Skip to main content
Colorado General AssemblyToggle Main Menu
Agency NameToggle Agency Menu

S_JUD_2016A 03/02/2016 01:32:34 PM Committee Summary

Final

STAFF SUMMARY OF MEETING



SENATE COMMITTEE ON JUDICIARY

Date: 03/02/2016
ATTENDANCE
Time: 01:32 PM to 04:04 PM
Aguilar
*
Cooke
X
Place: LSB B
Merrifield
X
Lundberg
X
This Meeting was called to order by
Roberts
X
Senator Roberts
This Report was prepared by
Conrad Imel
X = Present, E = Excused, A = Absent, * = Present after roll call
Bills Addressed: Action Taken:
HB16-1051

SB16-084

SB16-085

SB16-075
Referred to the Committee of the Whole - Consent Calendar

Postponed Indefinitely

Referred to the Committee of the Whole - Consent Calendar

Amended, Referred to Finance





01:32 PM -- HB16-1051



Senator Roberts, chair, called the committee to order. A quorum was present. Senator Holbert, sponsor, presented House Bill 16-1051, concerning the issuance of beneficiary designation forms to facilitate the transfer of ownership of a vehicle upon the death of an owner.



01:34 PM --
Mr. Justin Vaughn, representing himself, testified in support of the bill.

BILL: HB16-1051
TIME: 01:36:34 PM
MOVED: Cooke
MOTION: Refer House Bill 16-1051 to the Committee of the Whole with a recommendation that it be placed on the consent calendar. The motion passed on a vote of 4-0.
SECONDED:
VOTE
Aguilar
Excused
Cooke
Yes
Merrifield
Yes
Lundberg
Yes
Roberts
Yes
Final YES: 4 NO: 0 EXC: 1 ABS: 0 FINAL ACTION: PASS















01:37 PM -- SB16-084



Senator Steadman, sponsor, presented Senate Bill 16-084, concerning the Colorado Uniform Recognition of Substitute Health Care Decision-making Documents Act. Committee members commented on the bill.

BILL: SB16-084
TIME: 01:40:21 PM
MOVED: Merrifield
MOTION: Refer Senate Bill 16-084 to the Committee of the Whole. The motion failed on a vote of 1-3.
SECONDED:
VOTE
Aguilar
Excused
Cooke
No
Merrifield
Yes
Lundberg
No
Roberts
No
YES: 1 NO: 3 EXC: 1 ABS: 0 FINAL ACTION: FAIL


BILL: SB16-084
TIME: 01:41:37 PM
MOVED: Lundberg
MOTION: Postpone Senate Bill 16-084 indefinitely using a reversal of the previous roll call. There was no objection to the use of the reverse roll call, therefore, the bill was postponed indefinitely.
SECONDED:
VOTE
Aguilar
Excused
Cooke
Merrifield
Lundberg
Roberts
Final YES: 0 NO: 0 EXC: 1 ABS: 0 FINAL ACTION:



























01:42 PM -- SB16-085



Senator Steadman, sponsor, presented Senate Bill 16-085, concerning the Colorado Uniform Trust Decanting Act. Senator Steadman explained specific provisions of the bill.



01:45 PM --
Mr. Stan Kent, representing the Uniform Law Commission, testified in support of the bill. Mr. Kent discussed the relationship between the bill and existing tax law, and stated the reasons for bringing the bill. Mr. Kent responded to questions regarding deadlines and notice provisions in the bill.



01:56 PM --
Mr. Kent responded to questions regarding trustee liability under the bill and the determination of a settlor's intent.



02:02 PM --
Ms. Jessica Broderick, representing the Colorado Bar Association, testified in support of the bill and stated its benefits.





02:04 PM



Senator Steadman provided closing remarks on the bill. Senator Roberts commented on the bill.

BILL: SB16-085
TIME: 02:07:28 PM
MOVED: Merrifield
MOTION: Refer Senate Bill 16-085 to the Committee of the Whole with a recommendation that it be placed on the consent calendar. The motion passed on a vote of 4-0.
SECONDED:
VOTE
Aguilar
Excused
Cooke
Yes
Merrifield
Yes
Lundberg
Yes
Roberts
Yes
Final YES: 4 NO: 0 EXC: 1 ABS: 0 FINAL ACTION: PASS





































02:08 PM -- SB16-075



Senator Johnston and Senator Cooke presented Senate Bill 16-075, concerning the collection of a DNA sample from offenders convicted of misdemeanors against vulnerable persons. Senator Johnston distributed to the committee and explained a packet of information about DNA collection by law enforcement (Attachment A). Senator Johnston distributed and explained amendment L.004 (Attachment B).



16SenateJud0302AttachA.pdf16SenateJud0302AttachA.pdf16SenateJud0302AttachB.pdf16SenateJud0302AttachB.pdf



02:17 PM



Senator Cooke explained the bill, stated reasons he supports the bill, and provided information relating to crimes covered by the bill. Senator Lundberg and the sponsors discussed privacy issues surrounding the bill.





02:28 PM



Committee discussion continued on issues of privacy and the statistics relating to solving cases.



