HB 1048 reform certain campaign finance requirements and...
State of South Dakota
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EIGHTY-SECOND SESSION
LEGISLATIVE ASSEMBLY,
2007
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400N0209
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HOUSE STATE AFFAIRS COMMITTEE ENGROSSED
NO.
HB 1048
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02/07/2007
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This bill has been extensively amended (hoghoused) and may no longer be consistent
with the original intention of the sponsor.
Introduced by:
The Committee on State Affairs at the request of the Office of the Secretary
of State
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FOR AN ACT ENTITLED, An Act to
reform certain campaign finance requirements and to
establish certain fines and penalties.
BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF SOUTH DAKOTA:
Section
1.
Terms used in this Act mean:
(1) "Ballot question," any referendum, initiative, proposed constitutional amendment, or
other measure submitted to voters at any election;
(2) "Ballot question committee," a person or organization that raises, collects, or
disburses contributions solicited for the placement of a ballot question on the ballot
or the adoption or defeat of any ballot question. A ballot question committee is not
a person, political committee, or political party that makes a contribution to a ballot
question committee. A ballot question committee is not an organization that makes
a contribution to a ballot question committee from treasury funds;
(3) "Candidate campaign committee," any entity organized by a candidate to receive
contributions and make expenditures for the candidate. Only one candidate campaign
committee may be organized for each candidate;
(4) "Candidate," any person who seeks nomination for or election to public office, and
for the purpose of this Act a person is deemed a candidate if the person raises,
collects, or disburses contributions in excess of five hundred dollars; has authorized
the solicitation of contributions or the making of expenditures; or has created a
candidate campaign committee for the purpose of obtaining public office. The person
is also deemed a candidate if the person has taken all actions required by state law
to qualify for nomination for or election to public office;
(5) "Clearly identified," the appearance of the name, nickname, a photograph or a
drawing of a candidate or public office holder, or the unambiguous reference to the
identity of a candidate or public office holder;
(6) "Contribution," any gift, advance, distribution, deposit, or payment of money or any
other valuable consideration, or any contract, promise or agreement to do so; any
discount or rebate not available to the general public; any forgiveness of indebtedness
or payment of indebtedness by another person; or the use of services or property
without full payment made or provided by any person, political committee, or
political party whose primary business is to provide such services or property for the
purpose of influencing:
(a) The nomination, election, or re-election of any person to public office; or
(b) The placement of a ballot question on the ballot or the adoption or defeat of
any ballot question submitted.
The term does not include services provided by a person as a volunteer for or on
behalf of any candidate, political committee, or political party, including the free or
discounted use of a person's residence. Nor does the term include the purchase of any
item of value or service from any political committee or political party. The purchase
price of the item may not exceed the fair market value and may not include an intent
to contribute beyond the item's value. A contribution does not include administration
and solicitation of a contribution for a political action committee established by an
organization and associated expenses, nor the use of an organization's real or
personal property located on its business premises for such purposes. A contribution
does not include nominal use of a candidate's real or personal property or nominal
use of resources available at a candidate's primary place of business;
(7) "County office," any elected office at a county in this state;
(8) "Election," any election for public office; any general, special, primary, or runoff
election; and any election on a ballot question;
(9) "Expressly advocate," any communication which:
(a) In context has no other reasonable meaning than to urge the election or defeat
of one or more clearly identified candidates, public office holders, or the
placement of a ballot question on the ballot or the adoption or defeat of any
ballot question; or
(b) When taken as a whole and with limited reference to external events, such as
the proximity to the election, may only be interpreted by a reasonable person
as containing advocacy of the election or defeat of one or more clearly
identified candidates, public office holders, or the placement of a ballot
question on the ballot or the adoption or defeat of any ballot question because:
(i) The electoral portion of the communication is unmistakable,
unambiguous, and suggestive of only one meaning; and
(ii) Reasonable minds could not differ as to whether it encourages actions
