Hawaii Revised Statutes
712. Offenses Against Public Health and Morals
712-1281 Forfeiture; fireworks.

§712-1281 Forfeiture; fireworks. In addition to any other penalty that may be imposed for violation of section 132D-14(a)(1) or (3), any property used or intended for use in the commission of, attempt to commit, or conspiracy to commit an offense under section 132D-14(a)(1) or (3), or that facilitated or assisted such activity, and any proceeds or other property acquired or maintained with the proceeds from violation of section 132D-14(a)(1) or (3) may be subject to forfeiture pursuant to chapter 712A. [L 2010, c 136, §1]
COMMENTARY ON § §712-1270 TO 712-1281
Act 181, Session Laws 1979, established this part to provide a remedy to abate as nuisances, offenses against public health and morals in the nature of offenses defined as prostitution, the display of indecent matter, and the like. It is based largely on sections 11225 to 11235 of the California Penal Code.
In enacting §712-1279, the legislature thought it desirable to place the burden upon the property owner to take appropriate action against the lessee to abate the nuisance, but felt that a categorical mandate requiring notice of revocation might raise collateral problems, particularly where chains of subleases were involved. Accordingly, the legislature chose to require the courts to consider the giving of notice and other actions the owner may or may not have taken to abate the nuisance when deliberating upon the issue of criminal contempt. Senate Standing Committee Report No. 892 (1979) states:
Such treatment prevents the imposition of penalty against the owner who may not have technically given notice but who, under peculiar circumstances, may have taken other reasonable and possibly more effective measures to abate the nuisance, and thereby acted in ... good faith.
Act 158, Session Laws 1990, amended §712-1270 to expand the nuisance law to permit closure of premises where drug offenses repeatedly occur. The legislature emphasized that this amendment is not intended to be applied to innocent landlords whose property may be inadvertently involved in drug offenses. Conference Committee Report No. 30.
Act 246, Session Laws 1996, amended § §712-1270 to 712-1280, by, inter alia, allowing any organization to bring a nuisance abatement suit and providing that the court may order that the person causing the nuisance be excluded from the premises under certain conditions. The Act also allowed the abatement of a nuisance that involves the manufacture as well as the distribution of drugs, and made the language in the statutes more consistent and comprehensive by referring to "buildings" and "premises" as well as a "place." The legislature believed that places used for illicit drugs, prostitution, or pornography were major factors contributing to the decline of neighborhoods, and that permitting any organization to bring a nuisance abatement action and allowing a court to exclude persons causing the nuisance strengthened part IV of chapter 712 to deal with these problems. Conference Committee Report No. 35, Senate Standing Committee Report No. 2618.
Act 286, Session Laws 1998, added §712-1270.5 to allow injunctions against entering or residing in any public or private building, premises, or place to issue against the person causing the nuisance. The legislature found that in 1996, Act 246 was passed, which amended various sections in chapter 712. The purpose of Act 246 was to allow organizations to maintain nuisance abatement suits and thereby obtain injunctive relief against persons utilizing certain buildings, premises, or places, to commit offenses against public health and morals. The legislature also found that the department of the prosecuting attorney, relying on Act 246, began to move for injunctions barring prostitutes from certain areas of Waikiki. The legal reasoning upon which Act 246 was applied to prostitutes was that prostitutes who solicit on public streets aggressively hinder both pedestrian and vehicular traffic and harass visitors to the point where their activity becomes a public nuisance. However, the circuit courts denied the motions for injunctions against prostitutes on the grounds that the nuisance abatement statute did not expressly apply to individuals.
In passing Act 246, the legislature expressly intended that the court could order, as part of the abatement of the nuisance, the exclusion of the person causing the nuisance from the place, building, or premises involved. Act 286 will solve the apparent ambiguity in the law by specifically stating that nothing in the nuisance abatement law prohibits injunctions against persons causing the nuisance. House Standing Committee Report No. 613-98, Conference Committee Report No. 93.
