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S. B. No. 348 As IntroducedAs Introduced
129th General Assembly | Regular Session | 2011-2012 |
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Cosponsors:
Senators Cafaro, Jones, Manning
A BILL
To amend section 2981.12 and to enact sections
3701.137, 3701.138, 3707.60, and 3707.61 of the
Revised Code to provide for the remediation of
real property on which an illegal methamphetamine
manufacturing laboratory has been discovered.
BE IT ENACTED BY THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF THE STATE OF OHIO:
Section 1. That section 2981.12 be amended and sections
3701.137, 3701.138, 3707.60, and 3707.61 of the Revised Code be
enacted to read as follows:
Sec. 2981.12. (A) Unclaimed or forfeited property in the
custody of a law enforcement agency, other than property described
in division (A)(2) of section 2981.11 of the Revised Code, shall
be disposed of by order of any court of record that has
territorial jurisdiction over the political subdivision that
employs the law enforcement agency, as follows:
(1) Drugs shall be disposed of pursuant to section 3719.11 of
the Revised Code or placed in the custody of the secretary of the
treasury of the United States for disposal or use for medical or
scientific purposes under applicable federal law.
(2) Firearms and dangerous ordnance suitable for police work
may be given to a law enforcement agency for that purpose.
Firearms suitable for sporting use or as museum pieces or
collectors' items may be sold at public auction pursuant to
division (B) of this section. The agency may sell other firearms
and dangerous ordnance to a federally licensed firearms dealer in
a manner that the court considers proper. The agency shall destroy
any firearms or dangerous ordnance not given to a law enforcement
agency or sold or shall send them to the bureau of criminal
identification and investigation for destruction by the bureau.
(3) Obscene materials shall be destroyed.
(4) Beer, intoxicating liquor, or alcohol seized from a
person who does not hold a permit issued under Chapters 4301. and
4303. of the Revised Code or otherwise forfeited to the state for
an offense under section 4301.45 or 4301.53 of the Revised Code
shall be sold by the division of liquor control if the division
determines that it is fit for sale or shall be placed in the
custody of the investigations unit in the department of public
safety and be used for training relating to law enforcement
activities. The department, with the assistance of the division of
liquor control, shall adopt rules in accordance with Chapter 119.
of the Revised Code to provide for the distribution to state or
local law enforcement agencies upon their request. If any tax
imposed under Title XLIII of the Revised Code has not been paid in
relation to the beer, intoxicating liquor, or alcohol, any moneys
acquired from the sale shall first be used to pay the tax. All
other money collected under this division shall be paid into the
state treasury. Any beer, intoxicating liquor, or alcohol that the
division determines to be unfit for sale shall be destroyed.
(5) Money received by an inmate of a correctional institution
from an unauthorized source or in an unauthorized manner shall be
returned to the sender, if known, or deposited in the inmates'
industrial and entertainment fund of the institution if the sender
is not known.
(6)(a) Any mobile instrumentality forfeited under this
chapter may be given to the law enforcement agency that initially
seized the mobile instrumentality for use in performing its
duties, if the agency wants the mobile instrumentality. The agency
shall take the mobile instrumentality subject to any security
interest or lien on the mobile instrumentality.
(b) Vehicles and vehicle parts forfeited under sections
4549.61 to 4549.63 of the Revised Code may be given to a law
enforcement agency for use in performing its duties. Those parts
may be incorporated into any other official vehicle. Parts that do
not bear vehicle identification numbers or derivatives of them may
be sold or disposed of as provided by rules of the director of
public safety. Parts from which a vehicle identification number or
derivative of it has been removed, defaced, covered, altered, or
destroyed and that are not suitable for police work or
incorporation into an official vehicle shall be destroyed and sold
as junk or scrap.
(7) Computers, computer networks, computer systems, and
computer software suitable for police work may be given to a law
enforcement agency for that purpose or disposed of under division
(B) of this section.
(8) Money seized in connection with the operation of an
illegal methamphetamine manufacturing laboratory as defined in
section 3745.13 of the Revised Code shall be deposited in the
contaminated property remediation fund created by section 3701.138
of the Revised Code.
