28 C.F.R. § 22.28

Use of data identifiable to a private person for judicial, legislative or administrative purposes

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(a) Research or statistical information identifiable to a private person shall be immune from legal process and shall only be admitted as evidence or used for any purpose in any action, suit, or other judicial, legislative or administrative proceeding with the written consent of the individual to whom the data pertains.

(b) Where consent is obtained, such consent shall:

(1) Be obtained at the time that information is sought for use in judicial, legislative or administrative proceedings;

(2) Set out specific purposes in connection with which information will be used;

(3) Limit, where appropriate, the scope of the information subject to such consent.

[41 FR 54846, Dec. 15, 1976, as amended at 45 FR 62038, Sept. 18, 1980]
Notes of Decisions
Cited in 1 case, 1993–1993 · leading case: State v. Kalakosky, 852 P.2d 1064 (Wash. 1993).
State v. Kalakosky, 852 P.2d 1064 (Wash. 1993). · cites it 2× “28 C.F.R. § 22.28 . A reviewing court should not infer a congressional purpose to preempt state law.”
Annotations are extracted automatically from the opinions in the Syfert caselaw corpus and ranked by authority, recency, and treatment. Dots show Syfertize treatment of the citing case itself.