| 2C:21-6.
Credit Card Theft
2C:21-6. Credit Cards.
a. Definitions. As
used in this section:
(1) "Cardholder" means the person or organization
named on the face of a credit card to whom or for
whose benefit the credit card is issued by an
issuer.
(2) "Credit card" means any tangible or intangible
instrument or device issued with or without fee by
an issuer that can be used, alone or in connection
with another means of account access, in obtaining
money, goods, services or anything else of value on
credit, including credit cards, credit plates,
account numbers, or any other means of account
access.
(3) "Expired credit
card" means a credit card which is no longer valid
because the term shown either on it or on
documentation provided to the cardholder by the
issuer has elapsed.
(4) "Issuer" means the business organization or
financial institution which issues a credit card or
its duly authorized agent.
(5) "Receives" or "receiving" means acquiring
possession or control or accepting a credit card as
security for a loan.
(6) "Revoked credit card" means a credit card which
is no longer valid because permission to use it has
been suspended or terminated by the issuer.
b. False statements made in procuring issuance of
credit card. A person who makes or causes to be
made, either directly or indirectly, any false
statement in writing, knowing it to be false and
with intent that it be relied on, respecting his
identity or that of any other person, firm or
corporation, or his financial condition or that of
any other person, firm or corporation, for the
purpose of procuring the issuance of a credit card
is guilty of a crime of the fourth degree.
c. Credit card theft.
(1) A person who takes or obtains a credit card from
the person, possession, custody or control of
another without the cardholder's consent or who,
with knowledge that it has been so taken, receives
the credit card with intent to use it or to sell it,
or to transfer it to a person other than the issuer
or the cardholder is guilty of a crime of the fourth
degree. Taking a credit card without consent
includes obtaining it by any conduct defined and
prescribed in Chapter 20 of this title, Theft and
Related Offenses.
A person who has in his possession or under his
control (a) credit cards issued in the names of two
or more other persons or, (b) two or more stolen
credit cards is presumed to have violated this
paragraph.
(2) A person who receives a credit card that he
knows to have been lost, mislaid, or delivered under
a mistake as to the identity or address of the
cardholder, and who retains possession with intent
to use it or to sell it or to transfer it to a
person other than the issuer or the cardholder is
guilty of a crime of the fourth degree.
(3) A person other than the issuer who sells a
credit card or a person who buys a credit card from
a person other than the issuer is guilty of a crime
of the fourth degree.
(4) A person who, with intent to defraud the issuer,
a person or organization providing money, goods,
services or anything else of value, or any other
person, obtains control over a credit card as
security for debt is guilty of a crime of the fourth
degree.
(5) A person who, with intent to defraud a purported
issuer, a person or organization providing money,
goods, services or anything else of value, or any
other person, falsely makes or falsely embosses a
purported credit card or utters such a credit card
is guilty of a third degree offense. A person other
than the purported issuer who possesses two or more
credit cards which are falsely made or falsely
embossed is presumed to have violated this
paragraph. A person "falsely makes" a credit card
when he makes or draws, in whole or in part, a
device or instrument which purports to be the credit
card of a named issuer but which is not such a
credit card because the issuer did not authorize the
making or drawing, or alters a credit card which was
validly issued. A person "falsely embosses" a credit
card when, without the authorization of the named
issuer, he completes a credit card by adding any of
the matter, other than the signature of the
cardholder, which an issuer requires to appear on
the credit card before it can be used by a
cardholder.
(6) A person other than the cardholder or a person
authorized by him who, with intent to defraud the
issuer, or a person or organization providing money,
goods, services or anything else of value, or any
other person, signs a credit card, is guilty of a
crime of the fourth degree. A person who possesses
two or more credit cards which are so signed is
presumed to have violated this paragraph.
d. Intent of cardholder to defraud; penalties;
knowledge of revocation. A person, who, with intent
to defraud the issuer, a person or organization
providing money, goods, services or anything else of
value, or any other person, (1) uses for the purpose
of obtaining money, goods, services or anything else
of value a credit card obtained or retained in
violation of subsection c. of this section or a
credit card which he knows is forged, expired or
revoked, or (2) obtains money, goods, services or
anything else of value by representing without the
consent of the cardholder that he is the holder of a
specified card or by representing that he is the
holder of a card and such card has not in fact been
issued, is guilty of a crime of the third degree.
Knowledge of revocation shall be presumed to have
been received by a cardholder four days after it has
been mailed to him at the address set forth on the
credit card or at his last known address by
registered or certified mail, return receipt
requested, and, if the address is more than 500
miles from the place of mailing, by air mail. If the
address is located outside the United States, Puerto
Rico, the Virgin Islands, the Canal Zone and Canada,
notice shall be presumed to have been received 10
days after mailing by registered or certified mail.
e. Intent to defraud by person authorized to furnish
money, goods, or services; penalties.
(1) A person who is authorized by an issuer to
furnish money, goods, services or anything else of
value upon presentation of a credit card by the
cardholder, or any agent or employees of such
person, who, with intent to defraud the issuer or
the cardholder, furnishes money, goods, services or
anything else of value upon presentation of a credit
card obtained or retained in violation of subsection
c. of this section or a credit card which he knows
is forged, expired or revoked violates this
paragraph and is guilty of a crime of the third
degree.
(2) A person who is authorized by an issuer to
furnish money, goods, services or anything else of
value upon presentation of a credit card by the
cardholder, fails to furnish money, goods, services
or anything else of value which he represents in
writing to the issuer that he has furnished is
guilty of a crime of the fourth degree.
f. Incomplete credit cards; intent to complete
without consent. A person other than the cardholder
possessing two or more incomplete credit cards, with
intent to complete them without the consent of the
issuer or a person possessing, with knowledge of its
character, machinery, plates or any other
contrivance designed to reproduce instruments
purporting to be the credit cards of an issuer who
has not consented to the preparation of such credit
cards, is guilty of a crime of the third degree. A
credit card is "incomplete" if part of the matter
other than the signature of the cardholder, which an
issuer requires to appear on the credit card, before
it can be used by a cardholder, has not yet been
stamped, embossed, imprinted or written on it.
g. Receiving anything of value knowing or believing
that it was obtained in violation of subsection d.
of N.J.S.2C:21-6. A person who receives money,
goods, services or anything else of value obtained
in violation of subsection d. of this section,
knowing or believing that it was so obtained is
guilty of a crime of the fourth degree. A person who
obtains, at a discount price a ticket issued by an
airline, railroad, steamship or other transportation
company which was acquired in violation of
subsection d. of this section without reasonable
inquiry to ascertain that the person from whom it
was obtained had a legal right to possess it shall
be presumed to know that such ticket was acquired
under circumstances constituting a violation of
subsection d. of this section.
h. Fraudulent use of credit cards.
A person who knowingly uses any counterfeit,
fictitious, altered, forged, lost, stolen or
fraudulently obtained credit card to obtain money,
goods or services, or anything else of value; or
who, with unlawful or fraudulent intent, furnishes,
acquires, or uses any actual or fictitious credit
card, whether alone or together with names of credit
cardholders, or other information pertaining to a
credit card account in any form, is guilty of a
crime of the third degree.
L.1978, c.95; amended 1979,c.178,s.36; 1984,c.119;
1991,c.122,s.1.
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