Hawaii 2025 Regular Session

Hawaii Senate Bill SB1316 Compare Versions

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1-THE SENATE S.B. NO. 1316 THIRTY-THIRD LEGISLATURE, 2025 S.D. 1 STATE OF HAWAII H.D. 2 A BILL FOR AN ACT RELATING TO COURT-ORDERED PAYMENTS. BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF HAWAII:
1+THE SENATE S.B. NO. 1316 THIRTY-THIRD LEGISLATURE, 2025 S.D. 1 STATE OF HAWAII H.D. 1 A BILL FOR AN ACT RELATING TO COURT-ORDERED PAYMENTS. BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF HAWAII:
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33 THE SENATE S.B. NO. 1316
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3131 A BILL FOR AN ACT
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3737 RELATING TO COURT-ORDERED PAYMENTS.
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4343 BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF HAWAII:
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47- SECTION 1. Section 601-17.5, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended to read as follows: "§601-17.5 Collection of delinquent court-ordered payments. The judiciary [may] shall contract with a collection agency bonded under chapter 443B or with a licensed attorney to collect any delinquent court-ordered [penalties,] fees, fines, [restitution,] sanctions, and court costs[, including juvenile monetary assessments]. Any fees or costs associated with the collection efforts shall be added to the amount due and retained by the collection agency as its payment; provided that no fees or costs shall exceed fifty per cent of the amount collected." SECTION 2. Section 706-642, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended to read as follows: "§706-642 Time and method of payment. (1) When a defendant is sentenced to pay a fee, fine, or restitution, the court may grant permission for the payment to be made within a specified period of time or in specified installments. If no such permission is embodied in the sentence, the fee, fine, or restitution shall be payable forthwith by cash, check, or [by] a credit card approved by the court. (2) When a defendant sentenced to pay a fee, fine, or restitution is also sentenced to probation, the court may make the payment of the fee, fine, or restitution a condition of probation. (3) When a defendant sentenced to pay a fee or fine is also ordered to make restitution or reparation to the victim or victims, or to the person or party who has incurred loss or damage because of the defendant's crime, the payment of restitution or reparation shall have priority over the payment of the fee or fine, pursuant to section 706-651. No fee or fine shall be collected until the restitution or reparation order has been satisfied." SECTION 3. Section 706-644, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended to read as follows: "§706-644 Consequences of nonpayment; imprisonment for contumacious nonpayment; summary collection. (1) When a defendant in district court is sentenced pursuant to section 706-605, granted a conditional discharge pursuant to section 712-1255, or granted a deferred plea pursuant to chapter 853, and the defendant is ordered to pay a fee, fine, or restitution, whether as an independent order, as part of a judgment and sentence, or as a condition of probation or deferred plea[, and]: (a) If the defendant was ordered to pay restitution, the court shall set a proof of compliance hearing for the defendant; provided that the court may further order that the defendant need not appear for the proof of compliance hearing if all fees, fines, and restitution have been paid in full and all other sentencing requirements have been met before a designated date, which may be earlier than the proof of compliance date. At each proof of compliance hearing for a defendant in district court, if the defendant appears and is in compliance, but has not yet paid all fees, fines, and restitution in full, the court shall order a further proof of compliance hearing within one year or as soon as practicable until the fees, fines, or restitution have been paid in full. If the defendant defaults in the payment thereof [or of any installment], the court[, upon the motion of the prosecuting attorney or upon its own motion, may] shall require the defendant to show cause why the defendant's default should not be treated as contumacious, and [may], if the defendant fails to appear, the court shall issue a summons or a warrant of arrest for the defendant's appearance. Unless the defendant shows that the defendant's default was not attributable to an intentional refusal to obey the order of the court, or to a failure on the defendant's part to make a good faith effort to obtain the funds required for the payment, the court shall find that the defendant's default was contumacious and may order the defendant committed until the fee, fine, restitution, or a specified part thereof is paid[.]; provided that for a defendant in district court, if the fees, fines, and restitution are not paid in full, the court shall order further proof of compliance hearings every six months or less until the court is satisfied that the defendant will appear and remain in compliance; or (b) If the defendant was ordered to pay fines, fees, or both, but no restitution, the district court shall refer the outstanding fines or fees to the collection agency contracted pursuant to section 601-17.5. A proof of compliance hearing shall not be required in cases where no restitution was ordered. (2) When a fee, fine, or restitution is imposed on a corporation or unincorporated association, it [is] shall be the duty of the person or persons authorized to make disbursement from the assets of the