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Office of the Revisor of Statutes

HF 2028

1st Engrossment - 83rd Legislature (2003 - 2004)

Posted on 12/15/2009 12:00 a.m.

KEY: stricken = removed, old language.
underscored = added, new language.
  1.1                          A bill for an act 
  1.2             relating to public safety; appropriating money for the 
  1.3             courts, public safety, corrections, the Sentencing 
  1.4             Guidelines Commission, public defenders, and other 
  1.5             agencies and programs; providing a life penalty for 
  1.6             most first degree criminal sexual conduct crimes; 
  1.7             creating indeterminate sentences and mandatory life 
  1.8             sentences for second degree criminal sexual conduct 
  1.9             and certain third and fourth degree criminal sexual 
  1.10            conduct crimes; creating a criminal sexual predatory 
  1.11            conduct crime; establishing minimum sentences for 
  1.12            certain sex offenses; establishing the Minnesota Sex 
  1.13            Offender Review Board; providing procedures for 
  1.14            operation of the review board; specifying when an 
  1.15            offender may petition for conditional release; 
  1.16            directing the Sentencing Guidelines Commission to 
  1.17            assess risk levels and presumptive sentences for 
  1.18            certain offenses; requiring the commissioner of 
  1.19            corrections to establish criteria and procedures for 
  1.20            reviewing offenders' petitions for release; exempting 
  1.21            the Minnesota Sex Offender Review Board and certain 
  1.22            responsibilities of the commissioner of corrections 
  1.23            from rulemaking; specifying that the Open Meeting Law 
  1.24            does not apply to meetings and hearings of the 
  1.25            Minnesota Sex Offender Review Board; instructing the 
  1.26            revisor to renumber various statutes; providing for 
  1.27            registration of predatory offenders; providing a 
  1.28            registration procedure when a person lacks a primary 
  1.29            address; requiring the commissioner of corrections to 
  1.30            convene an end-of-confinement review committee to 
  1.31            assess the risk level of offenders coming into 
  1.32            Minnesota from another state; clarifying current law 
  1.33            requiring assessment of offenders released from 
  1.34            federal facilities; allowing community notification 
  1.35            pursuant to a risk level assigned in another state; 
  1.36            requiring the Bureau of Criminal Apprehension to 
  1.37            forward registration and notification information on 
  1.38            certain offenders to the Department of Corrections; 
  1.39            directing the commissioner of corrections to determine 
  1.40            whether notification laws of other states are 
  1.41            comparable to Minnesota's notification law; repealing 
  1.42            various laws pertaining to sex offenders; making 
  1.43            various technical and conforming changes; regulating 
  1.44            the sale of methamphetamine precursor drugs; 
  1.45            authorizing reporting of suspicious transactions 
  1.46            involving these drugs and providing civil immunity for 
  2.1             so doing; requiring a methamphetamine educational 
  2.2             program for retailers; further regulating while 
  2.3             recodifying activities involving anhydrous ammonia; 
  2.4             requiring courts to order restitution in certain 
  2.5             situations involving controlled substances; imposing 
  2.6             property restrictions in certain situations involving 
  2.7             controlled substances; increasing the criminal 
  2.8             penalties for possessing certain substances with the 
  2.9             intent to manufacture methamphetamine and imposing a 
  2.10            mandatory minimum sentence for so doing; establishing 
  2.11            new methamphetamine-related crimes; expanding the 
  2.12            definition of "violent crime" for mandatory sentencing 
  2.13            purposes; requiring that vehicles and other property 
  2.14            used to manufacture methamphetamine indicate this in 
  2.15            the title or deed; establishing a methamphetamine 
  2.16            laboratory cleanup revolving fund and authorizing 
  2.17            loans to assist counties and cities in conducting 
  2.18            methamphetamine cleanup; expanding the crime of 
  2.19            causing death while committing child abuse; treating 
  2.20            probation officers the same as correctional employees 
  2.21            for purposes of certain assaults; specifically 
  2.22            including conduct involving sex trafficking in the 
  2.23            promoting prostitution crime; modifying the 
  2.24            distribution formula for prostitution and sex 
  2.25            trafficking-related forfeiture proceeds; prohibiting 
  2.26            nonvehicular evasive flight from a peace officer; 
  2.27            establishing a crime for interfering with ambulance 
  2.28            service personnel who are providing emergency care; 
  2.29            increasing the criminal penalties for interfering with 
  2.30            privacy; increasing the age of protected minor victims 
  2.31            for enhanced penalties for this crime; providing for 
  2.32            representation by the public defender; providing 
  2.33            public defender access to government data; requiring 
  2.34            the public defense co-payment to be deposited in the 
  2.35            general fund; increasing the appropriation for fiscal 
  2.36            year 2005; permitting Ramsey County to collect and 
  2.37            receive a $1 criminal surcharge in order to fund 
  2.38            Ramsey County's petty misdemeanor diversion program; 
  2.39            providing that when a person is arrested for driving 
  2.40            while impaired, the arresting officer must invalidate 
  2.41            and return the person's driver's license card for use 
  2.42            as an identification card during the period of license 
  2.43            suspension, revocation, or cancellation; clarifying 
  2.44            DWI plate impoundment law; establishing an expedited 
  2.45            process for the nonconsensual collection of a blood 
  2.46            sample from an inmate when a corrections employee is 
  2.47            significantly exposed to the potential transfer of a 
  2.48            bloodborne pathogen; safety of emergency workers on 
  2.49            highways; defining "appropriate reduced speed" when 
  2.50            approaching or passing stopped emergency vehicle in 
  2.51            certain circumstances; increasing surcharge on failure 
  2.52            to drive at appropriate reduced speed when approaching 
  2.53            or passing stopped emergency vehicle; authorizing 
  2.54            citation within four hours of offense; proscribing a 
  2.55            penalty on owner or lessee of vehicle when driver 
  2.56            fails to drive at appropriate reduced speed at the 
  2.57            scene of an emergency; requiring certain information 
  2.58            to be included in driver education curriculum and 
  2.59            driver's manual; enacting a model postconviction DNA 
  2.60            analysis act; providing procedures for persons 
  2.61            convicted of crimes to establish innocence by 
  2.62            petitioning the court for DNA analysis; authorizing 
  2.63            retired court commissioners to be appointed to perform 
  2.64            judicial duties in the district court; providing 
  2.65            increased reimbursement for bullet-resistant vests; 
  2.66            prohibiting falsely reporting police misconduct; 
  2.67            imposing criminal penalties; amending Minnesota 
  2.68            Statutes 2002, sections 2.722, subdivision 1; 2.724, 
  2.69            subdivision 3; 13.851, by adding a subdivision; 
  2.70            13D.01, subdivision 2; 152.135, subdivision 2; 
  2.71            168A.05, subdivision 3; 169.14, subdivision 3, by 
  3.1             adding subdivisions; 169A.52, subdivision 7; 169A.60, 
  3.2             subdivision 11; 169A.63, subdivision 8; 171.13, by 
  3.3             adding a subdivision; 241.336, by adding a 
  3.4             subdivision; 241.67, subdivision 3; 243.166, as 
  3.5             amended; 243.167; 243.24, subdivision 2; 243.55, 
  3.6             subdivision 1; 244.05, subdivisions 1, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7; 
  3.7             244.052, subdivisions 3, 4, by adding a subdivision; 
  3.8             244.195, subdivision 1; 253B.185, subdivision 2; 
  3.9             260C.163, subdivision 3; 299A.38, subdivisions 2, 2a; 
  3.10            357.021, by adding a subdivision; 401.01, subdivision 
  3.11            2; 489.01, by adding a subdivision; 609.1095, 
  3.12            subdivision 1; 609.117, subdivisions 1, 2; 609.1351; 
  3.13            609.185; 609.2231, subdivision 1; 609.321, subdivision 
  3.14            7, by adding a subdivision; 609.341, by adding 
  3.15            subdivisions; 609.342; 609.343; 609.344; 609.345; 
  3.16            609.3452, subdivision 4; 609.347; 609.3471; 609.348; 
  3.17            609.353; 609.487, by adding a subdivision; 609.50, 
  3.18            subdivision 1; 609.505; 609.5315, subdivision 1, by 
  3.19            adding a subdivision; 609.746, subdivision 1; 609.748, 
  3.20            subdivisions 2, 3a; 609.749, subdivisions 1, 2; 
  3.21            611.16; 611.215, subdivision 1; 631.045; Minnesota 
  3.22            Statutes 2003 Supplement, sections 152.021, 
  3.23            subdivisions 2a, 3; 270A.03, subdivision 5; 357.021, 
  3.24            subdivisions 6, 7; 609.2231, subdivision 3; 611.14; 
  3.25            611.17, subdivision 1; 611.25, subdivision 1; 611.26, 
  3.26            subdivision 6; 611.272; proposing coding for new law 
  3.27            in Minnesota Statutes, chapters 152; 244; 299A; 446A; 
  3.28            545A; 590; 609; repealing Minnesota Statutes 2002, 
  3.29            sections 18C.005, subdivisions 1a, 35a; 18C.201, 
  3.30            subdivisions 6, 7; 18D.331, subdivision 5; 243.166, 
  3.31            subdivisions 1, 8; 299A.64; 299A.65; 299A.66; 609.108; 
  3.32            609.109; Minnesota Statutes 2003 Supplement, section 
  3.33            611.18. 
  3.34  BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF MINNESOTA: 
  3.35                             ARTICLE 1
  3.36                           APPROPRIATIONS
  3.37  Section 1.  [CORRECTIONS AND CRIMINAL JUSTICE APPROPRIATIONS AND 
  3.38  TRANSFERS.] 
  3.39     The dollar amounts in the columns under "APPROPRIATION 
  3.40  CHANGE" are added to or, if shown in parentheses, are subtracted 
  3.41  from the appropriations in Laws 2003, First Special Session 
  3.42  chapter 2, article 1, or other law to the specified agencies.  
  3.43  The appropriations are from the general fund or other named fund 
  3.44  and are available for the fiscal years indicated for each 
  3.45  purpose.  The figures "2004" and "2005" used in this article 
  3.46  mean that the addition to or subtraction from the appropriations 
  3.47  listed under the figure is for the fiscal years ending June 30, 
  3.48  2004, and June 30, 2005, respectively. 
  3.49                          SUMMARY BY FUND
  3.50                            2004          2005           TOTAL
  3.51  GENERAL                $  155,000    $16,818,000    $16,973,000
  3.52  STATE GOVERNMENT
  4.1   SPECIAL REVENUE         3,475,000        -0-          3,475,000
  4.2   TOTAL                  $3,630,000    $16,818,000    $20,448,000 
  4.3                                              APPROPRIATIONS 
  4.4                                          Available for the Year 
  4.5                                              Ending June 30 
  4.6                                             2004         2005 
  4.7   Sec. 2.  CORRECTIONS 
  4.8   Subdivision 1.  Total 
  4.9   Appropriation                     $    -0-       $    6,744,000
  4.10  Subd. 2.  Eliminate Gate Money 
  4.11  for Supervised Release Violators 
  4.12  and Short-Term Offenders               -0-              (84,000)
  4.13  This reduction is from the 
  4.14  appropriation in Laws 2003, First 
  4.15  Special Session chapter 2, article 1, 
  4.16  section 13. 
  4.17  Subd. 3.  Increased 
  4.18  Prison Population                      -0-            2,850,000 
  4.19  This is a onetime appropriation. 
  4.20  Subd. 4.  Methamphetamine 
  4.21  Enforcement and Awareness              -0-              322,000 
  4.22  Subd. 5.  Behavioral Treatment 
  4.23  Programs for Offenders                 -0-            1,000,000 
  4.24  Subd. 6.  GPS for All Level 
  4.25  3 Sex Offenders                        -0-              162,000 
  4.26  Subd. 7.  Intensive Supervised 
  4.27  Release Services                       -0-            1,800,000 
  4.28  To provide intensive supervised release 
  4.29  services in unserved counties and to 
  4.30  increase services to existing intensive 
  4.31  supervised release programs for 
  4.32  high-risk sex offenders. 
  4.33  As of June 30, 2004, any unused funds 
  4.34  dedicated to remote electronic alcohol 
  4.35  monitoring shall be available for use 
  4.36  as grants to counties to establish and 
  4.37  operate programs of intensive probation 
  4.38  for repeat violators of the driving 
  4.39  while impaired laws as provided for in 
  4.40  Minnesota Statutes, section 169A.74. 
  4.41  Subd. 8.  Assessment and Evaluation 
  4.42  of High-Risk Sex Offenders             -0-              335,000 
  4.43  Subd. 9.  Revocation Hearings 
  4.44  for Sex Offenders                      -0-              190,000 
  4.45  Subd. 10.  Track and Capture 
  4.46  Fugitive Sex Offenders                 -0-               69,000 
  4.47  Subd. 11.  Community Notification 
  4.48  for Sex Offenders Moving into the  
  4.49  State                                  -0-              100,000 
  4.50  The base for this appropriation shall 
  4.51  be $150,000 in fiscal year 2006 and 
  4.52  $150,000 in fiscal year 2007. 
  5.1   Subd. 12.  Increased Sex Offender
  5.2   Impact 
  5.3   The base for this appropriation shall 
  5.4   be $832,000 in fiscal year 2006 and 
  5.5   $2,159,000 in fiscal year 2007.  
  5.6   Subd. 13.  Rush City Per Diem 
  5.7   By June 30, 2004, the commissioner of 
  5.8   the Department of Corrections shall 
  5.9   transfer $500,000 to the general fund 
  5.10  from the per diem receipts collected 
  5.11  and deposited in the special revenue 
  5.12  fund for renting beds at the Rush City 
  5.13  Correctional Facility, as authorized in 
  5.14  Laws 2003, First Special Session 
  5.15  chapter 2, article 1, section 13, 
  5.16  subdivision 2. 
  5.17  Sec. 3.  SENTENCING GUIDELINES        -0-                40,000 
  5.18  The Sentencing Guidelines Commission, 
  5.19  in consultation with the chairs and 
  5.20  ranking minority members of the senate 
  5.21  and house committees having 
  5.22  jurisdiction over criminal justice 
  5.23  policy and finance, shall conduct a 
  5.24  study of alternatives to Minnesota's 
  5.25  current system of determinate 
  5.26  sentencing guidelines.  The study must 
  5.27  explore whether alternative sentencing 
  5.28  approaches would improve the operation, 
  5.29  effectiveness, and outcomes of 
  5.30  Minnesota's criminal justice system.  
  5.31  The commission shall report findings 
  5.32  and recommendations from this study to 
  5.33  the chairs and ranking minority members 
  5.34  of the senate and house committees 
  5.35  having jurisdiction over criminal 
  5.36  justice policy by February 15, 2005. 
  5.37  (a) Study of determinate and 
  5.38  indeterminate sentencing.  The study 
  5.39  must: 
  5.40  (1) review the underlying philosophy, 
  5.41  goals and objectives, structure, 
  5.42  operation, and state outcome measures 
  5.43  of the two sentencing systems; 
  5.44  (2) identify the benefits and 
  5.45  limitations of each sentencing system 
  5.46  to the state; 
  5.47  (3) define the role and uses of 
  5.48  incarceration under each system; and 
  5.49  (4) outline the potential benefits and 
  5.50  limitations of a hybrid determinate and 
  5.51  indeterminate sentencing model. 
  5.52  (b) Study of alternative sentencing 
  5.53  options.  The study must: 
  5.54  (1) identify categories of offenders 
  5.55  for whom the state's current 
  5.56  determinate sentencing practices may be 
  5.57  inappropriate, explaining in detail the 
  5.58  basis for any conclusion; 
  6.1   (2) identify, describe, and critically 
  6.2   evaluate any alternative to determinate 
  6.3   sentencing that is deemed to be 
  6.4   practical; 
  6.5   (3) examine and evaluate the factors 
  6.6   that might be used to release, after a 
  6.7   period of years, offenders convicted of 
  6.8   a violent crime, including but not 
  6.9   limited to: 
  6.10  (i) the efficacy of chemical or 
  6.11  behavioral treatment; 
  6.12  (ii) the efficacy of matching the 
  6.13  granting or withdrawal of good time 
  6.14  credit depending upon the offender's 
  6.15  progress in treatment programs; and 
  6.16  (iii) the efficacy of denying release 
  6.17  based upon an assessment of recidivism 
  6.18  risk; 
  6.19  (4) examine the experience of other 
  6.20  states with indeterminate sentencing 
  6.21  practices, hybrid practices that blend 
  6.22  determinate and indeterminate 
  6.23  sentences, and determinate sentencing 
  6.24  laws that differ from practices in 
  6.25  Minnesota; and 
  6.26  (5) include detailed recommendations 
  6.27  for possible statutory or regulatory 
  6.28  revisions, as may be needed to 
  6.29  implement conclusions in the report. 
  6.30  (c) Study of alternative sentencing 
  6.31  options for drug offenders.  The study 
  6.32  must: 
  6.33  (1) identify categories of offenders 
  6.34  for whom the state's current 
  6.35  determinate sentencing practices may be 
  6.36  inappropriate, explaining in detail the 
  6.37  basis for any conclusion; 
  6.38  (2) identify, describe, and critically 
  6.39  evaluate any alternative to determinate 
  6.40  sentencing that is deemed to be 
  6.41  practical; 
  6.42  (3) examine and evaluate the factors 
  6.43  that might be used to release or divert 
  6.44  drug offenders, including but not 
  6.45  limited to: 
  6.46  (i) the efficacy of chemical or 
  6.47  behavioral treatment; 
  6.48  (ii) the efficacy of matching the 
  6.49  granting or withdrawal of good time 
  6.50  credit depending upon the offender's 
  6.51  progress in treatment programs; and 
  6.52  (iii) the efficacy of denying release 
  6.53  based upon an assessment of recidivism 
  6.54  risk; 
  6.55  (4) examine the experience of other 
  6.56  states with diversion to treatment 
  6.57  programs, hybrid practices that blend 
  7.1   determinate sentences and diversion, 
  7.2   and determinate sentencing laws that 
  7.3   differ from practices in Minnesota; and 
  7.4   (5) include detailed recommendations 
  7.5   for possible statutory or regulatory 
  7.6   revisions, as may be needed to 
  7.7   implement conclusions in the report. 
  7.8   By December 15, 2004, the Sentencing 
  7.9   Guidelines Commission shall disclose a 
  7.10  completed draft of the report to the 
  7.11  commissioner of corrections, 
  7.12  commissioner of health, state public 
  7.13  defender, and the attorney general for 
  7.14  review of the findings and 
  7.15  recommendations in the report.  Written 
  7.16  comments about the report received by 
  7.17  the commission by January 14, 2005, 
  7.18  from any of the officials listed in 
  7.19  this subdivision shall be included in 
  7.20  the appendix to the final report that 
  7.21  is submitted to the legislature. 
  7.22  Sec. 4.  HUMAN RIGHTS                 -0-             (105,000)
  7.23  This reduction is from the 
  7.24  appropriation in Laws 2003, First 
  7.25  Special Session chapter 2, article 1, 
  7.26  section 12. 
  7.27  Sec. 5.  BOARD ON JUDICIAL  
  7.28  STANDARDS                                155,000        -0-     
  7.29  This amount is appropriated in fiscal 
  7.30  year 2004 for deficiency costs related 
  7.31  to proceedings against a judge and 
  7.32  shall remain available for expenditure 
  7.33  until June 30, 2005. 
  7.34  Sec. 6.  BOARD OF PUBLIC DEFENSE 
  7.35  Subdivision 1.  Total 
  7.36  Appropriation                          -0-            4,943,000 
  7.37  Subd. 2.  Funding Increase  
  7.38  Related to Loss of Public Defender 
  7.39  Co-Pay Revenue                         -0-            3,000,000 
  7.40  This appropriation is in addition to 
  7.41  any appropriation provided by Laws 
  7.42  2003, First Special Session chapter 2, 
  7.43  article 1, section 8, and is added to 
  7.44  the base level funding. 
  7.45  Subd. 3.  Costs for Sex  
  7.46  Offender Assessment Process for 
  7.47  Community Notification                 -0-              200,000 
  7.48  Subd. 4.  Increased Methamphetamine 
  7.49  Case Load                              -0-              206,000 
  7.50  The base for this appropriation shall 
  7.51  be $399,000 in fiscal year 2006 and 
  7.52  $399,000 in fiscal year 2007. 
  7.53  Subd. 5.  Increased Sex Offender 
  7.54  Case Load                              -0-            1,537,000  
  7.55  The base for this appropriation shall 
  7.56  be $3,074,000 in fiscal year 2006 and 
  8.1   $3,074,000 in fiscal year 2007.  
  8.2   Sec. 7.  SUPREME COURT                 -0-           (1,572,000) 
  8.3   This is a reduction to the 
  8.4   appropriation to civil legal services 
  8.5   as provided for in Laws 2003, First 
  8.6   Special Session chapter 2, article 1, 
  8.7   section 2. 
  8.8   The Supreme Court administrator shall 
  8.9   study and evaluate the impact of the 
  8.10  sex offender legislation contained in 
  8.11  this act on the courts and the public 
  8.12  defender system and prepare a report to 
  8.13  the legislature that identifies and 
  8.14  explains the results of the study and 
  8.15  evaluation.  The report is due to the 
  8.16  chairs and ranking minority members of 
  8.17  the house and senate committees having 
  8.18  jurisdiction over criminal justice 
  8.19  policy and finance by February 15, 2005.
  8.20  Sec. 8.  DISTRICT COURTS 
  8.21  Subdivision 1.  Total 
  8.22  Appropriation                          -0-            2,632,000 
  8.23  Subd. 2.  Increased Methamphetamine 
  8.24  Case Load                              -0-               53,000 
  8.25  Subd. 3.  Ramsey County Criminal 
  8.26  Surcharge                              -0-              108,000 
  8.27  This appropriation is for 
  8.28  administration of the petty misdemeanor 
  8.29  diversion program operated by the 
  8.30  Second Judicial District Ramsey County 
  8.31  Violations Bureau as provided for in 
  8.32  article 8, sections 5 and 6, of this 
  8.33  bill. 
  8.34  The base for this appropriation shall 
  8.35  be $118,000 in fiscal year 2006 and 
  8.36  $118,000 in fiscal year 2007. 
  8.37  Subd. 4.  Increased Sex Offender 
  8.38  Case Load                              -0-            2,471,000 
  8.39  The base for this appropriation shall 
  8.40  be $4,942,000 in fiscal year 2006 and 
  8.41  $4,942,000 in fiscal year 2007.  
  8.42  Sec. 9.  PUBLIC SAFETY 
  8.43  Subdivision 1.  Total       
  8.44  Appropriation                          3,475,000      4,136,000 
  8.45                          SUMMARY BY FUND
  8.46                            2004          2005
  8.47  GENERAL            $      -0-     $    4,136,000
  8.48  STATE GOVERNMENT
  8.49  SPECIAL REVENUE        3,475,000          -0-  
  8.50  Subd. 2.  Operating Budget  
  8.51  Reduction                              -0-           (1,452,000) 
  8.52  This reduction is from the 
  9.1   appropriation in Laws 2003, First 
  9.2   Special Session chapter 2, article 1, 
  9.3   section 9. 
  9.4   Subd. 3.  Criminal Apprehension        -0-            1,495,000 
  9.5   For special agents and support staff to 
  9.6   enforce predator offender compliance, 
  9.7   scientists and equipment to process DNA 
  9.8   and other critical evidence, and to 
  9.9   improve the predator offender database. 
  9.10  Subd. 4.  Methamphetamine 
  9.11  Enforcement and Awareness              -0-               40,000 
  9.12  This appropriation is for the 
  9.13  methamphetamine retail and consumer 
  9.14  education program described in article 
  9.15  6, section 13.  This is a onetime 
  9.16  appropriation. 
  9.17  Subd 5.  To Reform and Enhance 
  9.18  the Gang and Drug Task Forces          -0-            2,650,000 
  9.19  Subd. 6.  To match federal 
  9.20  grants in support of state and local
  9.21  delinquency prevention and 
  9.22  intervention efforts                   -0-              106,000 
  9.23  Subd. 7.  Fire Marshal                 -0-              565,000 
  9.24  Subd. 8.  Homeless Sex Offender 
  9.25  Registration                           -0-              100,000 
  9.26  This is a onetime appropriation.  
  9.27  Subd. 9.  Community Notification 
  9.28  for Sex Offenders Moving Into the 
  9.29  State                                  -0-              100,000 
  9.30  Subd. 10.  911 Emergency 
  9.31  Telecommunications Services         3,475,000             -0-
  9.32  For expenditures related to the 911 
  9.33  program as specified by session law and 
  9.34  statute.  This appropriation is from 
  9.35  the state government special revenue 
  9.36  fund for 911 emergency 
  9.37  telecommunications services. 
  9.38  This is a onetime appropriation.  
  9.39  Subd. 11.  Crime Victims 
  9.40  Services                               -0-              532,000
  9.41  This appropriation is for crime victim 
  9.42  services programming to ensure that no 
  9.43  one judicial district will receive more 
  9.44  than a 12 percent reduction in funding 
  9.45  for crime victim services in state 
  9.46  fiscal year 2005 versus fiscal year 
  9.47  2004.  This is a onetime appropriation. 
  9.48  Subd. 12.  Special Revenue Spending 
  9.49  Authorization from Criminal Justice Special 
  9.50  Projects Account 
  9.51  Remaining balances in the special 
  9.52  revenue fund from spending authorized 
  9.53  by Laws 2001, First Special Session 
  9.54  chapter 8, article 7, section 14, 
 10.1   subdivision 1, for which spending 
 10.2   authorization ended June 30, 2003, 
 10.3   under Laws 2001, First Special Session 
 10.4   chapter 8, article 7, section 14, 
 10.5   subdivision 3, are transferred to the 
 10.6   general fund. 
 10.7   Sec. 10.  SUNSET OF UNCODIFIED 
 10.8   LANGUAGE 
 10.9   All uncodified language contained in 
 10.10  this article expires on June 30, 2005, 
 10.11  unless a different expiration date is 
 10.12  explicit. 
 10.13                             ARTICLE 2 
 10.14      MANDATORY LIFE SENTENCES AND INDETERMINATE SENTENCES FOR 
 10.15        SEX OFFENDERS; OTHER SEX OFFENDER SENTENCING CHANGES 
 10.16     Section 1.  [LEGISLATIVE FINDINGS AND PURPOSE.] 
 10.17     The legislature finds that sex offenders pose a significant 
 10.18  threat to public safety, are unique in their psychological 
 10.19  makeup, and are particularly likely to continue to be dangerous 
 10.20  after their release from imprisonment.  The legislature also 
 10.21  finds that sex offenders inflict long-standing psychological 
 10.22  harm on their victims and significantly undermine victim and 
 10.23  community safety to a greater extent than most other criminal 
 10.24  offenses.  Based on these findings, the legislature believes sex 
 10.25  offenders need long-term supervision and treatment beyond that 
 10.26  provided other offenders.  The legislature further believes this 
 10.27  type of supervision and treatment is best provided in a secure 
 10.28  correctional facility and public safety warrants the use of 
 10.29  state resources for this purpose. 
 10.30     The legislature's purpose in enacting this legislation is 
 10.31  to provide courts and corrections and treatment professionals 
 10.32  with the tools necessary to protect public safety through use of 
 10.33  longer, more flexible sentences than currently provided by law.  
 10.34  The legislature intends that a sex offender's past and future 
 10.35  dangerousness be considered both in sentencing and release 
 10.36  decisions. 
 10.37     Sec. 2.  [244.048] [DEFINITIONS.] 
 10.38     For the purpose of sections 244.05 to 244.0515, the 
 10.39  following terms have the meanings given them, unless otherwise 
 10.40  noted. 
 11.1      (a) "Conditional release" means the release of an inmate 
 11.2   subject to conditions, as described in sections 244.0514 and 
 11.3   609.3459.  
 11.4      (b) "First eligible for release" has the meaning given in 
 11.5   section 609.341, subdivision 23.  
 11.6      (c) "Minimum term of imprisonment" has the meaning given in 
 11.7   section 609.341, subdivision 24.  
 11.8      (d) "Minnesota Sex Offender Review Board" or "Board" has 
 11.9   the meaning given in section 244.0515, subdivision 1, paragraph 
 11.10  (a).  
 11.11     (e) "Sex offense" has the meaning given in section 609.341, 
 11.12  subdivision 26. 
 11.13     [EFFECTIVE DATE.] This section is effective August 1, 2004, 
 11.14  and applies to crimes committed on or after that date. 
 11.15     Sec. 3.  Minnesota Statutes 2002, section 244.05, 
 11.16  subdivision 1, is amended to read: 
 11.17     Subdivision 1.  [SUPERVISED RELEASE REQUIRED.] Except as 
 11.18  provided in subdivisions 1b, 4, and 5, and section 244.0514, 
 11.19  every inmate shall serve a supervised release term upon 
 11.20  completion of the inmate's term of imprisonment as reduced by 
 11.21  any good time earned by the inmate or extended by confinement in 
 11.22  punitive segregation pursuant to section 244.04, subdivision 2.  
 11.23  Except for a sex offender conditionally released under section 
 11.24  609.108, subdivision 5, the supervised release term shall be 
 11.25  equal to the period of good time the inmate has earned, and 
 11.26  shall not exceed the length of time remaining in the inmate's 
 11.27  sentence. 
 11.28     [EFFECTIVE DATE.] This section is effective August 1, 2004, 
 11.29  and applies to crimes committed on or after that date. 
 11.30     Sec. 4.  Minnesota Statutes 2002, section 244.05, 
 11.31  subdivision 4, is amended to read: 
 11.32     Subd. 4.  [MINIMUM IMPRISONMENT, LIFE SENTENCE.] An inmate 
 11.33  serving a mandatory life sentence under section 609.106 must not 
 11.34  be given supervised release under this section.  An inmate 
 11.35  serving a mandatory life sentence under section 609.185, clause 
 11.36  (1), (3), (5), or (6); or 609.109, subdivision 2a, must not be 
 12.1   given supervised release under this section without having 
 12.2   served a minimum term of 30 years.  An inmate serving a 
 12.3   mandatory life sentence under section 609.385 must not be given 
 12.4   supervised release under this section without having served a 
 12.5   minimum term of imprisonment of 17 years. 
 12.6      [EFFECTIVE DATE.] This section is effective August 1, 2004, 
 12.7   and applies to crimes committed on or after that date. 
 12.8      Sec. 5.  Minnesota Statutes 2002, section 244.05, 
 12.9   subdivision 5, is amended to read: 
 12.10     Subd. 5.  [SUPERVISED RELEASE, LIFE SENTENCE.] (a) The 
 12.11  commissioner of corrections may, under rules promulgated by the 
 12.12  commissioner, give supervised release to an inmate serving a 
 12.13  mandatory life sentence under section 609.185, clause (1), (3), 
 12.14  (5), or (6); 609.109, subdivision 2a;, or 609.385 after the 
 12.15  inmate has served the minimum term of imprisonment specified in 
 12.16  subdivision 4. 
 12.17     (b) The commissioner shall require the preparation of a 
 12.18  community investigation report and shall consider the findings 
 12.19  of the report when making a supervised release decision under 
 12.20  this subdivision or a conditional release decision under section 
 12.21  244.0514.  The report shall reflect the sentiment of the various 
 12.22  elements of the community toward the inmate, both at the time of 
 12.23  the offense and at the present time.  The report shall include 
 12.24  the views of the sentencing judge, the prosecutor, any law 
 12.25  enforcement personnel who may have been involved in the case, 
 12.26  and any successors to these individuals who may have information 
 12.27  relevant to the supervised release or conditional release 
 12.28  decision.  The report shall also include the views of the victim 
 12.29  and the victim's family unless the victim or the victim's family 
 12.30  chooses not to participate.  The commissioner must submit the 
 12.31  report required by this paragraph to the Minnesota Sex Offender 
 12.32  Review Board described in section 244.0515 at least six months 
 12.33  before the inmate is first eligible for release.  The 
 12.34  commissioner also shall give the board, on request, any and all 
 12.35  information the commissioner gathered for use in compiling the 
 12.36  report. 
 13.1      (c) The commissioner shall make reasonable efforts to 
 13.2   notify the victim, in advance, of the time and place of the 
 13.3   inmate's supervised release review hearing.  The victim has a 
 13.4   right to submit an oral or written statement at the review 
 13.5   hearing.  The statement may summarize the harm suffered by the 
 13.6   victim as a result of the crime and give the victim's 
 13.7   recommendation on whether the inmate should be given supervised 
 13.8   release at this time.  The commissioner must consider the 
 13.9   victim's statement when making the supervised release decision. 
 13.10     (d) As used in this subdivision, "victim" means the 
 13.11  individual who suffered harm as a result of the inmate's crime 
 13.12  or, if the individual is deceased, the deceased's surviving 
 13.13  spouse or next of kin. 
 13.14     [EFFECTIVE DATE.] This section is effective August 1, 2004, 
 13.15  and applies to crimes committed on or after that date. 
 13.16     Sec. 6.  Minnesota Statutes 2002, section 244.05, 
 13.17  subdivision 6, is amended to read: 
 13.18     Subd. 6.  [INTENSIVE SUPERVISED RELEASE.] The commissioner 
 13.19  may order that an inmate be placed on intensive supervised 
 13.20  release for all or part of the inmate's supervised release or 
 13.21  parole term if the commissioner determines that the action will 
 13.22  further the goals described in section 244.14, subdivision 1, 
 13.23  clauses (2), (3), and (4).  In addition, the commissioner may 
 13.24  order that an inmate be placed on intensive supervised release 
 13.25  for all of the inmate's conditional or supervised release term 
 13.26  if the inmate was convicted of a sex offense under sections 
 13.27  609.342 to 609.345 or was sentenced under the provisions of 
 13.28  section 609.108 609.3453.  The commissioner may impose 
 13.29  appropriate conditions of release on the inmate including but 
 13.30  not limited to unannounced searches of the inmate's person, 
 13.31  vehicle, or premises by an intensive supervision agent; 
 13.32  compliance with court-ordered restitution, if any; random drug 
 13.33  testing; house arrest; daily curfews; frequent face-to-face 
 13.34  contacts with an assigned intensive supervision agent; work, 
 13.35  education, or treatment requirements; and electronic 
 13.36  surveillance.  In addition, any sex offender placed on intensive 
 14.1   supervised release may be ordered to participate in an 
 14.2   appropriate sex offender program as a condition of release.  If 
 14.3   the inmate violates the conditions of the intensive supervised 
 14.4   release, the commissioner shall impose sanctions as provided in 
 14.5   subdivision 3 and section 609.108 244.0514.  
 14.6      [EFFECTIVE DATE.] This section is effective August 1, 2004, 
 14.7   and applies to crimes committed on or after that date. 
 14.8      Sec. 7.  Minnesota Statutes 2002, section 244.05, 
 14.9   subdivision 7, is amended to read: 
 14.10     Subd. 7.  [SEX OFFENDERS; CIVIL COMMITMENT DETERMINATION.] 
 14.11  (a) Before the commissioner releases from prison any inmate who 
 14.12  has ever been convicted of a felony under sections section 
 14.13  609.342 to, 609.343, 609.344, 609.345, or 609.3453 or sentenced 
 14.14  as a patterned offender under section 609.108, and determined by 
 14.15  the commissioner to be in a high risk category, the commissioner 
 14.16  shall make a preliminary determination whether, in the 
 14.17  commissioner's opinion, a petition under section 253B.185 may be 
 14.18  appropriate.  
 14.19     (b) In making this decision, the commissioner shall have 
 14.20  access to the following data only for the purposes of the 
 14.21  assessment and referral decision: 
 14.22     (1) private medical data under section 13.384 or 144.335, 
 14.23  or welfare data under section 13.46 that relate to medical 
 14.24  treatment of the offender; 
 14.25     (2) private and confidential court services data under 
 14.26  section 13.84; 
 14.27     (3) private and confidential corrections data under section 
 14.28  13.85; and 
 14.29     (4) private criminal history data under section 13.87. 
 14.30     (c) If the commissioner determines that a petition may be 
 14.31  appropriate, the commissioner shall forward this determination, 
 14.32  along with a summary of the reasons for the determination, to 
 14.33  the county attorney in the county where the inmate was convicted 
 14.34  no later than 12 months before the inmate's release date.  If 
 14.35  the inmate is received for incarceration with fewer than 12 
 14.36  months remaining in the inmate's term of imprisonment, or if the 
 15.1   commissioner receives additional information less than 12 months 
 15.2   before release which makes the inmate's case appropriate for 
 15.3   referral, the commissioner shall forward the determination as 
 15.4   soon as is practicable.  Upon receiving the commissioner's 
 15.5   preliminary determination, the county attorney shall proceed in 
 15.6   the manner provided in section 253B.185.  The commissioner shall 
 15.7   release to the county attorney all requested documentation 
 15.8   maintained by the department.  
 15.9      (d) This subdivision does not apply to an inmate sentenced 
 15.10  to a mandatory life sentence under section 609.3455 after August 
 15.11  1, 2004. 
 15.12     [EFFECTIVE DATE.] This section is effective August 1, 2004, 
 15.13  and applies to crimes committed on or after that date. 
 15.14     Sec. 8.  [244.0514] [CONDITIONAL RELEASE TERM FOR SEX 
 15.15  OFFENSES.] 
 15.16     Subdivision 1.  [CONDITIONAL RELEASE REQUIRED.] Except as 
 15.17  provided in subdivision 3, every inmate sentenced for a sex 
 15.18  offense shall serve a conditional release term as provided in 
 15.19  section 609.3459 upon the person's release from a state 
 15.20  correctional facility. 
 15.21     Subd. 2.  [RELATIONSHIP TO SUPERVISED RELEASE.] Except as 
 15.22  otherwise provided in this section and sections 244.0515 and 
 15.23  609.3459, the provisions related to supervised release in 
 15.24  section 244.05 apply to inmates sentenced to conditional release.
 15.25     Subd. 3.  [MINIMUM IMPRISONMENT; LIFE SENTENCE.] An inmate 
 15.26  serving a mandatory life sentence under section 609.342, 
 15.27  subdivision 2, or section 609.3458, subdivision 3, must not be 
 15.28  given conditional release under this section unless the inmate 
 15.29  is serving an indeterminate sentence under section 609.342, 
 15.30  subdivision 1, paragraph (a), (b), or (g), or 609.3455.  An 
 15.31  inmate serving a mandatory life sentence under section 609.3455 
 15.32  must not be given conditional release under this section without 
 15.33  having first served the minimum term of imprisonment specified 
 15.34  by the court under section 609.3455, subdivision 2.  An inmate 
 15.35  serving a mandatory life sentence under section 609.3458, 
 15.36  subdivision 3, must not be given conditional release under this 
 16.1   section without having served a minimum of 30 years imprisonment.
