Hawaii 2025 Regular Session

Hawaii Senate Bill SB694 Compare Versions

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1-THE SENATE S.B. NO. 694 THIRTY-THIRD LEGISLATURE, 2025 H.D. 1 STATE OF HAWAII C.D. 1 A BILL FOR AN ACT RELATING TO THE DETENTION OF MINORS. BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF HAWAII:
1+THE SENATE S.B. NO. 694 THIRTY-THIRD LEGISLATURE, 2025 H.D. 1 STATE OF HAWAII A BILL FOR AN ACT RELATING TO THE DETENTION OF MINORS. BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF HAWAII:
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33 THE SENATE S.B. NO. 694
44 THIRTY-THIRD LEGISLATURE, 2025 H.D. 1
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2331 A BILL FOR AN ACT
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2537 RELATING TO THE DETENTION OF MINORS.
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2743 BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF HAWAII:
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29-SECTION 1. Section 571-32, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended as follows: 1. By amending subsections (d) and (e) to read: "(d) No minor shall be held in a detention facility for juveniles or shelter longer than twenty-four hours, excluding weekends and holidays, unless a petition or motion for revocation of probation[,] or motion for revocation of protective supervision has been filed, or unless the judge orders otherwise after a court hearing. No ex parte motions shall be considered. [For the purposes of this section: (1) Unless a court finds, after a hearing and in writing, that it is in the interest of justice as provided for in subsection (g)(2), a minor believed to come within section 571-11(1), or a minor awaiting trial or another legal process, who is treated as an adult for purposes of prosecution in criminal court and housed in a secure facility shall not: (A) Have sight or sound contact with adult inmates; or (B) Be held in any jail or lockup for adults, except as provided in subsection (g)(3); and (2) Detention in a jail or lockup for adults may be permitted for: (A) A minor accused of a non-status offense who is held for a period not to exceed six hours; provided that the minor is being held: (i) For processing or release; (ii) While awaiting transfer to a juvenile facility; or (iii) For a court appearance that occurs within the period of detention; or (B) A minor accused of a non-status offense who is awaiting an initial court appearance that will occur within forty-eight hours of the minor being taken into custody, excluding weekends and holidays, and where the jail or lockup for adults is in a location: (i) Outside a metropolitan statistical area, as defined by the Office of Management and Budget, and no acceptable alternative placement is available; (ii) Where the distance to be traveled or the lack of highway, road, or transportation does not allow for court appearances within forty-eight hours, excluding weekends and holidays, such that a brief delay of no more than an additional forty-eight hours is excusable; or (iii) Where safety concerns exist, such as severe and life-threatening weather conditions that do not allow for reasonably safe travel, in which case the time for an appearance may be delayed until twenty-four hours after the time that conditions allow for reasonably safe travel; provided that the minor shall not have sight or sound contact with adult inmates; provided further that the State shall have a policy in effect that requires individuals who work with both minor and adult inmates in collocated facilities to be trained and certified to work with juveniles.] (e) No minor [may] shall be held after the filing of a petition or motion, as specified in subsection (d), unless an order for continued detention or shelter has been made by a judge after a court hearing. If there is probable cause to believe that the minor comes within section 571-11(1), the minor may be securely detained, following a court hearing, in a detention facility for juveniles or may be held in a shelter. If there is probable cause to believe that the minor comes within section 281-101.5 or 571-11(2), the minor may be held, following a court hearing, in a shelter but shall not be securely detained in a detention facility for juveniles for longer than twenty-four hours, excluding weekends and holidays, unless the minor is subject to the provisions of chapter 582, Interstate Compact on Juveniles, or chapter 582D, Interstate Compact for Juveniles, or is allegedly in or has already been adjudicated for a violation of a valid court order, as provided under the federal Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention Act of 1974, as amended." 2. By amending subsections (g) through (i) to read: "(g) When a minor is ordered to be held or detained by the court[: (1) Where a minor transferred for criminal proceedings pursuant to a waiver of family court jurisdiction is detained, the minor shall not: (A) Have sight or sound contact with adult inmates; or (B) Be held in any jail or lockup for adults, unless a court finds, after a hearing and in writing, that it is in the interest of justice; (2) In determining whether it is in the interest of justice to permit a minor to be held in any jail or lockup for adults, or to have sight or sound contact with adult inmates, a court shall consider: (A) The age of the minor; (B) The physical and mental maturity of the minor; (C) The present mental state of the minor, including whether the minor presents an imminent risk of self-harm; (D) The nature and circumstances of the alleged offense; (E) The minor's history of prior delinquent acts; (F) The relative ability of the available adult and juvenile detention facilities to meet the specific needs of the minor and protect the safety of the public as well as other detained minors; and (G) Any other relevant factor; and (3) If a court determines that it is in the interest of justice to permit a minor to be held in any jail or lockup for adults, or to have sight or sound contact with adult inmates: (A) The court shall hold a hearing no less frequently than once every thirty days, or in the case of a rural jurisdiction, no less frequently than once every forty-five days, to review whether it remains in the interest of justice to permit the minor to be held in a jail or lockup for adults or to have sight or sound contact with adult inmates; and (B) The minor shall not be held in any jail or lockup for adults, or permitted to have sight or sound contact with adult inmates, for more than one hundred eighty days, unless the court, in writing, determines there is good cause for an extension, or the minor expressly waives this limitation.] , the minor shall not be held in any jail, lockup, or prison for adults. (h) A minor may be placed in room confinement in a juvenile detention [or adult jail] facility only under the following conditions: (1) Room confinement may only