BILL NUMBER: AB 2496	AMENDED
	BILL TEXT

	AMENDED IN SENATE  AUGUST 18, 2010
	AMENDED IN SENATE  JULY 15, 2010
	AMENDED IN ASSEMBLY  MAY 20, 2010
	AMENDED IN ASSEMBLY  MAY 13, 2010
	AMENDED IN ASSEMBLY  APRIL 14, 2010

INTRODUCED BY   Assembly Member Nava

                        FEBRUARY 19, 2010

   An act to amend Sections 22979, 22980, and 22980.1 of the Business
and Professions Code, to add Section 104557.1 to the Health and
Safety Code, to amend Section 308.1 of the Penal Code, and to amend
Sections 30101.7 and 30165.1 of, and to add Section 30165.2 to, the
Revenue and Taxation Code, relating to tobacco products.


	LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST


   AB 2496, as amended, Nava. Cigarette and tobacco products.
   (1) The California Cigarette and Tobacco Products Licensing Act of
2003 (hereafter the act) provides for the licensure, by the State
Board of Equalization, of manufacturers, distributors, wholesalers,
importers, and retailers of cigarette or tobacco products that are
engaged in business in California and prohibits retailers,
manufacturers, distributors, and wholesalers from distributing or
selling those cigarette and tobacco products unless they are in
compliance with those licensure requirements.
   The act requires a manufacturer or importer to comply with
specified requirements in order to be eligible for obtaining and
maintaining a license under that act, including consent to
jurisdiction of the California courts for the purpose of enforcement
of that act and appointment of a registered agent for service of
process in this state.
   This bill would require a manufacturer or importer to additionally
consent to jurisdiction of the California courts for the purpose of
enforcement of the Master Settlement Agreement and the Cigarette and
Tobacco Products Tax Law or, in lieu of this consent, to post a
surety bond, as specified . The bill would provide that a licensee
who does not waive the sovereign immunity defense or post the surety
bond is ineligible to obtain or maintain a license and would also
make a licensee who raises a sovereign immunity defense in a
specified action subject to revocation of its license. This bill
would require the manufacturer or importer to additionally identify
the registered agent to the Attorney General.
   The act authorizes a peace officer or board employee granted
limited peace officer status to conduct inspections at any site where
evidence of activities involving evasion of cigarette or tobacco
products tax may be discovered.
   This bill would additionally authorize those officers to inspect
any site with respect to violations of a specified provision of the
Cigarette and Tobacco Products Tax Law.
   The act prohibits an importer, distributor, or wholesaler, or
distributor functioning as a wholesaler, or retailer, to purchase,
obtain, or otherwise acquire any package of cigarettes to which a
stamp or meter impression may not be affixed in accordance with the
Cigarette and Tobacco Products Tax Law. A violation of this provision
is a misdemeanor.
   This bill would additionally prohibit those persons from acquiring
a package of cigarettes unless the brand family or product
manufacturer of the cigarettes is included on a directory posted by
the Attorney General described in (3). By changing the definition of
a crime, this bill would impose a state-mandated local program.
   (2) Existing law prohibits the retail sale of cigarettes in
California unless the sale is a vendor-assisted, face-to-face sale,
as defined.
   This bill would allow delivery sales, as defined, in specified
circumstances. The bill would make violation of this provision a
misdemeanor. By creating a new crime, this bill would impose a
state-mandated local program.
   (3) Under existing law, states' attorneys general and various
tobacco product manufacturers have entered into a Master Settlement
Agreement (MSA), in settlement of various lawsuits, that provides for
the allocation of money to the states and certain territories. The
state has entered into a memorandum of understanding providing for
the allocation of the state's share of moneys to be received under
the MSA between the state and counties and certain cities in the
state. Existing law requires any tobacco product manufacturer selling
cigarettes to consumers in California to place specified amounts
into a qualified escrow fund by April 15 of each year.
   This bill would authorize a tobacco product manufacturer that
elects to place funds into a qualified escrow fund to make an
irrevocable assignment of its interest in the funds to the benefit of
the State of California, as specified. This bill would require any
funds assigned to the state that are withdrawn to be deposited into
the General Fund as a credit against any judgment or settlement which
may be obtained against the tobacco product manufacturer that has
assigned the funds.
    (4) The Cigarette and Tobacco Products Tax Law requires every
tobacco product manufacturer whose cigarettes are sold in this state
to make a certification to the Attorney General regarding certain
information. That law makes a false certification a misdemeanor.
   This bill would require certification of additional information,
as specified. By changing the definition of a crime, this bill would
impose a state-mandated local program.
   The Cigarette and Tobacco Products Tax Law requires the Attorney
General to post on the Attorney General's Internet Web site a
directory of tobacco product manufacturers that are participating
manufacturers under the MSA, and that have made all required escrow
payments and provided certification of related information to the
Attorney General. That law also requires the Attorney General's
Internet Web site to include specified brand families, as defined,
that have been identified by the tobacco product manufacturers.
Existing law also requires that a manufacturer and brand families be
excluded from the directory, if any of certain circumstances occur.
   This bill would establish circumstances under which a manufacturer
and brand families are to be excluded from the directory of
manufacturers and brand families, and would require the Attorney
General to provide distributors and wholesalers with written notice
of each tobacco product that is added to or removed from the
directory and to provide notice to each licensed distributor,
wholesaler, retailer, or other person who has provided an electronic
mail address for this purpose.
   This bill would also require a newly qualified nonparticipating
manufacturer, as defined, or a nonparticipating manufacturer that
poses an elevated risk of noncompliance with that law or the MSA, to
post a surety bond, as specified before inclusion onto the directory.

   This bill would specify that a person is prohibited from shipping
or distributing into or within this state for personal consumption in
this state cigarettes of a tobacco product manufacturer or brand
family not included in the directory, and would provide that this
specification is declaratory of existing law.
   This bill would require any nonparticipating manufacturer located
outside of the United States, as an additional condition precedent to
having its brand families listed or retained in the directory, to
cause its importers to appoint an agent, as specified, and would
impose additional specified responsibilities upon such a
manufacturer.
   This bill would give the Attorney General additional specified
authority regarding the administration of that law.
   This bill would, as a condition of selling cigarettes in the
state, require a tobacco product manufacturer, as specified, to
submit, or authorize to disclose, a copy of its applicable return.
This bill would provide that failure to comply with that provision
would subject the manufacturer and its brand families to removal from
the directory. This bill would impose a civil penalty on any
manufacturer that intentionally provides an applicable return with
materially false information.
   (5) Existing law prohibits the offer, sale, distribution, or
importation of a tobacco product know as "bidis" or "beedies," as
defined, unless it is sold or intended for sale in business
establishments that exclude minors.
   This bill would amend the definition of "bidis" or "beedies" to
include any product that is marketed and sold as "bidis" or "beedies,"
and would clarify that persons who violate this prohibition are
subject to both criminal and civil liability.
   By changing the definition of related crimes, this bill would
impose a state-mandated local program.
   (6) This bill would provide that the provisions of this bill are
severable. 
   (7) This bill would incorporate additional changes in Section
22979 of the Business and Professions Code proposed by AB 2733, that
would become operative only if AB 2733 and this bill are both
chaptered and become operative on or before January 1, 2011, and this
bill is chaptered last.  
   (7) 
    (8) The California Constitution requires the state to
reimburse local agencies and school districts for certain costs
mandated by the state. Statutory provisions establish procedures for
making that reimbursement.
   This bill would provide that no reimbursement is required by this
act for a specified reason.
   Vote: majority. Appropriation: no. Fiscal committee: yes.
State-mandated local program: yes.


THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA DO ENACT AS FOLLOWS:

