Montana 2025 2025 Regular Session

Montana House Bill HB612 Enrolled / Bill

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69th Legislature 2025 	HB 612
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ENROLLED BILL
AN ACT PROVIDING IF A SENTENCE IS REVOKED THE NEW SENTENCE MUST RUN CONSECUTIVELY 
TO ANY EXISTING SENTENCE UNLESS THE ORIGINAL SENTENCE RAN CONCURRENTLY; AND 
AMENDING SECTIONS 46-18-203 AND 46-18-401, MCA.”
BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF MONTANA:
Section 1. Section 46-18-203, MCA, is amended to read:
"46-18-203. 
revocation showing probable cause that the offender has violated any condition of a sentence, any condition of 
a deferred imposition of sentence, or any condition of supervision after release from imprisonment imposed 
pursuant to 45-5-503(4), 45-5-507(5), 45-5-601(3), 45-5-625(4), or 45-5-711, the judge may issue an order for a 
hearing on revocation. The order must require the offender to appear at a specified time and place for the 
hearing and be served by delivering a copy of the petition and order to the offender personally. The judge may 
also issue an arrest warrant directing any peace officer or a probation and parole officer to arrest the offender 
and bring the offender before the court.
(2) The petition for a revocation must be filed with the sentencing court either before the period of 
suspension or deferral has begun or during the period of suspension or deferral but not after the period has 
expired. Expiration of the period of suspension or deferral after the petition is filed does not deprive the court of 
its jurisdiction to rule on the petition.
(3) The provisions pertaining to bail, as set forth in Title 46, chapter 9, are applicable to persons 
arrested pursuant to this section.
(4) Without unnecessary delay and no more than 60 days after arrest, the offender must be 
brought before the judge, and at least 10 days prior to the hearing the offender must be advised of:
(a) the allegations of the petition; **** 
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ENROLLED BILL
(b) the opportunity to appear and to present evidence in the offender's own behalf;
(c) the opportunity to question adverse witnesses; and
(d) the right to be represented by counsel at the revocation hearing pursuant to Title 46, chapter 8, 
part 1.
(5) A hearing is required before a suspended or deferred sentence can be revoked or the terms or 
conditions of the sentence can be modified unless:
(a) the offender admits the allegations and waives the right to a hearing; or
(b) the relief to be granted is favorable to the offender and the prosecutor, after having been given 
notice of the proposed relief and a reasonable opportunity to object, has not objected. An extension of the term 
of probation is not favorable to the offender for the purposes of this subsection (5)(b).
(6) (a) At the hearing, the prosecution shall prove, by a preponderance of the evidence, that there 
has been a violation of:
(i) the terms and conditions of the suspended or deferred sentence; or
(ii) a condition of supervision after release from imprisonment imposed pursuant to 45-5-503(4), 
45-5-507(5), 45-5-601(3), 45-5-625(4), or 45-5-711.
(b) However, when a failure to pay restitution is the basis for the petition, the offender may excuse 
the violation by showing sufficient evidence that the failure to pay restitution was not attributable to a failure on 
the offender's part to make a good faith effort to obtain sufficient means to make the restitution payments as 
ordered.
(7) (a) If the judge finds that the offender has violated the terms and conditions of the suspended 
or deferred sentence by committing either compliance violations or noncompliance violations, or both, the judge 
may:
(i) continue the suspended or deferred sentence without a change in conditions;
(ii) continue the suspended sentence with modified or additional terms and conditions, which may 
include placement in:
(A) a secure facility designated by the department for up to 9 months; or
(B) a community corrections facility or program designated by the department for up to 9 months, 
including but not limited to placement in a prerelease center, sanction or hold bed, transitional living program,  **** 
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enhanced supervision program, relapse intervention bed, chemical dependency treatment, or 24/7 sobriety 
program;
(iii) revoke the suspension of sentence and require the offender to serve either the sentence 
imposed or any sentence that could have been imposed that does not include a longer imprisonment or 
commitment term than the original sentence. A sentence imposed upon revocation must run consecutively to 
any other previously existing sentence unless the suspended or deferred sentence that is being revoked ran 
concurrently to the previously existing sentence; or.
