Wsipp Sexually Violent Predators State Law Comparisson 2007
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Washington State Institute for Public Policy 110 Fifth Avenue Southeast, Suite 214 • PO Box 40999 • Olympia, WA 98504-0999 • (360) 586-2677 • www.wsipp.wa.gov August 2007 Comparison of State Laws Authorizing Involuntary Commitment of Sexually Violent Predators: 2006 Update, Revised BACKGROUND INFORMATION This report updates the Institute’s 2005 study, “Involuntary Commitment of Sexually Violent Predators: Comparing State Laws.”1 The 2005 report covered data through 2004; this report extends the timeframe through 2006. The report includes information on the number of residents, discharges, and program costs. In addition to the 17 states covered in the previous report, three states have passed legislation authorizing civil commitment of sexually violent predators (SVPs). Nebraska passed a law in 2006, while New Hampshire and New York both passed laws early this year. The states with SVP laws are: Arizona, California, Florida, Illinois, Iowa, Kansas, Massachusetts, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, North Dakota, Pennsylvania, South Carolina, Texas, Virginia, Washington, and Wisconsin. The Texas law is unusual as it does not require confinement, instead treatment occurs in an outpatient setting. Pennsylvania’s law is only for selected sex offenders who are “aging out” of the juvenile justice system at age 21. To collect data for this report, we asked representatives from states to complete information on a common template. Some limitations need to be acknowledged. In many cases, the state representative for the 2004 and 2006 reports differ, thus there could be different interpretations of the questions. In terms of cost information, the full costs of a SVP law are difficult to calculate as the 1 K. Gookin. (2005). Involuntary commitment of sexually violent predators: Comparing state laws. Olympia: Washington State Institute for Public Policy, Document No. 05-03-1101. program’s expenditures are often spread across state budgets. For example, the treatment may be supplied by a social and health services agency, legal costs paid through another agency, and security and supervision supplied by corrections. In some instances, the state representatives were unable to estimate all aspects of the costs. Additionally, in counting individuals in various categories (revoked, recommended for release), we refined the categories from the previous report to reflect the variation in states. It is difficult, however, to capture the full nuances of each state’s policies in a spreadsheet format. FINDINGS FOR U.S. Number of Persons Held Under SVP Laws: 4,534 Number of Persons Discharged or Released: 494; an additional 85 persons died while in custody. Average Annual Program Costs: $97,000 per person. WASHINGTON STATE Number of Persons Held Under SVP Laws: 305 Annual Program Costs: $40.5 million in 2006 Exhibit 1 Sexually Violent Predator Laws: Persons Held Under Law WA 305 ND 75 MN 342 MA WI 121 500 PA IA NE 12 69 18 IL 307 CA KS MO 558 161 143 VA 37 AZ SC 414 119 TX 69 FL 942 WSIPP, 2007 NJ 342 Exhibit 2 2006 Program Overview REASONS FOR DISCHARGES AND RELEASES OF PEOPLE COMMITTED State Code (Year Law Effective) Arizona 36-3701 et seq. (1996) California WIC Section 6600 et seq. (1996) Florida ss394.910394.931, Part V (1999) Illinois 725 ILCS 207/1 et seq. (1988) Iowa 229.A1 et seq. (1998) Involved With Court Petition or Discharged Decision Certification or Released Without for Who Were Program Program Commitment To Committed Staff Staff Since Law (Accumulative, Corrections Effective Not Including Recommen- Recommen(New Deaths) (Accumulative) dation dation Charges) Revoked Since Release (Accumulative) (Accumulative)* Deaths Other 414 87 0 86 1 0 3 13 558 96 4 74 15 3 15 2 942 28 1 16 11 0 8 9 307 40 15 9 16 0 10 6 69 15 5 10 0 0 1 1 161 16 3 0 0 12 8 0 121 5 0 5 0 0 0 N/A 342 43 27 0 3 13 2 27 143 10 0 0 8 2 7 0 18 18 14 0 4 0 0 0 342 30 1 27 1 1 2 2 North Dakota 25.03-3.01 et seq. (1997) 75 20 14 1 5 0 1 0 Pennsylvania SB421 (2003) 12 