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Developed and maintained by the Division of Legislative Automated Systems.
2007 SESSION
073230232Be it enacted by the General Assembly of Virginia:
1. That §§ 19.2-305.1, 19.2-305.2, 19.2-305.4, 19.2-349, 19.2-353.3, and 19.2-354 of the Code of Virginia are amended and reenacted as follows:
§ 19.2-305.1. Restitution for property damage or loss; community service.
A. Notwithstanding any other provision of law, no person
convicted of a crime in violation of any provision in Title 18.2, which
resulted in property damage or loss, shall be placed on probation or have his
sentence suspended unless such person shall make at least partial restitution
for such property damage or loss, or shall be compelled to perform community services,
or both, or shall submit, at or before the time of sentencing, a
written plan for doing that,
which appears to the court to be feasible under the circumstances or consent to a plan offered by the court.
B. Notwithstanding any other provision of law, any person who,
on or after July 1, 1995, commits, and is convicted of, a crime in violation of
any provision in Title 18.2 shall make at least partial restitution for any
property damage or loss caused by the crime or for any past or expected
future medical expenses or past or expected
future expenses directly related to vocational or
rehabilitative physical therapy or funeral or burial incurred by
the victim or his estate as a result of the crime, may be compelled to perform
community services and, if the court so orders, shall submit a plan for
doing thator consent to the plan offered by the Commonwealth
which appears to be feasible to the court under the circumstances.
B1. Notwithstanding any other provision of law, any person, who on or after July 1, 2005 commits and is convicted of a crime in violation of § 18.2-248 involving the manufacture of any controlled substance, may be ordered, upon presentation of suitable evidence of such costs, by the court to reimburse the Commonwealth or the locality for the costs incurred by the jurisdiction, as the case may be, for the removal and remediation associated with the illegal manufacture of any controlled substance by the defendant.
C. At or before the time of sentencing, the court shall receive
and consider any plan for making restitution submitted by the defendantinquire
of the attorney for the Commonwealth, or the victim in district court cases
where the attorney for the Commonwealth is not present, whether any financial
loss subject to restitution arose from the offense. The attorney for the
Commonwealth, or the victim in district court cases where the attorney for the
Commonwealth is not present, shall advise whether restitution is being sought
and may present evidence of financial loss. In determining restitution, the
court shall consider the representations of the attorney for the Commonwealth,
or the victim in district court cases where the attorney for the Commonwealth
is not present, and information provided in the presentence investigation
report and victim impact statements and any other relevant evidence, including
but not limited to testimony, correspondence, invoices, bills, receipts,
cancelled checks, and estimates of future medical expenses. The attorney for
the Commonwealth, or the victim in district court cases where the attorney for
the Commonwealth is not present, shall provide the defendant with reasonable
prior notice of any request for restitution for losses not reasonably described
in the presentence report, the victim impact statement, testimony at trial or
preliminary hearing, or in police reports provided to the defendant prior to
sentencing. The court shall consider the request for restitution and determine
the amount of restitution without consideration of the defendant's ability to pay.
However, the court shall consider the defendant's ability to pay for the
purpose of determining an appropriate restitution payment plan. The court shall
hear arguments by the Commonwealth, or the victim in district court cases where
the attorney for the Commonwealth is not present, and the defendant concerning
any dispute about the appropriate amount of restitution to be paid.
The payment plan shall include the
defendant's home address, place of employment and address, social security
number and bank information. If the court finds such plan to be reasonable and
practical under the circumstances, it may consider probation or suspension of
whatever portion of the sentence that it deems appropriate. By order of the
court incorporating the defendant's plan or a reasonable
and practical plan devised by the courttotal amount of
restitution ordered and the terms of the approved payment plan, if any,
the defendant shall begin to make restitution while he is
free on probation or work release or following his release from confinement.
Additionally, the court may order that the defendant begin to make
restitution during his confinement, if feasible, based upon both his earning
capacity and net worth as determined by the court at sentencing.
