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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR Moore
DATE TYPED 02/23/05 HB 783
SHORT TITLE Sex Offender Treatment & Prior Convictions
SB
ANALYST Wilson
APPROPRIATION
Appropriation Contained Estimated Additional Impact Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
FY05
FY06
FY05
FY06
Minimal
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
Responses Received From
Administrative Office for the Courts (AOC)
Attorney General’s Office (AGO)
Corrections Department (CD)
Public Defender Department (PDD)
SUMMARY
Synopsis of Bill
House Bill 783 amends Section 31-18-17 NMSA 1978 to eliminate the limitation on the use of
prior felony convictions when determining whether a person is a habitual offender, if the convic-
tion is for one of a list of specified sexual offenses and DWI offenses from the habitual offender
statute.
This bill also provides that, as a condition of probation, the district court shall order a sex of-
fender to participate in an outpatient or inpatient sex offender treatment program.
Significant Issues
The AGO notes requiring mandatory treatment for all sex offenders eliminates the court consid-
ering recommendations whether treatment is appropriate for a particular offender. Treatment
may not be appropriate for offenders who are in denial and are unwilling to work on treatment
issues. Treatment resources may be wasted if treatment is required for all sex offenders.
The CD states the scarcity of sex offender’s treatment programs may make it difficult to actually
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House Bill 783-- Page 2
place a sex offender on probation due to the lack of program space. Quality of treatment in rural
areas would be poor, and there is potential that sex offenders may be concentrated in Albuquer-
que to meet this requirement.
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
There will be a minimal administrative cost for statewide update, distribution, and documenta-
tion of statutory changes. Any additional fiscal impact on the judiciary will be proportional to
the enforcement of this law and commenced prosecutions. New laws, amendments to existing
laws, and new hearings have the potential to increase caseloads in the courts, thus requiring addi-
tional resources to handle the increase.
CD believes this bill might marginally decrease the amount of time sex offenders spend in prison
due to the elimination of prior convictions that may by used to apply a habitual offender en-
hancement.
ADMINISTRATIVE IMPLICATIONS
Probation Officers may bear the burden of ensuring that the court imposes sex offenders’ pro-
gramming as a condition of probation. Additionally, they may end up competing to acquire a
limited amount of treatment spaces for probationers on their caseloads.
OTHER SUBSTANTIVE ISSUES
The PDD provided the following:
The breadth and scope of the sex offenses and the conduct they punish make this exten-
sion particularly harsh. These convictions can be used even if the new offense is not sex
related. This was not a recommendation of the sentencing commission or the sex of-
fender management board.
Some of the offenses listed are already listed as violent offenses and if a second violent
sex offense occurs, the sentence is mandatory life under NMSA 1978, section 31-18-25,
or a third violent offense that is not sex related under section 31-18-23. There is no time
restriction in these sections on the age of the offense.
The bill’s intent in section 31-18-17 D.1.a-j is unclear. A superficial reading of the sec-
tion seems to eliminate convictions for these offenses altogether as priors rather than
eliminating the 10-year limit. It also appears to include felony DWI convictions as avail-
able for habitual purposes. While there is currently no time limit on use of prior DWI
convictions for subsequent DWI convictions, a DWI felony cannot be used to enhance
any other felony conviction. This is because the DWI statutes have their own enhance-
ment provisions.
These convictions never go away even for habitual sentencing purposes even if the per-
son is convicted of a totally different and non-sexual offense such as shoplifting. Persons
with these convictions are being treated differently than persons with other convictions
for not apparent reason.
DW/lg