Hawaii 2023 Regular Session

Hawaii House Bill HB1261 Compare Versions

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1-HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES H.B. NO. 1261 THIRTY-SECOND LEGISLATURE, 2023 H.D. 2 STATE OF HAWAII A BILL FOR AN ACT RELATING TO SPECIAL PURPOSE DIGITAL CURRENCY LICENSURE. BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF HAWAII:
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47- SECTION 1. The legislature finds that digital currencies are assets that are primarily managed or stored electronically. Digital currencies refer to digital currency, cryptocurrency, e‑money, network money, e-cash, and others, as defined by various governmental jurisdictions. Digital currency may be recorded on a decentralized ledger on the Internet or a centralized database or ledger system owned by a company. Digital currencies do not have physical form like banknotes or minted coins. Digital currencies are also usually not issued by a governmental body and are generally not considered legal tender. Although digital currency has grown in popularity and acceptance worldwide, there is little regulation of the industry in the United States, with a few states treating digital currency activities as within the scope of money transmitter laws. The legislature further finds that the division of financial institutions of the department of commerce and consumer affairs and the Hawaii technology development corporation are currently conducting a sandbox pilot program, called the digital currency innovation lab, to study digital currency transactions. This study allows companies to conduct digital currency transactions without obtaining a money transmitter license while the division of financial institutions evaluates the need for more permanent and comprehensive oversight. The data gathered through the digital currency innovation lab confirmed that digital currency transactions are not best regulated through existing money transmitter laws and that a new regulatory framework is appropriate. The purpose of this Act is to: (1) Establish a licensing program for special purpose digital currency companies that will replace the digital currency innovation lab; and (2) Allow, for six months, any company participating in the digital currency innovation lab on June 30, 2023, to continue operations if a complete application for licensure is submitted to the division of financial institutions by March 1, 2024. SECTION 2. The Hawaii Revised Statutes is amended by adding a new chapter to title 22 to be appropriately designated and to read as follows: "CHAPTER SPECIAL PURPOSE DIGITAL CURRENCY LICENSING ACT PART I. GENERAL PROVISIONS § -1 Definitions. As used in this chapter, unless the context otherwise requires: "Commissioner" means the commissioner of financial institutions. "Consumer" means a natural person who engages in a transaction that is primarily for that natural person's personal, family, or household purposes. "Control" means ownership of, or the power to vote, twenty-five per cent or more of the outstanding voting securities of a licensee or controlling person. For purposes of determining the percentage of a licensee controlled by any person, there shall be aggregated with the controlling person's interest the interest of any other person controlled by the person, or by any spouse, parent, or child of the person. "Control of digital currency", when used in reference to a transaction or relationship involving digital currency, means the power to execute unilaterally or prevent indefinitely a digital currency transaction. "Control person" means an individual who directly or indirectly exercises control over a licensee or applicant. "Custodial services" means the safekeeping, servicing, and management of customer digital currency and digital assets. "Department" means the department of commerce and consumer affairs. "Digital currency" means any type of digital representation of value that is used as a medium of exchange or a form of digitally stored value. "Digital currency" includes any type of digital representation of value that: (1) Has a centralized repository or administrator; (2) Is decentralized and has no centralized repository or administrator; or (3) May be created or obtained by computing or manufacturing effort. "Digital currency" does not include any of the following: (1) Digital representations of value that: (A) Are used solely within online gaming platforms; (B) Have no market or application outside of those gaming platforms; and (C) Cannot be converted into, or redeemed for, fiat currency or digital currency; (2) Digital representations of value that can be redeemed for: (A) Goods, services, discounts, or purchases as part of a customer affinity or rewards program with the issuer or other designated merchants; or (B) Digital representations of value in another customer affinity or rewards program, but cannot be converted into or redeemed for fiat currency or digital currency; or (3) Digital units used as part of prepaid cards. "Digital currency administration" means issuing digital currency with the authority to redeem the currency for money, bank credit, or other digital currency. "Digital currency business activity" means: (1) Exchanging, transferring, or storing digital currency or engaging in digital currency administration, whether directly or through an agreement with a digital currency control-services vendor; (2) Exchanging one or more digital representations of value used within one or more online games, game platforms, or family of games for money or bank credit outside the online game, game platform, or family of games offered by or on behalf of the same publisher from which the original digital representation of value was received; (3) Storing, holding, or maintaining custody or control of digital currency on behalf of others; (4) Buying and selling digital currency as a business; (5) Performing exchange services as a business; or (6) Controlling, administering, or issuing a digital currency. "Digital currency control-services vendor" means a person that has control of digital currency solely under an agreement with a person that, on behalf of another person, assumes control of digital currency. "Division" means the division of financial institutions of the department. "Elder" means an individual who is sixty-two years of age or older. "Exchange" means the conversion or change of: (1) Fiat currency or other value into digital currency; (2) Digital currency into fiat currency or other value; or (3) One form of digital currency into another form of digital currency. "Licensee" means a person who is licensed or required to be licensed under this chapter. "NMLS" means the Nationwide Multistate Licensing System and Registry developed and maintained by the Conference of State Bank Supervisors for the state licensing and registration of state-licensed financial services providers. "Person" means an individual, sole proprietorship, partnership, corporation, limited liability company, limited liability partnership, or other association of individuals, however organized. "Private key" means a unique element of cryptographic data, or any substantially similar analogue, that is: (1) Held by a person; (2) Paired with a unique, publicly available element of cryptographic data; and (3) Associated with an algorithm that is necessary to carry out an encryption or decryption required to execute a transaction. "Special purpose digital currency company" means a person holding a special purpose digital currency license under this chapter. "Stored value" means monetary value that is evidenced by an electronic record. "Tangible net worth" means total assets, excluding intangible assets, less total liabilities, in accordance with United States generally accepted accounting principles. "Transfer" means to assume control of digital currency from or on behalf of a person and to: (1) Credit the digital currency to the account of another person; (2) Move the digital currency from one account of a person to another account of the same person; or (3) Relinquish control of digital currency to another person. "United States dollar equivalent of digital currency" means the equivalent value of a particular digital currency in United States dollars shown on a digital currency exchange based in the United States for a particular date or specified period. § -2 Exclusions. (a) This chapter shall not apply to: (1) The exchange, transfer, or storage of digital currency or to digital currency administration to the extent regulated by the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (15 U.S.C. chapter 2B) or Commodity Exchange Act (7 U.S.C. chapter 1); (2) Activity by a person that: (A) Contributes only connectivity software or computing power to a: (i) Decentralized digital currency; or (ii) Protocol governing transfer of the digital representation of value; (B) Provides only data storage or security services for a business engaged in digital currency business activity and does not otherwise engage in digital currency business activity on behalf of another person; or (C) Provides only to a person, that is otherwise exempt from this chapter, digital currency as one or more enterprise solutions used solely among each other and has no agreement or relationship with a person that is an end-user of digital currency; (3) A person using digital currency, including creating, investing, buying or selling, or obtaining digital currency as payment for the purchase or sale of goods or services, solely for academic purposes; (4) A person whose digital currency business activity with or on behalf of persons is reasonably expected to be valued, in the aggregate, on an annual basis at $5,000 or less, measured by the United States dollar equivalent of digital currency; (5) An attorney to the extent of providing escrow services to a person; (6) A securities intermediary, as defined in section 490:8-102, or commodity intermediary, as defined in section 490:9-102; (7) A digital currency control-services vendor; (8) A person that: (A) Does not receive compensation from a person for: (i) Providing digital currency products or services; or (ii) Conducting digital currency business activity; or (B) Is engaged in testing products or services with the person's own funds or digital currency; (9) Non-custodial digital currency business activity by a person using a digital currency: (A) Acknowledged as legal tender by the United States or a government recognized by the United States; or (B) That has been determined not to be a security by a United States regulatory agency; or (10) Banks, bank holding companies, credit unions, savings banks, financial services loan companies, and mutual banks organized under the laws of the United States or any state. (b) The commissioner may determine whether a person or class of persons is to be exempt from this chapter. § -3 Powers of commissioner. In addition to any other powers provided by law, the commissioner may: (1) Adopt rules pursuant to chapter 91 as the commissioner deems necessary for the administration of this chapter; (2) Issue declaratory rulings or informal nonbinding interpretations; (3) Investigate and conduct hearings regarding any violation of this chapter or any rule or order of, or agreement with, the commissioner; (4) Create fact-finding committees that may make recommendations to the commissioner for the commissioner's deliberations; (5) Require an applicant or any of its control persons, executive officers, directors, general partners, and managing members to disclose their relevant criminal history and request a criminal history record check to be conducted by or through NMLS or pursuant to chapter 846. The information shall be accompanied by the appropriate payment of the applicable fee for each criminal history record check; (6) Contract with or employ qualified persons, including accountants, attorneys, investigators, examiners, auditors, or other professionals who may be exempt from chapter 76 and who shall assist the commissioner in exercising the commissioner's powers and duties; (7) Process and investigate complaints, subpoena witnesses and documents, administer oaths, receive affidavits and oral testimony, including telephonic communications, and do anything necessary or incidental to the exercise of the commissioner's power and duties, including the authority to conduct contested case proceedings under chapter 91; (8) Require a licensee to comply with: (A) Any rule, guidance, guideline, statement, supervisory policy, or any similar proclamation issued or adopted by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation; or (B) Any policy position of the Conference of State Bank Supervisors, to the same extent and in the same manner as a bank chartered by the State; (9) Enter into agreements or relationships with other government officials or regulatory associations to improve efficiencies and reduce regulatory burden by sharing resources; standardized or uniform methods or procedures; and documents, records, information, or evidence obtained under this chapter; (10) Use, hire, contract, or employ publicly or privately available analytical systems, methods, or software to investigate or examine a licensee or person subject to this chapter; (11) Accept and rely on investigation or examination reports made by other government officials, within or outside the State; (12) Accept audit reports made by an independent certified public accountant for the licensee or person subject to this chapter during that part of the examination covering the same general subject matter as the audit and may incorporate the audit report in the report of the examination, report of investigation, or other writing of the commissioner; and (13) Enter into agreements with, hire, retain, or contract with private and governmental entities to develop and create educational programs relating to special purpose digital currency. PART II. LICENSING § -11 License required. (a) A person shall not engage in digital currency business activity, or hold itself out as being able to engage in digital currency business activity, with or on behalf of another person unless the person is: (1) Licensed in the State under this chapter; or (2) Excluded from licensing under section -2. (b) Any transaction made in violation of this section shall be void, and no person shall have the right to collect, receive, or retain any principal, interest, fees, or other charges in connection with the transaction. § -12 Payment of fees. All fees, fines, penalties, and other charges collected pursuant to this chapter or by rule shall be deposited with the director of commerce and consumer affairs to the credit of the compliance resolution fund established pursuant to section 26‑9(o). Payments shall be made through NMLS, to the extent allowed by NMLS. § -13 License; application; issuance. (a) The commissioner shall require all licensees to register with NMLS. (b) Applicants for a license shall apply in a form as prescribed by NMLS or by the commissioner. The application shall contain, at a minimum, the following information: (1) The legal name, trade names, and business address of: (A) The applicant; and (B) Every member, officer, principal, or director thereof, if the applicant is a partnership, association, limited liability company, limited liability partnership, or corporation; (2) The applicant's principal place of business located in the United States; (3) The complete address of any other branch offices at which the applicant currently proposes to engage in digital currency business activity in the State; and (4) Other data, financial statements, and pertinent information as the commissioner may require with respect to the applicant or, if an applicant is not an individual, each of the applicant's control persons, executive officers, directors, general partners, and managing members. (c) To fulfill the purposes of this chapter, the commissioner may enter into agreements or contracts with NMLS or other entities to use NMLS to collect and maintain records and process transaction fees or other fees related to licensees or other persons subject to this chapter. (d) For the purpose and to the extent necessary to participate in NMLS, the commissioner may waive or modify, in whole or in part, by rule or order, any or all of the requirements of this chapter and establish new requirements as reasonably necessary to participate in NMLS. (e) In connection with an application for a license under this chapter, the applicant, at a minimum, shall furnish to NMLS information or material concerning the applicant's identity, including: (1) Fingerprints of the applicant or, if an applicant is not an individual, fingerprints of each of the applicant's control persons, executive officers, directors, general partners, and managing members for submission to the Federal Bureau of Investigation or any governmental agency or entity authorized to receive the fingerprints for a state, national, and international criminal history background check, accompanied by the applicable fee charged by the entities conducting the criminal history background check; and (2) Personal history and experience of the applicant or, if an applicant is not an individual, the personal history and experience of each of the applicant's control persons, executive officers, directors, general partners, and managing members in a form prescribed by NMLS, including the submission of authorization for NMLS and the commissioner to obtain: (A) An independent credit report obtained from a consumer reporting agency described in section 603(p) of the Fair Credit Reporting Act, title 15 United States Code section 1681a(p); and (B) Information related to any administrative, civil, or criminal findings by any governmental jurisdiction; provided that the commissioner may use any information obtained pursuant to this subsection or through NMLS to determine an applicant's demonstrated financial responsibility, character, and general fitness for licensure. (f) The commissioner may use NMLS as an agent for requesting information from and distributing information to the United States Department of Justice or any governmental agency. (g) The commissioner may use NMLS as an agent for requesting and distributing information to and from any source directed by the commissioner. (h) An applicant for a license as a special purpose digital currency company shall be registered with the business registration division of the department to do business in the State before a license pursuant to this chapter is issued. § -14 Issuance of license; grounds for denial. (a) The commissioner shall investigate every applicant to determine the financial responsibility, character, and general fitness of the applicant. The commissioner shall issue the applicant a license to engage in digital currency business activity if the commissioner determines that: (1) The applicant or, in the case of an applicant that is not an individual, each of the applicant's control persons, executive officers, directors, general partners, and managing members has never had a special purpose digital currency license revoked in any jurisdiction; provided that a subsequent formal vacation of a revocation shall not be deemed a revocation for purposes of this section; (2) The applicant or, in the case of an applicant that is not an individual, each of the applicant's control persons, executive officers, directors, general partners, and managing members has not been convicted of, pled guilty or nolo contendere to, or been granted a deferred acceptance of a guilty plea under federal law or the laws of any state to a felony in a domestic, foreign, or military court: (A) During the seven-year period preceding the date of the application for licensing; or (B) At any time preceding the date of application, if the felony involved an act of fraud, dishonesty, breach of trust, or money laundering; provided that any pardon of a conviction shall not be deemed a conviction for the purposes of this section; (3) The applicant or, in the case of an applicant that is not an individual, each of the applicant's control persons, executive officers, directors, general partners, and managing members has demonstrated financial responsibility, character, and general fitness to command the confidence of the community and to warrant a determination that the applicant shall operate honestly, fairly, and efficiently, pursuant to this chapter. For the purposes of this paragraph, a person is not financially responsible when the person has shown a disregard in the management of the person's financial condition. A determination that a person has shown a disregard in the management of the person's financial condition may be based upon: (A) Current outstanding judgments, except judgments solely as a result of medical expenses; (B) Current outstanding tax liens or other government liens and filings, subject to applicable disclosure laws and administrative rules; (C) Foreclosures within the preceding three years; and (D) A pattern of seriously delinquent accounts within the preceding three years; (4) The applicant or, in the case of an applicant that is not an individual, each of the applicant's control persons, executive officers, directors, general partners, and managing members has not been convicted of, pled guilty or nolo contendere to, or been granted a deferred acceptance of a guilty plea under federal law or the laws of any state to any misdemeanor involving an act of fraud, dishonesty, breach of trust, or money laundering; (5) The applicant has satisfied the licensing requirements of this chapter; and (6) The applicant has provided the bond required by section -17. (b) The applicant or, in the case of an applicant that is not an individual, each of the applicant's control persons, executive officers, directors, general partners, and managing members shall submit authorization to the commissioner for the commissioner to conduct background checks to determine or verify the information in subsection (a) in each state in which the person has conducted digital currency business activity. Authorization pursuant to this subsection shall include consent to provide additional fingerprints, if necessary, to law enforcement or regulatory bodies in other states. (c) A license shall not be issued to an applicant: (1) Whose license to conduct business under this chapter, or any similar statute in any other jurisdiction, has been suspended or revoked within five years of the filing of the present application; (2) Whose license to conduct digital currency business activity has been revoked by an administrative order issued by the commissioner or the commissioner's designee, or the licensing authority of another state or jurisdiction, for the period specified in the administrative order; (3) Who has advertised directly and purposefully to consumers in the State or conducted transactions in violation of this chapter; or (4) Who has failed to complete an application for licensure. (d) A license issued in accordance with this chapter shall remain in force and effect until surrendered, suspended, or revoked, or until the license expires as a result of nonpayment of the annual license renewal fee required by this chapter. § -15 Anti-money laundering program. (a) Each licensee shall conduct an initial risk assessment that shall consider legal, compliance, financial, and reputational risks associated with the licensee's activities, services, customers, counterparties, and geographic location and establish, maintain, and enforce an anti-money laundering program based on the risk assessment. The licensee shall conduct additional assessments on an annual basis, or more frequently as risks change, and shall modify its anti-money laundering program as appropriate to reflect the changes. (b) Each licensee, at a minimum, shall: (1) Establish an effective anti-money laundering compliance program in accordance with the federal Anti-Money Laundering Act of 2020; (2) Establish an effective customer due diligence system and monitoring program; (3) Screen against the Specially Designated Nationals and Blocked Persons List maintained by the Office of Foreign Assets Control and other government lists; (4) Maintain records of cash purchases or cash transactions and report to the appropriate federal regulatory agency, as required by the federal Anti‑Money Laundering Act of 2020; (5) Establish an effective suspicious activity monitoring and reporting process; and (6) Develop a risk-based anti-money laundering program. (c) Each licensee shall have in place appropriate policies and procedures to block or reject specific or impermissible transactions that violate federal or state laws, rules, or regulations. § -16 Cybersecurity program. (a) Each licensee shall establish and maintain an effective cybersecurity program to ensure the availability and functionality of the licensee's electronic systems and to protect those systems and any sensitive data stored on those systems from unauthorized access, use, or tampering. The cybersecurity program shall be designed to perform the following core cyber security functions: (1) Identify internal and external cybersecurity risks by, at a minimum, identifying the information stored on the licensee's systems, the sensitivity of the information, and how and by whom the information may be accessed; (2) Protect the licensee's electronic systems, and the information stored on those systems, from unauthorized access, use, or other malicious acts through the use of defensive infrastructure and the implementation of policies and procedures; (3) Detect systems intrusions, data breaches, unauthorized access to systems or information, malware, and other cybersecurity events; (4) Respond to detected cybersecurity events to mitigate any negative effects; and (5) Recover from cybersecurity events and restore normal operations and services. (b) Each licensee shall implement a written cybersecurity policy setting forth the licensee's policies and procedures for the protection of its electronic systems and customer and counterparty data stored on those systems, which shall be reviewed and approved by the licensee's board of directors or equivalent governing body at least annually. The cybersecurity policy shall: (1) Establish effective policies, procedures, and controls to effectuate subsection (a); (2) Designate a cybersecurity officer; (3) Develop and implement employee training in accordance with position responsibilities to keep abreast of the changing cybersecurity risk and threats; (4) Establish a method of independent testing; and (5) Maintain records. § -17 Fees; bond. (a) A special purpose digital currency company shall pay the following fees to the division through NMLS to obtain and maintain a valid license under this chapter: (1) Initial nonrefundable application fee of $9,000; (2) Nonrefundable renewal application fee of $1,000; and (3) Fees collected by NMLS for the processing of the application, including applicable fees charged by the entities conducting: (A) The criminal history background check of each of the applicant's control persons, executive officers, directors, general partners, and managing members for submission to the Federal Bureau of Investigation and any governmental agency or entity authorized to receive the fingerprints for a state, national, and international criminal history background check; and (B) An independent credit report obtained from a consumer reporting agency described in section 603(p) of the Fair Credit Reporting Act, title 15 United States Code section 1681a(p). (b) Every licensee shall be assessed quarterly fees based on the total value of transactions in the State, in United States dollar equivalent of digital currency, as reported in the quarterly reports. The quarterly fees shall be assessed the quarter after the applicant is licensed in accordance with the following: (1) For licensees with a total value of transactions, in United States dollar equivalent of digital currency, not over $10,000, the quarterly assessment shall be $2,500; (2) For licensees with a total value of transactions, in United States dollar equivalent of digital currency, over $10,000 but not over $15,000, the quarterly assessment shall be $3,750; (3) For licensees with a total value of transactions, in United States dollar equivalent of digital currency, over $15,000 but not over $25,000, the quarterly assessment shall $6,250; (4) For licensees with a total value of transactions, in United States dollar equivalent of digital currency, over $25,000 but not over $35,000, the quarterly assessment shall be $8,750; and (5) For licensees with a total value of transactions, in United States dollar equivalent of digital currency, over $35,000, the quarterly assessment shall be $12,500. (c) The assessments shall be paid quarterly on February 15, May 15, August 15, and November 15 of each year based on the licensee's quarterly reports as of the previous December 31, March 31, June 30, and September 30, respectively. (d) The digital assets shall be based on the United States dollar equivalent of digital currency assets held on behalf of customers, calculated on United States dollars from the company's quarterly report based on the trading price of the asset on the licensee's platform as of 4:30 p.m. Hawaii Aleutian Standard Time. (e) The applicant shall file and maintain a surety bond that is approved by the commissioner and executed by the applicant as obligor and by a surety company authorized to operate as a surety in the State, whose liability as a surety does not exceed, in the aggregate, the penal sum of the bond. The penal sum of the bond shall be a minimum of $500,000, based upon the annual United States dollar equivalent of digital currency as reported in the annual renewal report. (f) The bond required by subsection (e) shall run to the State of Hawaii as obligee for the use and benefit of the State and of any person or persons who may have a cause of action against the licensee as obligor under this chapter. The bond shall be conditioned upon the following: (1) The licensee as obligor shall faithfully conform to and abide by this chapter and all the rules adopted under this chapter; and (2) The bond shall pay to the State and any person or persons having a cause of action against the licensee as obligor all moneys that may become due and owing to the State and those persons under and by virtue of this chapter. § -18 Renewal of license; annual report; quarterly reports. (a) An annual report shall be filed in accordance with NMLS policy. The annual report shall include the licensee's most recent audited annual financial statement, including balance sheets, a statement of income or loss, a statement of changes in shareholders' equity, and a statement of cash flows or, if a licensee is a wholly owned subsidiary of another corporation, the consolidated audited annual financial statement of the parent corporation in lieu of the licensee's audited annual financial statement. (b) Quarterly reports shall be filed in a form prescribed by the commissioner, which shall include: (1) A report detailing the special purpose digital currency company's activities in the State since the prior reporting period, including: (A) The number of stored value accounts opened; (B) The number of transactions processed; (C) The total value of transactions in United States dollar equivalent of digital currency; (D) The number of system outages; (E) A chart of accounts, including a description of each account; and (F) Any other information that the commissioner may require related to performance metrics and the efficacy of the special purpose digital currency license program; (2) A report of any material changes to any of the information submitted by the licensee on its original application that have not previously been reported to the commissioner on any other report required to be filed under this chapter; (3) Disclosure of any pending or final suspension, revocation, or other enforcement action by any state or governmental authority; and (4) Any other information the commissioner may require. (c) A licensee may renew its license by: (1) Continuing to meet the licensing requirements of sections -13, -14, -15, -16, and -17; (2) Filing a completed renewal application on a form prescribed by NMLS or by the commissioner; (3) Paying a renewal fee; and (4) Meeting all other requirements of this section. (d) At renewal, a licensee that has not filed an application deemed complete by the commissioner, an annual report, or quarterly reports or paid the quarterly fees, and has not been granted an extension of time by the commissioner, shall have its license suspended on the renewal date. The licensee shall have thirty days after its license is suspended to file the annual report or quarterly reports, or pay the quarterly fees, plus a late filing fee of $250 for each day after suspension that the commissioner does not receive the annual report, quarterly reports, and the quarterly fee. The commissioner, for good cause, may reduce or suspend the late filing fee. § -19 Principal place of business. (a) Every special purpose digital currency company licensed under this chapter shall have and maintain a principal place of business in the United States, regardless of whether the special purpose digital currency company maintains its principal office outside of the United States. (b) The principal place of business of the special purpose digital currency company shall be