Legislature(2011 - 2012)CAPITOL 120

03/25/2011 01:00 PM House JUDICIARY


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* first hearing in first committee of referral
+ teleconferenced
= bill was previously heard/scheduled
*+ HB 171 ARRESTS FOR MISDEMEANORS TELECONFERENCED
Heard & Held
+ HJR 4 CONST. AM: TRANSPORTATION FUND TELECONFERENCED
Heard & Held
+ Bills Previously Heard/Scheduled TELECONFERENCED
+= HB 23 COMPUTER PRIVACY TELECONFERENCED
Moved CSHB 23(JUD) Out of Committee
               HB 171 - ARRESTS FOR MISDEMEANORS                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
1:06:18 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR GATTO announced  that the first order of  business would be                                                               
HOUSE BILL NO. 171, "An  Act relating to arrests without warrants                                                               
by peace officers for certain misdemeanors."                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
1:06:37 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE CATHY MUNOZ, Alaska  State Legislature, sponsor by                                                               
request,  explained  that  HB 171  would  allow  law  enforcement                                                               
officers  to  make  an  arrest  without  a  warrant  for  certain                                                               
misdemeanor  crimes  against  a  person when  there  is  probable                                                               
cause.   The concept of  HB 171 was  brought forth by  the Juneau                                                               
Police Department  (JPD), and is  endorsed by  police departments                                                               
across the state.   Under AS 11.41 - offenses  against a person -                                                               
misdemeanor  crimes   include  assault  in  the   fourth  degree,                                                               
reckless endangerment,  stalking in the second  degree, custodial                                                               
interference in the  second degree, sexual assault  in the fourth                                                               
degree,  sexual  abuse of  a  minor  in  the fourth  degree,  and                                                               
indecent exposure in  the second degree.  She  mentioned that law                                                               
enforcement   representatives   would  be   providing   testimony                                                               
regarding why  legislation such as  HB 171  is needed and  how it                                                               
would  improve law  enforcement's ability  to effectively  ensure                                                               
public safety in Alaska's communities.                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
1:09:13 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
KRIS  SELL, Lieutenant,  Juneau Police  Department (JPD),  City &                                                               
Borough  of  Juneau  (CBJ); President,  Capital  City  Chapter  -                                                               
Juneau, Member,  State Board of Directors,  Alaska Peace Officers                                                               
Association   (APOA),  after   mentioning  that   she  would   be                                                               
testifying only  on behalf  of the  APOA, said  that the  APOA is                                                               
supporting  HB 171  as part  of  its agenda  to promote  victims'                                                               
rights.  She  then shared an experience she'd had  many years ago                                                               
as a  patrol officer in  Juneau as  illustrative of the  need for                                                               
HB 171.   Back then,  there was  a man in  the downtown  area who                                                               
liked to beat up people  who were weaker than himself, especially                                                               
drunk people because they were  easy targets; he would just start                                                               
punching  other people  simply because  they drew  his attention.                                                               
One night,  near the El  Sombrero restaurant on  Franklin Street,                                                               
this man  punched a much  smaller/lighter man  in the face.   The                                                               
victim,  who  either  couldn't  or wouldn't  do  much  to  defend                                                               
himself,  was  young  and had  some  mental-health  problems  but                                                               
regardless  had done  nothing  to deserve  getting  beaten.   The                                                               
victim  was  obviously  injured  by the  time  she  arrived,  she                                                               
relayed,  and witnesses  pointed  out where  the perpetrator  had                                                               
gone, and knowing whom they  were referring to, then-Officer Sell                                                               
gave chase and caught up with him by the bank on Front Street.                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
LIEUTENANT SELL continued:                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
     I got in  front of him and told him  he was detained as                                                                    
     part of  the investigation.   He sized  me up  and down                                                                    
     and said, "No,  I'm not."  I said, "Yes,  you are," and                                                                    
     drew my baton from the ring  at my waist.  He looked at                                                                    
     me  and thought  for a  second -  I felt  like I  could                                                                    
     almost  see the  smoke coming  out  of his  ears as  he                                                                    
     pondered what  might happen next  - [and] I  will admit                                                                    
     to  being relieved  when he  said,  "Okay," and  turned                                                                    
     around  and  put  his  hands  behind  his  back  to  be                                                                    
     handcuffed  -  he  had a  long  history  of  assaulting                                                                    
     people, both  [domestic partners  and others],  ... and                                                                    
     he knew the  drill.  I walked him back  to the scene to                                                                    
