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NY A00087
Bill
Status
Introduced
1/5/2011
Primary Sponsor
Michael Benedetto
Click for details
AI Summary
- Changes the calculation method for orders of protection expiration dates to begin from the date of sentencing rather than the date of conviction
- Extends protection orders for felony sexual assault convictions with probation sentences from 8 years to 10 years from sentencing, and for class A misdemeanor sexual assault with probation from 5 years to 6 years from sentencing
- Requires courts to disregard jail time credits when calculating the expiration date of the maximum sentence term for purposes of determining order of protection duration
- For determinate sentences, requires courts to add the full imprisonment term plus the full period of post-release supervision when calculating order of protection expiration dates
- Takes effect 30 days after enactment and applies to all criminal cases where sentencing has not yet been imposed
Legislative Description
Provides clarification on determining the expiration date of an order of protection issued in relation to a family offense.
Last Action
referred to codes
1/5/2011
Committee Referrals
Codes1/5/2011
Full Bill Text
No bill text available