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SB1064 • 2026

Disclosure of Public Servants’ Personal Information

Disclosure of Public Servants’ Personal Information

Labor
Passed Legislature

This bill passed both chambers and reached final enrollment, even if later executive action is not shown here.

Sponsor
Bradley
Last action
2026-03-13
Official status
Senate - Died in Governmental Oversight and Accountability
Effective date
2027-01-15

Plain English Breakdown

The bill text does not specify the exact conditions under which data brokers can provide email addresses for receiving requests.

Disclosure of Public Servants’ Personal Information

This bill allows public servants to request that data brokers stop sharing their personal information and requires data brokers to comply with these requests.

What This Bill Does

  • Defines who can ask a data broker not to share their personal information (called 'protected information').
  • Lists the types of personal information protected, such as home addresses, phone numbers, email addresses, social security numbers, driver license numbers, and vehicle identifiers.
  • Requires public servants or their authorized agents to send written requests to data brokers asking them not to share this protected information.
  • Prohibits data brokers from sharing or re-sharing any protected information after receiving a request from a covered person.

Who It Names or Affects

  • Public servants, including judges, prosecutors, law enforcement officers, and other government workers.
  • Data brokers who collect and share personal information of consumers.

Terms To Know

Covered person
A public servant or their family member who can ask a data broker not to share their personal information.
Data broker
An entity that collects and shares personal information of consumers with third parties.

Limits and Unknowns

  • The bill does not specify what happens if a data broker fails to comply with the request.
  • It is unclear how this law will be enforced or who will monitor compliance by data brokers.

Bill History

  1. 2026-03-13 Senate

    • Died in Governmental Oversight and Accountability

  2. 2026-01-13 Senate

    • Introduced

  3. 2026-01-12 Senate

    • Referred to Governmental Oversight and Accountability; Judiciary; Rules

  4. 2026-01-05 Senate

    • Filed

Official Summary Text

Disclosure of Public Servants’ Personal Information; Authorizing certain public employees and officials to provide a written notice to a data broker to prevent disclosure of specified personal data concerning themselves and related persons; prohibiting a data broker from disclosing or redisclosing certain data after receipt of such notice; authorizing data brokers to provide e-mail addresses for receipt of such notice under specified conditions; providing for civil actions against a data broker for failure to comply, etc.

Current Bill Text

Read the full stored bill text
Florida Senate
-
2026

SB 1064

By
Senator Bradley

6-00434A-26 20261064__
1 A bill to be entitled
2 An act relating to the disclosure of public servants’
3 personal information; providing legislative findings;
4 creating s. 111.101, F.S.; defining terms; authorizing
5 certain public employees and officials to provide a
6 written notice to a data broker to prevent disclosure
7 of specified personal data concerning themselves and
8 related persons; prohibiting a data broker from
9 disclosing or redisclosing certain data after receipt
10 of such notice; authorizing data brokers to provide e
11 mail addresses for receipt of such notice under
12 specified conditions; providing for civil actions
13 against a data broker for failure to comply; providing
14 the standard of fault in such actions; providing that
15 it is not a defense that protected information was
16 available through specified means; providing that it
17 is an affirmative defense to assert that the person is
18 not a covered person; providing exceptions; providing
19 for damages and costs; providing construction;
20 providing severability; providing an effective date.
21
22 Be It Enacted by the Legislature of the State of Florida:
23
24 Section 1.
The Legislature finds that the state’s judges,

25
prosecutors, law enforcement officers, and other public servants

26
play an essential role in the functioning of the government of

27
this state and that the nature of their public duties regularly

28
places them in danger of death, serious physical injury,

29
threats, intimidation, and other reprisals. Violence, threats,

30
and intimidation targeted at such public servants and their

31
families is on the rise. Technology has broadened access to the

32
personal information of such persons, defined in this act as

33
“protected information,” and can be and has been used to

34
facilitate violence, threats, and intimidation. Accordingly, the

35
provisions set forth herein are both necessary and appropriate

36
to protect the privacy, safety, and security of such public

37
servants and to prevent interference in the administration of

38
justice and the operation of government in this state.

