Legislature(2011 - 2012)CAPITOL 120

03/05/2012 01:00 PM House JUDICIARY


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* first hearing in first committee of referral
+ teleconferenced
= bill was previously heard/scheduled
+ SB 173 2012 REVISOR'S BILL TELECONFERENCED
Moved Out of Committee
*+ HB 359 SEX CRIMES; TESTIMONY BY VIDEO CONFERENCE TELECONFERENCED
Heard & Held
+ Bills Previously Heard/Scheduled TELECONFERENCED
       HB 359 - SEX CRIMES; TESTIMONY BY VIDEO CONFERENCE                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
1:25:18 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
VICE CHAIR  THOMPSON announced that  the final order  of business                                                               
would be  HOUSE BILL NO. 359,  "An Act relating to  conspiracy to                                                               
commit human trafficking  in the first degree  or sex trafficking                                                               
in  the  first  degree;  relating  to  the  crime  of  furnishing                                                               
indecent material to minors, the  crime of online enticement of a                                                               
minor,  the  crime   of  prostitution,  and  the   crime  of  sex                                                               
trafficking;  relating   to  forfeiture   of  property   used  in                                                               
prostitution  offenses; relating  to  sex offender  registration;                                                               
relating  to testimony  by video  conference;  adding Rule  38.3,                                                               
Alaska  Rules  of  Criminal  Procedure;   and  providing  for  an                                                               
effective date."                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
1:26:11 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
ANNE  CARPENETI,  Assistant   Attorney  General,  Legal  Services                                                               
Section, Criminal  Division, Department  of Law  (DOL), explained                                                               
that the  majority of HB 359  - [Sections 1, 2,  7-11, 14, 17-19,                                                               
21-24, and  27] -  addresses changing  the name  of the  crime of                                                               
promoting  prostitution to  the  crime of  sex trafficking;  this                                                               
proposed name change applies to  first, second, third, and fourth                                                               
degree crimes, would  ensure that victims of  sex traffickers are                                                               
viewed  as  victims  rather than  as  prostitutes,  and  reflects                                                               
current law-enforcement  vernacular.   The other sections  of the                                                               
bill, she  proffered, reflect good public  policy.  Specifically,                                                               
Section  3  would   add  the  class  A  felony   crime  of  human                                                               
trafficking in the first degree  and the class A and unclassified                                                               
felony  crimes  of  sex  trafficking   in  the  first  degree  to                                                               
AS 11.31.120(h)(2),  which outlines  what  constitutes a  serious                                                               
felony  offense under  the statutes  pertaining to  the crime  of                                                               
conspiracy, which [generally] warrants  a felony charge one level                                                               
below that  of the  underlying felony offense.   Section  4 would                                                               
narrow  AS   11.61.128  -   which  pertains   to  the   crime  of                                                               
distribution of  indecent material to  minors - in response  to a                                                               
federal  district  court  ruling  that the  existing  statute  is                                                               
unconstitutionally overbroad;  under Section  4, the  state would                                                               
have to prove both that  the person intentionally distributed, or                                                               
possessed  with  intent  to distribute,  prohibited  material  to                                                               
someone he/she knew or believed to  be under 16 years of age, and                                                               
that the person knew the material depicted prohibited conduct.                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE HOLMES  expressed favor with Section  4's proposed                                                               
change to AS 11.61.128, offering  her recollection that the issue                                                               
of  unconstitutionality was  raised the  last time  the committee                                                               
addressed that statute.                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
MS.   CARPENETI,  in   response   to   questions,  relayed   that                                                               
Section 4's  proposed  changes have  been  vetted;  noted that  a                                                               
letter from  the American Civil  Liberties Union of  Alaska (ACLU                                                               
of Alaska) in  members' packets doesn't express  any concern with                                                               
Section 4; and  offered her belief that the  court's concern with                                                               
existing AS 11.61.128 is that  a person could unwittingly violate                                                               
it.  Section 4's proposed  changes would ensure that that statute                                                               
applies  only to  those  who intend  to  distribute materials  in                                                               
knowing violation of the law.                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
MS. CARPENETI,  in response to  another question,  clarified that                                                               
in  addition to  changing  the  name of  the  crime of  promoting                                                               
prostitution  to  the crime  of  sex  trafficking, Section  1  of                                                               
HB 359 would  add to AS 04.06.110  - a provision in  the statutes                                                               
pertaining to the Alcoholic Beverage  Control Board ("ABC Board")                                                               
- a  reference to the  fourth degree crime, AS  11.66.135, which,                                                               
due  to  an oversight,  she  surmised,  wasn't included  in  that                                                               
