Wisconsin Code § 220.285

Reproduction and destruction of records; evidence
Open in Lexace · Ask the AI about this section
(1) Any state bank, trust company bank, licensee
under ss. 138.09, 138.12, 138.14, 218.0101 to 218.0163, 218.02,
218.04, 218.05, 224.72, or 224.725 or ch. 217 may cause any or
all records kept by such bank, licensee, or registered person to be
recorded, copied or reproduced by any photostatic, photographic
or miniature photographic process or by optical imaging if the
process employed correctly, accurately and permanently copies,
reproduces or forms a medium for copying, reproducing or
recording the original record on a film or other durable material.
A bank may thereafter dispose of the original record. A licensee
or registered person may thereafter dispose of the original record
after first obtaining the written consent of the division. This section is applicable to national banking associations insofar as it
does not contravene federal law.
(2) Any photographic, photostatic, or miniature photographic
copy or reproduction or copy reproduced from a film record or
any copy of a record generated from optical disc storage of a bank
record or record of a licensee or registered person is considered to
be an original record for all purposes and shall be treated as an
original record in all courts or administrative agencies for the purpose of its admissibility in evidence. A facsimile, exemplification, or certified copy of any such photographic copy or reproduction, copy reproduced from a film record, or copy generated
from optical disc storage of a record shall, for all purposes, be
considered a facsimile, exemplification, or certified copy of the
original record.

‹ Prev All Wisconsin sections Next ›


Lexace provides legal information, not legal advice, and no attorney–client relationship is created. Statute text is provided for general information and may not reflect the most recent amendments; verify against the official state code.