  SECTION 1.  Section 22979 of the Business and Professions Code is
amended to read:
   22979.  (a)  Commencing on January 1, 2004, every
  Every  manufacturer and every  importer,
as defined in subdivision (b) of Section 22971,  
importer  shall obtain and maintain a license to engage in the
sale of cigarettes. In order to be eligible for obtaining and
maintaining a license under this division, a manufacturer or importer
shall do all of the following in the manner specified by the board:
   (1) Submit to the board a list of all brand families that they
manufacture or import.
   (2) Update the list of all brand families that they manufacture or
import whenever a new or additional brand is manufactured or
imported, or a listed brand is no longer manufactured or imported.
   (3) Consent to jurisdiction of the California courts for the
purpose of enforcement of this division, Sections 104555 to 104557,
inclusive, of the Health and Safety Code, Section 30165.1 of the
Revenue and Taxation Code  ,  and regulations adopted
pursuant thereto, and appoint a registered agent for service of
process in this state and identify the registered agent to the board
and the Attorney General.
   (4) Waive any sovereign immunity defense that may apply to any
enforcement action brought by the Attorney General or the board to
enforce this division, Sections 104555 to 104557, inclusive, of the
Health and Safety Code, or Part 13 (commencing with Section 30001) of
Division 2 of the Revenue and Taxation Code, and regulations adopted
thereto. Any waiver shall be express and in writing, in a form and
manner acceptable to the Attorney General. In lieu of this waiver, a
manufacturer or importer may  post a surety bond 
 file with the Attorney General a surety bond in a form and
manner directed by the Attorney General,  written in favor of
the State of California and conditioned on the performance by the
manufacturer or importer of all its duties and obligations under this
division, Sections 104555 to 104557, inclusive, of the Health and
Safety Code, Part 13 (commencing with Section 30001) of Division 2 of
the Revenue and Taxation Code, and regulations adopted thereto. The
bond shall be posted by a corporate surety located within the United
States in an amount equal to the greater of fifty thousand dollars
($50,000) or the amount of escrow the manufacturer or importer in
either its current or predecessor form was required to deposit as a
result of the largest of its most recent five calendar years' sales
in California  .  The bond may be drawn upon by the Attorney
General to cover unsatisfied escrow obligations, tax obligations,
claims for penalties, claims for monetary damages, and any other
liabilities that are subject to the licensee's claim of sovereign
immunity against enforcement of the laws specified above. In the
event a nonparticipating manufacturer is required to post a surety
bond under this paragraph, the amount of the bond shall be reduced by
the amount of any surety bond that is in force and required of that
nonparticipating manufacturer under paragraph (5) of subdivision (c)
of Section 30165.1 of the Revenue and Taxation Code. A manufacturer
or importer that has neither waived any sovereign immunity defense
nor posted a surety bond as provided in this section shall not be
eligible to obtain and maintain a license under this division.
   (b) In order to be eligible for obtaining and maintaining a
license under this division, a manufacturer or importer that is a
"tobacco product manufacturer" in subdivision (i) of Section 104556
of the Health and Safety Code, shall do all of the following in the
manner specified by the board:
   (1) Certify to the board that it is a "participating manufacturer"
as defined in subsection II(jj) of the "Master Settlement Agreement"
(MSA), or is in full compliance with paragraph (2) of subdivision
(a) of Section 104557 of the Health and Safety Code, Section 30165.1
of the Revenue and Taxation Code, and regulations adopted pursuant
thereto. Any person who makes a certification pursuant to this
subdivision that asserts the truth of any material matter that he or
she knows to be false is guilty of a misdemeanor punishable by
imprisonment of up to one year in the county jail, or a fine of not
more than one thousand dollars ($1,000), or both the imprisonment and
the fine.
   (2) Submit to the board a list of all brand families that fit
under the category applicable to the manufacturer or importer, in
accordance with the following:
   (A) Brand families that are to be counted, in the unit volume and
market shares determined pursuant to subsections II(z) and II(mm) of
the MSA and Exhibit E thereto, in calculating the manufacturer's
annual payments under the MSA.
   (B) Brand families that are to be counted in calculating the
manufacturer's escrow deposits under paragraph (2) of subdivision (a)
of Section 104557 of the Health and Safety Code.
   (C) The manufacturer or importer shall update the list whenever a
new or additional brand is manufactured or imported or a listed brand
is no longer manufactured or imported.
   (c) The board may not grant or permit the maintenance of a license
to any manufacturer or an importer of cigarettes that does not
affirmatively certify, both at the time the license is granted and
annually thereafter, compliance with paragraph (4) of subdivision
(a), that all packages of cigarettes manufactured or imported by that
person and distributed in California fully comply with subdivision
(b) of Section 30163 of the Revenue and Taxation Code, and that the
cigarettes contained in those packages are the subject of filed
reports that fully comply with all requirements of the federal
Cigarette Labeling and Advertising Act (15 U.S.C. Sec. 1331 et seq.)
for the reporting of ingredients added to cigarettes. For purposes of
the federal Cigarette Labeling and Advertising Act requirement,
cigars weighing three pounds or less per 1,000 are excluded from the
definition of cigarette.
   (d) A license issued to a manufacturer or an importer under this
division is only valid with respect to the manufacturer or importer
designated on the license and may not be transferred or assigned to
another manufacturer or importer.
   (e) Any manufacturer or importer that is issued a license under
this division that does not commence business in the manner specified
or designated in the license, ceases to do business in the manner
specified or designated in the license, or is notified that the
license is suspended or revoked, shall immediately surrender that
license to the board.
   (f) (1) Any manufacturer or any importer who is denied a license
may petition for a redetermination of the board's denial of the
license within 30 days after service upon that manufacturer or that
importer of the notice of the denial of the license. If a petition
for redetermination is not filed within the 30-day period, the
determination of denial becomes final at the expiration of the 30-day
period.
   (2) Every petition for redetermination shall be in writing and
shall state the specific grounds upon which the petition is founded.
The petition may be amended to state additional grounds at anytime
prior to the date on which the board issues its order or decision
upon the petition for redetermination.
   (3) If the petition for redetermination is filed within the 30-day
period, the board shall reconsider the determination of the denial
and, if the manufacturer or the importer has so requested in the
petition, shall grant an oral hearing and shall give the manufacturer
or the importer at least 10 days' notice of the time and place of
the hearing. The board may continue the hearing from time to time as
may be necessary.
   (4) The order or decision of the board upon a petition for
redetermination becomes final 30 days after mailing of notice
thereof.
   (5) Any notice required by this subdivision shall be served
personally or by mail. If served by mail, the notice shall be placed
in a sealed envelope, with postage paid, addressed to the
manufacturer or the importer at the address as it appears in the
records of the board. The giving of notice shall be deemed complete
at the time of deposit of the notice in the United States Post
Office, or a mailbox,  subpost   sub-post 
office, substation or mail chute or other facility regularly
maintained or provided by the United States Postal Service, without
extension of time for any reason. In lieu of mailing, a notice may be
served personally by delivering to the person to be served and
service shall be deemed complete at the time of the delivery.
Personal service to a corporation may be made by delivery of a notice
to any person designated in the Code of Civil Procedure to be served
for the corporation with summons and complaint in a civil action.
   (g) In any action brought by the Attorney General or the board to
enforce this division, Sections 104555 to 104557, inclusive, of the
Health and Safety Code, Part 13 (commencing with Section 30001) of
Division 2 of the Revenue and Taxation Code, or regulations adopted
thereto, including, but not limited to, an action to suspend or
revoke a license issued under this section, if the licensee raises a
sovereign immunity defense with respect to an aspect of that
proceeding, the license in question shall be subject to revocation.
In the event of a revocation under this subdivision, the person whose
license has been revoked shall not be eligible for a license under
this section in the future, unless that person agrees to waive any
sovereign immunity defense that may apply to an enforcement action
brought by the Attorney General or the board to enforce this
division, Sections 104555 to 104557, inclusive, of the Health and
Safety Code, Part 13 (commencing with Section 30001) of Division 2 of
the Revenue and Taxation Code, or regulations adopted thereto. The
Attorney General shall inform the board in the event a sovereign
immunity defense is raised by a licenseholder.
   SEC. 1.5.    Section 22979 of the   Business
and Professions Code   is amended to read: 
   22979.  (a)  Commencing on January 1, 2004, every
  Every  manufacturer and every importer  ,
as defined in subdivision (b) of Section 22971,  shall
obtain and maintain a license to engage in the sale of cigarettes. In
order to be eligible for obtaining and maintaining a license under
this division, a manufacturer or importer shall do all of the
following in the manner specified by the board:
   (1) Submit to the board a list of all brand families that they
manufacture or import.
   (2) Update the list of all brand families that they manufacture or
import whenever a new or additional brand is manufactured or
imported, or a listed brand is no longer manufactured or imported.
   (3) Consent to jurisdiction of the California courts for the
purpose of enforcement of this division  , Sections 104555 to
104557, inclusive, of the Health and Safety Code, Section 30165.1 of
the Revenue and Taxation Code, and regulations adopted pursuant
thereto,  and appoint a registered agent for service of process
in this state and identify the registered agent to the board  and
the Attorney General  . 
   (4) Waive any sovereign immunity defense that may apply to any
enforcement action brought by the Attorney General or the board to
enforce this division, Sections 104555 to 104557, inclusive, of the
Health and Safety Code, or Part 13 (commencing with Section 30001) of
Division 2 of the Revenue and Taxation Code, and regulations adopted
thereto. Any waiver shall be express and in writing, in a form and
manner acceptable to the Attorney General. In lieu of this waiver, a
manufacturer or importer may file with the Attorney General a surety
bond in a form and manner directed by the Attorney General, written
in favor of the State of California and conditioned on the
performance by the manufacturer or importer of all its duties and
obligations under this division, Sections 104555 to 104557,
inclusive, of the Health and Safety Code, Part 13 (commencing with
Section 30001) of Division 2 of the Revenue and Taxation Code, and
regulations adopted thereto. The bond shall be posted by a corporate
surety located within the United States in an amount equal to the
greater of fifty thousand dollars ($50,000) or the amount of escrow
the manufacturer or importer in either its current or predecessor
form was required to deposit as a result of the largest of its most
recent five calendar years' sales in California. The bond may be
drawn upon by the Attorney General to cover unsatisfied escrow
obligations, tax obligations, claims for penalties, claims for
monetary damages, and any other liabilities that are subject to the
licensee's claim of sovereign immunity against enforcement of the
laws specified above. In the event a nonparticipating manufacturer is
required to post a surety bond under this paragraph, the amount of
the bond shall be reduced by the amount of any surety bond that is in
force and required of that nonparticipating manufacturer under
paragraph (5) of subdivision (c) of Section 30165.1 of the Revenue
and Taxation Code. A manufacturer or importer that has neither waived
any sovereign immunity defense nor posted a surety bond as provided
in this section shall not be eligible to obtain and maintain a
license under this division. 
   (b) In order to be eligible for obtaining and maintaining a
license under this division, a manufacturer or importer that is a
"tobacco product manufacturer" in subdivision (i) of Section 104556
of the Health and Safety Code, shall do all of the following in the
manner specified by the board:
   (1) Certify to the board that it is a "participating manufacturer"
as defined in subsection II(jj) of the "Master Settlement Agreement"
(MSA), or is in full compliance with paragraph (2) of subdivision
(a) of Section 104557 of the Health and Safety Code  , Section
30165.1 of the Revenue and Taxation Code, and regulations adopted
pursuant thereto  . Any person who makes a certification
pursuant to this subdivision that asserts the truth of any material
matter that he or she knows to be false is guilty of a misdemeanor
punishable by imprisonment of up to one year in the county jail, or a
fine of not more than one thousand dollars ($1,000), or both the
imprisonment and the fine.
   (2) Submit to the board a list of all brand families that fit
under the category applicable to the manufacturer or importer, in
accordance with the following:
   (A) Brand families that are to be counted, in the unit volume and
market shares determined pursuant to subsections II(z) and II(mm) of
the MSA and Exhibit E thereto, in calculating the manufacturer's
annual payments under the MSA.
   (B) Brand families that are to be counted in calculating the
manufacturer's escrow deposits under paragraph (2) of subdivision (a)
of Section 104557 of the Health and Safety Code.
   (C) The manufacturer or importer shall update the list whenever a
new or additional brand is manufactured or imported or a listed brand
is no longer manufactured or imported.
   (c) The board may not grant or permit the maintenance of a license
to any manufacturer or an importer of cigarettes that does not
affirmatively certify, both at the time the license is granted and
annually thereafter,  compliance with paragraph (4) of
subdivision (a),  that all packages of cigarettes manufactured
or imported by that person and distributed in  this state
  California  fully comply with subdivision (b) of
Section 30163 of the Revenue and Taxation Code, and that the
cigarettes contained in those packages are the subject of filed
reports that fully comply with all requirements of the federal
Cigarette Labeling and Advertising Act (15 U.S.C. Sec. 1331 et seq.)
for the reporting of ingredients added to cigarettes. For purposes of
the federal Cigarette Labeling and Advertising Act requirement,
cigars weighing three pounds or less per 1,000 are excluded from the
definition of cigarette.
   (d) A license issued to a manufacturer or an importer under this
division is only valid with respect to the manufacturer or importer
designated on the license and may not be transferred or assigned to
another manufacturer or importer.
   (e) Any manufacturer or importer that is issued a license under
this division that does not commence business in the manner specified
or designated in the license, ceases to do business in the manner
specified or designated in the license, or is notified that the
license is suspended or revoked, shall immediately surrender that
license to the board.
   (f) (1) Any manufacturer or any importer who is denied a license
may petition for a redetermination of the board's denial of the
license within 30 days after service upon that manufacturer or that
importer of the notice of the denial of the license. If a petition
for redetermination is not filed within the 30-day period, the
determination of denial becomes final at the expiration of the 30-day
period.
   (2) Every petition for redetermination shall be in writing and
shall state the specific grounds upon which the petition is founded.
The petition may be amended to state additional grounds at anytime
prior to the date on which the board issues its order or decision
upon the petition for redetermination.
   (3) If the petition for redetermination is filed within the 30-day
period, the board shall reconsider the determination of the denial
and, if the manufacturer or the importer has so requested in the
petition, shall grant an oral hearing and shall give the manufacturer
or the importer at least 10 days' notice of the time and place of
the hearing. The board may continue the hearing from time to time as
may be necessary.
   (4) The order or decision of the board upon a petition for
redetermination becomes final 30 days after mailing of notice
thereof. 
   (5) Any notice required by this subdivision shall be served
personally or by mail. If by mail, the notice shall be placed in a
sealed envelope, with postage paid, addressed to the manufacturer or
the importer at the address as it appears in the records of the
board. The giving of notice shall be deemed complete at the time of
deposit of the notice in the United States Post Office, or a mailbox,
subpost office, substation or mail chute or other facility regularly
maintained or provided by the United States Postal Service, without
extension of time for any reason. In lieu of mailing, a notice may be
served personally by delivering to the person to be served and
service shall be deemed complete at the time of the delivery.
Personal service to a corporation may be made by delivery of a notice
to any person designated in the Code of Civil Procedure to be served
for the corporation with summons and complaint in a civil action.
 