statute when  the legislature  first established  that particular                                                               
crime back in 2007.                                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
1:37:00 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MS. CARPENETI  went on  to explain  that Sections  5 and  6 would                                                               
[together]  raise  the   penalty  for  being  the   patron  of  a                                                               
prostitute  who  is under  18  years  of age  -  from  a class  B                                                               
misdemeanor  to  a  class  C   felony  -  and  provide  that  the                                                               
prostitute's age is  not a circumstance that requires  proof of a                                                               
culpable mental  state.  In  response to questions  and comments,                                                               
she confirmed that  under those provisions of the  bill, it won't                                                               
matter  what   age  the  "patron"   thinks  his/her   victim  is;                                                               
furthermore, comments  received from  the Public  Defender Agency                                                               
(PDA)  indicate that  perhaps Section  6 ought  to be  changed in                                                               
order  to clarify  that  the proposed  increase  in penalty  only                                                               
applies to the  patron.  Changing existing law as  Sections 5 and                                                               
6  are proposing  is one  way of  addressing people  who prey  on                                                               
children,  and the  point  is to  discourage  such behavior,  she                                                               
added, noting  that up  until as  recently as  2007, it  wasn't a                                                               
crime in Alaska to be the patron of a prostitute.                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
MS. CARPENETI then explained that Section  12 of HB 357 would add                                                               
the fourth  degree crime - AS  11.66.135 - to the  list of crimes                                                               
for  which corroboration  of certain  testimony is  not required;                                                               
this  proposed conforming  change, addressing  another oversight,                                                               
would  ensure  that   for  all  degrees  of  the   crime  of  sex                                                               
trafficking,   the    victim's   testimony    regarding   his/her                                                               
victimization need  not be  corroborated.   Section 13  would add                                                               
the  crime  of prostitution  -  AS  11.66.100  - to  the  statute                                                               
stipulating that property used to  institute, aid, or facilitate,                                                               
or  property received  or derived  from, a  violation of  the law                                                               
shall  be forfeited.   In  response to  questions regarding  what                                                               
kind of  property could  be subject  to forfeiture  under Section                                                               
13's proposed  AS 11.66.145, she  indicated that the  state would                                                               
have to  show a nexus  between the  property in question  and the                                                               
crime.                                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  HAWKER   observed  that  Section   12's  proposed                                                               
AS 11.66.140  references AS  11.66.110  -  AS 11.66.135,  whereas                                                               
Section  13's proposed  AS 11.66.145  references  AS 11.66.100  -                                                               
AS 11.66.135.                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
MS. CARPENETI  acknowledged that perhaps the  proposed references                                                               
in those two sections could be changed to mirror one another.                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
1:47:24 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MS.  CARPENETI went  on  to explain  that  Section 16's  proposed                                                               
addition of  a new subsection  (h) to AS  12.47.100 - one  of the                                                               
provisions in  Alaska's code of criminal  procedure pertaining to                                                               
insanity  and competency  to stand  trial -  would allow,  in the                                                               
pretrial hearing  to determine a defendant's  competency to stand                                                               
trial, testimony from a witness  by contemporaneous two-way video                                                               
conference [in situations in which  the witness would be required                                                               
to travel more than  50 miles to court, or lives  in a place from                                                               
which people customarily  travel by air to reach the  court].  To                                                               
date, neither  Alaska's courts  nor the  U.S. Supreme  Court have                                                               
specifically  addressed  this  issue,   though  courts  in  other                                                               
jurisdictions  have  and  do  allow  for  such  testimony.    The                                                               
rational for doing so, she  relayed, is that competency hearings,                                                               
which,  again, are  pretrial proceedings,  deal with  issues that                                                               
don't   have  criminal   penalties  attached;   furthermore,  the                                                               
evidentiary standard  used when determining competency  is merely                                                               
that of a preponderance of  the evidence - [the standard required                                                               
in most civil cases].                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
MS. CARPENETI opined  that it makes practical sense  to allow for                                                               
such testimony  in jurisdictions that have  the technology; under                                                               
Section 16,  a psychiatrist at  the Alaska  Psychiatric Institute                                                               
(API), for  example, could  testify and be  cross examined  as if                                                               
