[Adopted 6-18-2012 by Ord. No. 136]
This article shall be known as the "Precious Metal and Gem Dealer Ordinance."
The purpose of this article is to protect public health, safety and welfare and to advance the legitimate rational regulation of businesses. In an effort to promote and protect public health and welfare, reduce and/or eliminate the acceptance and resale of stolen or unauthorized property and reduce crime, the Township enacts this article to license and regulate precious metal and gem dealers within its borders
This Ordinance is adopted pursuant to and in accordance with Act 246, Public Acts of 1945,[1] as amended, and MCLA § 445.481 et al, the Precious Metal and Gem Dealer Act.
[1]
Editor's Note: See MCLA § 41.181 et seq.
Definitions utilized under this article shall be the same definitions as provided in the Precious Metal and Gem Dealer Act, MCLA § 445.482, as amended.
A registration fee and renewal fee shall be assessed from each licensee as set forth in Section 18-195 of this article in a manner and amount as set from time to time by resolution of the Board of Trustees. A transaction fee per transaction shall be payable in an amount as set from time to time by the Board of Trustees.
(a) 
A dealer shall maintain a permanent record of each transaction, on record of transaction forms provided for in Act 95 of 1981. Such record shall be legibly written or otherwise printed in ink in the English language. Each record of transaction form shall be filled out in quadruplicate by the dealer or agent or employee of the dealer. One copy of the form shall go to the Chesterfield Township Police Department pursuant to state law; one copy shall go to the customer; and one copy shall be retained by the dealer pursuant to state law.
(b) 
At the time a dealer receives or purchases a precious item, the dealer or the agent or employee of the dealer shall insure that the following information is recorded accurately on a record of transaction form:
(1) 
The dealer certificate of registration number.
(2) 
A general description of the precious item or precious items received or purchased, including the type of metal or precious gem. In the case of watches, the description shall contain the name of the maker and the number of both the works and the case. In the case of jewelry, all letters and marks inscribed on the jewelry shall be included in the description.
(3) 
The date of the transaction.
(4) 
The name of the person conducting the transaction.
(5) 
The name, date of birth, driver's license number or State of Michigan personal identification card number, and street and house number of the customer, together with a legible imprint of the right thumb of the customer, or if that is not possible, of the left thumb or a finger of the customer. However, the thumbprint or fingerprint shall only be required on the record of transaction form retained by the dealer. The thumbprint or fingerprint shall be made available to a police agency during the course of a police investigation involving a precious item or items described on the record of transaction. After a period of one year from the date of the record of transaction, if a police investigation concerning a precious item or items described on the record of transaction has not occurred, the dealer and any police agency or sheriff's department holding a copy of the record of transaction shall destroy, and not keep a permanent record of, the record of transaction. A dealer who goes out of business or changes his or her business address to another local jurisdiction, either within or out of this state, shall transmit the records of all transactions made by the dealer within one year before his or her closing or moving, to the local police agency.
(6) 
The price paid by the dealer for the precious item or precious items.
(7) 
The form of payment to the customer: check, money order, bank draft, or cash. If the payment is by check, money order, or bank draft, the dealer shall indicate the number of the check, money order, or bank draft.
(8) 
The customer's signature.
(c) 
The record of each transaction shall be numbered consecutively, commencing with the number 1 and the calendar year (example: 01-2011).
(d) 
The record of transaction forms of a dealer and each precious item received shall be open to an inspection by the county prosecuting attorney, the local police agency, the police agency or sheriff's department of the local governmental unit in which the customer resides, and the Michigan State Police, at all times during the ordinary business hours of the dealer. As a condition of doing business, a dealer is considered to have given consent to the inspection prescribed by this subsection. The record of transaction forms of a dealer shall not be open to inspection by the general public.
(e) 
The items shall be photographed and any serial number or other markings provided, as well as any other information as required pursuant to the electronic transaction reporting processes utilized by the Township. Additionally, the driver's license, state identification, passport, or other photographic identification of a customer shall be photographed.
(f) 
The form of the record of transaction shall have an eight-and-one-half-by-eleven-inch size and shall be as follows:[1]
[1]
Editor's Note: The Record of Transaction Form is included as an attachment to this chapter.
(a) 
Except as otherwise provided by state law, each record of a transaction shall be retained by the dealer for not less than one year after the transaction to which the record pertains.
(b) 
Within 48 hours after receiving or purchasing a precious item, the dealer shall send a copy of the record of transaction form to the Chesterfield Township Police Department and, if the record of transaction form indicates that the customer resides outside the jurisdiction of the Township, the dealer shall send a copy of the record of transaction form to the police agency of the city, village or township in which the customer resides as set forth on the record of transaction, or, if that city, village or township does not have a police agency, to the sheriffs department of the county in which the customer resides as set forth on the record of transaction.