   (g) In any action brought by the Attorney General or the board to
enforce this division, Sections 104555 to 104557, inclusive, of the
Health and Safety Code, Part 13 (commencing with Section 30001) of
Division 2 of the Revenue and Taxation Code, or regulations adopted
thereto, including, but not limited to, an action to suspend or
revoke a license issued under this section, if the licensee raises a
sovereign immunity defense with respect to an aspect of that
proceeding, the license in question shall be subject to revocation.
In the event of a revocation under this subdivision, the person whose
license has been revoked shall not be eligible for a license under
this section in the future, unless that person agrees to waive any
sovereign immunity defense that may apply to an enforcement action
brought by the Attorney General or the board to enforce this
division, Sections 104555 to 104557, inclusive, of the Health and
Safety Code, Part 13 (commencing with Section 30001) of Division 2 of
the Revenue and Taxation Code, or regulations adopted thereto. The
Attorney General shall inform the board in the event a sovereign
immunity defense is raised by a licenseholder. 
  SEC. 2.  Section 22980 of the Business and Professions Code is
amended to read:
   22980.  (a) (1) Any peace officer, or board employee granted
limited peace officer status pursuant to paragraph (6) of subdivision
(a) of Section 830.11 of the Penal Code, upon presenting appropriate
credentials, is authorized to enter any place as described in
paragraph (3) and to conduct inspections in accordance with the
following paragraphs, inclusive.
   (2) Inspections shall be performed in a reasonable manner and at
times that are reasonable under the circumstances, taking into
consideration the normal business hours of the place to be entered.
   (3) Inspections may be at any place at which cigarettes or tobacco
products are sold, produced, or stored or at any site where evidence
of activities involving evasion of cigarette or tobacco products tax
and violations of Section 30165.1 of the Revenue and Taxation Code
may be discovered.
   (4) Inspections shall be requested or conducted no more than once
in a 24-hour period.
   (b) Any person that refuses to allow an inspection shall be
subject to the penalties imposed pursuant to Section 22981.
  SEC. 3.  Section 22980.1 of the Business and Professions Code is
amended to read:
   22980.1.  (a) No manufacturer or importer shall sell cigarettes or
tobacco products to a distributor, wholesaler, retailer, or any
other person who is not licensed pursuant to this division or whose
license has been suspended or revoked.
   (b) (1) Except as provided in paragraph (2), no distributor or
wholesaler shall sell cigarettes or tobacco products to a retailer,
wholesaler, distributor, or any other person who is not licensed
pursuant to this division or whose license has been suspended or
revoked.
   (2) This subdivision does not apply to any sale of cigarettes or
tobacco products by a distributor, wholesaler, or any other person to
a retailer, wholesaler, distributor, or any other person that the
state, pursuant to the United States Constitution, the laws of the
United States, or the California Constitution, is prohibited from
regulating.
   (c) No retailer, distributor, or wholesaler shall purchase
packages of cigarettes or tobacco products from a manufacturer or
importer who is not licensed pursuant to this division or whose
license has been suspended or revoked.
   (d) (1) No retailer, or wholesaler shall purchase cigarettes or
tobacco products from any person who is not licensed pursuant to this
division or whose license has been suspended or revoked.
   (2) Notwithstanding subdivision (c), no distributor shall purchase
cigarettes or tobacco products from any person who is required to be
licensed pursuant to this division but who is not licensed or whose
license has been suspended or revoked.
   (e) Each separate sale to, or by, a retailer, wholesaler,
distributor, importer, manufacturer, or any other person who is not
licensed pursuant to this division shall constitute a separate
violation.
   (f) No manufacturer, distributor, wholesaler, or importer may sell
cigarette or tobacco products to any retailer or wholesaler whose
license has been suspended or revoked unless all outstanding debts of
that retailer or wholesaler that are owed to a wholesaler or
distributor for cigarette or tobacco products are paid and the
license of that retailer or wholesaler has been reinstated by the
board. Any payment received from a retailer or wholesaler shall be
credited first to the outstanding debt for cigarettes or tobacco
products and must be immediately reported to the board. The board
shall determine the debt status of a suspended retailer or wholesaler
licensee 25 days prior to the reinstatement of the license.
   (g) No importer, distributor, or wholesaler, or distributor
functioning as a wholesaler, or retailer, shall purchase, obtain, or
otherwise acquire any package of cigarettes to which a stamp or meter
impression may not be affixed in accordance with subdivision (b) of
Section 30163 or subdivision (e) of Section 30165.1 of the Revenue
and Taxation Code, or any cigarettes obtained from a manufacturer or
importer that cannot demonstrate full compliance with all
requirements of the federal Cigarette Labeling and Advertising Act
(15 U.S.C. Sec. 13335a et seq.) for the reporting of ingredients
added to cigarettes.
   (h)  (1) Failure to comply with the provisions of this section
shall be a misdemeanor subject to penalties pursuant to Section
22981.
   (2) Notwithstanding paragraph (1), a manufacturer or importer who
uses the most up-to-date licensing information provided by the board
on the board's Web site to determine a person's licensing status is
presumed to be in compliance with this section.
   (i) The amendments that are made to this section by the act adding
this subdivision shall become operative May 1, 2007.
  SEC. 4.  Section 104557.1 is added to the Health and Safety Code,
to read:
   104557.1.  (a) Notwithstanding subdivision (b) of Section 104557,
a tobacco product manufacturer that elects to place funds into escrow
pursuant to paragraph (2) of subdivision (a) of Section 104557 may
make an irrevocable assignment of its interest in the funds to the
benefit of the State of California. Such assignment shall be
permanent and apply to all funds in the subject escrow account or
that may subsequently come into the account, including those
deposited into the escrow account prior to the assignment being
executed, those deposited into the escrow account after the
assignment is executed, and interest or other appreciation on the
funds. The tobacco product manufacturer, the Attorney General, and
the financial institution where the escrow amount is maintained may
make such amendments to the qualified escrow account agreement as may
be necessary to effectuate an assignment of rights executed pursuant
to this subdivision or a withdrawal of funds from the escrow amount
pursuant to subdivision (b). An assignment of rights executed
pursuant to this section shall be in writing, signed by a duly
authorized representative of the tobacco products manufacturer
                                       making the assignment, and
shall become effective upon delivery of the assignment to the
Attorney General and the financial institution where the escrow
account is maintained.
   (b) Notwithstanding subdivision (b) of Section 104557, any escrow
funds assigned to the state pursuant to subdivision (a) shall be
withdrawn by the state upon the request by the Treasurer and approval
of the Attorney General. Any funds withdrawn pursuant to this
subdivision shall be deposited into the General Fund and shall be
calculated on a dollar-for-dollar basis as a credit against any
judgment or settlement described in subdivision (b) of Section 104557
which may be obtained against the tobacco product manufacturer who
has assigned the funds in the subject escrow account. Nothing in this
section shall be construed to relieve a tobacco product manufacturer
from any past, current, or future obligations the manufacturer may
have pursuant to this chapter.
  SEC. 5.  Section 308.1 of the Penal Code is amended to read:
   308.1.  (a) Notwithstanding any other law, no person shall sell,
offer for sale, distribute, or import any tobacco product commonly
referred to as "bidis" or "beedies," unless that tobacco product is
sold, offered for sale, or intended to be sold in a business
establishment that prohibits the presence of persons under 18 years
of age on its premises.
   (b) For purposes of this section, "bidis" or "beedies" means any
of the following:
   (1) A product containing tobacco that is wrapped in temburni leaf
(diospyros melanoxylon) or tendu leaf (diospyros exculpra).
   (2) A product that is marketed and sold as "bidis" or "beedies."
   (c) Any person who violates this section is guilty of a
misdemeanor and is also subject to a civil action brought by the
Attorney General, a city attorney, county counsel, or district
attorney for an injunction and a civil penalty of up to two thousand
dollars ($2,000) per violation. This subdivision does not affect any
other remedies available for a violation of this section.
  SEC. 6.  Section 30101.7 of the Revenue and Taxation Code is
amended to read:
   30101.7.  (a) It is the intent of the Legislature in enacting this
section to facilitate the collection of all applicable state
surtaxes, sales or use taxes, and escrow and other payment
obligations on cigarettes sold to residents of the state and to
ensure compliance with the Prevent All Cigarette Trafficking Act of
2009 (PACT Act; Public Law 111-154).
   (b) Except as provided in subdivision (d), no person may engage in
a retail sale of cigarettes in California unless the sale is a
vendor-assisted, face-to-face sale.
   (c) For the purposes of this section, the following definitions
shall apply:
   (1) "Consumer" means a person who purchases cigarettes or tobacco
products. "Consumer" does not include any person licensed under this
part or under Division 8.6 (commencing with Section 22970) of the
Business and Professions Code and lawfully operating as a
manufacturer, distributor, wholesaler, or retailer of cigarettes or
tobacco products.
   (2) "Delivery sale" means sale of cigarettes or tobacco products
into and in this state in either of the following cases:
   (A) The consumer submits the order for the sale by means of a
telephone or other method of voice transmission, the mail, or the
Internet or other online service, or the seller is otherwise not in
the physical presence of the consumer when the request for purchase
or order is made.
   (B) The cigarettes or tobacco products are delivered to the
consumer by common carrier, private delivery service, or other method
of remote delivery, or the seller is not in the physical presence of
the consumer when the consumer obtains possession of the cigarettes
or tobacco products.
   (3) "Delivery seller" means a person who makes a delivery sale.
   (4) "Face-to-face sale" means a sale in which the purchaser is in
the physical presence of the seller or the seller's employee or agent
at the time of the sale. A face-to-face sale does not include a
delivery sale.
   (5) "Indian country" shall have the same meaning as provided in
Section 1151 of Title 18 of the United States Code, and includes any
other land held by the United States in trust or restricted status
for one or more Indian tribes.
   (6) "Interstate commerce" means commerce between a state and any
place outside the state, commerce between a state and Indian country
in the state, or commerce between points in the same state but
through a place outside of the state or through any Indian country.
   (7) "Tobacco products" shall have the same meaning as otherwise
defined under this part with the exception of cigars.
   (d) A person may engage in delivery sale of cigarettes or tobacco
products to a person in California provided that all of the following
conditions are met:
   (1) The delivery seller has fully complied with all of the
requirements of Chapter 10A (commencing with Section 375) of Title 15
of the United States Code, otherwise known as the Jenkins Act.
   (2) The delivery seller obtains and maintains any applicable
license under this part and under Division 8.6 (commencing with
Section 22970) of the Business and Professions Code, as if the
delivery sales occurred entirely within this state.
   (3) The delivery seller complies with any applicable state law
that imposes escrow or other payment obligations on tobacco product
manufacturers, including, but not limited to, Sections 104555 to
104557, inclusive, of the Health and Safety Code.
   (4) The  delivery seller reports   Attorney
General may require the delivery seller to report  to the
Attorney General its delivery sales of cigarettes and tobacco
products to California consumers in the form and manner 
prescribed   specified  by the Attorney General.
   (e) Any violation of this section by any person is a misdemeanor.
Each offense shall be punishable by a fine not to exceed five
thousand dollars ($5,000), or imprisonment not to exceed one year in
a county jail, or both the fine and imprisonment. The amount of any
fines assessed shall be deposited in the Cigarette and Tobacco
Products Compliance Fund.
   (f) The State Board of Equalization  shall  
may  provide information relative to a seller's failure or
attempt to comply with the PACT Act and the Jenkins Act to the
Attorney General.
   (g) The Attorney General or a city attorney, county counsel, or
district attorney may bring a civil action to enforce this section
against a person that violates this section and, in addition to any
other remedy provided by law, the court shall assess a civil penalty
in accordance with the following schedule:
   (1) A civil penalty of not less than one thousand dollars ($1,000)
and not more than two thousand dollars ($2,000) for the first
violation.
   (2) A civil penalty of not less than two thousand five hundred
dollars ($2,500) and not more than three thousand five hundred
dollars ($3,500) for the second violation within a five-year period.
   (3) A civil penalty of not less than four thousand dollars
($4,000) and not more than five thousand dollars ($5,000) for the
third violation within a five-year period.
   (4) A civil penalty of not less than five thousand five hundred
dollars ($5,500) and not more than six thousand five hundred dollars
($6,500) for a fourth violation within a five-year period.
   (5) A civil penalty of up to ten thousand dollars ($10,000) for a
fifth or subsequent violation within a five-year period.
   (h) This section does not prohibit the lawful sale of a tobacco
product that occurs by means of a vending machine.
   (i) Nothing in this section shall relieve the seller of cigarettes
from any other applicable requirement of state law relating to the
sale or distribution of cigarettes or tobacco products in this state.