he/she  were in  the courtroom.   The  potential issue  raised by                                                               
Section 16,  she remarked, is  that of "confrontation"  - whether                                                               
the proposed statutory change would  still provide for a person's                                                               
constitutional  rights  to  be   confronted  with  the  witnesses                                                               
against   him/her,  and   the  DOL   believes   that  it   would.                                                               
Furthermore,  the  courts  have   already  held  that  competency                                                               
hearings are  different from  criminal trials  and thus  the full                                                               
panoply of constitutional rights  associated with criminal trials                                                               
do   not  necessarily   apply.     However,   she  relayed,   the                                                               
aforementioned  letter   from  the   ACLU  of   Alaska  expresses                                                               
disagreement on that point.                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
MS.  CARPENETI, in  response to  a question,  offered her  belief                                                               
that Section  16's proposed  AS 12.47.100(h)  would be  upheld by                                                               
the  court  because  it's discretionary  in  nature  rather  than                                                               
mandatory.    Such  testimony and  subsequent  cross  examination                                                               
would  be  "almost  face-to-face,"   she  remarked,  adding  that                                                               
although Alaska's  courts have held  that "face-to-face"  is very                                                               
important  at trial,  it's not  necessarily that  important at  a                                                               
pretrial proceeding.  She suggested  that in its written comments                                                               
regarding Section  16, the  ACLU of  Alaska is  perhaps confusing                                                               
the jurisprudence  addressing trial  issues with  that addressing                                                               
pretrial issues.  Again, under Section  16, it would be as if the                                                               
witness were in the courtroom with the defendant.                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE HOLMES  observed that  Section 16 is  proposing to                                                               
define the  term, "contemporaneous  two-way video  conference" as                                                               
used  in proposed  AS 12.47.100(h)  as being  a conference  among                                                               
people  at different  places by  means of  transmitted audio  and                                                               
video signals  and includes  all communication  technologies that                                                               
allow two or  more places to interact by two-way  video and audio                                                               
transmissions  simultaneously.   She expressed  concern regarding                                                               
the broadness of  that definition - specifically it's  use of the                                                               
phrase,  "all   communication  technologies"   -  and   with  the                                                               
potential for  the witness to  be coached by someone  off camera,                                                               
not visible  to the  court.  The  aforementioned letter  from the                                                               
ACLU of  Alaska, she noted,  suggests some  possible "sideboards"                                                               
to add to the bill; for  example, changing the bill such that the                                                               
only  person who  would be  allowed to  be in  the room  with the                                                               
witness would be the audio/video-conference technician.                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
MS. CARPENETI  noted that the  issue of  who shall be  allowed in                                                               
the room  with such a witness  is addressed in Section  25, which                                                               
is proposing a direct court rule  change to Rule 38 of the Alaska                                                               
Rules of Criminal Procedure.   She expressed a willingness to add                                                               
language from  Section 25 to Section  16 in order to  address the                                                               
concern, such  as the language  which provides that  either party                                                               
may  object to  having anyone  else in  the room  other than  the                                                               
witness and the audio/video-conference technician.                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
1:54:55 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MS. CARPENETI then explained that Section  20 of HB 357 would add                                                               
to AS  12.63.100(6) - which  defines the term, "sex  offense" for                                                               
purposes of  requiring a person  in Alaska  to register as  a sex                                                               
offender or child  kidnapper - a new subparagraph  (D) that would                                                               
additionally define  a sex  offense as being  a crime  in another                                                               
jurisdiction  that  requires the  person  to  register as  a  sex                                                               
offender  or child  kidnapper in  that other  jurisdiction.   The                                                               
DOL's position  is that for the  safety of Alaska citizens,  if a                                                               
person  who  is  physically  present in  Alaska  is  required  to                                                               
register  as  a  sex  offender  or  child  kidnapper  in  another                                                               
jurisdiction, he/she should  also have to register  in Alaska, at                                                               
least for the  period of time during which he/she  is required to                                                               
register in  that other  jurisdiction.   That latter  point could                                                               
perhaps be clarified  further in the bill,  she acknowledged, and                                                               