be used as a temporary response to a minor's behavior, and only if: (A) The behavior poses an immediate and substantial risk of danger to the minor's self or another individual, or a serious and immediate threat to the safety and orderly operation of the facility; provided that any decision to hold a minor in room confinement due to a mental health emergency shall be made by a mental health professional and based upon the mental health professional's examination of the minor; or (B) The minor is an imminent escape risk; (2) Because of the potential impact on a minor's mental or physical health, room confinement may only be used for the minimum time necessary for the minor to regain self-control, and only after less restrictive options or techniques, including de-escalation, conflict and behavioral management techniques, and intervention by a mental health professional, have been attempted, exhausted, and failed; (3) If a minor is placed in room confinement, the reasons for the room confinement shall be explained to the minor. The minor shall also be informed that release from room confinement will occur immediately when the minor exhibits self-control and is no longer deemed a threat to the minor's safety or the safety of others; (4) If a minor is placed in room confinement, the following individuals shall be notified on the next business day and provided the reasons for the room confinement as well as the location and duration of the confinement: (A) The senior judge of the family court; (B) The presiding judge who ordered the minor to be held at the facility; (C) The deputy chief court administrator; and (D) The social services manager of the juvenile client services branch for the circuit court of the first circuit; (5) Room confinement shall not be used for purposes of punishment or disciplinary sanction, coercion, convenience, or retaliation, or to address staffing shortages at the facility; (6) A minor may be held in room confinement for no more than three hours unless the minor is a danger to themselves or another, or the on-call judge grants an extension of no more than three additional hours of confinement. Thereafter, the minor shall be returned to the general population; provided that if a minor is held in room confinement for more than three hours, a hearing shall be held before the family court on the next business day, at which time the minor shall be provided legal representation; (7) A minor shall not be returned to room confinement immediately after returning to the general population from room confinement for the purposes of evading the reporting requirements and room confinement restrictions pursuant to this section; (8) If the minor is not returned to the general population following a hearing pursuant to paragraph (6), the minor shall be transferred to a location where services may be provided to the minor without the need for room confinement; provided that if a mental health professional determines that the level of crisis service needed is not presently available at the location, the superintendent or deputy superintendent of the facility shall initiate a referral to a facility that can meet the needs of the minor; (9) All rooms used for room confinement shall have adequate and operational lighting, ventilation for the comfort of the minor, and shall be clean and resistant to suicide and self-harm; (10) The minor shall have access to drinking water, toilet facilities, hygiene supplies, and reading materials approved by a mental health professional; (11) The minor shall have the same access as provided to minors in the general population of the facility to meals, contact with parents or legal guardians, legal assistance, educational programs, and medical and mental health services; (12) The minor shall be continuously monitored by facility staff; and (13) The judiciary shall post quarterly on the judiciary's website a report of its detention center detailing their compliance with this section. Each report shall include: (A) The number of incidents of room confinement every year; (B) The number of minors impacted; (C) The age, gender identity, and race of minors impacted; (D) Any alternative strategies employed before the use of room confinement, the reasons those alternative strategies failed, and why room confinement was necessary; and (E) The incidence of mental illness. For the purposes of this subsection: "Mental health professional" means a qualified mental health professional or mental health professional supervised by a qualified mental health professional. "Room confinement" means the placement of a minor in a room, cell, or area with minimal or no contact with persons other than court staff and attorneys. "Room confinement" does not include confinement of a minor in a single-person room or cell for brief periods of locked room time as necessary for required institutional operations and does not include confinement during sleep hours. (i) Provisions regarding bail shall not be applicable to minors detained in accordance with this chapter[, except]; provided that bail may be allowed after a minor has been transferred for criminal prosecution pursuant to waiver of family court jurisdiction." 3. By amending subsections (k) and (l) to read: "(k) Any other provision of law to the contrary notwithstanding, any person otherwise subject to proceedings under chapter 832 and who is under the age of eighteen may be confined in a juvenile detention facility [or correctional facility] by order of a judge for the purposes set forth in section 832-12, 832-15, or 832-17. (l) A minor may temporarily be held for processing or while in transit to court in an adult jail or lockup in a county that does not have a juvenile detention facility if the minor is: (1) Separated by sight and sound from adult inmates; and (2) Held no longer than is necessary to be transported to court or the nearest juvenile detention facility. The department of human services through the office of youth services shall certify police station cellblocks and community correctional centers that provide sight and sound separation between minors and adults in temporary secure custody[.] pursuant to this subsection. Only cellblocks and centers certified under this subsection shall be authorized to [detain] temporarily hold juveniles pursuant to [section 571-32(d).] this subsection. The office of youth services may develop sight and sound separation standards, issue certifications, monitor and inspect facilities for compliance, cite facilities for violations, withdraw certifications, and require certified facilities to submit data and information as requested. In addition, the office of youth services may monitor and inspect all cellblocks and centers for compliance with [section 571-32(d).] this subsection." SECTION 2. Statutory material to be repealed is bracketed and stricken. New statutory material is underscored. SECTION 3. This Act shall take effect upon its approval.
