Bill Text: MI HB4021 | 2009-2010 | 95th Legislature | Introduced
Bill Title: Corrections; prisoners; commutation hearings and procedures; expedite for prisoners who are terminally ill. Amends secs. 35 & 44 of 1953 PA 232 (MCL 791.235 & 791.244).
Spectrum: Partisan Bill (Republican 1-0)
Status: (Introduced - Dead) 2009-01-27 - Printed Bill Filed 01/23/2009 [HB4021 Detail]
Download: Michigan-2009-HB4021-Introduced.html
HOUSE BILL No. 4021
January 22, 2009, Introduced by Rep. Rick Jones and referred to the Committee on Judiciary.
A bill to amend 1953 PA 232, entitled
"Corrections code of 1953,"
by amending sections 35 and 44 (MCL 791.235 and 791.244), section
35 as amended by 1998 PA 315 and section 44 as amended by 1999 PA
191.
THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF MICHIGAN ENACT:
Sec. 35. (1) The release of a prisoner on parole shall be
granted solely upon the initiative of the parole board. The parole
board may grant a parole without interviewing the prisoner.
However,
beginning on the date on which the administrative rules
prescribing
parole guidelines pursuant to section 33e(5) take
effect
January 26, 1996, the parole board may grant a parole
without interviewing the prisoner only if, after evaluating the
prisoner according to the parole guidelines, the parole board
determines that the prisoner has a high probability of being
paroled and the parole board therefore intends to parole the
prisoner. Except as provided in subsection (2), a prisoner shall
not be denied parole without an interview before 1 member of the
parole board. The interview shall be conducted at least 1 month
before the expiration of the prisoner's minimum sentence less
applicable good time and disciplinary credits for a prisoner
eligible for good time and disciplinary credits, or at least 1
month before the expiration of the prisoner's minimum sentence for
a prisoner subject to disciplinary time. The parole board shall
consider any statement made to the parole board by a crime victim
under the William Van Regenmorter crime victim's rights act, 1985
PA 87, MCL 780.751 to 780.834, or under any other provision of law.
The parole board shall not consider any of the following factors in
making a parole determination:
(a) A juvenile record that a court has ordered the department
to expunge.
(b) Information that is determined by the parole board to be
inaccurate or irrelevant after a challenge and presentation of
relevant evidence by a prisoner who has received a notice of intent
to conduct an interview as provided in subsection (4). This
subdivision applies only to presentence investigation reports
prepared before April 1, 1983.
(2)
Beginning on the date on which the administrative rules
prescribing
the parole guidelines take effect pursuant to section
33e(5)
January 26, 1996, if, after evaluating a prisoner according
to the parole guidelines, the parole board determines that the
prisoner has a low probability of being paroled and the parole
board therefore does not intend to parole the prisoner, the parole
board
shall is not be required to interview the prisoner
before
denying parole to the prisoner.
(3) The parole board may consider but shall not base a
determination to deny parole solely on either of the following:
(a) A prisoner's marital history.
(b) Prior arrests not resulting in conviction or adjudication
of delinquency.
(4) If an interview is to be conducted, the prisoner shall be
sent a notice of intent to conduct an interview at least 1 month
before the date of the interview. The notice shall state the
specific issues and concerns that shall be discussed at the
interview and that may be a basis for a denial of parole. A denial
of parole shall not be based on reasons other than those stated in
the notice of intent to conduct an interview except for good cause
stated to the prisoner at or before the interview and in the
written explanation required by subsection (12). This subsection
does not apply until April 1, 1983.
(5) Except for good cause, the parole board member conducting
the interview shall not have cast a vote for or against the
prisoner's release before conducting the current interview. Before
the interview, the parole board member who is to conduct the
interview shall review pertinent information relative to the notice
of intent to conduct an interview.
(6) A prisoner may waive the right to an interview by 1 member
of the parole board. The waiver of the right to be interviewed
shall be given not more than 30 days after the notice of intent to
conduct an interview is issued and shall be made in writing. During
the interview held pursuant to a notice of intent to conduct an
interview, the prisoner may be represented by an individual of his
or her choice. The representative shall not be another prisoner or
an attorney. A prisoner is not entitled to appointed counsel at
public expense. The prisoner or representative may present relevant
evidence in support of release. This subsection does not apply
until April 1, 1983.