 16.2      Subd. 4.  [CONDITIONAL RELEASE; LIFE SENTENCE.] (a) Except 
 16.3   as provided in paragraph (b), the Minnesota Sex Offender Review 
 16.4   Board may give conditional release to an inmate serving a 
 16.5   mandatory life sentence under section 609.3455 after the inmate 
 16.6   has served the minimum term of imprisonment specified in 
 16.7   subdivision 3.  
 16.8      (b) The Minnesota Sex Offender Review Board may give 
 16.9   conditional release to an inmate sentenced under section 
 16.10  609.3458, subdivision 3 after the inmate has served 30 years 
 16.11  imprisonment. 
 16.12     (c) The terms of conditional release are governed by this 
 16.13  section and section 609.3459. 
 16.14     [EFFECTIVE DATE.] This section is effective August 1, 2004, 
 16.15  and applies to crimes committed on or after that date. 
 16.16     Sec. 9.  Minnesota Statutes 2002, section 244.052, 
 16.17  subdivision 3, is amended to read: 
 16.18     Subd. 3.  [END-OF-CONFINEMENT REVIEW COMMITTEE.] (a) The 
 16.19  commissioner of corrections shall establish and administer 
 16.20  end-of-confinement review committees at each state correctional 
 16.21  facility and at each state treatment facility where predatory 
 16.22  offenders are confined.  The committees shall assess on a 
 16.23  case-by-case basis the public risk posed by predatory offenders 
 16.24  who are about to be released from confinement. 
 16.25     (b) Each committee shall be a standing committee and shall 
 16.26  consist of the following members appointed by the commissioner: 
 16.27     (1) the chief executive officer or head of the correctional 
 16.28  or treatment facility where the offender is currently confined, 
 16.29  or that person's designee; 
 16.30     (2) a law enforcement officer; 
 16.31     (3) a treatment professional who is trained in the 
 16.32  assessment of sex offenders; 
 16.33     (4) a caseworker experienced in supervising sex offenders; 
 16.34  and 
 16.35     (5) a victim's services professional. 
 16.36     Members of the committee, other than the facility's chief 
 17.1   executive officer or head, shall be appointed by the 
 17.2   commissioner to two-year terms.  The chief executive officer or 
 17.3   head of the facility or designee shall act as chair of the 
 17.4   committee and shall use the facility's staff, as needed, to 
 17.5   administer the committee, obtain necessary information from 
 17.6   outside sources, and prepare risk assessment reports on 
 17.7   offenders. 
 17.8      (c) The committee shall have access to the following data 
 17.9   on a predatory offender only for the purposes of its assessment 
 17.10  and to defend the committee's risk assessment determination upon 
 17.11  administrative review under this section: 
 17.12     (1) private medical data under section 13.384 or 144.335, 
 17.13  or welfare data under section 13.46 that relate to medical 
 17.14  treatment of the offender; 
 17.15     (2) private and confidential court services data under 
 17.16  section 13.84; 
 17.17     (3) private and confidential corrections data under section 
 17.18  13.85; and 
 17.19     (4) private criminal history data under section 13.87. 
 17.20     Data collected and maintained by the committee under this 
 17.21  paragraph may not be disclosed outside the committee, except as 
 17.22  provided under section 13.05, subdivision 3 or 4.  The predatory 
 17.23  offender has access to data on the offender collected and 
 17.24  maintained by the committee, unless the data are confidential 
 17.25  data received under this paragraph. 
 17.26     (d)(i) Except as otherwise provided in item items (ii), 
 17.27  (iii), and (iv), at least 90 days before a predatory offender is 
 17.28  to be released from confinement, the commissioner of corrections 
 17.29  shall convene the appropriate end-of-confinement review 
 17.30  committee for the purpose of assessing the risk presented by the 
 17.31  offender and determining the risk level to which the offender 
 17.32  shall be assigned under paragraph (e).  The offender and the law 
 17.33  enforcement agency that was responsible for the charge resulting 
 17.34  in confinement shall be notified of the time and place of the 
 17.35  committee's meeting.  The offender has a right to be present and 
 17.36  be heard at the meeting.  The law enforcement agency may provide 
 18.1   material in writing that is relevant to the offender's risk 
 18.2   level to the chair of the committee.  The committee shall use 
 18.3   the risk factors described in paragraph (g) and the risk 
 18.4   assessment scale developed under subdivision 2 to determine the 
 18.5   offender's risk assessment score and risk level.  Offenders 
 18.6   scheduled for release from confinement shall be assessed by the 
 18.7   committee established at the facility from which the offender is 
 18.8   to be released.  
 18.9      (ii) If an offender is received for confinement in a 
 18.10  facility with less than 90 days remaining in the offender's term 
 18.11  of confinement, the offender's risk shall be assessed at the 
 18.12  first regularly scheduled end of confinement review committee 
 18.13  that convenes after the appropriate documentation for the risk 
 18.14  assessment is assembled by the committee.  The commissioner 
 18.15  shall make reasonable efforts to ensure that offender's risk is 
 18.16  assessed and a risk level is assigned or reassigned at least 30 
 18.17  days before the offender's release date. 
 18.18     (iii) If the offender is subject to an indeterminate 
 18.19  sentence under section 609.3455 or was sentenced under section 
 18.20  609.3458, subdivision 3, the commissioner of corrections shall 
 18.21  convene the appropriate end-of-confinement review committee at 
 18.22  least nine months before the offender is first eligible for 
 18.23  release.  If the offender is received for confinement in a 
 18.24  facility with fewer than nine months remaining before the 
 18.25  offender is first eligible for release, the committee shall 
 18.26  conform its procedures to those outlined in item (ii) to the 
 18.27  extent practicable.  
 18.28     (iv) If the predatory offender is granted conditional 
 18.29  release under section 244.0515, the commissioner of corrections 
 18.30  shall notify the appropriate end-of-confinement review committee 
 18.31  that it needs to review the offender's previously determined 
 18.32  risk level at its next regularly scheduled meeting.  The 
 18.33  commissioner shall make reasonable efforts to ensure that the 
 18.34  offender's earlier risk level determination is reviewed and the 
 18.35  risk level is confirmed or reassigned at least 60 days before 
 18.36  the offender's release date.  The committee shall give the 
 19.1   report to the offender and to the law enforcement agency at 
 19.2   least 60 days before an offender is released from confinement.  
 19.3      (e) The committee shall assign to risk level I a predatory 
 19.4   offender whose risk assessment score indicates a low risk of 
 19.5   reoffense.  The committee shall assign to risk level II an 
 19.6   offender whose risk assessment score indicates a moderate risk 
 19.7   of reoffense.  The committee shall assign to risk level III an 
 19.8   offender whose risk assessment score indicates a high risk of 
 19.9   reoffense. 
 19.10     (f) Before the predatory offender is released from 
 19.11  confinement, the committee shall prepare a risk assessment 
 19.12  report which specifies the risk level to which the offender has 
 19.13  been assigned and the reasons underlying the committee's risk 
 19.14  assessment decision.  Except for an offender subject to an 
 19.15  indeterminate sentence under section 609.3455 who has not been 
 19.16  granted conditional release by the Minnesota Sex Offender Review 
 19.17  Board, the committee shall give the report to the offender and 
 19.18  to the law enforcement agency at least 60 days before an 
 19.19  offender is released from confinement.  If the offender is 
 19.20  subject to an indeterminate sentence and has not yet served the 
 19.21  entire minimum term of imprisonment, the committee shall give 
 19.22  the report to the offender, the commissioner, and the Minnesota 
 19.23  Sex Offender Review Board at least six months before the 
 19.24  offender is first eligible for release.  The committee also 
 19.25  shall give the board, on request, any and all information the 
 19.26  committee reviewed in making its risk assessment.  If the risk 
 19.27  assessment is performed under the circumstances described in 
 19.28  paragraph (d), item (ii), the report shall be given to the 
 19.29  offender and the law enforcement agency as soon as it is 
 19.30  available.  The committee also shall inform the offender of the 
 19.31  availability of review under subdivision 6. 
 19.32     (g) As used in this subdivision, "risk factors" includes, 
 19.33  but is not limited to, the following factors: 
 19.34     (1) the seriousness of the offense should the offender 
 19.35  reoffend.  This factor includes consideration of the following:  
 19.36     (i) the degree of likely force or harm; 
 20.1      (ii) the degree of likely physical contact; and 
 20.2      (iii) the age of the likely victim; 
 20.3      (2) the offender's prior offense history.  This factor 
 20.4   includes consideration of the following: 
 20.5      (i) the relationship of prior victims to the offender; 
 20.6      (ii) the number of prior offenses or victims; 
 20.7      (iii) the duration of the offender's prior offense history; 
 20.8      (iv) the length of time since the offender's last prior 
 20.9   offense while the offender was at risk to commit offenses; and 
 20.10     (v) the offender's prior history of other antisocial acts; 
 20.11     (3) the offender's characteristics.  This factor includes 
 20.12  consideration of the following:  
 20.13     (i) the offender's response to prior treatment efforts; and 
 20.14     (ii) the offender's history of substance abuse; 
 20.15     (4) the availability of community supports to the offender. 
 20.16  This factor includes consideration of the following: 
 20.17     (i) the availability and likelihood that the offender will 
 20.18  be involved in therapeutic treatment; 
 20.19     (ii) the availability of residential supports to the 
 20.20  offender, such as a stable and supervised living arrangement in 
 20.21  an appropriate location; 
 20.22     (iii) the offender's familial and social relationships, 
 20.23  including the nature and length of these relationships and the 
 20.24  level of support that the offender may receive from these 
 20.25  persons; and 
 20.26     (iv) the offender's lack of education or employment 
 20.27  stability; 
 20.28     (5) whether the offender has indicated or credible evidence 
 20.29  in the record indicates that the offender will reoffend if 
 20.30  released into the community; and 
 20.31     (6) whether the offender demonstrates a physical condition 
 20.32  that minimizes the risk of reoffense, including but not limited 
 20.33  to, advanced age or a debilitating illness or physical condition.
 20.34     (h) Upon the request of the law enforcement agency or the 
 20.35  offender's corrections agent, the commissioner may reconvene the 
 20.36  end-of-confinement review committee for the purpose of 
 21.1   reassessing the risk level to which an offender has been 
 21.2   assigned under paragraph (e).  In a request for a reassessment, 
 21.3   the law enforcement agency which was responsible for the charge 
 21.4   resulting in confinement or agent shall list the facts and 
 21.5   circumstances arising after the initial assignment or facts and 
 21.6   circumstances known to law enforcement or the agent but not 
 21.7   considered by the committee under paragraph (e) which support 
 21.8   the request for a reassessment.  The request for reassessment by 
 21.9   the law enforcement agency must occur within 30 days of receipt 
 21.10  of the report indicating the offender's risk level assignment.  
 21.11  The offender's corrections agent, in consultation with the chief 
 21.12  law enforcement officer in the area where the offender resides 
 21.13  or intends to reside, may request a review of a risk level at 
 21.14  any time if substantial evidence exists that the offender's risk 
 21.15  level should be reviewed by an end-of-confinement review 
 21.16  committee.  This evidence includes, but is not limited to, 
 21.17  evidence of treatment failures or completions, evidence of 
 21.18  exceptional crime-free community adjustment or lack of 
 21.19  appropriate adjustment, evidence of substantial community need 
 21.20  to know more about the offender or mitigating circumstances that 
 21.21  would narrow the proposed scope of notification, or other 
 21.22  practical situations articulated and based in evidence of the 
 21.23  offender's behavior while under supervision.  Upon review of the 
 21.24  request, the end-of-confinement review committee may reassign an 
 21.25  offender to a different risk level.  If the offender is 
 21.26  reassigned to a higher risk level, the offender has the right to 
 21.27  seek review of the committee's determination under subdivision 6.
 21.28     (i) An offender may request the end-of-confinement review 
 21.29  committee to reassess the offender's assigned risk level after 
 21.30  three years have elapsed since the committee's initial risk 
 21.31  assessment and may renew the request once every two years 
 21.32  following subsequent denials.  In a request for reassessment, 
 21.33  the offender shall list the facts and circumstances which 
 21.34  demonstrate that the offender no longer poses the same degree of 
 21.35  risk to the community.  In order for a request for a risk level 
 21.36  reduction to be granted, the offender must demonstrate full 
 22.1   compliance with supervised release conditions, completion of 
 22.2   required post-release treatment programming, and full compliance 
 22.3   with all registration requirements as detailed in section 
 22.4   243.166.  The offender must also not have been convicted of any 
 22.5   felony, gross misdemeanor, or misdemeanor offenses subsequent to 
 22.6   the assignment of the original risk level.  The committee shall 
 22.7   follow the process outlined in paragraphs (a) to (c) in the 
 22.8   reassessment.  An offender who is incarcerated may not request a 
 22.9   reassessment under this paragraph. 
 22.10     (j) Offenders returned to prison as release violators shall 
 22.11  not have a right to a subsequent risk reassessment by the 
 22.12  end-of-confinement review committee unless substantial evidence 
 22.13  indicates that the offender's risk to the public has increased. 
 22.14     (k) The commissioner shall establish an end-of-confinement 
 22.15  review committee to assign a risk level to offenders who are 
 22.16  released from a federal correctional facility in Minnesota or 
 22.17  another state and who intend to reside in Minnesota, and to 
 22.18  offenders accepted from another state under a reciprocal 
 22.19  agreement for parole supervision under the interstate compact 
 22.20  authorized by section 243.16.  The committee shall make 
 22.21  reasonable efforts to conform to the same timelines as applied 
 22.22  to Minnesota cases.  Offenders accepted from another state under 
 22.23  a reciprocal agreement for probation supervision are not 
 22.24  assigned a risk level, but are considered downward dispositional 
 22.25  departures.  The probation or court services officer and law 
 22.26  enforcement officer shall manage such cases in accordance with 
 22.27  section 244.10, subdivision 2a.  The policies and procedures of 
 22.28  the committee for federal offenders and interstate compact cases 
 22.29  must be in accordance with all requirements as set forth in this 
 22.30  section, unless restrictions caused by the nature of federal or 
 22.31  interstate transfers prevents such conformance. 
 22.32     (l) If the committee assigns a predatory offender to risk 
 22.33  level III, the committee shall determine whether residency 
 22.34  restrictions shall be included in the conditions of the 
 22.35  offender's release based on the offender's pattern of offending 
 22.36  behavior. 
 23.1      [EFFECTIVE DATE.] This section is effective August 1, 2004, 
 23.2   and applies to crimes committed on or after that date. 
 23.3      Sec. 10.  Minnesota Statutes 2002, section 609.1351, is 
 23.4   amended to read: 
 23.5      609.1351 [PETITION FOR CIVIL COMMITMENT.] 
 23.6      When a court sentences a person under section 609.108, 
 23.7   609.342, 609.343, 609.344, or 609.345, or 609.3453, the court 
 23.8   shall make a preliminary determination whether in the court's 
 23.9   opinion a petition under section 253B.185 may be appropriate and 
 23.10  include the determination as part of the sentencing order.  If 
 23.11  the court determines that a petition may be appropriate, the 
 23.12  court shall forward its preliminary determination along with 
 23.13  supporting documentation to the county attorney.  
 23.14     [EFFECTIVE DATE.] This section is effective August 1, 2004, 
 23.15  and applies to crimes committed on or after that date. 
 23.16     Sec. 11.  Minnesota Statutes 2002, section 609.341, is 
 23.17  amended by adding a subdivision to read: 
 23.18     Subd. 22.  [CONDITIONAL RELEASE.] "Conditional release" has 
 23.19  the meaning given in section 244.048, paragraph (a). 
 23.20     [EFFECTIVE DATE.] This section is effective August 1, 2004, 
 23.21  and applies to crimes committed on or after that date. 
 23.22     Sec. 12.  Minnesota Statutes 2002, section 609.341, is 
 23.23  amended by adding a subdivision to read: 
 23.24     Subd. 23.  [FIRST ELIGIBLE FOR RELEASE.] (a) For the 
 23.25  purpose of an offender sentenced under section 609.3455, "first 
 23.26  eligible for release" means the day after the inmate has served 
 23.27  the entire minimum term of imprisonment, plus any disciplinary 
 23.28  time imposed by the commissioner of corrections. 
 23.29     (b) In the case of an offender sentenced under section 
 23.30  609.3458, subdivision 3, "first eligible for release" means the 
 23.31  day after the inmate has served 30 years imprisonment, plus any 
 23.32  disciplinary time imposed by the commissioner of corrections.  
 23.33     [EFFECTIVE DATE.] This section is effective August 1, 2004, 
 23.34  and applies to crimes committed on or after that date. 
 23.35     Sec. 13.  Minnesota Statutes 2002, section 609.341, is 
 23.36  amended by adding a subdivision to read: 
 24.1      Subd. 24.  [MINIMUM TERM OF IMPRISONMENT.] "Minimum term of 
 24.2   imprisonment" means the minimum length of time an offender is 
 24.3   incarcerated for a sentence imposed under section 609.3455.  The 
 24.4   minimum term of imprisonment is equal to two-thirds of the 
 24.5   sentence length called for by the presumptive sentence under the 
 24.6   appropriate cell of the Sentencing Guidelines grid, plus any 
 24.7   disciplinary time imposed by the commissioner of corrections.  
 24.8   If the Sentencing Guidelines do not provide the presumptive 
 24.9   sentence for the offense, the minimum term of imprisonment is as 
 24.10  provided by statute or, if not so provided, as determined by the 
 24.11  court.  
 24.12     [EFFECTIVE DATE.] This section is effective August 1, 2004, 
 24.13  and applies to crimes committed on or after that date. 
 24.14     Sec. 14.  Minnesota Statutes 2002, section 609.341, is 
 24.15  amended by adding a subdivision to read: 
 24.16     Subd. 25.  [PREDATORY CRIME.] "Predatory crime" means any 
 24.17  felony violation of, or felony attempt to violate, section 
 24.18  609.185; 609.19; 609.195; 609.20; 609.205; 609.221; 609.222; 
 24.19  609.223; 609.24; 609.245; 609.25; 609.255; 609.365; or 609.582, 
 24.20  subdivision 1. 
 24.21     [EFFECTIVE DATE.] This section is effective August 1, 2004, 
 24.22  and applies to crimes committed on or after that date. 
 24.23     Sec. 15.  Minnesota Statutes 2002, section 609.341, is 
 24.24  amended by adding a subdivision to read: 
 24.25     Subd. 26.  [SEX OFFENSE.] Unless otherwise provided, "sex 
 24.26  offense" means any violation of, or attempt to violate, section 
 24.27  609.342, 609.343, 609.344, 609.345, or 609.3453, or any similar 
 24.28  statute of the United States or any other state. 
 24.29     [EFFECTIVE DATE.] This section is effective August 1, 2004, 
 24.30  and applies to crimes committed on or after that date. 
 24.31     Sec. 16.  Minnesota Statutes 2002, section 609.342, is 
 24.32  amended to read: 
 24.33     609.342 [CRIMINAL SEXUAL CONDUCT IN THE FIRST DEGREE.] 
 24.34     Subdivision 1.  [CRIME DEFINED.] A person who engages in 
 24.35  sexual penetration with another person, or in sexual contact 
 24.36  with a person under 13 years of age as defined in section 
 25.1   609.341, subdivision 11, paragraph (c), is guilty of criminal 
 25.2   sexual conduct in the first degree if any of the following 
 25.3   circumstances exists: 
 25.4      (a) the complainant is under 13 years of age and the actor 
 25.5   is more than 36 months older than the complainant.  Neither 
 25.6   mistake as to the complainant's age nor consent to the act by 
 25.7   the complainant is a defense; 
 25.8      (b) the complainant is at least 13 years of age but less 
 25.9   than 16 years of age and the actor is more than 48 months older 
 25.10  than the complainant and in a position of authority over the 
 25.11  complainant.  Neither mistake as to the complainant's age nor 
 25.12  consent to the act by the complainant is a defense; 
 25.13     (c) circumstances existing at the time of the act cause the 
 25.14  complainant to have a reasonable fear of imminent great bodily 
 25.15  harm to the complainant or another; 
 25.16     (d) the actor is armed with a dangerous weapon or any 
 25.17  article used or fashioned in a manner to lead the complainant to 
 25.18  reasonably believe it to be a dangerous weapon and uses or 
 25.19  threatens to use the weapon or article to cause the complainant 
 25.20  to submit; 
 25.21     (e) the actor causes personal injury to the complainant, 
 25.22  and either of the following circumstances exist: 
 25.23     (i) the actor uses force or coercion to accomplish sexual 
 25.24  penetration; or 
 25.25     (ii) the actor knows or has reason to know that the 
 25.26  complainant is mentally impaired, mentally incapacitated, or 
 25.27  physically helpless; 
 25.28     (f) the actor is aided or abetted by one or more 
 25.29  accomplices within the meaning of section 609.05, and either of 
 25.30  the following circumstances exists: 
 25.31     (i) an accomplice uses force or coercion to cause the 
 25.32  complainant to submit; or 
 25.33     (ii) an accomplice is armed with a dangerous weapon or any 
 25.34  article used or fashioned in a manner to lead the complainant 
 25.35  reasonably to believe it to be a dangerous weapon and uses or 
 25.36  threatens to use the weapon or article to cause the complainant 
 26.1   to submit; 
 26.2      (g) the actor has a significant relationship to the 
 26.3   complainant and the complainant was under 16 years of age at the 
 26.4   time of the sexual penetration.  Neither mistake as to the 
 26.5   complainant's age nor consent to the act by the complainant is a 
 26.6   defense; or 
 26.7      (h) the actor has a significant relationship to the 
 26.8   complainant, the complainant was under 16 years of age at the 
 26.9   time of the sexual penetration, and: 
 26.10     (i) the actor or an accomplice used force or coercion to 
 26.11  accomplish the penetration; 
 26.12     (ii) the complainant suffered personal injury; or 
 26.13     (iii) the sexual abuse involved multiple acts committed 
 26.14  over an extended period of time. 
 26.15     Neither mistake as to the complainant's age nor consent to 
 26.16  the act by the complainant is a defense. 
 26.17     Subd. 2.  [PENALTY.] (a) Except as otherwise provided in 
 26.18  section 609.109, A person convicted under subdivision 1, may 
 26.19  clause (c), (d), (e), (f), or (h), or convicted for an attempted 
 26.20  violation of subdivision 1, clause (c), (d), (e), (f), or (h), 
 26.21  shall be sentenced to imprisonment for not more than 30 years or 
 26.22  to a payment of a fine of not more than $40,000, or both life.  
 26.23  A person convicted under subdivision 1, clause (a), (b), or (g), 
 26.24  or convicted for an attempted violation of subdivision 1, clause 
 26.25  (a), (b), or (g), may be sentenced to imprisonment for life. 
 26.26     (b) In addition to the sentence imposed under paragraph 
 26.27  (a), the person also may be sentenced to a fine of not more than 
 26.28  $40,000. 
 26.29     (c) Unless a longer mandatory minimum sentence is otherwise 
 26.30  required by law or the Sentencing Guidelines provide for a 
 26.31  longer presumptive executed sentence, the court shall presume 
 26.32  that an executed sentence of 144 months must be imposed on an 
 26.33  offender convicted of violating, this section or attempting to 
 26.34  violate, subdivision 1, clause (a), (b), or (g).  Sentencing a 
 26.35  person in a manner other than that described in this paragraph 
 26.36  is a departure from the Sentencing Guidelines. 
 27.1      (d) Unless a longer mandatory minimum sentence is otherwise 
 27.2   required or the Sentencing Guidelines call for a longer 
 27.3   presumptive executed sentence, for the purpose of section 
 27.4   609.3455, the court shall presume the minimum term of 
 27.5   imprisonment for a conviction under subdivision 1, clause (a), 
 27.6   (b), or (g) is 96 months and the minimum term of imprisonment 
 27.7   for a conviction for an attempted violation of subdivision 1, 
 27.8   clause (a), (b), or (g) is 48 months.  
 27.9      Subd. 3.  [STAY.] Except when imprisonment is required 
 27.10  under section 609.109 609.3458, subdivision 3, if a person is 
 27.11  convicted under subdivision 1, clause (g), the court may stay 
 27.12  imposition or execution of the sentence if it finds that: 
 27.13     (a) a stay is in the best interest of the complainant or 
 27.14  the family unit; and 
 27.15     (b) a professional assessment indicates that the offender 
 27.16  has been accepted by and can respond to a treatment program. 
 27.17     If the court stays imposition or execution of sentence, it 
 27.18  shall include the following as conditions of probation: 
 27.19     (1) incarceration in a local jail or workhouse; 
 27.20     (2) a requirement that the offender complete a treatment 
 27.21  program; and 
 27.22     (3) a requirement that the offender have no unsupervised 
 27.23  contact with the complainant until the offender has successfully 
 27.24  completed the treatment program unless approved by the treatment 
 27.25  program and the supervising correctional agent. 
 27.26     [EFFECTIVE DATE.] This section is effective August 1, 2004, 
 27.27  and applies to crimes committed on or after that date. 
 27.28     Sec. 17.  Minnesota Statutes 2002, section 609.343, is 
 27.29  amended to read: 
 27.30     609.343 [CRIMINAL SEXUAL CONDUCT IN THE SECOND DEGREE.] 
 27.31     Subdivision 1.  [CRIME DEFINED.] A person who engages in 
 27.32  sexual contact with another person is guilty of criminal sexual 
 27.33  conduct in the second degree if any of the following 
 27.34  circumstances exists: 
 27.35     (a) the complainant is under 13 years of age and the actor 
 27.36  is more than 36 months older than the complainant.  Neither 
 28.1   mistake as to the complainant's age nor consent to the act by 
 28.2   the complainant is a defense.  In a prosecution under this 
 28.3   clause, the state is not required to prove that the sexual 
 28.4   contact was coerced; 
 28.5      (b) the complainant is at least 13 but less than 16 years 
 28.6   of age and the actor is more than 48 months older than the 
 28.7   complainant and in a position of authority over the complainant. 
 28.8   Neither mistake as to the complainant's age nor consent to the 
 28.9   act by the complainant is a defense; 
 28.10     (c) circumstances existing at the time of the act cause the 
 28.11  complainant to have a reasonable fear of imminent great bodily 
 28.12  harm to the complainant or another; 
 28.13     (d) the actor is armed with a dangerous weapon or any 
 28.14  article used or fashioned in a manner to lead the complainant to 
 28.15  reasonably believe it to be a dangerous weapon and uses or 
 28.16  threatens to use the dangerous weapon to cause the complainant 
 28.17  to submit; 
 28.18     (e) the actor causes personal injury to the complainant, 
 28.19  and either of the following circumstances exist: 
 28.20     (i) the actor uses force or coercion to accomplish the 
 28.21  sexual contact; or 
 28.22     (ii) the actor knows or has reason to know that the 
 28.23  complainant is mentally impaired, mentally incapacitated, or 
 28.24  physically helpless; 
 28.25     (f) the actor is aided or abetted by one or more 
 28.26  accomplices within the meaning of section 609.05, and either of 
 28.27  the following circumstances exists: 
 28.28     (i) an accomplice uses force or coercion to cause the 
 28.29  complainant to submit; or 
 28.30     (ii) an accomplice is armed with a dangerous weapon or any 
 28.31  article used or fashioned in a manner to lead the complainant to 
 28.32  reasonably believe it to be a dangerous weapon and uses or 
 28.33  threatens to use the weapon or article to cause the complainant 
 28.34  to submit; 
 28.35     (g) the actor has a significant relationship to the 
 28.36  complainant and the complainant was under 16 years of age at the 
 29.1   time of the sexual contact.  Neither mistake as to the 
 29.2   complainant's age nor consent to the act by the complainant is a 
 29.3   defense; or 
 29.4      (h) the actor has a significant relationship to the 
 29.5   complainant, the complainant was under 16 years of age at the 
 29.6   time of the sexual contact, and: 
 29.7      (i) the actor or an accomplice used force or coercion to 
 29.8   accomplish the contact; 
 29.9      (ii) the complainant suffered personal injury; or 
 29.10     (iii) the sexual abuse involved multiple acts committed 
 29.11  over an extended period of time. 
 29.12     Neither mistake as to the complainant's age nor consent to 
 29.13  the act by the complainant is a defense. 
 29.14     Subd. 2.  [PENALTY.] (a) Except as otherwise provided in 
 29.15  section 609.109, A person convicted under subdivision 1 may be 
 29.16  sentenced to imprisonment for not more than 25 years or to a 
 29.17  payment of a fine of not more than $35,000, or both life.  The 
 29.18  person also may be sentenced to a fine of not more than $35,000. 
 29.19     (b) If section 609.3455 provides the sentence for a 
 29.20  conviction under this section, the court shall sentence the 
 29.21  person to an indeterminate sentence under section 609.3455.  If 
 29.22  section 609.3455 does not provide the sentence for a conviction 
 29.23  under this section, the court shall sentence the person as 
 29.24  provided in paragraph (c). 
 29.25     (c) Unless a longer mandatory minimum sentence is otherwise 
 29.26  required by law or the Sentencing Guidelines provide for a 
 29.27  longer presumptive executed sentence, the court shall presume 
 29.28  that an executed sentence of 90 months must the minimum sentence 
 29.29  that may be imposed on an offender convicted of violating 
 29.30  subdivision 1, clause (c), (d), (e), (f), or (h) is an executed 
 29.31  sentence of 90 months.  Sentencing a person in a manner other 
 29.32  than that described in this paragraph is a departure from the 
 29.33  Sentencing Guidelines.  
 29.34     (d) Unless a longer mandatory minimum sentence is otherwise 
 29.35  required or the Sentencing Guidelines call for a longer 
 29.36  presumptive executed sentence, for the purpose of section 
 30.1   609.3455, the court shall presume the minimum term of 
 30.2   imprisonment for a conviction under subdivision 1, clause (c), 
 30.3   (d), (e), (f), or (h), is 60 months and the minimum term of 
 30.4   imprisonment for a conviction for an attempted violation of 
 30.5   subdivision 1, clause (c), (d), (e), (f), or (h), is 30 months. 
 30.6      Subd. 3.  [STAY.] Except as otherwise provided in this 
 30.7   subdivision or when imprisonment is required under section 
 30.8   609.109 609.3457 or 609.3458, subdivision 2 or 3, if a person is 
 30.9   convicted under subdivision 1, clause (g), the court may stay 
 30.10  imposition or execution of the sentence if it finds that: 
 30.11     (a) a stay is in the best interest of the complainant or 
 30.12  the family unit; and 
 30.13     (b) a professional assessment indicates that the offender 
 30.14  has been accepted by and can respond to a treatment program. 
 30.15     If the court stays imposition or execution of sentence, it 
 30.16  shall include the following as conditions of probation: 
 30.17     (1) incarceration in a local jail or workhouse; 
 30.18     (2) a requirement that the offender complete a treatment 
 30.19  program; and 
 30.20     (3) a requirement that the offender have no unsupervised 
 30.21  contact with the complainant until the offender has successfully 
 30.22  completed the treatment program unless approved by the treatment 
 30.23  program and the supervising correctional agent.  
 30.24     If a person violates a stay of imposition or execution of 
 30.25  sentence granted under this subdivision, the person shall be 
 30.26  subject to an indeterminate sentence as provided in section 
 30.27  609.3455.  
 30.28     [EFFECTIVE DATE.] This section is effective August 1, 2004, 
 30.29  and applies to crimes committed on or after that date. 
 30.30     Sec. 18.  Minnesota Statutes 2002, section 609.344, is 
 30.31  amended to read: 
 30.32     609.344 [CRIMINAL SEXUAL CONDUCT IN THE THIRD DEGREE.] 
 30.33     Subdivision 1.  [CRIME DEFINED.] A person who engages in 
 30.34  sexual penetration with another person is guilty of criminal 
 30.35  sexual conduct in the third degree if any of the following 
 30.36  circumstances exists:  
 31.1      (a) the complainant is under 13 years of age and the actor 
 31.2   is no more than 36 months older than the complainant.  Neither 
 31.3   mistake as to the complainant's age nor consent to the act by 
 31.4   the complainant shall be a defense; 
 31.5      (b) the complainant is at least 13 but less than 16 years 
 31.6   of age and the actor is more than 24 months older than the 
 31.7   complainant.  In any such case it shall be an affirmative 
 31.8   defense, which must be proved by a preponderance of the 
 31.9   evidence, that the actor believes the complainant to be 16 years 
 31.10  of age or older.  If the actor in such a case is no more than 48 
 31.11  months but more than 24 months older than the complainant, the 
 31.12  actor may be sentenced to imprisonment for not more than five 
 31.13  years.  Consent by the complainant is not a defense; 
 31.14     (c) the actor uses force or coercion to accomplish the 
 31.15  penetration; 
 31.16     (d) the actor knows or has reason to know that the 
 31.17  complainant is mentally impaired, mentally incapacitated, or 
 31.18  physically helpless; 
 31.19     (e) the complainant is at least 16 but less than 18 years 
 31.20  of age and the actor is more than 48 months older than the 
 31.21  complainant and in a position of authority over the complainant. 
 31.22  Neither mistake as to the complainant's age nor consent to the 
 31.23  act by the complainant is a defense; 
 31.24     (f) the actor has a significant relationship to the 
 31.25  complainant and the complainant was at least 16 but under 18 
 31.26  years of age at the time of the sexual penetration.  Neither 
 31.27  mistake as to the complainant's age nor consent to the act by 
 31.28  the complainant is a defense; 
 31.29     (g) the actor has a significant relationship to the 
 31.30  complainant, the complainant was at least 16 but under 18 years 
 31.31  of age at the time of the sexual penetration, and: 
 31.32     (i) the actor or an accomplice used force or coercion to 
 31.33  accomplish the penetration; 
 31.34     (ii) the complainant suffered personal injury; or 
 31.35     (iii) the sexual abuse involved multiple acts committed 
 31.36  over an extended period of time.  
 32.1      Neither mistake as to the complainant's age nor consent to 
 32.2   the act by the complainant is a defense; 
 32.3      (h) the actor is a psychotherapist and the complainant is a 
 32.4   patient of the psychotherapist and the sexual penetration 
 32.5   occurred: 
 32.6      (i) during the psychotherapy session; or 
 32.7      (ii) outside the psychotherapy session if an ongoing 
 32.8   psychotherapist-patient relationship exists.  
 32.9      Consent by the complainant is not a defense; 
 32.10     (i) the actor is a psychotherapist and the complainant is a 
 32.11  former patient of the psychotherapist and the former patient is 
 32.12  emotionally dependent upon the psychotherapist; 
 32.13     (j) the actor is a psychotherapist and the complainant is a 
 32.14  patient or former patient and the sexual penetration occurred by 
 32.15  means of therapeutic deception.  Consent by the complainant is 
 32.16  not a defense; 
 32.17     (k) the actor accomplishes the sexual penetration by means 
 32.18  of deception or false representation that the penetration is for 
 32.19  a bona fide medical purpose.  Consent by the complainant is not 
 32.20  a defense; 
 32.21     (1) the actor is or purports to be a member of the clergy, 
 32.22  the complainant is not married to the actor, and: 
 32.23     (i) the sexual penetration occurred during the course of a 
 32.24  meeting in which the complainant sought or received religious or 
 32.25  spiritual advice, aid, or comfort from the actor in private; or 
 32.26     (ii) the sexual penetration occurred during a period of 
 32.27  time in which the complainant was meeting on an ongoing basis 
 32.28  with the actor to seek or receive religious or spiritual advice, 
 32.29  aid, or comfort in private.  Consent by the complainant is not a 
 32.30  defense; 
 32.31     (m) the actor is an employee, independent contractor, or 
 32.32  volunteer of a state, county, city, or privately operated adult 
 32.33  or juvenile correctional system, including, but not limited to, 
 32.34  jails, prisons, detention centers, or work release facilities, 
 32.35  and the complainant is a resident of a facility or under 
 32.36  supervision of the correctional system.  Consent by the 
 33.1   complainant is not a defense; or 
 33.2      (n) the actor provides or is an agent of an entity that 
 33.3   provides special transportation service, the complainant used 
 33.4   the special transportation service, and the sexual penetration 
 33.5   occurred during or immediately before or after the actor 
 33.6   transported the complainant.  Consent by the complainant is not 
 33.7   a defense. 
 33.8      Subd. 2.  [PENALTY.] (a) A person convicted under 
 33.9   subdivision 1 may be sentenced to imprisonment for not more than 
 33.10  15 years or to a payment of a fine of not more than $30,000, or 
 33.11  both life.  The person also may be sentenced to a fine of not 
 33.12  more than $30,000. 
 33.13     (b) If section 609.3455 provides the sentence for a 
 33.14  conviction under this section, the court shall sentence the 
 33.15  person to an indeterminate sentence under section 609.3455.  If 
 33.16  section 609.3455 does not provide the sentence for a conviction 
 33.17  under this section, the court shall sentence the person to the 
 33.18  presumptive sentence under the Sentencing Guidelines for the 
 33.19  offense. 
 33.20     Subd. 3.  [STAY.] Except as otherwise provided in this 
 33.21  subdivision or when imprisonment is required under 
 33.22  section 609.109 609.3457 or 609.3458, subdivision 2, if a person 
 33.23  is convicted under subdivision 1, clause (f), the court may stay 
 33.24  imposition or execution of the sentence if it finds that: 
 33.25     (a) a stay is in the best interest of the complainant or 
 33.26  the family unit; and 
 33.27     (b) a professional assessment indicates that the offender 
 33.28  has been accepted by and can respond to a treatment program. 
 33.29     If the court stays imposition or execution of sentence, it 
 33.30  shall include the following as conditions of probation: 
 33.31     (1) incarceration in a local jail or workhouse; 
 33.32     (2) a requirement that the offender complete a treatment 
 33.33  program; and 
 33.34     (3) a requirement that the offender have no unsupervised 
 33.35  contact with the complainant until the offender has successfully 
 33.36  completed the treatment program unless approved by the treatment 
 34.1   program and the supervising correctional agent.  
 34.2      If a person violates a stay of imposition or execution of 
 34.3   sentence granted under this subdivision, the person shall be 
 34.4   subject to an indeterminate sentence as provided in section 
 34.5   609.3455.  
