Editors’ note: CCRC recently released its report on 2019 criminal record reforms, which recognized New Jersey as the “Reintegration Champion” of 2019, for having the most consequential legislative record of any state in the past year. The following comment describes New Jersey’s laws enacted in 2019. New Jersey’s various restoration of rights laws are further described in the state’s profile in the CCRC Restoration of Rights Project. In December 2019, Governor Phil Murphy signed into law S4154, now L.2019, c.269, as part of his Second Chance Agenda. The law is a strong step towards criminal justice reform, and places New Jersey on the map as a leader in expungement policy. Along with easing access to the existing expungement process, it creates a new “clean slate” system that provides for expungement of all but the most serious violent offenses after ten years. It additionally sets in motion a process aiming to automate all clean slate expungements. The substantive provisions of the law are set to go into effect on June 15, 2020, and we anticipate a large increase in expungements following its implementation.
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Report Card: Grading states on 2019 record reforms
The following is an excerpt from our recent annual report on legislative reforms, Pathways to Reintegration: Criminal Record Reforms in 2019. Report Card For the first time this year we have prepared a “Report Card” on how state legislatures performed in 2019 in advancing the goals of reintegration. We have not covered all states, only those we thought most and least productive. We hope this new feature of our annual reports will provide an incentive to legislatures across the nation, and a tool for legislative advocates. New Jersey gets the top mark as Reintegration Champion of 2019 for the most consequential legislative record of any state last year. In this inaugural year, New Jersey gets the top mark as Reintegration Champion of 2019 for the most consequential legislative record of any state last year. New Jersey’s “Clean Slate” law authorized an automated record-clearing process for many thousands of misdemeanor and felony convictions going back decades, and extended eligibility and improved procedures for petition-based discretionary expungement relief. New Jersey enacted two other important laws promoting reintegration. One limited felony disenfranchisement to people in prison, immediately restoring the vote to about 80,000 people still completing their sentences in the community. Unlike the […]
Read moreCCRC reports on criminal record reforms in 2019
We are pleased to publish our annual report on criminal record reforms enacted during the past calendar year. This is the fourth in a series of reports since 2016 on new laws aimed at avoiding or mitigating the collateral consequences of arrest and conviction. This year we have included for the first time a Report Card grading the progress of the most (and least) productive state legislatures in 2019. The press release accompanying the report is reprinted below: Report finds record-breaking number of criminal record reforms enacted in 2019 February 17, 2020 Washington, D.C. — The Collateral Consequences Resource Center (CCRC) has released a new report documenting the astonishing number of laws passed in 2019 aimed at promoting reintegration for individuals with a criminal record. Last year, 43 states, the District of Columbia, and the federal government enacted an extraordinary 153 laws to provide criminal record relief or to alleviate the collateral consequences of arrest and conviction, consequences that may otherwise last a lifetime and frequently have little or no public safety rationale. The year 2019 was the most productive legislative year since a wave of “fair chance” reforms began in 2013, a period CCRC has documented in a series of legislative reports (2013-2016, 2017, and 2018). CCRC’s 2019 report, titled “Pathways to Reintegration: Criminal […]
Read moreNew 2019 laws on immigration consequences and driver’s license suspension
This is the fifth and final comment on new 2019 laws restoring rights or delivering record relief. The laws included cover immigration consequences, driver’s licenses, pardon procedures, and several miscellaneous topics. The full report on 2019 laws is available here. Immigration consequences In 2019, four states took steps enabling non-citizens charged with offenses to avoid deportation based on sentence or guilty plea. Colorado, New York, and Utah capped prison sentences for misdemeanors at 364 days, to avoid mandatory deportation based on a one-year prison sentence, with the first two states giving the law retroactive effect. New York also restricted the dissemination of certain criminal record information to federal immigration authorities. Oregon revised its law on deferred judgments to prohibit guilty pleas that would trigger deportability. Oregon also, along with Nevada, regulated the questioning of criminal defendants or detained individuals about their immigration status. Colorado passed three laws aimed at mitigating the immigration consequences of conviction. The first two relate to mandatory deportation for state misdemeanors carrying a potential one-year sentence. See 8 U.S.C. § 1227(a)(2). To avoid this consequence, Colorado reduced the maximum jail sentence for various offenses from one year to 364 days. (HB 1148; HB 1263). Colorado also […]
Read moreUpdated report on 2018 fair chance and expungement reforms
On January 10, 2019, we released a report documenting the extraordinary number of laws passed in 2018 aimed at reducing barriers to successful reintegration for individuals with a criminal record. Since that time, we discovered five additional laws enacted in 2018 (in AL, PA, OR, MO, and the U.S. Virgin Islands), and have updated our report accordingly. In 2018, 32 states, the District of Columbia, and the U.S. Virgin Islands enacted at least 61 new laws aimed at avoiding or mitigating the collateral consequences of arrest and conviction, consequences that may otherwise last a lifetime. The CCRC report analyzes last year’s lawmaking and summarizes all 61 new authorities, which include 57 statutes, 3 executive orders, and one ballot initiative. Last year saw the most productive legislative year since a wave of “fair chance” reforms began in 2013. CCRC documented these earlier developments in reports on the 2013-2016 reforms and 2017 reforms. In the period 2012–2018, every state legislature has in some way addressed the problem of reintegration. Congress has not enacted any laws dealing with the problems presented by collateral consequences for more than a decade. The state laws enacted in 2018 aim to break down legal and other barriers to success in the […]
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