(B) Unclaimed or forfeited property that is not described in
division (A) of this section or division (A)(2) of section 2981.11
of the Revised Code, with court approval, may be used by the law
enforcement agency in possession of it. If it is not used by the
agency, it may be sold without appraisal at a public auction to
the highest bidder for cash or disposed of in another manner that
the court considers proper.
(C) Except as provided in divisions (A) and, (F), and (G) of
this section and after compliance with division (D) of this
section when applicable, any moneys acquired from the sale of
property disposed of pursuant to this section shall be placed in
the general revenue fund of the state, or the general fund of the
county, the township, or the municipal corporation of which the
law enforcement agency involved is an agency.
(D) If the property was in the possession of the law
enforcement agency in relation to a delinquent child proceeding in
a juvenile court, ten per cent of any moneys acquired from the
sale of property disposed of under this section shall be applied
to one or more alcohol and drug addiction treatment programs that
are certified by the department of alcohol and drug addiction
services under section 3793.06 of the Revised Code. A juvenile
court shall not specify a program, except as provided in this
division, unless the program is in the same county as the court or
in a contiguous county. If no certified program is located in any
of those counties, the juvenile court may specify a certified
program anywhere in Ohio. The remaining ninety per cent of the
proceeds or cash shall be applied as provided in division (C) of
this section.
Each treatment program that receives in any calendar year
forfeited money under this division shall file an annual report
for that year with the attorney general and with the court of
common pleas and board of county commissioners of the county in
which the program is located and of any other county from which
the program received forfeited money. The program shall file the
report on or before the first day of March in the calendar year
following the calendar year in which the program received the
money. The report shall include statistics on the number of
persons the program served, identify the types of treatment
services it provided to them, and include a specific accounting of
the purposes for which it used the money so received. No
information contained in the report shall identify, or enable a
person to determine the identity of, any person served by the
program.
(E) Each certified alcohol and drug addiction treatment
program that receives in any calendar year money under this
section or under section 2981.13 of the Revised Code as the result
of a juvenile forfeiture order shall file an annual report for
that calendar year with the attorney general and with the court of
common pleas and board of county commissioners of the county in
which the program is located and of any other county from which
the program received the money. The program shall file the report
on or before the first day of March in the calendar year following
the year in which the program received the money. The report shall
include statistics on the number of persons served with the money,
identify the types of treatment services provided, and
specifically account for how the money was used. No information in
the report shall identify or enable a person to determine the
identity of anyone served by the program.
As used in this division, "juvenile-related forfeiture order"
means any forfeiture order issued by a juvenile court under
section 2981.04 or 2981.05 of the Revised Code and any disposal of
property ordered by a court under section 2981.11 of the Revised
Code regarding property that was in the possession of a law
enforcement agency in relation to a delinquent child proceeding in
a juvenile court.
(F) Each board of county commissioners that recognizes a
citizens' reward program under section 9.92 of the Revised Code
shall notify each law enforcement agency of that county and of a
township or municipal corporation wholly located in that county of
the recognition by filing a copy of its resolution conferring that
recognition with each of those agencies. When the board recognizes
a citizens' reward program and the county includes a part, but not
all, of the territory of a municipal corporation, the board shall
so notify the law enforcement agency of that municipal corporation
of the recognition of the citizens' reward program only if the
county contains the highest percentage of the municipal
corporation's population.
Upon being so notified, each law enforcement agency shall pay
twenty-five per cent of any forfeited proceeds or cash derived
from each sale of property disposed of pursuant to this section,
except as otherwise provided by this section, to the citizens'
reward program for use exclusively to pay rewards. No part of the
funds may be used to pay expenses associated with the program. If
a citizens' reward program that operates in more than one county
or in another state in addition to this state receives funds under
this section, the funds shall be used to pay rewards only for tips
and information to law enforcement agencies concerning offenses
committed in the county from which the funds were received.
Receiving funds under this section or section 2981.11 of the
Revised Code does not make the citizens' reward program a
governmental unit or public office for purposes of section 149.43
of the Revised Code.
