[1]NOTE:
As provided in LFC policy, this report is intended only for use by the
standing finance committees of the legislature. The Legislative
Finance Committee does not assume responsibility for the accuracy of the information
in this report when used in any other situation.
Only the most recent
FIR version (in HTML & Adobe PDF formats) is available on the Legislative
Website. The Adobe PDF version includes
all attachments, whereas the HTML version does not. Previously issued FIRs and attachments may be obtained from the
LFC’s office in Suite 101 of the State Capitol Building North.
SPONSOR: |
Sanchez |
DATE TYPED: |
02/06/02 |
HB |
144/aHCPAC |
||
SHORT TITLE: |
Twelve-Hour Hold Following Arrest |
SB |
|
||||
|
ANALYST: |
Wilson |
|||||
APPROPRIATION
Appropriation
Contained |
Estimated
Additional Impact |
Recurring or Non-Rec |
Fund Affected |
||
FY02 |
FY03 |
FY02 |
FY03 |
|
|
|
$100.0 |
|
$574.0 Indeterminate
– See Narrative |
Recurring |
General Fund |
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Revenue
Decreases)
REVENUE
Estimated Revenue |
Subsequent Years
Impact |
Recurring or Non-Rec |
Fund Affected |
|
FY02 |
FY03 |
|
|
|
|
$100.0 |
|
Recurring |
New Fund |
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Revenue
Decreases)
Administrative Office of the Courts (AOC)
Public Defender Department (PDD)
Attorney
General’s Office (AG)
Administrative Office of the District Attorneys
(ADA)
LFC files
SUMMARY
Synopsis
of HCPAC Amendment
The
House Consumer and Public Affairs Committee Amendment lowers the appropriation
from $1,000.0 to $100.0 and gives it to the Second Judicial District Attorney’s Office instead of the
First Judicial District Attorney’s Office.
Synopsis
of Original Bill
House Bill 144 appropriates $1,000.0 from the
general fund to the First Judicial District Attorney’s Office for the purpose
of domestic violence education, victim protection and offender treatment.
House Bill 144
would require offenders to be held for at least twelve hours after arrest for
domestic violence.
House Bill 144
mandates that the DA use the money to expand a coordinated community program
for domestic violence. In addition to
administering funds, the DA’s office would track the efficacy of various
treatment programs for batterers. The
DA’s office would examine quantitative measures, qualitative measures and
recidivism rates for treatment programs.
The DA’s office would initially pilot the program in the First Judicial
District and subsequently expand the program via RFPs to other districts that
use the coordinated community program model.
Significant
Issues
The
twelve-hour hold period would allow the victims of domestic violence to seek
alternative shelter.
The
PDD states that holding domestic violence arrestees and protective order
violators for up to 12 hours before a bail hearing violates due process, equal
protection, and the Rules of Criminal Procedure.
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
The appropriation of $1,000.0 contained in this
bill is a recurring expense to the general fund. Any unexpended or unencumbered
balance remaining at the end of FY2003 shall not revert to the general
fund. The $1,000.0 is appropriated to
the newly created domestic violence education victim protection and offender
treatment fund.
This bill creates a new fund and provides for
continuing appropriations. The LFC
objects to including continuing appropriation language in the statutory
provisions for newly created funds. Earmarking
reduces the ability of the legislature to establish spending priorities.
The
PDD opposes having the prosecuting attorneys in the First Judicial District
administer the domestic violence fund:
this may lead to an unfair distribution of funds. For example, the
district attorneys office may allocate little money for offender treatment, and
most of the money for victim protection. Or, the First Judicial District may
not allocate money evenly to other judicial districts around the state.
Furthermore the PDD says that the prosecutors in the First Judicial District
should not have the discretion to decide where the funds are allocated.
The PDD also notes that they will have to
contest the incarceration policy and will be compelled to dedicate significant
time and assets until the issue is resolved.
This will undoubtedly involve both present staff and contract counsel
throughout the state who will have to preserve the issue for appeal. The cost estimates of $574.0 include at
least one appellate attorney, six attorneys to represent at initial appearance
arraignments around the state and contract counsel costs.
The AOC notes
that there will be a minimal administrative cost for statewide update, distribution,
and documentation of statutory changes.
The fiscal implications on the judiciary will directly follow the amount
of litigation that is generated or, alternatively, avoided by the Act.
The AG states HB 144 bill creates a new area for
criminal appeals that could increase the number of appeals taken by criminal
defendants. An increase in appeals
taken would have an impact on workload for the AG’s Criminal Appeals
Division. The extent of the impact is
too speculative to estimate at this time. If additional staffing were required,
the agency would not be in a position to absorb the costs. The detention
portion of the bill would also likely have a fiscal impact on county correctional
facilities
The ADA writes that HB 144 will create a
need for a supervisory position, a victim relations coordinator, a probation
position to monitor the offenders, and an administrative support position in
the First Judicial District Attorney’s Office and that the appropriation
contained in HB 144 is sufficient to cover these costs.
ADMINISTRATIVE IMPLICATIONS
The PDD says that HB 144 presents a possible
problem with PDD representation. Public Defenders will have an obligation to
respond immediately with a request for a bond hearing in the circumstances
outlined by the bill. Although
proponents may insist the 12 hours is only a “cooling off”
period that benefits the injured spouse, HB 144
automatically assumes the accused is “guilty.”
This legal conclusion is not only a violation of constitutional rights,
but invites abuse. If a household member is unjustly accused (a common
occurrence in domestic disputes) the 12 hour incarceration is an intrusion upon
those freedoms upon which our system is based.
Clearly, the Public Defender is morally and statutorily obligated to
respond to requests from clients that insist the accusation is false. Delay is not a suitable option as the
“punishment” is inflicted immediately.
There is no remedy save an immediate hearing that will require
additional staff
The ADA notes that additional duties
stemming from this program within the First Judicial District Attorney’s office
will demand more work from current staff and an increase in the resources used
by the office. The allocation given in
the bill will help meet these increased costs.
TECHNICAL ISSUES
The ADA notes that Section 2, Section C
in HB 144 states that the First Judicial Court may contract for the provision
of the programs contemplated by the bill.
The District Attorney’s office is actually in charge of running the
programs, so allowing the Court to contract for the services would not be
helpful. The ADA recommends replacing
“court” on page 2, line 24 with ”district attorney’s office”.
DW/ar:njw
[1]Begin typing on the * in replace mode. Do not add or delete spaces.