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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR Youngberg
DATE TYPED 2/21/05
HB 712
SHORT TITLE Sexual Offenses Against Incapacitated Persons
SB
ANALYST Wilson
APPROPRIATION
Appropriation Contained Estimated Additional Impact Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
FY05
FY06
FY05
FY06
See Narrative
Relates to HB 505 & HB 713
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
Responses Received From
Administrative Office of the District Attorneys (AODA)
Attorney General’s Office (AGO)
Corrections Department (CD)
Department of Public Safety (DPS)
Public Defender Department (PDD)
SUMMARY
Synopsis of Bill
House Bill 712 amends current statute to enhance the criminal penalties for sexual offenses
committed against incapacitated persons. It raises the penalty for criminal sexual contact on a
person who is incapacitated for any reason from a misdemeanor to a fourth degree felony. An
incapacitated person includes a victim who is unconscious, asleep or otherwise physically help-
less or suffers from a mental condition that limits the capacity of the victim to understand the
nature or consequences of the act.
While the current statute does penalize offenders for engaging in sexual acts with incapacitated
persons, generally the penalty is only triggered if the victim suffers great bodily harm or some
degree of personal injury.
pg_0002
House Bill 712 -- Page 2
This bill will remove the personal injury requirement for the following crimes: criminal sexual
penetration in the second degree; criminal sexual contact in the fourth degree; and criminal sex-
ual contact of a minor in the second and third degree.
Significant Issues
The AODA states that as a practical matter this bill will make it far more possible for the state to
prove the crimes of criminal sexual penetration and criminal sexual contact when committed
upon persons suffering from mental handicaps which render them far more vulnerable to such
crimes. At present, the state bears the very difficult challenge of proving that a victim was "in-
capable of understanding" and this burden frequently prevents full prosecution of many offenses
against society’s most vulnerable victims. Accordingly, the enactment of this statute is likely to
result in more prosecutable cases and tougher sentences for offenders.
The PDD notes that great mental anguish is already in the statute as an aggravator and is in-
cluded as an aggravator for incapacitated persons, this term is vague in the context of criminal
sexual penetration. Arguably, it is abnormal not to suffer mental anguish as the result of a vio-
lent crime.
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
The enactment of this bill may result in the prosecution of an unknown number of additional
cases since the state doesn’t have to prove that a victim's condition renders the victim incapable
of understanding. The state will only need to prove that the condition limits the victim’s under-
standing. If more offenders are charged and convicted under this statute, and the statute includes
provisions for mandatory incarceration and longer period of probation, there are likely to be at
least some additional costs for various state agencies, including the district attorneys, public De-
fenders, courts, CD and probation and parole officers.
ADMINISTRATIVE IMPLICATIONS
This bill will result in more cases referred to district attorneys, the public defenders, the courts
and prison, parole and probation officers, thus increasing current workloads.
RELATIONSHIP
HB 712 relates to HB 505, Revise Criminal Sexual Contact of a Minor and HB 713, Distribution
of Rape Drugs.
TECHNICAL ISSUES
The AODA suggests Section 30-9-13(B) be amended to include the touching “of the unclothed
intimate parts of another” and making criminal sexual contact a second degree felony instead of
a third degree. The present language refers only to “contact of the unclothed intimate parts of a
minor” and does not adequately address the common situation in which an offender has a victim
touch the offender's unclothed parts. Failure to make this amendment will cause this kind of of-
fense to remain as third CSC, and is not consistent with the rest of the statute.
DW/lg