1,000, whichever is greater.
(c)
Attorney's fees. Upon a finding by the court
that an unsuccessful pleading, motion, or
other paper filed in connection with an
action under this section was filed in bad
faith or for purposes of harassment, the
court shall award to the prevailing party
attorney's fees reasonable in relation to
the work expended in responding to the
pleading, motion, or other paper.
§
617. Civil liability for
negligent noncompliance [15 U.S.C.
§ 1681o]
(a) In
general. Any person who is negligent in
failing to comply with any requirement
imposed under this title with respect to any
consumer is liable to that consumer in an
amount equal to the sum of
- (1) any
actual damages sustained by the consumer
as a result of the failure;
-
- (2) in
the case of any successful action to
enforce any liability under this
section, the costs of the action
together with reasonable attorney's fees
as determined by the court.
(b)
Attorney's fees. On a finding by the court
that an unsuccessful pleading, motion, or
other paper filed in connection with an
action under this section was filed in bad
faith or for purposes of harassment, the
court shall award to the prevailing party
attorney's fees reasonable in relation to
the work expended in responding to the
pleading, motion, or other paper.
§
618. Jurisdiction of
courts; limitation of actions [15
U.S.C. § 1681p]
An action to
enforce any liability created under this
title may be brought in any appropriate
United States district court without regard
to the amount in controversy, or in any
other court of competent jurisdiction,
within two years from the date on which the
liability arises, except that where a
defendant has materially and willfully
misrepresented any information required
under this title to be disclosed to an
individual and the information so
misrepresented is material to the
establishment of the defendant's liability
to that individual under this title, the
action may be brought at any time within two
years after discovery by the individual of
the misrepresentation.
§
619. Obtaining information
under false pretenses [15 U.S.C.
§ 1681q]
Any person
who knowingly and willfully obtains
information on a consumer from a consumer
reporting agency under false pretenses shall
be fined under title 18, United States Code,
imprisoned for not more than 2 years, or
both.
§
620. Unauthorized
disclosures by officers or employees
[15 U.S.C. § 1681r]
Any officer
or employee of a consumer reporting agency
who knowingly and willfully provides
information concerning an individual from
the agency's files to a person not
authorized to receive that information shall
be fined under title 18, United States Code,
imprisoned for not more than 2 years, or
both.
§
621. Administrative
enforcement [15 U.S.C. § 1681s]
(a) (1)
Enforcement by Federal Trade Commission.
Compliance with the requirements imposed
under this title shall be enforced under the
Federal Trade Commission Act [15 U.S.C. §§
41 et seq.] by the Federal Trade Commission
with respect to consumer reporting agencies
and all other persons subject thereto,
except to the extent that enforcement of the
requirements imposed under this title is
specifically committed to some other
government agency under subsection (b)
hereof. For the purpose of the exercise by
the Federal Trade Commission of its
functions and powers under the Federal Trade
Commission Act, a violation of any
requirement or prohibition imposed under
this title shall constitute an unfair or
deceptive act or practice in commerce in
violation of section 5(a) of the Federal
Trade Commission Act [15 U.S.C. § 45(a)] and
shall be subject to enforcement by the
Federal Trade Commission under section 5(b)
thereof [15 U.S.C. § 45(b)] with respect to
any consumer reporting agency or person
subject to enforcement by the Federal Trade
Commission pursuant to this subsection,
irrespective of whether that person is
engaged in commerce or meets any other
jurisdictional tests in the Federal Trade
Commission Act. The Federal Trade Commission
shall have such procedural, investigative,
and enforcement powers, including the power
to issue procedural rules in enforcing
compliance with the requirements imposed
under this title and to require the filing
of reports, the production of documents, and
the appearance of witnesses as though the
applicable terms and conditions of the
Federal Trade Commission Act were part of
this title. Any person violating any of the
provisions of this title shall be subject to
the penalties and entitled to the privileges
and immunities provided in the Federal Trade
Commission Act as though the applicable
terms and provisions thereof were part of
this title.
