Washington uses determinate sentencing for felony offenses, in which a standard range for the offense is determined by cross referencing the seriousness level of the offense, provided by statute, with an offender score based on the criminal history of the defendant. The judge must impose a sentence within the standard range for the offense unless the court finds there are substantial and compelling reasons to impose an exceptional sentence outside the standard range. Notwithstanding the standard range sentence, a number of other factors may apply to increase mandatory sentence terms for a defendant, including sentencing enhancements, mandatory minimum sentencing terms, determinate plus sentencing, and persistent offender sentencing.
Certain sentencing alternatives have been enacted which allow the court to waive the usual standard range without finding grounds for an exceptional sentence. These alternatives frequently allow a term of community custody to be imposed in lieu of confinement and may require the person to engage in a form of treatment. Sentencing alternatives for adult felony defendants include the First-Time Offender Waiver, Parenting Sentencing Alternative, Drug Offender Sentencing Alternative, and Special Sex Offender Sentencing Alternative.
Persons on community custody are supervised by community corrections officers. With the exception of persons who receive sentencing alternatives, Washington limits community supervision to persons who are classified high risk. The law provides procedures for persons sentenced to community custody which include mandatory conditions of supervision, review, imposition of additional conditions, and structured revocation that do not call for direct court supervision or review.
In 2019, the Legislature established a Criminal Sentencing Task Force to review state sentencing laws which met throughout 2019 and 2020. The task force produced a final report containing 47 consensus recommendations in December 2020. Recommendation Six of the report calls for establishing a mental health sentencing alternative.
A mental disability mandated observation and treatment alternative to incarceration (MDMOTAI) is created, which allows a sentencing court to waive the standard range and impose a term of community custody if the defendant is:
Any party or the court may move for imposition of a MDMOTAI, but the defendant must be willing. The court may order an examination of the defendant or rely on existing health records if sufficient information is available. Before imposition of a MDMOTAI, a written report must be provided in the form of a presentence investigation containing:
The court must impose 12 to 24 months of community custody if the standard range sentence is less that 36 months, and 12-36 months of community custody for longer sentencing ranges. The defendant must be assigned a community corrections officer with mental health training, or to a special needs unit or behavioral health unit if one exists. The court may impose conditions such as:
The court may assess a supervision charge of $30 per month against the defendant if the defendant is financially able. No supervision fee may be charged if the defendant is on public assistance.
The court must schedule regular progress hearings for the defendant, as regularly as needed to meet the needs of the defendant. The Department of Corrections and any treatment provider must provide a report to the court before each hearing. The court may modify the conditions of community custody at a progress hearing if the modification serves the interests of justice and the best interests of the defendant. The court must schedule a termination hearing one month before the end of supervision. If the court revokes the MDMOTAI it may impose a sentence of confinement within the standard range sentence or an exceptional sentence below the standard range, with credit for time served for time served in the community.
Costs for examinations or the preparation of treatment plans may be paid out of the Criminal Justice Treatment Account.
PRO: This advances public health and public safety. It addresses the root causes of criminal behavior where mental health or brain injuries are a factor. This bill expands on the ideas of drug courts. It is a recommendation of the Washington Criminal Sentencing Task Force. This has been the work of many years. There are sentencing alternatives for almost every kind of issue that brings people into the criminal justice system, but the one that causes the greatest difficulty for people is mental illness. We are not doing well by individuals with mental illness in the criminal justice system. This provides a unique opportunity to provide treatment in the community and supervision to help those who need it. There is no guarantee of Department of Corrections supervision without a special sentencing alternative. It is time for this. I have represented young adults who have first psychotic episodes and face jail and prison. A family calls 911 asking for help and instead of a hospital stay their son ends up in jail. This measure supports resilience to trauma. I believe in aggressive, proactive application of the law. This bill does the right thing. Community custody works. Treatment works. Smart justice demands we stop warehousing persons with mental illness.
OTHER: The goals of this bill are laudable. Please do not use money from the Criminal Justice Treatment Account, which is designed for people with a diagnosis of substance use disorder. The entirety of the funds in the account are already spent. We have concerns about the fiscal impact of extra pressure on the courts. Courts in rural areas may not have the funding and personnel to utilize this program. Please address victims' interests, and create a nexus between the mental illness and the criminal conduct. We see this as an unfunded mandate. We should take a global look at the funding being placed in the behavioral health system. There are other ways to address mental illness in the justice system, such as by a mitigating factor. The classification of severe and persistent mental health issue is very broad. The exclusion of serious violent offenses is too narrow.