(1) A person commits unauthorized trading in telephone records if the person, without lawful authorization:
Knowingly procures or attempts to procure a telephone record;
Knowingly sells, buys, offers to sell, or offers to buy a telephone record;
Possesses a telephone record with the intent to use such record, or information contained in such record, to harm another person; or
Receives a telephone record of a resident of Colorado knowing that such record wasobtained without lawful authorization or by fraud or deception.
(2) For the purposes of this section:
"Lawful authorization" means authorization from the person or the agent of the person to whom the telephone number is assigned or from the person or the agent of the person who purchases the telephone service.
"Procure" means to obtain by any means, with or without consideration.
"Telecommunications provider" means a company and its affiliates that provide commercial telephone service to a customer, irrespective of the technology employed, including, without limitation, wired, wireless, cable, broadband, satellite, or voice-over-internet protocol.
(I) "Telephone record" means information retained by a telecommunications providerthat relates to the number dialed by the customer or subscriber, to the number of a person who dialed the customer, or to other data that are typically contained on a customer's telephone bill for either wired or wireless telephone service, including, without limitation, the time a call was made, the duration of a call, or the charges for a call.
(II) "Telephone record" shall not include a directory listing or information collected and retained by customers utilizing caller identification technology or similar technology.
(a) This section shall not prohibit a peace officer, a law enforcement agency, or an employee or agent of a law enforcement agency from obtaining telephone records in the performance of their duties or as authorized by law.
(b) This section shall not prohibit a telecommunications provider from obtaining, using, disclosing, or permitting access to a telephone record when such access:
Is otherwise authorized by Colorado law, any other state law, or federal law, including, without limitation, the rules promulgated by the federal communications commission;
Is necessary to operations of the telecommunications provider, or to provide servicesor products, or to protect the rights and property of the telecommunications provider;
Protects users of the service and other telecommunications providers from fraudulent, abusive, or unlawful use of or subscription to such service;
Is made to a government entity if the telecommunications provider reasonably believes that an emergency involving immediate danger of serious physical injury to any person justifies disclosure of the information;
Is made to the national center for missing and exploited children or its successorentity and concerns a report submitted under 42 U.S.C. sec. 13032;
Is in connection with the sale, purchase, or transfer of all or part of a telecommunications provider's business; or
Is in connection with the migration of a customer from one telecommunicationsprovider to another.
(c) This section shall not be construed to imply that telephone records belong to a person other than the telecommunications provider that maintains them.
Unauthorized trading in telephone records is a class 1 misdemeanor.
This section shall not apply to a telecommunications provider or its agents or representatives who reasonably and in good faith act pursuant to Colorado law, any other state law, or federal law, including, without limitation, the rules promulgated by the federal communications commission, notwithstanding a later determination that the act was not authorized by such law.
Source: L. 2006: Entire section added, p. 584, § 1, effective July 1.