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The department may enforce the lien provided by this part by issuance of an administrative order to any person or entity directing the seizure or sale of any assets of an obligor. The order shall direct the person or entity to hold, subject to any due process procedures provided the obligor, all assets of any kind of the obligor who is subject to the order pending the outcome of the administrative due process procedures. The order shall be based upon and issued pursuant to an existing judicial or administrative order that has previously established support under which an arrearage, due to overdue support, as defined in § 36-5-901, has occurred.
Upon receipt of the administrative order, whether electronically or otherwise, the person or entity that has or may have the assets of the obligor shall immediately seize, hold, and encumber such assets, as directed by the department, pending further direction from the department as to the disposition of the assets or pending any further orders of any court of competent jurisdiction. The person or entity may place such funds as it has that belong to the obligor in an escrow account for such purpose and may take any other steps deemed reasonable to preserve any real or personal property.
All administrative orders for seizure or sale shall be subject to and subordinate to:
Any order of a United States Bankruptcy Court;
An attachment or execution under any judicial process in effect at the time of the administrative seizure order, pending modification of such court's orders; or
A priority under § 36-5-901(c).
If the assets of the obligor are known by the person or entity that received such administrative order to be subject to any orders of the United States Bankruptcy Court, or to any attachment, execution or existing lien, the person or entity shall, within ten (10) days after receipt of the administrative order, notify the department at the address contained in the order. With respect to deposit accounts of the obligor, the depository financial institution shall inform the department of the unencumbered balances of such accounts.
Upon receipt of direction from the department that all due process procedures have been completed or were waived in any manner, and subject to subsection (c) and subject to the priority for the department's liens as described in § 36-5-901(c), the person or entity shall pay or deliver to the department, pursuant to its direction, the assets of the obligor that are held or that come into the possession or control of the person or entity and that are necessary to comply with the terms of the department's administrative order.
There shall be no requirement of advance judicial notice or hearing prior to the seizure of the obligor's property by administrative order, but the department of human services shall promulgate rules to provide procedures for the seizure of any property subject to the lien arising under this part and to provide post-enforcement procedures to permit the obligor to contest the seizure of any property pursuant to this part and part 10 of this chapter.
Such rules shall not permit the final disposition of any property seized under the lien enforcement procedures until the exhaustion of administrative and judicial remedies as provided in this part and shall make the disposition subject to the lien priorities of § 36-5-901.
A notice shall be sent to the obligor against whom the administrative order for seizure or sale of assets is directed by mail within five (5) days of the issuance of such administrative seizure order of the fact that such assets have been the subject of an administrative order and that they have been seized or are subject to sale and are being held, may be conveyed to the department or may be sold, subject to the right to an administrative hearing to contest the seizure or sale of such assets.
The notice shall specify the sum demanded and shall contain, in the case of personal property, an account of the property actually seized and, in the case of real property, a description with reasonable certainty of the property seized. In the case of assets in a financial institution, it shall be sufficient to notify the obligor of the seizure of any assets of the obligor that may be held by any institution to which the order is directed.
A final order of seizure or sale of the obligor's property pursuant to this part shall be effective to convey and vest title in the department or in the purchaser and shall be evidence of title for all purposes. The commissioner or the commissioner's agent may convey title to personal property by certificate of title or may execute a deed conveying title to real property to the purchaser in accordance with regulations as may be prescribed by the commissioner.
All persons or entities complying with any administrative order issued pursuant to this section shall be absolutely immune from any liability, civil or criminal, for compliance with the terms of such order or attempted compliance in good faith with such order.
No more than fifty percent (50%) of the total amount in a commissary account or any other account or fund established by or for the benefit of an inmate in a correctional institution or private prison operated by or under contract with the department of correction while the inmate is incarcerated or any account containing wages received for work performed while an inmate is incarcerated shall be subject to seizure by the department. Any portion of the account that is used to pay litigation taxes, court costs, sexual offender surcharges, fines, restitution, or other moneys related to the criminal offense for which the inmate is confined shall be deducted from the account before the seizure authorized by this subsection (h) is calculated.