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SPONSOR: |
Gorham |
DATE TYPED: |
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HB |
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SHORT TITLE: |
Criminal Sexual Penetration Time Limitations |
SB |
470 / a SFl#1 |
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ANALYST: |
Maloy |
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APPROPRIATION
Appropriation
Contained |
Estimated
Additional Impact |
Recurring or
Non-Rec |
Fund Affected |
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FY03 |
FY04 |
FY03 |
FY04 |
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See Narrative |
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(Parenthesis
( ) Indicate Expenditure Decreases)
Duplicates HB 547.
Administrative Offices of the Courts
Office of the Attorney General
Corrections Department
SUMMARY
Synopsis of SFL Amendment
The Senate Floor
Amendment to Senate Bill 470 are stylistic language
changes.
Synopsis of Original Bill
Senate Bill 470 tolls
the statute of limitations for an alleged second, third or fourth degree sexual
penetration when DNA evidence is available and a suspect has not been
identified.
With this bill, the
applicable time period for commencing a prosecution does not begin to run until a DNA profile is matched with a
suspect.
Significant Issues.
This Act only applies
to an alleged second, third or fourth degree sexual penetration for which the
applicable time period for commencing a prosecution has not expired as of
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
There are little
direct costs associated with SB 470.
There are, however, secondary costs that will inevitably arise out of
the ever-advancing developments in technology and DNA in the law enforcement
arena. These costs will need to be
absorbed by law enforcement agencies and the courts as a routine price of
operation and remaining current and effective.
ADMINISTRATIVE
IMPLICATIONS
Criminals
who are caught years later, whose DNA match DNA taken from victims of these
crimes, can be brought to justice. This may result in an in the number of
individuals brought to trial and convicted.
This means a slight increase in FTE and budget expenditures for such agencies
as the Courts, the District Attorneys Office, the Public Defenders Department,
Correctional institutes and parole and probation offices.
Such prosecutions will
likely be costly due to the fact that much of the evidence will have aged and
the case may not be as easily built as when it was fresh.
OTHER SUBSTANTIVE
ISSUES
1.
Under current law, the statute of limitations for
second-degree criminal sexual penetration (CSP) is 6 years from the time the
crime was committed. See NMSA
1978, §
2.
Under current law, the statute of limitations for
third- or fourth-degree CSP is 5 years from the time the crime was
committed. See §
3.
Under SB 470, the current statute of limitations
for first-degree CSP would remain unchanged; there is no provision in SB 470
for tolling this statute of limitations.
4.
Under current law, Section
5.
Section 30-1-8(G) does not expressly state what the
statute of limitations is for a first-degree nonviolent felony, nor does
Section 30-1-8(G) provide that there is no statute of limitations for
first-degree nonviolent felonies.
Under SB 470 and the current Section 30-1-8, it appears to be possible
for a suspect to argue that the offense for which he is being prosecuted is a
first-degree nonviolent felony, that Section 30-1-8(G) is therefore
inapplicable (and it is not clear under Section 30-1-8(G) what the statute of
limitations would then be), and that HB 547 is inapplicable to toll the time
for first-degree CSP.
It
may be helpful to prevent this confusion by changing SB 470 so that it would
toll the statute of limitations for first-degree CSP in the event that a
statute of limitations is set by law. For instance, a new subsection could be added
to HB 547 to provide: "When DNA
evidence is available and a suspect has not been identified, and when Section
30-1-8 NMSA 1978 sets a time limitation for commencing prosecution for an alleged
violation of Subsection C of Section 30-9-11 NMSA 1978, the applicable time
period for commencing prosecution shall not begin to run until a DNA profile is
matched with a suspect." Section 2
of SB 470 should then also be changed to add "C" after
"Subsection" and before "D, E or F."
SJM/prr/sb:yr