Bill Text: HI HB824 | 2024 | Regular Session | Amended
Bill Title: Relating To Medical Release.
Spectrum: Partisan Bill (Democrat 8-0)
Status: (Engrossed - Dead) 2024-04-18 - Received notice of appointment of House conferees (Hse. Com. No. 760). [HB824 Detail]
Download: Hawaii-2024-HB824-Amended.html
HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES |
H.B. NO. |
824 |
THIRTY-SECOND LEGISLATURE, 2023 |
H.D. 2 |
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STATE OF HAWAII |
S.D. 1 |
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A BILL FOR AN ACT
RELATING TO MEDICAL RELEASE.
BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF HAWAII:
SECTION 1. The legislature finds that an ever-increasing number of individuals are entering prison with serious medical illnesses and many face the risk of developing a serious illness or disability, particularly prisoners with long mandatory sentences. Long sentences and an aging prison population mean that correctional facilities in the State and across the United States are housing a growing number of elderly inmates who often have extensive medical needs. Concern over how society should deal with the aging and seriously ill prison population has led policymakers in many states to endorse early release for older and seriously ill prisoners who pose a low risk to public safety. Presently, the United States federal prison system and many states grant some kind of medical or compassionate release under certain circumstances.
The legislature further finds that compassionate release provides physicians and other medical professionals an opportunity to use their unique expertise and knowledge of prognosis, geriatrics, cognitive and functional decline, and palliative medicine to ensure that medical criteria for compassionate release are appropriately evidence-based. With this information, criminal justice professionals are able to better determine whether or not an inmate should be granted medical release. Furthermore, compassion is an integral part of the aloha spirit.
Accordingly, the purpose of this Act is to create a medical or compassionate release program for certain ill or impaired inmates who pose a low risk to public safety.
SECTION 2. Chapter 353, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by adding a new section to part I to be appropriately designated and to read as follows:
"§353- Medical release program. The director shall assess and refer inmates to the Hawaii paroling authority for possible medical release as provided in subpart of part II."
SECTION 3. Chapter 353, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by adding a new subpart to part II to be appropriately designated and to read as follows:
" . Medical Release Program
§353- Definitions. As used in this subpart:
"Inmate" means any person committed to the custody of the director.
"Medical release" means the release of an inmate before the expiration of the inmate's sentence due to the inmate's medical condition.
§353- Medical release program; authority to release; rules. (a) An inmate may be considered for medical release if the inmate poses a low risk to public safety and:
(1) Has a terminal illness with a predictably poor prognosis;
(2) Has a seriously debilitating and irreversible mental or physical condition that impairs the inmate's functional ability to the extent that the inmate would be more appropriately managed in a community setting;
(3) Is too ill or cognitively impaired to participate in rehabilitation or be aware of punishment; or
(4) Has a disease or condition that requires a complexity of treatment or level of care that the department is unable to provide on a long-term basis.
(b) Requests for medical release may be initiated by the director, an inmate, or an inmate's representative. All requests for medical release shall be made in writing. Requests initiated by an inmate or an inmate's representative shall be made to the director and state the grounds for the request, relevant diagnoses and prognosis, and include a statement describing how and why the inmate meets the criteria for medical release. Requests initiated by the director shall be accompanied by a recommendation for medical release by a physician who is licensed to practice medicine in the State.
(c) Requests initiated by the director shall be forwarded to the Hawaii paroling authority with a brief statement of the reasons for the request and a statement that the inmate meets the criteria for release. Requests initiated by an inmate or inmate's representative shall be reviewed by the director and within twenty days of receiving the request forwarded to the Hawaii paroling authority with a recommendation from the director for or against release and a statement as to whether the inmate meets the criteria for release; provided that if it appears that a request clearly does not meet the criteria for release or is clearly frivolous, the director may hold the request and not submit it to the Hawaii paroling authority, unless and until it is supported by a report from a physician stating that, to a reasonable degree of medical probability, the inmate meets the criteria for release.
(d) The Hawaii paroling authority shall conduct a hearing on all requests for medical release. The hearing shall be held within ten days of receiving a medical release report from the department. The Hawaii paroling authority shall grant or deny the request within two days following the hearing.
(e) The Hawaii paroling authority shall not grant medical release to an inmate who poses a danger to society.
(f) A denial of medical release by the Hawaii paroling authority shall not affect an inmate's eligibility for any other form of parole or release under applicable law; provided that the inmate shall not reapply or be reconsidered for medical release unless there is a demonstrated change in the inmate's medical condition.
(g) The director shall appoint an advocate for any inmate who requests medical release and is unable, due to incapacitation or debilitation, to advocate on the inmate's own behalf.
(h) The department shall adopt a fast-track procedure for the evaluation and release of rapidly dying inmates; provided that the procedure shall be posted on the websites of the department and the Hawaii paroling authority.
(i) Medical release shall not be considered a reduction of a minimum sentence, and the sixty-day notice requirement of section 706-669(5) shall not apply to any medical release; provided that the department shall notify the prosecuting attorney of the appropriate county of all requests for medical release as soon as practicable after a request is initiated, and the prosecuting attorney may participate in any medical release hearing conducted by the Hawaii paroling authority.
(j) The department shall adopt rules pursuant to chapter 91 to implement the medical release program.
(k) As used in this section:
"Reasonable degree of medical probability" means that a medical outcome is more likely to occur than not to occur.
"Terminal illness" means a progressive and incurable medical condition that is expected to result in death.
§353- Conditions of a medical release. The Hawaii paroling authority shall set reasonable conditions on an inmate's medical release that shall apply through the date upon which the inmate's sentence would have expired. The conditions shall include the following:
(1) The released inmate shall be subject to supervision by the Hawaii paroling authority;
(2) Personnel of the department shall be allowed to visit the inmate at reasonable times at the inmate's home or elsewhere; and
(3) The released inmate shall comply with all conditions of release set by the Hawaii paroling authority.
§353- Revocation of medical release; return of inmate to custody. (a) The Hawaii paroling authority shall promptly order an inmate to be returned to the custody of the director to await a revocation hearing if the paroling authority receives credible information that the inmate has failed to comply with any reasonable condition set upon the inmate's medical release.
(b) If the Hawaii paroling authority revokes an inmate's medical release for failure to comply with a reasonable condition of release, the inmate shall resume serving the remaining balance of the inmate's sentence, with credit given only for the duration of the inmate's medical release served in compliance with all reasonable conditions. Revocation of an inmate's medical release for violating a reasonable condition of release shall not affect an inmate's eligibility for any other form of parole or release provided by law."
SECTION 4. Chapter 353, part II, Hawaii Revised
Statutes, is amended by designating sections 353-61 through 353-72 as subpart A,
entitled "Hawaii Paroling
Authority; General Provisions".
SECTION 5. New statutory material is underscored.
SECTION 6. This Act shall take effect upon its approval.
Report Title:
DCR; Hawaii Paroling Authority; Corrections; Medical Release Program
Description:
Creates a medical release program within the Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation for certain ill or impaired inmates who pose a low risk to public safety. (SD1)
The summary description
of legislation appearing on this page is for informational purposes only and is
not legislation or evidence of legislative intent.