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art.011/6/011/5/011/4
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ARTICLE 11
RELATING TO COURTS AND STATE HOSPITALS

     SECTION 1. Section 8-8-1 of the General Laws in Chapter 8-8 entitled "District Court" is
hereby amended to read as follows:
     8-8-1. District Court established -- Chief and associate justices.
     There is established a district court for the state of Rhode Island which shall consist of a
chief judge and thirteen (13) fourteen (14) associate judges. The district court shall be a court of
record and shall have a seal with such words and devices as it shall adopt.
     SECTION 2. Chapter 8-8 of the General Laws entitled "District Court" is hereby amended
by adding thereto the following section:
     8-8-1.2. Mental health treatment calendar.
     (a) Findings and declarations. The general assembly finds and declares as follows:
     (1) Mental illness is a prevalent and persistent issue in Rhode Island within the criminal
population in general and the incarcerated population in particular. Approximately one-fifth (1/5)
of all inmates at the adult correctional institutions have a diagnosed mental illness, while nearly
eighty percent (80%) have a history of substance abuse. Many suffer from both maladies.
     (2) Mental illness can often go unrecognized and untreated, leaving some individuals to
suffer and spiral downward until they are caught in the criminal justice system. These individuals
often become trapped in a cycle of repeated prosecution and incarceration.
     (3) Individuals with mental illness who are charged with crimes can benefit from
alternatives to incarceration when feasible, and when permitted to obtain proper treatment for
persistent mental health and substance abuse disorders through a jail diversion treatment program
that recognizes their special set of circumstances while at the same time providing accountability
for their wrong-doing wrongdoing and providing for the safety of the public.
     (b) The district court shall create a voluntary mental health treatment calendar to better
address individuals who suffer from mental illness and are charged with a misdemeanor. The
district court will provide the tools and skills necessary to address these individuals’ unique
challenges thus helping them develop the insight needed to reintegrate successfully into society and
maintain a productive and law-abiding lifestyle within the community.
     (c) There shall be established, funded, and staffed a mental health alternative sentencing
and treatment calendar within the jurisdiction of the district court for hearing, addressing, and
disposing of certain misdemeanor offenses in an effort to direct eligible defendants into a court
program that integrates support and treatment plans with the judicial process, potentially resulting
in alternatives to traditional prosecution, sentencing, and incarceration; reducing the risk of
recidivism; and realizing cost savings for the state and increasing public safety. Successful
completion may result in a full dismissal of charges or in reduced charges and alternative
sentencing. The mental health treatment calendar shall be overseen by a district court judge to be
appointed pursuant to chapter 16.1 of this title 8, subject to an appropriation made by the general
assembly.
     (d) The chief judge of the district court shall create a mental health treatment calendar in
the district court and shall assign a district court judge and associated personnel to the extent
necessary to hear and decide all criminal actions involving offenses committed by defendants
accepted into the program. [The calendar shall be called the mental health treatment calendar.]
     (e) An eligible defendant is any person who stands charged in a district court complaint
with one or more misdemeanors, and:
     (1) Suffers from a mental, behavioral, or emotional disorder resulting in serious functional
impairment which substantially interferes with or limits one or more major life activities; and
     (2) Is determined by the court to be appropriate for participation in the mental health
treatment calendar.
     (3) An individual’s history of substance and alcohol abuse may also be considered to the
extent necessary to make a proper diagnosis of a co-occurring disorder.
     SECTION 3. Section 9-5-9 of the General Laws in Chapter 9-5 entitled "Writs, Summons
and Process" is hereby amended to read as follows:
     9-5-9. Warrants for commitment to institutions Warrants for commitment to state-
operated facilities.
     Any warrant or mittimus issued from any superior or district court committing any person
to the institute of mental health Eleanor Slater Hospital hospital or Rhode Island State Psychiatric
Hospital state psychiatric hospital shall be directed to and executed by duly authorized agents of
the department of human services behavioral healthcare, developmental disabilities and hospitals,
who shall make return thereon, the provisions of any other law to the contrary notwithstanding.
     SECTION 4. Sections 40.1-3-7 and 40.1-3-9 of the General Laws in Chapter 40.1-3 entitled
"Curative Services" are hereby amended to read as follows:
     40.1-3-7. Rules and regulations for Eleanor Slater hospital.
     The director of the department shall establish, in his or her the director’s discretion, rules
for the government of the hospital Eleanor Slater Hospital hospital, regulations for the admission
of patients, and shall generally be vested with all the powers necessary for the proper carrying on
of the work entrusted to him or her.
     40.1-3-9. Staff and employees of the state of Rhode Island medical center Staff and
employees of the Eleanor Slater Hospital hospital and of the Rhode Island State Psychiatric
Hospital state psychiatric hospital.
     The director of behavioral healthcare, developmental disabilities and hospitals shall
appoint, or delegate to another employee of the department the authority to appoint, employees, as
he or she the director may deem necessary for the proper management of the institutions facilities
of either or both the Eleanor Slater Hospital hospital or the Rhode Island State Psychiatric Hospital
state psychiatric hospital.
     SECTION 5. Chapter 40.1-3 of the General Laws entitled "Curative Services" 1s hereby
amended by adding thereto the following section:
     40.1-3-7.1. Rules and regulations for the Rhode Island State Psychiatric Hospital state
psychiatric hospital.
     The director of the department shall establish, in his or her the director’s discretion, rules
for the governance of the Rhode Island State Psychiatric Hospital state psychiatric hospital,
regulations for the admission of patients, and shall generally be vested with all the powers necessary
for the proper carrying on of the work entrusted to him or her.
     SECTION 6. Section 40.1-3-8 of the General Laws m Chapter 40.1-3 entitled "Curative
Services" is hereby repealed:
     40.1-3-8. Change of names of hospital for mental diseases and state infirmary.
     The name of the state institution at Cranston formerly known as the state asylum for the
insane or the state hospital for the insane or the state hospital for mental diseases, and the name of
the state institution at Cranston formerly known as tile state almshouse or the state infirmary, or
the general hospital, shall hereafter be known as the "Eleanor Slater Hospital." In any general law,
other public law, or resolution of the general assembly, and in any document, record, instrument,
or proceeding authorized by any such law or resolution, unless the context or subject matter
otherwise requires, the words "state asylum for the insane" and the words "state hospital for the
insane" or "state hospital for mental disease" shall be construed to mean the "Eleanor Slater
Hospital."
     SECTION 7. Sections 40.1-5-2, 40.1-5-5, 40.1-5-6, 40.1-5-7, 40.1-5-7.1, 40.1-5-8, 40.1-5-
11, 40.1-5-27.1, 40.1-5-31, 40.1-5-32, 40.1-5-33 and 40.1-5-34 of the General Laws in Chapter
40.1-5 entitled "Mental Health Law" are hereby amended to read as follows:
     40.1-5-2. Definitions.
     Whenever used in this chapter, or in any order, rule, or regulation made or promulgated
pursuant to this chapter, or in any printed forms prepared by the department or the director, unless
otherwise expressly stated, or unless the context or subject matter otherwise requires:
     (1) "Alternatives to admission or certification" means alternatives to a particular facility or
treatment program, and shall include, but not be limited to, voluntary or court-ordered outpatient
treatment, day treatment in a hospital, night treatment in a hospital, placement in the custody of a
friend or relative, placement in a nursing home, referral to a community mental health clinic and
home health aide services, or any other services that may be deemed appropriate.
     (2) "Care and treatment" means psychiatric care, together with such medical, nursing,
psychological, social, rehabilitative, and maintenance services as may be required by a patient in
association with the psychiatric care provided pursuant to an individualized treatment plan recorded
in the patient's medical record.
     (3) "Department" means the state department of behavioral healthcare, developmental
disabilities and hospitals.
     (4) "Director" means the director of the state department of behavioral healthcare,
developmental disabilities and hospitals.
