A09097 Summary:

BILL NOA09097
 
SAME ASNo Same As
 
SPONSORSolages
 
COSPNSR
 
MLTSPNSR
 
Amd Exec L, generally; amd Cor L, generally; amd §§160.50, 160.55, 390.50, 410.91, 430.20 & 440.50, CP L; amd §190, Judy L; amd §10.11, Ment Hyg L; amd §579, Pub Health L; amd §§70.30, 70.40, 70.45 & 240.32, Pen L
 
Renames the state board of parole the state board of re-entry; makes conforming changes.
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A09097 Actions:

BILL NOA09097
 
02/07/2024referred to correction
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A09097 Committee Votes:

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A09097 Floor Votes:

There are no votes for this bill in this legislative session.
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A09097 Text:



 
                STATE OF NEW YORK
        ________________________________________________________________________
 
                                          9097
 
                   IN ASSEMBLY
 
                                    February 7, 2024
                                       ___________
 
        Introduced  by M. of A. SOLAGES -- read once and referred to the Commit-
          tee on Correction
 
        AN ACT to amend the executive law, in relation  to  renaming  the  state
          board  of parole; and to amend the correction law, the criminal proce-
          dure law, the judiciary law, the mental hygiene law, the public health
          law and the penal law, in relation to making conforming changes

          The People of the State of New York, represented in Senate and  Assem-
        bly, do enact as follows:
 
     1    Section  1.  The article heading of article 12-B of the executive law,
     2  as amended by section 105 of subpart B of part C of chapter  62  of  the
     3  laws of 2011, is amended to read as follows:
     4                       STATE BOARD OF [PAROLE] RE-ENTRY
     5    §  2.    Paragraphs (c) and (e) of subdivision 1 of section 169 of the
     6  executive law, paragraph (c) as amended by section 9 of part A of  chap-
     7  ter  60  of the laws of 2012 and paragraph (e) as amended by section 2-a
     8  of part AA of chapter 56 of the laws of 2019, are  amended  to  read  as
     9  follows:
    10    (c)  commissioner of agriculture and markets, commissioner of alcohol-
    11  ism and substance abuse services,  adjutant  general,  commissioner  and
    12  president  of  state  civil service commission, commissioner of economic
    13  development, chair of the energy  research  and  development  authority,
    14  president  of  higher  education  services  corporation, commissioner of
    15  motor vehicles, member-chair of board of  [parole]  re-entry,  chair  of
    16  public  employment  relations board, secretary of state, commissioner of
    17  alcoholism and substance abuse services, executive director of the hous-
    18  ing finance agency, commissioner of housing and community renewal, exec-
    19  utive director of state  insurance  fund,  commissioner-chair  of  state
    20  liquor authority, and chair of the workers' compensation board;
    21    (e)  chairperson  of state athletic commission, director of the office
    22  of victim services, chairperson of human  rights  appeal  board,  chair-
    23  person  of  the  industrial  board  of appeals, chairperson of the state
    24  commission of correction, members of the  board  of  [parole]  re-entry,
    25  member-chairperson  of  unemployment insurance appeal board, director of
 
         EXPLANATION--Matter in italics (underscored) is new; matter in brackets
                              [ ] is old law to be omitted.
                                                                   LBD13619-01-3

        A. 9097                             2
 
     1  veterans' services, and vice-chairperson of  the  workers'  compensation
     2  board;
     3    §  3.    Section 244 of the executive law, as amended by section 19 of
     4  part A of chapter 56 of the laws of 2010, is amended to read as follows:
     5    § 244. Hostels and foster homes. 1. The office is hereby authorized to
     6  provide or to pay for care in a hostel or foster home  approved  by  the
     7  office  as  suitable for such cases for any probationer or parolee under
     8  the age of twenty-one years when the [parole] board  of  re-entry  or  a
     9  judge  of  a  court  determines that there is no other suitable home for
    10  such probationer or parolee and that such probationer or parolee  should
    11  be placed in such hostel or foster home. In addition to payment for such
    12  care,  when  ordered  by the board or court, the office is authorized to
    13  provide or pay for clothing and other necessities, including medical and
    14  psychiatric treatment, required for the welfare of such  probationer  or
    15  parolee.  The  office  may also provide or contract for such care in any
    16  suitable facility operated by a department of correction or by any other
    17  public or voluntary social welfare agency, institution or  organization.
    18  A  court  with  respect  to such a probationer and the [parole] board of
    19  re-entry with respect to such a parolee shall, subject to regulation  by
    20  the  division control admissions to and discharges from such hostels and
    21  foster homes.  When placement is made in any hostel or foster  home,  or
    22  in any facility other than a public institution, such placement whenever
    23  practicable shall be in a hostel, or facility operated by or in the home
    24  of a person or persons of the same religious faith as the probationer or
    25  parolee.
    26    2.  The office shall have authority and the duty to stimulate programs
    27  for the development of hostels and foster homes for the care  of  proba-
    28  tioners and parolees under the age of twenty-one years.
    29    §  4.   Subdivision 1 of section 259 of the executive law, as added by
    30  section 37 of subpart A of  part C of chapter 62 of the laws of 2011, is
    31  amended and a new subdivision 9 is added to read as follows:
    32    1. "Board" means the state board of [parole] re-entry.
    33    9. "Division" means the division of criminal justice services.
    34    § 5.  Section 259-a of the executive law, as added by  section  38  of
    35  subpart  A  of   part C of chapter 62 of the laws of 2011, is amended to
    36  read as follows:
    37    § 259-a. State board of [parole] re-entry; funding. The annual  budget
    38  submitted  by the governor shall separately state the recommended appro-
    39  priations for the state board of [parole]  re-entry.    Upon  enactment,
    40  these  separately  stated appropriations for the state board of [parole]
    41  re-entry shall not be decreased by interchange with any other  appropri-
    42  ation, notwithstanding section fifty-one of the state finance law.
    43    § 6.  The section heading and subdivisions 1 and 3 of section 259-b of
    44  the  executive  law, the section heading and subdivision 1 as amended by
    45  section 38-a of subpart A of  part C of chapter 62 of the laws  of  2011
    46  and  subdivision  3  as  amended by chapter 135 of the laws of 2013, are
    47  amended to read as follows:
    48    State board of [parole] re-entry; organization. 1. There shall  be  in
    49  the  department  a  state board of [parole] re-entry which shall possess
    50  the powers and duties hereinafter specified. The  board  shall  function
    51  independently  of  the  department  regarding all of its decision-making
    52  functions, as well as any other powers  and  duties  specified  in  this
    53  article,  provided,  however,  that  administrative  matters  of general
    54  applicability within the department shall be applicable  to  the  board.
    55  Such  board shall consist of not more than nineteen members appointed by
    56  the governor with the advice and consent of  the  senate.  The  term  of

        A. 9097                             3
 
     1  office  of  each  member of such board shall be for six years; provided,
     2  however, that any member chosen to fill a  vacancy  occurring  otherwise
     3  than  by  expiration of term shall be appointed for the remainder of the
     4  unexpired  term of the member whom he or she is to succeed. In the event
     5  of the inability to act of any member, the  governor  may  appoint  some
     6  competent  informed person to act in his or her stead during the contin-
     7  uance of such disability.
     8    3. The governor shall designate one of the members  of  the  board  as
     9  [chairman]  chairperson to serve in such capacity at the pleasure of the
    10  governor or until the member's term of office expires and a successor is
    11  designated in accordance with law, whichever first occurs.  The  [chair-
    12  man]  chairperson  shall be responsible for the administrative functions
    13  and daily operations of the [parole] board  and  its  staff,  except  as
    14  otherwise provided by law.
    15    § 7. The section heading, the opening paragraph and subdivisions 4, 12
    16  and  13  of  section 259-c of the executive law, the section heading and
    17  the opening paragraph as amended by section 38-b of subpart A of  part C
    18  of chapter 62 of the laws of 2011, subdivisions 4 and 12 as  amended  by
    19  chapter 322 of the laws of 2021 and subdivision 13 as amended by chapter
    20  292 of the laws of 2018, are amended to read as follows:
    21    State  board  of [parole] re-entry; functions, powers and duties.  The
    22  state board of [parole] re-entry shall:
    23    4. establish written procedures for its use in making parole decisions
    24  as required by law. Such written procedures shall incorporate  risk  and
    25  needs  principles  to  measure  the  rehabilitation of persons appearing
    26  before the board,  the  likelihood  of  success  of  such  persons  upon
    27  release,  and  assist members of the state board of [parole] re-entry in
    28  determining which incarcerated individuals may  be  released  to  parole
    29  supervision;
    30    12.  to  facilitate  the  supervision  of all incarcerated individuals
    31  released on community supervision  the  [chairman]  chairperson  of  the
    32  state  board of [parole] re-entry shall consider the implementation of a
    33  program of graduated sanctions, including but not limited to the  utili-
    34  zation  of a risk and needs assessment instrument that would be adminis-
    35  tered to all incarcerated individuals eligible for  parole  supervision.
    36  Such  a  program  would  include various components including the use of
    37  alternatives to incarceration for technical parole violations;
    38    13. transmit a report of the work  of  the  state  board  of  [parole]
    39  re-entry  for the preceding calendar year to the governor and the legis-
    40  lature annually.   Such report  shall  include  statistical  information
    41  regarding the demographics of persons granted release and considered for
    42  release  to  community  supervision  or  deportation,  including but not
    43  limited to age, gender, race, ethnicity, region of commitment and  other
    44  relevant categories of classification and commitment;
    45    §  8.  Subdivision 1 of section 259-d of the executive law, as amended
    46  by section 38-b-2 of subpart A of part C of chapter 62 of  the  laws  of
    47  2011, is amended to read as follows:
    48    1.  The  state board of [parole] re-entry shall appoint and shall have
    49  the power to remove, in accordance with  the  provisions  of  the  civil
    50  service  law, hearing officers who shall be authorized to conduct parole
    51  revocation proceedings. Hearing officers shall function independently of
    52  the department regarding all of  their  decision-making  functions,  and
    53  shall  report directly to the board, provided, however, that administra-
    54  tive matters of general applicability within  the  department  shall  be
    55  applicable  to  all  hearing officers. A hearing officer conducting such
    56  proceedings shall, when delegated such authority by the board  in  rules

