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Department
of Highway Safety and Motor Vehicles
SPECIAL
LEGAL BULLETIN No. 2 |
| Florida Statutes Section 316.066, Written reports of crashes, was recently amended (effective 6/5/01) in order to protect the privacy of crash victims and to deter the filing of fraudulent insurance claims immediately after a crash. Ch. 2001-163, amending §316.066, Fla. Stat. (2000)(HB 1805). In summary, the amendments make crash reports that reveal personal information concerning parties to motor vehicle crashes confidential and exempt from public disclosure for 60 days after the date the report is filed. However, crash reports, including the personal information, may be made immediately available to the parties involved in the crash and other parties specified in the amended statute. The amendments also provide criminal penalties (third degree felony) for the unlawful disclosure of confidential personal information and for unlawfully obtaining or attempting to obtain confidential personal information. No definition is provided for the term "other personal information" used in subsection (3)(c) of the amended statute. Given the legislative intent, "other personal information" should be read to include any personal information that would allow someone to solicit crash victims, such as pager and cellular telephone numbers, hotel and temporary addresses. It will be our position that the entire crash report is exempt for the sixty-day period. The amended and added portions of the statute are on the reverse side. Paragraph (c) of subsection (3) was amended by deleting the prior text and adding the text below, and paragraphs (d) and (e) were added to subsection (3). Section 2 of the bill gives the legislative intent and findings behind the exemption. Questions regarding this Legal Bulletin should be directed to the local state attorney or the Office of General Counsel (850) 488-1606, SunCom 278-1606. Officers from other law enforcement agencies should contact their respective legal advisors prior to taking action based upon this Legal Bulletin. Approved by Enoch J. Whitney, General Counsel; Edited by Judson Chapman, Assistant General Counsel. *316.066 Written reports of crashes.-- (3)(c) Crash reports required by this section which reveal the identity, home or employment telephone number or home or employment address of, or other personal information concerning the parties involved in the crash and which are received or prepared by any agency that regularly receives or prepares information from or concerning the parties to motor vehicle crashes are confidential and exempt from s. 119.07(1) and s. 24(a), Art. I of 9;- 1 -the State Constitution for a period of 60 days after the date the report is filed. However, such reports may be made immediately available to the parties involved in the crash, their legal representatives, their licensed insurance agents, their insurers or insurers to which they have applied for coverage, persons under contract with such insurers to provide claims or underwriting information, prosecutorial authorities, radio and television stations licensed by the Federal Communications Commission, newspapers qualified to publish legal notices under ss. 50.011 and 50.031, and free newspapers of general circulation, published once a week or more often, available and of interest to the public generally for the dissemination of news. For the purposes of this section, the following products or publications are not newspapers as referred to in this section: those intended primarily for members of a particular profession or occupational group; those with the primary purpose of distributing advertising; and those with the primary purpose of publishing names and other personally identifying information concerning parties to motor vehicle crashes. Any state or federal agency that is authorized to have access to such reports by any provision of law shall be granted such access in the furtherance of the agency's statutory duties notwithstanding the provisions of this paragraph. Any person attempting to access crash reports within 60 days after the date the report is filed must present legitimate credentials or identification that demonstrates his or her qualifications to access that information. This exemption is subject to the Open Government Sunset Review Act of 1995 in accordance with s. 119.15, and shall stand repealed on October 2, 2006, unless reviewed and saved from repeal through reenactment by the Legislature. (d) Any employee of a state or local agency in possession of information made confidential by this section who knowingly discloses such confidential information to a person not entitled to access such information under this section is guilty of a felony of the third degree, punishable as provided in s. 775.082, s. 775.083, or s. 775.084. (e) Any person, knowing that he or she is not entitled to obtain information made confidential by this section, who obtains or attempts to obtain such information is guilty of a felony of the third degree, punishable as provided in s. 775.082, s. 775.083, or s. 775.084. *The above amendments were obtained from the Florida Online Sunshine Internet site (www.myflorida.com) and are subject to editing for arrangement and grammatical structure by the Division of Statutory Revision for the Official Florida Statutes, 2001. Question: During the first 60 days after filing of the crash report, is the entire report exempt from public record?
Question: If the report remains a public record during the 60-day period, who can lawfully purchase the crash report?
Question: If the report remains a public record what items are required to be redacted for those persons or other entities not entitled to a nonredacted report?
Question: Can a private reporting pickup service representing law firms and insurance companies purchase copies of nonredacted crash reports during the 60-day exemption period?
Question: Presently, there is a prohibition on asking the identity of individuals requesting public records including crash reports. Is that prohibition lifted with the implementation of the revisions to Section 316.066, Florida Statutes?
Question: All crash reports, where a citation is issued, are forwarded to the Clerk of the Court. The statute refers to State and Federal authorities and makes no mention of "governmental agencies". Shall this practice continue?
Question: Many times, parties involved in traffic crashes will telephone the office seeking information that was not readily available at the time of the crash (insurance information, etc.). The records clerk would routinely provide this information over the telephone to the party after reviewing the report. What procedure should we follow in providing this information to parties entitled to original crash information especially if they are out of state (tourist)? Additionally, if a report has been provided to a party in compliance with this statute and an update is later completed, is the individual required to resubmit a request for this new information?
Question: In an attempt to avoid confusion and to assist the public and records staff, should the "Request for Traffic Crash Report," form be provided to all parties involved in a traffic crash at the scene?
Question: Other than individual parties involved in traffic crashes, what will be acceptable "supporting credentials or identification" for insurance agents, attorneys, crash report pick up services, etc., to present when obtaining crash reports?
Question: The majority of public records request are completed by mail at this office. What will be the procedure for handling mail requests for crash reports?
Question: Obviously this sounds silly but in keeping with the statute language, "parties involved in the crash", can a family member, friend, room mate, etc., obtain a copy of the report on behalf of a party due to injuries or death?
Question: Shouldn’t specific crash data be included on each request form (i.e. parties involved, date, location) to document compliance with the requirements of this statute?
Question: Do we need a separate form for each crash report?
Additional questions
will likely arise from the implementation of this statutory revision.
All questions having a potential for statewide impact should be submitted
through the chain-of-command to Lt. Colonel Billy Dickson. Lt. Colonel
Dickson will be responsible for the forwarding of answers to all Troop
Commanders. |
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