Chapter 226
2019 -- H 5847 SUBSTITUTE A
Enacted 07/15/2019

A N   A C T
RELATING TO FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS -- LICENSED ACTIVITIES--CURRENCY TRANSMISSIONS

Introduced By: Representatives Shekarchi, Solomon, Speakman, Blazejewski, and
Date Introduced: March 14, 2019

It is enacted by the General Assembly as follows:
     SECTION 1. Sections 19-14-1, 19-14-2, 19-14-4, 19-14-5, 19-14-6 and 19-14-26 of the
General Laws in Chapter 19-14 entitled "Licensed Activities" are hereby amended to read as
follows:
     19-14-1. Definitions.
     Unless otherwise specified, the following terms shall have the following meanings
throughout chapters 14, 14.1, 14.2, 14.3, 14.4, 14.6, 14.8, 14.10, and 14.11 of this title:
     (1) "Bona fide employee" shall mean an employee of a licensee who works under the
oversight and supervision of the licensee.
     (2) "Check" means any check, draft, money order, personal money order, or other
instrument for the transmission or payment of money. For the purposes of check cashing,
travelers checks or foreign denomination instruments shall not be considered checks. "Check
cashing" means providing currency for checks.
     (3) "Check casher" means a person or entity who or that, for compensation, engages, in
whole or in part, in the business of cashing checks.
     (4) "Currency transmission" means engaging in the business of any of the following:
     (i) Sale or issuance of payment instruments or stored value primarily for personal, family,
or household purposes; or
     (ii) Receiving money or monetary value for transmission or holding funds incidental to
transmission within the United States or to locations abroad by any and all means, including
payment instrument, stored value, wire, facsimile, or electronic transfer, primarily for personal,
family, or household purposes. This includes maintaining control of virtual currency or
transactions in virtual currency on behalf of others.
     (4)(5) "Deferred-deposit transaction" means any transaction, such as those commonly
known as "payday loans,", "payday advances,", or "deferred-presentment loans,", in which a cash
advance is made to a customer in exchange for the customer's personal check or in exchange for
the customer's authorization to debit the customer's deposit account and where the parties agree
either that the check will not be cashed or deposited, or that the customer's deposit account will
not be debited until a designated future date.
     (5)(6)(7) "Deliver" means to deliver a check to the first person who, in payment for the
check, makes, or purports to make, a remittance of, or against, the face amount of the check,
whether or not the deliverer also charges a fee in addition to the face amount and whether or not
the deliverer signs the check.
     (6) "Electronic money transfer" means receiving money for transmission within the
United States or to locations abroad by any means including, but not limited to, wire, facsimile, or
other electronic transfer system.
     (7)(8) "Insurance premium finance agreement" means an agreement by which an insured,
or prospective insured, promises to pay to an insurance premium finance company the amount
advanced, or to be advanced, under the agreement to an insurer or to an insurance producer, in
payment of a premium, or premiums, on an insurance contract, or contracts, together with interest
and a service charge, as authorized and limited by this title.
     (8)(9) "Insurance premium finance company" means a person or entity engaged in the
business of making insurance premium finance agreements or acquiring insurance premium
finance agreements from other insurance premium finance companies.
     (9)(10)(i) "Lender" means any person who makes or funds a loan within this state with
the person's own funds, regardless of whether the person is the nominal mortgagee or creditor on
the instrument evidencing the loan;
     (ii) A loan is made or funded within this state if any of the following conditions exist:
     (A) The loan is secured by real property located in this state;
     (B) An application for a loan is taken by an employee, agent, or representative of the
lender within this state;
     (C) The loan closes within this state;
     (D) The loan solicitation is done by an individual with a physical presence in this state; or
     (E) The lender maintains an office in this state.
     (iii) The term "lender" shall also include any person engaged in a transaction whereby the
person makes or funds a loan within this state using the proceeds of an advance under a line of
credit over which proceeds the person has dominion and control and for the repayment of which
the person is unconditionally liable. This transaction is not a table-funding transaction. A person
is deemed to have dominion and control over the proceeds of an advance under a line of credit
used to fund a loan regardless of whether:
     (A) The person may, contemporaneously with, or shortly following, the funding of the
loan, assign or deliver to the line of credit lender one or more loans funded by the proceeds of an
advance to the person under the line of credit;
     (B) The proceeds of an advance are delivered directly to the settlement agent by the line-
of-credit lender, unless the settlement agent is the agent of the line-of-credit lender;
     (C) One or more loans funded by the proceeds of an advance under the line of credit is
purchased by the line-of-credit lender; or
     (D) Under the circumstances, as set forth in regulations adopted by the director, or the
director's designee, pursuant to this chapter.
     (10)(11) "Licensee" means any person licensed under this chapter.
     (11)(12) "Loan" means any advance of money or credit including, but not limited to:
     (i) Loans secured by mortgages;
     (ii) Insurance premium finance agreements;
     (iii) The purchase or acquisition of retail installment contracts or advances to the holders
of those contracts;
     (iv) Educational loans;
     (v) Any other advance of money; or
     (vi) Any transaction, such as those commonly known as "payday loans,", "payday
advances,", or "deferred-presentment loans,", in which a cash advance is made to a customer in
exchange for the customer's personal check, or in exchange for the customer's authorization to
debit the customer's deposit account, and where the parties agree either, that the check will not be
cashed or deposited, or that customer's deposit account will not be debited, until a designated
future date.
     (12)(13) "Loan broker" means any person or entity who or that, for compensation or gain,
or in the expectation of compensation or gain, either directly or indirectly, solicits, processes,
negotiates, places, or sells a loan within this state for others in the primary market, or offers to do
so. A loan broker shall also mean any person who is the nominal mortgagee or creditor in a table-
funding transaction. A loan is brokered within this state if any of the following conditions exist:
     (i) The loan is secured by real property located in this state;
     (ii) An application for a loan is taken or received by an employee, agent, or representative
of the loan broker within this state;
     (iii) The loan closes within this state;
     (iv) The loan solicitation is done by an individual with a physical presence in this state; or
     (v) The loan broker maintains an office in this state.
     (13)(14) "Loan-closing services" means providing title services, including title searches,
title examinations, abstract preparation, insurability determinations, and the issuance of title
commitments and title insurance policies, conducting loan closings, and preparation of loan-
closing documents when performed by, or under the supervision of, a licensed attorney, licensed
title agency, or licensed title insurance company.