        A. 9097                             4
 
     1  adopted  by the board, be required to make a written decision in accord-
     2  ance with standards and rules adopted by  the  board.  Nothing  in  this
     3  article  shall  be  deemed  to  preclude  a member of the state board of
     4  [parole]  re-entry  from  exercising  all  of  the functions, powers and
     5  duties of a hearing officer upon request of the [chairman] chairperson.
     6    § 9. Section 259-e of the executive law, as amended by chapter 322  of
     7  the laws of 2021, is amended to read as follows:
     8    §  259-e.  Institutional parole services. The department shall provide
     9  institutional parole services. Such services shall  include  preparation
    10  of reports and other data required by the state board of [parole] re-en-
    11  try in the exercise of its functions with respect to release on presump-
    12  tive release, parole, conditional release or post-release supervision of
    13  incarcerated  individuals.  Additionally, the department shall determine
    14  which incarcerated individuals are in need of a deaf language interpret-
    15  er or an English language interpreter, and shall  inform  the  board  of
    16  such  need  within  a reasonable period of time prior to an incarcerated
    17  individual's scheduled appearance before the board.   Employees  of  the
    18  department  who  collect  data,  interview  incarcerated individuals and
    19  prepare reports for the state board of [parole] re-entry in institutions
    20  under the jurisdiction of the department shall  work  under  the  direct
    21  supervision  of  the  deputy commissioner of the department in charge of
    22  program services. Data and reports submitted to the board shall  address
    23  the  statutory  factors  to  be  considered by the board pursuant to the
    24  relevant provisions of section two hundred fifty-nine-i of this article.
    25    § 10. Subdivision 5 of section 259-h of the executive law, as  amended
    26  by chapter 322 of the laws of 2021, is amended to read as follows:
    27    5.  The provisions of this section shall not be construed as diminish-
    28  ing the discretionary authority of the board  of  [parole]  re-entry  to
    29  determine whether or not an incarcerated individual is to be paroled.
    30    §  11. Subparagraph (iii) of paragraph (f) of subdivision 3, paragraph
    31  (b) of subdivision 6 and subdivision 8 of section 259-i of the executive
    32  law, subparagraph (iii) of paragraph (f) of subdivision 3 as amended  by
    33  chapter    427  of  the  laws of 2021, paragraph (b) of subdivision 6 as
    34  added by section 1 of part T of chapter 62  of  the  laws  of  2003  and
    35  subdivision  8  as amended by chapter 9 of the laws of 2017, are amended
    36  to read as follows:
    37    (iii) Both the alleged violator and an attorney who has filed a notice
    38  of appearance on his or her behalf in accordance with the rules  of  the
    39  board  of  [parole]  re-entry shall be given written notice of the date,
    40  place and time of the hearing pursuant to subparagraph (ix) of paragraph
    41  (c) of this subdivision.
    42    (b) The [chairman] chairperson of the board of [parole] re-entry shall
    43  maintain records of all parole interviews and hearings for a  period  of
    44  twenty-five years from the date of the parole release interview or until
    45  expiration of the maximum term of sentence.
    46    8.  Foreign born or non-English speaking person before the board. Upon
    47  notification from the department pursuant to section two hundred  fifty-
    48  nine-e  of this article, or upon the request of any foreign born or non-
    49  English speaking person who is scheduled to participate in an interview,
    50  parole release hearing, preliminary hearing or revocation hearing, there
    51  shall be appointed from the New York state office  of  general  services
    52  statewide  administrative  services contract, a qualified interpreter to
    53  interpret the proceedings to and the statements  or  testimony  of  such
    54  person.  The  board shall determine a reasonable fee for all such inter-
    55  preting services, the cost of which shall be a charge upon the board  of

        A. 9097                             5
 
     1  [parole] re-entry. No such request or appointment shall cause a delay of
     2  release from incarceration of such person.
     3    §  12.  Subdivisions 1, 2 and 3 of section 259-j of the executive law,
     4  as amended by section 38-g of subpart A of part C of chapter 62  of  the
     5  laws of 2011, are amended to read as follows:
     6    1.  Except where a determinate sentence was imposed for a felony other
     7  than a felony defined in article two  hundred  twenty  [or  article  two
     8  hundred  twenty-one] of the penal law, if the board of [parole] re-entry
     9  is satisfied  that  an  absolute  discharge  from  presumptive  release,
    10  parole,  conditional  release  or  release  to  a period of post-release
    11  supervision is in the best interests of society,  the  board  may  grant
    12  such  a  discharge  prior  to the expiration of the full term or maximum
    13  term to any person who has been on unrevoked community  supervision  for
    14  at least three consecutive years. A discharge granted under this section
    15  shall  constitute a termination of the sentence with respect to which it
    16  was granted. No such discharge shall be  granted  unless  the  board  is
    17  satisfied  that  the  parolee or releasee, otherwise financially able to
    18  comply with an order of restitution and the  payment  of  any  mandatory
    19  surcharge,  sex offender registration fee or DNA databank fee previously
    20  imposed by a court of competent jurisdiction,  has  made  a  good  faith
    21  effort to comply therewith.
    22    2.  The [chairman] chairperson of the board of [parole] re-entry shall
    23  promulgate rules and regulations governing the  issuance  of  discharges
    24  from  community supervision pursuant to this section to assure that such
    25  discharges are consistent with public safety.
    26    3. Notwithstanding any other provision of this section to the  contra-
    27  ry, where a term of post-release supervision in excess of five years has
    28  been  imposed  on  a  person convicted of a crime defined in article one
    29  hundred thirty of the penal law, including a sexually motivated  felony,
    30  the  board  of [parole] re-entry may grant a discharge from post-release
    31  supervision prior to the expiration of the maximum term of  post-release
    32  supervision.   Such a discharge may be granted only after the person has
    33  served at least five years of post-release supervision, and  only  to  a
    34  person  who  has been on unrevoked post-release supervision for at least
    35  three consecutive years. No such discharge shall be granted  unless  the
    36  board  of  [parole]  re-entry  or  the department acting pursuant to its
    37  responsibility under subdivision one of section two hundred one  of  the
    38  correction  law  consults  with  any  licensed  psychologist,  qualified
    39  psychiatrist, or other mental health professional who is providing  care
    40  or  treatment  to  the  supervisee; and the board: (a) determines that a
    41  discharge from post-release supervision is  in  the  best  interests  of
    42  society; and (b) is satisfied that the supervisee, otherwise financially
    43  able  to  comply  with  an  order  of restitution and the payment of any
    44  mandatory surcharge, sex offender registration fee, or DNA data bank fee
    45  previously imposed by a court of competent jurisdiction, has made a good
    46  faith effort to comply  therewith.  Before  making  a  determination  to
    47  discharge  a person from a period of post-release supervision, the board
    48  of [parole] re-entry may request that the commissioner of the office  of
    49  mental  health  arrange  a  psychiatric  evaluation of the supervisee. A
    50  discharge granted under this section shall constitute a  termination  of
    51  the sentence with respect to which it was granted.
    52    §  13.  Subdivisions 1, 2 and 4 of section 259-k of the executive law,
    53  as amended by section 38-i of subpart A of part C of chapter 62  of  the
    54  laws of 2011, are amended to read as follows:
    55    1. All case files shall be maintained by the department for use by the
    56  department  and  board. The department and board and authorized officers

        A. 9097                             6
 
     1  and employees thereof shall have complete access to such files  and  the
     2  board  of [parole] re-entry shall have the right to make such entries as
     3  the board of [parole] re-entry shall deem appropriate in accordance with
     4  law.
     5    2.  The  board  shall  make  rules  for the purpose of maintaining the
     6  confidentiality of records, information contained therein  and  informa-
     7  tion  obtained in an official capacity by officers, employees or members
     8  of the board of [parole] re-entry.
     9    4. Upon a determination by the department and board of [parole] re-en-
    10  try that records regarding an individual presently under the supervision
    11  of the department are relevant to an investigation  of  child  abuse  or
    12  maltreatment  conducted  by a child protective service pursuant to title
    13  six of article six of the social services law, the department and  board
    14  shall provide the records determined to be relevant to the child protec-
    15  tive  service  conducting  the  investigation.  The department and board
    16  shall promulgate rules for the transmission of records  required  to  be
    17  provided under this section.
    18    §  14.    Subdivisions  1 and 2 of section 259-l of the executive law,
    19  subdivision 1 as amended by chapter 322 of the laws of 2021 and subdivi-
    20  sion 2 as amended by section 38-j of subpart A of part C of  chapter  62
    21  of the laws of 2011, are amended to read as follows:
    22    1.  It shall be the duty of the commissioner of corrections and commu-
    23  nity supervision to ensure  that  all  officers  and  employees  of  the
    24  department  shall  at  all  times  cooperate  with the board of [parole]
    25  re-entry and shall furnish to such members of the board and employees of
    26  the board such information as may  be  appropriate  to  enable  them  to
    27  perform  their  independent decision making functions. It is also his or
    28  her duty to ensure that the functions of the board of [parole]  re-entry
    29  are not hampered in any way, including but not limited to: a restriction
    30  of  resources including staff assistance; limited access to vital infor-
    31  mation; and presentation of an incarcerated individual's information  in
    32  a  manner  that  may inappropriately influence the board in its decision
    33  making. Where an incarcerated individual has appeared before  the  board
    34  prior  to  having  completed any program assigned by the department, and
    35  such program remains incomplete by no fault of the incarcerated individ-
    36  ual, and where the board has denied such incarcerated individual release
    37  pursuant to paragraph (a) of subdivision  two  of  section  two  hundred
    38  fifty-nine-i  of  this  article, the department shall prioritize such an
    39  incarcerated individual's placement into the assigned program.
    40    2. The official in charge of each institution wherein  any  person  is
    41  confined  under  a  definite  sentence of imprisonment, all officers and
    42  employees thereof and all other public  officials  shall  at  all  times
    43  cooperate with the board of [parole] re-entry, and shall furnish to such
    44  board, its officers and employees such information as may be required by
    45  the  board to perform its functions hereunder. The members of the board,
    46  its officers and employees shall at all times be given  free  access  to
    47  all  persons  confined  in  any such institution under such sentence and
    48  shall be furnished with appropriate working space  in  such  institution
    49  for such purpose without charge therefor.
    50    § 15. Subdivision 2 of section 259-m of the executive law, as added by
    51  chapter 904 of the laws of 1977, is amended to read as follows:
    52    2.  The [chairman] chairperson of the board of [parole] re-entry shall
    53  have power and shall be charged with the duty of promulgating such rules
    54  and regulations as may be deemed necessary to carry out the terms  of  a
    55  compact entered into by the state pursuant to this section.

