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Code · Kentucky · Chapter 49 — Office of claims and appeals

49.370 Award requirements -- Expenses allowed -- Amounts.

886 words·~4 min read·/ky/chapter-49/49-370

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(1)No award shall be made unless the Crime Victims Compensation Board or board
member, as the case may be, finds that:
(a)Criminally injurious conduct occurred; and
(b)The criminally injurious conduct resulted in personal physical or
psychological injury to, or death of, the victim.
(a)Any award made pursuant to KRS 49.270 to 49.490 shall be in an amount not
exceeding out-of-pocket expenses, including loss of earnings or support
resulting from the injury on which the claim is based and indebtedness
reasonably incurred for medical or other services, including:
1. For the victim and for any child who is the victim's dependent, when the
crime was committed at the primary residence of the victim:
a. Relocation if the victim is moving from one
(1)primary residence
to another due to concern for the safety of themselves or other
persons at the residence as a result of a crime within six
months of the crime, not to exceed two thousand dollars ($2,000).
The board may, in its discretion, allow relocation expenses
incurred after six
(6)months; and
b. Temporary housing costs incurred within thirty
(30)days of the
crime, when the victim is unable to stay in the primary residence
due to the crime, not to exceed two thousand dollars ($2,000);
2. Tattoo removal for victims of human trafficking, not to exceed four
thousand dollars ($4,000);
3. Crime scene cleanup within thirty
(30)days of the crime when the crime
was committed at the primary residence or business of the victim, not to
exceed two thousand dollars ($2,000);
4. Reimbursement for the replacement of items owned by the victim and
for any child who is the victim's dependent that were seized by law
enforcement as evidence of the commission of the crime, not to exceed
five hundred dollars ($500) per item;
5. Replacement or repair of windows and locks at the primary residence or
business of the victim which were damaged by the commission of the
crime, not to exceed one thousand five hundred dollars ($1,500);
6. Rehabilitative or wellness practices recommended by a healthcare
provider, engaged in by the victim and any juveniles dependent upon the
victim due to the crime, not to exceed one thousand dollars ($1,000) per
year per person, for a maximum of two
(2)years;
7. Expenses related to court proceedings related to the crime for a victim or
for a victim's caregiver;
8. Mental health counseling, necessary as a result of the injury upon which
the claim is based. Mental health counseling:
a. Shall be paid for a maximum of two
(2)years, but only after
proper documentation is submitted to the board stating what
treatment is planned and for what period of time; and
b. Need not be for a consecutive period and may be paused and
resumed at a later time; and
9. Replacement of eyeglasses and other corrective lenses stolen, destroyed,
or damaged during the crime.
(b)The board may promulgate administrative regulations to establish additional
guidelines for awards pursuant to this section.
(3)Any award made for loss of earnings or financial support may be considered for a
claimant who has loss of support or wages due to the crime for which the claim is
filed. Unless reduced pursuant to other provisions of KRS 49.270 to 49.490, the
award shall be equal to net earnings at the time of the criminally injurious conduct;
however, no award under this subsection shall exceed five hundred dollars ($500)
for each week of lost earnings or financial support. The wage earner or source of
support must have been employed or paying support at the time the crime occurred.
Said employment or support shall be verified by the staff of the board after
information is provided by the claimant or victim. Should the claimant or victim fail
to supply the board with the information requested, the portion of the claim for lost
wages or support shall be denied. If there are two
(2)or more persons entitled to an
award as a result of the injury or death of a person which is the direct result of
criminally injurious conduct, the award shall be apportioned by the board among
the claimants.
(4)The board is authorized to set a reasonable limit for the payment of funeral and
burial expenses, which shall include funeral costs, a monument, and grave plot. In
no event shall an award for funeral expenses exceed ten thousand dollars ($10,000).
(5)Any award made under KRS 49.270 to 49.490 shall not exceed fifty thousand
dollars ($50,000) in total compensation to be received by or paid on behalf of a
claimant from the fund.
(6)An award shall not be made for any type of property loss or damage, except as
otherwise permitted in KRS 49.270 to 49.490.
(7)An award may be made for a claim filed more than ten
(10)years after the
criminally injurious conduct, due to a delay in the testing of or DNA profile
matching from a sexual assault forensic examination kit or biological material
collected as evidence related to a sexual offense, in which case the victim may
collect a lump sum in the amount of five thousand dollars ($5,000) to cover the
victim's out-of-pocket expenses incurred due to the crime which may not be
provable due to the delay.
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