Oregon Revised Statutes

Or. Rev. Stat. § 137.599 (2026)

Hearing prior to, or after, imposition of sanctions

✓ current as of May 2026
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      137.599 Hearing prior to, or after, imposition of sanctions. Prior to the imposition of any structured, intermediate sanction or within four judicial days after receiving notice that a structured, intermediate sanction has been imposed on a probationer pursuant to rules adopted under ORS 137.595, the court, upon motion of the district attorney or on its own motion, may cause the probationer to be brought before the court for a hearing, and may revoke probation or impose such other or additional sanctions or modify the conditions of probation as authorized by law. In no case may the sentencing judge cause a probationer to be brought before the court for a hearing and revoke probation or impose other or additional sanctions after the probationer has completed a structured, intermediate sanction imposed by the Department of Corrections or a county community corrections agency pursuant to rules adopted under ORS 137.595. [1993 c.680 §13]

 

      Note: See note under 137.592.

 

      137.600 [Repealed by 1955 c.491 §9]

Notes of Decisions
Cited in 2 cases (1 in the last 5 years), 2003–2024 · leading case: State v. Melton, 76 P.3d 156 (Or. Ct. App. 2003).
State v. Melton, 76 P.3d 156 (Or. Ct. App. 2003). “2 ORS 137.599 duplicates the provisions of ORS 137.”
State v. Stone, 331 Or. App. 621 (Or. Ct. App. 2024). “Defendant argues that the trial court was required to consider the factors set out in those provisions and to balance “as it must, the needs of public safety and the rehabilitation of the offender.”
Annotations are extracted automatically from the opinions in the Syfert caselaw corpus and ranked by authority, recency, and treatment. Dots show Syfertize treatment of the citing case itself.