9.14 Venue and Change of Venue
Library | Virginia Law and Practice: A Handbook for Attorneys (Virginia CLE) (2020 Ed.) |
9.14 VENUE AND CHANGE OF VENUE
9.1401 Venue.
A. General Rule The place of a criminal trial in Virginia is generally in the county or city where the offense was committed. If venue cannot be readily determined, prosecution may be in the jurisdiction in which
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the defendant resides or, if the defendant is not a resident, in the jurisdiction in which he or she is arrested or, if the defendant is not a resident and is not arrested in the commonwealth, in the jurisdiction in which any relevant offense was committed. 532 By statute, forgery may be prosecuted (i) where the writing was forged or where it was used, passed, attempted to be used or passed, or deposited or placed either for collection or credit; (ii) where the writing is found in the possession of the defendant; or (iii) where an issuer, acquirer, or account holder sustained a financial loss as a result of the offense. 533 Credit card theft must be prosecuted where the theft is completed—where the card or number is unlawfully taken from its rightful owner or is received with knowledge that it has been taken and with the intent to use it, sell it, or transfer it, but not in those jurisdictions to where the card is taken after the offense of the theft is complete. The location where the card is used is not the proper venue for prosecution of credit card theft. 534 Similarly, the offense of altering the serial number of a firearm is a discrete act and is completed once the person tampers with the serial number. Proper venue lies only where the alteration took place and not in other localities into which the firearm was taken. 535
An exception under the Virginia Computer Crimes Act 536 expands the concept considerably. Va. Code § 19.2-249.2 provides that for the purpose of venue, any violation of the Virginia Computer Crimes Act or Va. Code § 18.2-386.1 is considered to have been committed in any county or city: (i) in which any act was performed in furtherance of any course of conduct; (ii) in which the owner has his or her principal place of business in the commonwealth; (iii) in which any offender had control or possession of any proceeds of the violation or of any books, records, documents, property, financial instrument, computer software, computer program, computer data, or other material or objects that were used in furtherance of the violation; (iv) from which, to which, or through which any access to a computer or computer network was made whether by wires, electromagnetic waves,
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microwaves, optics, or any other means of communication; (v) in which the offender resides; or (vi) in which any computer that is an object or an instrument of the violation is located at the time of the alleged offense.
B. Offenses Committed Wholly or Partially Outside the Commonwealth, City, or County. When the offense is committed wholly or partially outside Virginia, prosecution may occur in any county or city where the offender is found or to which he or she is sent by any judge or court. When a person commits larceny or embezzlement outside Virginia and brings the stolen property into Virginia, he or she may be tried in any county or city in Virginia into which he or she has brought the stolen property. 537 If the larceny or embezzlement is committed in Virginia, and the property is taken into another county or city, the offender may be prosecuted in the county or city where the property is taken. 538 If a mortal wound or other violence or injury is inflicted by a person in Virginia upon someone outside Virginia or upon someone in Virginia who later dies outside of Virginia from the effect, the offender is subject to prosecution and punishment for the offense in the city or county where he or she was at the time of the commission. 539 Where evidence exists that a homicide has been committed either inside or outside Virginia under circumstances that make it unknown where the crime was committed, the homicide and any related offense may be prosecuted in the courts of the county or city where the body or any part thereof of the victim is found. 540 If the victim of a homicide was removed from the commonwealth for medical treatment before death and died outside the commonwealth, venue lies in the court of the county or city from which the victim was removed. 541 In a prosecution for capital murder under Va. Code § 18.2-31(8), the offense may be prosecuted in any jurisdiction where prosecution for one of the murders could be prosecuted. 542
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When the offense charged is a continuing offense, such as possession of stolen property or narcotics, venue may be proper in more than one place. 543
C. Offenses Committed Between Counties or Cities. When an offense is committed on the boundary of two counties, on the boundary of two cities, or on the boundary of a county and city, or within 300 yards thereof, the offender may be prosecuted in either of the jurisdictions.
If an injury is inflicted in one county or city of the commonwealth and death ensues in another such county or city, the offense may be prosecuted in either. 544
D. Burden of Proof and Waiver. In criminal cases, the burden is on the Commonwealth to prove venue by either direct or circumstantial evidence. 545 The evidence must furnish a foundation for a "strong presumption" that the offense was committed within the jurisdiction of the court. 546 Furthermore, the court may take judicial notice of geographical facts that are either matters of common knowledge or shown by maps of common use, which are on the record. 547 Venue is not, however, a substantive part of the crime 548 and need not be proven beyond a reasonable doubt. 549 An allegation of venue in an indictment is not adequate proof of venue and jurisdiction. The mere fact that police of a particular jurisdiction investigated a crime cannot support an inference that the crime was committed within that jurisdiction. 550
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The right to object to a trial in an improper venue is waived unless the objection is made before a verdict is rendered in a jury trial or before judgment in a...
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