Washington State House of Representatives Office of Program Research |
BILL ANALYSIS |
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Criminal Justice & Corrections Committee |
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SSB 5123
Brief Description: Revising the crime of escape as it relates to persons committed to the department of social and health services.
Sponsors: By Senate Committee on Human Services & Corrections (originally sponsored by Senators Costa, Long and Hargrove).
Brief Summary of Substitute Bill
$Expands the escape statute to include sexually violent predators and persons civilly committed under a plea of insanity, who leave the state with authorization but fail to return at a required specified time.
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Hearing Date: 3/21/01
Staff: Yvonne Walker (786‑7841).
Background:
Generally, escape in the second degree is committed when a person escapes from a detention facility or having been charged with a felony or an equivalent juvenile offense, he or she escapes from custody. The crime of escape can also be committed when a person, found to be a sexually violent predator and is under an order of conditional release, leaves Washington without prior authorization. The crime of escape does not include sexually violent predators who leave the state with authorization but fail to return to the state at a required specified time.
Furthermore, the crime of escape does not include persons civilly committed under the Criminal Insanity statute for a sex, violent, or felony harassment offense who have been conditionally released on less restrictive alternatives and who leave or remain absent from the state without authorization.
Escape in the second degree is a seriousness level III, class C felony. A first time offender would receive a presumptive sentence of one to three months in jail.
Summary of Bill:
Sexually violent predators and persons civilly committed under a plea of insanity for a sex, violent, or felony harassment offense, who have been conditionally released on a less restrictive alternative, and who leave and remain absent from the state without authorization are guilty of escape in the second degree.
Appropriation: None.
Fiscal Note: Available.
Effective Date: Ninety days after adjournment of session in which bill is passed.