corporation or association to pay it from those assets, and their failure to do so may be held contumacious unless they make the showing required in subsection (1). (3) The term of imprisonment for nonpayment of fee, fine, or restitution shall be specified in the order of commitment, and shall not exceed one day for each $250 of the fee or fine, thirty days if the fee or fine was imposed upon conviction of a violation or a petty misdemeanor, or one year in any other case, whichever is the shorter period. A person committed for nonpayment of a fee or fine shall be given credit toward payment of the fee or fine for each day of imprisonment, at the rate of $250 per day. (4) If it appears that the defendant's default in the payment of a fee, fine, or restitution is not contumacious, the court may make an order allowing the defendant additional time for payment, reducing the amount of each installment, or revoking the fee, fine, or the unpaid portion thereof in whole or in part, or converting the unpaid portion of the fee or fine to community service. A defendant shall not be discharged from an order to pay restitution until the full amount of the restitution has actually been collected or accounted for. (5) Unless discharged by payment or, in the case of a fee or fine, service of imprisonment pursuant to subsection (3), an order to pay a fee, fine, or restitution, whether as an independent order, as a part of a judgment and sentence, or as a condition of probation or deferred plea pursuant to chapter 853, may be collected in the same manner as a judgment in a civil action. The State or the victim named in the order may collect the restitution, including costs, interest, and attorney's fees, pursuant to section 706-646. The State may collect the fee or fine, including costs, interest, and attorney's fees, pursuant to section 706-647. (6) Attorney's fees, costs, and interest shall not be deemed part of the penalty, and no person shall be imprisoned under this section in default of payment of attorney's fees, costs, and interest. (7) For purposes of this section, "default" means failure to pay a fee, fine, or restitution within a period of time specified by the court pursuant to section 706-642, or failure to pay three consecutive installments of a fee, fine, or restitution, whichever occurs first." SECTION 4. Section 806-73, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by amending subsection (b) to read as follows: "(b) All adult probation records shall be confidential and shall not be deemed to be public records. As used in this section, [the term] "records" includes but is not limited to all records made by any adult probation officer in the course of performing the probation officer's official duties. The records, or the content of the records, shall be divulged only as follows: (1) A copy of any adult probation case record or of a portion of it, or the case record itself, upon request, may be provided to: (A) An adult probation officer, a court officer, a social worker of a Hawaii state adult probation unit, or a family court officer who is preparing a report for the courts; or (B) A state or federal criminal justice agency, or state or federal court program that[:] is: (i) [Is providing] Providing supervision of a defendant or offender convicted and sentenced by the courts of Hawaii; or (ii) [Is responsible] Responsible for the preparation of a report for a court; (2) The residence address, work address, home telephone number, or work telephone number of a current or former defendant shall be provided only to: (A) A law enforcement officer as defined in section 710-1000 to locate the probationer for the purpose of serving a summons or bench warrant in a civil, criminal, or deportation hearing, or for the purpose of a criminal investigation; or (B) A collection agency or licensed attorney contracted by the judiciary to collect any delinquent court-ordered [penalties,] fees, fines, [restitution,] sanctions, and court costs pursuant to section 601-17.5; (3) A copy of a presentence report or investigative report shall be provided only to: (A) The persons or entities named in section 706-604; (B) The Hawaii paroling authority; (C) Any psychiatrist, psychologist, or other treatment practitioner who is treating the defendant pursuant to a court order or parole order for that treatment; (D) The intake service centers; (E) In accordance with applicable law, persons or entities doing research; and (F) Any Hawaii state adult probation officer or adult probation officer of another state or federal jurisdiction who[:] is engaged in the: (i) [Is engaged in the supervision] Supervision of a defendant or offender convicted and sentenced in the courts of Hawaii; or (ii) [Is engaged in the preparation] Preparation of a report for a court regarding a defendant or offender convicted and sentenced in the courts of Hawaii; (4) Access to adult probation records by a victim, as defined in section 706-646 to enforce an order filed pursuant to section 706-647, shall be limited to the: (A) Name and contact information of the defendant's adult probation officer; (B) Compliance record of the defendant with court‑ordered payments; (C) Amounts paid by the defendant; (D) Dates of the payments made by the defendant; (E) Payee of payments made by the defendant; and (F) Remaining unpaid balance, without the assessment of a filing fee or surcharge; (5) Upon written request, the victim, or the parent or guardian of a minor victim or incapacitated victim, of a defendant who has been placed on probation for an offense under section 580-10(d)(1), 586-4(e), 586‑11(a), or 709-906 may be notified by the defendant's probation officer when the probation officer has any information