identified in NMLS. § -20 Sale or transfer of license; change of control. (a) No special purpose digital currency company license shall be transferred, except as provided in this section. (b) A person or group of persons requesting approval of a proposed change of control of a licensee shall submit to the commissioner an application requesting approval of a proposed change of control of the licensee, accompanied by a nonrefundable application fee of $10,000. (c) After review of an application requesting approval under subsection (b), the commissioner may require the licensee or person or group of persons requesting approval of a proposed change of control of the licensee, or both, to provide additional information concerning the persons who shall assume control of the licensee. The additional information shall be limited to similar information required of the licensee or persons in control of the licensee as part of its original license or renewal application. The information shall include, for the five-year period prior to the date of the application for change of control of the licensee, a history of material litigation and criminal convictions of each person who, upon approval of the application for change of control, will be a principal of the licensee. Authorization shall also be given to conduct criminal history record checks of those persons, accompanied by the appropriate payment of the applicable fee for each record check. (d) The commissioner shall approve an application requesting a change of control under subsection (b) if, after investigation, the commissioner determines that the person or group of persons requesting approval has the competence, experience, character, and general fitness to control the licensee or person in control of the licensee in a lawful and proper manner, and that the interests of the public will not be jeopardized by the change of control. (e) The following persons shall be exempt from the requirements of subsection (b); provided that the licensee shall notify the commissioner when control is assumed by a person: (1) Who acts as a proxy for the sole purpose of voting at a designated meeting of the security holders or holders of voting interests of a licensee or person in control of a licensee; (2) Who acquires control of a licensee by devise or descent; (3) Who acquires control as a personal representative, custodian, guardian, conservator, trustee, or as an officer appointed by a court of competent jurisdiction or by operation of law; or (4) Whom the commissioner, by rule or order, exempts in the public interest. (f) Before filing an application requesting approval for a change of control, a person may request, in writing, a determination from the commissioner as to whether the person would be considered a person in control of a licensee upon consummation of a proposed transaction. If the commissioner determines that the person would not be a person in control of a licensee, the commissioner shall enter an order to that effect and the proposed person and transaction shall not be subject to subsections (b) through (d). (g) Subsection (b) shall not apply to public offerings of securities. § -21 Ownership and control of digital currency. (a) A licensee that has control of digital currency for one or more persons shall maintain control of digital currency in each type of digital currency sufficient to satisfy the aggregate entitlements of the persons to the type of digital currency. (b) If a licensee violates subsection (a), the property interests of the persons in the digital currency shall be pro rata property interests in the type of digital currency to which the persons are entitled, without regard to the time the persons became entitled to the digital currency or the licensee obtained control of the digital currency. (c) The digital currency referred to in this section shall: (1) Be held for the persons entitled to the digital currency; (2) Not be considered property of the licensee; and (3) Not be subject to the claims of creditors of the licensee. (d) To the extent a licensee stores, holds, or maintains custody or control of digital currency on behalf of another person, the licensee shall hold digital currency of the same type and amount as that which is owed or obligated to that other person. (e) Each licensee shall be prohibited from selling, transferring, assigning, lending, hypothecating, pledging, or otherwise using or encumbering assets, including digital currency, stored, held, or maintained by, or under the custody or control of, the licensee on behalf of another person except for the sale, transfer, or assignment of the assets at the direction of that other person, unless clearly presented and stated to the client that doing so is the intent of the product. PART III. DISCLOSURES, ADVERTISING, AND RECORDKEEPING § -31 Required disclosures. (a) A licensee that engages in digital currency business activity shall provide to a person who uses the licensee's products or service the disclosures required by subsection (b) and any additional disclosure the commissioner determines reasonably necessary for the protection of persons. The commissioner shall determine the time and form required for disclosure. A disclosure required by this section shall be made separately from any other information provided by the licensee and kept by the person in a clear and conspicuous manner in a record. A licensee may propose for the commissioner's approval alternate disclosures as more appropriate for its digital currency business activity. (b) Before establishing a relationship with a person, a licensee shall disclose the following, to the extent applicable to the digital currency business activity the licensee will undertake with the person: (1) A schedule of fees and charges the licensee may assess, how fees and charges will be calculated if they are not set in advance and disclosed, and the timing of the fees and charges; (2) Whether the product or service provided by the licensee is covered by: (A) A form of insurance or is otherwise guaranteed against loss by an agency of the United States, including the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation and Securities Investor Protection Corporation, up to the United States dollar equivalent of digital currency purchased from the licensee or for control of digital currency by the licensee; or (B) Private insurance against theft or loss, including cyber theft or theft by other means; (3) The irrevocability of a transfer or exchange; (4) The method by which the person can update the person's contact information with the licensee; (5) That the date or time when the transfer or exchange is made, and when the person's account is debited, may differ from the date or time when the person initiates the instruction to make the transfer or exchange; (6) The person's right to receive a receipt or other evidence of the transfer or exchange; (7) The person's right to at least thirty days notice of a change in the licensee's fee schedule, other terms and conditions of operating its digital currency business activity with the person, and the policies applicable to the person's account; and (8) That digital currency is not money. (c) At the end of a digital currency transaction with or on behalf of a person, a licensee shall provide the person a confirmation in a record that contains: (1) The name and contact information of the licensee, including information the person may need to ask a question or file a complaint; (2) The type, value, date, precise time, and amount of the transaction; and (3) The fee charged for the transaction, including any charge for conversion of digital currency to money, bank credit, or other digital currency. § -32 Tangible net worth requirement; records. (a) A licensee engaged in digital currency business activity shall maintain at all times, a tangible net worth of no less than $500,000, or an amount determined by the commissioner necessary to ensure safe and sound operation. (b) Each licensee shall make, keep, preserve, and make available for inspection by the commissioner the books, accounts, and other records required in subsection (c). A licensee shall maintain records required by subsection (c) in a form that enables the commissioner to determine whether the licensee is in compliance with this chapter, any court order, and the laws of the State. (c) A licensee shall maintain, for all digital currency business activity with or on behalf of a person five years after the date of the activity, a record of: (1) Each transaction of the licensee with or on behalf of the person or for the licensee's account in the State, including: (A) The identity of the person; (B) The form of the transaction; (C) The amount, date, and payment instructions given by the person; and (D) The account number, name, and address of the person and, to the extent feasible, other parties to the transaction; (2) The aggregate number of transactions and aggregate value of transactions by the licensee with or on behalf of the person and for the licensee's account in this State, expressed in United States dollar equivalent of digital currency for the previous twelve calendar months; (3) Each transaction in which the licensee exchanges one form of digital currency for money or another form of digital currency with or on behalf of the person; (4) A general ledger posted at least monthly that lists all assets, liabilities, capital, income, ownership equity, and expenses of the licensee; (5) Each business-call report the licensee is required to create or provide to the division or NMLS; (6) Bank statements and bank reconciliation records for the licensee and the name, account number, and United States Postal Service address of each bank the licensee uses in the conduct of its digital currency business activity with or on behalf of the person; (7) Communications and documentation related to investigations of customer complaints; and (8) A report of any digital currency business activity transaction with or on behalf of a person, that the licensee was unable to complete. § -33 Advertising and marketing. (a) Each licensee engaged in digital currency business activity shall not advertise its products, services, or activities in the State or to consumers in the State without including the name of the licensee and the legend that the licensee is "Licensed to engage in Digital Currency Business Activity by the State of Hawaii Department of Commerce and Consumer Affairs' Division of Financial Institutions." (b) Each licensee shall maintain, for examination by the commissioner, all advertising and marketing materials for a period of at least five years from the date of their creation, including but not limited to print media, internet media, websites, radio and television advertising, road show materials, presentations, and brochures. Each licensee shall maintain website captures of material changes to internet advertising and marketing, and audio and video transcripts of its advertising and marketing materials, as applicable. (c) In all advertising and marketing materials, each licensee shall comply with all disclosure requirements under federal and state laws, rules, and regulations. (d) In all advertising and marketing materials, each licensee and any person or entity acting on its behalf, shall not, directly or by implication, make any false, misleading, or deceptive representations or omissions. § -34 Confidentiality. (a) Except as otherwise provided in title 12 United States Code section 5111, the requirements under any federal or state law regarding the privacy or confidentiality of any information or material provided to NMLS, and any privilege arising under federal or state law, including the rules of any federal or state court, with respect to the information or material, shall continue to apply to the information or material after the information or material has been disclosed to NMLS. The information and material may be shared with all federal and state regulatory officials with oversight authority over transactions subject to this chapter, without the loss of privilege or the loss of confidentiality protections provided by federal or state law. (b) For the purposes of this section, the commissioner may enter into agreements or sharing arrangements with other governmental agencies, the Conference of State Bank Supervisors, or other associations representing governmental agencies as established by rule or order of the commissioner. (c) Information or material that is subject to a privilege or confidentiality under subsection (a) shall not be subject to: (1) Disclosure under chapter 92F; or (2) Subpoena or discovery, or admission into evidence, in any private civil action or administrative process, unless any privilege is determined by NMLS to be applicable to the information or material; provided that the person to whom the information or material pertains waives that privilege, in whole or in part, in the discretion of the person. (d) Notwithstanding chapter 92F, the examination process and related information and documents, including the reports of examination, shall be confidential and shall not be subject to discovery or disclosure in civil or criminal lawsuits. (e) In the event of a conflict between this section and any other section of law relating to the disclosure of privileged or confidential information or material, this section shall control. (f) This section shall not apply to information or material relating to the employment history of, and publicly adjudicated disciplinary and enforcement actions against, any persons that are included in NMLS for access by the public. PART IV. ENFORCEMENT § -41 Enforcement authority; violations; penalties. (a) To ensure the effective supervision and enforcement of this chapter, the commissioner may take any disciplinary action specified in subsection (b) against an applicant or licensee if the commissioner finds that: (1) The applicant or licensee has violated this chapter, or any rule or order lawfully adopted pursuant to this chapter; (2) The applicant has failed to disclose facts or conditions that would have clearly justified the commissioner in denying an application for licensure, had these facts or conditions been known to exist at the time the application was made; (3) The applicant or licensee has failed to provide information required by the commissioner within a reasonable time, as specified by the commissioner; (4) The applicant or licensee has failed to provide or maintain proof of financial responsibility; (5) The applicant or licensee is insolvent; (6) The applicant or licensee has made, in any document or statement filed with the commissioner, a false representation of a material fact or has omitted to state a material fact; (7) The applicant, licensee, or, if an applicant or licensee is not an individual, any of the applicant's or licensee's control persons, executive officers, directors, general partners, or managing members have been convicted of or entered a plea of guilty or nolo contendere to a crime involving fraud or deceit, or to any similar crime under the jurisdiction of any federal court or court of another state; (8) The applicant or licensee has failed to make, maintain, or produce records that comply with section -42 or any rule adopted by the commissioner pursuant to chapter 91; (9) The applicant or licensee has been the subject of any disciplinary action by any state or federal agency that resulted in revocation of a license; (10) A final judgment has been entered against the applicant or licensee for violations of this chapter, any state or federal law concerning a special purpose digital currency license or money transmitter license, or any state or federal law prohibiting unfair or deceptive acts or practices; or (11) The applicant or licensee has failed, in a timely manner as specified by the commissioner, to take or provide proof of the corrective action required by the commissioner after an investigation or examination pursuant to section -42. (b) After a finding of one or more of the conditions under subsection (a), the commissioner may take any or all the following actions: (1) Deny an application for licensure, including an application for a branch office license; (2) Suspend or revoke the license in accordance with section -45; (3) Issue an order to the licensee to cease and desist in accordance with section -46 from engaging in any act specified under subsection (a); (4) Order the licensee to make refunds to consumers of excess charges under this chapter; or (5) Impose penalties of up to $10,000 for each violation in accordance with section -48. (c) The commissioner may issue a temporary cease and desist order if the commissioner makes a finding that the licensee, applicant, or person is engaging, has engaged, or is about to engage in an illegal, unauthorized, unsafe, or unsound practice in violation of this chapter. Whenever the commissioner denies a license application or takes disciplinary action pursuant to this subsection, the commissioner shall enter an order to that effect and notify the licensee, applicant, or person of the denial or disciplinary action. The notification required by this subsection shall be given by personal service or by certified mail to the last known address of the licensee or applicant as shown on the application or license, or as subsequently furnished in writing to the commissioner. (d) The revocation, suspension, expiration, or surrender of a license shall not affect the licensee's liability for acts previously committed or impair the commissioner's ability to issue a final agency order or take disciplinary action against the licensee. (e) No revocation, suspension, consent order, or surrender of a license shall impair or affect the obligation of any preexisting lawful contract between the licensee and any consumer. (f) The commissioner may reinstate a license, terminate a suspension, or grant a new license to a person whose license has been revoked or suspended if no fact or condition then exists that would clearly justify the commissioner in revoking, suspending, or refusing to grant a license. (g) The commissioner may impose an administrative fine on a licensee or person subject to this chapter if the commissioner finds on the record after notice and opportunity for hearing that the licensee or person subject to this chapter has violated or failed to comply with any requirement of this chapter or any rule adopted by the commissioner under this chapter or order issued under the authority of this chapter. (h) Each violation or failure to comply with any directive or order of the commissioner shall be a separate and distinct violation. § -42 Investigation and examination authority. (a) In addition to the authority granted under section -3, the commissioner may conduct investigations and examinations in accordance with this section. The commissioner may access, receive, and use any books, accounts, records, files, documents, information, or evidence that the commissioner deems relevant to the investigation or examination, regardless of the location, possession, control, or custody of the documents, information, or evidence. (b) For the purposes of investigating violations or complaints arising under this chapter, or for the purposes of examination, the commissioner may review, investigate, or examine any licensee or person subject to this chapter as often as necessary to carry out the purposes of this chapter. The commissioner may direct, subpoena, or order the attendance of, and examine under oath, all persons whose testimony may be required about digital currency transactions or the business or subject matter of any investigation or examination and may direct, subpoena, or order the person to produce books, accounts, records, files, and any other documents the commissioner deems relevant to the inquiry. (c) Each licensee or person subject to this chapter shall provide to the commissioner, upon request, the books and records relating to the operations of the licensee or person subject to this chapter. The commissioner shall have access to the books and records and shall be permitted to interview the control persons, executive officers, directors, general partners, managing members, principals, managers, employees, independent contractors, agents, and consumers of the licensee or person subject to this chapter concerning their business. (d) Each licensee or person subject to this chapter shall make or compile reports or prepare other information, as directed by the commissioner, to carry out the purposes of this section, including: (1) Accounting compilations; (2) Information lists and data concerning digital currency transactions in a format prescribed by the commissioner; or (3) Other information that the commissioner deems necessary. (e) In conducting any investigation or examination authorized by this chapter, the commissioner may control access to any documents and records of the licensee or person under investigation or examination. The commissioner may take possession of the documents and records or place a person in exclusive charge of the documents and records. During the period of control, no person shall remove or attempt to remove any of the documents and records except pursuant to a court order or with the consent of the commissioner. Unless the commissioner has reasonable grounds to believe the documents or records of the licensee or person under investigation or examination have been, or are at risk of being, altered or destroyed for the purposes of concealing a violation of this chapter, the licensee or owner of the documents and records shall have access to the documents or records as necessary to conduct its ordinary business affairs. (f) The authority of this section shall remain in effect, whether a licensee or person subject to this chapter acts or claims to act under any licensing or registration law of this State or claims to act without this authority. (g) No licensee or person subject to investigation or examination under this section may knowingly withhold, abstract, remove, mutilate, destroy, or conceal any books, records, computer records, or other information. (h) The commissioner may charge an investigation or examination fee, payable to the commissioner, based upon the cost per hour per examiner for all licensees and persons subject to this chapter investigated or examined by the commissioner or the commissioner's staff. The hourly fee shall be $60 or an amount as the commissioner shall establish by rule pursuant to chapter 91. In addition to the investigation or examination fee, the commissioner may charge any person who is investigated or examined by the commissioner or the commissioner's staff pursuant to this section additional fees for travel, per diem, mileage, and other reasonable expenses incurred in connection with the investigation or examination, payable to the commissioner. (i) Any person having reason to believe that this chapter or the rules adopted under this chapter have been violated, or that a license issued under this chapter should be suspended or revoked, may file a written complaint with the commissioner, setting forth the details of the alleged violation or grounds for suspension or revocation. § -43 Prohibited practices. (a) It shall be a violation of this chapter for a licensee, its control persons, executive officers, directors, general partners, managing members, employees, or independent contractors, or any other person subject to this chapter to: (1) Engage in any act that limits or restricts the application of this chapter; (2) Use a customer's digital currency account number to prepare, issue, or create a digital currency transaction on behalf of the consumer without the customer's authorization; (3) Charge, collect, or receive, directly or indirectly, fees for negotiating digital currency transactions except those explicitly authorized in this chapter; (4) Fail to make disclosures as required by this chapter and any other applicable federal or state law, including rules or regulations adopted pursuant to federal or state law; (5) Directly or indirectly employ any scheme, device, or artifice to defraud or mislead any consumer or person; (6) Directly or indirectly engage in unfair or deceptive acts, practices, or advertising in connection with a digital currency business activity toward any person; (7) Directly or indirectly obtain digital currency by fraud or misrepresentation; (8) Conduct digital currency business activity with or on behalf of any person physically located in the State through the use of the Internet, facsimile, telephone, kiosk, or other means without first obtaining a license under this chapter; (9) Make, in any manner, any false or deceptive statement or representation, including with regard to the rates, fees, or other financing terms or conditions for digital currency business activity, or engage in bait and switch advertising; (10) Make any false statement or knowingly make any omission of material fact in connection with any reports filed with the division by a licensee or in connection with any investigation conducted by the division; (11) Conduct digital currency business activity from any unlicensed location; (12) Draft funds from any depository financial institution without written approval of the consumer; provided that nothing in this paragraph shall prohibit the conversion of a negotiable instrument into an electronic form for processing through the Automated Clearing House or similar system; (13) Fail to comply with all applicable federal and state laws relating to the activities governed by this chapter; or (14) Fail to pay any fee, assessment, or moneys due to the department. (b) In addition to any other penalties provided for under this chapter, any digital currency transaction in violation of subsection (a) shall be void and unenforceable. § -44 Voluntary surrender of license. (a) A licensee may voluntarily cease business and surrender its license by giving written notice through NMLS to the commissioner of the licensee's intent to surrender its license. Prior to the surrender date, the licensee shall have either completed all pending digital currency transactions or assigned each pending digital currency transaction to another licensee. (b) Notice to the commissioner shall be provided at least thirty days before the surrender of the license and shall include: (1) The date of surrender; (2) The name, address, telephone number, facsimile number, and electronic mail address of a contact individual with knowledge and authority sufficient to communicate with the commissioner regarding all matters relating to the licensee during the period that it was licensed pursuant to this chapter; (3) The reason or reasons for surrender; (4) The total dollar amount of the licensee's outstanding digital currency transactions in the State and the individual amounts of each outstanding digital currency transactions and the name, address, and contact telephone number of the licensee to whom each outstanding digital currency transaction was assigned; (5) A list of the licensee's authorized branch offices in the State, if any, as of the date of surrender; (6) Confirmation that the licensee has notified each of its authorized branch offices in the State, if any, that the branch offices shall no longer conduct digital currency business activity on the licensee's behalf; and (7) Confirmation that the licensee has notified each of its digital currency accounts, if any, that the digital currency account is being transferred and the name, address, telephone number, and any other contact information of the licensee or entity described in section -20 to whom the digital currency was assigned. (c) Voluntary surrender of a license shall be effective upon the date of surrender specified on the written notice to the commissioner as required by this section; provided that the licensee has met all the requirements of voluntary surrender. § -45 Suspension or revocation of licenses. The commissioner may suspend or revoke a license if the commissioner finds that: (1) Any fact or condition exists that, if it had existed at the time at which the licensee applied for its license, would have been grounds for denying the licensee's application; (2) The licensee's tangible net worth becomes inadequate and the licensee, after ten days' written notice from the commissioner, fails to take steps as the commissioner deems necessary to remedy a deficiency; (3) The licensee knowingly violates any material provision of this chapter or any rule adopted or order issued by the commissioner under authority of this chapter; (4) The licensee is conducting its business in an unsafe or unsound manner; (5) The licensee is insolvent; (6) The licensee has suspended payment of its obligations, has made an assignment for the benefit of its creditors, or has admitted, in writing, its inability to pay its debts as they become due; (7) The licensee has filed for bankruptcy, reorganization, arrangement, or other relief under any bankruptcy law; (8) The licensee refuses to permit the commissioner to make any investigation or examination authorized by this chapter; or (9) The competence, experience, character, or general fitness of the licensee indicates that it is not in the public interest to allow the licensee to have a license. § -46 Orders to cease and desist. (a) If the commissioner determines that a licensee's violation of this chapter or a rule adopted or an order issued under this chapter is: (1) Likely to cause immediate and irreparable harm to the licensee, the licensee's customers, or the public as a result of the violation; or (2) Cause insolvency or significant dissipation of assets of the licensee, the commissioner may issue an order requiring the licensee to cease and desist from the violation. The order shall become effective upon service of the order upon the licensee. (b) An order to cease and desist shall remain effective and enforceable pending the completion of an administrative proceeding pursuant to chapter 91. (c) A licensee that is served with an order to cease and desist may petition the circuit court for a judicial order setting aside, limiting, or suspending the enforcement, operation, or effectiveness of the order pending the completion of an administrative proceeding pursuant to sections -51 or -52. (d) The commissioner shall commence an administrative proceeding pursuant to chapter 91 within twenty days after issuing an order to cease and desist. (e) The commissioner may apply to the circuit court for an appropriate order to protect the public interest. § -47 Consent orders. The commissioner may enter into a consent order at any time with a person to resolve a matter arising under this chapter. A consent order shall be signed by the person to whom the order is issued or by the person's authorized representative and shall indicate agreement with the terms contained in the order. A consent order may provide that it does not constitute an admission by a person that this chapter or a rule adopted or an order issued under this chapter has been violated. § -48 Civil penalties. (a) The commissioner may assess a fine against a person who violates this chapter or a rule adopted or an order issued under this chapter in an amount not to exceed $10,000 per violation, plus the State's costs and expenses for the investigation and prosecution of the matter, including reasonable attorneys' fees. (b) Any violation of this chapter that is directed toward, targets, or injures an elder may be subject to an additional civil penalty of no more than $10,000 for each violation, in addition to any other fines or penalties assessed for the violation. § -49 Criminal penalties. (a) A person who intentionally makes a false statement, misrepresentation, or false certification in a record filed or required to be maintained under this chapter, who intentionally makes a false entry, or who omits a material entry in a record shall be guilty of a class C felony and shall be subject to a fine of no more than $10,000. (b) An individual or person who knowingly engages in any activity for which a license is required under this chapter, without being licensed under this chapter, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor and shall be subject to a fine of no more than $1,000, imprisonment of no more than one year, or both. Each day a violation exists shall be deemed a separate offense. § -50 Unlicensed persons. (a) If the commissioner has reason to believe that a person has violated or is violating section -11, the commissioner may issue an order to show cause why an order to cease and desist should not issue requiring that the person cease and desist from the violation of section -11. (b) If the commissioner has reason to believe that a person has violated or is violating section -11, the commissioner may petition the circuit court for the issuance of a temporary restraining order if the public would be irreparably harmed. (c) An order to cease and desist shall become effective upon service of the order upon the person. (d) An order to cease and desist shall remain effective and enforceable pending the completion of an administrative proceeding pursuant to section -46. (e) A person who is served with an order to cease and desist for violating section -11 may petition the circuit court for a judicial order setting aside, limiting, or suspending the enforcement, operation, or effectiveness of the order to cease and desist pending the completion of an administrative proceeding