Amended in Senate August 15, 2016

Amended in Senate June 20, 2016

Amended in Assembly May 31, 2016

Amended in Assembly April 25, 2016

Amended in Assembly April 18, 2016

Amended in Assembly March 28, 2016

California Legislature—2015–16 Regular Session

Assembly BillNo. 1751


Introduced by Assembly Member Low

(Coauthors: Assembly Members Bigelow, Calderon, Cooper, Dababneh, Gatto, Jones, Jones-Sawyer, Lackey, Mathis, Mullin, Olsen, Rodriguez, Waldron, and Wilk)

(Coauthors: Senators Anderson, Berryhill, Block, Hill, Mendoza, Morrell, Nguyen, and Vidak)

February 2, 2016


An act to amend Sections 21628 and 21642.5 of, to add Section 21627.5 to, to repeal Sections 21628.1 and 21633 of, and to repeal and add Section 21630 of, the Business and Professions Code, relating to secondhand goods, and declaring the urgency thereof, to take effect immediately.

LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL’S DIGEST

AB 1751, as amended, Low. Secondhand goods.

Existing lawbegin delete provides for the regulation ofend deletebegin insert regulatesend insert secondhand dealers and coin dealers,begin delete as defined. Existing lawend deletebegin insert andend insert makes it unlawful for a person to engage in the business of a secondhand dealer without a license issued by the chief of police, the sheriff, or, where appropriate, the police commission.begin insert Existing law also regulates pawnbrokers.end insert Existing law requires a local law enforcement agency to issue a license to engage in the business of a secondhand dealer or pawnbroker to an applicant whobegin delete meets designated criteria. Existing law authorizes the local licensing authority and the Department of Justice to charge an initial licensure fee and a renewal fee, as specified.end deletebegin insert end insertbegin inserthas not been convicted of an offense involving stolen property.end insert Existing law requires a secondhand dealer to report, as specified, to the chief of police or sheriff all secondhand “tangible personal property,” as defined, purchased, taken in trade, taken in pawn, accepted for sale on consignment, or accepted for auctioning. Existing law requires the report to include, among other things, the identification of the intended seller or pledger of the property, verified by the person taking the information by specified methods. Existing law requires the reporting of this information to the Department of Justice through a single, statewide,begin delete andend delete uniform electronic reporting system. Existing law requires the Department of Justice to develop descriptive categories and secondhand dealers and coin dealers to use these categories in their reports.

This bill would define “CAPSS” as the California Pawnbroker and SecondhandDealer System, which is the single, statewide,begin delete andend delete uniform electronic reporting system operated by the Department of Justice. The bill would eliminate the requirement that a secondhand dealer send reports on paper forms. The bill would eliminate the requirements that the Department of Justice develop, and secondhand dealers and coin dealers use, descriptive categories in their reports of acquired tangible personal property. Instead, the bill would require the Department of Justice to accept the plain text property descriptions commonly recognized and utilized by the pawn and secondhand dealer industries. The bill would authorize a secondhand dealer to utilize an article field descriptor provided by the Department of Justice, if using the article field descriptor would, in whole or in part, populate the property description. This bill would prohibit the Department of Justice, chiefs of police, and sheriffs from requiring secondhand dealers to report any additional information other than that which is required by these provisions. The bill would require that a future change to the reporting requirements of CAPSS that substantively alters the reporting standards be implemented and operated in compliance with the Administrative Procedure Act and prohibit the Department of Justice from taking any action with respect to the implementation, operation, or maintenance of CAPSS by adoption of an emergency regulation. The bill would also require the Department of Justice to convene a meeting with the Department of Technology to discuss issues pertaining to any proposed changes or upgrades, and authorize the Department of Technology to provide technological assistance for ongoing improvements, updates, or changes, to CAPSS.

Existing law provides an exception to the reporting requirement for the acquisition of the same property from the same customer within 12 months of a reported transfer, except when submission of the report is specifically requested in writing by the local authorities.

This bill would expand the reporting requirement exception to all acquisitions of the same property from the same customer within 12 months of a reported transfer.

