SENATE BILL REPORT
E2SSB 6259
BYSenate Committee on Ways & Means (originally sponsored by Senators Nelson, Talmadge, Patrick, Wojahn, Thorsness, Vognild, Bender, Warnke, Bauer, von Reichbauer, Gaspard, Madsen, Murray, Sutherland, Rasmussen, Fleming, Hansen, Conner and Kreidler; by request of Governor)
Changing provisions relating to criminal offenders.
Senate Committee on Law & Justice
Senate Hearing Date(s):January 9, 1990; January 10, 1990; January 11, 1990; January 12, 1990
Majority Report: That Substitute Senate Bill No. 6259 be substituted therefor, and the substitute bill do pass and be referred to Committee on Ways & Means.
Signed by Senators Nelson, Chairman; McCaslin, Vice Chairman; Hayner, Madsen, Newhouse, Niemi, Patrick, Rasmussen, Rinehart, Talmadge, Thorsness.
Senate Staff:Cliff Petersen (786-7457)
January 16, 1990
Senate Committee on Ways & Means
Senate Hearing Date(s):January 17, 1990; January 18, 1990
Majority Report: That Second Substitute Senate Bill No. 6259 be substituted therefor, and the second substitute bill do pass.
Signed by Senators McDonald, Chairman; Craswell, Vice Chairman; Amondson, Bailey, Bauer, Bluechel, Cantu, Gaspard, Hayner, Johnson, Lee, Moore, Newhouse, Niemi, Saling, Smith, Talmadge, Warnke, Williams, Wojahn.
Senate Staff:Randy Hodgins (786-7715)
February 7, 1990
AS PASSED SENATE, JANUARY 24, 1990
BACKGROUND:
Introduction. The Governor's Task Force on Community Protection was created following a brutal sexual assault upon a young child and the murder of a young woman in Seattle. The task force submitted to the Governor contains numerous proposals for statutory changes and funding programs for sex offenders and their victims. The proposals impact the criminal justice system for adults and juveniles and the civil and criminal commitment system dealing with insane and incompetent offenders.
Current Law. The Department of Corrections conducts a victim/witness/police notification program for victims of sex and violent offenders. If requested, the department must notify victims, witnesses and local police when the department is going to release a particular inmate or the inmate escapes. The victim, witnesses, and police must request notice or the department has no obligation to give such notice. The program exists only for adults convicted of sex and violent offenses and committed to the Department of Corrections. The Division of Juvenile Rehabilitation has a far less extensive notification program for victims but not witnesses. Counties are not statutorily obligated to provide notice of release.
Numerous laws exist that govern the confidentiality of information concerning adult and juvenile offenders and offenders in the custody of the Department of Social and Health Services (DSHS). Case law is not well developed concerning the extent of information an agency may release to other agencies and the general public when an offender is going to be released into the community. Several statutes have specific requirements governing the release of information and the failure to release information. In general, agencies are liable for the improper release of information but not the failure to release information. Agencies and agency employees may be subject to civil suit for the improper release of information.
Adults convicted of offenses who are in county or state custody are eligible to have their sentences reduced by up to one-third by earning early release credits, commonly known as "good time."
Juvenile offenders who are committed to the Department of Social and Health Services may be supervised on parole up to 18 months. If a juvenile offender violates a condition of parole, the juvenile may be returned to custody for up to 30 days. Some dispositions for juvenile offenders not committed to the department may include a period of supervision up to one year.
While juvenile sex offenders may receive some limited treatment while committed to the department, no formal dispositional alternative exists for juveniles that is comparable to the adult sentencing alternative for sex offenders.
Juveniles who are at least 16 years old may be declined jurisdiction in juvenile court and transferred to adult court for prosecution if the juvenile is charged with a class A felony. Juveniles who are at least 17 years old may be transferred if charged with assault in the second degree, extortion in the first degree, indecent liberties, child molestation in the second degree, kidnapping in the second degree or robbery in the second degree. In these above cases, a decline hearing must be held unless waived by the court, the parties, and their counsel.
Currently, neither state nor local law enforcement agencies may require sex offenders who reside within their jurisdictions to register with the local police.
