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A02217 Summary:

BILL NOA02217
 
SAME ASSAME AS S01302-A
 
SPONSORPaulin
 
COSPNSRRamos, Lifton, Englebright, Kavanagh, Rosenthal, Wright, Schimel, Abinanti, Colton, Dinowitz, Jaffee, Mayer, Steck, Seawright
 
MLTSPNSRArroyo, Crespo, Gottfried, Hooper, Magnarelli
 
Add Art 39-BB SS875-a - 875-j, Gen Bus L, amd S400.00, Pen L
 
Requires the creation and imposition of restrictive commercial practices and stringent recordkeeping and reporting to prevent gun sales to criminals; provides that such measures shall be promulgated by the superintendent of state police; restricts premises of sales; requires employee training; prohibits straw purchases; imposes additional license conditions.
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A02217 Text:



 
                STATE OF NEW YORK
        ________________________________________________________________________
 
                                          2217
 
                               2015-2016 Regular Sessions
 
                   IN ASSEMBLY
 
                                    January 15, 2015
                                       ___________
 
        Introduced  by  M.  of  A. PAULIN, RAMOS, LIFTON, ENGLEBRIGHT, KAVANAGH,
          ROSENTHAL, WRIGHT, SCHIMEL, ABINANTI, COLTON, DINOWITZ, JAFFEE, MAYER,
          SCARBOROUGH -- Multi-Sponsored by -- M. of  A.  ARROYO,  CLARK,  GOTT-
          FRIED,  HOOPER,  MAGNARELLI -- read once and referred to the Committee
          on Economic Development
 
        AN ACT to amend the general business law and the penal law, in  relation
          to preventing the sale of firearms, rifles, and shotguns to criminals
 
          The  People of the State of New York, represented in Senate and Assem-
        bly, do enact as follows:
 
     1    Section 1. Legislative findings and declaration. The legislature here-
     2  by finds and declares as follows:
     3    1. Firearms, rifles and shotguns are used to kill over 30,000 individ-
     4  uals in the United States every year, including 1,000 individuals in New
     5  York state alone. Additionally, there  are  100,000  non-fatal  injuries
     6  across  the  country.  The  federal  government has largely ignored this
     7  public health crisis and has left it up to state and  local  governments
     8  to protect its citizens. Firearm violence also costs billions of dollars
     9  and  causes  incalculable  emotional  damage,  devastating  families and
    10  communities throughout the country.  Therefore, the state  of  New  York
    11  has  a  strong interest in reducing violence and crimes that involve the
    12  use of firearms and the illegal trafficking of  firearms.  Illegal  guns
    13  obtained  throughout  the  state end up in the hands of criminals, youth
    14  and violent individuals who use them to threaten, maim and kill.
    15    2. There is a thriving underground market for illegal firearms, large-
    16  ly driven by demand from drug gangs and other criminals. A highly  effi-
    17  cient  and  continuous  business  practice  exists in which firearms are
    18  moved from legal manufacture and sale to prohibited  purchasers,  making
    19  them  illegal  firearms.  In  2013, according to a review by the federal
    20  Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives (ATF) of trace data
    21  compiled for several regions in the state,  including  Albany,  Buffalo,
    22  Rochester,  Syracuse,  Long Island and New York City that calendar year,
 
         EXPLANATION--Matter in italics (underscored) is new; matter in brackets
                              [ ] is old law to be omitted.
                                                                   LBD00153-03-5