This bill would declare that it is to take effect immediately as an urgency statute.

Vote: 23. Appropriation: no. Fiscal committee: yes. State-mandated local program: no.

The people of the State of California do enact as follows:

P3    1

SECTION 1.  

(a) It is the intent of the Legislature to clarify
2that pawnbrokers and other secondhand dealers are to report their
3acquisition of tangible personal property received in pledge, trade,
4consignment, or auction or by purchase using plain text, in
5descriptive language historically used in the pawn and secondhand
6industries when reporting to the single, statewide, and uniform
7electronic reporting system operated by the Department of Justice,
8or if not yet implemented in their respective jurisdictions, on paper
9forms sent to the local police chief or sheriff of the jurisdiction in
10which the secondhand dealer is physically located.

11(b) It is further the intent of the Legislature that by specifying
12this manner of reporting, it will relieve all secondhand dealers and
13pawnbrokers of the inherent costs and burdens imposed under
14existing law that requires these businesses to report their daily
15acquisitions of secondhand tangible personal property on paper
16forms limited to a single transaction, or where the electronic
17reporting system is implemented, the cost associated with
18converting industry standard descriptions to specific law
19enforcement categories, the ongoing costs of training to that
P4    1standard, and the costs of implementing software to maintain that
2standard.

3(c) Further, it is the intent of the Legislature that the Department
4of Justice shall continue to accept the plain text descriptive
5language historically used in the pawn and secondhand industries
6and may provide article field descriptors to secondhand dealers in
7order to facilitate communication between the single, statewide,
8and uniform electronic reporting system and law enforcement
9databases. It is the intent of the Legislature that only properly
10trained law enforcement personnel of the Department of Justice
11or local law enforcement classify and encode for law enforcement
12databases property reported by pawnbrokers and secondhand
13dealers.

14

SEC. 2.  

Section 21627.5 is added to the Business and
15Professions Code
, to read:

16

21627.5.  

“CAPSS” means the California Pawnbroker and
17SecondhandDealer System, which is a single, statewide, uniform
18electronic reporting system that receives secondhand dealer reports
19and is operated by the Department of Justice consistent with
20Resolution Chapter 16 of the Statutes of 2010. The maintenance
21and operation of CAPSS is funded by the Secondhand Dealer and
22Pawnbroker Fund established pursuant to Section 21642.5.

23

SEC. 3.  

Section 21628 of the Business and Professions Code,
24as amended by Section 1 of Chapter 169 of the Statutes of 2015,
25is amended to read:

26

21628.  

(a) Every secondhand dealer or coin dealer described
27in Section 21626 shall report daily, or no later than the next
28business day excluding weekends and holidays after receipt or
29purchase of secondhand tangible personal property, to CAPSS, all
30secondhand tangible personal property, except for firearms, which
31he or she has purchased, taken in trade, taken in pawn, accepted
32for sale on consignment, or accepted for auctioning, in accordance
33with the provisions of Section 21630 and subdivision (d). The
34report shall be legible, prepared in English, completed where
35applicable, and include only the following information:

36(1) The name and current address of the intended seller or
37pledger of the property.

38(2) The identification of the intended seller or pledger. The
39identification of the seller or pledger of the property shall be
40verified by the person taking the information, who may use
P5    1technology, including, but not limited to, cameras or software, or
2both, to obtain information and verify identity remotely. The
3verification shall be valid if the person taking the information
4reasonably relies on any one of the following documents, provided
5that the document is currently valid or has been issued within five
6years and contains a photograph or description, or both, of the
7person named on it, and, where applicable, is signed by the person,
8and bears a serial or other identifying number:

9(A) A passport of the United States.

10(B) A driver’s license issued by any state or Canada.

11(C) An identification card issued by any state.

12(D) An identification card issued by the United States.

13(E) A passport from any other country in addition to another
14item of identification bearing an address.

15(F) A Matricula Consular in addition to another item of
16identification bearing an address.