        A. 9097                             7
 
     1    §  16. Subdivision 3 of section 259-o of the executive law, as amended
     2  by chapter 211 of the laws of 1985, is amended to read as follows:
     3    3.  Whenever  there  is  reasonable  cause  to  believe  that a person
     4  released on parole in this state but under  the  parole  supervision  of
     5  another state pursuant to section two hundred fifty-nine-m of this arti-
     6  cle  has  violated the conditions thereof, any person duly authorized in
     7  such other state to conduct preliminary violation hearings, upon request
     8  of the [chairman] chairperson of the board  of  [parole]  re-entry,  may
     9  conduct such hearing, unless such hearing is waived by the parolee.  The
    10  preliminary  violation hearing and the determinations made thereat shall
    11  have  the  same  force  and  effect  as  preliminary  violation  hearing
    12  conducted  in  this state by the board of [parole] re-entry or a member,
    13  hearing officer or panel thereof.
    14    § 17. Subdivisions 1, 2, 3, 4 and 6 of section 259-q of the  executive
    15  law,  subdivisions  1,  2  and  6  and paragraph (b) of subdivision 4 as
    16  amended by section 38-k-1 of subpart A of part C of chapter  62  of  the
    17  laws  of  2011,  subdivision  3 as amended by chapter 120 of the laws of
    18  2017, and subdivision 4 as added by chapter 466 of the laws of 1978, are
    19  amended to read as follows:
    20    1. No civil action shall be brought in any court of the state,  except
    21  by  the  attorney general on behalf of the state, against any officer or
    22  employee of the board of [parole] re-entry or former division of parole,
    23  in his or her personal capacity, for damages arising out of any act done
    24  or the failure to perform any act within the scope of the employment and
    25  in the discharge of the duties by such officer or employee.
    26    2. Any claim for damages arising out of any act done or the failure to
    27  perform any act within the scope of the employment and in the  discharge
    28  of the duties of any officer or employee of the board of [parole] re-en-
    29  try  or former division of parole shall be brought and maintained in the
    30  court of claims as a claim against the state.
    31    3. The state shall save harmless and indemnify any officer or employee
    32  of the board of [parole] re-entry or  former  division  of  parole  from
    33  financial  loss  resulting  from  a claim filed in a court of the United
    34  States for damages arising out of an act done or the failure to  perform
    35  any  act  that  was  (a)  within  the scope of the employment and in the
    36  discharge of the duties of such officer or employee, and (b) not done or
    37  omitted with the intent to violate any rule or regulation of the depart-
    38  ment, board or former division or of any statute or governing  case  law
    39  of  the  state  or  of  the  United  States at the time the damages were
    40  sustained; provided that the officer or employee shall comply  with  the
    41  provisions  of subdivision four of section seventeen of the public offi-
    42  cers law.
    43    4. (a) The provisions of this section shall supplement, and be  avail-
    44  able  in  addition to, the provisions of section seventeen of the public
    45  officers law and, insofar as this section is inconsistent  with  section
    46  seventeen  of  the  public  officers law, the provisions of this section
    47  shall be controlling.
    48    (b) The provisions of this section shall not be construed in  any  way
    49  to  impair,  modify or abrogate any immunity available to any officer or
    50  employee of the board of [parole] re-entry or former division of  parole
    51  under the statutory or decisional law of the state or the United States.
    52    6.  The  benefits  of subdivision three [hereof] of this section shall
    53  inure only to officers and employees of the board of  [parole]  re-entry
    54  or  former  division  of  parole  and  shall not enlarge or diminish the
    55  rights of any other party.

        A. 9097                             8
 
     1    § 18. Subdivisions 10 and 11 of section 259-r of  the  executive  law,
     2  as  amended  by  chapter 322 of the laws of 2021, are amended to read as
     3  follows:
     4    10.  Notwithstanding  any  other  provision  of law, in the case of an
     5  incarcerated individual whose terminal condition,  disease  or  syndrome
     6  meets  the  criteria for medical parole as set forth in paragraph (a) of
     7  subdivision one of this section, and who is not serving a  sentence  for
     8  one  or  more  offenses set forth in paragraph (i) of subdivision one of
     9  section eight hundred six of the correction law which would render  such
    10  incarcerated individual ineligible for presumptive release, the granting
    11  of  medical parole shall be determined by the commissioner provided that
    12  a release of such incarcerated individual shall be  in  accordance  with
    13  subdivision  eleven  of  this section. In such case, the provisions that
    14  would have applied to and the procedures that would have  been  followed
    15  by  the  board of [parole] re-entry pursuant to this section shall apply
    16  to and be followed by the commissioner.
    17    11. (a) After the commissioner  has  made  a  determination  to  grant
    18  medical  parole pursuant to subdivision ten of this section, the commis-
    19  sioner shall notify the chairperson of the board of  [parole]  re-entry,
    20  or  their designee who shall be a member of the board of [parole] re-en-
    21  try, and provide him or her with all relevant records,  files,  informa-
    22  tion  and documentation, which includes but is not limited to the crimi-
    23  nal  history,  medical  diagnosis  and  treatment  pertaining   to   the
    24  terminally  ill  incarcerated individual no more than five days from the
    25  date of the determination. (b) The chairperson or his  or  her  designee
    26  shall either accept the commissioner's grant of medical parole, in which
    27  case the incarcerated individual may be released by the commissioner, or
    28  conduct  further  review.  This  decision or review shall be made within
    29  five days of the receipt of the relevant records, files, information and
    30  documentation from the commissioner. The  chairperson's  further  review
    31  may  include, but not be limited to, an appearance by the terminally ill
    32  incarcerated individual before the chairperson or his or  her  designee.
    33  (c)  After  this further review, the chairperson shall either accept the
    34  commissioner's grant of medical parole, in which case  the  incarcerated
    35  individual may be released by the commissioner, or the chairperson shall
    36  schedule  an  appearance  for the terminally ill incarcerated individual
    37  before the board of [parole] re-entry.
    38    In the event the terminally ill incarcerated individual  is  scheduled
    39  to  make an appearance before the board of [parole] re-entry pursuant to
    40  this subdivision, the matter shall be heard by a  panel  that  does  not
    41  include  the chairperson or any member of the board of [parole] re-entry
    42  who was involved in the review of the commissioner's determination.
    43    § 19. Paragraph (b) of subdivision 2 of section 259-s of the executive
    44  law, as amended by chapter 322 of the laws of 2021, is amended  to  read
    45  as follows:
    46    (b) The commissioner, or the commissioner's designee, shall review the
    47  diagnosis  and may certify that the incarcerated individual is suffering
    48  from such condition, disease or syndrome and that the incarcerated indi-
    49  vidual is so debilitated or incapacitated  as  to  create  a  reasonable
    50  probability  that  he  or  she is physically or cognitively incapable of
    51  presenting any danger to society. If the commissioner does not so certi-
    52  fy then the incarcerated individual shall not be referred to  the  board
    53  for  consideration  for  release  on medical parole. If the commissioner
    54  does so certify, then the commissioner shall, within seven working  days
    55  of  receipt  of such diagnosis, refer the incarcerated individual to the
    56  board for consideration for release on medical parole.  However, no such

        A. 9097                             9
 
     1  referral of an incarcerated individual to the board of [parole] re-entry
     2  shall be made unless the incarcerated individual has been examined by  a
     3  physician  and  diagnosed  as having a condition, disease or syndrome as
     4  previously described herein at some time subsequent to such incarcerated
     5  individual's admission to a facility operated by the department.
     6    §  20.  Section 259-t of the executive law, as added by chapter 487 of
     7  the laws of 2021, is amended to read as follows:
     8    § 259-t. Permitted activities. Where any person is granted presumptive
     9  release, parole, conditional release,  release  to  post-release  super-
    10  vision  or  any  other  type  of  supervised release, the state board of
    11  [parole] re-entry shall not deem a person to be in violation of and  the
    12  state  board  of  [parole]  re-entry  shall  not  terminate such granted
    13  presumptive release, parole, conditional release,  release  to  post-re-
    14  lease supervision or any other type of supervised release solely because
    15  such  person engaged in bona fide work for an employer, including travel
    16  time to or from bona fide work, during curfew times set by conditions of
    17  probation, parole, presumptive release, conditional release  or  release
    18  to  post-release  supervision.  For  purposes of this section, bona fide
    19  work is work performed as an employee for an  employer,  as  defined  in
    20  section two of the labor law.
    21    §  21.  Section 259-t of the executive law, as added by chapter 492 of
    22  the laws of 2021, is amended to read as follows:
    23    § [259-t] 259-u.  Permitted activities. Where any  person  is  granted
    24  presumptive  release,  parole,  conditional release, release to post-re-
    25  lease supervision or any other type of  supervised  release,  the  state
    26  board of [parole] re-entry shall not deem a person to be in violation of
    27  and the state board of [parole] re-entry shall not terminate such grant-
    28  ed presumptive release, parole, conditional release, release to post-re-
    29  lease supervision or any other type of supervised release solely because
    30  such  person participated in work related labor protests, or in a lawful
    31  labor dispute, strike or other concerted stoppage of  work  or  slowdown
    32  pursuant  to  article  twenty  of  the  labor  law or the national labor
    33  relations act (29 U.S.C. sections 151 et. seq.).
    34    § 22. Subparagraph (iii) of paragraph (c) of subdivision 1 of  section
    35  632-a  of  the  executive law, as amended by section 100 of subpart B of
    36  part C of chapter 62 of the laws of 2011, is amended to read as follows:
    37    (iii) is no longer subject to a sentence of probation  or  conditional
    38  discharge or indeterminate, determinate or definite term of imprisonment
    39  or period of post-release supervision or term of supervised release, and
    40  where within the previous three years: the full or maximum term or peri-
    41  od  terminated  or expired or such person was granted a discharge by the
    42  state board of [parole] re-entry or the department  of  corrections  and
    43  community supervision pursuant to applicable law, or granted a discharge
    44  or  termination  from  probation pursuant to applicable law or granted a
    45  discharge or termination under applicable federal or state law, rules or
    46  regulations prior to the expiration of such  full  or  maximum  term  or
    47  period;  and  includes  only:  (A)  those funds paid to such person as a
    48  result of any interest, right, right of  action,  asset,  share,  claim,
    49  recovery  or  benefit  of  any  kind  that  the person obtained, or that
    50  accrued in favor of  such  person,  prior  to  the  expiration  of  such
    51  sentence,  term  or  period;  (B)  any  recovery or award collected in a
    52  lawsuit after expiration of such sentence where the right  or  cause  of
    53  action  accrued prior to the expiration or service of such sentence; and
    54  (C) earned income earned during a period in which such person was not in
    55  compliance with the conditions of his or her probation,  parole,  condi-
    56  tional  release, period of post-release supervision by the department of

        A. 9097                            10
 
     1  corrections and community supervision or term of supervised release with
     2  the United States probation office or United States  parole  commission.
     3  For  purposes  of this subparagraph, such period of non-compliance shall
     4  be measured, as applicable, from the earliest date of delinquency deter-
     5  mined  by  the  department  of corrections and community supervision, or
     6  from the earliest date on which a declaration of  delinquency  is  filed
     7  pursuant  to section 410.30 of the criminal procedure law and thereafter
     8  sustained, or from  the  earliest  date  of  delinquency  determined  in
     9  accordance  with applicable federal law, rules or regulations, and shall
    10  continue until a final determination sustaining the violation  has  been
    11  made  by  the  trial  court, the department of corrections and community
    12  supervision, or appropriate federal authority.
    13    § 23. Subdivision 9 of section 2 of the correction law, as amended  by
    14  chapter 476 of the laws of 1970, is amended to read as follows:
    15    9. "Diagnostic and treatment center". A correctional facility operated
    16  for the purpose of providing intensive physical, mental and sociological
    17  diagnostic and treatment services including pre-parole diagnostic evalu-
    18  ation, where requested by the board of [parole] re-entry, and scientific
    19  study of the social and mental aspects of the causes of crime.
    20    § 24. Subdivision 1 of section 24 of the correction law, as amended by
    21  section  11 of subpart A of part C of chapter 62 of the laws of 2011, is
    22  amended to read as follows:
    23    1. No civil action shall be brought in any court of the state,  except
    24  by  the  attorney general on behalf of the state, against any officer or
    25  employee of the department, which for purposes  of  this  section  shall
    26  include  members  of the state board of [parole] re-entry, in his or her
    27  personal capacity, for damages arising out of any act done or the  fail-
    28  ure  to  perform  any  act within the scope of the employment and in the
    29  discharge of the duties by such officer or employee.
    30    § 25. Subdivision 2 of section 29 of the correction law, as amended by
    31  section 12 of subpart A of part C of chapter 62 of the laws of 2011,  is
    32  amended to read as follows:
    33    2.  The  commissioner  shall  make rules as to the privacy of records,
    34  statistics and other information collected, obtained and  maintained  by
    35  the  department,  its institutions or the board of [parole] re-entry and
    36  information obtained in an official capacity by officers,  employees  or
    37  members thereof.
    38    § 26. Section 71-a of the correction law, as amended by chapter 322 of
    39  the laws of 2021, is amended to read as follows:
    40    §  71-a. Transitional accountability plan. Upon admission of an incar-
    41  cerated individual committed to the custody of the department  under  an
    42  indeterminate  or  determinate  sentence of imprisonment, the department
    43  shall develop a transitional accountability plan. Such plan shall  be  a
    44  comprehensive,  dynamic and individualized case management plan based on
    45  the programming and treatment needs of the incarcerated individual.  The
    46  purpose  of  such  plan  shall  be  to promote the rehabilitation of the
    47  incarcerated individual and their successful and productive reentry  and
    48  reintegration into society upon release. To that end, such plan shall be
    49  used  to prioritize programming and treatment services for the incarcer-
    50  ated individual during incarceration and any period of community  super-
    51  vision.  The  commissioner may consult with the office of mental health,
    52  the office of [alcoholism and substance abuse]  addiction  services  and
    53  supports,  the board of [parole] re-entry, the department of health, and
    54  other appropriate agencies  in  the  development  of  transitional  case
    55  management plans.