to elect or defeat one or more clearly identified candidates, public office
holders, or the placement of a ballot question on the ballot or the
adoption or defeat of any ballot question or encourages some other kind
of action;
(10) "Immediate family," a spouse of a candidate or public office holder, or a person under
the age of eighteen years who is claimed by that candidate or public office holder or
that candidate's or public office holder's spouse as a dependent for federal income tax
purposes or any relative within the third degree of kinship of the candidate or the
candidate's spouse, and the spouses of such relatives;
(11) "Independent expenditure," an expenditure made by a person, organization, political
committee, or political party to expressly advocate the election or defeat of a clearly
identified candidate or the placement of a ballot question on the ballot or the
adoption or defeat of any ballot question, but which is not made to, controlled by,
coordinated with, requested by, or made upon consultation with a candidate, political
committee, or agent of a candidate or political committee. The term does not include
administration and solicitation of any contribution for a political action committee
established by an organization and associated expenses, nor the use of an
organization's real or personal property located on its business premises for such
purposes;
(12) "In-kind," a good or service provided at no charge or for less than its fair market
value. The term does not include the value of services provided by a person as a
volunteer for or on behalf of any candidate, political committee, or political party,
including the free or discounted use of any person's residence or office;
(13) "Legislative office," the Senate and the House of Representatives of the South
Dakota Legislature;
(14) "Loan," a transfer of money, property, guarantee, or anything of value in exchange
for an obligation, conditional or not, to repay in whole or part;
(15) "National political party," the organization which is responsible for the day-to-day
operation of a political party at the national level, as determined by the Federal
Election Commission;
(16) "Organization," any business corporation, limited liability company, nonprofit
corporation, limited liability partnership, limited partnership, partnership,
cooperative, business trust, association, club, labor union, collective bargaining
organization, local, state, or national organization to which a labor organization pays
membership or per capita fees, based upon its affiliation and membership, trade or
professional association that receives its funds from membership dues or service fees,
whether organized inside or outside the state, any entity organized in a corporate
form under federal law or the laws of this state, or any group of persons acting in
concert which is not defined as a political committee or political party in the Act;
(17) "Person," a natural person;
(18) "Political action committee," a person or organization that raises, collects or
disburses contributions to influence the outcome of an election and who is not a
candidate, candidate campaign committee, ballot question committee, or a political
party. A political action committee is not any:
(a) Person that makes a contribution to a political committee or political
party; or
(b) Organization that makes a contribution to a ballot question committee from
treasury funds;
(19) "Political committee," any candidate campaign committee, political action
committee, or ballot question committee;
(20) "Political party," any state or county political party qualified to participate in a
primary or general election, including any auxiliary organization of such political
party. An auxiliary organization is any organization designated as an auxiliary
organization in the political party's bylaws or constitution except any secondary or
post-secondary student organization that only accepts contributions to support
volunteer student activities of the organization and does not make monetary
contributions to any political committee;
(21) "Public office," any statewide office, legislative office, or county office;
(22) "Qualified nonprofit corporation," any nonprofit corporation, subject to the
provisions of chapters 47-22 to 47-28, inclusive, that was organized for the purpose
of promoting political ideas and cannot engage in business activities, has no
shareholders or other persons affiliated so as to have a claim on the assets or
earnings, was not established by a corporation, and has not accepted more than de
minimus amount of funds from any corporation;
(23) "Statewide office," the offices of Governor, lieutenant governor, secretary of state,
attorney general, state auditor, state treasurer, commissioner of school and public
lands, and public utilities commissioner;
(24) "Volunteer," a person who provides services free of charge.
Section
2.
A political committee shall have a chair and a treasurer, which may be the same
person. The chair and treasurer for a candidate campaign committee shall be appointed by the
candidate, and the candidate may serve as either, or both, such officers. No political committee
may receive or make contributions or pay expenses while the office of treasurer is vacant. A
violation of this section is a Class 2 misdemeanor.
Section
3.
