Am. Sub. S.B. 9

126th General Assembly

(As Passed by the General Assembly)

 

Sens.      Jacobson, Clancy, Gardner, Harris, Spada, Cates, Austria

Reps.     Domenick, Evans, C., Evans, D., Hagan, Law, Patton, T., Seitz, Smith, G., Uecker

Effective date:  April 14, 2006

ACT SUMMARY

·        Enacts offenses related to terrorism and the possession, use, or assembly of chemical weapons, biological weapons, radiological or nuclear weapons, and explosive devices.

·        Enacts the offense of money laundering in support of terrorism.

·        Requires notification of the Immigration and Customs Enforcement Section of the U.S. Department of Homeland Security when a suspected alien is convicted of or pleads guilty to a felony.

·        Requires the Department of Rehabilitation and Correction monthly to compile a list of suspected aliens who are serving prison terms, indicating the earliest possible date of release, and provide that document to the Immigration and Customs Enforcement Section to determine if the Section wishes custody; provides procedures for the transfer of that custody.

·        Prohibits persons entering an airport, train station, port, or other similar critical transportation infrastructure site from refusing to show identification when there is a threat to security and a law enforcement officer requires identification of all persons entering; permits officer to prevent entry of persons who refuse to show identification.

·        Requires the Director of Public Safety to prepare a document to serve as a declaration of assistance/nonassistance that includes the six questions the act sets forth to determine whether applicants for identified licenses, persons doing business with a government entity, or applicants under final consideration for government employment have provided material assistance to an organization on the United States Department of State Terrorist Exclusion List.

·        Establishes an appeals process under which the Department of Public Safety may consider the appeal of a person denied a license, denied opportunity to do business, or denied employment because of providing material assistance to an organization on the Terrorist Exclusion List.

·        Permits an agency to revoke a license, and a public employer to terminate the employment of any person who, after filling out a declaration of material assistance, takes an action that would result in an answer of "yes" to the declaration if that declaration were to be readministered after the action.

·        Makes failing to disclose the provision of material assistance to an organization on the Terrorist Exclusion List or knowingly making false statements regarding material assistance to an organization on the list a fifth degree felony.

·        Requires the Director of Public Safety to identify by rule licenses the state issues for which a holder with ties to a terrorist organization would present a potential risk to the residents of Ohio; prohibits the inclusion of renewable drivers licenses held by state residents as a license of this type.

·        Generally prohibits a government entity from doing business with or providing funding to a private entity that has provided material assistance to an organization on the Terrorist Exclusion List; provides exceptions to the prohibition.

·        Requires any private entity that does more than $100,000 aggregate in business with government entities in Ohio to certify that it has not provided material assistance to an organization on the Terrorist Exclusion List.

·        Provides authority for government entities to adopt a precertification procedure under which private entities annually may be precertified as not making contributions to organizations on the Terrorist Exclusion List.

·        Generally prohibits government entities from employing persons who have provided material assistance to an organization on the Terrorist Exclusion List.

·        Permits the Director of Public Safety to establish categories of employment that are exempt from the act's disclosure requirements.

·        Prohibits a person in a public place from refusing to disclose the person's name, address, or date of birth when requested by a law enforcement officer who reasonably suspects the person is committing, has committed, or is about to commit a crime or, generally, has witnessed a felony; establishes a penalty of a misdemeanor of the fourth degree for failure to disclose; provides an exception for age when age is an element of the crime the person is suspected of committing.

·        Imposes a 20-year statute of limitation period for specified terrorist related offenses.

·        Modifies the definitions of "material support or resources" and "specified offense" that are used in existing antiterrorism measures.

·        Prohibits state and local employees from unreasonably failing to comply with any lawful request for assistance made by specified federal authorities related to homeland security, to the extent the request is consistent with the doctrine of federalism; a statement of disagreement or a critical opinion does not qualify as unreasonable noncompliance.

·        Prohibits a municipal corporation from enacting anything that materially hinders or prevents employees from complying with the USA Patriot Act, an immigration or terrorism investigation, an executive order of the President of the United States pertaining to homeland security, or from cooperating with state or federal immigration services and terrorism investigations; establishes the penalty of ineligibility to receive homeland security funding; specifies that disagreement or critical opinion is not sufficient to qualify as material hindrance or prevention.

·        Expands the list of offenses that are within the definition of "corrupt activity" under the Corrupt Activity Law to include the new offenses the act establishes.

·        Expands the existing definition of "designated offense" that applies to the Communications Interception Law to include the new offenses the act establishes.

·        Requires the Registrar of Motor Vehicles to ensure that the identification of an applicant for a certificate of title (as carried out pursuant to continuing law) is reasonably accurate.

·        Requires non-resident owners of aircraft based in Ohio to register those aircraft with the Department of Transportation and pay the license fee.

·        Requires persons registering aircraft based in Ohio to indicate the location where the aircraft usually is based and to update the registration if that location changes.

·        Requires the Department of Transportation to maintain all aircraft registrations filed with it and to develop a program to track and enforce the registrations of aircraft based in Ohio; imposes a fine for failure to register.

·        Requires the Department of Transportation to adopt rules that require public-use airports and private-use airports to register and that all public-use airports and specified private-use airports prepare written security plans as the act requires.

·        Charges the Department of Natural Resources, Division of Watercraft, in consultation with the Department of Public Safety, to adopt rules that identify ports that meet security related criteria, require those ports to prepare a security plan and emergency locator map, and address other specified topics regarding the security of ports on waterways and the facilities associated with those ports.

·        Permits any peace officer to render assistance to any federal law enforcement officer who has arrest authority under the USA Patriot Act, under specified conditions of danger or serious emergency, or when the circumstances reasonably indicate that assistance is appropriate.

·        Authorizes the owner or operator of a facility where chemicals are produced, or the owner or operator of any other facility or business of any type, to provide a copy of any vulnerability assessment or other security-sensitive information to specified public bodies with emergency responsibilities, enables those public bodies to share information,  and provides that the documents are not public records subject to release except when state or federal law otherwise requires.

·        Prohibits the reinstatement of driving privileges to a person whose driver's license or permit has been suspended under any Revised Code provision if there is an active warrant for the person's arrest.

·        Specifies that the existing prohibition against a person disclosing or using any information concerning telephone numbers, addresses, or names obtained for the data base that serves the public answering point of a 9‑1‑1 system does not apply when access to that data base is given by a telephone company that is a wireline service provider to a state and local government in a warning of a public emergency, as determined by the Public Utilities Commission; provides that there is no civil liability for injuries, death, or loss related to this provision of assistance the act authorizes.

·        Modifies the procedure for amending a final 9-1-1 plan for specified purposes.

·        Adopts the National Incident Management System (NIMS) as the standard procedure for this state and requires all departments, agencies, and political subdivisions to use it.

·        Requires the Director of Public Safety to establish a Homeland Security Advisory Council that includes, but is not limited to state and local government officials who have homeland security or emergency management responsibilities and who represent first responders.

·        Assigns additional responsibilities to the Division of Homeland Security in the Department of Public Safety, including information gathering, information dissemination, and agency coordinating responsibilities.

·        Enables law enforcement officers acting pursuant to cooperation agreements authorized by statute, to have the same authority to enforce the law as when acting within their own territory.

·        Charges the Ohio Community Service Council with duties related to volunteers, including establishing a statewide system for volunteers and assisting political subdivisions with implementing that system.

·        Permits the Ohio Community Service Council to accept and administer grants from any source to carry out its functions.

·        Defines "registered volunteer" and creates an exemption from liability for registered volunteers in specified situations.

·        Establishes which information related to volunteers is a public record and which information is a security record not subject to public disclosure.

·        Requires the Director of Health to establish a system of volunteers as advisable and reasonably necessary to respond in an emergency involving the public's health.

·        Enacts new and modifies several definitions related to homeland security.

