FINAL BILL REPORT

                 SHB 1176

                         C 339 L 97

                     Synopsis as Enacted

 

Brief Description:  Adding child rape to the two strikes list.

 

Sponsors:  By House Committee on Criminal Justice & Corrections (originally sponsored by  Representatives Koster, Boldt, Smith, Backlund, Dunn, McMorris, Schoesler, Sheldon, Johnson, DeBolt and Mulliken).

 

House Committee on Criminal Justice & Corrections

Senate Committee on Law & Justice

 

Background:  Under what is commonly referred to as the ATwo Strikes and You=re Out@ law, a person is considered a Apersistent offender@ if:

 

(1)the person has been convicted of any of the following sex offenses:

 

(a) rape in the first degree;

(b) rape in the second degree;

(c) indecent liberties by forcible compulsion;

(d) murder in the first or second degree, kidnaping in the first or second degree, assault in the first or second degree, or burglary in the first degree when those offenses are committed with sexual motivation; or 

(e) an attempt to commit any of those sex offenses; and

 

(2) the person has been convicted on at least one prior separate and distinct occasion of any one of the listed sex offenses.

 

The commission of the offense and the conviction for that offense count as a Astrike,@ and both must occur before the next commission and conviction of an offense can count as another Astrike.@

 

APersistent offenders@ are sentenced to life imprisonment without possibility of parole.   APersistent offenders@ are not eligible for community custody, earned early release time, furlough, home detentions, partial confinement, work crew, work release, or any other form of early release.

 

A person commits rape of a child in the first degree when the person has sexual intercourse with a child who is less than 12 years old and not married to the perpetrator, and the perpetrator is at least two years older than the child.

 

A person commits rape of a child in the second degree when the person has sexual intercourse with a child who is at least 12 years old, but less than 14 years old and not married to the perpetrator, and the perpetrator is at least three years older than the child. 

 

Rape of a child in the first degree and rape of a child in the second degree are not included in the Atwo strikes@ list of sex offenses.

 

Summary:  Rape of a child in the first degree and rape of a child in the second degree are added to the sex offenses listed in the ATwo Strikes and You=re Out@ law, which classifies a person as a Apersistent offender@ when the person is twice convicted, on two separate occasions, of any of the sex offenses listed.  In addition, some age restrictions apply when counting rape of a child in the first degree and second degree as strikes.  An offender convicted of rape of a child in the first degree has to be at least 16 years old when the offender committed the offense and an offender convicted of rape of a child in the second degree has to be at least 18 years old.

 

Votes on Final Passage:

 

House  95 0

Senate 49 0

 

Effective:July 27,  1997