Chapter
430
2003 -- H 5582 SUBSTITUTE A
Enacted 08/06/03
A N A C T
RELATING TO COURTS AND CIVIL
PROCEDURE - JURY LISTS
Introduced By:
Representatives Anguilla, Williamson, Almeida, Lewiss, and Dennigan
Date
Introduced: February 11, 2003
It is enacted by the General
Assembly as follows:
SECTION
1. Sections 9-9-1 and 9-9-1.1 of the General Laws in Chapter 9-9 entitled
"Jury Lists" are hereby
amended to read as follows:
9-9-1.
Persons liable to service -- Voting, operator's licenses, Rhode Island
identification card lists
as evidence Persons
liable to service - - Voting operator’s licenses,
Rhode Island identification
card, state income tax returns and unemployment compensation
as evidence. - -
(a) A
person is liable to serve as a juror if the person is:
(1)
A citizen of the United States; and
(2)
At least eighteen (18) years of age; and
(3)
A resident of Rhode Island who either:
(i)
Resides in the county where the person is registered to vote;
(ii)
Is licensed to operate a motor vehicle within this state; or
(iii) Possesses a Rhode Island identification card issued pursuant to the
provisions of
sections 3-8-6 and 3-8-6.1. ;or
(iv)
Is an individual filing a state income tax return; or
(v)
Is an individual recipient of unemployment compensation.
(b)
The list of qualified electors of each town and city as made up by the board of
canvassers thereof, at its last meeting
prior to the Tuesday after the first Monday in November in
each even numbered year, and the
duly certified records of the administrator of the division of
motor vehicles shall be conclusive
evidence of the liability of each person to serve as provided in
this chapter, unless in the case of
a qualified elector the name of the person has been removed
from the list of qualified electors
of that town or city on which the name of that person appears
prior to being summoned to appear
in court as a juror, and except as provided in this chapter. The
jury commissioner shall notify the
clerk of the board of canvassers and registration of each
particular city or town when it
appears that a person on a list of qualified jurors does not reside at
the address on the list. The board
of canvassers and registration, after due notice to the person,
shall challenge the listing thereof
and after a hearing thereon may remove that person from the
list.
(c)
The division of motor vehicles shall forward to the jury commissioner the names
of
licensed drivers and the names of
those persons who possess Rhode Island identification cards
issued pursuant to the provisions
of sections 3-8-6 and 3-8-6.1 in the state on a yearly basis.
(d)
The division of taxation shall forward to the jury commissioner the names of
all
individuals who have filed a
state income tax return, on a yearly basis.
(e)
The department of labor and training shall forward to the jury commissioner the
names of all individuals who are
receiving unemployment compensation, on a yearly basis.
9-9-1.1.
Qualifications of jurors. –
(a) A
person is qualified to serve as a juror if the person is:
(1)
A citizen of the United States; and
(2)
A resident of Rhode Island who either:
(i)
Resides in the county where the person is registered to vote; or
(ii)
Is licensed to operate a motor vehicle within this state; or
(iii) Possesses a Rhode Island identification card issued pursuant to the
provisions of
sections 3-8-6 and 3-8-6.1; or
(iv)
Is an individual filing a state income tax return; or
(v)
Is an individual recipient of unemployment compensation.
(3)
At least 18 years of age;
(4) Able
to understand and participate in the court proceedings; and
(5)
Physically and mentally capable of performing in a reasonable manner the duties
of a
juror.
(b)
No person shall be allowed to serve as a juror if he or she has been lawfully
adjudicated to be non compos
mentis.
(c)
No person convicted of a felony shall be allowed to serve as a juror, until
completion
of such felon's sentence, served or
suspended, and of parole or probation regardless of a nolo
contendere plea.
(d)
Notwithstanding subdivisions (a)(4) and (5), a person with a disability shall
not be
ineligible to serve as a juror
solely on the basis of his or her disability, and if that person meets
the above requirements, with
reasonable accommodations if necessary, he or she shall be deemed
a qualified juror.
