Mr. James A. Cox, Jr. Chairman, Texas Lottery Commission Post Office Box 16630 Austin, Texas 78761-6630
Re: Whether section
Dear Mr. Cox:
You ask whether section
We first address the authority of the Commission. Chapter 466 of the Government Code relates to the state lottery. See TEX. GOV'T CODE ANN. §
[This] approach would be to access the electronically readable information encoded on the magnetic stripe on the back of the Texas *Page 2 driver's license. The information accessed would not be stored in the machines. Rather, the machines would simply check the age to determine whether or not to allow the transaction to go forward. The information accessed would not be maintained, compiled or used for any purpose other than verifying [that] the purchaser is over the age of 18. Further, the licensed retailer would not have access to information encoded on the magnetic stripe on the back of the Texas driver's license.
Request Letter, supra note 1, at 1 (footnote omitted).
The access or use of electronically readable information on a driver's license is governed by section
*Page 3(d) The prohibition provided by Subsection (b) does not apply to a person who accesses, uses, compiles, or maintains a database of the information for a law enforcement or governmental purpose, including:
(1) an officer or employee of the department [of Public Safety] carrying out law enforcement or governmental purposes;3
(2) a peace officer, as defined by Article
2.12 , Code of Criminal Procedure, acting in the officer's official capacity;(3) a license deputy, as defined by Section
12.702 , Parks and Wildlife Code, issuing a license, stamp, tag, permit, or other similar item through use of a point-of-sale system under Section12.703 , Parks and Wildlife Code;(4) a person acting as authorized by Section
109.61 , Alcoholic Beverage Code;(5) a person establishing the identity of a voter under Chapter 63, Election Code;
(6) a person acting as authorized by Section
161.0825 , Health and Safety Code; or(7) a person screening an individual who will work with or have access to children if the person is an employee or an agent of an employee of a public school district or an organization exempt from federal income tax under Section
501 (c)(3), Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended, that sponsors a program for youth.
Id. § 521.126(d) (emphasis added) (footnote added). Thus, the issue before us is whether compliance with section
In 2006, this office said that the general prohibition of section 521.126 "does not prohibit a retailer, acting in compliance with section 486.014 of the Health and Safely Code, from electronically recording and storing personal data from the driver's license of a person who purchases certain nonprescription drugs that could be used in the manufacture of methamphetamine." Tex. Att'y Gen. Op. No.
Although a retailer of pharmaceutical drugs was not specifically listed among those persons exempted from the section 521.126 general prohibition, the opinion primarily focused on the fact that section
Likewise, in the situation you pose, the purpose and operation of the restriction on the sale of lottery tickets to persons under the age of eighteen years is analogous to certain specific exceptions listed in section 521.126(d), especially those having to do with the sale of alcoholic beverages to persons under the age of twenty-one years in section 521.126(d)(4), and with the sale of tobacco products to persons under the age of eighteen years in section 521.126(d)(6). The sole purpose of accessing the information in question is to permit the Commission to enforce the requirement of section
In answer, then, to your specific question, because the use of electronically readable information on a driver's license to verify the age of a person attempting to purchase a lottery ticket serves a legitimate law enforcement or governmental purpose, the Commission is not prohibited by section
Very truly yours,
KENT C. SULLIVAN First Assistant Attorney General
ANDREW WEBER Deputy Attorney General for Legal Counsel
NANCY S. FULLER Chair, Opinion Committee
Rick Gilpin Assistant Attorney General, Opinion Committee
