
H. B. 4385
(By Delegates Marshall, Fleischauer, Houston,
C. White, Modesitt, Johnson and Compton)
[Introduced February 3, 2000; referred to the
Committee on Government Organization then Finance.]
A BILL to amend chapter thirty of the code of West Virginia, one
thousand nine hundred thirty-one, as amended, by adding
thereto a new article, designated article thirty-eight,
relating to providing for the licensure and regulation of
bail-enforcement agents; creating a misdemeanor offense for
violating provisions of article; and establishing criminal
penalties and civil cause of action.
Be it enacted by the Legislature of West Virginia:
That chapter thirty of the code of West Virginia, one
thousand nine hundred thirty-one, as amended, be amended by
adding thereto a new article, designated article thirty-eight, to
read as follows:
ARTICLE 38. LICENSURE AND REGULATION OF BAIL-ENFORCEMENT AGENTS.
§30-38-1. Definitions.
For the purposes of this article, except where the context
clearly requires otherwise, the following terms shall have the meanings ascribed to them:
(1) "Applicant" means a person who files a completed
application with the office of the secretary of state as required
in sections two and three of this article for licensure to act as
a bail-enforcement agent in the state of West Virginia;
(2) "Bail enforcement" means engaging in the apprehension
and return of a suspect who is released on bail and who has
failed to appear at any stage of a criminal proceeding;
(3) "Bail-enforcement agent" means any person who, on behalf
of a bail bond holder or surety agent, engages in the
apprehension and return of persons who are released on bail and
who have failed to appear at any stage of the proceeding as
directed by a court with jurisdiction over the person or who are
released on bail and have had their bail revoked;
(4) "Licensed bail-enforcement agent" means any person who
is licensed as a bail-enforcement agent by the secretary of
state;
(5) "Person" means a natural person; and

(6) "Secretary" shall mean the secretary of state.
§30-38-2. Eligibility requirements for persons seeking licensure
as a bail-enforcement agent; exceptions.
(a) In order to be eligible to be licensed as a
bail-enforcement agent, an applicant shall:
(1) Be at least eighteen years of age;
(2) Have maintained a residence in this state for more than
one year immediately preceding the date of application;
(3) Not have been convicted in any jurisdiction of any
felony, crime involving moral turpitude or illegal use or
possession of a dangerous weapon for any of which a full pardon
or similar relief has not been granted under the laws of the
United States, the state of West Virginia or any state or
country;
(4) Not have been declared by any court of competent
jurisdiction incompetent by reason of mental defect or disease
which has not been restored;
(5) Not suffer from habitual drunkenness or from controlled
substance addiction or dependence;
(6) Have a minimum of one year of education or training in
any one of the following areas or some combination thereof:
(A) Courses or training relevant to the criminal justice
system at an accredited college or university;
(B) Employment as a member of any United States government
investigative agency, employment as a member of a state or local
law-enforcement agency or service as a sheriff;
(C) Employment in the field of bail bond enforcement for a
period of at least one year; or
(D) Any other substantially equivalent training or
experience;
(7) Present satisfactory evidence that the applicant has, if
he or she carries a firearm in the performance of his or her
duties as a bail-enforcement agent, completed a training course
in firing and handling a handgun. The successful completion of
any of the following courses fulfills this training requirement:
(A) Any national rifle association handgun safety course;
(B) Any handgun safety or training course or class available
to the general public offered by an official law-enforcement
organization, community college, junior college, college or
private or public institution or organization or handgun training
school using instructors duly certified by the institution;
(C) Any handgun training or safety course or class conducted
by a handgun instructor certified as such by the state or by the
national rifle association; or
(D) Any handgun training or safety course or class conducted
by any branch of the United States military, reserve or national
guard.
(b) The provisions of this article for obtaining licensure
as a bail-enforcement agent do not apply to any person who has
been approved by a circuit court of this state to act as a bail
bondsman for at least two years prior to the effective date of
this article.
(c) No person convicted of a crime involving
domestic violence may be licensed as a bail-enforcement agent.
§30-38-3. Application requirements for a license to act as a
licensed bail-enforcement agent.
(a) To be licensed as a bail-enforcement agent, each
applicant shall complete and file a written application, under
oath, with the secretary of state and in a form as the secretary
may prescribe.
(b) On the application each applicant shall provide the
following information: The applicant's name, birth date,
citizenship, physical description, military service, criminal
history, current residence, residences for the preceding ten
years and any other information requested by the secretary of
state in order to comply with the requirements of this article.