 34.6      [EFFECTIVE DATE.] This section is effective August 1, 2004, 
 34.7   and applies to crimes committed on or after that date. 
 34.8      Sec. 19.  Minnesota Statutes 2002, section 609.345, is 
 34.9   amended to read: 
 34.10     609.345 [CRIMINAL SEXUAL CONDUCT IN THE FOURTH DEGREE.] 
 34.11     Subdivision 1.  [CRIME DEFINED.] A person who engages in 
 34.12  sexual contact with another person is guilty of criminal sexual 
 34.13  conduct in the fourth degree if any of the following 
 34.14  circumstances exists: 
 34.15     (a) the complainant is under 13 years of age and the actor 
 34.16  is no more than 36 months older than the complainant.  Neither 
 34.17  mistake as to the complainant's age or consent to the act by the 
 34.18  complainant is a defense.  In a prosecution under this clause, 
 34.19  the state is not required to prove that the sexual contact was 
 34.20  coerced; 
 34.21     (b) the complainant is at least 13 but less than 16 years 
 34.22  of age and the actor is more than 48 months older than the 
 34.23  complainant or in a position of authority over the complainant.  
 34.24  Consent by the complainant to the act is not a defense.  In any 
 34.25  such case, it shall be an affirmative defense which must be 
 34.26  proved by a preponderance of the evidence that the actor 
 34.27  believes the complainant to be 16 years of age or older; 
 34.28     (c) the actor uses force or coercion to accomplish the 
 34.29  sexual contact; 
 34.30     (d) the actor knows or has reason to know that the 
 34.31  complainant is mentally impaired, mentally incapacitated, or 
 34.32  physically helpless; 
 34.33     (e) the complainant is at least 16 but less than 18 years 
 34.34  of age and the actor is more than 48 months older than the 
 34.35  complainant and in a position of authority over the complainant. 
 34.36  Neither mistake as to the complainant's age nor consent to the 
 35.1   act by the complainant is a defense; 
 35.2      (f) the actor has a significant relationship to the 
 35.3   complainant and the complainant was at least 16 but under 18 
 35.4   years of age at the time of the sexual contact.  Neither mistake 
 35.5   as to the complainant's age nor consent to the act by the 
 35.6   complainant is a defense; 
 35.7      (g) the actor has a significant relationship to the 
 35.8   complainant, the complainant was at least 16 but under 18 years 
 35.9   of age at the time of the sexual contact, and: 
 35.10     (i) the actor or an accomplice used force or coercion to 
 35.11  accomplish the contact; 
 35.12     (ii) the complainant suffered personal injury; or 
 35.13     (iii) the sexual abuse involved multiple acts committed 
 35.14  over an extended period of time.  
 35.15     Neither mistake as to the complainant's age nor consent to 
 35.16  the act by the complainant is a defense; 
 35.17     (h) the actor is a psychotherapist and the complainant is a 
 35.18  patient of the psychotherapist and the sexual contact occurred: 
 35.19     (i) during the psychotherapy session; or 
 35.20     (ii) outside the psychotherapy session if an ongoing 
 35.21  psychotherapist-patient relationship exists.  Consent by the 
 35.22  complainant is not a defense; 
 35.23     (i) the actor is a psychotherapist and the complainant is a 
 35.24  former patient of the psychotherapist and the former patient is 
 35.25  emotionally dependent upon the psychotherapist; 
 35.26     (j) the actor is a psychotherapist and the complainant is a 
 35.27  patient or former patient and the sexual contact occurred by 
 35.28  means of therapeutic deception.  Consent by the complainant is 
 35.29  not a defense; 
 35.30     (k) the actor accomplishes the sexual contact by means of 
 35.31  deception or false representation that the contact is for a bona 
 35.32  fide medical purpose.  Consent by the complainant is not a 
 35.33  defense; 
 35.34     (1) the actor is or purports to be a member of the clergy, 
 35.35  the complainant is not married to the actor, and: 
 35.36     (i) the sexual contact occurred during the course of a 
 36.1   meeting in which the complainant sought or received religious or 
 36.2   spiritual advice, aid, or comfort from the actor in private; or 
 36.3      (ii) the sexual contact occurred during a period of time in 
 36.4   which the complainant was meeting on an ongoing basis with the 
 36.5   actor to seek or receive religious or spiritual advice, aid, or 
 36.6   comfort in private.  Consent by the complainant is not a 
 36.7   defense; 
 36.8      (m) the actor is an employee, independent contractor, or 
 36.9   volunteer of a state, county, city, or privately operated adult 
 36.10  or juvenile correctional system, including, but not limited to, 
 36.11  jails, prisons, detention centers, or work release facilities, 
 36.12  and the complainant is a resident of a facility or under 
 36.13  supervision of the correctional system.  Consent by the 
 36.14  complainant is not a defense; or 
 36.15     (n) the actor provides or is an agent of an entity that 
 36.16  provides special transportation service, the complainant used 
 36.17  the special transportation service, the complainant is not 
 36.18  married to the actor, and the sexual contact occurred during or 
 36.19  immediately before or after the actor transported the 
 36.20  complainant.  Consent by the complainant is not a defense. 
 36.21     Subd. 2.  [PENALTY.] (a) A person convicted under 
 36.22  subdivision 1 may be sentenced to imprisonment for not more than 
 36.23  ten years or to a payment of a fine of not more than $20,000, or 
 36.24  both life.  The person also may be sentenced to a fine of not 
 36.25  more than $20,000. 
 36.26     (b) If section 609.3455 provides the sentence for a 
 36.27  conviction under this section, the court shall sentence the 
 36.28  person to an indeterminate sentence under section 609.3455.  If 
 36.29  section 609.3455 does not provide the sentence for a conviction 
 36.30  under this section, the court shall sentence the person to the 
 36.31  presumptive sentence under the Sentencing Guidelines for the 
 36.32  offense. 
 36.33     Subd. 3.  [STAY.] Except as otherwise provided in this 
 36.34  subdivision or when imprisonment is required under 
 36.35  section 609.109 609.3457 or 609.3458, subdivision 2, if a person 
 36.36  is convicted under subdivision 1, clause (f), the court may stay 
 37.1   imposition or execution of the sentence if it finds that: 
 37.2      (a) a stay is in the best interest of the complainant or 
 37.3   the family unit; and 
 37.4      (b) a professional assessment indicates that the offender 
 37.5   has been accepted by and can respond to a treatment program. 
 37.6      If the court stays imposition or execution of sentence, it 
 37.7   shall include the following as conditions of probation: 
 37.8      (1) incarceration in a local jail or workhouse; 
 37.9      (2) a requirement that the offender complete a treatment 
 37.10  program; and 
 37.11     (3) a requirement that the offender have no unsupervised 
 37.12  contact with the complainant until the offender has successfully 
 37.13  completed the treatment program unless approved by the treatment 
 37.14  program and the supervising correctional agent. 
 37.15     If a person violates a stay of imposition or execution of 
 37.16  sentence granted under this subdivision, the person shall be 
 37.17  subject to an indeterminate sentence as provided in section 
 37.18  609.3455.  
 37.19     [EFFECTIVE DATE.] This section is effective August 1, 2004, 
 37.20  and applies to crimes committed on or after that date. 
 37.21     Sec. 20.  Minnesota Statutes 2002, section 609.3452, 
 37.22  subdivision 4, is amended to read: 
 37.23     Subd. 4.  [DEFINITION.] As used in this section, "sex 
 37.24  offense" means a violation of section 609.342; 609.343; 609.344; 
 37.25  609.345; 609.3451; 609.3453; 609.746, subdivision 1; 609.79; or 
 37.26  617.23; or another offense arising out of a charge based on one 
 37.27  or more of those sections. 
 37.28     [EFFECTIVE DATE.] This section is effective August 1, 2004, 
 37.29  and applies to crimes committed on or after that date. 
 37.30     Sec. 21.  [609.3453] [CRIMINAL SEXUAL PREDATORY CONDUCT.] 
 37.31     Subdivision 1.  [CRIME DEFINED.] A person is guilty of 
 37.32  criminal sexual predatory conduct if the person commits a 
 37.33  predatory crime and the predatory crime was motivated by the 
 37.34  offender's sexual impulses or was part of a predatory pattern of 
 37.35  behavior that had criminal sexual conduct as its goal. 
 37.36     Subd. 2.  [PENALTY.] (a) A person convicted under 
 38.1   subdivision 1, or for an attempted violation of subdivision 1, 
 38.2   shall be sentenced under section 609.3455.  The person also may 
 38.3   be sentenced to a fine of not more than $30,000.  
 38.4      (b) The minimum term of imprisonment for a conviction under 
 38.5   subdivision 1 is double the minimum term of imprisonment that 
 38.6   would apply to the predatory crime.  The minimum term of 
 38.7   imprisonment for an attempted violation of subdivision 1 is the 
 38.8   minimum term of imprisonment that would apply to the predatory 
 38.9   crime. 
 38.10     [EFFECTIVE DATE.] This section is effective August 1, 2004, 
 38.11  and applies to crimes committed on or after that date. 
 38.12     Sec. 22.  [609.3455] [INDETERMINATE SENTENCES FOR SEX 
 38.13  OFFENSES.] 
 38.14     Subdivision 1.  [APPLICABILITY.] (a) This section applies 
 38.15  to an offender convicted of a violation of section 609.3453 or 
 38.16  an attempted violation of section 609.3453.  This section also 
 38.17  applies to an offender convicted of a violation of section 
 38.18  609.342, subdivision 1, clause (a), (b), or (g); 609.343; 
 38.19  609.344; or 609.345 or an attempted violation of section 
 38.20  609.342, subdivision 1, clause (a), (b), or (g); 609.343; 
 38.21  609.344; or 609.345 when: 
 38.22     (1) the Sentencing Guidelines presume an executed sentence 
 38.23  for the offense; 
 38.24     (2) section 609.3458 imposes a mandatory minimum sentence; 
 38.25  or 
 38.26     (3) the Sentencing Guidelines presume a stayed sentence for 
 38.27  the offense and the court departs from the Sentencing Guidelines 
 38.28  and imposes an upward dispositional departure.  This section 
 38.29  also applies to a person who violates a stay of imposition or 
 38.30  execution of sentence under section 609.343, subdivision 3; 
 38.31  609.344, subdivision 3; or 609.345, subdivision 3.  
 38.32     (b) The court shall sentence an offender covered by this 
 38.33  subdivision to a minimum and maximum term of imprisonment, as 
 38.34  specified in subdivision 2. 
 38.35     Subd. 2.  [MINIMUM AND MAXIMUM TERM OF IMPRISONMENT.] (a)  
 38.36  Unless a longer mandatory minimum sentence is otherwise required 
 39.1   by law, the presumptive minimum term of imprisonment for an 
 39.2   offense listed in subdivision 1 is the minimum term of 
 39.3   imprisonment for the offense committed or, in the case of an 
 39.4   upward dispositional departure, the minimum term of imprisonment 
 39.5   is the term of imprisonment specified by the court.  In 
 39.6   sentencing an offender under this section, the court shall 
 39.7   consider whether a longer mandatory minimum sentence is required 
 39.8   under section 609.342, 609.343, 609.3457, or 609.3458.  The 
 39.9   minimum term of imprisonment must be served before the offender 
 39.10  may be granted conditional release under sections 244.0514 and 
 39.11  244.0515. 
 39.12     (b) Prior to the time of sentencing, the prosecutor may 
 39.13  file a motion for a downward durational departure under the 
 39.14  Sentencing Guidelines.  The court may grant this motion if the 
 39.15  court finds substantial and compelling reasons to do so.  In no 
 39.16  case shall the court impose a minimum term of imprisonment that 
 39.17  is less than one year and one day.  A sentence imposed under 
 39.18  this subdivision is a departure from the Sentencing Guidelines. 
 39.19     (c) Notwithstanding any other law to the contrary, the 
 39.20  maximum sentence for an offense listed in subdivision 1 is life. 
 39.21     (d) Notwithstanding section 609.135, the court may not stay 
 39.22  the imposition or execution of the sentence required by this 
 39.23  section.  An offender committed to the custody of the 
 39.24  commissioner of corrections under this section may not be 
 39.25  released from incarceration except as provided in sections 
 39.26  244.05, subdivision 8; 244.0514, subdivision 4; and 244.0515.  
 39.27     Subd. 3.  [CONDITIONAL RELEASE.] A person who is released 
 39.28  from a state correctional facility after receiving a sentence 
 39.29  under this section shall be subject to conditional release for 
 39.30  the remainder of the person's life.  The terms and procedures 
 39.31  related to conditional release are governed by sections 244.05, 
 39.32  244.0514, and 609.3459.  
 39.33     [EFFECTIVE DATE.] This section is effective August 1, 2004, 
 39.34  and applies to crimes committed on or after that date. 
 39.35     Sec. 23.  [609.3457] [MANDATORY MINIMUM SENTENCES FOR 
 39.36  CERTAIN DANGEROUS, PATTERNED SEX OFFENDERS; NO PREVIOUS 
 40.1   CONVICTION REQUIRED.] 
 40.2      Subdivision 1.  [MANDATORY INCREASED SENTENCE.] (a) A court 
 40.3   shall commit a person to the commissioner of corrections for a 
 40.4   period of time that is not less than double the presumptive 
 40.5   sentence under the Sentencing Guidelines and not more than the 
 40.6   statutory maximum, or if the statutory maximum is less than 
 40.7   double the presumptive sentence, for a period of time that is 
 40.8   equal to the statutory maximum, if: 
 40.9      (1) the court is imposing an executed sentence on a person 
 40.10  convicted of committing or attempting to commit a violation of 
 40.11  section 609.342, 609.343, 609.344, 609.345, or 609.3453; 
 40.12     (2) the court finds that the offender is a danger to public 
 40.13  safety; and 
 40.14     (3) the court finds that the offender needs long-term 
 40.15  treatment or supervision beyond the presumptive term of 
 40.16  imprisonment and supervised release.  The finding must be based 
 40.17  on a professional assessment by an examiner experienced in 
 40.18  evaluating sex offenders that concludes that the offender is a 
 40.19  patterned sex offender.  The assessment must contain the facts 
 40.20  upon which the conclusion is based, with reference to the 
 40.21  offense history of the offender or the severity of the current 
 40.22  offense, the social history of the offender, and the results of 
 40.23  an examination of the offender's mental status unless the 
 40.24  offender refuses to be examined.  The conclusion may not be 
 40.25  based on testing alone.  A patterned sex offender is one whose 
 40.26  criminal sexual behavior is so engrained that the risk of 
 40.27  reoffending is great without intensive psychotherapeutic 
 40.28  intervention or other long-term controls. 
 40.29     (b) The court shall consider imposing a sentence under this 
 40.30  section whenever a person is convicted of violating section 
 40.31  609.342 or 609.343. 
 40.32     (c) If the court sentences a person under this subdivision 
 40.33  and the person is subject to indeterminate sentencing under 
 40.34  section 609.3455, the minimum term of imprisonment shall be 
 40.35  two-thirds of the minimum sentence specified in this 
 40.36  subdivision, plus disciplinary time, unless a longer minimum 
 41.1   term of imprisonment is otherwise required for the offense.  The 
 41.2   maximum term of imprisonment shall be as provided in section 
 41.3   609.3455. 
 41.4      Subd. 2.  [DANGER TO PUBLIC SAFETY.] The court shall base 
 41.5   its finding that the offender is a danger to public safety on 
 41.6   any of the following factors: 
 41.7      (1) the crime involved an aggravating factor that would 
 41.8   justify a durational departure from the presumptive sentence 
 41.9   under the Sentencing Guidelines; or 
 41.10     (2) the offender previously committed or attempted to 
 41.11  commit a predatory crime or a violation of section 609.224 or 
 41.12  609.2242, including: 
 41.13     (i) an offense committed as a juvenile that would have been 
 41.14  a predatory crime or a violation of section 609.224 or 609.2242 
 41.15  if committed by an adult; or 
 41.16     (ii) a violation or attempted violation of a similar law of 
 41.17  any other state or the United States; or 
 41.18     (3) the offender planned for or prepared for the crime 
 41.19  prior to its commission. 
 41.20     Subd. 3.  [DEPARTURE FROM GUIDELINES.] A sentence imposed 
 41.21  under subdivision 1 is a departure from the Sentencing 
 41.22  Guidelines. 
 41.23     [EFFECTIVE DATE.] This section is effective August 1, 2004, 
 41.24  and applies to crimes committed on or after that date. 
 41.25     Sec. 24.  [609.3458] [MANDATORY MINIMUM SENTENCES FOR 
 41.26  REPEAT OR AGGRAVATED SEX OFFENSES.] 
 41.27     Subdivision 1.  [DEFINITION; CONVICTION OF OFFENSE.] For 
 41.28  purposes of this section, "offense" means a completed offense or 
 41.29  an attempt to commit an offense. 
 41.30     Subd. 2.  [PRESUMPTIVE EXECUTED SENTENCE.] (a) Except as 
 41.31  provided in subdivision 3, if a person is convicted under 
 41.32  section 609.343, 609.344, or 609.345 and has a previous sex 
 41.33  offense conviction, the court shall commit the defendant to the 
 41.34  commissioner of corrections for a minimum sentence of not less 
 41.35  than three years.  Except as provided in subdivision 3, if a 
 41.36  person is convicted under section 609.343, 609.344, or 609.345 
 42.1   within five years of discharge from sentence for a previous sex 
 42.2   offense conviction, the court shall commit the defendant to the 
 42.3   commissioner of corrections for a minimum sentence of not less 
 42.4   than five years.  The court may stay the execution of the 
 42.5   sentence imposed under this subdivision only if: 
 42.6      (1) the offense is not governed by an indeterminate 
 42.7   sentence under section 609.3455; and 
 42.8      (2) it finds that a professional assessment indicates the 
 42.9   offender is accepted by and can respond to treatment at a 
 42.10  long-term inpatient program exclusively treating sex offenders 
 42.11  and approved by the commissioner of corrections.  If the court 
 42.12  stays the execution of a sentence, it shall include the 
 42.13  following as conditions of probation: 
 42.14     (i) incarceration in a local jail or workhouse; and 
 42.15     (ii) a requirement that the offender successfully complete 
 42.16  the treatment program and aftercare as directed by the court. 
 42.17     (b) If the court sentences a person under this subdivision 
 42.18  and the person is subject to indeterminate sentencing under 
 42.19  section 609.3455, the minimum term of imprisonment shall be 
 42.20  two-thirds of the minimum sentence specified in this 
 42.21  subdivision, plus disciplinary time, unless a longer minimum 
 42.22  term of imprisonment is otherwise required for the offense.  The 
 42.23  maximum term of imprisonment is life.  
 42.24     Subd. 3.  [MANDATORY LIFE SENTENCE.] (a) The court shall 
 42.25  sentence a person to imprisonment for life if: 
 42.26     (1) the person is convicted under section 609.342; and 
 42.27     (2) the court determines on the record at the time of 
 42.28  sentencing that any of the following circumstances exists: 
 42.29     (i) the person has previously been sentenced under section 
 42.30  609.1095; 
 42.31     (ii) the person has one previous sex offense conviction for 
 42.32  a violation of section 609.342, 609.343, or 609.344 that 
 42.33  occurred before August 1, 1989, for which the person was 
 42.34  sentenced to prison in an upward durational departure from the 
 42.35  Sentencing Guidelines that resulted in a sentence at least twice 
 42.36  as long as the presumptive sentence; or 
 43.1      (iii) the person has two previous sex offense convictions 
 43.2   under section 609.342, 609.343, or 609.344. 
 43.3      (b) Notwithstanding subdivision 2 and section 609.342, 
 43.4   subdivision 3, the court may not stay imposition of the sentence 
 43.5   required by this subdivision. 
 43.6      Subd. 4.  [MANDATORY MINIMUM 30-YEAR SENTENCE.] (a) The 
 43.7   court shall commit a person to the commissioner of corrections 
 43.8   for a minimum sentence of not less than 30 years if: 
 43.9      (1) the person is convicted under section 609.342, 
 43.10  subdivision 1, clause (c), (d), (e), or (f), or 609.343, 
 43.11  subdivision 1, clause (c), (d), (e), or (f); and 
 43.12     (2) the court determines on the record at the time of 
 43.13  sentencing that: 
 43.14     (i) the crime involved an aggravating factor that would 
 43.15  provide grounds for an upward departure under the Sentencing 
 43.16  Guidelines other than the aggravating factor applicable to 
 43.17  repeat criminal sexual conduct convictions; and 
 43.18     (ii) the person has a previous sex offense conviction under 
 43.19  section 609.342, 609.343, or 609.344. 
 43.20     (b) Notwithstanding subdivision 2 and sections 609.342, 
 43.21  subdivision 3, or 609.343, subdivision 3, the court may not stay 
 43.22  imposition or execution of the sentence required by this 
 43.23  subdivision. 
 43.24     (c) If the court sentences a person under this subdivision 
 43.25  and the person is subject to indeterminate sentencing under 
 43.26  section 609.3455, the minimum term of imprisonment shall be 
 43.27  two-thirds of the minimum sentence specified in this 
 43.28  subdivision, plus disciplinary time, unless a longer minimum 
 43.29  term of imprisonment is otherwise required for the offense.  The 
 43.30  maximum term of imprisonment is life.  
 43.31     Subd. 5.  [PREVIOUS SEX OFFENSE CONVICTIONS.] For the 
 43.32  purposes of this section, a conviction is considered a previous 
 43.33  sex offense conviction if the person was convicted of a sex 
 43.34  offense before the commission of the present offense of 
 43.35  conviction.  A person has two previous sex offense convictions 
 43.36  only if the person was convicted and sentenced for a sex offense 
 44.1   committed after the person was earlier convicted and sentenced 
 44.2   for a sex offense, and both convictions preceded the commission 
 44.3   of the present offense of conviction.  A "sex offense" is a 
 44.4   violation of sections 609.342 to 609.345 or any similar statute 
 44.5   of the United States, this state, or any other state. 
 44.6      Subd. 6.  [MANDATORY MINIMUM DEPARTURE FOR SEX OFFENDERS.] 
 44.7   (a) The court shall sentence a person to at least twice the 
 44.8   presumptive sentence recommended by the Sentencing Guidelines if:
 44.9      (1) the person is convicted under section 609.342, 
 44.10  subdivision 1, clause (c), (d), (e), or (f), 609.343, 
 44.11  subdivision 1, clause (c), (d), (e), or (f); or 609.344, 
 44.12  subdivision 1, clause (c) or (d); and 
 44.13     (2) the court determines on the record at the time of 
 44.14  sentencing that the crime involved an aggravating factor that 
 44.15  would provide grounds for an upward departure under the 
 44.16  Sentencing Guidelines. 
 44.17     (b) If the court sentences a person under this subdivision 
 44.18  and the person is subject to indeterminate sentencing under 
 44.19  section 609.3455, the minimum term of imprisonment shall be 
 44.20  two-thirds of the minimum sentence specified in this 
 44.21  subdivision, plus disciplinary time, unless a longer minimum 
 44.22  term of imprisonment is otherwise required for the offense.  The 
 44.23  maximum term of imprisonment is life.  
 44.24     [EFFECTIVE DATE.] This section is effective August 1, 2004, 
 44.25  and applies to crimes committed on or after that date. 
 44.26     Sec. 25.  [609.3459] [CONDITIONAL RELEASE FOR SEX 
 44.27  OFFENDERS.] 
 44.28     Subdivision 1.  [APPLICABILITY.] This section applies to a 
 44.29  person who commits a sex offense. 
 44.30     Subd. 2.  [LENGTH OF CONDITIONAL RELEASE SENTENCE.] (a) 
 44.31  Notwithstanding the statutory maximum sentence otherwise 
 44.32  applicable to the offense or any provision of the Sentencing 
 44.33  Guidelines, when a court sentences a person to the custody of 
 44.34  the commissioner of corrections for a violation or attempted 
 44.35  violation of section 609.342, 609.343, 609.344, 609.345, or 
 44.36  609.3453, the court shall provide that, upon the person's 
 45.1   release from a state correctional facility, the commissioner of 
 45.2   corrections shall place the person on conditional release. 
 45.3      (b) If the person was convicted for a violation or 
 45.4   attempted violation of section 609.343, 609.344, or 609.345 and 
 45.5   was not sentenced under section 609.3455, the person shall be 
 45.6   placed on conditional release for five years, minus the time the 
 45.7   person served on supervised release. 
 45.8      (c) If the person was convicted for a violation or 
 45.9   attempted violation of section 609.343, 609.344, or 609.345 
 45.10  after a previous sex offense conviction as defined in section 
 45.11  609.3458, subdivision 5, or was sentenced to a mandatory 
 45.12  departure under section 609.3458, subdivision 6, the person 
 45.13  shall be placed on conditional release for ten years, minus the 
 45.14  time the person served on supervised release, unless the person 
 45.15  was sentenced under section 609.3455. 
 45.16     (d) If the person was convicted for a sex offense and 
 45.17  sentenced under section 609.3455, the person shall be subject to 
 45.18  an indeterminate sentence and, if released from a correctional 
 45.19  facility under sections 244.0514 and 244.0515, the person shall 
 45.20  be placed on conditional release for the remainder of the 
 45.21  person's life. 
 45.22     Subd. 3.  [TERMS OF CONDITIONAL RELEASE.] (a) The 
 45.23  conditions of release may include successful completion of 
 45.24  treatment and aftercare in a program approved by the 
 45.25  commissioner, satisfaction of the release conditions specified 
 45.26  in section 244.05, subdivision 6, and any other conditions the 
 45.27  commissioner considers appropriate.  Before the offender is 
 45.28  released, the commissioner shall notify the sentencing court, 
 45.29  the prosecutor in the jurisdiction where the offender was 
 45.30  sentenced, and the victim of the offender's crime, whenever 
 45.31  possible, of the terms of the offender's conditional release.  
 45.32  If the offender fails to meet any condition of release, the 
 45.33  commissioner may revoke the offender's conditional release and 
 45.34  order that the offender serve the remaining portion of the 
 45.35  conditional release term in prison.  For offenders subject to a 
 45.36  five- or ten-year conditional release period, the commissioner 
 46.1   shall not dismiss the offender from supervision before the 
 46.2   conditional release term expires.  For offenders subject to 
 46.3   conditional release for life, the commissioner shall not dismiss 
 46.4   the offender from supervision.  
 46.5      (b) Conditional release under this section is governed by 
 46.6   provisions relating to supervised release, except as otherwise 
 46.7   provided in this section or section 244.04, subdivision 1, or 
 46.8   244.05.  Conditional release under this section also is governed 
 46.9   by section 244.0514.  
 46.10     (c) The commissioner shall pay the cost of treatment of a 
 46.11  person released under this subdivision.  This section does not 
 46.12  require the commissioner to accept or retain an offender in a 
 46.13  treatment program. 
 46.14     [EFFECTIVE DATE.] This section is effective August 1, 2004, 
 46.15  and applies to crimes committed on or after that date. 
 46.16     Sec. 26.  [INSTRUCTION TO SENTENCING GUIDELINES 
 46.17  COMMISSION.] 
 46.18     The Minnesota Sentencing Guidelines Commission is directed 
 46.19  to review the new and increased penalties for various crimes in 
 46.20  this act to ensure the presumptive sentences under the 
 46.21  Sentencing Guidelines reflect the legislature's assessment of 
 46.22  the severity of these crimes.  In those situations where the 
 46.23  Sentencing Guidelines do not reflect the legislature's 
 46.24  assessment of the severity of these crimes, the commission shall 
 46.25  increase the level at which various crimes are ranked and set 
 46.26  new presumptive sentences for these crimes, if necessary. 
 46.27     [EFFECTIVE DATE.] This section is effective August 1, 2004. 
 46.28     Sec. 27.  [REPEALER.] 
 46.29     Minnesota Statutes 2002, sections 609.108 and 609.109 are 
 46.30  repealed.  The revisor shall include a note accompanying the 
 46.31  repeal to inform the reader that these statutes have been 
 46.32  amended and recodified, from sections 609.108 and 609.109 to 
 46.33  sections 609.3457 and 609.3458, respectively. 
 46.34     [EFFECTIVE DATE.] This section is effective August 1, 2004. 
 46.35                             ARTICLE 3
 46.36                MINNESOTA SEX OFFENDER REVIEW BOARD
 47.1      Section 1.  Minnesota Statutes 2002, section 13.851, is 
 47.2   amended by adding a subdivision to read: 
 47.3      Subd. 9.  [PREDATORY OFFENDERS; MINNESOTA SEX OFFENDER 
 47.4   REVIEW BOARD.] Certain data classified under this chapter are 
 47.5   made accessible to the Minnesota Sex Offender Review Board under 
 47.6   section 244.0515. 
 47.7      [EFFECTIVE DATE.] This section is effective August 1, 2004. 
 47.8      Sec. 2.  Minnesota Statutes 2002, section 13D.01, 
 47.9   subdivision 2, is amended to read: 
 47.10     Subd. 2.  [EXCEPTIONS.] This chapter does not apply: 
 47.11     (1) to meetings of the commissioner of corrections; 
 47.12     (2) to meetings of the Minnesota Sex Offender Review Board 
 47.13  under section 244.0515; 
 47.14     (3) to a state agency, board, or commission when it is 
 47.15  exercising quasi-judicial functions involving disciplinary 
 47.16  proceedings; or 
 47.17     (3) (4) as otherwise expressly provided by statute. 
 47.18     [EFFECTIVE DATE.] This section is effective August 1, 2004. 
 47.19     Sec. 3.  [244.0515] [MINNESOTA SEX OFFENDER REVIEW BOARD.] 
 47.20     Subdivision 1.  [DEFINITIONS.] For the purpose of this 
 47.21  section, the following terms have the meanings given them. 
 47.22     (a) "Board" means the Minnesota Sex Offender Review Board 
 47.23  established under subdivision 2. 
 47.24     (b) "End-of-confinement review committee" means the 
 47.25  committee described in section 244.052, subdivision 3. 
 47.26     (c) "Victim" means an individual who suffered harm as a 
 47.27  result of the inmate's crime or, if the individual is deceased, 
 47.28  the deceased's surviving spouse or next of kin.  
 47.29     Subd. 2.  [BOARD; ESTABLISHMENT.] The Minnesota Sex 
 47.30  Offender Review Board is established which shall be comprised of 
 47.31  five members.  The board shall be governed by section 15.0575, 
 47.32  except as otherwise provided by this section.  
 47.33     Subd. 3.  [MEMBERS.] The Minnesota Sex Offender Review 
 47.34  Board shall consist of the following:  
 47.35     (1) the commissioner of corrections or a designee appointed 
 47.36  by the commissioner; 
 48.1      (2) the commissioner of human services or a designee 
 48.2   appointed by the commissioner; 
 48.3      (3) a retired judge appointed by the governor; 
 48.4      (4) a treatment professional, not employed by the 
 48.5   Department of Corrections or the Department of Human Services, 
 48.6   trained in the assessment of sex offenders and appointed by the 
 48.7   governor; and 
 48.8      (5) one public member appointed by the governor.  
 48.9      When an appointing authority selects individuals for 
 48.10  membership on the board, the authority shall make reasonable 
 48.11  efforts to appoint qualified members of protected groups, as 
 48.12  defined in section 43A.02, subdivision 33.  
 48.13     One of the members shall be designated by the governor as 
 48.14  chair of the board.  
 48.15     Subd. 4.  [APPOINTMENT TERMS.] Each appointed member shall 
 48.16  be appointed for four years and shall continue to serve during 
 48.17  that time as long as the member occupies the position that made 
 48.18  the member eligible for the appointment.  Each member shall 
 48.19  continue in office until a successor is duly appointed.  Members 
 48.20  shall be eligible for reappointment and the appointment may be 
 48.21  made to fill an unexpired term.  The members of the board shall 
 48.22  elect any additional officers necessary for the efficient 
 48.23  discharge of their duties. 
 48.24     Subd. 5.  [RESPONSIBILITIES.] (a) The board shall hold a 
 48.25  hearing and consider whether an inmate shall be granted 
 48.26  conditional release at least 90 days before the offender is 
 48.27  first eligible for release and whenever an inmate petitions for 
 48.28  release from imprisonment under subdivision 6.  When determining 
 48.29  whether to grant conditional release to an inmate serving a life 
 48.30  sentence under section 609.3455, the board shall consider: 
 48.31     (1) the risk assessment report prepared under section 
 48.32  244.052 and any and all information the end-of-confinement 
 48.33  review committee reviewed in making its risk assessment; 
 48.34     (2) the community investigation report prepared under 
 48.35  section 244.05, subdivision 5, and any and all information 
 48.36  gathered for use in compiling that report; 
 49.1      (3) the inmate's criminal offense history; 
 49.2      (4) the inmate's behavior while incarcerated; 
 49.3      (5) the inmate's participation in, and completion of, 
 49.4   appropriate treatment; 
 49.5      (6) the inmate's need for additional treatment, training, 
 49.6   or supervision; 
 49.7      (7) the danger the inmate poses to the public if released; 
 49.8   and 
 49.9      (8) any other information the board deems relevant.  
 49.10     (b) The board shall have access to the following data on an 
 49.11  inmate only for purposes of making the conditional release 
 49.12  decision: 
 49.13     (1) private medical data under section 13.384 or 144.335, 
 49.14  or welfare data under section 13.46 that relate to medical 
 49.15  treatment of the inmate; 
 49.16     (2) private and confidential court services data under 
 49.17  section 13.84; 
 49.18     (3) private and confidential corrections data under section 
 49.19  13.85; 
 49.20     (4) private criminal history data under section 13.87; 
 49.21     (5) the community investigation report prepared under 
 49.22  section 244.05, subdivision 5, and any information gathered for 
 49.23  use in compiling the report; and 
 49.24     (6) the risk assessment report prepared under section 
 49.25  244.052, subdivision 5, and any information used to make the 
 49.26  risk assessment. 
 49.27     Data collected and maintained by the board under this 
 49.28  paragraph may not be disclosed outside the board, except as 
 49.29  provided under section 13.05, subdivision 3 or 4.  The inmate 
 49.30  has access to data on the inmate collected and maintained by the 
 49.31  board, unless the data are confidential data received under this 
 49.32  paragraph. 
 49.33     (c) The board must make a decision regarding whether or not 
 49.34  to grant conditional release within 14 days of the hearing.  If 
 49.35  the board decides not to grant conditional release to an inmate, 
 49.36  the board must specify in writing the reasons for its decision. 
 50.1   The board may identify in writing conditions the offender must 
 50.2   meet in order to file a petition with the board for release.  
 50.3   The board also may inform the inmate in writing that the inmate 
 50.4   may petition for release earlier than the time designated in 
 50.5   subdivision 6. 
 50.6      (d) If the board grants conditional release to the inmate 
 50.7   at the inmate's first hearing before the board, the commissioner 
 50.8   of corrections must release the individual at the time the 
 50.9   inmate is first eligible for release.  If the board subsequently 
 50.10  grants conditional release to the inmate, the commissioner of 
 50.11  corrections must release the individual 90 days from the date of 
 50.12  the board's decision.  If the inmate's scheduled release date 
 50.13  falls on a Friday, Saturday, Sunday, or holiday, the inmate's 
 50.14  conditional release term shall begin as specified in section 
 50.15  244.05, subdivision 1a. 
 50.16     Subd. 6.  [PETITION FOR RELEASE.] (a) An inmate who has 
 50.17  served the minimum term of imprisonment is eligible to petition 
 50.18  the board for release. 
 50.19     (b) Except as provided in paragraph (c), the inmate may not 
 50.20  petition the board for release until 24 months have passed since 
 50.21  the board last issued a written decision denying release to the 
 50.22  inmate, or until the inmate satisfies all conditions set by the 
 50.23  board when it previously denied release, whichever is later.  
 50.24     (c) An inmate may petition the board at an earlier time 
 50.25  than allowed under paragraph (b) if the board authorizes an 
 50.26  earlier petition under subdivision 5. 
 50.27     Subd. 7.  [RELEASE HEARING.] (a) Within 45 days of the time 
 50.28  the board first considers an inmate's eligibility for release, 
 50.29  or within 45 days of the time the inmate files a petition for 
 50.30  release, the commissioner of corrections shall give written 
 50.31  notice of the time and place of the hearing before the board to 
 50.32  all interested parties, including the petitioner, the sentencing 
 50.33  court, the county attorney's office involved in prosecuting the 
 50.34  case, and the victim. 
 50.35     (b) The victim has a right to submit an oral or written 
 50.36  statement to the board at the hearing.  The statement may 
 51.1   summarize the harm suffered by the victim as a result of the 
 51.2   crime and give the victim's recommendation on whether the inmate 
 51.3   should be given conditional release.  The board must consider 
 51.4   the victim's statement when making the conditional release 
 51.5   decision. 
 51.6      (c) The hearing must be held on the record.  Upon approval 
 51.7   of the board, the petitioner may subpoena witnesses to appear at 
 51.8   the hearing. 
 51.9      Subd. 8.  [ADMINISTRATIVE SERVICES.] The commissioner of 
 51.10  corrections shall provide adequate office space and 
 51.11  administrative services for the board.  The board may utilize 
 51.12  the services, equipment, personnel, information, and resources 
 51.13  of other state agencies with their consent.  The board may 
 51.14  accept voluntary and uncompensated services; contract with 
 51.15  individuals and public and private agencies; and request 
 51.16  information, reports, and data from any agency of the state, or 
 51.17  any of its political subdivisions, to the extent authorized by 
 51.18  law.  
 51.19     Subd. 9.  [ADMINISTRATOR.] The board may select and employ 
 51.20  an administrator who shall perform the duties the board directs, 
 51.21  including the hiring of any clerical help and other employees as 
 51.22  the board may approve.  The administrator and other staff shall 
 51.23  be in the unclassified service of the state and their 
 51.24  compensation shall be established pursuant to chapter 43A.  They 
 51.25  shall be reimbursed for the expenses necessarily incurred in the 
 51.26  performance of their official duties in the same manner as other 
 51.27  state employees. 
 51.28     Subd. 10.  [EXEMPTION FROM CHAPTER 14.] (a) For the 
 51.29  purposes of this section and except as provided in paragraph 
 51.30  (b), the Minnesota Sex Offender Review Board and the 
 51.31  commissioner of corrections are not subject to chapter 14. 
 51.32     (b) The Minnesota Sex Offender Review Board and the 
 51.33  commissioner of corrections may adopt rules under sections 
 51.34  14.389, 244.0514, and 609.3459 when proceeding under this 
 51.35  section. 