TABLE OF CONTENTS

Offenses related to terrorism.. 7

Ongoing terrorism offenses. 8

Terrorism offenses the act creates. 8

Duty to report suspected alien who is a felon or serving prison term.. 11

Identification when entering a critical transportation infrastructure site. 11

Declaration of material assistance/nonassistance. 12

Appeals process. 13

Licenses for which a holder with terrorist connections presents a potential risk. 14

Identify licenses. 14

Penalties. 14

Material assistance after declaration. 14

Reporting duties of agency. 15

Government prohibited from doing business with entities with terrorist ties. 15

Declaration of material assistance/nonassistance. 15

Pre-certification. 16

Private entities required to certify. 16

Appeals process. 16

Penalties. 16

Business transactions that are excepted. 17

Public employment of person with ties to terrorist organization. 17

Appeals process. 18

Penalties. 18

Identification in situations of suspected criminal offense. 18

Government employee cooperation with antiterrorism measure. 19

Duty to comply. 19

Restrictions on municipal corporation enactments. 19

Disagreement is not "material hindrance" 20

Limitations for commencing specified terrorism-related offenses. 20

Corrupt Activity Law.. 20

General 20

Expansion of Corrupt Activity Law under the act 21

Communications Interception Law.. 22

Accuracy of applicant for certificate of title. 23

Aircraft Law.. 23

Penalty. 24

Security of public-use and private-use airports. 24

Port security. 26

Assistance to federal law enforcement officer. 26

Emergency management 26

NIMS system for incident management 26

Emergency assistance from law enforcement officers. 27

Vulnerability assessments and other security-sensitive information. 27

Driving privileges for person subject to an active arrest warrant 28

Duties of Director of Public Safety. 28

Duties of Division of Homeland Security. 28

Statewide system for volunteers. 29

Reverse 9-1-1 system.. 30

Modification of procedure to amend a final 9-1-1 plan. 30

Definitions. 31

Terms the act modifies. 31

Terms enacted by reference. 31

New definitions. 33

 

COMMENT

1.  Terms used in the act, defined in continuing law.. 35

2.  Summary of Supreme Court ruling on Nevada "stop and identify" statute. 36

 

CONTENT AND OPERATION

Offenses related to terrorism

Ongoing law contains a series of antiterrorism measures enacted in Sub. S.B. 184 of the 124th General Assembly.  The current act does not change most of these provisions but modifies a few prior provisions and enacts new measures that address different aspects of terrorism.

Ongoing terrorism offenses

The following are the R.C. sections related to terrorism that S.B. 184 of the 124th General Assembly enacted, indicating for each whether it is modified or not changed by the current act.

R.C. 2909.21.  Terrorism definitions (modified by current act).

R.C. 2909.22.  Offense of soliciting or providing support for an act of terrorism (not changed by act).

R.C. 2909.23.  Offense of making terroristic threats (not changed by act).

R.C. 2909.24.  Offense of terrorism (not changed by act).

R.C. 2909.25.  Reimbursement of investigation, prosecution, and response costs concerning act of terrorism (not changed by current act).

R.C. 2921.32.  Obstructing justice (not changed by current act).

R.C. 2923.31.  Corrupt activity definitions (modified by current act).

R.C. 2927.24.  Offense of contaminating a substance for human consumption or use or contamination with a hazardous chemical, biological, or radioactive substance; spreading false report (not changed by current act).

Terrorism offenses the act creates

The act creates the following new offenses related to terrorism:

R.C. 2909.26.  A violation of this section's prohibition is the offense of criminal possession of a chemical weapon, biological weapon, radiological or nuclear weapon, or explosive device.  A violation of the prohibition described in (A) below is a felony of the third degree; a violation of the prohibition described in (B) is a felony of the second degree.

The act prohibits a person from knowingly possessing any chemical weapon, biological weapon, radiological or nuclear weapon, or explosive device with the intent to do either of the following:

(A)  Use the weapon or device to cause serious physical harm or death to another person;

(B)  Use the weapon to:  (1) intimidate or coerce a civilian population, (2) influence the policy of any government by intimidation or coercion, or (3) affect the conduct of any government by murder, assassination, or kidnapping.

The prohibitions do not apply when the described items are possessed for a purpose related to the performance of official duties related to any military purpose of the U.S. or any law enforcement purpose, including any domestic riot control purpose.

R.C. 2909.27.  Criminal use of a chemical weapon, biological weapon, radiological or nuclear weapon, or explosive device.  This offense, which is a felony of the second degree, applies to a violation of either of the following:

(A)  The prohibition of recklessly using, deploying, releasing, or causing to be used, deployed, or released any chemical weapon, biological weapon, radiological or nuclear weapon, or explosive device that creates a risk of death or serious physical harm to another person not a participant in the offense.

(B)  The prohibition of knowingly using, deploying, releasing, or causing to be used, deployed, or released any chemical weapon, biological weapon, radiological or nuclear weapon, or explosive device with the intent to:  (1) intimidate or coerce a civilian population, (2) influence the policy of any government by intimidation or coercion, (3) affect the conduct of any government by murder, assassination, or kidnapping, or (4) causing serious physical harm to, or the death of, any person who is not a participant in the offense.

The prohibition described in (A) above does not apply to any person who uses any of the following:  (1) any household product that is generally available for sale to consumers in Ohio in the quantity and concentration available for sale to those consumers, (2) a self-defense spray, (3) a biological agent, toxin, or delivery system that the person possess solely for protective, bona fide research or other peaceful purposes, or (4) a chemical weapon that the person possesses solely for a purpose not prohibited under this section if the type and quantity is consistent with that purpose.

For purposes of this section, "a purpose not prohibited under this section" means (1) any peaceful purpose related to an industrial, agricultural, research, medical, or pharmaceutical activity or other peaceful activity, (2) any purpose directly related to protection against toxic chemicals and to protection against chemical weapons, (3) any military purpose of the United States that is not connected with the use of a chemical weapon or that is not dependent on the use of the toxic or poisonous properties of the chemical weapon to cause death or other harm when related to the performance of official duties, or (4) any law enforcement purpose, including any domestic riot control purpose, when related to the performance of official duties. 

R.C. 2909.28.  Illegal assembly or possession of chemicals for the manufacture of a chemical weapon, biological weapon, radiological or nuclear weapon, or explosive device.  This offense is a felony of the fourth degree, and is for a violation of the act's prohibition of a person, with the intent to manufacture a chemical weapon, biological weapon, radiological or nuclear weapon, or explosive device, knowingly assembling or possessing one or more toxins, toxic chemicals, precursors of toxic chemicals, vectors, biological agents, or hazardous radioactive substances, including, but not limited to those listed in rules the Director of Public Safety adopts.

The act specifies that, in a prosecution for a violation of the prohibition, it is not necessary to allege or prove that the offender assembled or possessed all chemicals or substances necessary to manufacture one of the listed weapons.  The assembly or possession, with the intent to manufacture, of a single chemical or substance that may be used in the manufacture of a listed weapon is sufficient to violate this section.

The section's prohibition does not apply when the items described are assembled or possessed for a purpose related to the performance of official duties related to any military purpose of the United States and any law enforcement purpose, including any domestic riot control purpose. 

R.C. 2909.29.  Money laundering in support of terrorism.  This section of the act prohibits a person, knowing that the property involved in the transaction is the proceeds of an act of terrorism, or a monetary instrument given, received, or intended to be used in support of an act of terrorism, from conducting or attempting to conduct any transaction, or transport, transmit, or transfer that property of monetary instrument with the intent to:  (1) commit or further the commission of criminal activity, (2) conceal or disguise the nature, location, source, ownership, or control of either the proceeds of an act of terrorism or monetary instrument received, intended to be used to support an act of terrorism, or (3) conceal or disguise the intent to avoid a transaction reporting requirement under R.C. 1315.53 (not in the act, but in ongoing law, generally sets forth a series of financial transaction reporting requirements) or under federal law.

A violation of this section's prohibition is the offense of money laundering in support of terrorism, which is an offense of the first degree except as follows:

(1)  The offense is a felony of the fifth degree if the total value of the property or monetary instruments involved in the transaction equals or exceeds $1,000 and is less than $5,000.

(2)  The offense is a felony of the fourth degree if the total value of the property or monetary instruments involved in the transaction equals or exceeds $5,000 and is less than $25,000.

(3)  The offense is a felony of the third degree if the total value of the property or monetary instruments involved in the transaction equals or exceeds $25,000 and is less than $75,000.

(4)  The offense is a felony of the second degree if the total value of the property or monetary instrument involved in the transaction equals or exceeds $75,000. 

Duty to report suspected alien who is a felon or serving prison term

The act requires the judge of a court of record to direct the clerk of that court to notify the Immigration and Customs Enforcement Section of the United States Department of Homeland Security when a suspected alien has been convicted of or pleaded guilty to a felony.

The act also requires the Department of Rehabilitation and Correction (DRC) monthly to compile a list of suspected aliens who are serving a prison term.  The list is to include the earliest possible date of release of the offender, whether through expiration of the prison term, parole, or other means.  DRC is directed to provide a copy of the list to the Immigration and Customs Enforcement Section of the United States Department of Homeland Security for a determination of whether it wishes custody of the suspected alien.  If the Section wishes custody, DRC is responsible for the suspected alien until the Section takes custody.

