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SPONSOR: |
Sanchez |
DATE TYPED: |
02/01/02 |
HB |
|
||
SHORT TITLE: |
Waive Fees
for Certain Crime Victims |
SB |
294/aSPAC |
||||
|
ANALYST: |
Wilson |
|||||
REVENUE
Estimated Revenue |
Subsequent Years
Impact |
Recurring or Non-Rec |
Fund Affected |
|
FY02 |
FY03 |
|
|
|
|
|
($0.1) Minimal |
|
|
(Parenthesis
( ) Indicate Expenditure Decreases)
Administrative Office of the Courts (AOC)
Attorney General’s Office (AG)
Administrative Office of District Attorneys
(ADA)
Public Defender Department (PDD)
SUMMARY
Synopsis
of SPAC Amendment
The Senate Public Affairs Committee amendment
adds victims of “domestic abuse” to the
list of crime victims who do not incur
costs associated with the prosecution of
the crimes listed in SB294.
Synopsis
of Original Bill
SB 294 amends current law so that victims of sexual offenses, stalking,
harassment, crimes against a household member and violations of restraining
orders do not incur costs associated with the prosecution of those crimes, or
costs associated with securing a protective order. SB 294 also amends the Family Violence Protection Act to provide
legislative intent relating to domestic abuse investigations. SB 294 contains an emergency clause.
Significant
Issues
SB
294 will bring New Mexico into compliance with the requirements in the federal
Violence Against Women Act of 2000. The
US Department of Justice refused to continue funding grants of about $1
million, citing several problems including discouraging arrests. Section 1 of this bill appears to tighten up
another requirement of the Violence Against Women Act relating to charging
fees.
Under
current law, a citizen can file criminal misdemeanor complaints in magistrate
court. Citizens will file these
complaints when the police have decided, for whatever reasons, not to file the
case. Often police will not file
because there is no probable cause to file the complaint. In the vast majority of domestic violence
cases, police departments or the district attorney’s offices are involved in
filing the case and no filing fees are charged.
Unless
there is some qualifying language limiting the section on harassment and
stalking, the $20 fee will also be waived in non-domestic violence situations
such as when a citizen files a criminal complaint against his or her neighbor
for harassment.
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
The
courts will lose a small amount of money when a person files a misdemeanor
citizen complaint under NMRA 6-108.
The rule allows a citizen to file criminal misdemeanor complaints in
magistrate court.
ADMINISTRATIVE IMPLICATIONS
There
will be a small administrative impact on the courts in devising procedures and
training clerks on when to assess fees.
RELATIONSHIP
Relates
to HB 242, Waive Crime Fees for Crime Victims.
HB 242 amends the section on arrest without a warrant while SB 294 bill
declares a state policy that dual arrests are discouraged and that domestic
violence training shall be part of the basic law enforcement curriculum.
TECHNICAL ISSUES
The amendments to the Family Violence Protection
Act do not cite where they would be inserted.
The AG recommends that page 2, lines 20-25; and page 3 lines 1-3 be inserted
at NMSA 40-13-7 B
The amendments to the Law Enforcement Training
Act do not cite where they would be inserted into the act. The AG recommends that the amendment on page
3, lines 4-8, be revised for inclusion in either: NMSA 29-7-6 A. (9) or in NMSA
29-7-7 B. The remaining sections on
page 3, lines 3-6 and lines 9-11 could be revised and incorporated into NMSA
29-7-7 F. or NMSA 29-7-7.1 C.
OTHER SUBSTANTIVE ISSUES
SB 294 removes the possibility that victims will incur the cost of prosecuting sexual crimes, stalking or harassment, crimes against household members, and violations of protection orders. The bill also makes it possible to seek a protective order against an offender in those crimes without cost to the victim.
The costs of the prosecution of crimes is typically a cost borne by the State, and this bill creates a safety net to insure that none of these costs are misdirected at a crime victim in those instances where inadequate funding or inadequate staffing might lead to such a result.
Currently, “domestic abuse” victims are entitled
to protective orders without charge.
This bill clarifies the type of crime victims who could receive free
protective orders. Those victims who could receive a protective order without
charge under the terms of this bill include victims of “crimes against a
household member”, stalking or harassment, sexual offenses and victims of
violations of protective orders.
SB 294 directs law enforcement to analyze the crime of domestic disturbance in such a manner as to determine who the primary physical aggressor is, and to consider self-defense issues in the course of the investigation. The bill states the legislative intent for the State is to discourage dual arrests in domestic disturbance investigations. This bill follows a growing national trend to codify a public policy that law enforcement must determine when an individual has engaged in a self-defensive activity, as opposed to an individual is violent and deserving of criminal justice sanctions. When both parties present to law enforcement with evidence of physical altercation or injury, a mutual arrest results in both parties being subjected to potential criminal justice sanctions, even though one party may have acted in self-defense.
DW/ar
[1]Begin typing on the * in replace mode. Do not add or delete spaces.