Fla. Admin. Code Ann. R. 69V-560.1021 - Effect of Law Enforcement Records on Applications for Money Services Business Licensure
(1) Definitions. For
purposes of this rule:
(a) "Relevant persons"
means each control person of the money services business applicant. If the
applicant is a natural person, he or she is the relevant person under this
rule.
(b) "Trigger date" means the
date on which an applicant was found guilty, or pled guilty, or pled nolo
contendere to a crime.
(2) General Procedure Regarding Law
Enforcement Records. At the time of submitting an Application for Licensure as
a Money Services Business, Form OFR-560-01, which is incorporated by reference
in Rule 69V-560.1012, F.A.C., the
applicant shall disclose on the application form any pending criminal charges
and all criminal matters in which a relevant person has pled guilty or nolo
contendere to, or has been convicted or found guilty, regardless of whether
adjudication was withheld, of any crime. In addition, the applicant shall
supply the Office with required documentation for each relevant person, as
specified in this rule, relating to:
1) all
criminal matters in which the relevant person has pled guilty or nolo
contendere to, or has been convicted or found guilty, regardless of whether
adjudication was withheld, of a class "A," "B," or "C" crime as described in
this rule,
2) any pending criminal
charges for a relevant person relating to a class "A," "B," or "C" crime as
described in this rule, or
3) shall
supply evidence that such documentation cannot be obtained. Evidence that
documentation cannot be obtained shall consist of a written statement on the
letterhead of the agency that would be the custodian of the documents, signed
by a representative of that agency, stating that they have no record of such
matter, or that the record is lost or was damaged or destroyed, or otherwise
stating why the document cannot be produced. The required documentation must be
legible. Required documentation includes:
(a)
A copy of the police arrest affidavit, arrest report or similar
document.
(b) A certified copy of
the charges.
(c) A certified copy
of the plea, judgment, and sentence where applicable.
(d) A certified copy of an order of entry
into pre-trial intervention, and the order of termination of pre-trial
intervention showing dismissal of charges where applicable.
(e) A certified copy of an order of
termination of probation or supervised release, if
applicable.
(3)
Effect of Failure to Fully Disclose Law Enforcement Record on Application.
(a) The omission of any part of a law
enforcement record required to be disclosed pursuant to subsection (2), is a
material misrepresentation or material misstatement on the application and the
application shall be denied pursuant to Section
560.114(1)(k),
F.S.
(b) Notwithstanding paragraph
(3)(a), the Office shall not deny an application for failure to provide
documentation listed in subsection (2), when the crime is not a class "A," "B,"
or "C" crime and the applicant has disclosed the crime on the application
form.
(c) If the Office discovers
the applicant's failure to disclose after a license has been granted, the
Office will suspend or revoke each license currently held by the applicant as
follows:
1. Suspension for 12 months if, had
the license application been accurate, the application would have been granted,
based on the statutes and licensing rules applicable to the application at the
time the Office issued the license, and the documentation in the applicant's
file at the time the Office issued the license.
2. Revocation if, had the license application
been accurate, the application would have been denied, based on the statutes
and licensing rules applicable to the application at the time the Office issued
the license.
(4) Classification of Crimes.
(a) The Office makes a general classification
of crimes into three classes: "A," "B," and "C," as listed in subsections (16),
(17) and (18) of this rule.
(b)
These classifications reflect the Office's evaluation of various crimes in
terms of moral turpitude and the seriousness of the crime as such factors
relate to the prospective threat to public welfare typically posed by a person
who would commit such a crime.
(c)
The names or descriptions of crimes, as set out in the classification of
crimes, are intended to serve only as generic names or descriptions of crimes
and shall not be read as legal titles of crimes, or as limiting the included
crimes to crimes bearing the exact name or description stated.
(d) A charge in the nature of attempt or
intent to commit a crime, or conspiracy to commit a crime, is classified the
same as the crime itself.
(5) Effect on Licensure of Commitment of
Single Crime. The Office finds it necessary to implement the following
standards for applicants with relevant persons whose law enforcement record
includes a single crime, subject to the mitigating factors set forth elsewhere
in this rule before licensure. All disqualifying periods referenced in this
rule run from the trigger date.
