Pennsylvania 2025 2025-2026 Regular Session

Pennsylvania Senate Bill SB136 Introduced / Bill

                     
PRINTER'S NO. 136 
THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF PENNSYLVANIA
SENATE BILL 
No.136 
Session of 
2025 
INTRODUCED BY STREET, SAVAL, KEARNEY, HUGHES, TARTAGLIONE, 
COSTA, HAYWOOD, KANE AND SCHWANK, JANUARY 29, 2025 
REFERRED TO JUDICIARY, JANUARY 29, 2025 
AN ACT
Amending Titles 42 (Judiciary and Judicial Procedure) and 61 
(Prisons and Parole) of the Pennsylvania Consolidated 
Statutes, in sentencing, repealing provisions relating to 
transfer of inmates in need of medical treatment; and, in 
Pennsylvania Board of Probation and Parole, providing for 
parole for reasons of age or illness and for medical parole 
due to public or disaster emergency related to health or 
contagious disease outbreak.
The General Assembly of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania 
hereby enacts as follows:
Section 1.  Section 9777 of Title 42 of the Pennsylvania 
Consolidated Statutes is repealed:
[§ 9777.  Transfer of inmates in need of medical treatment.
(a)  Inmates committed to custody of department.--If an 
inmate is committed to the custody of the department, the 
department, the inmate or a person to whom the court grants 
standing to act on behalf of the inmate may petition the 
sentencing court to temporarily defer service of the sentence of 
confinement and temporarily remove the inmate committed to the 
custody of the department, or other facility, for placement in a 
hospital, long-term care nursing facility or hospice care 
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21 location. The following shall apply:
(1)  The sentencing court may approve the petitioner's 
request to temporarily defer service of the sentence of 
confinement and place the inmate in a hospital or long-term 
care nursing facility under electronic monitoring by the 
department upon clear and convincing proof that all of the 
following apply:
(i)  The medical needs of the inmate can be more 
appropriately addressed in the hospital or long-term care 
nursing facility.
(ii)  The hospital or long-term care nursing facility 
requested by the petitioner has agreed to accept the 
placement of the inmate and to provide necessary medical 
care.
(iii)  The inmate is seriously ill and is expected by 
a treating physician to not live for more than one year.
(iv)  There are no writs filed or detainers lodged 
against the inmate and the inmate is not subject to any 
court order requiring the inmate's presence.
(v)  The placement in the hospital or long-term care 
nursing facility does not pose an undue risk of escape or 
danger to the community. In making this determination, 
the sentencing court shall consider the inmate's 
institutional conduct record, whether the inmate was ever 
convicted of a crime of violence, the length of time that 
the inmate has been imprisoned and any other factors the 
sentencing court deems relevant.
(vi)  The hospital or long-term care nursing facility 
has agreed to notify the department and the court of any 
material changes in the health status of the inmate, the 
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30 nature of the care provided or other information required 
by the department.
(vii)  Each agency representing the Commonwealth at a 
proceeding which resulted in an order committing or 
detaining the inmate, the State or local correctional 
facility housing the inmate and any registered crime 
victim have been given notice and an opportunity to be 
heard on the petition.
(2)  The sentencing court may approve the petitioner's 
request to temporarily defer service of the sentence of 
confinement in order for the inmate to receive care from a 
licensed hospice care provider, proposed by the petitioner 
and subject to electronic monitoring by the department, if 
all of the following are established by clear and convincing 
proof:
(i)  The inmate is terminally ill, not ambulatory and 
likely to die in the near future.
(ii)  The licensed hospice care provider can provide 
the inmate with more appropriate care.
(iii)  Appropriate medical care and palliative and 
supportive services will be provided by the licensed 
hospice care provider at the proposed hospice care 
location.
(iv)  The placement of the inmate in the proposed, 
licensed hospice care location does not pose an undue 
risk of escape or danger to the community. In making this 
determination, the sentencing court shall consider the 
inmate's institutional conduct record, whether the inmate 
was ever convicted of a crime of violence, the length of 
time that the inmate has been imprisoned and any other 
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30 factors the sentencing court deems relevant.
(v)  The licensed hospice care provider has agreed to 
notify the department and the sentencing court of any 
material changes in the health status of the inmate, the 
nature of the hospice care provided or other information 
required by the department or the sentencing court.
(vi)  Each agency representing the Commonwealth at a 
proceeding which resulted in an order committing or 
detaining the inmate, the State or local correctional 
facility housing the inmate and any registered crime 
victim have been given notice and an opportunity to be 
heard on the petition.
