ALLARD, Judge.
Following a jury trial, Harold P. Kankanton was convicted of two counts of second-degree theft for stealing two "access devices."
On appeal, Kankanton challenges only his second conviction (the conviction for theft of a driver's license), arguing that a driver's license does not qualify as an "access device" under Alaska law.
Having reviewed the language and legislative history of the relevant statutes, we conclude that there is minimal support, if any, for the State's claim that the legislature intended a driver's license to automatically fall within the definition of an "access device." Because the legislative intent is ambiguous, the rule of lenity requires us to construe the statute against the government. We therefore reverse Kankanton's conviction for theft of the driver's license.
Under AS 11.46.130(a)(7), a person commits second-degree theft "if with the intent to deprive another of property, or to appropriate property of another to oneself or a third person, the person obtains the property of another" and the property is "an access device."
Under the plain language of this statute, an item is an "access device" if (1) it falls within the listed categories — "a card, credit card, plate, code, account number, algorithm, or identification number, including [but not limited to
The same legislation that enacted this definition of "access device" separately defined "identification document" as "a paper instrument, or other article used to establish the identity of a person," including "a social security card, driver's license, non-driver's identification, birth certificate, passport, employee identification, or hunting or fishing license."
Thus, a driver's license is specifically included in the definition of an "identification document," but it is not specifically listed as an "access device." The question presented in this appeal is whether we should nevertheless construe the definition of "access device" to encompass a driver's license because it is a type of "card" or "identification number" that could be "capable of being used, alone or in conjunction with another access device or identification document, to obtain property or services."
The legislative history of the relevant statutes provides no guidance on this question. During committee discussion of the legislation, a representative of the Alaska Public Defender Agency expressed concern that the definition of "access device" could potentially be construed to include a driver's license, but committee members did not respond to that concern or indicate whether or not they agreed with it.
The statutes defining "access device" and "identification document" were enacted in 2000 as part of a larger crime bill addressing the problem of identity theft.
As part of the same crime bill, the legislature amended other sections of the criminal code to bring it up-to-date with the more technologically sophisticated means through which people improperly access the finances and financial credit of others. The offense of "fraudulent use of a credit card" thus became "fraudulent use of an access device,"
As this discussion makes clear, in the 2000 identity theft bill, the legislature assigned distinct meanings to the terms "access device" and "identification document" — enacting separate definitions in AS 11.81.900 and creating some criminal offenses that penalize conduct involving access devices and other criminal offenses that penalize conduct involving both access devices and identification documents.
The State argues that these terms are not mutually exclusive. In its view, a driver's license, like a social security card, can function as an identification document and as an access device, because it is potentially "capable of being used, alone or in conjunction with another access device or identification document to obtain property or services."
We agree that a driver's license, like an access device, might be used "to obtain property or services" — for instance, to open a bank account or to obtain credit. But this is potentially true of all the items listed in the definition of "identification document," including a birth certificate, passport — even a hunting license. We think if the legislature had intended "theft of an access device" to mean "theft of an access device or an identification document," it would have said so, as it did in other sections of the criminal code.
The State also cites to several federal cases that have treated a driver's license as an "access device" under federal law.
Having reviewed the legislative history of AS 11.81.900(b)(1) and the larger statutory scheme that was enacted at the same time, we conclude that the legislative intent with regard to whether a driver's license is an "access device" for purposes of the second-degree theft statute is, at best, ambiguous. We are therefore required by the rule of lenity to construe the definition of this statutory term against the imposition of criminal liability.
We REVERSE Kankanton's second-degree theft conviction for theft of a driver's license (Count V) and REMAND to the superior court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion. We do not retain jurisdiction.