Joseph F. Vallario Jr.
Template:Short description Script error: No such module "infobox".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".Script error: No such module "Check for conflicting parameters". Joseph F. Vallario Jr. (born March 4, 1937) is an American politician who represented district 23B in the Maryland House of Delegates and was the chairman of the House Judiciary Committee.[1] Vallario was first elected in 1974 and was the longest serving chairman in the Maryland General Assembly.
Background
Vallario attended Washington, DC, parochial schools, the Benjamin Franklin University (since merged into George Washington University), B.C.S. (commercial science) and M.C.S. (commercial science), 1959; Eastern College, and the Mt. Vernon School of Law, LL.B., J.D., 1963 (Now the University of Baltimore School of Law). Admitted to Maryland Bar in 1964, he is an attorney and a member of the American and Maryland State Bar Associations. Vallario is a past president of the Prince George's County Criminal Trial Lawyers Association and a member of the Order of Sons of Italy in America.[1]
He was featured in the Netflix documentary, "The Keepers," for his role in being opposed to a bill seeking to increase the statute of limitations of sexual abuse victims.[2]
Legislative career
Delegate Vallario had been the Chairman of the Judiciary Committee since 1993 and a member of the Rules and Executive Nominations Committee, also since 1993. He served on the Legislative Policy Committee, the Article 27 (crimes & punishments) Revision Committee and is a past member of the Joint Committee on Legislative Ethics, the Drunk and Drugged Driving Task Force (1988–90), the Joint Task Force on Maryland's Procurement Law (1993–94), and the Joint Committee on the Selection of the State Treasurer (1996 & 2002). He was the Co-Chair of the Task Force to Examine Crime Victims' Rights Laws in Maryland (1996–2003), a member of the Special Committee on Gaming (2001), a member of the Maryland State Commission on Criminal Sentencing Policy and the past chair, Prince George's County Delegation. National Conference of State Legislatures (law & criminal justice committee). Vallario has been an active supporter of victims rights as well as a proponent for strengthening Maryland's laws against child predators.[3] He has opposed legalizing same-sex marriage, but in March 2011 he voted as chairman for a bill to do just that in the Judiciary Committee. He was criticized for that vote, with Del. Michael D. Smigiel, Sr. saying, "The chairman did what he was told. That's why he's chairman."[4] Vallario was attacked in a lengthy Washington Post article published August 3, 2013, for his conflict of interest in having legally represented many drunken drivers and then using his Chairman position to pardon them.
Legislative notes
2013
- refused to allow a vote on a bill decriminalizing possession of small amounts of marijuana, claiming "Bad message to the kids."[5] The bill would have subjected people caught with 10 grams or less to a civil fine of $100.[5]
2008
- co-sponsor of HB6, requiring custodial interrogations in capital cases be recorded.(became law Chapter 360)[6]
2006
- voted for Healthy Air Act in 2006 (SB154) [7]
2005
- voted against slot machines in 2005 (HB1361)[8]
- voted for "No-Knock" Warrants (HB557), (became law Chapter 560)[9]
1998
- voted for income tax reduction in 1998 (SB750)[10]
Awards and honors
- 2010 Most Influential Maryland Legislators (Top 20)[11]
Election results
2006 General election results, District 27A
- Voters to choose two:[12]
Name Votes Percent Outcome James E. Proctor Jr., Democratic 19,829 40.3% Won Joseph F. Vallario Jr., Democratic 18,677 38.0% Won Kenneth S. Brown, Democratic 5,687 11.6% Lost Antoinette "Toni" Jarboe-Duley, Democratic 4,948 10.1% Lost Other write-ins 48 .1%
Vallario lost in the primary election held on June 26, 2018.
Notes
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- Pages with script errors
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- 1937 births
- Living people
- Democratic Party members of the Maryland House of Delegates
- Maryland lawyers
- American people of Italian descent
- University of Baltimore School of Law alumni
- Politicians from Washington, D.C.
- People from Upper Marlboro, Maryland
- University of Baltimore alumni
- Benjamin Franklin University alumni
- 20th-century American lawyers
- 21st-century American lawyers
- Catholic politicians from Maryland
- 20th-century members of the Maryland General Assembly
- 21st-century members of the Maryland General Assembly