District of Columbia Code Division V. Local Business Affairs § 29-306.70. Definitions.
Current as of January 01, 2020 | Updated by FindLaw Staff
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(a) The sheriff shall keep and maintain a permanent record of all abandoned or stolen firearms, not subject to disposition by general law. The records shall state the description of the firearm, the date of recovery of the firearm, and the serial or other identifying number, if any, of the firearm. Firearm as used in this part shall have the same meaning as defined in Section 13A-8-1.
(b) Unless otherwise provided by law, the sheriff may sell or destroy these firearms if the owner of the firearm does not claim the firearm within six months of the date the sheriff obtained it.
(c) The sheriff may sell the firearms only to gun dealers who have held an active business license for at least one year immediately prior to the date of the sale. The sheriff shall establish a procedure to notify gun dealers of a sale. A firearm shall be sold to the gun dealer submitting the highest sealed bid unless the firearm is being traded in to a public safety firearm store. The proceeds of the sale, after deducting and paying all expenses incurred in the recovery, maintenance, and sale of the firearms, shall be paid to the Sheriff's Office Law Enforcement Fund of Cherokee County.
(d) The sheriff may establish a procedure to destroy firearms and may expend necessary sheriff's office funds for that purpose.
(e) Any firearm held by the sheriff on May 1, 2018, shall be subject to this section, but shall be held for at least six months after May 1, 2018.
(a) The board of trustees, if it so elects, and with the approval of the governing body of the city, shall have the power and authority to appoint a secretary-treasurer of the board who shall serve at the pleasure of the board and who shall receive a compensation for his or her services the sum of seventy-five dollars ($75) per month or such other amount of compensation as the board of trustees shall provide by majority vote and shall be approved by the governing body of the city, to be paid on the first day of each month by warrant drawn in like manner as other warrants on such fund. The secretary-treasurer of the board of trustees is hereby made, and it shall be his or her duty to be the custodian of all monies belonging to the policemen's and firemen's retirement fund, and all monies belonging to such fund, and all money or other property belonging to such fund, and all money or other property belonging to similar fund now or hereafter maintained in any city to which this subpart applies shall be promptly paid to him or her. The secretary-treasurer shall also be custodian of all securities and things of value belonging to such fund. The secretary-treasurer shall before taking office, make bond in a sum to be fixed from time to time by resolutions of the governing body of the city, to be approved by the chair of the board of trustees in a surety company authorized to do business in Alabama for the faithful performance of the duties imposed upon him or her under this subsection, and for the faithful accounting of all monies, and things of value which may come into his or her hands, as such treasurer of such fund, and he or she shall keep a separate account thereof, which shall at all times show the true condition of such fund. Upon the resignation or removal from office of such secretary-treasurer he or she shall surrender and deliver up to his or her successor all bonds, securities, and all unexpended monies or other properties which may have come into his or her hands as treasurer of such fund. It shall be the duty of the secretary-treasurer of the board to keep, in a book provided for that purpose, a full and complete record of all proceedings of the board of trustees, and he or she shall perform such other duties as may be assigned to him or her by the board of trustees.
(b) Notwithstanding anything to the contrary in this subpart, the board of trustees, with the approval of the governing body of the city, may elect by majority vote to allow any insurance company or financial institution of its choice to exercise custodial care thereof, and make investments with, all monies in the retirement fund; and provided further that any such delegation of custodial care shall not become effective until written notice of such delegation is posted in all police and fire stations of the city, and after the 10 days’ notice thereof, an election is held in each of the departments in which election a simple majority of the contributing members, by secret ballot, vote in favor of such delegation. Custodial care of the retirement fund, if delegated to an insurance company or financial institution, shall obligate the custodian as follows:
(1) To accept fiduciary responsibility for the fund.
(2) To prepare for the board of trustees, upon demand, a report on the financial condition of the fund.
(3) To provide benefits for the members of the policemen's and firemen's retirement fund, as agreed upon by such custodian and the board of trustees of the fund.
Cite this article: FindLaw.com - District of Columbia Code Division V. Local Business Affairs § 29-306.70. Definitions. - last updated January 01, 2020 | https://codes.findlaw.com/dc/division-v-local-business-affairs/dc-code-sect-29-306-70/
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