Washington State House of Representatives Office of Program Research |
BILL ANALYSIS |
Judiciary Committee | |
HB 3076
Title: An act relating to making it a felony to drive or be in physical control of a vehicle while under the influence of intoxicating liquor or any drug when the person has three prior offenses within seven years or has a prior conviction for vehicular homicide or vehicular assault.
Brief Description: Changing penalties for driving or physical control of a vehicle under the influence of intoxicating liquor or any drug.
Sponsors: Representatives Ahern, Lantz, McCoy, Nixon, Simpson, Woods, Serben, Springer, Conway, Kessler, Green and Morrell.
Brief Summary of Proposed Substitute Bill |
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Hearing Date: 1/24/06
Staff: Trudes Tango (786-7384).
Background:
DUI LAW
Drunk driving (DUI) is a gross misdemeanor. The maximum confinement sentence for a gross
misdemeanor is one year in jail. The DUI law contains a complex system of mandatory
minimum penalties that escalate based on the number of prior offenses and the concentration of
alcohol (BAC) in the offender's blood or breath. The minimum penalties are as follows:
First offense:
One prior offense within seven years:
Two or more prior offenses within seven years:
A "prior offense" counts to increase an offender's sentence under the DUI laws if the arrest for
that offense occurred within seven years of the arrest for the current offense. "Prior offenses"
include convictions for: (a) DUI; (b) vehicular homicide and vehicular assault if either was
committed while under the influence; (c) negligent driving after having consumed alcohol ("wet
neg"), reckless driving, and reckless endangerment if the original charge was DUI; and (d) any
equivalent local DUI ordinance or out-of-state law. In addition, a deferred prosecution for DUI
or "wet neg" counts as a prior offense even if the charges are dropped after successful completion
of the deferred prosecution treatment program.
In addition to serving mandatory jail time, a DUI offender is subject to other sanctions that
include alcohol assessment, the mandatory use of an ignition interlock system on any vehicle the
offender drives, and probation.
FELONY SENTENCING UNDER THE SENTENCING REFORM ACT
An adult who is convicted of a felony is sentenced under the provisions of the Sentencing
Reform Act (SRA). The SRA has a sentencing grid in statute that provides a standard sentence
range based on the seriousness level of the current offense and the offender's prior criminal
history score. Unless the sentencing judge imposes an exceptional sentence upward or
downward, the sentencing judge will sentence the offender to a period of confinement within that
standard range. However, in no case may a sentence be longer than the maximum allowed by
statute for a particular class of felony. For class C felonies, this maximum is five years in prison.
Felonies are "ranked" in the SRA from Level I (low) to Level XVI (high). An offender's criminal
history score ranges from 0 to 9+ and is calculated based on numerous factors, including the
number of prior felony convictions and the relationship between those prior convictions and the
current offense. A few prior non-felony crimes can count toward an offender's score in
sentencing for a current felony. "Serious traffic" offenses, which include DUI, are non-felony
crimes that count when the current offense is a felony traffic offense. Prior felony traffic
offenses, which include vehicular assault and vehicular homicide, count double when the current
offense is also a felony traffic offense.
The SRA has "washout" periods that determine how long a prior conviction continues to count
toward an offender's score. Class C felonies and serious traffic offenses wash out if the offender
has spent five years without committing an offense since the date of his or her release from
confinement.
The SRA also has sentencing alternatives for some types of offenders, such as the first-time
offender waiver program, drug offender sentencing alternative (DOSA), and work ethic camp.
At the time of sentencing, the court also imposes a term of community custody for certain
offenders, including those offenders who have been convicted of an offense categorized as a
"Crime Against Persons." Conditions of community custody and levels of supervision are based
on risk. The court has discretion when setting the range of community custody, but generally, the
range for a person convicted of a "Crime Against Persons" will be between nine to 18 months.
Under the SRA, an offender may earn an early release of up to fifty percent off a sentence for less
serious offenses. For offenses categorized as "Crimes Against Persons" and other serious
offenses, an offender may receive earned early release time up to one third off.
JUVENILE ADJUDICATIONS
The Juvenile Justice Act governs the disposition (or sentencing) of juvenile offenders. The act
contains a disposition grid with presumptive sanctions based on the seriousness of the offense
and prior criminal history. Offenses are "categorized" (very much like ranking in the SRA)
between Category E (least serious) through Category A+ (most serious). DUI is categorized as a
D offense. A juvenile adjudicated of DUI who has no prior criminal history will typically receive
local sanctions, meaning the court may impose one or all of the following:
0 - 30 days in confinement in a local juvenile detention facility; 0-12 months of community
supervision, 0-150 hours of community restitution, and/or $0-500 fine. More serious offenders
are subject to confinement in the state juvenile facility.
The Juvenile Justice Act provides disposition alternatives that give courts discretion to suspend
the juvenile's disposition and impose conditions. Some of those alternatives include the
suspended disposition alternative, the chemical dependency disposition alternative, and the
mental health disposition alternative.
Summary of Proposed Substitute Bill:
DUI is a class C felony if the offender: (a) has three or more prior offenses within seven years;
or (b) has ever been convicted of vehicular homicide while under the influence of alcohol or
drugs or vehicular assault while under the influence of alcohol or drugs.
Felony DUI is a Level V offense. This means a DUI offender with three prior misdemeanor
DUIs will receive a presumptive sentence range of 15 - 20 months. A DUI offender with only
one prior vehicular assault will have that prior count double, as provided under current SRA
rules, and receive a presumptive sentence range of 13 - 17 months.
Felony DUI is categorized as a "Crime Against Persons" under the SRA. This means the
offender is eligible for earned early release not to exceed one third of his or her sentence and
community custody provisions apply.
An offender is not eligible for the first time offender waiver program, DOSA, or work ethic
camp. The court must order the offender to undergo treatment during incarceration. The
offender shall be liable for the costs of treatment unless the court finds the offender indigent and
no third-party insurance is available. The license suspension and ignition interlock provisions
under the misdemeanor DUI laws apply.
The provisions under the SRA related to "wash out" periods and vacation of records are amended
to include the seven year period in which "prior offenses" under the DUI laws are counted.
Under the Juvenile Justice Act, felony DUI is made a Category B+ offense. This means a
juvenile with zero or one prior adjudication will receive a presumptive disposition range of 15 -
36 weeks in a state juvenile facility. Categorizing the offense as a B+ makes the juvenile
ineligible for the chemical dependency disposition alternative, but not the suspended disposition
alternative.
Appropriation: None.
Fiscal Note: Requested on January 16, 2006.
Effective Date: The bill takes effect 90 days after adjournment of session in which bill is passed.