Assembly Bill A7553A

2013-2014 Legislative Session

Relates to the age of criminal responsibility

download bill text pdf

Sponsored By

Archive: Last Bill Status - In Assembly Committee


  • Introduced
    • In Committee Assembly
    • In Committee Senate
    • On Floor Calendar Assembly
    • On Floor Calendar Senate
    • Passed Assembly
    • Passed Senate
  • Delivered to Governor
  • Signed By Governor

Do you support this bill?

Please enter your contact information

Home address is used to determine the senate district in which you reside. Your support or opposition to this bill is then shared immediately with the senator who represents you.

Optional services from the NY State Senate:

Create an account. An account allows you to officially support or oppose key legislation, sign petitions with a single click, and follow issues, committees, and bills that matter to you. When you create an account, you agree to this platform's terms of participation.

Include a custom message for your Senator? (Optional)

Enter a message to your senator. Many New Yorkers use this to share the reasoning behind their support or opposition to the bill. Others might share a personal anecdote about how the bill would affect them or people they care about.
Actions

Bill Amendments

co-Sponsors

2013-A7553 - Details

See Senate Version of this Bill:
S4489
Current Committee:
Assembly Codes
Law Section:
Criminal Procedure Law
Laws Affected:
Amd §§1.10, 1.20, 160.10, 160.20 & 725.00, add Art 155 §§155.00 - 155.20 & Art 722 §§722.00 - 722.60, CP L; amd §§243 & 502, Exec L; amd §212, add Art 21-C §§849-l - 849-o, Judy L; amd §30.00, Pen L
Versions Introduced in Other Legislative Sessions:
2011-2012: A10257, S7394
2015-2016: S5175

2013-A7553 - Summary

Relates to the age of criminal responsibility.

2013-A7553 - Bill Text download pdf

                            
                    S T A T E   O F   N E W   Y O R K
________________________________________________________________________

                                  7553

                       2013-2014 Regular Sessions

                          I N  A S S E M B L Y

                              May 23, 2013
                               ___________

Introduced  by  M.  of  A. LENTOL, CLARK -- (at request of the Office of
  Court Administration) -- read once and referred to  the  Committee  on
  Codes

AN ACT to amend the criminal procedure law, the executive law, the judi-
  ciary  law  and  the  penal  law,  in  relation to the age of criminal
  responsibility

  THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK, REPRESENTED IN SENATE AND  ASSEM-
BLY, DO ENACT AS FOLLOWS:

  Section  1.  Legislative  findings. The legislature finds and declares
that, each year, roughly 40,000 youths aged 16 and 17  are  arrested  in
New York and prosecuted as adults in its criminal courts, overwhelmingly
for  non-felony  offenses.  As  many  studies  over the past decade have
shown, however, the adult criminal justice system does  not  effectively
respond to teenage criminal behavior. It is costly and largely ill-suit-
ed to the challenges such crime presents. Accordingly, this measure aims
to provide a distinctly new, more effective response to teenage criminal
behavior.
  Modern  behavioral  neuroscience confirms that the brains of teenagers
are not yet matured; they lack impulse  control  and  can  neither  make
fully-reasoned  judgments  nor weigh the risks and consequences of their
behavior. It is now understood that teenage offenders should be  treated
differently  from  older  criminals  because  their  offenses are not as
"morally reprehensible as that of an adult." Moreover, as  other  states
nationwide  have learned, and as the legislature now recognizes, teenag-
ers are better candidates for rehabilitation and more likely to  benefit
from  alternatives-to-incarceration programs and locally-based services.
Experience in other states  has  shown  that  recidivism  among  teenage
offenders  drops  markedly  when the latter are treated with appropriate
intervention programs and services designed for  teenagers  rather  than
with  adult criminal sanctions. Indeed, where such programs and services
are utilized, all involved can benefit: the affected teenagers, many  of