 51.36     [EFFECTIVE DATE.] This section is effective August 1, 2004. 
 52.1      Sec. 4.  [DIRECTION TO COMMISSIONER OF CORRECTIONS.] 
 52.2      (a) The commissioner of corrections shall establish 
 52.3   criteria and procedures for the Minnesota Sex Offender Review 
 52.4   Board, established under Minnesota Statutes, section 244.0515, 
 52.5   to use in making release decisions on offenders sentenced under 
 52.6   Minnesota Statutes, section 609.3455.  In establishing criteria 
 52.7   and procedures, the commissioner of corrections shall seek the 
 52.8   input of the end-of-confinement review committee at each state 
 52.9   correctional facility and at each state treatment facility where 
 52.10  predatory offenders are confined.  The commissioner also shall 
 52.11  seek input from individuals knowledgeable in health and human 
 52.12  services; public safety; Minnesota's sex offender treatment 
 52.13  program; treatment of sex offenders; crime victim issues; 
 52.14  criminal law; sentencing guidelines; law enforcement; and 
 52.15  probation, supervised release, and conditional release.  
 52.16     (b) The commissioner of corrections shall establish 
 52.17  criteria and procedures to govern the review and release of sex 
 52.18  offenders subject to indeterminate sentences by November 15, 
 52.19  2004.  These criteria and procedures will become effective on 
 52.20  June 1, 2005, unless the legislature takes action before that 
 52.21  time to modify or reject the criteria and procedures. 
 52.22     (c) By November 15, 2004, the commissioner of corrections 
 52.23  shall provide the legislature with a written report containing 
 52.24  the criteria and procedures the commissioner proposes the 
 52.25  Minnesota Sex Offender Review Board use in deciding whether to 
 52.26  release a sex offender subject to an indeterminate sentence.  
 52.27  This report also shall include a summary of the input gathered 
 52.28  under paragraph (a).  
 52.29     [EFFECTIVE DATE.] This section is effective the day 
 52.30  following final enactment. 
 52.31                             ARTICLE 4
 52.32                PREDATORY OFFENDER REGISTRATION AND
 52.33                 COMMUNITY NOTIFICATION PROVISIONS
 52.34     Section 1.  Minnesota Statutes 2002, section 243.166, as 
 52.35  amended by Laws 2003, chapter 116, section 2, and Laws 2003, 
 52.36  First Special Session chapter 2, article 8, sections 4 and 5, is 
 53.1   amended to read: 
 53.2      243.166 [REGISTRATION OF PREDATORY OFFENDERS.] 
 53.3      Subdivision 1.  [REGISTRATION REQUIRED.] (a) A person shall 
 53.4   register under this section if:  
 53.5      (1) the person was charged with or petitioned for a felony 
 53.6   violation of or attempt to violate any of the following, and 
 53.7   convicted of or adjudicated delinquent for that offense or 
 53.8   another offense arising out of the same set of circumstances: 
 53.9      (i) murder under section 609.185, clause (2); or 
 53.10     (ii) kidnapping under section 609.25; or 
 53.11     (iii) criminal sexual conduct under section 609.342; 
 53.12  609.343; 609.344; 609.345; or 609.3451, subdivision 3; or 
 53.13     (iv) indecent exposure under section 617.23, subdivision 3; 
 53.14  or 
 53.15     (2) the person was charged with or petitioned for falsely 
 53.16  imprisoning a minor in violation of section 609.255, subdivision 
 53.17  2; soliciting a minor to engage in prostitution in violation of 
 53.18  section 609.322 or 609.324; soliciting a minor to engage in 
 53.19  sexual conduct in violation of section 609.352; using a minor in 
 53.20  a sexual performance in violation of section 617.246; or 
 53.21  possessing pornographic work involving a minor in violation of 
 53.22  section 617.247, and convicted of or adjudicated delinquent for 
 53.23  that offense or another offense arising out of the same set of 
 53.24  circumstances; or 
 53.25     (3) the person was convicted of a predatory crime as 
 53.26  defined in section 609.108, and the offender was sentenced as a 
 53.27  patterned sex offender or the court found on its own motion or 
 53.28  that of the prosecutor that the crime was part of a predatory 
 53.29  pattern of behavior that had criminal sexual conduct as its 
 53.30  goal; or 
 53.31     (4) the person was convicted of or adjudicated delinquent 
 53.32  for, including pursuant to a court martial, violating a law of 
 53.33  the United States, including the Uniform Code of Military 
 53.34  Justice, similar to the offenses described in clause (1), (2), 
 53.35  or (3). 
 53.36     (b) A person also shall register under this section if: 
 54.1      (1) the person was convicted of or adjudicated delinquent 
 54.2   in another state for an offense that would be a violation of a 
 54.3   law described in paragraph (a) if committed in this state; 
 54.4      (2) the person enters the state to reside, or to work or 
 54.5   attend school; and 
 54.6      (3) ten years have not elapsed since the person was 
 54.7   released from confinement or, if the person was not confined, 
 54.8   since the person was convicted of or adjudicated delinquent for 
 54.9   the offense that triggers registration, unless the person is 
 54.10  subject to lifetime registration, in which case the person must 
 54.11  register for life regardless of when the person was released 
 54.12  from confinement, convicted, or adjudicated delinquent. 
 54.13  For purposes of this paragraph: 
 54.14     (i) "school" includes any public or private educational 
 54.15  institution, including any secondary school, trade or 
 54.16  professional institution, or institution of higher education, 
 54.17  that the person is enrolled in on a full-time or part-time 
 54.18  basis; and 
 54.19     (ii) "work" includes employment that is full time or part 
 54.20  time for a period of time exceeding 14 days or for an aggregate 
 54.21  period of time exceeding 30 days during any calendar year, 
 54.22  whether financially compensated, volunteered, or for the purpose 
 54.23  of government or educational benefit. 
 54.24     (c) A person also shall register under this section if the 
 54.25  person was committed pursuant to a court commitment order under 
 54.26  section 253B.185 or Minnesota Statutes 1992, section 526.10, or 
 54.27  a similar law of another state or the United States, regardless 
 54.28  of whether the person was convicted of any offense. 
 54.29     (d) A person also shall register under this section if: 
 54.30     (1) the person was charged with or petitioned for a felony 
 54.31  violation or attempt to violate any of the offenses listed in 
 54.32  paragraph (a), clause (1), or a similar law of another state or 
 54.33  the United States, or the person was charged with or petitioned 
 54.34  for a violation of any of the offenses listed in paragraph (a), 
 54.35  clause (2), or a similar law of another state or the United 
 54.36  States; 
 55.1      (2) the person was found not guilty by reason of mental 
 55.2   illness or mental deficiency after a trial for that offense, or 
 55.3   found guilty but mentally ill after a trial for that offense, in 
 55.4   states with a guilty but mentally ill verdict; and 
 55.5      (3) the person was committed pursuant to a court commitment 
 55.6   order under section 253B.18 or a similar law of another state or 
 55.7   the United States. 
 55.8      Subd. 1a.  [DEFINITIONS.] (a) As used in this section, 
 55.9   unless the context clearly indicates otherwise, the following 
 55.10  terms have the meanings given them. 
 55.11     (b) "Bureau" means the Bureau of Criminal Apprehension.  
 55.12     (c) "Dwelling" means the building where the person lives 
 55.13  under a formal or informal agreement to do so.  
 55.14     (d) "Incarceration" and "confinement" do not include 
 55.15  electronic home monitoring.  
 55.16     (e) "Law enforcement authority" or "authority" means, with 
 55.17  respect to a home rule charter or statutory city, the chief of 
 55.18  police, and with respect to an unincorporated area, the county 
 55.19  sheriff. 
 55.20     (f) "Motor vehicle" has the meaning given in section 
 55.21  169.01, subdivision 2. 
 55.22     (g) "Primary address" means the mailing address of the 
 55.23  person's dwelling.  If the mailing address is different from the 
 55.24  actual location of the dwelling, "primary address" also includes 
 55.25  the physical location of the dwelling described with as much 
 55.26  specificity as possible. 
 55.27     (h) "School" includes any public or private educational 
 55.28  institution, including any secondary school, trade, or 
 55.29  professional institution, or institution of higher education, 
 55.30  that the person is enrolled in on a full-time or part-time basis.
 55.31     (i) "Secondary address" means the mailing address of any 
 55.32  place where the person regularly or occasionally stays overnight 
 55.33  when not staying at the person's primary address.  If the 
 55.34  mailing address is different from the actual location of the 
 55.35  place, secondary address also includes the physical location of 
 55.36  the place described with as much specificity as possible. 
 56.1      (j) "Treatment facility" means a residential facility, as 
 56.2   defined in section 244.052, subdivision 1, and residential 
 56.3   chemical dependency treatment programs and halfway houses 
 56.4   licensed under chapter 245A, including, but not limited to, 
 56.5   those facilities directly or indirectly assisted by any 
 56.6   department or agency of the United States. 
 56.7      (k) "Work" includes employment that is full time or part 
 56.8   time for a period of time exceeding 14 days or for an aggregate 
 56.9   period of time exceeding 30 days during any calendar year, 
 56.10  whether financially compensated, volunteered, or for the purpose 
 56.11  of government or educational benefit. 
 56.12     Subd. 1b.  [REGISTRATION REQUIRED.] (a) A person shall 
 56.13  register under this section if: 
 56.14     (1) the person was charged with or petitioned for a felony 
 56.15  violation of or attempt to violate, or aiding, abetting, or 
 56.16  conspiracy to commit, any of the following, and convicted of or 
 56.17  adjudicated delinquent for that offense or another offense 
 56.18  arising out of the same set of circumstances: 
 56.19     (i) murder under section 609.185, clause (2); 
 56.20     (ii) kidnapping under section 609.25; 
 56.21     (iii) criminal sexual conduct under section 609.342; 
 56.22  609.343; 609.344; 609.345; or 609.3451, subdivision 3; or 
 56.23     (iv) indecent exposure under section 617.23, subdivision 3; 
 56.24     (2) the person was charged with or petitioned for false 
 56.25  imprisonment in violation of section 609.255, subdivision 2; 
 56.26  soliciting a minor to engage in prostitution in violation of 
 56.27  section 609.322 or 609.324; soliciting a minor to engage in 
 56.28  sexual conduct in violation of section 609.352; using a minor in 
 56.29  a sexual performance in violation of section 617.246; or 
 56.30  possessing pornographic work involving a minor in violation of 
 56.31  section 617.247, and convicted of or adjudicated delinquent for 
 56.32  that offense or another offense arising out of the same set of 
 56.33  circumstances; 
 56.34     (3) the person was sentenced as a patterned sex offender 
 56.35  under section 609.108; or 
 56.36     (4) the person was convicted of or adjudicated delinquent 
 57.1   for, including pursuant to a court martial, violating a law of 
 57.2   the United States, including the Uniform Code of Military 
 57.3   Justice, similar to the offenses described in clause (1), (2), 
 57.4   or (3). 
 57.5      (b) A person also shall register under this section if: 
 57.6      (1) the person was convicted of or adjudicated delinquent 
 57.7   in another state for an offense that would be a violation of a 
 57.8   law described in paragraph (a) if committed in this state; 
 57.9      (2) the person enters this state to reside, work, or attend 
 57.10  school, or enters this state and remains for 14 days or longer; 
 57.11  and 
 57.12     (3) ten years have not elapsed since the person was 
 57.13  released from confinement or, if the person was not confined, 
 57.14  since the person was convicted of or adjudicated delinquent for 
 57.15  the offense that triggers registration, unless the person is 
 57.16  subject to lifetime registration, in which case the person shall 
 57.17  register for life regardless of when the person was released 
 57.18  from confinement, convicted, or adjudicated delinquent. 
 57.19     (c) A person also shall register under this section if the 
 57.20  person was committed pursuant to a court commitment order under 
 57.21  section 253B.185 or Minnesota Statutes 1992, section 526.10, or 
 57.22  a similar law of another state or the United States, regardless 
 57.23  of whether the person was convicted of any offense. 
 57.24     (d) A person also shall register under this section if: 
 57.25     (1) the person was charged with or petitioned for a felony 
 57.26  violation or attempt to violate any of the offenses listed in 
 57.27  paragraph (a), clause (1), or a similar law of another state or 
 57.28  the United States, or the person was charged with or petitioned 
 57.29  for a violation of any of the offenses listed in paragraph (a), 
 57.30  clause (2), or a similar law of another state or the United 
 57.31  States; 
 57.32     (2) the person was found not guilty by reason of mental 
 57.33  illness or mental deficiency after a trial for that offense, or 
 57.34  found guilty but mentally ill after a trial for that offense, in 
 57.35  states with a guilty but mentally ill verdict; and 
 57.36     (3) the person was committed pursuant to a court commitment 
 58.1   order under section 253B.18 or a similar law of another state or 
 58.2   the United States. 
 58.3      Subd. 2.  [NOTICE.] When a person who is required to 
 58.4   register under subdivision 1 1b, paragraph (a), is sentenced or 
 58.5   becomes subject to a juvenile court disposition order, the court 
 58.6   shall tell the person of the duty to register under this section 
 58.7   and that, if the person fails to comply with the registration 
 58.8   requirements, information about the offender may be made 
 58.9   available to the public through electronic, computerized, or 
 58.10  other accessible means.  The court may not modify the person's 
 58.11  duty to register in the pronounced sentence or disposition 
 58.12  order.  The court shall require the person to read and sign a 
 58.13  form stating that the duty of the person to register under this 
 58.14  section has been explained.  The court shall forward the signed 
 58.15  sex offender registration form, the complaint, and sentencing 
 58.16  documents to the Bureau of Criminal Apprehension.  If a person 
 58.17  required to register under subdivision 1 1b, paragraph (a), was 
 58.18  not notified by the court of the registration requirement at the 
 58.19  time of sentencing or disposition, the assigned corrections 
 58.20  agent shall notify the person of the requirements of this 
 58.21  section.  When a person who is required to register under 
 58.22  subdivision 1 1b, paragraph (c) or (d), is released from 
 58.23  commitment, the treatment facility shall notify the person of 
 58.24  the requirements of this section.  The treatment facility shall 
 58.25  also obtain the registration information required under this 
 58.26  section and forward it to the Bureau of Criminal Apprehension. 
 58.27     Subd. 3.  [REGISTRATION PROCEDURE.] (a) Except as provided 
 58.28  in subdivision 3a, a person required to register under this 
 58.29  section shall register with the corrections agent as soon as the 
 58.30  agent is assigned to the person.  If the person does not have an 
 58.31  assigned corrections agent or is unable to locate the assigned 
 58.32  corrections agent, the person shall register with the law 
 58.33  enforcement agency authority that has jurisdiction in the area 
 58.34  of the person's residence primary address. 
 58.35     (b) Except as provided in subdivision 3a, at least five 
 58.36  days before the person starts living at a new primary address, 
 59.1   including living in another state, the person shall give written 
 59.2   notice of the new primary living address to the assigned 
 59.3   corrections agent or to the law enforcement authority with which 
 59.4   the person currently is registered.  If the person will be 
 59.5   living in a new state and that state has a registration 
 59.6   requirement, the person shall also give written notice of the 
 59.7   new address to the designated registration agency in the new 
 59.8   state.  A person required to register under this section shall 
 59.9   also give written notice to the assigned corrections agent or to 
 59.10  the law enforcement authority that has jurisdiction in the area 
 59.11  of the person's residence primary address that the person is no 
 59.12  longer living or staying at an address, immediately after the 
 59.13  person is no longer living or staying at that address.  The 
 59.14  corrections agent or law enforcement authority shall, within two 
 59.15  business days after receipt of this information, forward it to 
 59.16  the Bureau of Criminal Apprehension.  The Bureau of Criminal 
 59.17  Apprehension shall, if it has not already been done, notify the 
 59.18  law enforcement authority having primary jurisdiction in the 
 59.19  community where the person will live of the new address.  If the 
 59.20  person is leaving the state, the Bureau of Criminal Apprehension 
 59.21  shall notify the registration authority in the new state of the 
 59.22  new address.  If the person's obligation to register arose under 
 59.23  subdivision 1, paragraph (b), The person's registration 
 59.24  requirements under this section terminate when after the person 
 59.25  begins living in the new state and the bureau has confirmed the 
 59.26  address in the other state through the annual verification 
 59.27  process on at least one occasion. 
 59.28     (c) A person required to register under subdivision 1 1b, 
 59.29  paragraph (b), because the person is working or attending school 
 59.30  in Minnesota shall register with the law enforcement 
 59.31  agency authority that has jurisdiction in the area where the 
 59.32  person works or attends school.  In addition to other 
 59.33  information required by this section, the person shall provide 
 59.34  the address of the school or of the location where the person is 
 59.35  employed.  A person must shall comply with this paragraph within 
 59.36  five days of beginning employment or school.  A person's 
 60.1   obligation to register under this paragraph terminates when the 
 60.2   person is no longer working or attending school in Minnesota. 
 60.3      (d) A person required to register under this section who 
 60.4   works or attends school outside of Minnesota shall register as a 
 60.5   predatory offender in the state where the person works or 
 60.6   attends school.  The person's corrections agent, or if the 
 60.7   person does not have an assigned corrections agent, the law 
 60.8   enforcement authority that has jurisdiction in the area of the 
 60.9   person's residence primary address shall notify the person of 
 60.10  this requirement.  
 60.11     Subd. 3a.  [REGISTRATION PROCEDURE WHEN PERSON LACKS 
 60.12  PRIMARY ADDRESS.] (a) If a person leaves a primary address and 
 60.13  does not have a new primary address, the person shall register 
 60.14  with the law enforcement authority that has jurisdiction in the 
 60.15  area where the person is staying within 24 hours of the time the 
 60.16  person no longer has a primary address. 
 60.17     (b) A person who lacks a primary address shall register 
 60.18  with the law enforcement authority that has jurisdiction in the 
 60.19  area where the person is staying within 24 hours after entering 
 60.20  the jurisdiction.  Each time a person who lacks a primary 
 60.21  address moves to a new jurisdiction without acquiring a new 
 60.22  primary address, the person shall register with the law 
 60.23  enforcement authority that has jurisdiction in the area where 
 60.24  the person is staying within 24 hours after entering the 
 60.25  jurisdiction. 
 60.26     (c) Upon registering under this subdivision, the person 
 60.27  shall provide the law enforcement authority with all of the 
 60.28  information the individual is required to provide under 
 60.29  subdivision 4a.  However, instead of reporting the person's 
 60.30  primary address, the person shall describe the location of where 
 60.31  the person is staying with as much specificity as possible. 
 60.32     (d) Except as otherwise provided in paragraph (e), if a 
 60.33  person continues to lack a primary address, the person shall 
 60.34  report in person on a weekly basis to the law enforcement 
 60.35  authority with jurisdiction in the area where the person is 
 60.36  staying.  This weekly report shall occur between the hours of 
 61.1   9:00 a.m. and 5:00 p.m.  The person is not required to provide 
 61.2   the registration information required under subdivision 4a each 
 61.3   time the offender reports to an authority, but the person shall 
 61.4   inform the authority of changes to any information provided 
 61.5   under this subdivision or subdivision 4a and shall otherwise 
 61.6   comply with this subdivision. 
 61.7      (e) If the law enforcement authority determines that it is 
 61.8   impractical, due to the person's unique circumstances, to 
 61.9   require a person lacking a primary address to report weekly and 
 61.10  in person as required under paragraph (d), the authority may 
 61.11  authorize the person to follow an alternative reporting 
 61.12  procedure.  The authority shall consult with the person's 
 61.13  corrections agent, if the person has one, in establishing the 
 61.14  specific criteria of this alternative procedure, subject to the 
 61.15  following requirements:  
 61.16     (1) the authority shall document, in the person's 
 61.17  registration record, the specific reasons why the weekly 
 61.18  in-person reporting process is impractical for the person to 
 61.19  follow; 
 61.20     (2) the authority shall explain how the alternative 
 61.21  reporting procedure furthers the public safety objectives of 
 61.22  this section; 
 61.23     (3) the authority shall require the person lacking a 
 61.24  primary address to report in person at least monthly to the 
 61.25  authority or the person's corrections agent and shall specify 
 61.26  the location where the person shall report.  If the authority 
 61.27  determines it would be more practical and would further public 
 61.28  safety for the person to report to another law enforcement 
 61.29  authority with jurisdiction where the person is staying, it may, 
 61.30  after consulting with the other law enforcement authority, 
 61.31  include this requirement in the person's alternative reporting 
 61.32  process; 
 61.33     (4) the authority shall require the person to comply with 
 61.34  the weekly, in-person reporting process required under paragraph 
 61.35  (d), if the person moves to a new area where this process would 
 61.36  be practical; 
 62.1      (5) the authority shall require the person to report any 
 62.2   changes to the registration information provided under 
 62.3   subdivision 4a and to comply with the periodic registration 
 62.4   requirements specified under paragraph (f); and 
 62.5      (6) the authority shall require the person to comply with 
 62.6   the requirements of subdivision 3, paragraphs (b) and (c), if 
 62.7   the person moves to a primary address.  
 62.8      (f) If a person continues to lack a primary address and 
 62.9   continues to report to the same law enforcement authority, the 
 62.10  person shall provide the authority with all of the information 
 62.11  the individual is required to provide under this subdivision and 
 62.12  subdivision 4a at least annually, unless the person is required 
 62.13  to register under subdivision 1b, paragraph (c), following 
 62.14  commitment pursuant to a court commitment under section 253B.185 
 62.15  or a similar law of another state or the United States.  If the 
 62.16  person is required to register under subdivision 1b, paragraph 
 62.17  (c), the person shall provide the law enforcement authority with 
 62.18  all of the information the individual is required to report 
 62.19  under this subdivision and subdivision 4a at least once every 
 62.20  three months. 
 62.21     (g) A law enforcement authority receiving information under 
 62.22  this subdivision shall forward registration information and 
 62.23  changes to that information to the bureau within two business 
 62.24  days of receipt of the information. 
 62.25     (h) For purposes of this subdivision, a person who fails to 
 62.26  report a primary address will be deemed to be a person who lacks 
 62.27  a primary address, and the person shall comply with the 
 62.28  requirements for a person who lacks a primary address. 
 62.29     Subd. 4.  [CONTENTS OF REGISTRATION.] (a) The registration 
 62.30  provided to the corrections agent or law enforcement authority, 
 62.31  must consist of a statement in writing signed by the person, 
 62.32  giving information required by the Bureau of Criminal 
 62.33  Apprehension, a fingerprint card, and photograph of the person 
 62.34  taken at the time of the person's release from incarceration or, 
 62.35  if the person was not incarcerated, at the time the person 
 62.36  initially registered under this section.  The registration 
 63.1   information also must include a written consent form signed by 
 63.2   the person allowing a treatment facility or residential housing 
 63.3   unit or shelter to release information to a law enforcement 
 63.4   officer about the person's admission to, or residence in, a 
 63.5   treatment facility or residential housing unit or shelter.  
 63.6   Registration information on adults and juveniles may be 
 63.7   maintained together notwithstanding section 260B.171, 
 63.8   subdivision 3.  
 63.9      (b) For persons required to register under subdivision 1 
 63.10  1b, paragraph (c), following commitment pursuant to a court 
 63.11  commitment under section 253B.185 or a similar law of another 
 63.12  state or the United States, in addition to other information 
 63.13  required by this section, the registration provided to the 
 63.14  corrections agent or law enforcement authority must include the 
 63.15  person's offense history and documentation of treatment received 
 63.16  during the person's commitment.  This documentation shall be is 
 63.17  limited to a statement of how far the person progressed in 
 63.18  treatment during commitment. 
 63.19     (c) Within three days of receipt, the corrections agent or 
 63.20  law enforcement authority shall forward the registration 
 63.21  information to the Bureau of Criminal Apprehension.  The bureau 
 63.22  shall ascertain whether the person has registered with the law 
 63.23  enforcement authority where the person resides in the area of 
 63.24  the person's primary address, if any, or if the person lacks a 
 63.25  primary address, where the person is staying, as required by 
 63.26  subdivision 3a.  If the person has not registered with the law 
 63.27  enforcement authority, the bureau shall send one copy to that 
 63.28  authority.  
 63.29     (d) The corrections agent or law enforcement authority may 
 63.30  require that a person required to register under this section 
 63.31  appear before the agent or authority to be photographed.  The 
 63.32  agent or authority shall forward the photograph to the Bureau of 
 63.33  Criminal Apprehension. 
 63.34     (e) During the period a person is required to register 
 63.35  under this section, the following shall provisions apply: 
 63.36     (1) Except for persons registering under subdivision 3a, 
 64.1   the Bureau of Criminal Apprehension shall mail a verification 
 64.2   form to the last reported address of the person's residence last 
 64.3   reported primary address.  This verification form shall must 
 64.4   provide notice to the offender that, if the offender does not 
 64.5   return the verification form as required, information about the 
 64.6   offender may be made available to the public through electronic, 
 64.7   computerized, or other accessible means.  For persons who are 
 64.8   registered under subdivision 3a, the bureau shall mail an annual 
 64.9   verification form to the law enforcement authority where the 
 64.10  offender most recently reported.  The authority shall provide 
 64.11  the verification form to the person at the next weekly meeting 
 64.12  and ensure that the person completes and signs the form and 
 64.13  returns it to the bureau.  
 64.14     (2) The person shall mail the signed verification form back 
 64.15  to the Bureau of Criminal Apprehension within ten days after 
 64.16  receipt of the form, stating on the form the current and last 
 64.17  address of the person's residence and the other information 
 64.18  required under subdivision 4a. 
 64.19     (3) In addition to the requirements listed in this section, 
 64.20  a person who is assigned to risk level II or risk level III 
 64.21  under section 244.052, and who is no longer under correctional 
 64.22  supervision, shall have an annual in-person contact with the law 
 64.23  enforcement authority in the area of the person's primary 
 64.24  address or, if the person has no primary address, where the 
 64.25  person is staying.  During the month of the person's birth date, 
 64.26  the person shall report to the authority to verify the accuracy 
 64.27  of the registration information and to be photographed.  Within 
 64.28  three days of this contact, the authority shall enter 
 64.29  information as required by the bureau into the predatory 
 64.30  offender registration database and submit an updated photograph 
 64.31  of the person to the bureau's predatory offender registration 
 64.32  unit. 
 64.33     (4) If the person fails to mail the completed and signed 
 64.34  verification form to the Bureau of Criminal Apprehension within 
 64.35  ten days after receipt of the form, or if the person fails to 
 64.36  report to the law enforcement authority during the month of the 
 65.1   person's birth date, the person shall be is in violation of this 
 65.2   section. 
 65.3      (5) For any person who fails to mail the completed and 
 65.4   signed verification form to the bureau within ten days after 
 65.5   receipt of the form and who has been determined to be a level 
 65.6   III offender under section 244.052, the bureau shall immediately 
 65.7   investigate and notify local law enforcement authorities to 
 65.8   investigate the person's location and to ensure compliance with 
 65.9   this section.  The bureau also shall immediately give notice of 
 65.10  the person's violation of this section to the law enforcement 
 65.11  authority having jurisdiction over the person's last registered 
 65.12  address or addresses.  
 65.13  For persons required to register under subdivision 1 1b, 
 65.14  paragraph (c), following commitment pursuant to a court 
 65.15  commitment under section 253B.185 or a similar law of another 
 65.16  state or the United States, the bureau shall comply with clause 
 65.17  (1) at least four times each year.  For persons who, under 
 65.18  section 244.052, are assigned to risk level III and who are no 
 65.19  longer under correctional supervision, the bureau shall comply 
 65.20  with clause (1) at least two times each year.  For all other 
 65.21  persons required to register under this section, the bureau 
 65.22  shall comply with clause (1) each year within 30 days of the 
 65.23  anniversary date of the person's initial registration. 
 65.24     (f) When sending out a verification form, the Bureau of 
 65.25  Criminal Apprehension must shall determine whether the person to 
 65.26  whom the verification form is being sent has signed a written 
 65.27  consent form as provided for in paragraph (a).  If the person 
 65.28  has not signed such a consent form, the Bureau of Criminal 
 65.29  Apprehension must shall send a written consent form to the 
 65.30  person along with the verification form.  A person who receives 
 65.31  this written consent form must shall sign and return it to the 
 65.32  Bureau of Criminal Apprehension at the same time as the 
 65.33  verification form. 
 65.34     (g) For the purposes of this subdivision, "treatment 
 65.35  facility" means a residential facility, as defined in section 
 65.36  244.052, subdivision 1, and residential chemical dependency 
 66.1   treatment programs and halfway houses licensed under chapter 
 66.2   245A, including, but not limited to, those facilities directly 
 66.3   or indirectly assisted by any department or agency of the United 
 66.4   States. 
 66.5      Subd. 4a.  [INFORMATION REQUIRED TO BE PROVIDED.] (a) As 
 66.6   used in this section: 
 66.7      (1) "motor vehicle" has the meaning given "vehicle" in 
 66.8   section 169.01, subdivision 2; 
 66.9      (2) "primary residence" means any place where the person 
 66.10  resides longer than 14 days or that is deemed a primary 
 66.11  residence by a person's corrections agent, if one is assigned to 
 66.12  the person; and 
 66.13     (3) "secondary residence" means any place where the person 
 66.14  regularly stays overnight when not staying at the person's 
 66.15  primary residence, and includes, but is not limited to: 
 66.16     (i) the person's parent's home if the person is a student 
 66.17  and stays at the home at times when the person is not staying at 
 66.18  school, including during the summer; and 
 66.19     (ii) the home of someone with whom the person has a minor 
 66.20  child in common where the child's custody is shared.  
 66.21     (b) A person required to register under this section shall 
 66.22  provide to the corrections agent or law enforcement authority 
 66.23  the following information: 
 66.24     (1) the address of the person's primary residence address; 
 66.25     (2) the addresses of all of the person's secondary 
 66.26  residences addresses in Minnesota, including all addresses used 
 66.27  for residential or recreational purposes; 
 66.28     (3) the addresses of all Minnesota property owned, leased, 
 66.29  or rented by the person; 
 66.30     (4) the addresses of all locations where the person is 
 66.31  employed; 
 66.32     (5) the addresses of all residences schools where the 
 66.33  person resides while attending school is enrolled; and 
 66.34     (6) the year, model, make, license plate number, and color 
 66.35  of all motor vehicles owned or regularly driven by the person.  
 66.36     (c) (b) The person shall report to the agent or authority 
 67.1   the information required to be provided under paragraph (b) (a), 
 67.2   clauses (2) to (6), within five days of the date the clause 
 67.3   becomes applicable.  If because of a change in circumstances any 
 67.4   information reported under paragraph (b) (a), clauses (1) to 
 67.5   (6), no longer applies, the person shall immediately inform the 
 67.6   agent or authority that the information is no longer valid.  If 
 67.7   the person leaves a primary address and does not have a new 
 67.8   primary address, the person shall register as provided in 
 67.9   subdivision 3a. 
 67.10     Subd. 5.  [CRIMINAL PENALTY.] (a) A person required to 
 67.11  register under this section who knowingly violates any of its 
 67.12  provisions or intentionally provides false information to a 
 67.13  corrections agent, law enforcement authority, or the Bureau of 
 67.14  Criminal Apprehension is guilty of a felony and may be sentenced 
 67.15  to imprisonment for not more than five years or to payment of a 
 67.16  fine of not more than $10,000, or both. 
 67.17     (b) Except as provided in paragraph (c), a person convicted 
 67.18  of violating paragraph (a) shall be committed to the custody of 
 67.19  the commissioner of corrections for not less than a year and a 
 67.20  day, nor more than five years. 
 67.21     (c) A person convicted of violating paragraph (a), who has 
 67.22  previously been convicted of or adjudicated delinquent for 
 67.23  violating this section, shall be committed to the custody of the 
 67.24  commissioner of corrections for not less than two years, nor 
 67.25  more than five years. 
 67.26     (d) Prior to the time of sentencing, the prosecutor may 
 67.27  file a motion to have the person sentenced without regard to the 
 67.28  mandatory minimum sentence established by this subdivision.  The 
 67.29  motion shall must be accompanied by a statement on the record of 
 67.30  the reasons for it.  When presented with the motion, or on its 
 67.31  own motion, the court may sentence the person without regard to 
 67.32  the mandatory minimum sentence if the court finds substantial 
 67.33  and compelling reasons to do so.  Sentencing a person in the 
 67.34  manner described in this paragraph is a departure from the 
 67.35  Sentencing Guidelines. 
 67.36     (e) A person convicted and sentenced as required by this 
 68.1   subdivision is not eligible for probation, parole, discharge, 
 68.2   work release, conditional release, or supervised release, until 
 68.3   that person has served the full term of imprisonment as provided 
 68.4   by law, notwithstanding the provisions of sections 241.26, 
 68.5   242.19, 243.05, 244.04, 609.12, and 609.135. 
 68.6      Subd. 6.  [REGISTRATION PERIOD.] (a) Notwithstanding the 
 68.7   provisions of section 609.165, subdivision 1, and except as 
 68.8   provided in paragraphs (b), (c), and (d), a person required to 
 68.9   register under this section shall continue to comply with this 
 68.10  section until ten years have elapsed since the person initially 
 68.11  registered in connection with the offense, or until the 
 68.12  probation, supervised release, or conditional release period 
 68.13  expires, whichever occurs later.  For a person required to 
 68.14  register under this section who is committed under section 
 68.15  253B.18 or 253B.185, the ten-year registration period does not 
 68.16  include the period of commitment. 
 68.17     (b) If a person required to register under this section 
 68.18  fails to register following a change in residence provide the 
 68.19  person's primary address as required by subdivision 3, paragraph 
 68.20  (b), fails to comply with the requirements of subdivision 3a, 
 68.21  fails to provide information as required by subdivision 4a, or 
 68.22  fails to return the verification form referenced in subdivision 
 68.23  4 within ten days, the commissioner of public safety may require 
 68.24  the person to continue to register for an additional period of 
 68.25  five years.  This five-year period is added to the end of the 
 68.26  offender's registration period.  
 68.27     (c) If a person required to register under this section is 
 68.28  subsequently incarcerated following a conviction for a new 
 68.29  offense or following a revocation of probation, supervised 
 68.30  release, or conditional release for that any offense, or a 
 68.31  conviction for any new offense, the person shall continue to 
 68.32  register until ten years have elapsed since the person was last 
 68.33  released from incarceration or until the person's probation, 
 68.34  supervised release, or conditional release period expires, 
 68.35  whichever occurs later. 
 68.36     (d) A person shall continue to comply with this section for 
 69.1   the life of that person:  
 69.2      (1) if the person is convicted of or adjudicated delinquent 
 69.3   for any offense for which registration is required under 
 69.4   subdivision 1 1b, or any offense from another state or any 
 69.5   federal offense similar to the offenses described in subdivision 
 69.6   1 1b, and the person has a prior conviction or adjudication for 
 69.7   an offense for which registration was or would have been 
 69.8   required under subdivision 1 1b, or an offense from another 
 69.9   state or a federal offense similar to an offense described in 
 69.10  subdivision 1 1b; 
 69.11     (2) if the person is required to register based upon a 
 69.12  conviction or delinquency adjudication for an offense under 
 69.13  section 609.185, clause (2), or a similar statute from another 
 69.14  state or the United States; 
 69.15     (3) if the person is required to register based upon a 
 69.16  conviction for an offense under section 609.342, subdivision 1, 
 69.17  paragraph (a), (c), (d), (e), (f), or (h); 609.343, subdivision 
 69.18  1, paragraph (a), (c), (d), (e), (f), or (h); 609.344, 
 69.19  subdivision 1, paragraph (a), (c), or (g); or 609.345, 
 69.20  subdivision 1, paragraph (a), (c), or (g); or a statute from 
 69.21  another state or the United States similar to the offenses 
 69.22  described in this clause; or 
 69.23     (4) if the person is required to register under subdivision 
 69.24  1 1b, paragraph (c), following commitment pursuant to a court 
 69.25  commitment under section 253B.185 or a similar law of another 
 69.26  state or the United States. 
 69.27     Subd. 7.  [USE OF INFORMATION.] Except as otherwise 
 69.28  provided in subdivision 7a or sections 244.052 and 299C.093, the 
 69.29  information provided under this section is private data on 
 69.30  individuals under section 13.02, subdivision 12.  The 
 69.31  information may be used only for law enforcement purposes.  
 69.32     Subd. 7a.  [AVAILABILITY OF INFORMATION ON OFFENDERS WHO 
 69.33  ARE OUT OF COMPLIANCE WITH REGISTRATION LAW.] (a) The Bureau of 
 69.34  Criminal Apprehension may make information available to the 
 69.35  public about offenders who are 16 years of age or older and who 
 69.36  are out of compliance with this section for 30 days or longer 
 70.1   for failure to provide the address of the offenders' primary or 
 70.2   secondary residences addresses.  This information may be made 
 70.3   available to the public through electronic, computerized, or 
 70.4   other accessible means.  The amount and type of information made 
 70.5   available shall be is limited to the information necessary for 
 70.6   the public to assist law enforcement in locating the offender. 
 70.7      (b) An offender who comes into compliance with this section 
 70.8   after the Bureau of Criminal Apprehension discloses information 
 70.9   about the offender to the public may send a written request to 
 70.10  the bureau requesting the bureau to treat information about the 
 70.11  offender as private data, consistent with subdivision 7.  The 
 70.12  bureau shall review the request and promptly take reasonable 
 70.13  action to treat the data as private, if the offender has 
 70.14  complied with the requirement that the offender provide the 
 70.15  addresses of the offender's primary and secondary residences 
 70.16  addresses, or promptly notify the offender that the information 
 70.17  will continue to be treated as public information and the 
 70.18  reasons for the bureau's decision. 
 70.19     (c) If an offender believes the information made public 
 70.20  about the offender is inaccurate or incomplete, the offender may 
 70.21  challenge the data under section 13.04, subdivision 4. 
 70.22     (d) The Bureau of Criminal Apprehension is immune from any 
 70.23  civil or criminal liability that might otherwise arise, based on 
 70.24  the accuracy or completeness of any information made public 
 70.25  under this subdivision, if the bureau acts in good faith. 
 70.26     Subd. 8.  [LAW ENFORCEMENT AUTHORITY.] For purposes of this 
 70.27  section, a law enforcement authority means, with respect to a 
 70.28  home rule charter or statutory city, the chief of police, and 
 70.29  with respect to an unincorporated area, the sheriff of the 
 70.30  county. 