(3)  Any order entered pursuant to this subsection 
temporarily deferring service of an inmate's sentence of 
confinement shall include a provision that the department or 
prosecuting attorney may at any time petition the sentencing 
court for an order directing that the inmate be recommitted 
to the custody of the department if the circumstances under 
which the inmate was released change or for any previously 
unknown circumstances, including a change in the inmate's 
medical status, the inmate's risk of escape, the inmate's 
danger to the community or the nature of the medical or other 
care provided by the hospital, long-term care nursing 
facility or hospice care provider.
(4)  The sentencing court may terminate at any time its 
order authorizing the temporary deferral of the service of an 
inmate's sentence of confinement entered pursuant to this 
subsection. An inmate taken into custody pursuant to an order 
directing the inmate's detention or recommitment under this 
subsection shall be delivered to the nearest State 
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30 correctional institution pending a hearing on the matter.
(b)  Inmates committed to custody of other facilities.--An 
inmate not committed to the custody of the department but 
confined in an institution authorized to incarcerate or detain 
persons for criminal sentences, violations of criminal law or 
orders of parole, probation, bail or other order related to a 
civil or criminal matter may have service of the sentence of 
confinement deferred and may be placed in a hospital, long-term 
care nursing facility or licensed hospice care location, subject 
to electronic monitoring, by order of the judge that committed 
the inmate to the facility or institution or by another 
available judge designated to preside if all of the following 
are established by clear and convincing proof:
(1)  The chief administrator, the chief administrator's 
designee, the inmate or a person to whom the court grants 
standing to act on behalf of the inmate petitions the court 
or has given written consent to the grant of a petition under 
this section filed on behalf of the inmate.
(2)  There is sufficient proof to establish the 
requirements for a placement to a hospital or long-term care 
nursing facility under subsection (a)(1) or a placement to a 
hospice care location under subsection (a)(2).
(3)  An entry of an order pursuant to this subsection 
temporarily deferring service of an inmate's sentence of 
confinement shall include a provision that the chief 
administrator or the prosecuting attorney may at any time 
petition the sentencing court seeking the issuance of a bench 
warrant directing that the inmate be recommitted to the 
custody of the appropriate correctional institution if the 
circumstances under which the inmate was released change or 
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30 for previously unknown circumstances, including a change in 
the inmate's medical status, the inmate's risk of escape, the 
inmate's danger to the community or the nature of the medical 
or other care provided by the hospital, long-term care 
nursing facility or hospice care provider.
(4)  The sentencing court may terminate at any time its 
order authorizing the temporary deferral of the service of an 
inmate's sentence of confinement entered pursuant to this 
subsection. An inmate taken into custody pursuant to an order 
directing detention or recommitment under this subsection 
shall be delivered to the county correctional institution or 
other institution at which the inmate was confined prior to 
the entry of the order deferring the service of the sentence 
of confinement pending a hearing on the matter.
(c)  Service.--Any petition filed under this section shall be 
served on each agency representing the Commonwealth at each 
proceeding which resulted in an order by which the inmate is 
committed or detained and to the correctional institution or 
institution responsible for housing the inmate. Each party shall 
have an opportunity to object and be heard as to the petition 
for alternative placement, the circumstances of placement, the 
conditions of return or any other relevant issue. The court 
shall ensure that any crime victim entitled to notification 
under section 201(7) or (8) of the act of November 24, 1998 
(P.L.882, No.111), known as the Crime Victims Act, has been 
given notice and the opportunity to be heard on the petition. 
All parties served or notified under this subsection shall 
receive a copy of the final order adjudicating the petition.
(d)  Notice.--
(1)  Any order entered under this section placing an 
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30 inmate in a hospital, long-term care nursing facility or 
hospice care location which provides care to persons who were 
not placed therein pursuant to an order entered under this 
section shall direct the individual in charge of the 
hospital, long-term care nursing facility or hospice care 
location to ensure that each person receiving care at, and 
each employee or contractor working in, the hospital, long-
term care nursing facility or hospice care location is 
notified that the placement was ordered if it is foreseeable 
that the person, employee or contractor will come into 
contact with the inmate during the placement.
(2)  The sentencing court shall forward notice of any 
order entered under this section placing an inmate in a 
hospital, long-term care nursing facility or hospice care 
location to the hospital, long-term care nursing facility or 
hospice care location and to the Department of Human 
Services.
(e)  Petition requirements.--Any petition filed pursuant to 
this section must aver:
(1)  The name of the hospital, long-term care nursing 
facility or hospice care location proposed for placement.
(2)  That the petitioner reasonably believes the named 
hospital, long-term care nursing facility or hospice care 
location has agreed to accept the placement of the inmate and 
the facts upon which that belief is based.
