(1) The secretary shall provide
adequate care and individualized treatment to persons found
criminally insane at one or several of the state institutions or
facilities under the direction and control of the secretary. In
order that the secretary may adequately determine the nature of
the mental illness or developmental disability of the person
committed as criminally insane, all persons who are committed to
the secretary as criminally insane shall be promptly examined by
qualified personnel in order to provide a proper evaluation and
diagnosis of such individual. The examinations of all persons
with developmental disabilities committed under this chapter
shall be performed by developmental disabilities professionals.
Any person so committed shall not be released from the control of
the secretary except by order of a court of competent
jurisdiction made after a hearing and judgment of release.
(2) Whenever there is a hearing which the committed person
is entitled to attend, the secretary shall send the person in the
custody of one or more department employees to the county in
which the hearing is to be held at the time the case is called
for trial. During the time the person is absent from the
facility, the person may be confined in a facility designated by
and arranged for by the department, but shall at all times be
deemed to be in the custody of the department employee and
provided necessary treatment. If the decision of the hearing
remits the person to custody, the department employee shall
return the person to such institution or facility designated by
the secretary. If the state appeals an order of release, such
appeal shall operate as a stay, and the person shall remain in
custody and be returned to the institution or facility designated
by the secretary until a final decision has been rendered in the
cause.
[2010 c 263 § 4; 2000 c 94 § 15; 1989 c 420 § 7; 1974 ex.s. c 198 § 11; 1973 1st ex.s. c 117 § 12.]