In order to qualify for crime victims compensation, the victim must report the criminal act to law enforcement within 72 hours of its occurrence. If it could not reasonably have been reported within that period, then it must be reported within 72 hours of when a report could reasonably have been made.
Last year a cap of $150,000 per victim was instituted on medical benefits.
The Sentencing Reform Act designates only certain offenses as "sex offenses." Sex offenses are offenses such as include rape and child molestation. Crimes that may be sexually motivated but are not completed acts of sexual abuse are not labeled sex offenses. Examples include assault with intent to commit rape, and burglary with intent to commit rape. Several predatory sex offenders have a history of sexually motivated offenses but have not been convicted of a sex offense. Consequently, the criminal and mental health system may not treat the offender as a sex offender.
The Washington criminal code classifies sex offenses in various degrees based upon the seriousness of the offense. Felonies that are class A felonies carry a maximum penalty of life in prison. Second degree rape, rape of a child in the second degree and first degree child molestation are class B felonies which carry a maximum penalty of 10 years in prison. Indecent exposure is classified as a gross misdemeanor.
The sentencing grid in the Sentencing Reform Act contains 14 levels of punishment based upon the seriousness of the crime. For each offense a midpoint sentencing range is established.
For first time sex offenders the sentencing midpoints are: Five years for first degree rape and first degree rape of a child; two years for second degree rape, second degree rape of a child, and first degree child molestation; 18 months for indecent liberties with forcible compulsion; 13 months for indecent liberties without forcible compulsion and second degree child molestation; six months for third degree rape of a child; and two months for third degree child molestation and first degree sexual misconduct with a minor.
Before a court can impose consecutive sentences for current convictions without imposing an exceptional sentence, the offender must be convicted of three or more serious violent offenses.
If an adult offender is being convicted of a sex offense and has prior juvenile convictions for violent offenses, the juvenile convictions count as one point in the offender score even if the convictions involved separate victims. Prior juvenile and adult convictions may not be included in the offender score after a certain period of time if they are not class A felony sex offenses.
The special sexual offender sentencing alternative (SSOSA) for adults requires judges to consider whether the defendant and the community will benefit if the defendant is placed in community based treatment but does not require consideration of the victim's opinion. Offenders who are given a community based disposition are placed on supervision up to two years. An offender is ineligible for SSOSA if the sentence range for the offender is above six years. The court must order the defendant not to change therapists to prevent an offender from changing treatment providers.
Following release from custody, certain offenders including sex and serious violent offenders must be placed on one year of community placement supervision.
Washington State's Involuntary Treatment Act (ITA), Chapter 71.05 RCW, was enacted in 1959 and underwent major amendatory changes in 1973, 1979, and 1987. The act permits, by court order, the involuntary treatment of a person who, as a result of a mental disorder, is gravely disabled or presents a likelihood of serious harm to self or others.
The ITA may not be applicable to violent sex offenders because the offenders may not have a mental disease or defect that renders them appropriate for treatment under the statute. In addition, in order to continually confine an offender, the ITA requires an overt act of dangerousness during the commitment period. This will not occur since the offender does not have access to potential victims during the period of confinement.
In 1989, approximately 3,000 adults and children in Washington contacted local sexual assault programs to seek professional assistance. Victims' recovery from the trauma of sexual assault can be enhanced by support and assistance from trained counselors. Counseling for the nonabusive parent is also very useful in inter-familial cases involving young children. The programs to assist victims of sexual assault are operated out of mental health agencies, criminal justice agencies, hospitals and private nonprofit agencies. It has been suggested that there is a need for additional programs for victims and a need for a statewide victim advocacy office.
Background checks of prospective employees may be conducted for employers to ensure that prospective employees who have access to young children, the developmentally disabled, or vulnerable adults do not have a criminal history of sex offenses or other offenses against persons. Certificated employees of school districts are excluded from the background check. Indecent exposure is not among the list of offenses that may be considered for dissemination to employers. Business organizations may be subjected to civil liability if they use the information from the background checks for any purpose other than hiring decisions. Background checks are good for two years even if the employee transfers to different school districts.
