Code A | Less than thirty thousand dollars; |
Code B | At least thirty thousand dollars, but less than sixty thousand dollars; |
Code C | At least sixty thousand dollars, but less than one hundred thousand dollars; |
Code D | At least one hundred thousand dollars, but less than two hundred thousand dollars; |
Code E | At least two hundred thousand dollars, but less than five hundred thousand dollars; |
Code F | At least five hundred thousand dollars, but less than seven hundred and fifty thousand dollars; |
Code G | At least seven hundred fifty thousand dollars, but less than one million dollars; or |
Code H | One million dollars or more. |
(c) An amount of stock may be reported by number of shares instead of by market value. No provision of this subsection may be interpreted to prevent any person from filing more information or more detailed information than required.
(4) Items of value given to an official's or employee's spouse, domestic partner, or family member are attributable to the official or employee, except the item is not attributable if an independent business, family, or social relationship exists between the donor and the spouse, domestic partner, or family member.
Part VII. Statewide Resources
NEW SECTION. Sec. 701. A new section is added to chapter
43.101 RCW to read as follows:
(1) Subject to the availability of amounts appropriated for this specific purpose, the commission must administer a grant program for establishing a statewide resource prosecutor for domestic violence cases.
(2) The grant recipient must be a statewide organization or association representing prosecuting attorneys. The grant recipient must hire a resource prosecutor for the following purposes:
(a) To provide technical assistance and research to prosecutors for prosecuting domestic violence cases;
(b) To provide training on implementation and enforcement of orders to surrender and prohibit weapons, extreme risk protection orders, first appearances, case resolution, duties regarding recovery of firearms at the scene of domestic violence incidents, service of orders to surrender weapons and extreme risk protection orders, and firearm rights restoration petitions for domestic violence perpetrators;
(c) To provide additional training and resources to prosecutors to support a trauma-informed, victim-centered approach to prosecuting domestic violence cases;
(d) To meet regularly with law enforcement agencies and prosecutors to explain legal issues and prosecutorial approaches to domestic violence cases and provide and receive feedback to improve case outcomes;
(e) To consult with the commission with respect to developing and implementing best practices for prosecuting domestic violence cases across the state; and
(f) To comply with other requirements established by the commission under this section.
(3) The commission may establish additional appropriate conditions for any grant awarded under this section. The commission may adopt necessary policies and procedures to implement and administer the grant program, including monitoring the use of grant funds and compliance with the grant requirements.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 702. A new section is added to chapter
43.330 RCW to read as follows:
(1) Subject to the availability of amounts appropriated for this specific purpose, the department shall administer a pilot program to implement domestic violence high risk teams. A domestic violence high risk team must, at a minimum, include the following four elements:
(a) Early identification of the most dangerous cases through evidence-based lethality assessments;
(b) Increased access to supportive services for high-risk victims;
(c) Increased perpetrator monitoring and accountability; and
(d) A coordinated response to high-risk cases through a multidisciplinary team.
(2) A domestic violence program must be the lead or co-lead of the domestic violence high risk teams.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 703. A new section is added to chapter
28B.20 RCW to read as follows:
(1) The University of Washington must establish a center of excellence in domestic violence research, policy, and practice. The center is created to:
(a) Conduct scientifically rigorous intimate partner violence research that informs policy and practice in Washington and serves as a national model;
(b) Promote a collaborative, multidisciplinary approach to addressing intimate partner violence, informed by community members and practitioners;
(c) Collaborate with and be informed by survivors and community and governmental agencies that interact with and provide services to those affected by intimate partner violence;
(d) Disseminate research findings to assist in the development of evidence-based intimate partner violence policy and practice; and
(e) Assist in the support, success, and continued training of intimate partner violence research scholars.