     the approval of the gathered  crowd, and put him in the                                                                    
     back of my  patrol car, and spoke with  the victim, the                                                                    
     victim's friend, and other witnesses.   They all agreed                                                                    
     I had the  right man and that he  had viciously punched                                                                    
     the much smaller man in the  face.  It also came out in                                                                    
     officer interviews,  there and  other places,  that the                                                                    
     man  had  punched  two other  people  within  about  24                                                                    
     hours,  one of  whom  had [come]  ...  into the  police                                                                    
     department with his eyes swelled shut.                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
1:12:12 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
     I got  out a citizen's  arrest report form  and offered                                                                    
     it  to the  people who  ... saw  the assault.   No  one                                                                    
     would  sign.    They  were   afraid  of  him.    I  was                                                                    
     frustrated,  but I  understood -  he was  a very  scary                                                                    
     man, even  for us.  None  of the civilians in  the area                                                                    
     wanted to be the focus  of this violent man's attention                                                                    
     and retribution.   I  told the victim  about how  I was                                                                    
     going to have  to let the man go if  no one would place                                                                    
     him under arrest.  This  is exactly what happened - [I]                                                                    
     took the  man out of  the car, took off  his handcuffs,                                                                    
     and let him go.  You  can imagine what this did for his                                                                    
     reputation as someone  who was going to  do whatever he                                                                    
     wanted  and nobody,  including  the  police, ...  [was]                                                                    
     going  to  stop  him.    The  bully  went  on  to  harm                                                                    
     additional  people in  his  criminal  career, until  we                                                                    
     finally saw  him go to  prison for a long  period after                                                                    
     he robbed  a homeless man:   a felony, where  we didn't                                                                    
     need  anybody who  was  a witness  to  place him  under                                                                    
     arrest.                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
     But I've always  wondered how many of  those assaults -                                                                    
     how  many of  those  criminal acts  -  could have  been                                                                    
     prevented if  we could have  held him  accountable more                                                                    
     severely and much  quicker.  I'm asking you  to let the                                                                    
     police protect citizens and to  do so immediately after                                                                    
     a citizen is violently attacked.   We officers will put                                                                    
     our  names down  on the  piece  of paper  and take  the                                                                    
     responsibility  for arresting  those  who hurt  others.                                                                    
     Please  don't continue  to put  that responsibility  on                                                                    
     people who are frightened and  who have every reason to                                                                    
     be  frightened.   It is  time to  tell the  bullies and                                                                    
     those who make a  lifestyle of intimidating others that                                                                    
     we are  done with  that behavior, and  consequences for                                                                    
     attacking  even  a  stranger  will  now  be  immediate.                                                                    
     Thank you - I appreciate your time and attention ....                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
LIEUTENANT SELL,  in response to  questions, reiterated  that the                                                               
APOA supports  HB 171, and  said she doesn't anticipate  that the                                                               
arrest authority granted by the bill  would be used all the time,                                                               
particularly   given  that   even   with   probable  cause,   law                                                               
enforcement   officers   often   want   to   conduct   additional                                                               
investigation before actually arresting  someone; instead, HB 171                                                               
would give  law enforcement officers  another tool with  which to                                                               
address  violent behavior  immediately.   She  pointed out,  too,                                                               
that an arrest  would not be mandatory under the  bill like it is                                                               
under Alaska's domestic  violence (DV) statutes.   In response to                                                               
further questions,  she explained  that law  enforcement officers                                                               
already have to  determine whether an assault  has actually taken                                                               
place, whether there really is  probable cause to arrest someone,                                                               
who to arrest, and whether an arrest  is going to be the best way                                                               
of addressing  the violent behavior or  whether alternative steps                                                               
