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Legislators with BillsLegislators(145)
Referred Bills (172)
Concerning the mental health sentencing alternative.
Concerning basic law enforcement academy.
Concerning flexible work for general and limited authority Washington peace officers.
Establishing an oversight committee to improve construction-related training and pathways to state registered apprenticeships in state correctional facilities.
Concerning flexible work for general and limited authority Washington peace officers.
Revised for 2nd Substitute: Supporting crime victims and witnesses by promoting victim-centered, trauma-informed responses.Original: Supporting crime victims and witnesses by promoting victim-centered, trauma-informed responses in the legal system.
Revised for Engrossed: Protecting the safety and security of students and maintaining order within school buses by designating trespassing on a school bus as a criminal offense.Revised for 1st Substitute: Designating trespassing on a school bus as a felony offense.Original: Designating trespassing on a public school bus as a felony offense.
Supporting victims of human trafficking and sexual abuse.
Prohibiting the use of hog-tying.
Timing of eligibility for vacation of nonfelony convictions.
Supporting first responder wellness and peer support.
Limiting liability arising from the use of trained police dogs.
Concerning impaired driving.
Addressing harassment.
Concerning fraud in assisted reproduction.
Concerning tribal warrants.
Modifying the community parenting alternative for eligible participants in the residential parenting program at the department of corrections.
Revised for 1st Substitute: Concerning disclosure of certain recipient information to the Washington state patrol.Original: Concerning disclosure of certain recipient locations to the Washington state patrol.
Modifying conditions of community custody.
Concerning fabricated intimate or sexually explicit images and depictions.
Revised for 2nd Substitute: Providing gate money to incarcerated individuals at the department of corrections.Original: Providing gate money to individuals releasing from custody prior to the expiration of their sentence.
Concerning criminal penalties for bias-motivated defacement of private or public property.
Updating processes of the office of independent investigations by changing authority to obtain and share investigative information and aligning with current operations and practices.
Concerning animal cruelty in the first degree.
Concerning supervision of domestic violence in criminal sentencing.
Concerning sentencing of felony offenses.
Concerning the body scanner pilot program at the department of corrections.
Concerning organized retail theft.
Concerning photographs, microphotographs, and electronic images from traffic safety cameras and toll systems.
Deterring robberies from cannabis retail establishments.
Concerning law enforcement officer definition.
Concerning victims' rights.
Revised for Engrossed: Concerning impaired driving.Original: Extending the felony driving under the influence lookback to 15 years while providing additional treatment options through the creation of a drug offender sentencing alternative for driving under the influence.
Revised for 1st Substitute: Updating the endangerment with a controlled substance statute to include fentanyl or synthetic opioids.Original: Including synthetic opioids in the endangerment with a controlled substance statute.
Concerning conditional release transition teams.
Requiring individuals convicted of offenses related to driving under the influence to pay financial support to minor children and dependents when the offense results in the death or disability of a parent.
Establishing a special allegation for habitual property offenders.
Concerning law enforcement officer protection.
Creating an advisory board to the office of the corrections ombuds.
Establishing a wild horse holding and training program at a state corrections center.
Recalculating sentencing ranges for currently incarcerated individuals whose offender score was increased by juvenile convictions.
Improving school safety by extending and increasing penalties for interference by, or intimidation by threat of, force or violence at schools and athletic activities.
Providing judicial discretion to modify sentences in the interests of justice.
Excluding any person who is convicted of a hit and run resulting in death from being eligible for a first-time offender waiver.
Facilitating the use of dental records in missing person investigations.
Revised for Engrossed: Concerning impaired driving.Original: Extending the felony driving under the influence lookback to 15 years while providing additional treatment options through the creation of a drug offender sentencing alternative for driving under the influence.
Revised for 1st Substitute: Updating the endangerment with a controlled substance statute to include fentanyl or synthetic opioids.Original: Including synthetic opioids in the endangerment with a controlled substance statute.
Concerning criminal penalties and restitution for graffiti.
Establishing a mechanism for independent prosecutions within the office of the attorney general of criminal conduct arising from police use of force.
Expanding eligibility for employment of certain law enforcement and prosecutor office positions.