A political committee shall file a statement of organization with the secretary of
state not later than fifteen days after the date upon which the committee made contributions,
received contributions, or paid expenses in excess of five hundred dollars unless such activity
falls within thirty days of any statewide election in which case the statement of organization
shall be filed within forty-eight hours. Any candidate for public office shall organize a candidate
campaign committee not later than fifteen days after becoming a candidate and shall file a
statement of organization with the secretary of state. A political committee that regularly files
a campaign finance disclosure statement with the Federal Election Commission is not required
to file a statement of organization. A violation of this section is a Class 2 misdemeanor.
Section
4.
A political committee may incorporate and not be subject to the provisions of
section 18 of this Act if the political committee incorporates for liability purposes only.
Notwithstanding the corporate status of the political committee, the treasurer of an incorporated
political committee remains personally responsible for carrying out the treasurer's duties under
this Act.
Section
5.
A political committee created prior to the effective date of this Act that has not
filed a termination statement shall file a statement of organization with the secretary of state not
later than fifteen days after this Act becomes effective. A violation of this section is a Class 2
misdemeanor.
Section
6.
The statement of organization shall include:
(1) The name, street address, postal address, and daytime telephone number of the
committee;
(2) The name, street address, postal address, and daytime telephone number of the chair
and the treasurer of the committee;
(3) A statement of the type of political committee that has been or is being organized;
(4) In the case of a candidate campaign committee, the name, street address, and postal
address of the candidate;
(5) In the case of a political action committee or ballot question committee, a concise
statement of its purpose and goals, and the full name, street address, and postal
address of the organization with which the committee is connected or affiliated, or
if the committee is not connected or affiliated with any one organization, the trade,
profession, or primary interest of the committee;
(6) If the committee is organized as a corporation under federal or state laws for liability
purposes only as authorized by section 4 of this Act, a statement affirming such
organization; and
(7) The name, street address, postal address, and telephone number of each financial
institution where an account or depository is maintained.
The statement shall be signed by the candidate and treasurer for a candidate campaign
committee and by the chair and treasurer for other political committees. A political committee
continues to exist until a termination statement is filed pursuant to sections 25 and 26 of this
Act.
The candidate or treasurer of a political committee shall file an updated statement of
organization not later than fifteen days after any change in the information contained on the
most recently filed statement of organization.
Section
7.
If the contributor is a person, no candidate for statewide office or the candidate's
campaign committee may accept any contribution which in the aggregate exceeds four thousand
dollars during any calendar year. A candidate campaign committee may accept contributions
from any candidate campaign committee, political action committee, or political party. The
limitation on any contribution from a person in this section does not apply to any contribution
by the candidate or the candidate's immediate family. A violation of this section is a Class 1
misdemeanor.
Section
8.
If the contributor is a person, no candidate for legislative or county office or the
candidate's campaign committee may accept any contribution which in the aggregate exceeds
one thousand dollars during any calendar year. A candidate campaign committee may accept
contributions from any candidate campaign committee, political action committee, or political
party. The limitation on any contribution from a person in this section does not apply to any
contribution by the candidate or the candidate's immediate family. A violation of this section
is a Class 1 misdemeanor.
Section
9.
If the contributor is a person, no political action committee may accept any
contribution which in the aggregate exceeds ten thousand dollars during any calendar year. A
political action committee may accept contributions from any candidate campaign committee,
political action committee, or political party. A violation of this section is a Class 1
misdemeanor.
Section
10.
If the contributor is a person, no political party may accept any contribution
which in the aggregate exceeds ten thousand dollars during any calendar year. A political party
may accept contributions from any candidate campaign committee, political action committee,
or political party. A violation of this section is a Class 1 misdemeanor.
Section
11.
No person, organization, candidate, political committee, or political party may
give or accept a contribution unless the name and residence address of the contributor is made
known to the person receiving the contribution. Any contribution, money, or other thing of value
received by a candidate, political committee, or political party from an unknown source shall
be donated to a nonprofit charitable organization. A violation of this section is a Class 2
misdemeanor.
