Experienced licensed professional bail
bonds agents, agency, and bail bondsman will assist you with all bail bond
needs in all cities in San Bernardino. Provides you with valuable
bail bonding information on everything you want to know about bailbonds process, and fastest ways to bail
your loved ones out of jail.
Bail-Bonds-San-Bernardino.com
is a an internet division of
Intrastate Bail Bonds,
a professional licensed bonded nationwide
bail bonds agency serving San Bernardino
County, Orange County, Los Angeles County, San Diego County,
Riverside County, Ventura County throughout Southern California
and other major states.
San Bernardino bail bonds provides 24 hours bail, professional, personal,
confidential bail bondsman serving California. Specializes in
assault and battery bail, burglary bail, criminal bail, domestic
battery bail, domestic violence bail, driving under influence DUI
bail, drug bail, felony bail, larceny bail, marijuana bail,
misdemeanor bail, narcotics bail, robbery bail, spousal abuse
bail. Cash bail and credit bail are
available.
Call toll free
1-800-957-2245
for bail information and free bail consultation. Bail bonding
questions are welcome.
We accept Visa, Master
Card, American Express, Discover, Personal Checks, Money Orders,
Cash, Cashier's Check.
Specialty Bail bonds:
Other
regions that we provide bail services:
Orange County Bail Bonds,
Los Angeles County Bail Bonds,
San
Diego County Bail Bonds,
Riverside
County Bail Bonds,
California Bail
Bonds,
San Bernardino County Bail Bonds,
Ventura County
Bail Bonds from professional
licensed bonded
bail bonds agency.
Serving all California
Counties and cities - Central Coast bail, Northern California
bail, Sierra Nevada bail, Southern California bail.
Larceny Bail Bonds
California Penal Codes Defined:
484. (a) Every person
who shall feloniously steal, take, carry, lead, or drive away
the personal property of another, or who shall fraudulently
appropriate property which has been entrusted to him or her,
or who shall knowingly and designedly, by any false or
fraudulent representation or pretense, defraud any other
person of money, labor or real or personal property, or who
causes or procures others to report falsely of his or her
wealth or mercantile character and by thus imposing upon any
person, obtains credit and thereby fraudulently gets or
obtains possession of money, or property or obtains the labor
or service of another, is guilty of theft. In determining the
value of the property obtained, for the purposes of this
section, the reasonable and fair market value shall be the
test, and in determining the value of services received the
contract price shall be the test. If there be no contract
price, the reasonable and going wage for the service rendered
shall govern. For the purposes of this section, any false or
fraudulent representation or pretense made shall be treated as
continuing, so as to cover any money, property or service
received as a result thereof, and the complaint, information
or indictment may charge that the crime was committed on any
date during the particular period in question. The hiring of
any additional employee or employees without advising each of
them of every labor claim due and unpaid and every judgment
that the employer has been unable to meet shall be prima facie
evidence of intent to defraud.
(b) (1) Except as provided in Section 10855 of the Vehicle
Code, where a person has leased or rented the personal
property of another person pursuant to a written contract, and
that property has a value greater than one thousand dollars
($1,000) and is not a commonly used household item, intent to
commit theft by fraud shall be rebuttably presumed if the
person fails to return the personal property to its owner
within 10 days after the owner has made written demand by
certified or registered mail following the expiration of the
lease or rental agreement for return of the property so leased
or rented.
(2) Except as provided in Section 10855 of the Vehicle Code,
where a person has leased or rented the personal property of
another person pursuant to a written contract, and where the
property has a value no greater than one thousand dollars
($1,000), or where the property is a commonly used household
item, intent to commit theft by fraud shall be rebuttably
presumed if the person fails to return the personal property
to its owner within 20 days after the owner has made written
demand by certified or registered mail following the
expiration of the lease or rental agreement for return of the
property so leased or rented.
(c) Notwithstanding the provisions of subdivision (b), if one
presents with criminal intent identification which bears a
false or fictitious name or address for the purpose of
obtaining the lease or rental of the personal property of
another, the presumption created herein shall apply upon the
failure of the lessee to return the rental property at the
expiration of the lease or rental agreement, and no written
demand for the return of the leased or rented property shall
be required.
(d) The presumptions created by subdivisions (b) and (c) are
presumptions affecting the burden of producing evidence.
(e) Within 30 days after the lease or rental agreement has
expired, the owner shall make written demand for return of the
property so leased or rented. Notice addressed and mailed to
the lessee or renter at the address given at the time of the
making of the lease or rental agreement and to any other known
address shall constitute proper demand. Where the owner fails
to make such written demand the presumption created by
subdivision (b) shall not apply.
484.1. (a) Any person who knowingly gives false
information or provides false verification as to the person's
true identity or as to the person's ownership interest in
property or the person's authority to sell property in order
to receive money or other valuable consideration from a
pawnbroker or secondhand dealer and who receives money or
other valuable consideration from the pawnbroker or secondhand
dealer is guilty of theft.
(b) Upon conviction of the offense described in subdivision
(a), the court may require, in addition to any sentence or
fine imposed, that the defendant make restitution to the
pawnbroker or secondhand dealer in an amount not exceeding the
actual losses sustained pursuant to the provisions of
subdivision (c) of Section 13967 of the Government Code, as
operative on or before September 28, 1994, if the defendant is
denied probation, or Section 1203.04, as operative on or
before August 2, 1995, if the defendant is granted probation
or Section 1202.4.
(c) Upon the setting of a court hearing date for sentencing of
any person convicted under this section, the probation
officer, if one is assigned, shall notify the pawnbroker or
secondhand dealer or coin dealer of the time and place of the
hearing.
484b. Any person who receives money for the purpose of
obtaining or paying for services, labor, materials or
equipment and willfully fails to apply such money for such
purpose by either willfully failing to complete the
improvements for which funds were provided or willfully
failing to pay for services, labor, materials or equipment
provided incident to such construction, and wrongfully diverts
the funds to a use other than that for which the funds were
received, shall be guilty of a public offense and shall be
punishable by a fine not exceeding ten thousand dollars
($10,000), or by imprisonment in the state prison, or in the
county jail not exceeding one year, or by both such fine and
such imprisonment if the amount diverted is in excess of one
thousand dollars ($1,000). If the amount diverted is less than
one thousand dollars ($1,000), the person shall be guilty of a
misdemeanor.
484c. Any person who submits a false voucher to obtain
construction loan funds and does not use the funds for the
purpose for which the claim was submitted is guilty of
embezzlement.
484d. As used in this section and Sections 484e to
484j, inclusive:
(1) "Cardholder" means any person to whom an access card is
issued or any person who has agreed with the card issuer to
pay obligations arising from the issuance of an access card to
another person.
(2) "Access card" means any card, plate, code, account number,
or other means of account access that can be used, alone or in
conjunction with another access card, to obtain money, goods,
services, or any other thing of value, or that can be used to
initiate a transfer of funds, other than a transfer originated
solely by a paper instrument.
(3) "Expired access card" means an access card which shows on
its face it has elapsed.
(4) "Card issuer" means any person who issues an access card
or the agent of that person with respect to that card.
(5) "Retailer" means every person who is authorized by an
issuer to furnish money, goods, services, or anything else of
value upon presentation of an access card by a cardholder.
(6) An access card is "incomplete" if part of the matter other
than the signature of the cardholder which an issuer requires
to appear on the access card before it can be used by a
cardholder has not been stamped, embossed, imprinted, or
written on it.
(7) "Revoked access card" means an access card which is no
longer authorized for use by the issuer, that authorization
having been suspended or terminated and written notice thereof
having been given to the cardholder.
(8) "Counterfeit access card" means any access card that is
counterfeit, fictitious, altered, or forged, or any false
representation or depiction of an access card or a component
thereof.
(9) "Traffic" means to transfer or otherwise dispose of
property to another, or to obtain control of property with
intent to transfer or dispose of it to another.
(10) "Card making equipment" means any equipment, machine,
plate, mechanism, impression, or other device designed, used,
or intended to be used to produce an access card.
484e. (a) Every person who, with intent to defraud,
sells, transfers, or conveys, an access card, without the
cardholder's or issuer's consent, is guilty of grand theft.
(b) Every person, other than the issuer, who within any
consecutive 12-month period, acquires access cards issued in
the names of four or more persons which he or she has reason
to know were taken or retained under circumstances which
constitute a violation of subdivision (a), (c), or (d) is
guilty of grand theft.
(c) Every person who, with the intent to defraud, acquires or
retains possession of an access card without the cardholder's
or issuer's consent, with intent to use, sell, or transfer it
to a person other than the cardholder or issuer is guilty of
petty theft.
(d) Every person who acquires or retains possession of access
card account information with respect to an access card
validly issued to another person, without the cardholder's or
issuer's consent, with the intent to use it fraudulently, is
guilty of grand theft.
484f. (a) Every person who, with the intent to defraud,
designs, makes, alters, or embosses a counterfeit access card
or utters or otherwise attempts to use a counterfeit access
card is guilty of forgery.
(b) A person other than the cardholder or a person authorized
by him or her who, with the intent to defraud, signs the name
of another or of a fictitious person to an access card, sales
slip, sales draft, or instrument for the payment of money
which evidences an access card transaction, is guilty of
forgery.
