GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF NORTH CAROLINA
SESSION 2017
H D
HOUSE BILL DRH40165-TCf-8 (02/14)
|
Short Title: Limited Identification Cards. |
(Public) |
|
|
Sponsors: |
Representatives Warren, Collins, Jordan, and Adams (Primary Sponsors). |
|
|
Referred to: |
|
|
A BILL TO BE ENTITLED
AN ACT TO reduce identity theft by increasing penalties for the manufacture or sale of counterfeit documents AND TO ALLOW UNDOCUMENTED ALIENS TO OBTAIN limited IDENTIFICATION CARDS.
The General Assembly of North Carolina enacts:
PART I. INCREASE PENALTIES FOR MANUFACTURE OR SALE OF FALSE IDENTIFICATION DOCUMENTS
SECTION 1.(a) G.S. 14‑100.1 reads as rewritten:
"§ 14‑100.1. Possession or manufacture Possession,
manufacture, or sale of certain fraudulent forms of identification.
(a) Except as otherwise made
unlawful by G.S. 20‑30, it shall be is unlawful for
any person to knowingly possess or manufacture possess, manufacture,
or sell a false or fraudulent form of identification as defined in this
section for the purpose of deception, fraud, or other criminal conduct.
(b) Except as otherwise made
unlawful by G.S. 20‑30, it shall be is unlawful for
any person to knowingly obtain a form of identification by the use of false,
fictitious, or fraudulent information.
(c) Possession of a form of
identification obtained in violation of subsection (b) of this section shall
constitute is a violation of subsection (a) of this section.
(d) For purposes of this section, a "form of identification" means any of the following or any replica thereof:
(1) An identification card containing a picture, issued by any department, agency, or subdivision of the State of North Carolina, the federal government, or any other state.
(2) A military identification card containing a picture.
(3) A passport.
(4) An alien registration card containing a picture.
(e) A violation of this
section shall be punished as is a Class 1 misdemeanor.misdemeanor,
except that a violation of subsection (a) of this section with respect to the manufacture
or sale of a false or fraudulent form of identification is a Class G felony."
SECTION 1.(b) G.S. 20‑30 reads as rewritten:
"§ 20‑30. Violations of license, learner's permit, limited identification card, or special identification card provisions.
It shall be is unlawful
for any person to commit any of the following acts:
(1) To display or cause to be displayed or to have in possession a driver's license, learner's permit, limited identification card, or special identification card, knowing the same to be fictitious or to have been canceled, revoked, suspended or altered.
(2) To counterfeit, sell, lend to, or knowingly permit the use of, by one not entitled thereto, a driver's license, learner's permit, limited identification card, or special identification card. A violation of this subdivision by a person under the age of 21 for the purpose of the underage purchase of alcohol is a Class 1 misdemeanor. A violation of this subdivision by a person under the age of 18 for the purpose of the underage purchase of tobacco products or cigarette wrapping papers is a Class 2 misdemeanor. A person who otherwise violates the provisions of this subdivision is guilty of a Class G felony.
(3) To display or to represent as one's own a drivers license, learner's permit, limited identification card, or special identification card not issued to the person so displaying same.
(4) To fail or refuse to surrender to the Division upon demand any driver's license, learner's permit, limited identification card, or special identification card that has been suspended, canceled or revoked as provided by law.
(5) To use a false or
fictitious name or give a false or fictitious address in any application for a
driver's license, learner's permit, limited identification card, or
special identification card, or any renewal or duplicate thereof, or knowingly
to make a false statement or knowingly conceal a material fact or otherwise
commit a fraud in any such application, or for any person to procure, or
knowingly permit or allow another to commit any of the foregoing acts. Any
license, learner's permit, limited identification card, or special
identification card procured as aforesaid shall be is void from
the issuance thereof, and any moneys paid therefor shall be forfeited to the
State. Any A person violating who violates the
provisions of this subdivision shall be is guilty of a Class 1
misdemeanor.
