The online versions of legislation provided on this website are not official. Enrolled bills are the final version passed by the Ohio General Assembly and presented to the Governor for signature. The official version of acts signed by the Governor are available from the Secretary of State's Office in the Continental Plaza, 180 East Broad St., Columbus.
|
H. B. No. 132 As IntroducedAs Introduced
127th General Assembly | Regular Session | 2007-2008 |
| |
Cosponsors:
Representatives Bacon, Flowers, McGregor, J., Evans, Collier, Stewart, D., Williams, B., Yuko, White, Adams, DeGeeter
A BILL
To amend section 2929.01 and to enact section 2909.031 of the Revised Code to create the offense of unlawful property burning.
BE IT ENACTED BY THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF THE STATE OF OHIO:
Section 1. That section 2929.01 be amended and section 2909.031 of the Revised Code be enacted to read as follows: Sec. 2909.031. (A)(1) No person, without privilege to do so on real property owned by a person other than the offender, shall set a fire, cause a fire to be set, or add fuel or a combustible substance to a trash receptacle, a dumpster, or to a fire that is already burning. (2) No person, without privilege to do so on real property owned by a person other than the offender, shall add fuel or a combustible substance to combustible personal property, a motor vehicle, or a fire that is already burning.
(B)(1) Whoever violates this section is guilty of unlawful property burning. Except as otherwise provided in division (B)(2) of this section, unlawful property burning is a misdemeanor of the second degree, and the court shall impose on the offender the maximum fine prescribed in section 2929.28 of the Revised Code for a misdemeanor of the second degree. (2) Unlawful property burning is a misdemeanor of the first degree, and the court shall impose on the offender a mandatory jail term of at least three days and the maximum fine prescribed in section 2929.28 of the Revised Code for a misdemeanor of the first degree if either of the following applies:
(a) The fire, receptacle, dumpster, combustible personal property, or motor vehicle that is involved in a violation of division (A)(1) or (2) of this section is located within twenty feet of a residence, vehicle, or other property that belongs to a person other than the offender.
(b) The violation of division (A)(1) or (2) of this section creates a hazardous or hostile working condition for any emergency personnel.
Sec. 2929.01. As used in this chapter: (A)(1) "Alternative residential facility" means, subject to
division (A)(2)
of this section, any facility other than an
offender's home
or residence in which an offender is assigned to
live
and that satisfies all of the following criteria: (a) It provides programs through which the offender may seek
or maintain
employment or may receive education, training,
treatment, or
habilitation. (b) It has received the appropriate license or certificate
for any
specialized education, training, treatment, habilitation,
or
other service that it provides from the government agency that
is responsible for licensing or certifying that type of
education,
training, treatment, habilitation, or service. (2) "Alternative residential facility" does
not include a
community-based correctional facility, jail,
halfway house, or
prison. (B) "Bad time" means the time by which the parole board
administratively extends an offender's stated prison term or terms
pursuant to
section 2967.11 of the Revised Code because the parole
board
finds by clear and convincing evidence that the
offender,
while serving the prison term or terms, committed an
act that is a
criminal offense under the law of this state or the
United States,
whether or not the offender is prosecuted for
the commission of
that act. (C) "Basic probation supervision" means a
requirement that
the offender maintain contact with a person
appointed
to supervise
the offender in accordance
with sanctions imposed by the court or
imposed by the parole board pursuant to
section 2967.28 of the
Revised Code. "Basic probation supervision"
includes basic parole
supervision and basic post-release control
supervision. (D) "Cocaine," "crack cocaine," "hashish," "L.S.D.," and
"unit dose" have the
same meanings as in section 2925.01 of the
Revised Code. (E) "Community-based correctional
facility" means a
community-based correctional facility and
program or district
community-based correctional facility and
program developed
pursuant to sections 2301.51 to 2301.58 of the
Revised Code. (F) "Community control sanction"
means a sanction that is
not a prison term and that is described
in section 2929.15,
2929.16, 2929.17, or 2929.18 of the Revised
Code
or a sanction
that is not a jail term and that is described in
section 2929.26,
2929.27, or 2929.28 of the Revised Code.
