Texas 2009 - 81st Regular

Texas House Bill HB2973 Latest Draft

Bill / House Committee Report Version Filed 02/01/2025

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                            81R10735 KEL-F
 By: Coleman, Farrar, Miklos, Moody H.B. No. 2973
 Substitute the following for H.B. No. 2973:
 By: Gallego C.S.H.B. No. 2973


 A BILL TO BE ENTITLED
 AN ACT
 relating to the insanity defense in a criminal case.
 BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF TEXAS:
 SECTION 1. Section 8.01(a), Penal Code, is amended to read
 as follows:
 (a) It is an affirmative defense to prosecution that, at the
 time of the commission of the acts constituting the offense, the
 defendant, as a result of a severe mental disease or defect, was
 unable to appreciate the nature and quality or the wrongfulness of
 his or her acts. [conduct charged, the actor, as a result of severe
 mental disease or defect, did not know that his conduct was wrong.]
 SECTION 2. Chapter 46C, Code of Criminal Procedure, is
 amended by adding Subchapter G to read as follows:
 SUBCHAPTER G.  PROVISIONS APPLICABLE TO PERSONS ACQUITTED BY REASON
 OF INSANITY UNDER THIS CHAPTER OR PRIOR LAW
 Art. 46C.301.  APPLICABILITY OF SUBCHAPTER.  This subchapter
 applies to a person acquitted by reason of insanity under this
 chapter or under former Article 46.03, as that article existed
 before September 1, 2005.
 SECTION 3. Articles 46C.002, 46C.268, and 46C.269, Code of
 Criminal Procedure, are transferred to Subchapter G, Chapter 46C,
 Code of Criminal Procedure, as added by this Act, renumbered as
 Articles 46C.302, 46C.303, and 46C.304, respectively, and amended
 to read as follows:
 Art. 46C.302 [46C.002]. MAXIMUM PERIOD OF COMMITMENT
 DETERMINED BY MAXIMUM TERM FOR OFFENSE. (a) A person acquitted by
 reason of insanity may not be committed to a mental hospital or
 other inpatient or residential care facility or ordered to receive
 outpatient or community-based treatment and supervision under
 Subchapter F or under former Article 46.03, as applicable, for a
 cumulative period that exceeds the maximum term provided by law for
 the offense for which the acquitted person was tried.
 (b) On expiration of that maximum term, the acquitted person
 may be further confined in a mental hospital or other inpatient or
 residential care facility or ordered to receive outpatient or
 community-based treatment and supervision only under civil
 commitment proceedings.
 Art. 46C.303 [46C.268]. ADVANCE DISCHARGE OF ACQUITTED
 PERSON AND TERMINATION OF JURISDICTION. (a) A [An acquitted]
 person acquitted by reason of insanity, the head of the facility to
 which the acquitted person is committed, the person responsible for
 providing the outpatient or community-based treatment and
 supervision, or the state may request that the court discharge an
 acquitted person from inpatient commitment or outpatient or
 community-based treatment and supervision.
 (b) Not later than the 14th day after the date of the
 request, the court shall hold a hearing on a request made by the
 head of the facility to which the acquitted person is committed or
 the person responsible for providing the outpatient or
 community-based treatment and supervision.
 (c) If a request is made by an acquitted person, the court
 must act on the request not later than the 14th day after the date of
 the request. A hearing under this subsection is at the discretion
 of the court, except that the court shall hold a hearing if the
 request and any accompanying material indicate that modification of
 the order may be appropriate.
 (d) If a request is made by an acquitted person not later
 than the 90th day after the date of a hearing on a previous request,
 the court is not required to act on the request except on the
 expiration of the order or on the expiration of the 90-day period
 following the date of the hearing on the previous request.
 (e) The court shall rule on the request during or shortly
 after any hearing that is held and in any case not later than the
 14th day after the date of the request.