relating to the safety and welfare of the victim; (6) Notwithstanding paragraph (3) and upon notice to the defendant, records and information relating to the defendant's risk assessment and need for treatment services; information related to the defendant's past treatment and assessments, with the prior written consent of the defendant for information from a treatment service provider; provided that [for] any substance abuse records [such] release shall be subject to title 42 Code of Federal Regulations part 2, relating to the confidentiality of alcohol and drug abuse patient records; and information that has therapeutic or rehabilitative benefit, may be provided to: (A) A case management, assessment, or treatment service provider assigned by adult probation to service the defendant; provided that [such] the information shall be given only upon the acceptance or admittance of the defendant into a treatment program; (B) Correctional case manager, correctional unit manager, and parole officers involved with the defendant's treatment or supervision; and (C) In accordance with applicable law, persons or entities doing research; (7) Probation drug test results may be released with prior written consent of a defendant to the defendant's treating physician when test results indicate substance use [which] that may be compromising the defendant's medical care or treatment; (8) Records obtained pursuant to section 704-404(9) may be made available as provided in that section; (9) Any person, agency, or entity receiving records, or contents of records, pursuant to this subsection shall be subject to the same restrictions on disclosure of the records as Hawaii state adult probation offices; and (10) Any person who uses the information covered by this subsection for purposes inconsistent with the intent of this subsection or outside of the scope of the person's official duties shall be fined no more than $500." SECTION 5. There is appropriated out of the general revenues of the State of Hawaii the sum of $ or so much thereof as may be necessary for fiscal year 2025-2026 and the same sum or so much thereof as may be necessary for fiscal year 2026-2027 for the purposes of this Act, including the hiring of necessary staff. The sums appropriated shall be expended by the judiciary for the purposes of this Act. SECTION 6. This Act does not affect rights and duties that matured, penalties that were incurred, and proceedings that were begun before its effective date. SECTION 7. Statutory material to be repealed is bracketed and stricken. New statutory material is underscored. SECTION 8. This Act shall take effect on July 1, 3000.
47+ SECTION 1. Section 601-17.5, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended to read as follows: "§601-17.5 Collection of delinquent court-ordered payments. The judiciary [may] shall contract with a collection agency bonded under chapter 443B or with a licensed attorney to collect any delinquent court-ordered [penalties,] fees, fines, [restitution,] sanctions, and court costs[, including juvenile monetary assessments]. Any fees or costs associated with the collection efforts shall be added to the amount due and retained by the collection agency as its payment; provided that no fees or costs shall exceed fifty per cent of the amount collected." SECTION 2. Section 706-642, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended to read as follows: "§706-642 Time and method of payment. (1) When a defendant is sentenced to pay a fee, fine, or restitution, the court may grant permission for the payment to be made within a specified period of time or in specified installments. If no such permission is embodied in the sentence, the fee, fine, or restitution shall be payable forthwith by cash, check, or [by] a credit card approved by the court. (2) When a defendant sentenced to pay a fee, fine, or restitution is also sentenced to probation, the court may make the payment of the fee, fine, or restitution a condition of probation. (3) When a defendant sentenced to pay a fee or fine is also ordered to make restitution or reparation to the victim or victims, or to the person or party who has incurred loss or damage because of the defendant's crime, the payment of restitution or reparation shall have priority over the payment of the fee or fine, pursuant to section 706-651. No fee or fine shall be collected until the restitution or reparation order has been satisfied." SECTION 3. Section 706-644, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended to read as follows: "§706-644 Consequences of nonpayment; imprisonment for contumacious nonpayment; summary collection. (1) When a defendant in district court is sentenced pursuant to section 706-605, granted a conditional discharge pursuant to section 712-1255, or granted a deferred plea pursuant to chapter 853, and the defendant is ordered to pay a fee, fine, or restitution, whether as an independent order, as part of a judgment and sentence, or as a condition of probation or deferred plea[, and]: (a) If the defendant was ordered to pay restitution, the court shall set a proof of compliance hearing for the defendant; provided that the court may further order that the defendant need not appear for the proof of compliance hearing if all fees, fines, and restitution have been paid in full and all other sentencing requirements have been met before a designated date, which may be earlier than the proof of compliance date. At each proof of compliance hearing for a defendant in district court, if the defendant appears and is in compliance, but has not yet paid all fees, fines, and restitution in full, the court shall order a further proof of compliance hearing within one year or as soon as