(2) The center must:
(a) Establish an advisory council for the center with representation from relevant disciplines across the University of Washington, representatives from systems that interact with domestic violence victims and perpetrators, and intimate partner violence community groups in order to guide development of the center's overarching goals and strategic vision. The advisory council will also assist center leadership and core center faculty in identifying priority areas of research to best inform intimate partner violence policy and practice;
(b) Award research grants to facilitate timely generation of data and research results to inform the legislature and others on key policy or practice-related issues relevant to those affected by intimate partner violence;
(c) Generate an annual report beginning December 1, 2024, on the state of domestic violence in Washington, including available prevalence data;
(d) Conduct listening sessions with survivors of intimate partner violence statewide, including survivors in urban and rural areas, black survivors, indigenous survivors, survivors of color, and survivors who identify as part of the LGBTQ community;
(e) Provide presentations and research-informed training to system actors, including domestic violence victim advocates;
(f) Convene an annual statewide domestic violence summit. The first summit must occur by June 30, 2025;
(g) Develop a statewide strategic plan to reduce intimate partner violence and increase support for victims. The preliminary strategic plan is due December 1, 2025, and must be updated every five years thereafter; and
(h) Undertake a body of work related to domestic violence intervention treatment. This must include:
(i) Executing a robust, multiyear research study to test the efficacy of various therapeutic interventions for domestic violence perpetrators aimed at reducing intimate partner violence, including intimate terrorism as defined in RCW
10.99.020. Treatment interventions may vary, but must include internal family systems and an evidence-based intervention for the treatment of suicidality, such as the collaborative assessment and management of suicidality or dialectical behavioral therapy; and
(ii) Working with the department of health, domestic violence intervention treatment providers, insurance carriers, and other relevant entities in order to formulate a detailed plan that would facilitate medicaid and commercial insurance reimbursement for domestic violence intervention treatment in Washington. The plan must include licensing requirements and provider credentialing necessary for reimbursement, billing codes, needed changes to law or rule, and any other relevant information.
Part VIII. Law Enforcement
NEW SECTION. Sec. 801. A new section is added to chapter
43.101 RCW to read as follows:
(1) Subject to the availability of amounts appropriated for this specific purpose, the commission must provide ongoing specialized, intensive, and integrative training for persons responsible for investigating domestic violence cases involving intimate partners. The training must be based on a victim-centered, trauma-informed approach to responding to domestic violence. Among other subjects, the training must include content on the neurobiology of trauma and trauma-informed interviewing, counseling, and investigative techniques.
(2) The training must: Be based on research-based practices and standards; offer participants an opportunity to practice interview skills and receive feedback from instructors; minimize the trauma of all persons who are interviewed during investigations; provide methods of reducing the number of investigative interviews necessary whenever possible; assure, to the extent possible, that investigative interviews are thorough, objective, and complete; recognize needs of special populations; recognize the nature and consequences of domestic violence victimization; require investigative interviews to be conducted in a manner most likely to permit the interviewed persons the maximum emotional comfort under the circumstances; address record retention and retrieval; address documentation of investigative interviews; and educate investigators on the best practices for notifying victims of significant events in the investigative process.
(3) In developing the training, the commission must seek advice from the Washington association of sheriffs and police chiefs, organizations representing victims of domestic violence, and experts on domestic violence and the neurobiology of trauma. The commission must consult with the Washington association of prosecuting attorneys in an effort to design training containing consistent elements for all professionals engaged in interviewing and interacting with domestic violence victims in the criminal legal system.
(4) The commission must develop the training and begin offering it by January 1, 2025. Officers assigned to regularly investigate domestic violence must complete the training within one year of being assigned or by July 1, 2026, whichever is later.
Sec. 802. RCW
10.31.100 and 2021 c 215 s 118 are each amended to read as follows:
A police officer having probable cause to believe that a person has committed or is committing a felony shall have the authority to arrest the person without a warrant. A police officer may arrest a person without a warrant for committing a misdemeanor or gross misdemeanor only when the offense is committed in the presence of an officer, except as provided in subsections (1) through (11) of this section.
(1) Any police officer having probable cause to believe that a person has committed or is committing a misdemeanor or gross misdemeanor, involving physical harm or threats of harm to any person or property or the unlawful taking of property or involving the use or possession of cannabis, or involving the acquisition, possession, or consumption of alcohol by a person under the age of twenty-one years under RCW
66.44.270, or involving criminal trespass under RCW
9A.52.070 or
9A.52.080, shall have the authority to arrest the person.