484g. Every person who, with the intent to defraud, (a)
uses, for the purpose of obtaining money, goods, services, or
anything else of value, an access card or access card account
information that has been altered, obtained, or retained in
violation of Section 484e or 484f, or an access card which he
or she knows is forged, expired, or revoked, or (b) obtains
money, goods, services, or anything else of value by
representing without the consent of the cardholder that he or
she is the holder of an access card and the card has not in
fact been issued, is guilty of theft. If the value of all
money, goods, services, and other things of value obtained in
violation of this section exceeds four hundred dollars ($400)
in any consecutive six-month period, then the same shall
constitute grand theft.
484h. Every retailer or other person who, with intent
to defraud:
(a) Furnishes money, goods, services or anything else of value
upon presentation of an access card obtained or retained in
violation of Section 484e or an access card which he or she
knows is a counterfeit access card or is forged, expired, or
revoked, and who receives any payment therefor, is guilty of
theft. If the payment received by the retailer or other person
for all money, goods, services, and other things of value
furnished in violation of this section exceeds four hundred
dollars ($400) in any consecutive six-month period, then the
same shall constitute grand theft.
(b) Presents for payment a sales slip or other evidence of an
access card transaction, and receives payment therefor,
without furnishing in the transaction money, goods, services,
or anything else of value that is equal in value to the amount
of the sales slip or other evidence of an access card
transaction, is guilty of theft. If the difference between the
value of all money, goods, services, and anything else of
value actually furnished and the payment or payments received
by the retailer or other person therefor upon presentation of
a sales slip or other evidence of an access card transaction
exceeds four hundred dollars ($400) in any consecutive
six-month period, then the same shall constitute grand theft.
484i. (a) Every person who possesses an incomplete
access card, with intent to complete it without the consent of
the issuer, is guilty of a misdemeanor.
(b) Every person who, with the intent to defraud, makes,
alters, varies, changes, or modifies access card account
information on any part of an access card, including
information encoded in a magnetic stripe or other medium on
the access card not directly readable by the human eye, or who
authorizes or consents to alteration, variance, change, or
modification of access card account information by another, in
a manner that causes transactions initiated by that access
card to be charged or billed to a person other than the
cardholder to whom the access card was issued, is guilty of
forgery.
(c) Every person who designs, makes, possesses, or traffics in
card making equipment or incomplete access cards with the
intent that the equipment or cards be used to make counterfeit
access cards, is punishable by imprisonment in a county jail
for not more than one year, or by imprisonment in the state
prison.
484j. Any person who publishes the number or code of an
existing, canceled, revoked, expired or nonexistent access
card, personal identification number, computer password,
access code, debit card number, bank account number, or the
numbering or coding which is employed in the issuance of
access cards, with the intent that it be used or with
knowledge or reason to believe that it will be used to avoid
the payment of any lawful charge, or with intent to defraud or
aid another in defrauding, is guilty of a misdemeanor. As used
in this section, "publishes" means the communication of
information to any one or more persons, either orally, in
person or by telephone, radio or television, or on a computer
network or computer bulletin board, or in a writing of any
kind, including without limitation a letter or memorandum,
circular or handbill, newspaper or magazine article, or book.
485. One who finds lost property under circumstances
which give him knowledge of or means of inquiry as to the true
owner, and who appropriates such property to his own use, or
to the use of another person not entitled thereto, without
first making reasonable and just efforts to find the owner and
to restore the property to him, is guilty of theft.
486. Theft is divided into two degrees, the first of
which is termed grand theft; the second, petty theft.
487. Grand theft is theft committed in any of the
following cases:
(a) When the money, labor, or real or personal property taken
is of a value exceeding four hundred dollars ($400), except as
provided in subdivision (b).
(b) Notwithstanding subdivision (a), grand theft is committed
in any of the following cases:
(1) (A) When domestic fowls, avocados, olives, citrus or
deciduous fruits, other fruits, vegetables, nuts, artichokes,
or other farm crops are taken of a value exceeding one hundred
dollars ($100).
(B) For the purposes of establishing that the value of
avocados or citrus fruit under this paragraph exceeds one
hundred dollars ($100), that value may be shown by the
presentation of credible evidence which establishes that on
the day of the theft avocados or citrus fruit of the same
variety and weight exceeded one hundred dollars ($100) in
wholesale value.
(2) When fish, shellfish, mollusks, crustaceans, kelp, algae,
or other aquacultural products are taken from a commercial or
research operation which is producing that product, of a value
exceeding one hundred dollars ($100).
(3) Where the money, labor, or real or personal property is
taken by a servant, agent, or employee from his or her
principal or employer and aggregates four hundred dollars
($400) or more in any 12 consecutive month period.
(c) When the property is taken from the person of another.
(d) When the property taken is any of the following:
(1) An automobile, horse, mare, gelding, any bovine animal,
any
caprine animal, mule, jack, jenny, sheep, lamb, hog, sow,
boar, gilt, barrow, or pig.
(2) A firearm.
(e) This section shall become operative on January 1, 1997.
487a. (a) Every person who shall feloniously steal,
take, transport or carry the carcass of any bovine, caprine,
equine, ovine, or suine animal or of any mule, jack or jenny,
which is the personal property of another, or who shall
fraudulently appropriate such property which has been
entrusted to him, is guilty of grand theft.
(b) Every person who shall feloniously steal, take, transport,
or carry any portion of the carcass of any bovine, caprine,
equine, ovine, or suine animal or of any mule, jack, or jenny,
which has been killed without the consent of the owner
thereof, is guilty of grand theft.
487b. Every person who converts real estate of the
value of one hundred dollars ($100) or more into personal
property by severance from the realty of another, and with
felonious intent to do so, steals, takes, and carries away
such property is guilty of grand theft and is punishable by
imprisonment in the state prison.
487c. Every person who converts real estate of the
value of less than one hundred dollars ($100) into personal
property by severance from the realty of another, and with
felonious intent to do so steals, takes, and carries away such
property is guilty of petty theft and is punishable by
imprisonment in the county jail for not more than one year, or
by a fine not exceeding one thousand dollars ($1,000), or by
both such fine and imprisonment.
487d. Every person who feloniously steals, takes, and
carries away, or attempts to take, steal, and carry from any
mining claim, tunnel, sluice, undercurrent, riffle box, or
sulfurate machine, another's gold dust, amalgam, or
quicksilver is guilty of grand theft and is punishable by
imprisonment in the state prison.
487e. Every person who feloniously steals, takes, or
carries away a dog of another which is of a value exceeding
four hundred dollars ($400) is guilty of grand theft.
487f. Every person who feloniously steals, takes, or
carries away a dog of another which is of a value not
exceeding four hundred dollars ($400) is guilty of petty
theft.
487g. Every person who steals or maliciously takes or
carries away any animal of another for purposes of sale,
medical research, slaughter, or other commercial use, or who
knowingly, by any false representation or pretense, defrauds
another person of any animal for purposes of sale, medical
research, slaughter, or other commercial use is guilty of a
public offense punishable by imprisonment in a county jail not
exceeding one year or in the state prison.
488. Theft in other cases is petty theft.
489. Grand theft is punishable as follows:
(a) When the grand theft involves the theft of a firearm, by
imprisonment in the state prison for 16 months, 2, or 3 years.
(b) In all other cases, by imprisonment in a county jail not
exceeding one year or in the state prison.
490. Petty theft is punishable by fine not exceeding
one thousand dollars ($1,000), or by imprisonment in the
county jail not exceeding six months, or both.
490a. Wherever any law or statute of this state refers
to or mentions larceny, embezzlement, or stealing, said law or
statute shall hereafter be read and interpreted as if the word
"theft" were substituted therefor.
490.1. (a) Petty theft, where the value of the money,
labor, real or personal property taken is of a value which
does not exceed fifty dollars ($50), may be charged as a
misdemeanor or an infraction, at the discretion of the
prosecutor, provided that the person charged with the offense
has no other theft or theft-related conviction.
(b) Any offense charged as an infraction under this section
shall be subject to the provisions of subdivision (d) of
Section 17 and Sections 19.6 and 19.7.
A violation which is an infraction under this section is
punishable by a fine not exceeding two hundred fifty dollars
($250).
490.5. (a) Upon a first conviction for petty theft
involving merchandise taken from a merchant's premises or a
book or other library materials taken from a library facility,
a person shall be punished by a mandatory fine of not less
than fifty dollars ($50) and not more than one thousand
dollars ($1,000) for each such violation; and may also be
punished by imprisonment in the county jail, not exceeding six
months, or both such fine and imprisonment.
(b) When an unemancipated minor's willful conduct would
constitute petty theft involving merchandise taken from a
merchant's premises or a book or other library materials taken
from a library facility, any merchant or library facility who
has been injured by that conduct may bring a civil action
against the parent or legal guardian having control and
custody of the minor. For the purposes of those actions the
misconduct of the unemancipated minor shall be imputed to the
parent or legal guardian having control and custody of the
minor. The parent or legal guardian having control or custody
of an unemancipated minor whose conduct violates this
subdivision shall be jointly and severally liable with the
minor to a merchant or to a library facility for damages of
not less than fifty dollars ($50) nor more than five hundred
dollars ($500), plus costs. In addition to the foregoing
damages, the parent or legal guardian shall be jointly and
severally liable with the minor to the merchant for the retail
value of the merchandise if it is not recovered in a
merchantable condition, or to a library facility for the fair
market value of its book or other library materials. Recovery
of these damages may be had in addition to, and is not limited
by, any other provision of law which limits the liability of a
parent or legal guardian for the tortious conduct of a minor.
