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§ 8.01-195.10.Purpose; action by the General Assembly required; definitions.

Chapter 3. Actions · Article 18.2. Compensation for Wrongful Incarceration for a Felony Conviction · Last amended 2025 · Last verified July 16, 2026

In one sentenceSection 8.01-195.10 states that Virginia’s wrongful-incarceration compensation program exists only through General Assembly appropriation rather than as an automatic entitlement, and defines “incarceration” and “wrongful incarceration” to include vacated felony convictions and absolute pardons for crimes the person did not commit.

Full Text of § 8.01-195.10

Text sizeJump to: (A) (B)

A. The purpose of this article is to provide directions and guidelines for the compensation of persons who have been wrongfully incarcerated in the Commonwealth. Compensation for wrongful incarceration is governed by Article IV, § 14 of the Constitution of Virginia, which prohibits the General Assembly from granting relief in cases in which the courts or other tribunals may have jurisdiction. No compensation shall be awarded under this article unless the recipient has executed a release and waiver pursuant to subsection B of § 8.01-195.12. The payment and receipt of any compensation for wrongful incarceration shall be contingent upon the General Assembly appropriating funds for that purpose. This article shall not provide an entitlement to compensation for persons wrongfully incarcerated or require the General Assembly to appropriate funds for the payment of such compensation.
B. As used in this article:
"Incarceration" or "incarcerated" means (i) confinement in a local or regional correctional facility, juvenile correctional center, state correctional facility, or residential detention center or (ii) confinement in a facility operated pursuant to the Corrections Private Services Act (§ 53.1-261 et seq.).
"Wrongful incarceration" or "wrongfully incarcerated" means incarceration for a felony conviction for which the conviction has been vacated pursuant to Chapter 19.2 (§ 19.2-327.2 et seq.) or 19.3 (§ 19.2-327.10 et seq.) of Title 19.2, or the person incarcerated has been granted an absolute pardon for the commission of a crime that he did not commit.

Plain-English Summary

Subsection A sets the framework for the whole article: it exists to provide directions and guidelines for compensating people wrongfully incarcerated in Virginia, operating within the limits of Article IV, Section 14 of the Virginia Constitution, which bars the General Assembly from granting relief in matters the courts or other tribunals could otherwise resolve. No compensation can be awarded unless the recipient signs the release and waiver required by Section 8.01-195.12(B), and any payment depends entirely on the General Assembly appropriating the money. The subsection is explicit that this article creates no entitlement to compensation and does not require the General Assembly to fund it — a wrongfully incarcerated person has a path to seek compensation, not a guaranteed payout.

Subsection B supplies the definitions the rest of the article uses. “Incarceration” or “incarcerated” means confinement in a local or regional correctional facility, a juvenile correctional center, a state correctional facility, or a residential detention center, or confinement in a facility operated under the Corrections Private Services Act. “Wrongful incarceration” or “wrongfully incarcerated” means incarceration for a felony conviction that has since been vacated under either of the two Title 19.2 chapters governing writs of actual innocence, or incarceration of a person later granted an absolute pardon for a crime he did not commit.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is a wrongfully incarcerated person automatically entitled to compensation in Virginia?

No. Section 8.01-195.10(A) states expressly that this article does not create an entitlement to compensation and does not require the General Assembly to appropriate funds for it.

What counts as “wrongful incarceration” under this article?

Incarceration for a felony conviction that has been vacated under one of the two Title 19.2 chapters governing writs of actual innocence, or incarceration of someone later granted an absolute pardon for a crime he did not commit.

Does a governor’s pardon qualify someone for compensation?

Only an absolute pardon for a crime the person did not commit qualifies under this definition — a conditional pardon or a pardon granted for other reasons does not meet the definition of wrongful incarceration here.

What kinds of confinement count as “incarceration”?

Confinement in a local or regional correctional facility, a juvenile correctional center, a state correctional facility, a residential detention center, or a facility operated under the Corrections Private Services Act.

Why does the Virginia Constitution matter to this compensation program?

Article IV, Section 14 of the Virginia Constitution bars the General Assembly from granting relief in cases the courts or other tribunals could handle, so this article was written to operate within that limit rather than as a direct legislative award.

Amendment History

2004, cc. 818, 840; 2010, cc. 496, 557; 2021, Sp. Sess. I, cc. 344, 345; 2022, cc. 572, 573; 2024, c. 396; 2025, c. 337.

Source & verification. Section text and amendment history are reproduced verbatim from the Code of Virginia, published by the Code of Virginia, Virginia Division of Legislative Automated Systems. Last verified July 16, 2026. · Official source
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