(2) A police officer shall arrest and take into custody, pending release on bail, personal recognizance, or court order, a person without a warrant when the officer has probable cause to believe that:
(a) A domestic violence protection order, a sexual assault protection order, a stalking protection order, or a vulnerable adult protection order has been issued, of which the person has knowledge, under chapter
7.105 RCW, or an order has been issued, of which the person has knowledge, under RCW
26.44.063, or chapter
9A.40, 9A.46, 9A.88, 10.99, 26.09, ((
26.10,)) 26.26A, 26.26B, or
74.34 RCW, or any of the former chapters
7.90, 7.92, and
26.50 RCW, restraining the person and the person has violated the terms of the order restraining the person from acts or threats of violence, or restraining the person from going onto the grounds of, or entering, a residence, workplace, school, or day care, or prohibiting the person from knowingly coming within, or knowingly remaining within, a specified distance of a location, a protected party's person, or a protected party's vehicle,
or requiring the person to submit to electronic monitoring, or, in the case of an order issued under RCW
26.44.063, imposing any other restrictions or conditions upon the person;
(b) An extreme risk protection order has been issued against the person under chapter
7.105 RCW or former RCW
7.94.040, the person has knowledge of the order, and the person has violated the terms of the order prohibiting the person from having in ((
his or her))
the person's custody or control, purchasing, possessing, accessing, or receiving a firearm or concealed pistol license;
(c) A foreign protection order, as defined in RCW
26.52.010, or a Canadian domestic violence protection order, as defined in RCW
26.55.010, has been issued of which the person under restraint has knowledge and the person under restraint has violated a provision of the foreign protection order or the Canadian domestic violence protection order prohibiting the person under restraint from contacting or communicating with another person, or excluding the person under restraint from a residence, workplace, school, or day care, or prohibiting the person from knowingly coming within, or knowingly remaining within, a specified distance of a location, a protected party's person, or a protected party's vehicle, or a violation of any provision for which the foreign protection order or the Canadian domestic violence protection order specifically indicates that a violation will be a crime; or
(d) The person is eighteen years or older and within the preceding four hours has assaulted a family or household member or intimate partner as defined in RCW
10.99.020 and the officer believes: (i) A felonious assault has occurred; (ii) an assault has occurred which has resulted in bodily injury to the victim, whether the injury is observable by the responding officer or not; or (iii) that any physical action has occurred which was intended to cause another person reasonably to fear imminent serious bodily injury or death. Bodily injury means physical pain, illness, or an impairment of physical condition. When the officer has probable cause to believe that family or household members or intimate partners have assaulted each other, the officer is not required to arrest both persons. The officer shall arrest the person whom the officer believes to be the primary ((
physical)) aggressor. In making this determination, the officer shall make every reasonable effort to consider: (A) The intent to protect victims of domestic violence under RCW
10.99.010; (B) the comparative extent of injuries inflicted or serious threats creating fear of physical injury; and (C) the history of domestic violence of each person involved, including whether the conduct was part of an ongoing pattern of abuse.
(3) Any police officer having probable cause to believe that a person has committed or is committing a violation of any of the following traffic laws shall have the authority to arrest the person:
(a) RCW
46.52.010, relating to duty on striking an unattended car or other property;
(b) RCW
46.52.020, relating to duty in case of injury to, or death of, a person or damage to an attended vehicle;
(d) RCW
46.61.502 or
46.61.504, relating to persons under the influence of intoxicating liquor or drugs;
(e) RCW
46.61.503 or
46.25.110, relating to persons having alcohol or THC in their system;
(f) RCW
46.20.342, relating to driving a motor vehicle while operator's license is suspended or revoked;
(g) RCW
46.61.5249, relating to operating a motor vehicle in a negligent manner.
(4) A law enforcement officer investigating at the scene of a motor vehicle accident may arrest the driver of a motor vehicle involved in the accident if the officer has probable cause to believe that the driver has committed, in connection with the accident, a violation of any traffic law or regulation.
(5)(a) A law enforcement officer investigating at the scene of a motor vessel accident may arrest the operator of a motor vessel involved in the accident if the officer has probable cause to believe that the operator has committed, in connection with the accident, a criminal violation of chapter
79A.60 RCW.
(b) A law enforcement officer investigating at the scene of a motor vessel accident may issue a citation for an infraction to the operator of a motor vessel involved in the accident if the officer has probable cause to believe that the operator has committed, in connection with the accident, a violation of any boating safety law of chapter
79A.60 RCW.
(6) Any police officer having probable cause to believe that a person has committed or is committing a violation of RCW
79A.60.040 shall have the authority to arrest the person.
(7) An officer may act upon the request of a law enforcement officer, in whose presence a traffic infraction was committed, to stop, detain, arrest, or issue a notice of traffic infraction to the driver who is believed to have committed the infraction. The request by the witnessing officer shall give an officer the authority to take appropriate action under the laws of the state of Washington.
(8) Any police officer having probable cause to believe that a person has committed or is committing any act of indecent exposure, as defined in RCW
9A.88.010, may arrest the person.
(9) A police officer may arrest and take into custody, pending release on bail, personal recognizance, or court order, a person without a warrant when the officer has probable cause to believe that an antiharassment protection order has been issued of which the person has knowledge under chapter
7.105 RCW or former chapter
10.14 RCW and the person has violated the terms of that order.
(10) Any police officer having probable cause to believe that a person has, within twenty-four hours of the alleged violation, committed a violation of RCW
9A.50.020 may arrest such person.