   (j) The board shall enforce the licensing and tax provisions of
this section. Other provisions of this section shall be enforced by
the Attorney General.  
   (j) 
    (k)  The provisions of this section are severable. If
any provision of this section or its application is held invalid,
that invalidity shall not affect other provisions or applications
that can be given effect without the invalid provision or
application.
  SEC. 7.  Section 30165.1 of the Revenue and Taxation Code is
amended to read:
   30165.1.  (a) The following definitions shall apply for purposes
of this section:
   (1) "Board" means the State Board of Equalization.
   (2) "Brand family" means all styles of cigarettes sold under the
same trademark and differentiated from one another by means of
additional modifiers, including, but not limited to, "menthol,"
"lights," "kings," and "100s" and includes any brand name, alone or
in conjunction with any other word, trademark, logo, symbol, motto,
selling message, recognizable pattern of colors, or any other indicia
of product identification identical or similar to, or identifiable
with, a previously known brand of cigarettes.
   (3) "Cigarette" has the same meaning as in subdivision (d) of
Section 104556 of the Health and Safety Code and includes tobacco
products defined as a cigarette under that subdivision.
   (4) "Distributor" has the same meaning as in Section 30011.
   (5) "MSA" means the Master Settlement Agreement, as defined in
subdivision (e) of Section 104556 of the Health and Safety Code.
   (6) "Nonparticipating manufacturer" means any tobacco product
manufacturer that is not a participating manufacturer.
   (7) "Participating manufacturer" has the same meaning as in
subsection II(jj) of the MSA.
   (8) "Qualified escrow fund" has the same meaning as in subdivision
(f) of Section 104556 of the Health and Safety Code.
   (9) "Tobacco product manufacturer" has the same meaning as in
subdivision (i) of Section 104556 of the Health and Safety Code.
   (10) "Units sold" has the same meaning as in subdivision (j) of
Section 104556 of the Health and Safety Code.
   (b) Every tobacco product manufacturer whose cigarettes are sold
in this state, whether directly or through a distributor, retailer,
or similar intermediary or intermediaries, shall execute and deliver
on a form and in the manner prescribed by the Attorney General, a
certification to the Attorney General no later than the 30th day of
April each year that, as of the date of the certification, the
tobacco product manufacturer is either a participating manufacturer
that has made all payments calculated by the independent auditor to
be due under the Master Settlement Agreement, except to the extent
the participating manufacturer is disputing any of the payments, or
is in full compliance with Article 3 (commencing with Section 104555)
of Chapter 1 of Part 3 of Division 103 of the Health and Safety
Code, including all installment payments required by that article and
this section, and any regulations promulgated pursuant thereto. A
tobacco product manufacturer located outside of the United States
shall provide to the Attorney General and keep current, the names,
and addresses, including electronic mail addresses, of all importers
that sell or will be selling their cigarettes in this state and shall
cause each importer to provide to the Attorney General a copy of a
valid importer permit issued by the United States Treasury, Alcohol
and Tobacco Tax and Trade Bureau, and the importer license issued by
the board. The importers who sell or will be selling their cigarettes
in this state shall obtain and maintain a license as an importer in
compliance with Division 8.6 (commencing with Section 22970) of the
Business and Professions Code. Any person who makes a certification
pursuant to this subdivision that asserts the truth of any material
matter that he or she knows to be false is guilty of a misdemeanor
punishable by imprisonment of up to one year in the county jail, or a
fine of not more than one thousand dollars ($1,000), or both the
imprisonment and the fine.
   (1) A participating manufacturer shall include in its
certification a complete list of its brand families. The
participating manufacturer shall update the list 30 days prior to any
addition to or modification of its brand families by executing and
delivering a supplemental certification to the Attorney General.
   (2) A nonparticipating manufacturer shall include in its
certification a complete list of all of its brand families in
accordance with the following requirements:
   (A) Separately listing brand families of cigarettes and the number
of units sold for each brand family that were sold in the state
during the preceding calendar year.
   (B) Separately listing all of its brand families that have been
sold in the state at any time during the current calendar year.
   (C) Indicating by an asterisk any brand family sold in the state
during the preceding calendar year that is no longer being sold in
the state as of the date of the certification.
   (D) Identifying by name and address any other manufacturer,
including all fabricators or makers of the brand families in the
preceding or current calendar year in a form, manner, and detail as
required by the Attorney General. The nonparticipating manufacturer
shall update the list 30 days prior to any change in a fabricator for
any brand family or any addition to or modification of its brand
families by executing and delivering a supplemental certification to
the Attorney General.
   (3) In the case of a nonparticipating manufacturer, the
certification shall further certify all of the following:
   (A) That the nonparticipating manufacturer is registered to do
business in the state, or has appointed a resident agent for service
of process and provided notice thereof as required by subdivision
(f).
   (B) That the nonparticipating manufacturer has done all of the
following:
   (i) Established and continues to maintain a qualified escrow fund
as that term is defined in subdivision (f) of Section 104556 of the
Health and Safety Code and implementing regulations.
   (ii) Executed a qualified escrow agreement that has been reviewed
and approved by the Attorney General and that governs the qualified
escrow fund.
   (iii) If the nonparticipating manufacturer is not the fabricator
or maker of the cigarettes, that the escrow agreement, certification,
reports, and any other forms required by Article 3 (commencing with
Section 104555) of Chapter 1 of Part 3 of Division 103 of the Health
and Safety Code and implementing regulations are signed by the
company that fabricates or makes the cigarettes and in the manner
required by the Attorney General.
   (C) That the nonparticipating manufacturer is in full compliance
with both of the following:
   (i)  Article 3 (commencing with Section 104555) of Chapter 1 of
Part 3 of Division 103 of the Health and Safety Code, including
paragraph (2) of subdivision (a) of Section 104557 of the Health and
Safety Code, this section, and any regulations promulgated pursuant
thereto.
   (ii) Division 8.6 (commencing with Section 22970) of the Business
and Professions Code, and any regulations promulgated pursuant
thereto. The nonparticipating manufacturer shall also provide a copy
of a valid, corresponding federal permit issued by the United States
Treasury, Alcohol and Tobacco Tax and Trade Bureau.
   (D) That the manufacturer has provided all of the following:
   (i) The name, address, and telephone number of the financial
institution where the nonparticipating manufacturer has established
the qualified escrow fund required pursuant to Article 3 (commencing
with Section 104555) of Chapter 1 of Part 3 of Division 103 of the
Health and Safety Code and all regulations promulgated thereto.
   (ii) The account number of the qualified escrow fund and
subaccount number for the State of California.
   (iii) The amount the nonparticipating manufacturer placed in the
fund for cigarettes sold in the state during the preceding calendar
year, the date and amount of each deposit, and any confirming
evidence or verification as may be deemed necessary by the Attorney
General.
   (iv) The amounts and dates of any withdrawal or transfer of funds
the nonparticipating manufacturer made at any time from the fund or
from any other qualified escrow fund into which it ever made escrow
payments pursuant to Article 3 (commencing with Section 104555) of
Chapter 1 of Part 3 of Division 103 of the Health and Safety Code and
all regulations promulgated thereto.
   (E) In the case of a nonparticipating manufacturer located outside
the United States, that the manufacturer has provided a declaration
in a form prescribed by the Attorney General from each of its
importers into the United States of any of its brand families to be
sold in California, that the importer accepts joint and several
liability with the nonparticipating manufacturer for all escrow
deposits due in accordance with Article 3 (commencing with Section
104555), for all penalties assessed in accordance with Article 3
(commencing with Section 104555) of Chapter 1 of Part 3 of Division
103 of the Health and Safety Code, and for payment of all fees,
costs, attorney's fees, penalties, and refunds imposed or required
under this section, including, but not limited to, all refunds
resulting from the removal of the manufacturer or any of its brand
families from the directory. The declaration shall appoint for the
declarant a resident agent for service of process in California in
accordance with subdivision (f) and affirm that it has caused every
importer that will sell its tobacco products in this state to obtain
and maintain a license as an importer pursuant to Division 8.6
(commencing with Section 22970) of the Business and Professions Code.