     (14)(15) "Loan solicitation" shall mean an effectuation, procurement, delivery and offer,
and advertisement of a loan. Loan solicitation also includes providing or accepting loan
applications and assisting persons in completing loan applications and/or advising, conferring, or
informing anyone regarding the benefits, terms and/or conditions of a loan product or service.
Loan solicitation does not include loan processing or loan underwriting as defined in this section.
Loan solicitation does not include telemarketing that is defined, for purposes of this section, to
mean contacting a person by telephone with the intention of collecting such person's name,
address, and telephone number for the sole purpose of allowing a mortgage loan originator to
fulfill a loan inquiry.
     (15)(16) "Loan underwriting" shall mean a loan process that involves the analysis of risk
with respect to the decision whether to make a loan to a loan applicant based on credit,
employment, assets, and other factors, including evaluating a loan applicant against a lender's
various lending criteria for creditworthiness, making a determination for the lender as to whether
the applicant meets the lender's pre-established credit standards, and/or making a
recommendation regarding loan approval.
     (16)(17) "Monetary value" means a medium of exchange, whether or not redeemable in
fiat currency.
     (16)(17)(18) "Mortgage loan" means a loan secured in whole, or in part, by real property
located in this state.
     (17)(18)(19) "Mortgage loan originator" has the same meaning set forth in § 19-14.10-
3(6).
     (18)(19)(20) "Nationwide Multi-state licensing system Licensing System Multistate
Licensing System" means a system involving more than one or more states state, the District of
Columbia, or the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico and which that is established to facilitate the
sharing of regulatory information and the licensing, application, reporting, and payment
processes, by electronic or other means, for mortgage lenders and loan brokers and other
licensees required to be licensed under this chapter.
     (19)(20)(21) "Natural person employee" shall mean any natural person performing
services as a bona fide employee for a person or entity licensed under § 19-14-1 et seq., in return
for a salary, wage, or other consideration, where such salary, wage, or consideration is reported
by the licensee on a federal form W-2 payroll record. The term does not include any natural
person or business entity performing services for a person licensed under the provisions of Rhode
Island general laws in return for a salary, wage, or other consideration, where such salary, wage,
or consideration is reported by the licensee on a federal form 1099.
     (20)(21)(22) "Negative equity" means the difference between the value of an asset and
the outstanding portion of the loan taken out to pay for the asset, when the latter exceeds the
former amount.
     (21)(22)(23) "Negotiates" shall mean, with respect to a loan, to confer directly with, or
offer advice directly to, a loan applicant or prospective loan applicant for a loan product or
service concerning any of the substantive benefits, terms, or conditions of the loan product or
service.
     (22)(23)(24) "Nonprofit organization" means a corporation qualifying as a 26 U.S.C. §
501(c)(3) nonprofit organization, in the operation of which no member, director, officer, partner,
employee, agent, or other affiliated person profits financially other than receiving reasonable
salaries if applicable.
     (23)(24)(25) "Operating subsidiary" shall mean a majority-owned subsidiary of a
financial institution or banking institution that engages only in activities permitted by the parent
financial institution or banking institution.
     (24)(25)(26) "Oversight and supervision of the licensee" shall mean that the licensee
provides training to the employee, sets the employee's hours of work, and provides the employee
with the equipment and physical premises required to perform the employee's duties.
     (25)(26)(27) "Personal money order" means any instrument for the transmission or
payment of money in relation to which the purchaser or remitter appoints, or purports to appoint,
the seller as his or her agent for the receipt, transmission, or handling of money, whether the
instrument is signed by the seller, or by the purchaser, or remitter, or some other person.
     (26)(27)(28) "Primary market" means the market in which loans are made to borrowers
by lenders, whether or not through a loan broker or other conduit.
     (27)(28)(29) "Principal owner" means any person or entity who or that owns, controls,
votes, or has a beneficial interest in, directly or indirectly, ten percent (10%) or more of the
outstanding capital stock and/or equity interest of a licensee.
     (28)(29)(30) "Processes" shall mean, with respect to a loan, any of a series of acts or
functions, including the preparation of a loan application and supporting documents, performed
by a person that leads to, or results in, the acceptance, approval, denial, and/or withdrawal of a
loan application, including, without limitation, the rendering of services, including loan
underwriting, obtaining verifications, credit reports or appraisals, communicating with the
applicant and/or the lender or loan broker, and/or other loan processing and origination services,
for consideration by a lender or loan broker. Loan processing does not include the following:
     (i) Providing loan closing services;
     (ii) Rendering of credit reports by an authorized credit reporting agency; and
     (iii) Rendering of appraisal services.
     (29)(30)(31) "Provisional employee" means a natural person who, pursuant to a written
agreement between the natural person and a wholly owned subsidiary of a financial holding
company, as defined in the Bank Holding Company Act of 1956 (12 U.S.C. § 1841 et seq.), as
amended, a bank-holding company, savings-bank-holding company, or thrift-holding company, is
an exclusive agent for the subsidiary with respect to mortgage loan originations and the
subsidiary: (a) Holds a valid loan broker's license; and (b) Enters into a written agreement with
the director, or the director's designee, to include:
     (i) An "undertaking of accountability,", in a form prescribed by the director, or the
director's designee, for all of the subsidiary's exclusive agents to include full-and-direct financial
and regulatory responsibility for the mortgage loan originator activities of each exclusive agent as
if said exclusive agent were an employee of the subsidiary;
     (ii) A business plan, to be approved by the director, or the director's designee, for the
education of the exclusive agents, the handling of consumer complaints related to the exclusive
agents, and the supervision of the mortgage loan origination activities of the exclusive agents; and
     (iii) A restriction of the exclusive agents' mortgage loan originators' activities to loans to
be made only by the subsidiary's affiliated bank.
     (30)(31)(32) "Sell" means to sell, to issue, or to deliver a check.
     (31)(32)(33) "Servicing" means receiving a scheduled, periodic payment from a
borrower, pursuant to the terms of a loan, including amounts for escrow accounts, and making the
payments to the owner of the loan or other third party of principal and interest and other
payments with respect to the amounts received from the borrower as may be required pursuant to
the terms of the servicing loan documents or servicing contract. In the case of a home equity
conversion mortgage or a reverse mortgage, servicing includes making payment to the borrower.
