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From YouTube: 5/29/2021 - Assembly Committee on Judiciary
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A
A
Here
please
mark
assemblywoman,
bilbray,
axelrod
absent
excuse,
everyone
else
is
present.
That
means
we
have
a
quorum
good
morning
to
those
here
in
the
room
with
us
and
good
morning
to
those
who
may
be
watching
on
the
internet.
I
apologize
for
the
late
start
this
morning.
Things
are
a
little
fluid
in
the
building,
but
appreciate
your
patience
and
we'll
get
through
this
agenda.
I
think
rather
quickly
this
morning,
just
a
few
quick
housekeeping
matters.
A
A
As
you
can
see
members,
we
have
a
work
session
scheduled
with
two
bills
on
the
work
session
agenda
you
will
for
members
of
the
public
who
may
be
watching
you
can
find
the
work
session
document
on
the
legislature's
website
under
nellis
they'll
be
there
as
an
exhibit.
So
if
you
want
to
follow
along
that
way,
you'll
be
able
to
so
at
this
time
we'll
move
to
the
work
session
and
we're
going
to
first
consider
senate
bill
147
I'll
hand
it
over
to
ms
thornton
to
take
us
through
the
work
session
document.
C
Thank
you,
chairman
diane
thornton
policy,
analyst
legislative
council
bureau.
Our
first
bill
is
senate
bill
147,
which
establishes
provisions
relating
to
conditions
of
release
that
prohibit
the
contact
or
attempted
contact
of
certain
persons
sponsored
by
the
senate
committee
on
judiciary,
on
behalf
of
the
committee,
to
conduct
an
interim
study
of
issues
relating
to
pre-trial
release
and
heard
in
committee
on
may
27th.
C
C
Third,
it
revises
section
1,
subsection
8a1,
to
include
new
language
regarding
when
the
prosecutor
decides
not
to
prosecute.
It
revises
section
1
to
include
a
new
section
requiring
the
court
to
provide
certain
warnings
to
a
person
if
a
violation
of
the
order
occurs,
and,
lastly,
it
deletes
section
3
of
the
bill.
Thank
you,
chair.
A
A
It
just
does
it
in
a
little
bit
of
a
different
way,
instead
of
defining
violation
of
a
stay
away
order
as
a
trespass,
it
is
now
its
own
misdemeanor
offense,
and
then
the
other
provisions
really
are
to
ensure
that
the
defendant
receives
at
least
a
notice
of
some
sort
that
if
they
violate
a
stay
away,
order
that
could
result
in
a
new
misdemeanor
charge
and
could
result
in
the
revocation
of
bail
or
other
conditions.
Now
truthfully,
those
things
already
exist
in
law.
A
If
a
judge
tells
you
to
do
something
as
a
condition
of
your
lease,
and
you
don't
do
it-
your
bail
can
be
revoked.
Other
conditions
can
be
opposed,
but
we
want
to
make
sure
the
court
informs
the
defendant
that
it
could
also
be
another
misdemeanor
crime.
So
I
think
with
that
we
got
everybody
to
a
pretty
good
place
on
this
bill
and
again
thank
the
sponsor
for
her
work
on
it.
With
that
being
said,
any
committee
members
have
questions
about
the
work
session
document
on
senate
bill,
147,
assemblyman,
o'neill.
D
Thank
you,
chair,
quick
question
on
the
fourth
amendment.
To
provide
certain
warnings
is
that
is:
does
it
state
in
their
written
oral?
What's
the
delivery
method.
A
Thank
you,
assemblyman
o'neill,
so
this
it
doesn't
say
in
this
bill.
It
just
says
they
have
to
be
provided
with
notice.
Essentially,
so
I
think
our
bill
leaves
that
open-ended
for
the
court,
but
there
is
another
bill,
so
I
believe
that
senate
bill
369,
which
is
over
in
the
senate,
it's
on
the
senate
floor
right
now
for
a
concur,
not
concur,
and
that
bill
requires
that
all
conditions
of
release
be
provided
to
a
defendant
in
writing
and
the
defendant
has
to
sign
the
document
in
writing.
A
So
the
tricky
part
answering
a
question
is
neither
bill
has
passed
yet
so
if
they
both
pass,
then
the
the
warning
would
be
in
writing.
If,
for
some
reason,
senate
bill
369
does
not
pass,
then
this
bill
essentially
would
leave
it
to
the
court's
discretion,
but
they
at
least
have
to
tell
them
in
court
that
about
the
consequences
of
violence,
violating
a
stay
away
order.
A
A
B
I
just
thank
you
chair
yeager.