        A. 9097                            11
 
     1    §  27.  Subdivisions  6  and 8 of section 73 of the correction law, as
     2  amended by chapter 322 of the laws  of  2021,  is  amended  to  read  as
     3  follows:
     4    6.  Where  a person who is an incarcerated individual of a residential
     5  treatment facility absconds, or fails to return thereto as specified  in
     6  the  program  approved  for  him  or  her, he or she may be arrested and
     7  returned by an officer or employee of the department  or  by  any  peace
     8  officer, acting pursuant to his or her special duties, or police officer
     9  without  a  warrant; or a member of the board of [parole] re-entry or an
    10  officer designated by such board may issue a warrant for the retaking of
    11  such person. A warrant issued pursuant to this  subdivision  shall  have
    12  the  same force and effect, and shall be executed in the same manner, as
    13  a warrant issued for violation of community supervision.
    14    8. The state board of [parole] re-entry may grant parole to any incar-
    15  cerated individual of a residential treatment facility at any time after
    16  he or she becomes eligible therefor. Such parole shall be in  accordance
    17  with  provisions  of  law  that  would  apply  if  the person were still
    18  confined in the facility from which he or she  was  transferred,  except
    19  that any personal appearance before the board may be at any place desig-
    20  nated by the board.
    21    §  28. Subdivision 1 of section 89-e of the correction law, as amended
    22  by section 47 of part A of chapter 56 of the laws of 2010, is amended to
    23  read as follows:
    24    1. The alternate correctional facility review panel is  hereby  estab-
    25  lished  and shall consist of the commissioner, the chairman of the state
    26  commission  of  correction,  the  chairman  of  the  board  of  [parole]
    27  re-entry,  the  director  of  the  office  of probation and correctional
    28  alternatives, the commissioner of correction of the city  of  New  York,
    29  the  president  of  the  New York State Sheriffs' Association Institute,
    30  Inc., and the president of the Correctional Association of New  York  or
    31  their designees. The governor shall appoint a chairman and vice-chairman
    32  from among the members.
    33    §  29.  Subdivision 4 of section 112 of the correction law, as amended
    34  by chapter 322 of the laws of 2021, is amended to read as follows:
    35    4. The commissioner and the chair of the [parole]  board  of  re-entry
    36  shall  work  jointly to develop and implement, as soon as practicable, a
    37  risk and needs assessment instrument  or  instruments,  which  shall  be
    38  empirically  validated, that would be administered to incarcerated indi-
    39  viduals upon reception into  a  correctional  facility,  and  throughout
    40  their  incarceration and release to community supervision, to facilitate
    41  appropriate programming both during an incarcerated individual's  incar-
    42  ceration  and  community  supervision,  and  designed  to facilitate the
    43  successful integration of incarcerated individuals into the community.
    44    § 30. Section 168-m of the correction law, as amended by section 20 of
    45  subpart B of part C of chapter 62 of the laws of  2011,  is  amended  to
    46  read as follows:
    47    §  168-m.  Review.  Notwithstanding  any other provision of law to the
    48  contrary, any state or local correctional facility, hospital or institu-
    49  tion, district attorney, law enforcement agency,  probation  department,
    50  state board of [parole] re-entry, court or child protective agency shall
    51  forward  relevant  information  pertaining  to  a  sex  offender  to  be
    52  discharged, paroled, released to post-release supervision or released to
    53  the board for review no later than one hundred twenty days prior to  the
    54  release  or  discharge  and  the  board  shall  make  recommendations as
    55  provided in subdivision six of section one hundred sixty-eight-l of this
    56  article within sixty days of receipt of the information. Information may

        A. 9097                            12
 
     1  include, but may not be limited to all or a portion of the arrest  file,
     2  prosecutor's  file,  probation  or  parole  file, child protective file,
     3  court file, commitment file, medical file and treatment file  pertaining
     4  to  such  person.  Such person shall be permitted to submit to the board
     5  any information relevant to the review.  Upon  application  of  the  sex
     6  offender  or  the district attorney, the court shall seal any portion of
     7  the board's file pertaining to the sex offender that  contains  material
     8  that  is confidential under any state or federal law; provided, however,
     9  that in any subsequent proceedings in which the sex offender who is  the
    10  subject  of the sealed record is a party and which requires the board to
    11  provide a recommendation to the court pursuant  to  this  article,  such
    12  sealed  record  shall  be  available  to  the sex offender, the district
    13  attorney, the court and the attorney general where the attorney  general
    14  is a party, or represents a party, in the proceeding.
    15    §  31. Subdivision 1 of section 201 of the correction law, as added by
    16  section 32 of subpart A of part C of chapter 62 of the laws of 2011,  is
    17  amended to read as follows:
    18    1.  The  department  shall  have responsibility for the preparation of
    19  reports and other data required by the state board of [parole]  re-entry
    20  in the exercise of its independent decision making functions.
    21    §  32. Subdivision 5 of section 205 of the correction law, as added by
    22  section 32 of subpart A of part C of chapter 62 of the laws of 2011,  is
    23  amended to read as follows:
    24    5. The commissioner, in consultation with the chairman of the board of
    25  [parole]  re-entry, shall promulgate rules and regulations governing the
    26  issuance of merit terminations of sentence and discharges from  presump-
    27  tive release, parole, conditional release or post-release supervision to
    28  assure  that such terminations and discharges are consistent with public
    29  safety. The board of [parole] re-entry shall have access to merit termi-
    30  nation application case files and corresponding decisions to assess  the
    31  effectiveness  of  the  rules and regulations in ensuring public safety.
    32  Such review will in no manner effect the decisions made with  regard  to
    33  individual merit termination determinations.
    34    §  33. Subdivision 1 of section 206 of the correction law, as added by
    35  section 32 of subpart A of part C of chapter 62 of the laws of 2011,  is
    36  amended to read as follows:
    37    1.   All requests for presumptive release or conditional release shall
    38  be made in writing on forms prescribed and furnished by the  department.
    39  Within  one  month from the date any such application is received, if it
    40  appears that the applicant is eligible for presumptive release or condi-
    41  tional release or will be eligible for such release during  such  month,
    42  the  conditions  of  release  shall  be  fixed  in accordance with rules
    43  prescribed by the board of [parole] re-entry.  Such conditions shall  be
    44  substantially the same as conditions imposed upon parolees.
    45    §  34. Section 207 of the correction law, as amended by chapter 322 of
    46  the laws of 2021, is amended to read as follows:
    47    § 207. Cooperation. It shall  be  the  duty  of  the  commissioner  of
    48  corrections  and  community  supervision to insure that all officers and
    49  employees of the department shall at all times cooperate with the  board
    50  of  [parole] re-entry and shall furnish to such members and employees of
    51  the board of [parole] re-entry such information as may be appropriate to
    52  enable them to perform their independent decision making  functions.  It
    53  is  also  his  or  her duty to ensure that the functions of the board of
    54  [parole] re-entry are not hampered in any way, including but not limited
    55  to: a restriction  of  resources  including  staff  assistance;  limited
    56  access to vital information; and presentation of incarcerated individual

        A. 9097                            13
 
     1  information  in a manner that may inappropriately influence the board in
     2  its decision making.
     3    §  35. Section 405 of the correction law, as amended by chapter 766 of
     4  the laws of 1976, is amended to read as follows:
     5    § 405. Duty of the department to  the  director  of  a  hospital.  The
     6  department  shall  notify the director of a hospital in advance of hear-
     7  ings to be held at such hospital as may be necessary to  carry  out  the
     8  duties  of the board of [parole] re-entry or the department. The depart-
     9  ment shall assist the department of mental hygiene  in  establishing  or
    10  continuing the operation of grievance procedures at such hospital. Where
    11  the subject matter of the grievance primarily involves a policy or prac-
    12  tice  of the department of mental hygiene, the commissioner shall trans-
    13  fer the review of the grievance to the commissioner  of  mental  hygiene
    14  for  resolution  pursuant  to  subdivision  three of section one hundred
    15  thirty-nine of [the correction law] this chapter.
    16    § 36. Section 705 of the correction law, as amended by section  36  of
    17  subpart  B  of  part  C of chapter 62 of the laws of 2011, is amended to
    18  read as follows:
    19    § 705. Forms and filing. 1. All applications, certificates and  orders
    20  of  revocation  necessary for the purposes of this article shall be upon
    21  forms prescribed pursuant to agreement among the state  commissioner  of
    22  corrections and community supervision, the [chairman] chairperson of the
    23  state  board  of  [parole]  re-entry  and the administrator of the state
    24  judicial conference. Such forms relating to certificates of relief  from
    25  disabilities shall be distributed by the office of probation and correc-
    26  tional  alternatives  and forms relating to certificates of good conduct
    27  shall  be  distributed  by  the  commissioner  of  the   department   of
    28  corrections and community supervision.
    29    2.  Any court or department issuing or revoking any certificate pursu-
    30  ant to this article shall immediately file a copy of the certificate, or
    31  of the order of revocation, with the New York state  identification  and
    32  intelligence system.
    33    §  37. Section 805 of the correction law, as amended by section 226 of
    34  chapter 322 of the laws of 2021, is amended to read as follows:
    35    § 805. Earned eligibility program. Persons committed to the custody of
    36  the department under an indeterminate or determinate sentence of  impri-
    37  sonment  shall be assigned a work and treatment program as soon as prac-
    38  ticable. No earlier than two months prior to the  incarcerated  individ-
    39  ual's  eligibility  to be paroled pursuant to subdivision one of section
    40  70.40 of the penal law, the commissioner shall review  the  incarcerated
    41  individual's  institutional  record  to  determine whether he or she has
    42  complied with the assigned program. If the commissioner determines  that
    43  the incarcerated individual has successfully participated in the program
    44  he  or she may issue the incarcerated individual a certificate of earned
    45  eligibility. Notwithstanding any other provision of law, an incarcerated
    46  individual who is serving a sentence with a minimum  term  of  not  more
    47  than  eight years and who has been issued a certificate of earned eligi-
    48  bility, shall be granted parole release at the expiration of his or  her
    49  minimum  term  or  as  authorized  by  subdivision four of section eight
    50  hundred sixty-seven of this chapter unless the board of [parole]  re-en-
    51  try  determines  that  there  is  a reasonable probability that, if such
    52  incarcerated individual is released, he or she will not live and  remain
    53  at  liberty without violating the law and that his or her release is not
    54  compatible with the welfare of society. Any action by  the  commissioner
    55  pursuant  to  this section shall be deemed a judicial function and shall
    56  not be reviewable if done in accordance with law.

