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Legislative Year: 2025 Change
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Bill Detail: SB25-190

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Title Offender Release from Custody
Status Introduced In House - Assigned to Judiciary (04/01/2025)
Bill Subjects
  • Crimes, Corrections, & Enforcement
House Sponsors M. Soper (R)
J. Bacon (D)
Senate Sponsors J. Gonzales (D)
House Committee Judiciary
Senate Committee Judiciary
Date Introduced 03/04/2025
AI Summary
Summary

Under current law, a sheriff may allow an individual to choose to
stay in jail overnight after release when extenuating circumstances exist.
The bill states it is an extenuating circumstance to facilitate a connection
to a service provider. If a defendant remains in jail overnight, the
defendant must be released by 10 a.m. the next morning.
Under current law, there is a distinction for those who are 55 years
of age or older, and for those under that age with certain medical
conditions, for special needs parole. The bill changes that distinction. The
bill makes an inmate eligible for special needs parole if the inmate is 55
years of age or older and suffers from a diagnosed severe cognitive
impairment or serious impairment that limits the person's ability to
function. The bill makes an inmate eligible for special needs parole if the
inmate is under 55 years of age and suffers from a diagnosed severe
cognitive impairment or serious impairment that limits the person's ability
to function; has served at least 25% of the inmate's sentence, or 10 years
imprisonment, whichever is shorter; and has not incurred a class I code
of penal discipline violation within the 12 months before the date of the
application for special needs parole. The bill makes a person eligible for
special needs parole if the person has a condition such as advanced or
metastatic cancer; end-stage renal disease; end-stage chronic obstructive
pulmonary disorder; end-stage heart disease; end-stage liver disease;
progressive neurodegenerative disease such as Huntington's disease,
Parkinson's disease, and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis; intractable seizure
disorder; severe dementia; or Alzheimer's disease. The bill provides that
when a health-care provider who is providing care to the person makes a
determination that the person's medical condition meets the standard for
special needs parole, then a referral must be made to the parole board.
The department of corrections is required to include in each
contract with a licensed health-care provider involved in providing patient
care to an inmate a requirement that the provider screen each patient for
eligibility for special needs parole.
The bill requires legislative council staff to conduct a study of
options for releasing aging and seriously ill offenders from secure custody
to appropriate care or placing offenders in alternative programs that can
better provide the offender's needed medical care.

Committee Reports
with Amendments
Full Text
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Fiscal Notes Fiscal Notes (04/09/2025) (most recent)  
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