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A09862 Summary:

BILL NOA09862A
 
SAME ASSAME AS S08479-A
 
SPONSORSolages
 
COSPNSRSimon, Thiele, Darling, Rosenthal L, Simone, Cunningham, Sayegh, Steck, Ramos, Shrestha, Ardila, Burgos, Sillitti, Meeks, Chandler-Waterman
 
MLTSPNSR
 
Add Art 29-BBB §§529 & 529-a, Gen Bus L
 
Requires payment card networks to use certain merchant category-codes for firearm and ammunition dealers.
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A09862 Actions:

BILL NOA09862A
 
04/24/2024referred to consumer affairs and protection
05/17/2024amend (t) and recommit to consumer affairs and protection
05/17/2024print number 9862a
06/04/2024reference changed to ways and means
06/06/2024reported referred to rules
06/06/2024reported
06/06/2024rules report cal.506
06/06/2024substituted by s8479a
 S08479 AMEND=A MYRIE
 02/05/2024REFERRED TO CONSUMER PROTECTION
 05/14/2024REPORTED AND COMMITTED TO CODES
 05/15/2024AMEND (T) AND RECOMMIT TO CODES
 05/15/2024PRINT NUMBER 8479A
 06/04/2024COMMITTEE DISCHARGED AND COMMITTED TO RULES
 06/04/2024ORDERED TO THIRD READING CAL.1710
 06/04/2024PASSED SENATE
 06/04/2024DELIVERED TO ASSEMBLY
 06/04/2024referred to ways and means
 06/06/2024substituted for a9862a
 06/06/2024ordered to third reading rules cal.506
 06/07/2024passed assembly
 06/07/2024returned to senate
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A09862 Memo:

NEW YORK STATE ASSEMBLY
MEMORANDUM IN SUPPORT OF LEGISLATION
submitted in accordance with Assembly Rule III, Sec 1(f)
 
BILL NUMBER: A9862A
 
SPONSOR: Solages
  TITLE OF BILL: An act to amend the general business law, in relation to requiring payment card networks to use certain merchant category-codes for firearm merchants   PURPOSE: To create a new merchant category code for gun and ammunition retail businesses and dealers to enable financial institutions to monitor suspicious purchasing patterns.   SUMMARY: Section 1. Amends the real property law by adding a new article 29-BBB. Section 2. Sets the effective date.   JUSTIFICATION:: Nearly 45,000 Americans were killed with guns in 2021, and the country experiences gun violence at rates exceptionally higher than our peer nations. Since 2009, there have been 279 mass shootings resulting in more than 1,500 gun deaths; meanwhile, the shooters in some of the worst mass shootings in recent memory used credit cards to make their arsenal purchases. For example, in a matter of six weeks, the shooter who killed 12 people at an Aurora movie theater charged $11,000 worth of guns, ammunition, and body armor-to a Mastercard. Similarly, the killer who massacred 60 people on the Las Vegas strip used credit cards to purchase guns and ammunition totaling nearly $100,000 in the 12 months before the attack. The Pulse nightclub shooter racked up $26,000 in credit card charges on guns and ammunition in less than two weeks preceding the carnage that killed 49 people and wounded 53. As a precautionary meas- ure, the shooter searched online to learn whether his "unusual spending" pattern could be detected by the credit card companies and flagged for law enforcement. After being reassured that he need not worry about detection, he completed his purchases and irrevocably damaged countless families and the Orlando community as a whole. Reporting from the Wall Street Journal in April 2018 explained how banks and credit card companies could help law enforcement preempt some mass shootings by identifying suspicious gun purchases through the implemen- tation of a new MCC. Later that year, a Dealbook investigation into the financing of mass shootings continued and accelerated. MCCs are four- digit codes maintained by the International Organization for Standardi- zation (ISO), which classify merchants by the nature of their busi- nesses. Financial institutions and payment networks, including MasterCard and American Express, use the ISO standard to assign MCCs to merchants in order to determine interchange rates, assess transaction risks, and generally categorize payments. Currently, unique MCCs exist for "wig and toupee shops" and "electric razor shops," but none exist for firearms dealers. The creation of a new MCC for gun and ammunition retail stores would be the first step towards facilitating the collection of valuable financial data that could help law enforcement in countering the financing of terrorism efforts. A new MCC code could make it easier for financial institutions to monitor certain types of suspicious activities including straw purchases and unlawful bulk purchases that could be used in the commission of domestic terrorist acts or gun trafficking schemes. Such coordination between financial institutions and law enforcement has been instrumental in efforts across the Federal government to identify and prevent illicit activity.   RACIAL JUSTICE IMPACT: Communities of color are disproportionately impacted by gun violence   1. Gun violence in Black communities is a direct consequence of systemic disadvantages that are prevalent in Black communities today. Research shows that high rates of gun violence seen today have been forged by past and present racial discrimination, including historic racial segregation and disinvestment   2. As gun violence plagues these communities, it is important that New York takes the initiative to eradicate these present realities by implementing this legislation.   GENDER JUSTICE IMPACT: TBD.   LEGISLATIVE HISTORY:: New bill.   FISCAL IMPLICATIONS: None   EFFECTIVE DATE:: This act shall take effect immediately.   1https://everytownresearch.org/issue/impact-of-gun-violence-on-historic ally-marginalized-communities/   2https://giffords.orememo/gun-violence-in-black-communities/
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A09862 Text:



