HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES |
H.B. NO. |
584 |
THIRTY-SECOND LEGISLATURE, 2023 |
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STATE OF HAWAII |
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A BILL FOR AN ACT
RELATING TO PROBATION.
BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF HAWAII:
SECTION 1. The legislature finds that, at the end of the 2021 fiscal year, the judiciary's adult client services branch was overseeing approximately eighteen thousand five hundred offenders, all of whom were placed on probation or subject to court-ordered control, including offenders released from the Hawaii state hospital. Of this number, national studies indicate that between eleven thousand to fourteen thousand offenders were likely under the influence of drugs or alcohol during the commission of their offense, committed the offense to support a drug addiction, were charged with a substance-related crime, or are regular substance users. A growing body of research suggests that more than sixty per cent of persons who are arrested for a felony offense, including both drug-related and non-drug-related crimes, test positive for recent drug use at the time of booking.
The legislature further finds that, without proper supervision and treatment, an offender may fail on probation and commit new offenses. The offender's reengagement in criminal conduct leads to victimization of additional persons, further property loss, and greater expenditure of the State's limited resources to identify, apprehend, prosecute, and return the offender to confinement. Persons charged with repeat offenses pose a substantially greater risk of criminal recidivism.
The legislature notes that in 2004, Hawaii was the first state in the nation to develop a high-intensity, collaborative probation strategy known as Hawaii's opportunity probation with enforcement, or HOPE, to effect behavioral change in higher‑risk, higher-need felony probationers. The key to this probation strategy is that it imposes immediate consequences for probation violations. This allows the probationer to learn by pairing a bad choice (a probation violation) with a consequence (a consistent and proportionate jail sanction). The program may be characterized as "Parenting 101". Hawaii's opportunity probation with enforcement hearings typically deal with a single recent violation, rather than allowing multiple violations to accumulate without consequences, as often occurs with regular probation.
The legislature recognizes that, after starting in 2004 with a small group of thirty-four probationers who were either sex offenders or offenders having significant substance use issues, the program quickly grew to more than one thousand five hundred participants by 2007. The program expanded without requiring additional courtrooms, judges, court clerks, probation offers, police officers, or jail cells. The funds appropriated by the legislature were spent almost entirely on expanding the program's capacity for drug testing and treatment. By 2016, the program had expanded to include more than two thousand participants.
The legislature notes that, since 2007, the Hawaii's opportunity probation with enforcement program has been the focus of numerous top-quality studies and has been adopted by courts across the nation. One study conducted in 2007 by researchers from Pepperdine university and the university of California, Los Angeles, found that probationers who participated in the program were fifty-five per cent less likely to be arrested for a new crime. They were also seventy-two per cent less likely to use drugs, sixty-one per cent less likely to miss appointments with their supervisory officers, and fifty‑three per cent less likely to have their probation revoked. As a result, these probationers served or were sentenced to an average of forty-eight per cent fewer days of incarceration than the control group. Notably, the study found that while probationers in the program and those on regular probation served approximately the same number of days in jail, probationers in the program spent half as many days in prison for revocations or new convictions. Additionally, women in the program failed at probation and went to prison fifty per cent less often than women on regular probation. Similarly, native Hawaiians in the program were forty-two per cent less likely to have their probation revoked and to be sent to prison when compared to native Hawaiians on regular probation. Hawaii's opportunity probation with enforcement participants were also more likely than regular probationers to receive early termination of probation for successful compliance with all terms and conditions of their probation.
The legislature finds that the State has had substantial success with this program, in terms of fewer crimes committed, less need for long-term incarceration, and increased productivity, self-esteem, and overall well-being for program participants. The program is also cost-effective, since a single dedicated judge can simultaneously supervise more than two thousand felony probationers. Given these successes, the legislature believes that this program should be implemented on a broader scale, in a format that has already proven effective.
Accordingly, the purpose of this Act is to implement the Hawaii's opportunity probation with enforcement program statewide. The goal of the program shall be to reduce crime, recidivism, and mass incarceration while supporting probationers' desire to be contributing, law-abiding citizens, through a combined system of accountability and treatment options.
SECTION 2. Chapter 706, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by adding a new section to part I to be appropriately designated and to read as follows:
"§706- Hawaii's opportunity probation with
enforcement program; purpose; requirements. (1) There is established the Hawaii's opportunity
probation with enforcement program to help participants comply with terms and conditions
of supervision, succeed on probation or deferral, and avoid going to
prison. The program shall follow the
Hawaii's opportunity probation with enforcement model, as developed and
implemented in the city and county of Honolulu from 2004 through 2019. The program shall be administered by the
judiciary, in consultation with the office of the public defender and the
prosecuting attorneys for the counties of Hawaii, Maui, Kauai, and the city and
county of Honolulu.
(2)
The purpose of the program shall be to reduce recidivism by having the
court, attorneys, and probation officers work together closely to:
(a) Hold participants immediately accountable
for probation or deferral violations;
(b) Provide swift, certain, consistent, and
proportionate jail sanctions for probation or deferral violations;
(c) Provide support and accountability by
offering:
(i) Probation officers
trained in evidence-based practices;
(ii) A judge knowledgeable
about addiction who will encourage the participants but also be firm and hold
participants accountable for their actions; and
(iii) A swift, certain, consistent, and proportionate sanctions system
to help keep participants sober and ensure that participants see their
probation officers and treatment providers, if needed;
(d) Coordinate with various treatment programs,
including sex offender treatment, mental health treatment, substance abuse treatment,
and domestic violence intervention programs;
(e) Implement randomized drug testing for
appropriate participants; and
(f) Focus on higher-risk participants to
achieve the largest gains in reducing recidivism.
