Utah’s Clean Slate Law: Why It Isn’t Working as Intended

Posted by Stone River Criminal Defense Team

Last Updated: January 8, 2025

In 2019, Utah embarked on an ambitious path toward criminal justice reform with its Clean Slate Law—a bipartisan effort to automatically expunge certain criminal records for individuals who remained offense-free for a set period.
attorney meeting with client at desk

The law was groundbreaking in its scope, targeting low-level offenses such as drug possession, theft, and traffic violations. Advocates hoped it would provide a second chance for thousands of Utahns, enabling them to rebuild their lives free from the shadow of past mistakes.

Yet, more than four years later, the promise of this law remains unfulfilled. Thousands of Utahns who should have benefited from automatic record clearance have been left in limbo, slowed by administrative bottlenecks, outdated systems, and overly restrictive eligibility criteria. For all its noble intentions, Utah’s Clean Slate Law is failing to deliver the second chances it promised.

The Promise of a Clean Slate

The idea behind Utah’s Clean Slate Law was simple: Minor offenses—like misdemeanors for drug possession or petty theft—shouldn’t derail someone’s future forever. Clearing a criminal record requires an individual to navigate a maze of court filings, fees, and bureaucratic hurdles. By automating this process, the law sought to shift the burden off individuals and place it on state systems.

The hope was that by erasing these records, people could access better jobs, housing, and other opportunities too often blocked by a criminal history. Advocates estimated that the law could improve the lives of tens of thousands of Utahns. But as with so many well-meaning reforms, the devil has been in the details.

Why the Law Isn’t Working

First, the law’s eligibility criteria are far too narrow. It excludes a wide swath of offenses that, while more serious than a parking ticket, don’t rise to the level of violent crime. It also disqualifies cases where individuals owe court fines or fees—often the people most in need of relief. This narrow scope has created a patchwork of justice, where some benefit while others remain tethered to their past.

Then there are the technical challenges. Implementing an automatic expungement system requires a level of coordination that Utah’s aging bureaucratic infrastructure isn’t equipped for. Courts, law enforcement agencies, and state databases must communicate seamlessly to identify and clear eligible records. But in Utah, data inconsistencies, incomplete records, and underfunded systems have turned what should be a straightforward process into a logistical quagmire.

Finally, there’s a glaring lack of public awareness. While the law automatically clears some records, individuals whose cases don’t qualify are still eligible for traditional expungement. Yet few people know this—or how to navigate the process. Many mistakenly believe their records have already been cleared, only to face rejection from employers or landlords who discover otherwise.

Recommendations for Improvement

To ensure Utah’s Clean Slate Law fulfills its potential, policymakers and stakeholders must take action:

  1. Expand Eligibility Criteria: Reevaluate which offenses qualify for automatic expungement, considering the law’s intended goal of reducing long-term penalties for minor charges.
  2. Invest in Infrastructure: Allocate funding for technological upgrades and staffing to resolve administrative delays and ensure smooth data sharing between agencies.
  3. Public Awareness Campaigns: Launch targeted initiatives to inform Utahns about the Clean Slate Law, traditional expungement options, and available resources.
  4. Address Data Integrity: Create oversight mechanisms to verify that expunged records are removed from all public and private databases, ensuring clean slates truly mean a fresh start.

The Stakes Are High

The Clean Slate Law represents more than just a policy. It’s a statement about redemption and the belief that people can change. It’s about recognizing that one mistake shouldn’t define a lifetime.

But if Utah—and the rest of the country—can’t get these laws right, we risk deepening the very inequities we claim to be addressing. Those most needing a fresh start will continue to be left behind, and the promise of a clean slate will remain out of reach.

Originally Published: January 8, 2025

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