"Community control
sanction" includes probation if the sentence involved was
imposed
for a felony that was committed prior to July 1, 1996, or if
the
sentence involved was imposed for a misdemeanor that was committed
prior
to January 1, 2004. (G) "Controlled substance," "marihuana," "schedule I,"
and
"schedule II" have the same meanings as in section 3719.01 of the
Revised
Code. (H) "Curfew" means a requirement that
an offender during a
specified period of time be at a designated
place. (I) "Day reporting" means a sanction
pursuant to which an
offender is required each day to report to
and leave a center or
other approved reporting location at
specified times in order to
participate in work, education or
training, treatment, and other
approved programs at the center or
outside the center. (J) "Deadly weapon" has the same
meaning as in section
2923.11 of the Revised
Code. (K) "Drug and alcohol use monitoring"
means a program under
which an offender agrees to submit to
random chemical analysis of
the offender's blood, breath, or urine to
determine whether the
offender has ingested any alcohol or other
drugs. (L) "Drug treatment program" means
any program under which a
person undergoes assessment and treatment designed
to
reduce or
completely eliminate the person's physical or emotional reliance
upon alcohol, another drug, or alcohol and another drug and under
which the person may be required to
receive assessment and
treatment on an outpatient basis or may be required to
reside at a
facility other than the person's home or residence while
undergoing assessment and treatment. (M) "Economic loss" means any
economic detriment suffered by
a victim as a direct and proximate result of the commission of an offense and includes
any loss
of income due to lost
time at work because of any injury
caused to the victim, and any
property loss, medical cost, or
funeral expense incurred as a
result of the commission of the
offense. "Economic loss" does not include non-economic loss or any punitive or exemplary damages. (N) "Education or training" includes
study at, or in
conjunction with a program offered by, a
university, college, or
technical college or vocational study and
also includes the
completion of primary school, secondary school,
and literacy
curricula or their equivalent. (O)
"Firearm" has the same meaning as
in section 2923.11 of
the Revised Code. (P) "Halfway house" means a facility
licensed by the
division of parole and community services of the department of
rehabilitation and correction pursuant to section
2967.14 of the
Revised Code as a suitable
facility for the care and treatment of
adult offenders. (Q) "House arrest" means a period of confinement of an
offender that
is in the
offender's home or in
other premises specified by the
sentencing court or by the parole
board
pursuant to section 2967.28 of the Revised Code and during which all of
the
following apply: (1) The
offender is required to remain in the
offender's
home or other specified premises
for the
specified period of confinement, except for periods of time
during
which the
offender is at the
offender's place of
employment or at other
premises as authorized by the sentencing
court or by the parole board. (2) The
offender is required
to report periodically
to a person designated by the
court or parole board. (3) The
offender is subject to any other
restrictions and requirements that may be imposed by the
sentencing court or by the parole board. (R) "Intensive probation supervision" means a
requirement
that an offender maintain frequent contact with a
person appointed
by the court, or by the parole board pursuant to section
2967.28
of the Revised Code, to supervise the offender while the
offender
is seeking or maintaining necessary employment and
participating
in training, education, and treatment programs as
required in the
court's or parole board's order. "Intensive
probation
supervision" includes intensive parole supervision and intensive
post-release control supervision. (S) "Jail" means a jail, workhouse,
minimum security
jail,
or other residential facility
used for the confinement of
alleged
or convicted offenders that
is operated by a political
subdivision
or a combination of
political subdivisions of this
state. (T) "Jail term" means the term in a jail that a sentencing
court
imposes or is authorized to impose pursuant to section
2929.24 or
2929.25 of the
Revised Code or pursuant to any other
provision of the Revised Code that authorizes a term in a jail for
a misdemeanor conviction. (U) "Mandatory jail term" means the term in a jail that a