An action for recovery of damages, pursuant to this
subdivision, may be brought in small claims court if the total
damages do not exceed the jurisdictional limit of that court,
or in any other appropriate court; however, total damages,
including the value of the merchandise or book or other
library materials, shall not exceed five hundred dollars
($500) for each action brought under this section.
The provisions of this subdivision are in addition to other
civil remedies and do not limit merchants or other persons to
elect to pursue other civil remedies, except that the
provisions of Section 1714.1 of the Civil Code shall not apply
herein.
(c) When an adult or emancipated minor has unlawfully taken
merchandise from a merchant's premises, or a book or other
library materials from a library facility, the adult or
emancipated minor shall be liable to the merchant or library
facility for damages of not less than fifty dollars ($50) nor
more than five hundred dollars ($500), plus costs. In addition
to the foregoing damages, the adult or emancipated minor shall
be liable to the merchant for the retail value of the
merchandise if it is not recovered in merchantable condition,
or to a library facility for the fair market value of its book
or other library materials. An action for recovery of damages,
pursuant to this subdivision, may be brought in small claims
court if the total damages do not exceed the jurisdictional
limit of such court, or in any other appropriate court. The
provisions of this subdivision are in addition to other civil
remedies and do not limit merchants or other persons to elect
to pursue other civil remedies.
(d) In lieu of the fines prescribed by subdivision (a), any
person may be required to perform public services designated
by the court, provided that in no event shall any such person
be required to perform less than the number of hours of such
public service necessary to satisfy the fine assessed by the
court as provided by subdivision (a) at the minimum wage
prevailing in the state at the time of sentencing.
(e) All fines collected under this section shall be collected
and distributed in accordance with Sections 1463 and 1463.1 of
the Penal Code; provided, however, that a county may, by a
majority vote of the members of its board of supervisors,
allocate any amount up to, but not exceeding 50 percent of
such fines to the county superintendent of schools for
allocation to local school districts. The fines allocated
shall be administered by the county superintendent of schools
to finance public school programs, which provide counseling or
other educational services designed to discourage shoplifting,
theft, and burglary. Subject to rules and regulations as may
be adopted by the Superintendent of Public Instruction, each
county superintendent of schools shall allocate such funds to
school districts within the county which submit project
applications designed to further the educational purposes of
this section. The costs of administration of this section by
each county superintendent of schools shall be paid from the
funds allocated to the county superintendent of schools.
(f) (1) A merchant may detain a person for a reasonable time
for the purpose of conducting an investigation in a reasonable
manner whenever the merchant has probable cause to believe the
person to be detained is attempting to unlawfully take or has
unlawfully taken merchandise from the merchant's premises.
A theater owner may detain a person for a reasonable time for
the purpose of conducting an investigation in a reasonable
manner whenever the theater owner has probable cause to
believe the person to be detained is attempting to operate a
video recording device within the premises of a motion picture
theater without the authority of the owner of the theater.
A person employed by a library facility may detain a person
for a reasonable time for the purpose of conducting an
investigation in a reasonable manner whenever the person
employed by a library facility has probable cause to believe
the person to be detained is attempting to unlawfully remove
or has unlawfully removed books or library materials from the
premises of the library facility.
(2) In making the detention a merchant, theater owner, or a
person employed by a library facility may use a reasonable
amount of nondeadly force necessary to protect himself or
herself and to prevent escape of the person detained or the
loss of tangible or intangible property.
(3) During the period of detention any items which a merchant
or theater owner, or any items which a person employed by a
library facility has probable cause to believe are unlawfully
taken from the premises of the merchant or library facility,
or recorded on theater premises, and which are in plain view
may be examined by the merchant, theater owner, or person
employed by a library facility for the purposes of
ascertaining the ownership thereof.
(4) A merchant, theater owner, a person employed by a library
facility, or an agent thereof, having probable cause to
believe the person detained was attempting to unlawfully take
or has taken any item from the premises, or was attempting to
operate a video recording device within the premises of a
motion picture theater without the authority of the owner of
the theater, may request the person detained to voluntarily
surrender the item or recording. Should the person detained
refuse to surrender the recording or item of which there is
probable cause to believe has been recorded on or unlawfully
taken from the premises, or attempted to be recorded or
unlawfully taken from the premises, a limited and reasonable
search may be conducted by those authorized to make the
detention in order to recover the item. Only packages,
shopping bags, handbags or other property in the immediate
possession of the person detained, but not including any
clothing worn by the person, may be searched pursuant to this
subdivision. Upon surrender or discovery of the item, the
person detained may also be requested, but may not be
required, to provide adequate proof of his or her true
identity.
(5) If any person admitted to a theater in which a motion
picture is to be or is being exhibited, refuses or fails to
give or surrender possession or to cease operation of any
video recording device that the person has brought into or
attempts to bring into that theater, then a theater owner
shall have the right to refuse admission to that person or
request that the person leave the premises and shall thereupon
offer to refund and, unless that offer is refused, refund to
that person the price paid by that person for admission to
that theater. If the person thereafter refuses to leave the
theater or cease operation of the video recording device, then
the person shall be deemed to be intentionally interfering
with and obstructing those attempting to carry on a lawful
business within the meaning of Section 602.1.
(6) A peace officer who accepts custody of a person arrested
for an offense contained in this section may, subsequent to
the arrest, search the person arrested and his or her
immediate possessions for any item or items alleged to have
been taken.
(7) In any civil action brought by any person resulting from a
detention or arrest by a merchant, it shall be a defense to
such action that the merchant detaining or arresting such
person had probable cause to believe that the person had
stolen or attempted to steal merchandise and that the merchant
acted reasonably under all the circumstances.
In any civil action brought by any person resulting from a
detention or arrest by a theater owner or person employed by a
library facility, it shall be a defense to that action that
the theater owner or person employed by a library facility
detaining or arresting that person had probable cause to
believe that the person was attempting to operate a video
recording device within the premises of a motion picture
theater without the authority of the owner of the theater or
had stolen or attempted to steal books or library materials
and that the person employed by a library facility acted
reasonably under all the circumstances.
(g) As used in this section:
(1) "Merchandise" means any personal property, capable of
manual delivery, displayed, held or offered for retail sale by
a merchant.
(2) "Merchant" means an owner or operator, and the agent,
consignee, employee, lessee, or officer of an owner or
operator, of any premises used for the retail purchase or sale
of any personal property capable of manual delivery.
(3) "Theater owner" means an owner or operator, and the agent,
employee, consignee, lessee, or officer of an owner or
operator, of any premises used for the exhibition or
performance of motion pictures to the general public.
(4) The terms "book or other library materials" include any
book, plate, picture, photograph, engraving, painting,
drawing, map, newspaper, magazine, pamphlet, broadside,
manuscript, document, letter, public record, microform, sound
recording, audiovisual material in any format, magnetic or
other tape, electronic data-processing record, artifact, or
other documentary, written or printed material regardless of
physical form or characteristics, or any part thereof,
belonging to, on loan to, or otherwise in the custody of a
library facility.
(5) The term "library facility" includes any public library;
any library of an educational, historical or eleemosynary
institution, organization or society; any museum; any
repository of public records.
(h) Any library facility shall post at its entrance and exit a
conspicuous sign to read as follows:
"IN ORDER TO PREVENT THE THEFT OF BOOKS AND LIBRARY MATERIALS,
STATE LAW AUTHORIZES THE DETENTION FOR A REASONABLE PERIOD OF
ANY PERSON USING THESE FACILITIES SUSPECTED OF COMMITTING
"LIBRARY THEFT" (PENAL CODE SECTION 490.5)."
490.6. (a) A person employed by an amusement park may
detain a person for a reasonable time for the purpose of
conducting an investigation in a reasonable manner whenever
the person employed by the amusement park has probable cause
to believe the person to be detained is violating lawful
amusement park rules.
(b) If any person admitted to an amusement park refuses or
fails to follow lawful amusement park rules, after being so
informed, then an amusement park employee may request that the
person either comply or leave the premises. If the person
refuses to leave the premises or comply with lawful park
rules, then the person shall be deemed to be intentionally
interfering with and obstructing those attempting to carry on
a lawful business within the meaning of Section 602.1.
(c) In any civil action brought by any person resulting from a
detention or an arrest by a person employed by an amusement
park, it shall be a defense to that action that the amusement
park employee detaining or arresting the person had probable
cause to believe that the person was not following lawful
amusement park rules and that the amusement park employee
acted reasonably under all the circumstances.
491. Dogs are personal property, and their value is to
be ascertained in the same manner as the value of other
property.
492. If the thing stolen consists of any evidence of
debt, or other written instrument, the amount of money due
thereupon, or secured to be paid thereby, and remaining
unsatisfied, or which in any contingency might be collected
thereon, or the value of the property the title to which is
shown thereby, or the sum which might be recovered in the
absence thereof, is the value of the thing stolen.
493. If the thing stolen is any ticket or other paper
or writing entitling or purporting to entitle the holder or
proprietor thereof to a passage upon any railroad or vessel or
other public conveyance, the price at which tickets entitling
a person to a like passage are usually sold by the proprietors
of such conveyance is the value of such ticket, paper, or
writing.
494. All the provisions of this Chapter apply where the
property taken is an instrument for the payment of money,
evidence of debt, public security, or passage ticket,
completed and ready to be issued or delivered, although the
same has never been issued or delivered by the makers thereof
to any person as a purchaser or owner.