(e)
Nothing in this section shall prevent the court from disqualifying a
prospective juror
because he or she lacks a faculty
or has a disability which will prevent the potential juror from
being a competent juror in a
particular case.
(f)
Nothing in this section shall be construed to limit a party's right to
preemptorially
challenge jurors.
SECTION
2. Section 28-42-38 of the General Laws in Chapter 28-42 entitled
"Employment Security - General
Provisions" is hereby amended to read as follows:
28-42-38.
Records and reports -- Confidentiality of information. -- (a) Every
employer and every employing unit
employing any person in employment in this state shall keep
true and accurate employment
records of all persons employed by him or her, and of the weekly
hours worked for him or her by
each, and of the weekly wages paid by him or her to each person;
and every employer and employing
unit will keep records containing any other information that
the director may prescribe. Those
records shall at all times be available within this state and will
be open to inspection by the
director or his or her authorized representatives at any reasonable
time and as often as the director
deems necessary.
(b)
The director may require from any employer, or employing unit, employing any
person in this state, any reports
covering persons employed by him or her, on employment,
wages, hours, unemployment, and related
matters which the director deems necessary to the
effective administration of
chapters 42 -- 44 of this title.
(c)
(1) Information thus obtained, or information contained in other records of the
department obtained from any
individual pursuant to the administration of those chapters, shall be
held confidential by the director
and shall not be published or be open to public inspection in any
manner revealing the individual's
or employing unit's identity, but any claimant at a hearing
provided for in those chapters will
be supplied with information from those records of the extent
necessary for the proper
presentation of his or her claim, and any department employee guilty of
violating this provision is subject
to the penalties provided in chapters 42 -- 44 of this title;
provided, that nothing contained in
this section shall be construed to prevent the:
(i)
Director, or any qualified attorney whom the director has designated to
represent him
or her in any court of this state,
or the attorney general, from making any record, report, or other
information referred to in this
section, available in any proceeding before any court of this state in
any action to which the director is
a party;
(ii)
Director from making any record, report, or other information referred to in
this
section, available to any agency of
this state or any agency of a political subdivision of this state
charged with the administration of
public assistance within this state, or any political subdivision
of these;
(iii) Director from making any record, report, or other information referred to
in this
section available to the railroad
retirement board or to employees of the internal revenue service
in the performance of their public
duties, and the director will furnish, at the expense of the
railroad retirement board or the
internal revenue service, copies of those records, reports, or other
information referred to in this
section;
(iv)
Director from making available upon request and on a reimbursable basis, any
record, report, or other
information referred to in this section to the federal department of health
and human services in accordance
with the provisions of United States P.L. 100-485, Family
Support Act of 1988, or to the
federal department of housing and urban development and to
authorized representatives of
public housing agencies in accordance with the Stewart B.
McKinney Homeless Assistance Act,
42 U.S.C. section 11301 et seq.;
(v) Director
from making, and the director shall make, reports in the form and containing
the information that the federal
social security administration may from time to time require, and
complying with those provisions
that the federal social security administration may from time to
time find necessary to assure the
correctness and verification of those reports, and the director
will make available, upon request,
to any agency of the United States charged with the
administration of public works or
assistance through public employment, the name, address,
ordinary occupation, and employment
status of each recipient of unemployment compensation
and a statement of that recipient's
rights to further compensation under that law;
(vi)
Director from conducting any investigations he or she deems relevant in
connection
with this section; or
(vii) Director from conducting any investigations he or she deems relevant in
connection
with the performance of his or her
duties pursuant to the administration of the chapters 29, 32, 33,
34, 36, 37 and 41 of this title, or
from making any record, report, or other information referred to
in this section available to the
Workers' Compensation Fraud Prevention Unit for use in the
performance of its duties under section
42-16.1-12.; or
(viii)
Director from forwarding, and the director shall forward to the jury
commissioner
the names and addresses of all
individuals who are receiving unemployment compensation on a
yearly basis in accordance with
section 9-9-1(e).
