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1 | AN ACT concerning regulation.
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2 | Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
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3 | represented in the General Assembly:
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4 | Section 1. Short title. This Act may be cited as the | |||||||||||||||||||
5 | Digital Property Protection and Law Enforcement Act. | |||||||||||||||||||
6 | Section 5. Legislative findings; intent. The General | |||||||||||||||||||
7 | Assembly finds all of the following: | |||||||||||||||||||
8 | (a) Private and corporate citizens in Illinois | |||||||||||||||||||
9 | increasingly own cryptocurrencies, nonfungible tokens, and | |||||||||||||||||||
10 | other forms of digital property stored on blockchains. | |||||||||||||||||||
11 | (b) Digital property owners are particularly susceptible | |||||||||||||||||||
12 | to injury due to frauds, hacks, phishing scams, and ransomware | |||||||||||||||||||
13 | extortion as well as from the loss of cryptographic private | |||||||||||||||||||
14 | keys and mistaken transactions. Hacks involving digital | |||||||||||||||||||
15 | property have become routine and often result in hundreds of | |||||||||||||||||||
16 | millions of dollars in losses while frauds and the loss of | |||||||||||||||||||
17 | private keys have caused billions of dollars of injury to | |||||||||||||||||||
18 | digital property owners. | |||||||||||||||||||
19 | (c) Illinois citizens have suffered and continue to suffer | |||||||||||||||||||
20 | unnecessary losses due to these causes. Moreover, these losses | |||||||||||||||||||
21 | are often visited on those least able to bear them. Younger | |||||||||||||||||||
22 | persons and persons from disadvantaged communities are more | |||||||||||||||||||
23 | likely than others to own digital property and more likely to |
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1 | choose digital property over stocks or mutual funds to invest | ||||||
2 | their savings. As a result, disadvantaged communities bear the | ||||||
3 | brunt of losses due to digital property crimes, loss of | ||||||
4 | private keys, and fluctuations in prices of digital assets. | ||||||
5 | (d) Illinois citizens have asserted legal rights regarding | ||||||
6 | digital property but many blockchain networks lack procedures | ||||||
7 | to enforce court orders regarding digital property or have | ||||||
8 | adopted methods of operation that inhibit such enforcement. As | ||||||
9 | a result, the cost to enforce legal rights in digital property | ||||||
10 | is often prohibitive such that the property rights cannot be | ||||||
11 | vindicated and the vast majority of blockchain crimes go | ||||||
12 | unpunished. | ||||||
13 | (e) The difficulty of enforcing the law reduces the value | ||||||
14 | of digital property, imposes burdensome costs to protect | ||||||
15 | against risk, and inhibits the adoption of technology that | ||||||
16 | could benefit the private and corporate citizens of the State.
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17 | (f) Fostering development of technologies to protect | ||||||
18 | blockchain transactions and legal interests in digital | ||||||
19 | property presents an economic opportunity for Illinois | ||||||
20 | businesses.
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21 | (g) The public welfare, security, and safety will be | ||||||
22 | served by regulating blockchain transactions and digital | ||||||
23 | property in the State.
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24 | Section 10. Definitions. As used in this Act: | ||||||
25 | "Blockchain", "cryptographic hash", "electronic", |
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1 | "electronic record", "record", and "smart contract" shall have | ||||||
2 | the meanings ascribed to them in Section 5 of the Blockchain | ||||||
3 | Technology Act. | ||||||
4 | "Blockchain network" means a network of 2 or more nodes | ||||||
5 | that maintain or append a blockchain. | ||||||
6 | "Blockchain operator" means a person or entity operating a | ||||||
7 | full or partial node, including, without limitation, operating | ||||||
8 | a blockchain mining node, mining pool, validator, validator | ||||||
9 | pool, staking pool, and staking a validator. | ||||||
10 | "Blockchain transaction" means the processing and storage | ||||||
11 | of a record on a blockchain. | ||||||
12 | "Digital property" refers to any form of property recorded | ||||||
13 | on a blockchain, including, without limitation, | ||||||
14 | cryptocurrency, digital tokens, nonfungible tokens, and | ||||||
15 | tokenized real-world assets. | ||||||
16 | "Private key" means a cryptographic key used to sign a | ||||||
17 | blockchain transaction. | ||||||
18 | "Smart contract code" refers to computer code written to a | ||||||
19 | blockchain and used to execute a smart contract agreement in | ||||||
20 | whole or in part. | ||||||
21 | "Secured party" shall have the meaning ascribed to it in | ||||||
22 | subsection (a) of Section 9-102 of the Uniform Commercial | ||||||
23 | Code. | ||||||
24 | "Staking" means providing digital assets to a validator to | ||||||
25 | enable that validator to participate in operating a | ||||||
26 | proof-of-stake blockchain network.
