Ohio Revised Code
Chapter 109 | Attorney General
Section 109.571 | National Crime Prevention and Privacy Compact.

Effective: April 7, 2004
Latest Legislation: Senate Bill 53 - 125th General Assembly
The "national crime prevention and privacy compact" is hereby ratified, enacted into law, and entered into by the state of Ohio as a party to the compact with any other state that has legally joined in the compact as follows:
NATIONAL CRIME PREVENTION AND PRIVACY COMPACT
The contracting states agree to the following:
Overview
(a) This compact organizes an electronic information sharing system among the federal government and the states to exchange criminal history records for noncriminal justice purposes authorized by federal or state law, such as background checks for governmental licensing and employment.
(b) Under this compact, the FBI and the party states agree to maintain detailed databases of their respective criminal history records, including arrests and dispositions, and to make them available to the federal government and to party states for authorized purposes. The FBI shall also manage the federal data facilities that provide a significant part of the infrastructure for the system.
Article I
As used in this compact:
(1) "Attorney general" means the attorney general of the United States.
(2) "Compact officer" means:
(A) With respect to the federal government, an official so designated by the director of the FBI; and
(B) With respect to a party state, the chief administrator of the state's criminal history record repository or a designee of the chief administrator who is a regular full-time employee of the repository.
(3) "Council" means the compact council established under Article VI of the compact.
(4)(A) "Criminal history records" means information collected by criminal justice agencies on individuals consisting of identifiable descriptions and notations of arrests, detentions, indictments, or other formal criminal charges, and any disposition arising therefrom, including acquittal, sentencing, correctional supervision, or release.
(B) "Criminal history records" does not include identification information such as fingerprint records if the information does not indicate involvement of the individual with the criminal justice system.
(5) "Criminal history record repository" means the state agency designated by the governor or other appropriate executive official or the legislature of a state to perform centralized recordkeeping functions for criminal history records and services in the state.
(6) "Criminal justice" includes activities relating to the detection, apprehension, detention, pretrial release, post-trial release, prosecution, adjudication, correctional supervision, or rehabilitation of accused persons or criminal offenders. The administration of criminal justice includes criminal identification activities and the collection, storage, and dissemination of criminal history records.
(7) "Criminal justice agency" means courts and a governmental agency or any subunit of a governmental agency that performs the administration of criminal justice pursuant to a statute or executive order and allocates a substantial part of its annual budget to the administration of criminal justice. "Criminal justice agency" also includes federal and state inspectors general offices.
(8) "Criminal justice services" means services provided by the FBI to criminal justice agencies in response to a request for information about a particular individual or as an update to information previously provided for criminal justice purposes.
(9) "Criterion offense" means any felony or misdemeanor offense not included on the list of nonserious offenses published periodically by the FBI.
(10) "Direct access" means access to the national identification index by computer terminal or other automated means not requiring the assistance of or intervention by any other party or agency.
(11) "Executive order" means an order of the president of the United States or the chief executive officer of a state that has the force of law and that is promulgated in accordance with applicable law.
(12) "FBI" means the federal bureau of investigation.
(13) "Interstate identification system" or "III system" means the cooperative federal-state system for the exchange of criminal history records and includes the national identification index, the national fingerprint file, and, to the extent of their participation in that system, the criminal history record repositories of the states and the FBI.
(14) "National fingerprint file" means a database of fingerprints, or other uniquely personal identifying information, relating to an arrested or charged individual maintained by the FBI to provide positive identification of record subjects indexed in the III system.
(15) "National identification index" means an index maintained by the FBI consisting of names, identifying numbers, and other descriptive information relating to record subjects about whom there are criminal history records in the III system.
(16) "National indices" means the national identification index and the national fingerprint file.
(17) "Nonparty state" means a state that has not ratified this compact.
(18) "Noncriminal justice purposes" means uses of criminal history records for purposes authorized by federal or state law other than purposes relating to criminal justice activities, including employment suitability, licensing determinations, immigration and naturalization matters, and national security clearances.
(19) "Party state" means a state that has ratified this compact.
(20) "Positive identification" means a determination, based upon a comparison of fingerprints or other equally reliable biometric identification techniques, that the subject of a record search is the same person as the subject of a criminal history record or records indexed in the III system. Identifications based solely upon a comparison of subject's names or other nonunique identification characteristics or numbers, or combinations thereof, shall not constitute positive identification.