   (4) (A) A tobacco product manufacturer may not include a brand
family in its certification unless either of the following is true:
   (i) In the case of a participating manufacturer, the participating
manufacturer affirms that the brand family is to be deemed to be its
cigarettes for purposes of calculating its payments under the MSA
for the relevant year, in the volume and shares determined pursuant
to the MSA.
   (ii) In the case of a nonparticipating manufacturer, the
nonparticipating manufacturer affirms that the brand family is to be
deemed to be its cigarettes for purposes of Article 3 (commencing
with Section 104555) of Chapter 1 of Part 3 of Division 103 of the
Health and Safety Code, including paragraph (2) of subdivision (a) of
Section 104557 of the Health and Safety Code, and any regulations
promulgated pursuant thereto and this section.
   (B) Nothing in this section shall be construed as limiting or
otherwise affecting the state's right to maintain that a brand family
constitutes cigarettes of a different tobacco product manufacturer
for purposes of calculating payments under the MSA or for purposes of
Article 3 (commencing with Section 104555) of Chapter 1 of Part 3 of
Division 103 of the Health and Safety Code and any regulations
promulgated pursuant thereto.
   (5) A tobacco product manufacturer shall maintain all invoices and
documentation of sales and other information relied upon for the
certification for a period of five years, unless otherwise required
by law to maintain them for a longer period of time.
   (c) Not later than June 30, 2004, the Attorney General shall
develop and publish on its Internet Web site a directory listing all
tobacco product manufacturers that have provided current, timely, and
accurate certifications conforming to the requirements of
subdivision (b) and all brand families that are listed in the
certifications, except as specified below.
   (1) The Attorney General may not include or retain in the
directory the name or brand families of the following:
   (A) Any participating manufacturer that fails to provide the
required certification or to make a payment calculated by the
independent auditor to be due from it under the Master Settlement
Agreement except to the extent that it is disputing the payment.
   (B) Any nonparticipating manufacturer that fails to provide the
required certification or whose certification the Attorney General
determines is not in compliance with subdivision (b), unless the
Attorney General has determined that the violation has been cured to
the satisfaction of the Attorney General.
   (C) A tobacco product manufacturer that does not hold a valid and
current manufacturer's license under Section 22979 of the Business
and Professions Code, including, but not limited to, a manufacturer
whose license has been revoked under subdivision (g) of Section 22979
of the Business and Professions Code.
   (2) Neither a tobacco product manufacturer nor brand family shall
be included or retained in the directory if the Attorney General
concludes that any of the following is true:
   (A) In the case of a nonparticipating manufacturer, any escrow
deposit required pursuant to Section 104557 of the Health and Safety
Code for any period for any brand family, whether or not listed by
the nonparticipating manufacturer, has not been fully deposited into
a qualified escrow fund governed by a qualified escrow agreement that
has been approved by the Attorney General.
   (B) Any outstanding final judgment, including interest thereon,
for violations of Article 3 (commencing with Section 104555) of
Chapter 1 of Part 3 of Division 103 of the Health and Safety Code,
this section, Sections 30101.7 and 30165.2, and any regulations
promulgated pursuant thereto, has not been fully satisfied for the
brand family and the manufacturer.
   (C) In the case of a nonparticipating manufacturer by reason of
the business plan, business history, trade connections, or compliance
and payment history in California or any other state of any of the
principals thereof, the nonparticipating manufacturer fails to
provide reasonable assurance that it will comply with the
requirements of this section, Section 30165.2, and Article 3
(commencing with Section 104555) of Chapter 1 of Part 3 of Division
103 of the Health and Safety Code. As used in this section,
"reasonable assurance" may include information and documentation
establishing to the satisfaction of the Attorney General that a
failure to pay in California or elsewhere was the result of a good
faith dispute over the payment obligation.
   (D) In the case of a nonparticipating manufacturer, the
manufacturer has knowingly failed to disclose any material
information required or knowingly made any material false statements
in the certification of any supporting information or documentation
provided.
   (E) If the manufacturer or its importer, as defined in Section
30019, engages in delivery sales and the manufacturer fails to
provide or fails to cause his or her importer to provide reasonable
assurances that the delivery seller has fully complied with all
requirements of applicable federal and state law, including, but not
limited to, all of the following:
   (i) The Prevent All Cigarette Trafficking Act of 2009 (PACT Act;
Public Law 111-154).
   (ii) The Jenkins Act (Chapter 10A (commencing with Section 375) of
Title 15 of the United States Code).
   (iii) The requirements of Section 30101.7.
   (iv) All stamping, marking, and labeling requirements, including,
but not limited to, Section 30163, and any other information or
indicia requirements imposed by state or federal law.
   (v) All other state laws generally applicable to the sale and
distribution of tobacco products.
   (3) The Attorney General shall update the directory as necessary
in order to correct mistakes and to add or remove a tobacco product
manufacturer or brand family to keep the directory in conformity with
the requirements of this section, Section 30165.2, and Article 3
(commencing with Section 104555) of Chapter 1 of Part 3 of Division
103 of the Health and Safety Code. The Attorney General shall
promptly provide distributors and wholesalers with written notice of
each tobacco product manufacturer and brand family that the Attorney
General has added to, or excluded or removed from, the list.
   (A) When the Attorney General's office informs a manufacturer that
it will recommend to the Attorney General that the manufacturer or
brand family be delisted for cause, the office shall transmit by
electronic mail, or other practicable means, a copy of the notice of
the pending administrative action to the manufacturer, all licensed
distributors and wholesalers, and to any retailer or other person who
has provided an electronic mail address to the Attorney General for
this purpose.
   (B) A licensed distributor may purchase, stamp, or sell, and a
licensed wholesaler may purchase or sell, products affected by the
notice of pending administrative action for no more than 40 days
following issuance of the notice of pending administrative action.
Prior to the sale of a product affected by the notice of pending
administrative action, and no later than seven days after the notice
of pending administrative action, a distributor or wholesaler shall
notify each of its existing customers of the pending administrative
action.
   (C) Upon removal from the directory of a tobacco product
manufacturer or brand family, the Attorney General shall transmit by
electronic mail, or other practicable means, a notice of removal, to
the manufacturer, all licensed distributors and wholesalers, and to
any retailer or other person who has provided an electronic mail
address to the Attorney General for this purpose. No later than seven
days after issuance of the notice of removal, a distributor or
wholesaler shall provide each of its existing customers a copy of the
notice of removal.
   (D)  A licensed retailer may sell the  
Notwithstanding subdivision (e), a licensed retailer may possess,
transport,   and sell the tax-stamped  cigarettes of a
manufacturer or brand family affected by the notice of removal for no
more than 60 days following the effective date of the manufacturer
or brand family's removal from the directory.
   (E) After 60 days following removal from the directory the
cigarettes of a manufacturer or brand family identified in the notice
of removal are contraband and are subject to seizure and destruction
under subdivision (e) of Section 30436 and subdivision (b) of
Section 30449, and may not be purchased or sold in California.
   (F) In the event the Attorney General declines to remove a tobacco
product manufacturer or brand family from the directory following
issuance of the notice  of pending administrative action 
described in subparagraph (A), the Attorney General shall notify by
electronic mail, or other practicable means, the manufacturer, all
licensed distributors and wholesalers, and any retailer or other
person who has provided an electronic mail address to the Attorney
General for this purpose, of  this decision  
the decision not to pursue
         administrative action  . No later than seven days after
issuance of this notice, a distributor or wholesaler shall provide
each of its existing customers a copy of this notice  , and the
purchase, stamping, and sales restrictions imposed by subparagraph
(B) shall have no further effect  .
   (G) Upon request of the Attorney General, the board shall provide
the Attorney General all electronic mail addresses for licensed
distributors, wholesalers, and retailers in its possession.
   (4) Newly qualified and elevated-risk nonparticipating
manufacturers shall  post surety bonds as follows: 
 file with the Attorney General a surety bond in a form and
manner directed by the Attorney General. 
   (A) Notwithstanding any other law, if a newly qualified
nonparticipating manufacturer is to be listed in the directory or if
the Attorney General reasonably determines that any nonparticipating
manufacturer who has filed a certification pursuant to subdivision
(b) poses an elevated risk for noncompliance with this section,
Section 30165.2, Part 13 (commencing with Section 30001) of Division
2, or with Article 3 (commencing with Section 104555) of Chapter 1 of
Part 3 of Division 103 of the Health and Safety Code, neither the
nonparticipating manufacturer nor any of its brand families shall be
included in the directory unless and until the nonparticipating
manufacturer, or its United States importer that undertakes joint and
several liability for the manufacturer's performance in accordance
with subparagraph (E) of paragraph (3) of subdivision (b), has posted
a bond in accordance with this section.
   (B) The bonds shall be posted by a corporate surety located within
the United States in an amount equal to the greater of fifty
thousand dollars ($50,000) or the amount of escrow the manufacturer
in either its current or predecessor form was required to deposit as
a result of the largest of its most recent five calendar year's sales
in California. The bond shall be written in favor of the State of
California and shall be conditioned on the performance by the
nonparticipating manufacturer, or its United States importer that
undertakes joint and several liability for the manufacturer's
performance in accordance with subparagraph (E) of paragraph (3) of
subdivision (b), of all its duties and obligations under this section
and Article 3 (commencing with Section 104555) of Chapter 1 of Part
3 of Division 103 of the Health and Safety Code and payment of all
state taxes for the sale or distribution of cigarettes and tobacco
products in this state during the year in which the certification is
filed and the next succeeding calendar year. The bond may be drawn
upon by the board or the Attorney General to cover unsatisfied escrow
obligations, tax obligations, claims for penalties, claims for
monetary damages, and any other liabilities that are subject to the
licensee's claim of sovereign immunity against enforcement of the
laws specified above.
   (C) A nonparticipating manufacturer may be deemed to pose an
elevated risk for noncompliance with this section, Section 30165.2,
or Article 3 (commencing with Section 104555) of Chapter 1 of Part 3
of Division 103 of the Health and Safety Code if:
   (i) The nonparticipating manufacturer or any affiliate thereof has
failed to deposit fully the amount due on an escrow obligation with
respect to any state at any time during the calendar year or within
the past three calendar years unless either of the following occur:
   (I) The manufacturer did not underdeposit knowingly or recklessly
and the manufacturer promptly cured the underdeposit within 180 days
of notice of it.
   (II) The underdeposit or lack of deposit is the subject of a good
faith dispute as documented to the satisfaction of the Attorney
General and the underdeposit is cured within 180 days of entry of a
final order establishing the amount of the required escrow deposit.
   (ii) Any state has removed the manufacturer or its brands or brand
families or an affiliate or any of the affiliate's brands or brand
families from the state's tobacco directory for noncompliance with a
state escrow deposit or tobacco tax law at any time during the
calendar year or within the past three calendar years.
   (iii) Any state has litigation pending against, or an unsatisfied
final judgment against, the manufacturer or any affiliate thereof for
escrow or for penalties, fees, costs, refunds, or attorney's fees
related to noncompliance with state escrow laws.
   (iv) The nonparticipating manufacturer sells its cigarettes or
tobacco products directly to consumers via remote or other
non-face-to-face means.
   (v) A state or federal court determining that the nonparticipating
manufacturer has violated any tobacco tax or tobacco control law or
engaged in unfair business practice or unfair competition.
   (vi) Any state has suspended or revoked its license to engage in
any aspect of tobacco business.
   (vii) Any state or federal court has determined that it failed to
comply with state or federal law imposing marking, labeling, and
stamping requirements or requiring information to be affixed to, or
contained in, the labels, markings, or packaging.
   (viii) The nonparticipating manufacturer fails to submit or
complete any required forms, documents, certification, or notices, in
a timely manner or, to the satisfaction of the Attorney General or
the State Board of Equalization.
   (D) As used in this section, "newly qualified nonparticipating
manufacturer" means a nonparticipating manufacturer that has not
previously been listed in the California Tobacco Directory. These
manufacturers may be required to post a bond in accordance with this
section for the first three years of their listing, or longer if they
have been determined to pose an elevated risk for noncompliance.
   (5) The Attorney General shall provide each tobacco product
manufacturer that has provided all certifications and other
information required by this section with a written acknowledgment of
receipt within seven business days after receiving the
certifications and other materials. Each tobacco product manufacturer
shall provide to each distributor to whom it sells or ships
cigarettes, or any tobacco product defined as a cigarette under this
section, a copy of each acknowledgment of receipt provided to the
manufacturer by the Attorney General. Upon request, the Attorney
General shall provide any distributor with a copy of the most recent
written acknowledgment of receipt provided to the tobacco product
manufacturer.
   (d) (1) The Attorney General may exclude or remove from the list
required by subdivision (c) a tobacco product manufacturer or any of
its brand families, based on a determination that the manufacturer is
not a participating manufacturer that has provided the required
certification and made all payments calculated by the independent
auditor to be due from it under the Master Settlement Agreement,
except to the extent that it is disputing the payment, or in the case
of a nonparticipating manufacturer, has not made all escrow payments
required by paragraph (2) of subdivision (a) of Section 104557 of
the Health and Safety Code, in accordance with that subdivision, or
has not complied with this section, Section 30165.2, or the tobacco
product manufacturer has not complied with any state or federal
delivery sales laws applicable to sales and distribution of tobacco
products in this state. Before the exclusion or removal may take
effect, the Attorney General shall notify the manufacturer of this
determination.
   (2) Upon receiving notice from the Attorney General pursuant to
paragraph (1), the manufacturer may challenge the Attorney General's
determination as erroneous, and may seek relief from the
determination, by filing a petition for writ of mandate pursuant to
Section 1085 of the Code of Civil Procedure for that purpose in the
Superior Court for the County of Sacramento, or as otherwise provided
by law. The filing of the petition shall operate to stay the
Attorney General's determination, if the participating manufacturer
has made all payments calculated by the independent auditor to be due
from it under the Master Settlement Agreement, except to the extent
that it is disputing payment, or if a nonparticipating manufacturer
has paid into escrow the full amount of any deficiency in the escrow
payments that the Attorney General has determined the tobacco product
manufacturer was required to have made under paragraph (2) of
subdivision (a) of Section 104557 of the Health and Safety Code,
including any installment payments required under subdivision (h),
pending final resolution of the action.
   (e) (1) No person shall affix, or cause to be affixed, any tax
stamp or meter impression to a package of cigarettes pursuant to
subdivision (a) of Section 30163, or pay the tax levied pursuant to
Sections 30123 and 30131.2 on a tobacco product defined as a
cigarette under this section, unless the brand family of the
cigarettes or tobacco product, and the tobacco product manufacturer
that makes or sells the cigarettes or tobacco product, are included
on the list posted by the Attorney General pursuant to subdivision
(c).
   (2) No person shall sell, offer, or possess for sale in this
state, ship or otherwise distribute into or within this state or
import for personal consumption in this state, cigarettes of a
tobacco product manufacturer or brand family not included in the
directory.
   (3) No person shall do either of the following:
   (A) Sell or distribute cigarettes that the person knows or should
know are intended to be distributed in violation of paragraphs (1)
and (2).
   (B) Acquire, hold, own, possess, transport, import, or cause to be
imported cigarettes that the person knows or should know are
intended to be distributed in violation of paragraphs (1) and (2).
   (f) (1) Any nonresident or foreign nonparticipating manufacturer
that has not registered to do business in the state as a foreign
corporation or business entity shall, as a condition precedent to
having its brand families listed or retained in the directory,
appoint and continually engage without interruption the services of
an agent in this state to act as agent for the service of process on
whom all process, and any action or proceeding against it concerning
or arising out of the enforcement of this section, Article 3
(commencing with Section 104555) of Chapter 1 of Part 3 of Division
103 of the Health and Safety Code, and any regulations promulgated
pursuant thereto, may be served in any manner authorized by law. This
service shall constitute legal and valid service of process on the
nonparticipating manufacturer. The nonparticipating manufacturer
shall provide the name, address, telephone number, and proof of the
appointment and availability of the agent to the satisfaction of the
Attorney General. Any nonparticipating manufacturer located outside
of the United States shall, as an additional condition precedent to
having its brand families listed or retained in the directory, cause
each of its importers into the United States of any of its brand
families to be sold in California to appoint and continually engage
without interruption the services of an agent in the state in
accordance with this section. All obligations of a nonparticipating
manufacturer imposed by this section with respect to appointment of
its agent shall likewise apply to importers with respect to