(6) To make a color photocopy
or otherwise make a color reproduction of a drivers license, learner's permit, limited
identification card, or special identification card which that has
been color‑photocopied or otherwise reproduced in color, unless such the
color photocopy or other color reproduction was authorized by the
Commissioner. It shall be is lawful to make a black and white
photocopy of a drivers license, learner's permit, limited identification
card, or special identification card or otherwise make a black and white
reproduction of a drivers license, learner's permit, limited identification
card, or special identification card.
(7) To sell or offer for sale
any reproduction or facsimile or simulation of a driver's license, learner's
permit, limited identification card, or special identification card. The
provisions of this subdivision shall do not apply to agents or
employees of the Division while acting in the course and scope of their
employment. Any A person, firm or corporation violating that
violates the provisions of this subsection shall be is guilty
of a Class I G felony.
(8) To possess more than one commercial drivers license or to possess a commercial drivers license and a regular drivers license. Any commercial drivers license other than the one most recently issued is subject to immediate seizure by any law enforcement officer or judicial official. Any regular drivers license possessed at the same time as a commercial drivers license is subject to immediate seizure by any law enforcement officer or judicial official.
(9) To present, display, or
use a drivers license, learner's permit, limited identification card, or
special identification card that contains a false or fictitious name in the
commission or attempted commission of a felony. Any A person violating
who violates the provisions of this subdivision shall be is
guilty of a Class I felony.
(10) To possess more than one special identification card for a fraudulent purpose."
SECTION 1.(c) G.S. 20‑37.8 is repealed.
PART II. AUTHORIZE UNDOCUMENTED ALIENS TO OBTAIN LIMITED IDENTIFICATION CARDS
SECTION 2.(a) G.S. 20‑7 reads as rewritten:
"§ 20‑7. Issuance and renewal of drivers licenses.
…
(b1) Application. – To obtain an
a special identification card, learners permit, or drivers license
from the Division, a person shall complete an application form provided by the
Division, present at least two forms of identification approved by the
Commissioner, be a resident of this State, and, except for an a
special identification card, demonstrate his or her physical and mental
ability to drive safely a motor vehicle included in the class of license for
which the person has applied. At least one of the forms of identification shall
indicate the applicant's residence address. The Division may copy the
identification presented or hold it for a brief period of time to verify its
authenticity. To obtain an endorsement, a person shall demonstrate his or her
physical and mental ability to drive safely the type of motor vehicle for which
the endorsement is required.
The application form shall request all of the following information, and it shall contain the disclosures concerning the request for an applicant's social security number required by section 7 of the federal Privacy Act of 1974, Pub. L. No. 93‑579:
(1) The applicant's full name.
(2) The applicant's mailing address and residence address.
(3) A physical description of the applicant, including the applicant's sex, height, eye color, and hair color.
(4) The applicant's date of birth.
(5) The applicant's valid social security number.
(6) The applicant's signature.
The Division shall not issue an a
special identification card, learners permit, or drivers license to an
applicant who fails to provide the applicant's valid social security number.
…
(q1) Veteran Military Designation. – The Division shall develop a military designation for drivers licenses and special identification cards that may, upon request, be granted to North Carolina residents who are honorably discharged from military service in the Armed Forces of the United States. An applicant requesting this designation must produce a Form DD‑214 showing the applicant has been honorably discharged from the Armed Forces of the United States.
…."
SECTION 2.(b) Article 2B of Chapter 20 of the General Statutes reads as rewritten:
"Article 2B.
"Special Identification Cards and Limited Identification Cards for Nonoperators.
"§ 20‑37.7. Special identification card.
(a) Eligibility. – A Subject
to the applicable provisions of G.S. 20‑7, a person who is a
resident of this State is eligible for a special identification card.
(b) Application. – To obtain
a special identification card from the Division, a person must shall complete
the application form used to obtain a drivers license.
…
(e) Offense. – Any fraud or misrepresentation in the
application for or use of a special identification card issued under this
section is a Class 2 misdemeanor.
…
"§ 20‑37.8A. Limited identification card.
(a) Eligibility. – A person who is a resident of this State and who is not lawfully present in the United States is eligible for a limited identification card.
(b) Application. – The Division shall issue a limited identification card to an applicant who meets all of the following requirements:
(1) The applicant is not lawfully present in the United States.