(a) Class "A"
Crime. The applicant will not be granted a license until 15 years have passed
since the trigger date.
(b) Class
"B" Crime. The applicant will not be granted a license until 7 years have
passed since the trigger date.
(c)
Class "C" Crime. The applicant will not be granted licensure until 5 years have
passed since the trigger date.
(6) Relevant Persons With Multiple Crimes.
(a) The Office construes Sections
560.114(1)(o), (p), and
(q), F.S., to require that an applicant with
relevant persons whose law enforcement record includes multiple class "A," "B,"
or "C" crimes, or any combination thereof, wait longer than those whose law
enforcement record includes only a single crime before becoming eligible for
licensure in order to assure that such relevant person's greater inability or
unwillingness to abide by the law has been overcome. Therefore, the Office
finds it necessary that a longer disqualifying period be utilized in such
instances, before licensure can safely be granted. Accordingly, where the
relevant person has been found guilty or pled guilty or pled nolo contendere to
more than one crime, the Office shall add 5 years to the disqualifying period
for each additional crime.
(b) The
additional periods are added to the basic disqualifying period for the one most
serious crime, and the combined total disqualifying period then runs from the
trigger date of the most recent crime.
(c) Classification as "Single Crime" versus
"Multiple Crimes." For purposes of this rule, two (2) or more offenses are
considered a single crime if they are triable in the same court and are based
on the same act or transaction or on two (2) or more connected acts or
transactions.
(7)
Mitigating Factors.
(a) The disqualifying
period for a crime or crimes shall be shortened upon proof of one or more of
the following factors. Where more than one factor is present the applicant is
entitled to add together all the applicable mitigation amounts and deduct that
total from the usual disqualifying period, provided that an applicant shall not
be permitted an aggregate mitigation of more than three (3) years for the
following factors:
1. One year is deducted if
the probation officer or prosecuting attorney in the most recent crime states
in a signed writing that the probation officer or prosecuting attorney believes
the applicant would pose no significant threat to public welfare if licensed as
a money services business.
2. One
year is deducted if restitution or settlement has been made for all crimes in
which restitution or settlement was ordered by the court, and proof of such
restitution or settlement is shown in official court documents or as verified
in a signed writing by the prosecuting attorney or probation officer.
3. One year will be deducted if the applicant
was under age 21 when the crime was committed and there is only one crime in
the applicant's law enforcement record.
4. One year is deducted if the applicant
furnishes proof that the applicant was at the time of the crime addicted to
drugs or suffering active alcoholism. The proof must be accompanied by a
written letter from a properly licensed doctor, psychologist, or therapist
licensed by a duly constituted state licensing body stating that the licensed
person has examined or treated the applicant and that in his or her
professional opinion the addiction or alcoholism is currently in remission and
has been in remission for the previous 12 months. The professional opinion
shall be dated within 45 days of the time of application.
5. Other Mitigating Factors. An applicant is
permitted to submit any other evidence of facts that the applicant believes
should decrease the disqualifying period before licensure is allowed and one
additional year shall be deducted if the Office agrees the facts have a
mitigating effect on the licensure decision.
(b) In no event shall the aggregate
mitigation result in less than a seven (7) year disqualifying period where the
underlying crime committed was a felony.
(c) The burden is upon the applicant to
establish these mitigating factors. Where the mitigating factor relates to or
requires evidence of government agency or court action, it must be proved by a
certified true copy of the agency or court document.
(8) Circumstances Not Constituting
Mitigation. The Office finds that no mitigating weight exists, and none will be
given, for the following factors:
(a) Type of
Plea. The Office draws no distinction among types of pleas, i.e., found guilty;
pled guilty; pled nolo contendere.
(b) Collateral Attack on Criminal
Proceedings. The Office will not allow or give any weight to an attempt to
re-litigate, impeach, or collaterally attack judicial criminal proceedings or
their results in which the applicant was found guilty or pled guilty or nolo
contendere. Thus the Office will not hear or consider arguments such as: the
criminal proceedings were unfair; the judge was biased; the witnesses or
prosecutor lied or acted improperly; the defendant only pled guilty due to
financial or mental stress; the defendant was temporarily insane at the time of
the crime; or the defendant had ineffective counsel.
