CSHB 122(JUD) - PRISONERS: LITIGATION & DEBTS CHAIRMAN TAYLOR announced HB 122 to be up for consideration. MS. ANNE CARPENETI, Department of Law, said HB 122 has two basic themes relating to laws that were passed in 1995 regarding prisoner litigation. These laws limit frivolous lawsuits and require 20 percent of a prisoner's jail account for a filing fee, a system that has worked fairly well. HB 122 adds to the information prisoners must submit when they apply for an exemption from a filing fee to include money in accounts outside the prison and expands the definition of litigation against the State to specifically include particular forms of appellate litigation. It also addresses the DNA testing bill making it easier for the State to introduce DNA profile evidence in a prosecution. It also set up a DNA bank in the Department of Public Safety but it did not provide any enforcement procedures to get people to submit to DNA testing and prisoners are refusing to submit samples. HB 122 provides enforcement mechanisms to get those samples: it is a required condition of parole and probation; and it requires the court to order a convicted felon to submit a sample for the DNA bank as a part of sentencing. Cheek swabs are normally used, so it's not an intrusive procedure. DNA evidence has been helpful in solving crimes. SENATOR ELLIS asked if the DNA collection was strictly prospective. MS. CARPENETI said it applies to people who convicted of certain crimes after the passage date. SENATOR ELLIS asked if there is a plan to collect evidence that might exonerate people who may have been wrongly convicted. He said this is very important if the death penalty is reinstated in Alaska. MS. CARPENETI answered this bill does not address that issue and she wasn't aware of any plans in that area. It applies to people who convicted of a crime after 1995. SENATOR ELLIS asked if this kind of measure had been challenged and upheld through the federal courts. MS. CARPENETI said she would find that out for him. SENATOR PARNELL added that hundreds of samples had been collected to date and asked how widespread the problem is. MS. CARPENETI replied that some people are cooperating, but it is a significant enough problem. They were unable to get it ordered in a case last September and were getting less cooperation as a result. TAPE 98-54, SIDE B Number 579 SENATOR PARNELL moved to pass CSHB 122(Jud) from committee with individual recommendations. There were no objections and it was so ordered.