There are 14 situations in which it is legal to view someone else's driver's license and motor vehicle registration data.
Finding homes to ransack isn't one of them.
Yet that's exactly how David W. Pollard carried out his three-year burglary spree in Eden Prairie and other Hennepin County suburbs.
Pollard had an unusually high-tech method of picking his targets. He visited parking lots outside theaters, took note of the license plates of parked cars and then logged on to a service called Publicdata.com, which offered lookups for license plates to show the addresses of the owners.
When the curtains came down and the theatergoers went home, they found their homes violated and possessions looted. Minnetonka police caught Pollard in 2015, and in March he was sentenced to 11 years in prison.
The state Department of Public Safety thought there should be consequences for Publicdata.com as well. Though that's not as simple as it sounds.
The Irving, Texas-based company is one of many outfits that legally acquire databases of government information and offer it for sale to the public. At some point, they purchased in bulk Minnesota's driver and vehicle database.
A federal law restricts who can see that data to government agencies, employers, investigators, researchers and others with a public safety or motor vehicle purpose.