appointment of their agents.
   (2) The nonparticipating manufacturer shall provide notice to the
Attorney General 30 calendar days prior to termination of the
authority of an agent and shall further provide proof to the
satisfaction of the Attorney General of the appointment of a new
agent no less than five calendar days prior to the termination of an
existing agent appointment. In the event an agent terminates an
agency appointment, the nonparticipating manufacturer shall notify
the Attorney General of said termination within five calendar days
and shall include proof to the satisfaction of the Attorney General
of the appointment of a new agent.
   (3) Any nonparticipating manufacturer whose products are sold in
this state without appointing or designating an agent as herein
required shall be deemed to have appointed the Secretary of State as
its agent, as provided in Section 2105 of the Corporations Code, and
may be proceeded against in courts of this state by service of
process upon the Secretary of State. However, the appointment of the
Secretary of State pursuant to this provision as the agent for
service of process does not satisfy the condition precedent specified
in paragraph (1) to having its brand families listed or retained in
the directory.
   (4) For each nonparticipating manufacturer located outside the
United States, each importer into the United States of any
nonparticipating manufacturer's brand families that are sold in
California shall bear joint and several liability with the
nonparticipating manufacturer for deposit of all escrow due under
Section 104557 of the Health and Safety Code, payment of all costs
and attorney's fees imposed in accordance with Section 104557 of the
Health and Safety Code, and payment of all fees, costs, attorney's
fees, penalties, and refunds imposed or required by this section or
Section 30165.2. Each manufacturer and importer, that sells or
intends to sell cigarettes in California, shall obtain and maintain a
license as a manufacturer or importer in compliance with Division
8.6 (commencing with Section 22970) of the Business and Professions
Code. Each nonparticipating manufacturer and its importers shall
report in the manner, including electronically, as required by the
Attorney General, all cigarettes and tobacco products sold in this
state each month, including, but not limited to, the quantity,
including tobacco weight and number of cigarette sticks, the
wholesale cost and sale price of each brand family. Any manufacturer
or importer that fails to file the report as required by the Attorney
General shall be liable for a civil penalty in an amount not to
exceed the greater of either of the following:
   (A) Five times the retail value of the cigarettes, loose tobacco
and smokeless tobacco, or tobacco products defined as cigarettes
under this section that were not reported as required by the Attorney
General.
   (B) Five thousand dollars ($5,000).
   (g) (1) Not later than 25 days after the end of each calendar
quarter, and more frequently if so directed by the board or the
Attorney General, each distributor shall submit any information as
the board or Attorney General requires to facilitate compliance with
this section, including, but not limited to, a list by brand family
of the total number of cigarettes or, in the case of roll your own,
the total ounces for which the distributor affixed stamps during the
previous calendar month or otherwise paid the tax due. The
distributor shall maintain, and shall make available to the board and
the Attorney General, all invoices and documentation of sales of all
nonparticipating manufacturer cigarettes and any other information
relied upon in reporting to the board and the Attorney General for a
period of five years.
   (2) Notwithstanding Section 30455, the board is authorized to
disclose to the Attorney General any information received under this
part for purposes of determining compliance with and enforcing the
provisions of this section, Sections 30101.7 and 30165.2, and Article
3 (commencing with Section 104555) of Chapter 1 of Part 3 of
Division 103 of the Health and Safety Code, and any regulations
promulgated pursuant thereto. The board and Attorney General shall
share with each other the information received under this section,
and may share that information with other federal, state, or local
agencies, only for purposes of enforcement of this section, Article 3
(commencing with Section 104555) of Chapter 1 of Part 3 of Division
103 of the Health and Safety Code, and any regulations promulgated
pursuant thereto, or corresponding laws of other states.
   (3) At any time, the Attorney General may require from the
nonparticipating manufacturer proof from the financial institution in
which the manufacturer has established a qualified escrow fund for
the purpose of compliance with Article 3 (commencing with Section
104555) of Chapter 1 of Part 3 of Division 103 of the Health and
Safety Code, and any regulations promulgated pursuant thereto, of the
amount of money in the fund being held on behalf of the state and
the dates of deposits, and listing the amounts of all withdrawals
from the fund and the dates thereof.
   (4) In addition to the information required to be submitted
pursuant to this section or Article 3 (commencing with Section
104555) of Chapter 1 of Part 3 of Division 103 of the Health and
Safety Code and any regulations promulgated pursuant thereto,
 the board or  the Attorney General may require a
retailer, wholesaler, distributor, importer, or tobacco product
manufacturer to submit any additional information, including, but not
limited to, samples of the packaging or labeling of each brand
family, as is necessary to enable the Attorney General to determine
whether a tobacco product manufacturer or importer has complied, is
in compliance, and, if applicable pursuant to subparagraph (C) of
paragraph (2) of subdivision (c), has provided reasonable assurance
that it will comply or continue to comply with this section, Section
30165.2, Part 8 (commencing with Section 14950) of Division 12 of the
Health and Safety Code, and Article 3 (commencing with Section
104555) of Chapter 1 of Part 3 of Division 103 of the Health and
Safety Code, and any regulations promulgated pursuant thereto.
   (h) To promote compliance with this section, the Attorney General
may promulgate regulations requiring a tobacco product manufacturer
subject to the requirements of paragraph (2) of subdivision (a) of
Section 104557 to make the escrow deposits required in quarterly or
other specified installments during the year in which the sales
covered by the deposits are made. The Attorney General may require
production of information sufficient to enable the Attorney General
to determine the adequacy of the amount of the installment deposit.
   (i) (1) In addition to any other civil or criminal penalty
provided by law, upon a finding that a person has violated
subdivision (e), or paragraph (1) of subdivision (g), the board may
take the following actions:
   (A) In the case of the first offense, the board may revoke or
suspend the license or licenses issued to the person by the board,
pursuant to the procedures applicable to the revocation of a license
set forth in Sections 30148 and 30158, and Section 22980.3 of the
Business and Professions Code. Each stamp affixed and each sale or
offer to sell cigarettes in violation of subdivision (e) shall
constitute a separate violation.
   (B) In the case of a second or any subsequent offense that the
board determines to be a violation of subdivision (e), in addition to
the action authorized under subparagraph (A), the board may impose a
civil penalty in an amount not to exceed the greater of either of
the following:
   (i) Five times the retail value of the cigarettes or tobacco
products defined as cigarettes under this section.
   (ii) Five thousand dollars ($5,000).
   (2) A distributor in any action for a violation of subdivision (e)
shall have a defense provided that either of the following is true:
   (A) At the time of the violation, the cigarettes or tobacco
products claimed to be the subject of the alleged violation belonged
to a brand family that was included on the list required by
subdivision (c).
   (B) At the time of the violation, the distributor possessed a copy
of the Attorney General's most recent written acknowledgment of
receipt of the certifications and other information required as a
condition of including the brand family on the list required by
subdivision (c).
   (3) The defense described in subparagraph (B) of paragraph (2) is
not available to a distributor if, at the time of the violation, the
Attorney General had provided the distributor with written notice
that the brand family had been excluded or removed from the list
required by subdivision (c), or the distributor failed to provide the
Attorney General with a current address for the receipt of written
notice through electronic mail as required by paragraph (4) of
subdivision (c).
   (4) A violation of paragraph (3) of subdivision (e) shall
constitute a misdemeanor.
   (j) If a distributor affixes a stamp or meter impression to a
package of cigarettes under subdivision (a) of Section 30163, or pays
the tax levied under Sections 30123 and 30131.2 on a tobacco product
defined as a cigarette under this section, during the period between
the date on which the brand family of the cigarettes or tobacco
product was excluded or removed from the list required by subdivision
(c) and the date on which the distributor received notice of the
exclusion or removal under paragraph (4) of subdivision (c), then
both of the following shall apply:
   (1) The distributor shall be entitled to a credit for the tax paid
by the distributor with respect to the cigarette or tobacco product
to which the stamp or meter impression was affixed, or the tax paid
during that period. The distributor shall comply with regulations
prescribed by the board regarding refunds and credits that are
adopted pursuant to Section 30177.5. If the distributor has sold the
cigarette or tobacco product to a wholesaler or retailer, and has
received payment from the wholesaler or retailer, the distributor
shall provide the credit to the wholesaler or retailer.
   (2) The brand family may not be included on or restored to the
list until the tobacco product manufacturer has reimbursed the
distributor for the cost to the distributor of the cigarettes or
tobacco product to which the stamp or meter impression was affixed,
or the tax paid, during that period.
   (k) Any tobacco product manufacturer that falsely represents any
of the following to any person shall be guilty of a misdemeanor for
each false representation:
   (1) Any information required under subdivision (b).
   (2) That the tobacco product manufacturer is a participating
manufacturer.
   (3) That the tobacco product manufacturer or any other person has
made any or all escrow payments required by paragraph (2) of
subdivision (a) of Section 104557 of the Health and Safety Code, if
applicable to the manufacturer.
   (4) That it has complied with subdivision (b), or with paragraph
(1) of subdivision (g), if applicable to the manufacturer.
   (  l  ) A violation of subdivision (e) shall constitute
unfair competition under Section 17200 of the Business and
Professions Code.
   (m) No person shall be issued a distributor's license, pursuant to
Section 30140, unless that person has certified in writing that the
person will comply fully with this section. Any person who makes a
certification pursuant to this subdivision that asserts the truth of
any material matter that he or she knows to be false is guilty of a
misdemeanor punishable by imprisonment of up to one year in the
county jail, or a fine of not more than one thousand dollars
($1,000), or both the imprisonment and the fine.
   (n) For the year 2003, if the effective date of the act that added
this section is later than March 16, 2003, the first report of
distributors required by paragraph (1) of subdivision (g) shall be
due 30 days after that effective date, the certifications by a
tobacco product manufacturer described in subdivision (b) shall be
due 45 days after that effective date, and the directory described in
subdivision (c) shall be published or made available within 90 days
after that effective date.
   (o) The Attorney General may adopt rules and regulations to
implement this section. The rules and regulations may establish
procedures for including in the list described in subdivision (c)
tobacco product manufacturers that are not participating
manufacturers and were not required to make escrow payments under
paragraph (2) of subdivision (a) of Section 104557 of the Health and
Safety Code, for sales made during any preceding calendar year, and
brand families of those manufacturers. The rules and regulations may
also establish procedures for seizure and destruction of cigarettes
forfeited to the state pursuant to Section 30436 or Section 30449,
including, but not limited to, the state facilities that may be used
for the destruction of contraband cigarettes. Nothing in this section
shall affect the authority of local law enforcement and local
government officials to seize and destroy contraband under existing
state or local law. The regulations adopted to effect the purposes of
this section are emergency regulations in accordance with Chapter
3.5 (commencing with Section 11340) of Part 1 of Division 3 of Title
2 of the Government Code. For purposes of that chapter, including
Section 11349.6 of the Government Code, the adoption of the
regulations shall be considered by the Office of Administrative Law
to be necessary for the immediate preservation of the public peace,
health and safety, and general welfare. Notwithstanding subdivision
(e) of Section 11346.1 of the Government Code, the regulations shall
be repealed 180 days after their effective date, unless the adopting
authority or agency complies with that chapter, as provided in
subdivision (e) of Section 11346.1 of the Government Code.
   (p) In any action brought by the state to enforce this section,
the state shall be entitled to recover the costs of investigation,
expert witness fees, costs of the action, and reasonable attorney's
fees.
   (q) The Attorney General or his or her authorized representative
shall have the authority to:
   (1) Conduct audits and investigations of the following:
   (A) A nonparticipating manufacturer and its importers.
   (B) Exclusive distributors, retailers, stamping agents, and
wholesalers, as defined in Division 8.6 (commencing with Section
22970) of the Business and Profession Code, and this part.
   (C) Persons or entities engaged in delivery sales as defined in
Section 30101.7.
   (2) Upon reasonable cause to believe that a violation of this
article or of Article 3 (commencing with Section 104555) of Chapter 1
of Part 3 of Division 103 of the Health and Safety Code, or of
Section 22963 of the Business and Professions Code, or of Section
30101.7, has occurred or is reasonably likely to occur, issue
subpoenas, compel the attendance of witnesses, administer oaths,
certify to official acts, take depositions within and without the
state, as now provided by law, and compel the production of pertinent
books, payrolls, accounts, papers, records, documents, and testimony
relevant                                                   to
investigations. If a person refuses, without good cause, to be
examined or to answer a legal and pertinent question, or to produce a
document or other evidence when ordered to do so by the Attorney
General or his or her authorized representative, the Attorney General
or his or her authorized representative may apply to the superior
court of the county where the person is in attendance or located,
upon affidavit, for an order returnable in no less than two nor more
than five days, directing the person to show cause why he or she
should not be examined, answer a legal or pertinent question or
produce a document, record or other evidence. Upon the hearing, if
the court determines that the person, without good cause, has refused
to be examined or to answer legal or pertinent questions, or to
produce a document, record, or other evidence, the court may order
compliance with the subpoena and assess all costs and reasonable
attorney's fees against the person. If the motion for an order is
granted and the person thereafter fails to comply with the order, the
court may make orders as are provided for by law. Subpoenas shall be
served and witness fees and mileage paid as allowed in civil cases
in the courts of the State of California.
   (r) In any action regarding a violation of this article or of
Article 3 (commencing with Section 104555) of Chapter 1 of Part 3 of
Division 103 of the Health and Safety Code, or of Section 22963 of
the Business and Professions Code, or of Section 30101.7, or of
Section 17200 of the Business and Professions Code, reports submitted
to the board pursuant to Section 30182 or Section 22978.1, 22978.4,
or 22978.5 of the Business and Professions Code, shall be admissible
in evidence and shall be presumed to accurately state the number of
cigarettes stamped during the time period by the stamping agent that
submitted the report absent a contrary showing by the
nonparticipating manufacturer or importer. Nothing in this section
shall be construed as limiting or otherwise affecting the right of
the state to maintain that reports are incorrect or do not accurately
reflect a nonparticipating manufacturer's sales in the state during
the time period in question, and the presumption shall not apply in
the event the state does so maintain.
   (s) In any action regarding a violation of this article or of
Article 3 (commencing with Section 104555) of Chapter 1 of Part 3 of
Division 103 of the Health and Safety Code, or of Section 22963 of
the Business and Professions Code, or of Section 30101.7, or of
Section 17200 of the Business and Professions Code, sufficient notice
of the action to the alleged violator shall be given by complaint
written in the English language. The state shall not be required to
bear any expense of translating complaint into another language.
   (t) Unless otherwise expressly provided, the remedies or penalties
provided by this section are cumulative to each other and to the
remedies or penalties available under all other laws of this state.
  SEC. 8.  Section 30165.2 is added to the Revenue and Taxation Code,
to read:
   30165.2.  (a) For purposes of this section, "applicable returns"
means the following returns or reports relating to cigarettes that
are filed or required to be filed with the Alcohol and Tobacco Tax
and Trade Bureau of the United States Department of Treasury (TTB),
the federal Department of Homeland Security, and the United States
Customs and Border Patrol (CBP) after the effective date of the act
adding this section:
   (1) Alcohol and Tobacco Tax and Trade Bureau Form 5000.24.
   (2) Alcohol and Tobacco Tax and Trade Bureau Form 5210.5.
   (3) Alcohol and Tobacco Tax and Trade Bureau Form 5220.6.
   (4) United States Customs and Border Protection Form 7501.
   (5) Any successor returns or reports intended to replace the forms
specified in paragraphs (1) to (4), inclusive.
   (b) As a condition of selling cigarettes in the state, every
tobacco product manufacturer, as defined in paragraph (9) of
subdivision (a) of Section 30165.1, whose cigarettes are to be sold
in the state whether directly or through a distributor, importer,
retailer, or similar intermediary or intermediaries shall, at the
election of tobacco product manufacturer, either:
   (1) Submit to the Attorney General a true and correct copy of each
and every applicable return of the tobacco product manufacturer.
   (2) Submit to the United States Treasury a request or consent
under Internal Revenue Code Section 6103(c) authorizing the Alcohol
and Tobacco Tax and Trade Bureau to disclose the applicable returns
of manufacturer to the Attorney General.
    (c) A foreign tobacco product manufacturer whose cigarettes are
imported into the United States by an importer or importers shall
submit, or shall cause each of its importers to submit, to the
Attorney General and the board both of the following:
   (1) Each and every applicable return, form, or report filed with
TTB and CBP that includes any information about cigarettes of that
foreign tobacco product manufacturer imported into the United States.

