As of April 24th, 2025, the United States District Court for the District of Utah has ordered a temporary stay of S.B. 199.
The Utah State Courts are processing guardianship cases under existing law, but are excluding all of S.B. 199's provisions until the stay is lifted or amended. Learn more

Performance Measures

Restitution, Fines, and Fees

What it is: The amount of outstanding restitution owed to victims and uncollected court-ordered fines and fees. The graphs below are given to show how long court-ordered restitution, fines, and fees have been outstanding. Column percentages represent the proportion of all money owed based on when the court mandate was given. For example, a value of 5% in the "Over 3 years" column signifies that 5% of all the money owed to the court was ordered more than 3 years ago. A plea in abeyance is available in criminal cases in district court and does not apply to juvenile court cases.

How it is measured: Accounts receivable for restitution, fines and fees are summarized quarterly.

Why it is important: Assuring that victims receive awarded restitution and court-ordered fines and fees are collected are important administrative functions. Effective collection practices help make victims whole and enforce sanctions ordered by the court.

 

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