Committee pauses SB 222 extending parole-eligibility window for people sentenced for juvenile offenses; sends bill to study
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Summary
Sen. Jones proposed SB 222 to allow parole consideration for individuals who committed offenses before age 18 but are now 18–20; sponsors cited neuroscience and an estimated 500 affected individuals. Testimony from survivors, family members, and advocacy groups supported the measure; the committee voted to continue study, send a letter to the Commission on Youth and carry the bill into 2027.
Senator Jones introduced SB 222, which would allow parole consideration for people who committed offenses as juveniles and are between 18 and 20 years old, arguing that brain development and rehabilitation warrant an opportunity for review.
Supporters delivered personal testimony describing incarcerated people who were sentenced as teenagers and have since completed education and rehabilitative programming. Nicole Dale of BEN and the Bars described a man serving life without parole who was sentenced at 19 and argued SB 222 guarantees eligibility, not release, providing a chance for review. Survivors and organizations including Survivors for Justice Reform, the ACLU of Virginia and the Prosecutors’ Alliance Action were recorded in the room or on the record as supporting the bill.
Proponents and some senators discussed administrative cost and process: the sponsor cited a need for one additional headcount at an estimated $83,000 to process cases and backlog. Committee members raised concerns about retroactivity, victims’ interests, and whether the legislation should apply prospectively or retroactively; counsel and advocates discussed guards for plea agreements and statutory retroactivity constraints.
Action: the committee moved to continue the bill into 2027, accompanied by a chair’s letter and study request to the Commission on Youth to examine the policy details and implementation pathway. The motion passed with a recorded roll of Ayes 15, No 0.