practicable until the fees, fines, or restitution have been paid in full. If the defendant defaults in the payment thereof [or of any installment], the court[, upon the motion of the prosecuting attorney or upon its own motion, may] shall require the defendant to show cause why the defendant's default should not be treated as contumacious, and [may], if the defendant fails to appear, the court shall issue a summons or a warrant of arrest for the defendant's appearance. Unless the defendant shows that the defendant's default was not attributable to an intentional refusal to obey the order of the court, or to a failure on the defendant's part to make a good faith effort to obtain the funds required for the payment, the court shall find that the defendant's default was contumacious and may order the defendant committed until the fee, fine, restitution, or a specified part thereof is paid[.]; provided that for a defendant in district court, if the fees, fines, and restitution are not paid in full, the court shall order further proof of compliance hearings every six months or less until the court is satisfied that the defendant will appear and remain in compliance; or (b) If the defendant was ordered to pay fines, fees, or both, but no restitution, the district court shall refer the outstanding fines or fees to the collection agency contracted pursuant to section 601-17.5. A proof of compliance hearing shall not be required in cases where no restitution was ordered. (2) When a fee, fine, or restitution is imposed on a corporation or unincorporated association, it [is] shall be the duty of the person or persons authorized to make disbursement from the assets of the corporation or association to pay it from those assets, and their failure to do so may be held contumacious unless they make the showing required in subsection (1). (3) The term of imprisonment for nonpayment of fee, fine, or restitution shall be specified in the order of commitment, and shall not exceed one day for each $250 of the fee or fine, thirty days if the fee or fine was imposed upon conviction of a violation or a petty misdemeanor, or one year in any other case, whichever is the shorter period. A person committed for nonpayment of a fee or fine shall be given credit toward payment of the fee or fine for each day of imprisonment, at the rate of $250 per day. (4) If it appears that the defendant's default in the payment of a fee, fine, or restitution is not contumacious, the court may make an order allowing the defendant additional time for payment, reducing the amount of each installment, or revoking the fee, fine, or the unpaid portion thereof in whole or in part, or converting the unpaid portion of the fee or fine to community service. A defendant shall not be discharged from an order to pay restitution until the full amount of the restitution has actually been collected or accounted for. (5) Unless discharged by payment or, in the case of a fee or fine, service of imprisonment pursuant to subsection (3), an order to pay a fee, fine, or restitution, whether as an independent order, as a part of a judgment and sentence, or as a condition of probation or deferred plea pursuant to chapter 853, may be collected in the same manner as a judgment in a civil action. The State or the victim named in the order may collect the restitution, including costs, interest, and attorney's fees, pursuant to section 706-646. The State may collect the fee or fine, including costs, interest, and attorney's fees, pursuant to section 706-647. (6) Attorney's fees, costs, and interest shall not be deemed part of the penalty, and no person shall be imprisoned under this section in default of payment of attorney's fees, costs, and interest. (7) For purposes of this section, "default" means failure to pay a fee, fine, or restitution within a period of time specified by the court pursuant to section 706-642, or failure to pay three consecutive installments of a fee, fine, or restitution, whichever occurs first." SECTION 4. Section 806-73, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by amending subsection (b) to read as follows: "(b) All adult probation records shall be confidential and shall not be deemed to be public records. As used in this section, [the term] "records" includes but is not limited to all records made by any adult probation officer in the course of performing the probation officer's official duties. The records, or the content of the records, shall be divulged only as follows: (1) A copy of any adult probation case record or of a portion of it, or the case record itself, upon request, may be provided to: (A) An adult probation officer, a court officer, a social worker of a Hawaii state adult probation unit, or a family court officer who is preparing a report for the courts; or (B) A state or federal criminal justice agency, or state or federal court program that[:] is: (i) [Is providing] Providing supervision of a defendant or offender convicted and sentenced by the courts of Hawaii; or (ii) [Is responsible] Responsible for the preparation of a report for a court; (2) The residence address, work address, home telephone number, or work telephone number of a current or former defendant shall be provided only to: (A) A law enforcement officer as defined in section 710-1000 to locate the probationer for the purpose of serving a summons or bench warrant in a civil, criminal, or deportation hearing, or for the purpose of a criminal investigation; or (B) A collection agency or licensed attorney contracted by the judiciary to collect any delinquent court-ordered [penalties,] fees, fines, [restitution,] sanctions, and court costs pursuant to section 601-17.5; (3) A copy of a presentence report