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31-SECTION 1. Section 571-32, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended as follows:
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33-1. By amending subsections (d) and (e) to read:
47+ SECTION 1. Section 571-32, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended to read as follows: "§571-32 Detention; shelter; release; notice. (a) If a minor who is believed to come within section 571-11(1) is not released as provided in section 571-31 and is not deemed suitable for diversion, then the minor shall be taken without unnecessary delay to the court or to the place of detention or shelter designated by the court. If a minor who is believed to come within section 571-11(2) is not released as provided in section 571-31, and is not deemed suitable for diversion, then the minor shall be taken without unnecessary delay to the court or to the place of shelter designated by the court. If the court determines that the minor requires care away from the minor's own home but does not require secure physical restriction, the minor shall be given temporary care in any available nonsecure minor caring institution, foster family home, or other shelter facility. (b) The officer or other person who brings a minor to a detention or shelter facility shall give notice to the court at once, stating the legal basis therefor and the reason why the minor was not released to the minor's parents. If the facility to which the minor is taken is not an agency of the court, the person in charge of the facility in which the minor is placed shall promptly give notice to the court that the minor is in that person's custody. Before acceptance of the minor for detention or shelter care, a prompt inquiry shall be made by a duly authorized staff member of the detention or shelter facility or officer of the court. Where it is deemed in the best interests of the minor, the judge, officer, staff member, or director of detention services may then order the minor to be released, if possible, to the care of the minor's parent, guardian, legal custodian, or other responsible adult, or the judge may order the minor held in the facility subject to further order or placed in some other appropriate facility. (c) As soon as a minor is detained, the minor's parents, guardian, or legal custodian shall be informed, by personal contact or by notice in writing on forms prescribed by the court, that they may have a prompt hearing held by a circuit judge or district family judge regarding release or detention. A minor may be released on the order of the judge with or without a hearing. The director of detention services may order the release of the minor if an order of detention has not been made. (d) No minor shall be held in a detention facility for juveniles or shelter longer than twenty-four hours, excluding weekends and holidays, unless a petition or motion for revocation of probation[,] or motion for revocation of protective supervision has been filed, or unless the judge orders otherwise after a court hearing. No ex parte motions shall be considered. [For the purposes of this section: (1) Unless a court finds, after a hearing and in writing, that it is in the interest of justice as provided for in subsection (g)(2), a minor believed to come within section 571-11(1), or a minor awaiting trial or another legal process, who is treated as an adult for purposes of prosecution in criminal court and housed in a secure facility shall not: (A) Have sight or sound contact with adult inmates; or (B) Be held in any jail or lockup for adults, except as provided in subsection (g)(3); and (2) Detention in a jail or lockup for adults may be permitted for: (A) A minor accused of a non-status offense who is held for a period not to exceed six hours; provided that the minor is being held: (i) For processing or release; (ii) While awaiting transfer to a juvenile facility; or (iii) For a court appearance that occurs within the period of detention; or (B) A minor accused of a non-status offense who is awaiting an initial court appearance that will occur within forty-eight hours of the minor being taken into custody, excluding weekends and holidays, and where the jail or lockup for adults is in a location: (i) Outside a metropolitan statistical area, as defined by the Office of Management and Budget, and no acceptable alternative placement is available; (ii) Where the distance to be traveled or the lack of highway, road, or transportation does not allow for court appearances within forty-eight hours, excluding weekends and holidays, such that a brief delay of no more than an additional forty-eight hours is excusable; or (iii) Where safety concerns exist, such as severe and life-threatening weather conditions that do not allow for reasonably safe travel, in which case the time for an appearance may be delayed until twenty-four hours after the time that conditions allow for reasonably safe travel; provided that the minor shall not have sight or sound contact with adult inmates; provided further that the State shall have a policy in effect that requires individuals who work with both minor and adult inmates in collocated facilities to be trained and certified to work with juveniles.] (e) No minor [may] shall be held after the filing of a petition or motion, as specified in subsection (d), unless an order for continued detention or shelter has been made by a judge after a court hearing. If there is probable cause to believe that the minor comes within section 571-11(1), the minor may be securely detained, following a court hearing, in a detention facility for juveniles or may be held in a shelter. If there is probable cause to believe that the minor comes within section 281-101.5 or 571-11(2), the minor may be held, following a court hearing, in a shelter but shall not be securely detained in a detention facility for juveniles for longer than twenty-four hours, excluding weekends and holidays, unless the minor is subject to the provisions of chapter 582, Interstate Compact on Juveniles, or