DRC also is directed to transfer an alien, pursuant to a valid detainer lodged against an alien who is not legally present in the United States and who has been convicted or pleaded guilty to a felony, to the custody of the Immigration and Enforcement Section of the United States Department of Homeland Security upon completion of the alien's prison term.

For these provisions, the act defines "alien" to mean an individual who is not a citizen of the United States.  (R.C. 2909.30.)

Identification when entering a critical transportation infrastructure site

The act prohibits any person entering an airport, train station, port, or other similar critical transportation infrastructure site from refusing to show identification when requested by a law enforcement officer when there is a threat to security and the law enforcement officer is requiring identification of all persons entering the site.  A law enforcement officer may prevent any person who refuses to show identification from entering the site.  (R.C. 2909.31.)

Declaration of material assistance/nonassistance

The act requires the Director of Public Safety to prepare a document to serve as a declaration of material assistance/nonassistance and that is used for three purposes in the act:  (1) for agencies to use to identify whether an applicant for a license or the renewal of a license has provided material assistance to an organization listed on the Department of State Terrorist Exclusion List, (2) for public entities to use to determine whether a person under final consideration for employment has provided material assistance, and (3) for government entities to use to determine whether an entity with which it has business dealings has provided material assistance.  The Director is to make the declaration available to stat agencies and other public entities as the act requires, along with a then-current copy of the Terrorist Exclusion List.  The Director may adopt rules governing the development of the declaration and the distribution of the declaration and the list (R.C. 2909.32(A)(2), 2909.33(A), and 2909.34(A)).

The declaration is to be substantially in the following form and content, and include the following questions and the associated spaces for answering the questions (R.C. 2909.32(A)(2)(b)):

"DECLARATION regarding material assistance

to terrorist organization

 

(1)  Are you a member of an organization on the U.S. Department of State Terrorist Exclusion List?       Yes .....; No .......

(2)  Have you used any position of prominence you have within any country to persuade others to support an organization on the U.S. Department of State Terrorist Exclusion List?      Yes .....; No .......

(3)  Have you knowingly solicited funds or other things of value for an organization on the U.S. Department of State Terrorist Exclusion List?      Yes .....; No .......

(4)  Have you solicited any individual for membership in an organization on the U.S. Department of State Terrorist Exclusion List?      Yes .....; No .......

(5)  Have you committed an act that you know, or reasonably should have known, affords "material support or resources" (see below) to an organization on the U.S. Department of State Terrorist Exclusion List?      Yes .....; No .......

(6)  Have you hired or compensated a person known to be a member of an organization on the U.S. Department of State Terrorist Exclusion List or a person you knew to be engaged in planning, assisting, or carrying out an act of terrorism?      Yes .....; No .......

For purposes of the declaration, "material support or resources" means currency, payment instruments, other financial securities, funds, transfer of funds, financial services that are in excess of $100, as well as, communications, lodging, training, safe houses, false documentation or identification, communications equipment, facilities, weapons, lethal substances, explosives, personnel, transportation, and other physical assets, except medicine or religious materials."

Any answer of "yes," or the failure to answer "no" to any question on a declaration serves for the purposes of the act as a disclosure that the person has provided material assistance to an organization on the Terrorist Exclusion List.  (R.C. 2909.32(C)(1), 2909.33(B), and 2909.34(B).)

Appeals process

The act provides an appeals process that a person may use if denied a license, denied employment, or prohibited from doing business due to a disclosure of material assistance to an organization on the Terrorist Exclusion List.  The Department of Public Safety is directed to review a decision within 30 days of a request.  The Department must reinstate a license application for good cause, order that the prohibitions against doing business do not apply, or void the denial of employment if it determines all of the following pursuant to guidelines the Director adopts by rule:

(1)  That the provision of material assistance was made more than ten years prior to the time of the declaration, or the person provided the material assistance in the ten years preceding the declaration but at the time of the assistance, the organization was either not on the list or was not involved in any activity or conduct that would have merited inclusion on the list, or at the time of the assistance it was not reasonable to know of the organization's activities that would have merited its inclusion on the list.

(2)  The person is unlikely in the future to provide material assistance to any organization on the Terrorist Exclusion List.

(3)  That the person does not pose a risk to the residents of this state.  (R.C. 2909.32(D), 2909.33(E), and 2909.34(D).)

Licenses for which a holder with terrorist connections presents a potential risk

Identify licenses

The act requires the Director of Public Safety to adopt rules in accordance with the Administrative Procedure Act identifying licenses the state issues for which the holder would present a potential risk to the residents of Ohio if that person has a connection to a terrorist organization.  The rules may not identify a renewable driver's license or permit as a license of this nature if the applicant is a resident of this state.  (R.C. 2909.32(A).)

The act requires agencies that issue licenses the Director identifies to include a copy of the "Declaration of Material Assistance/Nonassistance," discussed above, with the application form for a license or renewal, along with a then-current copy of the Terrorist Exclusion List.  The agency is to inform applicants that they must truthfully answer each question on the declaration.  The act directs any person provided a declaration to answer each question and to attach the completed declaration to the license application.  (R.C. 2909.32(B).)

The act directs that a license be refused to any person making a disclosure unless the Department of Public Safety reinstates the application pursuant to the appeals process the act provides.  (R.C. 2909.32(C)(2).)

Penalties

The act provides that the failure of an applicant for a license to complete a declaration as the act requires, the failure to disclose material assistance to an organization on the Terrorist Exclusion List, or making false statements regarding material assistance to an organization the applicant knew, or should have known, was on the Terrorist Exclusion List, results in the denial of the application and the revocation of any license.  (R.C. 2909.32(E).)

The failure of an applicant to disclose the provision of material assistance to an organization on the Terrorist Exclusion List or knowingly making false statements regarding material assistance to an organization on the list is a felony of the fifth degree.  (R.C. 2909.32(F).)

Material assistance after declaration

The act permits an agency to revoke a license, pursuant to due process procedures that includes a hearing held pursuant to the Administrative Procedure Act, of any person who, after providing a declaration of assistance/nonassistance, takes an action that would result in an answer of "yes" to any question, had the declaration been readministered after taking that action.  (R.C. 2909.32(H).)

Reporting duties of agency

An issuing agency is required to notify the Department of Public Safety if it denies an application for a license or the renewal of a license because the applicant disclosed the provision of material assistance to an organization on the Terrorist Exclusion List.  (R.C. 2909.32(G).)

Government prohibited from doing business with entities with terrorist ties

The act generally prohibits the state, an instrumentality of the state, or a political subdivision of the state from conducting business with or providing funding to any person, company, affiliated group, or organization, or any person who has a controlling interest in a company, affiliated group, or organization unless certified as the act requires as not providing material assistance to an organization on the Terrorist Exclusion List.  The act directs government entities to provide a copy of the declaration the Director of Safety prepares, discussed above, along with a then-current copy of the Terrorist Exclusion List, to any private entity prior to doing business or providing funding.  The act specifies that if a contract is entered into pursuant to competitive bidding or another competitive process, the government entity need provide the declaration and list only to the person who is the successful bidder.  (R.C. 2909.33(D)(1).)

The act also prohibits a private company from doing business with a government entity unless the private entity certifies not providing material assistance to an organization on the Terrorist Exclusion List as the act requires.  (R.C. 2909.33(D)(2).)

Declaration of material assistance/nonassistance

The act directs the Director of Public Safety to prepare a document to serve as a declaration of material assistance/nonassistance, described above, for government entities (the state, an instrumentality of the state, or a political subdivision of the state) to use to determine if private entities with which they do business or provide funding (any person, company, affiliated group, or organization, and any person who holds, owns, or otherwise has a controlling interest in a company, affiliated group, or organization) have provided material assistance to an organization listed on the United States Department of State Terrorist Exclusion List.  The Director is responsible for making the declaration available to government entities, along with a then-current copy of the Terrorist Exclusion List.  The Director may adopt rules governing the preparation of the declaration and the distribution of the declaration and the Terrorist Exclusion List.  (R.C. 2909.33(A)(1) and (2).)

Pre-certification

The act permits a government entity to adopt a procedure for pre-certifying any private entity with which it does business.  The precertification, good for one year, is granted to any entity that submits a copy of the declaration with an answer of "no" to each question.  Any private entity that is precertified but that takes any action or learns of anything that would result in an answer of "yes" to any question must cease to represent that it is precertified and, within 30 days of taking that action or learning the new information, notify each government entity with which it is precertified to request that it rescind the precertification.  The act provides a penalty, a felony of the fifth degree, for any private entity that represents that it is precertified when that precertification has been rescinded or should have been rescinded as the act requires.  (R.C. 2909.33(A)(3).)