(f)  Removal from placement.--If an inmate placed in a 
hospital, long-term care nursing facility or hospice care 
location pursuant to this chapter removes himself from the 
hospital, long-term care nursing facility or hospice care 
location, the inmate shall be subject to arrest upon probable 
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30 cause and shall, upon conviction thereof, be guilty of criminal 
contempt.
(g)  Definitions.--As used in this section, the following 
words and phrases shall have the meanings given to them in this 
subsection unless the context clearly indicates otherwise:
"Chief administrator."  As defined under 61 Pa.C.S. § 102 
(relating to definitions).
"Department."  The Department of Corrections of the 
Commonwealth.
"Hospice care location."  A home, independent living 
environment or inpatient setting that provides a coordinated 
program of palliative and supportive services through a licensed 
hospice care provider.
"Hospital."  An entity licensed as an acute-care general 
hospital, a specialty hospital or a rehabilitation hospital 
under the act of July 19, 1979 (P.L.130, No.48), known as the 
Health Care Facilities Act.
"Licensed hospice care provider."  A hospice as defined under 
section 802.1 of the act of July 19, 1979 (P.L.130, No.48), 
known as the Health Care Facilities Act.
"Long-term care nursing facility."  A long-term care nursing 
facility as defined under section 802.1 of the act of July 19, 
1979 (P.L.130, No.48), known as the Health Care Facilities Act.
"Prosecuting attorney."  The Office of Attorney General of 
the Commonwealth or the office of a district attorney of a 
county who represented the Commonwealth at the most recent 
sentencing of an inmate.
"Sentencing court."  The trial judge who most recently 
sentenced an inmate or, if the trial judge is no longer serving 
as a judge of that court, the president judge of the county 
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30 court of common pleas. ]
Section 2.  Title 61 is amended by adding sections to read:
§ 6144.  Parole for reasons of age or illness.
(a)   Eligibility.-- 	N otwithstanding any other provision of 
law, the board may grant parole to an incarcerated individual 
upon petition by the department or the incarcerated individual 
if any of the following apply:
(1)   The incarcerated individual has a substantially  
diminished ability to function in a correctional institution 
due to any of the following 	: 
(i)  A terminal illness.
(ii)  A chronic and debilitating physical or medical 
condition or disease.
(iii)  A serious functional or cognitive impairment.
(iv)  Deteriorating physical or mental health due to 
the aging process.
(2)  All of the following criteria are met:
(i)  The incarcerated individual is at l 	east 55 years 
of age and has served the lesser of 25 years in prison or 
one-half of the minimum term imposed for the   offense  for  
which the incarcerated individual is currently 
imprisoned.
(ii)  The board   determines that the incarcerated  
individual would not presently pose a danger to others   or  
the general public if released.
(b)  Medical records.--The medical records of an incarcerated 
individual shall be made readily available to the incarcerated 
individual for purposes of filing a petition under subsection 
(a).
(c)  Department notification.--If the petition for parole is 
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30 filed by the incarcerated individual under subsection (a), the 
incarcerated individual shall provide a copy of the petition to 
the department within seven business days of filing the 
petition.
(d)  Victim notification.--W 	ithin three business days of  
receiving an incarcerated individual's petition for parole or of 
the department's filing of a petition for parole on behalf of an 
incarcerated individual under subsection (a), the board shall, 
subject to any applicable confidentiality requirements, take all 
of the following actions:
(1)  Notify the Office of Victim Advocate and any 
registered victim of the incarcerated individual's offense of 
the petition and the general reasons for the petition.
(2)  Provide the Office of Victim Advocate and any 
registered victims of the incarcerated individual an 
opportunity to respond within seven days in writing to the 
board.
(e)  Attorney and family notification.--
(1)  No later than 72 hours after an incarcerated 
individual is diagnosed with a   terminal illness, the  
department shall, subject to any applicable confidentiality 
requirements, take all of the following actions:
(i)  Notify the attorney, spouse or partner or an 
immediate family member of the incarcerated individual of 
the incarcerated individual's condition.
(ii)  Inform the attorney, spouse or partner or an 
immediate family member of the incarcerated individual 
that the attorney, spouse or partner or immediate family 
member may prepare and submit on the incarcerated 
individual's behalf a petition for parole in accordance 
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30 with subsection (a).
(iii)  Provide the incarcerated individual's medical 
records to the incarcerated individual and the attorney, 
spouse or partner or an immediate family member of the 
incarcerated individual.