- (2)(A)
In the event of a knowing violation,
which constitutes a pattern or practice
of violations of this title, the
Commission may commence a civil action
to recover a civil penalty in a district
court of the United States against any
person that violates this title. In such
action, such person shall be liable for
a civil penalty of not more than $2,500
per violation.
-
-
- (B)
In determining the amount of a civil
penalty under subparagraph (A), the
court shall take into account the
degree of culpability, any history
of prior such conduct, ability to
pay, effect on ability to continue
to do business, and such other
matters as justice may require.
-
- (3)
Notwithstanding paragraph (2), a court
may not impose any civil penalty on a
person for a violation of section
623(a)(1) [§ 1681s-2] unless the person
has been enjoined from committing the
violation, or ordered not to commit the
violation, in an action or proceeding
brought by or on behalf of the Federal
Trade Commission, and has violated the
injunction or order, and the court may
not impose any civil penalty for any
violation occurring before the date of
the violation of the injunction or
order.
(b)
Enforcement by other agencies. Compliance
with the requirements imposed under this
title with respect to consumer reporting
agencies, persons who use consumer reports
from such agencies, persons who furnish
information to such agencies, and users of
information that are subject to subsection
(d) of section 615 [§ 1681m] shall be
enforced under
- (1)
section 8 of the Federal Deposit
Insurance Act [12 U.S.C. § 1818], in the
case of
-
-
- (A)
national banks, and Federal branches
and Federal agencies of foreign
banks, by the Office of the
Comptroller of the Currency;
-
-
(B) member banks of the Federal
Reserve System (other than national
banks), branches and agencies of
foreign banks (other than Federal
branches, Federal agencies, and
insured State branches of foreign
banks), commercial lending companies
owned or controlled by foreign
banks, and organizations operating
under section 25 or 25(a) [25A] of
the Federal Reserve Act [12 U.S.C.
§§ 601 et seq., §§ 611 et seq], by
the Board of Governors of the
Federal Reserve System; and
-
-
(C) banks insured by the Federal
Deposit Insurance Corporation (other
than members of the Federal Reserve
System) and insured State branches
of foreign banks, by the Board of
Directors of the Federal Deposit
Insurance Corporation;
-
- (2)
section 8 of the Federal Deposit
Insurance Act [12 U.S.C. § 1818], by the
Director of the Office of Thrift
Supervision, in the case of a savings
association the deposits of which are
insured by the Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation;
-
- (3) the
Federal Credit Union Act [12 U.S.C. §§
1751 et seq.], by the Administrator of
the National Credit Union Administration
[National Credit Union Administration
Board] with respect to any Federal
credit union;
-
- (4)
subtitle IV of title 49 [49 U.S.C. §§
10101 et seq.], by the Secretary of
Transportation, with respect to all
carriers subject to the jurisdiction of
the Surface Transportation Board;
-
- (5) the
Federal Aviation Act of 1958 [49 U.S.C.
Appx §§ 1301 et seq.], by the Secretary
of Transportation with respect to any
air carrier or foreign air carrier
subject to that Act [49 U.S.C. Appx §§
1301 et seq.]; and
-
- (6) the
Packers and Stockyards Act, 1921 [7
U.S.C. §§ 181 et seq.] (except as
provided in section 406 of that Act [7
U.S.C. §§ 226 and 227]), by the
Secretary of Agriculture with respect to
any activities subject to that Act.
The terms
used in paragraph (1) that are not defined
in this title or otherwise defined in
section 3(s) of the Federal Deposit
Insurance Act (12 U.S.C. §1813(s)) shall
have the meaning given to them in section
1(b) of the International Banking Act of
1978 (12 U.S.C. § 3101).
(c) State
action for violations.