(2) The applicant completes the application form used to obtain a drivers license.
(3) The applicant agrees to a criminal history check, and that check shows that the applicant does not have a criminal history. The criminal history check shall include the taking of the applicant's fingerprints. An applicant for a limited identification card who is under 16 years old shall not be required to agree to a criminal history check under this subdivision.
(c) Format. – A limited identification card issued under this section shall do all of the following:
(1) Conform to the requirements of G.S. 20‑7(n)(1) through (6), (9), and (10).
(2) Be printed in a horizontal or vertical format that distinguishes the limited identification card, as determined by the age of the applicant and the appropriate horizontal or vertical format for that age.
(3) Bear an identifying number for the cardholder assigned by the Division, the first character of which shall be a letter that is only assigned to limited identification cards.
(4) Bear a distinguishing mark or other designation on the face of the identification card clearly denoting the limited duration of the identification card and clearly distinguishing it from other forms of licenses of limited duration and identification cards of limited duration.
(5) Bear a clearly legible statement that the identification card (i) is not valid as a means of demonstrating eligibility for voter registration or for public benefits, (ii) does not legitimize the holder's presence in the United States or the State of North Carolina, and (iii) is not valid for any purpose other than demonstrating identity.
(d) Expiration. – An initial limited identification card expires on the birthday of the person to whom it is issued in the first year after the initial issuance, provided that an initial limited identification card shall expire no later than 18 months after the date of the initial issuance. A renewal limited identification card expires one year after the expiration date of the limited identification card that is renewed. A person may apply to the Division to renew a limited identification card during the 180‑day period before the card expires. The Division may not accept an application for renewal made before the 180‑day period begins.
(e) Fee. – The Secretary of Transportation shall set the fee for an initial limited identification card, and the fee shall be equal to the actual cost of processing the relevant application and furnishing the card. The fee for a renewal of a limited identification card is twenty‑five dollars ($25.00). The fee shall be paid before a person receives a limited identification card.
(f) Records. – The Division shall maintain a record of all recipients of a limited identification card.
(g) No State Liability. – The fact of issuance of a limited identification card pursuant to this section shall not place upon the State of North Carolina or any agency thereof any liability for the misuse thereof, and the acceptance thereof as valid identification is a matter left entirely to the responsibility of a person to whom such card is presented.
(h) Advertising. – The Division may utilize the various communications media throughout the State to inform North Carolina residents of the provisions of this section.
(i) Misuse of Information. – A State agency or official shall not use any information submitted as part of the application process for a limited identification card to seek the removal from the United States of the applicant or for any purpose other than the issuance of the limited identification card, nor shall a State agency or official release information pertaining to the immigration status of an applicant for a limited identification card, except where expressly required by law to do so. This section does not prohibit the use of the information in the prosecution of crimes that (i) are committed by the applicant after the issuance of the identification card or (ii) are revealed by a criminal history check undertaken pursuant to subsection (b) of this section.
(j) Definition of Criminal History. – For purposes of this section, the term "criminal history" means a history of conviction of a State or federal crime, whether a misdemeanor or felony, that includes the criminal offenses set forth in any of the following Articles of Chapter 14 of the General Statutes: Article 5, Counterfeiting and Issuing Monetary Substitutes; Article 5A, Endangering Executive and Legislative Officers; Article 6, Homicide; Article 7A, Rape and Other Sex Offenses; Article 8, Assaults; Article 10, Kidnapping and Abduction; Article 13, Malicious Injury or Damage by Use of Explosive or Incendiary Device or Material; Article 14, Burglary and Other Housebreakings; Article 15, Arson and Other Burnings; Article 16, Larceny; Article 17, Robbery; Article 18, Embezzlement; Article 19, False Pretenses and Cheats; Article 19A, Obtaining Property or Services by False or Fraudulent Use of Credit Device or Other Means; Article 19B, Financial Transaction Card Crime Act; Article 20, Frauds; Article 21, Forgery; Article 26, Offenses Against Public Morality and Decency; Article 26A, Adult Establishments; Article 27, Prostitution; Article 28, Perjury; Article 29, Bribery; Article 31, Misconduct in Public Office; Article 35, Offenses Against the Public Peace; Article 36A, Riots and Civil Disorders; Article 39, Protection of Minors; Article 40, Protection of the Family; Article 59, Public Intoxication; and Article 60, Computer‑Related Crime. The crimes also include possession or sale of drugs in violation of the North Carolina Controlled Substances Act, Article 5 of Chapter 90 of the General Statutes, and alcohol‑related offenses, including sale to underage persons in violation of G.S. 18B‑302 or driving while impaired in violation of G.S. 20‑138.1 through G.S. 20‑138.5, but shall not include disturbing the public peace, misdemeanor possession of marijuana, misdemeanor larceny, shoplifting, or public drunkenness. The term shall include a final conviction in another state or in a federal jurisdiction of an offense which is substantially similar to any of the offenses listed in this subsection.