     (5)(i) "Facility" means a state hospital or psychiatric inpatient facility in the department
any public or private hospital licensed by the Rhode Island department of health that maintains staff
and facilities, including inpatient units, for the care and treatment of persons with psychiatric
illness, psychiatric disorders, and/or psychiatric disabilities; and in order to operate pursuant to the
Mental Health Act as codified in this chapter, such facility and/or inpatient unit must be approved
by the director of the department of behavioral healthcare, developmental disabilities and hospitals
upon application of such facility and/or inpatient unit, a psychiatric inpatient facility maintained by
a political subdivision of the state for the care and/or treatment of the mentally disabled; a general
or specialized hospital maintaining staff and facilities for this purpose; and any of the several
community mental health services established pursuant to chapter 8.5 of this title; and any other
facility within the state providing inpatient psychiatric care and/or treatment and approved by the
director upon application of this facility. Included within this definition shall be all hospitals,
institutions, facilities, and services under the control and direction of the director and the
department, as provided in this chapter. Nothing contained herein shall be construed to amend or
repeal any of the provisions of chapter 16 of title 23.
     (ii) The Eleanor Slater Hospital hospital shall be required to apply to the department for
approval from the director to operate pursuant to this chapter.
     (iii) The Rhode Island State Psychiatric Hospital state psychiatric hospital shall be
required to apply to the department for approval from the director to operate pursuant to this
chapter.
     (6) "Indigent person" means a person who has not sufficient property or income to support
himself or herself, and to support the members of his or her family dependent upon him or her for
support, and/or is unable to pay the fees and costs incurred pursuant to any legal proceedings
conducted under the provisions of this chapter.
     (7) "Likelihood of serious harm" means:
     (i) A substantial risk of physical harm to the person himself or herself as manifested by
behavior evidencing serious threats of, or attempts at, suicide;
     (ii) A substantial risk of physical harm to other persons as manifested by behavior or threats
evidencing homicidal or other violent behavior; or
     (iii) A substantial risk of physical harm to the mentally disabled person as manifested by
behavior that has created a grave, clear, and present risk to his or her the person’s physical health
and safety.
     (iv) In determining whether there exists a likelihood of serious harm, the physician and the
court may consider previous acts, diagnosis, words, or thoughts of the patient. If a patient has been
incarcerated, or institutionalized, or in a controlled environment of any kind, the court may give
great weight to such prior acts, diagnosis, words, or thoughts.
     (9)(8) "Mental health professional" means a psychiatrist, psychologist, or social worker
and such other persons, including psychiatric nurse clinicians, as may be defined by rules and
regulations promulgated by the director.
     (10)(9) "NICS database" means the National Instant Criminal Background Check System
as created pursuant to section 103(b) of the Brady Handgun Violence Prevention Act (Brady Act),
Pub. L. No. 103-159, 107 Stat. 1536 as established by 28 C.F.R. 25.1.
     (11)(10)"Patient" means a person admitted voluntarily, certified or re-certified admitted to
a facility according to the provisions of this chapter.
     (12)(11) "Physician" means a person duly licensed by the Rhode Island department of
health to practice medicine or osteopathy in this state pursuant to chapter 37 of title 5.
     (8)(12) "Mental disability" "Psychiatric disability" means a mental disorder in which the
capacity of a person to exercise self-control or judgment in the conduct of his or her the person’s
affairs and social relations, or to care for his or her the person’s own personal needs, is significantly
impaired.
     (13) "Psychiatric nurse clinician" means a licensed, professional registered nurse with a
master's degree in psychiatric nursing or related field who is licensed by the Rhode Island
department of health pursuant to chapter 34 of title 5 and who is currently working in the mental
health field as defined by the American Nurses Association, and/or a licensed advanced practice
registered nurse with a population focus of psychiatric/mental health population focus as defined
in paragraphs (2) and (12)(vi) of § 5-34-3.
     (14) "Psychiatrist" means a person duly licensed by the Rhode Island department of health
to practice medicine or osteopathy in this state pursuant to chapter 37 of title 5 who has, in addition,
completed three (3) years of graduate psychiatric training in a program approved by the American
Medical Association or American Osteopathic Association.
     (15) "Psychologist" means a person certified licensed by the Rhode Island department of
health pursuant to chapter 44 of title 5.
     (16) "Social worker" means a person with who has a masters or further advanced degree
from a school of social work, that is accredited by the council of social work education and who is
licensed by the Rhode Island department of health pursuant to chapter 39.1 of title 5.
     40.1-5-5. Admission of patients generally -- Rights of patients -- Patients' records --
Competence of patients.
     (a) Admissions. Any person who is in need of care and treatment in a facility, as herein
defined, may be admitted or certified, received, and retained as a patient in a facility by complying
with any one of the following admission procedures applicable to the case:
     (1) Voluntary admission.
     (2) Emergency certification.
     (3) Civil court certification.
     (b) Forms. The director shall prescribe and furnish forms for use in admissions and patient
notification procedures under this chapter.
     (c) Exclusions. No defective delinquent, person with a mental psychiatric disability, or
person under the influence of alcohol or drugs shall be certified to a facility, as herein defined,
solely by reason of that condition, unless the person also qualified for admission or certification
under the provisions of this chapter.
     (d) Examining physician. For purposes of certification, no examining physician shall be
related by blood or marriage to the person who is applying for the admission of another, or to the
person who is the subject of the application; nor shall he or she have any interest, contractually,
testamentary, or otherwise (other than reasonable and proper charges for professional services
rendered), in or against the estate or assets of the person who is the subject of the application; nor
shall he or she be a manager, trustee, visitor, proprietor, officer, stockholder, or have any pecuniary
interest, directly or indirectly, or, except as otherwise herein expressly provided, be a director,
resident physician, or salaried physician, or employee in any facility to which it is proposed to
admit the person.
     (e) Certificates. Certificates, as required by this chapter, must provide a factual description
of the person's behavior that indicates that the person concerned is mentally psychiatrically
disabled, creates a likelihood of serious harm, and is in need of care and treatment in a facility as
defined in this chapter. They shall further set forth such other findings as may be required by the
particular certification procedure used. Certificates shall also show that an examination of the
person concerned was made within five (5) days prior to the date of admission or certification,
unless otherwise herein provided. The date of the certificate shall be the date of the commencement
of the examination, and in the event examinations are conducted separately or over a period of
days, then the five-day (5) period above referred to (unless otherwise expressly provided) shall be
measured from the date of the commencement of the first examination. All certificates shall contain
the observations upon which judgments are based, and shall contain other information as the
director may by rule or regulation require.
     (f) Rights of patients. No patient admitted or certified to any facility under any provision
of this chapter shall be deprived of any constitutional, civil, or legal right, solely by reason of such
admission or certification nor shall the certification or admission modify or vary any constitutional
or civil right, including, but not limited to, the right or rights:
     (1) To privacy and dignity;
     (2) To civil service or merit rating or ranking and appointment;
     (3) Relating to the granting, forfeiture or denial of a license, permit, privilege, or benefit
pursuant to any law;
     (4) To religious freedom;
     (5) To be visited privately at all reasonable times by his or her personal physician, attorney,
and clergyperson, and by other persons at all reasonable times unless the official in charge of the
facility determines either that a visit by any of the other persons or a particular visitation time would
not be in the best interests of the patient and he or she incorporates a statement for any denial of
visiting rights in the individualized treatment record of the patient;
     (6) To be provided with stationery, writing materials, and postage in reasonable amounts
and to have free unrestricted, unopened, and uncensored use of the mails for letters;
     (7) To wear one's own clothes, keep and use personal possessions, including toilet articles;
to keep and be allowed to spend a reasonable sum of money for canteen expenses and small
purchases; to have access to individual storage space for his or her the person’s private use; and
reasonable access to telephones to make and receive confidential calls; provided, however, that any
of these rights may be denied for good cause by the official in charge of a facility or a physician
designated by him or her. A statement of the reasons for any denial shall be entered in the
individualized treatment record of the patient;
     (8) To seek independent psychiatric examination and opinion from a psychiatrist or mental
health professional of his or her the patient’s choice;
     (9) To be employed at a gainful occupation insofar as the patient's condition permits,
provided however, that no patient shall be required to perform labor;
     (10) To vote and participate in political activity;
     (11) To receive and read literature;
     (12) To have the least possible restraint imposed upon the person consistent with affording
him or her the care and treatment necessary and appropriate to his or her the patient’s condition;
     (13) To have access to the mental health advocate upon request;
     (14) To prevent release of his or her name to the advocate or next of kin by signing a form
provided to all patients for that purpose at the time of admission.