- (1)
Authority of states. In addition to such
other remedies as are provided under
State law, if the chief law enforcement
officer of a State, or an official or
agency designated by a State, has reason
to believe that any person has violated
or is violating this title, the State
-
-
- (A)
may bring an action to enjoin such
violation in any appropriate United
States district court or in any
other court of competent
jurisdiction;
-
-
-
- (B)
subject to paragraph (5), may bring
an action on behalf of the residents
of the State to recover
-
-
-
(i) damages for which the person
is liable to such residents
under sections 616 and 617
[§§ 1681n and 1681o] as a result
of the violation;
-
-
-
(ii) in the case of a violation
of section 623(a) [§ 1681s-2],
damages for which the person
would, but for section 623(c)
[§ 1681s-2], be liable to such
residents as a result of the
violation; or
-
-
-
(iii) damages of not more than
$1,000 for each willful or
negligent violation; and
-
-
(C) in the case of any successful
action under subparagraph (A) or
(B), shall be awarded the costs of
the action and reasonable attorney
fees as determined by the court.
-
(2) Rights of federal regulators. The
State shall serve prior written notice
of any action under paragraph (1) upon
the Federal Trade Commission or the
appropriate Federal regulator determined
under subsection (b) and provide the
Commission or appropriate Federal
regulator with a copy of its complaint,
except in any case in which such prior
notice is not feasible, in which case
the State shall serve such notice
immediately upon instituting such
action. The Federal Trade Commission or
appropriate Federal regulator shall have
the right
-
-
- (A)
to intervene in the action;
-
-
-
- (B)
upon so intervening, to be heard on
all matters arising therein;
-
-
-
- (C)
to remove the action to the
appropriate United States district
court; and
-
-
-
- (D)
to file petitions for appeal.
-
- (3)
Investigatory powers. For purposes of
bringing any action under this
subsection, nothing in this subsection
shall prevent the chief law enforcement
officer, or an official or agency
designated by a State, from exercising
the powers conferred on the chief law
enforcement officer or such official by
the laws of such State to conduct
investigations or to administer oaths or
affirmations or to compel the attendance
of witnesses or the production of
documentary and other evidence.
-
- (4)
Limitation on state action while federal
action pending. If the Federal Trade
Commission or the appropriate Federal
regulator has instituted a civil action
or an administrative action under
section 8 of the Federal Deposit
Insurance Act for a violation of this
title, no State may, during the pendency
of such action, bring an action under
this section against any defendant named
in the complaint of the Commission or
the appropriate Federal regulator for
any violation of this title that is
alleged in that complaint.
-
(5) Limitations on state actions for
violation of section 623(a)(1)
[§ 1681s-2].
-
-
- (A)
Violation of injunction required. A
State may not bring an action
against a person under paragraph
(1)(B) for a violation of section
623(a)(1) [§ 1681s-2], unless
-
-
-
-
-
(i) the person has been enjoined
from committing the violation,
in an action brought by the
State under paragraph (1)(A);
and
-
-
-
-
-
-
(ii) the person has violated the
injunction.
-
-
-
- (B)
Limitation on damages recoverable.
In an action against a person under
paragraph (1)(B) for a violation of
section 623(a)(1) [§ 1681s-2], a
State may not recover any damages
incurred before the date of the
violation of an injunction on which
the action is based.
(d)
Enforcement under other authority. For the
purpose of the exercise by any agency
referred to in subsection (b) of this
section of its powers under any Act referred
to in that subsection, a violation of any
requirement imposed under this title shall
be deemed to be a violation of a requirement
imposed under that Act. In addition to its
powers under any provision of law
specifically referred to in subsection (b)
of this section, each of the agencies
referred to in that subsection may exercise,
for the purpose of enforcing compliance with
any requirement imposed under this title any
other authority conferred on it by law.