     (32)(33)(34) "Simple interest" means interest computed on the principal balance
outstanding immediately prior to a payment for one plus the actual number of days between
payments made on a loan over the life of a loan.
     (33)(34)(35) "Small loan" means a loan of less than five thousand dollars ($5,000), not
secured by real estate, made pursuant to the provisions of chapter 14.2 of this title.
     (34)(35)(36) "Small-loan lender" means a lender engaged in the business of making
small loans within this state.
     (36)(37) "Stored value" means monetary value representing a claim against the issuer that
is stored on an electronic or digital medium and is evidenced by an electronic or digital record,
and that is intended and accepted for use as a means of redemption for money or monetary value
or payment for goods or services. The term does not include stored value that is redeemable by
the issuer exclusively in goods or services; stored value that is redeemable exclusively in goods
or services limited to transactions involving a defined merchant or location or set of locations,
such as a specific retailer or retail chain, college campus, or program points, miles, or other units
issued in connection with a customer affinity or rewards program, even if there is a secondary
market for the stored value.
     (35)(37)(38) "Table-funding transaction" means a transaction in which there is a
contemporaneous advance of funds by a lender and an assignment by the mortgagee or creditor of
the loan to the lender.
     (36)(38)(39) "Third-party loan servicer" means a person or entity who or that, directly or
indirectly, engages in the business of servicing a loan secured by residential real estate located in
Rhode Island, for a personal, family, or household purpose, owed or due, or asserted to be owed
or due, another, or a person or entity that owns the servicing rights to a loan secured by residential
real estate located in Rhode Island whether or not that owner services the loan themselves or
contracts with another person or entity for the servicing.
     (39)(40) "Virtual currency":
     (i) Means a digital representation of value that:
     (A) Is used as a medium of exchange, unit of account, or store of value; and
     (B) Is not legal tender, whether or not denominated in legal tender; and
     (ii) Does not include:
     (A) A transaction in which a merchant grants, as part of an affinity or rewards program,
value that cannot be taken from or exchanged with the merchant for legal tender, bank credit, or
virtual currency;
     (B) A digital representation of value issued by or on behalf of a publisher and used solely
within an online game, game platform, or family of games sold by the same publisher or offered
on the same game platform;
     (C) Native digital token used in a proprietary blockchain service platform; or
     (D) A gift certificate; store gift card; general-use prepaid card; or loyalty, award, or
promotional gift card, as these terms are defined in federal Regulation E, title 12 C.F.R.
1005.20(a), without giving effect to any exception as specified in title 31 C.F.R. 1010.100 (kkk)
or any card, code or device, or other device that can add funds to those products.
     (37)(40)(41) "Writing" means hard-copy writing or electronic writing that meets the
requirements of § 42-127.1-2(7).
     19-14-2. Licenses required.
     (a) No person shall engage within this state in the business of: (1) Making or funding
loans or acting as a lender or small loan lender; (2) Brokering loans or acting as a loan broker; (3)
Selling checks for a fee or other consideration Providing currency transmission for a fee or other
consideration; (4) Cashing checks for a fee or other consideration, which includes any premium
charged for the sale of goods in excess of the cash price of the goods; (5) Providing electronic
money transfers for a fee or other consideration; (6)(5) Providing debt-management services;
(7)(6) Performing the duties of a mortgage-loan originator; (8)(7) Servicing a loan, directly or
indirectly, as a third-party loan servicer without first obtaining a license or registration from the
director or the director's designee. The licensing requirement for any person providing debt-
management plans shall apply to all persons, without regard for state of incorporation or a
physical presence in this state, who initiate or service debt-management plans for residents of this
state. Special exemptions from licensing for each activity are contained in other chapters in this
title.
     (b) No lender or loan-broker licensee shall permit an employee to act as a mortgage loan
originator without first verifying that such the originator is licensed under this chapter. No
individual may act as a mortgage-loan originator without being licensed, or act as a mortgage-
loan originator for more than one person. The license of a mortgage-loan originator is not
effective during any period when such the mortgage-loan originator is not associated with a
lender or loan-broker licensee.
     (c) Each loan negotiated, solicited, placed, found, or made without a license as required
in subsection (a) shall constitute a separate violation for purposes of this chapter.
     (d) No person engaged in the business of making or brokering loans in this state, whether
licensed in accordance with the provisions of this chapter or exempt from licensing, shall accept
applications, or referral of applicants from, or pay a fee to, any lender, loan broker, or mortgage-
loan originator who is required to be licensed or registered under said sections but is not licensed
to act as such by the director, or the director's designee.
     (e) No person, except those exempt pursuant to § 19-14.3-1, shall engage in the business
of currency transmission in this state without a license as provided in this chapter.
     (f) A currency transmission licensee may conduct its business in this state at one or more
locations, directly or indirectly owned, or through one or more authorized delegates, or both,
pursuant to the license granted under this chapter.
     (g) A person is considered to be engaged in the business of currency transmission in this
state if that person enters into a transaction with a person physically located in or resident in
Rhode Island at the time the transaction is initiated.
     19-14-4. Annual fee.
     (a) Each licensee shall pay an annual license fee as follows:
     (1) Each small-loan lender license and each branch certificate, the sum of five hundred
fifty dollars ($550);
     (2) Each loan-broker license and each branch certificate, the sum of five hundred fifty
dollars ($550);
     (3) Each lender license and each branch certificate, the sum of one thousand one hundred
dollars ($1,100);
     (4) Each sale of checks currency transmission license, the sum of three hundred sixty
dollars ($360) one thousand dollars ($1,000);
     (5) Each check cashing license, the sum of three hundred sixty dollars ($360);
     (6) Each electronic money transfer license, the sum of three hundred sixty dollars ($360);
     (7) Each registration to provide debt-management services, the sum of two hundred
dollars ($200);
     (8) Each mortgage-loan originator license, the sum of one hundred dollars ($100); and
     (9) Each third-party loan-servicer license and each branch certificate, the sum of one
thousand one hundred dollars ($1,100).
