(1) The administrator shall examine periodically, at intervals the administrator deems appropriate, the loans, business, and records of every licensee. In addition, for the purpose of discovering violations of this code or securing information lawfully required, the administrator or, in lieu thereof, the official or agency to whose supervision the organization is subject pursuant to section 5-6-105, may at any time investigate the loans, business, and records of any supervised lender or any supervised financial organization. For these purposes the administrator shall have free and reasonable access to the offices, places of business, and records of the lender.
(2) (a) If the lender's records are located outside this state, the lender shall, at the lender's option, either make them available to the administrator at a convenient location within this state or pay the reasonable and necessary expenses for the administrator or the administrator's representative to examine them at the place where they are maintained; except that the lender shall make the records available for examination at the administrator's office or at any other location the administrator deems appropriate, at the cost of the lender, if the administrator determines that the examination of the records at the location where the records are maintained endangers the safety of the administrator's representative or that there are not adequate facilities at the location where the records are maintained to conduct the examination. The administrator may designate representatives, including comparable officials of the state in which the records are located, to inspect them on the administrator's behalf.
(b) The administrator may require any lender whose records are located within the state to make its records available for examination at the administrator's office or at any other location the administrator deems appropriate at the cost of the lender if the administrator determines that the examination of the records at the location where the records are maintained endangers the safety of the administrator's representative or that there are not adequate facilities at the location where the records are maintained to conduct the examination.
For the purposes of this section, the administrator may administer oaths or affirmations, and, upon the administrator's own motion or upon request of any party, may subpoena witnesses, compel their attendance, adduce evidence, and require the production of any matter that is relevant to the investigation, including the existence, description, nature, custody, condition, and location of any books, documents, or other tangible things and the identity and location of persons having knowledge of relevant facts or any other matter reasonably calculated to lead to the discovery of admissible evidence.
Upon failure without lawful excuse to obey a subpoena or to give testimony, theadministrator may apply to the district court in the city and county of Denver for an order compelling compliance.
After the administrator has examined a licensee pursuant to this section, the administrator shall provide a report of the examination to the licensee and request the licensee to take the corrective action required therein. The licensee shall, within a time and manner as fixed by the administrator, take the corrective action required in the report and provide proof that the corrective action was taken. The corrective action required may include refunds of excess charges and corrections of disclosures required by this code. This subsection (5) does not require the administrator to allow a licensee to take corrective action prior to the administrator filing legal or administrative action for repeated or willful violations of this code.
Source: L. 2000: Entire article R&RE, p. 1211, § 1, effective July 1.
Editor's note: This section is similar to former § 5-3-506, as it existed prior to 2000.