Section
12.
No person may make a contribution in the name of another person, make a
contribution in a fictitious name, make a contribution on behalf of another person, or knowingly
permit another to use his or her name to make a contribution. A violation of this section is a
Class 1 misdemeanor.
Section
13.
Equipment, supplies, and materials purchased with contributions are property
of the political committee or political party, and are not property of the candidate or any other
person.
Section
14.
The sale of any property shall be reported in the campaign finance disclosure
statement. A violation of this section is a Class 1 misdemeanor.
Section
15.
Any printed material or communication made, purchased, paid for, or authorized
by a candidate, political committee, or political party which expressly advocates for or against
a candidate, public office holder, ballot question, or political party shall prominently display or
clearly speak the statement: "Paid for by (Name of candidate, political committee, or political
party)." This section does not apply to buttons, balloons, pins, pens, matchbooks, clothing, or
similar small items upon which the inclusion of the statement would be impracticable. A
violation of this section is a Class 1 misdemeanor.
Section
16.
Any person or qualified nonprofit corporation that makes an independent
expenditure for a communication which expressly advocates for or against a candidate, public
office holder, ballot question, or political party totaling five hundred dollars or more shall file
a statement with the secretary of state that is received within forty-eight hours of the time that
the communication is disseminated, broadcast, or otherwise published.
Any organization that makes an independent expenditure for a communication which
expressly advocates for or against a public office holder, ballot question, or political party
totaling five hundred dollars or more shall file a statement with the secretary of state that is
received within forty-eight hours of the time that the communication is disseminated, broadcast,
or otherwise published.
The statement shall include the name of the person, qualified nonprofit corporation, or
organization and its street address, city, and state, the name of each candidate, public office
holder, ballot question, or political party mentioned in the communication, the amount spent on
the communication, and a description of the content of the communication.
Further, if the independent expenditure is made by an organization comprised of twenty or
fewer members or shareholders, the statement shall include the name and address of each
shareholder or member who owns ten percent or more of the organization. A violation of this
section is a Class 1 misdemeanor.
For the purposes of this section, the term, communication, does not include:
(1) Any news articles, editorial endorsements, opinion, or commentary writings, or letter
to the editor printed in a newspaper, magazine, flyer, pamphlet, or other periodical
not owned or controlled by a candidate, political committee, or political party;
(2) Any editorial endorsements or opinions aired by a broadcast facility not owned or
controlled by a candidate, political committee, or political party;
(3) Any communication by a person made in the regular course and scope of the person's
business or ministry or any communication made by a membership organization
solely to members of the organization and the members' families; and
(4) Any communication that refers to any candidate only as part of the popular name of
a bill or statute.
Section
17.
Any person, political committee, political party, or organization that makes a
payment or promise of payment totaling one thousand dollars or more for a communication that
clearly identifies a candidate or public office holder, but does not expressly advocate the
election or defeat of the candidate or public office holder, and that is disseminated, broadcast,
or otherwise published within sixty days of an election, shall file a statement with the secretary
of state disclosing the name, street address, city, and state of such person, political committee,
political party, or organization. The statement shall also include the name of the candidate or
public office holder mentioned in the communication, the amount spent on the communication,
and a description of the content of the communication. The statement shall be received and filed
within forty-eight hours of the time that the communication is disseminated, broadcast, or
otherwise published. A violation of this section is a Class 1 misdemeanor.
For the purposes of this section, the term, communication, does not include:
(1) Any news articles, editorial endorsements, opinion or commentary writings, or letter
to the editor printed in a newspaper, magazine, flyer, pamphlet, or other periodical
not owned or controlled by a candidate, political committee, or political party;
(2) Any editorial endorsements or opinions aired by a broadcast facility not owned or
controlled by a candidate, political committee, or political party;
(3) Any communication by a person made in the regular course and scope of the person's
business or ministry or any communication made by a membership organization
solely to members of the organization and the members' families; and
(4) Any communication that refers to any candidate only as part of the popular name of
a bill or statute.