could  be taken,  and the  bill  wouldn't change  that; and  that                                                               
current  law  already  requires mandatory  arrest  in  situations                                                               
involving DV regardless  of whether the violence  is witnessed by                                                               
the  officer,  and   thus  the  bill  wouldn't  be   used  in  DV                                                               
situations.   Again,  HB 171  would simply  give law  enforcement                                                               
officers  a  tool  with which  to  immediately  address  [non-DV-                                                               
related] violent  behavior in  situations where  no one  wants to                                                               
make  a citizen's  arrest and  the officer  hasn't witnessed  the                                                               
behavior.                                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
1:21:07 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
EDWARD TALIK,  Chief, Ketchikan Police Department  (KPD), City of                                                               
Ketchikan,  expressed support  for HB  171, characterizing  it as                                                               
important  legislation  that  would   provide  another  tool  for                                                               
Alaska's law  enforcement officers.   He went on to  explain that                                                               
the  KPD is  a  small  police force,  serving  a population  that                                                               
doubles with  the influx  of seasonal  workers and  tourists, and                                                               
thus there is  a definite need for the KPD  to keep public safety                                                               
at  the forefront  of  its  efforts.   If  passed, he  predicted,                                                               
HB 171 would give  KPD officers greater latitude  to address some                                                               
of  the  issues  they  face  daily.   Often,  calls  for  service                                                               
pertaining to [non-DV-related] assaults  come after the fact, and                                                               
currently law  enforcement officers can't do  much unless someone                                                               
is willing to  place the perpetrator under citizen's  arrest.  By                                                               
allowing an officer that has  probable cause to make an on-scene,                                                               
warrantless  arrest for  one  of  the aforementioned  misdemeanor                                                               
offenses against  a person, HB  171 would  go a long  way towards                                                               
helping  the KPD  protect its  citizens, particularly  given that                                                               
many times  officers end up  responding to the same  call several                                                               
times during  their shift; by  providing the option of  taking an                                                               
individual into custody on the  first call and thereby preventing                                                               
folks from being further injured  by that same individual, HB 171                                                               
would  result  in  a  more   efficient  use  of  law  enforcement                                                               
resources.    Furthermore,  it  makes  more  sense  to  arrest  a                                                               
perpetrator of a violent crime immediately.                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
1:24:17 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MR.  TALIK offered  his belief  that  HB 171  would help  protect                                                               
victims from  further violence and  serve as a  deterrent because                                                               
perpetrators  of violence  would know  that they're  going to  be                                                               
arrested immediately  when there is  probable cause.   There must                                                               
be  a  balance between  protecting  the  individual's rights  and                                                               
protecting the public at large, and  HB 171 would be a small step                                                               
toward achieving  that balance, he opined,  additionally offering                                                               
his belief that  HB 171 would survive  a constitutional challenge                                                               
because  similar  laws  in  other   states  have  done  so.    In                                                               
conclusion, he  reiterated his belief  that once adopted,  HB 171                                                               
would  help protect  people in  the  community.   In response  to                                                               
questions and  comments, he  stated that  arrests should  only be                                                               
made when there is probable cause  to make an arrest; pointed out                                                               
that the bill, already, would  only apply to misdemeanor offenses                                                               
against  a  person, and  that  although  there  might be  a  cost                                                               
associated with  making more arrests  under the bill, there  is a                                                               
huge cost  to society  and to victims  when they  are continually                                                               
being abused,  assaulted, or  raped by  the same  perpetrators of                                                               
violence; offered  his belief that  the authority granted  by the                                                               
bill  would not  be used  that often,  and that  it would  not be                                                               
abused  because  officers are  trained  to  follow the  rules  of                                                               
arrest which  require them to  have probable cause  before making                                                               
an  arrest; and  surmised that  changing  the bill  such that  it                                                               
would specifically list the crimes  to which it could apply would                                                               
still be in keeping with the spirit of the bill.                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE HOLMES  questioned whether perhaps the  bill ought                                                               