D. At the time of sentencing, the court shall determine and
specify the amount certain to
be repaid by the defendant and the terms and conditions thereof. If community
service work is ordered, the court shall determine the terms and conditions
upon which such work shall be performed. The court shall include such findings
in the judgment order, and all restitution and community service so
ordered shall be recorded by the clerk. The order shall specify
that sums paid under such order shall be paid to the clerkpayable
to the order of the clerk of the court, who shall disburse such
sums as the court may, by order, direct. Additionally, the
order shall specify that any payment plan entered into by the defendant that
becomes delinquent by more than 40 days shall be void and
the outstanding balance
immediately due and shall allow the Tax Commissioner to act in accordance with §
19.2-349 to collect any outstanding
judgment and such
outstanding balance. The court may require that fines,
costs, and restitution be combined into a single payment plan and that each
payment would be credited first to fines and costs and the remainder to
restitution. Any court desiring to
participateparticipating in the Setoff Debt
Collection Act (§§ 58.1-520 through 58.1-535) for the purpose of collecting
fines or costs or providing restitution shall, at the time of sentencing,
obtain the social security number of each defendant.
E. Unreasonable failure to execute the plan by the defendant shall result in revocation of the probation or imposition of the suspended sentence. A hearing shall be held in accordance with the provisions of this Code relating to revocation of probation or imposition of a suspended sentence before either such action is taken.
F. If restitution is ordered to be paid by the defendant to
the victim of a crime and the victim of the crime can
no longer be located or identified, the clerk shall deposit any such
restitution collected to the Criminal Injuries Compensation Fund for the
benefit of crime victims. The administrator shall reserve a sum sufficient in
the Fund from which he shall make prompt payment to the victim for any proper
claims. Before making the deposit he shall record the name, last known address
and amount of restitution due each victim appearing from the clerk's report to
be entitled to restitution.
G. An "agency receiving restitution payments" shall be defined as an agency that accepts restitution payments from the offender on behalf of the victim and issues a receipt noting the offender's compliance with the order of restitution or continuing compliance with the terms of the payment plan approved by the court. An agency receiving restitution payments prior to January 1, 2006, may continue to receive payments provided that the payments are payable to the order of the clerk of the court and the payments are forwarded to the clerk for deposit and recordation pursuant to subsection H of this section.
A "restitution monitoring agency" shall be defined as the agency that tracks the offender's compliance with the terms of the restitution order or payment plan approved by the court and that upon default by the offender may request the issuance of a show cause order or implement other punitive measures to force the offender's compliance with the restitution order. The clerk of the circuit or district court or other local agency, which was not monitoring prior to January 1, 2006, shall not be required to monitor compliance with the restitution, but the clerk shall, pursuant to subsection H of this section, be required to receive payments from offenders or any other agency receiving restitution payments.
H. The clerk shall record receipt of restitution payments in the Supreme Court's automated information system or another database compatible with the Supreme Court's automated information system.
§ 19.2-305.2. Amount of restitution; enforcement.
A. The court, when ordering restitution pursuant to §
19.2-305.1, may shall
require that such defendant, in the case of an offense resulting in damage to
or loss or destruction of property of a victim of the offense (i) return the
property to the owner or (ii) if return of the property is impractical or
impossible, pay an amount equal to the greater of the value of the property at
the time of the offense or the value of the property at the time of sentencing.
B. An order of restitution may shall
be docketed as provided in § 8.01-446 when so ordered by
the court or upon written request of the victim and
may be enforced by a victim named in the order to receive the restitution in
the same manner as a judgment in a civil action. If the clerk
receives a certificate of satisfaction or a
similar document verifying
that a judgment for restitution has been satisfied,
in whole or in part, the clerk shall comply with subsection
H of § 19.2-305.1.
§ 19.2-305.4. When interest to be paid on award of restitution.
