Louisiana has outlawed cash usage for second hand goods

Dead Money

Registered User
Forum Member
Sep 15, 2005
4,350
64
0
Upstairs watching sports on the big TV.
Passed in 2011...

I wonder how they can enforce this? Anyone here live in Louisiana?

Imagine arresting Grandma for having a garage sale and accepting cash from a stranger?

Or girl scouts having a charity rummage sale?




From Joseph Salerno at LewRockwell.com:

With the passage of House Bill 195 into law, the State of Louisiana has banned the use of cash in all transactions involving second-hand goods.

State representative Ricky Hardy, a co-author of the bill, claims that the bill targets criminals who traffic in stolen goods. According to Hardy, ?It?s a mechanism to be used so the police department has something to go on and have a lead.?

The bill prohibits cash transactions by ?second-hand dealers,? defined to include garage sales, flea markets, resellers of specialty items, and even non-profit resellers like Goodwill. Curiously, it specifically exempts pawnbrokers from the ban.

But of course, pawn shops ? and not rented stalls at local church flea markets ? are notorious as places that criminals frequent to convert stolen goods into quick cash. So what gives? Are the authors of the bill and those who voted for it ignoramuses ? or are they deliberately obscuring the real purpose of the bill?

The answer is clear once we examine the other provisions of the bill. The bill goes far beyond banning cash transactions. As lawyer Thad Ackel notes, the bill requires:

? second-hand dealers to turn over a valuable business asset, namely, their business? proprietary client information. For every transaction, a second-hand dealer must obtain the seller?s personal information such as their name, address, driver?s license number, and the license plate number of the vehicle in which the goods were delivered.

They must also make a detailed description of the item(s) purchased and submit this with the personal identification information of every transaction to the local policing authorities through electronic daily reports.

If a seller cannot or refuses to produce to the second-hand dealer any of the required forms of identification, the second-hand dealer is prohibited from completing the transaction.

SEE ALSO: Can this happen in your state? This 22-year U.S. Congressman says YES. Here?s why?

So the aim of the bill is not to aid law enforcement in apprehending criminals, none of whom would be ever stupid enough to turn over such information. The real intent is to feed government?s insatiable hunger for tax revenues by completely stripping law-abiding citizens of financial privacy in second-hand transactions, every detail of which is fed directly into police files. This troubling development in Louisiana parallels the intensification of the war on cash by the Federal government. Last month, it was reported that the U.S. Justice Department ordered bank employees to snitch to the cops on customers who withdrew $5,000 or more. In a speech, assistant attorney general Leslie Caldwell exhorted banks to ?alert law enforcement authorities about the problem? so that police can ?seize the funds? or at least ?initiate an investigation.?
 

The Joker

Registered
Forum Member
Aug 3, 2008
28,116
360
83
47
Tennessee
www.madjacksports.com

It's okay. There's still time to save this thread.........



















































































Phoebe-Cates-Fast-Times-e1404351635139.jpg
 

Dead Money

Registered User
Forum Member
Sep 15, 2005
4,350
64
0
Upstairs watching sports on the big TV.
Thanks for attempts at life support with the titty shot

Thanks for attempts at life support with the titty shot

Not to beat an obviously dying horse, if they were after copper re-cycling druggies, why did they not initially specify copper in their original text?

Shows you the abject stupidity and danger of elected officials throwing out the baby with the bath water.

On copper, last year I was at an estate sale and in the garage was an 8 foot tall brass rod about an inch and a half in diameter.
Paid $5.00 for it, took it to a recycler got $40, took it to an Indian casino bought my wife lunch, took the remaining $15.00, hit a $400.00 jackpot on a penny slot....one of those rare days I could no wrong.

No Video poker available, would have hit the royal that magical day.:00x10
 

MadJack

Administrator
Staff member
Forum Admin
Super Moderators
Channel Owner
Jul 13, 1999
105,812
2,107
113
70
home
Not to beat an obviously dying horse, if they were after copper re-cycling druggies, why did they not initially specify copper in their original text?

Shows you the abject stupidity and danger of elected officials throwing out the baby with the bath water.

On copper, last year I was at an estate sale and in the garage was an 8 foot tall brass rod about an inch and a half in diameter.
Paid $5.00 for it, took it to a recycler got $40, took it to an Indian casino bought my wife lunch, took the remaining $15.00, hit a $400.00 jackpot on a penny slot....one of those rare days I could no wrong.

No Video poker available, would have hit the royal that magical day.:00x10
:toast:
 

comfortable1

Useful
Forum Member
Nov 13, 2009
3,322
116
0
Calling that a titty shot is like calling the Mona Lisa just another painting. That is the pinnacle of cinematic boob exposure.
 
  • Like
Reactions: DZ
Bet on MyBookie
Top