H. B. 2226
(By Delegates Trump, Faircloth and Staton)
[Introduced February 22, 1993; referred to the
Committee on the Judiciary.]
A BILL to amend and reenact sections three and four, article two,
chapter sixty-one of the code of West Virginia, one thousand
nine hundred thirty-one, as amended; and to amend and
reenact section thirteen, article twelve, chapter sixty-two
of said code, all relating to crimes against the person;
increasing the penalty for murder of the second degree;
increasing the penalty for voluntary manslaughter; and
requiring that persons sentenced for life in prison serve
not less than fifteen years in confinement before becoming
eligible for parole.
Be it enacted by the Legislature of West Virginia:
That sections three and four, article two, chapter sixty-one
of the code of West Virginia, one thousand
nine hundred thirty-one, as amended, be amended and reenacted;
and that section thirteen, article twelve, chapter sixty-two of
said code be amended and reenacted, all to read as follows:
CHAPTER 61. CRIMES AND THEIR PUNISHMENT.
ARTICLE 2. CRIMES AGAINST THE PERSON.
§61-2-3. Penalty for murder of second degree.
Murder of the second degree shall be punished by confinement
in the penitentiary not less than five ten nor more than eighteen
twenty years.
§61-2-4. Voluntary manslaughter; penalty.
Voluntary manslaughter shall be punished by confinement in
the penitentiary not less than one two nor more than five ten
years.
CHAPTER 62. CRIMINAL PROCEDURE.
ARTICLE 12. PROBATION AND PAROLE.
§62-12-13. Powers and duties of board; eligibility for parole;
procedure for granting parole.
(a) The board of parole, whenever it is of the opinion that
the best interests of the state and of the prisoner will be
subserved thereby, and subject to the limitations hereinafter
provided, shall release any such prisoner on parole for such
terms and upon such conditions as are provided by this article.
Any prisoner of a penitentiary of this state, to be eligible for
parole:
(1)(A) Shall have served the minimum term of his or her
indeterminate sentence, or shall have served one fourth of his or
her definite term sentence, as the case may be, except that in no
case shall any person who committed, or attempted to commit a
felony with the use, presentment or brandishing of a firearm, be
eligible for parole prior to serving a minimum of three years of
his or her sentence or the maximum sentence imposed by the court,
whichever is less:
Provided,
That any person who committed, or
attempted to commit, any violation of section twelve, articletwo, chapter sixty-one of this code, with the use, presentment or
brandishing of a firearm, shall not be eligible for parole prior
to serving a minimum of five years of his or her sentence or one
third of his or her definite term sentence, whichever shall be
the greater. Nothing in this section shall apply to an accessory
before the fact or a principal in the second degree who has been
convicted as if he or she were a principal in the first degree
if, in the commission of or in the attempted commission of the
felony, only the principal in the first degree used, presented or
brandished a firearm. No person is ineligible for parole under
the provisions of this subdivision because of the commission or
attempted commission of a felony with the use, presentment or
brandishing of a firearm unless such fact is clearly stated and
included in the indictment or presentment by which such person
was charged and was either (i) found by the court at the time of
trial upon a plea of guilty or nolo contendere, or (ii) found by
the jury, upon submitting to such jury a special interrogatory
for such purpose if the matter was tried before a jury, or (iii)
found by the court, if the matter was tried by the court without
a jury.
For the purpose of this section, the term "firearm" shall
mean any instrument which will, or is designed to, or may readily
be converted to, expel a projectile by the action of an
explosive, gunpowder or any other similar means.
(B) The amendments to this subsection adopted in the year
one thousand nine hundred eighty-one:
(i) Shall apply to all applicable offenses occurring on or
after the first day of August of that year;
(ii) Shall apply with respect to the contents of any
indictment or presentment returned on or after the first day of
August of that year irrespective of when the offense occurred;
(iii) Shall apply with respect to the submission of a
special interrogatory to the jury and the finding to be made
thereon in any case submitted to such jury on or after the first
day of August of that year or to the requisite findings of the
court upon a plea of guilty or in any case tried without a jury:
Provided,
That the state shall give notice in writing of its
intent to seek such finding by the jury or court, as the case may
be, which notice shall state with particularity the grounds upon
which such finding shall be sought as fully as such grounds are
otherwise required to be stated in an indictment, unless the
grounds therefor are alleged in the indictment or presentment
upon which the matter is being tried;
(iv) Shall not apply with respect to cases not affected by
such amendment and in such cases the prior provisions of this
section shall apply and be construed without reference to such
amendment.
Insofar as such amendments relate to mandatory sentences
restricting the eligibility for parole, all such matters
requiring such sentence shall be proved beyond a reasonable doubt
in all cases tried by the jury or the court.
(2) Shall not be under punishment or in solitary confinement
for any infraction of prison rules;
(3) Shall have maintained a record of good conduct in prison
for a period of at least three months immediately preceding the
date of his or her release on parole;
(4) Shall have submitted to the board a written parole
release plan setting forth proposed plans for his or her place of
residence, employment and, if appropriate, his or her plans
regarding education and postrelease counseling and treatment,
said parole release plan having been approved by the commissioner
of corrections or his or her authorized representative;
(5) Shall have satisfied the board that if released on
parole he or she will not constitute a danger to the community.
Except in the case of one serving a life sentence, and no
person who has been previously twice convicted of a felony may be
released on parole until he or she has served the minimum term
provided by law for the crime for which he or she was convicted.
