Alabama 2023 Regular Session

Alabama House Bill HB436

Introduced
5/4/23  
Refer
5/4/23  
Report Pass
5/17/23  
Report Pass
5/17/23  
Engrossed
5/24/23  

Caption

Relating to criminal procedure; to amend Section 15-19-1, Code of Alabama 1975, to specify the age at which a person may be tried as a youthful offender.

Impact

Should this bill pass into law, it will impact the evaluation process of young individuals charged with serious crimes. It will establish clearer guidelines dictating that individuals under the age of 22 could be considered for youthful offender status, particularly emphasizing cases involving moral turpitude or serious sentencing. This change aims to balance the rights of defendants with the interests of justice, particularly in sensitive cases involving serious physical injuries or homicides.

Summary

House Bill 436 seeks to amend Section 15-19-1 of the Code of Alabama 1975, clarifying the age at which a person may be tried as a youthful offender. This bill outlines the procedures for how individuals charged with crimes committed while they were minors, and who now fall into a specific age bracket, will face legal processes. The intention is to specify and streamline the current legislative framework governing youthful offenders, making it clear when individuals under 22 may be processed as youthful offenders if they meet certain criteria.

Contention

Notably, there are discussions surrounding the implications of such changes. Proponents of this legislation argue it will provide essential rights and considerations for youthful offenders, ensuring a fair trial process while recognizing their status as minors at the time of their offenses. However, concerns have been raised regarding victims' rights and the adequacy of notice provisions, particularly when serious crimes against individuals occur. As such, there may be contention regarding definitions of seriousness and victim notification processes as the bill makes its way through legislative channels.

Companion Bills

No companion bills found.

Previously Filed As

AL HB157

Youthful Offender status, to prohibit a judge from granting youthful offender status to any person who is 16 years of age or older and charged with murder.

AL HB146

Youthful offender status, to prohibit a judge from granting youthful offender status to any person who is 16 years of age and older and charged with murder

AL HB199

Youthful offenders, electronic monitoring of delinquent children authorized; revise circumstances when status offenders may be detained

AL SB156

Sentencing; habitual felony offender act, resentencing procedures, established

AL SB153

Expungement , to provide that a person adjudged youthful offender for a misdemeanor offense, violation, traffic violation, or municipal ordinance violation may file a petition to have records expunged.

AL HB408

Relating to self-defense, to amend Section 13A-3-23, Code of Alabama 1975, to provide a person's use of physical force in defending himself, herself, or another person is presumed reasonable; to further provide for the immunity received by a person whose use of physical force on another person is justified self-defense; to shift the burden of proving a person's use of physical force is not justified to the state; and to make nonsubstantive, technical revisions to update the existing code language to current style

AL HB217

Relating to gross income; to amend Section 40-18-14, Code of Alabama 1975; to exclude difficulty of care payments from gross income.

AL SB105

Relating to civil liability; to amend Section 6-5-332, Code of Alabama 1975, to limit the liability of members of any community emergency response team who perform emergency care at the scene of an accident or disaster.

AL HB467

Taxation; to amend 40-18-14, Code of Alabama 1975, relating to overtime compensation

AL SB190

Criminal procedure; post-conviction remedies, DNA testing for non-capital offenders authorized

Similar Bills

No similar bills found.