chapter 582D, Interstate Compact for Juveniles, or is allegedly in or has already been adjudicated for a violation of a valid court order, as provided under the federal Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention Act of 1974, as amended. (f) No minor shall be released from detention except in accordance with this chapter. (g) When a minor is ordered to be held or detained by the court[: (1) Where a minor transferred for criminal proceedings pursuant to a waiver of family court jurisdiction is detained, the minor shall not: (A) Have sight or sound contact with adult inmates; or (B) Be held in any jail or lockup for adults, unless a court finds, after a hearing and in writing, that it is in the interest of justice; (2) In determining whether it is in the interest of justice to permit a minor to be held in any jail or lockup for adults, or to have sight or sound contact with adult inmates, a court shall consider: (A) The age of the minor; (B) The physical and mental maturity of the minor; (C) The present mental state of the minor, including whether the minor presents an imminent risk of self-harm; (D) The nature and circumstances of the alleged offense; (E) The minor's history of prior delinquent acts; (F) The relative ability of the available adult and juvenile detention facilities to meet the specific needs of the minor and protect the safety of the public as well as other detained minors; and (G) Any other relevant factor; and (3) If a court determines that it is in the interest of justice to permit a minor to be held in any jail or lockup for adults, or to have sight or sound contact with adult inmates: (A) The court shall hold a hearing no less frequently than once every thirty days, or in the case of a rural jurisdiction, no less frequently than once every forty-five days, to review whether it remains in the interest of justice to permit the minor to be held in a jail or lockup for adults or to have sight or sound contact with adult inmates; and (B) The minor shall not be held in any jail or lockup for adults, or permitted to have sight or sound contact with adult inmates, for more than one hundred eighty days, unless the court, in writing, determines there is good cause for an extension, or the minor expressly waives this limitation.] , the minor shall not be held in any jail, lockup, or prison for adults. (h) A minor may be placed in room confinement in a juvenile detention [or adult jail] facility only under the following conditions: (1) Room confinement may only be used as a temporary response to a minor's behavior, and only if: (A) The behavior poses an immediate and substantial risk of danger to the minor's self or another individual, or a serious and immediate threat to the safety and orderly operation of the facility; provided that any decision to hold a minor in room confinement due to a mental health emergency shall be made by a mental health professional and based upon the mental health professional's examination of the minor; or (B) The minor is an imminent escape risk; (2) Because of the potential impact on a minor's mental or physical health, room confinement may only be used for the minimum time necessary for the minor to regain self-control, and only after less restrictive options or techniques, including de-escalation, conflict and behavioral management techniques, and intervention by a mental health professional, have been attempted, exhausted, and failed; (3) If a minor is placed in room confinement, the reasons for the room confinement shall be explained to the minor. The minor shall also be informed that release from room confinement will occur immediately when the minor exhibits self-control and is no longer deemed a threat to the minor's safety or the safety of others; (4) If a minor is placed in room confinement, the following individuals shall be notified on the next business day and provided the reasons for the room confinement as well as the location and duration of the confinement: (A) The senior judge of the family court; (B) The presiding judge who ordered the minor to be held at the facility; (C) The deputy chief court administrator; and (D) The social services manager of the juvenile client services branch for the circuit court of the first circuit; (5) Room confinement shall not be used for purposes of punishment or disciplinary sanction, coercion, convenience, or retaliation, or to address staffing shortages at the facility; (6) A minor may be held in room confinement for no more than three hours unless the minor is a danger to themselves or another, or the on-call judge grants an extension of no more than three additional hours of confinement. Thereafter, the minor shall be returned to the general population; provided that if a minor is held in room confinement for more than three hours, a hearing shall be held before the family court on the next business day, at which time the minor shall be provided legal representation; (7) A minor shall not be returned to room confinement immediately after returning to the general population from room confinement for the purposes of evading the reporting requirements and room confinement restrictions pursuant to this section; (8) If the minor is not returned to the general population following a hearing pursuant to paragraph (6), the minor shall be transferred to a location where services may be provided to the minor without the need for room confinement; provided that if a mental health professional determines that the level of crisis service needed is not presently available at the location, the superintendent or deputy superintendent of the facility shall initiate a referral to a facility that can meet the needs of the minor; (9) All rooms used for room confinement shall have adequate and operational lighting, ventilation for the comfort of the minor, and shall be clean and resistant to suicide and self-harm; (10) The minor shall have access to drinking water, toilet facilities, hygiene supplies, and reading materials approved by a mental health professional; (11) The minor shall have the same