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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR Carraro
ORIGINAL DATE
LAST UPDATED
2-10-2007
HB
SHORT TITLE Sexual Predator Civil Commitment Act
SB 452
ANALYST Geisler
APPROPRIATION (dollars in thousands)
Appropriation
Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
FY07
FY08
$11,500.0
Recurring
General
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Expenditure Decreases)
Relates to: SB906/HB794, SB932, SB 464, SB 450, SB439, SB 528/HB579, HB 476 & HB 769
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
Responses Received From
Administrative Office of the Courts (AOC)
Public Defender
Department of Health (DOH)
Corrections Department (CD)
SUMMARY
Synopsis of Bill
Senate Bill 452 appropriates $11,500,000 from the general fund and enacts the Sexual Predator
Civil Commitment Act, a separate act from the laws pertaining to the Sex Offender Registration
and Notification Act and the Sexual Offender Management Board. This bill seeks to define
certain sexual predators as violent and place such individuals under civil commitment within the
State. The court imposed civil commitment would permit long-term control, care, and treatment
of sexually violent predators.
The bill provides for the commitment and treatment of sexually violent predators by: (1) creating
new processes to identify potentially sexually violent predators (based on mental abnormality or
personality disorder and a list of qualifying offenses; (2) referring those potentially sexually
violent predators to a committee for review and evaluation; (3) creating new legal proceedings
and processes for determining if a potential predator is, in fact, a violent sexual predator; and (4)
instituting involuntary and indefinite long-term commitment of persons determined to be violent
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sexual predators. The legal processes identified and included in SB 452 include jury trials, proof
beyond a reasonable doubt, and unanimous verdicts with regard to certain issues, and requires
courts to determine mental health status and propensity for sexual violence.
Other state agencies would be involved in enforcing the law including a multi-disciplinary team,
the Sex Offender Management Board, the Secretary of Corrections and the Attorney General.
Following certain procedures, a petition for commitment would be filed and the district court
would determine if a person is a sexually violent predator. Annual review and certain procedures
for release are included in the proposal.
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
Senate Bill 452 appropriates $11,000,000 to the Department of Health, $150,000 to the Attorney
General, $150,000 to the Public Defender Department, and $200,000 to the Administrative
Offices of the Courts from the General Fund to carry out the Sexual Predator Civil Commitment
Act in fiscal year 2008. The appropriation of $11,500,000 contained in this bill is a recurring
expense to the General Fund. Any unexpended or unencumbered balance remaining at the end
of FY08 shall revert to the general fund.
DOH notes that many states that have enacted Sexual Predator Civil Commitment Act have
experienced extraordinary financial burdens, including inadequate financial support to carry out
the purpose of the acts. A full understanding of fiscal implications would require evaluation of
existing housing and treatment resources and an accurate estimation of the number of potential
predators and sexually violent predators that would be identified by this bill.
Corrections notes that operation of a new secure treatment facility by DOH (or by contract with
Corrections) would likely require additional security personnel and treatment staff. DOH would
need to study all cost factors involved to determine if the $11 million appropriation identified in
SB 452 would be sufficient to provide an appropriate facility or facilities and operating budget.
Treatment costs (and SB 452 requires an elaborate treatment and evaluation process) would be at
the high range for inpatient mental health treatment. For comparison purposes, the
contract/private prison annual cost of incarcerating an inmate is $23,867 per year for males and
the cost per client to house a female inmate at a privately operated facility is $21,651 per year.
For probation and parole, the cost per client for a standard supervision program is $1,467 per
year and the cost per client in intensive supervision programs is $3,383 per year.
AOC notes the fiscal impact on the judiciary would be proportional to the enforcement of this
Act and commenced proceedings/hearings/trials related to the determination of probable cause
and/or whether the potential predator is a sexually violent predator. New laws, amendments to
existing laws, and new hearings have the potential to increase caseloads in the courts, thus
requiring additional resources to handle the increase.
SIGNIFICANT ISSUES
AOC
There may be a constitutional issue with regard to cruel and unusual punishment. Under the Act,
a person might have completed his sentence but can continue to be confined. Confinement could
continue indefinitely. A “Research Overview: Sex Offender Treatment Approaches and
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Programs" prepared for the New Mexico Sentencing Commission states that, in addition to
supervision and registration programs, several states have passed civil commitment statutes as a
way to manage their sex offender populations. It is anticipated that the amount of funds needed
to handle the growing population of civilly committed persons would be expected to double in
the next five years.
Corrections
It is unclear how this type of commitment can be considered a civil
commitment. The procedure
outlined is the same procedure for a criminal trial. The rules of evidence as applicable to a
criminal trial apply. The offender is afforded all the rights available to defendants at a criminal
trial and the standard of proof is beyond a reasonable doubt, which is the same standard as for a
criminal trial. Then after the trial, the person is at least potentially housed at the Department of
Corrections. What separates this from a criminal trail is that the defendant is on trial for what
they might do, not for what they have done
.
The inclusion of the Children’s Youth and Families Department (CYFD) as an “agency with
jurisdiction" seems to imply that children maybe locked up for the rest of their lives if they are
found to be covered by this act. The inclusion of the DOH as an “agency with jurisdiction"
seems to indicate that a person who has never been convicted of a crime maybe incarcerated for
the rest of their life if they are found to be covered by this act.
This bill probably will be challenged as being unconstitutional double jeopardy. The probability
of this challenge succeeding is enhanced by the fact that a person found to be subject to this law
is subject to multiple trials before they are released. The provision of this bill applying it to
anyone convicted of one of the enumerated offenses, even if the conviction occurred prior to the
passage of this bill, probably will be found to violate the ex post facto clause of the United States
and New Mexico Constitutions. The indeterminate nature of the commitment is also like to be
found in violation of the New Mexico Constitution.
TECHNICAL ISSUES
DOH notes that SB 452 identifies individuals who have committed defined sexually violent
offenses and who suffer from “mental abnormality" and/or “personality disorder" as sexually
violent predators. Clinical criterion for determining these conditions are not identified in the bill.
SB 452 provides for a review of potential predators by a multidisciplinary team. The
composition and professional qualifications of members of such a team are not specified.
The public defender notes that the bill does not specifically provide for appellate court review of
these commitment proceedings.
RELATIONSHIP
SB 452 relates to a number of other sex offender bills including SB 906/HB 974 sex offender
monitoring pilot project, SB 932 lifetime sex offender parole supervision, SB 464 sex offenders
near school boundaries, SB 450 sex offender definitions and registration, SB 439 additional sex
offender crimes & penalties, SB 528/HB 578 criminal sexual penetration of children, HB 476 sex
offender registration requirements and HB 769 certain stalkers as sex offenders.
GG/mt
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