BILL NUMBER: AB 299 INTRODUCED
BILL TEXT
INTRODUCED BY Assembly Member Maze
FEBRUARY 9, 2005
An act to amend Section 11165.9 of the Penal Code, and to amend
Section 827 of the Welfare and Institutions Code, relating to
juveniles.
LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST
AB 299, as introduced, Maze. Juvenile case files.
Existing law requires that reports of suspected child abuse or
neglect be made by mandated reporters to any police department or
sheriff's department, county probation department, as specified, or
the county welfare department.
This bill would require a police department or sheriff's
department that receives that report to transmit it to the county
welfare office within 60 minutes of receiving it. By imposing new
duties on local law enforcement, the bill would impose a
state-mandated local program.
Existing law delineates the persons who are authorized to inspect
juvenile case files.
This bill would make a technical change to that provision.
The California Constitution requires the state to reimburse local
agencies and school districts for certain costs mandated by the
state. Statutory provisions establish procedures for making that
reimbursement.
This bill would provide that, if the Commission on State Mandates
determines that the bill contains costs mandated by the state,
reimbursement for those costs shall be made pursuant to these
statutory provisions.
Vote: majority. Appropriation: no. Fiscal committee: yes.
State-mandated local program: yes.
THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA DO ENACT AS FOLLOWS:
SECTION 1. Section 11165.9 of the Penal Code is amended to read:
11165.9. Reports of suspected child abuse or neglect shall be
made by mandated reporters to any police department or sheriff's
department, not including a school district police or security
department, county probation department, if designated by the county
to receive mandated reports, or the county welfare department. Any of
those agencies shall accept a report of suspected child abuse or
neglect whether offered by a mandated reporter or another person, or
referred by another agency, even if the agency to whom the report is
being made lacks subject matter or geographical jurisdiction to
investigate the reported case, unless the agency can immediately
electronically transfer the call to an agency with proper
jurisdiction. When an agency takes a report about a case of suspected
child abuse or neglect in which that agency lacks jurisdiction, the
agency shall immediately refer the case by telephone, fax, or
electronic transmission to an agency with proper jurisdiction. A
police department or sheriff's department that receives a report
pursuant to this section shall transmit that report to the county
welfare office within 60 minutes of receiving the report.
SEC. 2. Section 827 of the Welfare and Institutions Code is
amended to read:
827. (a) (1) Except as provided in Section 828, a case file may
be inspected only by the following:(A) Court personnel.
(B) The district attorney, a city attorney, or city prosecutor
authorized to prosecute criminal or juvenile cases under state law.
(C) The minor who is the subject of the proceeding.
(D) His or her parents or guardian.
(E) The attorneys for the parties, and judges, referees, other
hearing officers, probation officers and law enforcement officers who
are actively participating in criminal or juvenile proceedings
involving the minor.
(F) The superintendent or designee of the school district where
the minor is enrolled or attending school.
(G) Members of the child protective agencies
Mandated reporter s, as defined in Section
11165.9 of the Penal Code.
(H) The State Department of Social Services to carry out its
duties pursuant to Division 9 (commencing with Section 10000), and
Part 5 (commencing with Section 7900) of Division 12 of the Family
Code to oversee and monitor county child welfare agencies, children
in foster care or receiving foster care assistance, and out-of-state
placements.
(I) To authorized legal staff or special investigators who are
peace officers who are employed by, or who are authorized
representatives of, the State Department of Social Services, as
necessary to the performance of their duties to inspect, license, and
investigate community care facilities, and to ensure that the
standards of care and services provided in those facilities are
adequate and appropriate and to ascertain compliance with the rules
and regulations to which the facilities are subject. The confidential
information shall remain confidential except for purposes of
inspection, licensing, or investigation pursuant to Chapter 3
(commencing with Section 1500) and Chapter 3.4 (commencing with
Section 1596.70) of Division 2 of the Health and Safety Code, or a
criminal, civil, or administrative proceeding in relation thereto.
The confidential information may be used by the State Department of
Social Services in a criminal, civil, or administrative proceeding.
