HJUD - 03/15/95 HB 151 - MAGISTRATE PRESUMPTIVE DEATH JURISDICTION Number 410 CHRIS CHRISTENSEN explained that this bill is also a technical change, a cleanup, as it were. AS 20.215.120 purports to set forth the complete jurisdiction of magistrates. However, over the years, a new statute may be added someplace else, increasing the jurisdiction of magistrates, and the bill drafters forget to cross reference this statute. A review of the presumptive death statutes which are in Title 9, indicates that magistrates do have jurisdiction in presumptive death cases. These are cases where an interested person alleges that someone has disappeared, and after diligent search, cannot be found. If it appears to the satisfaction of the district judge or the magistrate that the circumstances surrounding the disappearance afford reasonable grounds that the person has suffered death from accidental or other violent means, it will be presented to a six person coroner's jury. If a unanimous jury finds sufficient evidence to presume that the missing person is dead, and the judge or magistrate approves the finding, then after a period of six months have elapsed, then the person would be presumed deceased. Essentially, Title 9 gives magistrates this authority. They have been doing it now, for decades. To clean up the language, we would like to make it clear by adding the same language to AS 22.15.100, since that is where people normally look when they want to see what a magistrate can do. REPRESENTATIVE CYNTHIA TOOHEY made a motion to move HB 151 out of committee with individual recommendations and a zero fiscal note. Hearing no objection, it was so ordered.