(21) "Sealed record information" means both of the following:
(A) With respect to adults, that portion of a record that is not available for criminal justice uses, not supported by fingerprints or other accepted means of positive identification, or subject to restrictions on dissemination for noncriminal justice purposes pursuant to a court order related to a particular subject or pursuant to a federal or state statute that requires action on a sealing petition filed by a particular record subject;
(B) With respect to juveniles, whatever each state determines is a sealed record under its own law and procedure.
(22) "State" means any state, territory, or possession of the United States, the District of Columbia, and the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico.
Article II
The purposes of this compact are to do all of the following:
(1) Provide a legal framework for the establishment of a cooperative federal-state system for the interstate and federal-state exchange of criminal history records for noncriminal justice uses;
(2) Require the FBI to permit use of the national identification index and the national fingerprint file by each party state, and to provide, in a timely fashion, federal and state criminal history records to requesting states, in accordance with the terms of this compact and with rules, procedures, and standards established by the council under Article VI;
(3) Require party states to provide information and records for the national identification index and the national fingerprint file and to provide criminal history records, in a timely fashion, to criminal history record repositories of other states and the federal government for noncriminal justice purposes, in accordance with the terms of this compact and with rules, procedures, and standards established by the council under Article VI;
(4) Provide for the establishment of a council to monitor III system operations and to prescribe system rules and procedures for the effective and proper operation of the III system for noncriminal justice purposes;
(5) Require the FBI and each party state to adhere to III system standards concerning record dissemination and use, response times, system security, data quality, and other duly established standards, including those that enhance the accuracy and privacy of such records.
Article III
(a) The director of the FBI shall do all of the following:
(1) Appoint an FBI compact officer who shall do all of the following:
(A) Administer this compact within the department of justice and among federal agencies and other agencies and organizations that submit search requests to the FBI pursuant to Article V(c);
(B) Ensure that compact provisions and rules, procedures, and standards prescribed by the council under Article VI are complied with by the department of justice and the federal agencies and other agencies and organizations referred to in Article III(1)(A);
(C) Regulate the use of records received by means of the III system from party states when those records are supplied by the FBI directly to other federal agencies;
(2) Provide to federal agencies and to state criminal history record repositories criminal history records maintained in its database for the noncriminal justice purposes described in Article IV, including both of the following:
(A) Information from nonparty states;
(B) Information from party states that is available from the FBI through the III system, but is not available from the party state through the III system;
(3) Provide a telecommunications network and maintain centralized facilities for the exchange of criminal history records for both criminal justice purposes and the noncriminal justice purposes described in Article IV, and ensure that the exchange of criminal history records for criminal justice purposes has priority over exchange for noncriminal justice purposes;
(4) Modify or enter into user agreements with nonparty state criminal history record repositories to require them to establish record request procedures conforming to those prescribed in Article V.
(b) Each party state shall do all of the following:
(1) Appoint a compact officer who shall do all of the following:
(A) Administer this compact within that state;
(B) Ensure that the compact provisions and rules, procedures, and standards established by the council under Article VI are complied with in the state;
(C) Regulate the in-state use of records received by means of the III system from the FBI or from other party states;
(2) Establish and maintain a criminal history record repository, which shall provide both of the following:
(A) Information and records for the national identification index and the national fingerprint file;
(B) The state's III system-indexed criminal history records for noncriminal justice purposes described in Article IV;
(3) Participate in the national fingerprint file;
(4) Provide and maintain telecommunications links and related equipment necessary to support the services set forth in this compact.
(c) In carrying out their responsibilities under this compact, the FBI and each party state shall comply with the III system rules, procedures, and standards duly established by the council concerning record dissemination and use, response times, data quality, system security, accuracy, privacy protection, and other aspects of III system operation.
(d)(1) Use of the III system for noncriminal justice purposes authorized in this compact shall be managed so as not to diminish the level of services provided in support of criminal justice purposes.
(2) Administration of compact provisions shall not reduce the level of service available to authorized noncriminal justice users on the effective date of this compact.
Article IV
(a) To the extent authorized by section 552a of title 5, United States Code (commonly known as the 'Privacy Act of 1974'), the FBI shall provide on request criminal history records (excluding sealed records) to state criminal history record repositories for noncriminal justice purposes allowed by federal statute, federal executive order, or a state statute that has been approved by the attorney general and that authorizes national indices checks.