mentioned that  the administration  receives several  calls every                                                               
month from sex  offenders in other jurisdictions  wanting to know                                                               
if they could avoid having to  register as a sex offender if they                                                               
moved to  Alaska.   "We don't  necessarily want  to be  the place                                                               
where  people come  so  they  don't have  to  register  as a  sex                                                               
offender,"  she  added,  but  also  acknowledged  that  sometimes                                                               
behavior  constituting  a  sex offense  in  another  jurisdiction                                                               
might not constitute one in Alaska.                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  HAWKER  expressed   disfavor  with  Section  20's                                                               
proposed  change, specifically  with the  concept that  under it,                                                               
the  legislature  would  essentially be  abrogating  its  policy-                                                               
making  responsibilities to  other jurisdictions  with regard  to                                                               
what behavior constitutes a sex offense in Alaska.                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE HOLMES concurred.                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
MS.  CARPENETI  acknowledged  that  point.    In  response  to  a                                                               
question, she  indicated that  certain crimes  involving indecent                                                               
exposure,  for  example,  might sometimes  require  a  person  to                                                               
register as  a sex  offender in another  jurisdiction but  not in                                                               
Alaska.  No  one, she asserted, wants Alaska to  become the place                                                               
where sex  offenders move so  as not to  have to register  as sex                                                               
offenders.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
2:01:25 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MS. CARPENETI then explained that  Section 25, proposing a direct                                                               
court rule  change to  Rule 38  of the  Alaska Rules  of Criminal                                                               
Procedure  via the  addition  of  a new  Rule  38.3, would  allow                                                               
testimony  from  a  witness   by  contemporaneous  two-way  video                                                               
conference at  trial.  She  indicated that because of  a person's                                                               
constitutional  rights  to  be   confronted  with  the  witnesses                                                               
against him/her, such testimony [at  trial] would only be allowed                                                               
in  limited  circumstances.    "In  very  limited  facts-specific                                                               
circumstances,  this  procedure has  been  upheld  by the  United                                                               
States  Supreme Court  in Maryland  v. Craig,  ... [which]  dealt                                                             
with ...  child witnesses," she  added, and noted  that currently                                                               
under  Title   12,  Alaska  has  a   procedure  addressing  child                                                               
witnesses,  allowing  for  one-way closed-circuit  televising  of                                                               
such witnesses when  they are unable to face their  abusers.  The                                                               
proposed  new  court rule,  however,  provides  for a  different,                                                               
narrower,   procedure,   she   acknowledged,  one   involving   a                                                               
simultaneous two-way teleconference in which  the witness - as if                                                               
he/she were in the courtroom -  can see everyone and everyone can                                                               
see him/her, but for a particular  reason he/she cannot be in the                                                               
courtroom.   Under Section 25,  such a  witness would have  to be                                                               
under oath  and subject  to cross examination,  would have  to be                                                               
"unavailable" as  defined therein -  for example, if  he/she were                                                               
sick  -  and  the  use  of  his/her  testimony  must  further  an                                                               
important  public policy.   Use  of this  type of  procedure, she                                                               
pointed out, was upheld by the  [2nd Circuit Court of Appeals] in                                                               
United States v. Gigante; in that  case, the witness was dying of                                                             
cancer,  and  his testimony  was  essential  to the  prosecution.                                                               
This type of  procedure has also been approved in  cases in which                                                               
the witness was  out of the country or  was otherwise unavailable                                                               
for process  by the  State of  Alaska.  The  use of  Section 25's                                                               
proposed procedure,  she assured the committee,  would be limited                                                               
to  certain, narrow  circumstances,  decided  on a  case-by-case,                                                               
facts-specific basis.                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
2:06:26 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
QUINLAN  STEINER,  Director,   Central  Office,  Public  Defender                                                               
Agency (PDA), Department of  Administration (DOA), referred first                                                               
to  Section 16  - stipulating  that  in the  pretrial hearing  to                                                               
determine  a defendant's  competency  to  stand trial,  testimony                                                               
from a  witness by contemporaneous  two-way video  conference may                                                               
be allowed - and expressed concern  that this provision of HB 359                                                               
would erode the reliability of  the evidence the witness provides                                                               
