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Introduced Version House Bill 4338 History

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Key: Green = existing Code. Red = new code to be enacted


H. B. 4338


(By Delegates Manuel, Leach and Warner)

[Introduced January 31, 2002 ; referred to the

Committee on Finance.]





A BILL to amend and reenact sections three-a and three-b, article one, chapter twenty-five of the code of West Virginia, one thousand nine hundred thirty-one, as amended, all relating to funds held by the division of corrections for the benefits of inmates; removing the ten percent holding of inmate funds requirement for inmates the warden determines are likely to serve the remainder of their natural lives in prison due to their age and the length of their sentences; and allowing inmate benefit funds to be used for expenses related to the inmate telephone system.

Be it enacted by the Legislature of West Virginia:
That sections three-a and three-b, article one, chapter twenty-five of the code of West Virginia, one thousand nine hundred thirty-one, as amended, be amended and reenacted, all to read as follows:
ARTICLE 1. ORGANIZATION, INSTITUTIONS AND CORRECTIONS MANAGEMENT.
§25-1-3a. Trustee accounts and funds, earnings and personal property of inmates.

(a) The commissioner of corrections is authorized to establish at each institution under his or her jurisdiction a "trustee fund." The warden or administrator of each institution shall receive and take charge of the money and personal property, as defined by policy, of all inmates in his or her institution and all money or personal property, as defined by policy, sent to the inmates or earned by the inmates as compensation for work performed while they are domiciled there. The warden or administrator shall credit the money and earnings to the inmate entitled to it and shall keep an accurate account of all such the money and personal property so received, which account is subject to examination by the state commissioner of corrections. The warden or administrator shall deposit the moneys in one or more responsible banks in accounts to be designated a "trustee fund."
(b) For all inmates, except those serving life without mercy and those the warden determines are likely to serve the remainder of their natural lives in the custody of the division of corrections due to their age and the length of their sentences, the warden or administrator shall keep in an account at least ten percent of all money earned during the inmate's incarceration and pay same the money to the inmate at the time of the inmate's release.
(c) The commissioner of corrections may direct that offenders who work in community work programs, including work release inmates who have obtained employment, make reimbursement to the state towards the cost of his or her incarceration.
(d)(1) Prior to ordering an incarcerated offender to make reimbursement towards the costs of his or her incarceration, the commissioner, or his or her designee, shall consider the following:
(A) The offender's ability to pay;
(B) The nature and extent of the offender's responsibilities to his or her dependents, if any;
(C) The length of probable incarceration under the court's sentence; and
(D) The effect, if any, that reimbursement might have on the offender's rehabilitation.
(2) No order of reimbursement entered pursuant to this section may exceed five hundred dollars per month unless the offender gives his or her express consent.
(3) The commissioner of corrections shall, prior to the beginning of each fiscal year, prepare a report that details the average cost per inmate incurred by the division for the care and supervision of those individuals in his or her custody.
(e) The chief executive officer of any correctional institution, on request of an inmate, may expend up to one half of the money earned by the inmate on behalf of the family of the inmate if the ten percent mandatory savings has first been set aside and other fees owed by the inmate have been paid. The remainder of the money earned, after deducting amounts expended as authorized, shall be accumulated to the credit of the inmate and be paid to the inmate at times as may be prescribed by rules. The funds so accumulated on behalf of inmates shall be held by the chief executive officer of each institution, under a bond approved by the attorney general.
(f) The warden or administrator shall deliver to the inmate at the time he or she leaves the institution, or as soon as practicable thereafter after departure, all personal property, moneys and earnings then credited to the inmate, or in case of the death of the inmate before authorized release from the institution, the warden or administrator shall deliver the property to the inmate's personal representative. In case a conservator is appointed for the inmate while he or she is domiciled at the institution, the warden or administrator shall deliver to the conservator, upon proper demand, all moneys and personal property belonging to the inmate that are in the custody of the warden or administrator.
§25-1-3b. Inmate benefit funds.
(a) The commissioner of corrections shall establish an inmate benefit fund for each of the institutions under his or her jurisdiction. The inmate benefit fund is a fund held by the institutions for the benefit and welfare of inmates incarcerated in state correctional facilities and for the benefit of victims.
(b) There is hereby created a special revenue account in the state treasury for each inmate benefit fund established by the commissioner. Moneys received by an institution for deposit in an inmate benefit fund shall be deposited with the state treasurer to be credited to the special revenue account created for the institution's inmate benefit fund. Moneys in a special revenue account established for an inmate benefit fund may be expended by the institution for the purposes set forth in this section. Moneys to be deposited into an inmate benefit fund consist of:
(1) All profit from the exchange or commissary operation;
(2) All net proceeds from vending machines used for inmate visitation;
(3) All proceeds from contracted inmate telephone commissions;
(4) Any funds that may be assigned by inmates or donated to the institution by the general public or an inmate service organization on behalf of all inmates;
(5) Any funds confiscated considered contraband; and
(6) Any unexpended balances in individual inmate trustee funds if designated by the inmate upon his or her discharge from the institution.
(c) The inmate benefit fund may only be used for the following purposes at correctional facilities:
(1) Open-house visitation functions or other nonroutine inmate functions;
(2) Holiday functions which may include decorations and gifts for children of inmates;
(3) Cable television service;
(4) Rental of video cassettes;
(5) Payment of video license;
(6) Recreational supplies, equipment or area surfacing;
(7) Reimbursement of employee wages for overtime incurred during open house visitations and holiday functions;
(8) Postsecondary education classes;
(9) Reimbursement of a pro rata share of inmate work compensation;
(10) Household equipment and supplies in day rooms or units as approved by chief executive officers of institutions, excluding supplies used in the daily maintenance and sanitation of the unit;
(11) Christmas or other holidays gift certificates for each inmate to be used at the exchange or commissary;
(12) Any expense associated with the operation of the fund;
(13) Expenditures necessary to properly operate an automated inmate family and victim information notification system; and
(14) Any expense for improvement of the facility which will benefit the inmate population that is not otherwise funded; and
(15) Any expense related to the installation, operation and maintenance of the inmate telephone system.
(d) The institution shall compile a monthly report that specifically documents inmate benefit fund receipts and expenditures and a yearly report for the previous fiscal year by the first day of September of each year and submit the reports to the commissioner.



NOTE: The purpose of this bill is to address the authority of the Division of Corrections over funds it holds for the benefit of inmates. It removes the 10% holding of inmate funds requirement for inmates the warden determines are likely to serve the remainder of their natural lives in prison due to their age and the length of their sentences
and allows inmate benefit funds to be used for expenses related to the inmate telephone system.

Strike-throughs indicate language that would be stricken from the present law, and underscoring indicates new language that would be added.
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