 70.31     Subd. 9.  [OFFENDERS FROM OTHER STATES.] (a) When the state 
 70.32  accepts an offender from another state under a reciprocal 
 70.33  agreement under the interstate compact authorized by section 
 70.34  243.16, the interstate compact authorized by section 243.1605, 
 70.35  or under any authorized interstate agreement, the acceptance is 
 70.36  conditional on the offender agreeing to register under this 
 71.1   section when the offender is living in Minnesota. 
 71.2      (b) The Bureau of Criminal Apprehension shall notify the 
 71.3   commissioner of corrections: 
 71.4      (1) when the bureau receives notice from a local law 
 71.5   enforcement authority that a person from another state who is 
 71.6   subject to this section has registered with the authority, 
 71.7   unless the bureau previously received information about the 
 71.8   offender from the commissioner of corrections; 
 71.9      (2) when a registration authority, corrections agent, or 
 71.10  law enforcement agency in another state notifies the bureau that 
 71.11  a person from another state who is subject to this section is 
 71.12  moving to Minnesota; and 
 71.13     (3) when the bureau learns that a person from another state 
 71.14  is in Minnesota and allegedly in violation of subdivision 5 for 
 71.15  failure to register. 
 71.16     (c) When a local law enforcement agency notifies the bureau 
 71.17  of an out-of-state offender's registration, the agency shall 
 71.18  provide the bureau with information on whether the person is 
 71.19  subject to community notification in another state and the risk 
 71.20  level the person was assigned, if any.  
 71.21     (d) The bureau must forward all information it receives 
 71.22  regarding offenders covered under this subdivision from sources 
 71.23  other than the commissioner of corrections to the commissioner. 
 71.24     (e) When the bureau receives information directly from a 
 71.25  registration authority, corrections agent, or law enforcement 
 71.26  agency in another state that a person who may be subject to this 
 71.27  section is moving to Minnesota, the bureau must ask whether the 
 71.28  person entering the state is subject to community notification 
 71.29  in another state and the risk level the person has been 
 71.30  assigned, if any.  
 71.31     (f) When the bureau learns that a person subject to this 
 71.32  section intends to move into Minnesota from another state or has 
 71.33  moved into Minnesota from another state, the bureau shall notify 
 71.34  the law enforcement authority with jurisdiction in the area of 
 71.35  the person's primary address and provide all information 
 71.36  concerning the person that is available to the bureau. 
 72.1      (g) The commissioner of corrections must determine the 
 72.2   parole, supervised release, or conditional release status of 
 72.3   persons who are referred to the commissioner under this 
 72.4   subdivision.  If the commissioner determines that a person is 
 72.5   subject to parole, supervised release, or conditional release in 
 72.6   another state and is not registered in Minnesota under the 
 72.7   applicable interstate compact, the commissioner shall inform the 
 72.8   local law enforcement agency that the person is in violation of 
 72.9   section 243.161.  If the person is not subject to supervised 
 72.10  release, the commissioner shall notify the bureau and the local 
 72.11  law enforcement agency of the person's status. 
 72.12     Subd. 10.  [VENUE; AGGREGATION.] (a) A violation of this 
 72.13  section may be prosecuted in any jurisdiction where an offense 
 72.14  takes place.  However, the prosecutorial agency in the 
 72.15  jurisdiction where the person last registered a primary address 
 72.16  is initially responsible to review the case for prosecution.  
 72.17     (b) When a person commits two or more offenses in two or 
 72.18  more counties, the accused may be prosecuted for all of the 
 72.19  offenses in any county in which one of the offenses was 
 72.20  committed. 
 72.21     Subd. 11.  [CERTIFIED COPIES AS EVIDENCE.] Certified copies 
 72.22  of predatory offender registration records are admissible as 
 72.23  substantive evidence when necessary to prove the commission of a 
 72.24  violation of this section.  
 72.25     [EFFECTIVE DATE.] The provisions of this section are 
 72.26  effective the day following final enactment, and apply to 
 72.27  persons subject to predatory offender registration on or after 
 72.28  that date, except for subdivision 9, which is effective July 1, 
 72.29  2004.  
 72.30     Sec. 2.  Minnesota Statutes 2002, section 243.167, is 
 72.31  amended to read: 
 72.32     243.167 [REGISTRATION UNDER THE PREDATORY OFFENDER 
 72.33  REGISTRATION LAW FOR OTHER OFFENSES.] 
 72.34     Subdivision 1.  [DEFINITION.] As used in this section, 
 72.35  "crime against the person" means a violation of any of the 
 72.36  following or a similar law of another state or of the United 
 73.1   States:  section 609.165; 609.185; 609.19; 609.195; 609.20; 
 73.2   609.205; 609.221; 609.222; 609.223; 609.2231; 609.224, 
 73.3   subdivision 2 or 4; 609.2242, subdivision 2 or 4; 609.235; 
 73.4   609.245, subdivision 1; 609.25; 609.255; 609.3451, subdivision 
 73.5   2; 609.498, subdivision 1; 609.582, subdivision 1; or 617.23, 
 73.6   subdivision 2; or any felony-level violation of section 609.229; 
 73.7   609.377; 609.749; or 624.713. 
 73.8      Subd. 2.  [WHEN REQUIRED.] (a) In addition to the 
 73.9   requirements of section 243.166, a person also shall register 
 73.10  under section 243.166 if: 
 73.11     (1) the person is convicted of a crime against the person; 
 73.12  and 
 73.13     (2) the person was previously convicted of or adjudicated 
 73.14  delinquent for an offense listed in section 243.166, subdivision 
 73.15  1, paragraph (a), but was not required to register for the 
 73.16  offense because the registration requirements of that section 
 73.17  did not apply to the person at the time the offense was 
 73.18  committed or at the time the person was released from 
 73.19  imprisonment. 
 73.20     (b) A person who was previously required to register under 
 73.21  section 243.166 in any state and who has completed the 
 73.22  registration requirements of that section state shall again 
 73.23  register under section 243.166 if the person commits a crime 
 73.24  against the person. 
 73.25     [EFFECTIVE DATE.] This section is effective August 1, 2004, 
 73.26  and applies to crimes committed on or after that date.  
 73.27     Sec. 3.  Minnesota Statutes 2002, section 244.05, 
 73.28  subdivision 7, is amended to read: 
 73.29     Subd. 7.  [SEX OFFENDERS; CIVIL COMMITMENT DETERMINATION.] 
 73.30  (a) Before the commissioner releases from prison any inmate 
 73.31  convicted under sections 609.342 to 609.345 or sentenced as a 
 73.32  patterned offender under section 609.108, and determined by the 
 73.33  commissioner to be in a high risk category, the commissioner 
 73.34  shall make a preliminary determination whether, in the 
 73.35  commissioner's opinion, a petition under section 253B.185 may be 
 73.36  appropriate.  The commissioner's opinion must be based on a 
 74.1   recommendation of a Department of Corrections screening 
 74.2   committee and a legal review and recommendation from a 
 74.3   representative of the Office of the Attorney General 
 74.4   knowledgeable in the legal requirements of the civil commitment 
 74.5   process. 
 74.6      (b) In making this decision, the commissioner shall have 
 74.7   access to the following data only for the purposes of the 
 74.8   assessment and referral decision: 
 74.9      (1) private medical data under section 13.384 or 144.335, 
 74.10  or welfare data under section 13.46 that relate to medical 
 74.11  treatment of the offender; 
 74.12     (2) private and confidential court services data under 
 74.13  section 13.84; 
 74.14     (3) private and confidential corrections data under section 
 74.15  13.85; and 
 74.16     (4) private criminal history data under section 13.87. 
 74.17     (c) If the commissioner determines that a petition may be 
 74.18  appropriate, the commissioner shall forward this determination, 
 74.19  along with a summary of the reasons for the determination, to 
 74.20  the county attorney in the county where the inmate was convicted 
 74.21  no later than 12 months before the inmate's release date.  If 
 74.22  the inmate is received for incarceration with fewer than 12 
 74.23  months remaining in the inmate's term of imprisonment, or if the 
 74.24  commissioner receives additional information less than 12 months 
 74.25  before release which that makes the inmate's case appropriate 
 74.26  for referral, the commissioner shall forward the determination 
 74.27  as soon as is practicable.  Upon receiving the commissioner's 
 74.28  preliminary determination, the county attorney shall proceed in 
 74.29  the manner provided in section 253B.185.  The commissioner shall 
 74.30  release to the county attorney all requested documentation 
 74.31  maintained by the department. 
 74.32     [EFFECTIVE DATE.] This section is effective the day 
 74.33  following final enactment.  
 74.34     Sec. 4.  Minnesota Statutes 2002, section 244.052, 
 74.35  subdivision 3, is amended to read: 
 74.36     Subd. 3.  [END-OF-CONFINEMENT REVIEW COMMITTEE.] (a) The 
 75.1   commissioner of corrections shall establish and administer 
 75.2   end-of-confinement review committees at each state correctional 
 75.3   facility and at each state treatment facility where predatory 
 75.4   offenders are confined.  The committees shall assess on a 
 75.5   case-by-case basis the public risk posed by predatory offenders 
 75.6   who are about to be released from confinement. 
 75.7      (b) Each committee shall be a standing committee and shall 
 75.8   consist of the following members appointed by the commissioner: 
 75.9      (1) the chief executive officer or head of the correctional 
 75.10  or treatment facility where the offender is currently confined, 
 75.11  or that person's designee; 
 75.12     (2) a law enforcement officer; 
 75.13     (3) a treatment professional who is trained in the 
 75.14  assessment of sex offenders; 
 75.15     (4) a caseworker experienced in supervising sex offenders; 
 75.16  and 
 75.17     (5) a victim's services professional. 
 75.18     Members of the committee, other than the facility's chief 
 75.19  executive officer or head, shall be appointed by the 
 75.20  commissioner to two-year terms.  The chief executive officer or 
 75.21  head of the facility or designee shall act as chair of the 
 75.22  committee and shall use the facility's staff, as needed, to 
 75.23  administer the committee, obtain necessary information from 
 75.24  outside sources, and prepare risk assessment reports on 
 75.25  offenders. 
 75.26     (c) The committee shall have access to the following data 
 75.27  on a predatory offender only for the purposes of its assessment 
 75.28  and to defend the committee's risk assessment determination upon 
 75.29  administrative review under this section: 
 75.30     (1) private medical data under section 13.384 or 144.335, 
 75.31  or welfare data under section 13.46 that relate to medical 
 75.32  treatment of the offender; 
 75.33     (2) private and confidential court services data under 
 75.34  section 13.84; 
 75.35     (3) private and confidential corrections data under section 
 75.36  13.85; and 
 76.1      (4) private criminal history data under section 13.87. 
 76.2      Data collected and maintained by the committee under this 
 76.3   paragraph may not be disclosed outside the committee, except as 
 76.4   provided under section 13.05, subdivision 3 or 4.  The predatory 
 76.5   offender has access to data on the offender collected and 
 76.6   maintained by the committee, unless the data are confidential 
 76.7   data received under this paragraph. 
 76.8      (d)(i) Except as otherwise provided in item (ii), at least 
 76.9   90 days before a predatory offender is to be released from 
 76.10  confinement, the commissioner of corrections shall convene the 
 76.11  appropriate end-of-confinement review committee for the purpose 
 76.12  of assessing the risk presented by the offender and determining 
 76.13  the risk level to which the offender shall be assigned under 
 76.14  paragraph (e).  The offender and the law enforcement agency that 
 76.15  was responsible for the charge resulting in confinement shall be 
 76.16  notified of the time and place of the committee's meeting.  The 
 76.17  offender has a right to be present and be heard at the meeting.  
 76.18  The law enforcement agency may provide material in writing that 
 76.19  is relevant to the offender's risk level to the chair of the 
 76.20  committee.  The committee shall use the risk factors described 
 76.21  in paragraph (g) and the risk assessment scale developed under 
 76.22  subdivision 2 to determine the offender's risk assessment score 
 76.23  and risk level.  Offenders scheduled for release from 
 76.24  confinement shall be assessed by the committee established at 
 76.25  the facility from which the offender is to be released.  
 76.26     (ii) If an offender is received for confinement in a 
 76.27  facility with less than 90 days remaining in the offender's term 
 76.28  of confinement, the offender's risk shall be assessed at the 
 76.29  first regularly scheduled end of confinement review committee 
 76.30  that convenes after the appropriate documentation for the risk 
 76.31  assessment is assembled by the committee.  The commissioner 
 76.32  shall make reasonable efforts to ensure that offender's risk is 
 76.33  assessed and a risk level is assigned or reassigned at least 30 
 76.34  days before the offender's release date. 
 76.35     (e) The committee shall assign to risk level I a predatory 
 76.36  offender whose risk assessment score indicates a low risk of 
 77.1   reoffense.  The committee shall assign to risk level II an 
 77.2   offender whose risk assessment score indicates a moderate risk 
 77.3   of reoffense.  The committee shall assign to risk level III an 
 77.4   offender whose risk assessment score indicates a high risk of 
 77.5   reoffense. 
 77.6      (f) Before the predatory offender is released from 
 77.7   confinement, the committee shall prepare a risk assessment 
 77.8   report which specifies the risk level to which the offender has 
 77.9   been assigned and the reasons underlying the committee's risk 
 77.10  assessment decision.  The committee shall give the report to the 
 77.11  offender and to the law enforcement agency at least 60 days 
 77.12  before an offender is released from confinement.  If the risk 
 77.13  assessment is performed under the circumstances described in 
 77.14  paragraph (d), item (ii), the report shall be given to the 
 77.15  offender and the law enforcement agency as soon as it is 
 77.16  available.  The committee also shall inform the offender of the 
 77.17  availability of review under subdivision 6. 
 77.18     (g) As used in this subdivision, "risk factors" includes, 
 77.19  but is not limited to, the following factors: 
 77.20     (1) the seriousness of the offense should the offender 
 77.21  reoffend.  This factor includes consideration of the following:  
 77.22     (i) the degree of likely force or harm; 
 77.23     (ii) the degree of likely physical contact; and 
 77.24     (iii) the age of the likely victim; 
 77.25     (2) the offender's prior offense history.  This factor 
 77.26  includes consideration of the following: 
 77.27     (i) the relationship of prior victims to the offender; 
 77.28     (ii) the number of prior offenses or victims; 
 77.29     (iii) the duration of the offender's prior offense history; 
 77.30     (iv) the length of time since the offender's last prior 
 77.31  offense while the offender was at risk to commit offenses; and 
 77.32     (v) the offender's prior history of other antisocial acts; 
 77.33     (3) the offender's characteristics.  This factor includes 
 77.34  consideration of the following:  
 77.35     (i) the offender's response to prior treatment efforts; and 
 77.36     (ii) the offender's history of substance abuse; 
 78.1      (4) the availability of community supports to the offender. 
 78.2   This factor includes consideration of the following: 
 78.3      (i) the availability and likelihood that the offender will 
 78.4   be involved in therapeutic treatment; 
 78.5      (ii) the availability of residential supports to the 
 78.6   offender, such as a stable and supervised living arrangement in 
 78.7   an appropriate location; 
 78.8      (iii) the offender's familial and social relationships, 
 78.9   including the nature and length of these relationships and the 
 78.10  level of support that the offender may receive from these 
 78.11  persons; and 
 78.12     (iv) the offender's lack of education or employment 
 78.13  stability; 
 78.14     (5) whether the offender has indicated or credible evidence 
 78.15  in the record indicates that the offender will reoffend if 
 78.16  released into the community; and 
 78.17     (6) whether the offender demonstrates a physical condition 
 78.18  that minimizes the risk of reoffense, including but not limited 
 78.19  to, advanced age or a debilitating illness or physical condition.
 78.20     (h) Upon the request of the law enforcement agency or the 
 78.21  offender's corrections agent, the commissioner may reconvene the 
 78.22  end-of-confinement review committee for the purpose of 
 78.23  reassessing the risk level to which an offender has been 
 78.24  assigned under paragraph (e).  In a request for a reassessment, 
 78.25  the law enforcement agency which was responsible for the charge 
 78.26  resulting in confinement or agent shall list the facts and 
 78.27  circumstances arising after the initial assignment or facts and 
 78.28  circumstances known to law enforcement or the agent but not 
 78.29  considered by the committee under paragraph (e) which support 
 78.30  the request for a reassessment.  The request for reassessment by 
 78.31  the law enforcement agency must occur within 30 days of receipt 
 78.32  of the report indicating the offender's risk level assignment.  
 78.33  The offender's corrections agent, in consultation with the chief 
 78.34  law enforcement officer in the area where the offender resides 
 78.35  or intends to reside, may request a review of a risk level at 
 78.36  any time if substantial evidence exists that the offender's risk 
 79.1   level should be reviewed by an end-of-confinement review 
 79.2   committee.  This evidence includes, but is not limited to, 
 79.3   evidence of treatment failures or completions, evidence of 
 79.4   exceptional crime-free community adjustment or lack of 
 79.5   appropriate adjustment, evidence of substantial community need 
 79.6   to know more about the offender or mitigating circumstances that 
 79.7   would narrow the proposed scope of notification, or other 
 79.8   practical situations articulated and based in evidence of the 
 79.9   offender's behavior while under supervision.  Upon review of the 
 79.10  request, the end-of-confinement review committee may reassign an 
 79.11  offender to a different risk level.  If the offender is 
 79.12  reassigned to a higher risk level, the offender has the right to 
 79.13  seek review of the committee's determination under subdivision 6.
 79.14     (i) An offender may request the end-of-confinement review 
 79.15  committee to reassess the offender's assigned risk level after 
 79.16  three years have elapsed since the committee's initial risk 
 79.17  assessment and may renew the request once every two years 
 79.18  following subsequent denials.  In a request for reassessment, 
 79.19  the offender shall list the facts and circumstances which 
 79.20  demonstrate that the offender no longer poses the same degree of 
 79.21  risk to the community.  In order for a request for a risk level 
 79.22  reduction to be granted, the offender must demonstrate full 
 79.23  compliance with supervised release conditions, completion of 
 79.24  required post-release treatment programming, and full compliance 
 79.25  with all registration requirements as detailed in section 
 79.26  243.166.  The offender must also not have been convicted of any 
 79.27  felony, gross misdemeanor, or misdemeanor offenses subsequent to 
 79.28  the assignment of the original risk level.  The committee shall 
 79.29  follow the process outlined in paragraphs (a) to (c) in the 
 79.30  reassessment.  An offender who is incarcerated may not request a 
 79.31  reassessment under this paragraph. 
 79.32     (j) Offenders returned to prison as release violators shall 
 79.33  not have a right to a subsequent risk reassessment by the 
 79.34  end-of-confinement review committee unless substantial evidence 
 79.35  indicates that the offender's risk to the public has increased. 
 79.36     (k) The commissioner shall establish an end-of-confinement 
 80.1   review committee to assign a risk level to offenders who are 
 80.2   released from a federal correctional facility in Minnesota or 
 80.3   another state and who intend to reside in Minnesota, and to 
 80.4   offenders accepted from another state under a reciprocal 
 80.5   agreement for parole supervision under the interstate compact 
 80.6   authorized by section 243.16.  The committee shall make 
 80.7   reasonable efforts to conform to the same timelines as applied 
 80.8   to Minnesota cases.  Offenders accepted from another state under 
 80.9   a reciprocal agreement for probation supervision are not 
 80.10  assigned a risk level, but are considered downward dispositional 
 80.11  departures.  The probation or court services officer and law 
 80.12  enforcement officer shall manage such cases in accordance with 
 80.13  section 244.10, subdivision 2a.  The policies and procedures of 
 80.14  the committee for federal offenders and interstate compact cases 
 80.15  must be in accordance with all requirements as set forth in this 
 80.16  section, unless restrictions caused by the nature of federal or 
 80.17  interstate transfers prevents such conformance. 
 80.18     (l) If the committee assigns a predatory offender to risk 
 80.19  level III, the committee shall determine whether residency 
 80.20  restrictions shall be included in the conditions of the 
 80.21  offender's release based on the offender's pattern of offending 
 80.22  behavior. 
 80.23     [EFFECTIVE DATE.] This section is effective July 1, 2004, 
 80.24  and applies to persons subject to community notification on or 
 80.25  after that date.  
 80.26     Sec. 5.  Minnesota Statutes 2002, section 244.052, is 
 80.27  amended by adding a subdivision to read: 
 80.28     Subd. 3a.  [OFFENDERS FROM OTHER STATES AND OFFENDERS 
 80.29  RELEASED FROM FEDERAL FACILITIES.] (a) Except as provided in 
 80.30  paragraph (b), the commissioner shall establish an 
 80.31  end-of-confinement review committee to assign a risk level: 
 80.32     (1) to offenders who are released from a federal 
 80.33  correctional facility in Minnesota or a federal correctional 
 80.34  facility in another state and who intend to reside in Minnesota; 
 80.35     (2) to offenders who are accepted from another state under 
 80.36  the interstate compact authorized by section 243.16 or 243.1605 
 81.1   or any other authorized interstate agreement; and 
 81.2      (3) to offenders who are referred to the committee by local 
 81.3   law enforcement agencies under paragraph (f).  
 81.4      (b) This subdivision does not require the commissioner to 
 81.5   convene an end-of-confinement review committee for a person 
 81.6   coming into Minnesota who is subject to probation under another 
 81.7   state's law.  The probation or court services officer and law 
 81.8   enforcement officer shall manage such cases in accordance with 
 81.9   section 244.10, subdivision 2a. 
 81.10     (c) The committee shall make reasonable efforts to conform 
 81.11  to the same timelines applied to offenders released from a 
 81.12  Minnesota correctional facility and shall collect all relevant 
 81.13  information and records on offenders assessed and assigned a 
 81.14  risk level under this subdivision.  However, for offenders who 
 81.15  were assigned the most serious risk level by another state, the 
 81.16  committee must act promptly to collect the information required 
 81.17  under this paragraph. 
 81.18     The end-of-confinement review committee must proceed in 
 81.19  accordance with all requirements set forth in this section and 
 81.20  follow all policies and procedures applied to offenders released 
 81.21  from a Minnesota correctional facility in reviewing information 
 81.22  and assessing the risk level of offenders covered by this 
 81.23  subdivision, unless restrictions caused by the nature of federal 
 81.24  or interstate transfers prevent such conformance.  All of the 
 81.25  provisions of this section apply to offenders who are assessed 
 81.26  and assigned a risk level under this subdivision.  
 81.27     (d) If a local law enforcement agency learns or suspects 
 81.28  that a person who is subject to this section is living in 
 81.29  Minnesota and a risk level has not been assigned to the person 
 81.30  under this section, the law enforcement agency shall provide 
 81.31  this information to the Bureau of Criminal Apprehension and the 
 81.32  commissioner of corrections within three business days.  
 81.33     (e) If the commissioner receives reliable information from 
 81.34  a local law enforcement agency or the bureau that a person 
 81.35  subject to this section is living in Minnesota and a local law 
 81.36  enforcement agency so requests, the commissioner must determine 
 82.1   if the person was assigned a risk level under a law comparable 
 82.2   to this section.  If the commissioner determines that the law is 
 82.3   comparable and public safety warrants, the commissioner, within 
 82.4   three business days of receiving a request, shall notify the 
 82.5   local law enforcement agency that it may, in consultation with 
 82.6   the department, proceed with notification under subdivision 4 
 82.7   based on the person's out-of-state risk level.  However, if the 
 82.8   commissioner concludes that the offender is from a state with a 
 82.9   risk level assessment law that is not comparable to this 
 82.10  section, the extent of the notification may not exceed that of a 
 82.11  risk level II offender under subdivision 4, paragraph (b), 
 82.12  unless the requirements of paragraph (f) have been met.  If an 
 82.13  assessment is requested from the end-of-confinement review 
 82.14  committee under paragraph (f), the local law enforcement agency 
 82.15  may continue to disclose information under subdivision 4 until 
 82.16  the committee assigns the person a risk level.  After the 
 82.17  committee assigns a risk level to an offender pursuant to a 
 82.18  request made under paragraph (f), the information disclosed by 
 82.19  law enforcement shall be consistent with the risk level assigned 
 82.20  by the End-of-Confinement Review Committee.  The commissioner of 
 82.21  corrections, in consultation with legal advisers, shall 
 82.22  determine whether the law of another state is comparable to this 
 82.23  section.  
 82.24     (f) If the local law enforcement agency wants to make a 
 82.25  broader disclosure than is authorized under paragraph (e), the 
 82.26  law enforcement agency may request that an End-of-Confinement 
 82.27  Review Committee assign a risk level to the offender.  The local 
 82.28  law enforcement agency shall provide to the committee all 
 82.29  information concerning the offender's criminal history, the risk 
 82.30  the offender poses to the community, and other relevant 
 82.31  information.  The department shall attempt to obtain other 
 82.32  information relevant to determining which risk level to assign 
 82.33  the offender.  The committee shall promptly assign a risk level 
 82.34  to an offender referred to the committee under this paragraph. 
 82.35     [EFFECTIVE DATE.] This section is effective July 1, 2004, 
 82.36  and applies to persons subject to community notification on or 
 83.1   after that date. 
 83.2      Sec. 6.  Minnesota Statutes 2002, section 244.052, 
 83.3   subdivision 4, is amended to read: 
 83.4      Subd. 4.  [LAW ENFORCEMENT AGENCY; DISCLOSURE OF 
 83.5   INFORMATION TO PUBLIC.] (a) The law enforcement agency in the 
 83.6   area where the predatory offender resides, expects to reside, is 
 83.7   employed, or is regularly found, shall disclose to the public 
 83.8   any information regarding the offender contained in the report 
 83.9   forwarded to the agency under subdivision 3, paragraph (f), that 
 83.10  is relevant and necessary to protect the public and to 
 83.11  counteract the offender's dangerousness, consistent with the 
 83.12  guidelines in paragraph (b).  The extent of the information 
 83.13  disclosed and the community to whom disclosure is made must 
 83.14  relate to the level of danger posed by the offender, to the 
 83.15  offender's pattern of offending behavior, and to the need of 
 83.16  community members for information to enhance their individual 
 83.17  and collective safety. 
 83.18     (b) The law enforcement agency shall employ the following 
 83.19  guidelines in determining the scope of disclosure made under 
 83.20  this subdivision: 
 83.21     (1) if the offender is assigned to risk level I, the agency 
 83.22  may maintain information regarding the offender within the 
 83.23  agency and may disclose it to other law enforcement agencies.  
 83.24  Additionally, the agency may disclose the information to any 
 83.25  victims of or witnesses to the offense committed by the 
 83.26  offender. The agency shall disclose the information to victims 
 83.27  of the offense committed by the offender who have requested 
 83.28  disclosure and to adult members of the offender's immediate 
 83.29  household; 
 83.30     (2) if the offender is assigned to risk level II, the 
 83.31  agency also may disclose the information to agencies and groups 
 83.32  that the offender is likely to encounter for the purpose of 
 83.33  securing those institutions and protecting individuals in their 
 83.34  care while they are on or near the premises of the institution.  
 83.35  These agencies and groups include the staff members of public 
 83.36  and private educational institutions, day care establishments, 
 84.1   and establishments and organizations that primarily serve 
 84.2   individuals likely to be victimized by the offender.  The agency 
 84.3   also may disclose the information to individuals the agency 
 84.4   believes are likely to be victimized by the offender.  The 
 84.5   agency's belief shall be based on the offender's pattern of 
 84.6   offending or victim preference as documented in the information 
 84.7   provided by the department of corrections or human services; 
 84.8      (3) if the offender is assigned to risk level III, the 
 84.9   agency shall disclose the information to the persons and 
 84.10  entities described in clauses (1) and (2) and to other members 
 84.11  of the community whom the offender is likely to encounter, 
 84.12  unless the law enforcement agency determines that public safety 
 84.13  would be compromised by the disclosure or that a more limited 
 84.14  disclosure is necessary to protect the identity of the victim. 
 84.15     Notwithstanding the assignment of a predatory offender to 
 84.16  risk level II or III, a law enforcement agency may not make the 
 84.17  disclosures permitted or required by clause (2) or (3), if:  the 
 84.18  offender is placed or resides in a residential facility.  
 84.19  However, if an offender is placed or resides in a residential 
 84.20  facility, the offender and the head of the facility shall 
 84.21  designate the offender's likely residence upon release from the 
 84.22  facility and the head of the facility shall notify the 
 84.23  commissioner of corrections or the commissioner of human 
 84.24  services of the offender's likely residence at least 14 days 
 84.25  before the offender's scheduled release date.  The commissioner 
 84.26  shall give this information to the law enforcement agency having 
 84.27  jurisdiction over the offender's likely residence.  The head of 
 84.28  the residential facility also shall notify the commissioner of 
 84.29  corrections or human services within 48 hours after finalizing 
 84.30  the offender's approved relocation plan to a permanent 
 84.31  residence.  Within five days after receiving this notification, 
 84.32  the appropriate commissioner shall give to the appropriate law 
 84.33  enforcement agency all relevant information the commissioner has 
 84.34  concerning the offender, including information on the risk 
 84.35  factors in the offender's history and the risk level to which 
 84.36  the offender was assigned.  After receiving this information, 
 85.1   the law enforcement agency shall make the disclosures permitted 
 85.2   or required by clause (2) or (3), as appropriate. 
 85.3      (c) As used in paragraph (b), clauses (2) and (3), "likely 
 85.4   to encounter" means that:  
 85.5      (1) the organizations or community members are in a 
 85.6   location or in close proximity to a location where the offender 
 85.7   lives or is employed, or which the offender visits or is likely 
 85.8   to visit on a regular basis, other than the location of the 
 85.9   offender's outpatient treatment program; and 
 85.10     (2) the types of interaction which ordinarily occur at that 
 85.11  location and other circumstances indicate that contact with the 
 85.12  offender is reasonably certain. 
 85.13     (d) A law enforcement agency or official who discloses 
 85.14  information under this subdivision shall make a good faith 
 85.15  effort to make the notification within 14 days of receipt of a 
 85.16  confirmed address from the Department of Corrections indicating 
 85.17  that the offender will be, or has been, released from 
 85.18  confinement, or accepted for supervision, or has moved to a new 
 85.19  address and will reside at the address indicated.  If a change 
 85.20  occurs in the release plan, this notification provision does not 
 85.21  require an extension of the release date.  
 85.22     (e) A law enforcement agency or official who discloses 
 85.23  information under this subdivision shall not disclose the 
 85.24  identity or any identifying characteristics of the victims of or 
 85.25  witnesses to the offender's offenses. 
 85.26     (f) A law enforcement agency shall continue to disclose 
 85.27  information on an offender as required by this subdivision for 
 85.28  as long as the offender is required to register under section 
 85.29  243.166.  This requirement on a law enforcement agency to 
 85.30  continue to disclose information also applies to an offender who 
 85.31  lacks a primary address and is registering under section 
 85.32  243.166, subdivision 3a. 
 85.33     (g) A law enforcement agency that is disclosing information 
 85.34  on an offender assigned to risk level III to the public under 
 85.35  this subdivision shall inform the commissioner of corrections 
 85.36  what information is being disclosed and forward this information 
 86.1   to the commissioner within two days of the agency's 
 86.2   determination.  The commissioner shall post this information on 
 86.3   the Internet as required in subdivision 4b. 
 86.4      (h) A city council may adopt a policy that addresses when 
 86.5   information disclosed under this subdivision must be presented 
 86.6   in languages in addition to English.  The policy may address 
 86.7   when information must be presented orally, in writing, or both 
 86.8   in additional languages by the law enforcement agency disclosing 
 86.9   the information.  The policy may provide for different 
 86.10  approaches based on the prevalence of non-English languages in 
 86.11  different neighborhoods. 
 86.12     [EFFECTIVE DATE.] This section is effective the day 
 86.13  following final enactment, and applies to persons subject to 
 86.14  community notification on or after that date.  
 86.15     Sec. 7.  [REVISOR'S INSTRUCTION.] 
 86.16     The revisor of statutes shall change all references to 
 86.17  section 243.166, subdivision 1, in Minnesota Statutes to section 
 86.18  243.166.  In addition, the revisor shall make other technical 
 86.19  changes necessitated by this article.  
 86.20     [EFFECTIVE DATE.] This section is effective the day 
 86.21  following final enactment.  
 86.22     Sec. 8.  [REPEALER.] 
 86.23     Minnesota Statutes 2002, section 243.166, subdivisions 1 
 86.24  and 8, are repealed. 
 86.25     [EFFECTIVE DATE.] This section is effective the day 
 86.26  following final enactment. 
 86.27                             ARTICLE 5
 86.28           SEX OFFENDER TECHNICAL AND CONFORMING CHANGES
 86.29     Section 1.  Minnesota Statutes 2002, section 241.67, 
 86.30  subdivision 3, is amended to read: 
 86.31     Subd. 3.  [PROGRAMS FOR ADULT OFFENDERS COMMITTED TO THE 
 86.32  COMMISSIONER.] (a) The commissioner shall provide for a range of 
 86.33  sex offender programs, including intensive sex offender 
 86.34  programs, within the state adult correctional facility system.  
 86.35  Participation in any program is subject to the rules and 
 86.36  regulations of the Department of Corrections.  Nothing in this 
 87.1   section requires the commissioner to accept or retain an 
 87.2   offender in a program if the offender is determined by prison 
 87.3   professionals as unamenable to programming within the prison 
 87.4   system or if the offender refuses or fails to comply with the 
 87.5   program's requirements.  Nothing in this section creates a right 
 87.6   of an offender to treatment.  
 87.7      (b) The commissioner shall provide for residential and 
 87.8   outpatient sex offender programming and aftercare when required 
 87.9   for conditional release under section 609.108 609.3459 or as a 
 87.10  condition of supervised release. 
 87.11     [EFFECTIVE DATE.] This section is effective August 1, 2004, 
 87.12  and applies to crimes committed on or after that date. 
 87.13     Sec. 2.  Minnesota Statutes 2002, section 243.166, 
 87.14  subdivision 1, is amended to read: 
 87.15     Subdivision 1.  [REGISTRATION REQUIRED.] (a) A person shall 
 87.16  register under this section if:  
 87.17     (1) the person was charged with or petitioned for a felony 
 87.18  violation of or attempt to violate any of the following, and 
 87.19  convicted of or adjudicated delinquent for that offense or 
 87.20  another offense arising out of the same set of circumstances: 
 87.21     (i) murder under section 609.185, clause (2); or 
 87.22     (ii) kidnapping under section 609.25; or 
 87.23     (iii) criminal sexual conduct under section 609.342; 
 87.24  609.343; 609.344; 609.345; or 609.3451, subdivision 3; or 
 87.25     (iv) indecent exposure under section 617.23, subdivision 3; 
 87.26  or 
 87.27     (2) the person was charged with or petitioned for falsely 
 87.28  imprisoning a minor in violation of section 609.255, subdivision 
 87.29  2; soliciting a minor to engage in prostitution in violation of 
 87.30  section 609.322 or 609.324; soliciting a minor to engage in 
 87.31  sexual conduct in violation of section 609.352; using a minor in 
 87.32  a sexual performance in violation of section 617.246; or 
 87.33  possessing pornographic work involving a minor in violation of 
 87.34  section 617.247, and convicted of or adjudicated delinquent for 
 87.35  that offense or another offense arising out of the same set of 
 87.36  circumstances; or 
 88.1      (3) the person was convicted of a predatory crime as 
 88.2   defined in section 609.108 609.341, subdivision 25, and the 
 88.3   offender was sentenced as a patterned sex offender or the court 
 88.4   found on its own motion or that of the prosecutor that the crime 
 88.5   was part of a predatory pattern of behavior that had criminal 
 88.6   sexual conduct as its goal under section 609.3455; or 
 88.7      (4) the person was convicted of or adjudicated delinquent 
 88.8   for, including pursuant to a court martial, violating a law of 
 88.9   the United States, including the Uniform Code of Military 
 88.10  Justice, similar to the offenses described in clause (1), (2), 
 88.11  or (3). 
 88.12     (b) A person also shall register under this section if: 
 88.13     (1) the person was convicted of or adjudicated delinquent 
 88.14  in another state for an offense that would be a violation of a 
 88.15  law described in paragraph (a) if committed in this state; 
 88.16     (2) the person enters the state to reside, or to work or 
 88.17  attend school; and 
 88.18     (3) ten years have not elapsed since the person was 
 88.19  released from confinement or, if the person was not confined, 
 88.20  since the person was convicted of or adjudicated delinquent for 
 88.21  the offense that triggers registration, unless the person is 
 88.22  subject to lifetime registration, in which case the person must 
 88.23  register for life regardless of when the person was released 
 88.24  from confinement, convicted, or adjudicated delinquent. 
 88.25  For purposes of this paragraph: 
 88.26     (i) "school" includes any public or private educational 
 88.27  institution, including any secondary school, trade or 
 88.28  professional institution, or institution of higher education, 
 88.29  that the person is enrolled in on a full-time or part-time 
 88.30  basis; and 
 88.31     (ii) "work" includes employment that is full time or part 
 88.32  time for a period of time exceeding 14 days or for an aggregate 
 88.33  period of time exceeding 30 days during any calendar year, 
 88.34  whether financially compensated, volunteered, or for the purpose 
 88.35  of government or educational benefit. 
 88.36     (c) A person also shall register under this section if the 
 89.1   person was committed pursuant to a court commitment order under 
 89.2   section 253B.185 or Minnesota Statutes 1992, section 526.10, or 
 89.3   a similar law of another state or the United States, regardless 
 89.4   of whether the person was convicted of any offense. 
 89.5      (d) A person also shall register under this section if: 
 89.6      (1) the person was charged with or petitioned for a felony 
 89.7   violation or attempt to violate any of the offenses listed in 
 89.8   paragraph (a), clause (1), or a similar law of another state or 
 89.9   the United States, or the person was charged with or petitioned 
 89.10  for a violation of any of the offenses listed in paragraph (a), 
 89.11  clause (2), or a similar law of another state or the United 
 89.12  States; 
 89.13     (2) the person was found not guilty by reason of mental 
 89.14  illness or mental deficiency after a trial for that offense, or 
 89.15  found guilty but mentally ill after a trial for that offense, in 
 89.16  states with a guilty but mentally ill verdict; and 
 89.17     (3) the person was committed pursuant to a court commitment 
 89.18  order under section 253B.18 or a similar law of another state or 
 89.19  the United States. 
 89.20     [EFFECTIVE DATE.] This section is effective August 1, 2004, 
 89.21  and applies to crimes committed on or after that date. 