sentencing court is required to impose pursuant to division (G) of
section 1547.99 of the Revised Code, division (E) of section 2903.06 or division (D) of section 2903.08 of the Revised Code, division (B)(2) of section 2909.031 of the Revised Code, division (E) of section 2929.24 of the Revised Code, division (B)
of section
4510.14 of the Revised Code, or division
(G) of section 4511.19 of
the Revised Code or pursuant to any other provision of the
Revised
Code that requires a term in a jail for a misdemeanor
conviction. (V) "Delinquent child" has the same meaning as in section
2152.02 of the
Revised Code. (W) "License violation report" means
a report that is made
by a sentencing court, or by the parole board pursuant
to section
2967.28 of the Revised Code, to the regulatory or
licensing board
or agency that issued an offender a professional
license or a
license or permit to do business
in this state and that specifies
that the offender has been
convicted of or pleaded guilty to an
offense that may violate the
conditions under which the offender's
professional license or
license or permit to do business in this
state was granted or an offense
for which the offender's
professional license or license or permit to do
business in this
state may be revoked or suspended. (X) "Major drug offender" means an
offender who is convicted
of or pleads guilty to the possession
of, sale of, or offer to
sell any drug, compound, mixture,
preparation, or substance that
consists of or contains at least
one thousand grams of hashish; at
least one hundred
grams of crack cocaine; at least one thousand
grams of cocaine that is not
crack cocaine; at least two thousand
five hundred unit doses or two
hundred fifty grams of
heroin; at
least five thousand unit doses of
L.S.D. or five hundred grams of
L.S.D. in a
liquid concentrate, liquid extract, or liquid
distillate form; or at least
one hundred times the
amount of any
other schedule I or II controlled
substance other than marihuana
that is necessary to commit a
felony of the third degree pursuant
to section 2925.03, 2925.04,
2925.05, or 2925.11 of the Revised
Code
that is based on the possession of, sale of, or offer to sell
the
controlled substance. (Y) "Mandatory prison term" means any of the
following: (1) Subject to division (Y)(2) of this section,
the term in
prison that must be imposed for the offenses or
circumstances set
forth in divisions (F)(1) to (8) or
(F)(12) to (14) of section
2929.13 and
division (D) of section 2929.14 of the
Revised Code. Except as
provided in sections
2925.02, 2925.03, 2925.04, 2925.05, and
2925.11 of the
Revised Code, unless the maximum or another
specific term is required under section 2929.14 of the
Revised
Code, a mandatory prison term described in this division may be
any prison term authorized for the level of offense. (2) The term of sixty or one hundred twenty days in prison
that a sentencing court is required to impose for a third or
fourth degree
felony
OVI offense pursuant
to division (G)(2)
of
section 2929.13 and division
(G)(1)(d) or
(e) of
section
4511.19
of
the Revised Code or the term of one, two, three, four, or five years in prison that a sentencing court is required to impose pursuant to division (G)(2) of section 2929.13 of the Revised Code. (3) The term in prison imposed pursuant to section 2971.03
of the Revised Code for the offenses and in the circumstances
described in
division (F)(11) of section 2929.13 of the Revised
Code and
that term as
modified or terminated pursuant to
section
2971.05 of the Revised Code. (Z) "Monitored time" means a period
of time during which an
offender continues to be under the
control of the sentencing court
or parole board, subject to no
conditions other than leading a
law-abiding life. (AA) "Offender" means a person who,
in this state, is
convicted of or pleads guilty to a felony or a
misdemeanor. (BB) "Prison" means a residential
facility used for the
confinement of convicted felony offenders
that is under the
control of the department of rehabilitation and
correction but
does not include a violation sanction center operated under
authority of section 2967.141 of the Revised Code. (CC) "Prison term" includes any of the following
sanctions
for an offender: (1) A stated prison term; (2) A term in a prison shortened by, or with the
approval
of, the sentencing court pursuant to section 2929.20,
2967.26,
5120.031, 5120.032, or 5120.073 of the
Revised Code; (3) A term in prison extended by bad time imposed
pursuant
to section 2967.11 of the Revised Code
or imposed for a violation
of post-release control pursuant to
section 2967.28 of the Revised
