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HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES |
H.B. NO. |
1642 |
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THIRTY-THIRD LEGISLATURE, 2026 |
H.D. 1 |
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STATE OF HAWAII |
S.D. 1 |
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A BILL FOR AN ACT
RELATING TO CONSUMER PROTECTION.
BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF HAWAII:
SECTION 1. The legislature finds that digital financial asset transaction kiosks pose a significant risk to the financial security of the residents of the State. Digital financial asset transaction kiosks - also known as cryptocurrency Automated Teller Machines or cryptoATMs – enable a customer to buy and sell digital financial assets from a wallet or exchange. After providing the digital financial asset transaction kiosk with identification, which can range from a phone number to a scan of a government-issued ID, the customer enters the address of the wallet that will receive the purchased digital financial asset. The address could be the customer's own wallet or that of a third party. Finally, the customer inserts cash or a debit or credit card into the machine to finalize the purchase of the digital financial asset.
The legislature further finds that due to their ease of use, digital financial asset transaction kiosks are increasingly being used to facilitate scam payments. Typically, criminals target older individuals through unsolicited calls, posing as the government, bank, information technology support, or the customer service representative of a company. Once contact is made, the scammer provides detailed instructions to the prospective victim, including how to withdraw cash from the victim's bank, locate the kiosk, circumvent a kiosk's safeguards, and deposit and send funds using the kiosk to the wallet the scammer controls. After providing the instructions, the scammer stays in constant contact with the prospective victim until the payment is completed.
The legislature also finds that after the scams are complete, victims face significant barriers to recovering their losses. First, scammers quickly route funds to offshore platforms once the transactions are complete, which makes it very difficult to recover from the scammers. Second, the operators have consistently argued that, while the cash may be in the machine, the victim's money has already been transferred to the scammer, and the operator is unable to assist the victim in recovering the money.
The legislature finds that the proliferation of digital financial asset transaction kiosks and their increased use to facilitate scam payments has led to Americans losing millions of dollars. In 2024, the Federal Bureau of Investigation's Internet Crime Complaint Center received more than 10,956 complaints reporting the use of kiosks, with reported victim losses of approximately $246,700,000. That represents a ninety-nine per cent increase in the number of complaints and thirty-one per cent increase in reported victim losses from 2023. In the first six months of 2025, Americans lost around $240,000,000 in kiosk scams, a rate that is twice as high as in 2024.
Furthermore, several independent investigations, including investigations by the attorneys general for the District of Columbia and Iowa, have determined that a significant portion of transactions – as high as ninety per cent – were fraudulent transactions. Therefore, these kiosks pose a significant threat to the financial safety of the residents of this State.
Accordingly, the purpose of this Act is to:
(1) Establish
limits on transactions through digital financial asset transaction kiosks; and
(2) Require
operators of digital financial asset transaction kiosks to:
(A) Use blockchain analytics and tracing software to prevent fraud;
(B) Make certain disclosures;
(C) Provide receipts to customers;
(D) Provide full refunds under certain circumstances;
(E) Hold new customer transactions for a period of at least forty-eight hours; and
(F) Provide live customer service and a dedicated communications line for the department of the attorney general, office of consumer protection, department of law enforcement, and county police departments.
SECTION 2. Chapter 481B, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by adding a new section to part I to be appropriately designated and to read as follows:
"§481B- Digital
financial asset transaction kiosks; daily cap; fraud; disclosures. (a) An operator shall not accept transactions
from a single customer through a digital financial asset transaction kiosk of
more than:
(1) $2,000 or the
equivalent in digital financial assets per day; and
(2) $10,000 or the
equivalent in digital financial assets in any thirty-day period;
provided that the transaction limits shall apply
to each operator in the aggregate; provided further that no operator shall
accept transactions exceeding the applicable limit for their respective time
period.
(b)
All operators shall use blockchain analytics and tracing software to
prevent digital financial assets from being sent to a digital financial asset
wallet known or likely to be affiliated with fraudulent activity at the time of
transaction and to detect transaction patterns indicative of fraud or other
illicit activities. Operators shall
block transactions to digital financial asset wallets associated with overseas
exchanges inaccessible to users in the United States. The attorney general, executive director of
the office of consumer protection, director of law enforcement, and county
police departments may obtain evidence from an operator related to the
operator's current use of blockchain analytics.
(c) An
operator shall disclose in a clear, conspicuous, and easily readable manner all
relevant terms and conditions generally associated with the products, services,
and activities of the digital financial asset transaction kiosk, including but
not limited to transaction charges collected and exchange rates used by the
operator.
(d) An
operator shall display a warning on the digital financial asset
transaction kiosk or on the screen of the kiosk, written prominently in bold
type and provided separately from any other disclosure made pursuant to this
section, in substantially the following form:
"WARNING: This technology can be used to defraud
you. If someone asked you to deposit
money in this machine and/or is on the phone with you and claims to be a:
(1) Government
agent;
(2) Computer
software representative;
(3) Bill collector;
(4) Law
enforcement officer; or
(5) Anyone you do
not personally know,
STOP THIS TRANSACTION IMMEDIATELY and contact
your local law enforcement and digital financial asset transaction kiosk
operator. This is a scam. NEVER SEND MONEY to someone you don't
know."
(e) An operator shall disclose the material risks
associated with digital financial assets and digital financial asset
transactions to the customer at the digital financial asset transaction kiosk,
including disclosures that inform the customer that digital financial assets:
(1) Are not issued
or backed by the United States government and are not legal tender in the
United States;
(2) Are not subject
to protection by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, National Credit
Union Administration, or Securities Investor Protection Corporation; and
(3) May fluctuate significantly
in value relative to the United States dollar.
(f) An operator shall disclose the following
information to the customer at the digital financial asset transaction kiosk or
the first screen of the kiosk:
(1) The name,
address, and telephone number of the operator;
(2) The days, time,
and means of contact a customer may utilize to contact the operator for
assistance; and
(3) Any state and
county law enforcement and relevant government agency for reporting fraud.
(g) Any disclosure made by an operator pursuant
to this section shall not deprive a customer of receiving a refund.
(h) Upon completion of each transaction, the
operator shall provide the customer with paper and electronic receipts in a
retainable form. The receipt shall
include the following information:
(1) The operator's
name and toll-free customer service phone number;
(2) Relevant
contact information for state and county law enforcement and any relevant
government agency for reporting fraud;
(3) Type, value,
date, and precise time of the transaction;
(4) Each applicable
digital financial asset address and transaction hash where available;
(5) All charges;
(6) Exchange rate
of the digital financial assets to United States dollars;
(7) The operator's
refund policy;
(8) Any additional
information as determined by the operator; and
(9) Any additional
information required by the applicable state or county law enforcement or
relevant government agency.
(i) When a customer reports a fraudulent
transaction, the operator shall issue a refund to the customer in the full
amount of all transactions paid by the defrauded customer, including but not
limited to any transaction charges, at the time of the transaction, regardless
of any acknowledgements the customer may have made before finalizing the
transactions; provided that the customer:
(1) Has engaged in
a transaction or transactions involving the digital financial asset transaction
kiosk where fraud occurred, whether authorized or unauthorized;
(2) Contacted the
operator to inform the operator of the fraudulent nature of the transaction or
transactions at issue within ninety days after the last transaction occurred or
after the customer became aware of the fraud; and
(3) Submitted a
police report, government agency report, or sworn statement detailing the
fraudulent nature of the transaction or transactions to the operator within one
hundred twenty days after contacting the operator.
The refund under this subsection
shall be paid in the originating currency of the transaction. The operator shall issue a full refund within
seventy-two hours after being notified by the defrauded customer and receiving
a copy of the police or government agency's report or sworn statement.
(j) All operators shall hold each digital
financial asset transaction made by a new customer for a period of at least forty-eight
hours, after which the operator shall complete the transaction. No operator shall allow a new customer to
complete a digital financial asset transaction until the hold period has
elapsed. During the hold period, the new
customer may contact the operator to request the cancellation and full refund
of the transaction and the operator shall provide a full refund pursuant to
this section.
(k) All operators shall provide live customer
service during operating hours and between the hours of 8:00 a.m. and 10:00
p.m. Hawaii Standard Time. The customer
service toll-free number shall be displayed on the digital financial asset
transaction kiosk or on the screen of the kiosk.
(l) All operators performing business in the
State shall provide a dedicated communications line for the attorney general,
office of consumer protection, department of law enforcement, and county police
departments via a United States telephone number or electronic mail
address. The dedicated communications
line shall be used to facilitate law enforcement and government agency
communications with the operator in the event of a fraud report from a
customer. Upon request from a law
enforcement or government agency, an operator shall provide its trace findings
and provide blockchain analytics to assist the law enforcement or government
agency in any investigative matters related to the potential fraud.
(m) For the purposes of this section:
"Cash" means physical
United States currency, including coins and paper currency.
"Customer" means any
individual or entity that initiates, authorizes, or completes a transaction
involving digital financial assets through a digital financial asset
transaction kiosk, whether for the purpose of purchasing, selling,
transferring, or otherwise exchanging digital financial assets.
"Digital financial
asset" means a digital representation of value that is used as a medium of
exchange, unit of account, or store of value, and that is not legal tender,
regardless of whether denominated in legal tender. "Digital financial asset" does not
include:
(1) A transaction
in which a merchant grants, as part of an affinity or rewards program, value
that cannot be taken from or exchanged with the merchant for legal tender, bank
or credit union credit, or a digital financial asset;
(2) A digital representation
of value issued by or on behalf of a publisher and used solely within an online
game, game platform, or family of games sold by the same publisher or offered
on the same game platform; or
(3) A security registered
with or exempt from registration with the United States Securities and Exchange
Commission or a security registered or exempt from registration under chapter
485A.
"Digital financial asset
transaction" means a transaction conducted or performed, in whole or in
part, by electronic means via a digital financial asset transaction kiosk or
other means that facilitates or enables the purchase of digital financial
assets through a product or application that directs the customer to remit
payment in person, including through a clerk or other intermediary, for the purpose
of completing the transaction.
"Digital financial asset
transaction kiosk" means an electronic information processing device that
is capable of accepting or dispensing United States currency by means of credit
card or cash in exchange for a digital financial asset.
"Digital financial asset
wallet" means a software program or an application that stores digital
financial assets.
"New customer" means a
customer who has initiated, authorized, or completed the customer's first
digital financial asset transaction involving a digital financial asset transaction
kiosk within the past fourteen days.
"Operator" means a person who owns, operates, or manages a digital financial asset transaction kiosk located in the State."
SECTION 3. New statutory material is underscored.
SECTION 4. This Act shall take effect on July 1, 3000.
Report Title:
Consumer Protection; Digital Financial Assets; Virtual Currencies; Kiosks; Limits; Purchases
Description:
Establishes limits on transactions through digital financial asset transaction kiosks. Requires operators of digital financial asset transaction kiosks to use blockchain analytics and tracing software to prevent fraud; make certain disclosures; provide receipts to customers; provide full refunds under certain circumstances; hold new customer transactions for a period of at least forty-eight hours; and provide live customer service and a dedicated communications line for the Attorney General, Office of Consumer Protection, Department of Law Enforcement, and county police departments. Effective 7/1/3000. (SD1)
The summary description
of legislation appearing on this page is for informational purposes only and is
not legislation or evidence of legislative intent.