   (3) 
    (2)  A report of the sales of each brand family in this
state in the form and manner specified by the Attorney General or the
board.
   (d) A foreign tobacco manufacturer shall also cause every importer
who will sell its cigarettes in this state to obtain and maintain a
license as an importer in compliance with Division 8.6 (commencing
with Section 22970) of the Business and Professions Code.
   (e) The Attorney General and the board shall not disclose any
applicable returns or any information contained therein, except as
necessary to carry out the functions and duties of the Department of
Justice or board, or as provided in subdivision (f).
   (f) The Attorney General and the board may compile data on
cigarette shipments from the applicable returns and may share data
with other states that are signatories to the Master Settlement
Agreement, as defined in paragraph (5) of subdivision (a) of Section
30165.1, provided that states impose or agree to provide protections
against disclosure of the applicable returns, or any information from
applicable returns, that are equivalent to the protections provided
under subdivision (e).
   (g) A tobacco product manufacturer who does not comply with the
requirements of subdivisions (b), (c), and (d) shall, after 30 days
notice by the Attorney General or the board to the tobacco product
manufacturer of the failure to comply, be removed, along with its
brand families, from the tobacco directory unless the tobacco product
manufacturer has brought itself into compliance by the end of the
30-day period.
   (h) (1) Any tobacco manufacturer or importer that intentionally
provides any applicable return containing materially false
information shall be liable for a civil penalty in an amount not to
exceed the greater of either of the following:
   (A) Five times the retail value of the cigarettes or tobacco
products defined as cigarettes under this section and about which
false information was provided.
   (B) Five thousand dollars ($5,000).
   (2) The provisions of each applicable return containing one or
more false statements shall constitute a separate offense.
   (i) The Attorney General may promulgate regulations to implement
and carry out this section. 
  SEC. 9.    The Legislature finds and declares that
the amendments made to paragraph (2) of subdivision (e) of Section
30165.1 of the Revenue and Taxation Code by this act are declaratory
of, and do not constitute a change in, existing law. 
   SEC. 9.    The Legislature finds and declares all of
the following:  
   (a) Cigarette smoking and tobacco products present serious public
health concerns to the state and to the citizens of the state. 