Act 286, Session Laws 1998, amended §712-1271 to provide that no actions authorized under part V of chapter 712 which seeks to abate or prevent a nuisance shall be filed or maintained against the State or any political subdivision thereof. Conference Committee Report No. 93.
Act 286, Session Laws 1998, amended §712-1273 to allow evidence of a person's general reputation to be introduced to prove the existence of a nuisance. Conference Committee Report No. 93.
Act 44, Session Laws 2004, added §712-1270.3 and amended § §712-1276 and 712-1278, to allow citizens to recover attorneys' fees and to receive the same protection as crime victims do. House Standing Committee Report No. 495-04.
Act 123, Session Laws 2005, added §712-1271.5, to establish that a preponderance of the evidence is the standard of proof applicable to nuisance abatement actions, §712-1271.6, to authorize a court to issue a protective order to prevent the disclosure of the identity of a witness when presented with evidence of acts of violence or prior threats of violence by any defendant in a nuisance abatement action, and §712-1277.5, to subject an individual who knowingly violates a protective order to civil as well as criminal contempt of court.
Act 123 also amended § §712-1270.5, 712-1271, 712-1272, 712-1273, 712-1275, and 712-1276 to, among other things, allow injunctions against persons who maintain, aid, abet, or permit a nuisance from entering or residing in any place where the nuisance exists and enable a court to enter an order suspending or revoking any business, professional, operational, or liquor license if the holder of the license is involved in maintaining, aiding, abetting, or permitting the nuisance. The legislature found that the Act would encourage neighborhood residents to report community nuisances such as drug activity by increasing the protections for witnesses in nuisance abatement actions, expanding the scope of injunctions to include persons associated with the nuisance, and providing law enforcement additional tools to abate a nuisance. Conference Committee Report No. 11, House Standing Committee Report No. 1288, Senate Standing Committee Report No. 638.
Act 136, Session Laws 2010, added §712-1281 to subject to forfeiture laws property used or intended to be used and proceeds acquired in the commission or attempted commission of the illegal importation, sale, and transfer of fireworks. Act 136 also amended § §712-1270 and 712-1270.3, respectively, to establish a nuisance action under the Penal Code to abate those activities, and to give citizens who bring an action to abate the activities the same rights and protections of victims and witnesses in criminal proceedings. The legislature found that increasing the penalties for violations of fireworks-related laws may serve to curb rampant illegal fireworks in the State. Conference Committee Report No. 18-10, Senate Standing Committee Report No. 3044.
Act 80, Session Laws 2015, amended §712-1270 to promote the enforcement of criminal gambling prohibitions by including gambling among the types of criminal offenses that are subject to the nuisance abatement laws. The legislature found that illegal gambling establishments can generate a large volume of cash and lead to neighborhood and community nuisances by becoming a haven for organized crime. Act 80 supplements existing police efforts by providing an additional tool to remedy illegal activity at specific buildings, premises, or places within the State. Senate Standing Committee Report No. 596, House Standing Committee Report No. 1492.
Act 154, Session Laws 2016, amended §712-1270 to remedy the situation of an unlawful occupation of real property by authorizing civil lawsuits that seek, among other things, an order of abatement that permanently prohibits the trespassers from residing on or entering onto the subject real property. The legislature found that "squatting," to settle on land without title, right, or payment of rent, had become common in certain areas of the State and was a serious nuisance to the owners of the property, adjoining landowners, and neighboring residents. Squatting presented significant legal issues for landowners because the legal process to evict a squatter was costly and time consuming. The problems multiplied when the squatter located on property that had been abandoned by the owner. Because neighboring landowners and residents did not have a property interest in the abandoned parcel, they usually did not have effective legal tools to remove the squatter. There was a lack of effective remedies to protect against noise, drug use, unsanitary conditions, and other illegal activities in their neighborhoods. Conference Committee Report No. 38-16.