access as provided to minors in the general population of the facility to meals, contact with parents or legal guardians, legal assistance, educational programs, and medical and mental health services; (12) The minor shall be continuously monitored by facility staff; and (13) The judiciary shall post quarterly on the judiciary's website a report of its detention center detailing their compliance with this section. Each report shall include: (A) The number of incidents of room confinement every year; (B) The number of minors impacted; (C) The age, gender identity, and race of minors impacted; (D) Any alternative strategies employed before the use of room confinement, the reasons those alternative strategies failed, and why room confinement was necessary; and (E) The incidence of mental illness. For the purposes of this subsection: "Mental health professional" means a qualified mental health professional or mental health professional supervised by a qualified mental health professional. "Room confinement" means the placement of a minor in a room, cell, or area with minimal or no contact with persons other than court staff and attorneys. "Room confinement" does not include confinement of a minor in a single-person room or cell for brief periods of locked room time as necessary for required institutional operations and does not include confinement during sleep hours. (i) Provisions regarding bail shall not be applicable to minors detained in accordance with this chapter[, except]; provided that bail may be allowed after a minor has been transferred for criminal prosecution pursuant to waiver of family court jurisdiction. [(j) The official in charge of a facility for the detention of adult offenders or persons charged with crime shall inform the court immediately when a minor who is or appears to be under eighteen years of age is received at the facility. (k)] (j) Any other provision of law to the contrary notwithstanding, any person otherwise subject to proceedings under chapter 832 and who is under the age of eighteen may be confined in a juvenile detention facility [or correctional facility] by order of a judge for the purposes set forth in section 832-12, 832-15, or 832-17. [(l)] (k) A minor may temporarily be held for processing or while in transit to court in an adult jail or lockup in a county that does not have a juvenile detention facility if the minor is: (1) Separated by sight and sound from adult inmates; and (2) Held no longer than is necessary to be transported to court or the nearest juvenile detention facility. The department of human services through the office of youth services shall certify police station cellblocks and community correctional centers that provide sight and sound separation between minors and adults in temporary secure custody[.] pursuant to this subsection. Only cellblocks and centers certified under this subsection shall be authorized to [detain] temporarily hold juveniles pursuant to [section 571-32(d).] this subsection. The office of youth services may develop sight and sound separation standards, issue certifications, monitor and inspect facilities for compliance, cite facilities for violations, withdraw certifications, and require certified facilities to submit data and information as requested. In addition, the office of youth services may monitor and inspect all cellblocks and centers for compliance with [section 571-32(d).] this subsection." SECTION 2. Statutory material to be repealed is bracketed and stricken. New statutory material is underscored. SECTION 3. This Act shall take effect on July 1, 3000.
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35-"(d) No minor shall be held in a detention facility for juveniles or shelter longer than twenty-four hours, excluding weekends and holidays, unless a petition or motion for revocation of probation[,] or motion for revocation of protective supervision has been filed, or unless the judge orders otherwise after a court hearing. No ex parte motions shall be considered. [For the purposes of this section:
49+ SECTION 1. Section 571-32, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended to read as follows:
50+
51+ "§571-32 Detention; shelter; release; notice. (a) If a minor who is believed to come within section 571-11(1) is not released as provided in section 571-31 and is not deemed suitable for diversion, then the minor shall be taken without unnecessary delay to the court or to the place of detention or shelter designated by the court. If a minor who is believed to come within section 571-11(2) is not released as provided in section 571-31, and is not deemed suitable for diversion, then the minor shall be taken without unnecessary delay to the court or to the place of shelter designated by the court. If the court determines that the minor requires care away from the minor's own home but does not require secure physical restriction, the minor shall be given temporary care in any available nonsecure minor caring institution, foster family home, or other shelter facility.
52+
53+ (b) The officer or other person who brings a minor to a detention or shelter facility shall give notice to the court at once, stating the legal basis therefor and the reason why the minor was not released to the minor's parents. If the facility to which the minor is taken is not an agency of the court, the person in charge of the facility in which the minor is placed shall promptly give notice to the court that the minor is in that person's custody. Before acceptance of the minor for detention or shelter care, a prompt inquiry shall be made by a duly authorized staff member of the detention or shelter facility or officer of the court. Where it is deemed in the best interests of the minor, the judge, officer, staff member, or director of detention services may then order the minor to be released, if possible, to the care of the minor's parent, guardian, legal custodian, or other responsible adult, or the judge may order the minor held in the facility subject to further order or placed in some other appropriate facility.