     (g) Records. A facility shall maintain for each patient admitted pursuant to this chapter, a
comprehensive medical record. The record shall contain a recorded, individualized treatment plan,
which shall at least monthly be reviewed by the physician of the facility who is chiefly responsible
for the patient's care, notations of the reviews to be entered in the record. The records shall also
contain information indicating at the time of admission or certification what alternatives to
admission or certification are available to the patient; what alternatives have been investigated; and
why the investigated alternatives were not deemed suitable. The medical record shall further
contain other information as the director may by rule or regulation require.
     (h) Competence. A person shall not, solely by reason of his or her the person’s admission
or certification to a facility for examination or care and treatment under the provisions of this
chapter, thereby be deemed incompetent to manage his or her the person’s affairs; to contract; to
hold, or seek a professional, occupational, or vehicle operator's license; to make a will; or for any
other purpose. Neither shall any requirement be made, by rule, regulation, or otherwise, as a
condition to admission and retention, that any person applying for admission shall have the legal
capacity to contract, it being sufficient for the purpose, that the person understand the nature and
consequence of making the application.
     40.1-5-6. Voluntary admission.
     (a)(1) General. Any individual of lawful age may apply for voluntary admission to any
facility provided for by this law seeking care and treatment for alleged mental psychiatric disability.
The application shall be in writing, signed by the applicant in the presence of at least one witness,
who shall attest to the application by placing his or her name and address thereon. If the applicant
has not yet attained his or her eighteenth (18th) birthday, the application shall be signed by him or
her the applicant and his or her the applicant’s parent, guardian, or next of kin.
     (2) Admission of children. Any person who is under the age of eighteen (18) and who
receives medical benefits funded in whole or in part by either the department of children, youth and
families or by the department of human services may be admitted to any facility provided for by
this chapter seeking care and treatment for alleged mental psychiatric disability only after an initial
mental health crisis intervention is completed by a provider who is licensed by the department of
children, youth and families for emergency services, has proper credentials, and is contracted with
the RIte Care health plan or the state and the provider, after considering alternative services to
hospitalization with the child, family, and other providers, requests prior authorization for the
admission from a representative of the child and family's insurance company or utilization review
organization representing the insurance company. If the inpatient hospital admits a child without
the crisis intervention and prior authorization from the insurance company or utilization review
organization, the hospital will be paid a rate equivalent to an Administratively Necessary Day
(AND) for each day that the insurance company or utilization review organization representing the
insurance company determines that the child did not meet the inpatient level-of-care criteria. The
state shall ensure that this provision is included in all publicly financed contracts and agreements
for behavioral health services. Activities conducted pursuant to this section shall be exempt from
the provisions of § 23-17.12 [repealed], but shall be subject to the provisions of subsection (b) of
this section.
     (3) The department of human services shall develop regulations for emergency admissions
that would allow the admitting hospital to maintain its compliance with the provisions of the act
while meeting the need of the child.
     (b) Period of treatment. If it is determined that the applicant is in need of care and treatment
for mental psychiatric disability and no suitable alternatives to admission are available, he or she
shall be admitted for a period not to exceed thirty (30) days. Successive applications for continued
voluntary status may be made for successive periods not to exceed ninety (90) days each, so long
as care and treatment is deemed necessary and documented in accordance with the requirements of
this chapter and no suitable alternatives to admission are available.
     (c) Discharge.
     (1) A voluntary patient shall be discharged no later than the end of the business day
following of his or her the patient presenting a written notice of his or her the patient’s intent to
leave the facility to the medical official in charge or the medical official designated by him or her
the medical official in charge, unless that official or another qualified person from the facility
files an application for the patient's civil court certification pursuant to § 40.1-5-8. The notice shall
be on a form prescribed by the director and made available to all patients at all times. If a decision
to file an application for civil court certification is made, the patient concerned and his or her the
patient’s legal guardian(s), if any, shall receive immediately, but in no event later than twelve (12)
hours from the making of the decision, notice of the intention from the official in charge of the
facility, or his or her the official’s designee, and the patient may, in the discretion of the official,
be detained for an additional period not to exceed two (2) business days, pending the filing and
setting down for hearing of the application under § 40.1-5-8.
     (2) A voluntary patient who gives notice of his or her the patient’s intention or desire to
leave the facility may at any time during the period of his or her the patient’s hospitalization prior
to any certification pursuant to § 40.1-5-8, following the giving of the notice, submit a written
communication withdrawing the notice, whereby his or her the patient’s voluntary status shall be
considered to continue unchanged until the expiration of thirty (30) or ninety (90) days as provided
in subsection (b) of this section. In the case of an individual under eighteen (18) years of age, the
notice or withdrawal of notice may be given by either of the persons who made the application for
his or her the patient’s admission, or by a person of equal or closer relationship to the patient, who
shall, as well, receive notice from the official in charge indicating a decision to present an
application for civil court certification. The official may in his or her the official’s discretion refuse
to discharge the patient upon notice given by any person other than the person who made the
application, and in the event of such a refusal, the person giving notice may apply to a justice of
the family court for release of the patient.
     (d) Examination at facility. The medical official in charge of a facility shall ensure that all
voluntary patients receive preliminary physical and psychiatric examinations within twenty-four
(24) hours of admission. Furthermore, a complete psychiatric examination shall be conducted to
determine whether the person qualifies for care and treatment under the provisions of this chapter.
The examination shall begin within forty-eight (48) hours of admission and shall be concluded as
soon as practicable, but in no case shall extend beyond five (5) days. The examination shall include
an investigation with the prospective patient of: (1) What alternatives for admission are available
and (2) Why those alternatives are not suitable. The alternatives for admission investigated and
reasons for unsuitability, if any, shall be recorded on the patient's record. If it is determined that the
patient does not belong to the voluntary class in that a suitable alternative to admission is available,
or is otherwise ineligible for care and treatment, he or she shall be discharged.
     (e) Rights of voluntary patients. A voluntary patient shall be informed, in writing, of his or
her the patient’s status and rights as a voluntary patient immediately upon his or her the patient’s
admission, and again at the time of his or her the patient’s periodic review(s) as provided in §
40.1-5-10, including his or her the patient’s rights pursuant to § 40.1-5-5(f). Blank forms for
purposes of indicating an intention or desire to leave a facility shall be available at all times and on
and in all wards and segments of a facility wherein voluntary patients may reside.
     40.1-5-7. Emergency certification.
     (a) Applicants.
     (1) Any physician who, after examining a person, has reason to believe that the person is
in need of immediate care and treatment, and is one whose continued unsupervised presence in the
community would create an imminent likelihood of serious harm by reason of mental psychiatric
disability, may apply at a facility for the emergency certification of the person thereto. The medical
director, or any other physician employed by the proposed facility for certification, may apply
under this subsection if no other physician is available and he or she the physician or medical
director certifies this fact. If an examination is not possible because of the emergency nature of
the case and because of the refusal of the person to consent to the examination, the applicant on the
basis of his or her observation may determine, in accordance with the above, that emergency
certification is necessary and may apply therefor. In the event that no physician is available, a
qualified mental health professional who believes the person to be in need of immediate care and
treatment, and one whose continued unsupervised presence in the community would create an
imminent likelihood of serious harm by reason of mental psychiatric disability, may make the
application for emergency certification to a facility. Application shall in all cases be made to the
facility that, in the judgment of the applicant at the time of application, would impose the least
restraint on the liberty of the person consistent with affording him or her the person the care and
treatment necessary and appropriate to his or her the person’s condition.
     (2) Whenever an applicant, who is not employed by a community mental health center
established pursuant to chapter 8.5 of this title, has reason to believe that either the institute of
mental health Rhode Island State Psychiatric Hospital state psychiatric hospital or the Eleanor
Slater Hospital hospital is the appropriate facility for the person, the application shall be directed
to the community mental health center that serves the area in which the person resides, if the person
is a Rhode Island resident, or the area in which the person is physically present, if a nonresident,
and the qualified mental health professional(s) at the center shall make the final decision on the
application to either the institute of mental health Rhode Island State Psychiatric Hospital state
psychiatric hospital or the Eleanor Slater Hospital hospital or may determine whether some other
disposition should be made.