pursuant to section -46. (f) The commissioner shall commence an administrative proceeding within twenty days after issuing an order to cease and desist. § -51 Administrative procedures. All administrative proceedings under this chapter shall be conducted in accordance with chapter 91. § -52 Hearings. Except as otherwise provided in sections 18(d) and -45, the commissioner shall not suspend or revoke a license, issue an order to cease and desist, or assess a civil penalty without notice and an opportunity to be heard. § -53 Division functions. (a) The division shall exercise all administrative functions of the State in relation to the regulation, supervision, and licensing of special purpose digital currency companies. (b) The division shall interpret and enforce this chapter." SECTION 3. Section 489D-4, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by amending the definition of "monetary value" to read as follows: ""Monetary value" means a medium of exchange, whether or not redeemable in money[.], except as defined as digital currency under chapter ." SECTION 4. Section 846-2.7, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by amending subsection (b) to read as follows: "(b) Criminal history record checks may be conducted by: (1) The department of health or its designee on operators of adult foster homes for individuals with developmental disabilities or developmental disabilities domiciliary homes and their employees, as provided by section 321-15.2; (2) The department of health or its designee on prospective employees, persons seeking to serve as providers, or subcontractors in positions that place them in direct contact with clients when providing non-witnessed direct mental health or health care services as provided by section 321-171.5; (3) The department of health or its designee on all applicants for licensure or certification for, operators for, prospective employees, adult volunteers, and all adults, except adults in care, at healthcare facilities as defined in section 321-15.2; (4) The department of education on employees, prospective employees, and teacher trainees in any public school in positions that necessitate close proximity to children as provided by section 302A-601.5; (5) The counties on employees and prospective employees who may be in positions that place them in close proximity to children in recreation or child care programs and services; (6) The county liquor commissions on applicants for liquor licenses as provided by section 281-53.5; (7) The county liquor commissions on employees and prospective employees involved in liquor administration, law enforcement, and liquor control investigations; (8) The department of human services on operators and employees of child caring institutions, child placing organizations, and foster boarding homes as provided by section 346-17; (9) The department of human services on prospective adoptive parents as established under section 346‑19.7; (10) The department of human services or its designee on applicants to operate child care facilities, household members of the applicant, prospective employees of the applicant, and new employees and household members of the provider after registration or licensure as provided by section 346-154, and persons subject to section 346-152.5; (11) The department of human services on persons exempt pursuant to section 346-152 to be eligible to provide child care and receive child care subsidies as provided by section 346-152.5; (12) The department of health on operators and employees of home and community-based case management agencies and operators and other adults, except for adults in care, residing in community care foster family homes as provided by section 321-15.2; (13) The department of human services on staff members of the Hawaii youth correctional facility as provided by section 352-5.5; (14) The department of human services on employees, prospective employees, and volunteers of contracted providers and subcontractors in positions that place them in close proximity to youth when providing services on behalf of the office or the Hawaii youth correctional facility as provided by section 352D-4.3; (15) The judiciary on employees and applicants at detention and shelter facilities as provided by section 571-34; (16) The department of public safety on employees and prospective employees who are directly involved with the treatment and care of persons committed to a correctional facility or who possess police powers including the power of arrest as provided by section 353C-5; (17) The board of private detectives and guards on applicants for private detective or private guard licensure as provided by section 463-9; (18) Private schools and designated organizations on employees and prospective employees who may be in positions that necessitate close proximity to children; provided that private schools and designated organizations receive only indications of the states from which the national criminal history record information was provided pursuant to section 302C-1; (19) The public library system on employees and prospective employees whose positions place them in close proximity to children as provided by section 302A‑601.5; (20) The State or any of its branches, political subdivisions, or agencies on applicants and employees holding a position that has the same type of contact with children, vulnerable adults, or persons committed to a correctional facility as other public employees who hold positions that are authorized by law to require criminal history record checks as a condition of employment as provided by section 78-2.7; (21) The department of health on licensed adult day care center operators, employees, new employees, subcontracted service providers and their employees, and adult volunteers as provided by section 321-15.2; (22) The department of human services on purchase of service contracted and subcontracted service providers and their employees serving clients of the adult protective and community services branch, as provided by section 346-97; (23) The department of human services on foster grandparent program, senior companion program, and respite companion program participants as provided by section 346-97; (24) The department of human services on contracted and subcontracted service providers and their current and prospective employees that provide home and community‑based services under section 1915(c) of the Social Security Act, title 42 United States Code section 1396n(c), or under any other applicable section or sections of the Social Security Act for the purposes of providing home and community-based services, as provided by section 346-97; (25) The department of commerce and consumer affairs on proposed directors and executive officers of a bank, savings bank, savings and loan association, trust company, and depository financial services loan company as provided by section 412:3-201; (26) The department of commerce and consumer affairs on proposed directors and executive officers of a nondepository financial services loan company as provided by section 412:3-301; (27) The department of commerce and consumer affairs on the original chartering applicants and proposed executive officers of a credit union as provided by section 412:10-103; (28) The department of commerce and consumer affairs on: (A) Each principal of every non-corporate applicant for a money transmitter license; (B) Each person who upon approval of an application by a corporate applicant for a money transmitter license will be a principal of the licensee; and (C) Each person who upon approval of an application requesting approval of a proposed change in control of licensee will be a principal of the licensee, as provided by sections 489D-9 and 489D-15; (29) The department of commerce and consumer affairs on applicants for licensure and persons licensed under title 24; (30) The Hawaii health systems corporation on: (A) Employees; (B) Applicants seeking employment; (C) Current or prospective members of the corporation board or regional system board; or (D) Current or prospective volunteers, providers, or contractors, in any of the corporation's health facilities as provided by section 323F-5.5; (31) The department of commerce and consumer affairs on: (A) An applicant for a mortgage loan originator license, or license renewal; and (B) Each control person, executive officer, director, general partner, and managing member of an applicant for a mortgage loan originator company license or license renewal, as provided by chapter 454F; (32) The state public charter school commission or public charter schools on employees, teacher trainees, prospective employees, and prospective teacher trainees in any public charter school for any position that places them in close proximity to children, as provided in section 302D-33; (33) The counties on prospective employees who work with children, vulnerable adults, or senior citizens in community-based programs; (34) The counties on prospective employees for fire department positions that involve contact with children or vulnerable adults; (35) The counties on prospective employees for emergency medical services positions that involve contact with children or vulnerable adults; (36) The counties on prospective employees for emergency management positions and community volunteers whose responsibilities involve planning and executing homeland security measures including viewing, handling, and engaging in law enforcement or classified meetings and assisting vulnerable citizens during emergencies or crises; (37) The State and counties on employees, prospective employees, volunteers, and contractors whose position responsibilities require unescorted access to secured areas and equipment related to a traffic management center; (38) The State and counties on employees and prospective employees whose positions involve the handling or use of firearms for other than law enforcement purposes; (39) The State and counties on current and prospective systems analysts and others involved in an agency's information technology operation whose position responsibilities provide them with access to proprietary, confidential, or sensitive information; (40) The department of commerce and consumer affairs on: (A) Applicants for real estate appraiser licensure or certification as provided by chapter 466K; (B) Each person who owns more than ten per cent of an appraisal management company who is applying for registration as an appraisal management company, as provided by section 466L-7; and (C) Each of the controlling persons of an applicant for registration as an appraisal management company, as provided by section 466L-7; (41) The department of health or its designee on all license applicants, licensees, employees, contractors, and prospective employees of medical cannabis dispensaries, and individuals permitted to enter and remain in medical cannabis dispensary facilities as provided under sections 329D-15(a)(4) and 329D‑16(a)(3); (42) The department of commerce and consumer affairs on applicants for nurse licensure or license renewal, reactivation, or restoration as provided by sections 457-7, 457-8, 457-8.5, and 457-9; (43) The county police departments on applicants for permits to acquire firearms pursuant to section 134-2 and on individuals registering their firearms pursuant to section 134-3; (44) The department of commerce and consumer affairs on: (A) Each of the controlling persons of the applicant for licensure as an escrow depository, and each of the officers, directors, and principals who will be in charge of the escrow depository's activities upon licensure; and (B) Each of the controlling persons of an applicant for proposed change in control of an escrow depository licensee, and each of the officers, directors, and principals who will be in charge of the licenseeꞌs activities upon approval of the application, as provided by chapter 449; (45) The department of taxation on current or prospective employees or contractors who have access to federal tax information in order to comply with requirements of federal law, regulation, or procedure, as provided by section 231-1.6; (46) The department of labor and industrial relations on current or prospective employees or contractors who have access to federal tax information in order to comply with requirements of federal law, regulation, or procedure, as provided by section 383-110; (47) The department of human services on current or prospective employees or contractors who have access to federal tax information in order to comply with requirements of federal law, regulation, or procedure, as provided by section 346-2.5; (48) The child support enforcement agency on current or prospective employees or contractors who have access to federal tax information in order to comply with federal law, regulation, or procedure, as provided by section 576D-11.5; (49) The department of the attorney general on current or prospective employees or employees or agents of contractors who have access to federal tax information to comply with requirements of federal law, regulation, or procedure, as provided by section 28‑17; [[](50)[]] The department of commerce and consumer affairs on each control person, executive officer, director, general partner, and managing member of an installment loan licensee, or an applicant for an installment loan license, as provided in chapter 480J; [[](51)[]] The University of Hawaii on current and prospective employees and contractors whose duties include ensuring the security of campus facilities and persons; [and] (52) The department of commerce and consumer affairs on each control person, executive officer, director, general partner, and managing member of a special purpose digital currency company licensee, or an applicant for a special purpose digital currency license, as provided in chapter ; and [[(52)]] (53) Any other organization, entity, or the State, its branches, political subdivisions, or agencies as may be authorized by state law." SECTION 5. (a) Notwithstanding any law to the contrary, the companies participating in the digital currency innovation lab operated by the department of commerce and consumer affairs and Hawaii technology development corporation shall be allowed to continue operations until their applications are acted upon by the division of financial institutions of the department of commerce and consumer affairs; provided that the complete application is submitted to the division of financial institutions of the department of commerce and consumer affairs by March 1, 2024. (b) A company authorized to participate in the digital currency innovation lab as of June 30, 2023, and whose application for licensure under section 2 of this Act has been submitted to the division of financial institutions of the department of commerce and consumer affairs on or before March 1, 2024, shall be exempt from the requirements in section -11 of section 2 of this Act for a period of six months from the date the application is deemed complete or until the commissioner of financial institutions approves or denies the application, whichever occurs first. The commissioner of financial institutions, for good cause, may reduce or extend the six-month period. Submission of an application for licensure shall be evidenced through the nationwide multi-state licensing and registry system developed and maintained by the Conference of State Bank Supervisors for the state licensing and registration of state-licensed financial services providers to the commissioner of financial institutions. SECTION 6. The department of commerce and consumer affairs may employ necessary personnel without regard to chapter 76, Hawaii Revised Statutes, including three full-time equivalent (3.0 FTE) positions for examiners, to assist with the implementation and continuing function of this Act. SECTION 7. There is appropriated out of the compliance resolution fund established pursuant to section 26-9(o), Hawaii Revised Statutes, the sum of $ or so much thereof as may be necessary for fiscal year 2023-2024 and the same sum or so much thereof as may be necessary for fiscal year 2024-2025 to establish and hire three full-time equivalent (3.0 FTE) permanent examiners, without regard to chapter 76, Hawaii Revised Statutes, to carry out the purposes of the special purpose digital currency license program established by section 2 of this Act; provided that the positions may be added to the position count for the division of financial institutions of the department of commerce and consumer affairs. The sums appropriated shall be expended by the department of commerce and consumer affairs for the purposes of this Act. SECTION 8. Statutory material to be repealed is bracketed and stricken. New statutory material is underscored. SECTION 9. This Act shall take effect on June 30, 3000; provided that the special purpose digital currency licensing requirements established by section 2 of this Act shall take effect on January 1, 2024.
47+ SECTION 1. The legislature finds that digital currencies are assets that are primarily managed or stored electronically. Digital currencies refer to digital currency, cryptocurrency, e‑money, network money, e-cash, and others, as defined by various governmental jurisdictions. Digital currency may be recorded on a decentralized ledger on the Internet or a centralized database or ledger system owned by a company. Digital currencies do not have physical form like banknotes or minted coins. Digital currencies are also usually not issued by a governmental body and are generally not considered legal tender. Although digital currency has grown in popularity and acceptance worldwide, there is little regulation of the industry in the United States, with a few states treating digital currency activities as within the scope of money transmitter laws. The legislature further finds that the division of financial institutions of the department of commerce and consumer affairs and the Hawaii technology development corporation are currently conducting a sandbox pilot program, called the digital currency innovation lab, to study digital currency transactions. This study allows companies to conduct digital currency transactions without obtaining a money transmitter license while the division of financial institutions evaluates the need for more permanent and comprehensive oversight. The data gathered through the digital currency innovation lab confirmed that digital currency transactions are not best regulated through existing money transmitter laws and that a new regulatory framework is appropriate. The purpose of this Act is to: (1) Establish a licensing program for special purpose digital currency companies that will replace the digital currency innovation lab; and (2) Allow, for six months, any company participating in the digital currency innovation lab on June 30, 2023, to continue operations if a complete application for licensure is submitted to the division of financial institutions by March 1, 2024. SECTION 2. The Hawaii Revised Statutes is amended by adding a new chapter to title 22 to be appropriately designated and to read as follows: "CHAPTER SPECIAL PURPOSE DIGITAL CURRENCY LICENSING ACT PART I. GENERAL PROVISIONS § -1 Definitions. As used in this chapter, unless the context otherwise requires: "Commissioner" means the commissioner of financial institutions. "Consumer" means a natural person who engages in a transaction that is primarily for that natural person's personal, family, or household purposes. "Control" means ownership of, or the power to vote, twenty-five per cent or more of the outstanding voting securities of a licensee or controlling person. For purposes of determining the percentage of a licensee controlled by any person, there shall be aggregated with the controlling person's interest the interest of any other person controlled by the person, or by any spouse, parent, or child of the person. "Control of digital currency", when used in reference to a transaction or relationship involving digital currency, means the power to execute unilaterally or prevent indefinitely a digital currency transaction. "Control person" means an individual who directly or indirectly exercises control over a licensee or applicant. "Custodial services" means the safekeeping, servicing, and management of customer digital currency and digital assets. "Department" means the department of commerce and consumer affairs. "Digital currency" means any type of digital representation of value that is used as a medium of exchange or a form of digitally stored value. "Digital currency" includes any type of digital representation of value that: (1) Have a centralized repository or administrator; (2) Are decentralized and have no centralized repository or administrator; or (3) May be created or obtained by computing or manufacturing effort. "Digital currency" does not include any of the following: (1) Digital representations of value that: (A) Are used solely within online gaming platforms; (B) Have no market or application outside of those gaming platforms; and (C) Cannot be converted into, or redeemed for, fiat currency or digital currency; (2) Digital representations of value that can be redeemed for: (A) Goods, services, discounts, or purchases as part of a customer affinity or rewards program with the issuer or other designated merchants; or (B) Digital representations of value in another customer affinity or rewards program, but cannot be converted into or redeemed for fiat currency or digital currency; or (3) Digital units used as part of prepaid cards. "Digital currency administration" means issuing digital currency with the authority to redeem the currency for money, bank credit, or other digital currency. "Digital currency business activity" means: (1) Exchanging, transferring, or storing digital currency or engaging in digital currency administration, whether directly or through an agreement with a digital currency control-services vendor; (2) Exchanging one or more digital representations of value used within one or more online games, game platforms, or family of games for money or bank credit outside the online game, game platform, or family of games offered by or on behalf of the same publisher from which the original digital representation of value was received; (3) Storing, holding, or maintaining custody or control of digital currency on behalf of others; (4) Buying and selling digital currency as a business; (5) Performing exchange services as a business; or (6) Controlling, administering, or issuing a digital currency. "Digital currency control-services vendor" means a person that has control of digital currency solely under an agreement with a person that, on behalf of another person, assumes control of digital currency. "Division" means the division of financial institutions of the department. "Elder" means an individual who is sixty-two years of age or older. "Exchange" means the conversion or change of: (1) Fiat currency or other value into digital currency; (2) Digital currency into fiat currency or other value; or (3) One form of digital currency into another form of digital currency. "Licensee" means a person who is licensed or required to be licensed under this chapter. "NMLS" means the Nationwide Multistate Licensing System and Registry developed and maintained by the Conference of State Bank Supervisors for the state licensing and registration of state-licensed financial services providers. "Person" means an individual, sole proprietorship, partnership, corporation, limited liability company, limited liability partnership, or other association of individuals, however organized. "Private key" means a unique element of cryptographic data, or any substantially similar analogue, that is: (1) Held by a person; (2) Paired with a unique, publicly available element of cryptographic data; and (3) Associated with an algorithm that is necessary to carry out an encryption or decryption required to execute a transaction. "Special purpose digital currency company" means a person holding a special purpose digital currency license under this chapter. "Stored value" means monetary value that is evidenced by an electronic record. "Tangible net worth" means total assets, excluding intangible assets, less total liabilities, in accordance with United States generally accepted accounting principles. "Transfer" means to assume control of digital currency from or on behalf of a person and to: (1) Credit the digital currency to the account of another person; (2) Move the digital currency from one account of a person to another account of the same person; or (3) Relinquish control of digital currency to another person. "United States dollar equivalent of digital currency" means the equivalent value of a particular digital currency in United States dollars shown on a digital currency exchange based in the United States for a particular date or specified period. § -2 Exclusions. (a) This chapter shall not apply to: (1) The exchange, transfer, or storage of digital currency or to digital currency administration to the extent regulated by the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (15 U.S.C. chapter 2B) or Commodity Exchange Act (7 U.S.C. chapter 1); (2) Activity by a person that: (A) Contributes only connectivity software or computing power to a: (i) Decentralized digital currency; or (ii) Protocol governing transfer of the digital representation of value; (B) Provides only data storage or security services for a business engaged in digital currency business activity and does not otherwise engage in digital currency business activity on behalf of another person; or (C) Provides only to a person, that is otherwise exempt from this chapter, digital currency as one or more enterprise solutions used solely among each other and has no agreement or relationship with a person that is an end-user of digital currency; (3) A person using digital currency, including creating, investing, buying or selling, or obtaining digital currency as payment for the purchase or sale of goods or services, solely for academic purposes; (4) A person whose digital currency business activity with or on behalf of persons is reasonably expected to be valued, in the aggregate, on an annual basis at $5,000 or less, measured by the United States dollar equivalent of digital currency; (5) An attorney to the extent of providing escrow services to a person; (6) A securities intermediary, as defined in section 490:8-102, or commodity intermediary, as defined in section 490:9-102; (7) A digital currency control-services vendor; (8) A person that: (A) Does not receive compensation from a person for: (i) Providing digital currency products or services; or (ii) Conducting digital currency business activity; or (B) Is engaged in testing products or services with the person's own funds or digital currency; (9) Non-custodial digital currency business activity by a person using a digital currency: (A) Acknowledged as legal tender by the United States or a government recognized by the United States; or (B) That has been determined not to be a security by a United States regulatory agency; or (10) Banks, bank holding companies, credit unions, savings banks, financial services loan companies, and mutual banks organized under the laws of the United States or any state. (b) The commissioner may determine whether a person or class of persons is to be exempt from this chapter. § -3 Powers of commissioner. In addition to any other powers provided by law, the commissioner may: (1) Adopt rules pursuant to chapter 91 as the commissioner deems necessary for the administration of this chapter; (2) Issue declaratory rulings or informal nonbinding interpretations; (3) Investigate and conduct hearings regarding any violation of this chapter or any rule or order of, or agreement with, the commissioner; (4) Create fact-finding committees that may make recommendations to the commissioner for the commissioner's deliberations; (5) Require an applicant or any of its control persons, executive officers, directors, general partners, and managing members to disclose their relevant criminal history and request a criminal history record check to be conducted by or through NMLS or pursuant to chapter 846. The information shall be accompanied by the appropriate payment of the applicable fee for each criminal history record check; (6) Contract with or employ qualified persons, including accountants, attorneys, investigators, examiners, auditors, or other professionals who may be exempt from chapter 76 and who shall assist the commissioner in exercising the commissioner's powers and duties; (7) Process and investigate complaints, subpoena witnesses and documents, administer oaths, receive affidavits and oral testimony, including telephonic communications, and do anything necessary or incidental to the exercise of the commissioner's power and duties, including the authority to conduct contested case proceedings under chapter 91; (8) Require a licensee to comply with: (A) Any rule, guidance, guideline, statement, supervisory policy, or any similar proclamation issued or adopted by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation; or (B) Any policy position of the Conference of State Bank Supervisors, to the same extent and in the same manner as a bank chartered by the State; (9) Enter into agreements or relationships with other government officials or regulatory associations to improve efficiencies and reduce regulatory burden by sharing resources; standardized or uniform methods or procedures; and documents, records, information, or evidence obtained under this chapter; (10) Use, hire, contract, or employ publicly or privately available analytical systems, methods, or software to investigate or examine a licensee or person subject to this chapter; (11) Accept and rely on investigation or examination reports made by other government officials, within or outside the State; (12) Accept audit reports made by an independent certified public accountant for the licensee or person subject to this chapter during that part of the examination covering the same general subject matter as the audit and may incorporate the audit report in the report of the examination, report of investigation, or other writing of the commissioner; and (13) Enter into agreements with, hire, retain, or contract with private and governmental entities to develop and create educational programs relating to special purpose digital currency. PART II. LICENSING § -11 License required. (a) A person shall not engage in digital currency business activity, or hold itself out as being able to engage in digital currency business activity, with or on behalf of another person unless the person is: (1) Licensed in the State under this chapter; or (2) Excluded from licensing under section -2. (b) Any transaction made in violation of this section shall be void, and no person shall have the right to collect, receive, or retain any principal, interest, fees, or other charges in connection with the transaction. § -12 Payment of fees. All fees, fines, penalties, and other charges collected pursuant to this chapter or by rule shall be deposited with the director of commerce and consumer affairs to the credit of the compliance resolution fund established pursuant to section 26‑9(o). Payments shall be made through NMLS, to the extent allowed by NMLS. § -13 License; application; issuance. (a) The commissioner shall require all licensees to register with NMLS. (b) Applicants for a license shall apply in a form as prescribed by NMLS or by the commissioner. The application shall contain, at a minimum, the following information: (1) The legal name, trade names, and business address of: (A) The applicant; and (B) Every member, officer, principal, or director thereof, if the applicant is a partnership, association, limited liability company, limited liability partnership, or corporation; (2) The applicant's principal place of business located in the United States; (3) The complete address of any other branch offices at which the applicant currently proposes to engage in digital currency business activity in the State; and (4) Other data, financial statements, and pertinent information as the commissioner may require with respect to the applicant or, if an applicant is not an individual, each of the applicant's control persons, executive officers, directors, general partners, and managing members. (c) To fulfill the purposes of this chapter, the commissioner may enter into agreements or contracts with NMLS or other entities to use NMLS to collect and maintain records and process transaction fees or other fees related to licensees or other persons subject to this chapter. (d) For the purpose and to the extent necessary to participate in NMLS, the commissioner may waive or modify, in whole or in part, by rule or order, any or all of the requirements of this chapter and establish new requirements as reasonably necessary to participate in NMLS. (e) In connection with an application for a license under this chapter, the applicant, at a minimum, shall furnish to NMLS information or material concerning the applicant's identity, including: (1) Fingerprints of the applicant or, if an applicant is not an individual, fingerprints of each of the applicant's control persons, executive officers, directors, general partners, and managing members for submission to the Federal Bureau of Investigation or any governmental agency or entity authorized to receive the fingerprints for a