(2)
The director may publish in statistical form the results of any investigations
without
disclosing the identity of the
individuals involved.
SECTION
3. Section 44-30-95 of the General Laws in Chapter 44-30 entitled
"Personal
Income Tax" is hereby amended
to read as follows:
44-30-95.
General powers of tax administrator. -- (a) General. - The tax
administrator
shall administer and enforce the
Rhode Island personal income tax and is authorized to make such
rules and regulations, and to
require such facts and information to be reported, as he or she may
deem necessary to enforce the tax.
The provisions of chapter 1 relating to the tax administrator
shall be applicable to the Rhode
Island personal income tax.
(b) Examination
of books and witnesses. - The tax administrator, for the purpose of
ascertaining the correctness of any
return, or for the purpose of making an estimate of Rhode
Island income of any person where
information has been obtained, shall have the power to
examine or to cause to have
examined, by any agent or representative designated by the tax
administrator for that purpose, any
books, papers, records, or memoranda bearing upon the
matters required to be included in
the return, and may require the attendance of the person
rendering the return or any officer
or employee of the person, or the attendance of any other
person having knowledge in the
premises, and may take testimony and require proof material for
its information, with power to administer
oaths to the person or persons.
(c)
Secrecy requirement. - It shall be unlawful for any state official or employee
to
divulge or to make known to any
person in any manner whatever not provided by law the amount
or source of income, profits, losses,
expenditures, or any particular thereof set forth or disclosed
in any return, or to permit any
return or copy thereof or any book containing any abstract or
particulars thereof to be seen or
examined by any person except as provided by law; and it shall
be unlawful for any person to print
or publish in any manner whatever not provided by law any
return or any part thereof or
source of income, profits, losses, or expenditures appearing in any
return. Any offense against the
foregoing provision shall be punished by a fine not exceeding one
thousand dollars ($1,000) or by
imprisonment not exceeding one year, or both, at the discretion of
the court; and if the offender be
an officer or employee of the state of Rhode Island, the offender
may be dismissed from office or
discharged from employment.
(d)
Interstate and federal agreements. - The governor or the tax administrator may
enter
into agreements with tax officials
of other states and the federal government to provide for the
exchange of information and to
apportion or otherwise equitably determine taxes for the purposes
of carrying out the provisions of
section 44-30-18 and otherwise avoiding multiple taxation.
(e)
Income tax claims of other states. - The courts of this state shall recognize
and
enforce liabilities for personal
income taxes lawfully imposed by any other state which extends a
like comity to this state, and the
duly authorized officer of any other state may sue for the
collection of a tax in the courts
of this state. A certificate by the secretary of state of the other
state that an officer suing for the
collection of a tax is duly authorized to collect the tax shall be
conclusive proof of that authority.
For the purposes of this section, the word "taxes" shall include
additions to tax, interest, and
penalties, and liability for taxes, additions to tax, interest and
penalties shall be recognized and
enforced by the courts of this state to the same extent that the
laws of the other state permit the
enforcement in its courts of liability for taxes, additions to tax,
interest, and penalties due this
state under this part.
(f)
Small tax balances. - The tax administrator is authorized to abate the unpaid
portion
of the assessment of any tax, or
any liability in respect thereof, if the administrator determines
under uniform rules prescribed by
him or her that the administration and collection costs involved
would not warrant collection of the
amount due.
(g)
Limited disclosure of information. – Retirement board. -- The tax
administrator shall
disclose to the retirement board of
the state of Rhode Island information needed by said board to
implement the provisions of
sections 36-10-17 and 45-21-24. The content and nature of the
information to be disclosed shall
be determined and approved by the tax administrator and shall
be kept confidential by the board.
(h)
Limited disclosure of information. -- Jury Commissioner. The tax administrator
shall disclose to the jury
commissioners of the State of Rhode Island information needed by
him/her to implement provisions
of section 9-9-1(d).
SECTION
4. This act shall take effect upon passage.
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LC01916/SUB A
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