495. The provisions of this Chapter apply where the
thing taken is any fixture or part of the realty, and is
severed at the time of the taking, in the same manner as if
the thing had been severed by another person at some previous
time.
496. (a) Every person who buys or receives any property
that has been stolen or that has been obtained in any manner
constituting theft or extortion, knowing the property to be so
stolen or obtained, or who conceals, sells, withholds, or aids
in concealing, selling, or withholding any property from the
owner, knowing the property to be so stolen or obtained, shall
be punished by imprisonment in a state prison, or in a county
jail for not more than one year. However, if the district
attorney or the grand jury determines that this action would
be in the interests of justice, the district attorney or the
grand jury, as the case may be, may, if the value of the
property does not exceed four hundred dollars ($400), specify
in the accusatory pleading that the offense shall be a
misdemeanor, punishable only by imprisonment in a county jail
not exceeding one year.
A principal in the actual theft of the property may be
convicted pursuant to this section. However, no person may be
convicted both pursuant to this section and of the theft of
the same property.
(b) Every swap meet vendor, as defined in Section 21661 of the
Business and Professions Code, and every person whose
principal business is dealing in, or collecting, merchandise
or personal property, and every agent, employee, or
representative of that person, who buys or receives any
property of a value in excess of four hundred dollars ($400)
that has been stolen or obtained in any manner constituting
theft or extortion, under circumstances that should cause the
person, agent, employee, or representative to make reasonable
inquiry to ascertain that the person from whom the property
was bought or received had the legal right to sell or deliver
it, without making a reasonable inquiry, shall be punished by
imprisonment in a state prison, or in a county jail for not
more than one year.
Every swap meet vendor, as defined in Section 21661 of the
Business and Professions Code, and every person whose
principal business is dealing in, or collecting, merchandise
or personal property, and every agent, employee, or
representative of that person, who buys or receives any
property of a value of four hundred dollars ($400) or less
that has been stolen or obtained in any manner constituting
theft or extortion, under circumstances that should cause the
person, agent, employee, or representative to make reasonable
inquiry to ascertain that the person from whom the property
was bought or received had the legal right to sell or deliver
it, without making a reasonable inquiry, shall be guilty of a
misdemeanor.
(c) Any person who has been injured by a violation of
subdivision (a) or (b) may bring an action for three times the
amount of actual damages, if any, sustained by the plaintiff,
costs of suit, and reasonable attorney's fees.
(d) Notwithstanding Section 664, any attempt to commit any act
prohibited by this section, except an offense specified in the
accusatory pleading as a misdemeanor, is punishable by
imprisonment in the state prison, or in a county jail for not
more than one year.
496a. (a) Every person who, being a dealer in or
collector of junk, metals or secondhand materials, or the
agent, employee, or representative of such dealer or
collector, buys or receives any wire, cable, copper, lead,
solder, mercury, iron or brass which he knows or reasonably
should know is ordinarily used by or ordinarily belongs to a
railroad or other transportation, telephone, telegraph, gas,
water or electric light company or county, city, city and
county or other political subdivision of this state engaged in
furnishing public utility service without using due diligence
to ascertain that the person selling or delivering the same
has a legal right to do so, is guilty of criminally receiving
such property, and is punishable, by imprisonment in a state
prison, or in a county jail for not more than one year, or by
a fine of not more than two hundred fifty dollars ($250), or
by both such fine and imprisonment.
(b) Any person buying or receiving material pursuant to
subdivision (a) shall obtain evidence of his identity from the
seller including, but not limited to, such person's full name,
signature, address, driver's license number, vehicle license
number, and the license number of the vehicle delivering the
material.
The record of the transaction shall include an appropriate
description of the material purchased and such record shall be
maintained pursuant to Section 21607 of the Business and
Professions Code.
496b. Every person who, being a dealer in or collector
of second-hand books or other literary material, or the agent,
employee or representative of such dealer, or collector, buys
or receives any book, manuscript, map, chart, or other work of
literature, belonging to, and bearing any mark or indicia of
ownership by a public or incorporated library, college or
university, without ascertaining by diligent inquiry that the
person selling or delivering the same has a legal right to do
so, is guilty of criminally receiving such property in the
first degree if such property be of the value of more than
fifty dollars, and is punishable by imprisonment in the county
jail for not more than one year, or by a fine of not more than
twice the value of the property received, or by both such fine
and imprisonment; and is guilty of criminally receiving such
property in the second degree if such property be of the value
of fifty dollars or under, and is punishable by imprisonment
in the county jail for not more than one month, or by a fine
of not more than twice the value of the property received, or
by both such fine and imprisonment.
496c. Any person who shall copy, transcribe, photograph
or otherwise make a record or memorandum of the contents of
any private and unpublished paper, book, record, map or file,
containing information relating to the title to real property
or containing information used in the business of examining,
certifying or insuring titles to real property and belonging
to any person, firm or corporation engaged in the business of
examining, certifying, or insuring titles to real property,
without the consent of the owner of such paper, book, record,
map or file, and with the intent to use the same or the
contents thereof, or to dispose of the same or the contents
thereof to others for use, in the business of examining,
certifying, or insuring titles to real property, shall be
guilty of theft, and any person who shall induce another to
violate the provisions of this section by giving, offering, or
promising to such another any gift, gratuity, or thing of
value or by doing or promising to do any act beneficial to
such another, shall be guilty of theft; and any person who
shall receive or acquire from another any copy, transcription,
photograph or other record or memorandum of the contents of
any private and unpublished paper, book, record, map or file
containing information relating to the title to real property
or containing information used in the business of examining,
certifying or insuring titles to real property, with the
knowledge that the same or the contents thereof has or have
been acquired, prepared or compiled in violation of this
section shall be guilty of theft. The contents of any such
private and unpublished paper, book, record, map or file is
hereby defined to be personal property, and in determining the
value thereof for the purposes of this section the cost of
aquiring and compiling the same shall be the test.
496d. (a) Every person who buys or receives any motor
vehicle, as defined in Section 415 of the Vehicle Code, any
trailer, as defined in Section 630 of the Vehicle Code, any
special construction equipment, as defined in Section 565 of
the Vehicle Code, or any vessel, as defined in Section 21 of
the Harbors and Navigation Code, that has been stolen or that
has been obtained in any manner constituting theft or
extortion, knowing the property to be stolen or obtained, or
who conceals, sells, withholds, or aids in concealing,
selling, or withholding any motor vehicle, trailer, special
construction equipment, or vessel from the owner, knowing the
property to be so stolen or obtained, shall be punished by
imprisonment in the state prison for 16 months or two or three
years or a fine of not more than ten thousand dollars
($10,000), or both, or by imprisonment in a county jail not to
exceed one year or a fine of not more than one thousand
dollars ($1,000), or both.
(b) For the purposes of this section, the terms "special
construction equipment" and "vessel" are limited to motorized
vehicles and vessels.
497. Every person who, in another state or country
steals or embezzles the property of another, or receives such
property knowing it to have been stolen or embezzled, and
brings the same into this state, may be convicted and punished
in the same manner as if such larceny, or embezzlement, or
receiving, had been committed in this state.
498. (a) The following definitions govern the
construction of this section:
(1) "Person" means any individual, or any partnership, firm,
association, corporation, limited liability company, or other
legal entity.
(2) "Utility" means any electrical, gas, or water corporation
as those terms are defined in the Public Utilities Code, and
electrical, gas, or water systems operated by any political
subdivision.
(3) "Customer" means the person in whose name utility service
is provided.
(4) "Utility service" means the provision of electricity, gas,
water, or any other service provided by the utility for
compensation.
(5) "Divert" means to change the intended course or path of
electricity, gas, or water without the authorization or
consent of the utility.
(6) "Tamper" means to rearrange, injure, alter, interfere
with, or otherwise prevent from performing a normal or
customary function.
(7) "Reconnection" means the reconnection of utility service
by a customer or other person after service has been lawfully
disconnected by the utility.
(b) Any person who, with intent to obtain for himself or
herself utility services without paying the full lawful charge
therefor, or with intent to enable another person to do so, or
with intent to deprive any utility of any part of the full
lawful charge for utility services it provides, commits,
authorizes, solicits, aids, or abets any of the following
shall be guilty of a misdemeanor:
(1) Diverts or causes to be diverted utility services, by any
means whatsoever.
(2) Prevents any utility meter, or other device used in
determining the charge for utility services, from accurately
performing its measuring function by tampering or by any other
means.
(3) Tampers with any property owned by or used by the utility
to provide utility services.
(4) Makes or causes to be made any connection with or
reconnection with property owned or used by the utility to
provide utility services without the authorization or consent
of the utility.
(5) Uses or receives the direct benefit of all or a portion of
utility services with knowledge or reason to believe that the
diversion, tampering, or unauthorized connection existed at
the time of that use, or that the use or receipt was otherwise
without the authorization or consent of the utility.
(c) In any prosecution under this section, the presence of any
of the following objects, circumstances, or conditions on
premises controlled by the customer or by the person using or
receiving the direct benefit of all or a portion of utility
services obtained in violation of this section shall permit an
inference that the customer or person intended to and did
violate this section:
(1) Any instrument, apparatus, or device primarily designed to
be used to obtain utility services without paying the full
lawful charge therefor.
(2) Any meter that has been altered, tampered with, or
bypassed so as to cause no measurement or inaccurate
measurement of utility services.