(k) Division to Ensure That Cards Are Not Used to Obtain Public Benefits. – The Division shall work with other State and local agencies, including the State Board of Elections, the Department of Health and Human Services, the Department of Public Instruction, and the Department of Public Safety, on an ongoing basis to ensure that limited identification cards are not used to obtain public benefits for which only citizens and lawfully present persons are eligible.
"§ 20‑37.9. Notice of change of address or name.
(a) Address. – A person
whose address changes from the address stated on a special identification card must
or a limited identification card shall notify the Division of the
change within 60 days after the change occurs. If the person's address changed
because the person moved, the person must shall obtain a new
special identification card or limited identification card within that
time limit stating the new address. A person who does not move but whose
address changes due to governmental action may not be charged with violating
this subsection.
(b) Name. – A person whose
name changes from the name stated on a special identification card must or
a limited identification card shall notify the Division of the change
within 60 days after the change occurs and obtain a new special identification
card stating the new name.
(c) Fee. – G.S. 20‑37.7 sets the fee for a special identification card. G.S. 20‑37.8A sets the fee for a limited identification card."
SECTION 2.(c) Subpart D of Part 4 of Article 13 of Chapter 143B of the General Statutes is amended by adding a new section to read:
"§ 143B‑967. Criminal record checks of applicants for limited identification cards.
(a) The Department of Public Safety shall, upon request, provide to the Department of Transportation, Division of Motor Vehicles, the criminal history from the State and National Repositories of Criminal Histories of applicants age 16 or older for limited identification cards.
(b) Along with the request, the Division of Motor Vehicles shall provide the following to the Department of Public Safety:
(1) The fingerprints of the person who is the subject of the record check.
(2) A form signed by the person who is the subject of the record check consenting to all of the following:
a. The criminal record check.
b. The use of fingerprints.
c. Any other identifying information required by the State and National Repositories of Criminal Histories.
d. Any additional information required by the Department of Public Safety.
(c) The fingerprints shall be forwarded to the State Bureau of Investigation for a search of the State's criminal history record file, and the State Bureau of Investigation shall forward a set of fingerprints to the Federal Bureau of Investigation for a national criminal history record check.
(d) The Division of Motor Vehicles shall keep all information obtained pursuant to this section confidential.
(e) The Department of Public Safety may charge a fee to offset the cost incurred by it to conduct a criminal record check under this section. The fee shall not exceed the actual cost of locating, editing, researching, and retrieving the information.
(f) The Department of Public Safety may enter into a contract with a third party to conduct the criminal history record check."
SECTION 2.(d) G.S. 18B‑302(d) reads as rewritten:
"§ 18B‑302. Sale to or purchase by underage persons.
…
(d) Defense. – It shall be a
defense to a violation of subsection (a) of this section if the seller:seller
does any of the following:
(1) Shows that the purchaser
produced a driver's license, a special identification card issued under G.S. 20‑37.7,
a limited identification card issued under G.S. 20‑37.8A, a
military identification card, or a passport, showing his age to be at least the
required age for purchase and bearing a physical description of the person
named on the card reasonably describing the purchaser; orpurchaser.
(2) Produces evidence of other facts that reasonably indicated at the time of sale that the purchaser was at least the required age.
