BILL NUMBER: S611A
SPONSOR: STAVISKY
TITLE OF BILL:
An act to amend the criminal procedure law, in relation to victim state-
ments at the sentencing of a defendant for a misdemeanor
PURPOSE:
The purpose of this bill is to allow victims of certain misdemeanor
crimes to request to make a statement at the sentencing of the defendant
and to direct the court to accept such request.
SUMMARY OF PROVISIONS:
Section 1 of the bill would amend subparagraph b of subsection 2 of
section 380.50 of the criminal procedure law to direct a court, upon
timely request by the victim, to allow victims of certain misdemeanor
crimes to make a statement at the sentencing of a defendant who pled
down from a felony offense under vehicle and traffic law where a pre -
sentence report is order and defendant's actions resulted in serious
physical injury to the victim.
Section 2: Establishes the effective date.
JUSTIFICATION:
Under current law, only vietims of felony crimes have an absedute right,
upon timely request, to make a victim impact statement to the court at a
defendant's sentencing. This is true even fur offenses committed under
the Vehicle and Traffic Law, where a defendant driver has caused serious
physical injury to a victim and is charged with a felony offense. Sueh
defendant driver may nonetheless succeed in pleading down the charge to
a misdemeanor. Under such circumstances, the victim has no recourse and
may not provide a victim impact statement to the court.
Such a scenario, while not frequent, can occur as it did in the case of
Conan O'Rourke. Mr. O'Rourke suffered multiple injuries, including trau-
matic brain injury, a collapsed lung, a ruptured spleen, several spinal
fractures, and head and chest trauma, when defendant driver crashed into
the backend of his car. This tragedy took an unimaginable emotiona and
financial toll on the entire O'Rourke family. Due to Mr. O'Rourke's
injuries, he was unable to give a victim impart statement. Although Mr.
O'Rourke's 11-year-old daughter, Emma, sought te address the court en
his behalf, she was barred from speaking simply because defendant had
pleaded to a misdemeanor. By pleading to the misdemeanor charge of reck-
less driving, the driver that hit Mr. O'Rourke automatically foreclosed
his daughter's right to make a statement at sentencing. Many crime
victims, whether of a felony or misdemeanor crime, feel violated, desire
justice and want to express themselves directly to the court.
This bill directs courts, upon a victim's timely request, to permit
victims of misdemeanor crimes to make a statement at the sentencing of
the defendant where defendant's actions resulted in serious physical
injury to the victim and defendant has pleaded down from a felony
offense under vehicle and traffic law.
PRIOR LEGISLATIVE HISTORY:
A.3099-A of 2023-24: Referred to Codes
A.1901-A of 2023-24: PASSED SENATE
A.9744 of 2022: Referred to Codes
S.8761 of 2022: Referred to Codes
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS:
None
EFFECTIVE DATE:
This act shall take effect immediately.
Statutes affected: S611: 380.50 criminal procedure law, 380.50(2) criminal procedure law
S611A: 380.50 criminal procedure law, 380.50(2) criminal procedure law