(d) If the value of all utility services obtained in violation
of this section totals more than four hundred dollars ($400)
or if the defendant has previously been convicted of an
offense under this section or any former section which would
be an offense under this section, or of an offense under the
laws of another state or of the United States which would have
been an offense under this section if committed in this state,
then the violation is punishable by imprisonment in the county
jail for not more than one year, or in the state prison.
(e) This section shall not be construed to preclude the
applicability of any other provision of the criminal law of
this state.
499. (a) Any person who, having been convicted of a
previous violation of Section 10851 of the Vehicle Code, or of
subdivision (d) of Section 487, involving a vehicle or vessel,
and having served a term therefor in any penal institution or
having been imprisoned therein as a condition of probation for
the offense, is subsequently convicted of a violation of
Section 499b, involving a vehicle or vessel, is punishable for
the subsequent offense by imprisonment in the county jail not
exceeding one year or the state prison for 16 months, two, or
three years.
(b) Any person convicted of a violation of Section 499b, who
has been previously convicted under charges separately brought
and tried two or more times of a violation of Section 499b,
all such violations involving a vehicle or vessel, and who has
been imprisoned therefore as a condition of probation or
otherwise at least once, is punishable by imprisonment in the
county jail for not more than one year or in the state prison
for 16 months, two, or three years.
(c) This section shall become operative on January 1, 1997.
499b. Any person who shall, without the permission of
the owner thereof, take any bicycle or motorboat or vessel,
for the purpose of temporarily using or operating the same,
shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor, and upon conviction
thereof, shall be punished by a fine not exceeding four
hundred dollars ($400), or by imprisonment not exceeding three
months, or by both that fine and imprisonment.
499c. (a) As used in this section:
(1) "Access" means to approach, a way or means of approaching,
nearing, admittance to, including to instruct, communicate
with, store information in, or retrieve information from a
computer system or computer network.
(2) "Article" means any object, material, device, or substance
or copy thereof, including any writing, record, recording,
drawing, sample, specimen, prototype, model, photograph,
micro-organism, blueprint, map, or tangible representation of
a computer program or information, including both human and
computer readable information and information while in
transit.
(3) "Benefit" means gain or advantage, or anything regarded by
the beneficiary as gain or advantage, including benefit to any
other person or entity in whose welfare he or she is
interested.
(4) "Computer system" means a machine or collection of
machines, one or more of which contain computer programs and
information, that performs functions, including, but not
limited to, logic, arithmetic, information storage and
retrieval, communications, and control.
(5) "Computer network" means an interconnection of two or more
computer systems.
(6) "Computer program" means an ordered set of instructions or
statements, and related information that, when automatically
executed in actual or modified form in a computer system,
causes it to perform specified functions.
(7) "Copy" means any facsimile, replica, photograph or other
reproduction of an article, and any note, drawing or sketch
made of or from an article.
(8) "Representing" means describing, depicting, containing,
constituting, reflecting or recording.
(9) "Trade secret" means information, including a formula,
pattern, compilation, program, device, method, technique, or
process, that:
(A) Derives independent economic value, actual or potential,
from not being generally known to the public or to other
persons who can obtain economic value from its disclosure or
use; and
(B) Is the subject of efforts that are reasonable under the
circumstances to maintain its secrecy.
(b) Every person is guilty of theft who, with intent to
deprive or withhold the control of a trade secret from its
owner, or with an intent to appropriate a trade secret to his
or her own use or to the use of another, does any of the
following:
(1) Steals, takes, carries away, or uses without
authorization, a trade secret.
(2) Fraudulently appropriates any article representing a trade
secret entrusted to him or her.
(3) Having unlawfully obtained access to the article, without
authority makes or causes to be made a copy of any article
representing a trade secret.
(4) Having obtained access to the article through a
relationship of trust and confidence, without authority and in
breach of the obligations created by that relationship, makes
or causes to be made, directly from and in the presence of the
article, a copy of any article representing a trade secret.
(c) Every person who promises, offers or gives, or conspires
to promise or offer to give, to any present or former agent,
employee or servant of another, a benefit as an inducement,
bribe or reward for conveying, delivering or otherwise making
available an article representing a trade secret owned by his
or her present or former principal, employer or master, to any
person not authorized by the owner to receive or acquire the
trade secret and every present or former agent, employee, or
servant, who solicits, accepts, receives or takes a benefit as
an inducement, bribe or reward for conveying, delivering or
otherwise making available an article representing a trade
secret owned by his or her present or former principal,
employer or master, to any person not authorized by the owner
to receive or acquire the trade secret, shall be punished by
imprisonment in the state prison, or in a county jail not
exceeding one year, or by a fine not exceeding five thousand
dollars ($5,000), or by both that fine and imprisonment.
(d) In a prosecution for a violation of this section, it shall
be no defense that the person returned or intended to return
the article.
499d. Any person who operates or takes an aircraft not
his own, without the consent of the owner thereof, and with
intent to either permanently or temporarily deprive the owner
thereof of his title to or possession of such vehicle, whether
with or without intent to steal the same, or any person who is
a party or accessory to or an accomplice in any operation or
unauthorized taking or stealing is guilty of a felony, and
upon conviction thereof shall be punished by imprisonment in
the state prison, or in the county jail for not more than one
year or by a fine of not more than ten thousand dollars
($10,000) or by both such fine and imprisonment.
500. (a) Any person who receives money for the actual
or purported purpose of transmitting the same or its
equivalent to foreign countries as specified in Section 1800.5
of the Financial Code who fails to do at least one of the
following acts unless otherwise instructed by the customer is
guilty of a misdemeanor or felony as set forth in subdivision
(b):
(1) Forward the money as represented to the customer within 10
days of receipt of the funds.
(2) Give instructions within 10 days of receipt of the
customer's funds, committing equivalent funds to the person
designated by the customer.
(3) Refund to the customer any money not forwarded as
represented within 10 days of the customer's written request
for a refund pursuant to subdivision (a) of Section 1810.5 of
the Financial Code.
(b) (1) If the total value of the funds received from the
customer is less than four hundred dollars ($400), the offense
set forth in subdivision (a) is punishable by imprisonment in
the county jail not exceeding one year or by a fine not
exceeding one thousand dollars($1,000), or by both
imprisonment and fine.
(2) If the total value of the money received from the customer
is four hundred dollars ($400) or more, or if the total value
of all moneys received by the person from different customers
is four hundred dollars ($400), or more and the receipts were
part of a common scheme or plan, the offense set forth in
subdivision (a) is punishable by imprisonment in the state
prison for 16 months, 2, or 3 years, by a fine not exceeding
ten thousand dollars ($10,000), or by both imprisonment and
fine.
501. Upon a trial for larceny or embezzlement of money,
bank notes, certificates of stock, or valuable securities, the
allegation of the indictment or information, so far as regards
the description of the property, is sustained, if the offender
be proved to have embezzled or stolen any money, bank notes,
certificates of stock, or valuable security, although the
particular species of coin or other money, or the number,
denomination, or kind of bank notes, certificates of stock, or
valuable security, is not proved; and upon a trial for
embezzlement, if the offender is proved to have embezzled any
piece of coin or other money, any bank note, certificate of
stock, or valuable security, although the piece of coin or
other money, or bank note, certificate of stock, or valuable
security, may have been delivered to him or her in order that
some part of the value thereof should be returned to the party
delivering the same, and such part shall have been returned
accordingly.
502. (a) It is the intent of the Legislature in
enacting this section to expand the degree of protection
afforded to individuals, businesses, and governmental agencies
from tampering, interference, damage, and unauthorized access
to lawfully created computer data and computer systems. The
Legislature finds and declares that the proliferation of
computer technology has resulted in a concomitant
proliferation of computer crime and other forms of
unauthorized access to computers, computer systems, and
computer data.
The Legislature further finds and declares that protection of
the integrity of all types and forms of lawfully created
computers, computer systems, and computer data is vital to the
protection of the privacy of individuals as well as to the
well-being of financial institutions, business concerns,
governmental agencies, and others within this state that
lawfully utilize those computers, computer systems, and data.
(b) For the purposes of this section, the following terms have
the following meanings:
(1) "Access" means to gain entry to, instruct, or communicate
with the logical, arithmetical, or memory function resources
of a computer, computer system, or computer network.
(2) "Computer network" means any system that provides
communications between one or more computer systems and
input/output devices including, but not limited to, display
terminals and printers connected by telecommunication
facilities.
(3) "Computer program or software" means a set of instructions
or statements, and related data, that when executed in actual
or modified form, cause a computer, computer system, or
computer network to perform specified functions.
(4) "Computer services" includes, but is not limited to,
computer time, data processing, or storage functions, or other
uses of a computer, computer system, or computer network.
(5) "Computer system" means a device or collection of devices,
including support devices and excluding calculators that are
not programmable and capable of being used in conjunction with
external files, one or more of which contain computer
programs, electronic instructions, input data, and output
data, that performs functions including, but not limited to,
logic, arithmetic, data storage and retrieval, communication,
and control.
(6) "Data" means a representation of information, knowledge,
facts, concepts, computer software, computer programs or
instructions. Data may be in any form, in storage media, or as
stored in the memory of the computer or in transit or
presented on a display device.
(7) "Supporting documentation" includes, but is not limited
to, all information, in any form, pertaining to the design,
construction, classification, implementation, use, or
modification of a computer, computer system, computer network,
computer program, or computer software, which information is
not generally available to the public and is necessary for the
operation of a computer, computer system, computer network,
computer program, or computer software.