The court, when ordering restitution pursuant to § 19.2-305 or
19.2-305.1, mayshall
provide in the order for interest on the restitution. If
the court orders the payment of interest, itInterest
shall accrue from the date of the loss or damage unless the court specifies a
different date in the order, at the rate specified in § 6.1-330.54.
§ 19.2-349. Responsibility for collections; clerks to report unsatisfied fines, etc.; duty of attorneys for Commonwealth; duties of Department of Taxation.
A. The clerk of the circuit court and district court of every
county and city shall submit to the judge of his court, the Department of
Taxation, the State Compensation Board and,
the attorney for the Commonwealth of his county or city, and any
restitution monitoring agency in his county or city a monthly
report of all fines, costs, forfeitures and penalties which are delinquent more
than 30 days, including court-ordered restitution of a sum certain, imposed in
his court for a violation of state law or a local ordinance which remain
unsatisfied, including those which are delinquent in installment payments. The
monthly report shall include the social security number or driver's license
number of the defendant, if known, and such other information as the Department
of Taxation and the Compensation Board deem appropriate. The Executive
Secretary shall make the report required by this subsection on behalf of those
clerks who participate in the Supreme Court's automated information system.
B. It shall be the duty of the attorney for the Commonwealth to cause proper proceedings to be instituted for the collection and satisfaction of all fines, costs, forfeitures, penalties and restitution. The attorney for the Commonwealth shall determine whether it would be impractical or uneconomical for such service to be rendered by the office of the attorney for the Commonwealth. If the defendant does not enter into an installment payment agreement under § 19.2-354, the attorney for the Commonwealth and the clerk may agree to a process by which collection activity may be commenced 15 days after judgment.
If the attorney for the Commonwealth does not undertake collection, he shall contract with (i) private attorneys or private collection agencies, (ii) enter into an agreement with a local governing body, (iii) enter into an agreement with the county or city treasurer, or (iv) use the services of the Department of Taxation, upon such terms and conditions as may be established by guidelines promulgated by the Office of the Attorney General, the Executive Secretary of the Supreme Court with the Department of Taxation and the Compensation Board. If the attorney for the Commonwealth undertakes collection, he shall follow the procedures established by the Department of Taxation and the Compensation Board. Such guidelines shall not supersede contracts between attorneys for the Commonwealth and private attorneys and collection agencies when active collection efforts are being undertaken.
The fees of any private attorneys or collection agencies shall be paid on a contingency fee basis out of the proceeds of the amounts collected. However, in no event shall such attorney or collection agency receive a fee for amounts collected by the Department of Taxation under the Setoff Debt Collection Act (§ 58.1-520 et seq.). Whenever the attorney for the Commonwealth uses the Department of Taxation or contracts with any private attorney or collection agency to collect delinquent court-ordered restitution, the fees of such entity or individual shall be paid by the defendant in addition to the court-ordered restitution in accordance with the procedures established by the Department of Taxation and the Compensation Board.
A local treasurer undertaking collection pursuant to an agreement with the attorney for the Commonwealth may collect the administrative fee authorized by § 58.1-3958.
C. The Department of Taxation and the State Compensation Board shall be responsible for the collection of any judgment which remains unsatisfied or does not meet the conditions of § 19.2-354. Persons owing such unsatisfied judgments or failing to comply with installment payment agreements under § 19.2-354 shall be subject to the delinquent tax collection provisions of Title 58.1. The Department of Taxation and the State Compensation Board shall establish procedures to be followed by clerks of courts, attorneys for the Commonwealth, other state agencies and any private attorneys or collection agents and may employ private attorneys or collection agencies, or engage other state agencies to collect the judgment. The State Compensation Board shall consider duties related to the collection, recording, and disbursement of restitution when determining appropriate staffing standards for clerks, their deputies, or their employees. The Department of Taxation and the Commonwealth shall be entitled to deduct a fee for services from amounts collected for violations of local ordinances.