(b) The FBI, to the extent authorized by section 552a of title 5, United States Code (commonly known as the 'Privacy Act of 1974') and state criminal history record repositories, shall provide criminal history records (excluding sealed records) to criminal justice agencies and other governmental or nongovernmental agencies for noncriminal justice purposes allowed by federal statute, federal executive order, or a state statute that has been approved by the attorney general, that authorizes national indices checks.
(c) Any record obtained under this compact may be used only for the official purposes for which the record was requested. Each compact officer shall establish procedures, consistent with this compact, and with rules, procedures, and standards established by the council under Article VI, which procedures shall protect the accuracy and privacy of the records, and shall do all of the following:
(1) Ensure that records obtained under this compact are used only by authorized officials for authorized purposes;
(2) Require that subsequent record checks are requested to obtain current information whenever a new need arises;
(3) Ensure that record entries that may not legally be used for a particular noncriminal justice purpose are deleted from the response and, if no information authorized for release remains, an appropriate 'no record' response is communicated to the requesting official.
Article V
(a) Subject fingerprints or other approved forms of positive identification shall be submitted with all requests for criminal history record checks for noncriminal justice purposes.
(b) Each request for a criminal history record check utilizing the national indices made under any approved state statute shall be submitted through that state's criminal history record repository. A state criminal history record repository shall process an interstate request for noncriminal justice purposes through the national indices only if the request is transmitted through another state criminal history record repository or the FBI.
(c) Each request for criminal history record checks utilizing the national indices made under federal authority shall be submitted through the FBI or, if the state criminal history record repository consents to process fingerprint submissions, through the criminal history record repository in the state in which the request originated. Direct access to the national identification index by entities other than the FBI or state criminal history record repositories shall not be permitted for noncriminal justice purposes.
(d) A state criminal history record repository for the FBI may charge a fee, in accordance with applicable law, for handling a request involving fingerprint processing for noncriminal justice purposes and may not charge a fee for providing criminal history records in response to an electric request for a record that does not involve a request to process fingerprints.
(e)(1) If a state criminal history record repository cannot positively identify the subject of a record request made for noncriminal justice purposes, the request, together with fingerprints or other approved identifying information, shall be forwarded to the FBI for a search of the national indices.
(2) If, with respect to a request forwarded by a state criminal history record repository under paragraph (1), the FBI positively identifies the subject as having a III system-indexed record or records, the FBI shall so advise the state criminal history repository; and the state criminal history record repository shall be entitled to obtain the additional criminal history record information from the FBI or other state criminal history record repositories.
Article VI
(a)(1) There is established a council to be known as the 'compact council,' which shall have the authority to promulgate rules and procedures governing the use of the III system for noncriminal justice purposes, not to conflict with the FBI administration of the III system for criminal justice purposes.
(2) The council shall do all of the following:
(A) Continue in existence as long as this compact remains in effect;
(B) Be located, for administrative purposes, within the FBI;
(C) Be organized and hold its first meeting as soon as practicable after the effective date of this compact.
(b) The council shall be composed of fifteen members, each of whom shall be appointed by the attorney general as follows:
(1) Nine members, each of whom shall serve a two-year term, who shall be selected from among the compact officers of party states based on the recommendation of the compact officers of all party states, except that, in the absence of the requisite number of compact officers available to serve, the chief administrators of the criminal history record repositories of nonparty states shall be eligible to serve on an interim basis;
(2) Two at-large members, nominated by the director of the FBI, each of whom shall serve a three-year term, of whom one shall be a representative of the criminal justice agencies of the federal government and may not be employed by the FBI; and one shall be a representative of the noncriminal justice agencies of the federal government;
(3) Two at-large members, nominated by the chairman of the council, once the chairman is elected pursuant to Article VI(c), each of whom shall serve a three-year term, of whom one shall be a representative of state or local criminal justice agencies; and one shall be a representative of state or local noncriminal justice agencies;
(4) One member, who shall serve a three-year term, and who shall simultaneously be a member of the FBI's advisory policy board on criminal justice information services, nominated by the membership of that policy board;
(5) One member, nominated by the director of the FBI, who shall serve a three-year term, and who shall be an employee of the FBI.