        A. 2217                             2
 
     1  8,539 firearms were recovered and traced, 2,164 of which were long guns.
     2  Outside New York City, long guns are sold without a permit. 64.4% of the
     3  firearms recovered from crimes in New York in 2013  were  found  in  New
     4  York  City.    In  2011, ATF trace data showed that 90% of the traceable
     5  guns used in crimes in the five boroughs were from out of state.  State-
     6  wide,  in 2011, 68% of traced crime guns recovered in New York came from
     7  out of state.  A significant portion of guns involved in crimes  upstate
     8  originate within the state. For example, according to 2009 ATF crime gun
     9  trace  data, 69% of crime guns in the Buffalo area and 50% of crime guns
    10  in the Syracuse area originated within New York state.
    11    3. Youth are particularly at risk of being killed with guns.   Accord-
    12  ing  to  the  Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, in 2010 alone,
    13  116 children and teens (under the age of 19) died from gun  violence  in
    14  New York state.
    15    4. A substantial portion of illegal firearms are diverted to the ille-
    16  gal  market  through  licensed gun dealers. Rogue gun dealers play a key
    17  role in this market. These rogue dealers  funnel  guns  to  the  illegal
    18  market through a variety of channels. One of the most common means is to
    19  allow "straw purchases". A straw purchase occurs when a person purchases
    20  a  gun  on  behalf of a prohibited person. The ATF conducted an investi-
    21  gation of gun trafficking from July 1996 to December 1998 and found that
    22  almost 26,000 trafficked firearms were associated with investigations in
    23  which there was a straw purchaser. Almost 50% of all trafficking  inves-
    24  tigations  involved  straw  purchasers,  with  an average of 37 firearms
    25  trafficked per investigation.  Another issue, according to a 2008 report
    26  by Mayors Against Illegal Guns, Inside Straw Purchasing:  How  Criminals
    27  Get  Guns  Illegally,  is that many traffickers return to the same store
    28  again and again once they have identified it as one in  which  they  can
    29  make  straw  purchases easily.   According to the ATF, 1% of gun dealers
    30  are the source of almost 60% of crime guns.
    31    5.  Although most gun dealers operate  their  businesses  legally  and
    32  responsibly, some gun dealers who are corrupt or maintain shoddy record-
    33  keeping  practices flood the streets with illegal weapons as a result of
    34  their unrestricted access to new gun inventory and the unwillingness  of
    35  gun  manufacturers  to  terminate  their  supply to these rogue dealers.
    36  Current federal and state regulation has not curbed the  business  prac-
    37  tice  of illegal gun dealers. According to a 2004 study by Americans for
    38  Gun Safety, of the 120 worst gun dealers in the  country,  namely  those
    39  dealers  with an average of 500 crime guns traced to them, 96 were still
    40  in operation.
    41    6. Moreover, this problem is not limited to  unlicensed  sellers,  and
    42  clearly  includes  federal  firearms  licensees (FFLs). Indeed, although
    43  FFLs were involved in under 10% of the trafficking investigations under-
    44  taken by ATF, they were associated with the largest number  of  diverted
    45  firearms--over  40,000 guns, which is nearly half of the total number of
    46  trafficked firearms documented during the two-year period of  the  ATF's
    47  investigation.    Additionally,  a 2010 report by Mayors Against Illegal
    48  Guns indicated that several states  which  allow  state  authorities  to
    49  supplement  the  federal ATF inspection with routine inspections provide
    50  law enforcement with more opportunities to uncover dealers in  violation
    51  of  the law.   These inspections also help identify dealers who exercise
    52  lax oversight over their inventory and may lead to  improved  compliance
    53  with federal, state, and local laws.
    54    7.  Current  state  law  governing  firearm  dealers  is inadequate to
    55  prevent the diversion of firearms to the  illegal  marketplace.    Addi-
    56  tional  protections  that  are  needed  include, but are not limited to,