17(3) (A) A property description. The property description shall
18be a complete and reasonably accurate description of the property,
19including, but not limited to, the following: serial number,
20personalized inscriptions, and other identifying marks or symbols,
21owner-applied numbers, thebegin delete sizeend deletebegin insert size,end insert color, material, and, if known
22by the secondhand dealer, the manufacturer’s pattern name. The
23property description shall include the brand and model name or
24number of the item if known to, or reasonably ascertainable by,
25the secondhand dealer. The property description may include a
26plain text description of the item generally accepted by the
27secondhand industry. Watches need not be disassembled when
28special skill or special tools are required to obtain the required
29information, unless specifically requested to do so by a peace
30officer. A special tool does not include a penknife, caseknife, or
31similar instrument and disassembling a watch with a penknife,
32caseknife, or similar instrument does not constitute a special skill.
33In all instances where the required information may be obtained
34by removal of a watchband, then the watchband shall be removed.
35The cost associated with opening the watch shall be borne by the
36pawnbroker, secondhand dealer, or customer.

37(B) A secondhand dealer may utilize an article field descriptor,
38the format of which shall be provided by the Department of Justice,
39if using the article field descriptor would, in whole or in part,
40accurately populate the property description with a plain text
P6    1description generally accepted in the secondhand industry. The
2lack of an article field descriptor by a secondhand dealer shall not
3be relevant to any determination as to whether the secondhand
4dealer has received evidence of authority to sell or pledge the
5property pursuant to paragraph (1) of subdivision (b).

6(C) In the case of the receipt or purchase of a handheld electronic
7device by a secondhand dealer, the serial number reported pursuant
8to subparagraph (A) may be the International Mobile Station
9Equipment Identity (IMEI), the mobile equipment identifier
10(MEID), or other unique identifying number assigned to that device
11by the device manufacturer. If none of these identifying numbers
12are available by the time period required for reporting pursuant to
13this subdivision, the report shall be updated with the IMEI, MEID,
14or other unique identifying number assigned to that device by the
15device manufacturer as soon as reasonably possible but no later
16than 10 working days after receipt or purchase of the handheld
17electronic device.

18(D) For the purpose of this paragraph, “handheld electronic
19device” means any portable device that is capable of creating,
20receiving, accessing, or storing electronic data or communications
21and includes, but is not limited to, a cellular phone, smartphone,
22or tablet.

23(4) A certification by the intended seller or pledger that he or
24she is the owner of the property or has the authority of the owner
25to sell or pledge the property.

26(5) A certification by the intended seller or pledger that to his
27or her knowledge and belief the information is true and complete.

28(6) A legible fingerprint taken from the intended seller or
29pledger, as prescribed by the Department of Justice. This
30requirement does not apply to a coin dealer, unless required
31pursuant to local regulation.

32(7) A report submitted by a pawnbroker or secondhand dealer
33shall be deemed to have been accepted by the Department of Justice
34if a good faith effort has been made to supply all of the required
35information. An error or omission on the report shall be noted, and
36the reporting pawnbroker or secondhand dealer shall be notified
37of the error or omission by the Department of Justice. A reporting
38pawnbroker or secondhand dealer shall have three business days
39from that notice to amend or correct the report before being subject
40to any enforcement violation.

P7    1(b) (1) When a secondhand dealer complies with all of the
2provisions of this section, he or she shall be deemed to have
3received from the seller or pledger adequate evidence of authority
4to sell or pledge the property for all purposes included in this
5article, and Division 8 (commencing with Section 21000) of the
6Financial Code.

7(2) In enacting this subdivision, it is the intent of the Legislature
8that its provisions shall not adversely affect the implementation
9of, or prosecution under, any provision of the Penal Code.

begin delete

10(c) Upon request from a local law enforcement agency, the
11Department of Justice shall electronically provide to the requesting
12local law enforcement agency transaction data reported by a
13secondhand dealer who is not licensed by the requesting local law
14enforcement agency but who is conducting business as a
15secondhand dealer at a gun show or event, as defined in Section
16478.100 of Title 27 of the Code of Federal Regulations, in the
17jurisdiction of the requesting local law enforcement agency.