Private entities required to certify

Prior to entering into a contract to conduct business or receive funding, private entities that conduct business, or receive funding, in an amount greater than $100,000 annually from the state, any instrumentality of the state, and any political subdivision of the state, excluding personal benefits and salary earned as an employee, must certify as to not providing material assistance to any organization on the Terrorist Exclusion List.  The certification is made by completing the declaration the Director of Public Safety develops, described above.  (R.C. 2909.33(C).)

Appeals process

The act provides an appeals process, described above, under which an entity that is prohibited from doing business may appeal the decision to the Department of Public Safety, and the Department may order that the prohibitions against doing business do not apply.  (R.C. 2909.33(E).)

Penalties

The act specifies that any private entity that had not provided material assistance at the time a declaration was answered, but starts providing assistance to an organization on the Terrorist Exclusion List during the course of doing business or receiving funding from a government entity, is prohibited from entering into additional contracts to do business with or receive funding from any government entity for ten years after the provision of material assistance is discovered.  (R.C. 2909.22(F).)

It is a felony of the fifth degree under the act if any private entity knowingly provides a false certification pursuant to the act; that entity also is permanently banned from conducting business with or receiving funding from a government entity.  (R.C. 2909.33(G).)

Business transactions that are excepted

The act's certification requirements for doing business do not apply to the following types of transactions:  (1) an investment in a company that is publicly traded in any United States market, (2) an investment that is traded on a foreign market where United States investors regularly make investments, (3) an investment that is made through an agent or investment manager who has a fiduciary responsibility to the investor, (4) an investment in public agency debt, or (5) an investment in derivatives that are regulated by a government agency.  (R.C 2909.33(H).)

As used in these provisions, "personal benefit" means money, goods, services, pensions, disability and survivor benefits, other things of value provided by the United States, the state, or a political subdivision of the state to which the recipient is entitled by reason of age, medical condition, or a financial need that is established pursuant to an act of Congress or the General Assembly and salary or compensation a person receives as an employee of the state or a political subdivision of the state.  (R.C. 2909.33(I).)

Public employment of person with ties to terrorist organization

The act prohibits a government body from employing any person who discloses the provision of material assistance to an organization on the Terrorist Exclusion List.

The act requires the Director of Public Safety to prepare a document, described above, to serve as a declaration of material assistance/nonassistance for government entities (the state, instrumentalities of the state, and political subdivisions of the state) to use in determining whether any person who is under final consideration for employment has provided material assistance to an organization listed on the Department of State Terrorist Exclusion List. 

The Director is to make the declaration available to the public entities, along with a then-current copy of the List.  The Director may adopt rules that govern the preparation of the declaration and the distribution of the declaration and the List.  The act also permits the Director of Public Safety to adopt rules that establish categories of employment that are exempt from the act's disclosure requirements.  (R.C. 2909.34(A)(3) and (C).)

The act requires a government body to provide a copy of the declaration and a then-current copy of the Terrorist Exclusion List to any person under final consideration for a category of employment for which disclosure is required.  The act directs any person who is provided a declaration to complete that declaration.  Any answer of "yes" to any question, or the failure to answer "no" to any question serves for the act's purposes as a disclosure of the provision of material assistance to an organization on the Terrorist Exclusion List.  (R.C. 2909.34(B) and (C).)

Appeals process

The act provides an appeals process described above, under which any person denied employment due to having made a contribution to an organization on the Terrorist Exclusion List may appeal that denial.  (R.C. 2909.34(D).)

Penalties

The act establishes that it is a felony of the fifth degree for:  (1) the failure of an applicant for employment to disclose, as the act requires, the provision of material assistance to an organization on the Terrorist Exclusion List, or (2) knowingly making false statements regarding material assistance to an organization on that list.  (R.C. 2909.34(E).)

The act permits the state or any instrumentality or political subdivision to terminate, pursuant to hearing and due process procedures the act specifies, the employment of any person who, after providing a declaration of assistance/nonassistance, takes an action that would result in an answer of "yes" to any question, had the declaration been readministered after taking that action.  (R.C. 2909.34(F).)

Identification in situations of suspected criminal offense

The act prohibits a person who is in a public place from refusing to disclose the person's name, address, or date of birth when requested by a law enforcement officer who reasonably suspects that either:  (1) the person is committing, has committed, or is about to commit a criminal offense, or (2) the person witnessed an offense of violence that would constitute a felony under Ohio law, a felony offense that causes or results in or creates a substantial risk of serious physical harm to another person or to property, any attempt or conspiracy to commit or complicity in committing either of these offenses of violence or felony offenses, or any conduct reasonably indicating that either of these offenses, or complicity, has been, is being, or is about to be committed.[1]  The act establishes a penalty of a misdemeanor of the fourth degree for any person who fails to disclose personal information as the act requires.  (R.C. 2921.29(A) and (B).)

The act does not require a person to answer any questions beyond name, address, or date of birth.  Further, the act does not authorize a law enforcement officer to arrest a person for not providing information beyond name, address, or date of birth or for refusing to describe the offense observed.  It is not a violation for a person to refuse to answer a question of age or date of birth if age is an element of the crime that the person is suspected of committing.  (R.C. 2921.29(C) and (D).)

Government employee cooperation with antiterrorism measure

Duty to comply

The act provides that, notwithstanding any law, ordinance, or collective bargaining contract to the contrary, a state or local employee may not unreasonably fail to comply with any lawful request for assistance made by any federal authorities carrying out the provisions of the USA Patriot Act, any federal immigration or terrorism investigation, or any executive order of the President of the United States pertaining to homeland security, to the extent that the request is consistent with the doctrine of federalism.  The act specifies that an employee's statement of disagreement with, or a critical opinion of, the USA Patriot Act or any executive order of the President of the United States pertaining to homeland security is not sufficient to qualify as unreasonable noncompliance with a request for assistance.  "USA Patriot Act" means the "Uniting and Strengthening America by Providing Appropriate Tools Required to Intercept and Obstruct Terrorism (USA Patriot Act) Act of 2001," Pub. L. No. 107-056, 115 Stat. 272, as amended.  (R.C. 9.63(A), (D)(1), and (E).)

Restrictions on municipal corporation enactments

The act prohibits any municipal corporation from enacting an ordinance, policy, directive, rule, or resolution that would materially hinder or prevent local employees from complying with the USA Patriot Act, any federal immigration or terrorism investigation, or any executive order of the President of the United States pertaining to homeland security or from cooperating with state or federal immigration services and terrorism investigations.  A community that violates this provision is ineligible to receive any homeland security funding available from the state.  The act requires the Director of Public Safety to certify that any municipal corporation that violates the prohibition is ineligible to receive any homeland security funding from the state and to notify the General Assembly of that ineligibility.  That municipal corporation remains ineligible to receive any homeland security funding from the state until the Director certifies that the ordinance, policy, directive, rule, or resolution has been repealed.  (R.C. 9.63(B) and (C).)

Disagreement is not "material hindrance"

The act specifies that the enactment of an ordinance, policy, directive, rule, or resolution that states disagreement with, or a critical opinion of, any state or federal immigration or terrorism policy, the USA Patriot Act, or any executive order of the President of the United States pertaining to homeland security, is not sufficient to qualify as a "material hindrance or prevention."  (R.C. 9.63(D).)

Limitations for commencing specified terrorism-related offenses

Under ongoing law, unless otherwise provided, a criminal prosecution is generally barred unless commenced within six years for a felony, two years for a misdemeanor other than a minor misdemeanor, and six months for a minor misdemeanor.  There is no limitation for aggravated murder or murder.  A special 20-year limitation period is provided under ongoing law for specified offenses.

The act expands the special 20-year period of limitation to include the prosecution of the following offenses:  a violation of R.C. 2909.22 (soliciting or providing support for an act of terrorism, which is an offense in ongoing law); 2909.23 (making a terroristic threat, which is an offense in ongoing law); 2909.24 (terrorism, which is an offense in ongoing law); 2909.26 (criminal possession of a chemical weapon or biological weapon, an offense enacted by this act); 2909.28 (illegal assembly or possession of chemicals for the manufacture of a chemical weapon or biological weapon, an offense enacted by this act); 2909.29 (money laundering in support of terrorism, an offense enacted by this act) (R.C. 2901.13(A)(3)).

