There Is a Newer Version of the California Code
2005 California Penal Code Sections 13848-13848.8 PROSECUTION PROGRAM
PENAL CODESECTION 13848-13848.8
13848. (a) It is the intent of the Legislature in enacting this chapter to provide local law enforcement and district attorneys with the tools necessary to successfully interdict the promulgation of high technology crime. According to the federal Law Enforcement Training Center, it is expected that states will see a tremendous growth in high technology crimes over the next few years as computers become more available and computer users more skilled in utilizing technology to commit these faceless crimes. High technology crimes are those crimes in which technology is used as an instrument in committing, or assisting in the commission of, a crime, or which is the target of a criminal act. (b) Funds provided under this program are intended to ensure that law enforcement is equipped with the necessary personnel and equipment to successfully combat high technology crime which includes, but is not limited to, the following offenses: (1) White-collar crime, such as check, automated teller machine, and credit card fraud, committed by means of electronic or computer-related media. (2) Unlawful access, destruction of or unauthorized entry into and use of private, corporate, or government computers and networks, including wireless and wireline communications networks and law enforcement dispatch systems, and the theft, interception, manipulation, destruction, or unauthorized disclosure of data stored within those computers and networks. (3) Money laundering accomplished with the aid of computer networks or electronic banking transfers. (4) Theft and resale of telephone calling codes, theft of telecommunications service, theft of wireless communication service, and theft of cable television services by manipulation of the equipment used to receive those services. (5) Software piracy and other unlawful duplication of information. (6) Theft and resale of computer components and other high technology products produced by the high technology industry. (7) Remarking and counterfeiting of computer hardware and software. (8) Theft of trade secrets. (c) This program is also intended to provide support to law enforcement agencies by providing technical assistance to those agencies with respect to the seizure and analysis of computer systems used to commit high technology crimes or store evidence relating to those crimes. 13848.2. (a) There is hereby established in the agency or agencies designated by the Director of Finance pursuant to Section 13820 a program of financial and technical assistance for law enforcement and district attorneys' offices, designated the High Technology Theft Apprehension and Prosecution Program. All funds appropriated to the agency or agencies designated by the Director of Finance pursuant to Section 13820 for the purposes of this chapter shall be administered and disbursed by the executive director of the office in consultation with the High Technology Crime Advisory Committee as established in Section 13848.6 and shall to the extent feasible be coordinated with federal funds and private grants or private donations that are made available for these purposes. (b) The Executive Director of the agency or agencies designated by the Director of Finance pursuant to Section 13820 is authorized to allocate and award funds to regional high technology crime programs which are established in compliance with Section 13848.4. (c) The allocation and award of funds under this chapter shall be made on application executed by the district attorney, county sheriff, or chief of police and approved by the board of supervisors for each county that is a participant of a high technology theft apprehension and prosecution unit. (d) In identifying program areas that will be eligible for competitive application during the 1998-99 fiscal year for federal funding pursuant to the Edward Byrne Memorial State and Local Law Enforcement Assistance Programs (Subchapter V (commencing with Section 3750) of Chapter 46 of the United States Code), the agency or agencies designated by the Director of Finance pursuant to Section 13820 shall include, to the extent possible, an emphasis on high technology crime by selecting funding areas that would further the use of federal funds to address high technology crime and facilitate the establishment of high technology multijurisdictional task forces. (e) The agency or agencies designated by the Director of Finance pursuant to Section 13820 shall allocate any increase in federal funding pursuant to the Anti-Drug Abuse Act (Public Law 100-690) for the 1998-99 fiscal year to those programs described in subdivision (d). 13848.4. (a) All funds appropriated to the agency or agencies designated by the Director of Finance pursuant to Section 13820 for the purposes of this chapter shall be deposited in the High Technology Theft Apprehension and Prosecution Program Trust Fund, which is hereby established. The fund shall be under the direction and control of the executive director. Moneys in the fund, upon appropriation by the Legislature, shall be expended to implement this chapter. (b) Moneys in the High Technology Theft Apprehension and Prosecution Program Trust Fund shall be expended to fund programs to enhance the capacity of local law enforcement and prosecutors to deter, investigate, and prosecute high technology related crimes. After deduction of the actual and necessary administrative costs referred to in subdivision (f), the High Technology Theft Apprehension and Prosecution Program Trust Fund shall be expended to fund programs to enhance the capacity of local law enforcement, state police, and local prosecutors to deter, investigate, and prosecute high technology related crimes. Any funds distributed under this chapter shall be expended for the exclusive purpose of deterring, investigating, and prosecuting high technology related crimes. (c) Up to 10 percent of the funds shall be used for developing and maintaining a statewide database on high technology crime for use in developing and distributing intelligence information to participating law enforcement agencies. In addition, the Executive Director of the agency or agencies designated by the Director of Finance pursuant to Section 13820 