and  would be  found  unconstitutional.   Although  the issue  of                                                               
competency  isn't  addressed in  an  actual  criminal trial,  the                                                               
determination regarding  competency is  fundamental to  the case,                                                               
and many profound  consequences flow from such  a determination -                                                               
sometimes  having a  greater  impact on  the  defendant than  the                                                               
actual penalties associated with the  underlying crime.  In fact,                                                               
he opined,  Section 16 would  erode the reliability of  the fact-                                                               
finding  process in  that  it's much  more  difficult to  conduct                                                               
cross examination when it's not done face-to-face.                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
MR.  STEINER said  that  the  reality is,  and  what history  has                                                               
shown, and  what the  law relies  upon, is  the idea  that [under                                                               
face-to-face cross  examination], it's much harder  for a witness                                                               
to persist  in either  false testimony  or mistaken  testimony or                                                               
testimony that  is given  to cover up  work that  hasn't actually                                                               
been done.   Situations involving the latter type  of testimony -                                                               
where experts  have failed to do  the work necessary to  render a                                                               
valid  opinion -  are  very significant  in  terms of  competency                                                               
hearings  because  without  the  face-to-face  confrontation  and                                                               
face-to-face  questioning during  cross examination,  there is  a                                                               
risk that the court could  draw an erroneous conclusion regarding                                                               
the  person's  competency.   And  although  the courts  in  other                                                               
jurisdictions  have  differentiated between  trial  confrontation                                                               
and pretrial  confrontation, Alaska's  courts have not  - instead                                                               
indicating  strongly   the  value  of  confrontation   in  [both]                                                               
settings.                                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
MR. STEINER  referred then to  Section 25 and relayed  that there                                                               
are similar  concerns with  that provision of  HB 359.   Although                                                               
the U.S. Supreme Court, in Craig,  has permitted what he termed a                                                             
"relaxation"  of   the  right  to  confrontation   under  certain                                                               
circumstances, and  the proposed new-court-rule  language appears                                                               
to be crafted so as to  comply with Craig, that language could be                                                             
construed  to be  broader then  intended  in the  sense that  the                                                               
provision doesn't also stipulate that  the question of whether to                                                               
allow such testimony  must be determined on  a case-by-case basis                                                               
with an  eye towards balancing  the important public  policies at                                                               
issue in  any given  case.  Furthermore,  Section 25  attempts to                                                               
define what would constitute a  witness's being, "unavailable" in                                                               
three  different  ways,  but  none  are  tied  to  a  finding  of                                                               
furthering an important  public policy - there  is no requirement                                                               
that there  be a  nexus between  the two  - and  so it's  hard to                                                               
predict  how  the  proposed  new court  rule  would  be  applied,                                                               
thereby raising  the risk  that it could  be challenged  as being                                                               
unconstitutional.   He mentioned  that in  Craig, the  court does                                                             
discuss the  consequences of  eroding one's  constitutional right                                                               
to confrontation, and suggested that  a review of that discussion                                                               
could assist members in understanding  the policy implications of                                                               
actual face-to-face confrontation.                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
2:11:55 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MR.  STEINER  referring  then  to   Section  20  -  proposing  to                                                               
additionally defining  the term,  "sex offense", for  purposes of                                                               
requiring a  person in Alaska  to register  as a sex  offender or                                                               
child kidnapper,  as being a  crime in another  jurisdiction that                                                               
requires a person  to register in that other  jurisdiction - said                                                               
the  concern with  that  provision of  HB 359  is  that it  could                                                               
include conduct not currently considered  "criminal" in Alaska or                                                               
conduct  that  has  already  been determined  in  Alaska  as  not                                                               
warranting registration.  Furthermore,  under Section 20, whether                                                               
particular conduct  would constitute  an offense for  purposes of                                                               
also registering in Alaska could change  from year to year if the                                                               
laws in those other jurisdictions  change, and such changes could                                                               
be hard to keep track of.                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
MR. STEINER,  in response to  questions, offered his  belief that                                                               