(8) "Injury" means any alteration, deletion, damage, or
destruction of a computer system, computer network, computer
program, or data caused by the access, or the denial of access
to legitimate users of a computer system, network, or program.
(9) "Victim expenditure" means any expenditure reasonably and
necessarily incurred by the owner or lessee to verify that a
computer system, computer network, computer program, or data
was or was not altered, deleted, damaged, or destroyed by the
access.
(10) "Computer contaminant" means any set of computer
instructions that are designed to modify, damage, destroy,
record, or transmit information within a computer, computer
system, or computer network without the intent or permission
of the owner of the information. They include, but are not
limited to, a group of computer instructions commonly called
viruses or worms, that are self-replicating or
self-propagating and are designed to contaminate other
computer programs or computer data, consume computer
resources, modify, destroy, record, or transmit data, or in
some other fashion usurp the normal operation of the computer,
computer system, or computer network.
(11) "Internet domain name" means a globally unique,
hierarchical reference to an Internet host or service,
assigned through centralized Internet naming authorities,
comprising a series of character strings separated by periods,
with the rightmost character string specifying the top of the
hierarchy.
(c) Except as provided in subdivision (h), any person who
commits any of the following acts is guilty of a public
offense:
(1) Knowingly accesses and without permission alters, damages,
deletes, destroys, or otherwise uses any data, computer,
computer system, or computer network in order to either (A)
devise or execute any scheme or artifice to defraud, deceive,
or extort, or (B) wrongfully control or obtain money,
property, or data.
(2) Knowingly accesses and without permission takes, copies,
or makes use of any data from a computer, computer system, or
computer network, or takes or copies any supporting
documentation, whether existing or residing internal or
external to a computer, computer system, or computer network.
(3) Knowingly and without permission uses or causes to be used
computer services.
(4) Knowingly accesses and without permission adds, alters,
damages, deletes, or destroys any data, computer software, or
computer programs which reside or exist internal or external
to a computer, computer system, or computer network.
(5) Knowingly and without permission disrupts or causes the
disruption of computer services or denies or causes the denial
of computer services to an authorized user of a computer,
computer system, or computer network.
(6) Knowingly and without permission provides or assists in
providing a means of accessing a computer, computer system, or
computer network in violation of this section.
(7) Knowingly and without permission accesses or causes to be
accessed any computer, computer system, or computer network.
(8) Knowingly introduces any computer contaminant into any
computer, computer system, or computer network.
(9) Knowingly and without permission uses the Internet domain
name of another individual, corporation, or entity in
connection with the sending of one or more electronic mail
messages, and thereby damages or causes damage to a computer,
computer system, or computer network.
(d) (1) Any person who violates any of the provisions of
paragraph
(1), (2), (4), or (5) of subdivision (c) is punishable by a
fine not exceeding ten thousand dollars ($10,000), or by
imprisonment in the state prison for 16 months, or two or
three years, or by both that fine and imprisonment, or by a
fine not exceeding five thousand dollars ($5,000), or by
imprisonment in a county jail not exceeding one year, or by
both that fine and imprisonment.
(2) Any person who violates paragraph (3) of subdivision (c)
is punishable as follows:
(A) For the first violation that does not result in injury,
and where the value of the computer services used does not
exceed four hundred dollars ($400), by a fine not exceeding
five thousand dollars ($5,000), or by imprisonment in a county
jail not exceeding one year, or by both that fine and
imprisonment.
(B) For any violation that results in a victim expenditure in
an amount greater than five thousand dollars ($5,000) or in an
injury, or if the value of the computer services used exceeds
four hundred dollars ($400), or for any second or subsequent
violation, by a fine not exceeding ten thousand dollars
($10,000), or by imprisonment in the state prison for 16
months, or two or three years, or by both that fine and
imprisonment, or by a fine not exceeding five thousand dollars
($5,000), or by imprisonment in a county jail not exceeding
one year, or by both that fine and imprisonment.
(3) Any person who violates paragraph (6) or (7) of
subdivision (c) is punishable as follows:
(A) For a first violation that does not result in injury, an
infraction punishable by a fine not exceeding one thousand
dollars ($1,000).
(B) For any violation that results in a victim expenditure in
an amount not greater than five thousand dollars ($5,000), or
for a second or subsequent violation, by a fine not exceeding
five thousand dollars ($5,000), or by imprisonment in a county
jail not exceeding one year, or by both that fine and
imprisonment.
(C) For any violation that results in a victim expenditure in
an amount greater than five thousand dollars ($5,000), by a
fine not exceeding ten thousand dollars ($10,000), or by
imprisonment in the state prison for 16 months, or two or
three years, or by both that fine and imprisonment, or by a
fine not exceeding five thousand dollars ($5,000), or by
imprisonment in a county jail not exceeding one year, or by
both that fine and imprisonment.
(4) Any person who violates paragraph (8) of subdivision (c)
is punishable as follows:
(A) For a first violation that does not result in injury, a
misdemeanor punishable by a fine not exceeding five thousand
dollars ($5,000), or by imprisonment in a county jail not
exceeding one year, or by both that fine and imprisonment.
(B) For any violation that results in injury, or for a second
or subsequent violation, by a fine not exceeding ten thousand
dollars ($10,000), or by imprisonment in a county jail not
exceeding one year, or in the state prison, or by both that
fine and imprisonment.
(5) Any person who violates paragraph (9) of subdivision (c)
is punishable as follows:
(A) For a first violation that does not result in injury, an
infraction punishable by a fine not one thousand dollars.
(B) For any violation that results in injury, or for a second
or subsequent violation, by a fine not exceeding five thousand
dollars ($5,000), or by imprisonment in a county jail not
exceeding one year, or by both that fine and imprisonment.
(e) (1) In addition to any other civil remedy available, the
owner or lessee of the computer, computer system, computer
network, computer program, or data who suffers damage or loss
by reason of a violation of any of the provisions of
subdivision (c) may bring a civil action against the violator
for compensatory damages and injunctive relief or other
equitable relief. Compensatory damages shall include any
expenditure reasonably and necessarily incurred by the owner
or lessee to verify that a computer system, computer network,
computer program, or data was or was not altered, damaged, or
deleted by the access. For the purposes of actions authorized
by this subdivision, the conduct of an unemancipated minor
shall be imputed to the parent or legal guardian having
control or custody of the minor, pursuant to the provisions of
Section 1714.1 of the Civil Code.
(2) In any action brought pursuant to this subdivision the
court may award reasonable attorney's fees.
(3) A community college, state university, or academic
institution accredited in this state is required to include
computer-related crimes as a specific violation of college or
university student conduct policies and regulations that may
subject a student to disciplinary sanctions up to and
including dismissal from the academic institution. This
paragraph shall not apply to the University of California
unless the Board of Regents adopts a resolution to that
effect.
(4) In any action brought pursuant to this subdivision for a
willful violation of the provisions of subdivision (c), where
it is proved by clear and convincing evidence that a defendant
has been guilty of oppression, fraud, or malice as defined in
subdivision (c) of Section 3294 of the Civil Code, the court
may additionally award punitive or exemplary damages.
(5) No action may be brought pursuant to this subdivision
unless it is initiated within three years of the date of the
act complained of, or the date of the discovery of the damage,
whichever is later.
(f) This section shall not be construed to preclude the
applicability of any other provision of the criminal law of
this state which applies or may apply to any transaction, nor
shall it make illegal any employee labor relations activities
that are within the scope and protection of state or federal
labor laws.
(g) Any computer, computer system, computer network, or any
software or data, owned by the defendant, that is used during
the commission of any public offense described in subdivision
(c) or any computer, owned by the defendant, which is used as
a repository for the storage of software or data illegally
obtained in violation of subdivision (c) shall be subject to
forfeiture, as specified in Section 502.01.
(h) (1) Subdivision (c) does not apply to punish any acts
which are committed by a person within the scope of his or her
lawful employment. For purposes of this section, a person acts
within the scope of his or her employment when he or she
performs acts which are reasonably necessary to the
performance of his or her work assignment.
(2) Paragraph (3) of subdivision (c) does not apply to
penalize any acts committed by a person acting outside of his
or her lawful employment, provided that the employee's
activities do not cause an injury, as defined in paragraph (8)
of subdivision (b), to the employer or another, or provided
that the value of supplies or computer services, as defined in
paragraph (4) of subdivision (b), which are used does not
exceed an accumulated total of one hundred dollars ($100).
(i) No activity exempted from prosecution under paragraph (2)
of subdivision (h) which incidentally violates paragraph (2),
(4), or
(7) of subdivision (c) shall be prosecuted under those
paragraphs.
(j) For purposes of bringing a civil or a criminal action
under this section, a person who causes, by any means, the
access of a computer, computer system, or computer network in
one jurisdiction from another jurisdiction is deemed to have
personally accessed the computer, computer system, or computer
network in each jurisdiction.
(k) In determining the terms and conditions applicable to a
person convicted of a violation of this section the court
shall consider the following:
(1) The court shall consider prohibitions on access to and use
of computers.
(2) Except as otherwise required by law, the court shall
consider alternate sentencing, including community service, if
the defendant shows remorse and recognition of the wrongdoing,
and an inclination not to repeat the offense.