Code. (DD) "Repeat violent offender" means
a person about whom
both of the following apply: (1) The person is being sentenced for committing or for
complicity in
committing any of the following: (a) Aggravated murder,
murder, any felony of the first or second degree
that is an offense of violence, or an attempt to commit any of these offenses if the attempt is a felony of the first or second degree; (b) An offense under an existing or former law of this state, another state, or the United States that is or was substantially equivalent to an offense described in division (DD)(1)(a) of this section. (2) The person previously was convicted of or pleaded
guilty
to an offense described in division (DD)(1)(a) or (b) of this section. (EE) "Sanction" means any penalty
imposed upon an offender
who is convicted of or pleads guilty to
an offense, as punishment
for the offense. "Sanction"
includes any sanction imposed
pursuant to any provision of
sections 2929.14 to 2929.18
or
2929.24 to 2929.28 of the
Revised Code. (FF) "Sentence" means the sanction or
combination of
sanctions imposed by the sentencing court on an
offender who is
convicted of or pleads guilty to
an offense. (GG) "Stated prison term" means the
prison term, mandatory
prison term, or combination of all
prison terms and mandatory
prison terms imposed by the
sentencing court pursuant to section
2929.14 or 2971.03 of the
Revised Code. "Stated prison term"
includes any credit received by the offender for time spent in
jail awaiting trial, sentencing, or transfer to prison for the
offense and any time spent under house arrest or
house arrest
with electronic monitoring imposed after
earning credits pursuant to
section 2967.193 of the Revised Code. (HH) "Victim-offender mediation"
means a reconciliation or
mediation program that involves an
offender and the victim of the
offense committed by the offender and that
includes a meeting in
which the offender and the victim may discuss the
offense, discuss
restitution, and consider other sanctions for
the offense. (II) "Fourth degree felony
OVI offense" means a
violation
of division (A) of section
4511.19 of the Revised
Code
that, under
division (G) of that section, is a felony of the fourth
degree. (JJ) "Mandatory term of local
incarceration" means the term
of sixty or one hundred twenty days in a jail, a
community-based
correctional facility, a halfway house, or an alternative
residential facility that a sentencing court may impose upon a
person who is convicted of or pleads guilty to a fourth degree
felony
OVI offense pursuant to division (G)(1) of section
2929.13
of the Revised Code and division
(G)(1)(d) or
(e)
of section
4511.19 of
the
Revised Code. (KK) "Designated homicide, assault, or kidnapping
offense," "violent sex offense,"
"sexual motivation specification," "sexually violent offense,"
"sexually violent predator," and "sexually violent predator
specification"
have the same meanings as in section 2971.01 of the
Revised Code. (LL) "Habitual sex offender," "sexually oriented
offense,"
"sexual predator," "registration-exempt sexually oriented offense," "child-victim oriented offense," "habitual child-victim offender," and "child-victim predator" have the same meanings as in section 2950.01
of the Revised Code. (MM) An offense is "committed in the vicinity of a child"
if
the offender commits the offense within thirty feet of or within
the same
residential unit as a child who
is under eighteen years
of age, regardless of whether the offender knows the
age of the
child or whether the offender knows the offense is
being committed
within thirty feet of or within the same residential unit as
the
child and regardless of whether the child actually views the
commission of
the offense. (NN) "Family or household member" has the same meaning as
in
section 2919.25 of the Revised Code. (OO) "Motor vehicle" and "manufactured home" have the
same
meanings as in section 4501.01 of the Revised Code. (PP) "Detention" and "detention facility" have the same
meanings as in section 2921.01 of the Revised Code. (QQ) "Third degree felony
OVI offense" means a
violation of
division (A) of section 4511.19 of the Revised Code
that, under
division (G) of that section, is a felony of
the third
degree. (RR) "Random drug testing" has the same meaning as in
section 5120.63 of the Revised Code. (SS) "Felony sex offense" has the same meaning as in
section
2967.28 of the Revised Code. (TT) "Body armor" has the same meaning as in section
2941.1411 of the Revised Code. (UU) "Electronic monitoring" means monitoring through the
use of an electronic monitoring device.