     (b) Any licensee who shall not pay the annual fee by December 31 of each year shall be
subject to a daily penalty of twenty-five dollars ($25) per day, subject to a maximum of seven
hundred fifty dollars ($750). The penalty shall be paid to the director to, and for the use of, the
state. The penalty may be waived for good cause by the director, or the director's designee, upon
written request.
     19-14-5. Minimum capital.
     Each licensee, licensed pursuant to an application for license filed after June 30, 1995,
shall maintain the following minimum-net worth to be evidenced in accordance with regulations
promulgated by the director, or the director's designee.
     (1) Small-loan lenders, the sum of twenty-five thousand dollars ($25,000);
     (2) Loan brokers, the sum of ten thousand dollars ($10,000);
     (3) Lenders, the sum of one hundred thousand dollars ($100,000);
     (4) Sale of checks Currency transmission licensees, the sum of fifty thousand dollars
($50,000). If a licensee limits its actions to virtual currency, the licensee may include in its
calculation of net worth virtual currency, measured by the average value of the virtual currency in
U.S. Dollar equivalent over the prior six (6) months; and
     (5) Third-party loan servicers, the sum of one hundred thousand dollars ($100,000).
     19-14-6. Bond of applicant.
     (a) An applicant for any license shall file with the director, or the director's designee, a
bond to be approved by him or her in which the applicant shall be the obligor.
     (b) The amount of the bond shall be as follows:
     (1) Small-loan lenders, the sum of ten thousand dollars ($10,000);
     (2) Loan brokers, the sum of twenty thousand dollars ($20,000);
     (3) Lenders, the sum of fifty thousand dollars ($50,000);
     (4) Sale of checks and electronic money transfer Currency transmission licensees, the
sum of fifty thousand dollars ($50,000) subject to a maximum of one hundred and fifty thousand
dollars ($150,000) when aggregated with agent locations;
     (5) Check-cashing licensees who accept checks for collection with deferred payment, the
sum of fifty thousand dollars ($50,000) subject to a maximum of one hundred and fifty thousand
dollars ($150,000) when aggregated with agent locations;
     (6) Foreign-exchange licensees, the sum of ten thousand dollars ($10,000);
     (7) The amounts listed above apply to licensees with zero (0) to three (3) branch or agent
locations. Licensees with four (4) to seven (7) branches shall post a bond, as indicated above, and
an additional bond in the sum of ten thousand dollars ($10,000). Licensees with eight (8) or more
branches shall post a bond, as indicated above, and an additional bond in the sum of twenty-five
thousand dollars ($25,000);
     (8)(6)(8) Each debt-management services registrant, the amount provided in § 19-14.8-
13; or
     (9)(7)(9) Each third-party loan servicer, the sum of fifty thousand dollars ($50,000); or
     (8)(10) If a currency transmission licensee shows that a surety bond is not generally
available in this state at a commercially reasonable cost, the department may accept an alternative
form of security.
     (c) The bond shall run to the state for the use of the state and of any person who may
have cause of action against the obligor of the bond under the provisions of this title. The bond
shall be perpetual and shall be conditioned upon the obligor faithfully conforming to, and abiding
by, the provisions of this title and of all rules and regulations lawfully made, and the obligor will
pay to the state and to any person any and all money that may become due or owing to the state or
to the person from the obligor under, and by virtue of, the provisions of this title.
     (d) The provisions of subsection (b)(6) shall not apply to any foreign-exchange business
holding a valid, electronic money-transfer license issued pursuant to § 19-14-1 et seq., that has
filed with the division of banking the bond required by subsections (b)(4) and (b)(7).
     (e) The bond shall remain in force and effect until the surety is released from liability by
the director, or the director's designee, or until the bond is cancelled by the surety. The surety
may cancel the bond and be released from further liability under the bond upon receipt by the
director, or the director's designee, of written notice in a manner satisfactory to the director,
including, but not limited to, for documentation purpose of the cancellation of the bond at least
thirty (30) days in advance of the cancellation of the bond. The cancellation shall not affect any
liability incurred or accrued under the bond before the termination of the thirty-day (30) period.
Upon receipt of any notice of cancellation, the director shall provide written notice to the
licensee.
     (f) Upon receipt of any notice of cancellation, the director may provide written notice to
the licensee requiring reinstatement or replacement of the bond. Unless the bond is reinstated by
the surety, or a satisfactory replacement bond is filed with the director prior to the cancellation of
the original bond, the license shall be suspended. The licensee will be provided notice of the
suspension and may request a hearing within thirty (30) days. If the licensee does not request a
hearing, the director, or director's designee, shall issue an order revoking the license for failure to
comply with this section.
     19-14-26. Penalty for violations.
     Any person and the several members, officers, directors, agents, and employees of any
person who violate or participate (a) If a person other than a licensee engages in activity for
which licensure is required by this title with or on behalf of a resident in violation of this chapter,
the department may assess a civil penalty against the person in an amount not to exceed five
thousand dollars ($5,000) for each day of violation and/or may order that the person cease and
desist from all activities requiring licensure.
     (b) If a licensee materially violates or participates in the violation of any of the applicable
provisions of this title, or any regulation promulgated under this title, is guilty of a misdemeanor
and upon conviction shall be punished by a fine the department may assess a civil penalty of not
more than one thousand dollars ($1,000) for each violation or in the case of identifiable measured
transactions per transaction, or by imprisonment not exceeding one year, or both. Each violation
constitutes a separate offense. Complaints under the provisions of this chapter may be made by
the director, or the director's designee, and shall not be required to give surety for costs. The
attorney general shall prosecute all complaints criminal activities under this chapter.
     (c) A civil penalty under this section continues to accrue until the earlier of the following:
     (1) The date the violation ceases; or
     (2) A date specified by the department.
     (d) In addition to the remedies set forth in subsections (a) and (b) of this section, upon
proof of a material violation by a licensee, the department may take any of the following actions:
     (1) Suspend or revoke a license or registration under this chapter;
     (2) Order a person to cease and desist from doing activity for which a license or registrant
is required with or on behalf of a resident;
     (3) Request the court to appoint a receiver for the assets of a licensee or registrant;
     (4) Request the court to issue temporary, preliminary, or permanent injunctive relief
against a licensee or registrant;
     (5) Recover on the bond or security posted by the licensee or registrant; or
     (6) Impose necessary or appropriate conditions on the conduct of business activity with
or on behalf of a resident.