Structure Hawaii Revised Statutes

Hawaii Revised Statutes

Title 37. Hawaii Penal Code

712. Offenses Against Public Health and Morals

712-1200 Prostitution. §711-1200 Commentary:

712-1200.5 Commercial sexual exploitation.

712-1201 Advancing prostitution; profiting from prostitution; definition of terms.

712-1202 Sex trafficking.

712-1203 Promoting prostitution.

712-1204 REPEALED. § §712-1201 To 712-1204 Commentary:

712-1205 REPEALED.

712-1206 Loitering for the purpose of engaging in or advancing prostitution.

712-1207 Street prostitution and commercial sexual exploitation; designated areas.

712-1208 Promoting travel for prostitution.

712-1209 Commercial sexual exploitation near schools or public parks.

712-1209.1 Commercial sexual exploitation of a minor.

712-1209.5 Habitual commercial sexual exploitation.

712-1209.6 Prostitution; motion to vacate conviction.

712-1210 Definitions of terms in this part.

712-1211 Displaying indecent matter. §712-1211 Commentary:

712-1212 REPEALED.

712-1213 Displaying indecent material; prima facie evidence. §712-1213 Commentary:

712-1214 Promoting pornography. §712-1214 Commentary:

712-1215 Promoting pornography for minors. §712-1215 Commentary:

712-1215.5 Promoting minor-produced sexual images in the first degree.

712-1215.6 Promoting minor-produced sexual images in the second degree.

712-1216 Promoting pornography; prima facie evidence. §712-1216 Commentary:

712-1216.5 Importation, sale, or possession of a childlike sex doll.

712-1217 Open lewdness. §712-1217 Commentary:

712-1218 Failure to maintain age verification records of sexual performers.

712-1218.5 Failure to maintain age verification records of sexually exploited individuals.

712-1219 Failure to affix information disclosing location of age verification records of sexual performers.

712-1219.5 Disseminating visual depiction of sexual conduct without affixed information disclosing location of age verification records of sexual performers.

712-1220 Definitions of terms in this part.

712-1221 Promoting gambling in the first degree.

712-1222 Promoting gambling in the second degree.

712-1222.5 Promoting gambling aboard ships. (1) A person commits the offense of promoting gambling aboard ships if the person knowingly advances or profits from gambling activity by: (a) Managing, supervising, controlling, operating, or owning, eithe...

712-1223 Gambling. § §712-1221 To 712-1223 Commentary:

712-1224 Possession of gambling records in the first degree.

712-1225 Possession of gambling records in the second degree.

712-1226 Possession of a gambling device. § §712-1224 To 712-1226 Commentary:

712-1227 Possession of gambling records; defense.

712-1228 Gambling offenses; prima facie evidence.

712-1229 Lottery offenses; no defense.

712-1230 Forfeiture of property used in illegal gambling. §712-1230 Commentary:

712-1231 Social gambling; definition and specific conditions, affirmative defense.

712-1232 Savings promotion or prize-linked savings contest not gambling.

712-1240 Definitions of terms in this part.

712-1240.1 Defense to promoting.

712-1240.5 Manufacturing a controlled substance with a child present.

712-1240.6 REPEALED.

712-1240.7 Methamphetamine trafficking.

712-1240.8 REPEALED.

712-1240.9 Methamphetamine trafficking; restitution and reimbursement.

712-1241 Promoting a dangerous drug in the first degree.

712-1242 Promoting a dangerous drug in the second degree.

712-1243 Promoting a dangerous drug in the third degree.

712-1244 Promoting a harmful drug in the first degree.

712-1245 Promoting a harmful drug in the second degree.

712-1246 Promoting a harmful drug in the third degree.

712-1246.5 Promoting a harmful drug in the fourth degree.

712-1247 Promoting a detrimental drug in the first degree.

712-1248 Promoting a detrimental drug in the second degree.

712-1249 Promoting a detrimental drug in the third degree.

712-1249.4 Commercial promotion of marijuana in the first degree.

712-1249.5 Commercial promotion of marijuana in the second degree.

712-1249.6 Promoting a controlled substance in, on, or near schools, school vehicles, public parks, or public housing projects or complexes.

712-1249.7 Promoting a controlled substance through a minor.

712-1250 Promoting intoxicating compounds. § §712-1241 To 712-1250 Commentary:

712-1250.5 Promoting intoxicating liquor to a person under the age of twenty-one.

712-1251 Possession in a motor vehicle; prima facie evidence.

712-1252 Knowledge of character, nature, or quantity of substance, or age of transferee; prima facie evidence.

712-1253 Penalties under other laws.

712-1254 Bar to prosecution.

712-1255 Conditional discharge.

712-1256 Expunging of court records.

712-1257 Prohibited cigarette sales of less than twenty.

712-1258 Tobacco products and electronic smoking devices; persons under twenty-one years of age.

712-1260 REPEALED.

712-1270 Places used to commit offenses against public health and morals or other offenses, a nuisance.

712-1270.3 Citizen's rights.

712-1270.5 Injunctions against persons. Nothing in this part shall be construed to prohibit injunctions against persons causing, maintaining, aiding, abetting, or permitting a nuisance from entering or residing in any public or private building, prem...

712-1271 Suit to abate.

712-1271.5 Standard of proof.

712-1271.6 Protective order.

712-1272 Temporary writ.

712-1273 Suit to have precedence.

712-1274 Failure to prosecute.

712-1275 Order of abatement.

712-1276 Costs and expenses.

712-1277 Owner not guilty of contempt; may pay costs.

712-1277.5 Contempt.

712-1278 Fine, costs, lien on place.

712-1279 Termination of lease.

712-1280 Place.

712-1281 Forfeiture; fireworks.