        A. 2217                             3
 
     1  better gun dealer internal compliance procedures, programs to  eliminate
     2  straw  purchases, improved security measures, reducing youth access, and
     3  mandatory training for gun dealer employees.  The additional protections
     4  set forth in this act will greatly enhance the state's efforts to reduce
     5  criminal activity in the state.
     6    § 2. The general business law is amended by adding a new article 39-BB
     7  to read as follows:
     8                                 ARTICLE 39-BB
     9                      PREVENTING THE SALE OF FIREARMS,
    10                      RIFLES, AND SHOTGUNS TO CRIMINALS
    11  Section 875-a. Definitions.
    12          875-b. Reasonable measures to prevent sales and
    13                  transfers to criminals.
    14          875-c. Security.
    15          875-d. Access to firearms, rifles, and shotguns.
    16          875-e. Location of firearm, rifle, and shotgun sales.
    17          875-f. Employee training.
    18          875-g. Maintenance of records.
    19          875-h. Internal compliance and certification.
    20          875-i. Rules and regulations.
    21          875-j. Violations.
    22    § 875-a. Definitions. For the purposes of this article:
    23    1.  "Dealer"  means  any  person,  firm,  partnership, corporation, or
    24  company who engages in the business of purchasing, selling, keeping  for
    25  sale,  lending,  leasing,  or  in  any manner disposing of, any firearm,
    26  rifle, or shotgun.
    27    2. "Dispose of" means to dispose of, give,  give  away,  lease,  lend,
    28  keep  for  sale,  offer,  offer  for  sale, sell, transfer, or otherwise
    29  dispose of.
    30    3. "Firearm" has the same meaning as that term is defined in  subdivi-
    31  sion three of section 265.00 of the penal law.
    32    4.  "Firearm  exhibitor"  means  any person, firm, partnership, corpo-
    33  ration, or company that exhibits, sells, offers for sale, transfers,  or
    34  exchanges firearms, rifles, or shotguns at a gun show.
    35    5.  "Retail dealer" means any dealer engaged in the retail business of
    36  selling firearms, rifles, or shotguns.
    37    6. "Rifle" has the same meaning as that term is defined in subdivision
    38  eleven of section 265.00 of the penal law.
    39    7. "Shotgun" has the same meaning as that term is defined in  subdivi-
    40  sion twelve of section 265.00 of the penal law.
    41    8.  "Straw  purchase" means the purchase, or attempt to purchase, by a
    42  person of a firearm, rifle, or shotgun for, on behalf of, or for the use
    43  of another person, knowing that it would  be  unlawful  for  such  other
    44  person to possess such firearm, rifle, or shotgun, or an attempt to make
    45  such a purchase.
    46    9.  "Straw  purchaser"  means  a  person who, knowing that it would be
    47  unlawful for another person to possess a  firearm,  rifle,  or  shotgun,
    48  purchases  or  attempts to purchase a firearm, rifle, or shotgun for, on
    49  behalf of, or for the use of such other person.
    50    10. "Superintendent" means the superintendent of state police.
    51    § 875-b. Reasonable measures to prevent sales and transfers to  crimi-
    52  nals.  Every dealer shall adopt reasonable measures to prevent firearms,
    53  rifles,  and  shotguns  from  being  diverted  from  the legal stream of
    54  commerce, intentionally or  otherwise,  for  later  sale,  transfer,  or
    55  disposal to individuals not legally entitled to purchase or possess such
    56  weapons.  Such  measures  shall  include,  but  need  not be limited to,

