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Introduced Version Senate Bill 624 History

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

WEST virginia Legislature

2016 regular session

Introduced

Senate Bill 624

By Senators Gaunch, Cline, Takubo, Trump, Walters, Woelfel, Plymale, Prezioso, Boso, Ferns and Facemire

[Introduced February 18, 2016;
Referred to the Committee on the Judiciary.
]

A BILL to repeal §61-2-17 of the Code of West Virginia, 1931, as amended; to amend and reenact §15-9A-2 of said code; to amend said code by adding thereto a new article, designated §61-14-1, §61-14-2, §61-14-3, §61-14-4, §61-14-5, §61-14-6, §61-14-7, §61-14-8 and §61-14-9; and to amend and reenact §62-1D-8 of said code, all relating generally to human trafficking; designating the Division of Justice and Community Services to be the state administrative agency responsible for criminal justice and juvenile justice systems for the planning and development of state programs and grants relating to human trafficking; eliminating existing criminal offense and penalties for human trafficking; creating felony offenses and penalties for trafficking an individual; defining terms; creating felony offenses and penalties for using an individual in forced labor; creating felony offenses and penalties for using an individual in debt bondage; creating felony offenses and penalties for compelling an adult through coercion to engage in commercial sexual activity; creating a felony offense for maintaining or making available a minor for the purpose of engaging in commercial sexual activity; clarifying that consent of minor and misbelief as to age are not defenses to prosecution for sexual servitude offense; creating a felony offense of patronizing an individual to engage in commercial sexual activity; clarifying that each victim shall be considered a separate offense; limiting ability for parole in circumstances where the court makes a finding of aggravated circumstances; defining aggravated circumstances; providing for restitution to victims and the enforcement of a judgment order for restitution; directing unclaimed restitution to be paid to the Crime Victims Compensation Fund; providing for disgorgement of profits and debarment from state and local government contracts; making victims eligible for compensation under the Crime Victims Compensation Fund; providing for criminal immunity for offense of prostitution if individual was a minor at time of offense and was a victim at time of offense; providing for expungement of prostitution conviction for victims of trafficking; and authorizing law enforcement to use wiretaps to conduct investigations.

Be it enacted by the Legislature of West Virginia:


That §61-2-17 of the Code of West Virginia, 1931, as amended, be repealed; that §15‑9A‑2 of said code be amended and reenacted; that said code be amended by adding thereto a new article, designated §61-14-1, §61-14-2, §61-14-3, §61-14-4, §61-14-5, §61-14-6, §61-14‑7, §61-14-8 and §61-14-9; and that §62-1D-8 of said code be amended and reenacted, all to read as follows:

CHAPTER 15. PUBLIC SAFETY.


ARTICLE 9A. DIVISION OF JUSTICE AND COMMUNITY SERVICES. 

§15-9A-2. Division established; appointment of director.

(a) The Division of Justice and Community Services is created. The purpose of the division is to provide executive and administrative support to the Governor=s Committee on Crime Delinquency and Correction in the coordination of planning for the criminal justice system, to administer federal and state grant programs assigned to it by the actions of the Governor or Legislature and to perform such other duties as the Legislature may from time to time assign to the division. The division is the designated staffing agency for the Governor=s Committee on Crime, Delinquency and Correction, and all of its subcommittees. The division may apply for grants and other funding from federal or state programs, foundations, corporations and organizations which funding is consistent with its responsibilities and the purposes assigned to it or the subcommittees it staffs. The Division of Justice and Community Services is hereby designated as the state administrative agency responsible for criminal justice and juvenile justice systems, and various component agencies of state and local government, for the planning and development of state programs and grants which may be funded by federal, state or other allocations in the areas of community corrections, law-enforcement training and compliance, sexual assault forensic examinations, victim services, human trafficking and juvenile justice.

(b) The director of the division shall be named by the Governor to serve at his will and pleasure.

(c) The director of the division shall take and subscribe to an oath of office in conformity with article IV, section five of the Constitution of the State of West Virginia.


Chapter 61. crimes and their punishment.

ARticle 14. human trafficking.

§61-14-1. Definitions.


When used in this article, the following words and terms shall have meaning specified unless the context clearly indicates a different meaning:

“Adult” means an individual eighteen years of age or older.

