Bill

Bill > A2200


NJ A2200

NJ A2200
Creates the crime of victimization of a senior citizen or a person with a disability.


summary

Introduced
01/27/2016
In Committee
01/27/2016
Crossed Over
Passed
Dead
01/08/2018

Introduced Session

2016-2017 Regular Session

Bill Summary

This bill establishes a separate crime of victimization against a senior citizen or a person with a disability, which must be charged and proved as any other crime. Victimization would be graded one degree higher than the offense that was committed. A person would be guilty of victimization if the person commits any crime listed in the bill against a senior citizen or a person with a disability. Upon a conviction, the sentence imposed by the court would not merge with the sentence imposed for the underlying offense. This bill also provides that if the underlying crime for which the person is being sentenced was graded as a crime of the first or second degree, the sentence imposed shall include a term of post-incarceration parole supervision. Under the bill, a "senior citizen" is defined as a person 62 years of age or over. A "person with a disability" is defined as a person who by reason of any 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, any 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 establishes a separate crime of "victimization" against a senior citizen (defined as a person 62 years of age or over) or a person with a disability (defined as someone substantially incapable of exercising normal physical or mental power of resistance, including those determined disabled under federal or state programs). The victimization crime must be charged and proved separately from the underlying offense, and it is graded one degree higher than the underlying offense, except that victimization of a first-degree crime is a first-degree crime with a potential sentence of 20 years to life. The bill also requires a term of post-incarceration parole supervision if the underlying crime is of the first or second degree.

Committee Categories

Justice

Sponsors (4)

Last Action

Introduced, Referred to Assembly Judiciary Committee (on 01/27/2016)

bill text


bill summary

Loading...

bill summary

Loading...
Loading...