(7) At least 90 days before the expiration of the prisoner's
minimum sentence less applicable good time and disciplinary credits
for a prisoner eligible for good time or disciplinary credits, or
at least 90 days before the expiration of the prisoner's minimum
sentence for a prisoner subject to disciplinary time, or the
expiration of a 12-month continuance for any prisoner, a parole
eligibility report shall be prepared by appropriate institutional
staff. The parole eligibility report shall be considered pertinent
information for purposes of subsection (5). The report shall
include all of the following:
(a) A statement of all major misconduct charges of which the
prisoner was found guilty and the punishment served for the
misconduct.
(b) The prisoner's work and educational record while confined.
(c) The results of any physical, mental, or psychiatric
examinations of the prisoner that may have been performed.
(d) Whether the prisoner fully cooperated with the state by
providing complete financial information as required under section
3a of the state correctional facility reimbursement act, 1935 PA
253, MCL 800.403a.
(e) For a prisoner subject to disciplinary time, a statement
of all disciplinary time submitted for the parole board's
consideration pursuant to section 34 of 1893 PA 118, MCL 800.34.
(8) The preparer of the report shall not include a
recommendation as to release on parole.
(9) Psychological evaluations performed at the request of the
parole board to assist it in reaching a decision on the release of
a prisoner may be performed by the same person who provided the
prisoner with therapeutic treatment, unless a different person is
requested by the prisoner or parole board.
(10) The parole board may grant a medical parole for a
prisoner determined to be physically or mentally incapacitated. A
decision to grant a medical parole shall be initiated upon the
recommendation of the bureau of health care services and shall be
reached only after a review of the medical, institutional, and
criminal records of the prisoner. This subsection does not preclude
a prisoner from seeking a commutation based on physical or mental
incapacity under section 44.
(11) The department shall submit a petition to the appropriate
court under section 434 of the mental health code, 1974 PA 258, MCL
330.1434, for any prisoner being paroled or being released after
serving his or her maximum sentence whom the department considers
to be a person requiring treatment. The parole board shall require
mental health treatment as a special condition of parole for any
parolee whom the department has determined to be a person requiring
treatment whether or not the petition filed for that prisoner is
granted by the court. As used in this subsection, "person requiring
treatment" means that term as defined in section 401 of the mental
health code, 1974 PA 258, MCL 330.1401.
(12) When the parole board makes a final determination not to
release a prisoner, the prisoner shall be provided with a written
explanation of the reason for denial and, if appropriate, specific
recommendations for corrective action the prisoner may take to
facilitate release.
(13) This section does not apply to the placement on parole of
a person in conjunction with special alternative incarceration
under section 34a(7).
Sec. 44. (1) Subject to the constitutional authority of the
governor to grant reprieves, commutations, and pardons, 1 member of
the parole board shall interview a prisoner serving a sentence for
murder in the first degree or a sentence of imprisonment for life
without parole at the conclusion of 10 calendar years and
thereafter as determined appropriate by the parole board, until
such
time as the prisoner is granted a
reprieve, commutation, or
pardon by the governor, or is deceased. The interview schedule
prescribed in this subsection applies to all prisoners to whom this
section is applicable, regardless of when they were sentenced.
(2) Upon its own initiation of, or upon receipt of any
application for, a reprieve, commutation, or pardon, the parole
board shall do all of the following, as applicable:
(a) Not more than 60 days after receipt of an application,
conduct a review to determine whether the application for a
reprieve, commutation, or pardon has merit.
(b) Deliver either the written documentation of the initiation
or the original application with the parole board's determination
regarding merit, to the governor and retain a copy of each in its
file, pending an investigation and hearing.