or investigative report shall be provided only to: (A) The persons or entities named in section 706-604; (B) The Hawaii paroling authority; (C) Any psychiatrist, psychologist, or other treatment practitioner who is treating the defendant pursuant to a court order or parole order for that treatment; (D) The intake service centers; (E) In accordance with applicable law, persons or entities doing research; and (F) Any Hawaii state adult probation officer or adult probation officer of another state or federal jurisdiction who[:] is engaged in the: (i) [Is engaged in the supervision] Supervision of a defendant or offender convicted and sentenced in the courts of Hawaii; or (ii) [Is engaged in the preparation] Preparation of a report for a court regarding a defendant or offender convicted and sentenced in the courts of Hawaii; (4) Access to adult probation records by a victim, as defined in section 706-646 to enforce an order filed pursuant to section 706-647, shall be limited to the: (A) Name and contact information of the defendant's adult probation officer; (B) Compliance record of the defendant with court‑ordered payments; (C) Amounts paid by the defendant; (D) Dates of the payments made by the defendant; (E) Payee of payments made by the defendant; and (F) Remaining unpaid balance, without the assessment of a filing fee or surcharge; (5) Upon written request, the victim, or the parent or guardian of a minor victim or incapacitated victim, of a defendant who has been placed on probation for an offense under section 580-10(d)(1), 586-4(e), 586‑11(a), or 709-906 may be notified by the defendant's probation officer when the probation officer has any information relating to the safety and welfare of the victim; (6) Notwithstanding paragraph (3) and upon notice to the defendant, records and information relating to the defendant's risk assessment and need for treatment services; information related to the defendant's past treatment and assessments, with the prior written consent of the defendant for information from a treatment service provider; provided that [for] any substance abuse records [such] release shall be subject to title 42 Code of Federal Regulations part 2, relating to the confidentiality of alcohol and drug abuse patient records; and information that has therapeutic or rehabilitative benefit, may be provided to: (A) A case management, assessment, or treatment service provider assigned by adult probation to service the defendant; provided that [such] the information shall be given only upon the acceptance or admittance of the defendant into a treatment program; (B) Correctional case manager, correctional unit manager, and parole officers involved with the defendant's treatment or supervision; and (C) In accordance with applicable law, persons or entities doing research; (7) Probation drug test results may be released with prior written consent of a defendant to the defendant's treating physician when test results indicate substance use [which] that may be compromising the defendant's medical care or treatment; (8) Records obtained pursuant to section 704-404(9) may be made available as provided in that section; (9) Any person, agency, or entity receiving records, or contents of records, pursuant to this subsection shall be subject to the same restrictions on disclosure of the records as Hawaii state adult probation offices; and (10) Any person who uses the information covered by this subsection for purposes inconsistent with the intent of this subsection or outside of the scope of the person's official duties shall be fined no more than $500." SECTION 5. There is appropriated out of the general revenues of the State of Hawaii the sum of $ or so much thereof as may be necessary for fiscal year 2025-2026 and the same sum or so much thereof as may be necessary for fiscal year 2026-2027 for the purposes of this Act, including the hiring of necessary staff. The sums appropriated shall be expended by the judiciary for the purposes of this Act. SECTION 6. This Act does not affect rights and duties that matured, penalties that were incurred, and proceedings that were begun before its effective date. SECTION 7. Statutory material to be repealed is bracketed and stricken. New statutory material is underscored. SECTION 8. This Act shall take effect on April 23, 2057.
4848
4949 SECTION 1. Section 601-17.5, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended to read as follows:
5050
5151 "§601-17.5 Collection of delinquent court-ordered payments. The judiciary [may] shall contract with a collection agency bonded under chapter 443B or with a licensed attorney to collect any delinquent court-ordered [penalties,] fees, fines, [restitution,] sanctions, and court costs[, including juvenile monetary assessments]. Any fees or costs associated with the collection efforts shall be added to the amount due and retained by the collection agency as its payment; provided that no fees or costs shall exceed fifty per cent of the amount collected."
5252
5353 SECTION 2. Section 706-642, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended to read as follows:
5454
5555 "§706-642 Time and method of payment. (1) When a defendant is sentenced to pay a fee, fine, or restitution, the court may grant permission for the payment to be made within a specified period of time or in specified installments. If no such permission is embodied in the sentence, the fee, fine, or restitution shall be payable forthwith by cash, check, or [by] a credit card approved by the court.
5656
5757 (2) When a defendant sentenced to pay a fee, fine, or restitution is also sentenced to probation, the court may make the payment of the fee, fine, or restitution a condition of probation.