Corrupt Activity Law

General

The Corrupt Activity Law (R.C. 2923.31 to 2923.36 in ongoing law) prohibits a person from engaging in specific activities the law defines as "engaging in corrupt activity."  Under ongoing law, not changed by the act, "corrupt activity" means engaging in, attempting to engage in, conspiring to engage in, or soliciting, coercing, or intimidating another person to engage in any of a list of specified offenses.  (R.C. 2923.31(I).)  Under existing law, a "pattern" of corrupt activity means two or more incidents of corrupt activity whether or not there has been a prior conviction, that are related to the affairs of the same enterprise, are not isolated, and are not so closely related to each other and connected in time in place that they constitute a single event.  (R.C. 2923.31(E).)

Expansion of Corrupt Activity Law under the act

The act expands the list of offenses that are within the definition of corrupt activity under the Corrupt Activity Law to also include the following new offenses:

·        criminal possession of a chemical weapon, biological weapon, radiological or nuclear weapon, or explosive device

·        criminal use of a chemical weapon, biological weapon, radiological or nuclear weapon, or explosive device

·        illegal assembly or possession of chemicals or substances for the manufacture of a chemical weapon, biological weapon, radiological or nuclear weapon, or explosive device

·        money laundering in support of terrorism

·        animal or ecological terrorism.

The value of the property involved in the types of terrorism listed above is not a relevant factor in determining whether the offense has been committed.  (R.C. 2923.31(I)(2) and (4).)

By adding the new terrorism offenses to ongoing law, corrupt activity means engaging in, attempting to engage in, conspiring to engage in, or soliciting, coercing, or intimidating another to engage in:  (1) any of the offenses identified under ongoing law, (2) the cited new terrorism-related offenses enacted by the act, (3) animal or ecological terrorism, or (4) conduct constituting a violation of any law of any state other than Ohio that is substantially similar to any of the cited new terrorism-related offenses or to animal or ecological terrorism, provided the defendant was convicted of the criminal conduct in a criminal proceeding in the other state.

For purposes of the offenses described above, the act defines the following terms (R.C. 2923.31(M) to (P)):

(1)  "Animal or ecological terrorism" means the commission of any felony that involves causing or creating a substantial risk of physical harm to any property of another, the use of a deadly weapon or dangerous ordnance, or purposely, knowingly, or recklessly causing serious physical harm to property and that involves an intent to obstruct, impede, or deter any person from participating in a lawful animal activity, from mining, foresting, harvesting, gathering, or processing natural resources, or from being lawfully present in or on an animal facility or research facility.

(2)  "Animal activity" means any activity that involves the use of animals or animal parts, including, but not limited to, hunting, fishing, trapping, traveling, camping, the production, preparation, or processing of food or food products, clothing or garment manufacturing, medical research, other research, entertainment, recreation, agriculture, biotechnology, or service activity that involves the use of animals or animal parts.

(3)  "Animal facility" means a vehicle, building, structure, nature preserve, or other premises in which an animal is lawfully kept, handled, housed, exhibited, bred, or offered for sale, including, but not limited to, a zoo, rodeo, circus, amusement park, hunting preserve, or premises in which a horse or dog event is held.

(4)  "Research facility" means a place, laboratory, institution, medical care facility, government facility, or public or private educational institution in which a scientific test, experiment, or investigation involving the use of animals or other living organisms is lawfully carried out, conducted, or attempted.

Communications Interception Law

Ongoing law regulates, and generally restricts, the interception of wire, oral, and electronic communications, through the Communications Interception Law contained in R.C. 2933.51 to 2933.66.  The Law permits interception in specified circumstances, though, including an interception through the execution of an interception warrant obtained from a judge.  Warrants may be issued upon the application of a prosecuting attorney or an assistant if certain criteria are satisfied, including that there is probable cause to believe (1) that a particular person is committing, has committed, or is about to commit a designated offense, and (2) that particular communications concerning the designated offense will be obtained through the interception of wire, oral, or electronic communications.  (R.C. 2933.52 to 2933.54.)

The act expands the definition of "designated offense" so that the Communications Interception Law includes the following new offenses:  criminal possession of a chemical weapon, biological weapon, radiological or nuclear weapon, or explosive device, criminal use of a chemical weapon, biological weapon, radiological or nuclear weapon, or explosive device, illegal assembly or possession of chemicals or substances for the manufacture of a chemical weapon, biological weapon, radiological or nuclear weapon, or explosive device, and money laundering in support of terrorism (R.C. 2923.51(I)).

Due to the above additions, "designated offense" means:  (1) the offenses identified under prior law, (2) the above described new offenses this act creates, (3) complicity in the commission of one of these felony offenses, or (4) an attempt to commit, or conspiracy in the commission of one of these felony offenses if the attempt or conspiracy is punishable by a term of imprisonment of more than one year.

Accuracy of applicant for certificate of title

Under continuing law, the Registrar of Motor Vehicles issues rules to ensure uniform and orderly issuance of certificates of titles for motor vehicles.  The act expands the Registrar's responsibilities to require that the rules ensure the identification of each applicant for a certificate of title is reasonably accurate.  (R.C. 4505.02.)

Aircraft Law

The Ohio Aeronautics Law, ongoing law generally not changed by the act, regulates aircraft and airports and provides for registration and licensure of specified aircraft.  Under that law prior to this act, aircraft owned by a nonresident was exempt from licensure and registration.  The act eliminates this exemption, thus requiring registration and a license fee of a nonresident if the aircraft is based in this state.  The act also changes the time at which an aircraft must be registered, from the requirement in prior law of 48 hours after acquisition or after it becomes subject to the license tax, to 30 days after acquisition or becoming subject to the license tax.  (R.C. 4561.17(C) and (D).)

The act also specifies that an owner of any aircraft that is based in this state and for which a license fee is required, register the aircraft with the Department of Transportation.  In addition to ongoing registration requirements, the act requires the registration form to identify the airport or other place at which the aircraft is based.  Instead of registration renewal being required in January as under prior law, the act requires annual renewal at the time the Director of Transportation specifies.  In addition, the owner of the aircraft is to update the registration by filing a new form with the Office of Aviation if the airport or other place at which the aircraft usually is based changes.  (R.C. 4561.18 (A), (B) and (C).)

The act directs the Department of Transportation to maintain all aircraft registrations filed with it and to develop a program to track and enforce the registration of aircraft based in this state.  The act directs the Director to impose a fine pursuant to the existing penalty section for each aircraft that an owner fails to register and to require an owner to register the aircraft within the time the Director specifies.  The Director may impose a separate fine for each registration period during which the owner fails to register the aircraft.  (R.C. 4561.18(G).)

Penalty

Prior law provided a penalty of not more than $100 for a violation of the Aircraft License and Registration Law (R.C. 4561.17 to 4561.20).  The act increases the fine to not more than $500 and specifies that the fine is for each violation (R.C. 4561.22).

Security of public-use and private-use airports

The act requires the Department of Transportation, in consultation with the Department of Public Safety, to adopt rules regarding the security of "public-use and private-use airports."  The rules must include, but are not limited to, provisions that do the following:  (1) require all public-use and private-use airports located in whole or in part in Ohio to register biennially with the Office of Aviation of the Department of Transportation, (2) require all public-use airports located in whole or in part in Ohio, and all private-use airports located in whole or in part in Ohio that are located within 30 nautical miles of either a metropolitan population of at least 100,000 persons or a sensitive site, or that have 11 or more based aircraft,  a runway length more than 2,000 feet, or  more than 10,000 annual aircraft operations, to do all of the following:  (a) prepare a written security plan that is consistent with the most recent security guidelines for general aviation airports published by the United States Transportation Security Administration, (b) develop a written list of emergency contacts and telephones, (c) restrict access to aircraft keys by unlicensed persons, (d) require pilots, including those renting aircraft, to operate pursuant to F.A.R. 61.3 regarding pilot identification, (e) create an emergency locater map that identifies runways, ramp areas, fence lines, gates, hydrants, emergency shelters, buildings, and hazardous material sites, and (f) familiarize local law enforcement agencies with the airport and consult with them in the airport's development of security procedures, (3) require all aircraft owners or pilots to secure their aircraft, (4) require all persons who rent an aircraft to present government-issued identification, in addition to any pilot's license, to the person who rents them the aircraft, (5) address the security of public-use and private-use airports located in whole or in part in Ohio in any other manner that the Department of Transportation, in consultation with the Department of Public Safety, determines to be necessary.  (R.C. 4563.30(B).)

The security plan and the emergency locater map the act requires must prominently display the following statement:  "This document may contain information that, if disclosed, could endanger the life or safety of the public and, therefore, this document is to be maintained and used in a manner that preserves the confidentiality of the information it contains in a manner consistent with law."  (R.C. 4563.30(C).)

