§ 5-2-315 - Discharge or conditional release.
               	 		
5-2-315.    Discharge or conditional release.
    (a)    (1)    (A)  When  the Director of the Department of Human Services or his or her designee  determines that a person acquitted has recovered from his or her mental  disease or defect to such an extent that his or her release or his or  her conditional release under a prescribed regimen of medical,  psychiatric, or psychological care or treatment would no longer create a  substantial risk of bodily injury to another person or serious damage  to the property of another person, the director shall promptly file an  application for discharge or conditional release of the person acquitted  with the circuit court that ordered the commitment.
            (B)  In  addition, if the person acquitted has an impairment due to alcohol or  substance abuse, the director may petition the circuit court for  involuntary commitment under    20-64-815.
      (2)  The director shall send a copy of the application to the counsel for the person acquitted and to the attorney for the state.
(b)    (1)  Within  twenty (20) days after receiving the application for discharge or  conditional release of the person acquitted, the attorney for the state  may petition the circuit court for a hearing to determine whether the  person acquitted should be released.
      (2)  If  the attorney for the state does not request a hearing, the circuit  court may conduct a hearing on its own motion or discharge the person  acquitted.
(c)  If the circuit court  finds after a hearing under subsection (b) of this section by the  standard specified in    5-2-314(e) that the person acquitted has  recovered from his or her mental disease or defect to such an extent  that:
      (1)  The discharge of the  person acquitted would no longer create a substantial risk of bodily  injury to another person or serious damage to property of another  person, then the circuit court shall order that the person acquitted be  immediately discharged; or
      (2)  The  conditional release of the person acquitted under a prescribed regimen  of medical, psychiatric, or psychological care or treatment would no  longer create a substantial risk of bodily injury to another person or  serious damage to property of another person,
      then the circuit court shall order:
            (A)  That  the person acquitted be conditionally released under a prescribed  regimen of medical, psychiatric, or psychological care or treatment that  has been:
                  (i)  Prepared for the person acquitted;
                  (ii)  Certified to the circuit court as appropriate by the director of the facility in which the person acquitted is committed; and
                  (iii)  Found by the circuit court to be appropriate; and
            (B)  As explicit conditions of release that:
                  (i)  The person acquitted comply with the prescribed regimen of medical, psychiatric, or psychological care or treatment;
                  (ii)  The  person acquitted be subject to regularly scheduled personal contact  with a compliance monitor for the purpose of verifying compliance with  the conditions of release; and
                  (iii)  That  compliance with the conditions of release be documented with the  circuit court by the compliance monitor at ninety-day intervals or at  such intervals as the circuit court may order.
(d)  If  the circuit court determines that the person acquitted has not met his  or her burden of proof under subsection (c) of this section, the person  acquitted shall continue to be committed to the custody of the  Department of Human Services.
(e)  A  person ordered to be in charge of a prescribed regimen of medical,  psychiatric, or psychological care or treatment of a person acquitted  shall provide:
      (1)  The prescribed regimen of medical, psychiatric, or psychological care or treatment;
      (2)  Periodic  written documentation to a compliance monitor of compliance with the  conditions of release, including, but not limited to, documentation of  compliance with the prescribed:
            (A)  Medication;
            (B)  Treatment and therapy;
            (C)  Substance abuse treatment; and
            (D)  Drug testing; and
      (3)    (A)  Written  notice of any failure of the person acquitted to comply with the  prescribed regimen of medical, psychiatric, or psychological care or  treatment to the:
                  (i)  Compliance monitor;
                  (ii)  Attorney for the person acquitted;
                  (iii)  Attorney for the state; and
                  (iv)  Circuit court having jurisdiction.
            (B)  The  written notice under subdivision (e)(3)(A) of this section shall be  provided immediately upon the failure of the person acquitted to comply  with a condition of release.
            (C)    (i)  Upon  the written notice under subdivision (e)(3)(A) of this section or upon  other probable cause to believe that the person acquitted has failed to  comply with the prescribed regimen of medical, psychiatric, or  psychological care or treatment, the person acquitted may be detained  and shall be taken without unnecessary delay before the circuit court  having jurisdiction over him or her.
                  (ii)  After  a hearing, the circuit court shall determine whether the person  acquitted should be remanded to an appropriate facility on the ground  that, in light of his or her failure to comply with the prescribed  regimen of medical, psychiatric, or psychological care or treatment, his  or her continued release would create a substantial risk of bodily  injury to another person or serious damage to property of another  person.
            (D)  At any time after a  hearing employing the same criteria, the circuit court may modify or  eliminate the prescribed regimen of medical, psychiatric, or  psychological care or treatment.
(f)    (1)  Regardless  of whether the director or his or her designee has filed an application  pursuant to a provision of subsection (a) of this section, and at any  time during the commitment of the person acquitted, a person acquitted,  his or her counsel, or his or her legal guardian may file with the  circuit court that ordered the commitment a motion for a hearing to  determine whether the person acquitted should be discharged from the  facility in which the person acquitted is committed.
      (2)    However, no motion under subdivision (f)(1) of this section may be  filed more than one (1) time every one hundred eighty (180) days.
      (3)   A copy of the motion under subdivision (f)(1) of this section shall be sent to the:
            (A)  Director of the facility in which the person acquitted is committed; and
            (B)  Attorney for the state.