5858
5959 (3) When a defendant sentenced to pay a fee or fine is also ordered to make restitution or reparation to the victim or victims, or to the person or party who has incurred loss or damage because of the defendant's crime, the payment of restitution or reparation shall have priority over the payment of the fee or fine, pursuant to section 706-651. No fee or fine shall be collected until the restitution or reparation order has been satisfied."
6060
6161 SECTION 3. Section 706-644, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended to read as follows:
6262
6363 "§706-644 Consequences of nonpayment; imprisonment for contumacious nonpayment; summary collection. (1) When a defendant in district court is sentenced pursuant to section 706-605, granted a conditional discharge pursuant to section 712-1255, or granted a deferred plea pursuant to chapter 853, and the defendant is ordered to pay a fee, fine, or restitution, whether as an independent order, as part of a judgment and sentence, or as a condition of probation or deferred plea[, and]:
6464
6565 (a) If the defendant was ordered to pay restitution, the court shall set a proof of compliance hearing for the defendant; provided that the court may further order that the defendant need not appear for the proof of compliance hearing if all fees, fines, and restitution have been paid in full and all other sentencing requirements have been met before a designated date, which may be earlier than the proof of compliance date. At each proof of compliance hearing for a defendant in district court, if the defendant appears and is in compliance, but has not yet paid all fees, fines, and restitution in full, the court shall order a further proof of compliance hearing within one year or as soon as practicable until the fees, fines, or restitution have been paid in full. If the defendant defaults in the payment thereof [or of any installment], the court[, upon the motion of the prosecuting attorney or upon its own motion, may] shall require the defendant to show cause why the defendant's default should not be treated as contumacious, and [may], if the defendant fails to appear, the court shall issue a summons or a warrant of arrest for the defendant's appearance. Unless the defendant shows that the defendant's default was not attributable to an intentional refusal to obey the order of the court, or to a failure on the defendant's part to make a good faith effort to obtain the funds required for the payment, the court shall find that the defendant's default was contumacious and may order the defendant committed until the fee, fine, restitution, or a specified part thereof is paid[.]; provided that for a defendant in district court, if the fees, fines, and restitution are not paid in full, the court shall order further proof of compliance hearings every six months or less until the court is satisfied that the defendant will appear and remain in compliance; or
6666
6767 (b) If the defendant was ordered to pay fines, fees, or both, but no restitution, the district court shall refer the outstanding fines or fees to the collection agency contracted pursuant to section 601-17.5. A proof of compliance hearing shall not be required in cases where no restitution was ordered.
6868
6969 (2) When a fee, fine, or restitution is imposed on a corporation or unincorporated association, it [is] shall be the duty of the person or persons authorized to make disbursement from the assets of the corporation or association to pay it from those assets, and their failure to do so may be held contumacious unless they make the showing required in subsection (1).
7070
7171 (3) The term of imprisonment for nonpayment of fee, fine, or restitution shall be specified in the order of commitment, and shall not exceed one day for each $250 of the fee or fine, thirty days if the fee or fine was imposed upon conviction of a violation or a petty misdemeanor, or one year in any other case, whichever is the shorter period. A person committed for nonpayment of a fee or fine shall be given credit toward payment of the fee or fine for each day of imprisonment, at the rate of $250 per day.
7272
7373 (4) If it appears that the defendant's default in the payment of a fee, fine, or restitution is not contumacious, the court may make an order allowing the defendant additional time for payment, reducing the amount of each installment, or revoking the fee, fine, or the unpaid portion thereof in whole or in part, or converting the unpaid portion of the fee or fine to community service. A defendant shall not be discharged from an order to pay restitution until the full amount of the restitution has actually been collected or accounted for.
7474
7575 (5) Unless discharged by payment or, in the case of a fee or fine, service of imprisonment pursuant to subsection (3), an order to pay a fee, fine, or restitution, whether as an independent order, as a part of a judgment and sentence, or as a condition of probation or deferred plea pursuant to chapter 853, may be collected in the same manner as a judgment in a civil action. The State or the victim named in the order may collect the restitution, including costs, interest, and attorney's fees, pursuant to section 706-646. The State may collect the fee or fine, including costs, interest, and attorney's fees, pursuant to section 706-647.
7676
7777 (6) Attorney's fees, costs, and interest shall not be deemed part of the penalty, and no person shall be imprisoned under this section in default of payment of attorney's fees, costs, and interest.
7878
7979 (7) For purposes of this section, "default" means failure to pay a fee, fine, or restitution within a period of time specified by the court pursuant to section 706-642, or failure to pay three consecutive installments of a fee, fine, or restitution, whichever occurs first."