(c) Within 10 days after initiation, or after determining that
an application has merit, forward to the sentencing judge and to
the prosecuting attorney of the county having original jurisdiction
of the case, or their successors in office, a written notice of the
filing of the application or initiation, together with copies of
the application or initiation, any supporting affidavits, and a
brief
summary of the case. Within 30 days after receipt of notice
of
the filing of any application or initiation, the The
sentencing
judge and the prosecuting attorney, or their successors in office,
may file information at their disposal, together with any
objections, in writing, which they may desire to interpose. A
response from a sentencing judge or prosecuting attorney must be
filed within 10 days after he or she received the written notice in
the case of a proposed commutation based on physical or mental
incapacity as provided in subdivision (d) or within 30 days after
he or she received the written notice in the case of any other
proposed commutation. If the sentencing judge and the prosecuting
attorney,
or their successors in office, do not respond within 30
days
the applicable time period, the parole board shall proceed on
the application or initiation.
(d) If an application or initiation for commutation is based
on physical or mental incapacity, direct the bureau of health care
services to evaluate the condition of the prisoner and report on
that condition. If the bureau of health care services determines
that the prisoner is physically or mentally incapacitated, the
bureau shall appoint a specialist in the appropriate field of
medicine, who is not employed by the department, to evaluate the
condition of the prisoner and to report on that condition. These
reports are protected by the doctor-patient privilege of
confidentiality, except that these reports shall be provided to the
governor for his or her review.
(e) Within 270 days after initiation by the parole board or
receipt of an application that the parole board has determined to
have merit pursuant to subdivision (a), make a full investigation
and determination on whether or not to proceed to a public hearing.
(f)
Conduct Except as
otherwise provided in subsection (3),
conduct a public hearing not later than 90 days after making a
decision to proceed with consideration of a recommendation for the
granting of a reprieve, commutation, or pardon. The public hearing
shall be held before a formal recommendation is transmitted to the
governor. One member of the parole board who will be involved in
the formal recommendation may conduct the hearing, and the public
shall be represented by the attorney general or a member of the
attorney general's staff.
(g)
At least 30 days before Before conducting the public
hearing, provide written notice of the public hearing by mail to
the attorney general, the sentencing trial judge, and the
prosecuting attorney, or their successors in office, and each
victim who requests notice pursuant to the William Van Regenmorter
crime victim's rights act, 1985 PA 87, MCL 780.751 to 780.834. If
the public hearing is being conducted for a proposed commutation
based on physical or mental incapacity as provided in subdivision
(d), the written notice shall be provided at least 10 days before
the public hearing and may be provided simultaneously with the
notice required under subdivision (c). For all other public
hearings for proposed commutations, the written notice shall be
provided at least 30 days before the public hearing.
(h) Conduct the public hearing pursuant to the rules
promulgated by the department. Except as otherwise provided in this
subdivision, any person having information in connection with the
pardon, commutation, or reprieve shall be sworn as a witness. A
person who is a victim shall be given an opportunity to address and
be questioned by the parole board at the hearing or to submit
written testimony for the hearing. In hearing testimony, the parole
board shall give liberal construction to any technical rules of
evidence.
(i) Transmit its formal recommendation to the governor.
(j) Make all data in its files available to the governor if
the parole board recommends the granting of a reprieve,
commutation, or pardon.
(3) Notwithstanding subsection (2), a public hearing is not
required for a proposed commutation based on physical or mental
incapacity under subsection (2)(d) if both medical reports prepared
pursuant to subsection (2)(d) give the prisoner a life expectancy
of 6 months or less and if the parole board gives written notice of
the proposed commutation to the attorney general, the sentencing
judge, and the prosecuting attorney, or their successors in office,
and each victim who requests notice pursuant to the William Van
Regenmorter crime victim's rights act, 1985 PA 87, MCL 780.751 to
780.834. The written notice shall request a written response within
10 days as to the proposed commutation and may be made
simultaneously with the notice required under subsection (2)(c).
Any written responses shall be forwarded to the governor with the
parole board's final recommendation and shall be matters of public
record. This subsection does not apply to a prisoner serving a
sentence for a listed offense as defined in section 2 of the sex
offenders registration act, 1994 PA 295, MCL 28.722.
(4) (3)
Except for medical records protected by the doctor-
patient privilege of confidentiality, the files of the parole board
in
cases under this section shall be are matters of public
record.