   (b) Cheap cigarettes and tobacco products are being made available
through the evasion of state taxes, fees, payments, and deposits
required for sales of cigarettes and tobacco products in this state.
 
   (c) Cheap cigarettes and tobacco products pose a public health
hazard because their lower price makes them more accessible and
affordable to youth to become addicted to smoking and tobacco
products.  
   (d) It is the policy of the state to require that cigarettes and
tobacco products be sold at prices that reflect the payment of all
state taxes, fees, payments, and deposits required by law on sales of
cigarettes and tobacco products in this state in order to prevent
the public health hazard posed by cheap cigarettes and tobacco
products, especially to our youth. 
   (e) The amendments made to paragraph (2) of subdivision (e) of
Section 30165.1 of the Revenue and Taxation Code by Section 7 of this
act are declaratory of, and do not constitute a change in, existing
law. 
  SEC. 10.  Nothing in this act preempts or supersedes any local
tobacco control law or ordinance other than those laws or ordinances
that are related to the collection of state taxes. Local licensing
laws or ordinances may provide for the suspension or revocation of
licenses issued by a local government or agency for a violation of
the laws imposed under the Cigarette and Tobacco Products Tax Law
(Part 13 (commencing with Section 30001) of Division 2 of the Revenue
and Taxation Code).
  SEC. 11.  The provisions of this act are severable. If any
provision of this act or its application is held invalid, that
invalidity does not affect other provisions of applications that can
be given effect without the invalid provision or application.
   SEC. 12.    Section 1.5 of this bill incorporates
amendments to Section 22979 of the Business and Professions Code
proposed by both this bill and AB 2733. It shall only become
operative if (1) both bills are enacted and become effective on or
before January 1, 2011, (2) each bill amends Section 22979 of the
Business and Professions Code, and (3) this bill is enacted after AB
2733, in which case Section 1 of this bill shall not become
operative. 
   SEC. 12.   SEC. 13.   No reimbursement
is required by this act pursuant to Section 6 of Article XIII B of
the California Constitution because the only costs that may be
incurred by a local agency or school district will be incurred
because this act creates a new crime or infraction, eliminates a
crime or infraction, or changes the penalty for a crime or
infraction, within the meaning of Section 17556 of the Government
Code, or changes the definition of a crime within the meaning of
Section 6 of Article XIII B of the California Constitution.