state, national, and international criminal history background check, accompanied by the applicable fee charged by the entities conducting the criminal history background check; and (2) Personal history and experience of the applicant or, if an applicant is not an individual, the personal history and experience of each of the applicant's control persons, executive officers, directors, general partners, and managing members in a form prescribed by NMLS, including the submission of authorization for NMLS and the commissioner to obtain: (A) An independent credit report obtained from a consumer reporting agency described in section 603(p) of the Fair Credit Reporting Act, title 15 United States Code section 1681a(p); and (B) Information related to any administrative, civil, or criminal findings by any governmental jurisdiction; provided that the commissioner may use any information obtained pursuant to this subsection or through NMLS to determine an applicant's demonstrated financial responsibility, character, and general fitness for licensure. (f) The commissioner may use NMLS as an agent for requesting information from and distributing information to the United States Department of Justice or any governmental agency. (g) The commissioner may use NMLS as an agent for requesting and distributing information to and from any source directed by the commissioner. (h) An applicant for a license as a special purpose digital currency company shall be registered with the business registration division of the department to do business in the State before a license pursuant to this chapter is issued. § -14 Issuance of license; grounds for denial. (a) The commissioner shall investigate every applicant to determine the financial responsibility, character, and general fitness of the applicant. The commissioner shall issue the applicant a license to engage in digital currency business activity if the commissioner determines that: (1) The applicant or, in the case of an applicant that is not an individual, each of the applicant's control persons, executive officers, directors, general partners, and managing members has never had a special purpose digital currency license revoked in any jurisdiction; provided that a subsequent formal vacation of a revocation shall not be deemed a revocation for purposes of this section; (2) The applicant or, in the case of an applicant that is not an individual, each of the applicant's control persons, executive officers, directors, general partners, and managing members has not been convicted of, pled guilty or nolo contendere to, or been granted a deferred acceptance of a guilty plea under federal law or the laws of any state to a felony in a domestic, foreign, or military court: (A) During the seven-year period preceding the date of the application for licensing; or (B) At any time preceding the date of application, if the felony involved an act of fraud, dishonesty, breach of trust, or money laundering; provided that any pardon of a conviction shall not be deemed a conviction for the purposes of this section; (3) The applicant or, in the case of an applicant that is not an individual, each of the applicant's control persons, executive officers, directors, general partners, and managing members has demonstrated financial responsibility, character, and general fitness to command the confidence of the community and to warrant a determination that the applicant shall operate honestly, fairly, and efficiently, pursuant to this chapter. For the purposes of this paragraph, a person is not financially responsible when the person has shown a disregard in the management of the person's financial condition. A determination that a person has shown a disregard in the management of the person's financial condition may be based upon: (A) Current outstanding judgments, except judgments solely as a result of medical expenses; (B) Current outstanding tax liens or other government liens and filings, subject to applicable disclosure laws and administrative rules; (C) Foreclosures within the preceding three years; and (D) A pattern of seriously delinquent accounts within the preceding three years; (4) The applicant or, in the case of an applicant that is not an individual, each of the applicant's control persons, executive officers, directors, general partners, and managing members has not been convicted of, pled guilty or nolo contendere to, or been granted a deferred acceptance of a guilty plea under federal law or the laws of any state to any misdemeanor involving an act of fraud, dishonesty, breach of trust, or money laundering; (5) The applicant has satisfied the licensing requirements of this chapter; and (6) The applicant has provided the bond required by section -17. (b) The applicant or, in the case of an applicant that is not an individual, each of the applicant's control persons, executive officers, directors, general partners, and managing members shall submit authorization to the commissioner for the commissioner to conduct background checks to determine or verify the information in subsection (a) in each state in which the person has conducted digital currency business activity. Authorization pursuant to this subsection shall include consent to provide additional fingerprints, if necessary, to law enforcement or regulatory bodies in other states. (c) A license shall not be issued to an applicant: (1) Whose license to conduct business under this chapter, or any similar statute in any other jurisdiction, has been suspended or revoked within five years of the filing of the present application; (2) Whose license to conduct digital currency business activity has been revoked by an administrative order issued by the commissioner or the commissioner's designee, or the licensing authority of another state or jurisdiction, for the period specified in the administrative order; (3) Who has advertised directly and purposefully to consumers in the State or conducted transactions in violation of this chapter; or (4) Who has failed to complete an application for licensure. (d) A license issued in accordance with this chapter shall remain in force and effect until surrendered, suspended, or revoked, or until the license expires as a result of nonpayment of the annual license renewal fee required by this chapter. § -15 Anti-money laundering program. (a) Each licensee shall conduct an initial risk assessment that shall consider legal, compliance, financial, and reputational risks associated with the licensee's activities, services, customers, counterparties, and geographic location and establish, maintain, and enforce an anti-money laundering program based on the risk assessment. The licensee shall conduct additional assessments on an annual basis, or more frequently as risks change, and shall modify its anti-money laundering program as appropriate to reflect the changes. (b) Each licensee, at a minimum, shall: (1) Establish an effective anti-money laundering compliance program in accordance with the federal Anti-Money Laundering Act of 2020; (2) Establish an effective customer due diligence system and monitoring program; (3) Screen against the Specially Designated Nationals and Blocked Persons List maintained by the Office of Foreign Assets Control and other government lists; (4) Maintain records of cash purchases or cash transactions and report to the appropriate federal regulatory agency, as required by the federal Anti‑Money Laundering Act of 2020; (5) Establish an effective suspicious activity monitoring and reporting process; and (6) Develop a risk-based anti-money laundering program. (c) Each licensee shall have in place appropriate policies and procedures to block or reject specific or impermissible transactions that violate federal or state laws, rules, or regulations. § -16 Cybersecurity program. (a) Each licensee shall establish and maintain an effective cybersecurity program to ensure the availability and functionality of the licensee's electronic systems and to protect those systems and any sensitive data stored on those systems from unauthorized access, use, or tampering. The cybersecurity program shall be designed to perform the following core cyber security functions: (1) Identify internal and external cybersecurity risks by, at a minimum, identifying the information stored on the licensee's systems, the sensitivity of the information, and how and by whom the information may be accessed; (2) Protect the licensee's electronic systems, and the information stored on those systems, from unauthorized access, use, or other malicious acts through the use of defensive infrastructure and the implementation of policies and procedures; (3) Detect systems intrusions, data breaches, unauthorized access to systems or information, malware, and other cybersecurity events; (4) Respond to detected cybersecurity events to mitigate any negative effects; and (5) Recover from cybersecurity events and restore normal operations and services. (b) Each licensee shall implement a written cybersecurity policy setting forth the licensee's policies and procedures for the protection of its electronic systems and customer and counterparty data stored on those systems, which shall be reviewed and approved by the licensee's board of directors or equivalent governing body at least annually. The cybersecurity policy shall: (1) Establish effective policies, procedures, and controls to effectuate subsection (a); (2) Designate a cybersecurity officer; (3) Develop and implement employee training in accordance with position responsibilities to keep abreast of the changing cybersecurity risk and threats; (4) Establish a method of independent testing; and (5) Maintain records. § -17 Fees; bond. (a) A special purpose digital currency company shall pay the following fees to the division through NMLS to obtain and maintain a valid license under this chapter: (1) Initial nonrefundable application fee of $9,000; (2) Nonrefundable renewal application fee of $1,000; and (3) Fees collected by NMLS for the processing of the application, including applicable fees charged by the entities conducting: (A) The criminal history background check of each of the applicant's control persons, executive officers, directors, general partners, and managing members for submission to the Federal Bureau of Investigation and any governmental agency or entity authorized to receive the fingerprints for a state, national, and international criminal history background check; and (B) An independent credit report obtained from a consumer reporting agency described in section 603(p) of the Fair Credit Reporting Act, title 15 United States Code section 1681a(p). (b) Every licensee shall be assessed quarterly fees based on the total value of transactions in the State, in United States dollar equivalent of digital currency, as reported in the quarterly reports. The quarterly fees shall be assessed the quarter after the applicant is licensed in accordance with the following: (1) For licensees with a total value of transactions, in United States dollar equivalent of digital currency, not over $10,000, the quarterly assessment shall be $2,500; (2) For licensees with a total value of transactions, in United States dollar equivalent of digital currency, over $10,000 but not over $15,000, the quarterly assessment shall be $3,750; (3) For licensees with a total value of transactions, in United States dollar equivalent of digital currency, over $15,000 but not over $25,000, the quarterly assessment shall $6,250; (4) For licensees with a total value of transactions, in United States dollar equivalent of digital currency, over $25,000 but not over $35,000, the quarterly assessment shall be $8,750; and (5) For licensees with a total value of transactions, in United States dollar equivalent of digital currency, over $35,000, the quarterly assessment shall be $12,500. (c) The assessments shall be paid quarterly on February 15, May 15, August 15, and November 15 of each year based on the licensee's quarterly reports as of the previous December 31, March 31, June 30, and September 30, respectively. (d) The digital assets shall be based on the United States dollar equivalent of digital currency assets held on behalf of customers, calculated on United States dollars from the company's quarterly report based on the trading price of the asset on the licensee's platform as of 4:30 p.m. Hawaii Aleutian Standard Time. (e) The applicant shall file and maintain a surety bond that is approved by the commissioner and executed by the applicant as obligor and by a surety company authorized to operate as a surety in the State, whose liability as a surety does not exceed, in the aggregate, the penal sum of the bond. The penal sum of the bond shall be a minimum of $500,000, based upon the annual United States dollar equivalent of digital currency as reported in the annual renewal report. (f) The bond required by subsection (e) shall run to the State of Hawaii as obligee for the use and benefit of the State and of any person or persons who may have a cause of action against the licensee as obligor under this chapter. The bond shall be conditioned upon the following: (1) The licensee as obligor shall faithfully conform to and abide by this chapter and all the rules adopted under this chapter; and (2) The bond shall pay to the State and any person or persons having a cause of action against the licensee as obligor all moneys that may become due and owing to the State and those persons under and by virtue of this chapter. § -18 Renewal of license; annual report; quarterly reports. (a) An annual report shall be filed in accordance with NMLS policy. The annual report shall include the licensee's most recent audited annual financial statement, including balance sheets, a statement of income or loss, a statement of changes in shareholders' equity, and a statement of cash flows or, if a licensee is a wholly owned subsidiary of another corporation, the consolidated audited annual financial statement of the parent corporation in lieu of the licensee's audited annual financial statement. (b) Quarterly reports shall be filed in a form prescribed by the commissioner, which shall include: (1) A report detailing the special purpose digital currency company's activities in the State since the prior reporting period, including: (A) The number of stored value accounts opened; (B) The number of transactions processed; (C) The total value of transactions in United States dollar equivalent of digital currency; (D) The number of system outages; (E) A chart of accounts, including a description of each account; and (F) Any other information that the commissioner may require related to performance metrics and the efficacy of the special purpose digital currency license program; (2) A report of any material changes to any of the information submitted by the licensee on its original application that have not previously been reported to the commissioner on any other report required to be filed under this chapter; (3) Disclosure of any pending or final suspension, revocation, or other enforcement action by any state or governmental authority; and (4) Any other information the commissioner may require. (c) A licensee may renew its license by: (1) Continuing to meet the licensing requirements of sections -13, -14, -15, -16, and -17; (2) Filing a completed renewal application on a form prescribed by NMLS or by the commissioner; (3) Paying a renewal fee; and (4) Meeting all other requirements of this section. (d) At renewal, a licensee that has not filed an application deemed complete by the commissioner, an annual report, or quarterly reports or paid the quarterly fees, and has not been granted an extension of time by the commissioner, shall have its license suspended on the renewal date. The licensee shall have thirty days after its license is suspended to file the annual report or quarterly reports, or pay the quarterly fees, plus a late filing fee of $250 for each day after suspension that the commissioner does not receive the annual report, quarterly reports, and the quarterly fee. The commissioner, for good cause, may reduce or suspend the late filing fee. § -19 Principal place of business. (a) Every special purpose digital currency company licensed under this chapter shall have and maintain a principal place of business in the United States, regardless of whether the special purpose digital currency company maintains its principal office outside of the United States. (b) The principal place of business of the special purpose digital currency company shall be identified in NMLS. § -20 Sale or transfer of license; change of control. (a) No special purpose digital currency company license shall be transferred, except as provided in this section. (b) A person or group of persons requesting approval of a proposed change of control of a licensee shall submit to the commissioner an application requesting approval of a proposed change of control of the licensee, accompanied by a nonrefundable application fee of $10,000. (c) After review of an application requesting approval under subsection (b), the commissioner may require the licensee or person or group of persons requesting approval of a proposed change of control of the licensee, or both, to provide additional information concerning the persons who shall assume control of the licensee. The additional information shall be limited to similar information required of the licensee or persons in control of the licensee as part of its original license or renewal application. The information shall include, for the five-year period prior to the date of the application for change of control of the licensee, a history of material litigation and criminal convictions of each person who, upon approval of the application for change of control, will be a principal of the licensee. Authorization shall also be given to conduct criminal history record checks of those persons, accompanied by the appropriate payment of the applicable fee for each record check. (d) The commissioner shall approve an application requesting a change of control under subsection (b) if, after investigation, the commissioner determines that the person or group of persons requesting approval has the competence, experience, character, and general fitness to control the licensee or person in control of the licensee in a lawful and proper manner, and that the interests of the public will not be jeopardized by the change of control. (e) The following persons shall be exempt from the requirements of subsection (b); provided that the licensee shall notify the commissioner when control is assumed by a person: (1) Who acts as a proxy for the sole purpose of voting at a designated meeting of the security holders or holders of voting interests of a licensee or person in control of a licensee; (2) Who acquires control of a licensee by devise or descent; (3) Who acquires control as a personal representative, custodian, guardian, conservator, trustee, or as an officer appointed by a court of competent jurisdiction or by operation of law; or (4) Whom the commissioner, by rule or order, exempts in the public interest. (f) Before filing an application requesting approval for a change of control, a person may request, in writing, a determination from the commissioner as to whether the person would be considered a person in control of a licensee upon consummation of a proposed transaction. If the commissioner determines that the person would not be a person in control of a licensee, the commissioner shall enter an order to that effect and the proposed person and transaction shall not be subject to subsections (b) through (d). (g) Subsection (b) shall not apply to public offerings of securities. § -21 Ownership and control of digital currency. (a) A licensee that has control of digital currency for one or more persons shall maintain control of digital currency in each type of digital currency sufficient to satisfy the aggregate entitlements of the persons to the type of digital currency. (b) If a licensee violates subsection (a), the property interests of the persons in the digital currency shall be pro rata property interests in the type of digital currency to which the persons are entitled, without regard to the time the persons became entitled to the digital currency or the licensee obtained control of the digital currency. (c) The digital currency referred to in this section shall: (1) Be held for the persons entitled to the digital currency; (2) Not be considered property of the licensee; and (3) Not be subject to the claims of creditors of the licensee. (d) To the extent a licensee stores, holds, or maintains custody or control of digital currency on behalf of another person, the licensee shall hold digital currency of the same type and amount as that which is owed or obligated to that other person. (e) Each licensee shall be prohibited from selling, transferring, assigning, lending, hypothecating, pledging, or otherwise using or encumbering assets, including digital currency, stored, held, or maintained by, or under the custody or control of, the licensee on behalf of another person except for the sale, transfer, or assignment of the assets at the direction of that other person, unless clearly presented and stated to the client that doing so is the intent of the product. PART III. DISCLOSURES, ADVERTISING, AND RECORDKEEPING § -31 Required disclosures. (a) A licensee that engages in digital currency business activity shall provide to a person who uses the licensee's products or service the disclosures required by subsection (b) and any additional disclosure the commissioner determines reasonably necessary for the protection of persons. The commissioner shall determine the time and form required for disclosure. A disclosure required by this section shall be made separately from any other information provided by the licensee and kept by the person in a clear and conspicuous manner in a record. A licensee may propose for the commissioner's approval alternate disclosures as more appropriate for its digital currency business activity. (b) Before establishing a relationship with a person, a licensee shall disclose the following, to the extent applicable to the digital currency business activity the licensee will undertake with the person: (1) A schedule of fees and charges the licensee may assess, how fees and charges will be calculated if they are not set in advance and disclosed, and the timing of the fees and charges; (2) Whether the product or service provided by the licensee is covered by: (A) A form of insurance or is otherwise guaranteed against loss by an agency of the United States, including the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation and Securities Investor Protection Corporation, up to the United States dollar equivalent of digital currency purchased from the licensee or for control of digital currency by the licensee; or (B) Private insurance against theft or loss, including cyber theft or theft by other means; (3) The irrevocability of a transfer or exchange; (4) The method by which the person can update the person's contact information with the licensee; (5) That the date or time when the transfer or exchange is made, and when the person's account is debited, may differ from the date or time when the person initiates the instruction to make the transfer or exchange; (6) The person's right to receive a receipt or other evidence of the transfer or exchange; (7) The person's right to at least thirty days notice of a change in the licensee's fee schedule, other terms and conditions of operating its digital currency business activity with the person, and the policies applicable to the person's account; and (8) That digital currency is not money. (c) At the end of a digital currency transaction with or on behalf of a person, a licensee shall provide the person a confirmation in a record that contains: (1) The name and contact information of the licensee, including information the person may need to ask a question or file a complaint; (2) The type, value, date, precise time, and amount of the transaction; and (3) The fee charged for the transaction, including any charge for conversion of digital currency to money, bank credit, or other digital currency. § -32 Tangible net worth requirement; records. (a) A licensee engaged in digital currency business activity shall maintain at all times, a tangible net worth of no less than $500,000, or an amount determined by the commissioner necessary to ensure safe and sound operation. (b) Each licensee shall make, keep, preserve, and make available for inspection by the commissioner the books, accounts, and other records required in subsection (c). A licensee shall maintain records required by subsection (c) in a form that enables the commissioner to determine whether the licensee is in compliance with this chapter, any court order, and the laws of the State. (c) A licensee shall maintain, for all digital currency business activity with or on behalf of a person five years after the date of the activity, a record of: (1) Each transaction of the licensee with or on behalf of the person or for the licensee's account in the State, including: (A) The identity of the person; (B) The form of the transaction; (C) The amount, date, and payment instructions given by the person; and (D) The account number, name, and address of the person and, to the extent feasible, other parties to the transaction; (2) The aggregate number of transactions and aggregate value of transactions by the licensee with or on behalf of the person and for the licensee's account in this State, expressed in United States dollar equivalent of digital currency for the previous twelve calendar months; (3) Each transaction in which the licensee exchanges one form of digital currency for money or another form of digital currency with or on behalf of the person; (4) A general ledger posted at least monthly that lists all assets, liabilities, capital, income, ownership equity, and expenses of the licensee; (5) Each business-call report the licensee is required to create or provide to the division or NMLS; (6) Bank statements and bank reconciliation records for the licensee and the name, account number, and United States Postal Service address of each bank the licensee uses in the conduct of its digital currency business activity with or on behalf of the person; (7) Communications and documentation related to investigations of customer complaints; and (8) A report of any digital currency business activity transaction with or on behalf of a person, that the licensee was unable to complete. § -33 Advertising and marketing. (a) Each licensee engaged in digital currency business activity shall not advertise its products, services, or activities in the State or to consumers in the State without including the name of the licensee and the legend that the licensee is "Licensed to engage in Digital Currency Business Activity by the State of Hawaii Department of Commerce and Consumer Affairs' Division of Financial Institutions." (b) Each licensee shall maintain, for examination by the commissioner, all advertising and marketing materials for a period of at least five years from the date of their creation, including but not limited to print media, internet media, websites, radio and television advertising, road show materials, presentations, and brochures. Each licensee shall maintain website captures of material changes to internet advertising and marketing, and audio and video transcripts of its advertising and marketing materials, as applicable. (c) In all advertising and marketing materials, each licensee shall comply with all disclosure requirements under federal and state laws, rules, and regulations. (d) In all advertising and marketing materials, each licensee and any person or entity acting on its behalf, shall not, directly or by implication, make any false, misleading, or deceptive representations or omissions. § -34 Confidentiality. (a) Except as otherwise provided in title 12 United States Code section 5111, the requirements under any federal or state law regarding the privacy or confidentiality of any information or material provided to NMLS, and any privilege arising under federal or state law, including the rules of any federal or state court, with respect to the information or material, shall continue to apply to the information or material after the information or material has been disclosed to NMLS. The information and material may be shared with all federal and state regulatory officials with oversight authority over transactions subject to this chapter, without the loss of privilege or the loss of confidentiality protections provided by federal or state law. (b) For the purposes of this section, the commissioner may enter into agreements or sharing arrangements with other governmental agencies, the Conference of State Bank Supervisors, or other associations representing governmental agencies as established by rule or order of the commissioner. (c) Information or material that is subject to a privilege or confidentiality under subsection (a) shall not be subject to: (1) Disclosure under chapter 92F; or (2) Subpoena or discovery, or admission into evidence, in any private civil action or administrative process, unless any privilege is determined by NMLS to be applicable to the information or material; provided that the person to whom the information or material pertains waives that privilege, in whole or in part, in the discretion of the person. (d) Notwithstanding chapter 92F, the examination process and related information and documents, including the reports of examination, shall be confidential and shall not be subject to discovery or disclosure in civil or criminal lawsuits. (e) In the event of a conflict between this section and any other section of law relating to the disclosure of privileged or confidential information or material, this section shall control. (f) This section shall not apply to information or material relating to the employment history of, and publicly adjudicated disciplinary and enforcement actions against, any persons that are included in NMLS for access by the public. PART IV. ENFORCEMENT § -41 Enforcement authority; violations; penalties. (a) To ensure the effective supervision and enforcement of this chapter, the commissioner may take any disciplinary action specified in subsection (b) against an applicant or licensee if the commissioner finds that: (1) The applicant or licensee has violated this chapter, or any rule or order lawfully adopted pursuant to this chapter; (2) The applicant has failed to disclose facts or conditions that would have clearly justified the commissioner in denying an application for licensure, had these facts or conditions been known to exist at the time the application was made; (3) The applicant or licensee has failed to provide information required by the commissioner within a reasonable time, as specified by the commissioner; (4) The applicant or licensee has failed to provide or maintain proof of financial responsibility; (5) The applicant or licensee is insolvent; (6) The applicant or licensee has made, in any document or statement filed with the commissioner, a false representation of a material fact or has omitted to state a material fact; (7) The applicant, licensee, or, if an applicant or licensee is not an individual, any of the applicant's or licensee's control persons, executive officers, directors, general partners, or managing members have been convicted of or entered a plea of guilty or nolo contendere to a crime involving fraud or deceit, or to any similar crime under the jurisdiction of any federal court or court of another state; (8) The applicant or licensee has failed to make, maintain, or produce records that comply with section -42 or any rule adopted by the commissioner pursuant to chapter 91; (9) The applicant or licensee has been the subject of any disciplinary action by any state or federal agency that resulted in revocation of a license; (10) A final judgment has been entered against the applicant or licensee for violations of this chapter, any state or federal law concerning a special purpose digital currency license or money transmitter license, or any state or federal law prohibiting unfair or deceptive acts or practices; or (11) The applicant or licensee has failed, in a timely manner as specified by the commissioner, to take or provide proof of the corrective action required by the commissioner after an investigation or examination pursuant to section -42. (b) After a finding of one or more of the conditions under subsection (a), the commissioner may take any or all the following actions: (1) Deny an application for licensure, including an application for a branch office license; (2) Suspend or revoke the license in accordance with section -45; (3) Issue an order to the licensee to cease and desist in accordance with section -46 from engaging in any act specified under subsection (a); (4) Order the licensee to make refunds to consumers of excess charges under this chapter; or (5) Impose penalties of up to $10,000 for each violation in accordance with section -48. (c) The commissioner may issue a temporary cease and desist order if the commissioner makes a finding that the licensee, applicant, or person is engaging, has engaged, or is about to engage in an illegal, unauthorized, unsafe, or unsound practice in violation of this chapter. Whenever the commissioner denies a license application or takes disciplinary action pursuant