Police chiefs are blasting a proposal by the owner of Pawn America to change the way police track stolen property throughout Minnesota.
Brad Rixmann, owner of the chain, said ordinance changes made in Burnsville could be a model for what he'd like to see statewide.
After a long push by Rixmann, the Burnsville City Council has slashed his pawnshop licensing fee from $10,000 to $100 and ended a $2.50 per-transaction fee the business was paying to help maintain a database of pawnshop information that police share.
And under a new ordinance, fewer kinds of merchandise will be tracked as it is pawned and resold.
Burnsville Police Chief Bob Hawkins and other chiefs are contacting law agencies and policymakers statewide, saying they believe restrictions on Burnsville's investigative capabilities and Rixmann's other suggestions could make stolen property harder to recover.
"Obviously, he had some success in Burnsville, and he was trying to take that on the road and get the same type of arrangements elsewhere in Minnesota and any place else that he's trying to expand," Hawkins said.
Rixmann, however, says the changes won't hamper police, and he said he's long helped law enforcement solve crimes.
He says pawnshops have been unfairly singled out in the second-hand retail industry, and that others should be monitored as well -- as Burnsville is preparing to do soon with some jewelry, camera, antiques and other shops that resell merchandise.