39 Section 2. Section 111.101, Florida Statutes, is created to
40 read:
41
111.101

Nondisclosure of public servants’ personal

42
information.—

43
(1)

DEFINITIONS.—As used in this section, the term:

44
(a)

“Assignee” means a person or an entity to whom a

45
covered person’s right to bring a civil action for a violation

46
of paragraph (2)(b) has been assigned, in writing, by the

47
covered person or his or her authorized agent.

48
(b)

“Authorized agent” means any of the following persons

49
or entities authorized to submit or revoke a request for

50
nondisclosure of protected information on behalf of a covered

51
person and to engage in communications and enforcement related

52
thereto:

53
1.

A designated trustee or other agent acting pursuant to a

54
written power of attorney or other legal instrument on behalf of

55
a covered person who is physically or mentally incapacitated.

56
2.

A parent or legal guardian acting on behalf of a child

57
who is a minor and otherwise entitled to nondisclosure pursuant

58
to this section.

59
3.

A person or an entity that has been appointed pursuant

60
to a written power of attorney by a covered person to act on the

61
covered person’s behalf with respect to this section.

62
4.

An agent acting on behalf of a federal judge, a designee

63
of the United States Marshals Service, or the clerk of any

64
United States District Court.

65
(c)

“Covered person” means any of the following persons:

66
1.

Active or former sworn law enforcement personnel or

67
active or former civilian personnel employed by a law

68
enforcement agency, including law enforcement officers;

69
correctional officers; correctional probation officers;

70
personnel of the Department of Children and Families whose

71
duties include the investigation of abuse, neglect,

72
exploitation, fraud, theft, or other criminal activities; or

73
personnel of the Department of Revenue or local governments

74
whose responsibilities include revenue collection and

75
enforcement or child support enforcement.

76
2.

Current or former federal judges, justices of the

77
Supreme Court, district court of appeal judges, circuit court

78
judges, or county court judges, and current judicial assistants.

79
3.

Current or former general magistrates, special

80
magistrates, judges of compensation claims, administrative law

81
judges of the Division of Administrative Hearings, or child

82
support enforcement hearing officers.

83
4.

Current or former state attorneys, assistant state

84
attorneys, statewide prosecutors, or assistant statewide

85
prosecutors.

86
5.

Current or former juvenile probation officers, juvenile

87
probation supervisors, detention superintendents, assistant

88
detention superintendents, juvenile justice detention officers I

89
and II, juvenile justice detention officer supervisors, juvenile

90
justice residential officers, juvenile justice residential

91
officer supervisors I and II, juvenile justice counselors,

92
juvenile justice counselor supervisors, human services counselor

93
administrators, senior human services counselor administrators,

94
rehabilitation therapists, or social services counselors of the

95
Department of Juvenile Justice.

96
6.

Current or former public defenders, assistant public

97
defenders, criminal conflict and civil regional counsel, or

98
assistant criminal conflict and civil regional counsel.

99
7.

Individuals who hold or held elected public office under

100
the laws of this state at the state, county, or municipal level,

101
including members of the Legislature, statewide officers, county

102
commissioners, sheriffs, mayors, city council members, or

103
individuals holding similar positions.

104
8.

A child of a person identified in subparagraphs 1.-7.,

105
until such child attains 26 years of age.

106
9.

A person sharing custody of a minor child with a person

107
identified in subparagraphs 1.-7.

108
10.

A blood or legal relative sharing a primary residence

109
with a person identified in subparagraphs 1.-7.

110
(d)

“Data broker” means a person or an entity that

111
knowingly collects or obtains the protected information of a

112
consumer and then discloses that information to a third party.

113
The term does not include any governmental agency or its

114
representatives acting in their official capacity.

115
(e)

“Disclose” means to solicit, sell, manufacture, give,

116
provide, lend, trade, mail, deliver, transfer, post, publish,

117
distribute, circulate, disseminate, present, exhibit, advertise,

118
offer, or include within a searchable list or database,

119
regardless of whether any other person or entity has actually

120
searched such list or database for the information.

121
(f)

“Federal judge” has the same meaning as in the Daniel

122
Anderl Judicial Security and Privacy Act of 2022, Pub. L. No.

123
117-263, div. E, title LIX, subtitle D, Dec. 23, 2022, 136 Stat.

124
3458.

125
(g)

“Home address” means the dwelling location at which a

126
person resides and includes the person’s physical address,

127
mailing address, street address, parcel identification number,

128
plot identification number, legal property description,

129
neighborhood name and lot number, GPS coordinates, or any other

130
descriptive property information that may reveal the home

131
address.