(c)(1) From its membership, the council shall elect a chairman and a vice chairman of the council, respectively. Both the chairman and the vice chairman shall be a compact officer, unless there is no compact officer on the council who is willing to serve, in which case the chairman may be an at-large member; and shall serve a two-year term and may be reelected to only one additional two-year term.
(2) The vice chairman of the council shall serve as the chairman of the council in the absence of the chairman.
(d)(1) The council shall meet at least once each year at the call of the chairman. Each meeting of the council shall be open to the public. The council shall provide prior public notice in the federal register of each meeting of the council, including the matters to be addressed at the meeting.
(2) A majority of the council or any committee of the council shall constitute a quorum of the council or of such committee, respectively, for the conduct of business. A lesser number may meet to hold hearings, take testimony, or conduct any business not requiring a vote.
(e) The council shall make available for public inspection and copying at the council office with the FBI, and shall publish in the federal register, any rules, procedures, or standards established by the council.
(f) The council may request from the FBI any reports, studies, statistics, or other information or materials that the council determines to be necessary to enable the council to perform its duties under this compact. The FBI, to the extent authorized by law, may provide such assistance or information upon such a request.
(g) The chairman may establish committees as necessary to carry out this compact and may prescribe their membership, responsibilities, and duration.
Article VII
This compact shall take effect upon being entered into by two or more states as between those states and the federal government. Upon subsequent entering into this compact by additional states, it shall become effective among those states and the federal government and each party state that has previously ratified it. When ratified, this compact shall have the full force and effect of law within the ratifying jurisdictions. The form of ratification shall be in accordance with the laws of the executing state.
Article VIII
(a) Administration of this compact shall not interfere with the management and control of the director of the FBI over the FBI's collection and dissemination of criminal history records and the advisory function of the FBI's advisory policy board chartered under the Federal Advisory Committee Act (5 U.S.C. App.) for all purposes other than noncriminal justice.
(b) Nothing in this compact shall require the FBI to obligate or expend funds beyond those appropriated to the FBI.
(c) Nothing in this compact shall diminish or lessen the obligations, responsibilities, and authorities of any state, whether a party state or a nonparty state, or of any criminal history record repository or other subdivision or component thereof, under the Departments of State, Justice, and Commerce, the Judiciary, and Related Agencies Appropriation Act, 1973 (Public Law 92-544), or regulations and guidelines promulgated thereunder, including the rules and procedures promulgated by the council under Article VI(a), regarding the use and dissemination of criminal history records and information.
Article IX
(a) This compact shall bind each party state until renounced by the party state.
(b) Any renunciation of this compact by a party state shall be effected in the same manner by which the party state ratified this compact and shall become effective one hundred and eighty days after written notice of renunciation is provided by the party state to each other party state and to the federal government.
Article X
The provisions of this compact shall be severable, and if any phrase, clause, sentence, or provision of this compact is declared to be contrary to the constitution of any participating state, or to the Constitution of the United States, or the applicability of any phrase, clause, sentence, or provision of this compact to any government, agency, person, or circumstance is held invalid, the validity of the remainder of this compact and the applicability of the remainder of this compact to any government, agency, person, or circumstance shall not be affected thereby. If a portion of this compact is held contrary to the constitution of any party state, all other portions of this compact shall remain in full force and effect as to the remaining party states and in full force and effect as to the party states affected, as to all other provisions.
Article XI
(a) The council shall do both of the following:
(1) Have initial authority to make determinations with respect to any dispute regarding all of the following:
(A) Interpretation of this compact;
(B) Any rule or standard established by the council pursuant to Article V;
(C) Any dispute or controversy between any parties to this compact;
(2) Hold a hearing concerning any dispute described in paragraph (1) at a regularly scheduled meeting of the council and only render a decision based upon a majority vote of the members of the council. The decision shall be published pursuant to the requirements of Article VI(e).
(b) The FBI shall exercise immediate and necessary action to preserve the integrity of the III system, maintain system policy and standards, protect the accuracy and privacy of records, and to prevent abuses, until the council holds a hearing on such matters.
(c) The FBI or a party state may appeal any decision of the council to the attorney general, and thereafter may file suit in the appropriate district court of the United States, which shall have original jurisdiction of all cases or controversies arising under this compact. Any suit arising under this compact and initiated in a state court shall be removed to the appropriate district court of the United States in the manner provided by section 1446 of title 28, United States Code, or other statutory authority.