502.01. (a) As used in this section:
(1) "Property subject to forfeiture" means any property of the
defendant that is illegal telecommunications equipment as
defined in subdivision (g) of Section 502.8, or a computer,
computer system, or computer network, and any software or data
residing thereon, if the telecommunications device, computer,
computer system, or computer network was used in committing a
violation of, or conspiracy to commit a violation of, Section
422, 470, 470a, 472, 475, 476, 480, 483.5, 484g, or
subdivision (a), (b), or (d) of Section 484e, subdivision (a)
of Section 484f, subdivision (b) or (c) of Section 484i,
subdivision (c) of Section 502, or Section 502.7, 502.8, 529,
529a, or 530.5, 537e, 593d, 593e, or 646.9, or was used as a
repository for the storage of software or data obtained in
violation of those provisions. Forfeiture shall not be
available for any property used solely in the commission of an
infraction. If the defendant is a minor, it also includes
property of the parent or guardian of the defendant.
(2) "Sentencing court" means the court sentencing a person
found guilty of violating or conspiring to commit a violation
of Section 422, 470, 470a, 472, 475, 476, 480, 483.5, 484g, or
subdivision (a), (b), or (d) of Section 484e, subdivision (d)
of Section 484e, subdivision (a) of Section 484f, subdivision
(b) or (c) of Section 484i, subdivision (c) of Section 502, or
Section 502.7, 502.8, 529, 529a, 530.5, 537e, 593d, 593e, or
646.9, or, in the case of a minor, found to be a person
described in Section 602 of the Welfare and Institutions Code
because of a violation of those provisions, the juvenile
court.
(3) "Interest" means any property interest in the property
subject to forfeiture.
(4) "Security interest" means an interest that is a lien,
mortgage, security interest, or interest under a conditional
sales contract.
(5) "Value" has the following meanings:
(A) When counterfeit items of computer software are
manufactured or possessed for sale, the "value" of those items
shall be equivalent to the retail price or fair market price
of the true items that are counterfeited.
(B) When counterfeited but unassembled components of computer
software packages are recovered, including, but not limited
to, counterfeited computer diskettes, instruction manuals, or
licensing envelopes, the "value" of those components of
computer software packages shall be equivalent to the retail
price or fair market price of the number of completed computer
software packages that could have been made from those
components.
(b) The sentencing court shall, upon petition by the
prosecuting attorney, at any time following sentencing, or by
agreement of all parties, at the time of sentencing, conduct a
hearing to determine whether any property or property interest
is subject to forfeiture under this section. At the forfeiture
hearing, the prosecuting attorney shall have the burden of
establishing, by a preponderance of the evidence, that the
property or property interests are subject to forfeiture. The
prosecuting attorney may retain seized property that may be
subject to forfeiture until the sentencing hearing.
(c) Prior to the commencement of a forfeiture proceeding, the
law enforcement agency seizing the property subject to
forfeiture shall make an investigation as to any person other
than the defendant who may have an interest in it. At least 30
days before the hearing to determine whether the property
should be forfeited, the prosecuting agency shall send notice
of the hearing to any person who may have an interest in the
property that arose before the seizure.
A person claiming an interest in the property shall file a
motion for the redemption of that interest at least 10 days
before the hearing on forfeiture, and shall send a copy of the
motion to the prosecuting agency and to the probation
department.
If a motion to redeem an interest has been filed, the
sentencing court shall hold a hearing to identify all persons
who possess valid interests in the property. No person shall
hold a valid interest in the property if, by a preponderance
of the evidence, the prosecuting agency shows that the person
knew or should have known that the property was being used in
violation of, or conspiracy to commit a violation of, Section
311.1, 311.2, 311.3, 311.4, 311.5, 311.10, 311.11, 470, 470a,
472, 475, 476, 480, 483.5, 484g, or subdivision (a), (b), or
(d) of Section 484e, subdivision (a) of Section 484f,
subdivision (b) or (c) of Section 484i, subdivision (c) of
Section 502, or Section 502.7, 502.8, 529, 529a, 530.5, 537e,
593d, 593e, or 646.9, and that the person did not take
reasonable steps to prevent that use, or if the interest is a
security interest, the person knew or should have known at the
time that the security interest was created that the property
would be used for a violation.
(d) If the sentencing court finds that a person holds a valid
interest in the property, the following provisions shall
apply:
(1) The court shall determine the value of the property.
(2) The court shall determine the value of each valid interest
in the property.
(3) If the value of the property is greater than the value of
the interest, the holder of the interest shall be entitled to
ownership of the property upon paying the court the difference
between the value of the property and the value of the valid
interest.
If the holder of the interest declines to pay the amount
determined under paragraph (2), the court may order the
property sold and designate the prosecutor or any other agency
to sell the property. The designated agency shall be entitled
to seize the property and the holder of the interest shall
forward any documentation underlying the interest, including
any ownership certificates for that property, to the
designated agency. The designated agency shall sell the
property and pay the owner of the interest the proceeds, up to
the value of that interest.
(4) If the value of the property is less than the value of the
interest, the designated agency shall sell the property and
pay the owner of the interest the proceeds, up to the value of
that interest.
(e) If the defendant was a minor at the time of the offense,
this subdivision shall apply to property subject to forfeiture
that is the property of the parent or guardian of the minor.
(1) The prosecuting agency shall notify the parent or guardian
of the forfeiture hearing at least 30 days before the date set
for the hearing.
(2) The computer or telecommunications device shall not be
subject to forfeiture if the parent or guardian files a signed
statement with the court at least 10 days before the date set
for the hearing that the minor shall not have access to any
computer or telecommunications device owned by the parent or
guardian for two years after the date on which the minor is
sentenced.
(3) If the minor is convicted of a violation of Section 470,
470a, 472, 476, 480, or subdivision (b) of Section 484e,
subdivision (d) of Section 484e, subdivision (a) of Section
484f, subdivision (b) of Section 484i, subdivision (c) of
Section 502, or Section 502.7, 502.8, 529, 529a, or 530.5,
within two years after the date on which the minor is
sentenced, and the violation involves a computer or
telecommunications device owned by the parent or guardian, the
original property subject to forfeiture, and the property
involved in the new offense, shall be subject to forfeiture
notwithstanding paragraph (2).
(4) Notwithstanding paragraph (1), (2), or (3), or any other
provision of this chapter, if a minor's parent or guardian
makes full restitution to the victim of a crime enumerated in
this chapter in an amount or manner determined by the court,
the forfeiture provisions of this chapter do not apply to the
property of that parent or guardian if the property was
located in the family's primary residence during the
commission of the crime.
(f) Notwithstanding any other provision of this chapter, the
court may exercise its discretion to deny forfeiture where the
court finds that the convicted defendant, or minor adjudicated
to come within the jurisdiction of the juvenile court, is not
likely to use the property otherwise subject to forfeiture for
future illegal acts.
(g) If the defendant is found to have the only valid interest
in the property subject to forfeiture, it shall be distributed
as follows:
(1) First, to the victim, if the victim elects to take the
property as full or partial restitution for injury, victim
expenditures, or compensatory damages, as defined in paragraph
(1) of subdivision (e) of Section 502. If the victim elects to
receive the property under this paragraph, the value of the
property shall be determined by the court and that amount
shall be credited against the restitution owed by the
defendant. The victim shall not be penalized for electing not
to accept the forfeited property in lieu of full or partial
restitution.
(2) Second, at the discretion of the court, to one or more of
the following agencies or entities:
(A) The prosecuting agency.
(B) The public entity of which the prosecuting agency is a
part.
(C) The public entity whose officers or employees conducted
the investigation resulting in forfeiture.
(D) Other state and local public entities, including school
districts.
(E) Nonprofit charitable organizations.
(h) If the property is to be sold, the court may designate the
prosecuting agency or any other agency to sell the property at
auction. The proceeds of the sale shall be distributed by the
court as follows:
(1) To the bona fide or innocent purchaser or encumbrancer,
conditional sales vendor, or mortgagee of the property up to
the amount of his or her interest in the property, if the
court orders a distribution to that person.
(2) The balance, if any, to be retained by the court, subject
to the provisions for distribution under subdivision (g).
502.5. Every person who, after mortgaging or
encumbering by deed of trust any real property, and during the
existence of such mortgage or deed of trust, or after such
mortgaged or encumbered property shall have been sold under an
order and decree of foreclosure or at trustee's sale, and with
intent to defraud or injure the mortgagee or the beneficiary
or trustee, under such deed of trust, his representatives,
successors or assigns, or the purchaser of such mortgaged or
encumbered premises at such foreclosure or trustee's sale, his
representatives, successors or assigns, takes, removes or
carries away from such mortgaged or encumbered premises, or
otherwise disposes of or permits the taking, removal or
carrying away or otherwise disposing of any house, barn,
windmill, water tank, pump, engine or other part of the
freehold that is attached or affixed to such premises as an
improvement thereon, without the written consent of the
mortgagee or beneficiary, under deed of trust, his
representatives, successors or assigns, or the purchaser at
such foreclosure or trustee's sale, his representatives,
successors or assigns, is guilty of larceny and shall be
punished accordingly.
502.6. (a) Any person who knowingly, willfully, and
with the intent to defraud, possesses a scanning device, or
who knowingly, willfully, and with intent to defraud, uses a
scanning device to access, read, obtain, memorize or store,
temporarily or permanently, information encoded on the
magnetic strip or stripe of a payment card without the
permission of the authorized user of the payment card is
guilty of a misdemeanor, punishable by a term in a county jail
not to exceed one year, or a fine of one thousand dollars
($1,000), or both the imprisonment and fine.
