297F.21 CONTRABAND.
Subdivision 1. Contraband defined. The following are declared
to be contraband and therefore subject to civil and criminal penalties
under this chapter:
(a) Cigarette packages which do not have stamps affixed to them as
provided in this chapter, including but not limited to (i) packages with
illegible stamps and packages with stamps that are not complete or whole
even if the stamps are legible, and (ii) all devices for the vending of
cigarettes in which packages as defined in item (i) are found, including
all contents contained within the devices.
(b) A device for the vending of cigarettes and all packages of cigarettes,
where the device does not afford at least partial visibility of contents.
Where any package exposed to view does not carry the stamp required
by this chapter, it shall be presumed that all packages contained in the
device are unstamped and contraband.
(c) A device for the vending of cigarettes to which the commissioner
or authorized agents have been denied access for the inspection of contents.
In lieu of seizure, the commissioner or an agent may seal the device
to prevent its use until inspection of contents is permitted.
(d) A device for the vending of cigarettes which does not carry the
name and address of the owner, plainly marked and visible from the front
of the machine.
(e) A device including, but not limited to, motor vehicles, trailers,
snowmobiles, airplanes, and boats used with the knowledge of the owner
or of a person operating with the consent of the owner for the storage
or transportation of more than 5,000 cigarettes which are contraband under
this subdivision. When cigarettes are being transported in the course
of interstate commerce, or are in movement from either a public warehouse
to a distributor upon orders from a manufacturer or distributor, or from
one distributor to another, the cigarettes are not contraband, notwithstanding
the provisions of clause (a).
(f) A device including, but not limited to, motor vehicles, trailers,
snowmobiles, airplanes, and boats used with the knowledge of the owner,
or of a person operating with the consent of the owner, for the storage
or transportation of untaxed tobacco products intended for sale in Minnesota
other than those in the possession of a licensed distributor on or before
the due date for payment of the tax under section 297F.09, subdivision 2 .
(g) Cigarette packages or tobacco products obtained from an unlicensed seller.
(h) Cigarette packages offered for sale or held as inventory in violation
of section 297F.20, subdivision 7 .
(i) Tobacco products on which the tax has not been paid by a licensed
distributor.
(j) Any cigarette packages or tobacco products offered for sale or
held as inventory for which there is not an invoice from a licensed seller
as required under section 297F.13, subdivision 4 .
(k) Cigarette packages which have been imported into the United States
in violation of United States Code, title 26, section 5754 . All
cigarettes held in violation of that section shall be presumed to have
entered the United States after December 31, 1999, in the absence of proof
to the contrary.
(l) Cigarettes subject to forfeiture under section 299F.854, subdivision
5 , and cigarette packaging and markings, including the cigarettes contained
therein, which do not meet the requirements under section 299F.853 , paragraph (a).
Subd. 2. Seizure. Cigarettes, tobacco products, or other property
made contraband by subdivision 1 may be seized by the commissioner or
authorized agents or by any sheriff or other police officer, with or without
process, and are subject to forfeiture as provided in subdivision 3.
Subd. 3. Inventory; judicial determination; appeal;
disposition of seized property. (a) Within ten days
after the seizure of any alleged contraband, the person making the seizure
shall serve by certified mail an inventory of the property seized on the
person from whom the seizure was made, if known, and on any person known
or believed to have any right, title, interest, or lien in the property,
at the last known address, and file a copy with the commissioner. The
notice must include an explanation of the right to demand a judicial forfeiture
determination.
(b) Within 60 days after the date of service of the inventory, which
is the date of mailing, the person from whom the property was seized or
any person claiming an interest in the property may file a demand for
a judicial determination of the question as to whether the property was
lawfully subject to seizure and forfeiture. The demand must be in
the form of a civil complaint and must be filed with the court administrator
in the county in which the seizure occurred, together with proof of service
of a copy of the complaint on the commissioner of revenue, and the standard
filing fee for civil actions unless the petitioner has the right to sue
in forma pauperis under section 563.01 . If the value of the seized
property is $10,000 or less, the claimant may file an action in conciliation
court for recovery of the property. If the value of the seized property
is less than $500, the claimant does not have to pay the conciliation
court filing fee.