(iv) if the sentence was deferred, impose any sentence that might have been originally imposed.
(b) If a suspended or deferred sentence is revoked, the judge shall consider any elapsed time, 
consult the records and recollection of the probation and parole officer, and allow all of the elapsed time served 
without any record or recollection of violations as a credit against the sentence. If the judge determines that 
elapsed time should not be credited, the judge shall state the reasons for the determination in the order. Credit 
must be allowed for time served in a detention center or for home arrest time already served.
(c) If the judge finds that the offender has not violated a term or condition of a suspended or 
deferred sentence, the judge is not prevented from setting, modifying, or adding conditions of probation as 
provided in 46-23-1011.
(8) If the judge finds that the prosecution has not proved, by a preponderance of the evidence, that 
there has been a violation of the terms and conditions of the suspended or deferred sentence, the petition must 
be dismissed and the offender, if in custody, must be immediately released.
(9) All sanction and placement decisions must be documented in the offender's file.
(10) As used in this section:
(a) "absconding" means when an offender deliberately makes the offender's whereabouts 
unknown to a probation and parole officer or fails to report for the purposes of avoiding supervision, and 
reasonable efforts by the probation and parole officer to locate the offender have been unsuccessful; and
(b) "compliance violation" means a violation of the conditions of supervision that is not:
(i) a new criminal offense;
(ii) possession of a firearm in violation of a condition of probation;
(iii) behavior by the offender or any person acting at the offender's direction that could be  **** 
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considered stalking, harassing, or threatening the victim of the offense or a member of the victim's immediate 
family or support network;
(iv) absconding; or
(v) failure to enroll in or complete a required sex offender treatment program or a treatment 
program designed to treat violent offenders.
(11) The provisions of this section apply to any offender whose suspended or deferred sentence is 
subject to revocation regardless of the date of the offender's conviction and regardless of the terms and 
conditions of the offender's original sentence."
Section 2. Section 46-18-401, MCA, is amended to read:
"46-18-401. 
(a) whenever a person serving a term of commitment imposed by a court in this state is committed 
for another offense, the shorter term or shorter remaining term may not be merged in the other term; and
(b) whenever a person under suspended sentence or on probation for an offense committed in this 
state is sentenced for another offense, the period still to be served on suspended sentence or probation may 
not be merged in any new sentence of commitment or probation.
(2) The court, whether or not it merges the sentences, shall immediately furnish each of the other 
courts and the penal institutions in which the defendant is confined under sentence with authenticated copies of 
its sentence, which must cite any sentence that is merged.
(3) If an unexpired sentence is merged pursuant to subsection (1), the court that imposed the 
sentence shall modify it in accordance with the effect of the merger.
(4) Separate sentences for two or more offenses must run consecutively unless the court 
otherwise orders.
(5) If a sentence is revoked pursuant to 46-18-203, the sentence imposed upon revocation must 
run consecutively to any other previously existing sentence unless the suspended or deferred sentence that is 
being revoked ran concurrently to the previously existing sentence."
- END - I hereby certify that the within bill,
HB 612, originated in the House.
___________________________________________
Chief Clerk of the House 
___________________________________________
Speaker of the House 
Signed this _______________________________day
of____________________________________, 2025.
___________________________________________
President of the Senate
Signed this _______________________________day
of____________________________________, 2025. HOUSE BILL NO. 612
INTRODUCED BY G. OVERSTREET
AN ACT PROVIDING IF A SENTENCE IS REVOKED THE NEW SENTENCE MUST RUN CONSECUTIVELY 
TO ANY EXISTING SENTENCE UNLESS THE ORIGINAL SENTENCE RAN CONCURRENTLY; AND 
AMENDING SECTIONS 46-18-203 AND 46-18-401, MCA.”