     (b) Applications. An application for certification hereunder shall be in writing and filed
with the facility to which admission is sought. The application shall be executed within five (5)
days prior to the date of filing and shall state that it is based upon a personal observation of the
prospective patient by the applicant within the five-day (5) period. It shall include a description of
the applicant's credentials and the behavior that constitutes the basis for his or her judgment that
the prospective patient is in need of immediate care and treatment and that a likelihood of serious
harm by reason of mental psychiatric disability exists, and shall include, as well, any other relevant
information that may assist the admitting physician at the facility to which application is made.
Whenever practicable, prior to transporting or arranging for the transporting of a prospective patient
to a facility, the applicant shall telephone or otherwise communicate with the facility to describe
the circumstances and known clinical history to determine whether it is the proper facility to receive
the person, and to give notice of any restraint to be used or to determine whether restraint is
necessary. The application shall state whether the facility, in the judgment of the applicant at the
time of application, would impose the least restraint on the liberty of the person consistent with
affording him or her the care and treatment necessary and appropriate to his or her condition.
Whenever practicable, prior to transporting or arranging for the transporting of a prospective patient
to a facility, the applicant shall telephone or otherwise communicate with the facility to describe
the circumstances and known clinical history to determine whether it is the proper facility to receive
the person, and to give notice of any restraint to be used or to determine whether restraint is
necessary.
     (c) Confirmation; discharge; transfer. Within one hour after reception at a facility, the
person regarding whom an application has been filed under this section shall be seen by a physician.
As soon as possible, but in no event later than twenty-four (24) hours after reception, a preliminary
examination and evaluation of the person by a psychiatrist or a physician under his or her the
psychiatrist’s supervision shall begin. The psychiatrist shall not be an applicant hereunder. The
preliminary examination and evaluation shall be completed within seventy-two (72) hours from its
inception by the psychiatrist. If the psychiatrist determines that the patient is not a candidate for
emergency certification, he or she the patient shall be discharged. If the psychiatrist(s) determines
that the person who is the subject of the application is in need of immediate care and treatment and
is one whose continued unsupervised presence in the community would create an imminent
likelihood of serious harm by reason of mental psychiatric disability, he or she the psychiatrist
shall confirm the admission for care and treatment under this section of the person to the facility,
provided the facility is one that would impose the least restraint on the liberty of the person
consistent with affording him or her the person the care and treatment necessary and appropriate
to his or her the person’s condition and that no suitable alternatives to certification are available.
If at any time the official in charge of a facility, or his or her the official’s designee, determines
that the person is not in need of immediate care and treatment, or is not one whose continued
unsupervised presence in the community would create an imminent likelihood of serious harm by
reason of mental psychiatric disability, or suitable alternatives to certification are available, he or
she the official shall immediately discharge the person. In addition, the official may arrange to
transfer the person to an appropriate facility if the facility to which he or she has been certified is
not one that imposes the least restraint on the liberty of the person consistent with affording him or
her the care and treatment necessary and appropriate to his or her condition.
     (d) Custody. Upon the request of an applicant under this section, to be confirmed in writing,
it shall be the duty of any peace officer of this state or of any governmental subdivision thereof to
whom request has been made, to take into custody and transport the person to the facility
designated, the person to be expeditiously presented for admission thereto to take into custody and
immediately transport the person to the designated facility for admission thereto.
     (e) Ex parte court order. An applicant under this section may present a petition to any judge
of the district court or any justice of the family court, in the case of a person who is the subject of
an application who has not yet attained his or her eighteenth birthday, for a warrant directed to any
peace officer of the state or any governmental subdivision thereof to take into custody the person
who is the subject of the application and immediately transport the person to a designated facility.
The application shall set forth that the person who is to be certified is in need of immediate care
and treatment and his or her the person’s continued unsupervised presence in the community
would create an imminent likelihood of serious harm by reason of mental psychiatric disability,
and the reasons why an order directing a peace officer to transport the person to a designated facility
is necessary.
     (f) Notification of rights. No person shall be certified to a facility under the provisions of
this section unless appropriate opportunity is given to apply for voluntary admission under the
provisions of § 40.1-5-6 and unless he or she the person, or a parent, guardian, or next of kin, has
been informed, in writing, on a form provided by the department, by the official in charge of the
facility: (1) That he or she has a right to the voluntary admission; (2) That a person cannot be
certified until all available alternatives to certification have been investigated and determined to be
unsuitable; and (3) That the period of hospitalization or treatment in a facility cannot exceed ten
(10) days under this section, except as provided in subsection (g) of this section.
     (g) Period of treatment. A person shall be discharged no later than ten (10) days measured
from the date of his or her admission under this section, unless an application for a civil court
certification has been filed and set down for a hearing under the provisions of § 40.1-5-8, or the
person remains as a voluntary patient pursuant to § 40.1-5-6.
     40.1-5-7.1. Emergency transportation by police.
     (a) Any police officer may take an individual into protective custody and take or cause the
person to be taken to an emergency room of any hospital, by way of emergency vehicle, if the
officer has reason to believe that:
     (1) The individual is in need of immediate care and treatment, and is one whose continued
unsupervised presence in the community would create an imminent likelihood of serious harm by
reason of mental psychiatric disability if allowed to be at liberty pending examination by a licensed
physician; or
     (2) The individual is in need of immediate assistance due to mental psychiatric disability
and requests the assistance.
     (b) The officer making the determination to transport will document the reason for the
decision in a police report and travel with the individual to the hospital to relay the reason for
transport to the attending medical staff.
     40.1-5-8. Civil court certification.
     (a) Petitions. A verified petition may be filed in the district court, or family court in the
case of a person who has not reached his or her eighteenth (18th) birthday, for the certification to a
facility of any person who is alleged to be in need of care and treatment in a facility, and whose
continued unsupervised presence in the community would create a likelihood of serious harm by
reason of mental psychiatric disability. The petition may be filed by any person with whom the
subject of the petition may reside; or at whose house he or she the person may be; or the father or
mother, husband or wife, brother or sister, or the adult child of the person; the nearest relative if
none of the above are available; or his or her the person’s guardian; or the attorney general; or a
local director of public welfare; or the director of the department of behavioral healthcare,
developmental disabilities and hospitals; the director of the department of human services; or the
director of the department of corrections; the director of the department of health; the warden of
the adult correctional institutions; the superintendent of the boys training school for youth, or his
or her designated agent; or the director of any facility, or his or her the facility director’s
designated agent, whether or not the person shall have been admitted and is a patient at the time of
the petition. A petition under this section shall be filed only after the petitioner has investigated
what alternatives to certification are available and determined why the alternatives are not deemed
suitable.
     (b) Contents of petition. The petition shall state that it is based upon a personal observation
of the person concerned by the petitioner within a ten-day (10) period prior to filing. It shall include
a description of the behavior that constitutes the basis for the petitioner's judgment that the person
concerned is in need of care and treatment and that a likelihood of serious harm by reason of mental
psychiatric disability exists. In addition, the petitioner shall indicate what alternatives to
certification are available; what alternatives have been investigated; and why the investigated
alternatives are not deemed suitable.
     (c) Certificates and contents thereof. A petition hereunder shall be accompanied by the
certificates of two (2) physicians unless the petitioner is unable to afford, or is otherwise unable to
obtain, the services of a physician or physicians qualified to make the certifications. The certificates
shall be rendered pursuant to the provisions of § 40.1-5-5, except when the patient is a resident in
a facility, the attending physician and one other physician from the facility may sign the certificates,
and shall set forth that the prospective patient is in need of care and treatment in a facility and
would likely benefit therefrom, and is one whose continued unsupervised presence in the
community would create a likelihood of serious harm by reason of mental psychiatric disability
together with the reasons therefor. The petitions and accompanying certificates shall be executed
under penalty of perjury, but shall not require the signature of a notary public thereon.
     (d) Preliminary hearing.
     (1) Upon a determination that the petition sets forth facts constituting reasonable grounds
to support certification, the court shall summon the person to appear before the court at a
preliminary hearing, scheduled no later than five (5) business days from the date of filing. This
hearing shall be treated as a priority on the court calendar and may be continued only for good
cause shown. In default of an appearance, the court may issue a warrant directing a police officer
to bring the person before the court.