The confidential information shall be available only to the judge or
hearing officer and to the parties to the case. Names that are
confidential shall be listed in attachments separate to the general
pleadings. The confidential information shall be sealed after the
conclusion of the criminal, civil, or administrative hearings, and
shall not subsequently be released except in accordance with this
subdivision. If the confidential information does not result in a
criminal, civil, or administrative proceeding, it shall be sealed
after the State Department of Social Services decides that no further
action will be taken in the matter of suspected licensing
violations. Except as otherwise provided in this subdivision,
confidential information in the possession of the State Department of
Social Services shall not contain the name of the minor.
(J) Members of children's multidisciplinary teams, persons or
agencies providing treatment or supervision of the minor.
(K) A judge, commissioner, or other hearing officer assigned to a
family law case with issues concerning custody or visitation, or
both, involving the minor, and the following persons, if actively
participating in the family law case: a family court mediator
assigned to a case involving the minor pursuant to Article 1
(commencing with Section 3160) of Chapter 11 of Part 2 of Division 8
of the Family Code, a court-appointed evaluator or a person
conducting a court-connected child custody evaluation, investigation,
or assessment pursuant to Section 3118 of the Family Code, and
counsel appointed for the minor in the family law case pursuant to
Section 3150 of the Family Code. Prior to allowing counsel appointed
for the minor in the family law case to inspect the file, the court
clerk may require counsel to provide a certified copy of the court
order appointing him or her as the minor's counsel.
(L) Juvenile justice commissions as established under Section 225.
The confidentiality provisions of Section 10850 shall apply to a
juvenile justice commission and its members.
(M) Any other person who may be designated by court order of the
judge of the juvenile court upon filing a petition.
(2) Notwithstanding any other law and subject to subparagraph (A)
of paragraph (3), juvenile case files, except those relating to
matters within the jurisdiction of the court pursuant to Section 601
or 602, which pertain to a deceased child who was within the
jurisdiction of the juvenile court pursuant to Section 300, shall be
released to the public pursuant to an order by the juvenile court
after a petition has been filed and interested parties have been
afforded an opportunity to file an objection. Any information
relating to another child or which could identify another child,
except for information about the deceased, shall be redacted from the
juvenile case file prior to release, unless a specific order is made
by the juvenile court to the contrary. Except as provided in this
paragraph, the presiding judge of the juvenile court may issue an
order prohibiting or limiting access to the juvenile case file, or
any portion thereof, of a deceased child only upon a showing that
release of the juvenile case file or any portion thereof is
detrimental to the safety, protection, or physical, or emotional
well-being of another child who is directly or indirectly connected
to the juvenile case that is the subject of the petition.
(3) Access to juvenile case files pertaining to matters within the
jurisdiction of the juvenile court pursuant to Section 300 shall be
limited as follows:
(A) If a juvenile case file, or any portion thereof, is privileged
or confidential pursuant to any other state law or federal law or
regulation, the requirements of that state law or federal law or
regulation prohibiting or limiting release of the juvenile case file
or any portions thereof shall prevail. Unless a person is listed in
subparagraphs (A) to (L), inclusive, of paragraph (1) and is entitled
to access under the other state law or federal law or regulation
without a court order, all those seeking access, pursuant to other
authorization, to portions of, or information relating to the
contents of, juvenile case files protected under another state law or
federal law or regulation, shall petition the juvenile court. The
juvenile court may only release the portion of, or information
relating to the contents of, juvenile case files protected by another
state law or federal law or regulation if disclosure is not
detrimental to the safety, protection, or physical or emotional
well-being of a child who is directly or indirectly connected to the
juvenile case that is the subject of the petition. This paragraph
shall not be construed to limit the ability of the juvenile court to
carry out its duties in conducting juvenile court proceedings.
(B) Prior to the release of the juvenile case file or any portion
thereof, the court shall afford due process, including a notice of
and an opportunity to file an objection to the release of the record
or report to all interested parties.
(4) A juvenile case file, any portion thereof, and information
relating to the content of the juvenile case file, shall not be
disseminated by the receiving agencies to any persons or agencies,
other than those persons or agencies authorized to receive documents
pursuant to this section. Further, a juvenile case file, any portion
thereof, and information relating to the content of the juvenile case
file, shall not be made as an attachment to any other documents
without the prior approval of the presiding judge of the juvenile
court, unless it is used in connection with and in the course of a
criminal investigation or a proceeding brought to declare a person a
dependent child or ward of the juvenile court.
