(1) As used in this section:
- (a) “Disclose” includes, but is not limited to, transfer, publish, distribute, exhibit, advertise and offer.
- (b) “Injure” means to subject another to bodily injury or death.
- (c) “Harass” means to subject another to severe emotional distress such that the individual experiences anxiety, fear, torment or apprehension that may or may not result in a physical manifestation of severe emotional distress or a mental health diagnosis and is protracted rather than merely trivial or transitory.
(d) “Personal information” means:
- (A) The plaintiff’s home address, personal electronic mail address, personal phone number or Social Security number;
- (B) Contact information for the plaintiff’s employer;
- (C) Contact information for a family member of the plaintiff;
- (D) Photographs of the plaintiff’s children; or
- (E) Identification of the school that the plaintiff’s children attend.
- (e) “Stalk” means conduct constituting the crime of stalking under ORS 163.732 or conduct that would give rise to an action for issuance or violation of a stalking protective order under ORS 30.866.
(2) A plaintiff has a cause of action for improper disclosure of private information if the plaintiff establishes by a preponderance of the evidence that:
- (a) The defendant, with the intent to stalk, harass or injure the plaintiff, knowingly caused personal information to be disclosed;
- (b) The defendant knew or reasonably should have known that the plaintiff did not consent to the disclosure;
- (c) The plaintiff is stalked, harassed or injured by the disclosure; and
- (d) A reasonable person would be stalked, harassed or injured by the disclosure.
(3) A plaintiff who prevails in a claim under this section may recover:
- (a) Economic and noneconomic damages, as those terms are defined in ORS 31.705;
- (b) Punitive damages;
- (c) Injunctive relief;
- (d) Reasonable attorney fees; and
- (e) Any other appropriate equitable relief.
- (4) An action under this section must be commenced not later than two years after the conduct that gives rise to a claim for relief occurred.
[2021 c.300 §1; 2025 c.2 §2]