Each public-use and private-use airport located in whole or in part in Ohio must provide a copy of its registration, a copy of its security plan, and a copy of its emergency locater map to the Department of Public Safety, to the Department of Transportation, to the sheriff of the county in which the airport is located in whole or in part, and, if the airport is located in whole or in part in a municipal corporation, to the chief of police of each such municipal corporation in which it is wholly or partly located.  Copies of registrations, emergency locater maps, and security plans that are in the possession of the Department of Public Safety, a sheriff, or a chief of police and that were provided under this provision are not public records under R.C. 149.43 (ongoing law not in the act) and are not subject to mandatory disclosure under that section.  (R.C. 4563.30(D).)

The act specifies that the provisions governing airport security may not be construed to replace or supersede airport security standards the United States Department of Homeland Security and the Transportation Security Administration require, or safety standards the United States Department of Transportation and the Federal Aviation Administration require.  (R.C. 4563.30(E).)

The following definitions are used in the provisions described above (R.C. 4563.30(A)):

(1)  "Aircraft" means any contrivance used or designed for navigation or flight in the air, excepting a parachute or other contrivance for such navigation used primarily as safety equipment (by reference to R.C. 4561.01, not in the act).

(2)  "Airport" means any location either on land or water which is used for the landing and taking off of aircraft, except that it does not include any airport operated by a multi-state authority or any airport with scheduled commercial air carrier service (by reference to R.C. 4561.01, not in the act).

(3)  "Private-use airport" means an airport used exclusively by the owner of the airport and by persons authorized by that owner.

(4)  "Public-use airport" means an airport available for use by the general public without a requirement for the prior approval of the owner or operator except as may be required by federal law or regulation.

(5)  "Sensitive site" means an area that would be considered a key asset or critical infrastructure of the United States, including but not limited to military installations, nuclear and chemical plants, centers of government, monuments and iconic structures, and international ports.

Port security

The act charges the Department of Natural Resources, Division of Watercraft, in consultation with the Department of Public Safety, with adopting rules regarding the security of ports on waterways in this state and the facilities associated with those ports.  Required are rules that designate the ports to which the act's requirements apply based on security related considerations the act sets forth, that specify the annual registration of the designated ports, and govern the preparation of a security plan and emergency locator map by those ports.  The act directs the designated ports to provide a copy of the registration, the security plan, and emergency locator map to the Department of Public Safety, the Department of Natural Resources, the sheriff of the county in which the port is located in whole or in part, and the chief of police of each municipal corporation in which the port is located.  The act specifies that the documents it requires a port to prepare are not public records subject to mandatory disclosure.

The act's requirements related to ports are not to be construed to replace or supercede any standards of the U.S. Department of Homeland Security and the Transportation Security Administration, safety standards of the United States Department of Transportation, or any standard or law related to maritime security enforced by the Secretary of the Department in which the United States Coast Guard is located.  (R.C. 1547.80.)

Assistance to federal law enforcement officer

The act permits any peace officer to render assistance to any federal law enforcement officer who has arrest authority under the USA Patriot Act, if both of the following apply:  (1) there is a threat of imminent physical danger to the federal law enforcement officer, a threat of physical harm to another person, or any other serious emergency situation present, and (2) either the federal law enforcement officer requests emergency assistance or it appears that the federal law enforcement officer is unable to request assistance and the circumstances reasonably indicate that assistance is appropriate (R.C. 2935.033).

Emergency management

NIMS system for incident management

Continuing law establishes agencies to provide emergency management services, authorizes government units to provide and cooperate in the provision of services during an emergency, and establishes procedures for agencies and government units to follow in providing emergency services.  The act adopts the National Incident Management System (NIMS) as the standard procedure for incident management in this state and requires all departments, agencies, and political subdivisions within the state to utilize the system for incident management. (R.C. 5502.28(C).)

Emergency assistance from law enforcement officers

Continuing law authorizes units of local government to cooperate in the provision and management of emergency services, including countywide emergency management agencies, regional authorities for emergency management, and programs for emergency management within political subdivisions.  The act expands the types of assistance that cooperating entities may provide by specifying that responding law enforcement officers acting pursuant to statutory authority to cooperate have the same authority to enforce the law as when acting within the territory of their regular employment.  (R.C. 5502.41(F)(4).)

Vulnerability assessments and other security-sensitive information

The act authorizes the owner or operator of a facility where chemicals are produced, or the owner or operator of any other facility or business of any type, to provide a copy of any vulnerability assessment of the facility or business or of any other security-sensitive information developed regarding the facility or business to any of the following:  (1) the local emergency planning committee of the emergency planning district in which the facility or business is located, (2) the fire department with jurisdiction over the facility or business, (3) the sheriff of the county in which the facility or business is located, or (4) the chief of police of any municipal corporation with jurisdiction over the facility or business, (5) any state agency involved in the development of plans to protect businesses of any type against terrorist attack, including the Ohio Department of Public Safety, the Ohio Highway Patrol, the Office of Homeland Security, and the Emergency Management Agency.

The act specifies that any of the agencies listed may share an assessment or information with any of the other types of agencies listed, but may not share any vulnerability assessment or security-sensitive information received pursuant to this provision with any other public or private office unless required to do so by federal or state law.  Any vulnerability assessment or other security-sensitive information received is not a public record under the Ohio Public Records Law, R.C. 149.43 (continuing law, not in the act), and the assessment or information is not subject to the mandatory disclosure requirements of the Public Records Law.

The act specifies that the public records exception may not be construed to exempt any owner or operator of a facility where chemicals are produced or the owner or operator of any other facility or business of any type from providing information contained in a vulnerability assessment or other security-sensitive information to the public when the provision of that information otherwise is required by federal or state law.  (R.C. 3750.22.)

Driving privileges for person subject to an active arrest warrant

The act prohibits the reinstatement of driving privileges to a person whose driver's license or permit has been suspended under R.C. Chapter 4510. or any other provision of the Revised Code if the Registrar of Motor Vehicles determines that a warrant has been issued for the person's arrest and the warrant is an active warrant (R.C. 4507.08(E)).

Duties of Director of Public Safety

The act requires the Director of Public Safety to establish a Homeland Security Advisory Council to advise the Director on homeland security and homeland security funding efforts.  The membership of the Council should include, but is not limited to, state and local government officials who have homeland security or emergency management responsibilities and who represent first responders.  The Director is to appoint the members, who serve without compensation.  (R.C. 5502.011(E).)

Duties of Division of Homeland Security

The act expands the duties of the Division of Homeland Security of the Department of Public Safety to also include the following (R.C. 5502.03):

(1)  Collect, analyze, maintain, and disseminate information to support local, state, and federal law enforcement agencies, other government agencies, and private organizations in detecting, deterring, preventing, preparing for, responding to, and recovering from threatened or actual terrorist events (this information is not a public record under the act);

(2)  Coordinate efforts of state and local governments and private organizations to enhance the security and protection of critical infrastructure and key assets in Ohio;

(3)  Develop and coordinate policies, protocols, and strategies that may be used to prevent, detect, prepare for, respond to, and recover from terrorist acts or threats;

(4)  Develop, update, and coordinate the implementation of an Ohio homeland security strategic plan that will guide state and local governments in the achievement of homeland security.

Statewide system for volunteers

Under continuing law largely unchanged by the act, the Ohio Community Service Council is responsible for assisting in the development of programs that benefit communities.  The act adds the responsibility for the Council to establish a statewide system for recruiting, registering, training, and deploying the types of volunteers the Council considers advisable and reasonably necessary.  The Council also is given responsibility to advise, assist, consult with, and cooperate with, by contract or otherwise, agencies and political subdivisions in establishing the statewide system for volunteers.  The act enables the Council to accept and administer grants from any source, and to adopt fees by rule.  (R.C. 121.40(C)(13) and (F), 121.404(A) and (C).)

The act defines "registered volunteer" as any individual registered as a volunteer pursuant to procedures the Council establishes pursuant to the act and "who serves without pay or other consideration, other than the reasonable reimbursement or allowance for expenses actually incurred or the provision of incidental benefits related to the volunteer's service, such as meals, lodging, and childcare."  The act provides immunity from liability for registered volunteers in specified situations[2] and provides that information related to registered volunteers specific and unique responsibilities, assignments, or deployment plans, including but not limited to training, preparedness, readiness, or organizational assignment, is a security record under R.C. 149.433, which means that it is not a public record subject to mandatory release.   The act specifies that personal information, contact information, medical information, and information related to family members of dependents is not a public record but that a registered volunteer's status as a volunteer and any information presented in summary, statistical, or aggregate form that does not identify an individual is a public record.  (R.C. 121.404(B), (D), and (E).)

