ARTICLE 20
RELATING TO
CORRECTIONS
SECTION
1. Sections 13-8.1-2, 13-8.1-3 and 13-8.1-4 of the General Laws in Chapter
13-8.1 entitled
"Medical Parole" are hereby amended to read as follows:
13-8.1-2. Purpose.
-- Medical parole is made available for humanitarian reasons and to
alleviate exorbitant medical expenses associated with
inmates whose chronic and incurable illness
render their incarceration non-punitive and
non-rehabilitative. Notwithstanding
other statutory or
administrative provisions to the contrary, all
prisoners except those serving life without parole
shall at any time after they begin serving their
sentences be eligible for medical parole
consideration, regardless of the crime committed or
the sentence imposed.
13-8.1-3.
Definitions. -- (a) "Permanently physically incapacitated"
means suffering from
a condition caused by injury, disease, or illness
which, to a reasonable degree of medical
certainty, permanently and irreversibly physically
incapacitates the individual to the extent that
no significant physical activity is possible, and the
individual is confined to bed or a wheelchair.
(b) "Terminally
ill" means suffering from a condition caused by injury (except self-
inflicted injury), disease, or illness, which to a
reasonable degree of medical certainty will result
in death within six (6) months.
(c) "Severely
ill" means suffering from a significant and permanent or chronic physical
and/or mental condition that: (1) Requires extensive
medical and/or psychiatric treatment with
little to no possibility of recovery; and (2)
Precludes significant rehabilitation from further
incarceration.
13-8.1-4.
Procedure. -- (a) The parole board is authorized to grant release of a
prisoner,
except a prisoner serving life without parole, at any
time, who is determined to be terminally ill,
severely ill
or permanently physically incapacitated within the meaning of section 13-8.1-3.
Inmates who are severely ill will only be considered
for such release when their treatment causes
the state to incur exorbitant expenses as a result of
continued and frequent medical treatment
during incarceration, as determined by the office of
financial resources of the department of
corrections.
(b) In order to apply
for this relief, the prisoner, with an attending physician's written
approval, or an attending physician, on behalf of the
prisoner, shall file an application with the
director of the department of corrections. Within
seventy-two (72) hours after the filing of any
application, the director shall refer the application
to the health service unit of the department of
corrections for a medical report and a medical
discharge plan to be completed within five (5) ten
(10) days.
Upon receipt of the medical discharge plan the director of the department of
corrections shall immediately transfer the medical
discharge plan together with the application to
the parole board for its consideration and decision.
(c) The report shall
contain, at a minimum, the following information:
(1) Diagnosis of the
prisoner's medical conditions, including related medical history;
(2) Detailed
description of the conditions and treatments;
(3) Prognosis,
including life expectancy, likelihood of recovery, likelihood of
improvement, mobility, and rate of debilitation;
(4) Degree of
incapacity or disability, including an assessment of whether the prisoner is
ambulatory, capable of engaging in any substantial
physical activity, and the extent of that
activity;
(5) An opinion from the
medical director as to whether the person is terminally ill, and if
so, the stage of the illness or whether the person is
permanently physically incapacitated or
severely ill. If the medical director's opinion is
that the person is not terminally ill, permanently,
physically incapacitated, or severely ill as defined
in section 13-8.1-3, the petition for medical
parole shall not be forwarded to the parole board.
(6) In the case of a
severely ill inmate, the report shall also contain a determination from
the office of financial resources that the inmate's
illness causes the state to incur exorbitant
expenses as a result of continued and frequent medical
treatment during incarceration.
(d) When the director
of corrections refers a prisoner to the parole board for medical
parole, the director shall provide to the parole board
a medical discharge plan, which is
acceptable to the parole board.
(e) The department of
corrections and the parole board shall jointly develop standards for
the medical discharge plan that are appropriately
adapted to the criminal justice setting. The
discharge plan should ensure at the minimum that:
(1) An appropriate
placement for the prisoner has been secured, including, but not
limited to, a hospital, nursing facility, hospice, or
family home;
(2) A referral has
been made for the prisoner to secure a source for payment of the
prisoner prisoner's
medical expenses has been secured;
(3) A physician
continues to examine the releasee and A parole
officer has been
assigned to periodically obtain updates on the
prisoner's medical condition to
report back to the
board.
(f) If the parole board
finds from the credible medical evidence that the prisoner is
terminally ill, or permanently
physically incapacitated, or severely ill, the board shall grant
release to the prisoner but only after the board also
considers whether, in light of the prisoner's
medical condition, there is a reasonable probability
that the prisoner, if released, will live and
remain at liberty without violating the law, and that
the release is compatible with the welfare of
society and will not so depreciate the seriousness of
the crime as to undermine respect for the law.
Notwithstanding any other provision of law, release
may be granted at any time during the term
of a prisoner's sentence.
(g) There shall be a
presumption that the opinion of the physician and/or medical
director will be accepted. However, the applicant, the
physician, the director, or the parole board
may request an independent medical evaluation within
seven (7) days after the physician's and/or
medical director's report is presented. The evaluation
shall be completed and a report, containing
the information required by subsection (b) of this
section, filed with the director and the parole
board and a copy sent to the applicant within fourteen
(14) days from the date of the request.
