Oklahoma Code § 21-142.3

Title 21. Crimes And Punishments: Definitions
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As used in the Oklahoma Crime Victims Compensation Act, Section
142.1 et seq. of this title:
1.  "Allowable expense" means:
a. charges incurred for needed products, services and
accommodations, including, but not limited to, medical
care, wage loss, rehabilitation, rehabilitative
occupational training and other remedial treatment and
care,
b. any reasonable expenses related to the funeral,
cremation or burial,
c. reasonable costs for counseling family members of a
homicide victim,
d. reasonable costs associated with homicide crime scene
cleanup, and
e. reasonable cost of vehicle impound fees associated
with the collection and security of crime scene
evidence;
2.  "Board" means the Crime Victims Compensation Board created
by Section 142.4 of this title;
3.  "Claimant" means any of the following persons applying for
compensation under the Crime Victims Compensation Act:
a. a victim,
b. a dependent of a victim who has died because of
criminally injurious conduct, or
c. a person authorized to act on behalf of any of the
persons enumerated in subparagraphs a and b of this
paragraph;
4.  "Collateral source" means a source of benefits or advantages
for economic loss for which the claimant would otherwise be eligible
to receive compensation under this act, and which the claimant has
received, or which is readily available to the claimant, from any
one or more of the following:
a. the offender,
b. the government of the United States or any agency
thereof, in the form of benefits, such as social
security, Medicare and Medicaid, a state or any of its
political subdivisions or an instrumentality or two or
more states, unless the law providing for the benefits
or advantages makes them excessive or secondary to
benefits under this act,
c. state-required temporary nonoccupational disability
insurance,
d. workers' compensation,
e. wage continuation programs of any employer,
f. a contract providing prepaid hospital and other health
care services or benefits for disability,

g. a contract providing prepaid burial expenses or
benefits, or
h. proceeds of any contract of insurance payable to the
claimant for loss which the victim sustained because
of the criminally injurious conduct, except:
(1) life insurance proceeds or uninsured motorist
proceeds in an amount of Fifty Thousand Dollars
($50,000.00) or less shall not be considered a
collateral source when computing loss of support,
and
(2) life insurance proceeds and proceeds from
personal uninsured motorist coverage of any
amount shall not be considered a collateral
source for computing burial expenses;
5. a. "Criminally injurious conduct" means a misdemeanor or
felony which occurs or is attempted in this state, or
against a resident of this state in a state that does
not have an eligible crime victims compensation
program as such term is defined in the federal Victims
of Crime Act of 1984, Public Law 98-473, that results
in bodily injury, threat of bodily injury or death to
a victim which:
(1) may be punishable by fine, imprisonment or death,
or
(2) if the act is committed by a child, could result
in such child being adjudicated a delinquent
child.
b. Such term shall not include acts arising out of the
negligent maintenance or use of a motor vehicle
unless:
(1) the vehicle was operated or driven by the
offender while under the influence of alcohol,
with a blood alcohol level in excess of the legal
limit, or while under the influence of any other
intoxicating substance,
(2) the vehicle was operated or driven by the
offender with the intent to injure or kill the
victim or in a manner imminently dangerous to
another person and evincing a depraved mind,
although without any premeditated design to
injure or effect the death of any particular
person,
(3) the offense involved willful, malicious or
felonious failure to stop after being involved in
a personal injury accident to avoid detection or
prosecution, provided the victim of the accident
was a pedestrian or was operating a vehicle moved

solely by human power or a mobility device at the
time of contact, or
(4) the offense involving one or more vehicles
results in the death of the victim due to the
reckless disregard for the safety of others by
the offender.  As used in this division,
“reckless disregard for the safety of others” is
defined as the omission to do something which a
reasonably careful person would do, or the lack
of the usual and ordinary care and caution in the
performance of an act usually and ordinarily
exercised by a person under similar circumstances
and conditions.
c. “Criminally injurious conduct” shall include an act of
terrorism, as defined in Section 2331 of Title 18,
United States Code, committed outside the United
States;
6.  "Dependent" means a natural person wholly or partially
dependent upon the victim for care or support, and includes a child
of the victim born after the death of the victim where the death
occurred as a result of criminally injurious conduct;
7.  "Economic loss of a dependent" means loss after death of the
victim of contributions of things of economic value to the
dependent, not including services which would have been received
from the victim if he or she had not suffered the fatal injury;
8.  "Replacement services loss of dependent" means the loss
reasonably incurred by dependents after death of the victim in
obtaining ordinary and necessary services in lieu of those the
deceased victim would have performed for their benefit had the
deceased victim not suffered the fatal injury, less expenses of the
dependent avoided by reason of death of the victim and not
subtracted in calculating the economic loss of the dependent;
9.  "Economic loss" means monetary detriment consisting only of
allowable expense, work loss, replacement services loss and, if
injury causes death, economic loss and replacement services loss of
a dependent, but shall not include noneconomic loss;
10.  "Noneconomic detriment" means pain, suffering,
inconvenience, physical impairment and nonpecuniary damage;
11.  "Replacement services loss" means expenses reasonably
incurred in obtaining ordinary and necessary services in lieu of
those the victim would have performed, not for income, but for the
benefit of self or family, if the victim had not been injured or
died;
12.  "Traffic offense" means violation of a law relating to the
operation of vehicles, but shall not mean negligent homicide due to
operation of a motor vehicle, reckless driving, tampering with or
damaging a motor vehicle, failure of a driver of a motor vehicle

involved in an accident resulting in death or personal injury to
stop at the scene of the accident, leaving the scene of an accident
resulting in death or personal injury, operating or being in actual
physical control of a motor vehicle while intoxicated or impaired
due to alcohol or other intoxicating substance, or combination
thereof, or operating a motor vehicle with a blood alcohol content
in excess of the legal limit;
13.  "Work loss for victim" means loss of income from work the
victim would have performed if such person had not been injured or
died, reduced by any income from substitute work actually performed
by the victim or by income the victim would have earned in available
appropriate substitute work that the victim was capable of
performing but unreasonably failed to undertake, or loss of income
from work the victim’s caregiver would have performed if the
injuries of the victim sustained as a result of the criminally
injurious conduct had not created the need for the caregiver to miss
work to care for the injured victim; and
14.  "Victim" means a person who suffers personal injury or
death as a result of criminally injurious conduct and shall include
a resident of this state who is injured or killed by an act of
terrorism committed outside of the United States.
Added by Laws 1981, c. 93, § 3.  Amended by Laws 1987, c. 224, § 6,
eff. Nov. 1, 1987; Laws 1988, c. 109, § 21, eff. Nov. 1, 1988; Laws
1989, c. 125, § 2, eff. Nov. 1, 1989; Laws 1989, c. 348, § 8, eff.
Nov. 1, 1989; Laws 1990, c. 146, § 1, eff. Sept. 1, 1990; Laws 1992,
c. 136, § 3, eff. July 1, 1992; Laws 1993, c. 325, § 5, emerg. eff.
June 7, 1993; Laws 1996, c. 292, § 2, emerg. eff. June 10, 1996;

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