Government Code § 8206(d)
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(d) The journal of notarial acts of a notary public is the
exclusive property of that notary public, and shall not be surrendered to an
employer upon termination of employment, whether or not the employer paid for
the journal, or at any other time. The notary public shall not surrender the
journal to any other person, except the county clerk, pursuant to Section 8209,
or immediately, or if the journal is not present then as soon as possible, upon
request to a peace officer investigating a criminal offense who has reasonable
suspicion to believe the journal contains evidence of a criminal offense, as
defined in Sections 830.1, 830.2, and 830.3 of the Penal Code, acting in his or
her official capacity and within his or her authority. If the peace officer
seizes the notary journal, he or she must have probable cause as required by the
laws of this state and the United States. A peace officer or law enforcement
agency that seizes a notary journal shall notify the Secretary of State by
facsimile within 24 hours, or as soon possible thereafter, of the name of the
notary public whose journal has been seized. The notary public shall obtain a
receipt for the journal, and shall notify the Secretary of State by certified
mail within 10 days that the journal was relinquished to a peace officer. The
notification shall include the period of the journal entries, the commission
number of the notary public, the expiration date of the commission, and a
photocopy of the receipt. The notary public shall obtain a new sequential
journal. If the journal relinquished to a peace officer is returned to the
notary public and a new journal has been obtained, the notary public shall make
no new entries in the returned journal. A notary public who is an employee shall
permit inspection and copying of journal transactions by a duly designated
auditor or agent of the notary public’s employer, provided that the inspection
and copying is done in the presence of the notary public and the transactions
are directly associated with the business purposes of the employer. The notary
public, upon the request of the employer, shall regularly provide copies of all
transactions that are directly associated with the business purposes of the
employer, but shall not be required to provide copies of any transaction that is
unrelated to the employer’s business. Confidentiality and safekeeping of any
copies of the journal provided to the employer shall be the responsibility of
that employer.