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1 | Section 15. Enforcement of warrants and court orders; | ||||||
2 | penalties. | ||||||
3 | (a) Upon a valid request from the Attorney General or a | ||||||
4 | State's Attorney made pursuant to the substantive or | ||||||
5 | procedural laws of this State, a court may order any | ||||||
6 | appropriate blockchain transaction for digital property or for | ||||||
7 | the execution of a smart contract. | ||||||
8 | (b) A blockchain network that processes a blockchain | ||||||
9 | transaction originating in this State at any time after the | ||||||
10 | effective date of this Act shall process a court-ordered | ||||||
11 | blockchain transaction without the need for the private key | ||||||
12 | associated with the digital property or smart contract. | ||||||
13 | (c)(1) Each blockchain operator that has mined, validated, | ||||||
14 | or otherwise participated in processing a blockchain | ||||||
15 | transaction on the blockchain network which originated in this | ||||||
16 | State at any time after the effective date of this Act is | ||||||
17 | liable to this State for a violation of subsection (b). | ||||||
18 | (2) Upon a petition by the Attorney General or a | ||||||
19 | State's Attorney, the court shall assess a civil penalty | ||||||
20 | of between $5,000 and $10,000, as adjusted by the Federal | ||||||
21 | Civil Penalties Inflation Adjustment Act of 1990, 28 | ||||||
22 | U.S.C. 2461 note, Public Law 104–410, for each day that | ||||||
23 | the blockchain network fails to comply with the order. | ||||||
24 | (d) The fact that a blockchain network has not adopted | ||||||
25 | reasonable available procedures to comply with subsection (b) |
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1 | shall not be a defense to an action under subsection (c).
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2 | Section 20. Protection of digital property and contract | ||||||
3 | rights. | ||||||
4 | (a) Any person using a smart contract to deliver goods or | ||||||
5 | services in this State shall include smart contract code | ||||||
6 | capable of enforcing court orders regarding the smart | ||||||
7 | contract. Any person who violates this subsection (a) shall be | ||||||
8 | liable to return all digital property or other consideration | ||||||
9 | given by the plaintiff, without regard to any benefits that | ||||||
10 | may have been received by the plaintiff, and liable for the | ||||||
11 | costs of the action and reasonable attorney's fees as | ||||||
12 | determined by a court.
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13 | (b)(1) A court may order a blockchain transaction as a | ||||||
14 | remedy if a party to a smart contract or an owner of digital | ||||||
15 | property loses the private key associated with the smart | ||||||
16 | contract or digital property or if the owner of the private key | ||||||
17 | is deceased and the private key is unknown to the executor or | ||||||
18 | administrator of the estate. A court may also order that a | ||||||
19 | blockchain transaction originating in this State be refunded | ||||||
20 | to the sender if there is a legal right to a refund, such as in | ||||||
21 | cases of fraud or mistake. | ||||||
22 | (2) A blockchain network that processes a blockchain | ||||||
23 | transaction originating in this State at any time after | ||||||
24 | the effective date of this Act shall process the | ||||||
25 | court-ordered blockchain transactions without the need for |
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1 | the private key associated with the digital property or | ||||||
2 | smart contract.
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3 | (3) Each blockchain operator that has mined or | ||||||
4 | validated a blockchain transaction on the blockchain | ||||||
5 | network which originated in this State at any time after | ||||||
6 | the effective date of this Act is liable to the plaintiff | ||||||
7 | for damages suffered due to a violation of paragraph (2) | ||||||
8 | of this subsection together with the plaintiff's costs of | ||||||
9 | the action and reasonable attorney's fees, as determined | ||||||
10 | by a court. | ||||||
11 | (4) The fact that a blockchain network has not adopted | ||||||
12 | reasonable available procedures to comply with paragraph | ||||||
13 | (2) of this subsection shall not be a defense to an action | ||||||
14 | under paragraph (3) of this subsection.
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15 | Section 25. Security interests. | ||||||
16 | (a) Upon a valid request made pursuant to the substantive | ||||||
17 | or procedural laws of this State from a secured party claiming | ||||||
18 | an interest in digital property or right in a smart contract of | ||||||
19 | another, a court may order any transaction deemed appropriate. | ||||||
20 | (b) A blockchain network that processes a transaction | ||||||
21 | originating in this State at any time after the effective date | ||||||
22 | of this Act shall enforce a court order without need for the | ||||||
23 | private key associated with the digital property or smart | ||||||
24 | contract. | ||||||
25 | (c)(1) Each blockchain operator that has mined, validated, |
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1 | or otherwise participated in processing a blockchain | ||||||
2 | transaction on the blockchain network originating in this | ||||||
3 | State at any time after the effective date of this Act is | ||||||
4 | liable to the secured party for any damages suffered due to a | ||||||
5 | violation of subsection (b) together with the plaintiff's | ||||||
6 | costs of the action and reasonable attorney's fees, as | ||||||
7 | determined by a court. | ||||||
8 | (2) The fact that a blockchain network has not adopted | ||||||
9 | reasonable available procedures to comply with subsection | ||||||
10 | (b) shall not be a defense to an action under this | ||||||
11 | subsection (c).
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12 | Section 30. Service of process. A blockchain network may | ||||||
13 | be served by leaving a copy of the pleading, paper, filing, or | ||||||
14 | order with a blockchain operator who has participated in the | ||||||
15 | blockchain network at any time after the effective date of | ||||||
16 | this Act in any manner provided for service on individuals.
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17 | Section 99. Effective date. This Act takes effect 30 days | ||||||
18 | after becoming law.
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