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From our State Capitol in Lansing to the U.S. Capitol in Washington, DC, WKAR is committed to explaining how the actions of lawmakers are affecting Michiganders. Political and government reporter Abigail Censky leads this section. There are also stories from Capitol correspondents Cheyna Roth, Rick Pluta and the Associated Press. As the 2020 presidential race begins, look here for reports on the role Michigan will play in electing or re-electing the president.

Nessel Offers Suggestions To House Committee On Expungement Bills

Attorney General Dana Nessel
Cheyna Roth

The state Attorney General has recommendations for changes to bills on expunging criminal records. The bills are up for debate in the state Legislature.

At a Tuesday hearing in front of a House Judicial committee, Nessel said she is, overall, in support of expanding the state’s laws to set aside some crimes on a person’s criminal record. But she had ideas that she said could improve the bills. 

One area of concern was a bill to automatically remove certain crimes from a person’s record after 10 years.

“Who is it who will monitor or supervise the Michigan State Police to ensure that these convictions are automatically set aside? Secondly, realistically, how is this going to work?” she said. 

Nessel said a lot of the information is kept in local courts and there could be a breakdown in communication between those offices and MSP. She said she is concerned the bill could subject the state to lawsuits if people’s records are not expunged.

Another area of concern raised by Nessel was which crimes could be expunged, and which are exempt from expungement. Nessel says some of the exceptions in the bills for which crimes can be expunged are confusing. For example, some assault crimes can be expunged, but a variety of traffic offenses cannot. 

To say that they can be expunged but not a traffic offense that occurs in a work zone?” Nessel said. “It just doesn’t make sense to me.”

Nessel also offered to have a unit in her office designated as a place that people with questions about possible expungement could contact. And she advocated for allowing a drunk driving offense to be cleared from a person’s public record.

House Bills 4980 through 4985 have now had several committee hearings, but still have not been voted on.

Before becoming the newest Capitol reporter for Michigan Public Radio Network, Cheyna Roth was an attorney. She spent her days fighting it out in court as an assistant prosecuting attorney for Ionia County.
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