HB 563 -- Sexual Crimes Co-Sponsors: Monaco, Jolly, Kennedy, Bonner, Gambaro This bill makes various changes to laws relating to sexual crimes. In its main provisions, the bill: (1) Eliminates the statute of limitations for prosecuting forcible rape, attempted forcible rape, and forcible sodomy. This section has an emergency clause; (2) Allows certain sexual-crime defendants to be physically excluded from the room in which child victims are being deposed; (3) Adds statutory rape and statutory sodomy when the victim is less than 12 years old to the definition of "dangerous felony" as used in the criminal code; (4) Removes information relating to future contemplated crimes from the privilege accorded between probation or parole personnel and defendants; (5) Revises the crime of child molestation in the first degree by increasing the punishment to a class A felony for persons who have pled guilty to or been convicted of an offense in another state which would have been a Chapter 566, RSMo, sexual crime in Missouri; (6) Redefines the crime of child molestation in the second degree to apply to persons over 21 years who subject persons under 16 years to sexual contact. Current law applies to all persons who subject persons under 17 years to sexual contact; (7) Changes the punishment for child molestation in the second degree from a class A misdemeanor to a class D felony, unless the defendant has previously pled guilty to or been convicted of a Chapter 566 sexual crime in Missouri or a similar crime in another jurisdiction, in which case it is a class C felony; (8) Creates the crimes of child molestation in the third and fourth degrees, defines the crimes, and details their range of punishments; (9) Allows the punishments to be enhanced for the crimes of sexual misconduct involving a child and sexual misconduct in the first and second degrees if the defendant pled guilty to or was convicted of a similar crime in another jurisdiction; and (10) Adds individuals convicted of certain child-related sexual crimes, robbery, and burglary to the list of persons who must submit a blood or scientifically accepted biological sample for purposes of DNA profiling analysis.Copyright (c) Missouri House of Representatives