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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR Wirth
DATE TYPED 2/19/05
HB 255/aHJC
SHORT TITLE Crime of Simulating Legal Process
SB
ANALYST Wilson
APPROPRIATION
Appropriation Contained Estimated Additional Impact Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
FY05
FY06
FY05
FY06
See Narrative
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
Responses Received From
Public Defender Department (PDD)
Bernalillo County Metro Court (BCMC)
Attorney General’s Office (AGO)
Corrections Department (CD)
SUMMARY
Synopsis of HJC Amendment
The House Judiciary Committee amendment to HB 255 shortens the definition of a civil or
criminal process to mean a document or order, including but not limited to a summons, lien,
complaint, warrant, injunction, writ, notice, pleading or subpoena. There is less explanatory lan-
guage.
Synopsis of Original Bill
House Bill 255 creates a new misdemeanor crime of issuing or delivering a false legal document.
It would include documents normally issued by a court or filed in a court, like summons, liens,
complaints, warrants, writs, injunctions, notices, pleading, or subpoena.
Significant Issues
The AGO believes this bill is proposed to address the abuse of legal process by individuals and
groups who disavow the legitimacy of the courts and seek to disrupt or subvert it by the filing
pg_0002
House Bill 255/aHJC -- Page 2
and use of false documents. This law will provide a sanction for such conduct.
The BCMC believes the aim of this legislation is to abate the use of voluminous “look-alike” ju-
dicial and legal documents which are often directed at Judges, Court staff and other public offi-
cials and employees with the apparent goals of: frustrating actual judicial proceedings (e.g., traf-
fic cases); or, harassing such public officials and employees who are merely performing their
duties.
Such documents can intimidate these officials and employees into believing that they, or their
property, are being targeted via some incompletely disclosed legal process or proceeding. The
task of reviewing such simulated documents and confirming that they are not generated in the
course of genuine judicial or legal process is burdensome and very time-consuming since such
documents are typically quite lengthy and are written in an archaic style that contains incompre-
hensible language.
Given the increasing proliferation of model documents on the internet it is understandable that at
least 10 other states have criminalized simulation of the legal process. The current proposal in
the Bill draws largely from the existing statutes of Missouri, Oregon and West Virginia.
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
The bill could increase costs to the CD as a result of the new crime. Because this proposed crime
is a misdemeanor, the only way a person could go to prison for this is by stacking it with other
charges. For this reason, the greatest impact will be on the Probation Division. The number of
convictions is likely to be minimal.
ADMINISTRATIVE IMPLICATIONS
Any increase caused by the provisions in this bill can be absorbed by existing staff resources.
DW/lg:yr