56133.5
. (a) Except pursuant to an exemption granted by the
department, no person licensed under this chapter shall employ any
person as an agent, or who previously was an agent, who meets any of
the following criteria:
(1) Whose license has been revoked or is currently suspended.
(2) Who has committed any one flagrant or repeated violations of
this chapter or Chapter 6 (commencing with Section 55401).
(3) Who failed to pay a producer's claims for which the person,
or, where the person controlled the decision to pay, the person's
employer, was liable, and which arose out of the conduct of a
business licensed or required to be licensed under this chapter or
Chapter 6 (commencing with Section 55401).
(4) Who has been convicted of a crime that includes as one of its
elements the financial victimization of another person.
(b) The department may approve employment of any person covered by
subdivision (a) if the licensee furnishes and maintains a surety
bond in form and amount satisfactory to the department, but that
shall not be less than ten thousand dollars ($10,000), as assurance
that the licensee's business will be conducted in accordance with
this chapter and that the licensee will pay all amounts due farm
products creditors. The department may approve employment without a
surety bond after the expiration of four years from the effective
date of the applicable disciplinary order. The department, based on
changes in the nature and volume of business conducted by the
licensee, may require an increase or authorize a reduction in the
amount of the bond, but in no case shall the bond be reduced below
ten thousand dollars ($10,000). A licensee who is notified by the
department to provide a bond in an increased amount shall do so
within a reasonable time to be specified by the department. If the
licensee fails to do so, the approval of employment shall
automatically terminate. The department may suspend or revoke the
license of any licensee who, after the date given in the notice,
continues to employ any person in violation of this section.
(c) The department may obtain access to a licensee's or person's
criminal record during the course of a licensing investigation opened
for other reasons or if the department is presented with a
reasonable basis to believe a person or licensee satisfies any of the
criteria set forth in paragraphs (1) to (4), inclusive, of
subdivision (a). The Department of Justice shall furnish criminal
record information to the department at the department's request. If
the information thereby obtained reveals a conviction for a crime
that includes as one of its elements the financial victimization of
another person, the department shall bring this to the attention of
the licensee and the person by a written notice. This written notice
shall set out the charges against the licensee or person, prohibit
employment or revoke or deny the license effective if and when any
rights to an administrative hearing have been exhausted, and set out
the licensee's or person's rights under this section.
(d) The department may grant an exemption on presentation of
substantial, clear, and convincing evidence to support a reasonable
belief as to any of the following:
(1) There has been a mistake of fact or identity.
(2) The present role of the person provides no opportunity for a
repeat of the prior behavior.
(3) The person has been rehabilitated.
All submissions shall be authenticated and verified under penalty
of perjury. Unless the licensee or person can prove one of these
three elements by substantial, clear, and convincing evidence, the
department shall deny the request for exemption.
(e) (1) A licensee or person who has been identified by the
department as satisfying any of the criteria set forth in paragraphs
(1) to (4), inclusive, of subdivision (a) and who has not been
granted an exemption by the department shall be afforded a hearing
upon the licensee's or person's request under this chapter. The
licensee or person shall not have a right of hearing if the
department did not notify the employer or deny an exemption.
(2) At the hearing, the department shall have the burden to prove
that any of the criteria set forth in paragraphs (1) to (4),
inclusive, of subdivision (a) are satisfied by a preponderance of the
evidence. It shall be the licensee's or person's burden to prove
rehabilitation by substantial, clear, and convincing evidence.
(3) In the case of a criminal conviction, "convicted of a crime"
includes a plea or verdict of guilty or a conviction following a plea
of nolo contendere. Any action that the department is permitted to
take following the establishment of a conviction may be taken when
the time for appeal has elapsed, the judgment of conviction has been
affirmed on appeal, or when an order granting probation is made
suspending the imposition of sentence, notwithstanding a subsequent
order pursuant to Sections 1203.4 and 1203.4a of the Penal Code
permitting the person to withdraw his or her plea of guilty and to
enter a plea of not guilty, or setting aside the verdict of guilty,
or dismissing the accusation, information, or indictment. For
purposes of this section or any other provision of this chapter, the
record of a conviction, or a copy thereof certified by the clerk of
the court or by a judge of the court in which the conviction
occurred, shall be conclusive evidence of the conviction.
(4) For purposes of this section or any other provision of this
chapter, a certified copy of a decision and order or minutes of court
in which a finding is made concerning any of the criteria set forth
in paragraphs (1) to (3), inclusive, of subdivision (a), is prima
facie evidence of the truth of the charge and collateral estoppel
applies.
(f) The documents and information procured pursuant to this
section shall be considered the records of a consumer and shall not
be construed to be a public record. The documents and information
shall remain confidential, except in actions brought by the
department to enforce this division, or as a result of the issuance
of a subpoena in accordance with Section 1985.4 of the Code of Civil
Procedure. The unauthorized release of the documents received from
the Department of Justice or the information contained in those
documents, is a misdemeanor.