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CA AB 2692

Title: Criminal procedure: diversion.
Author: Diane Papan

Summary
AB 2692, as amended, Papan. Criminal procedure: diversion. Existing law prohibits a person from being tried or adjudged to punishment while that person is mentally incompetent. Existing law, in the case of a defendant charged with a felony, requires that, upon a finding of mental incompetence, the proceedings be suspended until the defendant regains competence. Existing law establishes the process by which, if the mental competency of a defendant is in doubt, the defendant’s mental competency is evaluated and the defendant receives treatment with the goal of returning the defendant to competency. Existing law prescribes a program of pretrial diversion for defendants with a diagnosed mental disorder whose disorder was a significant factor in the commission of their offense. Under existing law, persons charged with certain offenses, including murder, rape, sexual abuse of a child, and possession of a weapon of mass destruction, are ineligible for diversion.This bill would specify that the diversion period for an incompetent defendant shall not exceed 2 years and that the total time spent waiting to enter treatment in combination with the period of diversion shall not exceed either 30 months or the maximum term of imprisonment provided by law for the most serious offense charged, whichever is shorter.

Status
Read second time and amended.

Bill Documents
CA AB 2692 - 05/01/24 - Amended Assembly
05/01/24 - CA AB 2692 (05/01/24 - Amended Assembly)


CA AB 2692 - 04/17/24 - Amended Assembly
04/17/24 - CA AB 2692 (04/17/24 - Amended Assembly)

CA AB 2692 - 02/14/24 - Introduced
02/14/24 - CA AB 2692 (02/14/24 - Introduced)

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