 89.22     Sec. 3.  Minnesota Statutes 2002, section 244.05, 
 89.23  subdivision 3, is amended to read: 
 89.24     Subd. 3.  [SANCTIONS FOR VIOLATION.] If an inmate violates 
 89.25  the conditions of the inmate's supervised release imposed by the 
 89.26  commissioner, the commissioner may: 
 89.27     (1) continue the inmate's supervised release term, with or 
 89.28  without modifying or enlarging the conditions imposed on the 
 89.29  inmate; or 
 89.30     (2) revoke the inmate's supervised release and reimprison 
 89.31  the inmate for the appropriate period of time. 
 89.32     The period of time for which a supervised release may be 
 89.33  revoked may not exceed the period of time remaining in the 
 89.34  inmate's sentence, except that if a sex offender is sentenced 
 89.35  and conditionally released under section 609.108, subdivision 
 89.36  5 609.3455, the period of time for which conditional release may 
 90.1   be revoked may not exceed the balance of the conditional release 
 90.2   term. 
 90.3      [EFFECTIVE DATE.] This section is effective August 1, 2004, 
 90.4   and applies to crimes committed on or after that date. 
 90.5      Sec. 4.  Minnesota Statutes 2002, section 244.195, 
 90.6   subdivision 1, is amended to read: 
 90.7      Subdivision 1.  [DEFINITIONS.] (a) As used in this 
 90.8   subdivision, the following terms have the meanings given them. 
 90.9      (b) "Commissioner" means the commissioner of corrections. 
 90.10     (c) "Conditional release" means parole, supervised release, 
 90.11  conditional release as authorized by section 609.108, 
 90.12  subdivision 6, or 609.109, subdivision 7 609.3459, work release 
 90.13  as authorized by sections 241.26, 244.065, and 631.425, 
 90.14  probation, furlough, and any other authorized temporary release 
 90.15  from a correctional facility. 
 90.16     (d) "Court services director" means the director or 
 90.17  designee of a county probation agency that is not organized 
 90.18  under chapter 401. 
 90.19     (e) "Detain" means to take into actual custody, including 
 90.20  custody within a local correctional facility. 
 90.21     (f) "Local correctional facility" has the meaning given in 
 90.22  section 241.021, subdivision 1. 
 90.23     (g) "Release" means to release from actual custody. 
 90.24     [EFFECTIVE DATE.] This section is effective August 1, 2004, 
 90.25  and applies to crimes committed on or after that date. 
 90.26     Sec. 5.  Minnesota Statutes 2002, section 253B.185, 
 90.27  subdivision 2, is amended to read: 
 90.28     Subd. 2.  [TRANSFER TO CORRECTIONAL FACILITY.] (a) If a 
 90.29  person has been committed under this section and later is 
 90.30  committed to the custody of the commissioner of corrections for 
 90.31  any reason, including but not limited to, being sentenced for a 
 90.32  crime or revocation of the person's supervised release or 
 90.33  conditional release under section 244.05, 609.108, subdivision 
 90.34  6, or 609.109, subdivision 7 or 609.3459, the person shall be 
 90.35  transferred to a facility designated by the commissioner of 
 90.36  corrections without regard to the procedures provided in section 
 91.1   253B.18. 
 91.2      (b) If a person is committed under this section after a 
 91.3   commitment to the commissioner of corrections, the person shall 
 91.4   first serve the sentence in a facility designated by the 
 91.5   commissioner of corrections.  After the person has served the 
 91.6   sentence, the person shall be transferred to a treatment program 
 91.7   designated by the commissioner of human services. 
 91.8      [EFFECTIVE DATE.] This section is effective August 1, 2004, 
 91.9   and applies to crimes committed on or after that date. 
 91.10     Sec. 6.  Minnesota Statutes 2002, section 401.01, 
 91.11  subdivision 2, is amended to read: 
 91.12     Subd. 2.  [DEFINITIONS.] (a) For the purposes of sections 
 91.13  401.01 to 401.16, the following terms have the meanings given 
 91.14  them.  
 91.15     (b) "CCA county" means a county that participates in the 
 91.16  Community Corrections Act. 
 91.17     (c) "Commissioner" means the commissioner of corrections or 
 91.18  a designee. 
 91.19     (d) "Conditional release" means parole, supervised release, 
 91.20  conditional release as authorized by section 609.108, 
 91.21  subdivision 6, or 609.109, subdivision 7 609.3459, work release 
 91.22  as authorized by sections 241.26, 244.065, and 631.425, 
 91.23  probation, furlough, and any other authorized temporary release 
 91.24  from a correctional facility. 
 91.25     (e) "County probation officer" means a probation officer 
 91.26  appointed under section 244.19. 
 91.27     (f) "Detain" means to take into actual custody, including 
 91.28  custody within a local correctional facility. 
 91.29     (g) "Joint board" means the board provided in section 
 91.30  471.59. 
 91.31     (h) "Local correctional facility" has the meaning given in 
 91.32  section 241.021, subdivision 1. 
 91.33     (i) "Local correctional service" means those services 
 91.34  authorized by and employees, officers, and agents appointed 
 91.35  under section 244.19, subdivision 1. 
 91.36     (j) "Release" means to release from actual custody. 
 92.1      [EFFECTIVE DATE.] This section is effective August 1, 2004, 
 92.2   and applies to crimes committed on or after that date. 
 92.3      Sec. 7.  Minnesota Statutes 2002, section 609.117, 
 92.4   subdivision 1, is amended to read: 
 92.5      Subdivision 1.  [UPON SENTENCING.] The court shall order an 
 92.6   offender to provide a biological specimen for the purpose of DNA 
 92.7   analysis as defined in section 299C.155 when: 
 92.8      (1) the court sentences a person charged with violating or 
 92.9   attempting to violate any of the following, and the person is 
 92.10  convicted of that offense or of any offense arising out of the 
 92.11  same set of circumstances: 
 92.12     (i) murder under section 609.185, 609.19, or 609.195; 
 92.13     (ii) manslaughter under section 609.20 or 609.205; 
 92.14     (iii) assault under section 609.221, 609.222, or 609.223; 
 92.15     (iv) robbery under section 609.24 or aggravated robbery 
 92.16  under section 609.245; 
 92.17     (v) kidnapping under section 609.25; 
 92.18     (vi) false imprisonment under section 609.255; 
 92.19     (vii) criminal sexual conduct under section 609.342, 
 92.20  609.343, 609.344, 609.345, or 609.3451, subdivision 3, or 
 92.21  609.3453; 
 92.22     (viii) incest under section 609.365; 
 92.23     (ix) burglary under section 609.582, subdivision 1; or 
 92.24     (x) indecent exposure under section 617.23, subdivision 3; 
 92.25     (2) the court sentences a person as a patterned sex 
 92.26  offender under section 609.108; or 
 92.27     (3) the juvenile court adjudicates a person a delinquent 
 92.28  child who is the subject of a delinquency petition for violating 
 92.29  or attempting to violate any of the following, and the 
 92.30  delinquency adjudication is based on a violation of one of those 
 92.31  sections or of any offense arising out of the same set of 
 92.32  circumstances: 
 92.33     (i) murder under section 609.185, 609.19, or 609.195; 
 92.34     (ii) manslaughter under section 609.20 or 609.205; 
 92.35     (iii) assault under section 609.221, 609.222, or 609.223; 
 92.36     (iv) robbery under section 609.24 or aggravated robbery 
 93.1   under section 609.245; 
 93.2      (v) kidnapping under section 609.25; 
 93.3      (vi) false imprisonment under section 609.255; 
 93.4      (vii) criminal sexual conduct under section 609.342, 
 93.5   609.343, 609.344, 609.345, or 609.3451, subdivision 3, or 
 93.6   609.3453; 
 93.7      (viii) incest under section 609.365; 
 93.8      (ix) burglary under section 609.582, subdivision 1; or 
 93.9      (x) indecent exposure under section 617.23, subdivision 3. 
 93.10  The biological specimen or the results of the analysis shall be 
 93.11  maintained by the Bureau of Criminal Apprehension as provided in 
 93.12  section 299C.155. 
 93.13     [EFFECTIVE DATE.] This section is effective August 1, 2004, 
 93.14  and applies to crimes committed on or after that date. 
 93.15     Sec. 8.  Minnesota Statutes 2002, section 609.117, 
 93.16  subdivision 2, is amended to read: 
 93.17     Subd. 2.  [BEFORE RELEASE.] The commissioner of corrections 
 93.18  or local corrections authority shall order a person to provide a 
 93.19  biological specimen for the purpose of DNA analysis before 
 93.20  completion of the person's term of imprisonment when the person 
 93.21  has not provided a biological specimen for the purpose of DNA 
 93.22  analysis and the person: 
 93.23     (1) is currently serving a term of imprisonment for or has 
 93.24  a past conviction for violating or attempting to violate any of 
 93.25  the following or a similar law of another state or the United 
 93.26  States or initially charged with violating one of the following 
 93.27  sections or a similar law of another state or the United States 
 93.28  and convicted of another offense arising out of the same set of 
 93.29  circumstances: 
 93.30     (i) murder under section 609.185, 609.19, or 609.195; 
 93.31     (ii) manslaughter under section 609.20 or 609.205; 
 93.32     (iii) assault under section 609.221, 609.222, or 609.223; 
 93.33     (iv) robbery under section 609.24 or aggravated robbery 
 93.34  under section 609.245; 
 93.35     (v) kidnapping under section 609.25; 
 93.36     (vi) false imprisonment under section 609.255; 
 94.1      (vii) criminal sexual conduct under section 609.342, 
 94.2   609.343, 609.344, 609.345, or 609.3451, subdivision 3, or 
 94.3   609.3453; 
 94.4      (viii) incest under section 609.365; 
 94.5      (ix) burglary under section 609.582, subdivision 1; or 
 94.6      (x) indecent exposure under section 617.23, subdivision 3; 
 94.7   or 
 94.8      (2) was sentenced as a patterned sex offender under section 
 94.9   609.108, and committed to the custody of the commissioner of 
 94.10  corrections; or 
 94.11     (3) is serving a term of imprisonment in this state under a 
 94.12  reciprocal agreement although convicted in another state of an 
 94.13  offense described in this subdivision or a similar law of the 
 94.14  United States or any other state.  The commissioner of 
 94.15  corrections or local corrections authority shall forward the 
 94.16  sample to the Bureau of Criminal Apprehension. 
 94.17     [EFFECTIVE DATE.] This section is effective August 1, 2004, 
 94.18  and applies to crimes committed on or after that date.  
 94.19     Sec. 9.  Minnesota Statutes 2002, section 609.347, is 
 94.20  amended to read: 
 94.21     609.347 [EVIDENCE IN CRIMINAL SEXUAL CONDUCT CASES.] 
 94.22     Subdivision 1.  In a prosecution under sections 609.109 or 
 94.23  609.342 to 609.3451 or 609.3453, the testimony of a victim need 
 94.24  not be corroborated. 
 94.25     Subd. 2.  In a prosecution under sections 609.109 or 
 94.26  609.342 to 609.3451, or 609.3453, there is no need to show that 
 94.27  the victim resisted the accused.  
 94.28     Subd. 3.  In a prosecution under sections 609.109, 609.342 
 94.29  to 609.3451, 609.3453, or 609.365, evidence of the victim's 
 94.30  previous sexual conduct shall not be admitted nor shall any 
 94.31  reference to such conduct be made in the presence of the jury, 
 94.32  except by court order under the procedure provided in 
 94.33  subdivision 4.  The evidence can be admitted only if the 
 94.34  probative value of the evidence is not substantially outweighed 
 94.35  by its inflammatory or prejudicial nature and only in the 
 94.36  circumstances set out in paragraphs (a) and (b).  For the 
 95.1   evidence to be admissible under paragraph (a), subsection (i), 
 95.2   the judge must find by a preponderance of the evidence that the 
 95.3   facts set out in the accused's offer of proof are true.  For the 
 95.4   evidence to be admissible under paragraph (a), subsection (ii) 
 95.5   or paragraph (b), the judge must find that the evidence is 
 95.6   sufficient to support a finding that the facts set out in the 
 95.7   accused's offer of proof are true, as provided under Rule 901 of 
 95.8   the Rules of Evidence. 
 95.9      (a) When consent of the victim is a defense in the case, 
 95.10  the following evidence is admissible: 
 95.11     (i) evidence of the victim's previous sexual conduct 
 95.12  tending to establish a common scheme or plan of similar sexual 
 95.13  conduct under circumstances similar to the case at issue.  In 
 95.14  order to find a common scheme or plan, the judge must find that 
 95.15  the victim made prior allegations of sexual assault which were 
 95.16  fabricated; and 
 95.17     (ii) evidence of the victim's previous sexual conduct with 
 95.18  the accused.  
 95.19     (b) When the prosecution's case includes evidence of semen, 
 95.20  pregnancy, or disease at the time of the incident or, in the 
 95.21  case of pregnancy, between the time of the incident and trial, 
 95.22  evidence of specific instances of the victim's previous sexual 
 95.23  conduct is admissible solely to show the source of the semen, 
 95.24  pregnancy, or disease. 
 95.25     Subd. 4.  The accused may not offer evidence described in 
 95.26  subdivision 3 except pursuant to the following procedure: 
 95.27     (a) A motion shall be made by the accused at least three 
 95.28  business days prior to trial, unless later for good cause shown, 
 95.29  setting out with particularity the offer of proof of the 
 95.30  evidence that the accused intends to offer, relative to the 
 95.31  previous sexual conduct of the victim; 
 95.32     (b) If the court deems the offer of proof sufficient, the 
 95.33  court shall order a hearing out of the presence of the jury, if 
 95.34  any, and in such hearing shall allow the accused to make a full 
 95.35  presentation of the offer of proof; 
 95.36     (c) At the conclusion of the hearing, if the court finds 
 96.1   that the evidence proposed to be offered by the accused 
 96.2   regarding the previous sexual conduct of the victim is 
 96.3   admissible under subdivision 3 and that its probative value is 
 96.4   not substantially outweighed by its inflammatory or prejudicial 
 96.5   nature, the court shall make an order stating the extent to 
 96.6   which evidence is admissible.  The accused may then offer 
 96.7   evidence pursuant to the order of the court; 
 96.8      (d) If new information is discovered after the date of the 
 96.9   hearing or during the course of trial, which may make evidence 
 96.10  described in subdivision 3 admissible, the accused may make an 
 96.11  offer of proof pursuant to clause (a) and the court shall order 
 96.12  an in camera hearing to determine whether the proposed evidence 
 96.13  is admissible by the standards herein.  
 96.14     Subd. 5.  In a prosecution under sections 609.109 or 
 96.15  609.342 to 609.3451 or 609.3453, the court shall not instruct 
 96.16  the jury to the effect that: 
 96.17     (a) It may be inferred that a victim who has previously 
 96.18  consented to sexual intercourse with persons other than the 
 96.19  accused would be therefore more likely to consent to sexual 
 96.20  intercourse again; or 
 96.21     (b) The victim's previous or subsequent sexual conduct in 
 96.22  and of itself may be considered in determining the credibility 
 96.23  of the victim; or 
 96.24     (c) Criminal sexual conduct is a crime easily charged by a 
 96.25  victim but very difficult to disprove by an accused because of 
 96.26  the heinous nature of the crime; or 
 96.27     (d) The jury should scrutinize the testimony of the victim 
 96.28  any more closely than it should scrutinize the testimony of any 
 96.29  witness in any felony prosecution.  
 96.30     Subd. 6.  (a) In a prosecution under sections 609.109 or 
 96.31  609.342 to 609.3451, or 609.3453, involving a psychotherapist 
 96.32  and patient, evidence of the patient's personal or medical 
 96.33  history is not admissible except when:  
 96.34     (1) the accused requests a hearing at least three business 
 96.35  days prior to trial and makes an offer of proof of the relevancy 
 96.36  of the history; and 
 97.1      (2) the court finds that the history is relevant and that 
 97.2   the probative value of the history outweighs its prejudicial 
 97.3   value.  
 97.4      (b) The court shall allow the admission only of specific 
 97.5   information or examples of conduct of the victim that are 
 97.6   determined by the court to be relevant.  The court's order shall 
 97.7   detail the information or conduct that is admissible and no 
 97.8   other evidence of the history may be introduced. 
 97.9      (c) Violation of the terms of the order is grounds for 
 97.10  mistrial but does not prevent the retrial of the accused.  
 97.11     Subd. 7.  [EFFECT OF STATUTE ON RULES.] Rule 412 of the 
 97.12  Rules of Evidence is superseded to the extent of its conflict 
 97.13  with this section. 
 97.14     [EFFECTIVE DATE.] This section is effective August 1, 2004, 
 97.15  and applies to crimes committed on or after that date. 
 97.16     Sec. 10.  Minnesota Statutes 2002, section 609.3471, is 
 97.17  amended to read: 
 97.18     609.3471 [RECORDS PERTAINING TO VICTIM IDENTITY 
 97.19  CONFIDENTIAL.] 
 97.20     Notwithstanding any provision of law to the contrary, no 
 97.21  data contained in records or reports relating to petitions, 
 97.22  complaints, or indictments issued pursuant to section 609.342; 
 97.23  609.343; 609.344; or 609.345; or 609.3453, which specifically 
 97.24  identifies a victim who is a minor shall be accessible to the 
 97.25  public, except by order of the court.  Nothing in this section 
 97.26  authorizes denial of access to any other data contained in the 
 97.27  records or reports, including the identity of the defendant. 
 97.28     [EFFECTIVE DATE.] This section is effective August 1, 2004, 
 97.29  and applies to crimes committed on or after that date. 
 97.30     Sec. 11.  Minnesota Statutes 2002, section 609.348, is 
 97.31  amended to read: 
 97.32     609.348 [MEDICAL PURPOSES; EXCLUSION.] 
 97.33     Sections 609.109 and 609.342 to 609.3451 and 609.3453 do 
 97.34  not apply to sexual penetration or sexual contact when done for 
 97.35  a bona fide medical purpose. 
 97.36     [EFFECTIVE DATE.] This section is effective August 1, 2004, 
 98.1   and applies to crimes committed on or after that date. 
 98.2      Sec. 12.  Minnesota Statutes 2002, section 609.353, is 
 98.3   amended to read: 
 98.4      609.353 [JURISDICTION.] 
 98.5      A violation or attempted violation of section 609.342, 
 98.6   609.343, 609.344, 609.345, 609.3451, 609.3453, or 609.352 may be 
 98.7   prosecuted in any jurisdiction in which the violation originates 
 98.8   or terminates. 
 98.9      [EFFECTIVE DATE.] This section is effective August 1, 2004, 
 98.10  and applies to crimes committed on or after that date. 
 98.11     Sec. 13.  Minnesota Statutes 2002, section 631.045, is 
 98.12  amended to read: 
 98.13     631.045 [EXCLUDING SPECTATORS FROM THE COURTROOM.] 
 98.14     At the trial of a complaint or indictment for a violation 
 98.15  of sections 609.109, 609.341 to 609.3451, 609.3453, or 617.246, 
 98.16  subdivision 2, when a minor under 18 years of age is the person 
 98.17  upon, with, or against whom the crime is alleged to have been 
 98.18  committed, the judge may exclude the public from the courtroom 
 98.19  during the victim's testimony or during all or part of the 
 98.20  remainder of the trial upon a showing that closure is necessary 
 98.21  to protect a witness or ensure fairness in the trial.  The judge 
 98.22  shall give the prosecutor, defendant and members of the public 
 98.23  the opportunity to object to the closure before a closure order. 
 98.24  The judge shall specify the reasons for closure in an order 
 98.25  closing all or part of the trial.  Upon closure the judge shall 
 98.26  only admit persons who have a direct interest in the case. 
 98.27     [EFFECTIVE DATE.] This section is effective August 1, 2004, 
 98.28  and applies to crimes committed on or after that date. 
 98.29     Sec. 14.  [REVISOR INSTRUCTION.] 
 98.30     The revisor of statutes shall renumber Minnesota Statutes, 
 98.31  section 244.051, as Minnesota Statutes, section 244.0517, and 
 98.32  correct cross-references.  The revisor of statutes also shall 
 98.33  renumber Minnesota Statutes, section 609.3452, as Minnesota 
 98.34  Statutes, section 609.3462, and correct cross-references.  In 
 98.35  addition, the revisor shall delete the reference in Minnesota 
 98.36  Statutes, section 13.871, subdivision 3, paragraph (d), to 
 99.1   Minnesota Statutes, section 609.3452, and insert a reference to 
 99.2   Minnesota Statutes, section 609.3462.  The revisor shall include 
 99.3   a notation in Minnesota Statutes to inform readers of the 
 99.4   statutes of the renumbering of sections 244.051 and 609.3462. 
 99.5      [EFFECTIVE DATE.] This section is effective August 1, 2004. 
 99.6                              ARTICLE 6
 99.7                      METHAMPHETAMINE PROVISIONS
 99.8      Section 1.  [152.015] [GBL AND BDO.] 
 99.9      Gamma-butyrolactone (GBL) and 1,4-Butanediol (BDO) are not 
 99.10  controlled substances and are exempted from regulation under 
 99.11  this chapter when: 
 99.12     (1) intended for industrial use and not for human 
 99.13  consumption; or 
 99.14     (2) occurring in a natural concentration and not the result 
 99.15  of deliberate addition. 
 99.16     [EFFECTIVE DATE.] This section is effective August 1, 2004, 
 99.17  and applies to crimes committed on or after that date. 
 99.18     Sec. 2.  Minnesota Statutes 2003 Supplement, section 
 99.19  152.021, subdivision 2a, is amended to read: 
 99.20     Subd. 2a.  [METHAMPHETAMINE MANUFACTURE CRIMES CRIME; 
 99.21  POSSESSION OF SUBSTANCES WITH INTENT TO MANUFACTURE 
 99.22  METHAMPHETAMINE CRIME.] (a) Notwithstanding subdivision 1, 
 99.23  sections 152.022, subdivision 1, 152.023, subdivision 1, and 
 99.24  152.024, subdivision 1, a person is guilty of controlled 
 99.25  substance crime in the first degree if the person manufactures 
 99.26  any amount of methamphetamine. 
 99.27     (b) Notwithstanding paragraph (a) and section 609.17, A 
 99.28  person is guilty of attempted manufacture of methamphetamine a 
 99.29  crime if the person possesses any chemical reagents or 
 99.30  precursors with the intent to manufacture methamphetamine.  As 
 99.31  used in this section, "chemical reagents or precursors" refers 
 99.32  to one or more includes, but is not limited to, any of the 
 99.33  following substances, or their salts, isomers, and salts of 
 99.34  isomers: 
 99.35     (1) ephedrine; 
 99.36     (2) pseudoephedrine; 
100.1      (3) phenyl-2-propanone; 
100.2      (4) phenylacetone; 
100.3      (5) anhydrous ammonia, as defined in section 18C.005, 
100.4   subdivision 1a; 
100.5      (6) organic solvents; 
100.6      (7) hydrochloric acid; 
100.7      (8) lithium metal; 
100.8      (9) sodium metal; 
100.9      (10) ether; 
100.10     (11) sulfuric acid; 
100.11     (12) red phosphorus; 
100.12     (13) iodine; 
100.13     (14) sodium hydroxide; 
100.14     (15) benzaldehyde; 
100.15     (16) benzyl methyl ketone; 
100.16     (17) benzyl cyanide; 
100.17     (18) nitroethane; 
100.18     (19) methylamine; 
100.19     (20) phenylacetic acid; 
100.20     (21) hydriodic acid; or 
100.21     (22) hydriotic acid. 
100.22     [EFFECTIVE DATE.] This section is effective August 1, 2004, 
100.23  and applies to crimes committed on or after that date. 
100.24     Sec. 3.  Minnesota Statutes 2003 Supplement, section 
100.25  152.021, subdivision 3, is amended to read: 
100.26     Subd. 3.  [PENALTY.] (a) A person convicted under 
100.27  subdivisions 1 to 2a, paragraph (a), may be sentenced to 
100.28  imprisonment for not more than 30 years or to payment of a fine 
100.29  of not more than $1,000,000, or both; a person convicted under 
100.30  subdivision 2a, paragraph (b), may be sentenced to imprisonment 
100.31  for not more than three ten years or to payment of a fine of not 
100.32  more than $5,000 $20,000, or both. 
100.33     (b) If the conviction is a subsequent controlled substance 
100.34  conviction, a person convicted under subdivisions 1 to 2a, 
100.35  paragraph (a), shall be committed to the commissioner of 
100.36  corrections for not less than four years nor more than 40 years 
101.1   and, in addition, may be sentenced to payment of a fine of not 
101.2   more than $1,000,000; a person convicted under subdivision 2a, 
101.3   paragraph (b), may be sentenced to imprisonment for not more 
101.4   than four 15 years or to payment of a fine of not more than 
101.5   $5,000 $30,000, or both.  
101.6      (c) In a prosecution under subdivision 1 involving sales by 
101.7   the same person in two or more counties within a 90-day period, 
101.8   the person may be prosecuted for all of the sales in any county 
101.9   in which one of the sales occurred.  
101.10     [EFFECTIVE DATE.] This section is effective August 1, 2004, 
101.11  and applies to crimes committed on or after that date. 
101.12     Sec. 4.  [152.0275] [CERTAIN CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE OFFENSES; 
101.13  RESTITUTION; PROHIBITIONS ON PROPERTY USE.] 
101.14     Subdivision 1.  [RESTITUTION.] (a) As used in this 
101.15  subdivision: 
101.16     (1) "clandestine lab site" means any structure or 
101.17  conveyance or outdoor location occupied or affected by 
101.18  conditions or chemicals, typically associated with a clandestine 
101.19  drug lab operation; 
101.20     (2) "emergency response" includes, but is not limited to, 
101.21  removing and collecting evidence, securing the site, removal, 
101.22  remediation, and hazardous chemical assessment or inspection of 
101.23  the site where the relevant offense or offenses took place, 
101.24  regardless of whether these actions are performed by the public 
101.25  entities themselves or by private contractors paid by the public 
101.26  entities, or the property owner; 
101.27     (3) "remediation" means proper cleanup, treatment, or 
101.28  containment of hazardous substances or methamphetamine at or in 
101.29  a clandestine lab site, and may include demolition or disposal 
101.30  of structures or other property when an assessment so indicates; 
101.31  and 
101.32     (4) "removal" means the removal from the clandestine lab 
101.33  site of precursor or waste chemicals, chemical containers, or 
101.34  equipment associated with the manufacture, packaging, or storage 
101.35  of illegal drugs. 
101.36     (b) A court shall require a person convicted of 
102.1   manufacturing or attempting to manufacture a controlled 
102.2   substance or of an illegal activity involving a precursor 
102.3   substance, where the response to the crime involved an emergency 
102.4   response, to pay restitution to all public entities and property 
102.5   owners that participated in the response.  The restitution 
102.6   ordered must cover the reasonable costs of their participation 
102.7   in the response.  
102.8      (c) Notwithstanding paragraph (b), if the court finds that 
102.9   the convicted person is indigent or that payment of the 
102.10  restitution would create undue hardship for the convicted 
102.11  person's immediate family, the court may reduce the amount of 
102.12  restitution to an appropriate level.  
102.13     Subd. 2.  [PROPERTY-RELATED PROHIBITIONS.] (a) As used in 
102.14  this subdivision: 
102.15     (1) "clandestine lab site" has the meaning given in 
102.16  subdivision 1, paragraph (a); 
102.17     (2) "property" includes buildings and other structures, and 
102.18  motor vehicles as defined in section 609.487, subdivision 2a.  
102.19  Property also includes real property whether publicly or 
102.20  privately owned and public waters and rights-of-way; 
102.21     (3) "remediation" has the meaning given in subdivision 1, 
102.22  paragraph (a); and 
102.23     (4) "removal" has the meaning given in subdivision 1, 
102.24  paragraph (a).  
102.25     (b) A peace officer who arrests a person at a clandestine 
102.26  lab site shall notify the appropriate county or local health 
102.27  department, state duty officer, and child protection services of 
102.28  the arrest and the location of the site.  
102.29     (c) A local unit of government or local health department 
102.30  or sheriff shall order that all property that has been found to 
102.31  be a clandestine lab site and contaminated by substances, 
102.32  chemicals, or items of any kind used in the manufacture of 
102.33  methamphetamine or any part of the manufacturing process, or the 
102.34  by-products or degradates of manufacturing methamphetamine be 
102.35  prohibited from being occupied, rented, sold, or used until it 
102.36  has been assessed and remediated as provided in the Department 
103.1   of Health's clandestine drug labs general cleanup guidelines.  
103.2      (d) Unless clearly inapplicable, the procedures specified 
103.3   in chapter 145A and any related rules adopted under that chapter 
103.4   addressing the enforcement of public health laws, the removal 
103.5   and abatement of public health nuisances, and the remedies 
103.6   available to property owners or occupants apply to this 
103.7   subdivision.  
103.8      (e) Upon the proper removal and remediation of any property 
103.9   used as a clandestine lab site, the contractor shall verify that 
103.10  the work was completed according to the Department of Health's 
103.11  clandestine drug labs general cleanup guidelines and best 
103.12  practices and that levels of contamination have been reduced to 
103.13  levels set forth in the guidelines.  Following this, the 
103.14  applicable authority shall vacate its order issued under 
103.15  paragraph (c). 
103.16     (f) If the applicable authority determines under paragraph 
103.17  (c) that a motor vehicle has been contaminated by substances, 
103.18  chemicals, or items of any kind used in the manufacture of 
103.19  methamphetamine or any part of the manufacturing process, or the 
103.20  by-products or degradates of manufacturing methamphetamine and 
103.21  if the authority is able to obtain the certificate of title for 
103.22  the motor vehicle, the authority shall notify the registrar of 
103.23  motor vehicles of this fact and in addition forward the 
103.24  certificate of title to the registrar.  The authority shall also 
103.25  notify the registrar when it vacates its order under paragraph 
103.26  (e). 
103.27     [EFFECTIVE DATE.] This section is effective August 1, 2004. 
103.28     Sec. 5.  Minnesota Statutes 2002, section 152.135, 
103.29  subdivision 2, is amended to read: 
103.30     Subd. 2.  [EXCEPTIONS.] (a) A drug product containing 
103.31  ephedrine, its salts, optical isomers, and salts of optical 
103.32  isomers is exempt from subdivision 1 if the drug product: 
103.33     (1) may be lawfully sold over the counter without a 
103.34  prescription under the federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act, 
103.35  United States Code, title 21, section 321, et seq.; 
103.36     (2) is labeled and marketed in a manner consistent with the 
104.1   pertinent OTC Tentative Final or Final Monograph; 
104.2      (3) is manufactured and distributed for legitimate 
104.3   medicinal use in a manner that reduces or eliminates the 
104.4   likelihood of abuse; 
104.5      (4) is not marketed, advertised, or labeled for the 
104.6   indication of stimulation, mental alertness, weight loss, muscle 
104.7   enhancement, appetite control, or energy; and 
104.8      (5) is in solid oral dosage forms, including soft gelatin 
104.9   caplets, that combine 400 milligrams of guaifenesin and 25 
104.10  milligrams of ephedrine per dose, according to label 
104.11  instructions; or is an anorectal preparation containing not more 
104.12  than five percent ephedrine; and 
104.13     (6) is sold in a manner that does not conflict with section 
104.14  152.136. 
104.15     (b) Subdivisions 1 and 3 shall not apply to products 
104.16  containing ephedra or ma huang and lawfully marketed as dietary 
104.17  supplements under federal law.  
104.18     [EFFECTIVE DATE.] This section is effective August 1, 2004, 
104.19  and applies to crimes committed on or after that date. 
104.20     Sec. 6.  [152.136] [SALES OF METHAMPHETAMINE PRECURSOR 
104.21  DRUGS; REPORTING.] 
104.22     Subdivision 1.  [DEFINITIONS.] (a) As used in this section, 
104.23  the following terms have the meanings given. 
104.24     (b) "Methamphetamine precursor drug" means: 
104.25     (1) a drug or product containing as its sole active 
104.26  ingredient ephedrine or pseudoephedrine; or 
104.27     (2) a combination drug or product containing as one of its 
104.28  active ingredients ephedrine or pseudoephedrine. 
104.29     (c) "Over-the-counter sale" means a retail sale of a drug 
104.30  or product but does not include the sale of a drug or product 
104.31  pursuant to the terms of a valid prescription.  
104.32     (d) "Suspicious transaction" means the sale, distribution, 
104.33  delivery, or other transfer of a substance under circumstances 
104.34  that would lead a reasonable person to believe that the 
104.35  substance is likely to be used to illegally manufacture a 
104.36  controlled substance based on factors such as the amount of the 
105.1   substance involved in the transaction, the method of payment, 
105.2   the method of delivery, and any past dealings with any 
105.3   participant in the transaction. 
105.4      Subd. 2.  [PROHIBITED CONDUCT.] (a) No person may sell in a 
105.5   single over-the-counter sale more than three packages or any 
105.6   combination of packages exceeding a total weight of nine grams 
105.7   of a methamphetamine precursor drug or a combination of 
105.8   methamphetamine precursor drugs. 
105.9      (b) Over-the-counter sales of methamphetamine precursor 
105.10  drugs are limited to: 
105.11     (1) packages containing not more than a total of three 
105.12  grams of one or more methamphetamine precursor drugs, calculated 
105.13  in terms of ephedrine base and pseudoephedrine base; or 
105.14     (2) for nonliquid products, sales in blister packs, where 
105.15  each blister contains not more than two dosage units, or, if the 
105.16  use of blister packs is not technically feasible, sales in unit 
105.17  dose packets or pouches. 
105.18     Subd. 3.  [SUSPICIOUS TRANSACTIONS; REPORTING; 
105.19  IMMUNITY.] Any person employed by a business establishment that 
105.20  offers for sale methamphetamine precursor drugs who sells such a 
105.21  drug to any person in a suspicious transaction shall report the 
105.22  transaction to the owner, supervisor, or manager of the 
105.23  establishment.  The owner, supervisor, or manager may report the 
105.24  transaction to local law enforcement.  A person who reports 
105.25  information under this subdivision in good faith is immune from 
105.26  civil liability relating to the report. 
105.27     Subd. 4.  [EXEMPTION.] This section does not apply to 
105.28  pediatric products labeled pursuant to federal regulation 
105.29  primarily intended for administration to children under 12 years 
105.30  of age according to label instructions. 
105.31     Subd. 5.  [PREEMPTION; INVALIDATION.] This section preempts 
105.32  all local ordinances or regulations governing the sale by a 
105.33  business establishment of over-the-counter products containing 
105.34  ephedrine or pseudoephedrine.  All ordinances enacted prior to 
105.35  the effective date of this act are void. 
105.36     [EFFECTIVE DATE.] This section is effective January 1, 2005.
106.1      Sec. 7.  [152.137] [ANHYDROUS AMMONIA; PROHIBITED CONDUCT; 
106.2   CRIMINAL PENALTIES; CIVIL LIABILITY.] 
106.3      Subdivision 1.  [DEFINITIONS.] As used in this section, 
106.4   "tamper" means action taken by a person not authorized to take 
106.5   that action by law or by the owner or authorized custodian of an 
106.6   anhydrous ammonia container or of equipment where anhydrous 
106.7   ammonia is used, stored, distributed, or transported. 
106.8      Subd. 2.  [PROHIBITED CONDUCT.] (a) A person may not: 
106.9      (1) steal or unlawfully take or carry away any amount of 
106.10  anhydrous ammonia; 
106.11     (2) purchase, possess, transfer, or distribute any amount 
106.12  of anhydrous ammonia, knowing, or having reason to know, that it 
106.13  will be used to unlawfully manufacture a controlled substance; 
106.14     (3) place, have placed, or possess anhydrous ammonia in a 
106.15  container that is not designed, constructed, maintained, and 
106.16  authorized to contain or transport anhydrous ammonia; 
106.17     (4) transport anhydrous ammonia in a container that is not 
106.18  designed, constructed, maintained, and authorized to transport 
106.19  anhydrous ammonia; 
106.20     (5) use, deliver, receive, sell, or transport a container 
106.21  designed and constructed to contain anhydrous ammonia without 
106.22  the express consent of the owner or authorized custodian of the 
106.23  container; or 
106.24     (6) tamper with any equipment or facility used to contain, 
106.25  store, or transport anhydrous ammonia.  
106.26     (b) For the purposes of this subdivision, containers 
106.27  designed and constructed for the storage and transport of 
106.28  anhydrous ammonia are described in rules adopted under section 
106.29  18C.121, subdivision 1, or in Code of Federal Regulations, title 
106.30  49.  
106.31     Subd. 3.  [NO CAUSE OF ACTION.] (a) Except as provided in 
106.32  paragraph (b), a person tampering with anhydrous ammonia 
106.33  containers or equipment under subdivision 2 shall have no cause 
106.34  of action for damages arising out of the tampering against: 
106.35     (1) the owner or lawful custodian of the container or 
106.36  equipment; 
107.1      (2) a person responsible for the installation or 
107.2   maintenance of the container or equipment; or 
107.3      (3) a person lawfully selling or offering for sale the 
107.4   anhydrous ammonia.  
107.5      (b) Paragraph (a) does not apply to a cause of action 
107.6   against a person who unlawfully obtained the anhydrous ammonia 
107.7   or anhydrous ammonia container or who possesses the anhydrous 
107.8   ammonia or anhydrous ammonia container for any unlawful purpose. 
107.9      Subd. 4.  [CRIMINAL PENALTY.] A person who knowingly 
107.10  violates subdivision 2 is guilty of a felony and may be 
107.11  sentenced to imprisonment for not more than five years or to 
107.12  payment of a fine of not more than $50,000, or both.  
107.13     [EFFECTIVE DATE.] This section is effective August 1, 2004, 
107.14  and applies to crimes committed on or after that date. 
107.15     Sec. 8.  [152.138] [METHAMPHETAMINE-RELATED CRIMES 
107.16  INVOLVING CHILDREN AND VULNERABLE ADULTS.] 
107.17     Subdivision 1.  [DEFINITIONS.] (a) As used in this section, 
107.18  the following terms have the meanings given. 
107.19     (b) "Chemical substance" means a substance intended to be 
107.20  used as a precursor in the manufacture of methamphetamine or any 
107.21  other chemical intended to be used in the manufacture of 
107.22  methamphetamine. 
107.23     (c) "Child" means any person under the age of 18 years. 
107.24     (d) "Methamphetamine paraphernalia" means all equipment, 
107.25  products, and materials of any kind that are used, intended for 
107.26  use, or designed for use in manufacturing, injecting, ingesting, 
107.27  inhaling, or otherwise introducing methamphetamine into the 
107.28  human body. 
