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.
2005 SESSION
HB 1618 Telephone or telegraph communications; interfering with emergency use thereof, penalty.
Introduced by: William R. Janis | all patrons ... notes | add to my profiles
SUMMARY AS PASSED HOUSE: (all summaries)
Interfering with emergency use of telephone; penalty. Provides that if a person maliciously interrupts telephone communication with the intent to prevent another person from summoning emergency assistance, he is guilty of a Class 1 misdemeanor.
FULL TEXT
- 12/16/04 House: Prefiled & ordered printed; offered 01/12/05 054380348 pdf | impact statement
- 01/18/05 House: Committee substitute printed 055457348-H1 pdf | impact statement
HISTORY
- 12/16/04 House: Prefiled & ordered printed; offered 01/12/05 054380348
- 12/16/04 House: Referred to Committee for Courts of Justice
- 01/14/05 House: Assigned to C. J. sub-committee: Criminal Law
- 01/17/05 House: Reported from C. J. with substitute (19-Y 1-N)
- 01/18/05 House: Committee substitute printed 055457348-H1
- 01/19/05 House: Read first time
- 01/20/05 House: Read second time
- 01/20/05 House: Committee substitute agreed to 055457348-H1
- 01/20/05 House: Engrossed by House - committee substitute HB1618H1
- 01/21/05 House: Read third time and passed House (95-Y 1-N)
- 01/21/05 House: VOTE: PASSAGE (95-Y 1-N)
- 01/21/05 House: Communicated to Senate
- 01/24/05 Senate: Constitutional reading dispensed
- 01/24/05 Senate: Referred to Committee for Courts of Justice
- 02/21/05 Senate: Left in Courts of Justice