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Bill > S601


NJ S601

Creates crime of fiscal victimization against senior citizens or disabled persons.


summary

Introduced
01/14/2020
In Committee
01/30/2020
Crossed Over
Passed
Dead
01/11/2022

Introduced Session

2020-2021 Regular Session

Bill Summary

This bill creates the separate crime of fiscal victimization of a senior citizen or a person with a disability. Under the provisions of the bill a person would be guilty of fiscal victimization if he commits, attempts to commit, conspires with another to commit or threatens to commit a theft offense specified in chapter 20 of Title 2C of the New Jersey Statutes or a violation of N.J.S.2C:21-17, identity theft, against a senior citizen or a person with a disability. Fiscal victimization is a crime of the fourth degree if the underlying offense is a disorderly persons offense or petty disorderly persons offense. Otherwise, fiscal victimization is a crime one degree higher than the most serious underlying crime, except if the underlying crime is a crime of the first degree. Under those circumstances, fiscal victimization would be a first degree crime and upon conviction the defendant could be sentenced to an ordinary term of imprisonment between 10 years and 30 years, with a presumptive term of 20 years, notwithstanding the provisions of N.J.S.A.2C:43-6. The bill also provides a conviction of fiscal victimization would not merge with a conviction of any of the underlying offenses, nor would any conviction for the underlying offense merge with a conviction for fiscal victimization. Therefore, the court would be authorized to impose separate sentences upon a conviction for fiscal victimization and a conviction of any underlying offense. In addition, the bill provides that if the victim of the underlying offense is a senior citizen or a person with a disability, the actor would be strictly liable for the victimization offense. It would not be a defense that the actor did not know that the victim was a senior citizen or a person with a disability, nor would it be defense that the actor believed that the victim was not a senior citizen or a person with a disability, even if the mistaken belief was reasonable. The bill defines a "senior citizen" as a person 60 years of age or older. "Person with a disability" is defined as a person who by reason of a pre-existing medically determinable physical or mental impairment is substantially incapable of exercising normal physical or mental power of resistance, and includes, but is not limited to, a person determined disabled pursuant to the federal Social Security Act or any other governmental retirement or benefits program that uses substantially the same criteria for determining eligibility.

AI Summary

This bill creates the separate crime of "fiscal victimization" against senior citizens or persons with disabilities. Under this bill, a person would be guilty of fiscal victimization if they commit, attempt to commit, conspire to commit, or threaten to commit a theft offense or identity theft against a senior citizen (defined as someone 60 years or older) or a person with a disability (defined as someone substantially incapable of exercising normal physical or mental resistance). Fiscal victimization is graded as a crime one degree higher than the underlying offense, except if the underlying offense is a first-degree crime, in which case fiscal victimization is a first-degree crime with a potential sentence of 10 to 30 years. The bill also provides that convictions for fiscal victimization and the underlying offense do not merge, allowing for separate sentences. Finally, the bill states that the actor is strictly liable for the fiscal victimization offense, meaning it is not a defense that the actor did not know or reasonably believed the victim was not a senior citizen or person with a disability.

Committee Categories

Budget and Finance, Justice

Sponsors (3)

Last Action

Referred to Senate Budget and Appropriations Committee (on 01/30/2020)

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