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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR Swisstack
ORIGINAL DATE
LAST UPDATED
2/13/2007
HB 515
SHORT TITLE Delinquency Petition Record Requirements
SB
ANALYST Lucero
APPROPRIATION (dollars in thousands)
Appropriation
Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
FY07
FY08
NFI
NFI
NFI
NFI
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Expenditure Decreases)
Relates to HB32, HB449.
Relates to Appropriation in the General Appropriation Act
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
Responses Received From
Public Defender Department (PDD)
Children, Youth and Families Department (CYFD)
Administrative Office of the Courts (AOC)
Juvenile Parole Board (JPB)
SUMMARY
Synopsis of Bill
House Bill 515 amends Section 32A-2-26NMSA 1978 – Sealing of records to include the ability
of a person subject to a delinquency petition to request the court order the legal and social files
and records of the court, the department
, probation services and any other agency in the case
sealed. Significant amendments relate to the courts ability to order sealing of records if the court
finds that: A. (1) the child has reached the age of majority
and two years have elapsed since the
final release of the person from legal custody and supervision; and the person has not, within the
two years immediately prior to filing the motion, been convicted of a felony or of a misdemeanor
involving [moral turpitude
] driving under the influence of intoxicating liquor or drugs
or been
found delinquent by a court and no proceeding is pending seeking such a conviction or finding.
pg_0002
House Bill 515 – Page
2
B. (4) (5) The bill further identifies additional agencies (the local detention facility and
the public defender department
) as agencies to receive notice of the motion to seal.
C. Upon the entry of the sealing order, agencies that maintain such records shall ensure
that all personal identifying information in the
index or electronic
references shall be deleted.
The bill indicates that copies of the sealing order shall be sent by the petitioner
to each agency or
official named in the order. Copies of the sealing order shall also be available in the district
court clerk’s office.
G. A person who is not the subject of a delinquency petition or a person who is deter-
mined by the court not to be a delinquent offender shall have [his
] the person’s
files and records
automatically sealed by the court no later than six months after the person reaches the age of ma-
jority
.
H.
per the bill, this section of the Children’s Code would be deleted; [I
f two years have
elapsed since a person was released from legal custody and supervision and the d
e-
partment has not received any new allegations of delinquency regarding the person,
that person’s files and r
e
cords shall be automatically sealed
]
Essentially, the bill puts an age (eighteen) as the minimum age for a person to request sealing of
his/her juvenile record.
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
There could be a need for additional resources for the courts to conduct research relating to the
six-month deadline before automatically sealing cases. The judiciary’s data system does not dis-
tinguish cases based on whether there is a determination of delinquency. This situation led to the
November 2006 adoption of a rule by the Supreme Court requiring the children’s court attorney
or department to notify the court when a case must be sealed. Using this mechanism to imple-
ment Subsection G, any costs to the court are minimized.
Although the bill does not make an appropriation, it could have indirect fiscal impact on CYFD.
The bill would likely decrease costs to the department by reducing the time and labor required to
seal and archive cases on person’s under the age of eighteen.
SIGNIFICANT ISSUES
The bill provides language that clarifies and details the process for sealing of juvenile records.
By placing an age (eighteen) as the minimum age required to request sealing of records, it allows
the department to process sealing of records in a more efficient, equitable manner and addresses
concerns of public safety. Current language allows for a person to request sealing of his/her ju-
venile record at any age provided two years has elapsed since release from custody and supervi-
sion of the department. An example of a public safety concern related to the current language is
that a fourteen year old could be adjudicated of an armed robbery, complete a one year probation
term and then request his/her record be sealed at age seventeen. The department and the court
would not have access to this person’s delinquent history if this person were to commit a new
delinquent act at age seventeen. Department staff safety and public safety is compromised, as is
the ability of the court to make an informed decision related to the new delinquent act.
Subsection C’s proposal to delete all personal identifying information, both paper and electronic,
in the case conflicts with Subsections D and E, which permit the court to reopen files and records
pg_0003
House Bill 515 – Page
3
in certain situations, such as a new finding of delinquency or a conviction. With the destruction
of all personal identifying information, it would be impossible to locate the case. In addition, if
the bill intends to protect the identity of the youth, then making a copy of the sealing order avail-
able to the public in the clerk’s office may reveal the very information that is being sought to
protect.
Regarding Subsection G, the Supreme Court in November 2006 promulgated a rule for automatic
sealing of court records. The rule requires the children’s court attorney to present the court with
an order to seal files and records when the petition does not result in an adjudication of delin-
quency, but is dismissed, acquitted, etc. The rule also requires CYFD to present the court with
an order seal records and files when a person has been released from court-ordered supervision
and no new allegations of delinquency have been received in the past two years. The court clerk
is required to provide copies of the court’s order to the children’s court attorney, CYFD, law en-
forcement offices, any other agency having records or files in the case, the person’s attorney, and
the person who is the subject of the sealing order.
The rule does not address sealing records for the person who is not the subject of a delinquency
petition, because that case is never filed in court and is handled informally by probation services.
The department should determine how to seal its files and records in such cases.
The bill’s proposed “six months after the age of maturity" deadline would require court staff to
conduct manual research on each case to determine when to automatically seal files and records.
It is also unlikely that the six-month deadline would be met in the case of a person detained for
an alleged crime committed on the day before the 18th birthday. Police investigations and other
processes in the case could delay the court’s being able to adjudicate the case and seal records
within the 6-month time frame.
ADMINISTRATIVE IMPLICATIONS
There may be an administrative impact on the courts as the result of the implementing new re-
quirements in the bill.
CYFD will need to add resources to address the automatic sealing of juvenile records that meet
criteria under 32A-2-26 Section 1 (H). The department’s current electronic system for sealing
records is inadequate to meet this requirement of the Children’s Code as the system is not de-
signed to seal records on persons under the age of eighteen. Public safety is also a concern and
potential consequence of not enacting this bill as delinquent history on many juveniles would not
be accessible to the department and the courts.
CONFLICT, DUPLICATION, COMPANIONSHIP, RELATIONSHIP
Relates to HB32, HB449
WHAT WILL BE THE CONSEQUENCES OF NOT ENACTING THIS BILL
Status Quo
DL/yr