As an additional measure related to volunteers, the act permits the Director of Health to establish a system for recruiting, registering, training, and deploying volunteers the Director determines advisable and reasonably necessary to respond to an emergency involving the public's health.  (R.C. 3701.04.)

Reverse 9-1-1 system

The act expands the existing provisions that govern 9-1-1 systems to also address "reverse 9-1-1 systems."  In addition to a few ongoing exceptions, the act specifies another exception, that the prohibition against a person disclosing or using any information concerning telephone numbers, addresses, or names obtained from the data base that serves the public answering point of a 9-1-1 system does not apply when access to a data base is given to a state and local government in warning of a public emergency by a telephone company that is a wireline service provider.  The charge, terms, and conditions for the disclosure or use of that information to access a data base is subject to the jurisdiction of the Public Utilities Commission.

The act also expands a qualified civil immunity contained in the 9‑1-1 Law for telephone companies and other specified persons with telephone-related positions.  Except for willful or wanton misconduct and in addition to the existing qualified civil immunities, specified persons related to a telephone company and other customer premises equipment are not liable in damages in a civil action for injuries, death, or loss to persons or property resulting from assistance to a public utility, municipal utility, or state or local government as authorized by the act.  (R.C. 4931.49(C) and (F)(5).)

Modification of procedure to amend a final 9-1-1 plan

Prior law provided that a 9-1-1 plan could be amended only in the same manner as an initial plan is adopted.  The act provides alternative methods for amending a plan for specified purposes.

To amend to add a participant, the act permits an entity that wishes to be added as a participant in the system to file a written letter of that intent with a board of county commissioners.  The final plan is deemed amended upon the filing of that letter.  The entity filing the letter is responsible for sending written notice of that filing to all subdivisions and telephone companies participating in the system.

The act enables a board of county commissioners to call a meeting of the 9‑1-1 planning committee to consider amending a final plan for specified purposes, and authorizes the 9-1-1 planning committee to amend an existing plan by majority approval, for purposes which include:  (1) expanding the territory included in the countywide 9‑1-1 system, (2) adjusting the territory served by a public safety answering point, (3) providing for wireless enhanced 9-1-1, or (4) making other necessary adjustments to the plan.  (R.C. 4931.45.)

Definitions

Terms the act modifies

Material support or resources.  R.C. 2909.21(B) previously defined "material support or resources" as currency, payment instruments, other financial securities, lodging, training, safe houses, false documentation or identification, communications equipment, facilities, weapons, lethal substances, explosives, personnel, transportation, and other physical assets, except medicine or religious materials.  The act expands the definition to include funds, transfer of funds, and communications (R.C. 2909.21(I)).  This change expands the scope of all existing antiterrorism measures that use the term "material support or resources" (R.C. 2909.21 to 2909.25) to include the items and services in the expanded definition.

Specified offense.  R.C. 2909.21(E) previously defined "specified offense" as (1) a felony offense of violence or a violation of R.C. 2909.04 (the offense of disrupting public services), R.C. 2927.24 (the offense of contaminating a substance for human consumption or use or contamination with a hazardous chemical, biological, or radioactive substance or spreading a false report of contamination), or a felony of the first degree that is not a violation of any provision in R.C. Chapter 2925. or 3719., or (2) an attempt to commit, complicity in committing, or a conspiracy to commit any of those offenses.

The act expands the definition of "specified offense" (redesignated as R.C. 2909.21(N)) to include the existing offenses set forth in R.C. 2909.22 (soliciting or providing support for an act of terrorism), R.C. 2909.23 (making a terroristic threat), R.C. 2909.24 (terrorism), and offenses the act enacts in R.C. 2909.26 (criminal possession of a chemical weapon, biological weapon, radiological or nuclear weapon, or explosive device), R.C. 2909.27 (criminal use of a chemical weapon, biological weapon, radiological or nuclear weapon, or explosive device), R.C. 2909.28 (illegal assembly or possession of chemicals for the manufacture of a chemical weapon, biological weapon, radiological or nuclear weapon, or explosive device), and R.C. 2909.29 (money laundering in support of terrorism), and also an attempt to commit, complicity in committing, or a conspiracy to commit any of those offenses.  This change expands the scope of the existing antiterrorism measures that use the term "specified offense" or "act of terrorism" to include the offenses added by the change.

Terms enacted by reference

The following definitions are enacted by reference to definitions in sections of ongoing law that are not in the act:

"Biological agent" means any microorganism, virus, infectious substance, or biological product that may be engineered through biotechnology, or any naturally occurring or bioengineered component of any microorganism, virus, infectious substance, or biological product that may be engineered through biotechnology, capable of causing any of the following:  (1) death, disease, or other biological malfunction in a human, an animal, a plant, or another living organism, (2) deterioration of food, water, equipment, supplies, or material of any kind, or (3) deleterious alteration of the environment.  (R.C. 2909.21(B), by reference to ongoing R.C. 2917.33, not in the act.)

"Explosive device" means any device designed or specially adapted to cause physical harm to persons or property by means of an explosion, and consisting of an explosive substance or agency and a means to detonate it. "Explosive device" includes without limitation any bomb, any explosive demolition device, any blasting cap or detonator containing an explosive charge, and any pressure vessel that has been knowingly tampered with or arranged so as to explode.  (R.C. 2909.21(F), by reference to ongoing R.C. 2923.11, not in the act.)

"Delivery system" means any of the following:  (1) any apparatus, equipment, device, or means of delivery specifically designed to deliver or disseminate a biological agent, toxin, or vector, or (2) any vector (R.C. 2909.21(B), by reference to ongoing R.C. 2917.33, not in the act).

"Peace officer" includes, except as provided in R.C. 2935.081, a sheriff; deputy sheriff; marshal; deputy marshal; member of the organized police department of a municipal corporation, including a member of the organized police department of a municipal corporation in an adjoining state serving in Ohio under a contract; member of a metropolitan housing authority police force; member of a regional transit authority police force; state university law enforcement officer; designated enforcement agent of the Department of Public Safety; employee of the Department of Taxation delegated investigation powers; employee of the Department of Natural Resources who is a natural resources law enforcement staff officer, forest officer, preserve officer, wildlife officer, park officer, or state watercraft officer; individual designated to perform law enforcement duties under R.C. 511.232, 1545.13, or 6101.75; veterans' home police officer; port authority special police officer; township police constable or police officer; special police officer employed by a municipal corporation at a municipal airport, or other municipal air navigation facility, that has scheduled operations and that is required to be under a security program and is governed by aviation security rules of the federal Transportation Security Administration; the House sergeant at arms if he or she has arrest authority; and an assistant House sergeant at arms; specified officer or employee of the Bureau of Criminal Identification and Investigation who is providing assistance upon request to a law enforcement officer or emergency assistance to a peace officer pursuant to law; and, for the purpose of arrests within those areas, for the purposes of R.C. Chapter 5503., and the filing of and service of process relating to those offenses witnessed or investigated by them, the State Highway Patrol Superintendent and Troopers (R.C. 2909.21(K), by reference to ongoing R.C. 2935.01, not in the act).

"Prosecutor" includes the county prosecuting attorney and any assistant prosecutor designated to assist the county prosecuting attorney, and, in the case of courts inferior to courts of common pleas, includes the village solicitor, city director of law, or similar chief legal officer of a municipal corporation, any such officer's assistants, or any attorney designated by the prosecuting attorney of the county to appear for the prosecution of a given case. (R.C. 2909.21(K), by reference to ongoing R.C. 2935.01, not in the act).

"Toxin" means the toxic material of plants, animals, microorganisms, viruses, fungi, or infectious substances or a recombinant molecule, whatever its origin or method of reproduction, including, but not limited to, any of the following:  (1) any poisonous substance or biological product that may be engineered through biotechnology and that is produced by a living organism, or (2) a poisonous isomer or biological product, homolog, or derivative of any substance or product described in division (D)(3)(a) of this section (R.C. 2909.21(B), by reference to ongoing R.C. 2917.33, not in the act).

"Vector" means a living organism or molecule, including a recombinant molecule or biological product that may be engineered through biotechnology, capable of carrying a biological agent or toxin to a host (R.C. 2909.21(B), by reference to ongoing R.C. 2917.33, not in the act).

New definitions

The act includes the following new definitions:

"Biological weapon" means any biological agent, toxin, vector, or delivery system or combination of any biological agent or agents, any toxin or toxins, any vector or vectors, and any delivery system or systems (R.C. 2909.21(C)).

