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HR 3623 106th Congress House Crime and Law Enforcement Administration of criminal justice Administrative procedure Appellate procedure Capital punishment Civil actions and liability Criminal procedure DNA fingerprints Department of Justice Discovery (Law) Due process of law Evidence (Law) Forensic medicine Government Operations and Politics Health Identification of criminals Injunctions Judicial opinions Law Pretrial procedure

Accuracy in Judicial Administration Act of 2000

Introduced: February 10, 2000 See on congress.gov
 Everywhere this bill has been 3 steps
Introduced
In committee
Reported out
Passed House
Passed Senate
To President
Became law
Mar 27, 2000
Referred to the Subcommittee on Crime.
Feb 10, 2000
Referred to the House Committee on the Judiciary.
Feb 10, 2000
Introduced in House
 Plain-English summary Congressional Research Service
Accuracy in Judicial Administration Act of 2000 - Establishes a moratorium on any State or Federal authority carrying out of the death penalty.

Directs the Attorney General to prescribe standards to provide overwhelming confidence that innocent parties will not suffer the death penalty, which shall include procedures to assure: (1) an effective opportunity for pretrial discovery by defendants of forensic evidence in the possession of the prosecuting authority; and (2) that each individual convicted of a capital offense has a full and fair opportunity to produce any exculpatory DNA or similar evidence which was not available to that individual at the time of trial and to obtain an effective judicial vitiation of the conviction and sentence if the reviewing court determines that evidence indicates a reasonable doubt that the individual was guilty as convicted.

Ends the moratorium on the later of: (1) the date seven years after enactment of this Act; (2) for a State authority, the date a U.S. district court enters a declaratory judgment finding that the State has established procedures consistent with the standards prescribed by the Attorney General; or (3) for a Federal authority, the date the Attorney General certifies that such authority operates consistently with such standards.

What's happening now March 27, 2000

Referred to the Subcommittee on Crime.

 Committees of jurisdiction 2