to this subsection, the commissioner shall enter an order to that effect and notify the licensee, applicant, or person of the denial or disciplinary action. The notification required by this subsection shall be given by personal service or by certified mail to the last known address of the licensee or applicant as shown on the application or license, or as subsequently furnished in writing to the commissioner. (d) The revocation, suspension, expiration, or surrender of a license shall not affect the licensee's liability for acts previously committed or impair the commissioner's ability to issue a final agency order or take disciplinary action against the licensee. (e) No revocation, suspension, consent order, or surrender of a license shall impair or affect the obligation of any preexisting lawful contract between the licensee and any consumer. (f) The commissioner may reinstate a license, terminate a suspension, or grant a new license to a person whose license has been revoked or suspended if no fact or condition then exists that would clearly justify the commissioner in revoking, suspending, or refusing to grant a license. (g) The commissioner may impose an administrative fine on a licensee or person subject to this chapter if the commissioner finds on the record after notice and opportunity for hearing that the licensee or person subject to this chapter has violated or failed to comply with any requirement of this chapter or any rule adopted by the commissioner under this chapter or order issued under the authority of this chapter. (h) Each violation or failure to comply with any directive or order of the commissioner shall be a separate and distinct violation. § -42 Investigation and examination authority. (a) In addition to the authority granted under section -3, the commissioner may conduct investigations and examinations in accordance with this section. The commissioner may access, receive, and use any books, accounts, records, files, documents, information, or evidence that the commissioner deems relevant to the investigation or examination, regardless of the location, possession, control, or custody of the documents, information, or evidence. (b) For the purposes of investigating violations or complaints arising under this chapter, or for the purposes of examination, the commissioner may review, investigate, or examine any licensee or person subject to this chapter as often as necessary to carry out the purposes of this chapter. The commissioner may direct, subpoena, or order the attendance of, and examine under oath, all persons whose testimony may be required about digital currency transactions or the business or subject matter of any investigation or examination and may direct, subpoena, or order the person to produce books, accounts, records, files, and any other documents the commissioner deems relevant to the inquiry. (c) Each licensee or person subject to this chapter shall provide to the commissioner, upon request, the books and records relating to the operations of the licensee or person subject to this chapter. The commissioner shall have access to the books and records and shall be permitted to interview the control persons, executive officers, directors, general partners, managing members, principals, managers, employees, independent contractors, agents, and consumers of the licensee or person subject to this chapter concerning their business. (d) Each licensee or person subject to this chapter shall make or compile reports or prepare other information, as directed by the commissioner, to carry out the purposes of this section, including: (1) Accounting compilations; (2) Information lists and data concerning digital currency transactions in a format prescribed by the commissioner; or (3) Other information that the commissioner deems necessary. (e) In conducting any investigation or examination authorized by this chapter, the commissioner may control access to any documents and records of the licensee or person under investigation or examination. The commissioner may take possession of the documents and records or place a person in exclusive charge of the documents and records. During the period of control, no person shall remove or attempt to remove any of the documents and records except pursuant to a court order or with the consent of the commissioner. Unless the commissioner has reasonable grounds to believe the documents or records of the licensee or person under investigation or examination have been, or are at risk of being, altered or destroyed for the purposes of concealing a violation of this chapter, the licensee or owner of the documents and records shall have access to the documents or records as necessary to conduct its ordinary business affairs. (f) The authority of this section shall remain in effect, whether a licensee or person subject to this chapter acts or claims to act under any licensing or registration law of this State or claims to act without this authority. (g) No licensee or person subject to investigation or examination under this section may knowingly withhold, abstract, remove, mutilate, destroy, or conceal any books, records, computer records, or other information. (h) The commissioner may charge an investigation or examination fee, payable to the commissioner, based upon the cost per hour per examiner for all licensees and persons subject to this chapter investigated or examined by the commissioner or the commissioner's staff. The hourly fee shall be $60 or an amount as the commissioner shall establish by rule pursuant to chapter 91. In addition to the investigation or examination fee, the commissioner may charge any person who is investigated or examined by the commissioner or the commissioner's staff pursuant to this section additional fees for travel, per diem, mileage, and other reasonable expenses incurred in connection with the investigation or examination, payable to the commissioner. (i) Any person having reason to believe that this chapter or the rules adopted under this chapter have been violated, or that a license issued under this chapter should be suspended or revoked, may file a written complaint with the commissioner, setting forth the details of the alleged violation or grounds for suspension or revocation. § -43 Prohibited practices. (a) It shall be a violation of this chapter for a licensee, its control persons, executive officers, directors, general partners, managing members, employees, or independent contractors, or any other person subject to this chapter to: (1) Engage in any act that limits or restricts the application of this chapter; (2) Use a customer's digital currency account number to prepare, issue, or create a digital currency transaction on behalf of the consumer without the customer's authorization; (3) Charge, collect, or receive, directly or indirectly, fees for negotiating digital currency transactions except those explicitly authorized in this chapter; (4) Fail to make disclosures as required by this chapter and any other applicable federal or state law, including rules or regulations adopted pursuant to federal or state law; (5) Directly or indirectly employ any scheme, device, or artifice to defraud or mislead any consumer or person; (6) Directly or indirectly engage in unfair or deceptive acts, practices, or advertising in connection with a digital currency business activity toward any person; (7) Directly or indirectly obtain digital currency by fraud or misrepresentation; (8) Conduct digital currency business activity with or on behalf of any person physically located in the State through the use of the Internet, facsimile, telephone, kiosk, or other means without first obtaining a license under this chapter; (9) Make, in any manner, any false or deceptive statement or representation, including with regard to the rates, fees, or other financing terms or conditions for digital currency business activity, or engage in bait and switch advertising; (10) Make any false statement or knowingly make any omission of material fact in connection with any reports filed with the division by a licensee or in connection with any investigation conducted by the division; (11) Conduct digital currency business activity from any unlicensed location; (12) Draft funds from any depository financial institution without written approval of the consumer; provided that nothing in this paragraph shall prohibit the conversion of a negotiable instrument into an electronic form for processing through the Automated Clearing House or similar system; (13) Fail to comply with all applicable federal and state laws relating to the activities governed by this chapter; or (14) Fail to pay any fee, assessment, or moneys due to the department. (b) In addition to any other penalties provided for under this chapter, any digital currency transaction in violation of subsection (a) shall be void and unenforceable. § -44 Voluntary surrender of license. (a) A licensee may voluntarily cease business and surrender its license by giving written notice through NMLS to the commissioner of the licensee's intent to surrender its license. Prior to the surrender date, the licensee shall have either completed all pending digital currency transactions or assigned each pending digital currency transaction to another licensee. (b) Notice to the commissioner shall be provided at least thirty days before the surrender of the license and shall include: (1) The date of surrender; (2) The name, address, telephone number, facsimile number, and electronic mail address of a contact individual with knowledge and authority sufficient to communicate with the commissioner regarding all matters relating to the licensee during the period that it was licensed pursuant to this chapter; (3) The reason or reasons for surrender; (4) The total dollar amount of the licensee's outstanding digital currency transactions in the State and the individual amounts of each outstanding digital currency transactions and the name, address, and contact telephone number of the licensee to whom each outstanding digital currency transaction was assigned; (5) A list of the licensee's authorized branch offices in the State, if any, as of the date of surrender; (6) Confirmation that the licensee has notified each of its authorized branch offices in the State, if any, that the branch offices shall no longer conduct digital currency business activity on the licensee's behalf; and (7) Confirmation that the licensee has notified each of its digital currency accounts, if any, that the digital currency account is being transferred and the name, address, telephone number, and any other contact information of the licensee or entity described in section -30 to whom the digital currency was assigned. (c) Voluntary surrender of a license shall be effective upon the date of surrender specified on the written notice to the commissioner as required by this section; provided that the licensee has met all the requirements of voluntary surrender. § -45 Suspension or revocation of licenses. The commissioner may suspend or revoke a license if the commissioner finds that: (1) Any fact or condition exists that, if it had existed at the time at which the licensee applied for its license, would have been grounds for denying the licensee's application; (2) The licensee's tangible net worth becomes inadequate and the licensee, after ten days' written notice from the commissioner, fails to take steps as the commissioner deems necessary to remedy a deficiency; (3) The licensee knowingly violates any material provision of this chapter or any rule adopted or order issued by the commissioner under authority of this chapter; (4) The licensee is conducting its business in an unsafe or unsound manner; (5) The licensee is insolvent; (6) The licensee has suspended payment of its obligations, has made an assignment for the benefit of its creditors, or has admitted, in writing, its inability to pay its debts as they become due; (7) The licensee has filed for bankruptcy, reorganization, arrangement, or other relief under any bankruptcy law; (8) The licensee refuses to permit the commissioner to make any investigation or examination authorized by this chapter; or (9) The competence, experience, character, or general fitness of the licensee indicates that it is not in the public interest to allow the licensee to have a license. § -46 Orders to cease and desist. (a) If the commissioner determines that a licensee's violation of this chapter or a rule adopted or an order issued under this chapter is: (1) Likely to cause immediate and irreparable harm to the licensee, the licensee's customers, or the public as a result of the violation; or (2) Cause insolvency or significant dissipation of assets of the licensee, the commissioner may issue an order requiring the licensee to cease and desist from the violation. The order shall become effective upon service of the order upon the licensee. (b) An order to cease and desist shall remain effective and enforceable pending the completion of an administrative proceeding pursuant to chapter 91. (c) A licensee that is served with an order to cease and desist may petition the circuit court for a judicial order setting aside, limiting, or suspending the enforcement, operation, or effectiveness of the order pending the completion of an administrative proceeding pursuant to sections -51 or -52. (d) The commissioner shall commence an administrative proceeding pursuant to chapter 91 within twenty days after issuing an order to cease and desist. (e) The commissioner may apply to the circuit court for an appropriate order to protect the public interest. § -47 Consent orders. The commissioner may enter into a consent order at any time with a person to resolve a matter arising under this chapter. A consent order shall be signed by the person to whom the order is issued or by the person's authorized representative and shall indicate agreement with the terms contained in the order. A consent order may provide that it does not constitute an admission by a person that this chapter or a rule adopted or an order issued under this chapter has been violated. § -48 Civil penalties. (a) The commissioner may assess a fine against a person who violates this chapter or a rule adopted or an order issued under this chapter in an amount not to exceed $10,000 per violation, plus the State's costs and expenses for the investigation and prosecution of the matter, including reasonable attorneys' fees. (b) Any violation of this chapter that is directed toward, targets, or injures an elder may be subject to an additional civil penalty of no more than $10,000 for each violation, in addition to any other fines or penalties assessed for the violation. § -49 Criminal penalties. (a) A person who intentionally makes a false statement, misrepresentation, or false certification in a record filed or required to be maintained under this chapter, who intentionally makes a false entry, or who omits a material entry in a record shall be guilty of a class C felony and shall be subject to a fine of no more than $10,000. (b) An individual or person who knowingly engages in any activity for which a license is required under this chapter, without being licensed under this chapter, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor and shall be subject to a fine of no more than $1,000, imprisonment of no more than one year, or both. Each day a violation exists shall be deemed a separate offense. § -50 Unlicensed persons. (a) If the commissioner has reason to believe that a person has violated or is violating section -11, the commissioner may issue an order to show cause why an order to cease and desist should not issue requiring that the person cease and desist from the violation of section -11. (b) If the commissioner has reason to believe that a person has violated or is violating section -11, the commissioner may petition the circuit court for the issuance of a temporary restraining order if the public would be irreparably harmed. (c) An order to cease and desist shall become effective upon service of the order upon the person. (d) An order to cease and desist shall remain effective and enforceable pending the completion of an administrative proceeding pursuant to section -46. (e) A person who is served with an order to cease and desist for violating section -11 may petition the circuit court for a judicial order setting aside, limiting, or suspending the enforcement, operation, or effectiveness of the order to cease and desist pending the completion of an administrative proceeding pursuant to section -46. (f) The commissioner shall commence an administrative proceeding within twenty days after issuing an order to cease and desist. § -51 Administrative procedures. All administrative proceedings under this chapter shall be conducted in accordance with chapter 91. § -52 Hearings. Except as otherwise provided in sections 18(g) and -45, the commissioner shall not suspend or revoke a license, issue an order to cease and desist, or assess a civil penalty without notice and an opportunity to be heard. § -53 Division functions. (a) The division shall exercise all administrative functions of the State in relation to the regulation, supervision, and licensing of special purpose digital currency companies. (b) The division shall interpret and enforce this chapter." SECTION 3. Section 489D-4, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by amending the definition of "monetary value" to read as follows: ""Monetary value" means a medium of exchange, whether or not redeemable in money[.], except as defined as digital currency under chapter ." SECTION 4. Section 846-2.7, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by amending subsection (b) to read as follows: "(b) Criminal history record checks may be conducted by: (1) The department of health or its designee on operators of adult foster homes for individuals with developmental disabilities or developmental disabilities domiciliary homes and their employees, as provided by section 321-15.2; (2) The department of health or its designee on prospective employees, persons seeking to serve as providers, or subcontractors in positions that place them in direct contact with clients when providing non-witnessed direct mental health or health care services as provided by section 321-171.5; (3) The department of health or its designee on all applicants for licensure or certification for, operators for, prospective employees, adult volunteers, and all adults, except adults in care, at healthcare facilities as defined in section 321-15.2; (4) The department of education on employees, prospective employees, and teacher trainees in any public school in positions that necessitate close proximity to children as provided by section 302A-601.5; (5) The counties on employees and prospective employees who may be in positions that place them in close proximity to children in recreation or child care programs and services; (6) The county liquor commissions on applicants for liquor licenses as provided by section 281-53.5; (7) The county liquor commissions on employees and prospective employees involved in liquor administration, law enforcement, and liquor control investigations; (8) The department of human services on operators and employees of child caring institutions, child placing organizations, and foster boarding homes as provided by section 346-17; (9) The department of human services on prospective adoptive parents as established under section 346‑19.7; (10) The department of human services or its designee on applicants to operate child care facilities, household members of the applicant, prospective employees of the applicant, and new employees and household members of the provider after registration or licensure as provided by section 346-154, and persons subject to section 346-152.5; (11) The department of human services on persons exempt pursuant to section 346-152 to be eligible to provide child care and receive child care subsidies as provided by section 346-152.5; (12) The department of health on operators and employees of home and community-based case management agencies and operators and other adults, except for adults in care, residing in community care foster family homes as provided by section 321-15.2; (13) The department of human services on staff members of the Hawaii youth correctional facility as provided by section 352-5.5; (14) The department of human services on employees, prospective employees, and volunteers of contracted providers and subcontractors in positions that place them in close proximity to youth when providing services on behalf of the office or the Hawaii youth correctional facility as provided by section 352D-4.3; (15) The judiciary on employees and applicants at detention and shelter facilities as provided by section 571-34; (16) The department of public safety on employees and prospective employees who are directly involved with the treatment and care of persons committed to a correctional facility or who possess police powers including the power of arrest as provided by section 353C-5; (17) The board of private detectives and guards on applicants for private detective or private guard licensure as provided by section 463-9; (18) Private schools and designated organizations on employees and prospective employees who may be in positions that necessitate close proximity to children; provided that private schools and designated organizations receive only indications of the states from which the national criminal history record information was provided pursuant to section 302C-1; (19) The public library system on employees and prospective employees whose positions place them in close proximity to children as provided by section 302A‑601.5; (20) The State or any of its branches, political subdivisions, or agencies on applicants and employees holding a position that has the same type of contact with children, vulnerable adults, or persons committed to a correctional facility as other public employees who hold positions that are authorized by law to require criminal history record checks as a condition of employment as provided by section 78-2.7; (21) The department of health on licensed adult day care center operators, employees, new employees, subcontracted service providers and their employees, and adult volunteers as provided by section 321-15.2; (22) The department of human services on purchase of service contracted and subcontracted service providers and their employees serving clients of the adult protective and community services branch, as provided by section 346-97; (23) The department of human services on foster grandparent program, senior companion program, and respite companion program participants as provided by section 346-97; (24) The department of human services on contracted and subcontracted service providers and their current and prospective employees that provide home and community‑based services under section 1915(c) of the Social Security Act, title 42 United States Code section 1396n(c), or under any other applicable section or sections of the Social Security Act for the purposes of providing home and community-based services, as provided by section 346-97; (25) The department of commerce and consumer affairs on proposed directors and executive officers of a bank, savings bank, savings and loan association, trust company, and depository financial services loan company as provided by section 412:3-201; (26) The department of commerce and consumer affairs on proposed directors and executive officers of a nondepository financial services loan company as provided by section 412:3-301; (27) The department of commerce and consumer affairs on the original chartering applicants and proposed executive officers of a credit union as provided by section 412:10-103; (28) The department of commerce and consumer affairs on: (A) Each principal of every non-corporate applicant for a money transmitter license; (B) Each person who upon approval of an application by a corporate applicant for a money transmitter license will be a principal of the licensee; and (C) Each person who upon approval of an application requesting approval of a proposed change in control of licensee will be a principal of the licensee, as provided by sections 489D-9 and 489D-15; (29) The department of commerce and consumer affairs on applicants for licensure and persons licensed under title 24; (30) The Hawaii health systems corporation on: (A) Employees; (B) Applicants seeking employment; (C) Current or prospective members of the corporation board or regional system board; or (D) Current or prospective volunteers, providers, or contractors, in any of the corporation's health facilities as provided by section 323F-5.5; (31) The department of commerce and consumer affairs on: (A) An applicant for a mortgage loan originator license, or license renewal; and (B) Each control person, executive officer, director, general partner, and managing member of an applicant for a mortgage loan originator company license or license renewal, as provided by chapter 454F; (32) The state public charter school commission or public charter schools on employees, teacher trainees, prospective employees, and prospective teacher trainees in any public charter school for any position that places them in close proximity to children, as provided in section 302D-33; (33) The counties on prospective employees who work with children, vulnerable adults, or senior citizens in community-based programs; (34) The counties on prospective employees for fire department positions that involve contact with children or vulnerable adults; (35) The counties on prospective employees for emergency medical services positions that involve contact with children or vulnerable adults; (36) The counties on prospective employees for emergency management positions and community volunteers whose responsibilities involve planning and executing homeland security measures including viewing, handling, and engaging in law enforcement or classified meetings and assisting vulnerable citizens during emergencies or crises; (37) The State and counties on employees, prospective employees, volunteers, and contractors whose position responsibilities require unescorted access to secured areas and equipment related to a traffic management center; (38) The State and counties on employees and prospective employees whose positions involve the handling or use of firearms for other than law enforcement purposes; (39) The State and counties on current and prospective systems analysts and others involved in an agency's information technology operation whose position responsibilities provide them with access to proprietary, confidential, or sensitive information; (40) The department of commerce and consumer affairs on: (A) Applicants for real estate appraiser licensure or certification as provided by chapter 466K; (B) Each person who owns more than ten per cent of an appraisal management company who is applying for registration as an appraisal management company, as provided by section 466L-7; and (C) Each of the controlling persons of an applicant for registration as an appraisal management company, as provided by section 466L-7; (41) The department of health or its designee on all license applicants, licensees, employees, contractors, and prospective employees of medical cannabis dispensaries, and individuals permitted to enter and remain in medical cannabis dispensary facilities as provided under sections 329D-15(a)(4) and 329D‑16(a)(3); (42) The department of commerce and consumer affairs on applicants for nurse licensure or license renewal, reactivation, or restoration as provided by sections 457-7, 457-8, 457-8.5, and 457-9; (43) The county police departments on applicants for permits to acquire firearms pursuant to section 134-2 and on individuals registering their firearms pursuant to section 134-3; (44) The department of commerce and consumer affairs on: (A) Each of the controlling persons of the applicant for licensure as an escrow depository, and each of the officers, directors, and principals who will be in charge of the escrow depository's activities upon licensure; and (B) Each of the controlling persons of an applicant for proposed change in control of an escrow depository licensee, and each of the officers, directors, and principals who will be in charge of the licenseeꞌs activities upon approval of the application, as provided by chapter 449; (45) The department of taxation on current or prospective employees or contractors who have access to federal tax information in order to comply with requirements of federal law, regulation, or procedure, as provided by section 231-1.6; (46) The department of labor and industrial relations on current or prospective employees or contractors who have access to federal tax information in order to comply with requirements of federal law, regulation, or procedure, as provided by section 383-110; (47) The department of human services on current or prospective employees or contractors who have access to federal tax information in order to comply with requirements of federal law, regulation, or procedure, as provided by section 346-2.5; (48) The child support enforcement agency on current or prospective employees or contractors who have access to federal tax information in order to comply with federal law, regulation, or procedure, as provided by section 576D-11.5; (49) The department of the attorney general on current or prospective employees or employees or agents of contractors who have access to federal tax information to comply with requirements of federal law, regulation, or procedure, as provided by section 28‑17; [[](50)[]] The department of commerce and consumer affairs on each control person, executive officer, director, general partner, and managing member of an installment loan licensee, or an applicant for an installment loan license, as provided in chapter 480J; [[](51)[]] The University of Hawaii on current and prospective employees and contractors whose duties include ensuring the security of campus facilities and persons; [and] (52) The department of commerce and consumer affairs on each control person, executive officer, director, general partner, and managing member of a special purpose digital currency company licensee, or an applicant for a special purpose digital currency license, as provided in chapter ; and [[(52)]] (53) Any other organization, entity, or the State, its branches, political subdivisions, or agencies as may be authorized by state law." SECTION 5. (a) Notwithstanding any law to the contrary, the companies participating in the digital currency innovation lab operated by the department of commerce and consumer affairs and Hawaii technology development corporation shall be allowed to continue operations until their applications are acted upon by the division of financial institutions of the department of commerce and consumer affairs; provided that the complete application is submitted to the division of financial institutions of the department of commerce and consumer affairs by March 1, 2024. (b) A company authorized to participate in the digital currency innovation lab as of June 30, 2023, and whose application for licensure under section 2 of this Act has been submitted to the division of financial institutions of the department of commerce and consumer affairs on or before March 1, 2024, shall be exempt from the requirements in section -11 of section 2 of this Act for a period of six months from the date the application is deemed complete or until the commissioner of financial institutions approves or denies the application, whichever occurs first. The commissioner of financial institutions, for good cause, may reduce or extend the six-month period. Submission of an application for licensure shall be evidenced through the nationwide multi-state licensing and registry system developed and maintained by the Conference of State Bank Supervisors for the state licensing and registration of state-licensed financial services providers to the commissioner of financial institutions. SECTION 6. The department of commerce and consumer affairs may employ necessary personnel without regard to chapter 76, Hawaii Revised Statutes, including three full-time equivalent (3.0 FTE) positions for examiners, to assist with the implementation and continuing function of this Act. SECTION 7. There is appropriated out of the compliance resolution fund established pursuant to section 26-9(o), Hawaii Revised Statutes, the sum of $500,000 or so much thereof as may be necessary for fiscal year 2023-2024 and the same sum or so much thereof as may be necessary for fiscal year 2024-2025 to establish and hire three full-time equivalent (3.0 FTE) permanent examiners, without regard to chapter 76, Hawaii Revised Statutes, to carry out the purposes of the special purpose digital currency license program established by section 2 of this Act; provided that the positions may be added to the position count for the division of financial institutions of the department of commerce and consumer affairs. The sums appropriated shall be expended by the department of commerce and consumer affairs for the purposes of this Act. SECTION 8. Statutory material to be repealed is bracketed and stricken. New statutory material is underscored. SECTION 9. This Act shall take effect on July 1, 2023; provided that the special purpose digital currency licensing requirements established by section 2 of this Act shall take effect on January 1, 2024.