end delete
begin insert

18
(c) Any person who conducts business as a secondhand dealer
19at any gun show or event, as defined in Section 478.100 of Title
2027 of the Code of Federal Regulations, or its successor, outside
21the jurisdiction that issued the secondhand dealer license in
22accordance with subdivision (d) of Section 21641, may be required
23to submit a duplicate of the transaction report prepared pursuant
24to this section to the local law enforcement agency where the gun
25show or event is conducted.

end insert

26(d) (1) The Department of Justice shall recognize and accept
27the plain text property descriptions generally accepted in the pawn
28and secondhand industries provided by pawnbrokers and
29secondhand dealers, as has been the longstanding practice of chiefs
30of police and sheriffs when they had received paper reports from
31pawnbrokers and secondhand dealers.

32(2) A report required of a secondhand dealer pursuant to this
33section shall be transmitted by electronic means to CAPSS by the
34secondhand dealer.

35(3) Unless specifically identified in this section, the Department
36of Justice, chiefs of police, and sheriffs shall not require a
37secondhand dealer to include any additional information concerning
38the seller, the pledger, or the property received by the secondhand
39dealer in the report required by this section.

P8    1(4) If there is a future change to the reporting requirements of
2CAPSS that substantively alters the reporting standards provided
3by this article, those changes shall be implemented and operated
4in compliance with the Administrative Procedure Act (Chapter
53.5 (commencing with Section 11340) of Part 1 of Division 3 of
6Title 2 of the Government Code). In implementing and operating
7a future change to CAPSS, the Department of Justice, chiefs of
8police, and sheriffs shall comply with Sections 21637 and 21638.
9Notwithstanding any other law, the Department of Justice shall
10not take any action with respect to the implementation, operation,
11or maintenance of CAPSS required by this chapter by adoption of
12an emergency regulation.

13(5) On or before July 1, 2017, the Department of Justice shall
14convene a meeting with the Department of Technology to discuss
15issues pertaining to any proposed changes or upgrades to CAPSS
16required by this chapter. The Department of Technology may
17provide technological assistance for ongoing improvements,
18updates, or changes to CAPSS required by this chapter, as
19requested.

20(6) A coin dealer shall report the information required by this
21section under the reporting standard described in paragraph (1) on
22a form developed by the Attorney General that the coin dealer
23shall transmit each day by facsimile transmission or by mail to the
24chief of police or sheriff. A transaction shall consist of not more
25than one item.

26(7) For purposes of this subdivision, “item” shall mean any
27single physical article. However, with respect to a commonly
28accepted grouping of articles that are purchased as a set, including,
29but not limited to, a pair of earrings or place settings of china,
30silverware, or other tableware, “item” shall mean that commonly
31accepted grouping.

32(8) Nothing in this subdivision shall be construed as excepting
33a secondhand dealer from the fingerprinting requirement of
34paragraph (6) of subdivision (a).

35(e) Nothing in this section shall be construed to exempt a person
36licensed as a firearms dealer pursuant to Sections 26700 to 26915,
37inclusive, of the Penal Code from the reporting requirements for
38the delivery of firearms pursuant to Sections 26700 to 26915,
39inclusive, of the Penal Code.

P9    1

SEC. 4.  

Section 21628.1 of the Business and Professions Code
2 is repealed.

3

SEC. 5.  

Section 21630 of the Business and Professions Code
4 is repealed.

5

SEC. 6.  

Section 21630 is added to the Business and Professions
6Code
, to read:

7

21630.  

(a) A secondhand dealer or coin dealer shall
8electronically transmit to CAPSS no later than the next business
9day after the date of transaction excluding weekends and holidays
10or, if not then possible due to an electrical, telecommunications,
11or other malfunction, as soon as reasonable thereafter, the report
12of acquisition of tangible personal property as required by Section
1321628.

14(b) Notwithstanding Section 21628, submission of a tangible
15property acquisition report is not required if the report of an
16acquisition of the same property from the same customer has been
17submitted within the preceding 12 months.

18

SEC. 7.  

Section 21633 of the Business and Professions Code
19 is repealed.