Section
18.
No organization may make a contribution to a candidate committee, political
action committee, or political party or make an independent expenditure expressly advocating
the election or defeat of a candidate. An organization may make a contribution to a ballot
question committee organized solely for the purpose of influencing an election on a ballot
question and independent expenditures regarding the placement of a ballot question on the ballot
or the adoption or defeat of a ballot question. The prohibitions of this section do not apply to
independent expenditures expressly advocating the election or defeat of a candidate by a
qualified nonprofit corporation from its treasury funds. An organization may create a political
action committee. A violation of this section is a Class 1 misdemeanor.
Section
19.
Any organization that makes a contribution to a ballot question committee
pursuant to section 18 of this Act shall file a statement:
(1) As a domestic or foreign entity in good standing with the Office of the Secretary of
State of this state, or
(2) If the organization is not filed as a domestic or foreign entity in good standing with
the Office of the Secretary of State of this state, the organization shall include with
any contribution to a ballot question committee a statement providing the following
information:
(a) The name of the organization;
(b) The name of the state or country under whose law the organization is
incorporated or organized; and
(c) The street address of the organization's principal office; or
(3) However, if subdivisions 1 and 2 do not apply to the organization, then the
organization shall include with any contribution to a ballot question committee a
statement providing the following information:
(a) The name of the organization;
(b) The street address of the organization's principal office; and
(c) The names and street addresses of any owners, directors, or officers of the
organization including the name and street address of the person authorizing
the contribution.
Further, if any contribution from an organization to a ballot question committee exceeds ten
thousand dollars in the aggregate, and the organization is comprised of twenty or fewer
members or shareholders, the contribution shall include a statement with the name and address
of each shareholder or member who owns ten percent or more of the organization. The ballot
question committee shall disclose all information provided in the statement in the applicable
campaign financial disclosure statement or supplemental statement.
If any of the information required by this section is not delivered to the treasurer of the ballot
question committee, the treasurer shall return the contribution. A violation of this section is a
Class 1 misdemeanor.
Section
20.
The state, an agency of the state, and the governing body of a county,
municipality, or other political subdivision of the state may not expend or permit the
expenditure of public funds for the purpose of influencing the nomination or election of any
candidate, or for the petitioning of a ballot question on the ballot or the adoption or defeat of any
ballot question. This section may not be construed to limit the freedom of speech of any officer
or employee of the state or such political subdivisions in his or her personal capacity. This
section does not prohibit the state, its agencies, or the governing body of any political
subdivision of the state from presenting factual information solely for the purpose of educating
the voters on a ballot question.
Section
21.
No candidate, political committee, or political party may accept any contribution
from any state, state agency, political subdivision of the state, foreign government, Indian tribe,
federal agency, or the federal government. A violation of this section is a Class 1 misdemeanor.
Section
22.
A campaign financial disclosure statement shall be filed with the secretary of
state by every:
(1) Candidate or candidate campaign committee for any statewide or legislative office;
(2) Political action committee;
(3) Political party; and
(4) Ballot question committee.
The statement shall be signed by the treasurer of the political committee or political party.
The statement shall be received by the secretary of state and filed by 5:00 p.m. each February
first and shall cover the contributions and expenditures for the preceding calendar year.
However, no statement is required to be filed by a candidate campaign committee for legislative
or county office on February first following a year in which there is not an election. A statement
shall also be received by the secretary of state and filed by 5:00 p.m. on the second Friday prior
to each primary and general election complete through the fifteenth day prior to that election.