N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A 119 32 16 16 0 0 4 0 69 N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A 1 11 Kansas 59-29a01 et seq. (1994) Massachusetts Part 1 Title XVII, Ch. 123A 1 et seq. (1998) Minnesota 253B.185 et seq. (1999) Missouri 632.480 et seq. (1994) Nebraska (2006) New Jersey 30:4-27.24 et seq. (1994) South Carolina 44-48-10 et seq. (1998) Texas Health and Safety Code 841.001 et seq. (1999) 3 REASONS FOR DISCHARGES AND RELEASES OF PEOPLE COMMITTED Involved With Court Petition or Discharged Decision Certification or Released Without for Who Were Program Program Commitment To Committed Staff Staff Since Law (Accumulative, Corrections Effective Not Including Recommen- Recommen(New (Accumulative) Deaths) dation dation Charges) State Code (Year Law Effective) Revoked Since Release (Accumulative) (Accumulative)* Deaths Other Virginia 37.2-900 et seq. (2003) 37 5 N/A N/A N/A N/A None 2 Washington 71.09.010 et seq. (1990) 305 19 12 1 2 2 9 4 Wisconsin 980.01 et seq. (1994) 500 30 76 8 7 2 14 23 4,534 494 188 253 73 35 85 100 TOTALS *Unduplicated count of readmits after discharge because of a new legal process and readmits after discharge to outpatient treatment. Notes: Arizona: By policy, staff do not make recommendations regarding releases. Illinois: Recommendations for discharge/release are made by independent state evaluators, not program staff. Massachusetts: Does not have supervised release of an SVP. Note: In 2005, Massachusetts reported 306 persons held to date which may have included persons held under a previous law that was abolished in 1990. Pennsylvania: Program only has "aged-out" juveniles as they turn 21 years old. Texas: Outpatient only Washington: One additional person is awaiting revocation. The following states’ laws were passed in 2007 and are still being implemented. • New Hampshire, RSA 135-E • New York, Chapter 7 of S.3318 4 Exhibit 3 General Cost Information (2006) State Arizona California Florida Illinois Iowa Kansas Massachusetts Minnesota Missouri Nebraska New Jersey North Dakota Pennsylvania South Carolina Texas Virginia Washington Wisconsin AVERAGES SVP Resident Cost Per Year $110,000 $166,000 $41,845 $88,000 $71,000 $69,070 $73,197 $141,255 $75,920 $93,325 $67,000 $94,728 $150,000 $41,176 $17,391 $140,000 $149,904 $102,500 $94,017 Total: Total Civil Commitment Budget (in millions) $11.3 $147.3 $23.3 $25.6 $5.0 $10.9 $30.7 $54.9 $8.3 $13.5 $21.9 $12.7 $1.8 $2.9 $1.2 $8.2 $40.5 $34.7 $25.3 $454.7 Annual Salary and Benefits of Treatment Officer $50,985 N/A N/A N/A $56,356 N/A N/A N/A $25,358 N/A N/A $55,600 N/A N/A N/A N/A $40,228 N/A DOC Inmate Cost Per Year $20,564 $43,000 $19,000 $21,700 $23,002 $22,630 $43,026 $29,240 $14,538 $26,031 $35,000 $27,391 $32,304 $15,156 $15,527 $23,123 $29,055 $27,600 $25,994 Notes: New Hampshire is in the start-up phase. New York is in the start-up phase. Pennsylvania has only "aged-out" juveniles as they turn 21 years old. Their costs for DOC reflect 2004–2005, inflated by 3 percent. Texas has outpatients only. 5 Exhibit 4 Detailed Costs Contracted Services Legal Services Including Prosecutors and Defense Psychological Evaluations Transportation Capital Cost/Debt Service Administrative Overhead Other N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A $961,263 N/A $0 N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A $24,123 N/A N/A $25,623 N/A N/A N/A N/A Included in other costs N/A Included in other costs $0 Treatment Security and Supervision Direct Care (food, clothing, supplies) Health Care N/A N/A N/A California N/A N/A Florida N/A N/A Illinois N/A N/A State Arizona Iowa Kansas $381,169 $2,644,804 $3,143,060 $8,039,215 $646,650 $990,036 $24,123 $334,628 N/A N/A N/A $600,000 Massachusetts N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A Minnesota N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A Missouri $6,253,000 Included in treatment costs $38,510 N/A N/A $6,700 $0 $1,467,312 N/A Nebraska $1,818,066 Included in direct care $0 $0 $86,007 Included in other costs $0 $529,459 N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A $25,000 