     (2) At the preliminary hearing, the court shall serve a copy of the petition upon the person
and advise him or her the person of the nature of the proceedings and of his or her the person’s
right to counsel. If the person is unable to afford counsel, the court forthwith shall appoint the
mental health advocate for him or her. If the court finds that there is no probable cause to support
certification, the petition shall be dismissed, and the person shall be discharged unless the person
applies for voluntary admission. However, if the court is satisfied by the testimony that there is
probable cause to support certification, a final hearing shall be held not less than seven (7) days,
nor more than twenty-one (21) days, after the preliminary hearing, unless continued at the request
of counsel for the person, and notice of the date set down for the hearing shall be served on the
person. Copies of the petition and notice of the date set down for the hearing shall also be served
immediately upon the person's nearest relatives or legal guardian, if known, and to any other person
designated by the patient, in writing, to receive copies of notices. The preliminary hearing can be
waived by a motion of the patient to the court if the patient is a resident of a facility.
     (e) Petition for examination.
     (1) Upon motion of either the petitioner or the person, or upon its own motion, the court
may order that the person be examined by a psychiatrist appointed by the court. The examination
may be conducted on an outpatient basis and the person shall have the right to the presence of
counsel while it is being conducted. A report of the examination shall be furnished to the court, the
petitioner, and the person and his or her counsel at least forty-eight (48) hours prior to the hearing.
     (2) If the petition is submitted without two (2) physicians' certificates as required under
subsection (c), the petition shall be accompanied by a motion for a psychiatric examination to be
ordered by the court. The motion shall be heard on the date of the preliminary hearing set by the
court pursuant to subsection (d), or as soon thereafter as counsel for the subject person is engaged,
appointed, and ready to proceed. The motion shall be verified or accompanied by affidavits and
shall set forth facts demonstrating the efforts made to secure examination and certification by a
physician or physicians and shall indicate the reasons why the efforts failed.
     (3) After considering the motion and testimony as may be offered on the date of hearing
the motion, the court may deny the application and dismiss the petition, or upon finding: (i) That
there is a good cause for the failure to obtain one or more physician's certificates in accordance
with subsection (c); and (ii) That there is probable cause to substantiate the allegations of the
petition, the court shall order an immediate examination by two (2) qualified psychiatrists, pursuant
to subsection (e)(1).
     (f) Professional assistance. A person with respect to whom a court hearing has been ordered
under this section shall have, and be informed of, a right to employ a mental health professional of
his or her the person’s choice to assist him or her the person in connection with the hearing and
to testify on his or her the person’s behalf. If the person cannot afford to engage such a
professional, the court shall, on application, allow a reasonable fee for the purpose.
     (g) Procedure. Upon receipt of the required certificates and/or psychiatric reports as
applicable hereunder, the court shall schedule the petition for final hearing unless, upon review of
the reports and certificates, the court concludes that the certificates and reports do not indicate, with
supporting reasons, that the person who is the subject of the petition is in need of care and treatment;
that his or her unsupervised presence in the community would create a likelihood of serious harm
by reason of mental psychiatric disability; and that all alternatives to certification have been
investigated and are unsuitable, in which event the court may dismiss the petition.
     (h) Venue. An application for certification under this section shall be made to, and all
proceedings pursuant thereto shall be conducted in, the district court, or family court in the case of
a person who has not yet reached his or her eighteenth (18th) birthday, of the division or county in
which the subject of an application may reside or may be, or when the person is already a patient
in a facility, in the district court or family court of the division or county in which the facility is
located, subject, however, to application by any interested party for change of venue because of
inconvenience of the parties or witnesses or the condition of the subject of the petition or other
valid judicial reason for the change of venue.
     (i) Hearing. A hearing scheduled under this section shall be conducted pursuant to the
following requirements:
     (1) All evidence shall be presented according to the usual rules of evidence that apply in
civil, non-jury cases. The subject of the proceedings shall have the right to present evidence in his
or her own behalf and to cross examine all witnesses against him or her, including any physician
who has completed a certificate or filed a report as provided hereunder. The subject of the
proceedings shall have the further right to subpoena witnesses and documents, the cost of such to
be borne by the court where the court finds upon an application of the subject that the person cannot
afford to pay for the cost of subpoenaing witnesses and documents.
     (2) A verbatim transcript or electronic recording shall be made of the hearing that shall be
impounded and obtained or examined only with the consent of the subject thereof (or in the case of
a person who has not yet attained his or her eighteenth (18th) birthday, his or her the person’s
parent, guardian, or next of kin), or by order of the court.
     (3) The hearing may be held at a location other than a court, including any facility where
the subject may currently be a patient, where it appears to the court that holding the hearing at
another location would be in the best interests of the subject thereof.
     (4) The burden of proceeding and the burden of proof in a hearing held pursuant to this
section shall be upon the petitioner. The petitioner has the burden of demonstrating that the subject
of the hearing is in need of care and treatment in a facility; is one whose continued unsupervised
presence in the community would create a likelihood of serious harm by reason of mental
psychiatric disability; and what alternatives to certification are available, what alternatives to
certification were investigated, and why these alternatives were not deemed suitable.
     (5) The court shall render a decision within forty-eight (48) hours after the hearing is
concluded.
     (j) Order. If the court at a final hearing finds by clear and convincing evidence that the
subject of the hearing is in need of care and treatment in a facility, and is one whose continued
unsupervised presence in the community would, by reason of mental psychiatric disability, create
a likelihood of serious harm, and that all alternatives to certification have been investigated and
deemed unsuitable, it shall issue an order committing the person to the custody of the director for
care and treatment or to an appropriate facility. In either event, and to the extent practicable, the
person shall be cared for in a facility that imposes the least restraint upon the liberty of the person
consistent with affording him or her the person the care and treatment necessary and appropriate
to his or her the person’s condition. No certification shall be made under this section unless and
until full consideration has been given by the certifying court to the alternatives to in-patient care,
including, but not limited to, a determination of the person's relationship to the community and to
his or her the person’s family; of his or her employment possibilities; and of all available
community resources, alternate available living arrangements, foster care, community residential
facilities, nursing homes, and other convalescent facilities. A certificate ordered pursuant to this
section shall be valid for a period of six (6) months from the date of the order. At the end of that
period the patient shall be discharged, unless he or she the patient is discharged prior to that time,
in which case the certification shall expire on the date of the discharge.
     (k) Appeals.
     (1) A person certified under this section shall have a right to appeal from a final hearing to
the supreme court of the state within thirty (30) days of the entry of an order of certification. The
person shall have the right to be represented on appeal by counsel of his or her choice or by the
mental health advocate if the supreme court finds that he or she the person cannot afford to retain
counsel. Upon a showing of indigency, the supreme court shall permit an appeal to proceed without
payment of costs, and a copy of the transcript of the proceedings below shall be furnished to the
subject of the proceedings, or to his or her the person’s attorney, at the expense of the state. The
certifying court shall advise the person of all his or her the person’s rights pursuant to this section
immediately upon the entry of an order of certification.
     (2) Appeals under this section shall be given precedence, insofar as practicable, on the
supreme court dockets. The district and family courts shall promulgate rules with the approval of
the supreme court to insure the expeditious transmission of the record and transcript in all appeals
pursuant to this chapter.
     (l) Submission to NICS database.
     (1) The district court shall submit the name, date of birth, gender, race or ethnicity, and
date of civil commitment to the National Instant Criminal Background Check System (NICS)
database of all persons subject to a civil court certification order pursuant to this section within
forty-eight (48) hours of certification.
     (2) Any person affected by the provisions of this section, after the lapse of a period of three
(3) years from the date such civil certification is terminated, shall have the right to appear before
the relief from disqualifiers board.
     (3) Upon notice of a successful appeal pursuant to subsection (k), the district court shall,
as soon as practicable, cause the appellant's record to be updated, corrected, modified, or removed
from any database maintained and made available to the NICS and reflect that the appellant is no
longer subject to a firearms prohibition as it relates to 18 U.S.C. § 922(d)(4) and 18 U.S.C. §
922(g)(4).