No county, local, or auxiliary committee of any political party qualified to participate in a
primary or general election is required to file a campaign financial disclosure statement prior
to a statewide primary election. No candidate without opposition in a primary election is
required to file a campaign financial disclosure statement prior to a primary election. Any
statement filed pursuant to this section shall be consecutive and shall cover contributions and
expenditures since the last statement filed. A political committee that regularly files a campaign
finance disclosure statement with the Federal Election Commission is not required to file a
campaign finance disclosure statement. A violation of this section is a Class 1 misdemeanor.
Section
23.
A campaign finance disclosure statement shall be received by the secretary of
state and filed by any statewide ballot question committee by 5:00 p.m. on the fifth day of July
during the year in which the ballot question is to be voted on complete through the month of
June. A violation of this section is a Class 1 misdemeanor.
Section
24.
A campaign finance disclosure statement shall include the following
information:
(1) Political committee or political party name, street address, postal address, city, state,
zip code, daytime and evening telephone number, and e-mail address;
(2) Type of campaign statement (pre-primary, pre-general, mid-year, year-end,
amendment, supplement, or termination);
(3) If a ballot question committee, the ballot question number and whether the committee
is for or against the measure;
(4) The balance of cash and cash equivalents on hand at the beginning of the reporting
period;
(5) The total amount of all contributions received during the reporting period;
(6) The total amount of all in-kind contributions received during the reporting period;
(7) The total of refunds, rebates, interest, or other income not previously identified
during the reporting period;
(8) The total of contributions, loans, and other receipts during the reporting period;
(9) The total value of loans made to any person, political committee, or political party
during the reporting period;
(10) The total of expenditures made during the reporting period;
(11) The total amount of all expenditures incurred but not yet paid. An expenditure
incurred but not yet paid shall be reported on each report filed after the date of receipt
of goods or services until payment is made to the vendor. A payment shall be listed
as an expenditure when the payment is made;
(12) The statement shall state the cash balance on hand as of the close of the reporting
period;
(13) The total amount of contributions of one hundred dollars or less in the aggregate
from one source received during the reporting period;
(14) The name, residence address, city, and state of each person contributing a
contribution of more than one hundred dollars in the aggregate during the reporting
period and the amount of the contribution. Any contribution from any political
committee or political party shall be itemized. Any contribution from a federal
political committee or political committee organized outside this state shall also
include the name and internet website address of the filing office where campaign
finance disclosure statements are regularly filed for the committee. If all of the
information required is not on file, the political committee or political party may not
deposit the contribution;
(15) The statement shall contain the same information for in-kind contributions as for
monetary contributions, and shall also include a description of the in-kind
contribution;
(16) Upon the request of the treasurer, a person making an in-kind contribution shall
provide all necessary information to the treasurer, including the value of the
contribution;
(17) Any monetary or in-kind contribution made by the reporting political committee or
political party to any political committee, political party, or nonprofit charitable
organization shall be itemized;
(18) A categorical description and the amount of the refunds, rebates, interest, sale of
property, or other receipts not previously identified during the reporting period;
(19) A categorical description and the amount of funds or donations by any organization
to its political committee for establishing and administering the political committee
and for any solicitation costs of the political committee;
(20) The total balance of loans owed by the political committee or political party;
(21) The balance of loans owed by the political committee or political party, itemized by
lender's name, street address, city, and state, including the terms, interest rate, and
repayment schedule of each loan;
(22) The total balance of loans owed to the political committee or political party;
(23) The amount of each loan made during the reporting period. The name, street address,
city, and state of the recipient of the loan;
(24) The balance of each loan owed to the political committee or political party, itemized
by name, street address, city, and state;
(25) The expenditures made during the reporting period shall be categorized.
Disbursements to consultants, advertising agencies, credit card companies, and
similar firms shall be itemized into expense categories. Any contribution made by the
reporting political committee or political party that is not in exchange for any item
of value or service shall be itemized;
(26) The expenditures incurred but not yet paid during the reporting period and to whom
the expenditure is owed;
(27) The amount of each independent expenditure, as defined in this Act, made during the
reporting period, the name of the candidate, public office holder, or ballot question
related to the expenditure and a description of the expenditure;
(28) The information contained in any statement provided under section 19 of the Act; and
(29) The statement shall include a certification that the contents of the statement is true
and correct signed by the treasurer of the political committee or political party.