may allocate and award up to 5 percent of the funds available to public agencies or private nonprofit organizations for the purposes of establishing statewide programs of education, training, and research for public prosecutors, investigators, and law enforcement officers relating to deterring, investigating, and prosecuting high technology related crimes. Any funds not expended in a fiscal year for these purposes shall be distributed to regional high technology theft task forces pursuant to subdivision (b). (d) Any regional task force receiving funds under this section may elect to have the Department of Justice administer the regional task force program. The department may be reimbursed for any expenditures incurred for administering a regional task force from funds given to local law enforcement pursuant to subdivision (b). (e) The agency or agencies designated by the Director of Finance pursuant to Section 13820 shall distribute funds in the High Technology Theft Apprehension and Prosecution Program Trust Fund to eligible agencies pursuant to subdivision (b) in consultation with the High Technology Crime Advisory Committee established pursuant to Section 13848.6. (f) Administration of the overall program and the evaluation and monitoring of all grants made pursuant to this chapter shall be performed by the agency or agencies designated by the Director of Finance pursuant to Section 13820, provided that funds expended for these functions shall not exceed 5 percent of the total amount made available under this chapter. 13848.6. (a) The High Technology Crime Advisory Committee is hereby established for the purpose of formulating a comprehensive written strategy for addressing high technology crime throughout the state, with the exception of crimes that occur on state property or are committed against state employees, and to advise the agency or agencies designated by the Director of Finance pursuant to Section 13820 on the appropriate disbursement of funds to regional task forces. (b) This strategy shall be designed to be implemented through regional task forces. In formulating that strategy, the committee shall identify various priorities for law enforcement attention, including the following goals: (1) To apprehend and prosecute criminal organizations, networks, and groups of individuals engaged in the following activities: (A) Theft of computer components and other high technology products. (B) Violations of Penal Code Sections 211, 350, 351a, 459, 496, 537e, 593d, and 593e. (C) Theft of telecommunications services and other violations of Penal Code Sections 502.7 and 502.8. (D) Counterfeiting of negotiable instruments and other valuable items through the use of computer technology. (E) Creation and distribution of counterfeit software and other digital information, including the use of counterfeit trademarks to misrepresent the origin of that software or digital information. (2) To apprehend and prosecute individuals and groups engaged in the unlawful access, destruction, or unauthorized entry into and use of private, corporate, or government computers and networks, including wireless and wire line communications networks and law enforcement dispatch systems, and the theft, interception, manipulation, destruction, and unauthorized disclosure of data stored within those computers. (3) To apprehend and prosecute individuals and groups engaged in the theft of trade secrets. (4) To investigate and prosecute high technology crime cases requiring coordination and cooperation between regional task forces and local, state, federal, and international law enforcement agencies. (c) The Executive Director of the agency or agencies designated by the Director of Finance pursuant to Section 13820 shall appoint the following members to the committee: (1) A designee of the California District Attorneys Association. (2) A designee of the California State Sheriffs Association. (3) A designee of the California Police Chiefs Association. (4) A designee of the Attorney General. (5) A designee of the California Highway Patrol. (6) A designee of the High Technology Crime Investigation Association. (7) A designee of the agency or agencies designated by the Director of Finance pursuant to Section 13820. (8) A designee of the American Electronic Association to represent California computer system manufacturers. (9) A designee of the American Electronic Association to represent California computer software producers. (10) A designee of the California Cellular Carriers Association. (11) A representative of the California Internet industry. (12) A designee of the Semiconductor Equipment and Materials International. (13) A designee of the California Cable Television Association. (14) A designee of the Motion Picture Association of America. (15) A designee of either the California Telephone Association or the California Association of Competitive Telecommunication Companies. This position shall rotate every other year between designees of the two associations. (16) A representative of the California banking industry. (17) A representative of the Office of Privacy Protection. (18) A representative of the Department of Finance. (d) The Executive Director of the agency or agencies designated by the Director of Finance pursuant to Section 13820 shall designate the Chair of the High Technology Crime Advisory Committee from the appointed members. (e) The advisory committee shall not be required to meet more than 12 times per year. The advisory committee may create subcommittees of its own membership, and each subcommittee shall meet as often as the subcommittee members find necessary. It is the intent of the Legislature that all advisory committee members shall actively participate in all advisory committee deliberations required by this chapter. Any member who, without advance notice to the executive director and without designating an alternative representative, misses three scheduled meetings in any calendar year for any reason other than severe temporary illness or injury (as determined by the Executive Director of the agency or agencies designated by the Director of Finance pursuant to Section 13820) shall automatically be removed from the advisory committee. If a member wishes to send an alternative representative in his or her place, advance written notification of this