Concerning eligibility and requirements for deferred prosecutions.
Concerning judicial dismissal of a misdemeanor following completion of court-ordered conditions.
Addressing crimes involving human trafficking or sexual exploitation.
Concerning supervision compliance credit.
Concerning allowed earned release time for certain offenses and enhancements.
Concerning the governor's authority to grant pardons and commutations.
Improving traffic safety.
Concerning persons sentenced for aggravated first degree murder committed prior to reaching 21 years of age.
Concerning education and vocational programs in state correctional institutions.
Concerning sentencing enhancements.
Concerning deception by law enforcement officers during custodial interrogations.
Protecting minors from sexual exploitation.
Expanding eligibility in certain public employment positions for lawful permanent residents.
Concerning implementation of technology systems at the department of corrections.
Concerning penalties related to eluding police vehicles and resisting arrest.
Concerning a pilot program creating a healthier environment for correctional officers, department of corrections staff, and individuals within a correctional facility.
Establishing a pathway off lifetime community custody for individuals with sex offense convictions.
Concerning alcohol concentration.
Concerning the membership and operation of the sex offender policy board.
Concerning basic law enforcement academy.
Postconviction review, clemency, and pardons.
Expanding the circumstances that may constitute a major violation of the uniform controlled substances act.
Designating trespassing on a public school bus as a felony offense.
Concerning transparency, public safety, and independent oversight of the city, county, and regional jail system in Washington state.
Concerning law enforcement training.
Expanding the locations where a person can be guilty of unlawful transit conduct to include the Washington state ferries.
Concerning certification, background checks, and training requirements for sheriffs, police chiefs, marshals, reserve officers, and volunteers.
Concerning the release of incarcerated individuals from total confinement prior to the expiration of a sentence.
Concerning the release of incarcerated individuals from total confinement prior to the expiration of a sentence.
Prohibiting the use of hog-tying.
Improving public safety by deterring assaults involving strangulation or suffocation.
Making obstructing highways a crime.
Concerning the crime of endangerment with a controlled substance.
Concerning people convicted of one or more crimes committed before the person's 18th birthday petitioning the indeterminate sentence review board for early release.
Allowing qualifying persons serving long sentences committed prior to reaching 25 years of age to seek review for possible release from incarceration.
Concerning a cash reward for the recovery of firearms used in the commission of a crime.
Concerning narcotics enforcement.
Concerning tribal warrants.
Updating the endangerment with a controlled substance statute.
Concerning violent offenses.
Vacating a conviction for driving under the influence, actual physical control of a motor vehicle while under the influence, or an offense considered a prior offense to such convictions.
Establishing criminal penalties for the public use of fentanyl or methamphetamine.
Providing gate money to individuals releasing from custody prior to the expiration of their sentence.
Modifying the definition of persistent offender to exclude convictions for offenses committed by someone under the age of 18 and providing for resentencing.
Improving school safety by extending and increasing penalties for interference by, or intimidation by threat of, force or violence at schools and school-related athletic activities.
Ensuring adequate notice to and consideration of local communities when establishing housing options for individuals qualifying for a less restrictive alternative placement.
Revised for 1st Substitute: Requiring the criminal justice training commission to establish a program.Original: Requiring the criminal justice training commission to establish a program to recruit and train a pool of applicants who may be employed by certain law enforcement agencies in the state.
Improving community safety and justice in the civil commitment of sexually violent predators.
Modifying enforcement of motor vehicle liability insurance and fiscal responsibilities.
Obtaining and sharing investigative information and aligning provisions with current operations and practices of the office of independent investigations.
Concerning flexible work policies for law enforcement officers and participation in the law enforcement officers' and firefighters' retirement system plan 2.
Resentencing of individuals sentenced as a persistent offender.
Concerning an aggravating circumstance for the mutilation or dismemberment of a human body.
Creating the offense of unlawful branding of another person.
Concerning extradition of persons to and from Indian jurisdiction.
Revised for Engrossed: Expanding access to drug testing equipment to promote community safety.Original: Exempting fentanyl testing equipment from the definition of drug paraphernalia.
