HB 373: Reducing Criminal Offenses After Conviction

To track the status of this bill, find it on our Legislation Tracker. Click here to contact the sponsor of the bill to share your thoughts, or click here to email your Senator and Representative about it.

Libertas Institute supports this bill

Staff review of this legislation finds that it aligns with our principles and should therefore be passed into law.

Living with a criminal record is like having a scarlet letter attached to your name, impacting major life decisions every step of the way. Every job, student loan, or housing application will be potentially negatively impacted, hurting chances of upward mobility and success — even for those who haven’t recidivated by committing a new crime and aren’t a community safety risk but rather just trying to live a normal, crime-free life with some slip-ups in their past.

Representative Jordan Teuscher is sponsoring House Bill 373 in order to allow courts to lower criminal offenses for individuals who have successfully completed parole. This means that after the conviction, and after the individual has proven good behavior to the courts, their criminal penalty on their record will be lowered. Current law allows for Utah courts to lower an individual’s criminal conviction if they’ve successfully completed probation, already. But this bill would add parole to the list as well, making it more consistent to reach both community supervision programs condoned under Utah law.

Libertas supports this bill because it creates another incentive to get a person on parole to comply with their conditions and complete the program. And as a reward, the individual will benefit from a lower criminal penalty on their record. This is a win-win situation for public safety and the individual defendant.

About the author

Libertas Institute Staff

Share Post:

Fighting for a Future Where Individuals Are Fully Liberated to Pursue Their Dreams, Free from Coercion and Control.

You Might Also Like

This bill puts clear guardrails on how license plate reader data is collected, stored, and shared.
House Bill 261 modernizes and strengthens Utah’s Electronic Information Privacy Act to better protect individuals’ private digital data.
Utah has nearly 130,000 veterans, but many can’t work in the fields they’re already trained for. This bill would fix that.

Help us Nail and Scale Policies to Reduce Government Control

Your tax-deductible contributions to Libertas Institute increase freedom across the country.