Structure Ohio Revised Code

Ohio Revised Code

Title 1 | State Government

Chapter 109 | Attorney General

Section 109.01 | Election - Term.

Section 109.02 | Duties as Chief Law Officer.

Section 109.03 | Appointment of Assistant Attorney General and Chief Counsel - Duties.

Section 109.04 | Powers and Duties of First Assistant Attorney General.

Section 109.05 | Employees.

Section 109.06 | Bond.

Section 109.07 | Special Counsel.

Section 109.08 | Special Counsel to Collect Claims.

Section 109.081 | Attorney General Claims Fund.

Section 109.082 | Problem Resolution Officers for Tax Collection Complaints.

Section 109.09 | Action on Official Bonds.

Section 109.10 | Proceedings in Quo Warranto.

Section 109.11 | Attorney General Reimbursement Fund.

Section 109.111 | Attorney General Court Order Fund.

Section 109.112 | Notice of Receipt of Funds; Disposition of Funds.

Section 109.12 | Legal Advice to State Officers and Boards.

Section 109.121 | Real Property Title Review and Opinion.

Section 109.122 | Review of Entertainment or Sponsorship Contracts of Expositions Commission.

Section 109.13 | General Assembly May Require Written Opinions.

Section 109.14 | Attorney General Shall Advise Prosecuting Attorneys and Township Law Directors.

Section 109.15 | Forms of Contracts.

Section 109.16 | Suits May Be Brought in Franklin County.

Section 109.17 | Writs in Other Counties.

Section 109.18 | Service by Publication.

Section 109.19 | Security for Costs and Verification of Pleadings.

Section 109.20 | Actions to Be Taken Out of Their Order.

Section 109.21 | Moneys Paid Into General Revenue Fund.

Section 109.22 | Registers Shall Be Kept.

Section 109.23 | Charitable Trust Defined.

Section 109.231 | Prohibited Administrative Acts.

Section 109.232 | Amendment of Governing Instrument of Trust.

Section 109.24 | Investigating Transactions and Relationships of Trustees of Charitable Trust.