     (e) All actions of the department under this section shall be taken in accordance with the
requirements of chapter 35 of title 42, (the administrative procedures act).
     SECTION 2. The title of Chapter 19-14.3 of the General Laws entitled "Sale of Checks
and Electronic Money Transfers" is hereby amended to read as follows:
CHAPTER 19-14.3
Sale of Checks and Electronic Money Transfers
CHAPTER 19-14.3
CURRENCY TRANSMISSIONS
     SECTION 3. Section 19-14.3-1 of the General Laws in Chapter 19-14.3 entitled "Sale of
Checks and Electronic Money Transfers" is hereby amended to read as follows:
     19-14.3-1. Exemption from licensing.
     No license to sell checks or engage in the business of currency transmission electronic
money transfers shall be required of any:
     (1) Regulated institution, bank, or credit union organized under the laws of the United
States, or subject to written notice with a designated Rhode Island agent for service of process in
the form prescribed by the director, or the director's designee, of any other state within the United
States if the laws of the other state in which such the bank or credit union is organized authorizes
under conditions not substantially more restrictive than those imposed by the laws of this state, as
determined by the director, or the director's designee, a financial institution or credit union to
engage in the business of selling checks or electronic money transfers currency transmission in
the other state; no bank or credit union duly organized under the laws of any other state within the
United States may receive deposits, pay checks, or lend money from any location within this state
unless such the bank or credit union has received approval from the director, or the director's
designee, for the establishment of an interstate branch office pursuant to chapter 7 of title 19 this
title;
     (2) Natural person employee who is employed by a licensee when acting on the licensee's
behalf; or
     (3) Agents or authorized delegates any licensee shall designate or appoint. No sale of
check or electronic money transfer currency transmission licensee shall be required to obtain a
branch office license pursuant to § 19-14-12, or shall be subject to the provisions of § 19-14-24,
or shall be required to obtain a license pursuant to chapter 14.4 of this title for check-cashing
services incidental to the sale of checks and electronic money transfers and the person charges not
more than fifty cents ($.50) per check cashed. Agents or authorized delegates, in their capacity as
agents of the licensee, are subject to the supervision and regulation by the director
notwithstanding exemption from licensure.
     (4) This chapter shall not apply to activity by:
     (i) The United States, a state, political subdivision of a state, agency or instrumentality of
federal, state, or local government, or a foreign government or a subdivision, department, agency
or instrumentality of a foreign government;
     (ii) A person whose participation in a payment system is limited to providing processing,
clearing, or performing settlement services solely for transactions between or among persons that
who are exempt from the licensing or registration requirements of this chapter;
     (iii) A person engaged in the business of dealing in foreign exchange to the extent the
person's activity meets the definition in 31 C.F.R. 1010.605(f)(1)(iv), as may be amended from
time to time;
     (iv) A person that who:
     (A) Contributes only connectivity software or computing power to support the stability
and security of the underlying network;
     (B) Provides only data storage or security services for a business engaged in virtual
currency business activity and does not otherwise engage in virtual currency business activity on
behalf of another person;
     (C) Provides only to a person otherwise exempt from this chapter virtual currency as one
or more enterprise solutions used solely among each other and has no agreement or relationship
with a resident that is an end-user of virtual currency; or
     (D) Transmission or communications services providers that provide only the means of
transmission or communications.;
     (v) A person using virtual currency, including creating, investing, buying, or selling, or
obtaining virtual currency as payment for the purchase or sale of goods or services, solely:
     (A) On its own behalf;
     (B) For personal, family, or household purposes; or
     (C) For academic purposes;
     (vi) An attorney to the extent of providing escrow services to a resident;
     (vii) A title insurance company to the extent of providing escrow services to a resident;
     (viii) A securities intermediary, as defined in § 6A-8-102, or a commodity intermediary,
as defined § 6A-9-102, that:
     (A) Does not engage in the ordinary course of business in virtual currency business
activity with or on behalf of a resident in addition to maintaining securities accounts or
commodities accounts and is regulated as a securities intermediary or commodity intermediary
under federal law, the law of this state other than this chapter, or the law of another state; and
     (B) Affords resident protections comparable to those set forth in § 19-14.3-3.6;
     (ix) A secured party defined in § 6A-9-102(a) or creditor with a judicial lien or lien
arising by operation of law on collateral that is virtual currency, if the virtual currency business
activity of the creditor is limited to enforcement of the security interest in compliance with
chapter 9 of title 6A or a lien in compliance with the law applicable to the lien;
     (x) A virtual currency control-services vendor; or
     (xi) A person that:
     (A) Does not receive compensation from or on behalf of a resident or from sales of data
pertaining to a resident for:
     (I) Providing virtual currency products or services; or
     (II) Conducting virtual currency business activity; or
     (B) Is engaged in testing products or services with the person's own funds.
     (5) The department may determine that a person or class of persons, given facts particular
to the person or class, should be exempt from this chapter, whether the person or class is covered
by requirements imposed under federal law on a money-service business.
     SECTION 4. Chapter 19-14.3 of the General Laws entitled "Sale of Checks and
Electronic Money Transfers" is hereby amended by adding thereto the following sections:
     19-14.3-1.1. Definitions.
     In addition to the definitions provided in § 19-14-1 the following definitions are
applicable to this chapter:
     (1) "Control" means:
     (i) When used in reference to a transaction or relationship involving virtual currency, the
power to execute unilaterally or prevent indefinitely a virtual currency transaction; and
     (ii) When used in reference to a person, the direct or indirect power to direct the
management, operations, or policies of the person through legal or beneficial ownership of
twenty-five percent (25%) or more of the voting power in the person or under a contract,
arrangement, or understanding.
     (2) "Department" means the department of business regulation, division of banking;.
     (3) "Exchange," used as a verb, means to assume control of virtual currency from or on
behalf of a resident, at least momentarily, to sell, trade, or convert:
     (i) Virtual currency for legal tender, bank credit, or one or more forms of virtual
currency; or
     (ii) Legal tender or bank credit for one or more forms of virtual currency.
     (4) "Legal tender" means a medium of exchange or unit of value, including the coin or
paper money of the United States, issued by the United States or by another government.
     (5) "Licensee" means a person licensed under this chapter.
     (6) "Monetary value" means a medium of exchange, whether or not redeemable in
money.