(11) A police officer having probable cause to believe that a person illegally possesses or illegally has possessed a firearm or other dangerous weapon on private or public elementary or secondary school premises shall have the authority to arrest the person.
For purposes of this subsection, the term "firearm" has the meaning defined in RCW
9.41.010 and the term "dangerous weapon" has the meaning defined in RCW
9.41.250 and
9.41.280(1) (c) through (e).
(12) A law enforcement officer having probable cause to believe that a person has committed a violation under RCW
77.15.160(5) may issue a citation for an infraction to the person in connection with the violation.
(13) A law enforcement officer having probable cause to believe that a person has committed a criminal violation under RCW
77.15.809 or
77.15.811 may arrest the person in connection with the violation.
(14) Except as specifically provided in subsections (2), (3), (4), and (7) of this section, nothing in this section extends or otherwise affects the powers of arrest prescribed in Title
46 RCW.
(15) No police officer may be held criminally or civilly liable for making an arrest pursuant to subsection (2) or (9) of this section if the police officer acts in good faith and without malice.
(16)(a) Except as provided in (b) of this subsection, a police officer shall arrest and keep in custody, until release by a judicial officer on bail, personal recognizance, or court order, a person without a warrant when the officer has probable cause to believe that the person has violated RCW
46.61.502 or
46.61.504 or an equivalent local ordinance and the police officer: (i) Has knowledge that the person has a prior offense as defined in RCW
46.61.5055 within ten years; or (ii) has knowledge, based on a review of the information available to the officer at the time of arrest, that the person is charged with or is awaiting arraignment for an offense that would qualify as a prior offense as defined in RCW
46.61.5055 if it were a conviction.
(b) A police officer is not required to keep in custody a person under (a) of this subsection if the person requires immediate medical attention and is admitted to a hospital.
Sec. 803. RCW
36.28A.410 and 2021 c 215 s 147 are each amended to read as follows:
(1)(a) Subject to the availability of amounts appropriated for this specific purpose, the Washington association of sheriffs and police chiefs shall create and operate a statewide automated protected person notification system to automatically notify a registered person via the registered person's choice of telephone or email when a respondent subject to a court order specified in (b) of this subsection has attempted to purchase or acquire a firearm and been denied based on a background check or completed and submitted firearm purchase or transfer application that indicates the respondent is ineligible to possess a firearm under state or federal law. The system must permit a person to register for notification, or a registered person to update the person's registration information, for the statewide automated protected person notification system by calling a toll-free telephone number or by accessing a public website.
(b) The notification requirements of this section apply to any court order issued under chapter
7.105 RCW or former chapter
7.92 RCW, RCW
9A.46.080,
10.99.040,
10.99.045,
26.09.050,
26.09.060,
26.10.040,
26.26A.470, or
26.26B.020, any of the former RCW
7.90.090,
10.14.080,
26.10.115,
26.50.060, and
26.50.070, any foreign protection order filed with a Washington court pursuant to chapter
26.52 RCW, and any Canadian domestic violence protection order filed with a Washington court pursuant to chapter
26.55 RCW, where the order prohibits the respondent from possessing firearms or where by operation of law the respondent is ineligible to possess firearms during the term of the order. The notification requirements of this section apply even if the respondent has notified the Washington state patrol that ((
he or she))
the respondent has appealed a background check denial under RCW
43.43.823.
(c) The statewide automated protected person notification system must interface with the Washington state patrol, the administrative office of the courts, and any court not contributing data to the administrative office of the courts in real time.
(2) An appointed or elected official, public employee, or public agency as defined in RCW
4.24.470, or combination of units of government and its employees, as provided in RCW
36.28A.010, are immune from civil liability for damages for any release of information or the failure to release information related to the statewide automated protected person notification system in this section, so long as the release or failure to release was without gross negligence. The immunity provided under this subsection applies to the release of relevant and necessary information to other public officials, public employees, or public agencies, and to the general public.
