Chair Watts presented HB244 and provided background on the 2021 statute that created four degrees of robbery. The bill makes code corrections and clarifies which robbery degrees apply and which code sections define "firearm" for purposes of the robbery classification.
Committee Counsel explained the line amendments add a code section defining firearms and clarify references to robbery degrees b1 and b2. Counsel and the patron said the revisions ensure consistent application of the categories across the code. Nathan Green, representing prosecutors, opposed the bill on grounds that it may prevent the Commonwealth from establishing that pre-2021 robbery convictions should be treated as higher-category (e.g., where a firearm or death was involved) because earlier records may not contain the coded distinctions; he said the change could remove a path prosecutors use to prove elevated prior-offense guidelines.
Counsel responded that the Commonwealth can still introduce prior-conviction evidence showing serious bodily injury or death and that the bill actually broadens some evidentiary possibilities; the committee adopted the amendments and reported HB244 by a vote of 7 to 3.
The bill proceeds with technical fixes but with explicit acknowledgement from prosecutors that it may increase their evidentiary burden in some historical cases.