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2000 SESSION
006964680Be it enacted by the General Assembly of Virginia:
1. That §§ 24.2-914.1, 24.2-915, and 24.2-929 of the Code of Virginia are amended and reenacted as follows:
§ 24.2-914.1. Standards and requirements for electronic preparation and transmittal of campaign finance disclosure reports; database.
A. By January 1, 1998, the The State Board of Elections shall review or cause
to be developed and shall approve standards for the preparation, production, and transmittal by computer or electronic
means of the reports of contributions and expenditures required by this article
(§ 24.2-914 et seq.). The State Board may prescribe the method of execution and
certification of electronically filed statements and the procedures for receiving
statements in the office of the State Board or by the local electoral boards.
B. 1. Prior to January 1, 1999, the State Board may accept, and on and after
January 1, 1999, the The State Board shall accept, any report of contributions
and expenditures filed by candidates for the General Assembly, Governor,
Lieutenant Governor, and Attorney General by computer or electronic means in
accordance with the standards approved by the State Board and using software
meeting standards approved by it.
2. A local electoral board may accept reports of contributions and expenditures filed by computer or electronic means from any candidate or political committee that is required to file reports with that board. Such reports shall be filed in accordance with, and using software that meets, standards approved by the State Board. The electoral board shall promptly make the information that it accepts in this manner available to the public through the global information system known as the Internet.
3. The State Board may provide software to filers without charge or at a reasonable cost.
C. On and after January 1, 1999, the State Board shall enter or cause to be
entered into a campaign finance database, available to the public through the global
information system known as the Internet, the information from required reports
of contributions and expenditures filed by computer or electronic means by
candidates for the General Assembly, Governor, Lieutenant Governor, and
Attorney General and may enter or cause to be entered into that database
information from required disclosure statements filed by those candidates by
other methods. On and after January 1, 2001, the State Board shall enter or
cause to be entered into a campaign finance database, available to the public through
the global information system known as the Internet, the information from
required reports of contributions and expenditures filed by computer,
electronic, or other means by candidates for the General Assembly, Governor,
Lieutenant Governor, and Attorney General.
D. Candidates for Governor, Lieutenant Governor, and Attorney General shall
file by computer or electronic means in accordance with the standards approved
by the State Board the reports required by this article. Candidates for the
General Assembly may file the reports required by this article with the State
Board and local electoral boards by computer or electronic means in accordance
with the standards approved by the State Board and subject to the ability of
the local electoral board to receive such computer or electronic filings. This
information shall be made available to the public promptly by the State Board through
the global information system known as the Internet.
E. Other committee reports required by this chapter to be filed with the State Board or a local electoral board, or both, may be filed electronically on terms agreed to by the committee and Board.
§ 24.2-915. With whom candidates to file reports; responsibility for reporting.
ReportsElectronic reports shall be filed by candidates for nomination or
election (i) for statewide office, and the General Assembly with the State
Board, (ii). Non-electronic reports for the General Assembly, shall be filed
with the State Board and with the electoral board of the locality where the candidate resides, except as otherwise provided
in § 24.2-919, and (iii) for. For any other office, candidates shall file with
the electoral board of the locality in which the candidate resides.
It is the joint responsibility of the candidate and his treasurer that the report of a candidate be filed and that the report be in full and accurate detail. Any report to be filed with the State Board may be mailed. If mailed, the report must be postmarked not later than the deadline for filing, except as provided in § 24.2-919 for certain large pre-election contributions received within seventy-two hours of election day.
§ 24.2-929. Penalties for violations of chapter.
A. Any person who violates, or aids, abets, or participates in the violation
of, this chapter shall be subject to a civil penalty not to exceed fifty
dollars, except in the case of violation of Article 4 (§ 24.2-914 et seq.) of
this chapter which relates to the filing of, or the failure to file, a report due
within the one hundred twenty 120 days before or the thirty-five days after a
November general election date, in which case he shall be subject to a civil
penalty not to exceed $300. In the case of a willful violation, he shall be
guilty of a Class 1 misdemeanor. The Upon notice of a violation of this chapter
by the State Board or the local electoral board, as appropriate, the attorney
for the Commonwealth shall initiate civil proceedings to enforce the civil penalty
provided herein. Any civil penalties collected shall be payable to the State
Treasurer for deposit to the general fund. The statute of limitations
applicable to a violation of this chapter is stated in § 19.2-8. There shall be
a rebuttable presumption that the violation of this chapter was willful if the
violation is based on a person's failure to file a report required by this
chapter and his failure to file continues for more than sixty days following
his actual receipt of written notice of his failure to file sent to him by
certified mail, return receipt requested, by the State Board or an electoral
board.
B. Prior to assessing a penalty pursuant to this section for the filing of an incomplete report, the Secretary of the State Board or the secretary of the local electoral board shall notify, in writing, the candidate and treasurer, or person or political committee required to file a report with that board, that a filed report has not been completed, citing the omissions from the report. No penalty shall be assessed if the information required to complete the report is filed within ten days of the date of mailing the written notice.
C. If the information required to complete the report is not filed within the ten-day period, the Secretary of the State Board or the secretary of the local electoral board shall then assess against the candidate and treasurer, who shall be jointly and severally liable, or person or political committee required to file a report, a civil penalty not to exceed $300. The Secretary of the State Board or the secretary of the local electoral board may grant an additional period for compliance, not to exceed two weeks, to permit the completion of a filed report for good cause shown and in response to a request filed within the ten-day period. However, no additional period shall be granted thereafter for compliance.
D. For any report required to be filed between July 1, 1994, and the effective
date of this act, the State Board shall give the notice required by subsection B of
this section prior to assessing any civil penalty. If a penalty has been assessed
for any such report and no appeal of that penalty has been received, the State
Board shall notify the candidate and treasurer, or person or political
committee, who filed the report that an appeal may be filed within ten days of
the date of mailing of the notice by the State Board. The additional periods
for filing specified in subsections B and C shall apply only to the completion of a timely
filed report and not to any case of a failure to file a required report by the deadline
specified in this chapter.
E. In the case of a failure to file the report of any large preelection
contribution required by § 24.2-919, or the late or incomplete filing of such a
report, there shall be a rebuttable presumption that the violation was willful. The
provisions of subsections B, and C, and D of this section shall not apply to
reports required by § 24.2-919.