AN
ACT
RELATING TO CRIMINAL SENTENCING;
INCREASING THE AMOUNT PAID BY OFFENDERS FOR SUPERVISED PROBATION AND PAROLE
SERVICES; REQUIRING OFFENDERS WHO PARTICIPATE IN A COMMUNITY CORRECTIONS
PROGRAM TO MAKE A CO-PAYMENT; AMENDING SECTIONS OF THE NMSA 1978.
BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE
OF THE STATE OF NEW MEXICO:
Section
1. Section 31-20-6 NMSA 1978 (being Laws
1963, Chapter 303, Section 29-18, as amended) is amended to read:
"31‑20‑6. CONDITIONS OF ORDER DEFERRING OR SUSPENDING
SENTENCE.--The magistrate, metropolitan or district court shall attach to its
order deferring or suspending sentence reasonable conditions as it may deem
necessary to ensure that the defendant will observe the laws of the United
States and the various states and the ordinances of any municipality. The defendant upon conviction shall be
required to reimburse a law enforcement agency or local crime stopper program
for the amount of any reward paid by the agency or program for information
leading to his arrest, prosecution or conviction, but in no event shall
reimbursement to the crime stopper program preempt restitution to victims
pursuant to the provisions of Section 31‑17‑1 NMSA l978. The defendant upon conviction shall be
required to pay the actual costs of his supervised probation service to the
adult probation and parole division of the corrections department or
appropriate responsible agency for deposit to the corrections department
intensive supervision fund not exceeding one thousand eight hundred dollars
($1,800) annually to be paid in monthly installments of not less than
twenty-five dollars ($25.00) and not more than one hundred fifty dollars
($150), as set by the appropriate district supervisor of the adult probation
and parole division, based upon the financial circumstances of the
defendant. The defendant's payment of
the supervised probation costs shall not be waived unless the court holds an
evidentiary hearing and finds that the defendant is unable to pay the
costs. If the court waives the
defendant's payment of the supervised probation costs and the defendant's
financial circumstances subsequently change so that the defendant is able to
pay the costs, the appropriate district supervisor of the adult probation and
parole division shall advise the court and the court shall hold an evidentiary
hearing to determine whether the waiver should be rescinded. The court may also
require the defendant to:
A. provide for the support of persons for whose
support he is legally responsible;
B. undergo available medical or psychiatric
treatment and enter and remain in a specified institution when required for
that purpose;
C. be placed on probation under the supervision,
guidance or direction of the adult probation and parole division for a term not
to exceed five years;
D. serve a period of time in volunteer labor to
be known as "community service".
The type of labor and period of service shall be at the sole discretion
of the court; provided that a person receiving community service shall be
immune from any civil liability other than gross negligence arising out of the
community service, and a person who performs community service pursuant to
court order or a criminal diversion program shall not be entitled to wages,
shall not be considered an employee and shall not be entitled to workers'
compensation, unemployment benefits or any other benefits otherwise provided by
law. As used in this subsection,
"community service" means labor that benefits the public at large or
a public, charitable or educational entity or institution;
E. make a contribution of not less than ten
dollars ($10.00) and not more than one hundred dollars ($100), to be paid in
monthly installments of not less than five dollars ($5.00), to a local crime
stopper program or a local drug abuse resistance education program that
operates in the territorial jurisdiction of the court; and
F. satisfy any other conditions reasonably
related to his rehabilitation."
Section
2. Section 31-21-10 NMSA 1978 (being
Laws 1980, Chapter 28, Section 1, as amended) is amended to read:
"31-21-10. PAROLE AUTHORITY AND PROCEDURE.--
A. An inmate of an institution who was sentenced
to life imprisonment as the result of the commission of a capital felony, who
was convicted of three violent felonies and sentenced pursuant to Sections
31-18-23 and 31-18-24 NMSA 1978 or who was convicted of two violent sexual
offenses and sentenced pursuant to Subsection A of Section 31-18-25 NMSA 1978
and Section 31-18-26 NMSA 1978 becomes eligible for a parole hearing after he
has served thirty years of his sentence.
Before ordering the parole of an inmate sentenced to life imprisonment,
the board shall:
(1) interview the inmate at the institution where
he is committed;
(2) consider all pertinent information concerning
the inmate, including:
(a) the circumstances of the offense;
(b) mitigating and aggravating circumstances;
(c) whether a deadly weapon was used in the
commission of the offense;
(d) whether the inmate is a habitual offender;
(e) the reports filed under Section
31-21-9 NMSA 1978; and
(f) the reports of such physical and mental
examinations as have been made while in an institution;
(3) make a finding that a parole is in the best
interest of society and the inmate; and
(4) make a finding that the inmate is able and
willing to fulfill the obligations of a law-abiding citizen.
