(1)(a) Every person involuntarily detained or committed under the
provisions of this chapter shall be entitled to all the rights
set forth in this chapter, which shall be prominently posted in
the facility, and shall retain all rights not denied him or her
under this chapter except as chapter 9.41 RCW may limit the right
of a person to purchase or possess a firearm or to qualify for a
concealed pistol license.
(b) No person shall be presumed incompetent as a consequence
of receiving an evaluation or voluntary or involuntary treatment
for a mental disorder, under this chapter or any prior laws of
this state dealing with mental illness. Competency shall not be
determined or withdrawn except under the provisions of chapter 10.77 or 11.88 RCW.
(c) Any person who leaves a public or private agency
following evaluation or treatment for mental disorder shall be
given a written statement setting forth the substance of this
section.
(2) Each person involuntarily detained or committed pursuant
to this chapter shall have the right to adequate care and
individualized treatment.
(3) The provisions of this chapter shall not be construed to
deny to any person treatment by spiritual means through prayer in
accordance with the tenets and practices of a church or religious
denomination.
(4) Persons receiving evaluation or treatment under this
chapter shall be given a reasonable choice of an available
physician or other professional person qualified to provide such
services.
(5) Whenever any person is detained for evaluation and
treatment pursuant to this chapter, both the person and, if
possible, a responsible member of his or her immediate family,
personal representative, guardian, or conservator, if any, shall
be advised as soon as possible in writing or orally, by the
officer or person taking him or her into custody or by personnel
of the evaluation and treatment facility where the person is
detained that unless the person is released or voluntarily admits
himself or herself for treatment within seventy-two hours of the
initial detention:
(a) A judicial hearing in a superior court, either by a
judge or court commissioner thereof, shall be held not more than
seventy-two hours after the initial detention to determine
whether there is probable cause to detain the person after the
seventy-two hours have expired for up to an additional fourteen
days without further automatic hearing for the reason that the
person is a person whose mental disorder presents a likelihood of
serious harm or that the person is gravely disabled;
(b) The person has a right to communicate immediately with
an attorney; has a right to have an attorney appointed to
represent him or her before and at the probable cause hearing if
he or she is indigent; and has the right to be told the name and
address of the attorney that the mental health professional has
designated pursuant to this chapter;
(c) The person has the right to remain silent and that any
statement he or she makes may be used against him or her;
(d) The person has the right to present evidence and to
cross-examine witnesses who testify against him or her at the
probable cause hearing; and
(e) The person has the right to refuse psychiatric
medications, including antipsychotic medication beginning
twenty-four hours prior to the probable cause hearing.
(6) When proceedings are initiated under RCW 71.05.153, no
later than twelve hours after such person is admitted to the
evaluation and treatment facility the personnel of the evaluation
and treatment facility or the designated mental health
professional shall serve on such person a copy of the petition
for initial detention and the name, business address, and phone
number of the designated attorney and shall forthwith commence
service of a copy of the petition for initial detention on the
designated attorney.
(7) The judicial hearing described in subsection (5) of this
section is hereby authorized, and shall be held according to the
provisions of subsection (5) of this section and rules
promulgated by the supreme court.
(8) At the probable cause hearing the detained person shall
have the following rights in addition to the rights previously
specified:
(a) To present evidence on his or her behalf;
(b) To cross-examine witnesses who testify against him or
her;
(c) To be proceeded against by the rules of evidence;
(d) To remain silent;
(e) To view and copy all petitions and reports in the court
file.
(9) The physician-patient privilege or the
psychologist-client privilege shall be deemed waived in
proceedings under this chapter relating to the administration of
antipsychotic medications. As to other proceedings under this
chapter, the privileges shall be waived when a court of competent
jurisdiction in its discretion determines that such waiver is
necessary to protect either the detained person or the public.
The waiver of a privilege under this section is limited to
records or testimony relevant to evaluation of the detained
person for purposes of a proceeding under this chapter. Upon
motion by the detained person or on its own motion, the court
shall examine a record or testimony sought by a petitioner to
determine whether it is within the scope of the waiver.
The record maker shall not be required to testify in order
to introduce medical or psychological records of the detained
person so long as the requirements of RCW 5.45.020 are met except
that portions of the record which contain opinions as to the
detained person's mental state must be deleted from such records
unless the person making such conclusions is available for
cross-examination.
(10) Insofar as danger to the person or others is not
created, each person involuntarily detained, treated in a less
restrictive alternative course of treatment, or committed for
treatment and evaluation pursuant to this chapter shall have, in
addition to other rights not specifically withheld by law, the
following rights:
(a) To wear his or her own clothes and to keep and use his
or her own personal possessions, except when deprivation of same
is essential to protect the safety of the resident or other
persons;
(b) To keep and be allowed to spend a reasonable sum of his
or her own money for canteen expenses and small purchases;
(c) To have access to individual storage space for his or
her private use;
(d) To have visitors at reasonable times;
(e) To have reasonable access to a telephone, both to make
and receive confidential calls, consistent with an effective
treatment program;
(f) To have ready access to letter writing materials,
including stamps, and to send and receive uncensored
correspondence through the mails;
(g) To discuss treatment plans and decisions with
professional persons;
(h) Not to consent to the administration of antipsychotic
medications and not to thereafter be administered antipsychotic
medications unless ordered by a court under RCW 71.05.217 or
pursuant to an administrative hearing under RCW 71.05.215;
(i) Not to consent to the performance of electroconvulsant
therapy or surgery, except emergency life-saving surgery, unless
ordered by a court under RCW 71.05.217;
(j) Not to have psychosurgery performed on him or her under
any circumstances;
(k) To dispose of property and sign contracts unless such
person has been adjudicated an incompetent in a court proceeding
directed to that particular issue.
(11) Every person involuntarily detained shall immediately
be informed of his or her right to a hearing to review the
legality of his or her detention and of his or her right to
counsel, by the professional person in charge of the facility
providing evaluation and treatment, or his or her designee, and,
when appropriate, by the court. If the person so elects, the
court shall immediately appoint an attorney to assist him or her.
(12) A person challenging his or her detention or his or her
attorney shall have the right to designate and have the court
appoint a reasonably available independent physician or licensed
mental health professional to examine the person detained, the
results of which examination may be used in the proceeding. The
person shall, if he or she is financially able, bear the cost of
such expert examination, otherwise such expert examination shall
be at public expense.
(13) Nothing contained in this chapter shall prohibit the
patient from petitioning by writ of habeas corpus for release.
(14) Nothing in this chapter shall prohibit a person
committed on or prior to January 1, 1974, from exercising a right
available to him or her at or prior to January 1, 1974, for
obtaining release from confinement.
(15) Nothing in this section permits any person to knowingly
violate a no-contact order or a condition of an active judgment
and sentence or an active condition of supervision by the
department of corrections.
[2007 c 375 § 14; 2005 c 504 § 107; 1997 c 112 § 30; 1974 ex.s. c 145 § 25; 1973 1st ex.s. c 142 § 41.]
NOTES:
Findings -- Purpose -- Construction -- Severability -- 2007 c 375: See notes following RCW 10.31.110.
Findings -- Intent -- Severability -- Application -- Construction--Captions, part headings, subheadings not law -- Adoption of rules -- Effective dates -- 2005 c 504: See notes following RCW 71.05.027.
Alphabetization--Correction of references--2005 c 504: See note following RCW 71.05.020.