54+
55+ (c) As soon as a minor is detained, the minor's parents, guardian, or legal custodian shall be informed, by personal contact or by notice in writing on forms prescribed by the court, that they may have a prompt hearing held by a circuit judge or district family judge regarding release or detention. A minor may be released on the order of the judge with or without a hearing. The director of detention services may order the release of the minor if an order of detention has not been made.
56+
57+ (d) No minor shall be held in a detention facility for juveniles or shelter longer than twenty-four hours, excluding weekends and holidays, unless a petition or motion for revocation of probation[,] or motion for revocation of protective supervision has been filed, or unless the judge orders otherwise after a court hearing. No ex parte motions shall be considered. [For the purposes of this section:
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3759 (1) Unless a court finds, after a hearing and in writing, that it is in the interest of justice as provided for in subsection (g)(2), a minor believed to come within section 571-11(1), or a minor awaiting trial or another legal process, who is treated as an adult for purposes of prosecution in criminal court and housed in a secure facility shall not:
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3961 (A) Have sight or sound contact with adult inmates; or
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4163 (B) Be held in any jail or lockup for adults,
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4365 except as provided in subsection (g)(3); and
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4567 (2) Detention in a jail or lockup for adults may be permitted for:
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4769 (A) A minor accused of a non-status offense who is held for a period not to exceed six hours; provided that the minor is being held:
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4971 (i) For processing or release;
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5173 (ii) While awaiting transfer to a juvenile facility; or
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5375 (iii) For a court appearance that occurs within the period of detention; or
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5577 (B) A minor accused of a non-status offense who is awaiting an initial court appearance that will occur within forty-eight hours of the minor being taken into custody, excluding weekends and holidays, and where the jail or lockup for adults is in a location:
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5779 (i) Outside a metropolitan statistical area, as defined by the Office of Management and Budget, and no acceptable alternative placement is available;
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5981 (ii) Where the distance to be traveled or the lack of highway, road, or transportation does not allow for court appearances within forty-eight hours, excluding weekends and holidays, such that a brief delay of no more than an additional forty-eight hours is excusable; or
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6183 (iii) Where safety concerns exist, such as severe and life-threatening weather conditions that do not allow for reasonably safe travel, in which case the time for an appearance may be delayed until twenty-four hours after the time that conditions allow for reasonably safe travel;
6284
6385 provided that the minor shall not have sight or sound contact with adult inmates; provided further that the State shall have a policy in effect that requires individuals who work with both minor and adult inmates in collocated facilities to be trained and certified to work with juveniles.]
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65-(e) No minor [may] shall be held after the filing of a petition or motion, as specified in subsection (d), unless an order for continued detention or shelter has been made by a judge after a court hearing. If there is probable cause to believe that the minor comes within section 571-11(1), the minor may be securely detained, following a court hearing, in a detention facility for juveniles or may be held in a shelter. If there is probable cause to believe that the minor comes within section 281-101.5 or 571-11(2), the minor may be held, following a court hearing, in a shelter but shall not be securely detained in a detention facility for juveniles for longer than twenty-four hours, excluding weekends and holidays, unless the minor is subject to the provisions of chapter 582, Interstate Compact on Juveniles, or chapter 582D, Interstate Compact for Juveniles, or is allegedly in or has already been adjudicated for a violation of a valid court order, as provided under the federal Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention Act of 1974, as amended."
87+ (e) No minor [may] shall be held after the filing of a petition or motion, as specified in subsection (d), unless an order for continued detention or shelter has been made by a judge after a court hearing. If there is probable cause to believe that the minor comes within section 571-11(1), the minor may be securely detained, following a court hearing, in a detention facility for juveniles or may be held in a shelter. If there is probable cause to believe that the minor comes within section 281-101.5 or 571-11(2), the minor may be held, following a court hearing, in a shelter but shall not be securely detained in a detention facility for juveniles for longer than twenty-four hours, excluding weekends and holidays, unless the minor is subject to the provisions of chapter 582, Interstate Compact on Juveniles, or chapter 582D, Interstate Compact for Juveniles, or is allegedly in or has already been adjudicated for a violation of a valid court order, as provided under the federal Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention Act of 1974, as amended.
6688
67-2. By amending subsections (g) through (i) to read:
89+ (f) No minor shall be released from detention except in accordance with this chapter.
