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SPONSOR: |
R. Martinez |
DATE TYPED: |
|
HB |
|
||
SHORT TITLE: |
Create Sex Offender Management Board |
SB |
13 |
||||
|
ANALYST: |
Maloy |
|||||
APPROPRIATION
Appropriation
Contained |
Estimated
Additional Impact |
Recurring or
Non-Rec |
Fund Affected |
||
FY03 |
FY04 |
FY03 |
FY04 |
|
|
|
$250.0 |
|
Indeterminate (See Narrative) |
Recurring |
General
Fund |
(Parenthesis
( ) Indicate Expenditure Decreases)
Duplicates HB 4.
Relates to HB 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 9, 10, 11, 12,
and SB 4, 6, 7, 8, 11, and 12.
LFC Files
Responses
Received From
Administrative
Office of the Courts (AOC)
Attorney
General’s Office (AGO)
Corrections
Department (CD)
Department
of Health (DOH)
SUMMARY
Synopsis
of Bill
The
bill creates the 13 member "Sex Offender Management Board" within the
existing New Mexico Sentencing Commission. The bill appropriates $250,000 to
the New Mexico Sentencing Commission for expenditure in FY 04 and 05 to fund
the operations of the Board.
The
membership of the new Board includes certain members who are already members of
the Sentencing Commission:
·
Attorney
General,
·
a
District Attorney appointed by the District Attorneys' Association of New Mexico,
·
the
Chief Public Defender,
·
a
District Court Judge appointed by the District Court Judges' Association,
·
the
Secretaries of Corrections, Health, and Children, Youth and Families, and
·
one
member of the public appointed by the Governor who is a representative of a
The membership also includes several members who are not
currently members of the Sentencing Commission:
·
two
representatives appointed by the Governor who are mental health professionals licensed
to practice in New Mexico, at least one of whom shall be a member of the Association
for the Treatment of Sexual Abusers,
·
a
representative appointed by the Governor from the Adult Probation and Parole
Division of the Corrections Department who has expertise in the supervision of
sex offenders,
·
a
representative appointed by the Governor from the law enforcement community who
has expertise regarding sex offender community notification, registration, tracking
and monitoring,
·
a
representative appointed by the Governor who is affiliated with a civil
liberties organization, and
·
a
representative appointed by the Governor who is affiliated with a faith-based
organization.
The
bill sets out the duties of the Sex Offender Management Board, including the
power and duties to:
1) hold
meetings at least eight times a year;
2) develop
and prescribe a standard procedure for the identification and evaluation of
convicted sex offenders, including behavior management, monitoring, treatment
and program compliance as well as measures of success;
3) develop and implement guidelines and
standards for the treatment of sex offenders that can be used by offenders who
are placed on probation, incarcerated by the Corrections Department, placed on
parole or placed in a community corrections program. The guidelines and standards shall include a
monitoring process and a plan for developing treatment programs for sex
offenders, including determining the duration, terms and conditions of
probation and parole for sex offenders;
4) create
a risk assessment screening tool;
5) develop
guidelines and standards for monitoring sex offenders;
6)
develop
criteria for measuring a sex offender's progress in treatment;
7) develop a standardized procedure for the
identification and evaluation of juvenile sex offenders;
8) develop and implement guidelines and
standards for the treatment of juvenile sex offenders;
9) research
and analyze safety issues raised when sex offenders live in a community;
10) study
the viability and legality of a civil commitment program for sex offenders;
11) research and determine the feasibility and
legality of implementing indeterminate sentencing for sex offenders;
12) study
the use of clinical polygraph testing as a means to evaluate sex offenders;
13) evaluate sex offender treatment programs
administered by state agencies and recommend necessary changes; and
14) review the provisions of the Sex Offender
Notification and Registration Act and recommend necessary changes.
The
Sex Offender Management Board is required to report its findings and
recommendations to the New Mexico Sentencing Commission on a quarterly
basis. The Sentencing Commission must
vote to approve, disapprove or revise the recommendations of the Board. The members of the Board will be paid
pursuant to the Per Diem and Mileage Act and receive no other compensation.
The
bill includes an emergency clause.