(3) Shows that at the time of purchase, the purchaser utilized a biometric identification system that demonstrated (i) the purchaser's age to be at least the required age for the purchase and (ii) the purchaser had previously registered with the seller or seller's agent a drivers license, a special identification card issued under G.S. 20‑37.7, a limited identification card issued under G.S. 20‑37.8A, a military identification card, or a passport showing the purchaser's date of birth and bearing a physical description of the person named on the document."
SECTION 2.(e) G.S. 18C‑131(e) reads as rewritten:
"§ 18C‑131. Sales and sale price of tickets and shares; sales to minors prohibited.
…
(e) It shall be is
a defense for the person who sold a ticket or share in violation of
subsection (d) of this section if the person does either of the following:
(1) Shows that the purchaser produced a valid drivers license, a special identification card issued under G.S. 20‑37.7, a limited identification card issued under G.S. 20‑37.8A, a military identification card, or a passport, showing the purchaser to be at least 18 years old and bearing a physical description of the person named on the card that reasonably describes the purchaser.
(2) Produces evidence of other facts that reasonably indicated at the time of sale that the purchaser was at least 18 years old."
SECTION 2.(f) G.S. 19A‑32.1(i) reads as rewritten:
"§ 19A‑32.1. Minimum holding period for animals in animal shelters; public viewing of animals in animal shelters; disposition of animals.
…
(i) An animal shelter shall
require every person to whom an animal is released to present one of the
following valid forms of government‑issued photographic identification:
(i) a drivers license, (ii) a special identification card issued under G.S. 20‑37.7,
(iii) a military identification card, or (iv) a passport. (iv) a
passport, or (v) a limited identification card issued under G.S. 20‑37.8A.
Upon presentation of the required photographic identification, the shelter
shall document the name of the person, the type of photographic identification
presented by the person, and the photographic identification number."
SECTION 2.(g) G.S. 20‑7.3 reads as rewritten:
"§ 20‑7.3. Availability of organ, eye, and tissue donor cards at motor vehicle offices.
The Division shall make organ, eye,
and tissue donor cards available to interested individuals in each office
authorized to issue drivers licenses or licenses, special
identification cards. cards, or limited identification cards. The
Division shall obtain donor cards from qualified organ, eye, or tissue
procurement organizations or tissue banks, as defined in G.S. 130A‑412.4(31).
The Division shall offer organ donation information and a donor card to each
applicant for a drivers license. The organ donation information shall include
the following:
(1) A statement informing the
individual that federally designated organ procurement organizations and eye
banks have read‑only access to the Department‑operated Organ Donor
Registry Internet site (hereafter "Donor Registry") listing those
individuals who have stated to the Division of Motor Vehicles the individual's
intent to be an organ donor and have an organ donation symbol on the individual's
drivers license or license, special identification card.card,
or limited identification card.
(2) The type of information that will be made available on the Donor Registry."
SECTION 2.(h) G.S. 20‑43(a) reads as rewritten:
"§ 20‑43. Records of Division.
(a) All records of the
Division, other than those declared by law to be confidential for the use of
the Division, shall be open to public inspection during office hours in
accordance with G.S. 20‑43.1. A signature recorded in any format by
the Division for a drivers license or a special an identification
card is confidential and shall not be released except for law enforcement
purposes or to the State Chief Information Officer for purposes of G.S. 143B‑1385
or the State Board of Elections in connection with its official duties under
Chapter 163 of the General Statutes. A photographic image recorded in any
format by the Division for a drivers license or a special an identification
card is confidential and shall not be released except for law enforcement
purposes or to the State Chief Information Officer for the purposes of G.S. 143B‑1385
or to the State Board of Elections in connection with its official duties under
Chapter 163 of the General Statutes."
SECTION 2.(i) G.S. 20‑43.2(a) reads as rewritten:
"§ 20‑43.2. Internet access to organ donation records by organ procurement organizations.