I
just
want
to
say
thank
you
to
all
parties
involved
and
to
the
community
concerned
folks
who
work
together
to
get
us
here.
I'm
I'm
always
happy
when
we
can
find
just
some
middle
ground
and
I'm
I'm
grateful.
So
thank
you
so
much.
A
Very
well
stated,
and-
and
I
will
echo
that
as
well-
it's
we're
on
day
one
seven
we're
at
118
today
and
so
the
fact
that
we're
able
to
get
this
up
and
down
so
quickly
appreciate
the
hard
work.
I
know
it's.
The
light
is
here
at
the
end
of
the
tunnel,
but
we're
still
working,
and
so
I
agree
with
you
100
on
that
any
further
discussion.
A
Okay,
don't
see
further
discussion
again,
the
motion
is
to
amend
and
do
pass
senate
bill.
147.
All
those
in
favor,
please
signify
by
saying
aye,
any
opposed,
nay,
okay,
motion
carries
everyone
present
voted
in
favor.
Who
would
like
the
floor
statement?
Do
I
have
any
volunteers,
assemblyman
o'neill
you
have
it!
Thank
you
so
we'll
move
on
to
the
second
work
session
bill
on
the
agenda
and
that
would
be
senate
bill
236
ms
thornton.
C
Thank
you,
chair
senate
bill.
236
is
sponsored
by
senator
harris
and
heard
in
committee
on
may
27th.
This
bill
requires
every
law
enforcement
agency
to
establish
an
early
warning
system
to
identify
officers
who
display
bias
indicators
or
other
problematic
behavior.
The
bill
also
establishes
provisions
relating
to
traffic
stops
conducted
by
officers
and,
finally,
the
bill
requires
the
legislative
commission
to
appoint
a
committee
to
conduct
an
interim
study
related
to
the
establishment
of
crisis
call
centers,
and
there
are
no
amendments
to
the
measure.
A
B
Thank
you,
mr
speaker.
Sorry
next
year
you,
mr
chairman,
I'm
still
going
to
have
to
be
opposed
to
this
bill.
I
think
that
the
police
departments
are
doing
their
best
right
now
to
make
sure
that
there
are.
Everyone
is
weeded
out.
They've
been
doing
this
for
years
and
years
and
years,
and
I
just
this
is
gonna-
make
some
of
the
cops
on
the
street
a
little
more
hesitant
to
do
things
and
that
could
create
you
know
very
dangerous
situations,
so
I'm
gonna
have
to
be
a
definite
no
on
this.
Thank.
A
A
E
Thank
you
chair.
I
certainly
appreciate
that.
Do
a
study
and
to
be
watching
out
for
these
things
we
can
always
do
better.
I
do
appreciate
what
law
enforcement
does.
I
know
it's
not
perfect.
There's
just
some
language,
that's
a
little
bit
subjective
still
in
my
mind.
So
at
this
point
I
I'm
gonna
have
to.
E
A
A
Could
I
have
a
show
of
hands,
so
we
have
nays
from
assemblyman
wheeler
assembly,
woman,
hearty
assembly,
assemblywoman,
hanson,
assemblywoman,
kasama,
assemblywoman,
krasner
and
assemblyman
o'neill.
That
means
the
motion
does
carry.
Who
would
like
the
floor
statement?
Do
I
have
any
volunteers,
a
lot
of
volunteers
we'll
get
we'll
give
it
to
assemblywoman
bill
ray
axelrod,
since
she
was
a
little
bit
late
this
morning.
So
that's
sure,
but
the
truth
is
we
probably
won't
be
reading
the
floor
statements
anyway.
A
A
As
we
have
a
reminder,
we
reserve
up
to
30
minutes
for
public
comment.
Public
comments
have
two
minutes
to
provide
public
comment.
Public
comment
is
a
time
to
raise
matters
of
general
nature
within
the
jurisdiction
of
the
hard-working
assembly
judiciary
committee.
Do
we
have
any
public
comment
here
in
the
room
in
carson
city?
It
looks
like
we
have
four
individuals
in
the
audience.
A
E
A
G
As
we
know,
this
is
probably
one
of
our
last
judiciary
meetings
of
the
81st
session,
and
so
I
just
wanted
to
thank
chairman
yeager
so
much
for
all
your
hard
work
on
this
committee
and
honestly,
all
your
kindness
you're,
like
one
of
the
kindest
people
in
this
building,
along
with
senator
orange,
all
that
we
all
love
so
much,
but
I
just
wanted
to
thank
you
and
vice
chair
wynn
as
well,
for
just
your
leadership
on
this
committee
and
in
this
building
to
a
lot
of
us
freshmen,
and
I
also
just
want
to
thank
all
the
staff
for
all
the
hours
and
long
work.
G
G
A
B
A
D
And
I've
got
a
coming
from
the
other
side.
It
really
does
show,
though,
the
commonality
that
we
have
coming
together,
both
republicans
democrats
and
looking
at
the
bills,
and
your
leadership
has
helped
that
tremendously,
and
I
think,
speaking
with
ms
gonzalez,
what
she
had
in
her
speech
was
actually
she
said,
shh.
D
A
F
F
This
is
because
that's
how
we
work
together
as
a
body
and
we've
learned
that
no
greater
than
no
better
than
in
this
house,
where
our
chair
and
vice
chair
are
always
willing
to
give
consideration
and
kindness
to
everyone
to
participate
to
have
their
voice
into
you
know
to
be
protected,
as
we
make
hard
decisions
to
give
us
wisdom
and
guidance
in
how
we
do
that.
F
And
so
I
love
what
you
just
said
and
how
you,
you
know,
work
that
out-
and
I
don't
know
I'm
kind
of
like
you
know
all
this
kindness
off
with
this
hedge.
No.
A
Assemblyman,
I
was
going
to
recommend
you
for
the
floor
prayer
this
afternoon,
but
I
I
I
don't.
I
don't
know
if
we
can
do
that
now
with
that
final
comment.
So
so
so,
as
you
know,
committee
we
do
have
two
days
left
in
session.
There's
always
a
chance
that
we
could
have
another
meeting,
but
in
the
event
that
this
will
be
our
last
meeting
could
be
our
last
meeting.
A
A
We
get
criticized
a
lot
in
this
building
for
being
partisan
and
I
think
the
public
doesn't
always
see
that
we
have
hard
conversations
with
each
other
and
we're
trying
to
do
the
best
work
we
can
do
for
the
state,
and
certainly
all
of
you
played
a
huge
part
in
that
this
is
a
very
difficult
committee
to
sit
on.
We
put
in
long
hours.
A
We
hear
a
lot
of
bills,
but
I
just
want
to
say
what
an
honor
it
is
to
have
all
of
you
here
on
this
journey
and
then
our
staff
I
mean
our
staff
is
amazing.
I
think
whatever
you
see
them
doing,
there's
that's
like
the
tip
of
the
iceberg
in
terms
of
what
they're
doing
behind
the
scenes
and
and
that's
not
just
our
our
staff
here-
you
see
in
the
committee,
but
we
have
our
committee
manager,
we
have
bps,
who
is
like
I
mean
remember.
A
We
were
on
zoom
at
the
beginning
of
this
session
right.
It
seems
like
a
year
ago
now,
but
you
know
they
made
that
happen
and
made
this
process
more
accessible
than
it's
ever
been
in
the
public.
So
and
you
know
to
our
bill
drafters
to
our
police
officers
to
our
custodial
staff,
they're,
just
a
lot
of
people
that
work
really
hard
in
this
building
and
they
don't
always
get
the
recognition.
A
A
And
then
you
know,
finally,
just
members
of
the
public,
our
lobbyists,
our
activists,
it's
nice,
to
have
some
people
in
the
room
today.
But
we
know
this
was.
This
was
an
incredibly
difficult
session
at
the
beginning,
having
that
calling
on
the
phone
having
to
be
in
on
zoom
not
being
able
to
meet
with
legislators,
and
we
just
thank
you
for
your
patience
as
we
tried
to
work
through
this
pandemic
and
do
it
in
a
safe
and
effective
way.
A
We
appreciate
you
and
and
your
input
and
your
expertise
into
this
this
process,
and
then
you
know
to
our
freshman
I'll
say
this:
those
of
you
with
your
first
time
in
the
building,
what
a
session
to
have
as
your
first
session
and
and
so
I
think
we
we
probably
could
have
provided
a
little
bit
better
guidance
along
the
way.
But
the
way
the
building
opened
up
and
operated
was
just
very,
very
unique.
A
So
thank
you
for
always
being
flexible
and
I
think,
hopefully,
all
of
you
will
decide
to
come
back
next
session
and
we'll
hit
the
ground
running
in
the
committee
room
with
a
full
room
of
people.
So
now
that
I've
given
my
remarks,
although
I'd
like
this
meeting
to
last
forever
because
you're
all
saying
very
nice
things
about
me-
I
will
just
leave
it
at
that,
and
so
we
are
going
to
adjourn
here
momentarily.
We
do
have
agendas
for
the
next
two
days.