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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR M Sanchez
ORIGINAL DATE
LAST UPDATED
2/14/07
2/20/07 HB
SHORT TITLE Criminal Record Expungement Act
SB 599/aSPAC
ANALYST Wilson
ESTIMATED ADDITIONAL OPERATING BUDGET IMPACT (dollars in thousands)
FY07
FY08
FY09 3 Year
Total Cost
Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
Total
$0.1
$0.1
$0.1 Recurring General
Fund
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Expenditure Decreases)
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
Responses Received From
Administrative Office of the Courts (AOC)
Attorney General’s Office (AGO)
Department of Public Safety (DPS)
Children, Youth & Families Department (CYFD)
Public Education Department (PED
Public Defender Department (PDD)
State Records Center & Archives (SRCA)
SUMMARY
Synopsis of SPAC Amendment
The Senate Public Affairs Committee amendment adds to the definition of “expunge" the
requirement to remove from
public access the court records that contain any reference to or
record".
When the bill gives authority to expunge a record, the amendment makes it clear does not
include a dismissal under a completion of total term of determent.
The amendment also removes the entire section on expungement and put in its place the
requirement that the AOC and the DPS shall develop rules and procedures to implement the
Criminal Record Expungement Act, including procedures for notifying the accused of the
accused's rights under that act.
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Senate Bill 599/aSPAC – Page
2
Synopsis of Original Bill
Senate Bill 599
requires agencies that maintain public criminal records to expunge such records
within thirty days of receiving an order from a court of original jurisdiction if it finds that no
other charge or proceeding is pending against the accused and if:
A. the accused was a victim of identity theft;
B. the accused, in a proceeding for a violation of a municipal ordinance, misdemeanor, or
felony, was released without conviction, including:
(1) an acquittal or finding of not guilty;
(2) a nolle prosequi, a no bill or a dismissal;
(3) a referral to a pre-prosecution diversion program.
C. the proceedings were otherwise discharged; or
D. the accused was convicted of a misdemeanor or violation of municipal ordinance, but has
had on other conviction after completion of the sentence for the original conviction:
(1) for a period of two years, unless the conviction was an offense committed against
minors or children, a sex offense, an offense involving domestic violence or abuse or an
offense involving driving while under the influence of intoxicating substances or
(2) for a period of four years after a misdemeanor aggravated battery conviction.
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
The AOC notes there will be significant fiscal impact on the judiciary to monitor external
agencies’ compliance with an expungement order. Also, the court’s case management system
will require much reprogramming to retain information required for such monitoring and record
keeping; or, a new information system will have to be developed to track such monitoring. As a
practical matter, only the DPS has any leverage with local law enforcement agencies since it
provides law enforcement agencies with criminal history services including rap sheets, domestic
violence order of protection information and missing person information. In contrast, the courts
provide no services to law enforcement.
The other responding agencies did not provide any information relating to fiscal impacts
SIGNIFICANT ISSUES
The AOC provided the following:
While it is the responsibility of a judge to order an expungement, the courts are not the official
keeper of criminal history records in New Mexico or in any state, for that matter. The records
kept by a court may include arrest and disposition information but the courts do not verify
offender identification information or any of the other functions of law enforcement that are
required to create and maintain a criminal history record repository. The official criminal history
repository in New Mexico is maintained by DPS and only DPS can request expungement of
records from federal criminal history repositories maintained by the Federal Bureau of
Investigation (FBI) and the National Crime Identification Center (NCIC).
Since the act requires that the FBI remove a notation of an arrest placed on person’s record and
to destroy or otherwise remove all records of the proceeding, DPS should be made the
responsible entity since only they can submit the proper forms and required documentation under
current federal rules (please note that the FBI and the NCIC interprets expungement not to mean
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Senate Bill 599/aSPAC – Page
3
that information is physically destroyed but that the information is not available through
routinely available access methods). In fact, federal justice entities will not accept
communications requesting expungement of criminal records from any court and will only
accept such communications from the agency in each state that maintains the official criminal
history repository.