     (m) Equitable authority. In addition to the powers heretofore exercised, the district and
family courts are hereby empowered, in furtherance of their jurisdiction under this chapter, to grant
petitions for instructions for the provision or withholding of treatment as justice and equity may
require.
     40.1-5-11. Discharge -- Recertification.
     (a) The official in charge of any facility, or his or her designated agent, on having his or
her reasons noted on the patient's records, shall discharge any patient certified or admitted pursuant
to the provisions of this chapter, when:
     (1) Suitable alternatives to certification or admission are available;
     (2) The patient is, in the judgment of the official, recovered;
     (3) The patient is not recovered, but discharge, in the judgment of the official, will not
create a likelihood of serious harm by reason of mental psychiatric disability.
     (b) When a patient discharge is requested and if the discharge is denied, the reasons therefor
shall be stated, in writing, and noted in the patient's record and a copy thereof shall be given to the
person applying for the release.
     (c) At the expiration of the six-month (6) period set forth in § 40.1-5-8(j), or any subsequent
six-month (6) period following recertification pursuant to this section, the patient shall be
unconditionally released unless a recertification petition is filed by the official in charge of a
facility, or his or her designated agent, within no less than fifteen (15) days and no more than thirty
(30) days prior to the scheduled expiration date of a six-month (6) period. A hearing must be held
pursuant to the petition and a decision rendered before the expiration of the six-month (6) period.
A recertification hearing shall follow all of the procedures set forth in § 40.1-5-8 and recertification
may be ordered only if the petitioner proves by clear and convincing evidence that the conduct and
responses of the patient during the course of the previous six-month (6) period indicate that the
patient is presently in need of care and treatment in a facility; is one whose continued unsupervised
presence in the community would create a likelihood of serious harm by reason of mental
psychiatric disability; and that all alternatives to recertification have been investigated and deemed
unsuitable.
     40.1-5-27.1. Disclosure by mental health professional.
     (a) Notwithstanding §§ 40.1-5-26 and 40.1-5-27, a mental health professional providing
care and treatment to an adult person with a mental psychiatric disability as defined in § 40.1-5-
2(8) § 40.1-5-2(12) may provide certain information to a family member or other person if this
family member or other person lives with and provides direct care to the mentally psychiatrically
disabled person, and without such direct care there would be significant deterioration in the
mentally psychiatrically disabled person's daily functioning, and such disclosure would directly
assist in the care of the mentally psychiatrically disabled person. Disclosure can be made only at
the written request of the family member or person living with the mentally psychiatrically disabled
person.
     (b) Prior to the disclosure, the mentally psychiatrically disabled person shall be informed,
in writing, of the request, the name of the person requesting the information, the reason for the
request, and the specific information being provided. Prior to disclosure, the mentally
psychiatrically disabled person shall be provided the opportunity to give or withhold consent. If the
mentally psychiatrically disabled person withholds consent, the information shall not be disclosed
and the family member or other person shall be provided the opportunity to appeal. Disclosures
shall be limited to information regarding diagnosis, admission to or discharge from a treatment
facility, the name of the medication prescribed, and side effects of prescribed medication.
     (c) On or before April 1, 1993, the department of behavioral healthcare, developmental
disabilities and hospitals shall promulgate rules and regulations to further define and interpret the
provisions of this section. In the development of these rules and regulations, the department shall
work with an advisory committee composed, at a minimum, of proportionate representation from
the following: the Coalition of Consumer Self Advocates, the Alliance for the Mentally Ill, the
Mental Health Association of Rhode Island, the Council of Community Mental Health Centers, the
mental health advocate, and Rhode Island Protection and Advocacy Services. Rules and regulations
by the department shall include the provision of an appeals process, that would serve to protect the
rights of mentally psychiatrically disabled persons under the law.
     40.1-5-31. Maintenance of facilities.
     Facilities under the jurisdiction, supervision, and control of the department shall be
maintained, and services shall be provided, for the care and treatment of the mentally
psychiatrically disabled of the state and for other persons and related purposes as shall be provided
and authorized by law.
     40.1-5-32. Transfer of patients.
     (a) No transfer of a patient already in a facility shall be made to a facility, or section of a
facility, maintained for patients certified upon an order of a court or judge having criminal
jurisdiction in a proceeding arising out of a criminal offense. The official in charge of a facility, or
his or her the official’s designated agent, shall have reasonable discretion to order or permit
transfers within a facility for reason of finances, adequacy of personnel, and upon conditions set
forth in rules or regulations promulgated by the director pursuant hereto.
     (b) A patient certified to any facility pursuant to the provisions of this chapter may be
transferred, with his or her the patient’s consent or that of his or her the patient’s guardian, to any
facility within or without the state or to an institution operated by the Veterans' Administration or
to any agency of the United States government for the treatment of mental psychiatric disability at
a facility under its jurisdiction, within or without the state, when deemed in the interest of the patient
and approved by the transferring and receiving facilities. A transfer as above described may be
accomplished without the consent of a patient, or his or her the patient’s guardian, only upon prior
application to, and a hearing in, the district court (or family court in the case of a patient under
eighteen (18) years of age) and a specific finding by the court that the proposed transfer is in the
best interests of the patient and is to a facility that will afford the patient the care and treatment
necessary and appropriate to his or her the patient’s condition.
     (c) A patient received on voluntary admission may be transferred as provided in subsection
(b) with his or her the patient’s consent; and if the patient shall not yet have attained his or her the
patient’s eighteenth birthday, with the consent of his or her the patient’s parent, guardian, next of
kin, or person who signed for his or her admission. A voluntary patient may be transferred to
another facility without his or her the patient’s consent only upon the filing of a petition for
certification to the facility, and a finding of probable cause at a preliminary hearing in accordance
with § 40.1-5-8.
     (d) Patients transferred to facilities without the state, or to the Veterans' Administration or
the United States Public Health Service, or another agency operated by the United States
government, shall be subject to the rules and regulations of the facility or institution to which they
are transferred, and the person or official in charge thereof, in connection with the care and
treatment of the patient, being vested with the same powers as persons in charge of similar facilities
within the state, provided that no such transfer shall be made to a facility maintained for the purpose
of patients committed upon an order of a court or judge having criminal jurisdiction in a proceeding
arising out of a criminal offense. Transfers of patients between states that have entered into the
interstate compact on mental health shall be pursuant to and in accordance with said compact
whenever applicable.
     40.1-5-33. Payment for care and treatment.
     For the purposes of this chapter, facilities shall be maintained by the state for the care,
treatment, and maintenance of the mentally psychiatrically disabled, and the patients may be
maintained and treated in the facilities or in foster family care, and may receive the services
conditioned upon prompt and regular payments for the care, maintenance, and treatment or for the
services in amounts as fixed by the director. In the discretion of the director, the rates so fixed may
be the reimbursement rates or in excess thereof. A preference shall be given to persons whose
estate, or the person or persons legally liable for their support, cannot sufficiently pay for the care
and treatment, or for the services in licensed private facilities or from sources outside the
department. The director, in his or her the director’s discretion, may accept payments for services
at less than the reimbursement rates, but the acceptance of the lesser payments shall not release the
patient, his or her the patient’s estate, or relatives, if they have sufficient financial ability, from the
obligation to make up the difference between the amount fixed, accepted, or paid and the full
reimbursement rates.
     40.1-5-34. Exclusiveness of this chapter.
     Where under any provision of any existing law, except in the case of a person held under
criminal process, or under process of the family court for an act that would be considered a crime
if committed by an adult, any person with mental psychiatric disability, as defined in this chapter,
shall have recourse to or be dealt with as provided in this chapter, exclusively. This section shall
prevail notwithstanding the provisions of § 14-1-5(1)(v).
     SECTION 8. Sections 40.1-5.3-1, 40.1-5.3-2 and 40.1-5.3-3 of the General Laws in
Chapter 40.1-5.3 entitled "Incompetency to Stand Trial and Persons Adjudged Not Guilty by
Reason of Insanity" are hereby amended to read as follows:
     40.1-5.3-1. Facility for incompetent persons and others.