8080
8181 SECTION 4. Section 806-73, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by amending subsection (b) to read as follows:
8282
8383 "(b) All adult probation records shall be confidential and shall not be deemed to be public records. As used in this section, [the term] "records" includes but is not limited to all records made by any adult probation officer in the course of performing the probation officer's official duties. The records, or the content of the records, shall be divulged only as follows:
8484
8585 (1) A copy of any adult probation case record or of a portion of it, or the case record itself, upon request, may be provided to:
8686
8787 (A) An adult probation officer, a court officer, a social worker of a Hawaii state adult probation unit, or a family court officer who is preparing a report for the courts; or
8888
8989 (B) A state or federal criminal justice agency, or state or federal court program that[:] is:
9090
9191 (i) [Is providing] Providing supervision of a defendant or offender convicted and sentenced by the courts of Hawaii; or
9292
9393 (ii) [Is responsible] Responsible for the preparation of a report for a court;
9494
9595 (2) The residence address, work address, home telephone number, or work telephone number of a current or former defendant shall be provided only to:
9696
9797 (A) A law enforcement officer as defined in section 710-1000 to locate the probationer for the purpose of serving a summons or bench warrant in a civil, criminal, or deportation hearing, or for the purpose of a criminal investigation; or
9898
9999 (B) A collection agency or licensed attorney contracted by the judiciary to collect any delinquent court-ordered [penalties,] fees, fines, [restitution,] sanctions, and court costs pursuant to section 601-17.5;
100100
101101 (3) A copy of a presentence report or investigative report shall be provided only to:
102102
103103 (A) The persons or entities named in section 706-604;
104104
105105 (B) The Hawaii paroling authority;
106106
107107 (C) Any psychiatrist, psychologist, or other treatment practitioner who is treating the defendant pursuant to a court order or parole order for that treatment;
108108
109109 (D) The intake service centers;
110110
111111 (E) In accordance with applicable law, persons or entities doing research; and
112112
113113 (F) Any Hawaii state adult probation officer or adult probation officer of another state or federal jurisdiction who[:] is engaged in the:
114114
115115 (i) [Is engaged in the supervision] Supervision of a defendant or offender convicted and sentenced in the courts of Hawaii; or
116116
117117 (ii) [Is engaged in the preparation] Preparation of a report for a court regarding a defendant or offender convicted and sentenced in the courts of Hawaii;
118118
119119 (4) Access to adult probation records by a victim, as defined in section 706-646 to enforce an order filed pursuant to section 706-647, shall be limited to the:
120120
121121 (A) Name and contact information of the defendant's adult probation officer;
122122
123123 (B) Compliance record of the defendant with court‑ordered payments;
124124
125125 (C) Amounts paid by the defendant;
126126
127127 (D) Dates of the payments made by the defendant;
128128
129129 (E) Payee of payments made by the defendant; and
130130
131131 (F) Remaining unpaid balance,
132132
133133 without the assessment of a filing fee or surcharge;
134134
135135 (5) Upon written request, the victim, or the parent or guardian of a minor victim or incapacitated victim, of a defendant who has been placed on probation for an offense under section 580-10(d)(1), 586-4(e), 586‑11(a), or 709-906 may be notified by the defendant's probation officer when the probation officer has any information relating to the safety and welfare of the victim;
136136
137137 (6) Notwithstanding paragraph (3) and upon notice to the defendant, records and information relating to the defendant's risk assessment and need for treatment services; information related to the defendant's past treatment and assessments, with the prior written consent of the defendant for information from a treatment service provider; provided that [for] any substance abuse records [such] release shall be subject to title 42 Code of Federal Regulations part 2, relating to the confidentiality of alcohol and drug abuse patient records; and information that has therapeutic or rehabilitative benefit, may be provided to:
138138
139139 (A) A case management, assessment, or treatment service provider assigned by adult probation to service the defendant; provided that [such] the information shall be given only upon the acceptance or admittance of the defendant into a treatment program;
140140
141141 (B) Correctional case manager, correctional unit manager, and parole officers involved with the defendant's treatment or supervision; and
142142
143143 (C) In accordance with applicable law, persons or entities doing research;
144144
145145 (7) Probation drug test results may be released with prior written consent of a defendant to the defendant's treating physician when test results indicate substance use [which] that may be compromising the defendant's medical care or treatment;
146146
147147 (8) Records obtained pursuant to section 704-404(9) may be made available as provided in that section;
148148
149149 (9) Any person, agency, or entity receiving records, or contents of records, pursuant to this subsection shall be subject to the same restrictions on disclosure of the records as Hawaii state adult probation offices; and
150150
151151 (10) Any person who uses the information covered by this subsection for purposes inconsistent with the intent of this subsection or outside of the scope of the person's official duties shall be fined no more than $500."