(b) (1) While the Legislature reaffirms its belief that juvenile
court records, in general, should be confidential, it is the intent
of the Legislature in enacting this subdivision to provide for a
limited exception to juvenile court record confidentiality to promote
more effective communication among juvenile courts, family courts,
law enforcement agencies, and schools to ensure the rehabilitation of
juvenile criminal offenders as well as to lessen the potential for
drug use, violence, other forms of delinquency, and child abuse.
(2) Notwithstanding subdivision (a), written notice that a minor
enrolled in a public school, kindergarten to grade 12, inclusive, has
been found by a court of competent jurisdiction to have committed
any felony or any misdemeanor involving curfew, gambling, alcohol,
drugs, tobacco products, carrying of weapons, a sex offense listed in
Section 290 of the Penal Code, assault or battery, larceny,
vandalism, or graffiti shall be provided by the court, within seven
days, to the superintendent of the school district of attendance.
Written notice shall include only the offense found to have been
committed by the minor and the disposition of the minor's case. This
notice shall be expeditiously transmitted by the district
superintendent to the principal at the school of attendance. The
principal shall expeditiously disseminate the information to those
counselors directly supervising or reporting on the behavior or
progress of the minor. In addition, the principal shall disseminate
the information to any teacher or administrator directly supervising
or reporting on the behavior or progress of the minor whom the
principal believes needs the information to work with the pupil in an
appropriate fashion, to avoid being needlessly vulnerable or to
protect other persons from needless vulnerability.
Any information received by a teacher, counselor, or administrator
under this subdivision shall be received in confidence for the
limited purpose of rehabilitating the minor and protecting students
and staff, and shall not be further disseminated by the teacher,
counselor, or administrator, except insofar as communication with the
juvenile, his or her parents or guardians, law enforcement
personnel, and the juvenile's probation officer is necessary to
effectuate the juvenile's rehabilitation or to protect students and
staff.
An intentional violation of the confidentiality provisions of this
paragraph is a misdemeanor punishable by a fine not to exceed five
hundred dollars ($500).
(3) If a minor is removed from public school as a result of the
court's finding described in subdivision (b), the superintendent
shall maintain the information in a confidential file and shall defer
transmittal of the information received from the court until the
minor is returned to public school. If the minor is returned to a
school district other than the one from which the minor came, the
parole or probation officer having jurisdiction over the minor shall
so notify the superintendent of the last district of attendance, who
shall transmit the notice received from the court to the
superintendent of the new district of attendance.
(c) Each probation report filed with the court concerning a minor
whose record is subject to dissemination pursuant to subdivision (b)
shall include on the face sheet the school at which the minor is
currently enrolled. The county superintendent shall provide the court
with a listing of all of the schools within each school district,
within the county, along with the name and mailing address of each
district superintendent.
(d) Each notice sent by the court pursuant to subdivision (b)
shall be stamped with the instruction: "Unlawful Dissemination Of
This Information Is A Misdemeanor." Any information received from the
court shall be kept in a separate confidential file at the school of
attendance and shall be transferred to the minor's subsequent
schools of attendance and maintained until the minor graduates from
high school, is released from juvenile court jurisdiction, or reaches
the age of 18, whichever occurs first. After that time the
confidential record shall be destroyed. At any time after the date by
which a record required to be destroyed by this section should have
been destroyed, the minor or his or her parent or guardian shall have
the right to make a written request to the principal of the school
that the minor's school records be reviewed to ensure that the record
has been destroyed. Upon completion of any requested review and no
later than 30 days after the request for the review was received, the
principal or his or her designee shall respond in writing to the
written request and either shall confirm that the record has been
destroyed or, if the record has not been destroyed, shall explain why
destruction has not yet occurred.
Except as provided in paragraph (2) of subdivision (b), no
liability shall attach to any person who transmits or fails to
transmit any notice or information required under subdivision (b).
(e) For purposes of this section, a "juvenile case file" means a
petition filed in any juvenile court proceeding, reports of the
probation officer, and all other documents filed in that case or made
available to the probation officer in making his or her report, or
to the judge, referee, or other hearing officer, and thereafter
retained by the probation officer, judge, referee, or other hearing
officer.
SEC. 3.
If the Commission on State Mandates determines that this act
contains costs mandated by the state, reimbursement to local agencies
and school districts for those costs shall be made pursuant to Part
7 (commencing with Section 17500) of Division 4 of Title 2 of the
Government Code.