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SPONSOR: |
Mohorovic |
DATE TYPED: |
01/31/02 |
HB |
297/aHJC |
||
SHORT TITLE: |
Fingerprinting Procedures |
SB |
|
||||
|
ANALYST: |
Belmares |
|||||
APPROPRIATION
Appropriation
Contained |
Estimated
Additional Impact |
Recurring or Non-Rec |
Fund Affected |
||
FY02 |
FY03 |
FY02 |
FY03 |
|
|
|
|
|
$1.0 See
Narrative |
|
|
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Expenditure
Decreases)
Administrative Office of the Courts (AOC)
Administrative Office of the District Attorneys
(AODA)
Attorney General’s Office (AGO)
Department of Public Safety (DPS)
SUMMARY
Synopsis
of HJC Amendment
The House Judiciary Committee amendment strikes
the word “card” and “cards” and inserts in lieu thereof the words “record” and
“records” respectively. The amendment
addresses the occasional practice of fingerprint impressions recorded digitally
and not on traditional paper cards.
Synopsis
of Original Bill
House Bill 297 provides the legal framework for implementation of a State Tracking Number (STN) approach. The bill establishes that an arresting officer or the jail will fingerprint and photograph persons arrested for felony crimes, a misdemeanor punishable by six months of imprisonment, or of a drunk driving violation of statute or ordinance. HB 297 also requires fingerprint impressions prior to an individuals release from arrest. At the time of fingerprinting, a state tracking number shall be assigned to the fingerprint card and the booking sheet. All felony, misdemeanor and DWI arrest fingerprints shall be made in duplicate and forwarded to the FBI in Washington, D.C. The district attorney and AOC are to electronically provide final dispositions on all cases assigned a tracking number, including those cases in which a district attorney decides not to file
charges. HB 297 also provides that a person may petition the department to expunge arrest information on the state or FBI record if the crime is not one of moral turpitude. Finally, HB 297 provides that DPS will promulgate rules governing submission of fingerprint cards and the state tracking number system and will allow DPS to audit AOC and AODA for compliance with statute requirements.
Significant
Issues
DPS indicates approximately 35 percent of
records maintained by the State Central Repository for Criminal History contain
a final disposition (i.e., whether the person arrested was every prosecuted,
found guilty, or exonerated) and that passage of HB 297 will improve criminal
history records. AODA asserts that the
HB 297 will allow prosecutors to more effectively prosecute repeat offenders if
improved disposition data provided by HB297.
The state Criminal Justice Information
Management Team (CJIMT) is responsible for seeing that various parts of the
criminal justice system such as law enforcement, prosecution, defense,
courts, corrections and social services
are able to share information on criminals and persons accused of crimes. In cooperation with CJIMT, many of the
policy and procedural issues regarding the implementation of a state tracking
number program have already been developed and to some degree implemented at
various judicial districts throughout the state. CJIMT is carrying out a multi-year strategic plan for data
sharing. HB 297 addresses the first
component of the plan by helping to ensure that every criminal incident has a
“State Tracking Number” (STN).
DPS, AODA and AOC are working to establish a
information technology link to receive final disposition information from
affected agencies. HB 297 requires
continued close cooperation between different agencies of the judicial system
to produce final dispositions on fingerprint cards.
HB 297 is related to House Executive Message 10.
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
DPS indicates it may
require additional (unspecified number) FTE for audit purposes and tracking of
arrests; however, the agency did not provide an estimated fiscal impact. Additionally, DPS estimates $1.0 would be
required for duplication of new materials.
ADMINISTRATIVE IMPLICATIONS
The district attorney
offices, through AODA, have been attempting to collapse their databases into
one repository to transmit final disposition data to the DPS central
repository. AODA indicates that it and the
district attorney offices may not be able to comply with the provisions of HB
297 if they do not receive additional funding for their computer automation
systems.
The AOC central
repository is currently refreshed at least every 48 hours and the timely filing
of the final judgment and sentence is a significant issue. AOC indicates that efforts to finalize
judgment and sentence in the court, at the time of sentencing, may require
additional (unspecified number) clerks, as well as system support, to help with
document creation in the courtroom. The
AOC’s costs for implementing this bill were included in the appropriations
request for CJIMT. The LFC has
recommended funding for CJIMT for FY2003.
TECHNICAL ISSUES
The wording of the bill suggests that State
Tracking Numbers are assigned to fingerprint cards; however, STNs are assigned
to “incidents” (arrests or citations or other charges). The STN is then affixed to the fingerprint
card and to all other records associated with the incident.
HB 297 refers to fingerprint cards; however, fingerprints are sometimes taken in digitally using an Automated Fingerprint Identification System (AFIS). HB 297 language could be broadened by replacing “cards” with “records.”
If enacted, HB 297 would allow for the expungement
of misdemeanor arrest information contained in state and FBI records if the
crime is not one of moral turpitude.
However, the AGO indicates the state would not have jurisdiction to
request that the information be expunged from the FBI records. Additionally, the AGO indicates that
expungement of arrest information on crimes such as DWI would negatively impact
those arresting officers and prosecutors attempting to determine prior DWI
offenses. Finally, AOC has indicated
that the rationale for expungement is unclear in the bill given that the bill
establishes those cases in which the citizens seek expungement for minor
offenses or where there is not disposition information.
DPS has suggested
that language could be included to specify the amount of time that must pass
before the contemplated misdemeanor records can be expunged. Additionally, DPS has indicated HB 297
should precisely identify the persons charged with fingerprinting prisoners of
felony crimes and that ‘crimes of moral turpitude’ should be defined
or referenced.
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