(e)
Regulatory authority
- (1) The
Federal banking agencies referred to in
paragraphs (1) and (2) of subsection (b)
shall jointly prescribe such regulations
as necessary to carry out the purposes
of this Act with respect to any persons
identified under paragraphs (1) and (2)
of subsection (b), and the Board of
Governors of the Federal Reserve System
shall have authority to prescribe
regulations consistent with such joint
regulations with respect to bank holding
companies and affiliates (other than
depository institutions and consumer
reporting agencies) of such holding
companies.
-
- (2) The
Board of the National Credit Union
Administration shall prescribe such
regulations as necessary to carry out
the purposes of this Act with respect to
any persons identified under paragraph
(3) of subsection (b).
§
622. Information on
overdue child support obligations
[15 U.S.C. § 1681s-1]
Notwithstanding any other provision of this
title, a consumer reporting agency shall
include in any consumer report furnished by
the agency in accordance with section 604
[§ 1681b] of this title, any information on
the failure of the consumer to pay overdue
support which
- (1) is
provided
-
-
- (A)
to the consumer reporting agency by
a State or local child support
enforcement agency; or
-
-
-
- (B)
to the consumer reporting agency and
verified by any local, State, or
Federal government agency; and
-
(2) antedates the report by 7 years or
less.
§
623. Responsibilities of
furnishers of information to consumer
reporting agencies [15 U.S.C.
§ 1681s-2]
(a) Duty of
furnishers of information to provide
accurate information.
- (1)
Prohibition.
-
-
- (A)
Reporting information with actual
knowledge of errors. A person shall
not furnish any information relating
to a consumer to any consumer
reporting agency if the person knows
or consciously avoids knowing that
the information is inaccurate.
-
-
-
- (B)
Reporting information after notice
and confirmation of errors. A person
shall not furnish information
relating to a consumer to any
consumer reporting agency if
-
-
-
-
-
(i) the person has been notified
by the consumer, at the address
specified by the person for such
notices, that specific
information is inaccurate; and
-
-
-
-
-
-
(ii) the information is, in
fact, inaccurate.
-
-
-
- (C)
No address requirement. A person who
clearly and conspicuously specifies
to the consumer an address for
notices referred to in subparagraph
(B) shall not be subject to
subparagraph (A); however, nothing
in subparagraph (B) shall require a
person to specify such an address.
-
- (2) Duty
to correct and update information. A
person who
-
-
- (A)
regularly and in the ordinary course
of business furnishes information to
one or more consumer reporting
agencies about the person's
transactions or experiences with any
consumer; and
-
-
-
- (B)
has furnished to a consumer
reporting agency information that
the person determines is not
complete or accurate, shall promptly
notify the consumer reporting agency
of that determination and provide to
the agency any corrections to that
information, or any additional
information, that is necessary to
make the information provided by the
person to the agency complete and
accurate, and shall not thereafter
furnish to the agency any of the
information that remains not
complete or accurate.
-
- (3) Duty
to provide notice of dispute. If the
completeness or accuracy of any
information furnished by any person to
any consumer reporting agency is
disputed to such person by a consumer,
the person may not furnish the
information to any consumer reporting
agency without notice that such
information is disputed by the consumer.
-
- (4) Duty
to provide notice of closed accounts. A
person who regularly and in the ordinary
course of business furnishes information
to a consumer reporting agency regarding
a consumer who has a credit account with
that person shall notify the agency of
the voluntary closure of the account by
the consumer, in information regularly
furnished for the period in which the
account is closed.
-
- (5) Duty
to provide notice of delinquency of
accounts. A person who furnishes
information to a consumer reporting
agency regarding a delinquent account
being placed for collection, charged to
profit or loss, or subjected to any
similar action shall, not later than 90
days after furnishing the information,
notify the agency of the month and year
of the commencement of the delinquency
that immediately preceded the action.
(b) Duties of
furnishers of information upon notice of
dispute.