4848
4949 SECTION 1. The legislature finds that digital currencies are assets that are primarily managed or stored electronically. Digital currencies refer to digital currency, cryptocurrency, e‑money, network money, e-cash, and others, as defined by various governmental jurisdictions. Digital currency may be recorded on a decentralized ledger on the Internet or a centralized database or ledger system owned by a company.
5050
5151 Digital currencies do not have physical form like banknotes or minted coins. Digital currencies are also usually not issued by a governmental body and are generally not considered legal tender. Although digital currency has grown in popularity and acceptance worldwide, there is little regulation of the industry in the United States, with a few states treating digital currency activities as within the scope of money transmitter laws.
5252
5353 The legislature further finds that the division of financial institutions of the department of commerce and consumer affairs and the Hawaii technology development corporation are currently conducting a sandbox pilot program, called the digital currency innovation lab, to study digital currency transactions. This study allows companies to conduct digital currency transactions without obtaining a money transmitter license while the division of financial institutions evaluates the need for more permanent and comprehensive oversight.
5454
5555 The data gathered through the digital currency innovation lab confirmed that digital currency transactions are not best regulated through existing money transmitter laws and that a new regulatory framework is appropriate.
5656
5757 The purpose of this Act is to:
5858
5959 (1) Establish a licensing program for special purpose digital currency companies that will replace the digital currency innovation lab; and
6060
6161 (2) Allow, for six months, any company participating in the digital currency innovation lab on June 30, 2023, to continue operations if a complete application for licensure is submitted to the division of financial institutions by March 1, 2024.
6262
6363 SECTION 2. The Hawaii Revised Statutes is amended by adding a new chapter to title 22 to be appropriately designated and to read as follows:
6464
6565 "CHAPTER
6666
6767 SPECIAL PURPOSE DIGITAL CURRENCY LICENSING ACT
6868
6969 PART I. GENERAL PROVISIONS
7070
7171 § -1 Definitions. As used in this chapter, unless the context otherwise requires:
7272
7373 "Commissioner" means the commissioner of financial institutions.
7474
7575 "Consumer" means a natural person who engages in a transaction that is primarily for that natural person's personal, family, or household purposes.
7676
7777 "Control" means ownership of, or the power to vote, twenty-five per cent or more of the outstanding voting securities of a licensee or controlling person. For purposes of determining the percentage of a licensee controlled by any person, there shall be aggregated with the controlling person's interest the interest of any other person controlled by the person, or by any spouse, parent, or child of the person.
7878
7979 "Control of digital currency", when used in reference to a transaction or relationship involving digital currency, means the power to execute unilaterally or prevent indefinitely a digital currency transaction.
8080
8181 "Control person" means an individual who directly or indirectly exercises control over a licensee or applicant.
8282
8383 "Custodial services" means the safekeeping, servicing, and management of customer digital currency and digital assets.
8484
8585 "Department" means the department of commerce and consumer affairs.
8686
8787 "Digital currency" means any type of digital representation of value that is used as a medium of exchange or a form of digitally stored value. "Digital currency" includes any type of digital representation of value that:
8888
89- (1) Has a centralized repository or administrator;
89+ (1) Have a centralized repository or administrator;
9090
91- (2) Is decentralized and has no centralized repository or administrator; or
91+ (2) Are decentralized and have no centralized repository or administrator; or
9292
9393 (3) May be created or obtained by computing or manufacturing effort.
9494
9595 "Digital currency" does not include any of the following:
9696
9797 (1) Digital representations of value that:
9898
9999 (A) Are used solely within online gaming platforms;
100100
101101 (B) Have no market or application outside of those gaming platforms; and
102102
103103 (C) Cannot be converted into, or redeemed for, fiat currency or digital currency;
104104
105105 (2) Digital representations of value that can be redeemed for:
106106
107107 (A) Goods, services, discounts, or purchases as part of a customer affinity or rewards program with the issuer or other designated merchants; or
108108
109109 (B) Digital representations of value in another customer affinity or rewards program,
110110
111111 but cannot be converted into or redeemed for fiat currency or digital currency; or
112112
113113 (3) Digital units used as part of prepaid cards.
114114
115115 "Digital currency administration" means issuing digital currency with the authority to redeem the currency for money, bank credit, or other digital currency.
116116
117117 "Digital currency business activity" means:
118118
119119 (1) Exchanging, transferring, or storing digital currency or engaging in digital currency administration, whether directly or through an agreement with a digital currency control-services vendor;
120120
121121 (2) Exchanging one or more digital representations of value used within one or more online games, game platforms, or family of games for money or bank credit outside the online game, game platform, or family of games offered by or on behalf of the same publisher from which the original digital representation of value was received;
122122
123123 (3) Storing, holding, or maintaining custody or control of digital currency on behalf of others;
124124
125125 (4) Buying and selling digital currency as a business;
126126
127127 (5) Performing exchange services as a business; or
128128
129129 (6) Controlling, administering, or issuing a digital currency.
130130
131131 "Digital currency control-services vendor" means a person that has control of digital currency solely under an agreement with a person that, on behalf of another person, assumes control of digital currency.
132132
133133 "Division" means the division of financial institutions of the department.
134134
135135 "Elder" means an individual who is sixty-two years of age or older.
136136
137137 "Exchange" means the conversion or change of:
138138
139139 (1) Fiat currency or other value into digital currency;
140140
141141 (2) Digital currency into fiat currency or other value; or
142142
143143 (3) One form of digital currency into another form of digital currency.
144144
145145 "Licensee" means a person who is licensed or required to be licensed under this chapter.
146146
147147 "NMLS" means the Nationwide Multistate Licensing System and Registry developed and maintained by the Conference of State Bank Supervisors for the state licensing and registration of state-licensed financial services providers.
148148
149149 "Person" means an individual, sole proprietorship, partnership, corporation, limited liability company, limited liability partnership, or other association of individuals, however organized.
150150
151151 "Private key" means a unique element of cryptographic data, or any substantially similar analogue, that is:
152152
153153 (1) Held by a person;
154154
155155 (2) Paired with a unique, publicly available element of cryptographic data; and
156156
157157 (3) Associated with an algorithm that is necessary to carry out an encryption or decryption required to execute a transaction.
158158
159159 "Special purpose digital currency company" means a person holding a special purpose digital currency license under this chapter.
160160
161161 "Stored value" means monetary value that is evidenced by an electronic record.
162162
163163 "Tangible net worth" means total assets, excluding intangible assets, less total liabilities, in accordance with United States generally accepted accounting principles.
164164
165165 "Transfer" means to assume control of digital currency from or on behalf of a person and to:
166166
167167 (1) Credit the digital currency to the account of another person;
168168
169169 (2) Move the digital currency from one account of a person to another account of the same person; or
170170
171171 (3) Relinquish control of digital currency to another person.
172172
173173 "United States dollar equivalent of digital currency" means the equivalent value of a particular digital currency in United States dollars shown on a digital currency exchange based in the United States for a particular date or specified period.
174174
175175 § -2 Exclusions. (a) This chapter shall not apply to:
176176
177177 (1) The exchange, transfer, or storage of digital currency or to digital currency administration to the extent regulated by the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (15 U.S.C. chapter 2B) or Commodity Exchange Act (7 U.S.C. chapter 1);
178178
179179 (2) Activity by a person that:
180180
181181 (A) Contributes only connectivity software or computing power to a:
182182
183183 (i) Decentralized digital currency; or
184184
185185 (ii) Protocol governing transfer of the digital representation of value;
186186
187187 (B) Provides only data storage or security services for a business engaged in digital currency business activity and does not otherwise engage in digital currency business activity on behalf of another person; or
188188
189189 (C) Provides only to a person, that is otherwise exempt from this chapter, digital currency as one or more enterprise solutions used solely among each other and has no agreement or relationship with a person that is an end-user of digital currency;
190190
191191 (3) A person using digital currency, including creating, investing, buying or selling, or obtaining digital currency as payment for the purchase or sale of goods or services, solely for academic purposes;
192192
193193 (4) A person whose digital currency business activity with or on behalf of persons is reasonably expected to be valued, in the aggregate, on an annual basis at $5,000 or less, measured by the United States dollar equivalent of digital currency;
194194
195195 (5) An attorney to the extent of providing escrow services to a person;
196196
197197 (6) A securities intermediary, as defined in section 490:8-102, or commodity intermediary, as defined in section 490:9-102;
198198
199199 (7) A digital currency control-services vendor;
200200
201201 (8) A person that:
202202
203203 (A) Does not receive compensation from a person for:
204204
205205 (i) Providing digital currency products or services; or
206206
207207 (ii) Conducting digital currency business activity; or
208208
209209 (B) Is engaged in testing products or services with the person's own funds or digital currency;
210210
211211 (9) Non-custodial digital currency business activity by a person using a digital currency:
212212
213213 (A) Acknowledged as legal tender by the United States or a government recognized by the United States; or
214214
215215 (B) That has been determined not to be a security by a United States regulatory agency; or
216216
217217 (10) Banks, bank holding companies, credit unions, savings banks, financial services loan companies, and mutual banks organized under the laws of the United States or any state.
218218
219219 (b) The commissioner may determine whether a person or class of persons is to be exempt from this chapter.
220220
221221 § -3 Powers of commissioner. In addition to any other powers provided by law, the commissioner may:
222222
223223 (1) Adopt rules pursuant to chapter 91 as the commissioner deems necessary for the administration of this chapter;
224224
225225 (2) Issue declaratory rulings or informal nonbinding interpretations;
226226
227227 (3) Investigate and conduct hearings regarding any violation of this chapter or any rule or order of, or agreement with, the commissioner;
228228
229229 (4) Create fact-finding committees that may make recommendations to the commissioner for the commissioner's deliberations;
230230
231231 (5) Require an applicant or any of its control persons, executive officers, directors, general partners, and managing members to disclose their relevant criminal history and request a criminal history record check to be conducted by or through NMLS or pursuant to chapter 846. The information shall be accompanied by the appropriate payment of the applicable fee for each criminal history record check;
232232
233233 (6) Contract with or employ qualified persons, including accountants, attorneys, investigators, examiners, auditors, or other professionals who may be exempt from chapter 76 and who shall assist the commissioner in exercising the commissioner's powers and duties;
234234
235235 (7) Process and investigate complaints, subpoena witnesses and documents, administer oaths, receive affidavits and oral testimony, including telephonic communications, and do anything necessary or incidental to the exercise of the commissioner's power and duties, including the authority to conduct contested case proceedings under chapter 91;
236236
237237 (8) Require a licensee to comply with:
238238
239239 (A) Any rule, guidance, guideline, statement, supervisory policy, or any similar proclamation issued or adopted by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation; or
240240
241241 (B) Any policy position of the Conference of State Bank Supervisors,
242242
243243 to the same extent and in the same manner as a bank chartered by the State;
244244
245245 (9) Enter into agreements or relationships with other government officials or regulatory associations to improve efficiencies and reduce regulatory burden by sharing resources; standardized or uniform methods or procedures; and documents, records, information, or evidence obtained under this chapter;
246246
247247 (10) Use, hire, contract, or employ publicly or privately available analytical systems, methods, or software to investigate or examine a licensee or person subject to this chapter;
248248
249249 (11) Accept and rely on investigation or examination reports made by other government officials, within or outside the State;
250250
251251 (12) Accept audit reports made by an independent certified public accountant for the licensee or person subject to this chapter during that part of the examination covering the same general subject matter as the audit and may incorporate the audit report in the report of the examination, report of investigation, or other writing of the commissioner; and
252252
253253 (13) Enter into agreements with, hire, retain, or contract with private and governmental entities to develop and create educational programs relating to special purpose digital currency.
254254
255255 PART II. LICENSING
256256
257257 § -11 License required. (a) A person shall not engage in digital currency business activity, or hold itself out as being able to engage in digital currency business activity, with or on behalf of another person unless the person is:
258258
259259 (1) Licensed in the State under this chapter; or
260260
261261 (2) Excluded from licensing under section -2.
262262
263263 (b) Any transaction made in violation of this section shall be void, and no person shall have the right to collect, receive, or retain any principal, interest, fees, or other charges in connection with the transaction.
264264
265265 § -12 Payment of fees. All fees, fines, penalties, and other charges collected pursuant to this chapter or by rule shall be deposited with the director of commerce and consumer affairs to the credit of the compliance resolution fund established pursuant to section 26‑9(o). Payments shall be made through NMLS, to the extent allowed by NMLS.
266266
267267 § -13 License; application; issuance. (a) The commissioner shall require all licensees to register with NMLS.
268268
269269 (b) Applicants for a license shall apply in a form as prescribed by NMLS or by the commissioner. The application shall contain, at a minimum, the following information:
270270
271271 (1) The legal name, trade names, and business address of:
272272
273273 (A) The applicant; and
274274
275275 (B) Every member, officer, principal, or director thereof, if the applicant is a partnership, association, limited liability company, limited liability partnership, or corporation;
276276
277277 (2) The applicant's principal place of business located in the United States;
278278
279279 (3) The complete address of any other branch offices at which the applicant currently proposes to engage in digital currency business activity in the State; and
280280
281281 (4) Other data, financial statements, and pertinent information as the commissioner may require with respect to the applicant or, if an applicant is not an individual, each of the applicant's control persons, executive officers, directors, general partners, and managing members.
282282
283283 (c) To fulfill the purposes of this chapter, the commissioner may enter into agreements or contracts with NMLS or other entities to use NMLS to collect and maintain records and process transaction fees or other fees related to licensees or other persons subject to this chapter.
284284
285285 (d) For the purpose and to the extent necessary to participate in NMLS, the commissioner may waive or modify, in whole or in part, by rule or order, any or all of the requirements of this chapter and establish new requirements as reasonably necessary to participate in NMLS.
286286
287287 (e) In connection with an application for a license under this chapter, the applicant, at a minimum, shall furnish to NMLS information or material concerning the applicant's identity, including:
288288
289289 (1) Fingerprints of the applicant or, if an applicant is not an individual, fingerprints of each of the applicant's control persons, executive officers, directors, general partners, and managing members for submission to the Federal Bureau of Investigation or any governmental agency or entity authorized to receive the fingerprints for a state, national, and international criminal history background check, accompanied by the applicable fee charged by the entities conducting the criminal history background check; and
290290
291291 (2) Personal history and experience of the applicant or, if an applicant is not an individual, the personal history and experience of each of the applicant's control persons, executive officers, directors, general partners, and managing members in a form prescribed by NMLS, including the submission of authorization for NMLS and the commissioner to obtain:
292292
293293 (A) An independent credit report obtained from a consumer reporting agency described in section 603(p) of the Fair Credit Reporting Act, title 15 United States Code section 1681a(p); and
294294
295295 (B) Information related to any administrative, civil, or criminal findings by any governmental jurisdiction;
296296
297297 provided that the commissioner may use any information obtained pursuant to this subsection or through NMLS to determine an applicant's demonstrated financial responsibility, character, and general fitness for licensure.
298298
299299 (f) The commissioner may use NMLS as an agent for requesting information from and distributing information to the United States Department of Justice or any governmental agency.
300300
301301 (g) The commissioner may use NMLS as an agent for requesting and distributing information to and from any source directed by the commissioner.
302302
303303 (h) An applicant for a license as a special purpose digital currency company shall be registered with the business registration division of the department to do business in the State before a license pursuant to this chapter is issued.
304304
305305 § -14 Issuance of license; grounds for denial. (a) The commissioner shall investigate every applicant to determine the financial responsibility, character, and general fitness of the applicant. The commissioner shall issue the applicant a license to engage in digital currency business activity if the commissioner determines that:
306306
307307 (1) The applicant or, in the case of an applicant that is not an individual, each of the applicant's control persons, executive officers, directors, general partners, and managing members has never had a special purpose digital currency license revoked in any jurisdiction; provided that a subsequent formal vacation of a revocation shall not be deemed a revocation for purposes of this section;
308308
309309 (2) The applicant or, in the case of an applicant that is not an individual, each of the applicant's control persons, executive officers, directors, general partners, and managing members has not been convicted of, pled guilty or nolo contendere to, or been granted a deferred acceptance of a guilty plea under federal law or the laws of any state to a felony in a domestic, foreign, or military court:
310310
311311 (A) During the seven-year period preceding the date of the application for licensing; or
312312
313313 (B) At any time preceding the date of application, if the felony involved an act of fraud, dishonesty, breach of trust, or money laundering;
314314
315315 provided that any pardon of a conviction shall not be deemed a conviction for the purposes of this section;
316316
317317 (3) The applicant or, in the case of an applicant that is not an individual, each of the applicant's control persons, executive officers, directors, general partners, and managing members has demonstrated financial responsibility, character, and general fitness to command the confidence of the community and to warrant a determination that the applicant shall operate honestly, fairly, and efficiently, pursuant to this chapter. For the purposes of this paragraph, a person is not financially responsible when the person has shown a disregard in the management of the person's financial condition. A determination that a person has shown a disregard in the management of the person's financial condition may be based upon:
318318
319319 (A) Current outstanding judgments, except judgments solely as a result of medical expenses;
320320
321321 (B) Current outstanding tax liens or other government liens and filings, subject to applicable disclosure laws and administrative rules;
322322
323323 (C) Foreclosures within the preceding three years; and
324324
325325 (D) A pattern of seriously delinquent accounts within the preceding three years;
326326
327327 (4) The applicant or, in the case of an applicant that is not an individual, each of the applicant's control persons, executive officers, directors, general partners, and managing members has not been convicted of, pled guilty or nolo contendere to, or been granted a deferred acceptance of a guilty plea under federal law or the laws of any state to any misdemeanor involving an act of fraud, dishonesty, breach of trust, or money laundering;
328328
329329 (5) The applicant has satisfied the licensing requirements of this chapter; and
330330
331331 (6) The applicant has provided the bond required by section -17.
332332
333333 (b) The applicant or, in the case of an applicant that is not an individual, each of the applicant's control persons, executive officers, directors, general partners, and managing members shall submit authorization to the commissioner for the commissioner to conduct background checks to determine or verify the information in subsection (a) in each state in which the person has conducted digital currency business activity. Authorization pursuant to this subsection shall include consent to provide additional fingerprints, if necessary, to law enforcement or regulatory bodies in other states.
334334
335335 (c) A license shall not be issued to an applicant:
336336
337337 (1) Whose license to conduct business under this chapter, or any similar statute in any other jurisdiction, has been suspended or revoked within five years of the filing of the present application;
338338
339339 (2) Whose license to conduct digital currency business activity has been revoked by an administrative order issued by the commissioner or the commissioner's designee, or the licensing authority of another state or jurisdiction, for the period specified in the administrative order;
340340
341341 (3) Who has advertised directly and purposefully to consumers in the State or conducted transactions in violation of this chapter; or
342342
343343 (4) Who has failed to complete an application for licensure.
344344
345345 (d) A license issued in accordance with this chapter shall remain in force and effect until surrendered, suspended, or revoked, or until the license expires as a result of nonpayment of the annual license renewal fee required by this chapter.
346346
347347 § -15 Anti-money laundering program. (a) Each licensee shall conduct an initial risk assessment that shall consider legal, compliance, financial, and reputational risks associated with the licensee's activities, services, customers, counterparties, and geographic location and establish, maintain, and enforce an anti-money laundering program based on the risk assessment. The licensee shall conduct additional assessments on an annual basis, or more frequently as risks change, and shall modify its anti-money laundering program as appropriate to reflect the changes.
348348
349349 (b) Each licensee, at a minimum, shall:
350350
351351 (1) Establish an effective anti-money laundering compliance program in accordance with the federal Anti-Money Laundering Act of 2020;
352352
353353 (2) Establish an effective customer due diligence system and monitoring program;
354354
355355 (3) Screen against the Specially Designated Nationals and Blocked Persons List maintained by the Office of Foreign Assets Control and other government lists;
356356
357357 (4) Maintain records of cash purchases or cash transactions and report to the appropriate federal regulatory agency, as required by the federal Anti‑Money Laundering Act of 2020;
358358
359359 (5) Establish an effective suspicious activity monitoring and reporting process; and
360360
361361 (6) Develop a risk-based anti-money laundering program.
362362
363363 (c) Each licensee shall have in place appropriate policies and procedures to block or reject specific or impermissible transactions that violate federal or state laws, rules, or regulations.
364364
365365 § -16 Cybersecurity program. (a) Each licensee shall establish and maintain an effective cybersecurity program to ensure the availability and functionality of the licensee's electronic systems and to protect those systems and any sensitive data stored on those systems from unauthorized access, use, or tampering. The cybersecurity program shall be designed to perform the following core cyber security functions:
366366
367367 (1) Identify internal and external cybersecurity risks by, at a minimum, identifying the information stored on the licensee's systems, the sensitivity of the information, and how and by whom the information may be accessed;
368368
369369 (2) Protect the licensee's electronic systems, and the information stored on those systems, from unauthorized access, use, or other malicious acts through the use of defensive infrastructure and the implementation of policies and procedures;
370370
371371 (3) Detect systems intrusions, data breaches, unauthorized access to systems or information, malware, and other cybersecurity events;
372372
373373 (4) Respond to detected cybersecurity events to mitigate any negative effects; and
374374
375375 (5) Recover from cybersecurity events and restore normal operations and services.
376376
377377 (b) Each licensee shall implement a written cybersecurity policy setting forth the licensee's policies and procedures for the protection of its electronic systems and customer and counterparty data stored on those systems, which shall be reviewed and approved by the licensee's board of directors or equivalent governing body at least annually. The cybersecurity policy shall:
378378
379379 (1) Establish effective policies, procedures, and controls to effectuate subsection (a);
380380
381381 (2) Designate a cybersecurity officer;
382382
383383 (3) Develop and implement employee training in accordance with position responsibilities to keep abreast of the changing cybersecurity risk and threats;
384384
385385 (4) Establish a method of independent testing; and
386386
387387 (5) Maintain records.
388388
389389 § -17 Fees; bond. (a) A special purpose digital currency company shall pay the following fees to the division through NMLS to obtain and maintain a valid license under this chapter:
390390
391391 (1) Initial nonrefundable application fee of $9,000;
392392
393393 (2) Nonrefundable renewal application fee of $1,000; and
394394
395395 (3) Fees collected by NMLS for the processing of the application, including applicable fees charged by the entities conducting:
396396
397397 (A) The criminal history background check of each of the applicant's control persons, executive officers, directors, general partners, and managing members for submission to the Federal Bureau of Investigation and any governmental agency or entity authorized to receive the fingerprints for a state, national, and international criminal history background check; and
398398
399399 (B) An independent credit report obtained from a consumer reporting agency described in section 603(p) of the Fair Credit Reporting Act, title 15 United States Code section 1681a(p).