20

SEC. 8.  

Section 21642.5 of the Business and Professions Code
21 is amended to read:

22

21642.5.  

(a) The Department of Justice shall require each
23applicant for an initial license under Section 21641 of this code or
24Section 21300 of the Financial Code and each applicant for renewal
25of a license under Section 21642 of this code or Section 21301 of
26the Financial Code to pay a fee not to exceed three hundred dollars
27($300), but in no event exceeding the costs described in subdivision
28(b), except that the fee may be increased at a rate not to exceed
29any increase in the California Consumer Price Index as compiled
30and reported by the Department of Industrial Relations.

31(b) The fees assessed pursuant to subdivision (a) shall be no
32more than necessary to cover the reasonable regulatory costs to
33the department of doing all of the following:

34(1) Processing initial license applications under Section 21641
35of this code and Section 21300 of the Financial Code.

36(2) Processing renewal applications under Section 21642 of this
37code and Section 21301 of the Financial Code.

38(3) Implementing, operating, and maintaining CAPSS described
39in Section 21627.5.

P10   1(c) All licensees holding a license issued before the effective
2date of the act adding this section pursuant to Section 21641 or
321642 of this code or Section 21300 or 21301 of the Financial
4Code shall, within 120 days after enactment of the act adding this
5section in the 2011-12 Regular Session, in addition to any fee
6required under subdivision (a), pay a fee not to exceed two hundred
7eighty-eight dollars ($288) to the Department of Justice.

8(d) The fees paid pursuant to subdivisions (a) and (c) shall be
9deposited in the Secondhand Dealer and Pawnbroker Fund, which
10is hereby established in the State Treasury. The revenue in the
11fund shall, upon appropriation by the Legislature, be used by the
12Department of Justice for the purpose of paying for the costs
13described in paragraphs (1) to (3), inclusive, of subdivision (b),
14except that the revenue received pursuant to subdivision (c) shall,
15upon appropriation by the Legislature, be used by the Department
16of Justice for the purpose of paying for the costs described in
17paragraph (3) of subdivision (b).

18(e) Applicants described in subdivision (a) shall submit to the
19Department of Justice fingerprint images and related information
20required by the Department of Justice for the purposes of obtaining
21information as to the existence and contents of a record of state
22convictions and state arrests and information as to the existence
23and contents of a record of state arrests for which the Department
24of Justice establishes that the person is free on bail or on his or her
25own recognizance pending trial or appeal.

26(1) The Department of Justice shall prepare a state-level
27response pursuant to paragraph (1) of subdivision (l) of Section
2811105 of the Penal Code.

29(2) The Department of Justice shall provide subsequent
30notification service pursuant to Section 11105.2 of the Penal Code
31for applicants described in this subdivision.

32(3) The Department of Justice shall charge a fee sufficient to
33cover the cost of processing the request described in this
34subdivision. The fee revenues shall be deposited in the Fingerprint
35Fee Account and shall, upon appropriation by the Legislature, be
36used by the department for the purposes of paying the costs
37associated with this subdivision.

38

SEC. 9.  

This act is an urgency statute necessary for the
39immediate preservation of the public peace, health, or safety within
P11   1the meaning of Article IV of the Constitution and shall go into
2immediate effect. The facts constituting the necessity are:

3In order tobegin insert protect the public from the dissemination of stolen
4property,end insert
make the single, statewide, uniform electronic system a
5cost savings for secondhand dealers andbegin delete pawnbrokers,end delete
6begin insert pawnbrokers, and to requireend insert the plain text property descriptions
7historically utilized by these industriesbegin delete mustend deletebegin insert toend insert be accepted by the
8Department of Justice, just as these plain text descriptions have
9historically been accepted by chiefs of police andbegin delete sheriffs.end deletebegin insert sheriffs,
10at the earliest possible time, it is necessary that this act take effect
11immediately.end insert

begin delete

12Further, to protect the integrity of law enforcement databases,
13it is necessary to specify that only trained law enforcement
14personnel shall input classification codes of property reported by
15these businesses, not the businesses themselves.

end delete


O

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