Minnesota Administrative Rules Agency 124 - Crime Victims Reparations Board

Here’s an overview of Minnesota Administrative Rules, Agency 124 – Crime Victims Reparations Board:

📘 Official Authority

Under Minnesota Administrative Rules Agency 124, Chapter 3050 – Crime Victims Reparations, the Board administers the state’s reparations program, providing financial compensation to victims of violent crime and their families (revisor.mn.gov, regulations.justia.com).

🛠 Chapter 3050 Structure

This chapter comprises a range of parts detailing how the program works, including:

Parts 3050.0100–.0200: Definitions & purpose.

Parts 3050.0300–.0400, .0600–.0750: Legal representation, how to file, scope of discovery, and cooperation with the Board.

Parts 3050.1900–.2900: Disqualifications, required cooperation, reasonable treatment limits.

Parts 3050.3100–.4100: Covered losses such as loss of support, income, household services, funeral and medical rate limits, child care, and more (regulations.justia.com).

💵 Key Highlight: Lost Income Regulations (Part 3050.3200)

Subparts 1–2: Calculation method based either on employer-provided wage certifications or previous income documentation .

Subpart 2a: When tax rate data is lacking, default rates of 15% (income < $20K) or 25% (income > $20K) are used (law.cornell.edu).

Subpart 3: Physician or psychologist verification required for disability affecting work (law.cornell.edu).

Subpart 4: No double-dipping—paid leave benefits are not reimbursable .

Subparts 5–7: Lost income typically capped at 26 weeks (extendable another 26 with documentation); special provisions apply to family members of deceased victims (law.cornell.edu).

Subparts 8–9: Tuition, loans, and education delays are excluded; claims must be timely filed (law.cornell.edu).

🧩 How This Fits In

These rules implement Minnesota Statutes chapter 299B and outline:

Who qualifies (primary/secondary victims, dependents).

What losses are covered (medical, therapy, funeral, income, support services).

How much and under what conditions (limits, exclusions, cooperation, deadlines).

Administrative procedures (cooperation, subrogation, contested cases).

For contested cases related to reparations, hearings proceed under the Minnesota Administrative Procedure Act (Minn. R. ch. 1400) (ojp.gov, regulations.justia.com, mitchellhamline.edu).

📚 Where to Find the Rules

Official source: Minnesota Revisor of Statutes – Chapter 3050, Agency 124 (revisor.mn.gov).

Third-party references: LII and Justia provide searchable versions of the rules (law.cornell.edu).

 

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