The Department of Taxation and the State Compensation Board shall annually report to the Governor and the General Assembly the total of fines, costs, restitution, forfeitures and penalties assessed, collected, and unpaid and those which remain unsatisfied or do not meet the conditions of § 19.2-354 by each circuit and district court. The report shall include the procedures established by the Department of Taxation and the State Compensation Board pursuant to this section and a plan for increasing the collection of unpaid fines, costs, forfeitures and penalties. The Auditor of Public Accounts shall annually report to the Governor, the Executive Secretary of the Supreme Court and the General Assembly as to the adherence of clerks of courts, attorneys for the Commonwealth and other state agencies to the procedures established by the Department of Taxation and the State Compensation Board.
§ 19.2-353.3. Acceptance of checks and credit cards in lieu of money; additional fee.
Notwithstanding the provisions of § 19.2-353, personal checks payable
to the order of the clerk of court may be accepted and
credit cards shall be accepted in lieu of money to collect and secure all fees,
fines, restitution, forfeiture, penalties and costs collected for offenses
tried in a district court, including motor vehicle violations, committed
against the Commonwealth or against any county, city or town. Notwithstanding
the provisions of § 19.2-353, personal checks payable to the order
of the clerk of court shall may
be accepted in lieu of money to collect and secure all fees, fines,
restitution, forfeiture, penalties and costs collected for offenses tried in a
circuit court, including motor vehicle violations, committed against the
Commonwealth or against any county, city or town. The clerk of any circuit
court shall not be required to but may, in his discretion, accept credit card
payment in lieu of money to collect and secure all fees, including filing fees,
fines, restitution, forfeitures, penalties, and costs collected. The Committee
on District Courts shall devise a procedure for approving and accepting checks
and credit cards that shall be accepted by the district courts. Court personnel
shall not be held to be guarantors of the payment made in such manner and shall
not be personally liable for any sums uncollected. The clerk of the court, in
addition to any fees, fines, restitution, forfeiture, penalties or costs, may
add to such payment a sum not to exceed four percent of the amount paid as a
service charge for the acceptance of a credit card.
If a check is returned unpaid by the financial institution on which it is drawn or notice is received from the credit card issuer that payment will not be made, for any reason, the fees, fine, restitution, forfeiture, penalty or costs shall be treated as unpaid, and the court may pursue all available remedies to obtain payment. The clerk of the court to whom the dishonored check or credit card was tendered may impose a fee of twenty dollars or ten percent of the value of the payment, whichever is greater, in addition to the fine and costs already imposed.
The clerk of court may refuse acceptance of checks or credit
cards of an individual if (i) he has been convicted of a violation of Chapter 6
(§ 18.2-168 et seq.) of Title 18.2 in which a check, credit card, or credit
card information was used to commit the offense, (ii) he has previously
tendered to the court a check which was not ultimately honored or a credit card
or credit card information which did not ultimately result in payment by the
credit card issuer, (iii) authorization of payment is not given by the bank or
credit card issuer, or (iv) the validity of the check or
credit card cannot be verified, or (v) the payee
of the check is other than the court. If the clerk
receives a restitution payment made payable to the order of the victim, the
clerk shall have the authority, notwithstanding
other provisions of law, to endorse the
payment on behalf of the victim and
process the payment in the same manner as if it had been made payable
to the order of the clerk of court.
§ 19.2-354. Authority of court to order payment of fine, costs, forfeitures, penalties or restitution in installments or upon other terms and conditions; community work in lieu of payment.
