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The Impostor Rule and Identity Theft in America
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 06 March 2017
Abstract
Impersonation and then identity theft in America emerged in the legal space between a civil system with a high tolerance for market risk and losses incurred by impostors, and a later-developing criminal system preoccupied with fraud or forgery against the government. Negotiable instruments, generally paper checks, borrowed from seventeenth-century England, enabled a geographically far-flung commercial system of paper-based but impersonal exchanges at a time before widespread availability of centrally-issued currency or regulated banks. By assigning loss rather than catching criminals, the “impostor rule” made and continues to make transactions with negotiable instruments valid even if fraudulent. This large body of commercial law has stood essentially unchanged for three hundred years and has facilitated a system rife with impersonation which criminal and federal laws did not address until the late 20th century. English common law, American legal treatises, court cases, law review articles, and internal debates behind the Uniform Commercial Code tell the story of a legal system at the service of commerce through the unimpeded transfer of paper payments. Combining the fields of legal history and criminal justice with the approaches of emerging research in both identification and paperwork studies, this article explains the ongoing policy problems of identity theft.
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Footnotes
Funding to support this research came from the University of Wisconsin-La Crosse Faculty Research Grant. The author thanks the History Authors Writing Group and anonymous reviewers who provided valuable feedback.
References
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57. Another related body of law is the common law tort of privacy or the appropriation of identity. Also called the common law misappropriation of likeness, it protects the economic rights to one's own name or likeness, such as in cases of celebrities. In these cases, both parties are known to each other unlike in impostor cases. See Kahn, Jonathan, “What's in a Name? Law's Identity Under the Tort of Appropriation,” Temple Law Review 74 (2001): 263–65Google Scholar; and Kahn, Jonathan, “Enslaving the Image: The Origins of the Tort of Appropriation of Identity Reconsidered,” Legal Theory 2 (1996): 301–24Google Scholar.
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