(a) The Department of
Transportation, Division of Motor Vehicles, shall establish and maintain a
statewide, online Organ Donor Registry Internet site (hereafter "Donor
Registry"). The purpose of the Donor Registry is to enable federally
designated organ procurement organizations and eye banks to have access 24
hours per day, seven days per week to obtain relevant information on the Donor
Registry to determine, at or near death of the donor or a prospective donor,
whether the donor or prospective donor has made, amended, or revoked an
anatomical gift through a symbol on the donor's or prospective donor's drivers
license, special identification card, limited identification card, or
other manner. The data available on the Donor Registry shall be limited to the
individual's first, middle, and last name, date of birth, address, sex, county
of residence, and drivers license license, special identification
card, or limited identification card number. The Division of Motor Vehicles
shall ensure that only federally designated organ procurement organizations and
eye banks operating in this State have access to the Donor Registry in read‑only
format. The Division of Motor Vehicles shall enable federally designated organ
procurement organizations and eye banks operating in this State to have online
access in read‑only format to the Donor Registry through a unique
identifier and password issued to the organ procurement organization or eye
bank by the Division of Motor Vehicles. Employees of the Division who provide
access to or disclosure of information in good‑faith compliance with this
section are not liable in damages for access to or disclosure of the
information."
SECTION 2.(j) G.S. 20‑52(a) reads as rewritten:
"§ 20‑52. Application for registration and certificate of title.
(a) An owner of a vehicle subject to registration must apply to the Division for a certificate of title, a registration plate, and a registration card for the vehicle. To apply, an owner must complete an application provided by the Division. The application shall contain a preprinted option that co‑owners may use to title the vehicle as a joint tenancy with right of survivorship. The co‑owners' designation of a joint tenancy with right of survivorship on the application shall be valid notwithstanding whether this designation appears on the assignment of title. The application must request all of the following information and may request other information the Division considers necessary:
(1) The owner's name.
(1a) If the owner is an individual, the following information:
a. The owner's mailing address and residence address.
b. One of the following at the option of the applicant:
1. The owner's North
Carolina drivers license number or number, North Carolina special
identification card number.number, or North Carolina limited
identification card number.
…."
SECTION 2.(k) G.S. 20‑34.1 reads as rewritten:
"§ 20‑34.1. Violations for wrongful issuance of a
drivers license or a special an identification card.
(a) An employee of the Division or of an agent of the Division who does any of the following commits a Class I felony:
(1) Charges or accepts any
money or other thing of value, except the required fee, for the issuance of a
drivers license or a special an identification card.
(2) Knowing it is false,
accepts false proof of identification submitted for a drivers license or a
special an identification card.
(3) Knowing it is false,
enters false information concerning a drivers license or a special an
identification card in the records of the Division.
(b) Defenses Precluded. –
The fact that the Division does not issue a license or a special an identification
card after an employee or an agent of the Division charges or accepts money or
another thing of value for its issuance is not a defense to a criminal action
under this section. It is not a defense to a criminal action under this section
to show that the person who received or was intended to receive the license or special
identification card was eligible for it.
(c) Dismissal. – An employee of the Division who violates this section shall be dismissed from employment and may not hold any public office or public employment in this State for five years after the violation. If a person who violates this section is an employee of the agent of the Division, the Division shall cancel the contract of the agent unless the agent dismisses that person. A person dismissed by an agent because of a violation of this section may not hold any public office or public employment in this State for five years after the violation."
SECTION 2.(l) G.S. 25‑9‑503 reads as rewritten:
"§ 25‑9‑503. Name of debtor and secured party.
(a) Sufficiency of debtor's name. – A financing statement sufficiently provides the name of the debtor:
…
(4) Subject to subsection (g)
of this section, if the debtor is an individual to whom this State has issued a
drivers license or license that has not expired, special
identification card that has not expired, or limited identification card that
has not expired, only if the financing statement provides the name of the
individual which is indicated on the drivers license or license, special
identification card;card, or limited identification card;
…
(g) Multiple Drivers
Licenses or Special Identification Cards. – If this State has issued to an
individual more than one drivers license or special identification card
of a kind described in subdivision (a)(4) of this section, the one that was
issued most recently is the one to which subdivision (a)(4) of this section
refers.
…."
SECTION 2.(m) G.S. 66‑253 reads as rewritten:
"§ 66‑253. Display of identification upon request.