(2)  No later than seven days after the date an 
incarcerated individual is diagnosed with a terminal illness, 
the department shall provide the spouse or partner and family 
members of the incarcerated individual, including extended 
family, with an opportunity to visit the incarcerated 
individual in  person unless compelling reasons exist for  
denying visitation and the reasons are provided in writing.
(3)  U p on request from an incarcerated individual or the  
attorney, spouse or partner or a family member of the 
incarcerated individual, the department shall ensure that 
department employees assist the incarcerated individual in 
the preparation, drafting and submission of a petition for 
parole in accordance with subsection (a). In the case of an 
incarcerated individual who is physically or mentally unable 
to prepare or file a petition for parole under subsection 
(a) , the department shall have all of the following duties: 
(i)  Inform the attorney, spouse or partner or an 
immediate family member of the incarcerated individual 
that the attorney, spouse or partner or immediate family 
member may prepare and submit on the incarcerated 
individual's behalf a petition for parole under 
subsection (a) 	. 
(ii)  Upo n request from the incarcerated individual  
or the attorney, spouse or partner or an immediate family 
member of the incarcerated individual, take all of the 
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30 following actions:
(A)  Ensu re that  department employees assist the  
incarcerated individual in the preparation, drafting 
and submission of a petition for parole under 
subsection (a).
(B)  With in three days of the request, provide  
the incarcerated individual's medical records to the 
incarcerated individual and the attorney, spouse or 
partner or an immediate family member of the 
incarcerated individual.
(4)  The department shall ensure that employees at all 
correctional institutions regularly and visibly post, 
including an incarcerated individual's handbook, staff 
training materials, law libraries and medical and hospice 
facilities, and make available to incarcerated individuals 
upon demand, notice of all of the following:
(i)  A n incarcerated individual's right to petition  
for parole under subsection (a).
(ii)  The procedures and deadlines for initiating and 
resolving petitions made under this subsection and 
subsections (d) and (f).
(f)  Duties of board.--
(1)  Within two days of receipt of a petition for parole 
under subsection (a), the board shall notify the secretary of 
the receipt of the petition and offer the secretary an 
opportunity to make a recommendation on the petition. No 
later than 10 days after receipt of notice that the board has 
received a petition, the secretary may offer a recommendation 
in writing to the board.
(2)   The board shall issue a decision on a petition for  
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30 parole under subsection (a) and state the reasons for the 
decision as follows:
(i)  Within 15 days for a petition made based on the 
criteria under subsection (a)(1).
(ii)  Within 30 days for a petition made based on the 
criteria under subsection (a)(2).
(3)  The board shall immediately provide a copy of the 
decision under paragraph (2) to all of the following:
(i)  The incarcerated individual.
(ii)  The incarcerated individual's attorney.
(iii)  The Office of Victim Advocate and any 
registered victim of the incarcerated individual's 
offense.
(iv)  The secretary.
(4)  T he board shall, when issuing a decision on the  
petition under paragraph (2), consider all of the following:
(i)  A response to the petition by the Office of
Victim Advocate and any registered victim of the 
incarcerated individual's offense.
(ii)  Recommendations by the secretary, if any.
(iii)  The incarcerated individual's offense that 
resulted in the conviction.
(iv)  The incarcerated individual's sentence and time 
served for the conviction.
(v)   The incarcerated individual's current age,  
physical and mental condition and ability to function 
within a correctional environment.
(vi)   The incarcerated individual's postrelease care  
plan if a plan exists.
(vii)   The incarcerated individual's disciplinary  
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30 record, a full set of records of accomplishments and any 
records demonstrating rehabilitation while incarcerated.
(viii)  The likelihood that the incarcerated 
individual would pose a danger to others or the general 
public if released.
(5)  In  granting parole under paragraph (2), the board  
may impose any reasonable terms and conditions of parole 
specifically tailored to the circumstances relating to the 
sentence that is the least restrictive of the incarcerated 
individual's individual liberty.
(g)  Denial of petition.--If the board denies a petition for 
parole under subsection (f):
(1)  The incarcerated individual may file a State court 
habeas corpus petition challenging the denial. The court 
shall act upon a petition by holding a hearing within 60 days 
of receipt of the petition.
(2)  The incarcerated individual or the department may 
submit another petition for parole under subsection (a) for 
reconsideration by the board:
(i)  within 30 days of receipt of notice of the 
denial; or
(ii)  if the incarcerated individual's medical 
condition demonstrably worsens.
(3)  In addition to paragraphs (1) and (2), the 
incarcerated individual or the department may submit another 
petition for parole under subsection (a) one year after the 
date that the initial petition was filed.