SUMMARY:
Victim, Witness, and Police Notification Programs. The victim, witness, and police notification programs that currently exist for adult violent and sex offenders is used as a model to create new notification programs involving offenders in the custody of the Department of Social and Health Services (DSHS). The department must notify victims and witnesses of the release of sex and violent offenders who are juveniles or adults found not guilty by reason of insanity or incompetence to stand trial. Victims and witnesses must request notice of the release of such offenders, but the police do not have to request such notice.
Immunity for Release of Information. Public agencies are expressly authorized to release relevant information regarding sex offenders to the public when the release is necessary for public protection. This provision will end July 1, 1991.
Public employees and agencies are immune from civil liability for a discretionary decision to release information regarding juvenile sex offenders, and adult sex offenders committed to DSHS who are incompetent to stand trial or are insane. Immunity applies if the employee acts without gross negligence and believes in good faith that the release was necessary to protect the public. Any person who disseminates such information at the request of any public official, public employee, or public agency is immune from civil liability for damages.
The Governor is to study confidentiality laws and report to the Legislature on or before November 1, 1990.
Earned Early Release ("Good Time"). The maximum amount of earned early release a class A felony sex offender or a serious violent offender may earn is reduced from one-third to 15 percent of the sentence.
Juvenile Justice Amendments. Juveniles convicted of sex offenses may be supervised for a period of up to two years. If a juvenile violates a condition of supervision, the juvenile may be returned to custody for up to the remainder of the time left on the sentence rather than the previous limit of 30 days.
A special sexual offender dispositional alternative is created for juvenile offenders. Juveniles convicted of certain sex offenses who have no prior history of sex offenses may be given a special dispositional alternative that includes a suspended sentence, supervision for two years, up to 30 days in custody, and treatment. A juvenile sex offender must obtain court approval for a change of sex offender treatment providers if the prosecutor and probation counselor object to the change.
Mandatory decline hearings are extended to allow criminal solicitation or conspiracy to commit certain offenses to be the basis for a decline hearing.
Registration of Sex Offenders. Adults or juveniles convicted of any sex offense must register with the county sheriff within 30 days of release from custody or within 45 days of establishing residence. If the offender moves into a new county, the offender must register in the new county. The sheriff must obtain fingerprints and a photograph of the offender. Failure to register is a class C felony if the person was convicted of a class A felony sex offense, otherwise the failure is a gross misdemeanor. Registration applies to persons who commit sex offenses after the effective date of this provision. These provisions apply retroactively if the offender is currently under the custody or supervision of the Department of Corrections or the Department of Social and Health Services.
The Washington State Patrol is to maintain a central registry of sex offenders. The court and the Department of Corrections are to provide defendants and inmates with notice of the duty to register.
Persons convicted of a class C felony sex offense must be registered for a period of 10 years and persons convicted of a class B felony sex offense must be registered for 15 years. Unless a court relieves a person convicted of a class A felony offense, the person must always be registered. The 10 and 15 year periods run only if the offenders remain in the community without convictions for any new offenses within the time period.
Any offender may petition the court to be relieved of the duty to register.
Victims' Compensation Fund. The eligibility requirement that victims report the crime to the police within 72 hours of its occurrence is extended to 12 months.
In the case of victims of childhood criminal acts, the crime victims compensation rights are deemed to accrue at the time the victim discovers or reasonably should have discovered the elements of the crime.
The $150,000 cap on medical benefits applies per injury or death rather than per victim. Payments for medical services in excess of the cap are to be made available if necessary for a previously accepted condition, to protect the life of the victim, or to prevent deterioration, when the payments are not available from another source.
The costs of a colposcope exam are required to be reimbursed from the crime victims' compensation fund.
Victims are not required to use their own assets except for money recovered from civil or criminal restitution.
The Office of Financial Management (OFM) is to prevent expenditures from the public safety and education account from exceeding revenue forecasts. In developing and implementing an expenditure reduction plan, OFM is to seek the cooperation of judicial agencies but may not reduce the allotments to the Crime Victim's Compensation Program. The Economic and Revenue Forecast Council is required to prepare the official revenue estimate for the public safety and education account.
