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Gaetz Friend Accessed Restricted Database on 300 People

Joel Greenberg, the friend of U.S. Rep. Matt Gaetz who pleaded guilty earlier this year to identity theft and other charges, accessed a restricted state database through his position as a local tax collector in Florida to look up information about hundreds of people, officials said.

Greenberg looked up information on almost 300 people, using the Driver and Vehicle Information Database, known as DAVID, according to the Seminole County Tax Collector’s Office, located in a suburb of Orlando, Florida.

“We’re still working on determining the people searched,” Alan Byrd, a spokesperson for the Tax Collector’s Office, told the Orlando Sentinel this week. “This was an activity by the former tax collector that was not condoned by the DAVID system, and we are working to make sure that this sort of activity does not happen again.”

The DAVID system is used by police officers and deputies to quickly access a person’s information, including Social Security number, date of birth, addresses, signatures, and medical and disability information.

Greenberg and his employees had access to the DAVID system because residents obtain motor vehicle licenses through the county’s Tax Collector’s offices.

“I’m not surprised for one single moment,” said Seminole Commissioner Jay Zembower. “But it causes me great concern for those individuals, who for whatever purpose or reason, he was asking for their personal information.”

Officials in the Seminole County Tax Collector’s Office say they only learned about Greenberg’s searches after receiving a public records request from the Florida Center for Government Accountability, a government watchdog group, about the former tax collector’s use of the DAVID system.

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