(c) The Office finds that subjective factors
involving state of mind have no mitigating weight.
(9) Effect of Pending Appeal in Criminal
Proceedings; Reversal on Appeal.
(a) The
Office interprets the statutory grounds for denial of licensure as arising
immediately upon a finding of guilt, or a plea of guilty or nolo contendere,
regardless of whether an appeal is or is not allowed to be taken. The Office
will not wait for the outcome of an appeal to deny licensure, unless a Florida
court specifically stays the Office's adverse action.
(b) If on appeal the conviction is reversed,
the Office shall immediately drop the said crime as grounds for denial of
license.
(10) Pre-Trial
Intervention. The Office considers participation in a pre-trial intervention
program to be a pending criminal enforcement action and will not grant
licensure to any applicant with a relevant person who at time of application is
participating in a pre-trial intervention program. The Office finds it
necessary to the public welfare to wait until the pre-trial intervention is
successfully completed before licensure may be considered.
(11) Effect of Sealing or Expunging of
Criminal Record.
(a) An applicant is not
required to disclose or acknowledge, and is permitted in fact to affirmatively
deny, any arrest or criminal proceeding for a relevant person, the record of
which has been legally and properly expunged or sealed by order of a court of
competent jurisdiction prior to the time of application, and such denial or
failure to disclose is not grounds for adverse action by the Office.
(b) Matters Sealed or Expunged Subsequent to
Application. Occasionally a relevant person will have a matter sealed or
expunged after the applicant submits an application, but before a licensing
decision is made by the Office. In such situations the Office policy is as
follows:
1. If the applicant's relevant person
properly revealed the matter on the application, and thereafter has the record
sealed or expunged, the Office will not consider the matter in the application
decision.
2. However, if the
applicant's relevant person did not reveal the matter on the application and
the matter had not been sealed or expunged at the time of making the
application, the Office will construe the failure to disclose the matter on the
application as a material misrepresentation or material misstatement, and the
application shall be denied pursuant to Section
560.114(1)(k),
F.S.
(12)
Effect of Restoration of Civil Rights.
(a) An
applicant's relevant person must disclose crimes even where civil rights have
been restored.
(b) If a relevant
person's civil rights have been restored, the crimes will be evaluated in the
application process consistent with Section 112.011 and Chapter 560, F.S., and
the rules promulgated thereunder.
(c) The burden is upon the applicant to prove
the restoration of their civil rights.
(13) Effect of Varying Terminology.
(a) With regard to the following six
subparagraphs, the Office treats each phrase in a particular subparagraph as
having the same effect as the other phrases in that same subparagraph:
1. Adjudicated guilty; convicted.
2. Found guilty; entered a finding of
guilt.
3. Pled guilty; entered a
plea of guilty; admitted guilt; admitted the charges.
4. Nolo contendere; no contest; did not
contest; did not deny; no denial.
5. Adjudication of guilt withheld;
adjudication withheld; no adjudication entered; entry of findings withheld; no
official record to be entered; judgment withheld; judgment not
entered.
6. Nolle prosse; nolle
prosequi; charges withdrawn; charges dismissed; charges
dropped.
(b) In all other
instances the Office will look to the substantive meaning of the terminology
used in the context in which it was used under the law of the jurisdiction
where it was used.
(14)
Imprisoned Persons and Community Supervision.
(a) Imprisonment. Notwithstanding any
provision to the contrary in this rule, the Office shall not license any
applicant under Chapter 560, F.S., while any relevant person of the applicant
is imprisoned or serving a sentence for any crime. Further, the Office shall
not license any applicant with a relevant person who has been released from
imprisonment until the later of the period otherwise set out in these rules or
5 years after the date of release. The Office finds it necessary that the
person be released from imprisonment and thereafter demonstrate an ability to
abide by the law by passage of at least 5 years on good behavior, before
licensure can be granted without undue risk to the public welfare.