     (a) The state director of behavioral healthcare, developmental disabilities and hospitals
shall maintain, at the state institution of Cranston, an appropriate facility appropriate facilities,
including the Rhode Island State Psychiatric Hospital state psychiatric hospital and the Eleanor
Slater Hospital hospital, for the confinement of persons committed to his or her the director’s
custody pursuant to this chapter and shall provide for the proper care, treatment, and restraint of all
such persons. All persons now or hereafter committed, pursuant to the provisions of §§ 40.1-5.3-3,
40.1-5.3-4, 40.1-5.3-7, or the provisions of prior law, shall be removed or committed, as the case
may be, to the facility to the facility into the custody of the director, or his or her the director’s
designee, who in turn shall ensure the admission of the person to either the Rhode Island State
Psychiatric Hospital state psychiatric hospital or the Eleanor Slater Hospital hospital in the
discretion of the director or his or her the director’s designee.
     (b) The cost of care, maintenance, and treatment of persons committed to the custody of
the director of behavioral healthcare, developmental disabilities and hospitals, as provided in §§
40.1-5.3-3 and 40.1-5.3-4, unless otherwise provided for, shall be paid by the person, if he or she
the person has any estate, or by the person liable for his or her the person’s support, if such there
be; otherwise, the director may maintain without charge or defray the expense of care and treatment
of the poor or indigent persons incompetent to stand trial or acquitted on the grounds of insanity.
     40.1-5.3-2. Transfers to and from general wards Transfers between state-operated
hospitals.
     Whenever any person committed, transferred, or removed to either the Rhode Island State
Psychiatric Hospital state psychiatric hospital or the Eleanor Slater Hospital hospital to the
facility provided for in § 40.1-5.3-1 shall have recovered his or her mental health sufficiently, or if
any such person requires more intensive treatment or supervision to be cared for in the general
wards of the institute of mental health, the director may, upon request of the superintendent chief
executive officer or the chief medical officer of the state either state-operated hospital, transfer
discharge the person to the general wards of the state hospital, and retransfer him or her to the
facility provided for in § 40.1-5.3-1 upon a like request from the first hospital and then admit the
person to the general units of either the Rhode Island State Psychiatric Hospital state psychiatric
hospital or Eleanor Slater Hospital hospital, as the case may be.
     40.1-5.3-3. Competency to stand trial.
     (a) Definitions. As used in this section:
     (1) "Attorney for the state" means the attorney general, an authorized assistant attorney
general, or other person as may be authorized by law to act as a representative of the state in a
criminal proceeding;.
     (2) "Competent" or "competency" means mental ability to stand trial. A person is mentally
competent to stand trial if he or she is able to understand the character and consequences of the
proceedings against him or her and is able properly to assist in his or her defense;.
     (3) "Department" means the state department of behavioral healthcare, developmental
disabilities and hospitals.
     (4) "Director" means the director of the state department of behavioral healthcare,
developmental disabilities and hospitals;.
     (5) "Incompetent" or "incompetency" means mentally incompetent to stand trial. A person
is mentally incompetent to stand trial if he or she is unable to understand the character and
consequences of the proceedings against him or her or is unable properly to assist in his or her
defense.
     (b) Presumption of competency. A defendant is presumed competent. The burden of
proving that the defendant is not competent shall be by a preponderance of the evidence, and the
burden of going forward with the evidence shall be on the party raising the issue. The burden of
going forward shall be on the state if the court raises the issue.
     (c) Request for examination. If at any time during a criminal proceeding, prior to the
imposition of sentence, it appears that the defendant is not competent, counsel for the defendant or
the state, or the court, on its own motion, may request an examination to determine the defendant's
competency.
     (d) Examination of defendant.
     (1) If the court finds that the request for examination is justified, the court shall order an
examination of the defendant. The scope of the examination shall be limited to the question of
whether the defendant is competent.
     (2) The examination shall take place on an outpatient basis if the defendant is to be released
on bail or recognizance. If the defendant is ordered confined at the adult correctional institutions,
the examination shall take place at that facility. The department shall appoint or designate the
physician(s) who will conduct the examinations.
     (3) If the defendant is ordered confined to the adult correctional institutions, the physician
shall complete the examination within five (5) days. If the physician determines that the defendant
is incompetent to stand trial, the defendant shall be immediately transferred for admission to the to
the institute of mental health's forensic unit Rhode Island State Psychiatric Hospital state
psychiatric hospital or the Eleanor Slater Hospital hospital, pending the hearing provided for in
subsection (g). At the discretion of the director, pending the hearing provided for in subsection (g),
the defendant may be discharged from one state-operated hospital for the purpose of
contemporaneously admitting the defendant to the other state-operated hospital pursuant to the
procedures enumerated in § 40.1-5.3-2.
     (e) Bail or recognizance during examination.
     (1) A defendant for whom a competency examination has been ordered shall be entitled to
release on bail or recognizance to the same extent and on the same terms and conditions as if the
issue of competency had not been raised.
     (2) The court may order the defendant to appear at a designated time and place for
outpatient examination, and such an appearance may be made a condition of pretrial release.
     (f) Reports of examining physicians. Each examining physician shall prepare a report, in
writing, in which he or she the physician shall state his or her the physician’s findings concerning
the defendant's competency, together with the medical and other data upon which his or her the
physician’s findings are based. The report shall be filed with the court within ten (10) business
days if the defendant was ordered confined at the adult correctional institutions, and as soon as
practicable if the defendant was released on bail or recognizance, and copies given to the attorney
for the state and to the defendant or his or her the defendant’s counsel.
     (g) Hearing. Upon receipt of the report and appropriate notice to the parties, the court shall
hold a hearing unless the report concludes that the defendant is competent and the defendant and
the attorney for the state in open court state their assent to the findings on the record. At the hearing,
the report shall be introduced,; other evidence bearing on the defendant's competence may be
introduced by the parties,; and the defendant may testify, confront witnesses, and present evidence
on the issue of his or her the defendant’s competency. On the basis of the evidence introduced at
the hearing, the court shall decide if the defendant is competent.
     (h) Commitment of the defendant.
     (1) If the court finds, after the hearing, that a defendant is competent, it shall proceed with
the criminal case.
     (2) If the court finds that a defendant is incompetent, it shall commit him or her the
defendant to the custody of the director for the purpose of determining whether or not the defendant
is likely to imperil the peace and safety of the people of the state or the safety of himself or herself
and whether the defendant will regain competency within the maximum period of any placement
under this chapter.
     (3) Not later than fifteen (15) days from the date of the order of commitment, the director
shall prepare and file with the court a written report in which he or she the director shall state his
or her the director’s opinion regarding the defendant's dangerousness; the likelihood of the
defendant becoming competent to stand trial within the maximum period of any placement order;
and the recommendations of the department regarding appropriate care and treatment of the
defendant.
     (4) In the event the director is unable to complete the examination of the person in time to
render his or her the director’s report within the fifteen-day (15) period, he or she the director
shall report that fact, in writing, to the court with a statement of the reasons why the examination
and report could not be completed within the prescribed period. A copy of the director's statement
shall be given to the attorney general and to the defendant, or his or her the defendant’s counsel,
any of whom may respond in writing, or if the court deems it appropriate, orally, to the director's
statement. The court may thereupon enter an order extending for an additional twenty (20) days the
time in which the director is to file his or her the director’s report.
     (i) Hearing.
     (1) Upon receipt of the report and appropriate notice to the director, the attorney general,
and the defendant, or his or her the defendant’s counsel, the court shall hold a hearing at which
the report shall be introduced, other evidence bearing on the question of the mental condition of
the person may be introduced by the parties, and the person may testify, confront witnesses, and
present evidence.
     (2) If the court finds that a defendant who is incompetent may be placed on outpatient status
without imperiling the peace or safety of the public or the safety of himself or herself, it may
commit the defendant to an appropriate outpatient facility that agrees to provide treatment to the
defendant and to adhere to the requirements of this section, in order that the defendant may receive
treatment to restore or establish his or her competency.