(h) Within seven (7)
days of receiving the application, the medical report and the
discharge plan, the parole board shall determine
whether the application, on its face, demonstrates
that relief may be warranted. If the face of the
application clearly demonstrates that relief is
unwarranted, the board may deny the application
without a hearing or further proceedings, and
within seven (7) days shall notify the prisoner in
writing of its decision to deny the application,
setting forth its factual findings and a brief
statement of the reasons for denying release without a
hearing. Denial of release does not preclude the
prisoner from reapplying for medical parole after
the expiration of sixty (60) days. A reapplication
under this section must demonstrate a material
change in circumstances.
(i)
(1) Upon receipt of the application from the director of the department of
corrections
the parole board shall, except as provided in
subsection (h) of this section, set the case for a
hearing within fourteen (14) thirty (30)
days;
(2) Notice of the
hearing shall be sent to the prosecutor and the victim(s), if any, of the
offense(s) for which the prisoner is incarcerated, and
the prosecutor and the victim(s) shall have
the right to be heard at the hearing, or in writing,
or both;
(3) At the hearing, the
prisoner shall be entitled to be represented by an attorney or by
the public defender if qualified or other representative.
(j) Within seven (7)
days of the hearing, the parole board shall issue a written decision
granting or denying medical parole and explaining the
reasons for the decision. If the board
determines that medical parole is warranted, it shall
impose conditions of release, which shall
include the following:
(1) Periodic medical
examinations;
(2) Periodic reporting
to a parole officer, and the reporting interval;
(3) Any other terms or
conditions that the board deems necessary.; and
(4) In the case of a
prisoner who is medically paroled due to being severely ill, the parole
board shall require electronic monitoring as a
condition of the medical parole, unless the health
care plan mandates placement in a medical facility
that cannot accommodate the electronic
monitoring.
(k) If after release
the releasee's condition or circumstances change so
that he or she
would not then be eligible for medical parole, the
parole board may order him or her returned to
custody to await a hearing to determine whether his or
her release should be revoked. A release
may also be revoked for violation of conditions
otherwise applicable to parole.
(l) An annual report shall
be prepared by the director of corrections for the parole board
and the general assembly. The report shall include:
(1) The number of
inmates who have applied for medical parole;
(2) The number who have
been granted medical parole;
(3) The nature of the
illness of the applicants, and the nature of the placement pursuant to
the medical discharge plan;
(4) The categories of
reasons for denial for those who have been denied;
(5) The number of releasees on medical parole who have been returned to the
custody of
the department of corrections and the reasons for
return.
SECTION
2. Section 13-8-23 of the General Laws in Chapter 13-8 entitled
"Parole" is
hereby amended to read as
follows:
13-8-23. Agencies
required to provide reports to parole board. -- Parties
required to
provide reports to parole board. -- Information concerning applicants for parole shall be
provided by:
(1) The director of
corrections, who shall submit a list of all prisoners under his or her
control who will be eligible for parole in a given
month, not later than the tenth day of the second
month preceding. That list shall identify the prisoner
by name, offense, and date of commitment;
(2) The director of
corrections, who shall secure reports from prison officials and
institutional personnel who have had direct contact with the prisoner
including, but not limited to,
the director of corrections, the chaplain, the work
detail officer, the prison physician, and the
classification officer prison administrators, the classification board,
mental health counselors,
correctional officers, and medical personnel. The director shall transmit those reports, together
with all pertinent classification information, including
such as social history and information
pertaining to the prisoner's disciplinary record,
participation in rehabilitation and educational
programs, employment history and plan, housing plan,
community supports, mental health status
and needs, substance abuse status and needs, discharge
plan, etc., and any actions or
recommendations made by a classification board or
committee in the institution, to the board not
later than the twentieth day of the month next
preceding the month in which the individual is
eligible to appear before the board;
(3) The attorney
general's department, which shall supply to the board a written report of
its recommendation concerning the current application
for parole. The report shall set forth in
detail the reason or reasons why the particular
inmate, given his or her criminal history and the
circumstances surrounding his or her offense, should
or should not be paroled. The department
shall also consult the trial judge in the case to
determine if he or she may wish to make any
comment or recommendation; and if requested by the
board, the department shall have one of its
attorneys present at the board hearings to elaborate
on the attorney general's recommendation as
to parole of the inmate;
(4) The state When
deemed necessary by the board, a psychiatrist, who shall examine the
prisoner upon notice from the board and shall submit
his or her findings and recommendations to
the board not later than the twentieth day of the
month next preceding the month in which the
prisoner is eligible to appear before the board;
(5) The
psychological services agency, which Licensed mental health
professionals who
shall upon notice from the board examine the prisoner
and report its their findings and
recommendations to the board not later than the
twentieth day of the month next preceding the
month in which the prisoner is eligible to appear
before the board; provided, no applicant for
parole who is incarcerated for a crime of violence, as
defined in section 11-47-2, shall be
considered for parole unless a psychological
examination of the applicant that included
standardized national psychological testing was
completed within one year prior to the applicant's
parole hearing date or any continuance of the hearing;
(6) The department of
corrections, which shall submit: (i) a transcript of
the previous
criminal record of the prisoner, including the date of
offenses, nature of offenses, and the
disposition of each; (ii) a copy of the pre-sentence
investigation; and (iii) a full summary of the
contact of the department with the prisoner during any
prior period under supervision, either
probation or parole or both. The department shall make
a written recommendation concerning the
current application for parole.
SECTION
3. The director shall submit a quarterly report to the chairs of the house and
senate finance committees
and their respective fiscal advisors on the progress of closing the
Donald Price medium
security facility.
SECTION
4. This Article shall take effect upon passage.