(1) 
Every licensee, owner and employee shall keep a record of all persons and/or entities with whom business has transacted and all property coming into their possession. Reports must be electronically transmitted to the Police Chief or his designee. Within 48 hours of receipt by purchase or otherwise of a precious item, a report must be transmitted by means of electronic transmission through a modem or similar device in a format such that the data is capable of direct electronic entry into the Chesterfield Township's Police Department's computerized system, as approved by the Police Chief or his designee for identifying property coming into the possession of a licensor. A transaction report by electronic transmission under this subsection shall not be reported on paper forms, unless the Police Chief or his designee so requires. All dealers must have the equipment installed in their place of business no later than October 1, 2012. Information must be reported electronically beginning October 1, 2012.
(2) 
A fee as adopted and subject to change periodically by the Board of Trustees shall be assessed per transaction. The vendor will assess the property registration fee for each transaction the licensee reports, either through batch file upload or directly using the vendor's business interface or on the vendor's automated reported service, that involves transactions subject to the provision of this article.
(3) 
"Transaction" is defined as a single buy, or which may involve one or more items and does not include contract extension or claims. The per transaction registration fee is not a per item included in the transaction fee. It is within the sole discretion of the secondhand dealer whether to recover the fee from their customers for registering a transaction.
(4) 
The licensee will be invoiced on a monthly basis. The Township's vendor automated reporting service isolates and generates a list of the billable transactions that will be used for deriving invoiced amounts. The above fees are assessed for the use of the standard vendor's automated recording service. Any custom programming completed for the secondhand dealer will be negotiated on a contract basis and may result in additional licensing arrangements between the vendor and the licensor. Sales tax will be added to the above amounts where applicable. Failure to timely pay as invoiced is a violation of this article.
(c) 
The record of transaction forms received by a police agency or sheriff's department shall not be open to inspection by the general public. Each police agency or sheriff's department holding record of transaction forms shall be responsible for ensuring the confidentiality of the record of transaction forms and ensuring that the record of transaction forms are used only for the purpose for which they were received.
No person shall carry on the business of a precious metal or gem dealer in the Township without first having a certificate of registration issued from the Township Police Department authorizing such person or entity to carry on such business subject to the provisions of this article.
A dealer shall apply to the Township for a certificate of registration and pay a fee as set forth by the Chesterfield Township Board of Trustees to cover the cost of processing and issuing the certificate of registration by disclosing the following information:
(1) 
The name, address, and thumbprint of the applicant(s).
(2) 
The name and address under which the applicant does business.
(3) 
The name, address, and thumbprint of all agents or employees of the dealer. Within 24 hours after hiring a new employee, the dealer shall forward to the local police agency the name, address, and thumbprint of the new employee.
The Chesterfield Township Police Department shall review the application and determine whether the application complies with the provisions of this article and the Precious Metal and Gem Dealer Act (Act 95 of 1981). The dealer shall complete his examination and issue a determination within 30 days upon receipt of the application described herein.
The Planning and Zoning Administrator or his or her designee shall within 15 days of the submittal of an application, review the application and/or premises in order to determine whether the proposed precious metal and gem dealer activities are compliant with the Zoning Ordinance. Such determination shall be issued to the Chesterfield Township Police Department.
Not less than 10 days before a dealer changes the name or address under which the dealer does business, the dealer shall notify the Chesterfield Township Police Department in writing of the change.
Upon receipt of the certificate of registration from the local police agency, the dealer shall post it in a conspicuous place in the dealer's place of business.
A precious item received by a dealer shall be retained by the dealer for nine calendar days after it was received, without any form of alteration other than that required for an accurate appraisal of its value.
A dealer or an agent or employee of a dealer shall not:
(1) 
Knowingly receive or purchase a precious item from any person who is less than 18 years of age or any person known by the dealer or agent or employee of the dealer to have been convicted of theft or receipt of stolen property within the preceding five years, whether the person is acting in his or her own behalf or as the agent of another.
(2) 
Knowingly receive or purchase a precious item from a person unless that person presents a valid driver's license or a valid State of Michigan personal identification card.
Any violation of any provision of this article shall be a misdemeanor punishable by imprisonment of not more than 93 days and/or a fine of $500, or both, in addition to any other penalty provisions provided for a violation of a misdemeanor as set forth in the general penalty provisions of this Code of Ordinances.
Any dealer, agent, or employee of a dealer who is convicted of any misdemeanor pursuant to this article or under Section 535 of the Michigan Penal Code, 1931, Public Act 328, MCLA § 750.535, or of the Precious Metal and Gem Dealer Act MCLA § 445.481, shall not be permitted to operate as a dealer within this state for a period of one year after conviction. A dealer, or an agent, or employee of a dealer who is convicted of a felony under MCLA § 445.481 et seq., Precious Metal and Gem Dealer Act, or under Section 535 of the Michigan Penal Code, 1931 Public Act 328, MCLA § 750.535, shall not be permitted to operate as a dealer within this state for a period of five years after conviction.