        A. 9097                            14
 
     1    § 37-a. Section 805 of the correction law, as amended by section 226-a
     2  of chapter 322 of the laws of 2021, is amended to read as follows:
     3    § 805. Earned eligibility program. Persons committed to the custody of
     4  the  department under an indeterminate sentence of imprisonment shall be
     5  assigned a work and treatment program as soon as practicable. No earlier
     6  than two months prior to the expiration of an incarcerated  individual's
     7  minimum period of imprisonment, the commissioner shall review the incar-
     8  cerated individual's institutional record to determine whether he or she
     9  has  complied  with the assigned program. If the commissioner determines
    10  that the incarcerated individual has successfully  participated  in  the
    11  program he or she may issue the incarcerated individual a certificate of
    12  earned  eligibility.  Notwithstanding  any  other  provision  of law, an
    13  incarcerated individual who is serving a sentence with a minimum term of
    14  not more than six years and who has been issued a certificate of  earned
    15  eligibility, shall be granted parole release at the expiration of his or
    16  her  minimum  term or as authorized by subdivision four of section eight
    17  hundred sixty-seven of this chapter unless the board of [parole]  re-en-
    18  try  determines  that  there  is  a reasonable probability that, if such
    19  incarcerated individual is released, he or she will not live and  remain
    20  at  liberty without violating the law and that his or her release is not
    21  compatible with the welfare of society. Any action by  the  commissioner
    22  pursuant  to  this section shall be deemed a judicial function and shall
    23  not be reviewable if done in accordance with law.
    24    § 38. The opening paragraph of subdivision 2 of  section  851  of  the
    25  correction  law, as amended by section 228 of chapter 322 of the laws of
    26  2021, is amended to read as follows:
    27    "Eligible incarcerated individual" means:  a  person  confined  in  an
    28  institution  who  is  eligible  for release on parole or who will become
    29  eligible for release on parole or conditional release within two  years.
    30  Provided,  however,  that a person under sentence for an offense defined
    31  in paragraphs (a) and (b) of subdivision one of  section  70.02  of  the
    32  penal  law,  where  such offense involved the use or threatened use of a
    33  deadly weapon or dangerous instrument shall not be eligible  to  partic-
    34  ipate  in a work release program until he or she is eligible for release
    35  on parole or who will be eligible for release on parole  or  conditional
    36  release  within  eighteen  months.  Provided,  further,  however, that a
    37  person under a determinate sentence as a second felony drug offender for
    38  a class B felony offense defined in article two hundred  twenty  of  the
    39  penal  law,  who  was  sentenced  pursuant to section 70.70 of such law,
    40  shall not be eligible to participate  in  a  temporary  release  program
    41  until  the  time  served  under  imprisonment for his or her determinate
    42  sentence, including any jail time credited pursuant to the provisions of
    43  article seventy of the penal law, shall be at least eighteen months.  In
    44  the  case  of a person serving an indeterminate sentence of imprisonment
    45  imposed pursuant to the penal law in effect after September  one,  nine-
    46  teen hundred sixty-seven, for the purposes of this article parole eligi-
    47  bility  shall  be upon the expiration of the minimum period of imprison-
    48  ment fixed by the court or where the court has  not  fixed  any  period,
    49  after service of the minimum period fixed by the state board of [parole]
    50  re-entry.  If  an  incarcerated  individual is denied release on parole,
    51  such incarcerated individual shall not be deemed an eligible incarcerat-
    52  ed individual until he or she is within two years of  his  or  her  next
    53  scheduled  appearance  before  the state [parole] re-entry board. In any
    54  case where an incarcerated individual is denied release on parole  while
    55  participating  in  a  temporary  release  program,  the department shall
    56  review the status of the incarcerated individual to determine if contin-

        A. 9097                            15
 
     1  ued placement in the program is appropriate. No person convicted of  any
     2  escape  or absconding offense defined in article two hundred five of the
     3  penal law shall be eligible for temporary release.  Further,  no  person
     4  under  sentence for aggravated harassment of an employee by an incarcer-
     5  ated individual as defined in section 240.32 of the penal law  for,  any
     6  homicide offense defined in article one hundred twenty-five of the penal
     7  law,  for  any  sex offense defined in article one hundred thirty of the
     8  penal law, or for an offense defined in section 255.25, 255.26 or 255.27
     9  of the penal law shall be eligible to  participate  in  a  work  release
    10  program  as  defined in subdivision three of this section. Nor shall any
    11  person under sentence for any sex offense defined in article one hundred
    12  thirty of the penal law  be  eligible  to  participate  in  a  community
    13  services  program  as  defined  in  subdivision  five  of  this section.
    14  Notwithstanding the foregoing, no person who is  an  otherwise  eligible
    15  incarcerated individual who is under sentence for a crime involving: (a)
    16  infliction  of  serious  physical  injury upon another as defined in the
    17  penal law or (b) any other offense involving the use or  threatened  use
    18  of  a deadly weapon may participate in a temporary release program with-
    19  out the written approval of the  commissioner.  The  commissioner  shall
    20  promulgate regulations giving direction to the temporary release commit-
    21  tee  at each institution in order to aid such committees in carrying out
    22  this mandate.
    23    § 38-a. The opening paragraph of subdivision 2 of section 851  of  the
    24  correction  law,  as amended by section 228-b of chapter 322 of the laws
    25  of 2021, is amended to read as follows:
    26    "Eligible incarcerated individual" means:  a  person  confined  in  an
    27  institution  who  is  eligible  for release on parole or who will become
    28  eligible for release on parole or conditional release within two  years.
    29  Provided,  that a person under a determinate sentence as a second felony
    30  drug offender for a class  B  felony  offense  defined  in  article  two
    31  hundred  twenty  of the penal law, who was sentenced pursuant to section
    32  70.70 of such law, shall not be eligible to participate in  a  temporary
    33  release  program until the time served under imprisonment for his or her
    34  determinate sentence, including any jail time credited pursuant  to  the
    35  provisions  of article seventy of the penal law, shall be at least eigh-
    36  teen months. In the case of a person serving an  indeterminate  sentence
    37  of  imprisonment  imposed  pursuant  to  the  penal  law in effect after
    38  September one, nineteen hundred sixty-seven, for the  purposes  of  this
    39  article  parole  eligibility shall be upon the expiration of the minimum
    40  period of imprisonment fixed by the court or where  the  court  has  not
    41  fixed any period, after service of the minimum period fixed by the state
    42  board  of  [parole]  re-entry.  If  an incarcerated individual is denied
    43  release on parole, such incarcerated individual shall not be  deemed  an
    44  eligible  incarcerated individual until he or she is within two years of
    45  his or her next scheduled appearance before the state [parole]  re-entry
    46  board. In any case where an incarcerated individual is denied release on
    47  parole  while  participating in a temporary release program, the depart-
    48  ment shall review the status of the incarcerated individual to determine
    49  if  continued  placement  in  the  program  is  appropriate.  No  person
    50  convicted  of  any  escape  or absconding offense defined in article two
    51  hundred five of the penal law shall be eligible for  temporary  release.
    52  Nor shall any person under sentence for any sex offense defined in arti-
    53  cle  one hundred thirty of the penal law be eligible to participate in a
    54  community services program  as  defined  in  subdivision  five  of  this
    55  section.    Notwithstanding the foregoing, no person who is an otherwise
    56  eligible incarcerated individual who  is  under  sentence  for  a  crime

        A. 9097                            16
 
     1  involving:  (a)  infliction  of  serious physical injury upon another as
     2  defined in the penal law, (b) a sex offense involving  forcible  compul-
     3  sion,  or (c) any other offense involving the use or threatened use of a
     4  deadly weapon may participate in a temporary release program without the
     5  written  approval of the commissioner. The commissioner shall promulgate
     6  regulations giving direction to the temporary release committee at  each
     7  institution  in  order  to  aid  such  committees  in  carrying out this
     8  mandate.
     9    § 39. Subdivision 1 of section 852 of the correction law, as added  by
    10  chapter 472 of the laws of 1969, is amended to read as follows:
    11    1.  The  commissioner of correction shall designate one or more insti-
    12  tutions for the conduct of work release programs. Upon such  designation
    13  the commissioner, with the approval of the [chairman] chairperson of the
    14  board  of  [parole]  re-entry,  shall  promulgate  rules and regulations
    15  consistent with the provisions of this article for the administration of
    16  work release programs at any institution designated, and  shall  appoint
    17  or cause to be appointed a work release committee for such institution.
    18    §  40.  Subdivision 6 of section 855 of the correction law, as amended
    19  by section 231-a of chapter 322 of the laws of 2021, is amended to  read
    20  as follows:
    21    6. Participation in a work release program shall be a privilege. Noth-
    22  ing contained in this article may be construed to confer upon any incar-
    23  cerated  individual  the right to participate, or to continue to partic-
    24  ipate, in a work release program. The warden of the institution  may  at
    25  any  time,  and  upon recommendation of the work release committee or of
    26  the [chairman] chairperson of the state board of  [parole]  re-entry  or
    27  his  or  her designee shall, revoke any incarcerated individual's privi-
    28  lege to participate in a program of work release.
    29    § 41. Subdivision 9 of section 855 of the correction law,  as  amended
    30  by section 231 of chapter 322 of the laws of 2021, is amended to read as
    31  follows:
    32    9.  Participation in a temporary release program shall be a privilege.
    33  Nothing contained in this article may be construed to  confer  upon  any
    34  incarcerated  individual  the  right  to  participate, or to continue to
    35  participate, in a temporary release program. The superintendent  of  the
    36  institution  may  at  any time, and upon recommendation of the temporary
    37  release committee or of the commissioner or  of  the  [chairman]  chair-
    38  person  of  the  state board of [parole] re-entry or his or her designee
    39  shall, revoke any incarcerated individual's privilege to participate  in
    40  a program of temporary release in accordance with regulations promulgat-
    41  ed by the commissioner.
    42    §  42.  Subdivisions  2 and 5 of section 856 of the correction law, as
    43  amended by section 232 of chapter 322 of the laws of 2021,  are  amended
    44  to read as follows:
    45    2.  If  the  incarcerated  individual  violates  any  provision of the
    46  program, or any rule or regulation promulgated by the  commissioner  for
    47  conduct  of  incarcerated individuals participating in temporary release
    48  programs, such incarcerated individual shall be subject to  disciplinary
    49  measures  to  the  same  extent as if he or she violated a rule or regu-
    50  lation of the commissioner for conduct of incarcerated individuals with-
    51  in the premises of the institution. The failure of an incarcerated indi-
    52  vidual  to  voluntarily  return  to  the  institution  of  his  or   her
    53  confinement  more  than  ten  hours  after his or her prescribed time of
    54  return shall create a rebuttable presumption that the failure to  return
    55  was intentional. Any incarcerated individual who is found to have inten-
    56  tionally  failed  to  return  pursuant  to  this subdivision shall be an