"Chemical weapon" means any one or more of the following:  (1) a toxic chemical or precursor of a toxic chemical that is listed in Schedule 1, Schedule 2, or Schedule 3 of the international Convention on the Prohibition of the Development, Production, Stockpiling and Use of Chemical Weapons and on their Destruction (CWC), as entered into force on April 29, 1997, (2) a device specifically designed to cause death or other harm through the toxic properties of a toxic chemical or precursor identified in clause (1) that would be created or released as a result of the employment of that device, or (3) any equipment specifically designed for use directly in connection with the employment of devices (R.C. 2909.21(D)).

"Radiological or nuclear weapon" means any device that is designed to create or release radiation or radioactivity at a level that is dangerous to human life or in order to cause serious physical harm to persons as a result of the radiation or radioactivity created or released (R.C. 2909.21(E)).

"Key component of a binary or multicomponent chemical system" means the precursor that plays the most important role in determining the toxic properties of the final product and reacts rapidly with other chemicals in the binary or multicomponent chemical system.  (R.C. 2909.21(G).)

"Material assistance" means any of the following:  (1) membership in an organization on the United States Department of State Terrorist Exclusion List (see below), (2) use of the person's position of prominence within any country to persuade others to support an organization on the U.S. Department of State Terrorist Exclusion List, (3) knowingly soliciting funds or other things of value for an organization on the U.S. Department of State Terrorist Exclusion List, (4) solicitation of any individual for membership in an organization on the U.S. Department of State Terrorist Exclusion List, (5) commission of an act that the person knows, or reasonably should have known, affords material support or resources to an organization on the U.S. Department of State Terrorist Exclusion List, or (6) hiring or compensating a person known to be a member of an organization on the U.S. Department of State Terrorist Exclusion List or a person known to be engaged in planning, assisting, or carrying out an act of terrorism (R.C. 2909.21(H)).

"Precursor" means any chemical reactant that takes part at any stage in the production by whatever method of a toxic chemical, including any key component of a binary or multicomponent chemical system (R.C. 2909.21(L)).

"Toxic chemical" means any chemical that through its chemical action on life processes can cause death or serious physical harm to persons or animals, regardless of its origin or of its method of production and regardless of whether it is produced in facilities, in munitions, or elsewhere (R.C. 2909.21(O)).

"United States Department of State Terrorist Exclusion List" means the list compiled by the United States Secretary of State, in consultation with or upon the request of the United States Attorney General, that designates terrorist organizations for immigration purposes, as authorized by the federal "Uniting and Strengthening America by Providing Appropriate Tools Required to Intercept and Obstruct Terrorism (USA Patriot Act) Act of 2001" (R.C. 2909.21(P)).

"Hazardous radioactive substance" means any substance or item that releases or is designed to release radiation or radioactivity at a level dangerous to human life (R.C. 2909.21(Q)).

COMMENT

1.  Terms used in the act, defined in continuing law

The following terms used in R.C. 2909.21 to 2909.34 in the act are defined in continuing law as follows:

"Act of terrorism" means an act that is committed within or outside the territorial jurisdiction of Ohio or the United States, that constitutes a "specified offense" if committed in Ohio or constitutes an offense in any jurisdiction within or outside the territorial jurisdiction of the United States containing all of the essential elements of a specified offense, and that is intended to do one or more of the following:  (1) intimidate or coerce a civilian population, (2)  influence the policy of any government by intimidation or coercion, or (3) affect the conduct of any government by the act that constitutes the offense (R.C. 2909.21(A)).

"Offense of violence" means:  (1) a violation of R.C. 2903.01, 2903.02, 2903.03, 2903.04, 2903.11, 2903.12, 2903.13, 2903.15, 2903.21, 2903.211, 2903.22, 2905.01, 2905.02, 2905.11, 2907.02, 2907.03, 2907.05, 2909.02, 2909.03, 2909.24, 2911.01, 2911.02, 2911.11, 2917.01, 2917.02, 2917.03, 2917.31, 2919.25, 2921.03, 2921.04, 2921.34, 2923.161, 2911.12(A)(1), (2), or (3), or 2919.22(B)(1), (2), (3), or (4), or former R.C. 2907.12, (2) a violation of an existing or former municipal ordinance or law of Ohio or any other state or the United States, substantially equivalent to any of these offenses, (3) an offense, other than a traffic offense, under an existing or former municipal ordinance or law of Ohio or any other state or the United States, committed purposely or knowingly, and involving physical harm to persons or a risk of serious physical harm to persons, or (4) a conspiracy or attempt to commit, or complicity in committing, any of the above offenses (R.C. 2901.01, not in the act).

"Risk" means a significant possibility, as contrasted with a remote possibility, that a certain result may occur or that certain circumstances may exist (R.C. 2901.01).

"Serious physical harm to persons" means any of the following:  (1) any mental illness or condition of such gravity as would normally require hospitalization or prolonged psychiatric treatment, (2) any "physical harm" (see below) that carries a substantial risk of death, (3) any physical harm that involves some permanent incapacity, whether partial or total, or that involves some temporary, substantial incapacity, (4) any physical harm that involves some permanent disfigurement or that involves some temporary, serious disfigurement, or (5) any physical harm that involves acute pain of such duration as to result in substantial suffering or that involves any degree of prolonged or intractable pain.  "Physical harm to persons" means any injury, illness, or other physiological impairment, regardless of its gravity or duration.  (R.C. 2901.01.)

2.  Summary of Supreme Court ruling on Nevada "stop and identify" statute

In Hiibel v. Sixth Judicial District Court of Nevada (2004), 542 U.S. 177, 124 S. Ct. 2451, 2004 U.S. LEXIS 4385, the U.S. Supreme Court upheld a conviction under a Nevada "stop and identify" statute.  The Nevada statute, NRS § 171.123, provides that:

1.  Any peace officer may detain any person whom the officer encounters under circumstances which reasonably indicate that the person has committed, is committing or is about to commit a crime.

2.  Any peace officer may detain any person the officer encounters under circumstances which reasonably indicate that the person has violated or is violating the conditions of his parole or probation.

3.  The officer may detain the person pursuant to this section only to ascertain his identity and the suspicious circumstances surrounding his presence abroad. Any person so detained shall identify himself, but may not be compelled to answer any other inquiry of any peace officer.

4.  A person must not be detained longer than is reasonably necessary to effect the purposes of this section, and in no event longer than 60 minutes. The detention must not extend beyond the place or the immediate vicinity of the place where the detention was first effected, unless the person is arrested.

Another Nevada statute, NRS § 199.280, prohibits a person from willfully resisting, delaying, or obstructing a public officer in discharging or attempting to discharge any legal duty of the officer's office.

Briefly, in Hiibel, a police officer responding to a call reporting that a man assaulted a woman found Hiibel (the defendant) standing outside a parked truck with a woman inside the truck.  The officer asked for the defendant's identification 11 times and was refused each time, and the officer arrested the defendant.  The defendant was convicted under NRS § 199.280 for obstructing the officer in carrying out his duties under NRS § 171.123.  The Supreme Court determined that:  (a) the stop of the defendant (known as a "Terry stop"), the request for identification, and the State's requirement of a response did not contravene the guarantees of the Fourth Amendment, because the request for identity had an immediate relation to the purpose, rationale, and practical demands of the Terry stop and because the request for identification was reasonably related in scope to the circumstances that justified the Terry stop, and (b) the defendant's conviction did not violate the Fifth Amendment's prohibition on compelled self-incrimination, because disclosure of his name presented no reasonable danger of incrimination.

HISTORY

ACTION

DATE

 

 

Introduced

01-24-05

Reported, S. Judiciary on Criminal Justice

03-09-05

Passed Senate (32-0)

03-09-05

Reported, H. Transportation, Public Safety,
& Homeland Security


06-16-06

Re-referred, H. Transportation, Public Safety,
& Homeland Security


09-13-05

Re-reported, H. Transportation, Public Safety,
& Homeland Security


11-15-05

Passed House (69-23)

12-14-05

Senate concurred in House amendments (29-2)

12-14-05

 

 

 

05-sb9-126.doc/jc



[1] Comment 2 contains a summary of a U.S. Supreme Court decision concerning a Nevada "stop and identify" statute.

[2] The immunity differs from the existing "good Samaritan" laws in that registered volunteers under the act work as part of an organized response to an emergency while a "good Samaritan" under R.C. 2305.23 (not in the act) works outside an office or hospital, and is understood to have come upon the emergency instead of being part of an organized response.