Section 109.25 | Attorney General Is Necessary Party to Charitable Trust Proceedings.

Section 109.26 | Registration of Charitable Trusts.

Section 109.27 | Administrative Rules.

Section 109.28 | Inspection of Register of Charitable Trusts.

Section 109.29 | Courts to Furnish Information Relating to Charitable Trusts.

Section 109.30 | Notice of Creation of Charitable Trust to Attorney General and Specified Persons After Probate of Will.

Section 109.31 | Trustee's Annual Report to Attorney General.

Section 109.32 | Charitable Law Fund.

Section 109.33 | Employees.

Section 109.34 | Notice of Transactions by Nonprofit Health Care Entity.

Section 109.35 | Approval or Disapproval of Proposed Transactions.

Section 109.36 | Defense of Officers and Employees Definitions.

Section 109.361 | Defense of State Officer or Employee in Civil Action.

Section 109.362 | Investigation as to Whether Action Was Manifestly Outside Scope of Duties or With Malicious Purpose or in Bad Faith.

Section 109.363 | Employer to Provide Written Report and Information.

Section 109.364 | Denial of Representation.

Section 109.365 | Information Obtained Is Privileged.

Section 109.366 | Administrative Rules.

Section 109.37 | Legal Representation of Correctional Employee.

Section 109.40 | Compilation of Statutes Relative to Obscenity.

Section 109.41 | Claiming Escheated Property.

Section 109.42 | Compilation of Statutes Relative to Victim's Rights.

Section 109.43 | Public Records Training Programs - Model Public Records Policy.

Section 109.46 | Domestic Violence Program Fund.

Section 109.51 | Bureau of Criminal Identification and Investigation Created.

Section 109.511 | Felony Conviction Precludes or Terminates Employment.

Section 109.52 | Operation and Maintenance of Bureau.

Section 109.521 | Bureau of Criminal Identification and Investigation Asset Forfeiture and Cost Reimbursement Fund.

Section 109.53 | Equipment of Bureau.

Section 109.54 | Cooperation of Other Governmental Agencies.

Section 109.541 | Powers and Duties of Bureau.

Section 109.542 | Investigative Personnel Are Peace Officers.

Section 109.55 | Coordination of Law Enforcement Work and Crime Prevention Activities.

Section 109.56 | Training Local Law Enforcement Officers in Crime Prevention, Detection, and Solution.

Section 109.57 | Duties of Superintendent.

Section 109.571 | National Crime Prevention and Privacy Compact.

Section 109.572 | Criminal Records Check.

Section 109.573 | DNA Laboratory - Databases.

Section 109.574 | Volunteers Have Unsupervised Access to Children Definitions.

Section 109.575 | Information Provided by Volunteers Having Access to Children.

Section 109.576 | Notice of Volunteer's Conviction.

Section 109.577 | Immunity From Civil Liability.

Section 109.578 | Criminal Records Check.

Section 109.579 | Criminal Records Check.

Section 109.5721 | Retained Applicant Fingerprint Database.

Section 109.58 | Standard Fingerprint Impression Sheet.

Section 109.59 | Fingerprint Impressions and Other Descriptive Measurements.

Section 109.60 | Forwarding Fingerprints and Descriptions to Bureau - Annual Methamphetamine Report.

Section 109.61 | Sheriff or Chief of Police to Forward Information to Bureau.

Section 109.62 | Cooperation With Interstate, National, and International System of Criminal Identification and Investigation.

Section 109.63 | Superintendent May Testify.

Section 109.64 | Periodic Information Bulletin Concerning Missing Children Who May Be Present in State.

Section 109.65 | Missing Children Clearinghouse - Missing Children Fund.

Section 109.66 | Publication of Statistical Data on Trafficking in Persons.

Section 109.67 | Public Awareness Publications on Elder Fraud and Financial Exploitation of the Elderly.

Section 109.68 | Establishment of Statewide Sexual Assault Examination Kit Tracking System.