Sexual Motivation in Criminal Cases. The prosecutor must file a special allegation of sexual motivation in any case when sufficient evidence exists to justify a finding that the offense was sexually motivated. "Sexual motivation" means the offense was committed for the purposes of sexual gratification. The trier of fact shall make a finding whether the act was sexually motivated. The prosecutor may not dismiss the special allegation without court approval and the court must not approve the dismissal unless satisfied that the filing decision was made in error or that evidentiary problems exist that prevent proving the special allegation. Sexually motivated offenses are included in the definition of "sex offenses." The finding of sexual motivation may be an aggravating factor for an exceptional sentence, and will trigger the same consequences as any other sex offense, such as higher offender points for subsequent sex offenses, civil commitment, and eligibility or ineligibility for SSOSA or SSODA. The finding will also apply to juveniles. Examples include assault with intent to commit rape, and burglary with intent to commit rape.
Criminal Sentencing. The classifications for certain sex offenses are upgraded and thus increase the statutory maximum for the particular offense. Second degree rape, rape of a child in the second degree, and first degree child molestation are raised from class B to class A felonies. Indecent exposure is raised to a class C felony from a gross misdemeanor if the exposure is to a child under age 14 and if the offender has a previous conviction for exposure or a sex offense.
The mandatory term of confinement for first degree rape is increased from three to five years. The maximum time that first-time sex offenders may be required to undergo available outpatient treatment is increased from two to five years.
The sentencing grid is modified to create 15 seriousness levels rather than 14. Revised seriousness level XI has a new midpoint of 7.5 years for a first time offender and the new seriousness level XII has a midpoint of nine years for first time offenders. First degree assault is raised to seriousness level XII to remain in proportion with the increases in the first degree rape of a child and first degree rape.
In determining a sex offender's score, other current sex offenses and prior adult and juvenile sex offenses will count three points. If an adult sex offender has prior convictions for violent juvenile offenses with separate victims, the adjudications no longer merge but count separately in the offender score. All prior juvenile and adult sex offenses are included in the scoring of adult sex offenders.
Offenders must serve consecutive sentences when convicted of two or more current serious violent offenses.
When considering whether to impose a sentence under the special sexual offender sentencing alternative (SSOSA) the court must consider the victim's opinion regarding whether the offender should receive the treatment disposition. The group of offenders who are eligible for SSOSA is expanded to include offenders convicted of sexually motivated offenses, unless the offenses are sex offenses that are also serious violent offenses. The group of ineligible offenders is also expanded to include sex offenders who have a prior conviction for a sexually motivated offense. Imposition of SSOSA for first-time offenders is discretionary for offenders with sentences up to eight years in length instead of six because of the increase in standard ranges. The length of supervision is increased from up to two years to up to five years, or the length of the suspended sentence, whichever is longer. The offender must not change treatment providers without first notifying the court, community corrections officer, and the prosecutor, and must obtain court approval if the prosecutor and the community corrections officer object.
Sex offenders convicted prior to July 1, 1987 may apply for an evaluation and placement in a Department of Corrections sex offender treatment program subject to available funds.
The Department of Corrections must supervise sex and serious violent offenders for two years or up to the length of the offender's earned early release, whichever is longer. The department and the Indeterminate Sentence Review Board must give the greatest weight to public safety when making discretionary decisions regarding release and supervision of sexually violent prisoners.
Civil Commitment. A new civil commitment procedure is created for "sexually violent predators." An offender may be committed under these provisions if: 1) the sentence for a sexually violent offense has ended or is about to end; or 2) the person is charged with a sexually violent offense and is found not guilty by reason of insanity, or is incompetent to stand trial and is about to be released; and 3) it appears that the person may be a sexually violent predator.
The prosecutor may file a petition for civil commitment. The judge must review the petition and determine whether probable cause exists to believe that the person is a sexually violent predator. If so, the person is taken into custody, and transferred to an appropriate facility for an evaluation as to whether the person is a sexually violent predator.
Within 45 days after the filing of the petition, the court is required to conduct a trial to determine whether the person is a sexually violent predator. The person, prosecuting attorney or Attorney General, or judge may demand a jury trial. If the court or jury determines, beyond a reasonable doubt, that the person is a sexually violent predator, then the person is committed to the Department of Social and Health Services (DSHS). If the person has previously been found incompetent to stand trial and is about to be or has been released, the court must first determine, beyond a reasonable doubt, whether the person did commit the act or acts charged.