N/A $5,000 $13,503 New Jersey North Dakota Pennsylvania South Carolina N/A $1,565,798 N/A $41,176 $767,984 N/A $125,000 Virginia Washington Wisconsin $143,143 N/A $2,354,118 N/A $222,863 N/A $263,266 $308,000 $45,375 N/A $798,953 $545,456 N/A $0 N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A Included in contracts N/A $574,111 N/A $23,384 $78,257 $0 N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A $5,471,222 $720,074 $23,000 $0 N/A N/A N/A N/A Texas (Outpatient only) $605,000 $136,350 N/A $10,366,000 N/A $2,883,718 N/A $1,249,898 $5,313,589 N/A N/A Notes: Florida: Outside psychiatric evaluations are included in the daily rate. Starting in FY06–07, services were phased in beginning with clinical, medical, and other residential services, followed by internal security (December 15, 2006), and then transportation and perimeter security (April 2, 3007). Minnesota: Will forward detailed cost information as it becomes available. Missouri: Administrative Overhead covers staff salaries for administrative persons in the facility. Accounting, some human resources, and maintenance overhead are not included. New York: Program not yet begun. New Hampshire: Program not yet begun. Pennsylvania: Plans to have detailed cost information available in 2008. Washington: Costs are for the main facility only and do not include less restrictive facilities. $294,000 N/A $0 N/A $809,083 $6,636,298 N/A N/A Exhibit 5 Service and Facility Providers Treatment Provider Security Provider Facility (Contractor or State) (Contractor or State) (Contract or State Owned) State State State State (DMH) DOC (perimeter) State Florida Contract DOC and GEO State Illinois Contract State State Iowa State State State Kansas State State State Contract State State Minnesota State State State Missouri State State State Nebraska State State State New Jersey DHS DOC State North Dakota State State State Pennsylvania State State State South Carolina State State State Contract N/A (outpatient only) Contract (halfway houses) Virginia State State State Washington State State State Wisconsin State State State State Arizona California Massachusetts Texas Note: New Hampshire and New York are still planning for implementation of their recent laws. 7 Exhibit 6 State Contacts State Name Phone Email Arizona California Florida Illinois Iowa Kansas Massachusetts Minnesota Missouri Nebraska New Hampshire New Jersey New York North Dakota Pennsylvania South Carolina Texas Virginia Washington Wisconsin Dr. Noggle Brenda Epperly-Ellis Teion Wells Harrison Shan Jumper Jason Smith Dr. Leo Herrman Robert Murphy Thomas Lundquist Alan Blake Cynthia Dykeman Geoffrey Souther Merrill Main Rich Miraglia Alex Schweitzer Dr. Vito DonGiovanni Mark Binkley Allison Taylor Dr. Steve Wolf Dr. Henry Richards Dennis Doren 602-220-6482 916-653-2088 850-921-4490 217-322-3204 ext 5016 712-225-6948 Noggled@azdhs.gov Brenda.Epperly-Ellis@dmh.ca.gov Teion_Harrison@dcf.state.fl.us Shan.Jumper@illinois.gov Jsmith4@dhs.state.ia.us LPH0222@lsh.ks.gov RFMurphy@doc.state.ma.us thomas.j.lundquist@state.mn.us alan.blake@dmh.mo.gov cynthia.dykeman@hhss.ne.gov GSouther@dhhs.state.nh.us Merrill.Main@dhs.state.nj.us cofortm@ohm.state.ny.us aschweit@state.nd.us vdongiovan@state.pa.us MWB86@scdmh.org Allison.Taylor@dshs.state.tx.us steve.wolf@co.dmhmrsas.virginia.gov richahj@dshs.wa.gov dorendm@dhfs.state.wi.us 508-279-8111 218-485-5300 ext 5314 573-218 7079 603-271-8820 701-253-3964 724-675-2001 512-834-4530 804-347-8291 253-583-5933 608-301-1455 Kathy Gookin, a consultant in Olympia, Washington, prepared this report. For more information, please contact Roxanne Lieb at (360) 586-2768 or liebr@wsipp.wa.gov. Document No. 07-08-1101 Washington State Institute for Public Policy The Washington State Legislature created the Washington State Institute for Public Policy in 1983. A Board of Directors—representing the legislature, the governor, and public universities—governs the Institute and guides the development of all activities. The Institute’s mission is to carry out research, 8 at legislative direction, on issues of importance to Washington State.