        A. 2217                             4
 
     1  programs to eliminate sales to straw purchasers and to otherwise  thwart
     2  illegal  gun  trafficking.  The  superintendent  shall  develop programs
     3  designed to eliminate sales to straw purchasers and to otherwise  thwart
     4  illegal gun trafficking. Within six months of the effective date of this
     5  article,  the  superintendent  shall  submit a report to the legislature
     6  detailing such programs, including establishing minimum requirements for
     7  such programs.
     8    § 875-c. Security. Every dealer shall implement a  security  plan  for
     9  securing  firearms,  rifles and shotguns, including firearms, rifles and
    10  shotguns in shipment. The plan  must  satisfy  at  least  the  following
    11  requirements:
    12    1.  display  cases shall be locked at all times except when removing a
    13  single firearm, rifle or shotgun to show a customer, and customers shall
    14  handle firearms, rifles or shotguns only under the direct supervision of
    15  an employee;
    16    2. all firearms, rifles and shotguns  shall  be  secured,  other  than
    17  during  business  hours,  in  a  locked  fireproof  safe or vault in the
    18  licensee's business premises or in a similar secured  and  locked  area;
    19  and
    20    3. ammunition shall be stored separately from the firearms, rifles and
    21  shotguns and out of reach of the customers.
    22    4.  (a)  The  permitted business location shall be secured by an alarm
    23  system that is installed and maintained by  an  alarm  company  operator
    24  properly  licensed pursuant to state law. The alarm system must be moni-
    25  tored by a central station listed by  Underwriters  Laboratories,  Inc.,
    26  and  covered  by  an active Underwriters Laboratories, Inc. alarm system
    27  certificate with a #3 extent of protection.
    28    (b)  Underwriters  Laboratories,  Inc.  uses  the  term   "extent   of
    29  protection"  to  refer  to  the  amount of alarm protection installed to
    30  protect a particular area, room or container. Systems with a  #3  extent
    31  of  protection  include complete protection for all accessible openings,
    32  and partial motion and sound detection at certain  other  areas  of  the
    33  premises.  More information may be found in: Central Station Alarm Asso-
    34  ciation, A Practical Guide to Central Station Burglar Alarm Systems (3rd
    35  ed. 2005).
    36    § 875-d. Access to firearms, rifles, and shotguns. Every retail dealer
    37  shall exclude all  persons  under  eighteen  years  of  age  from  those
    38  portions of its premises where firearms, rifles, shotguns, or ammunition
    39  are  stocked  or  sold, unless such person is accompanied by a parent or
    40  guardian.
    41    § 875-e. Location of firearm, rifle, and shotgun sales.  Every  dealer
    42  shall  sell  or otherwise dispose of firearms, rifles, and shotguns only
    43  at the location listed on the dealer's federal firearms  license  or  at
    44  gun shows.
    45    § 875-f. Employee training. Every retail dealer shall provide training
    46  to  all  employees  and  other  personnel  engaged in the retail sale of
    47  firearms, rifles, and shotguns relating to:
    48    1. the law governing firearm, rifle, and shotgun transfers by  federal
    49  firearms licensees and individuals;
    50    2.  how  to  recognize  straw purchases and other attempts to purchase
    51  firearms, rifles, or shotguns illegally; and
    52    3. how to teach consumers rules  of  gun  safety,  including  but  not
    53  limited  to the safe handling and storage of firearms, rifles, and shot-
    54  guns.
    55    No employee or agent of any retail dealer  shall  participate  in  the
    56  sale  or disposition of firearms, rifles, or shotguns unless such person