(G) Any money acquired from the sale of property seized in
connection with the operation of an illegal methamphetamine
manufacturing laboratory as defined in section 3745.13 of the
Revised Code shall be deposited in the contaminated property
remediation fund created by section 3701.138 of the Revised Code.
(H) Any property forfeited under this chapter shall not be
used to pay any fine imposed upon a person who is convicted of or
pleads guilty to an underlying criminal offense or a different
offense arising out of the same facts and circumstances.
Sec. 3701.137. (A) As used in this section and section
3701.136 of the Revised Code, "illegal methamphetamine
manufacturing laboratory" has the same meaning as in section
3745.13 of the Revised Code.
(B) The director of health shall adopt rules under Chapter
119. of the Revised Code that do all of the following:
(1) Provide for the maintenance of a list of persons
certified to inspect and remediate property, including but not
limited to, real property and motor vehicles, on or in which an
illegal methamphetamine manufacturing laboratory or its components
has been found. The rules may provide for the certification of
persons who meet specified qualifications to inspect and remediate
property of that nature. If the rules provide for certification of
persons to inspect and remediate property of that nature, they
shall include a fee to be paid by each person requesting
certification. The fee shall be used to help pay for the
maintenance of the list.
(2) Implement sections 3707.60 and 3707.61 of the Revised
Code and regulate the inspection and remediation of property,
including but not limited to, real property and motor vehicles, in
or on which an illegal methamphetamine manufacturing laboratory or
its components has been found.
(3) Create a procedure by which municipal corporations,
counties, and townships may apply for grants of money from the
contaminated property remediation fund created by section 3701.136
of the Revised Code.
Sec. 3701.138. There is hereby created in the state treasury
the contaminated property remediation fund consisting of money
seized in connection with an illegal methamphetamine manufacturing
laboratory and deposited pursuant to section 2981.12 of the
Revised Code and any other money that may be appropriated or
contributed to the fund. Money in the fund shall be used for the
sole purpose of eliminating the contamination of real property
caused by the operation of an illegal methamphetamine
manufacturing laboratory. The director of health shall make grants
from the fund to municipal corporations, counties, and townships
pursuant to rules adopted under section 3701.137 of the Revised
Code.
Sec. 3707.60. (A) As used in this section:
(1) "Board of health" means the board of health of a city or
general health district or the authority having the duties of a
board of health under section 3709.05 of the Revised Code.
(2) "Illegal methamphetamine manufacturing laboratory" has
the same meaning as in section 3745.13 of the Revised Code.
(3) "Written notice," when used in connection with notice
sent to a law enforcement agency, board of health, or public
children services agency, includes electronic notice.
(B) If a law enforcement agency discovers an illegal
methamphetamine manufacturing laboratory on real property, the law
enforcement agency that makes the discovery shall give written
notice to all of the following of the location of the real
property on which the laboratory is discovered, including the room
number or location within the building if the laboratory is in a
room of a hotel, motel, apartment building, nursing home, or
similar establishment:
(1) The owner of record of the real property;
(2) The board of health having jurisdiction over the real
property;
(3) The public children services agency having jurisdiction
over the real property, if it appears to the law enforcement
agency that children are living on the real property.
Sec. 3707.61. (A) Upon receiving notice of a discovery of an
illegal methamphetamine manufacturing laboratory under section
3707.60 of the Revised Code, a board of health shall do both of
the following:
(1) Declare the real property on which the laboratory is
located a public health hazard that may not be occupied or
transferred until the board of health determines that the property
is no longer a public health hazard;
(2) File a notice with the recorder of the county in which
the real property is located identifying the property and stating
that the property is a public health hazard that may not be
occupied or transferred until the board determines that the
property is no longer a public health hazard.
(B) When a board of health determines in accordance with
rules adopted by the director of health under section 3701.137 of
the Revised Code that real property declared by the board to be a
public health hazard is no longer a public health hazard, the
board shall file a notice with the county recorder stating that
the property is no longer a public health hazard and may be
occupied or transferred.
(C) Nothing in this section shall be construed as a
limitation on the authority of the state or any political
subdivision of the state to declare the real property on which the
laboratory is located a nuisance and to abate the nuisance.
Section 2. That existing section 2981.12 of the Revised Code
is hereby repealed.
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