Virginia 2025 Regular Session

Virginia House Bill HB2328 Compare Versions

OldNewDifferences
11 2025 SESSION
22
3-ENROLLED
3+HOUSE SUBSTITUTE
44
5-VIRGINIA ACTS OF ASSEMBLY -- CHAPTER
5+25106258D
66
7-An Act to amend and reenact 19.2-120 of the Code of Virginia, relating to admission to bail; pregnant persons or persons who have recently given birth.
7+HOUSE BILL NO. 2328
88
9-[H 2328]
9+AMENDMENT IN THE NATURE OF A SUBSTITUTE
1010
11-Approved
11+(Proposed by the House Committee for Courts of Justice
12+
13+on January 29, 2025)
14+
15+(Patron Prior to SubstituteDelegate Simonds)
16+
17+A BILL to amend and reenact 19.2-120 of the Code of Virginia, relating to admission to bail; pregnant persons or persons who have recently given birth.
18+
19+
1220
1321 Be it enacted by the General Assembly of Virginia:
1422
1523 1. That 19.2-120 of the Code of Virginia is amended and reenacted as follows:
1624
1725 19.2-120. Admission to bail.
1826
1927 A. Prior to conducting any hearing on the issue of bail, release, or detention, the judicial officer shall, to the extent feasible, obtain the person's criminal history.
2028
2129 B. A person who is held in custody pending trial or hearing for an offense, civil or criminal contempt, or otherwise shall be admitted to bail by a judicial officer, unless there is probable cause to believe that:
2230
2331 1. He will not appear for trial or hearing or at such other time and place as may be directed; or
2432
2533 2. His liberty will constitute an unreasonable danger to himself, family or household members as defined in 16.1-228, or the public.
2634
2735 C. In making a determination under subsection B, the judicial officer shall consider all relevant information, including (i) the nature and circumstances of the offense; (ii) whether a firearm is alleged to have been used in the commission of the offense; (iii) the weight of the evidence; (iv) the history of the accused or juvenile, including his family ties or involvement in employment, education, or medical, mental health, or substance abuse treatment; (v) his length of residence in, or other ties to, the community; (vi) his record of convictions; (vii) his appearance at court proceedings or flight to avoid prosecution or convictions for failure to appear at court proceedings; and (viii) whether the person is likely to obstruct or attempt to obstruct justice, or threaten, injure, or intimidate, or attempt to threaten, injure, or intimidate, a prospective witness, juror, victim, or family or household member as defined in 16.1-228; and (ix) any evidence the person provided indicating that such person (a) is currently pregnant, (b) has recently given birth, or (c) is currently nursing a child.
2836
2937 D. A judicial officer who admits a person to bail who is charged with an act of violence as defined in 19.2-297.1 shall notify the attorney for the Commonwealth for the jurisdiction in which such person's case is filed contemporaneously with such person's grant of bail or release. Notice to the attorney for the Commonwealth may be made by facsimile or other electronic means.
3038
3139 E. The judicial officer shall inform the person of his right to appeal from the order denying bail or fixing terms of bond or recognizance consistent with 19.2-124.
3240
3341 F. If the judicial officer sets a secured bond and the person engages the services of a licensed bail bondsman, the magistrate executing recognizance for the accused shall provide the bondsman, upon request, with a copy of the person's Virginia criminal history record, if readily available, to be used by the bondsman only to determine appropriate reporting requirements to impose upon the accused upon his release. The bondsman shall pay a $15 fee payable to the state treasury to be credited to the Literary Fund, upon requesting the defendant's Virginia criminal history record issued pursuant to 19.2-389. The bondsman shall review the record on the premises and promptly return the record to the magistrate after reviewing it.