     (7) "Reciprocity agreement" means an arrangement between the department and the
appropriate licensing agency of another state which that permits a licensee operating under a
license granted by the other state to engage in currency transmission business activity with or on
behalf of a resident.
     (8) "Record" means information that is inscribed on a tangible medium or that is stored in
an electronic or other medium and is retrievable in perceivable form.
     (9) "Registry" means the Nationwide Multistate Licensing System.
     (10) "Resident":
     (i) Means a person that:
     (A) Is domiciled in this state;
     (B) Is physically located in this state for more than one hundred eighty-three (183) days
of the previous three hundred sixty-five (365) days; or
     (C) Has a place of business in this state; and
     (ii) Includes a legal representative of a person that satisfies subsection (10)(i) of this
section.
     (11) "Responsible individual" means an individual who has managerial authority with
respect to a licensee's currency transmission business activity with or on behalf of a resident.
     (12) "Sign" means, with present intent to authenticate or adopt a record:
     (i) To execute or adopt a tangible symbol; or
     (ii) To attach to or logically associate with the record an electronic symbol, sound, or
process.
     (13) "State" means a state of the United States, the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico, the
United States Virgin Islands, or any territory or insular possession subject to the jurisdiction of
the United States.
     (14) "Store," except in the phrase "store of value," means to maintain control of virtual
currency on behalf of a resident by a person other than the resident. "Storage" and "storing" have
corresponding meanings.
     (15) "Transfer" means to assume control of virtual currency from or on behalf of a
resident and to:
     (i) Credit the virtual currency to the account of another person;
     (ii) Move the virtual currency from one account of a resident to another account of the
same resident; or
     (iii) Relinquish control of virtual currency to another person.
     (16) "U.S. Dollar equivalent of virtual currency" means the equivalent value of a
particular virtual currency in United States dollars shown on a virtual currency exchange based in
the United States for a particular date or period specified in this chapter.
     (17) "Virtual currency business activity" means:
     (i) Exchanging, transferring, or storing virtual currency whether directly or through an
agreement with a virtual currency control-services vendor;
     (ii) Holding electronic precious metals or electronic certificates representing interests in
precious metals on behalf of another person or issuing shares or electronic certificates
representing interests in precious metals; or
     (iii) Exchanging one or more digital representations of value used within one or more
online games, game platforms, or family of games for:
     (A) Virtual currency offered by or on behalf of the same publisher from which the
original digital representation of value was received; or
     (B) Legal tender or bank credit outside the online game, game platform, or family of
games offered by or on behalf of the same publisher from which the original digital
representation of value was received.
     (18) "Virtual currency control-services vendor" means a person that who has control of
virtual currency solely under an agreement with a person that who, on behalf of another person,
assumes control of virtual currency.
     19-14.3-1.2. License by reciprocity.
     (a) A person licensed by another state to engage in currency transmission business
activity in that state may engage in currency transmission business activity with or on behalf of a
resident to the same extent as a licensee if:
     (1) The department determines that the state in which the person is licensed has in force
laws regulating currency transmission business activity which that are substantially similar to, or
more protective of rights of users than, this chapter and enters into a reciprocity agreement with
the other state that the state will allow reciprocal licensing of persons licensed under this chapter.
     (2) An application under this section is filed with the registry and the applicant shall
notify the department in a record that the applicant has submitted the application to the registry
and shall submit to the department:
     (i) A certification of license history from the agency responsible for issuing a license in
each state in which the applicant has been licensed to conduct currency transmission business
activity;
     (ii) A nonrefundable reciprocal licensing application fee in the amount required by § 19-
14-6;
     (iii) All other information requested by the department in the application for licensure on
the registry.
     19-14.3-1.3. Cooperation and data-sharing authority.
     (a) The department may cooperate, coordinate, jointly examine, consult, and share
records and other information with the appropriate regulatory agency of another state, a self-
regulatory organization, federal or state regulator of banking or non-depository providers, or a
regulator of a jurisdiction outside the United States, concerning the affairs and conduct of a
licensee in this state.
     (b) The department shall:
     (1) Establish or participate in, with another state that enacts a law substantially similar to
this chapter, a central depository for filings required by law of this state other than this chapter;
     (2) Cooperate in developing and implementing uniform forms for applications and
renewal reports and the conduct of joint administrative proceedings and civil actions;
     (3) Formulate joint rules, forms, statements of policy, and guidance and interpretative
opinions and releases; and
     (4) Develop common systems and procedures.
     (c) In deciding whether and how to cooperate, coordinate, jointly examine, consult, or
share records and other information under subsection (a) of this section, the department shall
consider:
     (1) Maximizing effectiveness and uniformity of regulation, examination, implementation,
and enforcement for the benefit of residents and licensees and registrants; and
     (2) Minimizing burdens on licensees and registrants without adversely affecting
protection for residents.
     19-14.3-3.5. Required disclosures for virtual currency.
     (a) A licensee engaging in virtual currency business activities shall provide to a resident
who uses the licensee's virtual currency products or service the disclosures required by subsection
(b) of this section and any additional disclosure the department by rule determines reasonably
necessary for the protection of residents. The department may determine by rule any additional
disclosures and/or the time and form required for disclosure. A disclosure required by this section
must be made separately from any other information provided by the licensee and in a clear and
conspicuous manner in a record the resident may keep. A licensee may propose for the
department's approval alternate disclosures as more appropriate for its virtual currency business
activity with or on behalf of residents.