(VV) "Electronic monitoring device" means any of the
following:
(1) Any device that can be operated by electrical or battery
power and that conforms with all of the following:
(a) The device has a transmitter that can be attached to a
person, that will transmit a specified signal to a receiver of the
type described in division (VV)(1)(b) of this section if the
transmitter is removed from the person, turned off, or altered in
any manner without prior court approval in relation to electronic
monitoring or without prior approval of the department of
rehabilitation and correction in relation to the use of an
electronic monitoring device for an inmate on transitional control
or otherwise is tampered with, that can transmit continuously and
periodically a signal to that receiver when the person is within a
specified distance from the receiver, and that can transmit an
appropriate signal to that receiver if the person to whom it is
attached travels a specified distance from that receiver.
(b) The device has a receiver that can receive continuously
the signals transmitted by a transmitter of the type described in
division (VV)(1)(a) of this section, can transmit continuously
those signals by telephone to a central monitoring computer of the
type described in division (VV)(1)(c) of this section, and can
transmit continuously an appropriate signal to that central
monitoring computer if the receiver is turned off or altered
without prior court approval or otherwise tampered with.
(c) The device has a central monitoring computer that can
receive continuously the signals transmitted by telephone by a
receiver of the type described in division (VV)(1)(b) of this
section and can monitor continuously the person to whom an
electronic monitoring device of the type described in division
(VV)(1)(a) of this section is attached.
(2) Any device that is not a device of the type described in
division (VV)(1) of this section and that conforms with all of the
following: (a) The device includes a transmitter and receiver that can
monitor and determine the location of a subject person at any
time, or at a designated point in time, through the use of a
central monitoring computer or through other electronic means.
(b) The device includes a transmitter and receiver that can
determine at any time, or at a designated point in time, through
the use of a central monitoring computer or other electronic means
the fact that the transmitter is turned off or altered in any
manner without prior approval of the court in relation to the
electronic monitoring or without prior approval of the department
of rehabilitation and correction in relation to the use of an
electronic monitoring device for an inmate on transitional control
or otherwise is tampered with.
(3) Any type of technology that can adequately track or
determine the location of a subject person at any time and that is
approved by the director of rehabilitation and correction,
including, but not limited to, any satellite technology, voice
tracking system, or retinal scanning system that is so approved. (WW) "Non-economic loss" means nonpecuniary harm suffered by a victim of an offense as a result of or related to the commission of the offense, including, but not limited to, pain and suffering; loss of society, consortium, companionship, care, assistance, attention, protection, advice, guidance, counsel, instruction, training, or education; mental anguish; and any other intangible loss. (XX) "Prosecutor" has the same meaning as in section 2935.01 of the Revised Code. (YY) "Continuous alcohol monitoring" means the ability to automatically test and periodically transmit alcohol consumption levels and tamper attempts at least every hour, regardless of the location of the person who is being monitored.
(ZZ) A person is "adjudicated a sexually violent predator" if the person is convicted of or pleads guilty to a violent sex offense and also is convicted of or pleads guilty to a sexually violent predator specification that was included in the indictment, count in the indictment, or information charging that violent sex offense or if the person is convicted of or pleads guilty to a designated homicide, assault, or kidnapping offense and also is convicted of or pleads guilty to both a sexual motivation specification and a sexually violent predator specification that were included in the indictment, count in the indictment, or information charging that designated homicide, assault, or kidnapping offense.
Section 2. That existing section 2929.01 of the Revised Code is hereby repealed.
Section 3. Section 2929.01 of the Revised Code is presented in
this act as a composite of the section as amended by both Am. Sub. H.B. 95 and Am. Sub. H.B. 162 of
the 126th General Assembly. The General Assembly, applying the
principle stated in division (B) of section 1.52 of the Revised
Code that amendments are to be harmonized if reasonably capable of
simultaneous operation, finds that the composite is the resulting
version of the section in effect prior to the effective date of
the section as presented in this act.
|
|