A. Whenever (i) a defendant, convicted of a traffic infraction
or a violation of any criminal law of the Commonwealth or of any political
subdivision thereof, or found not innocent in the case of a juvenile, is
sentenced to pay a fine, restitution, forfeiture or penalty and (ii) the
defendant is unable to make payment of the fine, restitution, forfeiture, or penalty
and costs within fifteen days of sentencing, the court shall order the
defendant to pay such fine, restitution, forfeiture or penalty and any costs
which the defendant may be required to pay in deferred payments or
installments. The court may authorize the clerk to establish and approve the
conditions of all deferred or installment payment agreements, pursuant to
guidelines established by the court. Receipt of all
deferred or installment payments shall be recorded
by the clerk pursuant to subsection H of § 19.2-305.1. As a condition of every
such agreement, a defendant who enters into an installment or deferred payment
agreement shall promptly inform the court of any change of mailing address
during the term of the agreement. If the defendant is unable to make payment
within fifteen days of sentencing, the court may assess a one-time fee not to
exceed ten dollars to cover the costs of management of the defendant's account
until such account is paid in full. This one-time fee shall not apply to cases
in which costs are assessed pursuant to §§ 17.1-275.1, 17.1-275.2, 17.1-275.3,
17.1-275.4, 17.1-275.7, 17.1-275.8 or § 17.1-275.9. Pursuant
to the court order set forth in subsection D of § 19.2-305.1,
a payment plan delinquent by more than 40
days shall be void and the
outstanding balance immediately due unless the court determines that the
defendant satisfies the conditions provided in subsection C of this section. Installment
or deferred payment agreements shall include terms for payment if the defendant
participates in a program as provided in subsection B or C. The court, if such
sum or sums are not paid in full by the date ordered, shall proceed in
accordance with § 19.2-358.
B. When a person sentenced to the Department of Corrections or a local correctional facility owes any fines, costs, forfeitures, restitution or penalties, he shall be required as a condition of participating in any work release, home/electronic incarceration or nonconsecutive days program as set forth in §§ 53.1-60, 53.1-131, 53.1-131.1 or § 53.1-131.2 to either make full payment or make payments in accordance with his installment or deferred payment agreement while participating in such program. If, after the person has an installment or deferred payment agreement, the person fails to pay as ordered, his participation in the program may be terminated until all fines, costs, forfeitures, restitution and penalties are satisfied. The Director of the Department of Corrections and any sheriff or other administrative head of any local correctional facility shall withhold such ordered payments from any amounts due to such person. Distribution of the money collected shall be made in the following order of priority to:
1. Meet the obligation of any judicial or administrative order to provide support and such funds shall be disbursed according to the terms of such order;
2. Pay any fines, restitution or costs as ordered by the court;
3. Pay travel and other such expenses made necessary by his work release employment or participation in an education or rehabilitative program, including the sums specified in § 53.1-150; and
4. Defray the offender's keep.
The balance shall be credited to the offender's account or sent to his family in an amount the offender so chooses.
The Board of Corrections shall promulgate regulations governing the receipt of wages paid to persons participating in such programs, the withholding of payments and the disbursement of appropriate funds.
C. The court shall establish a program to provide an option to any person upon whom a fine and costs have been imposed to discharge all or part of the fine or costs by earning credits for the performance of community service work before or after imprisonment. The program shall specify the rate at which credits are earned and provide for the manner of applying earned credits against the fine or costs. The court shall have such other authority as is reasonably necessary for or incidental to carrying out this program.
D. When the court has authorized deferred payment or
installment payments, the clerk court
shall give notice to the defendant that upon his failure to pay as ordered he
may be fined or imprisoned pursuant to § 19.2-358 and his privilege to operate
a motor vehicle will be suspended pursuant to § 46.2-395.
E. The failure of the defendant to enter into a deferred payment or installment payment agreement with the court or the failure of the defendant to make payments as ordered by the agreement shall allow the Tax Commissioner to act in accordance with § 19.2-349 to collect all fines, costs, restitution, forfeitures and penalties.
2. That the clerk of a circuit or district court that was not an agency monitoring restitution in the local jurisdiction prior to January 1, 2007, pursuant to subsection G of § 19.2-305.1, shall not be required to monitor restitution.
3. That the provisions of this act shall become effective for any restitution ordered on or after July 1, 2008.