(1)
When an offender is subject to a standard range disposition
involving confinement by the department, the court may:
(a) Impose the standard range; or
(b) Suspend the standard range disposition on condition that
the offender complies with the terms of this mental health
disposition alternative.
(2) The court may impose this disposition alternative when
the court finds the following:
(a) The offender has a current diagnosis, consistent with
the American psychiatry association diagnostic and statistical
manual of mental disorders, of axis I psychiatric disorder,
excluding youth that are diagnosed as solely having a conduct
disorder, oppositional defiant disorder, substance abuse
disorder, paraphilia, or pedophilia;
(b) An appropriate treatment option is available in the
local community;
(c) The plan for the offender identifies and addresses
requirements for successful participation and completion of the
treatment intervention program including: Incentives and
graduated sanctions designed specifically for amenable youth,
including the use of detention, detoxication, and in-patient or
outpatient substance abuse treatment and psychiatric
hospitalization, and structured community support consisting of
mental health providers, probation, educational and vocational
advocates, child welfare services, and family and community
support. For any mental health treatment ordered for an offender
under this section, the treatment option selected shall be chosen
from among programs which have been successful in addressing
mental health needs of juveniles and successful in mental health
treatment of juveniles and identified as research-based best
practice programs. A list of programs which meet these criteria
shall be agreed upon by: The Washington association of juvenile
court administrators, the juvenile rehabilitation administration
of the department of social and health services, a representative
of the division of public behavioral health and justice policy at
the University of Washington, and the Washington institute for
public policy. The list of programs shall be created not later
than July 1, 2003. The group shall provide the list to all
superior courts, its own membership, the legislature, and the
governor. The group shall meet annually and revise the list as
appropriate; and
(d) The offender, offender's family, and community will
benefit from use of the mental health disposition alternative.
(3) The court on its own motion may order, or on motion by
either party, shall order a comprehensive mental health
evaluation to determine if the offender has a designated mental
disorder. The court may also order a chemical dependency
evaluation to determine if the offender also has a co-occurring
chemical dependency disorder. The evaluation shall include at a
minimum the following: The offender's version of the facts and
the official version of the facts, the offender's offense, an
assessment of the offender's mental health and drug-alcohol
problems and previous treatment attempts, and the offender's
social, criminal, educational, and employment history and living
situation.
(4) The evaluator shall determine if the offender is
amenable to research-based treatment. A proposed case management
and treatment plan shall include at a minimum:
(a) The availability of treatment;
(b) Anticipated length of treatment;
(c) Whether one or more treatment interventions are proposed
and the anticipated sequence of those treatment interventions;
(d) The education plan;
(e) The residential plan; and
(f) The monitoring plan.
(5) The court on its own motion may order, or on motion by
either party, shall order a second mental health or chemical
dependency evaluation. The party making the motion shall select
the evaluator. The requesting party shall pay the cost of any
examination ordered under this subsection and subsection (3) of
this section unless the court finds the offender is indigent and
no third party insurance coverage is available, in which case the
state shall pay the cost.
(6) Upon receipt of the assessments, evaluations, and
reports the court shall consider whether the offender and the
community will benefit from use of the mental health disposition
alternative. The court shall consider the victim's opinion
whether the offender should receive the option.
(7) If the court determines that the mental health
disposition alternative is appropriate, the court shall impose a
standard range disposition, suspend execution of the disposition,
and place the offender on community supervision up to one year
and impose one or more other local sanctions. Confinement in a
secure county detention facility, other than county group homes,
inpatient psychiatric treatment facilities, and substance abuse
programs, shall be limited to thirty days. As a condition of a
suspended disposition, the court shall require the offender to
participate in the recommended treatment interventions.
(8) The treatment providers shall submit monthly reports to
the court and parties on the offender's progress in treatment.
The report shall reference the treatment plan and include at a
minimum the following: Dates of attendance, offender's
compliance with requirements, treatment activities, medication
management, the offender's relative progress in treatment, and
any other material specified by the court at the time of the
disposition.
(9) If the offender fails to comply with the suspended
disposition, the court may impose sanctions pursuant to RCW 13.40.200 or may revoke the suspended disposition and order the
disposition's execution.
(10) An offender is ineligible for the mental health
disposition option under this section if:
(a) The offender is ordered to serve a disposition for a
firearm violation under RCW 13.40.193; or
(b) The offense for which the disposition is being
considered is:
(i) An offense category A+, A, or A- offense, or an
attempt, conspiracy, or solicitation to commit a class A+, A, or
A- offense;
(ii) Manslaughter in the second degree (RCW 9A.32.070);
(iii) A sex offense as defined in RCW 9.94A.030; or
(iv) Any offense category B+ or B offense, when the offense
includes infliction of bodily harm upon another or when during
the commission or immediate withdrawal from the offense the
respondent was armed with a deadly weapon.
(11) Subject to funds appropriated for this specific
purpose, the costs incurred by the juvenile courts for the mental
health and chemical dependency evaluations, treatment, and costs
of supervision required under this section shall be paid by the
department's juvenile rehabilitation administration.
[2005 c 508 § 1; 2003 c 378 § 4.]