Texas 2009 81st Regular

Texas House Bill HB3907 Introduced / Bill

Filed 02/01/2025

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                    81R5773 KEL-D
 By: Madden H.B. No. 3907


 A BILL TO BE ENTITLED
 AN ACT
 relating to the court-ordered administration of psychoactive
 medication to certain criminal defendants and to the release of
 those defendants from certain facilities.
 BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF TEXAS:
 SECTION 1. Article 16.22, Code of Criminal Procedure, is
 amended by adding Subsections (c-1) through (c-6) and (e) and
 amending Subsection (d) to read as follows:
 (c-1)  Subsections (c-2) through (c-6) apply only to a
 defendant who:
 (1)  is found under this article to be a person who has
 a mental illness or a person with mental retardation;
 (2)  refuses to take psychoactive medications as
 required by any applicable continuing care plan or continuity of
 care plan; and
 (3)  after a hearing held under Section 574.106, Health
 and Safety Code, has been found to not meet the criteria prescribed
 by Sections 574.106(a) and (a-1), Health and Safety Code, for
 court-ordered administration of psychoactive medications.
 (c-2)  If a defendant described by Subsection (c-1) refuses
 to take psychoactive medications as required by the defendant's
 continuing care plan or continuity of care plan, the director of the
 correctional facility or the outpatient treatment provider, as
 applicable, shall notify the magistrate of that fact not later than
 the end of the business day immediately following the date of the
 refusal. The magistrate promptly shall notify the attorney
 representing the state and the attorney representing the defendant
 of the defendant's refusal. The attorney representing the state
 may file a written motion to compel medication.
 (c-3)  The magistrate, after notice and after a hearing held
 not later than the fifth day after the filing of a written motion to
 compel medication, may authorize the director of a correctional
 facility or the program provider, as applicable, to have the
 medication administered to the defendant, by reasonable force if
 necessary.
 (c-4)  The magistrate may issue an order under Subsection
 (c-3) only if the order is supported by the testimony of two
 physicians, one of whom is the physician who is prescribing the
 medication as a component of the defendant's continuing care plan
 or continuity of care plan and another who is not otherwise involved
 in proceedings against the defendant. The magistrate may require
 either or both physicians to examine the defendant and report on the
 examination to the magistrate.
 (c-5)  The magistrate may issue an order under Subsection
 (c-3) only if the magistrate finds by clear and convincing evidence
 that the prescribed medication:
 (1)  is medically appropriate, is in the best medical
 interest of the defendant, and does not present side effects that
 cause harm to the defendant that is greater than the medical benefit
 to the defendant; and
 (2)  will not unduly prejudice the defendant's rights
 or use of defensive theories at trial.
 (c-6)  A statement made by a defendant to a physician during
 an examination under Subsection (c-4) may not be admitted against
 the defendant in any criminal proceeding, other than at:
 (1)  a hearing on the defendant's incompetency under
 Chapter 46B; or
 (2)  any proceeding at which the defendant first
 introduces into evidence the contents of the statement.
 (d) Nothing in this article prevents the court from, pending
 an evaluation of the defendant as described by this article:
 (1) subject to Subsection (e), releasing a mentally
 ill or mentally retarded defendant from custody on personal or
 surety bond; or
 (2) ordering an examination regarding the defendant's
 competency to stand trial.
 (e)  If a sheriff releases a defendant who is a person with
 mental illness or mental retardation from custody, except on final
 disposition of the criminal proceedings, the sheriff must, before
 releasing the person:
 (1)  notify the local mental health or mental
 retardation authority of the impending release; and
 (2)  if possible, arrange for the release of the person
 during normal business hours.
 SECTION 2. Article 46B.072(d), Code of Criminal Procedure,
 is amended to read as follows:
 (d) An order issued under this article may require the
 defendant to participate in:
 (1) as appropriate, an outpatient treatment program
 administered by a community center or an outpatient treatment
 program administered by any other entity that provides outpatient
 competency restoration services, including an outpatient treatment
 program operated in a correctional facility by a local mental
 health authority or local mental retardation authority; and
 (2) an appropriate prescribed regimen of medical,
 psychiatric, or psychological care or treatment, including care
 or treatment involving the administration of psychoactive
 medication, including those required under Article 46B.086.
 SECTION 3. Article 46B.086(a), Code of Criminal Procedure,
 is amended to read as follows:
 (a) This article applies only to a defendant:
 (1) who is determined under this chapter to be
 incompetent to stand trial;
 (2) who is confined in a correctional facility while
 awaiting transfer to an inpatient mental health facility or a
 residential care facility or who has been released on bail to an
 outpatient treatment program;
 (3) for whom an inpatient mental health facility, a
 residential care facility, or an outpatient treatment program
 provider has prepared a continuity of care plan that requires the
 defendant to take psychoactive medications; and
 (4) [(3)] who, after a hearing held under Section
 574.106, Health and Safety Code, by either a court having probate
 jurisdiction or the court in which the criminal matter is pending,
 has been found to not [to] meet the criteria prescribed by Sections
 574.106(a) and (a-1), Health and Safety Code, for court-ordered
 administration of psychoactive medications[; or
 [(4) who is subject to Article 46B.072].
 SECTION 4. Subchapter D, Chapter 46B, Code of Criminal
 Procedure, is amended by adding Article 46B.087 to read as follows:
 Art. 46B.087.  ORDER OF RELEASE:  CONTINUATION OF TREATMENT.
 If a defendant is released under Article 46B.0095 or 46B.010, the
 court ordering the defendant's release shall consider whether the
 defendant could benefit from continued treatment. If the court
 finds that the defendant could benefit from continued treatment,
 the court shall include in the order of release a requirement that
 the sheriff release the defendant during normal business hours and
 notify the local mental health authority or local mental
 retardation authority, as applicable, before releasing the
 defendant.
 SECTION 5. Section 574.104, Health and Safety Code, is
 amended by adding Subsection (a-1) to read as follows:
 (a-1)  A physician who is treating a patient ordered to
 receive inpatient mental health services after having been
 determined to be incompetent to stand trial may:
 (1) proceed under Subsection (a); or
 (2)  file, in the court in which the criminal matter is
 pending, an application for an order to authorize the
 administration of a psychoactive medication, regardless of the
 patient's refusal if:
 (A)  the physician believes that the patient lacks
 the capacity to make a decision regarding the administration of the
 psychoactive medication;
 (B)  the physician determines that the medication
 is the proper course of treatment for the patient; and
 (C)  the patient, verbally or by other indication,
 refuses to take the medication.
 SECTION 6. Section 574.106(c), Health and Safety Code, is
 amended to read as follows:
 (c) A hearing under this subchapter shall be conducted on
 the record by the probate judge, a [or] judge with probate
 jurisdiction, or, if applicable, the judge of a criminal court with
 jurisdiction over the patient, except as provided by Subsection
 (d).
 SECTION 7. This Act takes effect immediately if it receives
 a vote of two-thirds of all the members elected to each house, as
 provided by Section 39, Article III, Texas Constitution. If this
 Act does not receive the vote necessary for immediate effect, this
 Act takes effect September 1, 2009.