Upon the request of any customer, State or local revenue agent, or law enforcement agent, a peddler, an itinerant merchant, a specialty market operator, or a specialty market vendor must provide its name and permanent address. A peddler, itinerant merchant, specialty market operator, or specialty market vendor who is an individual must, upon the request of any customer, State or local revenue agent, or law enforcement agent, provide a valid drivers license, a special identification card issued under G.S. 20‑37.7, a limited identification card issued under G.S. 20‑37.8A, a military identification, or a passport bearing a physical description of the person named reasonably describing the peddler, itinerant merchant, specialty market operator, or specialty market vendor. A peddler, itinerant merchant, specialty market operator, or specialty market vendor that is a corporation must, upon the request of any customer, State or local revenue agent, or law enforcement agent, give the name and registered agent of the corporation and the address of the registered office of the corporation, as filed with the Secretary of State."
SECTION 2.(n) G.S. 66‑254(a) reads as rewritten:
"§ 66‑254. Records of source of new merchandise.
(a) Record Required. – Each peddler, itinerant merchant, and specialty market vendor must keep a written record of the source of new merchandise the merchant offers for sale. The record must be a receipt or an invoice from the person who sold the merchandise to the merchant. The receipt or invoice must specifically identify the product being sold by product name and quantity purchased and must contain the complete business name of the seller and a description of the type of business. If the seller was an individual, the receipt or invoice must contain the seller's drivers license number, its state of issuance and expiration date, and the seller's date of birth. The merchant must verify this information by comparing the seller's drivers license to the receipt or invoice and signing the receipt or invoice. A special identification card or limited identification card issued by the Division of Motor Vehicles may be used in place of the seller's drivers license for the purposes of providing and verifying information required under this section. If the seller was a corporation, the receipt or invoice must contain the corporation's federal tax identification number, the state of incorporation, the name and address of the corporation's registered agent in this State, if any, and the corporation's principal office address."
SECTION 2.(o) G.S. 90‑106.1(a) reads as rewritten:
"§ 90‑106.1. Photo ID requirement for Schedule II controlled substances.
(a) Immediately prior to
dispensing a Schedule II controlled substance, or any of the Schedule III
controlled substances listed in subdivisions 1. through 8. of G.S. 90‑91(d),
each pharmacy holding a valid permit pursuant to G.S. 90‑85.21 shall
require the person seeking the dispensation to present one of the following
valid, unexpired forms of government‑issued photographic identification:
(i) a drivers license, (ii) a special identification card issued under G.S. 20‑37.7,
(iii) a military identification card, or (iv) a passport.passport,
or (v) a limited identification card issued under G.S. 20‑37.8A.
Upon presentation of the required photographic identification, the pharmacy
shall document the name of the person seeking the dispensation, the type of
photographic identification presented by the person seeking the dispensation,
and the photographic identification number. The pharmacy shall retain this
identifying information on the premises or at a central location apart from the
premises as part of its business records for a period of three years following
dispensation."
PART III. MISCELLANEOUS PROVISIONS
SECTION 3. Article 1 of Chapter 64 of the General Statutes is amended by adding the following new section to read:
"§ 64‑6. No criminal investigation, arrest, or detention in circumstances in which holders of other forms of identification would not be subject to investigation, arrest, or detention.
Possession of a limited identification card issued under G.S. 20‑37.8A, standing alone, shall not be used as a basis for a criminal investigation, arrest, or detention in circumstances in which a person who possesses some other form of identification would not be criminally investigated, arrested, or detained."
PART IV. EFFECTIVE DATE AND SEVERABILITY CLAUSE
SECTION 4.(a) Section 1 of this act becomes effective December 1, 2017, and applies to offenses committed on or after that date. Sections 2 and 3 of this act become effective January 1, 2018. Except as otherwise provided, the remainder of this act is effective when it becomes law.
SECTION 4.(b) The provisions of this act are severable. If any part of this act is declared invalid or unconstitutional, the declaration shall not affect the remainder of this act. If any particular interpretation or application of the provisions of this act is declared invalid or unconstitutional, the declaration shall not affect other interpretations or applications of this act.