SECTION 1: Section 47 of chapter 94C of the General Laws is hereby amended by striking out subparagraph (k)(1) and inserting in place thereof the following subparagraph:-
(k)(1) The attorney general, each district attorney and each police department for which the state treasurer has established a special law enforcement trust fund pursuant to subsection (d) shall file an annual report with the treasurer regarding all assets, monies and proceeds from assets seized pursuant to this section and held by such fund. The report shall provide itemized accounting for each seizure and forfeiture, as required by section 47B. The report shall be filed not later than January 31 for the preceding calendar year and shall be a public record.
SECTION 2: Section 24W of chapter 90 of the General Laws is hereby amended by adding the following paragraphs:-
(g) The attorney general, each district attorney and each police department shall file an annual report with the treasurer regarding all assets, monies and proceeds from assets seized pursuant to this section and held by such fund. The report shall provide itemized accounting for each seizure and forfeiture, as required by section 47B. The report shall be filed not later than January 31 for the preceding calendar year and shall be a public record.
(h) The attorney general, each district attorney and each police department for which the state treasurer has established a special law enforcement trust fund shall file an annual report with the treasurer regarding all expenditures therefrom, which shall include, but not be limited to, the following expense categories: personnel contractors equipment training private-public partnerships inter-agency collaborations; and community grants. The report shall be filed not later than January 31 for the preceding calendar year and shall be a public record.
(i) Annually, not later than March 15, the state treasurer shall file a report with the executive office of administration and finance and the house and senate committees on ways and means regarding the aggregate deposits, aggregate expenditures, and ending balances for each special law enforcement trust fund during the preceding calendar year. The report shall be a public record.
SECTION 3: Section 56 of chapter 265 of the General Laws is hereby amended by adding the following paragraphs:-
(k) The attorney general, each district attorney and each police department shall file an annual report with the treasurer regarding all assets, monies and proceeds from assets seized pursuant to this section and held by such fund. The report shall provide itemized accounting for each seizure and forfeiture, as required by section 47B. The report shall be filed not later than January 31 for the preceding calendar year and shall be a public record.
(l) The attorney general, each district attorney and each police department for which the state treasurer has established a special law enforcement trust fund shall file an annual report with the treasurer regarding all expenditures therefrom, which shall include, but not be limited to, the following expense categories: personnel contractors equipment training private-public partnerships inter-agency collaborations; and community grants. The report shall be filed not later than January 31 for the preceding calendar year and shall be a public record.
(m) Annually, not later than March 15, the state treasurer shall file a report with the executive office of administration and finance and the house and senate committees on ways and means regarding the aggregate deposits, aggregate expenditures, and ending balances for each special law enforcement trust fund during the preceding calendar year. The reports shall be a public record.
SECTION 4: Chapter 94C of the General Laws is hereby amended by adding the following new section:-
Section 47B: Seizure and forfeiture case tracking system and searchable public website.
(a) This section is applicable to property seized and forfeited under section 24W of chapter 90, section 47 of chapter 94C, section 56 of chapter 265, and any other section of the general laws that authorizes a law enforcement agency to seize property used in the commission of a criminal offense for forfeiture.
(b) The state treasurer shall establish and maintain a case tracking system and searchable public website that includes the following information about any property seized and forfeited under state law. The state treasurer shall assign the responsibility to report each element to relevant agencies, including seizing agencies and district attorneys where appropriate:
(1) Name of the law enforcement agency that seized the property;
(2) Date of the seizure;
(3) Type of property seized: currency or, if property other than currency, a description of property seized including make, model, and year;
(4) Place of seizure;
(5) Estimated value of the seizure;
(6) Whether the seizure was transferred to federal government;
(7) Crime for which suspect was charged;
(8) The outcome of suspect’s arrest: no charge was filed, charges dropped, acquittal, plea agreement, jury conviction or other;
(9) Criminal case number, if charged;
(10) Forfeiture case number;
(11) Type of forfeiture proceeding: civil, administrative, criminal or other;
(12) If a property owner filed a claim or counterclaim, who filed it: the suspect, innocent owner, lienholder, other party, or no filing by any party;
(13) Whether there was a forfeiture settlement or consent agreement;
(14) Date of the forfeiture order;
(15) Property disposition: returned to owner, partially returned to owner, sold, destroyed, retained by a law enforcement agency, or pending disposition;
(16) Total value of property forfeited including currency and proceeds from sale of non- currency property (excluding the value of contraband);
(17) Market value of property forfeited under state law that was retained or donated (excluding the value of contraband); and
(18) Estimate of total costs to the state (i) to store property in impound lots or evidence rooms, (ii) to pay for law enforcement personnel and prosecutors’ time and expenses to litigate forfeiture cases and (iii) cost to sell or dispose of forfeited property.
(c) If an agency has made no seizures during the previous year, a null report shall be filed by the agency specifying that it did not engage in seizures or forfeitures during the reporting period.
(d) If a law enforcement agency fails to file a report within 30 days after it is due and there is no good cause as determined by the state treasurer, the agency shall be subject to a civil fine payable to the General Revenue Fund of $500 or the equivalent of one-quarter of the forfeiture proceeds received in the prior year by the agency, whichever is greater.
(e) The state treasurer may recoup its costs under this section by charging a fee to the law enforcement agency filing a report. The agency may use forfeiture proceeds to pay the costs of compiling and reporting data under this chapter, and to pay any fees imposed by the state treasurer.
(f) The state treasurer may adopt rules necessary to implement this section.
(g) The data and reports compiled and prepared under this section shall public records.
SECTION 5. Section 4 shall take effect on January 1, 2022. The remainder of this act shall take effect upon its passage.
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