- (1) In
general. After receiving notice pursuant
to section 611(a)(2) [§ 1681i] of a
dispute with regard to the completeness
or accuracy of any information provided
by a person to a consumer reporting
agency, the person shall
-
-
- (A)
conduct an investigation with
respect to the disputed information;
-
-
-
- (B)
review all relevant information
provided by the consumer reporting
agency pursuant to section 611(a)(2)
[§ 1681i];
-
-
-
- (C)
report the results of the
investigation to the consumer
reporting agency; and
-
-
-
- (D)
if the investigation finds that the
information is incomplete or
inaccurate, report those results to
all other consumer reporting
agencies to which the person
furnished the information and that
compile and maintain files on
consumers on a nationwide basis.
-
- (2)
Deadline. A person shall complete all
investigations, reviews, and reports
required under paragraph (1) regarding
information provided by the person to a
consumer reporting agency, before the
expiration of the period under section
611(a)(1) [§ 1681i] within which the
consumer reporting agency is required to
complete actions required by that
section regarding that information.
(c)
Limitation on liability. Sections 616 and
617 [§§ 1681n and 1681o] do not apply to any
failure to comply with subsection (a),
except as provided in section 621(c)(1)(B)
[§ 1681s].
(d)
Limitation on enforcement. Subsection (a)
shall be enforced exclusively under section
621 [§ 1681s] by the Federal agencies and
officials and the State officials identified
in that section.
§
624. Relation to State
laws [15 U.S.C. § 1681t]
(a) In
general. Except as provided in subsections
(b) and (c), this title does not annul,
alter, affect, or exempt any person subject
to the provisions of this title from
complying with the laws of any State with
respect to the collection, distribution, or
use of any information on consumers, except
to the extent that those laws are
inconsistent with any provision of this
title, and then only to the extent of the
inconsistency.
(b) General
exceptions. No requirement or prohibition
may be imposed under the laws of any State
- (1) with
respect to any subject matter regulated
under
-
-
- (A)
subsection (c) or (e) of section 604
[§ 1681b], relating to the
prescreening of consumer reports;
-
-
-
- (B)
section 611 [§ 1681i], relating to
the time by which a consumer
reporting agency must take any
action, including the provision of
notification to a consumer or other
person, in any procedure related to
the disputed accuracy of information
in a consumer's file, except that
this subparagraph shall not apply to
any State law in effect on the date
of enactment of the Consumer Credit
Reporting Reform Act of 1996;
-
-
-
- (C)
subsections (a) and (b) of section
615 [§ 1681m], relating to the
duties of a person who takes any
adverse action with respect to a
consumer;
-
-
-
- (D)
section 615(d) [§ 1681m], relating
to the duties of persons who use a
consumer report of a consumer in
connection with any credit or
insurance transaction that is not
initiated by the consumer and that
consists of a firm offer of credit
or insurance;
-
-
-
- (E)
section 605 [§ 1681c], relating to
information contained in consumer
reports, except that this
subparagraph shall not apply to any
State law in effect on the date of
enactment of the Consumer Credit
Reporting Reform Act of 1996; or
-
-
-
- (F)
section 623 [§ 1681s-2], relating to
the responsibilities of persons who
furnish information to consumer
reporting agencies, except that this
paragraph shall not apply
-
-
-
-
-
(i) with respect to section
54A(a) of chapter 93 of the
Massachusetts Annotated Laws (as
in effect on the date of
enactment of the Consumer Credit
Reporting Reform Act of 1996);
or
-
-
-
-
-
-
(ii) with respect to section
1785.25(a) of the California
Civil Code (as in effect on the
date of enactment of the
Consumer Credit Reporting Reform
Act of 1996);
-
- (2) with
respect to the exchange of information
among persons affiliated by common
ownership or common corporate control,
except that this paragraph shall not
apply with respect to subsection (a) or
(c)(1) of section 2480e of title 9,
Vermont Statutes Annotated (as in effect
on the date of enactment of the Consumer
Credit Reporting Reform Act of 1996); or
-
- (3) with
respect to the form and content of any
disclosure required to be made under
section 609(c) [§ 1681g].