 EXPLANATION--Matter in ITALICS (underscored) is new; matter in brackets
                      [ ] is old law to be omitted.
                                                           LBD08997-01-3
              

co-Sponsors

2013-A7553A (ACTIVE) - Details

See Senate Version of this Bill:
S4489
Current Committee:
Assembly Codes
Law Section:
Criminal Procedure Law
Laws Affected:
Amd §§1.10, 1.20, 160.10, 160.20 & 725.00, add Art 155 §§155.00 - 155.20 & Art 722 §§722.00 - 722.60, CP L; amd §§243 & 502, Exec L; amd §212, add Art 21-C §§849-l - 849-o, Judy L; amd §30.00, Pen L
Versions Introduced in Other Legislative Sessions:
2011-2012: A10257, S7394
2015-2016: S5175

2013-A7553A (ACTIVE) - Summary

Relates to the age of criminal responsibility.

2013-A7553A (ACTIVE) - Bill Text download pdf

                            
                    S T A T E   O F   N E W   Y O R K
________________________________________________________________________

                                 7553--A

                       2013-2014 Regular Sessions

                          I N  A S S E M B L Y

                              May 23, 2013
                               ___________

Introduced  by  M.  of  A. LENTOL, CLARK -- (at request of the Office of
  Court Administration) -- read once and referred to  the  Committee  on
  Codes  --  committee  discharged,  bill  amended, ordered reprinted as
  amended and recommitted to said committee

AN ACT to amend the criminal procedure law, the executive law, the judi-
  ciary law and the penal law,  in  relation  to  the  age  of  criminal
  responsibility

  THE  PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK, REPRESENTED IN SENATE AND ASSEM-
BLY, DO ENACT AS FOLLOWS:

  Section  1.  Legislative  findings.  (a)  The  legislature  finds  and
declares  that,  each  year,  roughly  40,000  youths aged 16 and 17 are
arrested in New York and prosecuted as adults in  its  criminal  courts,
overwhelmingly  for  non-felony  offenses. As many studies over the past
decade have shown, however, the adult criminal justice system  does  not
effectively  respond  to  teenage  criminal  behavior.  It is costly and
largely ill-suited to the challenges such crime  presents.  Accordingly,
this  measure  aims to provide a distinctly new, more effective response
to teenage criminal behavior.
  Modern behavioral neuroscience confirms that the brains  of  teenagers
are  not  yet  matured;  they  lack impulse control and can neither make
fully-reasoned judgments nor weigh the risks and consequences  of  their
behavior.  It is now understood that teenage offenders should be treated
differently from older criminals  because  their  offenses  are  not  as
"morally  reprehensible  as that of an adult." Moreover, as other states
nationwide have learned, and as the legislature now recognizes,  teenag-
ers  are better candidates for rehabilitation and more likely to benefit
from alternatives-to-incarceration programs and locally-based  services.
Experience  in  other  states  has  shown  that recidivism among teenage
offenders drops markedly when the latter are  treated  with  appropriate
intervention  programs  and  services designed for teenagers rather than
with adult criminal sanctions. Indeed, where such programs and  services

 EXPLANATION--Matter in ITALICS (underscored) is new; matter in brackets
                      [ ] is old law to be omitted.
                                                           LBD08997-03-3
              

Comments

Open Legislation is a forum for New York State legislation. All comments are subject to review and community moderation is encouraged.

Comments deemed off-topic, commercial, campaign-related, self-promotional; or that contain profanity, hate or toxic speech; or that link to sites outside of the nysenate.gov domain are not permitted, and will not be published. Attempts to intimidate and silence contributors or deliberately deceive the public, including excessive or extraneous posting/posts, or coordinated activity, are prohibited and may result in the temporary or permanent banning of the user. Comment moderation is generally performed Monday through Friday. By contributing or voting you agree to the Terms of Participation and verify you are over 13.

Create an account. An account allows you to sign petitions with a single click, officially support or oppose key legislation, and follow issues, committees, and bills that matter to you. When you create an account, you agree to this platform's terms of participation.