Bill Text: VA SB649 | 2022 | Regular Session | Introduced
Bill Title: Juvenile law-enforcement records; disclosures to school principals.
Spectrum: Partisan Bill (Republican 1-0)
Status: (Passed) 2022-04-11 - Governor: Acts of Assembly Chapter text (CHAP0542) [SB649 Detail]
Download: Virginia-2022-SB649-Introduced.html
Be it enacted by the General Assembly of Virginia:
1. That §16.1-301 of the Code of Virginia is amended and reenacted as follows:
§16.1-301. Confidentiality of juvenile law-enforcement records; disclosures to school principal and others.
A. The court shall require all law-enforcement agencies to
take special precautions to ensure that law-enforcement records concerning a
juvenile are protected against disclosure to any unauthorized person. The
police departments of the cities of the Commonwealth, and the police
departments or sheriffs of the counties of the
Commonwealth, as the case may be, shall keep separate
records as to violations of law committed by
juveniles other than violations of motor vehicle laws committed by juveniles. Such
records with respect to such juvenile shall not be open to public inspection
nor their contents disclosed to the public unless a juvenile 14 years of age or
older is charged with a violent juvenile felony as specified in subsections B
and C of §16.1-269.1.
B. Notwithstanding any other provision of law, the chief of
police or sheriff of a jurisdiction or his designee
may shall
disclose, for the protection of the juvenile, his fellow students and school
personnel, to the school principal that a juvenile
is a suspect in or has been charged with or may disclose when a juvenile is a suspect in
(i) a violent juvenile felony, as specified in subsections B and C of §16.1-269.1;
(ii) a violation of any of the provisions of Article 1 (§18.2-77 et seq.) of
Chapter 5 of Title 18.2; or
(iii) a violation of law involving any weapon as described in subsection A of §
18.2-308; or (iv) a
violation of law as described in subsection G of §16.1-260.
If a chief of police, or sheriff or a designee has
disclosed to a school principal pursuant to this section that a juvenile is a
suspect in or has been charged with a crime
listed above as specified in
clauses (i) through (iv), upon a court disposition of a
proceeding regarding such crime in which a juvenile is adjudicated delinquent,
convicted, found not guilty or the charges are reduced, the chief of police,
or sheriff or a designee shall, within 15 days of the
expiration of the appeal period, if there is no notice of appeal, provide
notice of the disposition ordered by the court to the school principal to whom
disclosure was made. If the court defers disposition or if charges are
withdrawn, dismissed or nolle prosequi, the chief of police, or sheriff or a designee
shall, within 15 days of such action provide notice of such action to the
school principal to whom disclosure was made. If charges are withdrawn in
intake or handled informally without a court disposition or if charges are not
filed within 90 days of the initial disclosure, the chief of police, or
sheriff or a designee shall so notify the school principal to whom disclosure
was made. In addition to any other disclosure that is permitted by this subsection,
the principal in his discretion may provide such information to a threat
assessment team established by the local school division. No member of a threat
assessment team shall (a) disclose any juvenile record information obtained
pursuant to this section or (b) use such information for any purpose other than
evaluating threats to students and school personnel. For the purposes of this
subsection, "principal" also refers to the chief administrator of any
private primary or secondary school.
C. Inspection of law-enforcement records concerning juveniles shall be permitted only by the following:
1. A court having the juvenile currently before it in any proceeding;
2. The officers of public and nongovernmental institutions or agencies to which the juvenile is currently committed, and those responsible for his supervision after release;
3. Any other person, agency, or institution, by order of the court, having a legitimate interest in the case or in the work of the law-enforcement agency;
4. Law-enforcement officers of other jurisdictions, by order of the court, when necessary for the discharge of their current official duties;
5. The probation and other professional staff of a court in which the juvenile is subsequently convicted of a criminal offense for the purpose of a presentence report or other dispositional proceedings, or by officials of penal institutions and other penal facilities to which he is committed, or by a parole board in considering his parole or discharge or in exercising supervision over him;
6. The juvenile, parent, guardian or other custodian and counsel for the juvenile by order of the court; and
7. As provided in §§19.2-389.1 and 19.2-390.
D. The police departments of the cities and towns and the police departments or sheriffs of the counties may release, upon request to one another and to state and federal law-enforcement agencies, and to law-enforcement agencies in other states, current information on juvenile arrests. The information exchanged shall be used by the receiving agency for current investigation purposes only and shall not result in the creation of new files or records on individual juveniles on the part of the receiving agency.
E. Upon request, the police departments of the cities and towns and the police departments or sheriffs of the counties may release current information on juvenile arrests or juvenile victims to the Virginia Workers' Compensation Commission solely for purposes of determining whether to make an award to the victim of a crime, and such information shall not be disseminated or used by the Commission for any other purpose than provided in § 19.2-368.3.
F. Nothing in this section shall prohibit the exchange of other criminal investigative or intelligence information among law-enforcement agencies.
G. Nothing in this section shall prohibit the disclosure of law-enforcement records concerning a juvenile to a court services unit-authorized diversion program in accordance with this chapter, which includes programs authorized by subdivision 1 of §16.1-227 and §16.1-260. Such records shall not be further disclosed by the authorized diversion program or any participants therein. Law-enforcement officers may prohibit a disclosure to such a program to protect a criminal investigation or intelligence information.