(b) Any person who knowingly, willfully, and with the intent
to defraud, possesses a reencoder, or who knowingly,
willfully, and with intent to defraud, uses a reencoder to
place encoded information on the magnetic strip or stripe of a
payment card or any electronic medium that allows an
authorized transaction to occur, without the permission of the
authorized user of the payment card from which the information
is being reencoded is guilty of a misdemeanor, punishable by a
term in a county jail not to exceed one year, or a fine of one
thousand dollars ($1,000), or both the imprisonment and fine.
(c) Any scanning device or reencoder described in subdivision
(e) owned by the defendant and possessed or used in violation
of subdivision (a) or (b) may be seized and be destroyed as
contraband by the sheriff of the county in which the scanning
device or reencoder was seized.
(d) Any computer, computer system, computer network, or any
software or data, owned by the defendant, which is used during
the commission of any public offense described in this section
or any computer, owned by the defendant, which is used as a
repository for the storage of software or data illegally
obtained in violation of this section shall be subject to
forfeiture.
(e) As used in this section, the following definitions apply:
(1) "Scanning device" means a scanner, reader, or any other
electronic device that is used to access, read, scan, obtain,
memorize, or store, temporarily or permanently, information
encoded on the magnetic strip or stripe of a payment card.
(2) "Reencoder" means an electronic device that places encoded
information from the magnetic strip or stripe of a payment
card on to the magnetic strip or stripe of a different payment
card.
(3) "Payment card" means a credit card, debit card, or any
other card that is issued to an authorized user and that
allows the user to obtain, purchase, or receive goods,
services, money, or anything else of value.
(f) Nothing in this section shall preclude prosecution under
any other provision of law.
502.7. (a) Any person who, knowingly, willfully, and
with intent to defraud a person providing telephone or
telegraph service, avoids or attempts to avoid, or aids, abets
or causes another to avoid the lawful charge, in whole or in
part, for telephone or telegraph service by any of the
following means is guilty of a misdemeanor or a felony, except
as provided in subdivision (g):
(1) By charging the service to an existing telephone number or
credit card number without the authority of the subscriber
thereto or the lawful holder thereof.
(2) By charging the service to a nonexistent telephone number
or credit card number, or to a number associated with
telephone service which is suspended or terminated, or to a
revoked or canceled (as distinguished from expired) credit
card number, notice of the suspension, termination,
revocation, or cancellation of the telephone service or credit
card having been given to the subscriber thereto or the holder
thereof.
(3) By use of a code, prearranged scheme, or other similar
stratagem or device whereby the person, in effect, sends or
receives information.
(4) By rearranging, tampering with, or making connection with
telephone or telegraph facilities or equipment, whether
physically, electrically, acoustically, inductively, or
otherwise, or by using telephone or telegraph service with
knowledge or reason to believe that the rearrangement,
tampering, or connection existed at the time of the use.
(5) By using any other deception, false pretense, trick,
scheme, device, conspiracy, or means, including the fraudulent
use of false, altered, or stolen identification.
(b) Any person who does either of the following is guilty of a
misdemeanor or a felony, except as provided in subdivision
(g):
(1) Makes, possesses, sells, gives, or otherwise transfers to
another, or offers or advertises any instrument, apparatus, or
device with intent to use it or with knowledge or reason to
believe it is intended to be used to avoid any lawful
telephone or telegraph toll charge or to conceal the existence
or place of origin or destination of any telephone or
telegraph message.
(2) Sells, gives, or otherwise transfers to another or offers,
or advertises plans or instructions for making or assembling
an instrument, apparatus, or device described in paragraph (1)
of this subdivision with knowledge or reason to believe that
they may be used to make or assemble the instrument,
apparatus, or device.
(c) Any person who publishes the number or code of an
existing, canceled, revoked, expired, or nonexistent credit
card, or the numbering or coding which is employed in the
issuance of credit cards, with the intent that it be used or
with knowledge or reason to believe that it will be used to
avoid the payment of any lawful telephone or telegraph toll
charge is guilty of a misdemeanor.
Subdivision (g) shall not apply to this subdivision. As used
in this section, "publishes" means the communication of
information to any one or more persons, either orally, in
person or by telephone, radio, or television, or electronic
means, including, but not limited to, a bulletin board system,
or in a writing of any kind, including without limitation a
letter or memorandum, circular or handbill, newspaper, or
magazine article, or book.
(d) Any person who is the issuee of a calling card, credit
card, calling code, or any other means or device for the legal
use of telecommunications services and who receives anything
of value for knowingly allowing another person to use the
means or device in order to fraudulently obtain
telecommunications services is guilty of a misdemeanor or a
felony, except as provided in subdivision (g).
(e) Subdivision (a) applies when the telephone or telegraph
communication involved either originates or terminates, or
both originates and terminates, in this state, or when the
charges for service would have been billable, in normal
course, by a person providing telephone or telegraph service
in this state, but for the fact that the charge for service
was avoided, or attempted to be avoided, by one or more of the
means set forth in subdivision (a).
(f) Jurisdiction of an offense under this section is in the
jurisdictional territory where the telephone call or telegram
involved in the offense originates or where it terminates, or
the jurisdictional territory to which the bill for the service
is sent or would have been sent but for the fact that the
service was obtained or attempted to be obtained by one or
more of the means set forth in subdivision (a).
(g) Theft of any telephone or telegraph services under this
section by a person who has a prior misdemeanor or felony
conviction for theft of services under this section within the
past five years, is a felony.
(h) Any person or telephone company defrauded by any acts
prohibited under this section shall be entitled to restitution
for the entire amount of the charges avoided from any person
or persons convicted under this section.
(i) Any instrument, apparatus, device, plans, instructions, or
written publication described in subdivision (b) or (c) may be
seized under warrant or incident to a lawful arrest, and, upon
the conviction of a person for a violation of subdivision (a),
(b), or (c), the instrument, apparatus, device, plans,
instructions, or written publication may be destroyed as
contraband by the sheriff of the county in which the person
was convicted or turned over to the person providing telephone
or telegraph service in the territory in which it was seized.
(j) Any computer, computer system, computer network, or any
software or data, owned by the defendant, which is used during
the commission of any public offense described in this section
or any computer, owned by the defendant, which is used as a
repository for the storage of software or data illegally
obtained in violation of this section shall be subject to
forfeiture.
502.8. (a) Any person who knowingly advertises illegal
telecommunications equipment is guilty of a misdemeanor.
(b) Any person who possesses or uses illegal
telecommunications equipment intending to avoid the payment of
any lawful charge for telecommunications service or to
facilitate other criminal conduct is guilty of a misdemeanor.
(c) Any person found guilty of violating subdivision (b), who
has previously been convicted of the same offense, shall be
guilty of a felony, punishable by imprisonment in state
prison, a fine of up to fifty thousand dollars ($50,000), or
both.
(d) Any person who possesses illegal telecommunications
equipment with intent to sell, transfer, or furnish or offer
to sell, transfer, or furnish the equipment to another,
intending to avoid the payment of any lawful charge for
telecommunications service or to facilitate other criminal
conduct is guilty of a misdemeanor punishable by one year in a
county jail or imprisonment in state prison or a fine of up to
ten thousand dollars ($10,000), or both.
(e) Any person who possesses 10 or more items of illegal
telecommunications equipment with intent to sell or offer to
sell the equipment to another, intending to avoid payment of
any lawful charge for telecommunications service or to
facilitate other criminal conduct, is guilty of a felony,
punishable by imprisonment
in state prison, a fine of up to fifty thousand dollars
($50,000), or both.
(f) Any person who manufactures 10 or more items of illegal
telecommunications equipment with intent to sell or offer to
sell the equipment to another, intending to avoid the payment
of any lawful charge for telecommunications service or to
facilitate other criminal conduct is guilty of a felony
punishable by imprisonment in state prison or a fine of up to
fifty thousand dollars ($50,000), or both.
(g) For purposes of this section, "illegal telecommunications
equipment" means equipment that operates to evade the lawful
charges for any telecommunications service; surrepticiously
intercept electronic serial numbers or mobile identification
numbers; alter electronic serial numbers; circumvent efforts
to confirm legitimate access to a telecommunications account;
conceal from any telecommunications service provider or lawful
authority the existence, place of origin, or destination of
any telecommunication; or otherwise facilitate any other
criminal conduct. "Illegal telecommunications equipment"
includes, but is not limited to, any unauthorized electronic
serial number or mobile identification number, whether
incorporated into a wireless telephone or other device or
otherwise. Items specified in this paragraph shall be
considered illegal telecommunications equipment
notwithstanding any statement or disclaimer that the items are
intended for educational, instructional, or similar purposes.
(h) (1) In the event that a person violates the provisions of
this section with the intent to avoid the payment of any
lawful charge for telecommunications service to a
telecommunications service provider, the court shall order the
person to pay restitution to the telecommunications service
provider in an amount that is the greater of the following:
(A) Five thousand dollars ($5,000).
(B) Three times the amount of actual damages, if any,
sustained by the telecommunications service provider, plus
reasonable attorney fees.
(2) It is not a necessary prerequisite to an order of
restitution under this section that the telecommunications
service provider has suffered, or be threatened with, actual
damages.
502.9. Upon conviction of a felony violation under this
chapter, the fact that the victim was an elder or dependent
adult, as defined in Section 368, shall be considered a
circumstance in aggravation when imposing a term under
subdivision (b) of Section 1170.
How We Can Help
Please call us 24 hours a day at 1-800-957-2245. An experienced,
professional bail agent will immediately assist you and answer all
of your bail related questions.
|