132
(h)

“Home telephone number” means any telephone number used

133
primarily for personal communications or associated with

134
personal communications devices, including a landline or

135
cellular number.

136
(i)

“Judicial assistant” means a court employee assigned to

137
the following class codes: 8140, 8150, 8310, or 8320.

138
(j)

“Protected information” means:

139
1.

A home address, including a primary residence or

140
secondary residences.

141
2.

A home telephone number.

142
3.

A personal e-mail address.

143
4.

A social security number or driver license number.

144
5.

A license plate number or other unique identifiers of a

145
vehicle owned, leased, or regularly used by the covered person.

146
6.

The mobile advertising ID or any other unique identifier

147
used for tracking cellular phones or smart devices regularly

148
used by the covered person.

149
(2)

NONDISCLOSURE OF PROTECTED INFORMATION.—

150
(a)

A covered person or his or her authorized agent seeking

151
to prohibit the disclosure by a data broker of the protected

152
information of the covered person must provide written notice to

153
the data broker referencing this section and requesting that the

154
data broker cease the disclosure of the covered person’s

155
protected information, as described in such notice.

156
(b)

Not later than 10 business days following physical or

157
electronic receipt of such written notice, a data broker may not

158
disclose or redisclose, including, but not limited to, on the

159
Internet, the person’s protected information set forth in such

160
notice.

161
(c)

For receipt of such written notices from or on behalf

162
of covered persons, a data broker may provide an e-mail address

163
for receipt of written notices under this subsection, provided

164
that the e-mail address:

165
1.

Is clearly and publicly published in a privacy policy on

166
the data broker’s website;

167
2.

Does not change without at least 30 days’ notice to be

168
communicated in the privacy policy; and

169
3.

Is able to receive any written notice delivered by e

170
mail.

171
(3)

ENFORCEMENT.—

172
(a)

A data broker that violates paragraph (2)(b) shall be

173
liable to the covered person or the covered person’s assignee,

174
either of whom may bring a civil action in circuit court.

175
(b)

In any judicial proceeding initiated pursuant to

176
paragraph (a), the standard of fault is ordinary negligence, and

177
it is not a defense to liability in such proceeding that the

178
covered person’s protected information is or was available to

179
the public from other sources or available by inspection of

180
public records. For the purpose of determining whether the

181
covered person’s protected information has been disclosed in

182
violation of paragraph (2)(b), a party accessing a data broker’s

183
website or other products or services may not, as a result of

184
such access, be deemed to have agreed on behalf of the covered

185
person or the covered person’s assignee to any website terms and

186
conditions, including waivers of claims or limitations of

187
liability, with respect to the covered person’s or the covered

188
person’s assignee’s rights under this section. Prior

189
verification of a covered person’s status is not required for

190
the notice under paragraph (2)(a) to be effective, but it is an

191
affirmative defense to liability that such person is not a

192
covered person.

193
(c)

A disclosure of protected information is not a

194
violation of this section if the disclosure is:

195
1.

Made with the express authorization of the covered

196
person, contingent upon such authorization being provided

197
subsequent to the relevant nondisclosure request described in

198
paragraph (2)(a); or

199
2.

For the sole purpose of facilitating a transaction

200
initiated by the covered person.

201
(d)

For violations of paragraph (2)(b), the court shall

202
award:

203
1.

The greater of actual damages or liquidated damages

204
computed at the rate of $1,000 for each violation of paragraph

205
(2)(b).

206
2.

Punitive damages upon proof of willful or reckless

207
disregard of the law.

208
3.

Reasonable attorney fees and other litigation costs

209
reasonably incurred.

210
4.

Any other preliminary or equitable relief as the court

211
determines to be appropriate.

212
(4)

CONSTRUCTION AND SEVERABILITY.—

213
(a)

This section shall be liberally construed in order to

214
accomplish its purpose.

215
(b) If any provision of this section or its application to

216
any person or circumstance is held invalid, the invalidity does

217
not affect other provisions or applications of this section

218
which can be given effect without the invalid provision or

219
application, and to this end the provisions of this section are

220
severable.

221 Section 3. This act shall take effect January 15, 2027.