Kansas 2023 2023-2024 Regular Session

Kansas House Bill HB2293 Comm Sub / Analysis

                    SESSION OF 2023
SUPPLEMENTAL NOTE ON HOUSE BILL NO. 2293
As Amended by Senate Committee on Judiciary
Brief*
HB 2293, as amended, would create law in the Kansas 
Code of Criminal Procedure (Code) regarding jailhouse 
witness testimony.
[Note: The bill would contain a whereas clause 
designating its provisions as the Pete Coones Memorial Act.]
Disclosure Requirements
The bill would require, in any criminal prosecution, the 
prosecuting attorney (prosecutor) to disclose any intent to 
introduce testimony of a jailhouse witness, as defined by the 
bill, regarding statements made by a suspect or defendant, 
while the jailhouse witness and suspect or defendant were 
both incarcerated, within the time provided by the section of 
the Code governing discovery.
The bill would also require the prosecutor to disclose to 
the defense:
●The criminal history of the jailhouse witness, 
including pending or dismissed criminal charges;
●The jailhouse witness’s cooperation agreement and 
any benefit, as defined by the bill, that has been 
requested by, provided to, or will be provided in the 
future to the witness;
____________________
*Supplemental notes are prepared by the Legislative Research 
Department and do not express legislative intent. The supplemental 
note and fiscal note for this bill may be accessed on the Internet at 
http://www.kslegislature.org ●The contents of any statement allegedly given by 
the suspect or defendant to the jailhouse witness 
and the contents of any statement given by the 
witness to law enforcement regarding the 
statements allegedly made by the suspect or 
defendant, including the time and place such 
statements were given;
●Any information regarding the jailhouse witness 
recanting testimony or statements, including the 
time and place of recantation, the nature of the 
recantation, and the names of the people present 
at the recantation; and
●Any information regarding other criminal cases in 
which the testimony of the jailhouse witness was 
introduced or was intended to be introduced by a 
prosecutor regarding statements made by a 
suspect or defendant, including any cooperation 
agreement and any benefit the witness received in 
such case.
The court could allow the prosecutor to comply with 
these disclosure requirements after the time limit described 
above if the court finds the jailhouse witness was not known 
or the information the bill requires to be disclosed could not 
be discovered or obtained by the prosecutor exercising due 
diligence within such time period.
If the court finds that disclosure of the above information 
is likely to cause bodily harm to the jailhouse witness, the bill 
would allow the court to order that the evidence be viewed 
only by defense counsel and not by the defendant or others, 
or issue a protective order.
Database
The bill would require each prosecutor’s office to 
maintain a central record containing information regarding 
2- 2293 cases in which jailhouse witness testimony is introduced or is 
intended to be introduced by a prosecutor regarding 
statements made by a suspect or defendant, the substance of 
such testimony, and any benefit requested by, provided to, or 
to be provided in the future to such witness in connection with 
testimony provided by the witness.
The bill would require the prosecutor’s office to forward 
this information to the Kansas Bureau of Investigation (KBI), 
which would be required to maintain a statewide database of 
such information. The database would be accessible only to 
prosecutors and its records would otherwise remain 
confidential and not subject to disclosure under the Kansas 
Open Records Act (KORA), and this confidentiality provision 
would not be subject to expiration or review under KORA.
Victim Notification
If a jailhouse witness receives any benefit in connection 
with offering or providing testimony against a defendant, the 
bill would require the prosecutor to notify any victim 
connected to the criminal prosecution.
Background
The bill was introduced by the House Committee on 
Judiciary at the request of a representative of the Innocence 
Project.
House Committee on Judiciary
In the House Committee hearing on February 13, 2023, 
representatives of the Board of Indigents’ Defense Services 
(BIDS), the Innocence Project, and the Executive Director of 
the Midwest Innocence Project provided proponent 
testimony, generally stating the bill is an important step in 
preventing wrongful convictions and creates critical 
safeguards for the use of jailhouse witnesses in court. 
3- 2293 A representative of Americans for Prosperity provided written-
only proponent testimony.
On February 15, 2023, opponent testimony was 
provided by a representative of the Kansas County & District 
Attorneys Association (KCDAA), generally stating the bill 
proposes requirements already imposed by current statutes, 
case law, rules of professional conduct, and court rules. No 
other testimony was provided.
The House Committee adopted an amendment to 
remove provisions related to pretrial hearings in criminal 
prosecutions for murder or rape in which the prosecutor 
intended to introduce the testimony of a jailhouse witness and 
jury instructions involving the use of such testimony.
Senate Committee on Judiciary
In the Senate Committee hearing on March 14, 2023, 
proponent testimony was provided by representatives of 
BIDS and the Midwest Innocence Project who generally 
stated the bill would provide transparency and enhance 
reliability regarding testimony of jailhouse witnesses. Written-
only proponent testimony was provided by a representative of 
Americans for Prosperity.
Opponent testimony was provided by a representative 
of the KCDAA, who provided substantially similar testimony 
as in the House Committee hearing. Written-only opponent 
testimony was provided by the Sedgwick County District 
Attorney.
The Senate Committee amended the bill to remove 
legislative review of the confidentiality provision under KORA 
with respect to records held by the database that would be 
created by the bill.
4- 2293 Fiscal Information 
According to the fiscal note prepared by the Division of 
the Budget on the bill, as introduced, the KBI estimates 
enactment of the bill would result in additional expenditures of 
$182,180 from the State General Fund in FY 2024, incidental 
costs for security requirements of the system, and negligible 
costs for prosecuting attorneys who wish to access the 
system who are not already active users of the Kansas 
Criminal Justice Information System (KCJIS). The KBI 
estimates the initial cost for the database would be $165,000 
for licensing with an additional cost of $12,410 for training 
and installation, and $4,770 for maintenance, for a total of 
$182,180 that is scalable according to number of concurrent 
users needed for the database.
The Office of Judicial Administration states the bill’s 
enactment could have a fiscal effect on Judicial Branch 
operations because the bill’s provisions could extend the 
length of certain cases, and the fiscal effect cannot be 
estimated until there has been an opportunity for the Judicial 
Branch to operate under the bill’s provisions. Any fiscal effect 
associated with the bill is not reflected in The FY 2024 
Governor’s Budget Report.
Criminal prosecutions; jailhouse witness testimony; disclosures; database; Pete 
Coones Memorial Act; Kansas Open Records Act
5- 2293