Section
25.
The last campaign finance statement filed shall be a termination statement. The
termination statement shall be filed within thirty days following disposition of all funds and
property and the payment of all obligations.
Section
26.
A political committee may not dissolve until the political committee has settled
all of its debts, disposed of all of its assets, and filed a termination statement.
Section
27.
Any candidate, treasurer, or other person filing a statement pursuant to this Act,
shall file an amended statement within three days of discovering any omission, inaccuracy, or
other change necessary to make the statement accurate. A person responsible for filing a
statement pursuant to this Act, who willfully fails to report a material change or correction, is
guilty of a Class 1 misdemeanor. A person responsible for filing a statement pursuant to this
Act, who willfully fails to file an amendment pursuant to this section is subject to the civil
penalty in section 30 of this Act beginning on the first day following the third day after the
candidate, treasurer, or other person is notified of the omission, inaccuracy, or other change
necessary to make the statement accurate.
Section
28.
If any candidate campaign committee for statewide office, political action
committee, ballot question committee, or political party required to file a campaign finance
disclosure statement pursuant to this Act receives a contribution of five hundred dollars or more
within the fourteen days immediately prior to an election for which a campaign finance
disclosure statement may be filed, a supplemental statement shall be filed. The statement shall
state the name, street address, city, and state of the contributor and the amount and date of the
contribution, and information contained in any statement provided under section 19 of this Act,
if applicable. The statement shall be filed within forty-eight hours of the receipt of the
contribution. A violation of this section is a Class 1 misdemeanor.
Section
29.
The treasurer of a political committee and political party shall maintain and
preserve detailed and accurate records of the following:
(1) Each contribution and in-kind contribution received by the political committee or
political party;
(2) In the case of a ballot question committee, the information required by section 19 of
this Act for any organization contribution;
(3) Each loan received or made by the political committee or political party;
(4) Each refund, rebate, interest, or other income received by the political committee or
political party;
(5) All receipts, invoices, bills, canceled checks, or other proofs of payment, with an
explanation of each, for each expenditure;
(6) The name and address of any financial institution where an account or depository for
the political committee or political party is maintained including the account number.
The treasurer shall maintain and preserve the records for a period of seven years or three
years past the date of filing the termination statement for the election for which the contribution
or expenditure was made, whichever is earlier. A violation of this section is a Class 1
misdemeanor.
Section
30.
Notwithstanding the provisions of
§
12-25-33, the failure to timely file any
statement, amendment, or correction required by this Act subjects the treasurer responsible for
filing to a civil penalty of fifty dollars per day for each day that the statement remains
delinquent. The civil penalty shall be in addition to any criminal sanctions and shall be paid to
the secretary of state and deposited in the state general fund.
Section
31.
The secretary of state shall adopt forms for statements of organization and
campaign finance disclosure statements. Each person filing a statement of organization or
campaign finance disclosure statement shall subscribe to an oath or affirmation verifying that
the contents of the statement are true and correct to the best of the knowledge and belief of the
signer.
Section
32.
The secretary of state shall endorse the date of the filing on each statement filed
pursuant to this Act, and shall preserve the statement among the public records of the office.
However, the statement may be destroyed if the Records Destruction Board, acting pursuant to
§
1-27-19, declares the records to have no further administrative, legal, fiscal, research, or
historical value.
Section
33.
No information copied, or otherwise obtained, from any statement, or copy,
reproduction, or publication thereof, filed with the secretary of state, county auditor, or other
person in charge of conducting the election under this Act may be sold or utilized by any person
for any commercial purpose or for the purpose of soliciting contributions. Any violation of this
section shall be a Class 2 misdemeanor.
Section
34.