A person committed to DSHS under these provisions is entitled to an examination of his or her mental condition at least once a year. If the Secretary of DSHS determines that the person's disorder is changed to the extent that the person is not likely to commit sexually violent predatory acts, then the secretary must authorize the person to petition the court for release. If the prosecutor opposes the DSHS-authorized petition, he or she must show beyond a reasonable doubt that the person is not safe to be at large and is likely to commit predatory acts of sexual violence. The person may petition for discharge without the secretary's approval, but must show by a preponderance of the evidence that the person's personality disorder is so changed that her or she is safe to be at large.
The care and treatment of civilly committed sexually violent predators are required to conform to constitutional standards. This commitment procedure also applies to juveniles.
Grant Programs and Victims' Advocacy. A grant program is established in the Department of Labor and Industries to enhance the funding for treating the victims of sex offenders. Only activities which provide effective treatment to victims, increase access and availability of treatment and which create or build on existing community programs may be funded. The program is available to all local units of government, nonprofit community groups and nonprofit treatment providers.
An Office of Crime Victims' Advocacy is established in the Department of Labor and Industries to administer the grant program and provide other advocacy services to crime victims.
Applicants are required to provide evidence demonstrating the effectiveness of the proposal and how the funding criteria will be met. Applicants are also required to demonstrate active participation of the local community and its commitment to providing effective treatment services for victims.
The minimum requirements for the content of the grant application are outlined and the awards are to be made on a competitive basis. To assist the department in awarding the grants, a peer review committee is established comprised of individuals experienced in the treatment of victims of predatory violent sex offenders.
The department is to ask communities for suggestions on state practices, policies and priorities that would help communities treat victims. These suggestions are to be received by the executive branch and recommendations forwarded to the Legislature where appropriate.
By January 1, 1991, the department is to report to the Legislature on the operation of the grant program. The report is to include such items as the number and monetary amount of the grants, purposes of the grants, success of the projects in meeting its goals and objectives and recommendations for further funding and future operation of the program.
Background Checks. The list of prospective employees subject to background checks is expanded to cover certificated employees of school districts and any current school district employee who has applied for transfer. A new crime of felony indecent exposure is added to the list of crimes covered by background checks. Express imposition of liability is removed from business organizations which violate the requirement that the background checks are only to be used to make initial employment decisions. School district employees who transfer from one school district to another may be subjected to another background check.
Organic Treatment Study. The Sentencing Guidelines Commission, in consultation with the University of Washington School of Medicine and Department of Community Psychiatry is to conduct a study of organic treatment for sex offenders.
Joint CPS/Law Enforcement Pilot Project. A pilot project is established for the joint investigation of child abuse and sexual assault cases by personnel from law enforcement and Child Protective Services.
Certification of Treatment Providers: A program to certify sex offender treatment providers is established.
Treatment for Abusive Person Removed from Home. Whenever a person has committed a crime or violation against a child resulting in an order removing the person from the home, the person is to participate in an educational program as a condition of returning to the home where the child resides.
The person is to pay for the treatment on the basis of his or her financial ability.
In order to return to the home, the person must prove by substantial evidence that he or she is no longer a threat to the child.
Appropriation: none
Revenue: none
Fiscal Note: available
Effective Date:All sections other than the sections that will impact the sentencing scheme will take effect immediately. The sentencing changes will take effect July 1, 1990.