6890
69-"(g) When a minor is ordered to be held or detained by the court[:
91+ (g) When a minor is ordered to be held or detained by the court[:
7092
7193 (1) Where a minor transferred for criminal proceedings pursuant to a waiver of family court jurisdiction is detained, the minor shall not:
7294
7395 (A) Have sight or sound contact with adult inmates; or
7496
7597 (B) Be held in any jail or lockup for adults,
7698
7799 unless a court finds, after a hearing and in writing, that it is in the interest of justice;
78100
79101 (2) In determining whether it is in the interest of justice to permit a minor to be held in any jail or lockup for adults, or to have sight or sound contact with adult inmates, a court shall consider:
80102
81103 (A) The age of the minor;
82104
83105 (B) The physical and mental maturity of the minor;
84106
85107 (C) The present mental state of the minor, including whether the minor presents an imminent risk of self-harm;
86108
87109 (D) The nature and circumstances of the alleged offense;
88110
89111 (E) The minor's history of prior delinquent acts;
90112
91113 (F) The relative ability of the available adult and juvenile detention facilities to meet the specific needs of the minor and protect the safety of the public as well as other detained minors; and
92114
93115 (G) Any other relevant factor; and
94116
95117 (3) If a court determines that it is in the interest of justice to permit a minor to be held in any jail or lockup for adults, or to have sight or sound contact with adult inmates:
96118
97119 (A) The court shall hold a hearing no less frequently than once every thirty days, or in the case of a rural jurisdiction, no less frequently than once every forty-five days, to review whether it remains in the interest of justice to permit the minor to be held in a jail or lockup for adults or to have sight or sound contact with adult inmates; and
98120
99121 (B) The minor shall not be held in any jail or lockup for adults, or permitted to have sight or sound contact with adult inmates, for more than one hundred eighty days, unless the court, in writing, determines there is good cause for an extension, or the minor expressly waives this limitation.]
100122
101123 , the minor shall not be held in any jail, lockup, or prison for adults.
102124
103125 (h) A minor may be placed in room confinement in a juvenile detention [or adult jail] facility only under the following conditions:
104126
105127 (1) Room confinement may only be used as a temporary response to a minor's behavior, and only if:
106128
107129 (A) The behavior poses an immediate and substantial risk of danger to the minor's self or another individual, or a serious and immediate threat to the safety and orderly operation of the facility; provided that any decision to hold a minor in room confinement due to a mental health emergency shall be made by a mental health professional and based upon the mental health professional's examination of the minor; or
108130
109131 (B) The minor is an imminent escape risk;
110132
111133 (2) Because of the potential impact on a minor's mental or physical health, room confinement may only be used for the minimum time necessary for the minor to regain self-control, and only after less restrictive options or techniques, including de-escalation, conflict and behavioral management techniques, and intervention by a mental health professional, have been attempted, exhausted, and failed;
112134
113135 (3) If a minor is placed in room confinement, the reasons for the room confinement shall be explained to the minor. The minor shall also be informed that release from room confinement will occur immediately when the minor exhibits self-control and is no longer deemed a threat to the minor's safety or the safety of others;
114136
115137 (4) If a minor is placed in room confinement, the following individuals shall be notified on the next business day and provided the reasons for the room confinement as well as the location and duration of the confinement:
116138
117139 (A) The senior judge of the family court;
118140
119141 (B) The presiding judge who ordered the minor to be held at the facility;
120142
121143 (C) The deputy chief court administrator; and
122144
123145 (D) The social services manager of the juvenile client services branch for the circuit court of the first circuit;
124146
125147 (5) Room confinement shall not be used for purposes of punishment or disciplinary sanction, coercion, convenience, or retaliation, or to address staffing shortages at the facility;
126148
127149 (6) A minor may be held in room confinement for no more than three hours unless the minor is a danger to themselves or another, or the on-call judge grants an extension of no more than three additional hours of confinement. Thereafter, the minor shall be returned to the general population; provided that if a minor is held in room confinement for more than three hours, a hearing shall be held before the family court on the next business day, at which time the minor shall be provided legal representation;
128150
129151 (7) A minor shall not be returned to room confinement immediately after returning to the general population from room confinement for the purposes of evading the reporting requirements and room confinement restrictions pursuant to this section;
130152
131153 (8) If the minor is not returned to the general population following a hearing pursuant to paragraph (6), the minor shall be transferred to a location where services may be provided to the minor without the need for room confinement; provided that if a mental health professional determines that the level of crisis service needed is not presently available at the location, the superintendent or deputy superintendent of the facility shall initiate a referral to a facility that can meet the needs of the minor;
132154
133155 (9) All rooms used for room confinement shall have adequate and operational lighting, ventilation for the comfort of the minor, and shall be clean and resistant to suicide and self-harm;
134156
135157 (10) The minor shall have access to drinking water, toilet facilities, hygiene supplies, and reading materials approved by a mental health professional;
136158
137159 (11) The minor shall have the same access as provided to minors in the general population of the facility to meals, contact with parents or legal guardians, legal assistance, educational programs, and medical and mental health services;
138160
139161 (12) The minor shall be continuously monitored by facility staff; and
140162
141163 (13) The judiciary shall post quarterly on the judiciary's website a report of its detention center detailing their compliance with this section. Each report shall include:
142164
143165 (A) The number of incidents of room confinement every year;
144166
145167 (B) The number of minors impacted;
146168
147169 (C) The age, gender identity, and race of minors impacted;
148170
149171 (D) Any alternative strategies employed before the use of room confinement, the reasons those alternative strategies failed, and why room confinement was necessary; and
150172
151173 (E) The incidence of mental illness.