     (3) If the court finds that a defendant who is incompetent is likely to imperil the peace or
safety of the people of the state or the peace and safety of himself or herself the defendant, it may
order the defendant to the facility established Rhode Island State Psychiatric Hospital state
psychiatric hospital or the Eleanor Slater Hospital hospital, pursuant to § 40.1-5.3-1 or to the
general wards of the institute of mental health, if the director agrees that the defendant should be
placed on the general wards. A person who is ordered to be treated on inpatient status shall not be
paroled, furloughed, placed on outpatient status or removed from a locked facility, or otherwise
released from the institution where he or she the person is being treated except upon petition to
the court by the director, on notice to the attorney general and the defendant, or his or her the
defendant’s counsel, and after hearing thereon and entry of an order by a judge of the court
authorizing release. The commitment ordered pursuant to this section shall terminate upon the
occurrence of any of the following:
     (i) The defendant is determined by the court to be competent; or
     (ii) The charges against the defendant are dismissed pursuant to subsection (j); or
     (iii) The charges against the defendant are dismissed or a nolle prosequi is entered; or
     (iv) The defendant is civilly committed pursuant to § 40.1-5-8; or
     (v) The court finds there is no reasonable likelihood that in the foreseeable future the
defendant will become competent and his or her the defendant’s condition is such that he or she
the defendant cannot properly be committed under § 40.1-5-8.
     (j) Period of commitment. When a court commits a defendant pursuant to subsection (i)(2)
or (i)(3), it shall compute, counting from the date of entry to the order of commitment, the date of
the expiration of the period of time equal to two thirds (⅔) of the maximum term of imprisonment
for the most serious offense with which the defendant is charged. If the maximum term for the most
serious offense charged is life imprisonment or death, the court shall, for the purpose of
computation, deem the offense to be punishable by a maximum term of thirty (30) years. In the
order of commitment, the court shall provide that if, on the date so computed, the defendant is still
committed under the order, the charges against him or her the defendant shall be dismissed.
     (k) Periodic review. The director shall petition the court to review the state of competency
of a defendant committed pursuant to subsection (i)(2) or (i)(3) not later than six (6) months from
the date of the order of commitment and every six (6) months thereafter, or when the director
believes the defendant is no longer incompetent, whichever occurs first. Outpatient facilities that
are providing treatment to defendants in accordance with subsection (i)(2) shall prepare reports to
be submitted to the director in accordance with the requirements of this section. The director shall
attach to the petition a report on the condition of the defendant. If the report indicates that the
defendant remains incompetent, it shall include a prognosis regarding the likelihood that he or she
the defendant will become competent prior to the dismissal of the charges pursuant to subsection
(j). Copies of the report shall be given to the attorney for the state and to the defendant or his or her
the defendant’s counsel.
     (l) Defendant's right to petition. A defendant committed pursuant to subsection (i)(2) or
(i)(3) may at any time petition the court to review the state of his or her the defendant’s
competency.
     (m) Hearing on petition. Upon receipt of a petition pursuant to subsection (k) or (l) and
appropriate notice to the defendant, the state, and the director, the court shall hold a hearing at
which the parties may introduce evidence as to the defendant's competency, including any reports
of the director, and the defendant may testify, confront witnesses, and present evidence as to his or
her the defendant’s competency and prognosis. On the basis of the evidence, the court shall make
a finding as to the defendant's competency and, if he or she the defendent is found to be
incompetent, whether a reasonable likelihood exists that he or she the defendant will become
competent prior to the dismissal of the charges pursuant to subsection (j). If the court finds that the
defendant is competent, it shall enter an order to that effect. If the court finds that the defendant is
incompetent and that a reasonable likelihood exists that he or she the defendant will become
competent prior to the dismissal of the charges pursuant to subsection (j), it shall order continuation
of the commitment of the defendant. If the court finds that the defendant is incompetent and that a
reasonable likelihood does not exist that he or she the defendant will become competent prior to
the dismissal of the charges pursuant to subsection (j), it shall order that thirty (30) days thereafter
the defendant be discharged from detention under the order of commitment. Upon entry of the
order, the state may commence proceedings seeking to commit the defendant pursuant to § 40.1-5-
8.
     (n) Statements inadmissible. No statements made by a defendant in the course of an
examination conducted pursuant to subsection (d) or during a hearing conducted pursuant to
subsection (i) or (m) shall be admissible in evidence against the defendant in any criminal action
on any issue other than his or her the defendant’s mental condition. The statements shall be
admissible on the issue of his or her the defendant’s mental condition even though they might
otherwise be deemed to be privileged communications.
     (o) Disposition of charges. The court may, at any time, proceed to a disposition of the
charges pending against a defendant who has been committed pursuant to subsection (i)(2) or (i)(3)
if the factual and legal issues involved can be resolved without regard to the competency of the
defendant.
     SECTION 9. Sections 42-12.1-4 and 42-12.1-9 of the General Laws in Chapter 42-12.1
entitled "Department of Behavioral Healthcare, Developmental Disabilities and Hospitals" are
hereby amended to read as follows:
     42-12.1-4. Management of institutions.
     The department of behavioral healthcare, developmental disabilities and hospitals shall
have the management, supervision, and control of both the Eleanor Slater Hospital hospital and
the Rhode Island State Psychiatric Hospital state psychiatric hospital, and such other functions as
have been or may be assigned. The director of the department may delegate to another employee
of the department any functions related to the separate management, supervision, and control of the
state-operated hospitals. The department also shall operate, maintain, and repair the buildings,
grounds, and other physical property at those institutions, other than the roads and driveways, which
shall be under the care and supervision of the department of transportation.
     42-12.1-9. The Eleanor Slater Hospital hospital.
     The facilities known as the general hospital, the institution of mental health and the Dr. U.
E. Zambarano within the state of Rhode Island shall hereafter be named the "Eleanor Slater
Hospital." The hospital known as the Eleanor Slater Hospital hospital shall consist of facilities in
Cranston and/or Burrillville, or any units of such facilities, as licensed by the department of health.
     SECTION 10. Chapter 42-12.1 of the General Laws entitled "Department of Behavioral
Healthcare, Developmental Disabilities and Hospitals" is hereby amended by adding thereto the
following section:
     42-12.1-10. The Rhode Island State Psychiatric Hospital state psychiatric hospital.
     (a) A new hospital is hereby established to furnish care to any adult patient in Rhode Island
requiring inpatient psychiatric care, and who meets at least one of the following criteria:
     (1) The individual has been determined to require specialized mental health care and
psychiatric inpatient services that cannot be provided in a correctional facility as defined in § 40.1-
5.3-7:;
     (2) The individual has been ordered to inpatient care by a court of competent jurisdiction
for the purpose of competency evaluation, competency restoration, if indicated, and treatment;
     (3) The individual has been ordered to the forensic unit after a finding of not guilty by
reason of insanity until such time, subject to a determination of the director or his/her the director’s
designee, the individual may be safely managed in a civil unit of Eleanor Slater Hospital hospital;
     (4) The individual has been transferred to the Rhode Island State Psychiatric Hospital state
psychiatric hospital from the department of corrections when specialized services are required
that are better provided in a hospital setting and are provided until such time., in the discretion of
the director, the patient's condition has improved to the point at which the patient may be returned
to the adult correctional institutions and to receive sufficient treatment, as approved by a judge of
the district court or a justice of the superior court pursuant to the applicable procedures and
requirements of sections 6, 7, 8, 9 and/or 9.1 of chapter 5.3 of title 40.1 §§ 40.1-5.3-6, 40.1-5.3-7,
40.1-5.3-8, 40.1-5.3-9 and/or 40.1-5.3-9.1.
     (b) The new hospital shall be named the Rhode Island State Psychiatric Hospital state
psychiatric hospital and shall consist of facilities, or any units of such facilities, on the grounds of
the John O. Pastore Center center in Cranston., Rhode Island, as licensed by the department of
health.
     (c) The Rhode Island State Psychiatric Hospital state psychiatric hospital shall be
operated by the department of behavioral healthcare, developmental disabilities and hospitals and
shall be licensed by the department of health pursuant to chapter 17 of title 23; however, the Rhode
Island State Psychiatric Hospital state psychiatric hospital shall be a separate licensed entity from
the Eleanor Slater Hospital hospital;. and
     (d) The director of the department of behavioral healthcare, developmental disabilities and
hospitals is authorized to take such actions as may be necessary or prudent to establish the Rhode
Island State Psychiatric Hospital state psychiatric hospital consistent with this chapter.
     SECTION 11. This article shall take effect upon passage.