        A. 9097                            17
 
     1  absconder in violation of his or her temporary release program and  will
     2  not be an eligible incarcerated individual as defined in subdivision two
     3  of  section  eight  hundred  fifty-one  of  this  [chapter] article. The
     4  creation  of  such rebuttable presumption shall not be admissible in any
     5  court of law as evidence of the commission of any crime defined  in  the
     6  penal  law.  A full report of any such violation, a summary of the facts
     7  and findings of  the  disciplinary  hearing  and  disciplinary  measures
     8  taken,  shall  be made available to the board for the incarcerated indi-
     9  vidual's next scheduled appearance before the state  board  of  [parole]
    10  re-entry including any defense or explanation offered by the incarcerat-
    11  ed individual in response at such hearing.
    12    5.  Upon the conclusion or termination of a temporary release program,
    13  a full report of  the  incarcerated  individual's  performance  in  such
    14  program  shall be prepared in accordance with regulations of the commis-
    15  sioner.  Such report shall include but not be limited to: adjustment  to
    16  release,  supervision contacts, statement of any violations of the terms
    17  and conditions of release and of any disciplinary actions taken, and  an
    18  assessment of the incarcerated individual's suitability for parole. Such
    19  report  shall  be made available to the state board of [parole] re-entry
    20  for the incarcerated individual's next scheduled appearance before  such
    21  board.
    22    § 43. Paragraph (d) of subdivision 1 of section 160.50 of the criminal
    23  procedure law, as amended by chapter 449 of the laws of 2015, is amended
    24  to read as follows:
    25    (d)  such  records shall be made available to the person accused or to
    26  such person's designated agent, and shall be made  available  to  (i)  a
    27  prosecutor in any proceeding in which the accused has moved for an order
    28  pursuant  to  section  170.56  or  210.46 of this chapter, or (ii) a law
    29  enforcement agency upon ex parte motion in any superior court, or in any
    30  district court, city court or the criminal court of the city of New York
    31  provided that such court sealed the record, if such agency  demonstrates
    32  to the satisfaction of the court that justice requires that such records
    33  be  made  available to it, or (iii) any state or local officer or agency
    34  with responsibility for the issuance of licenses to possess  guns,  when
    35  the  accused  has  made  application for such a license, or (iv) the New
    36  York state department of corrections and community supervision when  the
    37  accused is on parole supervision as a result of conditional release or a
    38  parole release granted by the New York state board of [parole] re-entry,
    39  and the arrest which is the subject of the inquiry is one which occurred
    40  while  the  accused  was  under such supervision, or (v) any prospective
    41  employer of a police officer or peace officer as those terms are defined
    42  in subdivisions thirty-three and thirty-four of  section  1.20  of  this
    43  chapter,  in relation to an application for employment as a police offi-
    44  cer or peace officer; provided, however, that every  person  who  is  an
    45  applicant  for  the position of police officer or peace officer shall be
    46  furnished with a copy of all records obtained under this  paragraph  and
    47  afforded  an  opportunity  to  make  an explanation thereto, or (vi) the
    48  probation department responsible for supervision of the accused when the
    49  arrest which is the subject of the inquiry is one which  occurred  while
    50  the accused was under such supervision; and
    51    § 44. Paragraph (d) of subdivision 1 of section 160.55 of the criminal
    52  procedure law, as amended by chapter 449 of the laws of 2015, is amended
    53  to read as follows:
    54    (d) the records referred to in paragraph (c) of this subdivision shall
    55  be  made  available to the person accused or to such person's designated
    56  agent, and shall be made available to (i) a prosecutor in any proceeding

        A. 9097                            18

     1  in which the accused has moved for an order pursuant to  section  170.56
     2  or  210.46  of  this  chapter,  or (ii) a law enforcement agency upon ex
     3  parte motion in any superior court, or in any district court, city court
     4  or  the  criminal court of the city of New York provided that such court
     5  sealed the record, if such agency demonstrates to  the  satisfaction  of
     6  the  court  that justice requires that such records be made available to
     7  it, or (iii) any state or local officer or  agency  with  responsibility
     8  for  the issuance of licenses to possess guns, when the accused has made
     9  application for such a license, or (iv) the New York state department of
    10  corrections and community supervision when the accused is  under  parole
    11  supervision as a result of conditional release or parole release granted
    12  by the New York state board of [parole] re-entry and the arrest which is
    13  the  subject  of the inquiry is one which occurred while the accused was
    14  under such supervision, or (v) the probation department responsible  for
    15  supervision  of  the accused when the arrest which is the subject of the
    16  inquiry is one which occurred while the accused was  under  such  super-
    17  vision, or (vi) a police agency, probation department, sheriff's office,
    18  district attorney's office, department of correction of any municipality
    19  and  parole  department,  for  law  enforcement purposes, upon arrest in
    20  instances in which the individual stands convicted of harassment in  the
    21  second  degree, as defined in section 240.26 of the penal law, committed
    22  against a member of the same family or household as  the  defendant,  as
    23  defined in subdivision one of section 530.11 of this chapter, and deter-
    24  mined  pursuant  to subdivision eight-a of section 170.10 of this title;
    25  and
    26    § 45. Paragraph (a) of subdivision 2 of section 390.50 of the criminal
    27  procedure law, as amended by chapter 31 of the laws of 2019, is  amended
    28  to read as follows:
    29    (a)  Not less than one court day prior to sentencing, unless such time
    30  requirement is waived by the parties, the pre-sentence report  or  memo-
    31  randum  shall  be  made  available  by the court for examination and for
    32  copying by the defendant's attorney, the defendant himself  or  herself,
    33  if he or she has no attorney, and the prosecutor. In its discretion, the
    34  court  may except from disclosure a part or parts of the report or memo-
    35  randa which are not relevant to a proper sentence, or a diagnostic opin-
    36  ion which might seriously disrupt a program of rehabilitation, or sourc-
    37  es  of  information  which  have  been  obtained   on   a   promise   of
    38  confidentiality, or any other portion thereof, disclosure of which would
    39  not be in the interest of justice. In all cases where a part or parts of
    40  the report or memoranda are not disclosed, the court shall state for the
    41  record  that  a  part  or  parts  of  the  report or memoranda have been
    42  excepted and the reasons for its action. The action of the court except-
    43  ing information from disclosure shall be subject  to  appellate  review.
    44  The  pre-sentence  report shall be made available by the court for exam-
    45  ination and copying in connection with any appeal in the case, including
    46  an appeal under this subdivision. Upon written request, the court  shall
    47  make a copy of the presentence report, other than a part or parts of the
    48  report  redacted  by  the court pursuant to this paragraph, available to
    49  the defendant for use before the [parole] board of re-entry for  release
    50  consideration or an appeal of a [parole] board of re-entry determination
    51  or  an application for resentencing pursuant to section 440.46 or 440.47
    52  of this chapter. In his or her written request to the court the  defend-
    53  ant  shall  affirm  that  he or she anticipates an appearance before the
    54  [parole] board of re-entry or intends to file an  administrative  appeal
    55  of  a  [parole] board of re-entry determination or meets the eligibility
    56  criteria for and intends to file a motion for resentencing  pursuant  to

        A. 9097                            19
 
     1  440.46 of this chapter or has received notification from the court which
     2  received  his  or  her  request  to  apply  for resentencing pursuant to
     3  section 440.47 of this chapter confirming that he or she is eligible  to
     4  submit  an  application  for  resentencing pursuant to section 440.47 of
     5  this chapter. The court shall respond to the defendant's written request
     6  within twenty days from receipt of the defendant's written request.
     7    § 46. Subdivision 6 of section 410.91 of the criminal  procedure  law,
     8  as  amended  by  section  76 of subpart B of part C of chapter 62 of the
     9  laws of 2011, is amended to read as follows:
    10    6. Upon delivery of the defendant to the reception center, he  or  she
    11  shall be given a copy of the conditions of parole by a representative of
    12  the  department  of  corrections  and  community  supervision  and shall
    13  acknowledge receipt of a copy of the conditions in writing.  The  condi-
    14  tions  shall  be  established in accordance with article twelve-B of the
    15  executive law and the rules and regulations of  the  board  of  [parole]
    16  re-entry.    Thereafter  and  while  the parolee is participating in the
    17  intensive drug treatment program provided at the drug treatment  campus,
    18  the department of corrections and community supervision shall assess the
    19  parolee's special needs and shall develop an intensive program of parole
    20  supervision  that will address the parolee's substance abuse history and
    21  which shall include periodic urinalysis testing.  Unless  inappropriate,
    22  such  program  shall  include  the  provision of treatment services by a
    23  community-based substance abuse service provider which  has  a  contract
    24  with the department of corrections and community supervision.
    25    § 47. Paragraph (a) of subdivision 5 of section 430.20 of the criminal
    26  procedure law, as amended by chapter 788 of the laws of 1971, is amended
    27  to read as follows:
    28    (a)  If  the sentence also includes a term of imprisonment, commitment
    29  must be to the same institution as is designated for service of the term
    30  of imprisonment, and the period of commitment  commences  (i)  when  the
    31  term  of  imprisonment  is  satisfied,  or (ii) with the approval of the
    32  state board of [parole] re-entry, when the  defendant  becomes  eligible
    33  for parole, or (iii) when the defendant becomes eligible for conditional
    34  release,  whichever  occurs first; provided, however, that the court may
    35  direct that the period of imprisonment for  the  fine  run  concurrently
    36  with the term of imprisonment; and
    37    §  48.  Subdivision 1 of section 440.50 of the criminal procedure law,
    38  as amended by chapter 322 of the laws of 2021, is  amended  to  read  as
    39  follows:
    40    1.  Upon  the  request  of a victim of a crime, or in any event in all
    41  cases in which the final disposition includes a conviction of a  violent
    42  felony  offense  as  defined in section 70.02 of the penal law, a felony
    43  defined in article one hundred twenty-five of  such  law,  or  a  felony
    44  defined in article one hundred thirty of such law, the district attorney
    45  shall,  within  sixty  days of the final disposition of the case, inform
    46  the victim by letter of such final disposition. If such  final  disposi-
    47  tion  results  in  the commitment of the defendant to the custody of the
    48  department of corrections and community supervision for an indeterminate
    49  sentence, the notice provided to the crime victim shall also inform  the
    50  victim  of  his  or  her right to submit a written, audiotaped, or vide-
    51  otaped victim impact statement to  the  department  of  corrections  and
    52  community  supervision  or to meet personally with a member of the state
    53  board of [parole] re-entry  at  a  time  and  place  separate  from  the
    54  personal  interview  between  a  member  or members of the board and the
    55  incarcerated individual and make such a statement, subject to procedures
    56  and limitations contained in rules of the board, both pursuant to subdi-

