Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Hotel franchise - Can I go to the police station to check my hotel records?

Can I go to the police station to check my hotel records?

Legal analysis: You can check your own room opening records, only yours. Depends on whether the police check the hotel records for others. If it is necessary for handling a case, it is legal. It is illegal for the police to inquire about other people's personal privacy without filing a case. In China, the law strictly protects citizens' personal information security, and there is no legal basis.

Legal basis: Article 5 of the Interpretation of the Supreme People's Court and the Supreme People's Procuratorate on Several Issues Concerning the Application of Laws in Handling Criminal Cases of Infringement on Citizens' Personal Information, illegal acquisition, sale and provision of citizens' personal information shall be deemed as "serious circumstances" as stipulated in Article 253-1 of the Criminal Law: (1) selling and providing information on whereabouts for others to use in crimes; (two) knowing or should know that others use citizens' personal information to commit crimes and sell or provide them; (3) illegally obtaining, selling or providing more than 50 pieces of track information, communication content, credit information and property information; (4) Illegally obtaining, selling or providing more than 500 pieces of citizens' personal information, such as accommodation information, communication records, health and physiological information and transaction information, which may affect personal and property safety; (5) illegally obtaining, selling or providing more than 5,000 pieces of personal information of citizens other than items (3) and (4); (six) the quantity does not meet the standards stipulated in items 3 to 5, but it reaches the relevant quantitative standards of the corresponding proportion; (seven) the illegal income of more than five thousand yuan; (8) Selling or providing citizens' personal information obtained in the course of performing their duties or providing services to others, with the quantity or amount reaching more than half of the standards specified in Items (3) to (7); (9) Having been subjected to criminal punishment or administrative punishment within two years for illegally obtaining, selling or providing personal information of citizens due to infringement of their personal information; (10) Other serious circumstances. The acts specified in the preceding paragraph shall be deemed to be "especially serious" as specified in the first paragraph of Article 253-1 of the Criminal Law in any of the following circumstances: (1) Causing serious consequences such as death, serious injury, mental disorder or kidnapping of the victim; (2) Causing significant economic losses or adverse social impacts; (3) The quantity or amount reaches more than ten times the standards specified in Items (3) to (8) of the preceding paragraph; (4) Other particularly serious circumstances.