If parole
is denied, the inmate sentenced to life imprisonment shall again become
entitled to a parole hearing at two-year intervals. The board may, on its own motion, reopen any
case in which a hearing has already been granted and parole denied.
B. Unless the board finds that it is in the best
interest of society and the parolee to reduce the period of parole, a person
who was convicted of a capital felony shall be required to undergo a minimum
period of parole of five years. During
the period of parole, the person shall be under the guidance and supervision of
the board.
C. Except for sex offenders as provided in
Section 31-21-10.1 NMSA 1978, an inmate who was convicted of a first, second or
third degree felony and who has served the sentence of imprisonment imposed by
the court in an institution designated by the corrections department shall be
required to undergo a two-year period of parole. An inmate who was convicted of a fourth
degree felony and who has served the sentence of imprisonment imposed by the
court in an institution designated by the corrections department shall be
required to undergo a one-year period of parole. During the period of parole, the person shall
be under the guidance and supervision of the board.
D. Every person while on parole shall remain in
the legal custody of the institution from which he was released, but shall be
subject to the orders of the board. The
board shall furnish to each inmate as a prerequisite to his release under its
supervision a written statement of the conditions of parole that shall be
accepted and agreed to by the inmate as evidenced by his signature affixed to a
duplicate copy to be retained in the files of the board. The board shall also require as a
prerequisite to release the submission and approval of a parole plan. If an inmate refuses to affix his signature
to the written statement of the conditions of his parole or does not have an
approved parole plan, he shall not be released and shall remain in the custody
of the institution in which he has served his sentence, excepting parole, until
such time as the period of parole he was required to serve, less meritorious
deductions, if any, expires, at which time he shall be released from that
institution without parole, or until such time that he evidences his acceptance
and agreement to the conditions of parole as required or receives approval for
his parole plan or both. Time served
from the date that an inmate refuses to accept and agree to the conditions of
parole or fails to receive approval for his parole plan shall reduce the
period, if any, to be served under parole at a later date. If the district court has ordered that the
inmate make restitution to a victim as provided in Section 31-17-1 NMSA 1978,
the board shall include restitution as a condition of parole. The board shall also personally apprise the
inmate of the conditions of parole and his duties relating thereto.
E. When a person on parole has performed the
obligations of his release for the period of parole provided in this section,
the board shall make a final order of discharge and issue him a certificate of
discharge.
F. Pursuant to the provisions of Section
31-18-15 NMSA 1978, the board shall require the inmate as a condition of
parole:
(1) to pay the actual costs of his parole
services to the adult probation and parole division of the corrections
department for deposit to the corrections department intensive supervision fund
not exceeding one thousand eight hundred dollars ($1,800) annually to be paid
in monthly installments of not less than twenty-five dollars ($25.00) and not
more than one hundred fifty dollars ($150), as set by the appropriate district
supervisor of the adult probation and parole division, based upon the financial
circumstances of the defendant. The
defendant's payment of the supervised parole costs shall not be waived unless
the board holds an evidentiary hearing and finds that the defendant is unable
to pay the costs. If the board waives
the defendant's payment of the supervised parole costs and the defendant's
financial circumstances subsequently change so that the defendant is able to
pay the costs, the appropriate district supervisor of the adult probation and
parole division shall advise the board and the board shall hold an evidentiary
hearing to determine whether the waiver should be rescinded; and
(2) to reimburse a law enforcement agency or
local crime stopper program for the amount of any reward paid by the agency or
program for information leading to his arrest, prosecution or conviction.
G. The provisions of this section shall apply to
all inmates except geriatric, permanently incapacitated and terminally ill
inmates eligible for the medical and geriatric parole program as provided by
the Parole Board Act."
Section
3. Section 33-9-3 NMSA 1978 (being Laws
1983, Chapter 202, Section 3, as amended) is amended to read:
"33-9-3. COMMUNITY CORRECTIONS GRANT FUND--ESTABLISHED--CO-PAYMENTS.--
A. There is created in the state treasury a
special fund to be known as the "community corrections grant
fund". All money appropriated to
the fund or accruing to it as a result of gift, deposit, investments or other
sources shall not be transferred to another fund or encumbered or disbursed in
any manner except as provided in the Adult Community Corrections Act. The fund shall be for the purpose of
providing programs and services for the diversion of criminal offenders to
community-based settings.
B. The department shall require criminal
offenders who participate in a program and who receive services to make a
co-payment to offset the cost of the services.
The amount of the co-payment shall be based upon the offender's ability
to pay. The department shall collect the
co-payments and on a monthly basis deliver them to the state treasurer for
deposit in the community corrections grant fund."
Section
4. APPLICABILITY.--The provisions of
this act apply to persons convicted of a criminal offense on or after July 1,
2004.
Section
5. EFFECTIVE DATE.--The effective date
of the provisions of this act is July 1, 2004.