Senate Committee - Testified: LAW & JUSTICE: Norm Maleng, Chair, Governor's task force; Brother David, IMPROVE; Cathy Taylor, citizen; Judge Thompson, Sentencing Guidelines Commission; Bob Boruchowitz, Washington Defenders Association; Ida Ballasiotes, Friends of Diane; Angie Vincent, Tennis Shoe Brigade and Friends of Diane; Alice Gibson, citizen; Fran Dew, Helen Harlowe, Larry Erickson, Governor's task force; John Turner, Police Chief, Mountlake Terrace; Casey Carmody, Friends of Diane; Steve Eckstrom, Washington Coalition of Crime Victims; Karen Bachelder, Joan Duffell, Committee for Children; Bev Emery, Washington Coalition of Sexual Assault Program; Kirk Klevin, Washington Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers; Debbie Doane, Gil Matson, Eastside Sexual Assault Center; Bob Fisher, Washington Education Association; David Boerner, Lucy Berliner, Governor's task force; Thelma Struck, DSHS; Larry Fehr, WCCD; Michael Compte, Compte & Associates; Deborah Senn, Coalition Against Domestic Violence; John LaForn, UPS Law School; William Salen, Seattle Public Defender Association; Shirley Seigel, Stop Abuse by Counselors; Doug Walsh, Mike Grant, Attorney General's office
Senate Committee - Testified: WAYS & MEANS: Norm Maleng, Chair, Governor's Task Force; Ida Ballasiotes, Friends of Diane; Casey Carmody, Friends of Diane; Angie Vincent, Friends of Diane, Tennis Shoe Brigade; Andy Miller, Blue Ribbon Panel on Sex Offender Outpatient Treatment; James Chapman; Steve Eckstrom, Washington Coalition of Crime Victim Advocates; Bev Emergy, Washington Coalition of Crime Victim Advocates
HOUSE AMENDMENTS:
The House adopted a striking amendment and also adopted several other amendments that modify the original Senate bill. The changes are outlined below.
Victim, Witness, and Police Notification Programs. The House amendments provide for an expanded intent and purpose section as it relates to notification programs. When an agency considers what information is relevant and necessary for release, a balancing test is to be utilized that considers at least eight different articulated factors. Authorization is also provided for the release of booking photos.
For offenders convicted of a sex offense between June 30, 1984 and July 1, 1988, the Department of Corrections, three months prior to release of such an offender, is to give written notification to the prosecuting attorney of the county where the person was convicted. The department is to provide: (1) the person's name, offense history, and anticipated future residence; (2) a narrative describing the person's conduct during confinement and any treatment received; (3) information indicating whether the department recommends a civil commitment petition be filed.
Juvenile Justice Amendments. The age requirement for mandatory decline hearings, declining juvenile court jurisdiction, and transferring to adult court is lowered from age 16 to 15 for juveniles charged with a class A felony. The age requirement is lowered from age 17 to 16 for juveniles charged with certain other offenses.
The burden of proof in mandatory decline hearings is shifted to the juvenile to establish by a preponderance of the evidence that retaining juvenile court jurisdiction over him or her would be in their best interest and the public's.
The maximum length of confinement pursuant to the special sexual offender dispositional alternative is reduced for juveniles from six months to 30 days.
The provisions relating to the sealing of juvenile sex offenses are modified to provide that such sealing is nullified upon conviction of an adult offense rather than be nullified just upon conviction of any adult sex offense.
Registration of Sex Offenders. In addition to the requirement that the Department of Corrections is to provide written notification to inmates convicted of sex offenses of the registration requirements, the House amendments also provide that individuals in charge of local jails are required to notify sex offenders in their custody of the registration requirements.
The Department of Licensing is required to provide applicants for drivers' licenses with written information on sex offender registration requirements.
The Washington State Patrol is specifically required to reimburse the counties for the costs of processing sex offender registrations including taking the fingerprints and photographs.
Crime Victims' Compensation Fund. Three different statutory limits on crime victims' compensation awards are increased. The limitation on awards for a single injury or death is increased from $15,000 to $70,000. The limitation for a total permanent disability or death is increased from $20,000 to $80,000. Finally, the current limitation of $10,000 for a total temporary disability is increased to $15,000.
Sexual Motivation in Criminal Cases. Pursuant to the House amendments, sexual motivation need only be one of the purposes for which the defendant committed the crime rather than being the only purpose for which the defendant committed the crime. A clarifying amendment is added to provide that the finding of sexual motivation must be proven beyond a reasonable doubt.
Criminal Sentencing. The length of community supervision under the special sexual offender sentencing alternative (SSOSA) is reduced from up to five years to three years or the length of the suspended sentence, whichever is greater.
Nonindigent defendants are required to pay for the cost of additional evaluations under the special sexual offender dispositional alternative and under the special sentencing option for adult sex offenders.
Civil Commitment. A technical amendment is added to clarify the definition of mental abnormality.
