Juvenile law-enforcement records; restorative justice. (SB731)

Introduced By

Sen. Dave Marsden (D-Burke)

Progress

Introduced
Passed Committee
Passed House
Passed Senate
Signed by Governor
Became Law

Description

Juvenile law-enforcement records; restorative justice. Allows entities who have a contract with a juvenile and domestic relations district court to provide restorative justice services to inspect the police records of juveniles who are participating in the program or who have been identified by law-enforcement as possible participants. Read the Bill »

Outcome

Bill Has Failed

History

DateAction
12/12/2014Prefiled and ordered printed; offered 01/14/15 15100292D
12/12/2014Referred to Committee for Courts of Justice
01/08/2015Impact statement from DPB (SB731)
01/21/2015Reported from Courts of Justice with substitute (12-Y 0-N 1-A) (see vote tally)
01/21/2015Committee substitute printed 15103677D-S1
01/23/2015Constitutional reading dispensed (40-Y 0-N) (see vote tally)
01/23/2015Passed by for the day
01/23/2015Reconsideration of Passed by for the day agreed to (39-Y 0-N) (see vote tally)
01/26/2015Impact statement from DPB (SB731S1)
01/26/2015Read second time
01/26/2015Reading of substitute waived
01/26/2015Committee substitute agreed to 15103677D-S1
01/26/2015Engrossed by Senate - committee substitute SB731S1
01/27/2015Read third time and passed Senate (39-Y 0-N) (see vote tally)
01/30/2015Placed on Calendar
01/30/2015Read first time
01/30/2015Referred to Committee for Courts of Justice
02/09/2015Assigned Courts sub: Criminal Law
02/16/2015Subcommittee recommends laying on the table
02/24/2015Left in Courts of Justice

Comments

Safer Virginia writes:

As with SB 730, restorative justice should strengthen families and reduce cost to the Commonwealth without risking public safety.