107.29     (e) "Methamphetamine waste products" means substances, 
107.30  chemicals, or items of any kind used in the manufacture of 
107.31  methamphetamine or any part of the manufacturing process, or the 
107.32  by-products or degradates of manufacturing methamphetamine.  
107.33     (f) "Vulnerable adult" has the meaning given in section 
107.34  626.5572, subdivision 21. 
107.35     Subd. 2.  [PROHIBITED CONDUCT.] (a) No person may knowingly 
107.36  engage in any of the following activities in the presence of a 
108.1   child or vulnerable adult; in the residence of a child or a 
108.2   vulnerable adult; in a building, structure, conveyance, or 
108.3   outdoor location where a child or vulnerable adult might 
108.4   reasonably be expected to be present; in a room offered to the 
108.5   public for overnight accommodation; or in any multiple unit 
108.6   residential building: 
108.7      (1) manufacturing or attempting to manufacture 
108.8   methamphetamine; 
108.9      (2) storing any chemical substance; 
108.10     (3) storing any methamphetamine waste products; or 
108.11     (4) storing any methamphetamine paraphernalia. 
108.12     (b) No person may knowingly cause or permit a child or 
108.13  vulnerable adult to inhale, be exposed to, have contact with, or 
108.14  ingest methamphetamine, a chemical substance, or methamphetamine 
108.15  paraphernalia. 
108.16     Subd. 3.  [CRIMINAL PENALTY.] A person who violates 
108.17  subdivision 2 is guilty of a felony and may be sentenced to 
108.18  imprisonment for not more than five years or to payment of a 
108.19  fine of not more than $10,000, or both. 
108.20     Subd. 4.  [MULTIPLE SENTENCES.] Notwithstanding sections 
108.21  609.035 and 609.04, a prosecution for or conviction under this 
108.22  section is not a bar to conviction of or punishment for any 
108.23  other crime committed by the defendant as part of the same 
108.24  conduct. 
108.25     Subd. 5.  [CONSECUTIVE SENTENCES.] Notwithstanding any 
108.26  provision of the Sentencing Guidelines, the court may provide 
108.27  that a sentence imposed for a violation of this section shall 
108.28  run consecutively to any sentence imposed for the intended 
108.29  criminal act.  A decision of the court to impose consecutive 
108.30  sentences under this subdivision is not a departure from the 
108.31  Sentencing Guidelines. 
108.32     Subd. 6.  [PROTECTIVE CUSTODY.] A peace officer may take 
108.33  any child present in an area where any of the activities 
108.34  described in subdivision 2, paragraph (a), clauses (1) to (4), 
108.35  are taking place into protective custody in accordance with 
108.36  section 260C.175, subdivision 1, paragraph (b), clause (2).  A 
109.1   child taken into protective custody under this subdivision shall 
109.2   be provided health screening to assess potential health concerns 
109.3   related to methamphetamine as provided in section 260C.188.  A 
109.4   child not taken into protective custody under this subdivision 
109.5   but who is known to have been exposed to methamphetamine shall 
109.6   be offered health screening for potential health concerns 
109.7   related to methamphetamine as provided in section 260C.188. 
109.8      Subd. 7.  [REPORTING MALTREATMENT OF VULNERABLE ADULT.] If 
109.9   a vulnerable adult is present in an area where any of the 
109.10  activities described in subdivision 2, paragraph (a), clauses 
109.11  (1) to (4), are taking place, a peace officer or mandated 
109.12  reporter who has reason to believe the vulnerable adult inhaled, 
109.13  was exposed to, had contact with, or ingested methamphetamine, a 
109.14  chemical substance, or methamphetamine paraphernalia shall make 
109.15  a report under section 626.557, subdivision 9b.  
109.16     [EFFECTIVE DATE.] This section is effective August 1, 2004, 
109.17  and applies to crimes committed on or after that date. 
109.18     Sec. 9.  [152.185] [METHAMPHETAMINE AWARENESS AND 
109.19  EDUCATIONAL ACCOUNT.] 
109.20     Subdivision 1.  [ACCOUNT ESTABLISHED.] The methamphetamine 
109.21  awareness and educational account is a special revenue account 
109.22  in the state treasury.  Money in the account shall be used to 
109.23  support projects relating to educating retailers and the public 
109.24  on the dangers of methamphetamines and methamphetamine precursor 
109.25  drugs and the laws and regulations governing their use. 
109.26     Subd. 2.  [CONTRIBUTIONS.] The state may accept 
109.27  contributions, gifts, grants, and bequests for deposit into the 
109.28  fund. 
109.29     [EFFECTIVE DATE.] This section is effective August 1, 2004. 
109.30     Sec. 10.  Minnesota Statutes 2002, section 168A.05, 
109.31  subdivision 3, is amended to read: 
109.32     Subd. 3.  [CONTENT OF CERTIFICATE.] Each certificate of 
109.33  title issued by the department shall contain: 
109.34     (1) the date issued; 
109.35     (2) the first, middle, and last names, the dates of birth, 
109.36  and addresses of all owners who are natural persons, the full 
110.1   names and addresses of all other owners; 
110.2      (3) the names and addresses of any secured parties in the 
110.3   order of priority as shown on the application, or if the 
110.4   application is based on a certificate of title, as shown on the 
110.5   certificate, or as otherwise determined by the department; 
110.6      (4) any liens filed pursuant to a court order or by a 
110.7   public agency responsible for child support enforcement against 
110.8   the owner; 
110.9      (5) the title number assigned to the vehicle; 
110.10     (6) a description of the vehicle including, so far as the 
110.11  following data exists, its make, model, year, identifying 
110.12  number, type of body, whether new or used, and if a new vehicle, 
110.13  the date of the first sale of the vehicle for use; 
110.14     (7) with respect to motor vehicles subject to the 
110.15  provisions of section 325E.15, the true cumulative mileage 
110.16  registered on the odometer or that the actual mileage is unknown 
110.17  if the odometer reading is known by the owner to be different 
110.18  from the true mileage; 
110.19     (8) with respect to vehicles subject to sections 325F.6641 
110.20  and 325F.6642, the appropriate term "flood damaged," "rebuilt," 
110.21  "prior salvage," or "reconstructed"; and 
110.22     (9) with respect to a vehicle contaminated by 
110.23  methamphetamine production, if the registrar has received the 
110.24  certificate of title and notice described in section 152.0275, 
110.25  subdivision 2, paragraph (f), the term "hazardous waste 
110.26  contaminated vehicle"; and 
110.27     (10) any other data the department prescribes. 
110.28     [EFFECTIVE DATE.] This section is effective August 1, 2004. 
110.29     Sec. 11.  [446A.083] [METHAMPHETAMINE LABORATORY CLEANUP 
110.30  REVOLVING FUND.] 
110.31     Subdivision 1.  [DEFINITIONS.] As used in this section: 
110.32     (1) "clandestine lab site" has the meaning given in section 
110.33  152.0275, subdivision 1, paragraph (a); 
110.34     (2) "property" has the meaning given in section 152.0275, 
110.35  subdivision 2, paragraph (a), but does not include motor 
110.36  vehicles; and 
111.1      (3) "remediate" has the meaning given to remediation in 
111.2   section 152.0275, subdivision 1, paragraph (a).  
111.3      Subd. 2.  [FUND ESTABLISHED.] The authority shall establish 
111.4   a methamphetamine laboratory cleanup revolving fund to provide 
111.5   loans to counties and cities to remediate clandestine lab 
111.6   sites.  The fund must be credited with repayments.  
111.7      Subd. 3.  [APPLICATIONS.] Applications by a county or city 
111.8   for a loan from the fund must be made to the authority on the 
111.9   forms prescribed by the authority.  The application must 
111.10  include, but is not limited to:  
111.11     (1) the amount of the loan requested and the proposed use 
111.12  of the loan proceeds; 
111.13     (2) the source of revenues to repay the loan; and 
111.14     (3) certification by the county or city that it meets the 
111.15  loan eligibility requirements of subdivision 4.  
111.16     Subd. 4.  [LOAN ELIGIBILITY.] A county or city is eligible 
111.17  for a loan under this section if the county or city: 
111.18     (1) identifies a site or sites designated by a local public 
111.19  health department or law enforcement as a clandestine lab site; 
111.20     (2) has required the site's property owner to remediate the 
111.21  site at cost, under chapter 145A or a local public health 
111.22  nuisance ordinance that addresses clandestine lab remediation; 
111.23     (3) certifies that the property owner cannot pay for the 
111.24  remediation immediately; and 
111.25     (4) certifies that the property owner has not properly 
111.26  remediated the site. 
111.27     Subd. 5.  [USE OF LOAN PROCEEDS; REIMBURSEMENT BY PROPERTY 
111.28  OWNER.] (a) A loan recipient shall use the loan to remediate the 
111.29  clandestine lab site, or if this has already been done, to 
111.30  reimburse the applicable county or city fund for costs paid by 
111.31  the recipient to remediate the clandestine lab site.  
111.32     (b) A loan recipient shall seek reimbursement from the 
111.33  owner of the property containing the clandestine lab site for 
111.34  the costs of the remediation.  In addition to other lawful means 
111.35  of seeking reimbursement, the loan recipient may recover its 
111.36  costs through a property tax assessment by following the 
112.1   procedures specified in section 145A.08, subdivision 2, 
112.2   paragraph (c).  
112.3      Subd. 6.  [AWARD AND DISBURSEMENT OF FUNDS.] The authority 
112.4   shall award loans to recipients on a first-come, first-served 
112.5   basis, provided that the recipient is able to comply with the 
112.6   terms and conditions of the authority loan, which must be in 
112.7   conformance with this section.  The authority shall make a 
112.8   single disbursement of the loan upon receipt of a payment 
112.9   request that includes a list of remediation expenses and 
112.10  evidence that a second-party sampling was undertaken to ensure 
112.11  that the remediation work was successful or a guarantee that 
112.12  such a sampling will be undertaken.  
112.13     Subd. 7.  [LOAN CONDITIONS AND TERMS.] (a) When making 
112.14  loans from the revolving fund, the authority shall comply with 
112.15  the criteria in paragraphs (b) to (e).  
112.16     (b) Loans must be made at a two percent per annum interest 
112.17  rate for terms not to exceed ten years unless the recipient 
112.18  requests a 20-year term due to financial hardship. 
112.19     (c) The annual principal and interest payments must begin 
112.20  no later than one year after completion of the cleanup.  Loans 
112.21  must be amortized no later than 20 years after completion of the 
112.22  cleanup.  
112.23     (d) A loan recipient must identify and establish a source 
112.24  of revenue for repayment of the loan and must undertake whatever 
112.25  steps are necessary to collect payments within one year of 
112.26  receipt of funds from the authority.  
112.27     (e) The fund must be credited with all payments of 
112.28  principal and interest on all loans, except the costs as 
112.29  permitted under section 446A.04, subdivision 5, paragraph (a). 
112.30     (f) Loans must be made only to recipients with clandestine 
112.31  lab ordinances that address remediation.  
112.32     Subd. 8.  [AUTHORITY TO INCUR DEBT.] Counties and cities 
112.33  may incur debt under this section by resolution of the board or 
112.34  council authorizing issuance of a revenue bond to the authority. 
112.35     [EFFECTIVE DATE.] This section is effective August 1, 2004. 
112.36     Sec. 12.  Minnesota Statutes 2002, section 609.1095, 
113.1   subdivision 1, is amended to read: 
113.2      Subdivision 1.  [DEFINITIONS.] (a) As used in this section, 
113.3   the following terms have the meanings given.  
113.4      (b) "Conviction" means any of the following accepted and 
113.5   recorded by the court:  a plea of guilty, a verdict of guilty by 
113.6   a jury, or a finding of guilty by the court.  The term includes 
113.7   a conviction by any court in Minnesota or another jurisdiction.  
113.8      (c) "Prior conviction" means a conviction that occurred 
113.9   before the offender committed the next felony resulting in a 
113.10  conviction and before the offense for which the offender is 
113.11  being sentenced under this section. 
113.12     (d) "Violent crime" means a violation of or an attempt or 
113.13  conspiracy to violate any of the following laws of this state or 
113.14  any similar laws of the United States or any other state:  
113.15  section sections 152.138; 609.165; 609.185; 609.19; 609.195; 
113.16  609.20; 609.205; 609.21; 609.221; 609.222; 609.223; 609.228; 
113.17  609.235; 609.24; 609.245; 609.25; 609.255; 609.2661; 609.2662; 
113.18  609.2663; 609.2664; 609.2665; 609.267; 609.2671; 609.268; 
113.19  609.342; 609.343; 609.344; 609.345; 609.498, subdivision 1; 
113.20  609.561; 609.562; 609.582, subdivision 1; 609.66, subdivision 
113.21  1e; 609.687; 609.855, subdivision 5; any provision of sections 
113.22  609.229; 609.377; 609.378; 609.749; and 624.713 that is 
113.23  punishable by a felony penalty; or any provision of chapter 152 
113.24  that is punishable by a maximum sentence of 15 years or more. 
113.25     [EFFECTIVE DATE.] This section is effective August 1, 2004, 
113.26  and applies to crimes committed on or after that date. 
113.27     Sec. 13.  [METHAMPHETAMINE RETAIL AND CONSUMER EDUCATION 
113.28  PROGRAM.] 
113.29     The commissioner of public safety shall develop and 
113.30  implement a program designed to inform retailers and consumers 
113.31  and heighten public and business awareness of the dangers of 
113.32  illicit methamphetamine production, distribution, use, and the 
113.33  ready availability of methamphetamine in Minnesota.  
113.34  Specifically, the commissioner, in consultation with 
113.35  representatives from retail associations, shall develop (1) 
113.36  training posters for retail employees to identify the products 
114.1   that are commonly purchased or stolen for use in manufacturing 
114.2   methamphetamine, (2) an on-line retail employee training Web 
114.3   site, (3) signage, including shelf tags, stickers, and decals to 
114.4   deter criminals and to educate consumers about the program and 
114.5   ingredients used in manufacturing methamphetamine, (4) 
114.6   guidelines for the strategic placement of precursor products in 
114.7   areas that will deter theft or suspicious purchases of large 
114.8   quantities, (5) brochures educating retailers and consumers 
114.9   about the program, and (6) forms for retailers to report 
114.10  suspicious transactions.  The commissioner must also provide to 
114.11  businesses information on applicable state and federal laws and 
114.12  regulations relating to methamphetamine and methamphetamine 
114.13  precursor drugs. 
114.14     [EFFECTIVE DATE.] This section is effective July 1, 2004. 
114.15     Sec. 14.  [REPEALER.] 
114.16     Minnesota Statutes 2002, sections 18C.005, subdivisions 1a 
114.17  and 35a; 18C.201, subdivisions 6 and 7; and 18D.331, subdivision 
114.18  5, are repealed.  
114.19     [EFFECTIVE DATE.] This section is effective August 1, 2004. 
114.20                             ARTICLE 7 
114.21                    GENERAL CRIMINAL PROVISIONS 
114.22     Section 1.  Minnesota Statutes 2002, section 169.14, 
114.23  subdivision 3, is amended to read: 
114.24     Subd. 3.  [REDUCED SPEED REQUIRED.] (a) The driver of any 
114.25  vehicle shall, consistent with the requirements, drive at an 
114.26  appropriate reduced speed when approaching or passing an 
114.27  authorized emergency vehicle stopped with emergency lights 
114.28  flashing on any street or highway, when approaching and crossing 
114.29  an intersection or railway grade crossing, when approaching and 
114.30  going around a curve, when approaching a hill crest, when 
114.31  traveling upon any narrow or winding roadway, and when special 
114.32  hazards exist with respect to pedestrians or other traffic or by 
114.33  reason of weather or highway conditions.  
114.34     (b) For purposes of this subdivision, "appropriate reduced 
114.35  speed" when approaching or passing an emergency vehicle stopped 
114.36  on a highway with emergency lights flashing is a speed that 
115.1   allows the driver to control the vehicle to the extent 
115.2   necessary, up to and including stopping the vehicle, to prevent 
115.3   a collision, to prevent injury to persons or property, and to 
115.4   avoid interference with the performance of emergency duties by 
115.5   emergency personnel. 
115.6      (c) A person who fails to reduce speed appropriately when 
115.7   approaching or passing an authorized emergency vehicle stopped 
115.8   with emergency lights flashing on a street or highway shall be 
115.9   assessed an additional surcharge equal to the amount of the fine 
115.10  imposed for the speed violation, but not less than $25. 
115.11     [EFFECTIVE DATE.] This section is effective August 1, 2004, 
115.12  and applies to crimes committed on or after that date. 
115.13     Sec. 2.  Minnesota Statutes 2002, section 169.14, is 
115.14  amended by adding a subdivision to read: 
115.15     Subd. 3a.  [DRIVER EDUCATION AND TRAINING PROGRAMS.] The 
115.16  commissioner of public safety shall take all necessary steps to 
115.17  ensure that persons enrolled in driver education programs 
115.18  offered at public schools, and persons enrolled in driver 
115.19  training programs offered at private and parochial schools and 
115.20  commercial driver training schools, are instructed as to the 
115.21  responsibilities of drivers when approaching emergency scenes 
115.22  and stopped emergency vehicles on highways. 
115.23     [EFFECTIVE DATE.] This section is effective July 1, 2004. 
115.24     Sec. 3.  Minnesota Statutes 2002, section 169.14, is 
115.25  amended by adding a subdivision to read: 
115.26     Subd. 3b.  [CAUSE FOR ARREST; VIOLATION; PENALTY.] (a) A 
115.27  peace officer may arrest the driver of a motor vehicle if the 
115.28  peace officer has probable cause to believe that the driver has 
115.29  operated the vehicle in violation of subdivision 3 at the scene 
115.30  of an emergency within the past four hours. 
115.31     (b) If a motor vehicle is operated in violation of 
115.32  subdivision 3 at the scene of an emergency, the owner of the 
115.33  vehicle or, for a leased motor vehicle, the lessee of the 
115.34  vehicle, is guilty of a petty misdemeanor.  The owner or lessee 
115.35  may not be fined under this paragraph if (1) another person is 
115.36  convicted for that violation, or (2) the motor vehicle was 
116.1   stolen at the time of the violation.  This paragraph does not 
116.2   apply to a lessor of a motor vehicle if the lessor keeps a 
116.3   record of the name and address of the lessee.  This paragraph 
116.4   does not prohibit or limit the prosecution of a motor vehicle 
116.5   operator for violating subdivision 3. 
116.6      [EFFECTIVE DATE.] This section is effective August 1, 2004, 
116.7   and applies to crimes committed on or after that date. 
116.8      Sec. 4.  Minnesota Statutes 2002, section 171.13, is 
116.9   amended by adding a subdivision to read: 
116.10     Subd. 1i.  [DRIVER'S MANUAL; SAFETY AT EMERGENCY 
116.11  SCENE.] The commissioner shall include in each edition of the 
116.12  driver's manual published by the Department of Public Safety 
116.13  after July 1, 2004, a section relating to the responsibilities 
116.14  of motorists when approaching an emergency or a stopped 
116.15  emergency vehicle on a highway. 
116.16     [EFFECTIVE DATE.] This section is effective July 1, 2004. 
116.17     Sec. 5.  Minnesota Statutes 2002, section 243.55, 
116.18  subdivision 1, is amended to read: 
116.19     Subdivision 1.  Any person who brings, sends, or in any 
116.20  manner causes to be introduced into any state correctional 
116.21  facility or state hospital, or within or upon the grounds 
116.22  belonging to or land or controlled by any such facility or 
116.23  hospital, or is found in possession of any controlled substance 
116.24  as defined in section 152.01, subdivision 4, or any firearms, 
116.25  weapons or explosives of any kind, without the consent of the 
116.26  chief executive officer thereof, shall be guilty of a felony 
116.27  and, upon conviction thereof, punished by imprisonment for a 
116.28  term of not more than ten years.  Any person who brings, sends, 
116.29  or in any manner causes to be introduced into any state 
116.30  correctional facility or within or upon the grounds belonging to 
116.31  or land controlled by the facility, or is found in the 
116.32  possession of any intoxicating or alcoholic liquor or malt 
116.33  beverage of any kind without the consent of the chief executive 
116.34  officer thereof, shall be guilty of a gross misdemeanor.  The 
116.35  provisions of this section shall not apply to physicians 
116.36  carrying drugs or introducing any of the above described liquors 
117.1   into such facilities for use in the practice of their 
117.2   profession; nor to sheriffs or other peace officers carrying 
117.3   revolvers or firearms as such officers in the discharge of 
117.4   duties. 
117.5      [EFFECTIVE DATE.] This section is effective August 1, 2004, 
117.6   and applies to crimes committed on or after that date. 
117.7      Sec. 6.  [590.10] [PRESERVATION OF EVIDENCE.] 
117.8      Subdivision 1.  [PRESERVATION.] Notwithstanding any other 
117.9   provision of law, all appropriate governmental entities shall 
117.10  retain any item of physical evidence which contains biological 
117.11  material that is used to secure a conviction in a criminal case 
117.12  for the period of time that any person remains incarcerated, on 
117.13  probation or parole, civilly committed, or subject to 
117.14  registration as a sex offender in connection with the case.  The 
117.15  governmental entity need retain only the portion of such 
117.16  evidence as was used to obtain an accurate biological sample and 
117.17  used to obtain a conviction.  This requirement shall apply with 
117.18  or without the filing of a petition for postconviction DNA 
117.19  analysis, as well as during the pendency of proceedings under 
117.20  sections 590.01.  If evidence is intentionally destroyed after 
117.21  the filing of a petition under sections 590.01, the court may 
117.22  impose appropriate sanctions on the responsible party or parties.
117.23     Subd. 2.  [DEFINITION.] For purposes of this section, 
117.24  "biological evidence" means: 
117.25     (1) the contents of a sexual assault examination kit; or 
117.26     (2) any item that contains blood, semen, hair, saliva, skin 
117.27  tissue, or other identifiable biological material, whether that 
117.28  material is catalogued separately, on a slide, swab, or in a 
117.29  test tube, or is present on other evidence, including, but not 
117.30  limited to, clothing, ligatures, bedding or other household 
117.31  material, drinking cups, cigarettes, and similar items. 
117.32     [EFFECTIVE DATE.] This section is effective the day 
117.33  following final enactment. 
117.34     Sec. 7.  Minnesota Statutes 2002, section 609.185, is 
117.35  amended to read: 
117.36     609.185 [MURDER IN THE FIRST DEGREE.] 
118.1      (a) Whoever does any of the following is guilty of murder 
118.2   in the first degree and shall be sentenced to imprisonment for 
118.3   life: 
118.4      (1) causes the death of a human being with premeditation 
118.5   and with intent to effect the death of the person or of another; 
118.6      (2) causes the death of a human being while committing or 
118.7   attempting to commit criminal sexual conduct in the first or 
118.8   second degree with force or violence, either upon or affecting 
118.9   the person or another; 
118.10     (3) causes the death of a human being with intent to effect 
118.11  the death of the person or another, while committing or 
118.12  attempting to commit burglary, aggravated robbery, kidnapping, 
118.13  arson in the first or second degree, a drive-by shooting, 
118.14  tampering with a witness in the first degree, escape from 
118.15  custody, or any felony violation of chapter 152 involving the 
118.16  unlawful sale of a controlled substance; 
118.17     (4) causes the death of a peace officer or a guard employed 
118.18  at a Minnesota state or local correctional facility, with intent 
118.19  to effect the death of that person or another, while the peace 
118.20  officer or guard is engaged in the performance of official 
118.21  duties; 
118.22     (5) causes the death of a minor while committing child 
118.23  abuse, when the perpetrator has engaged in a past pattern of 
118.24  child abuse upon the a child and the death occurs under 
118.25  circumstances manifesting an extreme indifference to human life; 
118.26     (6) causes the death of a human being while committing 
118.27  domestic abuse, when the perpetrator has engaged in a past 
118.28  pattern of domestic abuse upon the victim or upon another family 
118.29  or household member and the death occurs under circumstances 
118.30  manifesting an extreme indifference to human life; or 
118.31     (7) causes the death of a human being while committing, 
118.32  conspiring to commit, or attempting to commit a felony crime to 
118.33  further terrorism and the death occurs under circumstances 
118.34  manifesting an extreme indifference to human life. 
118.35     (b) For purposes of paragraph (a), clause (5), "child abuse"
118.36  means an act committed against a minor victim that constitutes a 
119.1   violation of the following laws of this state or any similar 
119.2   laws of the United States or any other state:  section 609.221; 
119.3   609.222; 609.223; 609.224; 609.2242; 609.342; 609.343; 609.344; 
119.4   609.345; 609.377; 609.378; or 609.713. 
119.5      (c) For purposes of paragraph (a), clause (6), "domestic 
119.6   abuse" means an act that: 
119.7      (1) constitutes a violation of section 609.221, 609.222, 
119.8   609.223, 609.224, 609.2242, 609.342, 609.343, 609.344, 609.345, 
119.9   609.713, or any similar laws of the United States or any other 
119.10  state; and 
119.11     (2) is committed against the victim who is a family or 
119.12  household member as defined in section 518B.01, subdivision 2, 
119.13  paragraph (b). 
119.14     (d) For purposes of paragraph (a), clause (7), "further 
119.15  terrorism" has the meaning given in section 609.714, subdivision 
119.16  1. 
119.17     [EFFECTIVE DATE.] This section is effective the day 
119.18  following final enactment and applies to crimes committed on or 
119.19  after that date. 
119.20     Sec. 8.  Minnesota Statutes 2002, section 609.2231, 
119.21  subdivision 1, is amended to read: 
119.22     Subdivision 1.  [PEACE OFFICERS.] Whoever physically 
119.23  assaults a peace officer licensed under section 626.845, 
119.24  subdivision 1, when that officer is effecting a lawful arrest or 
119.25  executing any other duty imposed by law is guilty of a gross 
119.26  misdemeanor and may be sentenced to imprisonment for not more 
119.27  than one year or to payment of a fine of not more than $3,000, 
119.28  or both.  If the assault inflicts demonstrable bodily harm or 
119.29  the person intentionally throws or otherwise transfers bodily 
119.30  fluids or feces at or onto the officer, the person is guilty of 
119.31  a felony and may be sentenced to imprisonment for not more than 
119.32  three years or to payment of a fine of not more than $6,000, or 
119.33  both. 
119.34     [EFFECTIVE DATE.] This section is effective August 1, 2004, 
119.35  and applies to crimes committed on or after that date. 
119.36     Sec. 9.  Minnesota Statutes 2003 Supplement, section 
120.1   609.2231, subdivision 3, is amended to read: 
120.2      Subd. 3.  [CORRECTIONAL EMPLOYEES; PROBATION OFFICERS; SEX 
120.3   OFFENDER TREATMENT PROVIDERS.] Whoever commits either of the 
120.4   following acts against an employee of a correctional facility as 
120.5   defined in section 241.021, subdivision 1, paragraph (f), a 
120.6   probation officer or other qualified person employed in 
120.7   supervising offenders, or a person who provides care or 
120.8   treatment at a facility defined in section 252.025, subdivision 
120.9   7, or 253B.02, subdivision 18a, while the employee person is 
120.10  engaged in the performance of a duty imposed by law, policy, or 
120.11  rule is guilty of a felony and may be sentenced to imprisonment 
120.12  for not more than two years or to payment of a fine of not more 
120.13  than $4,000, or both: 
120.14     (1) assaults the employee person and inflicts demonstrable 
120.15  bodily harm; or 
120.16     (2) intentionally throws or otherwise transfers bodily 
120.17  fluids or feces at or onto the employee person. 
120.18     [EFFECTIVE DATE.] This section is effective August 1, 2004, 
120.19  and applies to crimes committed on or after that date. 
120.20     Sec. 10.  Minnesota Statutes 2002, section 609.321, 
120.21  subdivision 7, is amended to read: 
120.22     Subd. 7.  [PROMOTES THE PROSTITUTION OF AN INDIVIDUAL.] 
120.23  "Promotes the prostitution of an individual" means any of the 
120.24  following wherein the person knowingly:  
120.25     (1) solicits or procures patrons for a prostitute; or 
120.26     (2) provides, leases or otherwise permits premises or 
120.27  facilities owned or controlled by the person to aid the 
120.28  prostitution of an individual; or 
120.29     (3) owns, manages, supervises, controls, keeps or operates, 
120.30  either alone or with others, a place of prostitution to aid the 
120.31  prostitution of an individual; or 
120.32     (4) owns, manages, supervises, controls, operates, 
120.33  institutes, aids or facilitates, either alone or with others, a 
120.34  business of prostitution to aid the prostitution of an 
120.35  individual; or 
120.36     (5) admits a patron to a place of prostitution to aid the 
121.1   prostitution of an individual; or 
121.2      (6) transports an individual from one point within this 
121.3   state to another point either within or without this state, or 
121.4   brings an individual into this state to aid the prostitution of 
121.5   the individual; or 
121.6      (7) engages in the sex trafficking of an individual.  
121.7      [EFFECTIVE DATE.] This section is effective August 1, 2004, 
121.8   and applies to crimes committed on or after that date. 
121.9      Sec. 11.  Minnesota Statutes 2002, section 609.321, is 
121.10  amended by adding a subdivision to read: 
121.11     Subd. 7a.  [SEX TRAFFICKING.] "Sex trafficking" means 
121.12  receiving, recruiting, enticing, harboring, providing, or 
121.13  obtaining by any means an individual to aid in the prostitution 
121.14  of the individual.  
121.15     [EFFECTIVE DATE.] This section is effective August 1, 2004, 
121.16  and applies to crimes committed on or after that date. 
121.17     Sec. 12.  Minnesota Statutes 2002, section 609.487, is 
121.18  amended by adding a subdivision to read: 
121.19     Subd. 6.  [FLEEING, OTHER THAN VEHICLE.] Whoever, for the 
121.20  purpose of avoiding arrest, detention, or investigation, or in 
121.21  order to conceal or destroy potential evidence related to the 
121.22  commission of a crime, attempts to evade or elude a peace 
121.23  officer, who is acting in the lawful discharge of an official 
121.24  duty, by means of running, hiding, or by any other means except 
121.25  fleeing in a motor vehicle, is guilty of a misdemeanor. 
121.26     [EFFECTIVE DATE.] This section is effective August 1, 2004, 
121.27  and applies to crimes committed on or after that date. 
121.28     Sec. 13.  Minnesota Statutes 2002, section 609.50, 
121.29  subdivision 1, is amended to read: 
121.30     Subdivision 1.  [CRIME.] Whoever intentionally does any of 
121.31  the following may be sentenced as provided in subdivision 2: 
121.32     (1) obstructs, hinders, or prevents the lawful execution of 
121.33  any legal process, civil or criminal, or apprehension of another 
121.34  on a charge or conviction of a criminal offense; 
121.35     (2) obstructs, resists, or interferes with a peace officer 
121.36  while the officer is engaged in the performance of official 
122.1   duties; 
122.2      (3) interferes with or obstructs the prevention or 
122.3   extinguishing of a fire, or disobeys the lawful order of a 
122.4   firefighter present at the fire; or 
122.5      (4) interferes with or obstructs a member of an ambulance 
122.6   service personnel crew, as defined in section 144E.001, 
122.7   subdivision 3a, who is providing, or attempting to provide, 
122.8   emergency care; or 
122.9      (5) by force or threat of force endeavors to obstruct any 
122.10  employee of the Department of Revenue while the employee is 
122.11  lawfully engaged in the performance of official duties for the 
122.12  purpose of deterring or interfering with the performance of 
122.13  those duties.  
122.14     [EFFECTIVE DATE.] This section is effective August 1, 2004, 
122.15  and applies to crimes committed on or after that date. 
122.16     Sec. 14.  Minnesota Statutes 2002, section 609.505, is 
122.17  amended to read: 
122.18     609.505 [FALSELY REPORTING CRIME.] 
122.19     Subdivision 1.  [FALSE REPORTING.] Whoever informs a law 
122.20  enforcement officer that a crime has been committed or otherwise 
122.21  provides false information to an on-duty peace officer regarding 
122.22  the conduct of others, knowing that it is false and intending 
122.23  that the officer shall act in reliance upon it, is guilty of a 
122.24  misdemeanor.  A person who is convicted a second or subsequent 
122.25  time under this section is guilty of a gross misdemeanor. 
122.26     Subd. 2.  [REPORTING POLICE MISCONDUCT.] (a) Whoever 
122.27  informs, or causes information to be communicated to, a public 
122.28  officer, as defined in section 609.415, subdivision 1, or an 
122.29  employee thereof, whose responsibilities include investigating 
122.30  or reporting police misconduct, that a peace officer, as defined 
122.31  in section 626.84, subdivision 1, paragraph (c), has committed 
122.32  an act of police misconduct, knowing that the information is 
122.33  false, is guilty of a crime and may be sentenced as follows: 
122.34     (1) up to the maximum provided for a misdemeanor if the 
122.35  false information does not allege a criminal act; or 
122.36     (2) up to the maximum provided for a gross misdemeanor if 
123.1   the false information alleges a criminal act. 
123.2      (b) The court shall order any person convicted of a 
123.3   violation of this subdivision to make full restitution of all 
123.4   reasonable expenses incurred in the investigation of the false 
123.5   allegation unless the court makes a specific written finding 
123.6   that restitution would be inappropriate under the circumstances. 
123.7      [EFFECTIVE DATE.] This section is effective August 1, 2004, 
123.8   and applies to crimes committed on or after that date. 
123.9      Sec. 15.  Minnesota Statutes 2002, section 609.5315, 
123.10  subdivision 1, is amended to read: 
123.11     Subdivision 1.  [DISPOSITION.] (a) Subject to paragraph 
123.12  (b), if the court finds under section 609.5313, 609.5314, or 
123.13  609.5318 that the property is subject to forfeiture, it shall 
123.14  order the appropriate agency to do one of the following: 
123.15     (1) unless a different disposition is provided under clause 
123.16  (3) or (4), either destroy firearms, ammunition, and firearm 
123.17  accessories that the agency decides not to use for law 
123.18  enforcement purposes under clause (8), or sell them to federally 
123.19  licensed firearms dealers, as defined in section 624.7161, 
123.20  subdivision 1, and distribute the proceeds under subdivision 
123.21  5 or 5b; 
123.22     (2) sell property that is not required to be destroyed by 
123.23  law and is not harmful to the public and distribute the proceeds 
123.24  under subdivision 5 or 5b; 
123.25     (3) sell antique firearms, as defined in section 624.712, 
123.26  subdivision 3, to the public and distribute the proceeds under 
123.27  subdivision 5 or 5b; 
123.28     (4) destroy or use for law enforcement purposes 
123.29  semiautomatic military-style assault weapons, as defined in 
123.30  section 624.712, subdivision 7; 
123.31     (5) take custody of the property and remove it for 
123.32  disposition in accordance with law; 
123.33     (6) forward the property to the federal drug enforcement 
123.34  administration; 
123.35     (7) disburse money as provided under subdivision 5 or 5b; 
123.36  or 
124.1      (8) keep property other than money for official use by the 
124.2   agency and the prosecuting agency. 
124.3      (b) Notwithstanding paragraph (a), the Hennepin or Ramsey 
124.4   county sheriff may not sell firearms, ammunition, or firearms 
124.5   accessories if the policy is disapproved by the applicable 
124.6   county board. 
124.7      [EFFECTIVE DATE.] This section is effective August 1, 2004, 
124.8   and applies to crimes committed on or after that date. 
124.9      Sec. 16.  Minnesota Statutes 2002, section 609.5315, is 
124.10  amended by adding a subdivision to read: 
124.11     Subd. 5b.  [DISPOSITION OF CERTAIN FORFEITED PROCEEDS; 
124.12  PROSTITUTION, TRAFFICKING OFFENSES.] (a) For forfeitures 
124.13  resulting from violations of section 609.322, the money or 
124.14  proceeds from the sale of forfeited property, after payment of 
124.15  seizure, storage, forfeiture, and sale expenses, and 
124.16  satisfaction of valid liens against the property must be 
124.17  distributed as follows: 
124.18     (1) 40 percent of the proceeds must be forwarded to the 
124.19  appropriate agency for deposit as a supplement to the agency's 
124.20  operating fund or similar fund for use in law enforcement; 
124.21     (2) 20 percent of the proceeds must be forwarded to the 
124.22  county attorney or other prosecuting agency that handled the 
124.23  forfeiture for deposit as a supplement to its operating fund or 
124.24  similar fund for prosecutorial purposes; and 
124.25     (3) the remaining 40 percent of the proceeds is 
124.26  appropriated to the Department of Public Safety for distribution 
124.27  to crime victims services organizations that provide services to 
124.28  victims of prostitution or sex trafficking offenses.  
124.29     (b) The commissioner of public safety must submit a report 
124.30  to the legislature that describes the distribution of funds 
124.31  under paragraph (a), clause (3).  Beginning in 2005, the report 
124.32  is due to the legislature by April 1 of each year. 
124.33     [EFFECTIVE DATE.] This section is effective August 1, 2004, 
124.34  and applies to crimes committed on or after that date. 
124.35     Sec. 17.  Minnesota Statutes 2002, section 609.746, 
124.36  subdivision 1, is amended to read: 
125.1      Subdivision 1.  [SURREPTITIOUS INTRUSION; OBSERVATION 
125.2   DEVICE.] (a) A person is guilty of a gross misdemeanor who: 
125.3      (1) enters upon another's property; 
125.4      (2) surreptitiously gazes, stares, or peeps in the window 
125.5   or any other aperture of a house or place of dwelling of 
125.6   another; and 
125.7      (3) does so with intent to intrude upon or interfere with 
125.8   the privacy of a member of the household. 
125.9      (b) A person is guilty of a gross misdemeanor who: 
125.10     (1) enters upon another's property; 
125.11     (2) surreptitiously installs or uses any device for 
125.12  observing, photographing, recording, amplifying, or broadcasting 
125.13  sounds or events through the window or any other aperture of a 
125.14  house or place of dwelling of another; and 
125.15     (3) does so with intent to intrude upon or interfere with 
125.16  the privacy of a member of the household. 
125.17     (c) A person is guilty of a gross misdemeanor who: 
125.18     (1) surreptitiously gazes, stares, or peeps in the window 
125.19  or other aperture of a sleeping room in a hotel, as defined in 
125.20  section 327.70, subdivision 3, a tanning booth, or other place 
125.21  where a reasonable person would have an expectation of privacy 
125.22  and has exposed or is likely to expose their intimate parts, as 
125.23  defined in section 609.341, subdivision 5, or the clothing 
125.24  covering the immediate area of the intimate parts; and 
125.25     (2) does so with intent to intrude upon or interfere with 
125.26  the privacy of the occupant. 