to be  changed to  specify that  it could only  be used  when the                                                               
officer  also has  reasonable cause  to believe  a danger  to the                                                               
public exists  if someone isn't  arrested, but  acknowledged that                                                               
whether a person should be  arrested under the bill could instead                                                               
just be left up to the discretion of the officer.                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
MR.  TALIK indicated  a  preference  for having  the  bill be  as                                                               
simple as possible.                                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
1:36:11 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
TERRY  VRABEC,   Executive  Director,  Alaska   Police  Standards                                                               
Council (APSC),  Department of Public Safety  (DPS), relayed that                                                               
both the  APSC and  the Alaska Association  of Chiefs  of Police,                                                               
Inc. (AACOP),  support HB  171.   In response  to a  question, he                                                               
explained  that from  the  very beginning,  the  training of  law                                                               
enforcement  officers stresses  the importance  of learning  what                                                               
constitutes  probable  cause  and   of  being  able  justify  all                                                               
arrests;  and that  it  is  the responsibility  of  the heads  of                                                               
Alaska's various  law enforcement  agencies to ensure  that their                                                               
officers are  following proper  procedure.   He then  offered his                                                               
belief that HB  171 would be effecting a good  law, and cautioned                                                               
against tightening  it up to the  point where it would  no longer                                                               
be helpful.                                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
1:39:05 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
JERRY NANKERVIS, Captain, Juneau  Police Department (JPD), City &                                                               
Borough  of Juneau  (CBJ),  shared an  experience  he'd had  many                                                               
years  ago   regarding  a   bar  fight   he'd  responded   to  as                                                               
illustrative of the necessity for  and appropriateness of HB 171.                                                               
Back then, when  he arrived at the scene, the  man who'd lost the                                                               
fight  was  unconscious  and  so  couldn't  be  interviewed,  and                                                               
although  witnesses at  the scene  pointed  out the  perpetrator,                                                               
none were willing  to sign the arrest form,  and therefore [then-                                                               
Officer Nankervis]  was unable to arrest  the perpetrator because                                                               
he had not witnessed the fight.   Noting that as a police officer                                                               
he is  charged with public safety,  he said he wasn't  able to do                                                               
his  job that  night, and  characterized that  inability as  just                                                               
being  wrong.   Passage  of  the  bill  would neither  lower  the                                                               
standard requiring that there be  probable cause before an arrest                                                               
is made, nor  increase the potential for  false arrests; instead,                                                               
what  would change  is  that law  enforcement  officers would  be                                                               
better  able to  address public  safety issues  immediately under                                                               
certain circumstances.                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
CAPTAIN  NANKERVIS also  noted that  when an  arrest is  made, it                                                               
doesn't  necessarily mean  that  the person  is  actually put  in                                                               
jail;  instead, law  enforcement officers  might simply  take the                                                               
perpetrator  to the  police station  and issue  him/her a  ticket                                                               
before  releasing him/her.   Expressing  a preference  for having                                                               
the bill  apply to all misdemeanor  crimes so that it  would also                                                               
address [certain] property crimes, he,  too, noted that an arrest                                                               
would not  be mandatory under  the bill.  Furthermore,  there are                                                               
already   procedures  in   place   to  address   abuses  of   law                                                               
enforcement's  arrest authority,  he  remarked,  and offered  his                                                               
belief that law  enforcement officers already have  a pretty good                                                               
idea about  what needs  to be  done in  order to  maintain public                                                               
safety,  and that  HB 171  would  assist in  those  efforts.   In                                                               
response  to  a question,  he  relayed  that whether  an  assault                                                               
warrants a misdemeanor  charge or a felony charge  depends on the                                                               
severity  of the  injury  sustained  by the  victim,  and on  the                                                               
severity of assaultive behavior.                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
1:51:50 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
LAREN J.  ZAGER, Chief, Fairbanks  Police Department  (FPD), City                                                               
of Fairbanks,  ventured that proof  of the  value of HB  171 lies                                                               