The act requires that courts monitor other agencies’ compliance with the order to expunge with
specific deadlines identified within which the other agencies must report compliance. Among
the entities in New Mexico that maintain some piece of a person’s criminal history are the
following:
1. Local police agencies or other agencies with arrest powers.
2. Local sheriff departments and jails
3. The department of public safety
4. The administrative office of the district attorneys
5. The department of corrections
6. Tribal police and prosecutors
Courts have no capabilities to provide such a level of compliance monitoring; however, DPS has
a statewide criminal history network that includes all law enforcement entities. DPS could make
requests for local state agency record expungements and monitor expungement compliance
through use of this network. This network meets stringent federal security standards and is
regularly audited by the NCIC. According to federal regulations, the courts, as a non-law
enforcement entity, cannot be a participant on this network.
The act appears to require the courts to conduct background checks to ensure that a person
requesting expungement meets eligibility requirements of Act. As keeper of official criminal
history records DPS should perform this background check. Moreover, the courts are not
sufficiently staffed to conduct background investigations to prove such eligibility as required by
the Act.
The final significant issue is that “identity theft" is not defined in the bill. Identity theft as a
crime category is relatively new and the specific crimes in this category have yet to be
universally agreed upon. A complicating factor is the recent tendency to classify an individual as
a victim of identity theft if any data regarding that individual was misplaced, lost, stolen or even
unintentionally discarded without first rendered unreadable. The class of “victim" belonging to
this class of identity theft is very large and some estimates have most residents of the United
States as belonging to the class. As such, a very restrictive definition of identity theft is required
for this bill.
PED provided the following:
Because the bill refers to a “court of original jurisdiction," district courts, magistrate courts and
municipal courts will have authority to issue orders of expungement under the proposed Act.
There already is an expungement law at Section 30-31-2 of the Criminal Code that permits
expungement upon the completion of conditions imposed by a court upon an order of conditional
discharge for a first offense. The bill does not make a distinction for a first time offender.
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Senate Bill 599/aSPAC – Page
4
There is another avenue of expungment permitted under the DNA Identification Act [Chapter 29,
Article 16 NMSA 1978], which involves DNA samples given by persons arrested for covered
offenses.
There is another opportunity for a person to petition the DPS for expungement of arrest
information records found in Section 29-3-8.1. That section only permits expungement
following final disposition if the arrest was for a misdemeanor or petty misdemeanor, but nor for
a crime of moral turpitude.
The bill permits expungement for an accused referred to a pre-prosecutions diversion program.
Perhaps the expungement should be granted upon successful completion of such a program.
That will serve as more of an incentive.
ADMINISTRATIVE IMPLICATIONS
DPS has a concern about the immediate notification to the NCIC via the DPS Law Enforcement
Records Bureau (LERB) which serves as the state Criminal History Repository for all fingerprint
supported arrests. LERB also serves as the liaison with the FBI. There will also be a significant
increase of incoming expungements for processing and verification by the LERB.
The agencies named in the bill which include DPS, PED, CYFD, Human Services Department
and the courts will d be required to adopt procedures to respond to and comply with court orders
of expungement.
RELATIONSHIP
SB 599 relates
to several existing expungement laws discussed in Significant Issues.
TECHNICAL ISSUES
The AOC provided the following:
Page 2, line 4 after “remove" add “from public access the court records that
contain any reference to or record of the proceeding" and delete “all records of the
proceeding."
Page 3, line 11 after “dismissal" add “, other that a dismissal pursuant to Section
31-20-9 NMSA 1978."
Page 3, line 17 after “sentence" add “, including paying all fines and fees owed to
the state, “
Page 4, line 4 delete the entire page and replace with the following: The
administrative office of the courts and the department of public safety shall
develop rules and procedures to implement the criminal expungement act
including procedures for notifying the accused of his rights under the act.
The SRCA notes the definition of "public records" contained in the bill appears to be in conflict
with the definitions set forth in the Public Records Act and the Inspection of Public Records Act.
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Senate Bill 599/aSPAC – Page
5
The definition in SB599 excludes certain confidential records. Confidential records are still
public records; they are, however, exempt from public disclosure for the duration of their
confidential status.
The SRCA suggests that the definition of public records be amended so that it better conforms
with existing definitions and does not exclude the confidential material referenced in Paragraphs
(1) and (2) of Subsection F of Section 2 but rather recognizes it as exempt from disclosure.
DW/csd