Section  4 would  address the  constitutional concerns  raised by                                                               
existing  law regarding  the crime  of  distribution of  indecent                                                               
material to minors - AS 11.61.110  - in that it requires specific                                                               
intent regarding  the distribution,  and knowledge  regarding the                                                               
age of the child; and indicated  that Sections 5 and 6 - together                                                               
raising the  penalty for being  the "patron" of a  prostitute who                                                               
is under 18 years of age from a  class B misdemeanor to a class C                                                               
felony -  are enforceable regardless that  the statute pertaining                                                               
to prostitution  [doesn't currently  provide] for  an affirmative                                                               
defense  regarding a  reasonable mistake  as  to the  age of  the                                                               
victim,  because the  underlying  behavior -  offering  a fee  in                                                               
return for sexual conduct -  is already illegal regardless of the                                                               
victim's age.                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
2:17:55 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
JEFFREY A. MITTMAN, Executive  Director, American Civil Liberties                                                               
Union of Alaska  (ACLU of Alaska), explained  that he's submitted                                                               
written  testimony  to  the  committee   outlining  the  ACLU  of                                                               
Alaska's  concerns with  [Sections 16,  20,  and 25  of] HB  359.                                                               
With  regard to  Section  16  - stipulating  that  in a  pretrial                                                               
hearing  to determine  a defendant's  competency to  stand trial,                                                               
testimony  from  a  witness   by  contemporaneous  two-way  video                                                               
conference may be  allowed - he additionally pointed  out that if                                                               
there are  unique circumstances in  a particular case,  the court                                                               
already  has  the  authority  to   provide  for  such  testimony.                                                               
Because  competency hearings  have significant  consequences that                                                               
attach to  findings of  competency, the  ACLU of  Alaska contends                                                               
that the statutory default should  always be that an individual's                                                               
rights   are  protected   to   the   greatest  extent   possible.                                                               
Furthermore, the  ACLU of Alaska  has not  been able to  find any                                                               
cases  in which  the  court  specifically differentiates  between                                                               
pretrial  competency hearings  and actual  trials with  regard to                                                               
witnesses' testimony.   In conclusion, he urged  the committee to                                                               
either seek  a more narrow  solution to the perceived  problem or                                                               
leave the pertinent  statute as is; again, the  court already has                                                               
the authority  to provide for  testimony by  contemporaneous two-                                                               
way video conference.                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
2:20:35 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
RODNEY   DIAL,  Lieutenant,   Deputy  Commander,   A  Detachment,                                                               
Division of  Alaska State Troopers,  Department of  Public Safety                                                               
(DPS), said simply that the DPS supports HB 359.                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
2:21:01 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
NANCY  MEADE, General  Counsel, Administrative  Staff, Office  of                                                               
the   Administrative  Director,   Alaska   Court  System   (ACS),                                                               
mentioning that  the ACS takes  no position on HB  359, explained                                                               
that the  ACS's indeterminate fiscal note  reflects that Sections                                                               
16 and 25 may have some fiscal  impact on the ACS, though the ACS                                                               
doesn't view  those provisions as  either requiring the  court to                                                               
install audio/video-conference  equipment capable of  meeting the                                                               
specifics  outlined in  Section  25, or  requiring  the court  to                                                               
provide  such  equipment  outside   the  courtroom  to  potential                                                               
witnesses.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
VICE CHAIR THOMPSON,  after ascertaining that no  one else wished                                                               
to  testify, closed  public testimony,  and relayed  that HB  359                                                               
would be held over.                                                                                                             

Document Name Date/Time Subjects
SB 173 Request.pdf HJUD 3/5/2012 1:00:00 PM
SB 173
SB0173-1-2-020312-LAW-N.pdf HJUD 3/5/2012 1:00:00 PM
SB 173
SB 173 Sectional Analysis.pdf HJUD 3/5/2012 1:00:00 PM
SB 173
HB 359 Request Governor.pdf HJUD 3/5/2012 1:00:00 PM
HB 359
HB 359 Sectional.pdf HJUD 3/5/2012 1:00:00 PM
HB 359
SB0173A.pdf HJUD 3/5/2012 1:00:00 PM
SB 173
SB 173 Repealed statute.pdf HJUD 3/5/2012 1:00:00 PM
SB 173
HB359-ACS-TRC-2-28-2012.pdf HJUD 3/5/2012 1:00:00 PM
HB 359
HB0359A.pdf HJUD 3/5/2012 1:00:00 PM
HB 359
Maryland v Sandra Ann Craig.pdf HJUD 3/5/2012 1:00:00 PM
Nguyen v Garcia.pdf HJUD 3/5/2012 1:00:00 PM
Reutter v. State of Alaska.pdf HJUD 3/5/2012 1:00:00 PM
US v Burhoe.pdf HJUD 3/5/2012 1:00:00 PM
US v Gigante.pdf HJUD 3/5/2012 1:00:00 PM
HB 359 ACLU Review 2012 03 04.pdf HJUD 3/5/2012 1:00:00 PM
HB 359
HB0359-1-2-022212-LAW-N.pdf HJUD 3/5/2012 1:00:00 PM
HB 359
HB0359-5-2-022212-COR-Y.pdf HJUD 3/5/2012 1:00:00 PM
HB 359
HB0359-3-2-022212-ADM-Y.pdf HJUD 3/5/2012 1:00:00 PM
HB 359
HB0359-4-2-022212-ADM-Y.pdf HJUD 3/5/2012 1:00:00 PM
HB 359
HB0359-6-2-022212-DPS-Y.pdf HJUD 3/5/2012 1:00:00 PM
HB 359
HB0359-2-2-022212-DPS-N.pdf HJUD 3/5/2012 1:00:00 PM
HB 359