        A. 2217                             5
 
     1  is at least twenty-one years of age and has first received the  training
     2  required  by  this  section.  The  superintendent shall promulgate regu-
     3  lations setting  forth  minimum  requirements  for  the  maintenance  of
     4  records of such training.
     5    §  875-g.    Maintenance  of records. Every dealer shall establish and
     6  maintain such purchase, sale, inventory, and other records at the  deal-
     7  er's  place  of  business in such form and for such period as the super-
     8  intendent shall require, and shall submit such records to the  New  York
     9  state  police  every  April and October. Such records shall at a minimum
    10  include the following:
    11    1. every dealer shall record the make, model, caliber  or  gauge,  and
    12  serial  number  of all rifles and shotguns that are acquired or disposed
    13  of not later than one business day after their acquisition  or  disposi-
    14  tion.  Monthly  backups of these records shall be maintained in a secure
    15  container designed to prevent  loss by fire, theft, or other mishap;
    16    2. all rifles and shotguns acquired but not yet disposed  of  must  be
    17  accounted  for  through  an inventory check prepared once each month and
    18  maintained in a secure location;
    19    3. rifle and shotgun sales information, including the  serial  numbers
    20  of  rifles and shotguns sold, dates of sale, and identity of purchasers,
    21  shall be maintained and made available  to  government  law  enforcement
    22  agencies and to the manufacturer of the weapon or its designee; and
    23    4.  every  dealer shall maintain records of criminal rifle and shotgun
    24  traces initiated by the federal bureau of alcohol, tobacco, firearms and
    25  explosives ("ATF"). All ATF  Form  4473  transaction  records  shall  be
    26  retained  on  the  dealer's  business  premises  in  a  secure container
    27  designed to prevent loss by fire, theft, or other mishap.
    28    § 875-h. Internal compliance and certification. 1. Every dealer shall:
    29    (a) implement and maintain sufficient internal  compliance  procedures
    30  to  ensure  compliance  with  the  requirements  of this article and all
    31  applicable federal, state, and local laws and regulations governing  the
    32  sale, transfer, and disposal of firearms, rifles, and shotguns; and
    33    (b)  annually  certify  to  the  superintendent  that  such dealer has
    34  complied with all of the requirements of this article.  The  superinten-
    35  dent  shall  by regulation determine the form and content of such annual
    36  certification.
    37    2. The superintendent of state  police  shall  promulgate  regulations
    38  establishing  periodic  inspections,  during  regular and usual business
    39  hours, by the division of state police of the premises of  every  dealer
    40  to  determine  compliance  by  such dealer with the requirements of this
    41  article. Every dealer shall provide the division of  state  police  with
    42  full access to such dealer's premises for such inspections.
    43    § 875-i. Rules and regulations. The superintendent may promulgate such
    44  additional rules and regulations as the superintendent shall deem neces-
    45  sary  to prevent firearms, rifles, and shotguns from being diverted from
    46  the legal stream of commerce.
    47    § 875-j. Violations. Any person, firm, or  corporation  who  knowingly
    48  violates  any  provision  of  this  article shall be guilty of a class A
    49  misdemeanor punishable as provided for in the penal law,  and  shall  be
    50  guilty  of a class E felony for a second violation occurring within five
    51  years of a prior conviction for a violation of  any  provision  of  this
    52  article.
    53    §  3.  Subdivision 1 of section 400.00 of the penal law, as amended by
    54  chapter 1 of the laws of 2013, is amended to read as follows:
    55    1. Eligibility. No license shall be issued or renewed pursuant to this
    56  section except by the licensing officer, and then  only  after  investi-

        A. 2217                             6
 
     1  gation  and  finding  that  all statements in a proper application for a
     2  license are true. No license shall be issued or renewed  except  for  an
     3  applicant  (a) twenty-one years of age or older, provided, however, that
     4  where  such  applicant  has  been  honorably  discharged from the United
     5  States army, navy, marine corps,  air  force  or  coast  guard,  or  the
     6  national  guard  of the state of New York, no such age restriction shall
     7  apply; (b) of good moral character;  (c)  who  has  not  been  convicted
     8  anywhere  of  a  felony  or a serious offense; (d) who is not a fugitive
     9  from justice; (e) who is not an unlawful user  of  or  addicted  to  any
    10  controlled  substance as defined in section 21 U.S.C. 802; (f) who being
    11  an alien (i) is not illegally or unlawfully in the United States or (ii)
    12  has not been admitted to the United States  under  a  nonimmigrant  visa
    13  subject  to  the  exception in 18 U.S.C. 922(y)(2); (g) who has not been
    14  discharged from the Armed Forces under dishonorable conditions; (h) who,
    15  having been a citizen of the United States, has not renounced his or her
    16  citizenship; (i) who has stated whether he or she has ever suffered  any
    17  mental illness; (j) who has not been involuntarily committed to a facil-
    18  ity  under  the  jurisdiction  of  an office of the department of mental
    19  hygiene pursuant to article nine or fifteen of the mental  hygiene  law,
    20  article seven hundred thirty or section 330.20 of the criminal procedure
    21  law,  section  four  hundred two or five hundred eight of the correction
    22  law, section 322.2 or 353.4 of the family court act,  or  has  not  been
    23  civilly  confined in a secure treatment facility pursuant to article ten
    24  of the mental hygiene law; (k) who has not had a license revoked or  who
    25  is  not under a suspension or ineligibility order issued pursuant to the
    26  provisions of section 530.14 of the criminal procedure  law  or  section
    27  eight  hundred forty-two-a of the family court act; (l) in the county of
    28  Westchester, who has successfully completed a firearms safety course and
    29  test as evidenced by a certificate of completion issued in  his  or  her
    30  name  and endorsed and affirmed under the penalties of perjury by a duly
    31  authorized instructor,  except  that:  (i)  persons  who  are  honorably
    32  discharged  from  the  United  States  army, navy, marine corps or coast
    33  guard, or of the national guard of the state of New  York,  and  produce
    34  evidence  of  official  qualification  in  firearms  during  the term of
    35  service are not required to have completed those  hours  of  a  firearms
    36  safety  course pertaining to the safe use, carrying, possession, mainte-
    37  nance and storage of a firearm; and (ii) persons who  were  licensed  to
    38  possess  a  pistol or revolver prior to the effective date of this para-
    39  graph are not required to have completed a firearms  safety  course  and
    40  test;  (m)  who has not had a guardian appointed for him or her pursuant
    41  to any provision of state law, based on a determination that as a result
    42  of marked subnormal intelligence, mental illness, incapacity,  condition
    43  or  disease,  he  or she lacks the mental capacity to contract or manage
    44  his or her own affairs; and (n) concerning whom no good cause exists for
    45  the denial of the license. No person shall engage  in  the  business  of
    46  gunsmith or dealer in firearms unless licensed pursuant to this section,
    47  and  no person shall engage in the business of dealer in firearms unless
    48  such person complies with the provisions of  article  thirty-nine-BB  of
    49  the general business law.  An applicant to engage in such business shall
    50  also  be  a  citizen of the United States, more than twenty-one years of
    51  age and maintain a place of business in the city  or  county  where  the
    52  license  is  issued.  For  such  business, if the applicant is a firm or
    53  partnership, each member thereof shall comply with all of  the  require-
    54  ments  set  forth  in  this subdivision and if the applicant is a corpo-
    55  ration, each officer thereof shall so comply.