(c)
Definition of firm offer of credit or
insurance. Notwithstanding any definition of
the term "firm offer of credit or insurance"
(or any equivalent term) under the laws of
any State, the definition of that term
contained in section 603(l)
[§ 1681a] shall be construed to apply in the
enforcement and interpretation of the laws
of any State governing consumer reports.
(d)
Limitations. Subsections (b) and (c)
- (1) do
not affect any settlement, agreement, or
consent judgment between any State
Attorney General and any consumer
reporting agency in effect on the date
of enactment of the Consumer Credit
Reporting Reform Act of 1996; and
-
- (2) do
not apply to any provision of State law
(including any provision of a State
constitution) that
-
-
- (A)
is enacted after January 1, 2004;
-
-
-
- (B)
states explicitly that the provision
is intended to supplement this
title; and
-
-
-
- (C)
gives greater protection to
consumers than is provided under
this title.
§
625. Disclosures to FBI
for counterintelligence purposes
[15 U.S.C. § 1681u]
(a) Identity
of financial institutions. Notwithstanding
section 604 [§ 1681b] or any other provision
of this title, a consumer reporting agency
shall furnish to the Federal Bureau of
Investigation the names and addresses of all
financial institutions (as that term is
defined in section 1101 of the Right to
Financial Privacy Act of 1978 [12 U.S.C. §
3401]) at which a consumer maintains or has
maintained an account, to the extent that
information is in the files of the agency,
when presented with a written request for
that information, signed by the Director of
the Federal Bureau of Investigation, or the
Director's designee in a position not lower
than Deputy Assistant Director at Bureau
headquarters or a Special Agent in Charge of
a Bureau field office designated by the
Director, which certifies compliance with
this section. The Director or the Director's
designee may make such a certification only
if the Director or the Director's designee
has determined in writing, that such
information is sought for the conduct of an
authorized investigation to protect against
international terrorism or clandestine
intelligence activities, provided that such
an investigation of a United States person
is not conducted solely upon the basis of
activities protected by the first amendment
to the Constitution of the United States.
(b)
Identifying information. Notwithstanding the
provisions of section 604 [§ 1681b] or any
other provision of this title, a consumer
reporting agency shall furnish identifying
information respecting a consumer, limited
to name, address, former addresses, places
of employment, or former places of
employment, to the Federal Bureau of
Investigation when presented with a written
request, signed by the Director or the
Director's designee, which certifies
compliance with this subsection. The
Director or the Director's designee in a
position not lower than Deputy Assistant
Director at Bureau headquarters or a Special
Agent in Charge of a Bureau field office
designated by the Director may make such a
certification only if the Director or the
Director's designee has determined in
writing that such information is sought for
the conduct of an authorized investigation
to protect against international terrorism
or clandestine intelligence activities,
provided that such an investigation of a
United States person is not conducted solely
upon the basis of activities protected by
the first amendment to the Constitution of
the United States.
(c) Court
order for disclosure of consumer reports.
Notwithstanding section 604 [§ 1681b] or any
other provision of this title, if requested
in writing by the Director of the Federal
Bureau of Investigation, or a designee of
the Director in a position not lower than
Deputy Assistant Director at Bureau
headquarters or a Special Agent in Charge of
a Bureau field office designated by the
Director, a court may issue an order ex
parte directing a consumer reporting agency
to furnish a consumer report to the Federal
Bureau of Investigation, upon a showing in
camera that the consumer report is sought
for the conduct of an authorized
investigation to protect against
international terrorism or clandestine
intelligence activities, provided that such
an investigation of a United States person
is not conducted solely upon the basis of
activities protected by the first amendment
to the Constitution of the United States.
The terms of
an order issued under this subsection shall
not disclose that the order is issued for
purposes of a counterintelligence
investigation.