“Coercion” means:

(1) The use or threat of force against, abduction of, serious harm to, or physical restraint of, an individual;

(2) The use of a plan, pattern, or statement with intent to cause an individual to believe that failure to perform an act will result in the use of force against, abduction of, serious harm to, physical restraint of, or deportation of an individual;

(3) The abuse or threatened abuse of law or legal process;

(4) The destruction or taking of or the threatened destruction or taking of an individual’s identification document or other property; or

(5)  The use of an individual’s physical or mental impairment when the impairment has a substantial adverse effect on the individual’s cognitive or volitional function.

“Commercial sexual activity” means sexual activity for which anything of value is given to, promised to, or received by a person.

“Debt bondage” means inducing an individual to provide:

(1) Commercial sexual activity in payment toward or satisfaction of a real or purported debt; or

(2) Labor or services in payment toward or satisfaction of a real or purported debt if:

(A) The reasonable value of the labor or services is not applied toward the liquidation of the debt; or

(B) The length of the labor or services is not limited, and the nature of the labor or services is not defined.

“Forced labor” means labor or services that are performed or provided by another person and are obtained or maintained through the following:

(1) Threat, either implicit or explicit, deception or fraud, scheme, plan, or pattern, or other action intended to cause a person to believe that, if the person did not perform or provide the labor or services that person or another person would suffer serious bodily harm, physical restraint, or deportation: Provided, That this does not include work or services provided by a minor to the minor's parent or legal guardian so long as the legal guardianship or custody of the minor was not obtained for the purpose compelling the minor to participate in commercial sex acts or sexually explicit performance, or perform forced labor or services.

(2) Physically restraining or threatening to physically restrain a person;

(3) Abuse or threatened abuse of the legal process; or

(4) Destroying, concealing, removing, confiscating, or possessing any actual or purported passport or other immigration document, or any other actual or purported government identification document, of another person.

“Forced labor” does not mean labor or services required to be performed by a person in compliance with a court order or as a required condition of probation, parole, or imprisonment.

“Identification document” means a passport, driver’s license, immigration document, travel document, or other government-issued identification document, including a document issued by a foreign government.

“Labor or services” means activity having economic value.

“Minor” means an individual less than eighteen years of age.

“Patronize” means giving, agreeing to give, or offering to give anything of value to another person in exchange for commercial sexual activity.

“Person” means an individual, estate, business or nonprofit entity, or other legal entity.  The term does not include a public corporation or government or governmental subdivision, agency, or instrumentality.

“Serious harm” means harm, whether physical or nonphysical, including psychological, economic, or reputational, to an individual which would compel a reasonable individual of the same background and in the same circumstances to perform or continue to perform labor or services or sexual activity to avoid incurring the harm.

“Sexual activity” means sexual contact, sexual intercourse, or sexual intrusion, as defined in section one, article eight-b of this chapter, or sexually explicit conduct, as defined in section one, article eight-c of this chapter.

“Sexual servitude” means:

(1) Maintaining or making available a minor for the purpose of engaging the minor in commercial sexual activity; or

(2) Using coercion to compel an adult to engage in commercial sexual activity.

“Traffics” or “trafficking” means recruiting, transporting, transferring, harboring, receiving, providing, obtaining, isolating, maintaining, or enticing an individual in furtherance of forced labor or sexual servitude.

“Victim” means an individual who is subjected to trafficking or to conduct that would have constituted trafficking had this article been in effect when the conduct occurred, regardless of whether a perpetrator is identified, apprehended, prosecuted, or convicted.

§61-14-2. Trafficking an individual; penalties.


(a) Any person who knowingly and willfully traffics an adult is guilty of a felony and, upon conviction, shall be confined in a state correctional facility for not less than three nor more than fifteen years, fined not more than $200,000, or both confined and fined.

(b)  Any person who knowingly and willfully traffics a minor is guilty of a felony and, upon conviction, shall be confined in a state correctional facility for not less than five nor more than twenty years, fined not more than $300,000, or both confined and fined.

§61-14-3. Forced labor; penalties.


(a)  Any person who knowingly uses an adult in forced labor to provide labor or services, except when such conduct is permissible under federal law or law of this state, is guilty of a felony and, upon conviction, shall be confined in a state correctional facility for not less than one nor more than five years, fined not more than $100,000, or both confined and fined.