(c) The complaint must be captioned in the name of the claimant as
plaintiff and the seized property as defendant, and must state with specificity
the grounds on which the claimant alleges the property was improperly
seized and the plaintiff's interest in the property seized. No responsive
pleading is required of the commissioner, and no court fees may be charged
for the commissioner's appearance in the matter. The proceedings
are governed by the Rules of Civil Procedure. Notwithstanding any
law to the contrary, an action for the return of property seized under
this section may not be maintained by or on behalf of any person who has
been served with an inventory unless the person has complied with this
subdivision. The court shall decide whether the alleged contraband
is contraband, as defined in subdivision 1. The court shall hear
the action without a jury and shall try and determine the issues of fact
and law involved.
(d) When a judgment of forfeiture is entered, unless the judgment
is stayed pending an appeal, the commissioner:
(1) may authorize the forfeited property to be used for the purpose
of enforcing a criminal provision of state or federal law;
(2) shall cause forfeited cigarette packages or tobacco products not
used under clause (1) to be destroyed and products used under clause (1)
to be destroyed upon the completion of use; and
(3) may cause the forfeited property, other than forfeited cigarette
packages or tobacco products, to be sold at public auction as provided by law.
The person making a sale, after deducting the expense of keeping the property,
the fee for seizure, and the costs of the sale, shall pay all liens according
to their priority, which are established as being bona fide and as existing
without the lienor having any notice or knowledge that the property was
being used or was intended to be used for or in connection with the violation.
The balance of the proceeds must be paid 75 percent to the Department
of Revenue for deposit as a supplement to its operating fund or similar
fund for official use, and 25 percent to the county attorney or other
prosecuting agency that handled the court proceeding, if there is one,
for deposit as a supplement to its operating fund or similar fund for
prosecutorial purposes. If there is no prosecuting authority involved
in the forfeiture, the 25 percent of the proceeds otherwise designated
for the prosecuting authority must be deposited into the general fund.
(e) If no demand for judicial determination is made, the property
seized is considered forfeited to the state by operation of law and may
be disposed of by the commissioner as provided in the case of a judgment
of forfeiture.
Subd. 4. Repealed by Laws 2001, 1st Sp., c. 5, art. 18, § 11
(b) A retailer doing business off of an Indian reservation who sells
or offers to sell 5,000 or more, but fewer than 20,001 cigarettes with
Indian stamps is guilty of a gross misdemeanor.
(c) A retailer doing business off of an Indian reservation who sells
or offers to sell more than 20,000 cigarettes with Indian stamps is guilty
of a felony.
Subd. 8. Sales after license revocation. A person selling cigarettes
or tobacco products after the person's license has been revoked is guilty
of a felony.
Subd. 9. Purchases from unlicensed sellers. (a) No retailer
or subjobber shall purchase cigarettes or tobacco products from any person
who is not licensed under section 297F.03 as a licensed distributor or
subjobber.
(b) A retailer or subjobber who purchases from an unlicensed seller
fewer than 5,000 cigarettes or up to $350 worth of tobacco products is
guilty of a misdemeanor.
(c) A retailer or subjobber who purchases from an unlicensed seller
5,000 or more, but fewer than 20,001 cigarettes or more than $350 but
less than $1,400 worth of tobacco products is guilty of a gross misdemeanor.
(d) A retailer or subjobber who purchases from an unlicensed seller
more than 20,000 cigarettes or $1,400 or more worth of tobacco products
is guilty of a felony.
Subd. 10. Penalties are additional. Criminal penalties imposed
by this section are in addition to any civil penalties imposed by this chapter.
Subd. 11. Statute of limitations. Notwithstanding section 628.26
, or any other provision of the criminal laws of this state, an indictment
may be found and filed, or a complaint filed, upon a criminal offense
named in this section, in the proper court within six years after the
offense is committed.
Subd. 12. Other penalties. A violation of this chapter unless
otherwise specified is a misdemeanor.