No person sentenced for life may be paroled until he or she has
served ten fifteen years, and no person sentenced for life who
has been previously twice convicted of a felony may be paroled
until he or she has served fifteen years. In the case of a
person sentenced to any penal institution of this state, it shall
be the duty of the board, as soon as such person becomes
eligible, to consider the advisability of his or her release on
parole. If, upon such consideration, parole be denied, the board
shall at least once a year reconsider and review the case of
every prisoner so eligible, which reconsideration and review
shall be by the entire board. If parole be denied, the prisoner
shall be promptly notified.
(b) In the case of any person sentenced to or confined under
sentence in any city or county jail in this state, the board
shall act only upon written application for parole. If such jail
prisoner is under sentence on a felony conviction, the provisionshereof relating to penitentiary prisoners shall apply to and
control his or her release on parole. If such person is serving
time on a misdemeanor conviction, he or she is eligible for
parole consideration, upon receipt of his or her written parole
application and after time for probation release by the
sentencing court or judge has expired.
(c) The board shall, with the approval of the governor,
adopt rules and regulations governing the procedure in the
granting of parole. No provision of this article and none of the
rules and regulations adopted hereunder are intended or shall be
construed to contravene, limit or otherwise interfere with or
affect the authority of the governor to grant pardons and
reprieves, commute sentences, remit fines or otherwise exercise
his or her constitutional powers of executive clemency.
The board shall be charged with the duty of supervising all
probationers and parolees whose supervision may have been
undertaken by this state by reason of any interstate compact
entered into pursuant to the uniform act for out-of-state parolee
supervision.
(d) When considering a penitentiary prisoner for release on
parole, the board of parole shall have before it an authentic
copy of or report on the prisoner's current criminal record as
provided through the department of public safety of West
Virginia, the United States department of justice or other
reliable criminal information sources and written reports of the
warden or superintendent of the penitentiary, as the case may be,
to which such prisoner is sentenced:
(1) On the prisoner's conduct record while in prison,including a detailed statement showing any and all infractions of
prison rules by the prisoner and the nature and extent of
discipline and punishment administered therefor;
(2) On improvement or other changes noted in the prisoner's
mental and moral condition while in prison, including a statement
expressive of the prisoner's current attitude toward society in
general, toward the judge who sentenced him or her, toward the
prosecuting attorney who prosecuted him or her, toward the
policeman or other officer who arrested the prisoner and toward
the crime for which he or she is under sentence and his or her
previous criminal record;
(3) On the prisoner's industrial record while in prison,
showing the nature of his or her prison work or occupation and
the average number of hours per day he or she has been employed
in prison industry and recommending the nature and kinds of
employment which he or she is best fitted to perform and in which
the prisoner is most likely to succeed when he or she leaves
prison;
(4) On physical, mental and psychiatric examinations of the
prisoner conducted, insofar as practicable, within the two months
next preceding parole consideration by the board.
The board may waive the requirement of any such report when
not available or not applicable as to any prisoner considered for
parole but, in every such case, shall enter in the record thereof
its reason for such waiver:
Provided,
That in the case of a
prisoner who is incarcerated because such prisoner has been found
guilty of, or has pleaded guilty to a felony under the provisions
of section twelve, article eight, chapter sixty-one of this codeor under the provisions of article eight-b or eight-c of chapter
sixty-one, the board may not waive the report required by this
subsection and the report shall include a study and diagnosis
which shall include an on-going treatment plan requiring active
participation in sexual abuse counseling at an approved mental
health facility or through some other approved program:
Provided, however,
That nothing disclosed by the person during
such study or diagnosis shall be made available to any law-
enforcement agency, or other party without that person's consent,
or admissible in any court of this state, unless such information
disclosed shall indicate the intention or plans of the parolee to
do harm to any person, animal, institution, or to property.
Progress reports of outpatient treatment shall be made at least
every six months to the parole officer supervising such person.
In addition, in such cases, the parole board shall inform the
prosecuting attorney of the county in which the person was
convicted of the parole hearing and shall request that the
prosecuting attorney inform the parole board of the circumstances
surrounding a conviction or plea of guilty, plea bargaining and
other background information that might be useful in its
deliberations. The board shall also notify the victim, or the
parents or guardian of the victim if the victim is still a minor,
of the person being considered for parole in such a case.
Before releasing any penitentiary prisoner on parole, the
board of parole shall arrange for the prisoner to appear in
person before the board and the board may examine and interrogate
him or her on any matters pertaining to his or her parole,
including reports before the board made pursuant to theprovisions hereof. The board shall reach its own written
conclusions as to the desirability of releasing such prisoner on
parole. The warden or superintendent shall furnish all necessary
assistance and cooperate to the fullest extent with the board of
parole. All information, records and reports received by the
board shall be kept on permanent file.
The board and its designated agents shall at all times have
access to inmates imprisoned in any penal or correctional
institutions of this state or in any city or county jail in this
state, and shall have the power to obtain any information or aid
necessary to the performance of their duties from other
departments and agencies of the state or from any political
subdivision thereof.
The board shall, if so requested by the governor,
investigate and consider all applications for pardon, reprieve or
commutation and shall make recommendation thereon to the
governor.
Prior to making such recommendation and prior to releasing
any penitentiary person on parole, the board shall notify the
sentencing judge and prosecuting attorney at least ten days
before such recommendation or parole. Any person released on
parole shall participate as a condition of parole in the litter
control program of the county to the extent directed by the
board, unless the board specifically finds that this alternative
service would be inappropriate.
NOTE: The purpose of this bill is to increase the penalties
for murder of the second degree and for voluntary manslaughter.
The bill also requires that persons sentenced for life in prison
serve not less than fifteen years in confinement before becomingeligible for parole.
JUDICIARY COMMITTEE AMENDMENT
On page five, section thirteen, line twenty-five, by
striking out the word "fifteen" and inserting in lieu thereof the
word "twenty".