HB 355-CRIMINAL FINES FOR ORGANIZATIONS  CHAIR FRENCH announced the consideration of HB 355. [CSHB 355(JUD) was before the committee.] 9:35:06 AM GRETCHEN STAFT, Staff to Representative Max Gruenberg, sponsor of HB 355, explained that the bill amends the statute that provides the maximum criminal fines that may be levied against an organization upon conviction of an offense. Page 1, lines 7- 13, provides the following: · The maximum fine for a felony offense that results in death or a misdemeanor offense that results in death is increased [from $1 million to $2.5 million.] · The maximum fine for a class A misdemeanor offense that does not result in death is increased [from $200,000 to $500,000.] · The maximum fine for a class B misdemeanor offense that does not result in death is increased [from $25,000 to $75,000.] · The maximum fine for a violation is increased [from $10,000 to $25,000.] MS. STAFT noted that the fines for the less serious misdemeanors and a violation haven't changed since 1990 and inflation alone would have increased those by about 60 percent. The fine for a felony offense or a misdemeanor offense resulting in death was last raised in 2002, but the sponsor believes that the increase is justified because of the seriousness of the offense and because crimes by organizations are more sophisticated and yield great benefit to the organization. She clarified that these are maximum fines and the judge can order anything from zero to the maximum depending on the egregiousness of the offense. 9:37:57 AM Page 1, line 14, through page 2, line 7, relates to treble damages. Current law provides that a judge can order an organization to pay triple the amount of damages gained by the defendant in the crime or three times the loss sought by the defendant. MS. SHAFT said there's a loophole in the current law because in some crimes, like bribery or conspiracy, there might not be a gain to the defendant or a loss to the victim. HB 355 closes that loophole and allows the court to issue treble damages in those cases as well. 9:39:53 AM REPRESENTATIVE MAX GRUENBERG, sponsor of HB 355, said a recent news article about the Massey Coal Mine explosion that resulted in multiple deaths caught his eye because it could potentially lead to a charge of negligent homicide against the corporation. This bill would potentially help in that sort of case, he said. 9:42:18 AM RICK SVOBODNY, Deputy Attorney General, Criminal Division, Department of Law (DOL), said the department supports the bill. SENATOR WIELECHOWSKI commented that it's a great bill. CHAIR FRENCH announced he would hold HB 355 in committee.