400400
401401 (b) Every licensee shall be assessed quarterly fees based on the total value of transactions in the State, in United States dollar equivalent of digital currency, as reported in the quarterly reports. The quarterly fees shall be assessed the quarter after the applicant is licensed in accordance with the following:
402402
403403 (1) For licensees with a total value of transactions, in United States dollar equivalent of digital currency, not over $10,000, the quarterly assessment shall be $2,500;
404404
405405 (2) For licensees with a total value of transactions, in United States dollar equivalent of digital currency, over $10,000 but not over $15,000, the quarterly assessment shall be $3,750;
406406
407407 (3) For licensees with a total value of transactions, in United States dollar equivalent of digital currency, over $15,000 but not over $25,000, the quarterly assessment shall $6,250;
408408
409409 (4) For licensees with a total value of transactions, in United States dollar equivalent of digital currency, over $25,000 but not over $35,000, the quarterly assessment shall be $8,750; and
410410
411411 (5) For licensees with a total value of transactions, in United States dollar equivalent of digital currency, over $35,000, the quarterly assessment shall be $12,500.
412412
413413 (c) The assessments shall be paid quarterly on February 15, May 15, August 15, and November 15 of each year based on the licensee's quarterly reports as of the previous December 31, March 31, June 30, and September 30, respectively.
414414
415415 (d) The digital assets shall be based on the United States dollar equivalent of digital currency assets held on behalf of customers, calculated on United States dollars from the company's quarterly report based on the trading price of the asset on the licensee's platform as of 4:30 p.m. Hawaii Aleutian Standard Time.
416416
417417 (e) The applicant shall file and maintain a surety bond that is approved by the commissioner and executed by the applicant as obligor and by a surety company authorized to operate as a surety in the State, whose liability as a surety does not exceed, in the aggregate, the penal sum of the bond. The penal sum of the bond shall be a minimum of $500,000, based upon the annual United States dollar equivalent of digital currency as reported in the annual renewal report.
418418
419419 (f) The bond required by subsection (e) shall run to the State of Hawaii as obligee for the use and benefit of the State and of any person or persons who may have a cause of action against the licensee as obligor under this chapter. The bond shall be conditioned upon the following:
420420
421421 (1) The licensee as obligor shall faithfully conform to and abide by this chapter and all the rules adopted under this chapter; and
422422
423423 (2) The bond shall pay to the State and any person or persons having a cause of action against the licensee as obligor all moneys that may become due and owing to the State and those persons under and by virtue of this chapter.
424424
425425 § -18 Renewal of license; annual report; quarterly reports. (a) An annual report shall be filed in accordance with NMLS policy. The annual report shall include the licensee's most recent audited annual financial statement, including balance sheets, a statement of income or loss, a statement of changes in shareholders' equity, and a statement of cash flows or, if a licensee is a wholly owned subsidiary of another corporation, the consolidated audited annual financial statement of the parent corporation in lieu of the licensee's audited annual financial statement.
426426
427427 (b) Quarterly reports shall be filed in a form prescribed by the commissioner, which shall include:
428428
429429 (1) A report detailing the special purpose digital currency company's activities in the State since the prior reporting period, including:
430430
431431 (A) The number of stored value accounts opened;
432432
433433 (B) The number of transactions processed;
434434
435435 (C) The total value of transactions in United States dollar equivalent of digital currency;
436436
437437 (D) The number of system outages;
438438
439439 (E) A chart of accounts, including a description of each account; and
440440
441441 (F) Any other information that the commissioner may require related to performance metrics and the efficacy of the special purpose digital currency license program;
442442
443443 (2) A report of any material changes to any of the information submitted by the licensee on its original application that have not previously been reported to the commissioner on any other report required to be filed under this chapter;
444444
445445 (3) Disclosure of any pending or final suspension, revocation, or other enforcement action by any state or governmental authority; and
446446
447447 (4) Any other information the commissioner may require.
448448
449449 (c) A licensee may renew its license by:
450450
451451 (1) Continuing to meet the licensing requirements of sections -13, -14, -15, -16, and -17;
452452
453453 (2) Filing a completed renewal application on a form prescribed by NMLS or by the commissioner;
454454
455455 (3) Paying a renewal fee; and
456456
457457 (4) Meeting all other requirements of this section.
458458
459459 (d) At renewal, a licensee that has not filed an application deemed complete by the commissioner, an annual report, or quarterly reports or paid the quarterly fees, and has not been granted an extension of time by the commissioner, shall have its license suspended on the renewal date. The licensee shall have thirty days after its license is suspended to file the annual report or quarterly reports, or pay the quarterly fees, plus a late filing fee of $250 for each day after suspension that the commissioner does not receive the annual report, quarterly reports, and the quarterly fee. The commissioner, for good cause, may reduce or suspend the late filing fee.
460460
461461 § -19 Principal place of business. (a) Every special purpose digital currency company licensed under this chapter shall have and maintain a principal place of business in the United States, regardless of whether the special purpose digital currency company maintains its principal office outside of the United States.
462462
463463 (b) The principal place of business of the special purpose digital currency company shall be identified in NMLS.
464464
465465 § -20 Sale or transfer of license; change of control. (a) No special purpose digital currency company license shall be transferred, except as provided in this section.
466466
467467 (b) A person or group of persons requesting approval of a proposed change of control of a licensee shall submit to the commissioner an application requesting approval of a proposed change of control of the licensee, accompanied by a nonrefundable application fee of $10,000.
468468
469469 (c) After review of an application requesting approval under subsection (b), the commissioner may require the licensee or person or group of persons requesting approval of a proposed change of control of the licensee, or both, to provide additional information concerning the persons who shall assume control of the licensee. The additional information shall be limited to similar information required of the licensee or persons in control of the licensee as part of its original license or renewal application. The information shall include, for the five-year period prior to the date of the application for change of control of the licensee, a history of material litigation and criminal convictions of each person who, upon approval of the application for change of control, will be a principal of the licensee. Authorization shall also be given to conduct criminal history record checks of those persons, accompanied by the appropriate payment of the applicable fee for each record check.
470470
471471 (d) The commissioner shall approve an application requesting a change of control under subsection (b) if, after investigation, the commissioner determines that the person or group of persons requesting approval has the competence, experience, character, and general fitness to control the licensee or person in control of the licensee in a lawful and proper manner, and that the interests of the public will not be jeopardized by the change of control.
472472
473473 (e) The following persons shall be exempt from the requirements of subsection (b); provided that the licensee shall notify the commissioner when control is assumed by a person:
474474
475475 (1) Who acts as a proxy for the sole purpose of voting at a designated meeting of the security holders or holders of voting interests of a licensee or person in control of a licensee;
476476
477477 (2) Who acquires control of a licensee by devise or descent;
478478
479479 (3) Who acquires control as a personal representative, custodian, guardian, conservator, trustee, or as an officer appointed by a court of competent jurisdiction or by operation of law; or
480480
481481 (4) Whom the commissioner, by rule or order, exempts in the public interest.
482482
483483 (f) Before filing an application requesting approval for a change of control, a person may request, in writing, a determination from the commissioner as to whether the person would be considered a person in control of a licensee upon consummation of a proposed transaction. If the commissioner determines that the person would not be a person in control of a licensee, the commissioner shall enter an order to that effect and the proposed person and transaction shall not be subject to subsections (b) through (d).
484484
485485 (g) Subsection (b) shall not apply to public offerings of securities.
486486
487487 § -21 Ownership and control of digital currency. (a) A licensee that has control of digital currency for one or more persons shall maintain control of digital currency in each type of digital currency sufficient to satisfy the aggregate entitlements of the persons to the type of digital currency.
488488
489489 (b) If a licensee violates subsection (a), the property interests of the persons in the digital currency shall be pro rata property interests in the type of digital currency to which the persons are entitled, without regard to the time the persons became entitled to the digital currency or the licensee obtained control of the digital currency.
490490
491491 (c) The digital currency referred to in this section shall:
492492
493493 (1) Be held for the persons entitled to the digital currency;
494494
495495 (2) Not be considered property of the licensee; and
496496
497497 (3) Not be subject to the claims of creditors of the licensee.
498498
499499 (d) To the extent a licensee stores, holds, or maintains custody or control of digital currency on behalf of another person, the licensee shall hold digital currency of the same type and amount as that which is owed or obligated to that other person.
500500
501501 (e) Each licensee shall be prohibited from selling, transferring, assigning, lending, hypothecating, pledging, or otherwise using or encumbering assets, including digital currency, stored, held, or maintained by, or under the custody or control of, the licensee on behalf of another person except for the sale, transfer, or assignment of the assets at the direction of that other person, unless clearly presented and stated to the client that doing so is the intent of the product.
502502
503503 PART III. DISCLOSURES, ADVERTISING, AND RECORDKEEPING
504504
505505 § -31 Required disclosures. (a) A licensee that engages in digital currency business activity shall provide to a person who uses the licensee's products or service the disclosures required by subsection (b) and any additional disclosure the commissioner determines reasonably necessary for the protection of persons. The commissioner shall determine the time and form required for disclosure. A disclosure required by this section shall be made separately from any other information provided by the licensee and kept by the person in a clear and conspicuous manner in a record. A licensee may propose for the commissioner's approval alternate disclosures as more appropriate for its digital currency business activity.
506506
507507 (b) Before establishing a relationship with a person, a licensee shall disclose the following, to the extent applicable to the digital currency business activity the licensee will undertake with the person:
508508
509509 (1) A schedule of fees and charges the licensee may assess, how fees and charges will be calculated if they are not set in advance and disclosed, and the timing of the fees and charges;
510510
511511 (2) Whether the product or service provided by the licensee is covered by:
512512
513513 (A) A form of insurance or is otherwise guaranteed against loss by an agency of the United States, including the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation and Securities Investor Protection Corporation, up to the United States dollar equivalent of digital currency purchased from the licensee or for control of digital currency by the licensee; or
514514
515515 (B) Private insurance against theft or loss, including cyber theft or theft by other means;
516516
517517 (3) The irrevocability of a transfer or exchange;
518518
519519 (4) The method by which the person can update the person's contact information with the licensee;
520520
521521 (5) That the date or time when the transfer or exchange is made, and when the person's account is debited, may differ from the date or time when the person initiates the instruction to make the transfer or exchange;
522522
523523 (6) The person's right to receive a receipt or other evidence of the transfer or exchange;
524524
525525 (7) The person's right to at least thirty days notice of a change in the licensee's fee schedule, other terms and conditions of operating its digital currency business activity with the person, and the policies applicable to the person's account; and
526526
527527 (8) That digital currency is not money.
528528
529529 (c) At the end of a digital currency transaction with or on behalf of a person, a licensee shall provide the person a confirmation in a record that contains:
530530
531531 (1) The name and contact information of the licensee, including information the person may need to ask a question or file a complaint;
532532
533533 (2) The type, value, date, precise time, and amount of the transaction; and
534534
535535 (3) The fee charged for the transaction, including any charge for conversion of digital currency to money, bank credit, or other digital currency.
536536
537537 § -32 Tangible net worth requirement; records. (a) A licensee engaged in digital currency business activity shall maintain at all times, a tangible net worth of no less than $500,000, or an amount determined by the commissioner necessary to ensure safe and sound operation.
538538
539539 (b) Each licensee shall make, keep, preserve, and make available for inspection by the commissioner the books, accounts, and other records required in subsection (c). A licensee shall maintain records required by subsection (c) in a form that enables the commissioner to determine whether the licensee is in compliance with this chapter, any court order, and the laws of the State.
540540
541541 (c) A licensee shall maintain, for all digital currency business activity with or on behalf of a person five years after the date of the activity, a record of:
542542
543543 (1) Each transaction of the licensee with or on behalf of the person or for the licensee's account in the State, including:
544544
545545 (A) The identity of the person;
546546
547547 (B) The form of the transaction;
548548
549549 (C) The amount, date, and payment instructions given by the person; and
550550
551551 (D) The account number, name, and address of the person and, to the extent feasible, other parties to the transaction;
552552
553553 (2) The aggregate number of transactions and aggregate value of transactions by the licensee with or on behalf of the person and for the licensee's account in this State, expressed in United States dollar equivalent of digital currency for the previous twelve calendar months;
554554
555555 (3) Each transaction in which the licensee exchanges one form of digital currency for money or another form of digital currency with or on behalf of the person;
556556
557557 (4) A general ledger posted at least monthly that lists all assets, liabilities, capital, income, ownership equity, and expenses of the licensee;
558558
559559 (5) Each business-call report the licensee is required to create or provide to the division or NMLS;
560560
561561 (6) Bank statements and bank reconciliation records for the licensee and the name, account number, and United States Postal Service address of each bank the licensee uses in the conduct of its digital currency business activity with or on behalf of the person;
562562
563563 (7) Communications and documentation related to investigations of customer complaints; and
564564
565565 (8) A report of any digital currency business activity transaction with or on behalf of a person, that the licensee was unable to complete.
566566
567567 § -33 Advertising and marketing. (a) Each licensee engaged in digital currency business activity shall not advertise its products, services, or activities in the State or to consumers in the State without including the name of the licensee and the legend that the licensee is "Licensed to engage in Digital Currency Business Activity by the State of Hawaii Department of Commerce and Consumer Affairs' Division of Financial Institutions."
568568
569569 (b) Each licensee shall maintain, for examination by the commissioner, all advertising and marketing materials for a period of at least five years from the date of their creation, including but not limited to print media, internet media, websites, radio and television advertising, road show materials, presentations, and brochures. Each licensee shall maintain website captures of material changes to internet advertising and marketing, and audio and video transcripts of its advertising and marketing materials, as applicable.
570570
571571 (c) In all advertising and marketing materials, each licensee shall comply with all disclosure requirements under federal and state laws, rules, and regulations.
572572
573573 (d) In all advertising and marketing materials, each licensee and any person or entity acting on its behalf, shall not, directly or by implication, make any false, misleading, or deceptive representations or omissions.
574574
575575 § -34 Confidentiality. (a) Except as otherwise provided in title 12 United States Code section 5111, the requirements under any federal or state law regarding the privacy or confidentiality of any information or material provided to NMLS, and any privilege arising under federal or state law, including the rules of any federal or state court, with respect to the information or material, shall continue to apply to the information or material after the information or material has been disclosed to NMLS. The information and material may be shared with all federal and state regulatory officials with oversight authority over transactions subject to this chapter, without the loss of privilege or the loss of confidentiality protections provided by federal or state law.
576576
577577 (b) For the purposes of this section, the commissioner may enter into agreements or sharing arrangements with other governmental agencies, the Conference of State Bank Supervisors, or other associations representing governmental agencies as established by rule or order of the commissioner.
578578
579579 (c) Information or material that is subject to a privilege or confidentiality under subsection (a) shall not be subject to:
580580
581581 (1) Disclosure under chapter 92F; or
582582
583583 (2) Subpoena or discovery, or admission into evidence, in any private civil action or administrative process, unless any privilege is determined by NMLS to be applicable to the information or material; provided that the person to whom the information or material pertains waives that privilege, in whole or in part, in the discretion of the person.
584584
585585 (d) Notwithstanding chapter 92F, the examination process and related information and documents, including the reports of examination, shall be confidential and shall not be subject to discovery or disclosure in civil or criminal lawsuits.
586586
587587 (e) In the event of a conflict between this section and any other section of law relating to the disclosure of privileged or confidential information or material, this section shall control.
588588
589589 (f) This section shall not apply to information or material relating to the employment history of, and publicly adjudicated disciplinary and enforcement actions against, any persons that are included in NMLS for access by the public.
590590
591591 PART IV. ENFORCEMENT
592592
593593 § -41 Enforcement authority; violations; penalties. (a) To ensure the effective supervision and enforcement of this chapter, the commissioner may take any disciplinary action specified in subsection (b) against an applicant or licensee if the commissioner finds that:
594594
595595 (1) The applicant or licensee has violated this chapter, or any rule or order lawfully adopted pursuant to this chapter;
596596
597597 (2) The applicant has failed to disclose facts or conditions that would have clearly justified the commissioner in denying an application for licensure, had these facts or conditions been known to exist at the time the application was made;
598598
599599 (3) The applicant or licensee has failed to provide information required by the commissioner within a reasonable time, as specified by the commissioner;
600600
601601 (4) The applicant or licensee has failed to provide or maintain proof of financial responsibility;
602602
603603 (5) The applicant or licensee is insolvent;
604604
605605 (6) The applicant or licensee has made, in any document or statement filed with the commissioner, a false representation of a material fact or has omitted to state a material fact;
606606
607607 (7) The applicant, licensee, or, if an applicant or licensee is not an individual, any of the applicant's or licensee's control persons, executive officers, directors, general partners, or managing members have been convicted of or entered a plea of guilty or nolo contendere to a crime involving fraud or deceit, or to any similar crime under the jurisdiction of any federal court or court of another state;
608608
609609 (8) The applicant or licensee has failed to make, maintain, or produce records that comply with section -42 or any rule adopted by the commissioner pursuant to chapter 91;
610610
611611 (9) The applicant or licensee has been the subject of any disciplinary action by any state or federal agency that resulted in revocation of a license;
612612
613613 (10) A final judgment has been entered against the applicant or licensee for violations of this chapter, any state or federal law concerning a special purpose digital currency license or money transmitter license, or any state or federal law prohibiting unfair or deceptive acts or practices; or
614614
615615 (11) The applicant or licensee has failed, in a timely manner as specified by the commissioner, to take or provide proof of the corrective action required by the commissioner after an investigation or examination pursuant to section -42.
616616
617617 (b) After a finding of one or more of the conditions under subsection (a), the commissioner may take any or all the following actions:
618618
619619 (1) Deny an application for licensure, including an application for a branch office license;
620620
621621 (2) Suspend or revoke the license in accordance with section -45;
622622
623623 (3) Issue an order to the licensee to cease and desist in accordance with section -46 from engaging in any act specified under subsection (a);
624624
625625 (4) Order the licensee to make refunds to consumers of excess charges under this chapter; or
626626
627627 (5) Impose penalties of up to $10,000 for each violation in accordance with section -48.
628628
629629 (c) The commissioner may issue a temporary cease and desist order if the commissioner makes a finding that the licensee, applicant, or person is engaging, has engaged, or is about to engage in an illegal, unauthorized, unsafe, or unsound practice in violation of this chapter. Whenever the commissioner denies a license application or takes disciplinary action pursuant to this subsection, the commissioner shall enter an order to that effect and notify the licensee, applicant, or person of the denial or disciplinary action. The notification required by this subsection shall be given by personal service or by certified mail to the last known address of the licensee or applicant as shown on the application or license, or as subsequently furnished in writing to the commissioner.
630630
631631 (d) The revocation, suspension, expiration, or surrender of a license shall not affect the licensee's liability for acts previously committed or impair the commissioner's ability to issue a final agency order or take disciplinary action against the licensee.
632632
633633 (e) No revocation, suspension, consent order, or surrender of a license shall impair or affect the obligation of any preexisting lawful contract between the licensee and any consumer.
634634
635635 (f) The commissioner may reinstate a license, terminate a suspension, or grant a new license to a person whose license has been revoked or suspended if no fact or condition then exists that would clearly justify the commissioner in revoking, suspending, or refusing to grant a license.
636636
637637 (g) The commissioner may impose an administrative fine on a licensee or person subject to this chapter if the commissioner finds on the record after notice and opportunity for hearing that the licensee or person subject to this chapter has violated or failed to comply with any requirement of this chapter or any rule adopted by the commissioner under this chapter or order issued under the authority of this chapter.
638638
639639 (h) Each violation or failure to comply with any directive or order of the commissioner shall be a separate and distinct violation.
640640
641641 § -42 Investigation and examination authority. (a) In addition to the authority granted under section -3, the commissioner may conduct investigations and examinations in accordance with this section. The commissioner may access, receive, and use any books, accounts, records, files, documents, information, or evidence that the commissioner deems relevant to the investigation or examination, regardless of the location, possession, control, or custody of the documents, information, or evidence.
642642
643643 (b) For the purposes of investigating violations or complaints arising under this chapter, or for the purposes of examination, the commissioner may review, investigate, or examine any licensee or person subject to this chapter as often as necessary to carry out the purposes of this chapter. The commissioner may direct, subpoena, or order the attendance of, and examine under oath, all persons whose testimony may be required about digital currency transactions or the business or subject matter of any investigation or examination and may direct, subpoena, or order the person to produce books, accounts, records, files, and any other documents the commissioner deems relevant to the inquiry.
644644
645645 (c) Each licensee or person subject to this chapter shall provide to the commissioner, upon request, the books and records relating to the operations of the licensee or person subject to this chapter. The commissioner shall have access to the books and records and shall be permitted to interview the control persons, executive officers, directors, general partners, managing members, principals, managers, employees, independent contractors, agents, and consumers of the licensee or person subject to this chapter concerning their business.
646646
647647 (d) Each licensee or person subject to this chapter shall make or compile reports or prepare other information, as directed by the commissioner, to carry out the purposes of this section, including:
648648
649649 (1) Accounting compilations;
650650
651651 (2) Information lists and data concerning digital currency transactions in a format prescribed by the commissioner; or
652652
653653 (3) Other information that the commissioner deems necessary.
654654
655655 (e) In conducting any investigation or examination authorized by this chapter, the commissioner may control access to any documents and records of the licensee or person under investigation or examination. The commissioner may take possession of the documents and records or place a person in exclusive charge of the documents and records. During the period of control, no person shall remove or attempt to remove any of the documents and records except pursuant to a court order or with the consent of the commissioner. Unless the commissioner has reasonable grounds to believe the documents or records of the licensee or person under investigation or examination have been, or are at risk of being, altered or destroyed for the purposes of concealing a violation of this chapter, the licensee or owner of the documents and records shall have access to the documents or records as necessary to conduct its ordinary business affairs.
656656
657657 (f) The authority of this section shall remain in effect, whether a licensee or person subject to this chapter acts or claims to act under any licensing or registration law of this State or claims to act without this authority.
658658
659659 (g) No licensee or person subject to investigation or examination under this section may knowingly withhold, abstract, remove, mutilate, destroy, or conceal any books, records, computer records, or other information.
660660
661661 (h) The commissioner may charge an investigation or examination fee, payable to the commissioner, based upon the cost per hour per examiner for all licensees and persons subject to this chapter investigated or examined by the commissioner or the commissioner's staff. The hourly fee shall be $60 or an amount as the commissioner shall establish by rule pursuant to chapter 91. In addition to the investigation or examination fee, the commissioner may charge any person who is investigated or examined by the commissioner or the commissioner's staff pursuant to this section additional fees for travel, per diem, mileage, and other reasonable expenses incurred in connection with the investigation or examination, payable to the commissioner.
662662
663663 (i) Any person having reason to believe that this chapter or the rules adopted under this chapter have been violated, or that a license issued under this chapter should be suspended or revoked, may file a written complaint with the commissioner, setting forth the details of the alleged violation or grounds for suspension or revocation.
664664
665665 § -43 Prohibited practices. (a) It shall be a violation of this chapter for a licensee, its control persons, executive officers, directors, general partners, managing members, employees, or independent contractors, or any other person subject to this chapter to:
666666
667667 (1) Engage in any act that limits or restricts the application of this chapter;
668668
669669 (2) Use a customer's digital currency account number to prepare, issue, or create a digital currency transaction on behalf of the consumer without the customer's authorization;
670670
671671 (3) Charge, collect, or receive, directly or indirectly, fees for negotiating digital currency transactions except those explicitly authorized in this chapter;
672672
673673 (4) Fail to make disclosures as required by this chapter and any other applicable federal or state law, including rules or regulations adopted pursuant to federal or state law;
674674
675675 (5) Directly or indirectly employ any scheme, device, or artifice to defraud or mislead any consumer or person;
676676
677677 (6) Directly or indirectly engage in unfair or deceptive acts, practices, or advertising in connection with a digital currency business activity toward any person;
678678
679679 (7) Directly or indirectly obtain digital currency by fraud or misrepresentation;
680680
681681 (8) Conduct digital currency business activity with or on behalf of any person physically located in the State through the use of the Internet, facsimile, telephone, kiosk, or other means without first obtaining a license under this chapter;
682682
683683 (9) Make, in any manner, any false or deceptive statement or representation, including with regard to the rates, fees, or other financing terms or conditions for digital currency business activity, or engage in bait and switch advertising;
684684
685685 (10) Make any false statement or knowingly make any omission of material fact in connection with any reports filed with the division by a licensee or in connection with any investigation conducted by the division;
686686
687687 (11) Conduct digital currency business activity from any unlicensed location;
688688
689689 (12) Draft funds from any depository financial institution without written approval of the consumer; provided that nothing in this paragraph shall prohibit the conversion of a negotiable instrument into an electronic form for processing through the Automated Clearing House or similar system;
690690
691691 (13) Fail to comply with all applicable federal and state laws relating to the activities governed by this chapter; or
692692
693693 (14) Fail to pay any fee, assessment, or moneys due to the department.