(b) Any person who knowingly uses a minor in forced labor to provide labor or services, except when such conduct is permissible under federal law or law of this state, is guilty of a felony and, upon conviction shall be confined in a state correctional facility for not less than three nor more than fifteen years, fined not more than $300,000, or both confined and fined.

§61-14-4.  Debt Bondage; penalties.


(a)  Any person who knowingly uses an adult in debt bondage is guilty of a felony and, upon conviction, shall be confined in a state correctional facility for not less than one nor more than five years, fined not more than $100,000, or both confined and fined.

(b) Any person who knowingly uses a minor in debt bondage is guilty of a felony and, upon conviction shall be confined in a state correctional facility for not less than three nor more than fifteen years, fined not more than $300,000, or both confined and fined.

§61-14-5. Sexual servitude; penalties.


(a) Any person who knowingly uses coercion to compel an adult to engage in commercial sexual activity is guilty of a felony and, upon conviction, shall be confined in a state correctional facility for not less than three nor more than fifteen years, fined not more than $200,000, or both confined and fined.

 (b) Any person who knowingly maintains or makes available a minor for the purpose of engaging the minor in commercial sexual activity is guilty of a felony and, upon conviction, shall be confined in a state correctional facility for not less than five nor more than twenty years, fined not more than $300,000, or both confined and fined.

(c) It is not a defense in a prosecution under subsection (b) of this section that the minor consented to engage in the commercial sexual activity or that the defendant believed the minor was an adult.

§61-14-6. Patronizing a victim of sexual servitude; penalties.


(a) Any person who knowingly patronizes an individual to engage in commercial sexual activity with a third-party who is an adult, and who knows that such adult is a victim of sexual servitude, is guilty of a felony and, upon conviction thereof, shall be confined in a state correctional facility for not less than one nor more than five years, fined not more than $100,000, or both confined and fined.

(b)  Any person who knowingly patronizes an individual to engage in commercial sexual activity with a third-party who is a minor is guilty of felony and, upon conviction, shall be confined in a state correctional facility for not less than three nor more than fifteen years, fined not more than $300,000, or both confined and fined.

§61-14-7.  General provisions and other penalties.


(a) Separate violations- For purposes of this article, each adult or minor victim is a separate offense.

(b) Aggravating circumstance.

(1) If an individual is convicted of an offense under this article, and the court makes a finding that the offense involved an aggravating circumstance, the individual may not be eligible for parole before serving three years in a state correctional facility.

(2) For purposes of this subsection, “aggravating circumstance” means the individual recruited, enticed, or obtained the victim of the offense from a shelter or facility that serves runaway youths, children in foster care, the homeless, or individuals subjected to human trafficking, domestic violence, or sexual assault.

(c) Restitution. –

(1) The court shall order a person convicted of an offense under this article to pay restitution to the victim of the offense.

(2) A judgment order for restitution may be enforced by the state or a victim named in the order to receive the restitution in the same manner as a judgment in a civil action, in accordance with section four, article eleven-a of this chapter, including filing a lien against the person, firm, or corporation against whom restitution is ordered.

(3) The court shall order restitution under subdivision (1) of this subsection even if the victim is unavailable to accept payment of restitution.

(4) If the victim does not claim restitution ordered under subdivision (1) of this subsection for five years after entry of the order, the restitution shall be paid to the Crime Victims Compensation Fund created under section four, article two-a, chapter fourteen of this code.

(d) Disgorgement.- In addition to the fine and penalties set forth in this article, any business entity that engages in the offenses established in this article may be fined not more than $500,000 for each violation, be required to disgorge profit from activity in violation of this article pursuant to section five, article thirteen of this chapter, and be debarred from state and local government contracts.

(e) Eligibility for Compensation Fund.- Notwithstanding the definition of victim in section three, article two-a, chapter fourteen of this code, a victim of any offense under this article is a victim for all purposes of article two-a, chapter fourteen of this code: Provided, That for purposes subsection (b), section fourteen, article two-a, chapter fourteen of this code, if otherwise qualified, a victim of any offense under this article may not be denied eligibility solely for the failure to report to law enforcement within the designated time frame.

§61-14-8. Immunity of a minor victim of sex trafficking.


