Nevada Code § 205.471

Collection of fee from offender; amount and disposition of fee
Open in Lexace · Ask the AI about this section
1. The district attorney, the designated
representative of the program for restitution or a private entity under
contract with the district attorney, may collect a fee from any person who
draws or passes a check or draft in violation of a provision of this chapter,
if the office of the district attorney collects and processes the check or
draft.
2. The amount of the fee must not exceed:
(a) Twenty-five dollars if the face amount of the
check or draft does not exceed $100;
(b) Fifty dollars if the face amount of the check
or draft is greater than $100 but does not exceed $300;
(c) Seventy-five dollars if the face amount of
the check or draft is greater than $300 but does not exceed $1,000;
(d) One hundred and fifty dollars if the face
amount of the check or draft is greater than $1,000 but does not exceed $2,500;
(e) Five hundred dollars if the face amount of
the check or draft is greater than $2,500 but does not exceed $10,000; or
(f) Ten percent of the face amount of the check
or draft if the face amount of the check or draft is greater than $10,000.
3. Money collected pursuant to this
section must be deposited in the county treasury in an account to be
administered by the district attorney. The district attorney may use the money
in the account only to:
(a) Carry out the purposes of NRS 205.466 to 205.472 , inclusive;
(b) Defray the cost of:
(1) A program of instruction in managing a
checking account and developing a budget; or
(2) Any other program of education or
instruction designed to prevent the drawing or passing of a check or draft in
violation of the provisions of this chapter; and
(c) Assist a victim of a crime. As used in this
paragraph, victim has the meaning ascribed to it in NRS 176.015 .

‹ Prev All Nevada sections Next ›


Lexace provides legal information, not legal advice, and no attorney–client relationship is created. Statute text is provided for general information and may not reflect the most recent amendments; verify against the official state code.