        A. 2217                             7
 
     1    § 4. Subdivisions 11 and 12 of section 400.00 of  the  penal  law,  as
     2  amended  by  chapter  1  of  the  laws  of  2013, are amended to read as
     3  follows:
     4    11. License: revocation and suspension. (a) The conviction of a licen-
     5  see  anywhere  of  a felony or serious offense or a licensee at any time
     6  becoming ineligible to obtain a license under this section shall operate
     7  as a revocation of the license. A license may be revoked or suspended as
     8  provided for in section 530.14 of the criminal procedure law or  section
     9  eight  hundred forty-two-a of the family court act. Except for a license
    10  issued pursuant to section 400.01 of this  article,  a  license  may  be
    11  revoked  and  cancelled  at any time in the city of New York, and in the
    12  counties of Nassau and Suffolk, by the licensing officer, and  elsewhere
    13  than  in  the  city  of  New  York by any judge or justice of a court of
    14  record; a license issued pursuant to section 400.01 of this article  may
    15  be  revoked  and  cancelled  at any time by the licensing officer or any
    16  judge or justice of a court of record.  A license to engage in the busi-
    17  ness of dealer may be revoked or suspended  for  any  violation  of  the
    18  provisions  of  article  thirty-nine-BB of the general business law. The
    19  official revoking a license shall give written  notice  thereof  without
    20  unnecessary delay to the executive department, division of state police,
    21  Albany,  and  shall  also notify immediately the duly constituted police
    22  authorities of the locality.
    23    (b) Whenever the director of community services or his or her designee
    24  makes a report pursuant to section 9.46 of the mental hygiene  law,  the
    25  division  of  criminal  justice  services shall convey such information,
    26  whenever it determines that the person named in the report  possesses  a
    27  license  issued  pursuant  to this section, to the appropriate licensing
    28  official, who shall issue an order suspending or revoking such license.
    29    (c) In any instance in  which  a  person's  license  is  suspended  or
    30  revoked  under  paragraph  (a)  or  (b) of this subdivision, such person
    31  shall surrender such license to the appropriate licensing  official  and
    32  any  and  all  firearms,  rifles, or shotguns owned or possessed by such
    33  person shall be surrendered to an appropriate law enforcement agency  as
    34  provided  in  subparagraph  (f)  of  paragraph  one  of subdivision a of
    35  section 265.20 of this chapter. In  the  event  such  license,  firearm,
    36  shotgun,  or  rifle  is not surrendered, such items shall be removed and
    37  declared a nuisance and any  police  officer  or  peace  officer  acting
    38  pursuant  to  his  or her special duties is authorized to remove any and
    39  all such weapons.
    40    12. Records required of gunsmiths and dealers in  firearms.  [Any]  In
    41  addition  to the requirements set forth in article thirty-nine-BB of the
    42  general business law, any person  licensed  as  gunsmith  or  dealer  in
    43  firearms  shall  keep  a  record book approved as to form, except in the
    44  city of New York, by the superintendent of state police. In  the  record
    45  book  shall  be  entered  at  the  time of every transaction involving a
    46  firearm the date, name, age, occupation and residence of any person from
    47  whom a firearm is received or to whom a firearm is  delivered,  and  the
    48  calibre, make, model, manufacturer's name and serial number, or if none,
    49  any  other distinguishing number or identification mark on such firearm.
    50  Before delivering a firearm to any person, the  licensee  shall  require
    51  him  to  produce  either  a license valid under this section to carry or
    52  possess the same, or proof of  lawful  authority  as  an  exempt  person
    53  pursuant to section 265.20 of this chapter. In addition, before deliver-
    54  ing  a  firearm  to  a  peace  officer,  the  licensee shall verify that
    55  person's status as a peace officer with the division  of  state  police.
    56  After completing the foregoing, the licensee shall remove and retain the