(d)
Confidentiality. No consumer reporting
agency or officer, employee, or agent of a
consumer reporting agency shall disclose to
any person, other than those officers,
employees, or agents of a consumer reporting
agency necessary to fulfill the requirement
to disclose information to the Federal
Bureau of Investigation under this section,
that the Federal Bureau of Investigation has
sought or obtained the identity of financial
institutions or a consumer report respecting
any consumer under subsection (a), (b), or
(c), and no consumer reporting agency or
officer, employee, or agent of a consumer
reporting agency shall include in any
consumer report any information that would
indicate that the Federal Bureau of
Investigation has sought or obtained such
information or a consumer report.
(e) Payment
of fees. The Federal Bureau of Investigation
shall, subject to the availability of
appropriations, pay to the consumer
reporting agency assembling or providing
report or information in accordance with
procedures established under this section a
fee for reimbursement for such costs as are
reasonably necessary and which have been
directly incurred in searching, reproducing,
or transporting books, papers, records, or
other data required or requested to be
produced under this section.
(f) Limit on
dissemination. The Federal Bureau of
Investigation may not disseminate
information obtained pursuant to this
section outside of the Federal Bureau of
Investigation, except to other Federal
agencies as may be necessary for the
approval or conduct of a foreign
counterintelligence investigation, or, where
the information concerns a person subject to
the Uniform Code of Military Justice, to
appropriate investigative authorities within
the military department concerned as may be
necessary for the conduct of a joint foreign
counterintelligence investigation.
(g) Rules of
construction. Nothing in this section shall
be construed to prohibit information from
being furnished by the Federal Bureau of
Investigation pursuant to a subpoena or
court order, in connection with a judicial
or administrative proceeding to enforce the
provisions of this Act. Nothing in this
section shall be construed to authorize or
permit the withholding of information from
the Congress.
(h) Reports
to Congress. On a semiannual basis, the
Attorney General shall fully inform the
Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence
and the Committee on Banking, Finance and
Urban Affairs of the House of
Representatives, and the Select Committee on
Intelligence and the Committee on Banking,
Housing, and Urban Affairs of the Senate
concerning all requests made pursuant to
subsections (a), (b), and (c).
(i) Damages.
Any agency or department of the United
States obtaining or disclosing any consumer
reports, records, or information contained
therein in violation of this section is
liable to the consumer to whom such consumer
reports, records, or information relate in
an amount equal to the sum of
- (1)
$100, without regard to the volume of
consumer reports, records, or
information involved;
-
- (2) any
actual damages sustained by the consumer
as a result of the disclosure;
-
- (3) if
the violation is found to have been
willful or intentional, such punitive
damages as a court may allow; and
-
- (4) in
the case of any successful action to
enforce liability under this subsection,
the costs of the action, together with
reasonable attorney fees, as determined
by the court.
(j)
Disciplinary actions for violations. If a
court determines that any agency or
department of the United States has violated
any provision of this section and the court
finds that the circumstances surrounding the
violation raise questions of whether or not
an officer or employee of the agency or
department acted willfully or intentionally
with respect to the violation, the agency or
department shall promptly initiate a
proceeding to determine whether or not
disciplinary action is warranted against the
officer or employee who was responsible for
the violation.
(k)
Good-faith exception. Notwithstanding any
other provision of this title, any consumer
reporting agency or agent or employee
thereof making disclosure of consumer
reports or identifying information pursuant
to this subsection in good-faith reliance
upon a certification of the Federal Bureau
of Investigation pursuant to provisions of
this section shall not be liable to any
person for such disclosure under this title,
the constitution of any State, or any law or
regulation of any State or any political
subdivision of any State.
(l)
Limitation of remedies. Notwithstanding any
other provision of this title, the remedies
and sanctions set forth in this section
shall be the only judicial remedies and
sanctions for violation of this section.
(m)
Injunctive relief. In addition to any other
remedy contained in this section, injunctive
relief shall be available to require
compliance with the procedures of this
section. In the event of any successful
action under this subsection, costs together
with reasonable attorney fees, as determined
by the court, may be recovered.
§ 626.