(c) The applicant shall provide:
(1) Information in the application about whether the
applicant has ever been arrested for or convicted of any crime or
wrong, either done or threatened, against the government of the
United States;
(2) Information about offenses against the laws of West
Virginia or any state; and
(3) Any facts as may be required by the secretary to
determine the good character, competency and integrity of the
applicant.
(d) As part of the application, each applicant shall give
the secretary of state permission to review the records held by the West Virginia state police for any convictions that may be on
record for the applicant.
(e) For each applicant for a license, the application shall
be accompanied by two recent full-face photographs and one
complete set of the person's fingerprints which shall be
certified by a law-enforcement officer of this state.
(f) For each applicant, the application shall be accompanied
by:
(1) Character references from at least five reputable
citizens. Each reference must have known the applicant for at
least five years preceding the application. No reference may be
connected to the applicant by blood or marriage. All references
must have been written for the purpose of the application for a
license to conduct the bail-enforcement business; and
(2) A nonrefundable application processing service charge of
fifty dollars, which shall be payable to the secretary of state
to offset the cost of license review and criminal investigation
background report from the West Virginia state police, along with
a license fee of one hundred dollars. The license fee shall be
deposited to the general revenue fund and shall be refunded only
if the license is denied. This license shall be renewable on a
yearly basis.
(g) All applicants for bail-enforcement agent licenses shall
file in the office of secretary of state a surety bond. The bond shall:
(1) Be in the sum of fifty thousand dollars and conditioned
upon the faithful and honest conduct of the business by the
applicant;
(2) Be written by a company recognized and approved by the
insurance commissioner of West Virginia and approved by the
attorney general of West Virginia with respect to its form; and
(3) Be in favor of the state of West Virginia for any person
who is damaged by any violation of this article. The bond must
also be in favor of any person damaged by such a violation.
(h) Any person claiming against the bond required by
subsection (g) of this section for a violation of this article
may maintain an action at law against any licensed
bail-enforcement agent and against the surety. The surety shall
be liable only for damages awarded under section ten of this
article and not the punitive damages permitted under that
section. The aggregate liability of the surety to all persons
damaged by a person under this article may not exceed the amount
of the bond.
§30-38-4. Temporary license for interstate bail enforcement.
(a) Persons from states other than West Virginia seeking to
act as bail-enforcement agents within the state may do so
provided that the applicant for the temporary license has a
background substantially similar to that which is required to become licensed in the state of West Virginia and is approved by
the secretary of state. Applicants for temporary licensure shall
be subject to the same application process, fees and surety bond
promulgated by section three of this article. Applicants for
temporary licenses must post a standing surety bond in the sum of
fifty thousand dollars with the secretary of state which is
subject to the same rules as the surety bond required by
subsection (g), section three of this article.
(b) A license granted under the provisions of this section
shall be in effect for thirty days from the date the certificate
of license is issued and may be renewed for a period of thirty
days by the secretary of state upon application, in a form as the
secretary may prescribe, and upon payment of the fee and the
filing of the surety bond. At the time of applying for renewal
of a license, the secretary of state may require any person to
provide additional information to reflect any changes in the
original application or any previous renewal.
§30-38-5. Pursuit and apprehension; notification of sheriff or
state police required; entry of private home
prohibited.
(a) Except as otherwise provided in this section, no less
than eight hours before engaging in the apprehension and return
of a suspect who is released on bail and who has failed to appear
at any stage of the proceedings to answer the charge before the court in which he or she may be prosecuted, a bail-enforcement
agent shall notify the sheriff of the county in which the agent
will be apprehending said suspect of the date, time and place of
intended apprehension.
(b) The notice requirement in subsection (a) of this section
is not required of a bail-enforcement agent who discovers the
whereabouts of a suspect within the state and takes up immediate
pursuit of the suspect in order to avoid flight of the suspect,
if the agent, as soon as practicable, by telephone, radio or
other means, gives notice of the immediate and continuing pursuit
and intended apprehension to the sheriff of the county or the
state police headquarters in the county in which the pursuit
begins and in any county into which the pursuit continues.
(c) The notice requirement in subsection (a) of this section
is not required of a bail-enforcement agent who enters the state
in immediate pursuit of a suspect released on bail, and who as
soon as practicable after entering the state, gives notice by
telephone, radio or other means, of the continuing pursuit and
intended apprehension to the sheriff of the county or the state
police headquarters in the county in which the pursuit begins and
in any county into which the pursuit continues.
(d) Notice to the law-enforcement offices shall include the
offense for which the suspect is to be returned, and any other
criminal history of the suspect known to the agent.