152152
153153 SECTION 5. There is appropriated out of the general revenues of the State of Hawaii the sum of $ or so much thereof as may be necessary for fiscal year 2025-2026 and the same sum or so much thereof as may be necessary for fiscal year 2026-2027 for the purposes of this Act, including the hiring of necessary staff.
154154
155155 The sums appropriated shall be expended by the judiciary for the purposes of this Act.
156156
157157 SECTION 6. This Act does not affect rights and duties that matured, penalties that were incurred, and proceedings that were begun before its effective date.
158158
159159 SECTION 7. Statutory material to be repealed is bracketed and stricken. New statutory material is underscored.
160160
161- SECTION 8. This Act shall take effect on July 1, 3000.
161+ SECTION 8. This Act shall take effect on April 23, 2057.
162162
163- Report Title: Penal Code; Fees, Fines, and Restitution; Collections; Consequences of Nonpayment; Appropriations Description: Requires the Judiciary to contract with a collection agency or licensed attorney to collect delinquent court-ordered fees, fines, sanctions, and court costs. Repeals the authority of the Judiciary to contract with a collection agency or licensed attorney to collect delinquent restitution. Expressly allows courts to specify a period of time or installments for payment of fees and restitution. Requires district courts to hold payment compliance hearings once per year or as soon as practicable, until all fees, fines, and restitution are fully paid, and requires a defendant in district court to appear and show cause if the defendant fails to pay in full within a time specified by the court or fails to pay three consecutive installments. Makes conforming amendments to related statutes. Appropriates funds. Effective 7/1/3000. (HD2) The summary description of legislation appearing on this page is for informational purposes only and is not legislation or evidence of legislative intent.
163+ Report Title: Penal Code; Fees, Fines, and Restitution; Collections; Consequences of Nonpayment; Appropriations Description: Requires the Judiciary to contract with a collection agency or licensed attorney to collect delinquent court-ordered fees, fines, sanctions, and court costs. Repeals the authority of the Judiciary to contract with a collection agency or licensed attorney to collect delinquent restitution. Expressly allows courts to specify a period of time or installments for payment of fees and restitution. Requires district courts to hold payment compliance hearings once per year or as soon as practicable, until all fees, fines, and restitution are fully paid, and requires a defendant in district court to appear and show cause if the defendant fails to pay in full within a time specified by the court or fails to pay three consecutive installments. Makes conforming amendments to related statutes. Appropriates funds. Effective 4/23/2057. (HD1) The summary description of legislation appearing on this page is for informational purposes only and is not legislation or evidence of legislative intent.
164164
165165
166166
167167
168168
169169 Report Title:
170170
171171 Penal Code; Fees, Fines, and Restitution; Collections; Consequences of Nonpayment; Appropriations
172172
173173
174174
175175 Description:
176176
177-Requires the Judiciary to contract with a collection agency or licensed attorney to collect delinquent court-ordered fees, fines, sanctions, and court costs. Repeals the authority of the Judiciary to contract with a collection agency or licensed attorney to collect delinquent restitution. Expressly allows courts to specify a period of time or installments for payment of fees and restitution. Requires district courts to hold payment compliance hearings once per year or as soon as practicable, until all fees, fines, and restitution are fully paid, and requires a defendant in district court to appear and show cause if the defendant fails to pay in full within a time specified by the court or fails to pay three consecutive installments. Makes conforming amendments to related statutes. Appropriates funds. Effective 7/1/3000. (HD2)
177+Requires the Judiciary to contract with a collection agency or licensed attorney to collect delinquent court-ordered fees, fines, sanctions, and court costs. Repeals the authority of the Judiciary to contract with a collection agency or licensed attorney to collect delinquent restitution. Expressly allows courts to specify a period of time or installments for payment of fees and restitution. Requires district courts to hold payment compliance hearings once per year or as soon as practicable, until all fees, fines, and restitution are fully paid, and requires a defendant in district court to appear and show cause if the defendant fails to pay in full within a time specified by the court or fails to pay three consecutive installments. Makes conforming amendments to related statutes. Appropriates funds. Effective 4/23/2057. (HD1)
178178
179179
180180
181181
182182
183183
184184
185185 The summary description of legislation appearing on this page is for informational purposes only and is not legislation or evidence of legislative intent.