152174
153175 For the purposes of this subsection:
154176
155177 "Mental health professional" means a qualified mental health professional or mental health professional supervised by a qualified mental health professional.
156178
157179 "Room confinement" means the placement of a minor in a room, cell, or area with minimal or no contact with persons other than court staff and attorneys. "Room confinement" does not include confinement of a minor in a single-person room or cell for brief periods of locked room time as necessary for required institutional operations and does not include confinement during sleep hours.
158180
159-(i) Provisions regarding bail shall not be applicable to minors detained in accordance with this chapter[, except]; provided that bail may be allowed after a minor has been transferred for criminal prosecution pursuant to waiver of family court jurisdiction."
181+ (i) Provisions regarding bail shall not be applicable to minors detained in accordance with this chapter[, except]; provided that bail may be allowed after a minor has been transferred for criminal prosecution pursuant to waiver of family court jurisdiction.
160182
161-3. By amending subsections (k) and (l) to read:
183+ [(j) The official in charge of a facility for the detention of adult offenders or persons charged with crime shall inform the court immediately when a minor who is or appears to be under eighteen years of age is received at the facility.
162184
163-"(k) Any other provision of law to the contrary notwithstanding, any person otherwise subject to proceedings under chapter 832 and who is under the age of eighteen may be confined in a juvenile detention facility [or correctional facility] by order of a judge for the purposes set forth in section 832-12, 832-15, or 832-17.
185+ (k)] (j) Any other provision of law to the contrary notwithstanding, any person otherwise subject to proceedings under chapter 832 and who is under the age of eighteen may be confined in a juvenile detention facility [or correctional facility] by order of a judge for the purposes set forth in section 832-12, 832-15, or 832-17.
164186
165-(l) A minor may temporarily be held for processing or while in transit to court in an adult jail or lockup in a county that does not have a juvenile detention facility if the minor is:
187+ [(l)] (k) A minor may temporarily be held for processing or while in transit to court in an adult jail or lockup in a county that does not have a juvenile detention facility if the minor is:
166188
167189 (1) Separated by sight and sound from adult inmates; and
168190
169191 (2) Held no longer than is necessary to be transported to court or the nearest juvenile detention facility.
170192
171193 The department of human services through the office of youth services shall certify police station cellblocks and community correctional centers that provide sight and sound separation between minors and adults in temporary secure custody[.] pursuant to this subsection. Only cellblocks and centers certified under this subsection shall be authorized to [detain] temporarily hold juveniles pursuant to [section 571-32(d).] this subsection. The office of youth services may develop sight and sound separation standards, issue certifications, monitor and inspect facilities for compliance, cite facilities for violations, withdraw certifications, and require certified facilities to submit data and information as requested. In addition, the office of youth services may monitor and inspect all cellblocks and centers for compliance with [section 571-32(d).] this subsection."
172194
173195 SECTION 2. Statutory material to be repealed is bracketed and stricken. New statutory material is underscored.
174196
175-SECTION 3. This Act shall take effect upon its approval.
197+ SECTION 3. This Act shall take effect on July 1, 3000.
176198
177-Report Title: Minors; Detention; Adult Correctional Facilities; Prohibition Description: Prohibits minors from being held in jails, lockups, or prisons for adults, except temporarily under certain circumstances. (CD1) The summary description of legislation appearing on this page is for informational purposes only and is not legislation or evidence of legislative intent.
199+ Report Title: Minors; Detention; Adult Correctional Facilities; Prohibition Description: Prohibits minors from being held in jails, lockups, or prisons for adults, except temporarily under certain circumstances. Effective 7/1/3000. (HD1) The summary description of legislation appearing on this page is for informational purposes only and is not legislation or evidence of legislative intent.
200+
201+
202+
203+
178204
179205 Report Title:
180206
181207 Minors; Detention; Adult Correctional Facilities; Prohibition
182208
209+
210+
183211 Description:
184212
185-Prohibits minors from being held in jails, lockups, or prisons for adults, except temporarily under certain circumstances. (CD1)
213+Prohibits minors from being held in jails, lockups, or prisons for adults, except temporarily under certain circumstances. Effective 7/1/3000. (HD1)
214+
215+
216+
217+
218+
219+
186220
187221 The summary description of legislation appearing on this page is for informational purposes only and is not legislation or evidence of legislative intent.