New Jersey 2024 2024-2025 Regular Session

New Jersey Senate Bill S1887 Comm Sub / Analysis

                    SENATE JUDICIARY COMMITTEE 
 
STATEMENT TO  
 
SENATE, No. 1887  
 
STATE OF NEW JERSEY 
 
DATED:  JUNE 13, 2024 
 
 The Senate Judiciary Committee reports favorably Senate Bill No. 
1887. 
 This bill creates the offense of financial exploitation of the elderly. 
Under the bill, a person obtains property by financial exploitation of 
the elderly when, being a person in a position of trust, the person 
compels or induces an elderly person to deliver such property to the 
person or to a third person by means of fraud, false promise, extortion 
or intimidation.   
 An “elderly person” is defined as any person who is 60 years of 
age or older and is suffering from a disease or infirmity associated 
with advanced age or who suffers from a mental disease, defect or 
condition which renders the person incapable of deciding whether to 
give or withhold consent to taking, obtaining or withholding of his or 
her property. A "person in a position of trust" means a person who: 
 (a) is the parent, spouse, adult child or other relative by blood or 
affinity of an elderly person; or (b) is a joint tenant or tenant in 
common with an elderly person; or  (c) has a fiduciary obligation to an 
elderly person; or (d) receives monetary or other valuable 
consideration for providing care for the elderly person ; or (e)  lives 
with or provides some component of home care services on a 
continuing basis to the elderly person including, but not limited to, a 
neighbor or friend who does not provide such services but has access 
to the elderly person based on such relationship.   
 The offense would be graded as a crime of the third degree 
punishable by a term of imprisonment of three to five years, a fine of 
up to $15,000, or both, when the amount involved is at least $200 but 
does not exceed $500. Currently, a theft of this amount is graded as a 
crime of the fourth degree, punishable by a term of imprisonment of 
up to 18 months, a fine of up to $10,000, or both. When the act 
involving an elderly person resulted in the theft of an amount that is 
less than $200, it would be graded as a crime of the fourth degree 
subject to the aforementioned level of punishment for this degree of 
crime. A theft of this smaller amount is currently graded as a 
disorderly persons offense, punishable by a term of imprisonment of 
up to six months, a fine of up to $1,000, or both. 
 The theft of more than $500 but less than $75,000 from any victim, 
including an elderly person, would continue to be a crime of the third 
degree, and the theft of more than $75,000 from any victim would  2 
 
continue to be a crime of the second degree. 
 This bill was prefiled for introduction in the 2024-2025 session 
pending technical review.  As reported, the bill includes the changes 
required by technical review, which has been performed.