Section 109.69 | Reciprocity Agreement.

Section 109.71 | Ohio Peace Officer Training Commission Created - Definitions.

Section 109.72 | Members - Organization.

Section 109.73 | Rule Recommendations.

Section 109.731 | Prescribed Forms.

Section 109.74 | Attorney General May Adopt and Promulgate Rules and Regulations.

Section 109.741 | Rules Governing Training of Peace Officers in Handling of Missing Children and Child Abuse and Neglect Cases.

Section 109.742 | Rules Governing Training of Peace Officers in Crisis Intervention.

Section 109.743 | Administrative Rules.

Section 109.744 | Rules Governing Training of Peace Officers in Handling of Offense of Domestic Violence.

Section 109.745 | Training for Investigating and Handling Crime of Trafficking in Persons.

Section 109.746 | Public Awareness Programs Regarding Trafficking in Persons.

Section 109.747 | Rules Governing Training of Peace Officers on Companion Animal Encounters and Companion Animal Behavior.

Section 109.748 | Rules Governing the Training of Tactical Medical Professionals to Carry Firearms.

Section 109.749 | Training Materials on Restraining or Confining Pregnant Children or Women.

Section 109.75 | Powers and Duties of Peace Officer Training Commission Executive Director.

Section 109.751 | Attendance of Undercover Drug Agents, Bailiffs, Deputy Bailiffs or Public Defender Investigators at Basic Training Programs.

Section 109.752 | Sheriff Attending Peace Officer Basic Training Programs.

Section 109.76 | Peace Officers Not Exempted From Civil Service.

Section 109.761 | Reports of Appointment to Peace Officer Training Commission.

Section 109.77 | Certificate of Completion of Basic Training Program Necessary for Appointment.

Section 109.771 | Authority of Tactical Medical Professionals to Carry Firearms.

Section 109.78 | Certification of Special Police, Security Guards, or Persons Otherwise Privately Employed in a Police Capacity.

Section 109.79 | Ohio Peace Officer Training Academy.

Section 109.80 | Basic Training Course for Sheriffs - Continuing Education.

Section 109.801 | Annual Firearms Requalification Program.

Section 109.803 | Continuing Professional Training for Peace Officers and Troopers.

Section 109.804 | Chief of Police Training Course; Equivalency; Deferral.

Section 109.81 | Antitrust Cases - Appointment of Special Counsel.

Section 109.82 | Antitrust Section - Fund.

Section 109.83 | Investigating Organized Criminal Activity.

Section 109.84 | Investigation and Prosecution of Violation of Workers Compensation Law.

Section 109.85 | Investigation and Prosecution of Violation of Medicaid Law.

Section 109.86 | Investigation and Prosecution of Patient Abuse or Neglect.

Section 109.87 | Acts or Practices in Violation of Federal Telemarketing Laws.

Section 109.88 | Investigation, Prosecution of Telecommunications and Telemarketing Fraud.

Section 109.89 | Access and Use of National Precursor Log Exchange Information.

Section 109.90 | Collaboration in Establishment and Administration of Drug Take-Back Program.

Section 109.91 | Crime Victims Assistance Office - State Victims Assistance Advisory Council.

Section 109.92 | State Financial Assistance to Victim Assistance Programs That Operate in State.

Section 109.921 | Rape Crisis Program Trust Fund.

Section 109.93 | Attorney General Education Fund.

Section 109.94 | Attorney General May Issue Identity Fraud Passport to Victim.

Section 109.941 | Technical Assistance Regarding Identity Fraud Crimes.

Section 109.95 | Criminal Proceedings for Election Fraud.

Section 109.97 | Capital Case Status Report.

Section 109.98 | Civil Action Against State Retirement Board Member for Breach of Fiduciary Duty.

Section 109.981 | Civil Action Against Workers' Compensation Oversight Commission Member.

Section 109.99 | Penalty.