
ISRI provides a public compilation of the State Metals Theft Statutes (last updated February 13, 2023) that includes all of our individual state metals theft law summaries members can also access the individual summaries from ISRI's State Resources and Tracking pages. The database has been updated for 2022 with amendments in 28 states. ISRI has attempted to present the definitions and materials covered as clearly as possible unfortunately, this means that we've occasionally had to edit the definitions from how they are presented in the state law.

Please pay careful attention to the Materials Covered and Exemptions for each state! States may define the same term (such as "regulated metal") to cover entirely different types of metals or transactions and give different exemptions for particular materials and entities.
CALIFORNIA SCRAP METAL THEFT MR MACCY DOWNLOAD
This database is a public resource to help understand the laws by allowing visitors to view and download pre-made or custom reports on the provisions and states that interest them. These changes can make it increasingly challenging for citizens, law enforcement, lawmakers, and recyclers to stay on top of current requirements. In addition, states are frequently amending their laws to better address the problems they face. These laws impose varying requirements on purchasers, sellers, law enforcement, and other parties, with little uniformity between the states. Fletcher’s and my presentations can be downloaded here.All 50 state legislatures have passed laws intended to combat the growth in metals theft over recent years. Her presentation included the identification of frequently stolen items.Ī copy of the Summit agenda and the slides from Mr. Peggy Fletcher, Senior Investigator of AT&T Asset Protection, provided an overview of that organization’s attempt to deter scrap theft. In the last Parliament the Government mounted a sale of scrap metal after a spate of thefts. California Metal Scrap Statute Back to Scrap LawsCalifornia Metal Scrap Statute Current as of SeptemThe State Metals Theft Laws summaries are not intended to provide or be relied as a legal advice. In particular, I noted the ARA’s interest in ensuring enforcement identifies rogue operators through strict inspection and enforcement activities.įinally, Ms. I also described the role of the ARA in helping draft the current scrap theft laws. My presentation focused on the 28-year history that the Association has played in ensuring that the importance of the scrap industry from an Arkansas and a national standpoint is recognized. I was asked, as General Counsel of the Arkansas Recyclers Association (“ARA”), to undertake a presentation. He noted the constructive role that many scrap facilities have played in helping law enforcement. Svetz’s presentation focused on the laws in Arkansas intended to deter scrap theft. The scrap metal theft section of the Summit included three presentations. The division was created and funded by the Arkansas General Assembly to specifically focus on scrap theft in the second to last Arkansas legislative session. Stephen Svetz, Special Agent for the AAG’s office, heads this division. The Arkansas Attorney General created a division that focuses on scrap metal theft. For example, the Arkansas scrap theft statutory provisions provide significant recordkeeping requirements for scrap yards and related provisions. Over the last several sessions of Arkansas legislature, laws to deter scrap theft and enable and facilitate the arrest of offenders have been modernized and expanded. The theft of scrap metals (particularly nonferrous) has posed a problem in both Arkansas and the nation. These exports are valued at $16.5 billion. In addition, ISRI estimates that 30 to 40 percent of all scrap processed in the United States is exported. The Institute of Scrap Recycling Industries (“ISRI”) estimates that scrap recycling contributed on a national basis $116 billion and provided over 155,000 jobs.

These activities conserve energy, natural resources and contribute to the protection of the environment. The recovery, recycling, and processing of various scrap materials, including metals, has been an important activity in Arkansas and the nation for over 100 years. The Summit included a section addressing “scrap metal theft.” The Summit was attended by over 500 Arkansas law enforcement personnel.

The Arkansas Attorney General (“AAG”) held a 2017 Law Enforcement Summit (“Summit”) on October 3rd. It was thought a rise in scrap metal prices might be behind the thefts.