 (f) The court shall discharge the acquitted person from all
 court-ordered commitment and treatment and supervision and
 terminate the court's jurisdiction over the person if the court
 finds that the acquitted person has established by a preponderance
 of the evidence that:
 (1) the acquitted person does not have a severe mental
 illness or mental retardation; or
 (2) the acquitted person is not likely to cause
 serious harm to another because of any severe mental illness or
 mental retardation.
 Art. 46C.304 [46C.269]. TERMINATION OF COURT'S
 JURISDICTION. (a) The jurisdiction of the court over a person
 acquitted by reason of insanity [covered by this subchapter]
 automatically terminates on the date when the cumulative total
 period of institutionalization and outpatient or community-based
 treatment and supervision imposed under Subchapter F or under
 former Article 46.03, as applicable, [this subchapter] equals the
 maximum term of imprisonment provided by law for the offense of
 which the person was acquitted [by reason of insanity].
 (b) On the termination of the court's jurisdiction under
 this article, the acquitted person must be discharged from any
 inpatient treatment or residential care or outpatient or
 community-based treatment and supervision ordered under Subchapter
 F or under former Article 46.03, as applicable [this subchapter].
 (c) The [An] inpatient or residential care facility to which
 the acquitted [a] person has been committed [under this subchapter]
 or the [a] person responsible for administering a regimen of
 outpatient or community-based treatment and supervision [under
 this subchapter] must notify the court not later than the 30th day
 before the court's jurisdiction over the acquitted person ends
 under this article.
 (d) This article [subchapter] does not affect whether a
 person may be ordered to receive care or treatment under Subtitle C
 or D, Title 7, Health and Safety Code.
 SECTION 4. Article 46C.154, Code of Criminal Procedure, is
 amended to read as follows:
 Art. 46C.154. INFORMING JURY REGARDING CONSEQUENCES OF
 ACQUITTAL. The court[, the attorney representing the state, or the
 attorney for the defendant may not inform a juror or a prospective
 juror of] shall provide instruction to the jury in order to inform
 the jury of the consequences to the defendant if a verdict of not
 guilty by reason of insanity is returned[.], in substantially the
 form as follows:
 " Under the law applicable in this case, if you find the
 defendant not guilty by reason of insanity, you will be discharged
 and the court will determine the disposition of the defendant.
 "If the court finds that the offense of which the defendant
 was acquitted involved conduct that caused serious bodily injury to
 another person, placed another person in imminent danger of serious
 bodily injury, or consisted of a threat of serious bodily injury to
 another person through the use of a deadly weapon, the court must
 commit the defendant to a maximum-security inpatient facility for a
 mental health evaluation for a period not to exceed 30 days. Based
 upon that evaluation, the defendant may receive continuing mental
 health supervision or treatment for a period not to exceed the
 maximum term of confinement for the offense of which the person was
 acquitted, to be reviewed at least annually by the court, or upon
 request of the defendant, the state, the head of a facility to which
 the defendant is committed, or the person responsible for providing
 outpatient or community-based treatment and supervision. If the
 defendant has not been discharged by the court from mental health
 supervision or treatment before the expiration of that maximum
 term, upon the expiration of that maximum term the defendant must be
 discharged from the criminal jurisdiction of this court. The
 defendant may be further confined or treated after that time only
 under civil commitment proceedings outside the criminal
 jurisdiction of this court.
 "If the court finds that the offense of which the defendant
 was acquitted did not involve the dangerous conduct specified
 above, then the court must determine whether the defendant is a
 person with mental illness or mental retardation. If the court
 finds that the defendant is a person with mental illness or mental
 retardation, then the court must transfer the defendant for civil
 mental health commitment proceedings outside the criminal
 jurisdiction of this court. If the court does not find the defendant
 to be a person with mental illness or mental retardation, then the
 defendant must be discharged.
 "It cannot accurately be predicted how the criminal and civil
 commitment laws might be applied if the defendant is found not
 guilty by reason of insanity because the application of these laws
 will depend upon decisions made by the courts and mental health
 authorities regarding the defendant's mental health needs.