02:31 PM --
Ms. Susie Hernandez and Ms. Kelly Waidler, representing the Denver District Attorney's Office, testified in support of the bill. Ms. Hernandez discussed her experience as a victim of violent crime. Ms. Waidler discussed her role prosecuting the crimes committed against Ms. Hernandez and how DNA evidence was used to identify the perpetrator.



02:37 PM --
Mr. Dave Weaver, representing himself, testified in support of the bill. Mr. Weaver stated agreement with prior testimony and discussed the benefits of DNA collection as a tool for law enforcement.



02:39 PM --
Ms. Jan Girten and Ms. Katie Featherston, representing the Colorado Bureau of Investigation, testified in support of the bill. Ms. Girten discussed cases that were solved with the use of DNA collected from non-violent crimes. Ms. Featherston made herself available for questions. Ms. Featherston responded to questions regarding information collected from persons later exonerated, the process for having a DNA sample removed from the Combined DNA Index System (CODIS) database, the process for identifying persons by DNA collection, and storage and destruction of DNA samples.





02:49 PM



Ms. Featherston continued to respond to questions regarding degradation of DNA samples and how samples are matched to a person's biographical information. She elaborated on the process for destruction of DNA samples.



02:52 PM --
Ms. Denise Maes, representing the ACLU of Colorado, testified in opposition to the bill. Ms. Maes discussed exonerations that do not rely on DNA collection, scientific concerns, and whether DNA collection from certain crimes shows a propensity for the commission of future crimes. She also discussed Colorado's current DNA collection system. In response to a question, Ms. Maes discussed privacy concerns.



















03:00 PM --
Mr. Stan Garnett, District Attorney for the Twentieth Judicial District and representing the Colorado District Attorneys' Council, testified in support of the bill. Mr. Garnett stated approval for prior testimony in support of the bill, and that law enforcement should have tools to reach the truth. He discussed cases where DNA was used to solve crimes.



03:04 PM --
Mr. Steve Siegel, representing the Colorado Organization for Victim Assistance, testified in support of the bill.



03:06 PM --
Ms. Lydia Waligorski, representing the Colorado Coalition Against Domestic Violence, testified in support of the bill. Ms. Waligorski discussed patterned crimes and reasons for DNA collection.



03:09 PM --
Ms. Becky Bornhoff, representing herself, testified in support of the bill. Ms. Bornhoff discussed her experience as a victim of a violent crime and the length of time it took to apprehend the perpetrator.



03:12 PM --
Ms. Raana Simmons, representing the Colorado Coalition Against Sexual Assault, testified in support of the bill. Ms. Simmons provided information contained in the DNA database and the benefit of DNA collection for law enforcement.



03:17 PM --
Mr. Mitch Morrissey, Denver District Attorney, testified in support of the bill. Mr. Morrissey provided information on exonerations made on the bases of DNA collection and the use of DNA to solve crimes, including those committed by repeat offenders. Mr. Morrissey responded to questions regarding how DNA is used to identify suspects, the accuracy of certain methods for DNA identification, and statistics regarding exonerations and expungement of information from the DNA database.





03:27 PM



Mr. Morrissey continued to respond to questions regarding collection and expungement of DNA information from the DNA database.





03:37 PM



Senator Lundberg commented on the bill; Mr. Morrissey responded. Senator Johnston commented on the difference between DNA collection under Katie's Law (Section 16-23-101, C.R.S., et. seq.) and DNA collection under the existing law amended by the SB 16-075.



03:43 PM --
Mr. Adam Wills, representing the County Sheriffs of Colorado, testified in support of the bill. He discussed cases relating to DNA collection.



03:47 PM --
Mr. Ray Harlan, representing Colorado Victims for Justice, testified in support of the bill. Mr. Harlan provided information on the history of fingerprint collection and commented on prior testimony. He also discussed discourse surrounding the collection of DNA for misdemeanor offenses.























03:51 PM



Senator Johnston and Senator Cooke provided closing remarks on the bill. At the request of the chair, Senator Johnston explained amendment L.004.

BILL: SB16-075
TIME: 04:00:41 PM
MOVED: Cooke
MOTION: Adopt amendment L.004 (Attachment B). The motion passed without objection.
SECONDED:
VOTE
Aguilar
Cooke
Merrifield
Lundberg
Roberts
YES: 0 NO: 0 EXC: 0 ABS: 0 FINAL ACTION:



Committee members commented on the bill.

BILL: SB16-075
TIME: 04:03:35 PM
MOVED: Cooke
MOTION: Refer Senate Bill 16-075, as amended, to the Committee on Finance. The motion passed on a vote of 3-2.
SECONDED:
VOTE
Aguilar
Yes
Cooke
Yes
Merrifield
No
Lundberg
No
Roberts
Yes
Final YES: 3 NO: 2 EXC: 0 ABS: 0 FINAL ACTION: PASS





04:04 PM



The committee adjourned.


Colorado legislature email addresses ending in @state.co.us are no longer active. Please replace @state.co.us with @coleg.gov for Colorado legislature email addresses. Details

The effective date for bills enacted without a safety clause is August 7, 2024, if the General Assembly adjourns sine die on May 8, 2024, unless otherwise specified. Details