SEARCH SITE
VIRGINIA LAW PORTAL
- Code of Virginia
- Virginia Administrative Code
- Constitution of Virginia
- Charters
- Authorities
- Compacts
- Uncodified Acts
- RIS Users (account required)
SEARCHABLE DATABASES
- Bills & Resolutions
session legislation - Bill Summaries
session summaries - Reports to the General Assembly
House and Senate documents - Legislative Liaisons
State agency contacts
ACROSS SESSIONS
- Subject Index: Since 1995
- Bills & Resolutions: Since 1994
- Summaries: Since 1994
Developed and maintained by the Division of Legislative Automated Systems.
2019 SESSION
SB 1076 Criminal case; admissibility of prior inconsistent statements.
Introduced by: Janet D. Howell | all patrons ... notes | add to my profiles
SUMMARY AS INTRODUCED:
Admissibility of prior inconsistent statements in a criminal case. Provides that in all criminal cases, evidence of a prior statement that is inconsistent with testimony at the hearing or trial is admissible if the testifying witness is subject to cross-examination and the prior statement (i) was made by the witness under oath at a trial, hearing, or other proceeding or (ii) narrates, describes, or explains an event or condition of which the witness had personal knowledge and (a) the statement is proved to have been written or signed by the witness; (b) the witness acknowledges, under oath, the making of the statement in his testimony at the hearing or trial in which the admission into evidence of the prior statement is being sought; or (c) the statement is proved to have been accurately recorded by use of an audio recorder, a video/audio recorder, or any other similar electronic means of sound recording.
FULL TEXT
- 12/13/18 Senate: Prefiled and ordered printed; offered 01/09/19 19101472D pdf
- 01/23/19 Senate: Committee substitute printed to LIS only 19104790D-S1 pdf
HISTORY
- 12/13/18 Senate: Prefiled and ordered printed; offered 01/09/19 19101472D
- 12/13/18 Senate: Referred to Committee for Courts of Justice
- 01/23/19 Senate: Committee substitute printed to LIS only 19104790D-S1
- 01/23/19 Senate: Passed by indefinitely in Courts of Justice (12-Y 3-N)