Significant
Issues
According to the
Corrections Department, the
most significant issue is that a Sex Offender Management Board is necessary to
create a risk and needs assessment tool that can be used to determine the
appropriate programming for inmates, probationers, and parolees, as well as the
length and conditions of probation and parole for sex offenders. This will ensure that resources are used in
the most efficient manner.
The Attorney General’s Office cites the
following as significant issues:
1.
The
purpose of this board seems to be to act as an advisory committee to the New
Mexico Sentencing Commission, but some of the directives to the new board appear
to empower it to act directly. The strictly advisory role of the board should
be clarified. The board is a non-voting entity.
2.
The
review of Megan’s Law should be more specific, i.e. to include the duty to
recommend changes to Megan’s Law in accordance with federal rules and regulations
in order to receive all available federal grants and monies.
3.
Under
Section 1, on pages 12-13, the bill language states “study the use of clinical
polygraph testing as a means to evaluate sex offenders”. Currently, the legality of the use of
polygraph examinations in criminal proceedings is being adjudicated before the
New Mexico Supreme Court. It may be
appropriate to delete this directive.
According to the
Department of Health,
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
The
bill appropriates $250.0 to the New Mexico Sentencing Commission for
expenditure in FY 04 and 05 to fund the operations of the Sex Offender Management
Board. Any unexpended or unencumbered
balance remaining at the end of FY 05 shall revert to the general fund.
SB
13 would provide for the members of the Board to receive per diem and
mileage. These and other administrative
costs would be recurring.
ADMINISTRATIVE
IMPLICATIONS
There
will be a slight to moderate increase in the administrative burden on the
members of the new board and on others required to submit information to the
Board.
RELATIONSHIP
SB 13 relates to House
Bills 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 9, 10, 11, 12, and Senate Bills
4, 6, 7, 8, 11, and 12 that also address
sex offender legislation.
OTHER SUBSTANTIVE ISSUES
The Department of Health notes the following:
·
Safety
of victims and community is of the utmost importance. This requires that
1.
Goals that are directed toward public
safety and offender accountability – this involves a deliberate, comprehensive
approach to sex offender management;
2.
Progress on enhancing collaborative
efforts;
3.
Continual assessment and improvement of
sex offender management practices;
4.
A work plan that reflects an articulated
mission, as well as the Board’s values/ goals;
5.
A data collection effort that is outcome
based and directed toward identifying policies and practices which help prevent
future victimization; and
6.
A plan to institutionalize efforts to
ensure the work outlives current team membership.
·
The
·
Based
on analyses of self report victimization surveys of women, researchers know
that most sexual assaults are committed by someone known to the victim or the
victim’s family, regardless of whether the victim is a child or an adult
(Greenfield, 1997). Approximately 78
forcible rapes of women 18 years of age and older are committed each hour in
the U.S., and 1 of 6 U.S. women and 1 of 33 U.S. men have experienced an attempted
or completed rape as a child and/or adult (Tjaden & Thoennes, 1998). At least one in five girls and one in seven
boys have been sexually abused by age 18 (Finkelhor, 1994). Sexual crimes often are perpetrated against
youth; 22 percent of female rape victims were assaulted before they were 12; 32
percent were between 12 and 17 at the time they were sexually assaulted (Tjaden
& Thoennes, 1998). Approximately
two-thirds of state prisoners convicted of rape or sexual assault offended
against children (
·
The
passage of HB 4 would begin to address the serious problem(s) posed by the sex
offender population for
·
Despite
recent legislative changes and sentencing practices that increase the
likelihood and length of incarceration for convicted sex offenders, many of
these offenders are supervised in the community. A U.S. Department of Justice study
(Greenfeld, 1997) reports that approximately 265,000 adult sex offenders are
under the care, custody, or control of correctional agencies in the
·
The
establishment of clear and consistent policies at all levels (state, local, and
agency) is a crucial component of sex offender management. Clear policy defines how cases will be
investigated, prosecuted, adjudicated, supervised, and tracked. It also defines, for example, the method of
community supervision and the roles various agencies play in the offender management
process. Consensus built policy serves
as a vehicle to carry the goals of the system.
These are best developed through the establishment of a collaborative
team and the use of a strategic planning process. Policies must be developed that address and
effectively connect together the many components of sex offender management.
SM/lg