(a) Subject to the limitation in subsection (b) of this section, an individual is not criminally liable or subject to juvenile proceedings for an offense of prostitution in violation of subsection (b), section five, article eight of this chapter if the individual was a minor at the time of the offense and committed the offense as a direct result of being a victim.

(b) This section does not apply in a prosecution or a juvenile proceeding for soliciting, inducing, enticing or procuring a prostitute in violation of subsection (b), section five, article eight of this chapter.

§61-14-9. Petition to vacate and expunge conviction of sex trafficking victim.


(a) Notwithstanding the age and criminal history limitations set forth in section twenty-six, article eleven of this chapter, an individual convicted of prostitution in violation of subsection (b), section five, article eight of this chapter as a direct result of being a victim of trafficking, may apply by petition to the circuit court in the county of conviction to vacate the conviction and expunge the record of conviction. The court may grant the petition upon a finding that the individual’s participation in the offense was a direct result of being a victim of trafficking.

(b) A victim of trafficking seeking relief under this section shall not be required to complete any type of rehabilitation in order to obtain expungement.

(c) A petition filed under subsection (a) of this section, any hearing conducted on the petition, and any relief granted shall meet the procedural requirements of section twenty-six, article eleven of this chapter: Provided, That a victim of trafficking is not subject to the age or criminal history limitations in that section.

chapter 62.  criminal procedure.

article 1D. wiretapping and electronic surveillance act.

§62-1D-8. County prosecuting attorney or duly appointed special prosecutor may apply for order authorizing interception.


The prosecuting attorney of any county or duly appointed special prosecutor may apply to one of the designated circuit judges referred to in section seven of this article and such judge, in accordance with the provisions of this article, may grant an order authorizing the interception of wire, oral or electronic communications by an officer of the investigative or law-enforcement agency when the prosecuting attorney or special prosecutor has shown reasonable cause to believe the interception would provide evidence of the commission of: (i) Kidnapping or abduction as defined and prohibited by the provisions of sections fourteen and fourteen-a, article two, chapter sixty-one of this code and including threats to kidnap or demand ransom as defined and prohibited by the provisions of section fourteen-c of said article two or ; (ii) of any offense included and prohibited by section eleven, article four, chapter twenty-five of said code, sections eight, nine and ten, article five, chapter sixty-one of said code or section one, article eight, chapter sixty-two of said code to the extent that any of said sections provide for offenses punishable as a felony; or (iii) dealing, transferring or trafficking in any controlled substance or substances in the felonious violation of chapter sixty-a of this code; or (iv) of any offense included and prohibited by article fourteen, chapter sixty-one of this code; or (iv) (v) any aider or abettor to any of the foregoing offenses or any conspiracy to commit any of the foregoing offenses if any aider, abettor or conspirator is a party to the communication to be intercepted.


 

NOTE: The purpose of this bill is to eliminate existing criminal offense and penalties for human trafficking. The bill creates felony offenses and penalties for trafficking an individual. The bill defines terms. The bill creates felony offenses and penalties for using an individual in forced labor. The bill creates felony offenses and penalties for using an individual in debt bondage. The bill creates felony offenses and penalties for compelling an adult through coercion to engage in commercial sexual activity. The bill creates a felony offense for maintaining or making available a minor for the purpose of engaging in commercial sexual activity. The bill clarifies that consent of minor and misbelief as to age are not defenses to prosecution for sexual servitude offense. The bill creates a felony offense of patronizing an individual to engage in commercial sexual activity. The bill clarifies that each victim shall be considered a separate offense. The bill limits ability for parole in circumstances where the court makes a finding of aggravated circumstances. The bill defines aggravated circumstances. The bill provides for restitution to victims and the enforcement of a judgment order for restitution. The bill directs unclaimed restitution to be paid to the Crime Victims Compensation Fund. The bill provides for disgorgement of profits and debarment from state and local government contracts. The bill makes victims eligible for compensation under the Crime Victims Compensation Fund. The bill provides for criminal immunity for offense of prostitution if individual was a minor at time of offense and was a victim at time of offense. The bill provides for expungement of prostitution conviction for victims of trafficking. The bill authorizes law enforcement to use wiretaps to conduct investigations. The bill also designates the Division of Justice and Community Services to be the state administrative agency responsible for criminal justice and juvenile justice systems for the planning and development of state programs and grants relating to human trafficking.

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

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