(1) An owner, manager, or operator of a covered entity
may order a covered offender from the legal premises of a covered
entity as provided under this section. To do this, the owner,
manager, or operator of a covered entity must first provide the
covered offender, or cause the covered offender to be provided,
personal service of a written notice that informs the covered
offender that:
(a) The covered offender must leave the legal premises of
the covered entity and may not return without the written
permission of the covered entity; and
(b) If the covered offender refuses to leave the legal
premises of the covered entity, or thereafter returns and enters
within the legal premises of the covered entity without written
permission, the offender may be charged and prosecuted for a
felony offense as provided in RCW 9A.44.196.
(2) A covered entity may give written permission of entry
and use to a covered offender to enter and remain on the legal
premises of the covered entity at particular times and for lawful
purposes, including, but not limited to, conducting business,
voting, or participating in educational or recreational
activities. Any written permission of entry and use of the legal
premises of a covered entity must be clearly stated in a written
document and must be personally served on the covered offender.
If the covered offender violates the conditions of entry and use
contained in a written document personally served on the offender
by the covered entity, the covered offender may be charged and
prosecuted for a felony offense as provided in RCW 9A.44.196.
(3) An owner, employee, or agent of a covered entity shall
be immune from civil liability for damages arising from excluding
or failing to exclude a covered offender from a covered entity or
from imposing or failing to impose conditions of entry and use on
a covered offender.
(4) A person provided with written notice from a covered
entity under this section may file a petition with the district
court alleging that he or she does not meet the definition of
"covered offender" in RCW 9A.44.190. The district court must
conduct a hearing on the petition within thirty days of the
petition being filed. In the hearing on the petition, the person
has the burden of proving that he or she is not a covered
offender. If the court finds, by a preponderance of the
evidence, that the person is not a covered offender, the court
shall order the covered entity to rescind the written notice and
shall order the covered entity to pay the person's costs and
reasonable attorneys' fees.
[2006 c 126 § 5; 2006 c 125 § 3.]
NOTES:
Effective date -- 2006 c 126 §§ 1 and 3-7: See note following RCW 9A.44.130.
Intent -- Severability -- Effective date -- 2006 c 125: See notes following RCW 9A.44.190.