substitution shall be presented to the executive director. This notification shall be required for each meeting the appointed member elects not to attend. Members of the advisory committee shall receive no compensation for their services, but shall be reimbursed for travel and per diem expenses incurred as a result of attending meetings sponsored by the agency or agencies designated by the Director of Finance pursuant to Section 13820 under this chapter. (f) The executive director, in consultation with the High Technology Crime Advisory Committee, shall develop specific guidelines and administrative procedures for the selection of projects to be funded by the High Technology Theft Apprehension and Prosecution Program, which guidelines shall include the following selection criteria: (1) Each regional task force that seeks funds shall submit a written application to the committee setting forth in detail the proposed use of the funds. (2) In order to qualify for the receipt of funds, each proposed regional task force submitting an application shall provide written evidence that the agency meets either of the following conditions: (A) The regional task force devoted to the investigation and prosecution of high technology-related crimes is comprised of local law enforcement and prosecutors, and has been in existence for at least one year prior to the application date. (B) At least one member of the task force has at least three years of experience in investigating or prosecuting cases of suspected high technology crime. (3) Each regional task force shall be identified by a name that is appropriate to the area that it serves. In order to qualify for funds, a regional task force shall be comprised of local law enforcement and prosecutors from at least two counties. At the time of funding, the proposed task force shall also have at least one investigator assigned to it from a state law enforcement agency. Each task force shall be directed by a local steering committee composed of representatives of participating agencies and members of the local high technology industry. (4) The California High Technology Crimes Task Force shall be comprised of each regional task force developed pursuant to this subdivision. (5) Additional criteria that shall be considered by the advisory committee in awarding grant funds shall include, but not be limited to, the following: (A) The number of high technology crime cases filed in the prior year. (B) The number of high technology crime cases investigated in the prior year. (C) The number of victims involved in the cases filed. (D) The total aggregate monetary loss suffered by the victims, including individuals, associations, institutions, or corporations, as a result of the high technology crime cases filed, and those under active investigation by that task force. (6) Each regional task force that has been awarded funds authorized under the High Technology Theft Apprehension and Prosecution Program during the previous grant-funding cycle, upon reapplication for funds to the committee in each successive year, shall be required to submit a detailed accounting of funds received and expended in the prior year in addition to any information required by this section. The accounting shall include all of the following information: (A) The amount of funds received and expended. (B) The use to which those funds were put, including payment of salaries and expenses, purchase of equipment and supplies, and other expenditures by type. (C) The number of filed complaints, investigations, arrests, and convictions that resulted from the expenditure of the funds. (g) The committee shall annually review the effectiveness of the California High Technology Crimes Task Force in deterring, investigating, and prosecuting high technology crimes and provide its findings in a report to the Legislature and the Governor. This report shall be based on information provided by the regional task forces in an annual report to the committee which shall detail the following: (1) Facts based upon, but not limited to, the following: (A) The number of high technology crime cases filed in the prior year. (B) The number of high technology crime cases investigated in the prior year. (C) The number of victims involved in the cases filed. (D) The number of convictions obtained in the prior year. (E) The total aggregate monetary loss suffered by the victims, including individuals, associations, institutions, corporations, and other relevant public entities, according to the number of cases filed, investigations, prosecutions, and convictions obtained. (2) An accounting of funds received and expended in the prior year, which shall include all of the following: (A) The amount of funds received and expended. (B) The uses to which those funds were put, including payment of salaries and expenses, purchase of supplies, and other expenditures of funds. (C) Any other relevant information requested. 13848.8. (a) The executive director of the agency or agencies designated by the Director of Finance pursuant to Section 13820 shall also appoint the following members to the High Technology Crime Advisory Committee established by Section 13848.6: (1) A designee of the Recording Association of America. (2) A designee of the Consumers Union. (b) The High Technology Crime Advisory Committee, in formulating a comprehensive written strategy for addressing high technology crime throughout the state, shall identify, in addition to the various priorities for law enforcement attention specified in subdivision (b) of Section 13848.6, the goal of apprehending and prosecuting criminal organizations, networks, and groups of individuals engaged in the following activities: (1) Violations of Sections 653h, 653s, and 635w. (2) The creation and distribution of pirated sound recordings or audiovisual works or the failure to disclose the origin of a recording or audiovisual work.
Disclaimer: These codes may not be the most recent version. California may have more current or accurate information. We make no warranties or guarantees about the accuracy, completeness, or adequacy of the information contained on this site or the information linked to on the state site. Please check official sources.
This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google
Privacy Policy and
Terms of Service apply.