Budget Amendment ID: FY2013-S4-433

EPS 433

Drug Trafficking Registry

Messrs. Ross, Knapik and Tarr moved that the proposed new text be amended Mr. Ross moves to amend the bill (Senate No. 4) by inserting, after SECTION XX, the following new section:-

“SECTION XX. Chapter 94C of the General Laws, as so appearing, is hereby amended by adding after section 32E the following new section:-

‘Section 32E½. (1) Drug Trafficking Registry.

(a) As used in this section, the following term shall have the following meaning:

“Drug trafficker” means a person who has been convicted of a violation of chapter 94C section 32 subsection (a), or chapter 94C section 32E subsection (b), or chapter 94C section 32E subsection (c).

(b) There shall be, in the Massachusetts bureau of investigation, a drug trafficking registry for the purpose of identifying drug traffickers and making that information available to law enforcement and the general public. Said registry shall be supervised and maintained by said bureau in conjunction with the department of public health. For every person convicted of chapter 94C section 32 subsection (a), or chapter 94C section 32E subsection (b), or chapter 94C section 32E subsection (c) on or after the effective date of this Act, the drug trafficking registry shall contain information relating to each drug trafficker. The information shall include the drug trafficker’s name, date of birth, photograph, offense or offenses requiring inclusion in the drug trafficking registry, the conviction date and county of each such offense, and such other identifying information as the Massachusetts bureau of investigation and department of public health deem necessary to identify the drug trafficker, but shall not include the social security number of the drug trafficker.

(c) The Massachusetts bureau of investigation shall make the information contained in the statewide drug trafficking registry accessible on the Internet by means of a hyperlink labeled “Drug Trafficking Registry” on the department of public safety’s World Wide Web home page. The Massachusetts bureau of investigation shall update that information as it deems necessary.

(d) The Massachusetts bureau of investigation shall promulgate rules and regulations setting forth the procedures and methods for implementing this section and those rules and regulations must include procedures to ensure that the information in the registry is accurate, and that the information in the registry reflects any changes based on the reversal of a conviction for an offense requiring inclusion in the drug trafficking registry, or a court order requiring the sealing or expungement of records relating to the offense. A certified copy of such an order shall be deemed prima facie true and correct and, shall be sufficient to require the immediate amendment or removal of any person’s information from the drug trafficking registry by the Massachusetts bureau of investigation.

(e) Within 60 days after the effective date of this Act, the court clerks shall forward monthly to the Massachusetts bureau of investigation a copy of the judgment for each and all persons convicted of an offense within the definition of drug trafficker, as defined in subsection (a) during the previous month.

(f) Within 120 days after the effective date of this Act, the department of corrections shall forward to the Massachusetts bureau of investigation a list of all persons incarcerated or on mandatory supervised release, who have been convicted of an offense within the definition of drug trafficker, as defined in subsection (a).

(g) Police officials and other public employees acting in good faith shall not be liable in a civil or criminal proceeding for any publication on the Internet under subsection (c) or other dissemination of drug trafficking registry information.

(h) The Massachusetts bureau of investigation shall remove from the registry the name and other identifying information of persons who are convicted of a violation of the offenses described in subsection (b) seven (7) years after the date of the most recent judgment.’”