Implementing the recommendations of the Washington state missing and murdered indigenous women and people task force.
Concerning sexual assault procedures.
Addressing catalytic converter theft.
Establishing a moratorium on the siting and use of secure community transition facilities.
Making robbery in the second degree a most serious offense under certain circumstances.
Concerning minors in possession of alcohol, cannabis, or controlled substances.
Concerning siting of sex offender and sexually violent predator facilities.
Providing notice regarding less restrictive alternative placement contracting.
Expanding penalties for the crime of attempting to elude a pursuing police vehicle.
Concerning restitution for surviving minor children of deceased victims of vehicular homicide.
Concerning communications or conversations involving certain criminal conduct.
Encouraging treatment for possession of certain counterfeit drugs or controlled substances.
Requiring the criminal justice training commission to establish a work group and grant program related to vehicular pursuits.
Establishing a wild horse holding and training program at Coyote Ridge corrections center.
Concerning extradition of persons to and from Indian jurisdiction.
Concerning special purpose district malfeasance.
Concerning fentanyl.
Concerning a pilot project for providing basic law enforcement training in eastern Washington.
Concerning the definition of theft.
Making the knowing possession of a controlled substance a gross misdemeanor offense under criminal violations of Title 69 RCW.
Concerning flexible work for general and limited authority Washington peace officers.
Revised for 1st Substitute: Requiring the criminal justice training commission to establish a program.Original: Requiring the criminal justice training commission to establish a program to recruit and train a pool of applicants who may be employed by certain law enforcement agencies in the state.
Providing funding for the recruitment, retention, and support of law enforcement officers.
Concerning vehicular pursuits.
Concerning housing of inmates in state correctional facilities.
Authorizing public transportation benefit areas to become limited authority Washington law enforcement agencies.
Concerning public transparency in the criminal plea negotiation process.
Resentencing of individuals sentenced as a persistent offender.
Concerning vehicular pursuits.
Expanding offenses and penalties for manufacture, sale, distribution, and other conduct involving controlled substances and counterfeit substances.
Concerning an aggravating circumstance for the mutilation or dismemberment of a human body.
Addressing harassment of election officials.
Concerning labor and income of incarcerated persons.
Creating the offense of unlawful branding of another person.
Expanding access to drug testing equipment.
Concerning assaults committed against amateur sports officials.
Concerning solitary confinement.
Concerning persons convicted of violent offenses with firearm enhancements.
Concerning controlled substances, counterfeit substances, and legend drug possession and treatment.
Imposing criminal penalties for negligent driving involving the death of a vulnerable user victim.
Concerning reentry services and supports.
Enacting comprehensive protections for victims of domestic violence and other violence involving family members or intimate partners.
Concerning stalking-related offenses.
Concerning private detention facilities.
Concerning the scoring of prior juvenile offenses in sentencing range calculations.
Ensuring access to substance use disorder treatment.
Concerning extraordinary medical placement for incarcerated individuals at the department of corrections.
Concerning victim notification.
Prohibiting the sale of over-the-counter sexual assault kits.
Concerning off-duty employment of fish and wildlife officers.
Concerning the membership of the sentencing guidelines commission.
Concerning vehicular pursuits.
Providing tools and resources for the location and recovery of missing persons.
Supporting crime victims and witnesses by promoting victim-centered, trauma-informed responses in the legal system.
Increasing the penalty for hazing.
Concerning the contribution to costs of privileges by incarcerated individuals.
Concerning oversight and training requirements for limited authority Washington peace officers and agencies.
Concerning money received by the department of corrections on behalf of inmates from family or other outside sources for the purchase of commissary items.
Concerning female genital mutilation.
Concerning victims of nonfatal strangulation.
Authorizing additional counseling services for immediate family members of homicide victims.
Creating a missing and murdered indigenous women and people cold case investigations unit.
Concerning training for tribal police officers and employees.
Restricting the possession, purchase, delivery, and sale of certain equipment used to illegally process controlled substances.
Modifying an element of the offense of hate crime and classifying a hate crime as crimes against persons.
Reclassifying the sentence for the crime of custodial sexual misconduct.