Oregon Code § 423.105·Enacted ·Last updated March 01, 2026
Statute Text
Payment of court-ordered financial obligations; rules.
(1) As used in this section:
(a) Adult in
custody means a person who is at least 18 years of age and in the physical
custody of the Department of Corrections. Adult in custody does not include:
(A) A person on
leave from prison due to participation in an alternative incarceration program
established under ORS 421.504 or 421.506 or short-term transitional leave under
ORS 421.168.
(B) A person
transferred into or out of department custody pursuant to an interstate
corrections compact.
(C) A person in
the physical custody of the Oregon Youth Authority.
(D) A person in
the physical custody of a county jail or other county detention facility.
(b) Collected
moneys means moneys that have been collected from an adult in custody trust
account by the Department of Corrections pursuant to this section.
(c) Court-ordered
financial obligation means:
(A) A
compensatory fine imposed pursuant to ORS 137.101, an award of restitution as
defined in ORS 137.103 or any other fines, fees or court-appointed attorney
fees imposed in a criminal action;
(B) A child
support obligation;
(C) A civil
judgment including a money award in which the Department of Justice is a
judgment creditor; or
(D) A civil
judgment including a money award entered against an adult in custody resulting
from an action for the assault or battery of a Department of Corrections or
Oregon Corrections Enterprises employee.
(d) Criminal
action has the meaning given that term in ORS 131.005.
(e) Eligible
moneys means moneys deposited in an adult in custody trust account that are
subject to collection under this section, including but not limited to adult in
custody performance monetary awards and moneys received from family members or
friends of the adult in custody. Eligible moneys does not include protected
moneys.
(f) Protected
moneys means moneys deposited in an adult in custody trust account that are
not subject to collection under state or federal law or under this section
including but not limited to:
(A) Disability
benefits for veterans;
(B) Moneys
received from a Native American tribe or tribal government;
(C) Moneys
dedicated for medical, dental or optical expenses or emergency trips;
(D) Railroad
retirement benefits; or
(E) Moneys paid
as compensation to an adult in custody in a prison work program established
under the Prison Industries Enhancement Certification Program, or a successor
program designated by the United States Director of the Bureau of Justice
Assistance pursuant to 18 U.S.C. 1761.
(2)(a)
Notwithstanding ORS 161.675, the Department of Corrections shall collect
eligible moneys from an adult in custody trust account if the adult in custody
owes court-ordered financial obligations as described in this section.
(b)
Notwithstanding any other provision of this section, the department may deduct
a fixed percentage of each adult in custody performance monetary award made to
an adult in custody, to be credited to a general victims assistance fund,
before crediting the remainder of the award to the adult in custody trust
account.
(3)(a) The
Judicial Department shall provide an accounting to the Department of
Corrections of court-ordered financial obligations described in subsection
(1)(c)(A) of this section, if any, owed by each adult in custody. The
Department of Justice shall provide an accounting of court-ordered financial
obligations described in subsection (1)(c)(B) and (C) of this section. The
accounting records may be provided electronically in a format agreed upon by
the departments.
(b) Upon receipt
of the accounting records described in paragraph (a) of this subsection, the
Department of Corrections shall collect a portion of eligible moneys from the
adult in custody trust account of each adult in custody as follows:
(A) Until an
adult in custody not sentenced to death or to life imprisonment without the
possibility of release or parole has $500 in a transitional fund to facilitate
reentry after release, 10 percent of eligible moneys shall be collected for
court-ordered financial obligations and five percent of eligible moneys shall
be collected and transferred to the transitional fund.
(B) After the
adult in custody has at least $500 in the transitional fund, or if the adult in
custody has been sentenced to death or to life imprisonment without the
possibility of release or parole, the department shall collect 15 percent of
eligible moneys for court-ordered financial obligations.
(C) After
court-ordered financial obligations have been paid, an adult in custody not
sentenced to death or to life imprisonment without the possibility of release
or parole may elect to continue to transfer five percent of eligible moneys
into the transitional fund.
(c)
Notwithstanding ORS 18.615 or any other provision of law, while moneys held in
a transitional fund described in this subsection remain within the custody
Plain English Explanation
This Oregon statute addresses Payment of court-ordered financial obligations; rules. AI-powered analysis coming soon.
Key Points
01Part of Oregon statutory law
02Referenced as Oregon Code § 423.105
03Subject to legislative amendments
04Consult a licensed attorney for application to specific cases
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