        A. 2217                             8
 
     1  attached  coupon  and enter in the record book the date of such license,
     2  number, if any, and name of the licensing officer, in the  case  of  the
     3  holder  of a license to carry or possess, or the shield or other number,
     4  if  any,  assignment  and  department, unit or agency, in the case of an
     5  exempt person. The original transaction report shall be forwarded to the
     6  division of state police within ten days of delivering a firearm to  any
     7  person,  and  a duplicate copy shall be kept by the licensee. The super-
     8  intendent of state police  may  designate  that  such  record  shall  be
     9  completed  and transmitted in electronic form. A dealer may be granted a
    10  waiver from transmitting such records in electronic form if  the  super-
    11  intendent  determines that such dealer is incapable of such transmission
    12  due to technological limitations that  are  not  reasonably  within  the
    13  control  of  the dealer, or other exceptional circumstances demonstrated
    14  by the dealer, pursuant to a process established in regulation,  and  at
    15  the discretion of the superintendent. Records assembled or collected for
    16  purposes of inclusion in the database created pursuant to section 400.02
    17  of  this  article shall not be subject to disclosure pursuant to article
    18  six of the public officers law. The record book shall be  maintained  on
    19  the premises mentioned and described in the license and shall be open at
    20  all  reasonable hours for inspection by any peace officer, acting pursu-
    21  ant to his special duties, or police officer. In the event of  cancella-
    22  tion or revocation of the license for gunsmith or dealer in firearms, or
    23  discontinuance  of  business  by  a  licensee, such record book shall be
    24  immediately surrendered to the licensing officer  in  the  city  of  New
    25  York,  and  in  the counties of Nassau and Suffolk, and elsewhere in the
    26  state to the executive department, division of state police.
    27    § 5. Severability. If any clause, sentence, paragraph, section or part
    28  of this act shall be adjudged by any court of competent jurisdiction  to
    29  be  invalid,  such  judgment  shall not affect, impair or invalidate the
    30  remainder thereof, but shall be confined in its operation to the clause,
    31  sentence, paragraph, section or part thereof directly  involved  in  the
    32  controversy in which such judgment shall have been rendered.
    33    §  6.  This  act shall take effect on the ninetieth day after it shall
    34  have become a law; provided that the superintendent of the  division  of
    35  state police is authorized and directed to immediately adopt, amend, and
    36  promulgate  such rules and regulations as may be necessary and desirable
    37  to effectuate the purposes of section two of this act.
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