Any person who intentionally makes any false, fraudulent, or misleading
statement or entry in any statement of organization, campaign finance disclosure statement,
other statement, or amendment filed pursuant to this Act is guilty a Class 5 felony.
Section
35.
The attorney general shall investigate violations of the provisions of this Act
relating to a legislative office, statewide office, or statewide ballot question and prosecute any
violation thereof. In lieu of bringing a criminal action, the attorney general may elect to file a
civil action. In a civil action, in addition to other relief, the court may impose a civil penalty in
the amount provided by statute, or if not provided, in an amount not to exceed ten thousand
dollars for each violation. Any civil penalty recovered shall be paid to the state general fund. A
civil action brought by the attorney general shall be commenced in Hughes County, in the
county where the person resides, or in the county where the organization, political party, or
political committee has its principal office.
Section
36.
The attorney general may, for the purpose of enforcing the provisions of this
Act, inspect or examine any political committee or political party records required to be
maintained by this Act. It is a Class 1 misdemeanor for any person having charge, control, or
possession of political committee or political party records to neglect or refuse the attorney
general reasonable access to any records required to be maintained by this Act which are
necessary to enforce the provisions of this Act.
Section
37.
The attorney general shall keep each record inspected or examined confidential
except when the records are used to enforce provisions of this Act associated with a criminal
or civil action.
Section
38.
If any candidate is proved in a contest of an election or is proved to have
violated any provision of this Act punishable by a felony, the candidate may not be certified for
election or the candidate shall forfeit his or her office. The office shall be declared vacant and
shall be filled in the manner provided by law for filling vacancies occasioned by death or
resignation.
Section
39.
The provisions of this Act apply to each statewide office, legislative office,
statewide ballot question, county offices and ballot questions in counties with population greater
than five thousand according to the most recent Federal census, and school district offices and
ballot questions in school districts with more than two thousand average daily membership. Any
school district election covered by this Act shall conform to the contribution limits applicable
to legislative offices. This Act does not apply to the unified judicial system, nor does this Act
apply to any township, municipal, or special purpose district offices or ballot questions.
However, the governing body of any county, township, municipality, school district, or special
purpose district not otherwise covered by this Act may adopt an ordinance or resolution to make
the provisions of this Act, with or without amendments, applicable to county, township,
municipal, school district, or special purpose district elections.
Section
40.
The state's attorney shall investigate any violation of the provisions of this Act
relating to elections for county and school district office or ballot questions, and prosecute any
violation thereof. In lieu of bringing a criminal action, the state's attorney may elect to file a civil
action for any violation of this Act. In a civil action, in addition to other relief, the court may
impose a civil penalty in the amount provided by statute, or if not provided, in an amount not
to exceed one thousand dollar for each violation. Any civil penalty recovered shall be paid to
the county general fund if the violation arose out of a county office or ballot question or the
school district general fund if the violation arose out of a school district office or ballot question.
A civil enforcement action for a violation of the Act concerning a school district office or ballot
question may, with the consent of the state's attorney, be brought by the school district's
attorney. A civil action brought under this section shall be commenced in the county where
filings under the Act are required, in the county where the person resides or in the county where
the organization, political party, or political committee has its principal office.
Section
41.
Any statement required to be filed under this Act may be filed by facsimile
device or electronic mail in accordance with the methods approved by the secretary of state. To
be timely filed, any statement received by facsimile device or electronic mail shall be legible
and readable when received by the means it was delivered. The original shall be filed with the
secretary of state within one week following the date the facsimile or electronic mail
transmission was received.
Section
42.
Any statement, form, or filing required by this Act shall be filed with the
secretary of state in the case of a statewide office or legislative office election. Any statement,
form, or filing required by this Act shall be filed with the county auditor in the case of a county
office election, with the school business manager in the case of a school district office election,
or with the person in charge of the election in the case of other political subdivisions or special
purpose districts.
Section
43.
That
§
§
12-25-1
to
12-25-26
, inclusive, be repealed.