(3) The court shall hold hearings at the circuit
court of the applicable circuit, with both a prosecuting attorney and the
participant's defense attorney appearing at each hearing. To promote consistency, one primary judge and
one backup judge shall be assigned to implement the program in each circuit.
(4) Participants shall be admitted to the program
at the discretion of the court or their assigned probation officer, based upon
a determination by the court or assigned probation officer that the participant
is likely to benefit from the program.
(5) After admission to the program, each
participant shall attend a Hawaii's opportunity probation with enforcement
warning hearing with the judge, who shall inform the participant of the:
(a) Overall goals and expectations of the
program, including the fact that the court, probation officer, prosecuting
attorney, and defense attorney are working together to help the participant
succeed on probation or deferral;
(b) Terms and conditions of probation or
deferral that, if violated, will subject the participant to jail sanctions;
(c) Swift, certain, consistent, and
proportionate jail sanctions to be imposed in the event that the participant
violates the terms and conditions of probation or deferral;
(d) Ability of the judge to terminate the
participant's probation early upon a finding that the participant has been in
compliance with probation terms and conditions for at least two years;
(e) Specific rules and expectations relating to
randomized drug testing; court appearances; scheduled meetings with the
probation officer; participation in treatment, as required by the terms and
conditions of the participant's probation or deferral; and compliance with all
other terms and conditions of the probation or deferral; and
(f) Potential that, if terms and conditions are
violated, probation may be revoked or the deferral set aside, and the
participant resentenced to incarceration pursuant to section 706-625 or 853-3,
Hawaii Revised Statutes.
(6) The probation officer assigned to a
participant shall file a motion to enlarge the conditions of probation or
deferral pursuant to section 706-625 or 853-1, Hawaii Revised Statutes, or
revoke probation or set aside deferral pursuant to section 706‑625 or
853-3, Hawaii Revised Statutes, if the participant violates the terms and
conditions of probation or deferral by testing positive for drugs, refusing to
satisfactorily participate in treatment, failing to meet with their probation
officer as scheduled, or violates other terms and conditions.
(7) The probation officer assigned to a
participant shall conduct randomized drug testing of the participant, if
appropriate. If the participant tests
positive for drug use and admits to having used drugs, the probation officer
shall:
(a) Immediately take the participant into
custody;
(b) File a motion to enlarge the conditions of
probation or deferral pursuant to section 706-625 or 853-1, Hawaii Revised
Statutes, or revoke probation or set aside deferral pursuant to section 706-625
or 853-3, Hawaii Revised Statutes; and
(c) Schedule a court hearing to be held two
business days after the positive drug test result.
(8) At any hearing on a motion to enlarge the
conditions of probation or deferral, revoke probation, or set aside deferral,
the participant shall be represented by a defense attorney, and shall have the
right to contest the alleged violation pursuant to section 706-625, Hawaii
Revised Statutes. The standard of proof
for any contested hearing shall be a preponderance of the evidence.
(9) If the court finds that enlargement of the
conditions of probation or deferral is warranted, the court shall enlarge the
participant's sentence as follows:
(a) For failing to appear for an appointment or
drug test as scheduled but appearing within twenty-four hours of the missed
appointment or drug test, and testing negative, no more than seven hours of
confinement in the courthouse cellblock;
(b) For a positive drug test result, after
which the participant admits drug use, two days of jail;
(c) For a positive drug test result, after which
the participant denies drug use, and the positive result is confirmed by a
laboratory, fifteen days of jail;
(d) For failing to provide a sufficient urine
sample for drug testing as directed, fifteen days of jail;
(e) For tampering with the drug testing
procedure, including but not limited to providing diluted samples, using urine
adulterants, or swapping or otherwise providing altered samples, thirty days of
jail;
(f) For failing to appear for an appointment or
drug test as scheduled, following which the participant does not appear within
five or more days after the missed appointment or drug test, thirty days of
jail; and
(g) For conviction of a new crime, failure to
attend or complete treatment, or other violations of the terms and conditions
of probation or deferral not otherwise specified, either a period of jail to be
determined by the court, or revocation of probation or setting aside of the
deferral.
(10) For purposes of this Act:
"Defense
attorney" means any attorney retained, appointed, or ordered to represent
the participant, including the public defender or any deputy public defender.
"Deferral"
means deferred acceptance of guilty or nolo contendere plea pursuant to section
853-1, Hawaii Revised Statutes.
"Jail"
means any type of detention administered by the department of public safety, or
its successor agency.
"Participant"
means a defendant who has either been convicted of a felony offense or granted
a deferral and who has been accepted for placement in the Hawaii's opportunity
probation with enforcement program.
"Prosecuting attorney" means the prosecuting attorney or any deputy prosecuting attorney for the applicable county."
SECTION 3. New statutory material is underscored.
SECTION 4. This Act shall take effect upon its approval.
INTRODUCED
BY: |
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Report Title:
Judiciary; Offenders; Hawaii's Opportunity Probation With Enforcement Program
Description:
Establishes a statewide program modeled after the Hawaii's Opportunity Probation with Enforcement (HOPE) program that was implemented in the City and County of Honolulu from 2004 through 2019. Requires the Judiciary to administer the program.
The summary description
of legislation appearing on this page is for informational purposes only and is
not legislation or evidence of legislative intent.