Disclosures to governmental agencies for
counterterrorism purposes [15
U.S.C. §1681v]
(a) Disclosure.
Notwithstanding section 604 or any other
provision of this title, a consumer
reporting agency shall furnish a consumer
report of a consumer and all other
information in a consumer's file to a
government agency authorized to conduct
investigations of, or intelligence or
counterintelligence activities or analysis
related to, international terrorism when
presented with a written certification by
such government agency that such information
is necessary for the agency's conduct or
such investigation, activity or analysis.
(b) Form of
certification. The certification described
in subsection (a) shall be signed by a
supervisory official designated by the head
of a Federal agency or an officer of a
Federal agency whose appointment to office
is required to be made by the President, by
and with the advice and consent of the
Senate.
(c)
Confidentiality. No consumer reporting
agency, or officer, employee, or agent of
such consumer reporting agency, shall
disclose to any person, or specify in any
consumer report, that a government agency
has sought or obtained access to information
under subsection (a).
(d) Rule of
construction. Nothing in section 625 shall
be construed to limit the authority of the
Director of the Federal Bureau of
Investigation under this section.
(e) Safe
harbor. Notwithstanding any other provision
of this title, any consumer reporting agency
or agent or employee thereof making
disclosure of consumer reports or other
information pursuant to this section in
good-faith reliance upon a certification of
a governmental agency pursuant to the
provisions of this section shall not be
liable to any person for such disclosure
under this subchapter, the constitution of
any State, or any law or regulation of any
State or any political subdivision of any
State.
Legislative History
- House
Reports:
- No.
91-975 (Comm. on Banking and Currency)
and
- No.
91-1587 (Comm. of Conference)
-
- Senate
Reports:
- No.
91-1139 accompanying S. 3678 (Comm. on
Banking and Currency)
-
-
Congressional Record, Vol. 116 (1970)
- May 25,
considered and passed House.
- Sept.
18, considered and passed Senate,
amended.
- Oct. 9,
Senate agreed to conference report.
- Oct. 13,
House agreed to conference report.
-
-
Enactment:
- Public
Law No. 91-508 (October 26, 1970):
-
-
Amendments: Public Law Nos.
- 95-473
(October 17, 1978)
- 95-598
(November 6, 1978)
- 98-443
(October 4, 1984)
- 101-73
(August 9, 1989)
- 102-242
(December 19, 1991)
- 102-537
(October 27, 1992)
- 102-550
(October 28, 1992)
- 103-325
(September 23, 1994)
- 104-88
(December 29, 1995)
- 104-93
(January 6, 1996)
- 104-193
(August 22, 1996)
- 104-208
(September 30, 1996)
- 105-107
(November 20, 1997)
- 105-347
(November 2, 1998)
- 106-102
(November 12, 1999)
- 107-56
(October 26, 2001)
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Endnotes:
1. The reporting periods
have been lengthened for certain adverse
information pertaining to U.S. Government
insured or guaranteed student loans, or
pertaining to national direct student loans.
See sections 430A(f) and 463(c)(3) of the
Higher Education Act of 1965, 20 U.S.C.
1080a(f) and 20 U.S.C. 1087cc(c)(3),
respectively.
2. Should read
"paragraphs (4) and
(5)...."
Prior Section 605(a)(6) was amended and
re-designated as Section 605(a)(5) in
November 1998.
3. The Federal Trade
Commission increased the maximum allowable
charge to $9.00, effective January 1, 2002.
66 Fed. Reg. 63545 (Dec. 7, 2001).
NOTE: This document is provided for
reference purposes only. The source of this document is found
here:
http://www.ftc.gov/os/statutes/fcra.htm.
BackgroundsUSA makes every effort to keep
this document up-to-date, and current with
present legislative changes, but in the
event that a discrepancy exists, the parent
document to be found at the URL listed above
is to be considered the prevailing document
in the event of any kind of dispute that is
directly or indirectly related to the FCRA. |