 
                STATE OF NEW YORK
        ________________________________________________________________________
 
                                         9862--A
 
                   IN ASSEMBLY
 
                                     April 24, 2024
                                       ___________
 
        Introduced  by  M.  of A. SOLAGES, SIMON, THIELE, DARLING, L. ROSENTHAL,
          SIMONE, CUNNINGHAM, SAYEGH, STECK, K. BROWN -- read once and  referred
          to  the  Committee  on  Consumer  Affairs  and Protection -- committee
          discharged, bill amended, ordered reprinted as amended and recommitted
          to said committee
 
        AN ACT to amend the general  business  law,  in  relation  to  requiring
          payment  card  networks  to  use  certain  merchant category-codes for
          firearm merchants
 
          The People of the State of New York, represented in Senate and  Assem-
        bly, do enact as follows:
 
     1    Section 1. The general business law is amended by adding a new article
     2  29-BBB to read as follows:
 
     3                               ARTICLE 29-BBB
     4                           CREDIT AND DEBIT CARDS
 
     5  Section 529.   Definitions.
     6          529-a. Merchant category-codes.
     7    §  529. Definitions.  For  the purposes of this article, the following
     8  terms shall have the following meanings:
     9    1. "Merchant acquirer" means an entity that establishes a relationship
    10  with a merchant for the purposes of processing credit, debit, or prepaid
    11  transactions.
    12    2. "Payment card network" means an entity that provides services  that
    13  route transactions between participants on the network to conduct debit,
    14  credit, or prepaid transactions for the purpose of authorization, clear-
    15  ance, or settlement.
    16    3.  "Person" includes an individual, corporation, partnership or asso-
    17  ciation, two or more persons having a joint or common  interest  or  any
    18  other legal or commercial entity.
    19    4. "Issuer" means a person who issues a credit card or a debit card.
    20    § 529-a. Merchant category-codes. 1. For the purposes of this section,
    21  the following terms shall have the following meanings:
 
         EXPLANATION--Matter in italics (underscored) is new; matter in brackets
                              [ ] is old law to be omitted.
                                                                   LBD13704-03-4

        A. 9862--A                          2
 
     1    (a)  "Dealer  of ammunition" means any person who engages in the busi-
     2  ness of purchasing, selling or keeping ammunition in this state.
     3    (b)  "Dealer  of  firearms" means a gunsmith or dealers in firearms in
     4  this state licensed pursuant to section 400.00 of  the  penal  law,  for
     5  which  the  highest  sales  value  is,  or  is  expected to be, from the
     6  combined sale in New York of firearms, firearm accessories,  or  ammuni-
     7  tion, as stated by the business to its merchant acquirer in the ordinary
     8  course of business.
     9    (c) "Firearm" has the same meaning as that term is defined in subdivi-
    10  sion three of section 265.00 of the penal law.
    11    2.  (a)  On  or  before November first, two thousand twenty-four, each
    12  payment card network shall make the merchant category-code for  firearms
    13  and  ammunition businesses established by the international organization
    14  for standardization on September ninth, two thousand twenty-two,  avail-
    15  able for merchant acquirers that provide payment services for dealers of
    16  ammunition or dealers of firearms.
    17    (b)  On  and  after May first, two thousand twenty-five, each merchant
    18  acquirer shall assign  to  each  dealer  of  ammunition  and  dealer  of
    19  firearms in this state the merchant category-code for firearms and ammu-
    20  nition  businesses  established  by  the  international organization for
    21  standardization on September ninth, two thousand twenty-two.
    22    3. Whenever there shall be a violation of this section,  the  attorney
    23  general  shall  give written notice to the person violating this section
    24  identifying the specific provisions of this section  that  are  or  were
    25  being  violated.  The  attorney  general shall not bring an action under
    26  this section where, within thirty days of receiving such written notice,
    27  the person cures the violation and provides the attorney general with  a
    28  written statement confirming the violation was cured, including support-
    29  ing documentation on how the violation was cured, and stating how inter-
    30  nal  policies were changed to prevent such violations in the future.  If
    31  the violations were not cured or proper written notice not  received  by
    32  the attorney general within thirty days of written notice being received
    33  by such person violating this section, an application may be made by the
    34  attorney general in the name of the people of the state of New York to a
    35  court or justice having jurisdiction by a special proceeding to issue an
    36  injunction, and upon notice to the defendant of not less than five days,
    37  to  enjoin  and  restrain  the continuance of such violations; and if it
    38  shall appear to the satisfaction  of  the  court  or  justice  that  the
    39  defendant  has,  in  fact,  violated  this section, an injunction may be
    40  issued by such court or justice, enjoining and restraining  any  further
    41  violation,  without  requiring  proof that any person has, in fact, been
    42  injured or damaged thereby. In any such proceeding, the court  may  make
    43  allowances  to  the  attorney  general  as  provided in paragraph six of
    44  subdivision (a) of section eighty-three hundred three of the civil prac-
    45  tice law and rules, and direct restitution.  Whenever  the  court  shall
    46  determine  that  a violation of this section has occurred, the court may
    47  impose a civil penalty of not more than ten thousand  dollars  for  each
    48  violation  and reasonable attorney's fees and costs incurred in investi-
    49  gating and bringing an action under this section. In connection with any
    50  such proposed application, the attorney general is  authorized  to  take
    51  proof  and  make  a  determination  of  the  relevant facts and to issue
    52  subpoenas in accordance with the civil practice law and rules.
    53    § 2. This act shall take effect immediately.
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