694694
695695 (b) In addition to any other penalties provided for under this chapter, any digital currency transaction in violation of subsection (a) shall be void and unenforceable.
696696
697697 § -44 Voluntary surrender of license. (a) A licensee may voluntarily cease business and surrender its license by giving written notice through NMLS to the commissioner of the licensee's intent to surrender its license. Prior to the surrender date, the licensee shall have either completed all pending digital currency transactions or assigned each pending digital currency transaction to another licensee.
698698
699699 (b) Notice to the commissioner shall be provided at least thirty days before the surrender of the license and shall include:
700700
701701 (1) The date of surrender;
702702
703703 (2) The name, address, telephone number, facsimile number, and electronic mail address of a contact individual with knowledge and authority sufficient to communicate with the commissioner regarding all matters relating to the licensee during the period that it was licensed pursuant to this chapter;
704704
705705 (3) The reason or reasons for surrender;
706706
707707 (4) The total dollar amount of the licensee's outstanding digital currency transactions in the State and the individual amounts of each outstanding digital currency transactions and the name, address, and contact telephone number of the licensee to whom each outstanding digital currency transaction was assigned;
708708
709709 (5) A list of the licensee's authorized branch offices in the State, if any, as of the date of surrender;
710710
711711 (6) Confirmation that the licensee has notified each of its authorized branch offices in the State, if any, that the branch offices shall no longer conduct digital currency business activity on the licensee's behalf; and
712712
713- (7) Confirmation that the licensee has notified each of its digital currency accounts, if any, that the digital currency account is being transferred and the name, address, telephone number, and any other contact information of the licensee or entity described in section -20 to whom the digital currency was assigned.
713+ (7) Confirmation that the licensee has notified each of its digital currency accounts, if any, that the digital currency account is being transferred and the name, address, telephone number, and any other contact information of the licensee or entity described in section -30 to whom the digital currency was assigned.
714714
715715 (c) Voluntary surrender of a license shall be effective upon the date of surrender specified on the written notice to the commissioner as required by this section; provided that the licensee has met all the requirements of voluntary surrender.
716716
717717 § -45 Suspension or revocation of licenses. The commissioner may suspend or revoke a license if the commissioner finds that:
718718
719719 (1) Any fact or condition exists that, if it had existed at the time at which the licensee applied for its license, would have been grounds for denying the licensee's application;
720720
721721 (2) The licensee's tangible net worth becomes inadequate and the licensee, after ten days' written notice from the commissioner, fails to take steps as the commissioner deems necessary to remedy a deficiency;
722722
723723 (3) The licensee knowingly violates any material provision of this chapter or any rule adopted or order issued by the commissioner under authority of this chapter;
724724
725725 (4) The licensee is conducting its business in an unsafe or unsound manner;
726726
727727 (5) The licensee is insolvent;
728728
729729 (6) The licensee has suspended payment of its obligations, has made an assignment for the benefit of its creditors, or has admitted, in writing, its inability to pay its debts as they become due;
730730
731731 (7) The licensee has filed for bankruptcy, reorganization, arrangement, or other relief under any bankruptcy law;
732732
733733 (8) The licensee refuses to permit the commissioner to make any investigation or examination authorized by this chapter; or
734734
735735 (9) The competence, experience, character, or general fitness of the licensee indicates that it is not in the public interest to allow the licensee to have a license.
736736
737737 § -46 Orders to cease and desist. (a) If the commissioner determines that a licensee's violation of this chapter or a rule adopted or an order issued under this chapter is:
738738
739739 (1) Likely to cause immediate and irreparable harm to the licensee, the licensee's customers, or the public as a result of the violation; or
740740
741741 (2) Cause insolvency or significant dissipation of assets of the licensee,
742742
743743 the commissioner may issue an order requiring the licensee to cease and desist from the violation. The order shall become effective upon service of the order upon the licensee.
744744
745745 (b) An order to cease and desist shall remain effective and enforceable pending the completion of an administrative proceeding pursuant to chapter 91.
746746
747747 (c) A licensee that is served with an order to cease and desist may petition the circuit court for a judicial order setting aside, limiting, or suspending the enforcement, operation, or effectiveness of the order pending the completion of an administrative proceeding pursuant to sections -51 or -52.
748748
749749 (d) The commissioner shall commence an administrative proceeding pursuant to chapter 91 within twenty days after issuing an order to cease and desist.
750750
751751 (e) The commissioner may apply to the circuit court for an appropriate order to protect the public interest.
752752
753753 § -47 Consent orders. The commissioner may enter into a consent order at any time with a person to resolve a matter arising under this chapter. A consent order shall be signed by the person to whom the order is issued or by the person's authorized representative and shall indicate agreement with the terms contained in the order. A consent order may provide that it does not constitute an admission by a person that this chapter or a rule adopted or an order issued under this chapter has been violated.
754754
755755 § -48 Civil penalties. (a) The commissioner may assess a fine against a person who violates this chapter or a rule adopted or an order issued under this chapter in an amount not to exceed $10,000 per violation, plus the State's costs and expenses for the investigation and prosecution of the matter, including reasonable attorneys' fees.
756756
757757 (b) Any violation of this chapter that is directed toward, targets, or injures an elder may be subject to an additional civil penalty of no more than $10,000 for each violation, in addition to any other fines or penalties assessed for the violation.
758758
759759 § -49 Criminal penalties. (a) A person who intentionally makes a false statement, misrepresentation, or false certification in a record filed or required to be maintained under this chapter, who intentionally makes a false entry, or who omits a material entry in a record shall be guilty of a class C felony and shall be subject to a fine of no more than $10,000.
760760
761761 (b) An individual or person who knowingly engages in any activity for which a license is required under this chapter, without being licensed under this chapter, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor and shall be subject to a fine of no more than $1,000, imprisonment of no more than one year, or both. Each day a violation exists shall be deemed a separate offense.
762762
763763 § -50 Unlicensed persons. (a) If the commissioner has reason to believe that a person has violated or is violating section -11, the commissioner may issue an order to show cause why an order to cease and desist should not issue requiring that the person cease and desist from the violation of section -11.
764764
765765 (b) If the commissioner has reason to believe that a person has violated or is violating section -11, the commissioner may petition the circuit court for the issuance of a temporary restraining order if the public would be irreparably harmed.
766766
767767 (c) An order to cease and desist shall become effective upon service of the order upon the person.
768768
769769 (d) An order to cease and desist shall remain effective and enforceable pending the completion of an administrative proceeding pursuant to section -46.
770770
771771 (e) A person who is served with an order to cease and desist for violating section -11 may petition the circuit court for a judicial order setting aside, limiting, or suspending the enforcement, operation, or effectiveness of the order to cease and desist pending the completion of an administrative proceeding pursuant to section -46.
772772
773773 (f) The commissioner shall commence an administrative proceeding within twenty days after issuing an order to cease and desist.
774774
775775 § -51 Administrative procedures. All administrative proceedings under this chapter shall be conducted in accordance with chapter 91.
776776
777- § -52 Hearings. Except as otherwise provided in sections 18(d) and -45, the commissioner shall not suspend or revoke a license, issue an order to cease and desist, or assess a civil penalty without notice and an opportunity to be heard.
777+ § -52 Hearings. Except as otherwise provided in sections 18(g) and -45, the commissioner shall not suspend or revoke a license, issue an order to cease and desist, or assess a civil penalty without notice and an opportunity to be heard.
778778
779779 § -53 Division functions. (a) The division shall exercise all administrative functions of the State in relation to the regulation, supervision, and licensing of special purpose digital currency companies.
780780
781781 (b) The division shall interpret and enforce this chapter."
782782
783783 SECTION 3. Section 489D-4, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by amending the definition of "monetary value" to read as follows:
784784
785785 ""Monetary value" means a medium of exchange, whether or not redeemable in money[.], except as defined as digital currency under chapter ."
786786
787787 SECTION 4. Section 846-2.7, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by amending subsection (b) to read as follows:
788788
789789 "(b) Criminal history record checks may be conducted by:
790790
791791 (1) The department of health or its designee on operators of adult foster homes for individuals with developmental disabilities or developmental disabilities domiciliary homes and their employees, as provided by section 321-15.2;
792792
793793 (2) The department of health or its designee on prospective employees, persons seeking to serve as providers, or subcontractors in positions that place them in direct contact with clients when providing non-witnessed direct mental health or health care services as provided by section 321-171.5;
794794
795795 (3) The department of health or its designee on all applicants for licensure or certification for, operators for, prospective employees, adult volunteers, and all adults, except adults in care, at healthcare facilities as defined in section 321-15.2;
796796
797797 (4) The department of education on employees, prospective employees, and teacher trainees in any public school in positions that necessitate close proximity to children as provided by section 302A-601.5;
798798
799799 (5) The counties on employees and prospective employees who may be in positions that place them in close proximity to children in recreation or child care programs and services;
800800
801801 (6) The county liquor commissions on applicants for liquor licenses as provided by section 281-53.5;
802802
803803 (7) The county liquor commissions on employees and prospective employees involved in liquor administration, law enforcement, and liquor control investigations;
804804
805805 (8) The department of human services on operators and employees of child caring institutions, child placing organizations, and foster boarding homes as provided by section 346-17;
806806
807807 (9) The department of human services on prospective adoptive parents as established under section 346‑19.7;
808808
809809 (10) The department of human services or its designee on applicants to operate child care facilities, household members of the applicant, prospective employees of the applicant, and new employees and household members of the provider after registration or licensure as provided by section 346-154, and persons subject to section 346-152.5;
810810
811811 (11) The department of human services on persons exempt pursuant to section 346-152 to be eligible to provide child care and receive child care subsidies as provided by section 346-152.5;
812812
813813 (12) The department of health on operators and employees of home and community-based case management agencies and operators and other adults, except for adults in care, residing in community care foster family homes as provided by section 321-15.2;
814814
815815 (13) The department of human services on staff members of the Hawaii youth correctional facility as provided by section 352-5.5;
816816
817817 (14) The department of human services on employees, prospective employees, and volunteers of contracted providers and subcontractors in positions that place them in close proximity to youth when providing services on behalf of the office or the Hawaii youth correctional facility as provided by section 352D-4.3;
818818
819819 (15) The judiciary on employees and applicants at detention and shelter facilities as provided by section 571-34;
820820
821821 (16) The department of public safety on employees and prospective employees who are directly involved with the treatment and care of persons committed to a correctional facility or who possess police powers including the power of arrest as provided by section 353C-5;
822822
823823 (17) The board of private detectives and guards on applicants for private detective or private guard licensure as provided by section 463-9;
824824
825825 (18) Private schools and designated organizations on employees and prospective employees who may be in positions that necessitate close proximity to children; provided that private schools and designated organizations receive only indications of the states from which the national criminal history record information was provided pursuant to section 302C-1;
826826
827827 (19) The public library system on employees and prospective employees whose positions place them in close proximity to children as provided by section 302A‑601.5;
828828
829829 (20) The State or any of its branches, political subdivisions, or agencies on applicants and employees holding a position that has the same type of contact with children, vulnerable adults, or persons committed to a correctional facility as other public employees who hold positions that are authorized by law to require criminal history record checks as a condition of employment as provided by section 78-2.7;
830830
831831 (21) The department of health on licensed adult day care center operators, employees, new employees, subcontracted service providers and their employees, and adult volunteers as provided by section 321-15.2;
832832
833833 (22) The department of human services on purchase of service contracted and subcontracted service providers and their employees serving clients of the adult protective and community services branch, as provided by section 346-97;
834834
835835 (23) The department of human services on foster grandparent program, senior companion program, and respite companion program participants as provided by section 346-97;
836836
837837 (24) The department of human services on contracted and subcontracted service providers and their current and prospective employees that provide home and community‑based services under section 1915(c) of the Social Security Act, title 42 United States Code section 1396n(c), or under any other applicable section or sections of the Social Security Act for the purposes of providing home and community-based services, as provided by section 346-97;
838838
839839 (25) The department of commerce and consumer affairs on proposed directors and executive officers of a bank, savings bank, savings and loan association, trust company, and depository financial services loan company as provided by section 412:3-201;
840840
841841 (26) The department of commerce and consumer affairs on proposed directors and executive officers of a nondepository financial services loan company as provided by section 412:3-301;
842842
843843 (27) The department of commerce and consumer affairs on the original chartering applicants and proposed executive officers of a credit union as provided by section 412:10-103;
844844
845845 (28) The department of commerce and consumer affairs on:
846846
847847 (A) Each principal of every non-corporate applicant for a money transmitter license;
848848
849849 (B) Each person who upon approval of an application by a corporate applicant for a money transmitter license will be a principal of the licensee; and
850850
851851 (C) Each person who upon approval of an application requesting approval of a proposed change in control of licensee will be a principal of the licensee,
852852
853853 as provided by sections 489D-9 and 489D-15;
854854
855855 (29) The department of commerce and consumer affairs on applicants for licensure and persons licensed under title 24;
856856
857857 (30) The Hawaii health systems corporation on:
858858
859859 (A) Employees;
860860
861861 (B) Applicants seeking employment;
862862
863863 (C) Current or prospective members of the corporation board or regional system board; or
864864
865865 (D) Current or prospective volunteers, providers, or contractors,
866866
867867 in any of the corporation's health facilities as provided by section 323F-5.5;
868868
869869 (31) The department of commerce and consumer affairs on:
870870
871871 (A) An applicant for a mortgage loan originator license, or license renewal; and
872872
873873 (B) Each control person, executive officer, director, general partner, and managing member of an applicant for a mortgage loan originator company license or license renewal,
874874
875875 as provided by chapter 454F;
876876
877877 (32) The state public charter school commission or public charter schools on employees, teacher trainees, prospective employees, and prospective teacher trainees in any public charter school for any position that places them in close proximity to children, as provided in section 302D-33;
878878
879879 (33) The counties on prospective employees who work with children, vulnerable adults, or senior citizens in community-based programs;
880880
881881 (34) The counties on prospective employees for fire department positions that involve contact with children or vulnerable adults;
882882
883883 (35) The counties on prospective employees for emergency medical services positions that involve contact with children or vulnerable adults;
884884
885885 (36) The counties on prospective employees for emergency management positions and community volunteers whose responsibilities involve planning and executing homeland security measures including viewing, handling, and engaging in law enforcement or classified meetings and assisting vulnerable citizens during emergencies or crises;
886886
887887 (37) The State and counties on employees, prospective employees, volunteers, and contractors whose position responsibilities require unescorted access to secured areas and equipment related to a traffic management center;
888888
889889 (38) The State and counties on employees and prospective employees whose positions involve the handling or use of firearms for other than law enforcement purposes;
890890
891891 (39) The State and counties on current and prospective systems analysts and others involved in an agency's information technology operation whose position responsibilities provide them with access to proprietary, confidential, or sensitive information;
892892
893893 (40) The department of commerce and consumer affairs on:
894894
895895 (A) Applicants for real estate appraiser licensure or certification as provided by chapter 466K;
896896
897897 (B) Each person who owns more than ten per cent of an appraisal management company who is applying for registration as an appraisal management company, as provided by section 466L-7; and
898898
899899 (C) Each of the controlling persons of an applicant for registration as an appraisal management company, as provided by section 466L-7;
900900
901901 (41) The department of health or its designee on all license applicants, licensees, employees, contractors, and prospective employees of medical cannabis dispensaries, and individuals permitted to enter and remain in medical cannabis dispensary facilities as provided under sections 329D-15(a)(4) and 329D‑16(a)(3);
902902
903903 (42) The department of commerce and consumer affairs on applicants for nurse licensure or license renewal, reactivation, or restoration as provided by sections 457-7, 457-8, 457-8.5, and 457-9;
904904
905905 (43) The county police departments on applicants for permits to acquire firearms pursuant to section 134-2 and on individuals registering their firearms pursuant to section 134-3;
906906
907907 (44) The department of commerce and consumer affairs on:
908908
909909 (A) Each of the controlling persons of the applicant for licensure as an escrow depository, and each of the officers, directors, and principals who will be in charge of the escrow depository's activities upon licensure; and
910910
911911 (B) Each of the controlling persons of an applicant for proposed change in control of an escrow depository licensee, and each of the officers, directors, and principals who will be in charge of the licenseeꞌs activities upon approval of the application,
912912
913913 as provided by chapter 449;
914914
915915 (45) The department of taxation on current or prospective employees or contractors who have access to federal tax information in order to comply with requirements of federal law, regulation, or procedure, as provided by section 231-1.6;
916916
917917 (46) The department of labor and industrial relations on current or prospective employees or contractors who have access to federal tax information in order to comply with requirements of federal law, regulation, or procedure, as provided by section 383-110;
918918
919919 (47) The department of human services on current or prospective employees or contractors who have access to federal tax information in order to comply with requirements of federal law, regulation, or procedure, as provided by section 346-2.5;
920920
921921 (48) The child support enforcement agency on current or prospective employees or contractors who have access to federal tax information in order to comply with federal law, regulation, or procedure, as provided by section 576D-11.5;
922922
923923 (49) The department of the attorney general on current or prospective employees or employees or agents of contractors who have access to federal tax information to comply with requirements of federal law, regulation, or procedure, as provided by section 28‑17;
924924
925925 [[](50)[]] The department of commerce and consumer affairs on each control person, executive officer, director, general partner, and managing member of an installment loan licensee, or an applicant for an installment loan license, as provided in chapter 480J;
926926
927927 [[](51)[]] The University of Hawaii on current and prospective employees and contractors whose duties include ensuring the security of campus facilities and persons; [and]
928928
929929 (52) The department of commerce and consumer affairs on each control person, executive officer, director, general partner, and managing member of a special purpose digital currency company licensee, or an applicant for a special purpose digital currency license, as provided in chapter ; and
930930
931931 [[(52)]] (53) Any other organization, entity, or the State, its branches, political subdivisions, or agencies as may be authorized by state law."
932932
933933 SECTION 5. (a) Notwithstanding any law to the contrary, the companies participating in the digital currency innovation lab operated by the department of commerce and consumer affairs and Hawaii technology development corporation shall be allowed to continue operations until their applications are acted upon by the division of financial institutions of the department of commerce and consumer affairs; provided that the complete application is submitted to the division of financial institutions of the department of commerce and consumer affairs by March 1, 2024.
934934
935935 (b) A company authorized to participate in the digital currency innovation lab as of June 30, 2023, and whose application for licensure under section 2 of this Act has been submitted to the division of financial institutions of the department of commerce and consumer affairs on or before March 1, 2024, shall be exempt from the requirements in section -11 of section 2 of this Act for a period of six months from the date the application is deemed complete or until the commissioner of financial institutions approves or denies the application, whichever occurs first. The commissioner of financial institutions, for good cause, may reduce or extend the six-month period. Submission of an application for licensure shall be evidenced through the nationwide multi-state licensing and registry system developed and maintained by the Conference of State Bank Supervisors for the state licensing and registration of state-licensed financial services providers to the commissioner of financial institutions.
936936
937937 SECTION 6. The department of commerce and consumer affairs may employ necessary personnel without regard to chapter 76, Hawaii Revised Statutes, including three full-time equivalent (3.0 FTE) positions for examiners, to assist with the implementation and continuing function of this Act.
938938
939- SECTION 7. There is appropriated out of the compliance resolution fund established pursuant to section 26-9(o), Hawaii Revised Statutes, the sum of $ or so much thereof as may be necessary for fiscal year 2023-2024 and the same sum or so much thereof as may be necessary for fiscal year 2024-2025 to establish and hire three full-time equivalent (3.0 FTE) permanent examiners, without regard to chapter 76, Hawaii Revised Statutes, to carry out the purposes of the special purpose digital currency license program established by section 2 of this Act; provided that the positions may be added to the position count for the division of financial institutions of the department of commerce and consumer affairs.
939+ SECTION 7. There is appropriated out of the compliance resolution fund established pursuant to section 26-9(o), Hawaii Revised Statutes, the sum of $500,000 or so much thereof as may be necessary for fiscal year 2023-2024 and the same sum or so much thereof as may be necessary for fiscal year 2024-2025 to establish and hire three full-time equivalent (3.0 FTE) permanent examiners, without regard to chapter 76, Hawaii Revised Statutes, to carry out the purposes of the special purpose digital currency license program established by section 2 of this Act; provided that the positions may be added to the position count for the division of financial institutions of the department of commerce and consumer affairs.
940940
941941 The sums appropriated shall be expended by the department of commerce and consumer affairs for the purposes of this Act.
942942
943943 SECTION 8. Statutory material to be repealed is bracketed and stricken. New statutory material is underscored.
944944
945- SECTION 9. This Act shall take effect on June 30, 3000; provided that the special purpose digital currency licensing requirements established by section 2 of this Act shall take effect on January 1, 2024.
945+ SECTION 9. This Act shall take effect on July 1, 2023; provided that the special purpose digital currency licensing requirements established by section 2 of this Act shall take effect on January 1, 2024.
946946
947947
948948
949- Report Title: Department of Commerce and Consumer Affairs; Division of Financial Institutions; Special Purpose Digital Currency Companies; Licensure; Digital Currency Innovation Lab; Appropriation Description: Beginning 1/1/2024, establishes a program for the licensure, regulation, and oversight of special purpose digital currency companies. Extends operations of companies in the digital currency innovation lab under certain circumstances. Appropriates funds for three full-time equivalent (3.0 FTE) permanent examiners. Effective 6/30/3000. (HD2) The summary description of legislation appearing on this page is for informational purposes only and is not legislation or evidence of legislative intent.
949+ Report Title: Department of Commerce and Consumer Affairs; Division of Financial Institutions; Special Purpose Digital Currency Companies; Licensure; Digital Currency Innovation Lab; Appropriation Description: Beginning 1/1/2024, establishes a program for the licensure, regulation, and oversight of special purpose digital currency companies. Extends operations of companies in the digital currency innovation lab under certain circumstances. Appropriates funds for three full-time equivalent (3.0 FTE) permanent examiners. (HD1) The summary description of legislation appearing on this page is for informational purposes only and is not legislation or evidence of legislative intent.
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955955 Report Title:
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957957 Department of Commerce and Consumer Affairs; Division of Financial Institutions; Special Purpose Digital Currency Companies; Licensure; Digital Currency Innovation Lab; Appropriation
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961961 Description:
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963-Beginning 1/1/2024, establishes a program for the licensure, regulation, and oversight of special purpose digital currency companies. Extends operations of companies in the digital currency innovation lab under certain circumstances. Appropriates funds for three full-time equivalent (3.0 FTE) permanent examiners. Effective 6/30/3000. (HD2)
963+Beginning 1/1/2024, establishes a program for the licensure, regulation, and oversight of special purpose digital currency companies. Extends operations of companies in the digital currency innovation lab under certain circumstances. Appropriates funds for three full-time equivalent (3.0 FTE) permanent examiners. (HD1)
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971971 The summary description of legislation appearing on this page is for informational purposes only and is not legislation or evidence of legislative intent.