with  existing  law,  specifically  the laws  pertaining  to  the                                                               
crimes of domestic violence (DV)  and driving under the influence                                                               
(DUI);  years  ago, the  legislature  determined  that the  state                                                               
needed  to   more  effectively   and  more   efficiently  address                                                               
situations involving DV and DUI,  and so provided law enforcement                                                               
officers with the  authority to arrest in  those situations based                                                               
on probable cause.   House Bill 171 would merely  be an extension                                                               
of that authority, and wouldn't  require law enforcement officers                                                               
to  change  their  probable-cause standards,  or  interfere  with                                                               
their existing  discretion to determine whether  an arrest should                                                               
be made  in any  given case.   An arrest  would not  be mandatory                                                               
under  HB  171,   and  it  has  the  potential   for  making  law                                                               
enforcement more  efficient while  also being  of benefit  to the                                                               
public.                                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
MR. ZAGER  then pointed out  that there is a  distinction between                                                               
arresting a person  and charging a person; one  could be arrested                                                               
but  not charged,  and one  could  be charged  but not  arrested.                                                               
Under  HB 171,  a law  enforcement  officer would  be allowed  to                                                               
establish whether a particular person is  going to be a danger to                                                               
himself/herself or  others, and  then, if the  existing probable-                                                               
cause standards  are met,  put the person  in handcuffs  and take                                                               
him/her  to  jail; the  bill  wouldn't  affect law  enforcement's                                                               
ability to  charge the  person with a  misdemeanor, but  it would                                                               
sure  affect law  enforcement's ability  to take  the perpetrator                                                               
out of  play for whatever period  of time is necessary  to ensure                                                               
the safety  of the public.   In  conclusion, he said  he supports                                                               
HB 171,   though  he   wishes  it   applied  to   "virtually  all                                                               
misdemeanors."                                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
1:55:32 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
PAGE  DECKER, Assistant  Chief, Juneau  Police Department  (JPD),                                                               
City & Borough  of Juneau (CBJ), relayed that he  has worked as a                                                               
police  officer in  other states  that have  had laws  similar to                                                               
that being  proposed by  HB 171,  and considers  such laws  to be                                                               
great tools, adding  that he has not seen  them abused, surmising                                                               
that that's due to the  training law enforcement officers receive                                                               
and the internal  systems that are in place to  deal with abuses.                                                               
He then  provided members  with a  handout listing  those similar                                                               
laws.   Characterizing the law proposed  by HB 171 as  a critical                                                               
tool, he  opined that Alaska's  law enforcement officers  need it                                                               
in  order to  succeed  in  their mission  of  keeping the  peace.                                                               
Without  the  ability  to  bring  control  to  disorderly-conduct                                                               
incidents   without  the   assistance  of   a  willing   citizen,                                                               
communities can't be assured that  their law enforcement officers                                                               
will be effective  when called upon for  help, particularly given                                                               
that in  such [misdemeanor] cases, law  enforcement officers have                                                               
no more authority than any  other citizen to arrest a perpetrator                                                               
of violence.  Without adoption of  HB 171, there will continue to                                                               
be no  immediate consequence for  those who choose  to [violently                                                               
misbehave].                                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
1:58:51 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
RODNEY   DIAL,  Lieutenant,   Deputy  Commander,   A  Detachment,                                                               
Division of  Alaska State Troopers,  Department of  Public Safety                                                               
(DPS),  said that  officially,  the  DPS is  neutral  on HB  171,                                                               
though  it  agrees  with  the   comments  made  by  the  previous                                                               
testifiers.  Regardless  that HB 171 might  slightly increase the                                                               
number  of arrests  made  by law  enforcement  officers, the  DPS                                                               
anticipates  that  the additional  time  required  to make  those                                                               
arrests  would  be  offset  by   a  reduction  in  the  officers'                                                               
workloads because  they would  no longer  need to  be continually                                                               
responding to  the same scene, and  by a reduction in  the number                                                               