     (b) Before establishing a relationship with a resident, a licensee shall disclose, to the
extent applicable to the virtual currency business activity the licensee will undertake with the
resident:
     (1) A schedule of fees and charges the licensee may assess, the manner by which fees and
charges will be calculated if they are not set in advance and disclosed, and the timing of the fees
and charges;
     (2) Whether the product or service provided by the licensee is covered by:
     (i) A form of insurance or is otherwise guaranteed against loss by an agency of the United
States:
     (A) Up to the full U.S. Dollar equivalent of virtual currency placed under the control of
or purchased from the licensee as of the date of the placement or purchase, including the
maximum amount provided by insurance under the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation or
otherwise available from the Securities Investor Protection Corporation; or
     (B) If not provided at the full U.S. Dollar equivalent of virtual currency placed under the
control of or purchased from the licensee, the maximum amount of coverage for each resident
expressed in the U.S. Dollar equivalent of the virtual currency; or
     (ii) Private insurance against theft or loss, including cyber theft or theft by other means;
     (3) The irrevocability of a transfer or exchange and any exception to irrevocability;
     (4) A description of:
     (i) Liability for an unauthorized, mistaken, or accidental transfer or exchange;
     (ii) The resident's responsibility to provide notice to the licensee of the transfer or
exchange;
     (iii) The basis for any recovery by the resident from the licensee;
     (iv) General error-resolution rights applicable to the transfer or exchange; and
     (v) The method for the resident to update the resident's contact information with the
licensee;
     (5) That the date or time when the transfer or exchange is made and the resident's account
is debited may differ from the date or time when the resident initiates the instruction to make the
transfer or exchange;
     (6) Whether the resident has a right to stop a pre-authorized payment or revoke
authorization for a transfer and the procedure to initiate a stop-payment order or revoke
authorization for a subsequent transfer;
     (7) The resident's right to receive a receipt, trade ticket, or other evidence of the transfer
or exchange;
     (8) The resident's right to at least thirty (30) days' prior notice of a change in the
licensee's fee schedule, other terms and conditions of operating its virtual currency business
activity with the resident and the policies applicable to the resident's account; and
     (9) That virtual currency is not legal tender.
     (c) Except as otherwise provided in subsection (d) of this section, at the conclusion of a
virtual currency transaction with or on behalf of a resident, a licensee shall provide the resident a
confirmation in a record which that contains:
     (1) The name and contact information of the licensee, including information the resident
may need to ask a question or file a complaint;
     (2) The type, value, date, precise time, and amount of the transaction; and
     (3) The fee charged for the transaction, including any charge for conversion of virtual
currency to legal tender, bank credit, or other virtual currency.
     (d) If a licensee discloses that it will provide a daily confirmation in the initial disclosure
under subsection (c) of this section, the licensee may elect to provide a single, daily confirmation
for all transactions with or on behalf of a resident on that day instead of a per-transaction
confirmation.
     19-14.3-3.6. Property interests and entitlements to virtual currency.
     (a) A licensee that has control of virtual currency for one or more persons shall maintain
in its control an amount of each type of virtual currency sufficient to satisfy the aggregate
entitlements of the persons to the type of virtual currency.
     (b) If a licensee violates subsection (a) of this section, the property interests of the
persons in the virtual currency are pro rata property interests in the type of virtual currency to
which the persons are entitled, without regard to the time the persons became entitled to the
virtual currency or the licensee obtained control of the virtual currency.
     (c) The virtual currency referred to in this section is:
     (1) Held for the persons entitled to the virtual currency;
     (2) Not property of the licensee; and
     (3) Not subject to the claims of creditors of the licensee.
     19-14.3-3.7. Mandated compliance programs and monitoring.
     (a) An applicant, before submitting an application, shall create and, during licensure,
maintain in a record, policies and procedures for:
     (1) An information-security and operational-security program;
     (2) A business-continuity program;
     (3) A disaster-recovery program;
     (4) An anti-fraud program;
     (5) An anti-money-laundering program; and
     (6) A program to ensure compliance with the Bank Secrecy Act and the USA Patriot Act.
     (b) A licensee's information-security and operational-security policy must include
reasonable and appropriate administrative, physical, and technical safeguards to protect the
confidentiality, integrity, and availability of any non-public personal information or currency
transmission it receives, maintains, or transmits.
     (c) A licensee is not required to file with the department a copy of a report it makes to a
federal authority unless the department specifically requires filing.
     (d) After the policies and procedures required under this section are created by the
licensee and approved by the department, the licensee shall engage a responsible individual with
adequate authority and experience to monitor each policy and procedure, recommend changes as
desirable, and enforce it.
     (e) A licensee may:
     (1) Request advice from the department as to compliance with this section; and
     (2) With the department's approval, outsource functions, other than compliance, required
under this section.
     (f) Failure of a particular policy or procedure adopted under this section to meet its goals
in a particular instance is not a ground for liability of the licensee if the policy or procedure was
created, implemented, and monitored properly. Repeated failures of a policy or procedure are
evidence that the policy or procedure was not created or implemented properly.
     19-14.3-3.8. Prohibited acts and practices.
     (a) No person required to be licensed under this chapter shall:
     (1) Fail to remit all money or monetary value received for transmission pursuant to this
chapter, or give instructions committing equivalent money or monetary value to the person
designated by the sender within ten (10) days after receipt by the licensee unless otherwise
directed by the sender except in cases relating to the prevention and detection of fraud or money
laundering, compliance with applicable sanctions, regimes and other related compliance
obligations;
     (2) Fail to immediately notify the director in writing if the licensee dishonors or fails to
satisfy any currency transmission transaction within the ten (10) days following receipt for any
reason other than direction by the sender except in cases relating to the prevention and detection
of fraud or money laundering, compliance with applicable sanctions, regimes and other related
compliance obligations;
     (3) Engage in the business of currency transmission in the state under any name other
than that which it is organized or otherwise authorized to do business in the state;
     (4) Fail to comply with the Federal Bank Secrecy Act, 31 U.S.C. 5311 et seq., and 31
C.F.R. Part 1022, including maintenance of an active registration with the United States
Department of Treasury Financial Crimes Enforcement Network;
     (5) Fail to comply with the Federal Electronic Funds Fund Transfer Act, 15 U.S.C. 1693
et seq., and Regulation E, 12 C.F.R. 1005 et seq.;
     (6) Fail to safeguard identifying information obtained in the course of currency
transmission and otherwise comply with the requirements set forth in chapter 52 of title 6;
     (7) Fail to comply with applicable state and federal laws and regulations related to the
business of currency transmission;
     (8) Use or cause to be published or disseminated any advertising communication which
that contains any false, misleading, or deceptive statement or representation; or
     (9) Engage in unfair, deceptive, or fraudulent practices.
     SECTION 5. Title 6 of the General Laws entitled "COMMERCIAL LAW - GENERAL
REGULATORY PROVISIONS" is hereby amended by adding thereto the following chapter:
CHAPTER 56
UNIFORM SUPPLEMENTAL COMMERCIAL LAW FOR THE UNIFORM REGULATION
OF VIRTUAL-CURRENCY BUSINESSES ACT
     6-56-1. Short title.