(3) Information and records prepared, owned, used, or retained by the Washington association of sheriffs and police chiefs pursuant to chapter 261, Laws of 2017, including information a person submits to register and participate in the statewide automated protected person notification system, are exempt from public inspection and copying under chapter
42.56 RCW.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 804. A new section is added to chapter
36.28A RCW to read as follows:
Subject to the availability of amounts appropriated for this specific purpose, the Washington association of sheriffs and police chiefs must create and maintain an electronic portal for law enforcement to enter when any respondent identified in a no-contact order, restraining order, or protection order has met the requirements in RCW
9.41.345. The portal shall collect the respondent's name, date of birth, protective order number, and date the respondent is eligible to have the respondent's firearms returned.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 805. A new section is added to chapter
2.56 RCW to read as follows:
The administrative office of the courts shall work with the Washington association of sheriffs and police chiefs to develop and maintain an interface to the statewide automated victim information and notification system created under RCW
36.28A.040 and the statewide automated protected person notification system created under RCW
36.28A.410 to provide notifications per RCW
36.28A.040,
36.28A.410, and
7.105.105. The interface shall provide updated information not less than once per hour, 24 hours per day, seven days per week, without exception.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 901. If any provision of this act or its application to any person or circumstance is held invalid, the remainder of the act or the application of the provision to other persons or circumstances is not affected.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 902. If specific funding for the purposes of this act, referencing this act by bill or chapter number, is not provided by June 30, 2023, in the omnibus appropriations act, this act is null and void."
EFFECT: Removes all material relating to lethality assessments, including the establishment of the Domestic Violence Lethality Hotline, the creation of a high lethality designation, and provisions in civil and criminal domestic violence proceedings involving the high lethality designation.
Removes the requirement that electronic monitoring with victim notification technology be available for all courts in all jurisdictions in Washington. Removes the requirement that local governments enter into contracts with monitoring agencies. Requires the Administrative Office of the Courts (AOC), instead of the Statewide Resource Prosecutor, to provide training on electronic monitoring with victim notification technology.
Expands the plan on access to counsel to include family law proceedings. Clarifies that the plan applies to those who are unable to afford counsel. Removes the requirement that a list of domestic violence survivor's attorneys be created.
Removes the requirement that a program be created to provide legal support for survivors in tribal courts and instead requires the creation of a plan and implementation schedule. Instead, requires that the plan and implementation schedule be developed in coordination with the Indian Policy Advisory Council and representatives of tribal justice systems.
Removes the requirement that law enforcement attempt to contact a petitioner before or after service of a protection order. Removes the prohibition against the law enforcement information sheet including the petitioner's residential address.
Removes the requirement that the AOC ensure that judicial training is regularly provided and available remotely. Removes the requirement that the AOC notify judicial officers of the training. Instead, requires the AOC to develop training and provide it free of charge to judicial officers.
Removes the requirement that a person arrested for violating a protection order must be kept in custody until released by a judicial officer.
Removes the timelines specified in the bill for motions to reconsider or revise denials of permanent protection orders involving orders to surrender or prohibit weapons.
Removes the new civil cause of action for victims of domestic violence.
Removes the topic of children exposed to violence from mandatory training requirements. Requires training relating to investigation and interviewing skills to be trauma-informed. Requires training topics to include the impacts that trauma may have on domestic violence victims.
Removes provisions relating to intimate terrorism, including the definitions, training requirements, and criminal protections.
Requires the Washington Association of Sheriffs and Police Chiefs (WASPC) to develop a portal for law enforcement to enter when any respondent identified in a no-contact order, restraining order, or protection order meets the requirements for the return of surrendered firearms. Requires the portal to collect the name, date of birth, protective order number, and date the respondent is eligible to have the firearms returned.
Requires a law enforcement agency to notify, within one business day, an intimate partner, family member, or household member of the return of a firearm if the intimate partner, family member, or household member has requested such notification. Requires, once the WASPC portal is available, immediate entry of the information in the portal.
Requires the AOC to work with the WASPC to develop and maintain an interface to the statewide victim information and notification system and the statewide automated protected person notification system. Requires the notification system to provide updated information no less than once per hour, 24 hours per day, seven days a week, without exception.
Removes provisions authorizing courts to order the search and seizure of firearms and dangerous weapons. Restores current law provisions allowing surrender of firearms to be delayed until 24 hours after a respondent has been served with an order to surrender the firearms. Restores current law provisions authorizing a court not to hold a compliance hearing when there is an alternate showing that the firearms have been surrendered. Authorizes, instead of requires, the issuance of an arrest warrant when a respondent is in non-compliance with an order to surrender firearms.
Restores the current law requirement that a tenant's request to terminate a rental agreement must occur within 90 days of a reported act of domestic violence.
Eliminates the requirement that the Department of Commerce establish at least five high risk teams west of the Cascade Mountains and five high risk teams east of the Cascade Mountains.
Eliminates the requirement that the Department of Commerce establish the Office of the Statewide Domestic Violence Ombuds.
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