        A. 9097                            20
 
     1  vision two of section two hundred fifty-nine-i of the executive  law.  A
     2  copy of such letter shall be provided to the board of [parole] re-entry.
     3  The  right  of  the  victim  under  this subdivision to submit a written
     4  victim impact statement or to meet personally with a member of the state
     5  board  of [parole] re-entry applies to each personal interview between a
     6  member or members of the board and the incarcerated individual.
     7    § 49. Subdivision 5 of section 190 of the judiciary law, as  added  by
     8  chapter 477 of the laws of 1988, is amended to read as follows:
     9    5.  Notwithstanding  any  other  provision of law to the contrary, any
    10  proceeding which the supreme court  has  jurisdiction  to  entertain  to
    11  review  the  actions  or  determinations  of the state board of [parole]
    12  re-entry.
    13    § 50. Paragraph 1 of subdivision (d) of section 10.11  of  the  mental
    14  hygiene law, as amended by section 118-e of subpart B of part C of chap-
    15  ter 62 of the laws of 2011, is amended to read as follows:
    16    (1)  A person's regimen of strict and intensive supervision and treat-
    17  ment may be revoked if such a person violates a condition of strict  and
    18  intensive  supervision.  If  a  parole  officer  has reasonable cause to
    19  believe that the person has violated  a  condition  of  the  regimen  of
    20  strict  and  intensive supervision and treatment or, if there is an oral
    21  or written evaluation or report by a  treating  professional  indicating
    22  that the person may be a dangerous sex offender requiring confinement, a
    23  parole officer authorized in the same manner as provided in subparagraph
    24  (i)  of paragraph (a) of subdivision three of section two hundred fifty-
    25  nine-i of the executive law may take the person into custody and  trans-
    26  port  the  person  for lodging in a secure treatment facility or a local
    27  correctional facility for an evaluation by a psychiatric examiner, which
    28  evaluation shall be conducted within five days.  A  parole  officer  may
    29  take the person, under custody, to a psychiatric center for prompt eval-
    30  uation,  and  at  the  end  of the examination, return the person to the
    31  place of lodging. A parole officer, as authorized by this paragraph, may
    32  direct a peace officer, acting pursuant to his or her special duties, or
    33  a police officer who is a member of an authorized police  department  or
    34  force  or of a sheriff's department, to take the person into custody and
    35  transport the person as provided in this paragraph. It shall be the duty
    36  of such peace officer or police officer to take into custody and  trans-
    37  port  any  such  person upon receiving such direction. The department of
    38  corrections and community supervision shall promptly notify the attorney
    39  general and the mental hygiene legal service, when  a  person  is  taken
    40  into  custody  pursuant  to this paragraph. No provision of this section
    41  shall preclude the board of [parole] re-entry  from  proceeding  with  a
    42  revocation  hearing  as  authorized  by subdivision three of section two
    43  hundred fifty-nine-i of the executive law.
    44    § 51. Subdivision 2 of section  579  of  the  public  health  law,  as
    45  amended  by  chapter  322  of  the  laws  of 2021, is amended to read as
    46  follows:
    47    2. This title shall not be applicable to and the department shall  not
    48  have  the  power to regulate pursuant to this title: (a) any examination
    49  performed by a state or local government of materials derived  from  the
    50  human body for use in criminal identification or as evidence in a crimi-
    51  nal  proceeding  or  for  investigative purposes; (b) any test conducted
    52  pursuant to paragraph (c) of subdivision four of section eleven  hundred
    53  ninety-four of the vehicle and traffic law and paragraph (c) of subdivi-
    54  sion  eight of section 25.24 of the parks, recreation and historic pres-
    55  ervation law; (c) any examination performed by a state or  local  agency
    56  of  materials  derived  from  the  body  of  an incarcerated individual,

        A. 9097                            21
 
     1  pretrial releasee, parolee, conditional releasee or probationer  to  (i)
     2  determine,  measure or otherwise describe the presence or absence of any
     3  substance whose possession, ingestion or use is prohibited by  law,  the
     4  rules  of  the  department of corrections and community supervision, the
     5  conditions of release established by the board of [parole] re-entry, the
     6  conditions of release established by a  court  or  a  local  conditional
     7  release  commission or the conditions of any program to which such indi-
     8  viduals are referred and (ii) to determine  whether  there  has  been  a
     9  violation  thereof;  or  (d)  any  examination performed by a coroner or
    10  medical examiner for the medical-legal investigation of a death. Nothing
    11  herein shall prevent the department from consulting with the division of
    12  criminal justice services, the department of corrections  and  community
    13  supervision,  the state police, or any other state agency or commission,
    14  at the request of the division of criminal justice services, the depart-
    15  ment of corrections and community supervision, the state police, or such
    16  other agency or commission,  concerning  examination  of  materials  for
    17  purposes other than public health.
    18    §  52.  The opening paragraph of subdivision 3 of section 70.30 of the
    19  penal law, as amended by chapter 1 of the laws of 1998,  is  amended  to
    20  read as follows:
    21    The  term of a definite sentence, a determinate sentence, or the maxi-
    22  mum term of an indeterminate sentence imposed on a person shall be cred-
    23  ited with and diminished by the amount  of  time  the  person  spent  in
    24  custody  prior  to  the commencement of such sentence as a result of the
    25  charge that culminated in the sentence. In the case of an  indeterminate
    26  sentence,  if  the  minimum period of imprisonment has been fixed by the
    27  court or by the board of [parole] re-entry, the  credit  shall  also  be
    28  applied  against the minimum period. The credit herein provided shall be
    29  calculated from the date custody under the charge commenced to the  date
    30  the  sentence  commences and shall not include any time that is credited
    31  against the term or maximum term of any previously imposed  sentence  or
    32  period of post-release supervision to which the person is subject. Where
    33  the  charge  or  charges culminate in more than one sentence, the credit
    34  shall be applied as follows:
    35    § 52-a. The opening paragraph of subdivision 3 of section 70.30 of the
    36  penal law, as separately amended by chapter 648 of the laws of 1979  and
    37  chapter 1 of the laws of 1998, is amended to read as follows:
    38    The  term  of a definite sentence or the maximum term of an indetermi-
    39  nate sentence imposed on a person shall be credited with and  diminished
    40  by the amount of time the person spent in custody prior to the commence-
    41  ment  of  such sentence as a result of the charge that culminated in the
    42  sentence. In the case of an indeterminate sentence, if the minimum peri-
    43  od of imprisonment has been fixed by  the  court  or  by  the  board  of
    44  [parole]  re-entry, the credit shall also be applied against the minimum
    45  period. The credit herein provided shall be  calculated  from  the  date
    46  custody  under  the  charge commenced to the date the sentence commences
    47  and shall not include any time that is  credited  against  the  term  or
    48  maximum  term  of  any previously imposed sentence or period of post-re-
    49  lease supervision to which the person is subject. Where  the  charge  or
    50  charges culminate in more than one sentence, the credit shall be applied
    51  as follows:
    52    §  53. The opening paragraph of paragraph (a), paragraph (b) and para-
    53  graph (c) of subdivision 1, and subdivisions 2 and 3 of section 70.40 of
    54  the penal law, the opening paragraph of  paragraph  (a)  as  amended  by
    55  section 127-c, paragraph (b) as amended by section 127-d-1 and paragraph
    56  (c)  as amended by section 127-f of subpart B of part C of chapter 62 of

        A. 9097                            22
 
     1  the laws of 2011, subdivision 2 as amended by section 127-g of subpart B
     2  of part C of chapter 62 of the  laws  of  2011,  and  subdivision  3  as
     3  amended  by  chapter  427  of  the  laws of 2021, are amended to read as
     4  follows:
     5    Release  on  parole  shall  be in the discretion of the state board of
     6  [parole] re-entry, and such person shall continue service of his or  her
     7  sentence or sentences while on parole, in accordance with and subject to
     8  the provisions of the executive law and the correction law.
     9    (b)  A  person  who  is  serving one or more than one indeterminate or
    10  determinate sentence of imprisonment shall, if he or she so requests, be
    11  conditionally released from the  institution  in  which  he  or  she  is
    12  confined when the total good behavior time allowed to him or her, pursu-
    13  ant  to  the  provisions of the correction law, is equal to the unserved
    14  portion of his or her term, maximum  term  or  aggregate  maximum  term;
    15  provided,  however,  that  (i) in no event shall a person serving one or
    16  more indeterminate sentence of imprisonment and one or more  determinate
    17  sentence   of  imprisonment  which  run  concurrently  be  conditionally
    18  released until serving at least six-sevenths of the determinate term  of
    19  imprisonment  which has the longest unexpired time to run and (ii) in no
    20  event shall a person be conditionally released  prior  to  the  date  on
    21  which  such  person  is first eligible for discretionary parole release.
    22  The conditions of release, including those governing post-release super-
    23  vision, shall be such as may be imposed by the state board  of  [parole]
    24  re-entry in accordance with the provisions of the executive law.
    25    Every  person  so released shall be under the supervision of the state
    26  department of corrections and community supervision for a  period  equal
    27  to  the  unserved  portion  of the term, maximum term, aggregate maximum
    28  term, or period of post-release supervision.
    29    (c) A person who  is  serving  one  or  more  than  one  indeterminate
    30  sentence  of  imprisonment  shall, if he or she so requests, be released
    31  from the institution in which he or she is confined if granted  presump-
    32  tive  release  pursuant  to  section eight hundred six of the correction
    33  law. The conditions of release shall be such as may be  imposed  by  the
    34  state  board  of  [parole] re-entry in accordance with the provisions of
    35  the executive law. Every person so released shall be  under  the  super-
    36  vision  of the department of corrections and community supervision for a
    37  period equal to the unserved portion of his or her maximum or  aggregate
    38  maximum term unless discharged in accordance with law.
    39    2.  Definite  sentence.  A  person who is serving one or more than one
    40  definite sentence of imprisonment with  a  term  or  aggregate  term  in
    41  excess  of  ninety  days,  and  is eligible for release according to the
    42  criteria set forth in paragraphs (a), (b) and (c) of subdivision one  of
    43  section  two  hundred seventy-three of the correction law, may, if he or
    44  she so requests, be conditionally released from the institution in which
    45  he or she is confined at any time after service of sixty  days  of  that
    46  term,  exclusive  of  credits allowed under subdivisions four and six of
    47  section 70.30 of this article.  In computing service of sixty days,  the
    48  credit allowed for jail time under subdivision three of section 70.30 of
    49  this  article  shall  be  calculated as time served. Conditional release
    50  from such institution shall be in the discretion of the  [parole]  board
    51  of  re-entry,  or  a  local  conditional  release commission established
    52  pursuant to article twelve of the correction law, provided, however that
    53  where such release is by a local  conditional  release  commission,  the
    54  person  must be serving a definite sentence with a term in excess of one
    55  hundred twenty days and may only be released  after  service  of  ninety
    56  days  of  such  term.  In  computing  service of ninety days, the credit