(h)  Right to counsel.--An incarcerated individual who 
submits a petition under subsection (a) or (g)(2) shall have the 
right to assistance of counsel, including appointment of counsel 
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30 if the incarcerated individual is indigent, for proceedings in 
front of the board and for any State court habeas petition filed 
under subsection (g).
(i)  Reports.--No later than September 1, 2025, and each 
September 1 thereafter, the secretary   shall submit to the  
chairperson and minority chairperson of the Judiciary Committee 
of the  Senate  and the chairperson and minority chairperson of  
the Judiciary Committee of the   House of Representatives   a report 
on petitions for parole under subsection (a) and shall make the 
report available on the department's publicly accessible 
Internet website. The report shall include a description of all 
of the following for the previous year:
(1)  T he number of incarcerated individuals granted and  
denied parole, categorized by the criteria relied on as the 
grounds for parole.
(2)  The number of petitions initiated by or on behalf of 
incarcerated individuals, categorized by the criteria relied 
on as the grounds for parole.
(3)  Th e number of petitions that department 
employees  assisted incarcerated individuals in drafting,  
preparing or filing, categorized by the criteria relied on as 
the grounds for parole, and the final decision made in each 
petition.
(4)  T he number of petitions that attorneys, spouses or  
partners and immediate family members of incarcerated 
individuals submitted on behalf of the incarcerated 
individuals, categorized by the criteria relied on as the 
grounds for parole, and the final decision made in each 
petition.
(5)  T he number of petitions filed by the department,  
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30 categorized by the criteria relied on as the grounds for 
parole, and the final decision made in each petition 	. 
(6)  For  each petition filed by the department based on  
the criteria under subsection (a)(1), the time elapsed 
between the date the incarcerated individual was diagnosed 
and the date the department filed the petition, categorized 
by the criteria relied on as the grounds for parole, and the 
final decision made in each petition.
(7)  For each criteria  	specified under subsection (a),  
the number of incarcerated individuals who died while a 
petition for parole was pending.
(8)  The number of  notifications by the department to  
attorneys, spouses or partners and family members of 
incarcerated individuals of their right to visit terminally 
ill incarcerated individuals as required under subsection (e)
(2), whether visits occurred and how much time elapsed 
between the notifications and the visits.
(9)  The nu mber of visits to terminally ill incarcerated  
individuals that were denied by the department due to 
security or other concerns and the reasons given for the 
denials.
(j)  Regulations.--The board and the department shall 
promulgate regulations necessary to implement the provisions of 
this section.
(k)  Definitions.--As used in this section, the following 
words and phrases shall have the meanings given to them in this 
subsection unless the context clearly indicates otherwise:
"Chronic and debilitating physical or medical condition or 
disease."  A  medical condition that is persistent or permanent,  
requires medication or ongoing care from a physician or impairs 
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30 a person's ability to perform routine daily tasks or self-care.
"Deteriorating physical or mental health."  A loss of 
mobility in the limbs or body, an inability to walk without 
assistance, incontinence, forgetfulness or disorientation, an 
inability to perform routine daily tasks or self-care without 
assistance or supervision or a similar health issue.
"Serious functional or cognitive impairment."  A c 	ondition 
that is persistent or permanent and limits the incarcerated 
individual's ability to reason, perceive, comprehend or 
communicate. The term includes, but is not limited to, 
intellectual disability, mental illness, dementia or brain 
damage from injury or stroke.
"Substantially diminished."  The incarcerated individual is 
unable or only partially able to perform one or more essential 
daily tasks or self-care without partial or total assistance or 
supervision.
"T erminal illness."  A  	disease or condition with an end-of- 
life trajectory, with or without a specific prognosis of life 
expectancy. The term includes metastatic solid-tumor cancer, 
amyotrophic lateral  sclerosis, en 	d-stage organ disease, advanced  
dementia or a similar disease or condition.
§ 6145.  Medical parole due to public or disaster emergency 
related to health or contagious disease outbreak.
If a public or disaster emergency related to health is 
declared or a contagious disease outbreak occurs in a department 
facility which the facility is unable to contain or from which 
the facility cannot protect vulnerable individuals, the board 
may grant medical parole to an incarcerated individual who, due 
to the individual's age or underlying health conditions, is at 
risk of serious complications or death should the individual 
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30 contract the disease or virus. When granting medical parole 
under this section, the board may use any expedited review 
process it deems necessary and appropriate to release vulnerable 
individuals in a timely fashion.
Section 3.  All regulations and parts of regulations are 
abrogated to the extent of any inconsistency with the provisions 
of this act.
Section 4.  This act shall take effect in 60 days.
20250SB0136PN0136 	- 18 - 
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