of subpoenas  and warrants issued.   Law enforcement  officers in                                                               
rural areas  of the state would  also benefit by the  adoption of                                                               
HB 171  because it's not  always possible  for them to  contact a                                                               
judicial officer immediately [in order to obtain a warrant].                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
2:00:15 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
QUINLAN  STEINER,  Director,   Central  Office,  Public  Defender                                                               
Agency  (PDA),  Department  of Administration  (DOA),  said  that                                                               
HB 171 raises  concerns for the  PDA because the bill  in essence                                                               
bypasses  any review  of the  arrest decisions  made in  [certain                                                               
misdemeanor]  cases,  even  those   with  no  exigency  requiring                                                               
immediate  arrest.   He predicted  that under  the bill,  arrests                                                               
without sufficient  probable cause would occur.   Furthermore, as                                                               
currently  written, HB  171 would  apply to  some very  low-level                                                               
misdemeanor  offenses against  a  person, and  this,  too, is  of                                                               
concern  to the  PDA, he  indicated;  for example,  the crime  of                                                               
reckless  endangerment  could   [perhaps]  involve  something  as                                                               
simple as driving too  fast on an icy road and  not being able to                                                               
stop at a stop sign.                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
2:02:57 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
ANNE  CARPENETI,  Assistant   Attorney  General,  Legal  Services                                                               
Section, Criminal Division, Department  of Law (DOL), in response                                                               
to a  question, said that the  DOL's concerns regarding HB  171 -                                                               
as  expressed in  a letter  dated February  7, 2011  - have  been                                                               
significantly  alleviated by  the bill's  limited application  to                                                               
only  the aforementioned  misdemeanor offenses  against a  person                                                               
instead of  to all misdemeanors.   She said she shares  the PDA's                                                               
concern  that the  bill  would  allow an  arrest  for an  offense                                                               
committed  outside  the officer's  presence  even  in cases  that                                                               
don't  involve   exigent  circumstances.    In   conclusion,  she                                                               
acknowledged, though,  that the examples  such as the  one shared                                                               
by  Lieutenant Sell  illustrate  how legislation  such as  HB 171                                                               
could provide a useful tool for law enforcement.                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR GATTO  indicated a  belief that  with very  few exceptions,                                                               
most  law   enforcement  officers,  given  all   their  training,                                                               
probably wouldn't abuse the bill.                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR  GATTO,  after ascertaining  that  no  one else  wished  to                                                               
testify on  the bill, closed  public testimony, and  relayed that                                                               
HB 171 would be held over.                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                

Document Name Date/Time Subjects
HB171 Sponsor Statement 03-11-11.pdf HJUD 3/25/2011 1:00:00 PM
HB 171
HB171 Version B 02-25-11.pdf HJUD 3/25/2011 1:00:00 PM
HB 171
HB171 Fiscal Note-DOA-PDA 03-24-11.pdf HJUD 3/25/2011 1:00:00 PM
HB 171
HB171 Fiscal Note-DOC-OC 03-19-11.pdf HJUD 3/25/2011 1:00:00 PM
HB 171
HB171 Fiscal Note-DPS-DET 03-07-11.pdf HJUD 3/25/2011 1:00:00 PM
HB 171
HB171 Fiscal Note-LAW-CRIM 03-25-11.pdf HJUD 3/25/2011 1:00:00 PM
HB 171
HB171 Supporting Documents-Letter APOA 03-09-11.pdf HJUD 3/25/2011 1:00:00 PM
HB 171
HB171 Supporting Documents-Letters 03-09-11.pdf HJUD 3/25/2011 1:00:00 PM
HB 171
HB171 Supporting Documents-Opinion DOL 02-07-11.pdf HJUD 3/25/2011 1:00:00 PM
HB 171
HB171 Supporting Documents-Opinion Texas AG.pdf HJUD 3/25/2011 1:00:00 PM
HB 171
HB171 Supporting Documents-Report Leg Research 10-07-10.pdf HJUD 3/25/2011 1:00:00 PM
HB 171
HB23 CS Version E 03-24-11.pdf HJUD 3/25/2011 1:00:00 PM
HB 23
HB23 Explanation of Changes Version B to E 03-25-11.pdf HJUD 3/25/2011 1:00:00 PM
HB 23
HJR4 Sponsor Statement Version D 03-11-11.pdf HJUD 3/25/2011 1:00:00 PM
HJR 4
HJR4 CS(TRA) Version D 03-09-11.pdf HJUD 3/25/2011 1:00:00 PM
HJR 4
HJR4 Fiscal Note-DOR-TRS 03-18-11.pdf HJUD 3/25/2011 1:00:00 PM
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HJR4 Fiscal Note-OOG-DOE 02-11-11.pdf HJUD 3/25/2011 1:00:00 PM
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HJR4 Supporting Documents-Email Steve Sorensen 02-14-11.pdf HJUD 3/25/2011 1:00:00 PM
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HJR4 Supporting Documents-Letter AML 2011.pdf HJUD 3/25/2011 1:00:00 PM
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HJR4 Supporting Documents-Letter Business Advocacy Committee 02-09-11.pdf HJUD 3/25/2011 1:00:00 PM
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HJR4 Supporting Documents-Letter Harbormasters 02-14-11.pdf HJUD 3/25/2011 1:00:00 PM
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HJR4 Supporting Documents-Letter Miners 01-2011.pdf HJUD 3/25/2011 1:00:00 PM
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HJR4 Supporting Documents-Letter Mobility Coalition 02-15-11.pdf HJUD 3/25/2011 1:00:00 PM
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HJR4 Supporting Documents-Letter State Chamber 02-13-11.pdf HJUD 3/25/2011 1:00:00 PM
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HJR4 Supporting Documents-Opinion Legal Services 02-25-11.pdf HJUD 3/25/2011 1:00:00 PM
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HJR4 Supporting Documents-Report Persily 09-28-09.pdf HJUD 3/25/2011 1:00:00 PM
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HJR4 Supporting Documents-Resolution MSB 02-23-11.pdf HJUD 3/25/2011 1:00:00 PM
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HJR4 Supporting Documents-Table ATIF Payout 03-25-11.pdf HJUD 3/25/2011 1:00:00 PM
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