        A. 9097                            23
 
     1  allowed for jail time under subdivision three of section 70.30  of  this
     2  article shall be calculated as time served. A conditional release grant-
     3  ed  under  this  subdivision  shall  be  upon  such conditions as may be
     4  imposed  by  the  [parole]  board  of  re-entry,  in accordance with the
     5  provisions of the executive law, or a local conditional release  commis-
     6  sion in accordance with the provisions of the correction law.
     7    Conditional  release  shall  interrupt  service  of  the  sentence  or
     8  sentences and the remaining portion of the term or aggregate term  shall
     9  be  held in abeyance. Every person so released shall be under the super-
    10  vision of the department of corrections and community supervision  or  a
    11  local  probation  department and in the custody of the local conditional
    12  release commission in accordance with article twelve of  the  correction
    13  law,  for  a  period  of  one year. The local probation department shall
    14  cause complete records to be kept of every person released to its super-
    15  vision pursuant to this subdivision. The department of  corrections  and
    16  community supervision may supply to a local probation department and the
    17  local  conditional  release  commission  custody information and records
    18  maintained on persons under the  supervision  of  such  local  probation
    19  department  to  aid  in  the performance of its supervision responsibil-
    20  ities. Compliance with the conditions of release during  the  period  of
    21  supervision shall satisfy the portion of the term or aggregate term that
    22  has been held in abeyance.
    23    3.  Delinquency.  (a)  When  a  person is alleged to have violated the
    24  terms of presumptive release or parole  by  absconding,  and  the  state
    25  board  of  [parole]  re-entry has declared such person to be delinquent,
    26  the declaration of delinquency shall interrupt the person's sentence  as
    27  of  the  date  of  the  delinquency and such interruption shall continue
    28  until the releasee's appearance in response to a notice of violation  or
    29  the date of the execution of a warrant, whichever is earlier.
    30    (b)  When a person is alleged to have violated the terms of his or her
    31  conditional release or post-release supervision by  absconding  and  has
    32  been  declared delinquent by the [parole] board of re-entry or the local
    33  conditional release commission having supervision over such person,  the
    34  declaration  of delinquency shall interrupt the period of supervision or
    35  post-release supervision as of the date of the delinquency. For a condi-
    36  tional release, such interruption shall continue  until  the  releasee's
    37  appearance  in  response  to  a  notice  of violation or the date of the
    38  execution of a warrant, whichever is earlier. For a person  released  to
    39  post-release  supervision, the provisions of section 70.45 of this arti-
    40  cle shall apply.
    41    (c) Any time spent by a person in custody from the time  of  execution
    42  of  a  warrant pursuant to paragraph (a) of subdivision three of section
    43  two hundred fifty-nine-i of the executive law to the time service of the
    44  sentence resumes shall be credited against the term or maximum  term  of
    45  the interrupted sentence.
    46    §  53-a. Subparagraph (i) of paragraph (a) and paragraph (b) of subdi-
    47  vision 1 of section 70.40 of the penal law, subparagraph  (i)  of  para-
    48  graph  (a)  as  amended by section 127-d and paragraph (b) as amended by
    49  section 127-e of subpart B of part C of chapter 62 of the laws of  2011,
    50  are amended to read as follows:
    51    (i)  A  person  who  is  serving  one  or  more than one indeterminate
    52  sentence of imprisonment may be paroled from the institution in which he
    53  or she is confined at any time after the expiration of  the  minimum  or
    54  the  aggregate  minimum  period  of  imprisonment  of  the  sentence  or
    55  sentences or after the successful completion of  a  shock  incarceration
    56  program,  as  defined  in  article  twenty-six-A  of the correction law,

        A. 9097                            24
 
     1  whichever is sooner. Release on parole shall be in the discretion of the
     2  state board of [parole] re-entry, and such person shall continue service
     3  of his or her sentence or sentences while on parole, in accordance  with
     4  and  subject  to  the provisions of the executive law and the correction
     5  law.
     6    (b) A person who  is  serving  one  or  more  than  one  indeterminate
     7  sentence  of  imprisonment  shall,  if  he or she so requests, be condi-
     8  tionally released from the institution in which he or  she  is  confined
     9  when the total good behavior time allowed to him or her, pursuant to the
    10  provisions  of  the  correction law, is equal to the unserved portion of
    11  his or her maximum or aggregate maximum term. The conditions of release,
    12  including those governing post-release supervision, shall be such as may
    13  be imposed by the state board of [parole] re-entry  in  accordance  with
    14  the provisions of the executive law.
    15    Every person so released shall be under the supervision of the depart-
    16  ment  of corrections and community supervision for a period equal to the
    17  unserved portion of the maximum, aggregate maximum term,  or  period  of
    18  post-release supervision.
    19    § 54. Subdivisions 1-a and 3 of section 70.45 of the penal law, subdi-
    20  vision  1-a  as added by chapter 7 of the laws of 2007 and subdivision 3
    21  as added by chapter 1 of the laws  of  1998,  are  amended  to  read  as
    22  follows:
    23    1-a.  When,  following  a  final  hearing,  a time assessment has been
    24  imposed upon a person convicted of a felony sex offense who  owes  three
    25  years  or more on a period of post-release supervision, imposed pursuant
    26  to subdivision two-a of this  section,  such  defendant,  after  serving
    27  three  years  of  the time assessment, shall be reviewed by the board of
    28  [parole] re-entry and may be  re-released  to  post-release  supervision
    29  only  upon  a  determination  by  the board of [parole] re-entry made in
    30  accordance with subdivision two of section two hundred  fifty-nine-i  of
    31  the executive law. If re-release is not granted, the board shall specify
    32  a  date  not  more  than  twenty-four months from such determination for
    33  reconsideration, and the procedures to be followed upon  reconsideration
    34  shall  be  the  same.  If  a time assessment of less than three years is
    35  imposed upon such a defendant, the defendant shall be released upon  the
    36  expiration  of  such  time  assessment,  unless  he or she is subject to
    37  further imprisonment or confinement under any provision of law.
    38    3. Conditions of  post-release  supervision.  The  board  of  [parole]
    39  re-entry  shall  establish  and impose conditions of post-release super-
    40  vision in the same manner and to the same extent as it may establish and
    41  impose conditions in accordance with the executive law upon persons  who
    42  are  granted parole or conditional release; provided that, notwithstand-
    43  ing any other provision of law,  the  board  of  [parole]  re-entry  may
    44  impose  as a condition of post-release supervision that for a period not
    45  exceeding six months immediately following release from  the  underlying
    46  term of imprisonment the person be transferred to and participate in the
    47  programs  of a residential treatment facility as that term is defined in
    48  subdivision six of section two of the correction law. Upon release  from
    49  the  underlying term of imprisonment, the person shall be furnished with
    50  a written statement setting forth the conditions of post-release  super-
    51  vision  in  sufficient  detail  to  provide for the person's conduct and
    52  supervision.
    53    § 55. Section 240.32 of the penal law, as amended by  chapter  322  of
    54  the laws of 2021, is amended to read as follows:
    55  §  240.32  Aggravated harassment of an employee by an incarcerated indi-
    56             vidual.

        A. 9097                            25
 
     1    An incarcerated individual  or  respondent  is  guilty  of  aggravated
     2  harassment  of  an  employee  by  an  incarcerated individual when, with
     3  intent to harass, annoy, threaten or alarm a person in a  facility  whom
     4  he  or  she  knows  or  reasonably should know to be an employee of such
     5  facility  or  the  board  of  [parole]  re-entry or the office of mental
     6  health, or a probation department, bureau or unit or a  police  officer,
     7  he or she causes or attempts to cause such employee to come into contact
     8  with  blood,  seminal  fluid,  urine, feces, or the contents of a toilet
     9  bowl, by throwing, tossing or expelling such fluid or material.
    10    For purposes of  this  section,  "incarcerated  individual"  means  an
    11  incarcerated  individual  or  detainee in a correctional facility, local
    12  correctional facility or a hospital, as such term is defined in subdivi-
    13  sion two of section four hundred of the correction law. For purposes  of
    14  this  section,  "respondent" means a juvenile in a secure facility oper-
    15  ated and maintained by the office of children and family services who is
    16  placed with or committed to the office of children and family  services.
    17  For  purposes  of this section, "facility" means a correctional facility
    18  or local correctional facility, hospital, as such  term  is  defined  in
    19  subdivision  two  of  section  four  hundred of the correction law, or a
    20  secure facility operated and maintained by the office  of  children  and
    21  family services.
    22    Aggravated  harassment of an employee by an incarcerated individual is
    23  a class E felony.
    24    § 56. This act shall take effect immediately; provided, however, that:
    25    (a) the amendments to subdivision 2 of section 259-m of the  executive
    26  law  made  by section fifteen of this act shall be subject to the repeal
    27  of such section pursuant to section 3 of chapter  688  of  the  laws  of
    28  2003, as amended, and shall be deemed repealed therewith;
    29    (b)  the amendments to subdivision 6 of section 710.91 of the criminal
    30  procedure law made by section twenty-eight of this act shall not  affect
    31  the repeal of such section and shall be deemed repealed therewith;
    32    (c)  the  amendments  to  section  805  of  the correction law made by
    33  section thirty-seven of this act shall be subject to the expiration  and
    34  reversion  of  such  section pursuant to chapter 261 of the laws of 1987
    35  and subdivision d of section 74 of chapter 3 of the  laws  of  1995,  as
    36  amended, when upon such date the provisions of section thirty-seven-a of
    37  this act shall take effect;
    38    (d)  the  amendments to subdivision 2 of section 851 of the correction
    39  law made by section thirty-eight of this act shall  be  subject  to  the
    40  expiration  of  such subdivision and section pursuant to subdivision (c)
    41  of section 46 of chapter 60 of the laws of 1994 and section 10 of  chap-
    42  ter  339  of  the  laws  of  1972,  as  amended, when upon such date the
    43  provisions of section thirty-eight-a of this act shall take effect;
    44    (e) section thirty-nine of this act shall take effect on the same date
    45  as the reversion of subdivision 1 of section 852 of the  correction  law
    46  as  provided  by  section  10  of  chapter  339  of the laws of 1972, as
    47  amended;
    48    (f) section forty of this act shall take effect on the  same  date  as
    49  the  reversion  of subdivision 6 of section 855 of the correction law as
    50  provided by section 10 of chapter 339 of the laws of 1972, as amended;
    51    (g) the amendments to subdivision 9 of section 855 of  the  correction
    52  law, made by section forty-one of this act, shall not affect the expira-
    53  tion of such section and shall expire therewith;
    54    (h)  the  amendments  to  subdivisions  2  and 5 of section 856 of the
    55  correction law made by section forty-two of this act  shall  not  affect
    56  the expiration of such section and shall expire therewith;

        A. 9097                            26
 
     1    (i)  the  amendments  to  the  opening  paragraph  of subdivision 3 of
     2  section 70.30 of the penal law made by section  fifty-two  of  this  act
     3  shall be subject to the reversion of such subdivision pursuant to subdi-
     4  vision  d  of  section  74 of chapter 3 of the laws of 1995, as amended,
     5  when  upon  such  date the provisions of section fifty-two-a of this act
     6  shall take effect;
     7    (j) the amendments to the opening paragraph of paragraph (a) and para-
     8  graph (b) of subdivision 1 of section 70.40 of the  penal  law  made  by
     9  section  fifty-three  of  this  act shall be subject to the reversion of
    10  such subdivision pursuant to subdivision d of section 74 of chapter 3 of
    11  the laws of 1995, as amended, when upon  such  date  the  provisions  of
    12  section fifty-three-a of this act shall take effect; and
    13    (k)  the amendments to paragraph (c) of subdivision 1 of section 70.40
    14  of the penal law made by section  fifty-three  of  this  act  shall  not
    15  affect  the repeal of such paragraph and shall be deemed repealed there-
    16  with.
    17    Effective immediately, the addition, amendment and/or  repeal  of  any
    18  rule  or  regulation necessary for the implementation of this act on its
    19  effective date are authorized to be made and completed on or before such
    20  effective date.
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