(e) Under no circumstances may a bail-enforcement agent
apprehend a suspect released on bail until the agent has notified
the sheriff or state police headquarters in the county in which
the apprehension is to occur.
(f) Without the presence and cooperation of a
law-enforcement officer, a bail-enforcement agent may not enter
a private residence to pursue or apprehend a suspect, without
prior invitation of a resident.
§30-38-6. Prohibitions.
(a) No person may engage in the bail-enforcement business
without having first obtained from the secretary of state a
license to conduct the business.
(b) All licensed persons are prohibited from transferring
their licenses to an unlicensed person. This prohibition
includes contracting or subcontracting with an unlicensed person
to conduct the bail-enforcement business.
(c) It is unlawful for any person subject to the provisions
of this article to knowingly commit any of the following:
(1) Employ any individual to perform the duties of a
bail-enforcement agent who has not first complied with all
provisions of this article and the rules promulgated by the
secretary;
(2) Falsely represent that a person is the holder of a valid
license;
(3) Make a false report with respect to any matter with
which he or she is employed; or
(4) Authorize or permit another person to violate any
provision of this article or any rule of the secretary of state
adopted for this article.
(d) A firm, a partnership, an association, a limited
liability company or a corporation may not be licensed as a
bail-enforcement agent.
§30-38-7. Authority of secretary of state.
(a) When the secretary of state is satisfied as to the good
character, competency and integrity of an applicant, he or she
shall issue and deliver to the applicant a certificate of
license. Each license issued is for a period of one year and is
revocable at all times for cause shown pursuant to subsection (b)
of this section or any rules promulgated pursuant thereto.
(b) The secretary of state shall propose for promulgation in
accordance with the provisions of chapter twenty-nine-a of this
code legislative rules as may be necessary for the administration
and enforcement of this article and for the issuance, suspension
and revocation of licenses issued under the provisions of this
article. The secretary of state shall afford any applicant an
opportunity to be heard in person or by counsel when a
determination is made to deny, revoke or suspend any applicant's
license or application for license, including a renewal of a license. The applicant has fifteen days from the date of
receiving written notice of the secretary's adverse determination
to request a hearing on the matter of denial, suspension or
revocation: Provided, That the secretary may, forthwith, suspend
a licensee's license upon a finding that a licensee has acted in
his or her capacity as a bail-enforcement agent in violation of
the criminal laws of this state or in a manner which endangers
public health or safety. The action of the secretary of state in
granting, renewing or in refusing to grant or to renew a license,
is subject to review by the circuit court of Kanawha County or
other court of competent jurisdiction.
(c) At any hearing before the secretary of state to
challenge an adverse determination by the secretary of state on
the matter of a denial, suspension or revocation of a license, if
the adverse determination is based upon a conviction for a crime
which would bar licensure under the provisions of this article,
the hearing shall be an identity hearing only and the sole issue
which may be contested is whether the person whose application is
denied or whose license is suspended or revoked is the same
person convicted of the crime.
§30-38-8. Renewal of license.
A license granted under the provisions of this article shall
be in effect for one year from the date the certificate of
license is issued and may be renewed for a period of one year by the secretary of state upon application, in the form as the
secretary may prescribe, and upon payment of the fee and the
filing of the surety bond. At the time of applying for renewal
of a license, the secretary of state may require any person to
provide additional information to reflect any changes in the
original application or any previous renewal.
§30-38-9. Penalties.
(a) Any person, licensed or unlicensed, who violates any of
the provisions of this article is guilty of a misdemeanor and,
upon conviction, shall be fined not less than five hundred
dollars nor more than five thousand dollars or be confined in
jail for not more than one year, or both.
(b) In the case of a violation of subsection (a), section
six of this article, a fine shall be assessed for each day that
an individual conducted the bail-enforcement business.
§30-38-10. Action for damages.
Any individual who is injured or suffers property damage by
a violation of this article may bring an action for recovery of
damages, including punitive damages plus reasonable attorney's
fees and court costs.
§30-38-11. Disposition of fees.
All fees collected hereunder by the secretary of state shall
be paid to the state treasurer and deposited in the general
revenue fund, except the fifty-dollar application fee, which shall be deposited with the office of the secretary of state.
NOTE: The purpose of this bill is to require
bail-enforcement agents to be licensed by the state, and to
regulate the practice of bail enforcement. Bail-enforcement
agents would be required to notify law-enforcement officers of
pursuit and intended apprehension of a suspect. The bill would
provide for criminal penalties for violations of the article, and
would establish a cause of action for injury or property damages
resulting from violations.
This article is new; therefore, strike-throughs and
underscoring have been omitted.