Bill
Bill > HB441
summary
Introduced
01/12/2026
01/12/2026
In Committee
02/18/2026
02/18/2026
Crossed Over
02/16/2026
02/16/2026
Passed
Dead
Introduced Session
2026 Regular Regular Session
Bill Summary
Judicial Inquiry and Review Commission; reform. Increases from seven to 12 the number of members of the Judicial Inquiry and Review Commission (the Commission) by adding two additional attorney members, an additional active judge of the Court of Appeals of Virginia, and two additional citizen members. The bill provides that such attorney members be chosen by members of the General Assembly from recommendations provided by the Council of the Virginia State Bar, the Board of Directors for the Virginia Association of Commonwealth's Attorneys, and the Board of Directors for the Virginia Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers, and reduces the required years of practice for such lawyer members from 15 to eight. The bill establishes an initial and subsequent annual training requirement for each member and any newly hired counsel for the Commission. Additionally, the bill requires the Commission to adopt and implement a conflict of interest policy. The bill clarifies appointment powers of the Governor in any case where a member of the Commission or staff for the Commission is disqualified from or voluntarily recuses himself from participation in a proceeding. Further, the bill requires the Commission to adopt, the Committees for Courts of Justice to approve, and the Commission to make publicly available a Code of Conduct for all Commission members and Commission staff. The bill provides that the Commission shall make all reasonable efforts to contact any witnesses specified in complaints alleging judicial misconduct to assist the Commission. Further, the bill clarifies that the Commission may investigate any complaints within their purview arising out of matters that are pending or on appeal, and that the Commission shall not dismiss such complaints solely on the basis that the matter from which such complaint arose is pending or on appeal. The bill requires the Commission to make publicly available a publication specifying all possible sanctions, informal disciplinary actions, and supervision agreements the Commission may impose on a judge who is the subject of a complaint and provides an option for requiring the mandatory recusal of such judge in certain instances. The bill prohibits the Attorney General from acting as counsel in any proceeding where the Attorney General was involved in a case, either at trial or on appeal, where a complaint of judicial misconduct arose from such case, and provides that the Conflict of Interest policy the Commission adopts shall govern the Attorney General. The bill removes provisions of confidentiality for a complainant that currently bars a complainant from discussing or sharing privileged information regarding any filed complaint and permits such complainant to discuss publicly the filing of a complaint and any associated events relating to the complaint. The bill clarifies notice requirements to the complainant by the Commission. Finally, the bill permits the Office of the Executive Secretary of the Supreme Court of Virginia to provide the annual judicial performance evaluations for all judges subject to evaluation to the Commission, and such evaluations shall remain confidential.
AI Summary
This bill reforms the Judicial Inquiry and Review Commission (the Commission) by increasing its membership from seven to nine, adding two attorney members chosen by the General Assembly from recommendations by specific legal associations, and reducing the required years of practice for lawyer members from 15 to eight. It also mandates initial and annual training for Commission members and newly hired counsel, and requires the Commission to adopt a conflict of interest policy and a publicly available Code of Conduct. The bill clarifies the Governor's appointment powers when a Commission member or staff is disqualified or recuses themselves, and directs the Commission to make reasonable efforts to contact witnesses for complaints of judicial misconduct. Complainants will now have the opportunity to respond to any defense presented by a judge, and the Commission can investigate complaints related to matters that are pending or on appeal, without dismissing them solely on that basis. The bill requires the Commission to publish possible sanctions for judges and allows for mandatory recusal in certain cases, while prohibiting the Attorney General from acting as counsel if they were involved in the case that led to the complaint. Importantly, complainants will no longer be prohibited from discussing the filing of a complaint and associated events, and the Commission will maintain confidentiality for judicial performance evaluation comments transmitted to them.
Committee Categories
Justice
Sponsors (1)
Last Action
Referred to Committee for Courts of Justice (on 02/18/2026)
Official Document
bill text
bill summary
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bill summary
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bill summary
| Document Type | Source Location |
|---|---|
| State Bill Page | https://lis.virginia.gov/bill-details/20261/HB441 |
| BillText | https://lis.virginia.gov/bill-details/20261/HB441/text/HB441H1 |
| BillText | https://lis.virginia.gov/bill-details/20261/HB441/text/HB441HC2 |
| BillText | https://lis.virginia.gov/bill-details/20261/HB441/text/HB441HC1 |
| Fiscal Note/Analysis - Fiscal Impact Statement from Department of Planning and Budget (HB441) | https://lis.blob.core.windows.net/files/1096053.PDF |
| BillText | https://lis.virginia.gov/bill-details/20261/HB441/text/HB441 |
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