     This chapter shall be known and may be cited as the "Uniform Supplemental Commercial
Law for the Uniform Regulation of Virtual-Currency Businesses Act."
     6-56-2. Definitions.
     (a) As used in this chapter:
     (1) “Article 8” means Article 8 of the Uniform Commercial Code, as amended, in
substantially the form approved by the American Law Institute and the National Conference of
Commissioners on Uniform State Laws.
     (2) “Control” has the meaning provided in § 19-14.3-1.1(1).
     (3) “Hague Securities Convention” means the Convention on the Law Applicable to
Certain Rights in Respect of Securities Held with an Intermediary, concluded 5 July, 2006.
     (4) “Uniform Commercial Code jurisdiction” means a state that has enacted Article 8.
     (5) “Uniform Regulation of Virtual-Currency Businesses Act” means chapter 14.3 of title
19 of the Rhode Island general laws.
     (6) “User” means a person for which a licensee has control of virtual currency.
     (b) Other definitions applying to this chapter and the sections of the Uniform Regulation
of Virtual-Currency Businesses Act in which they appear are as follows:
     (1) “Licensee” as set forth in § 19-14.3-1.1.
     (2) “Record” as set forth in § 19-14.3-1.1.
     (3) “Resident” as set forth in § 19-14.3-1.1.
     (4) “Sign” as set forth in § 19-14.3-1.1.
     (5) “State” as set forth in § 19-14.3-1.1.
     (6) “Virtual currency” as set forth in § 19-14-1.
     (c) Other definitions applying to this chapter and the sections of Article 8 in which they
appear are as follows:
     (1) “Entitlement holder” as set forth in § 8-102(a).
     (2) “Financial asset” as set forth in § 8-102(a).
     (3) “Securities intermediary” as set forth in § 8-102(a).
     (4) “Security” as set forth in § 8-102(a).
     (5) “Securities account” as set forth in § 8-501.
     (d) The definition of “agreement” applying to this chapter appears in § 1-201(b)(3) of
Article 1 of the Uniform Commercial Code, as amended, in substantially the form approved by
the American Law Institute and the National Conference of Commissioners on Uniform State
Laws.
     6-56-3. Scope.
     This chapter applies to:
     (1) A person or transaction governed by the Uniform Regulation of Virtual-Currency
Businesses Act; and
     (2) A user that is not a resident if the user or transaction with the user would be governed
by the Uniform Regulation of Virtual-Currency Businesses Act if the user were a resident.
     6-56-4. Incorporation of Article 8.
     (a) The relationship between a licensee or registrant and a user shall be evidenced by an
agreement in a record signed by the licensee or registrant and by the user. The agreement:
     (1) Shall specify the jurisdiction whose law governs the agreement;
     (2) If governed by the law of a jurisdiction that is not a Uniform Commercial Code
jurisdiction, the agreement shall:
     (i) Specify a Uniform Commercial Code jurisdiction as the securities intermediary’s
jurisdiction for the purpose of Article 8; and
     (ii) State that the law in force in the Uniform Commercial Code jurisdiction under
subsection (2)(i) of this section applies to all issues specified in Article 2(1) of the Hague
Securities Convention;
     (3) Shall state that:
     (i) The licensee is a securities intermediary;
     (ii) The control of virtual currency by the licensee for the benefit of the user creates a
securities account of which the user is the entitlement holder;
     (iii) The parties agree that the virtual currency is to be treated as a financial asset credited
or held for credit to the securities account of the user; and
     (iv) The licensee will not grant a security interest in virtual currency which the licensee
or registrant is obligated to maintain under § 8-504(a) of Article 8;
     (4) May not provide a standard for the licensee to comply with its duties under Part 5 of
Article 8 of the Uniform Commercial Code which is less protective of the user than the standard
that would apply under Part 5 of Article 8 of the Uniform Commercial Code in the absence of an
agreement concerning the standard; and
     (5) May not provide that:
     (i) The securities intermediary’s jurisdiction for the purpose of Article 8 is a jurisdiction
that is not a Uniform Commercial Code jurisdiction; or
     (ii) The law in force in a jurisdiction that is not a Uniform Commercial Code jurisdiction
applies to all issues specified in Article 2(1) of The Hague Securities Convention.
     (b) To the extent that there is no agreement that complies with subsection (a) of this
section, the relationship between a licensee or registrant and a user is determined as if the licensee
or registrant and the user have an agreement that complies with subsection (a) of this section and
specifies that the law of this state governs the agreement.
     (c) The effect of this section may not be varied by agreement.
     6-56-5. Qualifying office under Hague Securities Convention.
     (a) A licensee shall maintain in a state an office that complies with the second sentence of
Article 4(1) of The Hague Securities Convention.
     (b) The effect of this section may not be varied by agreement.
     6-56-6. Effect of failure to comply with this chapter.
     Failure to comply with this chapter is a violation of the Uniform Regulation of Virtual-
Currency Businesses Act.
     6-56-7. No inference as to characterization under other statute or rule.
     Treatment of virtual currency as a financial asset credited to a securities account under
this chapter and Article 8 of the Uniform Commercial Code does not determine the
characterization or treatment of the virtual currency under any other statute or rule.
     6-56-8. Supplementary law.
     Unless displaced by the particular provisions of this chapter, the principles of law and
equity supplement this chapter.
     6-56-9. Uniformity of application and construction.
     In applying and construing this uniform act, consideration must be given to the need to
promote uniformity of the law with respect to its subject matter among states that enact it.
     6-56-10. Relation to Electronic Signatures in Global and National Commerce Act.
     This chapter modifies, limits, or supersedes the Electronic Signatures in Global and
National Commerce Act, 15 U.S.C. Section 7001, et seq., but does not modify, limit, or supersede
Section 101(c) of that act, 15 U.S.C. Section 7001(c), or authorize electronic delivery of any of
the notices described in Section 103(b) of that act, 15 U.S.C. Section 7003(b)).
     6-56-11. Severability.
     If any provision of this chapter or its application to any person or circumstance is held
invalid, the invalidity does not affect other provisions or application of this chapter which can be
given effect without the invalid provision or application, and to this end the provisions of this
chapter are severable.
     SECTION 6. This act shall take effect on January 1, 2020.
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LC002131/SUB A/2
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