(b) Community Supervision. The Office shall
not grant licensure to any person who at the time of application or at any time
during the pendency of the application is serving term on community supervision
for any felony crime involving fraud, dishonest dealing, moral turpitude,
misappropriation, conversion, or unlawful withholding of moneys belonging to
others; or any misdemeanor crime involving misappropriation, conversion, or
unlawful withholding of moneys belonging to others. The Office shall not
substantively consider an application until the applicant has successfully
completed his or her probationary term.
(15) Effect of Disqualifying Periods. The
disqualifying periods established in this rule do not give an applicant a right
to licensure after any set period of time. Regardless of the expiration of any
disqualifying period imposed by these rules, the burden to prove entitlement to
licensure remains on the applicant.
(16) Class "A" Crimes include the following
felonies involving financially related or white collar crime, or crimes
involving violence, and the Office finds that such crimes involve an act of
fraud, dishonest dealing, moral turpitude, misappropriation, conversion, or
unlawful withholding of moneys belong to others regardless of adjudication.
This list is representative only and shall not be construed to constitute a
complete or exclusive list of all crimes that are Class "A" crimes. Crimes
similar to the crimes on this list may also be considered Class "A" crimes, and
no inference should be drawn from the absence of any crime from this list.
(a) Any type of fraud, including but not
limited to Fraud, Postal Fraud, Wire Fraud, Securities Fraud, Welfare Fraud,
Defrauding the Government, Credit Card Fraud, Defrauding an Innkeeper, Passing
worthless check(s) with intent to defraud.
(b) Perjury.
(c) Armed robbery.
(d) Robbery.
(e) Extortion.
(f) Bribery.
(g) Embezzlement.
(h) Grand theft.
(i) Larceny.
(j) Burglary.
(k) Breaking and entering.
(l) Identity Theft.
(m) Any type of forgery or uttering a forged
instrument.
(n) Misuse of public
office.
(o) Racketeering.
(p) Buying, receiving, concealing, possessing
or otherwise dealing in stolen property.
(q) Treason against the United States, or a
state, district, or territory thereof.
(r) Altering public documents.
(s) Witness tampering.
(t) Tax evasion.
(u) Impersonating or attempting to
impersonate a law enforcement officer.
(v) Money laundering.
(w) Murder in all degrees.
(x) Arson.
(y) Sale, importation, or distribution of
controlled substances (drugs); or possession for sale, importation or
distribution.
(z) Aggravated
Assault (e.g., as with a deadly weapon).
(aa) Aggravated Battery (e.g., as with a
deadly weapon).
(bb)
Rape.
(cc) Sexually molesting any
minor.
(dd) Sexual
battery.
(ee) Battery of or
threatening a law enforcement officer or public official in the performance of
his/her duties.
(ff)
Kidnapping.
(17) Class
"B" Crimes include all felonies that involve any other act of fraud, dishonest
dealing, moral turpitude, misappropriation, conversion, or unlawful withholding
of moneys belonging to others, regardless of adjudication, and are not Class
"A" crimes.
(18) Class "C" Crimes
include any misdemeanor that involves misappropriation, conversion, or unlawful
withholding or moneys belonging to others, regardless of
adjudication.
(19) Foreign Law
Enforcement Records. If a law enforcement record includes convictions, charges,
or arrests outside the United States, the Office shall consider the following
factors to reduce, eliminate, or apply a disqualifying period:
(a) Whether the crime in the criminal record
would be a crime under the laws of the United States or any state within the
United States;
(b) The degree of
penalty associated with the same or similar crimes in the United States;
and,
(c) The extent to which the
foreign justice system provided safeguards similar to those provided criminal
defendants under the Constitution of the United States; for example, the right
of a defendant to a public trial, the right against self-incrimination, the
right of notice of the charges, the right to confront witnesses, the right to
call witnesses, and the right to counsel.
Notes
Rulemaking Authority 560.105 FS. Law Implemented 112.011, 560.114, 560.1401, 560.141 FS.
New 4-16-09, Amended 2-16-23.
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