The House amendments modify the provisions regarding the post commitment procedural due process rights of the committed person if DSHS does not approve the discharge petition. The Secretary of DSHS is required to provide annual notice of the person's right to petition for release. The notice must contain a waiver of the right to petition. If the person does not affirmatively waive the right, then the court is required to set a show cause hearing on the issue. The person does not have a right to be present but does have the right to an attorney. If the court determines that probable cause exists and believes that the person should be released, the court will set a hearing on the matter. The committed person is entitled to all the constitutional protections afforded at a trial. The state bears the burden of proof by a preponderance of the evidence that the committed person should not be released.
Community Action--Grant Programs and Victims' Advocacy. The Office of Victims' Rights and the grant program for victim treatment is located in the Department of Community Development rather than the Department of Labor and Industries.
Sex Offender Therapist Certification. A clarifying amendment is provided to ensure that the certification provisions apply to therapists that treat juvenile as well as adult offenders.
Miscellaneous Programs. Three provisions that were contained in the Senate bill were removed by the House amendments. The provisions regarding the treatment of abusive persons who are removed from the home, the joint child protective services/law enforcement pilot project, and the organic treatment of sex offenders study are no longer contained in the bill.
Appropriations. The following appropriations are added to the bill and are made from the general fund for the biennium ending June 30, 1991:
$100,000 to DSHS for implementing the expanded victim and police notification programs.
$2,850,000 to DSHS for the operations costs of the disposition and treatment alternatives for juvenile sex offenders.
$253,000 to the Washington State Patrol for the central sex offender registry.
$760,000 to the Attorney General to expand the homicide investigation and tracking system of serious violent crimes to include sex offenses.
$1,430,000 to the Department of Labor and Industries for the purposes of the crime victims' compensation fund.
$1,328,000 to the Department of Corrections for operations costs associated with additional prison population due to increased penalties ($172,000), improvement in sex offender treatment ($1,107,000), and improvement in the computer systems to allow better access to Department of Correction's information by the State Patrol and local law enforcement ($49,000).
$1,875,000 to DSHS for the civil commitment process. DSHS must reimburse counties for the cost of commitment actions.
$1,391,000 to DSHS for intensive voluntary supervision and treatment services for individuals who are at risk of committing sex offenses but who cannot be civilly committed or who are not incarcerated. These funds are to be used primarily for the developmentally disabled in need of those services.
$1,800,000 to DSHS to provide intensive treatment and other services to children who are victims of sexual abuse. These funds are to be used primarily for juveniles who are at risk of becoming offenders and in need of residential treatment or intensive treatment and counseling.
$327,000 to the Department of Corrections for the purpose of paying for polygraphs or plethysmographs for indigent sex offenders who are required to obtain those tests as conditions of release.
$640,000 to the Washington State Institute for Public Policy to research and evaluate efforts to examine the effectiveness of victims' and sex offender programs, including treatment. The institute will operate a grant program which must include awards for longitudinal and retrospective studies. An advisory panel will decide who receives grant money which must be given to applicants from for-profit or nonprofit organizations in addition to public universities. $140,000 of the $600,000 is appropriated to the Washington State Institute for Public Policy for the purposes of funding their proposed study "Special Sex Offender Sentencing Alternative: A Study of Recidivism and Community Attitudes." This study is to be conducted through Harborview Medical Center special assault center and its subcontractors as designated in the study.
$106,000 to DSHS to renovate an institutional cottage to house juvenile sex offenders.
$991,000 to DSHS to construct residential facilities to house a capacity of 24 juvenile sex offenders.
$400,000 to the Department of Community Development for programs designed to prevent sexual assault.
$2,800,000 to DSHS for early identification and treatment of child victims of sexual assault or abuse. $100,000 is provided solely for a public education campaign encouraging child victims of sexual assault and abuse and their families to seek treatment. $200,000 is provided solely for the development of a system of early identification referral to treatment of child victims of sexual assault and abuse. $2,500,000 is provided solely for contracts or direct purchase of specific treatment services from community organizations and private service providers.
$2,813,000 to the Department of Community Development. $2,500,000 of that amount is for the grant programs. $213,000 is for the Office of Victims' Rights. $100,000 is for the purpose of ensuring that crime victims are aware of their rights and the procedures for applying for benefits from the crime Victims' compensation fund.
$80,000 to the Department of Health to establish the sex offender treatment providers advisory committee and to administer the development of a sexual offender treatment provider certification program.