Professional Documents
Culture Documents
Councilmember Thomas
AN AMENDMENT
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“(C) Remaining in the District to reside, work or attend school after receipt of notice of the
obligation to register; or
“(D) Changing the place where he or she resides, works or attends school in the District or
elsewhere;”.
“(B) The address where the gun offender resides or expects to reside in the District;”
“(E) The jurisdiction and a description of the offense for which the gun offender was
convicted and the date of conviction;
“(F) Fingerprints;
“(G) The identification number on the gun offender’s driver’s license or non-driver photo
identification card;
“(H) The name and address of any school the gun offender attends or expects to attend; and
“(I) The name and address of the gun offender’s expected place of work including the name
and phone number of a supervisor.”.
(1) By striking the phrase “(1) Except as specified in paragraph (2)” and replacing it with
the phrase “(1) Except as specified in paragraph (2) and (3)”.
“(3) If a gun offender neither resides, works, nor attends school in the District of
Columbia, the gun offender shall not be required to comply with paragraph (1) or (2)
of this subsection.”.
(3) By renumbering existing paragraph (3) as paragraph (4) and striking the phrase
“or(3)”.
“Sec. 803. Registration period. A gun offender shall comply with the registration and
verification provisions required by section 802 for a period beginning when he or she is
sentenced for a gun offense and continuing until two (2) years after the expiration of any time
being served on probation, parole, supervised release, or conditional release, or two (2) years
after the gun offender is unconditionally released from a correctional facility, prison, hospital or
other place of confinement, whichever is latest. The registration period is tolled for any time the
gun offender fails to register or otherwise fails to comply with the requirements of the “Gun
Offender Registration and Community Protection Amendment Act of 2009.”.
(i) By amending Sec. 807(a) by striking the phrase “6 months” and inserting the phrase “12
months” in its place.
“Sec. 808. D.C. Official Code § 23-1322(c) is amended by adding a new paragraph (8) to
read as follows:
“(8) Violated the “Gun Offender Registration and Community Protection Amendment
Act of 2009” while on probation, parole, or supervised release for committing a dangerous crime
or a crime of violence, as these crimes are defined in D.C. Official Code § 23-1331, while armed
with or having readily available a firearm, imitation firearm, or other deadly or dangerous
weapon as defined in D.C. Official Code § 22-4502(a).”.
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Rationale:
The Committee print proposes that gun offenders be registered for just two years after the end of
other supervision. There is no justifiable reason why the GOR should not be concurrent with
other supervision, which has been demonstrated to be effective in New York City (four years of
registration) and Baltimore (three years). This amendment would extend the GOR supervision
for two years after other supervision has ended to tailor the act to the specific crime problems in
the District, where MPD’s analysis has shown that violent offenders are more likely to commit
serious crimes, including homicide, soon after other supervision ends.
This amendment also authorizes MPD to collect information on the offender’s driver’s license
number, and his or her work and school address, where applicable. This information, which is
required by the Baltimore and NYC laws, is critical for two reasons. (1) If the offender is in
violation of the requirements of the registry, this information will help locate the offender. (2)
Offenders convicted in DC but living in another jurisdiction may be driving into DC for work or
school, in which case this is their primary connection to the city. There is no reason not to
provide this information.
This amendment clarifies that individuals convicted in the District who live elsewhere must
register under the GOR, but that those who neither live, work nor go to school in the District do
not have to “re-register” one year later. This proposal is modeled on the New York and
Baltimore laws.
This amendment increases the penalty for a violation of the GOR to a fine of not more than
$1,000 and / or 12 months imprisonment for knowing violations, which is the same penalty
contained in the NYC and Baltimore laws.
Finally, this amendment would establish a rebuttable presumption for pre-trial detention if an
offender violates the requirements of the GOR while otherwise under supervision for a crime of
violence or dangerous crime committed while armed. In this scenario, someone is first convicted
of a serious crime while armed, and then violates the provisions of the registry as well as the
conditions of release which required the registration. Any GOR offense is a knowing violation,
so any violation would be showing flagrant disregard for the law and the safety of the
community. Such offenders should be held pending trial so as to minimize further danger to the
community
Fiscal Impact: