logo
Virginia will allow for some criminal records to be sealed next year

Virginia will allow for some criminal records to be sealed next year

Yahoo15-05-2025

Senate Majority Leader Scott Surovell, D-Fairfax, virtually joins a discussion panel with criminal justice experts in Richmond on May 14, 2025 to discuss a forthcoming record-sealing law. (Photo by Charlotte Rene Woods/ Virginia Mercury)
Next summer, certain people with past convictions will be eligible to apply for their criminal records to be sealed — meaning long-past convictions won't show up on background checks.
This can help people who have been formerly incarcerated and rehabilitated get a fresh start when applying for jobs, loans or apartments. The process stems from a 2021 law that underwent several years of workshopping before its delayed implementation.
Starting next summer, people with some misdemeanor and felony convictions will be able to petition to have their records sealed. For felonies, people need to have had no new convictions for 10 years to be eligible, while people with misdemeanor convictions need to have no new convictions in seven years. People with Class 1 or 2 felony convictions, typically violent crimes, or charges that carry life sentences are not eligible. And petitioners must not have been convicted of a Class 3 or Class 4 felony within 20 years.
For people with misdemeanors that might have been dismissed but still appear on records, expungement of records is a separate process they can seek out through their local circuit courts.
While expungement has been a limited option for people in Virginia, record-sealing is new.
The 2021 law's rollout has been slowed down to give circuit court clerks time to prepare for waves of people who would seek a sealing, determine how far back in court records would be permitted (prior to the 1980s, most courts weren't digitized), and compromise on the types of crimes that are eligible.
Senate Majority Leader Scott Surovell, D-Fairfax, virtually joined a panel of criminal justice experts Wednesday in Richmond to discuss the law's evolution and the journey for beneficiaries that lies ahead.
'It was important to get the system up and running and functioning,' Surovell said, noting that updates to Virginia's digital criminal record-keeping that can help streamline the process have been underway in recent years.
And while he, Del. Rae Cousins, D-Richmond, and Suffolk Circuit Court Clerk Randy Carter suspect the law will need further tweaking, they celebrated the fact that it's come to fruition.
With a start date of July 1, 2026, Surovell said dozens of constituents have already reached out to him to express excitement. Surovell said that one of those people had a larceny charge in his youth that has 'followed him around' for decades.
Likewise, Cousins stressed her support for the law.
'It is laws like this that make it easier for people who have taken accountability who have also served their time, who have rehabilitated themselves to actually get out and have a second chance at life.'
Lawyer George Townsend, who moderated the panel, said the law inspired him to found a firm called Clean Slate Virginia, specifically focused on record-sealing cases.
He said he saw the law as a 'game changer' for helping people get their lives back on track and reduce recidivism.
With a little more than a year before the law is effective, the panel acknowledged that public outreach about the new law will help let potential petitioners know they have this option. SUBSCRIBE: GET THE MORNING HEADLINES DELIVERED TO YOUR INBOX

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

M.L. Elrick wins Scripps Howard award for watchdog columns
M.L. Elrick wins Scripps Howard award for watchdog columns

Yahoo

time34 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

M.L. Elrick wins Scripps Howard award for watchdog columns

Detroit Free Press columnist M.L. Elrick nabbed another national honor this June. The longtime investigative journalist won the Scripps Howard Journalism Award for excellence in opinion writing June 10 for his 'On Guard' columns. Named alongside Elrick and the Free Press was 'Eye On Michigan,' a nonprofit, independent student investigative reporting program that Elrick launched. Elrick, who previously won the Pulitzer Prize, 'exposes politicians and public officials who break the rules or fail to do their jobs, providing the public with crucial information they can't find elsewhere to make informed decisions,' according to a listing on the Scripps Howard Fund and Scripps Howard Foundation website. More from M.L. Elrick: Wayne judge candidate won't run on his record because it includes lies and beating women Among the work that earned Elrick his latest honor were pieces that laid bare the checkered past of a probate judge candidate, exposed a Monroe County commissioner planning to serve an elected term while in federal prison, and took on Gov. Gretchen Whitmer and then-state House Speaker Joe Tate, D-Detroit, amid the controversial lame duck session at the end of 2024. Elrick's work is a valuable service, said Nicole Avery Nichols, editor and vice president of the Free Press. More from M.L. Elrick: Poobahs favor Duggan while GOP candidates hope the Donald doesn't Trump their ambitions 'M.L.'s brand of accountability journalism is uniquely Free Press, holding the powerful to account on behalf of metro Detroiters,' she said, later adding: 'Equally exciting is that the collegiate journalists of 'Eye on Michigan,' have also been honored for their investigative work. "Coaching and inspiring the next generation of journalists is something that M.L., and the Free Press, is deeply committed to.' More from M.L. Elrick: It's debatable who won Detroit mayoral candidates' chin-wag on Mackinac Island The Scripps Howard Journalism Awards honor work "that spurs action' and teams 'that go the extra mile to expose previously undisclosed or misunderstood information,' according to its website. The fund named winners across 12 categories from nearly 600 entries nationwide. This article originally appeared on Detroit Free Press: M.L. Elrick wins Scripps Howard award for watchdog columns

Jim Beam column:State Senate has cooler heads
Jim Beam column:State Senate has cooler heads

American Press

time37 minutes ago

  • American Press

Jim Beam column:State Senate has cooler heads

Members of the Louisiana Senate have cooler heads when it comes to deciding on the value of proposed legislaion.(Photo courtesy of The Louisiana Senate, as it has done for many years, helped make the recently concluded legislative fiscal session more productive by killing some bad bills and taking some positive steps. However, the Public Affairs Research Council of Louisiana said the session saw an erosion of ethics and public records laws and diminished laws that promote accountability and transparency in government. The Senate, instead of eliminating the Revenue Stabilization Trust Fund and moving its $3.9 billion into the Budget Stabilization (Rainy Day) Fund for use with future budget needs, pulled $1.2 billion from the fund for valuable one-time projects. Senate amendments to the state budget that had been approved by the House set aside $709 million of that money for roads, bridges and similar work that has been delayed much too long, $273 million to boost economic development, $75 million for local water system improvements and $43 million for higher education delayed maintenance. The House passed sales and income tax changes that only went into effect Jan. 1. The Senate let the income tax cut die and used the sales tax bill to create the Local Revenue Fund to be used solely to offset local costs of eliminating the inventory tax. Republican Gov. Jeff Landry wanted $93.5 million for the LA GATOR school choice program that will give parents grants for private education., and the House approved that amount. However, Senate President Cameron Henry, R-Metairie, said last year only $43.5 million would be spent on what is a new state program. Henry said he made it clear on how much would be spent in order 'to make sure we don't grow government too fast.' The Advocate Friday reported that with just an hour left in the session, the Senate killed a controversial bill that would have barred companies from owning both pharmacy benefits managers (PBMs) and pharmacies. Landry got so upset, he said he would call the Legislature back in for a special session to address the issue. Henry said senators had concerns about the rapid pace at which the bill was being considered. The newspaper said the bill only emerged from a conference committee with the language addressing PBMs. 'There's a legislative process for a reason,' Henry said. 'That amendment did not have one ounce of public testimony through the process.' The newspaper said CVS, which owns both a PBM and a nationwide chain of drug stores, said the bill would have forced it to close 119 stores in Louisiana. Henry said the bill wouldn't have taken effect until 2027 anyway, which meant the Legislature could simply vote on the bill next year. Louisiana voters on March 29 rejected a complex constitutional amendment that would have provided permanent pay increases for teachers and school support workers. The funds would come from eliminating three education trust funds. Objections were raised about eliminating those funds and voters didn't like the complexity of that amendment. So they will see a simpler amendment on the April 18, 2026, ballot. The House and Senate worked together to come up with that amendment. It took three bills. One eliminated the trust funds, a second used those funds to lower teacher retirement debt and the third levied the raises — $2,250 for teachers and $1,125 for support workers. Here is some other action from the session. The Legislature approved a bill that aims to stop out-of-state doctors from prescribing abortion drugs. Both houses passed a bill that would require app stores to verify the age of users. A bill that would ban Louisiana's diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI) programs had Black legislators calling it racism. The bill passed the House but died on the Senate calendar. Passed a bill that aims to provide public access to certain juvenile criminal records, which drew considerable opposition from advocates for juveniles. Louisiana may be able to speed up executions after passage of an overhaul of post-conviction relief. It is expected to affect more than the state's 55 death row inmates. Approved an amendment, if approved by voters, that could make it easier to fire state workers who are protected by civil service. A special thanks to the state Senate and its President Henry for using so much common sense to bring some sanity to the legislative process. We needed the comfort they gave us in these trying times. Jim Beam, the retired editor of the American Press, has covered people and politics for more than six decades. Contact him at 337-515-8871 or Reply Forward Add reaction

The Tribune's Quotes of the Week quiz for June 14
The Tribune's Quotes of the Week quiz for June 14

Chicago Tribune

time2 hours ago

  • Chicago Tribune

The Tribune's Quotes of the Week quiz for June 14

This tumultuous week ended with Illinois political giant Michael Madigan getting 7 1/2 years in prison for corruption. The historic sentencing is the latest chapter in the long story of corruption in Illinois politics. Unrelated to Madigan, Senate President Don Harmon faces more than $9.8 million in fines for allegedly breaking an Illinois election law. Gov. JB Pritzker traveled to Washington, D.C., to testify with the governors of New York and Minnesota in a U.S. House hearing on state sanctuary laws. The hearing was a key moment in the nation's ongoing unrest over the White House's immigration policies. When protests against ICE raids in Los Angeles turned violent this week, President Donald Trump ordered National Guard and Marine troops to go to California to quell the unrest. Gov. Gavin Newsom and other blue state governors saw this move as an overstep that only made the situation worse. Chicago's own protests this week stayed relatively peaceful and are expected to continue over the weekend. The City Council and the mayor's office were busy this week. Aldermen advanced an ordinance that would allow them to block short-term rentals such as Airbnbs when voters in a specific precinct call for it, the Board of Education voted to approve a new interim schools chief and the city could be on the hook for $24 million to settle three wrongful conviction cases. Thursday was a bad day for air travel. A JetBlue flight from Chicago rolled off the runway at Boston's airport and an Air India flight crashed minutes after takeoff, killing 241 people on board. A single passenger survived. In the world of sports, the Cubs bullpen has been hot this month. The White Sox made a trade this week, and one of their biggest fans, the pope, was seen donning a White Sox hat. The pontiff will deliver a virtual message at Rate Field on Saturday. Plus, Chicago Sky star Allie Quigley recently announced that she is retiring. The WNBA legend remains one of the best shooters in the history of women's basketball. Now for the fun stuff. Test your knowledge of who said what this week with the Tribune's Quotes of the Week quiz, this time with excerpts and utterances from June 8 to 14. Missed last week? You can find it here or check out our past editions of Quotes of the Week.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store