 Therefore, you may consider the existence of the criminal and civil
 commitment laws described herein, but you are not to consider the
 extent to which those laws may be applied to this defendant in
 reaching your verdict."
 SECTION 5. Article 46C.158, Code of Criminal Procedure, is
 amended to read as follows:
 Art. 46C.158. CONTINUING JURISDICTION OF DANGEROUS
 ACQUITTED PERSON. If the court finds that the offense of which the
 person was acquitted involved conduct that caused serious bodily
 injury to another person, placed another person in imminent danger
 of serious bodily injury, or consisted of a threat of serious bodily
 injury to another person through the use of a deadly weapon, the
 court retains jurisdiction over the acquitted person until either:
 (1) the court discharges the person and terminates its
 jurisdiction under Article 46C.303 [46C.268]; or
 (2) the cumulative total period of
 institutionalization and outpatient or community-based treatment
 and supervision under the court's jurisdiction equals the maximum
 term provided by law for the offense of which the person was
 acquitted by reason of insanity and the court's jurisdiction is
 automatically terminated under Article 46C.304 [46C.269].
 SECTION 6. Article 46C.255(a), Code of Criminal Procedure,
 is amended to read as follows:
 (a) The following proceedings under this chapter must be
 before the court, and the underlying matter determined by the
 court, unless the acquitted person or the state requests a jury
 trial or the court on its own motion sets the matter for jury trial:
 (1) a hearing under Article 46C.253;
 (2) a proceeding for renewal of an order under Article
 46C.261;
 (3) a proceeding on a request for modification or
 revocation of an order under Article 46C.266; and
 (4) a proceeding seeking discharge of an acquitted
 person under Article 46C.303 [46C.268].
 SECTION 7. Article 46C.259, Code of Criminal Procedure, is
 amended to read as follows:
 Art. 46C.259. STATUS OF COMMITTED PERSON. If an acquitted
 person is committed under this subchapter, the person's status as a
 patient or resident is governed by Subtitle C or D, Title 7, Health
 and Safety Code, except that:
 (1) transfer to a nonsecure unit is governed by
 Article 46C.260;
 (2) modification of the order to direct outpatient or
 community-based treatment and supervision is governed by Article
 46C.262; and
 (3) discharge is governed by Article 46C.303
 [46C.268].
 SECTION 8. Article 46C.270(b), Code of Criminal Procedure,
 is amended to read as follows:
 (b) Either the acquitted person or the state may appeal
 from:
 (1) an Order of Commitment to Inpatient Treatment or
 Residential Care entered under Article 46C.256;
 (2) an Order to Receive Outpatient or Community-Based
 Treatment and Supervision entered under Article 46C.257 or 46C.262;
 (3) an order renewing or refusing to renew an Order for
 Inpatient Commitment or Outpatient or Community-Based Treatment
 and Supervision entered under Article 46C.261;
 (4) an order modifying or revoking an Order for
 Outpatient or Community-Based Treatment and Supervision entered
 under Article 46C.266 or refusing a request to modify or revoke that
 order; or
 (5) an order discharging an acquitted person under
 Article 46C.303 [46C.268] or denying a request for discharge of an
 acquitted person.
 SECTION 9. (a) Except as provided by Subsection (b) of this
 section, the change in law made by this Act applies to a defendant
 acquitted of an offense committed before, on, or after the
 effective date of this Act.
 (b) The change in law made by this Act in amending Section
 8.01(a), Penal Code, and Article 46C.154, Code of Criminal
 Procedure, applies only to a defendant acquitted of an offense
 committed on or after the effective date of this Act. A defendant
 acquitted of an offense committed before the effective date of this
 Act is covered by the law in effect when the offense was committed,
 and the former law is continued in effect for that purpose. For
 purposes of this subsection, an offense was committed before the
 effective date of this Act if any element of the offense was
 committed before that date.
 SECTION 10. This Act takes effect September 1, 2009.