125.27     (d) A person is guilty of a gross misdemeanor who: 
125.28     (1) surreptitiously installs or uses any device for 
125.29  observing, photographing, recording, amplifying, or broadcasting 
125.30  sounds or events through the window or other aperture of a 
125.31  sleeping room in a hotel, as defined in section 327.70, 
125.32  subdivision 3, a tanning booth, or other place where a 
125.33  reasonable person would have an expectation of privacy and has 
125.34  exposed or is likely to expose their intimate parts, as defined 
125.35  in section 609.341, subdivision 5, or the clothing covering the 
125.36  immediate area of the intimate parts; and 
126.1      (2) does so with intent to intrude upon or interfere with 
126.2   the privacy of the occupant. 
126.3      (e) A person is guilty of a gross misdemeanor felony and 
126.4   may be sentenced to imprisonment for not more than two years or 
126.5   to payment of a fine of not more than $5,000, or both, if the 
126.6   person: 
126.7      (1) violates this subdivision after a previous conviction 
126.8   under this subdivision or section 609.749; or 
126.9      (2) violates this subdivision against a minor under the age 
126.10  of 16 18, knowing or having reason to know that the minor is 
126.11  present. 
126.12     (f) Paragraphs (b) and (d) do not apply to law enforcement 
126.13  officers or corrections investigators, or to those acting under 
126.14  their direction, while engaged in the performance of their 
126.15  lawful duties.  Paragraphs (c) and (d) do not apply to conduct 
126.16  in:  (1) a medical facility; or (2) a commercial establishment 
126.17  if the owner of the establishment has posted conspicuous signs 
126.18  warning that the premises are under surveillance by the owner or 
126.19  the owner's employees. 
126.20     [EFFECTIVE DATE.] This section is effective August 1, 2004, 
126.21  and applies to crimes committed on or after that date. 
126.22     Sec. 18.  Minnesota Statutes 2002, section 609.748, 
126.23  subdivision 2, is amended to read: 
126.24     Subd. 2.  [RESTRAINING ORDER; JURISDICTION.] A person who 
126.25  is a victim of harassment may seek a restraining order from the 
126.26  district court in the manner provided in this section.  The 
126.27  parent, stepparent, or guardian of a minor who is a victim of 
126.28  harassment may seek a restraining order from the district court 
126.29  on behalf of the minor.  
126.30     [EFFECTIVE DATE.] This section is effective July 1, 2004. 
126.31     Sec. 19.  Minnesota Statutes 2002, section 609.748, 
126.32  subdivision 3a, is amended to read: 
126.33     Subd. 3a.  [FILING FEE; COST OF SERVICE.] The filing fees 
126.34  for a restraining order under this section are waived for the 
126.35  petitioner if the petition alleges acts that would constitute a 
126.36  violation of section 609.342; 609.343; 609.344; 609.345; 
127.1   609.3451; or 609.749, subdivision 2 or 3.  The court 
127.2   administrator and the sheriff of any county in this state shall 
127.3   perform their duties relating to service of process without 
127.4   charge to the petitioner.  The court shall direct payment of the 
127.5   reasonable costs of service of process if served by a private 
127.6   process server when the sheriff is unavailable or if service is 
127.7   made by publication.  The court may direct a respondent to pay 
127.8   to the court administrator the petitioner's filing fees and 
127.9   reasonable costs of service of process if the court determines 
127.10  that the respondent has the ability to pay the petitioner's fees 
127.11  and costs. 
127.12     [EFFECTIVE DATE.] This section is effective July 1, 2004. 
127.13     Sec. 20.  Minnesota Statutes 2002, section 609.749, 
127.14  subdivision 1, is amended to read: 
127.15     Subdivision 1.  [DEFINITION.] As used in this section, 
127.16  "harass" means to engage in intentional conduct which: 
127.17     (1) the actor knows or has reason to know would cause the 
127.18  victim under the circumstances to feel frightened, threatened, 
127.19  oppressed, persecuted, or intimidated; and 
127.20     (2) causes this reaction on the part of the victim. 
127.21     [EFFECTIVE DATE.] This section is effective August 1, 2004, 
127.22  and applies to crimes committed on or after that date. 
127.23     Sec. 21.  Minnesota Statutes 2002, section 609.749, 
127.24  subdivision 2, is amended to read: 
127.25     Subd. 2.  [HARASSMENT AND STALKING CRIMES.] (a) A person 
127.26  who harasses another by committing any of the following acts is 
127.27  guilty of a gross misdemeanor: 
127.28     (1) directly or indirectly manifests a purpose or intent to 
127.29  injure the person, property, or rights of another by the 
127.30  commission of an unlawful act; 
127.31     (2) stalks, follows, monitors, or pursues another, whether 
127.32  in person or through technological or other means; 
127.33     (3) returns to the property of another if the actor is 
127.34  without claim of right to the property or consent of one with 
127.35  authority to consent; 
127.36     (4) repeatedly makes telephone calls, or induces a victim 
128.1   to make telephone calls to the actor, whether or not 
128.2   conversation ensues; 
128.3      (5) makes or causes the telephone of another repeatedly or 
128.4   continuously to ring; 
128.5      (6) repeatedly mails or delivers or causes the delivery by 
128.6   any means, including electronically, of letters, telegrams, 
128.7   messages, packages, or other objects; or 
128.8      (7) knowingly makes false allegations against a peace 
128.9   officer concerning the officer's performance of official duties 
128.10  with intent to influence or tamper with the officer's 
128.11  performance of official duties. 
128.12     (b) The conduct described in paragraph (a), clauses (4) and 
128.13  (5), may be prosecuted at the place where any call is either 
128.14  made or received.  The conduct described in paragraph (a), 
128.15  clause (6), may be prosecuted where any letter, telegram, 
128.16  message, package, or other object is either sent or received. 
128.17     (c) A peace officer may not make a warrantless, custodial 
128.18  arrest of any person for a violation of paragraph (a), clause 
128.19  (7). 
128.20     [EFFECTIVE DATE.] This section is effective August 1, 2004, 
128.21  and applies to crimes committed on or after that date. 
128.22                             ARTICLE 8
128.23                  COURT POLICY AND PUBLIC DEFENSE 
128.24     Section 1.  Minnesota Statutes 2002, section 2.722, 
128.25  subdivision 1, is amended to read: 
128.26     Subdivision 1.  [DESCRIPTION.] Effective July 1, 1959, the 
128.27  state is divided into ten judicial districts composed of the 
128.28  following named counties, respectively, in each of which 
128.29  districts judges shall be chosen as hereinafter specified: 
128.30     1.  Goodhue, Dakota, Carver, Le Sueur, McLeod, Scott, and 
128.31  Sibley; 33 35 judges; and four permanent chambers shall be 
128.32  maintained in Red Wing, Hastings, Shakopee, and Glencoe and one 
128.33  other shall be maintained at the place designated by the chief 
128.34  judge of the district; 
128.35     2.  Ramsey; 26 judges; 
128.36     3.  Wabasha, Winona, Houston, Rice, Olmsted, Dodge, Steele, 
129.1   Waseca, Freeborn, Mower, and Fillmore; 23 judges; and permanent 
129.2   chambers shall be maintained in Faribault, Albert Lea, Austin, 
129.3   Rochester, and Winona; 
129.4      4.  Hennepin; 60 62 judges; 
129.5      5.  Blue Earth, Watonwan, Lyon, Redwood, Brown, Nicollet, 
129.6   Lincoln, Cottonwood, Murray, Nobles, Pipestone, Rock, Faribault, 
129.7   Martin, and Jackson; 16 judges; and permanent chambers shall be 
129.8   maintained in Marshall, Windom, Fairmont, New Ulm, and Mankato; 
129.9      6.  Carlton, St. Louis, Lake, and Cook; 15 judges; 
129.10     7.  Benton, Douglas, Mille Lacs, Morrison, Otter Tail, 
129.11  Stearns, Todd, Clay, Becker, and Wadena; 25 27 judges; and 
129.12  permanent chambers shall be maintained in Moorhead, Fergus 
129.13  Falls, Little Falls, and St. Cloud; 
129.14     8.  Chippewa, Kandiyohi, Lac qui Parle, Meeker, Renville, 
129.15  Swift, Yellow Medicine, Big Stone, Grant, Pope, Stevens, 
129.16  Traverse, and Wilkin; 11 judges; and permanent chambers shall be 
129.17  maintained in Morris, Montevideo, and Willmar; 
129.18     9.  Norman, Polk, Marshall, Kittson, Red Lake, Roseau, 
129.19  Mahnomen, Pennington, Aitkin, Itasca, Crow Wing, Hubbard, 
129.20  Beltrami, Lake of the Woods, Clearwater, Cass and Koochiching; 
129.21  22 24 judges; and permanent chambers shall be maintained in 
129.22  Crookston, Thief River Falls, Bemidji, Brainerd, Grand Rapids, 
129.23  and International Falls; and 
129.24     10.  Anoka, Isanti, Wright, Sherburne, Kanabec, Pine, 
129.25  Chisago, and Washington; 41 judges; and permanent chambers shall 
129.26  be maintained in Anoka, Stillwater, and other places designated 
129.27  by the chief judge of the district. 
129.28     [EFFECTIVE DATE.] This section is effective January 1, 2005.
129.29     Sec. 2.  Minnesota Statutes 2002, section 2.724, 
129.30  subdivision 3, is amended to read: 
129.31     Subd. 3.  [RETIRED JUSTICES AND, JUDGES, AND 
129.32  COMMISSIONERS.] (a) The chief justice of the Supreme Court may 
129.33  assign a retired justice of the Supreme Court to act as a 
129.34  justice of the Supreme Court pursuant to subdivision 2 or as a 
129.35  judge of any other court.  The chief justice may assign a 
129.36  retired judge of any court to act as a judge of any court except 
130.1   the Supreme Court.  The chief justice may assign a retired court 
130.2   commissioner to act as a commissioner of any district court.  
130.3   The chief justice of the Supreme Court shall determine the pay 
130.4   and expenses to be received by a judge or commissioner acting 
130.5   pursuant to this paragraph. 
130.6      (b) A judge who has been elected to office and who has 
130.7   retired as a judge in good standing and is not practicing law 
130.8   may also be appointed to serve as judge of any court except the 
130.9   Supreme Court.  A retired judge acting under this paragraph will 
130.10  receive pay and expenses in the amount established by the 
130.11  Supreme Court. 
130.12     (c) A commissioner who has retired as a commissioner in 
130.13  good standing and is not practicing law may also be appointed to 
130.14  serve as commissioner of any court except the Supreme Court or 
130.15  Court of Appeals.  A retired commissioner acting under this 
130.16  paragraph will receive pay and expenses in the amount 
130.17  established by the Supreme Court. 
130.18     [EFFECTIVE DATE.] This section is effective July 1, 2004. 
130.19     Sec. 3.  Minnesota Statutes 2002, section 260C.163, 
130.20  subdivision 3, is amended to read: 
130.21     Subd. 3.  [APPOINTMENT OF COUNSEL.] (a) The child, parent, 
130.22  guardian or custodian has the right to effective assistance of 
130.23  counsel in connection with a proceeding in juvenile court. 
130.24     (b) Except in proceedings where the sole basis for the 
130.25  petition is habitual truancy, if the child, parent, guardian, or 
130.26  custodian desires counsel but is unable to employ it, the court 
130.27  shall appoint counsel to represent the child who is ten years of 
130.28  age or older or the parents or guardian in any case in which it 
130.29  feels that such an appointment is appropriate.  In the case of a 
130.30  child who is ten years of age or older, the counsel appointed 
130.31  shall be the district public defender.  Appointed counsel for a 
130.32  parent, guardian, or custodian must not be the district public 
130.33  defender.  Appointed counsel for a parent, guardian, or 
130.34  custodian must be paid for by the county in which the petition 
130.35  originates.  
130.36     (c) In any proceeding where the sole basis for the petition 
131.1   is habitual truancy, the child, parent, guardian, and custodian 
131.2   do not have the right to appointment of a public defender or 
131.3   other counsel at public expense.  However, before any 
131.4   out-of-home placement, including foster care or inpatient 
131.5   treatment, can be ordered, the court must appoint a public 
131.6   defender or other counsel at public expense in accordance with 
131.7   paragraph (b). 
131.8      (d) Counsel for the child shall not also act as the child's 
131.9   guardian ad litem.  
131.10     (e) In any proceeding where the subject of a petition for a 
131.11  child in need of protection or services is not represented by an 
131.12  attorney, the court shall determine the child's preferences 
131.13  regarding the proceedings, if the child is of suitable age to 
131.14  express a preference.  
131.15     [EFFECTIVE DATE.] This section is effective July 1, 2004. 
131.16     Sec. 4.  Minnesota Statutes 2003 Supplement, section 
131.17  270A.03, subdivision 5, is amended to read: 
131.18     Subd. 5.  [DEBT.] "Debt" means a legal obligation of a 
131.19  natural person to pay a fixed and certain amount of money, which 
131.20  equals or exceeds $25 and which is due and payable to a claimant 
131.21  agency.  The term includes criminal fines imposed under section 
131.22  609.10 or 609.125 and restitution.  The term also includes the 
131.23  co-payment for the appointment of a district public defender 
131.24  imposed under section 611.17, paragraph (c).  A debt may arise 
131.25  under a contractual or statutory obligation, a court order, or 
131.26  other legal obligation, but need not have been reduced to 
131.27  judgment.  
131.28     A debt includes any legal obligation of a current recipient 
131.29  of assistance which is based on overpayment of an assistance 
131.30  grant where that payment is based on a client waiver or an 
131.31  administrative or judicial finding of an intentional program 
131.32  violation; or where the debt is owed to a program wherein the 
131.33  debtor is not a client at the time notification is provided to 
131.34  initiate recovery under this chapter and the debtor is not a 
131.35  current recipient of food support, transitional child care, or 
131.36  transitional medical assistance. 
132.1      A debt does not include any legal obligation to pay a 
132.2   claimant agency for medical care, including hospitalization if 
132.3   the income of the debtor at the time when the medical care was 
132.4   rendered does not exceed the following amount: 
132.5      (1) for an unmarried debtor, an income of $8,800 or less; 
132.6      (2) for a debtor with one dependent, an income of $11,270 
132.7   or less; 
132.8      (3) for a debtor with two dependents, an income of $13,330 
132.9   or less; 
132.10     (4) for a debtor with three dependents, an income of 
132.11  $15,120 or less; 
132.12     (5) for a debtor with four dependents, an income of $15,950 
132.13  or less; and 
132.14     (6) for a debtor with five or more dependents, an income of 
132.15  $16,630 or less.  
132.16     The income amounts in this subdivision shall be adjusted 
132.17  for inflation for debts incurred in calendar years 2001 and 
132.18  thereafter.  The dollar amount of each income level that applied 
132.19  to debts incurred in the prior year shall be increased in the 
132.20  same manner as provided in section 1(f) of the Internal Revenue 
132.21  Code of 1986, as amended through December 31, 2000, except that 
132.22  for the purposes of this subdivision the percentage increase 
132.23  shall be determined from the year starting September 1, 1999, 
132.24  and ending August 31, 2000, as the base year for adjusting for 
132.25  inflation for debts incurred after December 31, 2000. 
132.26     Debt also includes an agreement to pay a MinnesotaCare 
132.27  premium, regardless of the dollar amount of the premium 
132.28  authorized under section 256L.15, subdivision 1a. 
132.29     [EFFECTIVE DATE.] This section is effective July 1, 2004. 
132.30     Sec. 5.  Minnesota Statutes 2003 Supplement, section 
132.31  357.021, subdivision 6, is amended to read: 
132.32     Subd. 6.  [SURCHARGES ON CRIMINAL AND TRAFFIC OFFENDERS.] 
132.33  (a) The court shall impose and the court administrator shall 
132.34  collect a $60 surcharge on every person convicted of any felony, 
132.35  gross misdemeanor, misdemeanor, or petty misdemeanor offense, 
132.36  other than a violation of a law or ordinance relating to vehicle 
133.1   parking, for which there shall be a $3 surcharge.  In the Second 
133.2   Judicial District, the court shall impose, and the court 
133.3   administrator shall collect, an additional $1 surcharge on every 
133.4   person convicted of any felony, gross misdemeanor, or petty 
133.5   misdemeanor offense, including a violation of a law or ordinance 
133.6   relating to vehicle parking, if the Ramsey County Board of 
133.7   Commissioners authorizes the $1 surcharge.  The surcharge shall 
133.8   be imposed whether or not the person is sentenced to 
133.9   imprisonment or the sentence is stayed.  
133.10     (b) If the court fails to impose a surcharge as required by 
133.11  this subdivision, the court administrator shall show the 
133.12  imposition of the surcharge, collect the surcharge and correct 
133.13  the record. 
133.14     (c) The court may not waive payment of the surcharge 
133.15  required under this subdivision.  Upon a showing of indigency or 
133.16  undue hardship upon the convicted person or the convicted 
133.17  person's immediate family, the sentencing court may authorize 
133.18  payment of the surcharge in installments. 
133.19     (d) The court administrator or other entity collecting a 
133.20  surcharge shall forward it to the commissioner of finance. 
133.21     (e) If the convicted person is sentenced to imprisonment 
133.22  and has not paid the surcharge before the term of imprisonment 
133.23  begins, the chief executive officer of the correctional facility 
133.24  in which the convicted person is incarcerated shall collect the 
133.25  surcharge from any earnings the inmate accrues from work 
133.26  performed in the facility or while on conditional release.  The 
133.27  chief executive officer shall forward the amount collected to 
133.28  the commissioner of finance. 
133.29     [EFFECTIVE DATE.] This section is effective either the day 
133.30  after the governing body of Ramsey County authorizes imposition 
133.31  of the surcharge, or July 1, 2004, whichever is the later date, 
133.32  and applies to convictions on or after the effective date. 
133.33     Sec. 6.  Minnesota Statutes 2003 Supplement, section 
133.34  357.021, subdivision 7, is amended to read: 
133.35     Subd. 7.  [DISBURSEMENT OF SURCHARGES BY COMMISSIONER OF 
133.36  FINANCE.] (a) Except as provided in paragraphs (b) and, (c), and 
134.1   (d), the commissioner of finance shall disburse surcharges 
134.2   received under subdivision 6 and section 97A.065, subdivision 2, 
134.3   as follows: 
134.4      (1) one percent shall be credited to the game and fish fund 
134.5   to provide peace officer training for employees of the 
134.6   Department of Natural Resources who are licensed under sections 
134.7   626.84 to 626.863, and who possess peace officer authority for 
134.8   the purpose of enforcing game and fish laws; 
134.9      (2) 39 percent shall be credited to the peace officers 
134.10  training account in the special revenue fund; and 
134.11     (3) 60 percent shall be credited to the general fund.  
134.12     (b) The commissioner of finance shall credit $3 of each 
134.13  surcharge received under subdivision 6 and section 97A.065, 
134.14  subdivision 2, to the general fund. 
134.15     (c) In addition to any amounts credited under paragraph 
134.16  (a), the commissioner of finance shall credit $32 of each 
134.17  surcharge received under subdivision 6 and section 97A.065, 
134.18  subdivision 2, and the $3 parking surcharge, to the general fund.
134.19     (d) If the Ramsey County Board of Commissioners authorizes 
134.20  imposition of the additional $1 surcharge provided for in 
134.21  subdivision 6, paragraph (a), the court administrator in the 
134.22  Second Judicial District shall transmit the surcharge to the 
134.23  commissioner of finance who shall credit the surcharge to the 
134.24  general fund.  
134.25     [EFFECTIVE DATE.] This section is effective either the day 
134.26  after the governing body of Ramsey County authorizes imposition 
134.27  of the surcharge, or July 1, 2004, whichever is the later date, 
134.28  and applies to convictions on or after the effective date. 
134.29     Sec. 7.  Minnesota Statutes 2002, section 489.01, is 
134.30  amended by adding a subdivision to read: 
134.31     Subd. 4.  [COURT COMMISSIONER RETIREMENT.] Upon retirement 
134.32  of a court commissioner, the retired commissioner may be 
134.33  appointed pursuant to section 2.724 and assigned to aid and 
134.34  assist in the performance of such duties as may be assigned by 
134.35  the chief judge of the district and act thereon with full powers 
134.36  of a commissioner as provided in section 489.02. 
135.1      [EFFECTIVE DATE.] This section is effective July 1, 2004. 
135.2      Sec. 8.  [545A.01] [APPEAL OF PRETRIAL ORDERS; ATTORNEY 
135.3   FEES; DEFENDANT; NOT GOVERNMENT RESPONSIBILITY.] 
135.4      (a) Notwithstanding Rule 28.04, subdivision 2, clause (6), 
135.5   of the Rules of Criminal Procedure, the government unit is not 
135.6   required to pay the attorney fees and costs incurred by the 
135.7   defendant on the unit's appeal of the following: 
135.8      (1) in any case, from a pretrial order of the trial court; 
135.9      (2) in felony cases, from any sentence imposed or stayed by 
135.10  the trial court; 
135.11     (3) in any case, from an order granting postconviction 
135.12  relief; 
135.13     (4) in any case, from a judgment of acquittal by the trial 
135.14  court entered after the jury returns a verdict of guilty under 
135.15  Rule 26.03, subdivision 17(2) or (3), of the Rules of Criminal 
135.16  Procedure; and 
135.17     (5) in any case, from an order of the trial court vacating 
135.18  judgment and dismissing the case made after the jury returns a 
135.19  verdict of guilty under Rule 26.04, subdivision 2, of the Rules 
135.20  of Criminal Procedure. 
135.21     (b) Paragraph (a) does not apply if the defendant is 
135.22  represented by the public defender in this matter. 
135.23     [EFFECTIVE DATE.] This section is effective July 1, 2004. 
135.24     Sec. 9.  Minnesota Statutes 2003 Supplement, section 
135.25  611.14, is amended to read: 
135.26     611.14 [RIGHT TO REPRESENTATION BY PUBLIC DEFENDER.] 
135.27     The following persons who are financially unable to obtain 
135.28  counsel are entitled to be represented by a public defender: 
135.29     (1) a person charged with a felony, gross misdemeanor, or 
135.30  misdemeanor including a person charged under sections 629.01 to 
135.31  629.29; 
135.32     (2) a person appealing from a conviction of a felony or 
135.33  gross misdemeanor, or a person convicted of a felony or gross 
135.34  misdemeanor, who is pursuing a postconviction proceeding and who 
135.35  has not already had a direct appeal of the conviction, but if 
135.36  the person pled guilty and received a presumptive sentence or a 
136.1   downward departure in sentence, and the state public defender 
136.2   reviewed the person's case and determined that there was no 
136.3   basis for an appeal of the conviction or of the sentence, then 
136.4   the state public defender may decline to represent the person in 
136.5   a postconviction remedy case; 
136.6      (3) a person who is entitled to be represented by counsel 
136.7   under section 609.14, subdivision 2; or 
136.8      (4) a minor ten years of age or older who is entitled to be 
136.9   represented by counsel under section 260B.163, subdivision 4, or 
136.10  260C.163, subdivision 3.  
136.11     The Board of Public Defense must not provide or pay for 
136.12  public defender services to persons other than those entitled to 
136.13  representation under this section. 
136.14     [EFFECTIVE DATE.] This section is effective July 1, 2004. 
136.15     Sec. 10.  Minnesota Statutes 2002, section 611.16, is 
136.16  amended to read: 
136.17     611.16 [REQUEST FOR APPOINTMENT OF PUBLIC DEFENDER.] 
136.18     Any person described in section 611.14 or any other person 
136.19  entitled by law to representation by counsel, may at any time 
136.20  request the court in which the matter is pending, or the court 
136.21  in which the conviction occurred, to appoint a public defender 
136.22  to represent the person.  In a proceeding defined by clause (2) 
136.23  of section 611.14, application for the appointment of a public 
136.24  defender may also be made to a judge of the Supreme Court.  
136.25     [EFFECTIVE DATE.] This section is effective July 1, 2004, 
136.26  and applies to crimes committed on or after that date. 
136.27     Sec. 11.  Minnesota Statutes 2003 Supplement, section 
136.28  611.17, subdivision 1, is amended to read: 
136.29     Subdivision 1.  [STANDARDS FOR DISTRICT PUBLIC DEFENSE 
136.30  ELIGIBILITY.] (a) Each judicial district must screen requests 
136.31  for representation by the district public defender.  A defendant 
136.32  is financially unable to obtain counsel if: 
136.33     (1) the defendant, or any dependent of the defendant who 
136.34  resides in the same household as the defendant, receives 
136.35  means-tested governmental benefits; or 
136.36     (2) the defendant, through any combination of liquid assets 
137.1   and current income, would be unable to pay the reasonable costs 
137.2   charged by private counsel in that judicial district for a 
137.3   defense of the same matter. 
137.4      (b) Upon a request for the appointment of counsel, the 
137.5   court shall make appropriate inquiry into the financial 
137.6   circumstances of the applicant, who shall submit a financial 
137.7   statement under oath or affirmation setting forth the 
137.8   applicant's assets and liabilities, including the value of any 
137.9   real property owned by the applicant, whether homestead or 
137.10  otherwise, less the amount of any encumbrances on the real 
137.11  property, the source or sources of income, and any other 
137.12  information required by the court.  The applicant shall be under 
137.13  a continuing duty while represented by a public defender to 
137.14  disclose any changes in the applicant's financial circumstances 
137.15  that might be relevant to the applicant's eligibility for a 
137.16  public defender.  The state public defender shall furnish 
137.17  appropriate forms for the financial statements.  The forms must 
137.18  contain conspicuous notice of the applicant's continuing duty to 
137.19  disclose to the court changes in the applicant's financial 
137.20  circumstances.  The forms must also contain conspicuous notice 
137.21  of the applicant's obligation to make a co-payment for the 
137.22  services of the district public defender, as specified under 
137.23  paragraph (c).  The information contained in the statement shall 
137.24  be confidential and for the exclusive use of the court and the 
137.25  public defender appointed by the court to represent the 
137.26  applicant except for any prosecution under section 609.48.  A 
137.27  refusal to execute the financial statement or produce financial 
137.28  records constitutes a waiver of the right to the appointment of 
137.29  a public defender.  The court shall not appoint a district 
137.30  public defender to a defendant who is financially able to retain 
137.31  private counsel but refuses to do so. 
137.32     An inquiry to determine financial eligibility of a 
137.33  defendant for the appointment of the district public defender 
137.34  shall be made whenever possible prior to the court appearance 
137.35  and by such persons as the court may direct.  This inquiry may 
137.36  be combined with the prerelease investigation provided for in 
138.1   Minnesota Rule of Criminal Procedure 6.02, subdivision 3.  In no 
138.2   case shall the district public defender be required to perform 
138.3   this inquiry or investigate the defendant's assets or 
138.4   eligibility.  The court has the sole duty to conduct a financial 
138.5   inquiry.  The inquiry must include the following: 
138.6      (1) the liquidity of real estate assets, including the 
138.7   defendant's homestead; 
138.8      (2) any assets that can be readily converted to cash or 
138.9   used to secure a debt; 
138.10     (3) the determination of whether the transfer of an asset 
138.11  is voidable as a fraudulent conveyance; and 
138.12     (4) the value of all property transfers occurring on or 
138.13  after the date of the alleged offense.  The burden is on the 
138.14  accused to show that he or she is financially unable to afford 
138.15  counsel.  Defendants who fail to provide information necessary 
138.16  to determine eligibility shall be deemed ineligible.  The court 
138.17  must not appoint the district public defender as advisory 
138.18  counsel. 
138.19     (c) Upon appointment of the public defender disposition of 
138.20  the case, an individual who receives has received public 
138.21  defender services shall be obligated to pay to the court a 
138.22  co-payment for representation provided by a public defender, 
138.23  unless the co-payment is, or has been, waived by the court.  The 
138.24  co-payment shall be according to the following schedule: 
138.25     (1) if the person was charged with a felony, $200; 
138.26     (2) if the person was charged with a gross misdemeanor, 
138.27  $100; or 
138.28     (3) if the person was charged with a misdemeanor, $50. 
138.29     If the person is a child and was appointed counsel under 
138.30  the provisions of section 260B.163, subdivision 4, the parents 
138.31  of the child shall pay to the court a co-payment of $100.  If 
138.32  the person is a parent of a child and the parent was appointed 
138.33  counsel under the provisions of section 260C.163, subdivision 3, 
138.34  the parent shall pay to the court a co-payment of $200.  The 
138.35  co-payment shall be deposited in the state general fund. 
138.36     If a term of probation is imposed as a part of an 
139.1   offender's sentence, the co-payment required by this section 
139.2   must not be made a condition of probation.  The co-payment 
139.3   required by this section is a civil obligation and must not be 
139.4   made a condition of a criminal sentence.  Collection of the 
139.5   co-payment may be made through the provisions of chapter 270A, 
139.6   the Revenue Recapture Act. 
139.7      (d) All public defender co-pay revenue collected under 
139.8   paragraph (c) and revenues less statutory fees collected under 
139.9   chapter 270A shall be deposited in the public defender co-pay 
139.10  account in the special revenue fund. 
139.11     The first $2,740,000 deposited in the public defender 
139.12  co-pay account must be transferred to the general fund.  This is 
139.13  not an annual transfer.  Receipts in excess of the first 
139.14  $2,740,000 are appropriated to the Board of Public Defense for 
139.15  public defender services. 
139.16     [EFFECTIVE DATE.] This section is effective July 1, 2004, 
139.17  and applies to crimes committed on or after that date. 
139.18     Sec. 12.  Minnesota Statutes 2002, section 611.215, 
139.19  subdivision 1, is amended to read: 
139.20     Subdivision 1.  [STRUCTURE; MEMBERSHIP.] (a) The State 
139.21  Board of Public Defense is a part of, but is not subject to the 
139.22  administrative control of, the judicial branch of government.  
139.23  The State Board of Public Defense shall consist of seven members 
139.24  including: 
139.25     (1) four two attorneys admitted to the practice of law, 
139.26  well acquainted with the defense of persons accused of crime, 
139.27  but not employed as prosecutors, appointed by the Supreme Court; 
139.28  and 
139.29     (2) three public members appointed by the governor; and 
139.30     (3) one attorney admitted to the practice of law, well 
139.31  acquainted with the defense of persons accused of crime, but not 
139.32  employed as a prosecutor, appointed by the speaker of the house 
139.33  of representatives; and 
139.34     (4) one attorney admitted to the practice of law, well 
139.35  acquainted with the defense of persons accused of crime, but not 
139.36  employed as a prosecutor, appointed by the senate majority 
140.1   leader. 
140.2      After the expiration of the terms of persons appointed to 
140.3   the board before March 1, 1991, the appointing authorities may 
140.4   not appoint a person who is a judge to be a member of the State 
140.5   Board of Public Defense, other than as a member of the ad hoc 
140.6   Board of Public Defense. 
140.7      (b) All members shall demonstrate an interest in 
140.8   maintaining a high quality, independent defense system for those 
140.9   who are unable to obtain adequate representation.  Appointments 
140.10  to the board shall include qualified women and members of 
140.11  minority groups.  At least three members of the board shall be 
140.12  from judicial districts other than the First, Second, Fourth, 
140.13  and Tenth Judicial Districts.  The terms, compensation, and 
140.14  removal of members shall be as provided in section 15.0575.  The 
140.15  chair shall be elected by the members from among the membership 
140.16  for a term of two years.  
140.17     (c) In addition, the State Board of Public Defense shall 
140.18  consist of a nine-member ad hoc board when considering the 
140.19  appointment of district public defenders under section 611.26, 
140.20  subdivision 2.  The terms of chief district public defenders 
140.21  currently serving shall terminate in accordance with the 
140.22  staggered term schedule set forth in section 611.26, subdivision 
140.23  2. 
140.24     [EFFECTIVE DATE.] This section is effective July 1, 2004. 
140.25     Sec. 13.  Minnesota Statutes 2003 Supplement, section 
140.26  611.25, subdivision 1, is amended to read: 
140.27     Subdivision 1.  [REPRESENTATION.] (a) The state public 
140.28  defender shall represent, without charge: 
140.29     (1) a defendant or other person appealing from a conviction 
140.30  of a felony or gross misdemeanor; 
140.31     (2) a person convicted of a felony or gross misdemeanor who 
140.32  is pursuing a postconviction proceeding and who has not already 
140.33  had a direct appeal of the conviction, but if the person pled 
140.34  guilty and received a presumptive sentence or a downward 
140.35  departure in sentence, and the state public defender reviewed 
140.36  the person's case and determined that there was no basis for an 
141.1   appeal of the conviction or of the sentence, then the state 
141.2   public defender may decline to represent the person in a 
141.3   postconviction remedy case; and 
141.4      (3) a child who is appealing from a delinquency 
141.5   adjudication or from an extended jurisdiction juvenile 
141.6   conviction. 
141.7      (b) The state public defender may represent, without 
141.8   charge, all other persons pursuing a postconviction remedy under 
141.9   section 590.01, who are financially unable to obtain counsel.  
141.10     (c) The state public defender shall represent any other 
141.11  person, who is financially unable to obtain counsel, when 
141.12  directed to do so by the Supreme Court or the Court of Appeals, 
141.13  except that The state public defender shall not represent a 
141.14  person in any action or proceeding in which a party is seeking a 
141.15  monetary judgment, recovery or award.  When requested by a 
141.16  district public defender or appointed counsel, the state public 
141.17  defender may assist the district public defender, appointed 
141.18  counsel, or an organization designated in section 611.216 in the 
141.19  performance of duties, including trial representation in matters 
141.20  involving legal conflicts of interest or other special 
141.21  circumstances, and assistance with legal research and brief 
141.22  preparation.  When the state public defender is directed by a 
141.23  court to represent a defendant or other person, the state public 
141.24  defender may assign the representation to any district public 
141.25  defender. 
141.26     [EFFECTIVE DATE.] This section is effective July 1, 2004, 
141.27  and applies to crimes committed on or after that date. 
141.28     Sec. 14.  Minnesota Statutes 2003 Supplement, section 
141.29  611.26, subdivision 6, is amended to read: 
141.30     Subd. 6.  [PERSONS DEFENDED.] The district public defender 
141.31  shall represent, without charge, a defendant charged with a 
141.32  felony, a gross misdemeanor, or misdemeanor when so directed by 
141.33  the district court.  The district public defender shall also 
141.34  represent a minor ten years of age or older in the juvenile 
141.35  court when so directed by the juvenile court.  The district 
141.36  public defender must not serve as advisory counsel.  The 
142.1   juvenile court may must not order the district public defender 
142.2   to represent a minor who is under the age of ten years, to serve 
142.3   as a guardian ad litem, or to represent a guardian ad litem, or 
142.4   to represent a parent, guardian, or custodian under section 
142.5   260C.163. 
142.6      [EFFECTIVE DATE.] This section is effective July 1, 2004. 
142.7      Sec. 15.  Minnesota Statutes 2003 Supplement, section 
142.8   611.272, is amended to read: 
142.9      611.272 [ACCESS TO GOVERNMENT DATA.] 
142.10     The district public defender, the state public defender, or 
142.11  an attorney working for a public defense corporation under 
142.12  section 611.216 has access to the criminal justice data 
142.13  communications network described in section 299C.46, as provided 
142.14  in this section.  Access to data under this section is limited 
142.15  to data regarding the public defender's own client as necessary 
142.16  to prepare criminal cases in which the public defender has been 
142.17  appointed, including as follows: 
142.18     (1) access to data about witnesses in a criminal case shall 
142.19  be limited to records of criminal convictions; and 
142.20     (2) access to data regarding the public defender's own 
142.21  client which includes, but is not limited to, criminal history 
142.22  data under section 13.87; juvenile offender data under section 
142.23  299C.095; warrant information data under section 299C.115; 
142.24  incarceration data under section 299C.14; conditional release 
142.25  data under section 299C.147; and diversion program data under 
142.26  section 299C.46, subdivision 5.  
142.27  The public defender has access to data under this section, 
142.28  whether accessed via CriMNet or other methods.  The public 
142.29  defender does not have access to law enforcement active 
142.30  investigative data under section 13.82, subdivision 7; data 
142.31  protected under section 13.82, subdivision 17; or confidential 
142.32  arrest warrant indices data under section 13.82, subdivision 19; 
142.33  or data systems maintained by a prosecuting attorney.  The 
142.34  public defender has access to the data at no charge, except for 
142.35  the monthly network access charge under section 299C.46, 
142.36  subdivision 3, paragraph (b), and a reasonable installation 
143.1   charge for a terminal.  Notwithstanding section 13.87, 
143.2   subdivision 3; 299C.46, subdivision 3, paragraph (b); 299C.48, 
143.3   or any other law to the contrary, there shall be no charge to 
143.4   public defenders for Internet access to the criminal justice 
143.5   data communications network. 
143.6      [EFFECTIVE DATE.] This section is effective July 1, 2004. 
143.7      Sec. 16.  [REPEALER.] 
143.8      Minnesota Statutes 2003 Supplement, section 611.18, is 
143.9   repealed. 
143.10     [EFFECTIVE DATE.] This section is effective July 1, 2004. 
143.11                             ARTICLE 9 
143.12                   CORRECTIONS AND PUBLIC SAFETY 
143.13     Section 1.  Minnesota Statutes 2002, section 169A.52, 
143.14  subdivision 7, is amended to read: 
143.15     Subd. 7.  [TEST REFUSAL; DRIVING PRIVILEGE LOST.] (a) On 
143.16  behalf of the commissioner, a peace officer requiring a test or 
143.17  directing the administration of a chemical test shall serve 
143.18  immediate notice of intention to revoke and of revocation on a 
143.19  person who refuses to permit a test or on a person who submits 
143.20  to a test the results of which indicate an alcohol concentration 
143.21  of 0.10 or more. 
143.22     (b) On behalf of the commissioner, a peace officer 
143.23  requiring a test or directing the administration of a chemical 
143.24  test of a person driving, operating, or in physical control of a 
143.25  commercial motor vehicle shall serve immediate notice of 
143.26  intention to disqualify and of disqualification on a person who 
143.27  refuses to permit a test, or on a person who submits to a test 
143.28  the results of which indicate an alcohol concentration of 0.04 
143.29  or more. 
143.30     (c) The officer shall either: 
143.31     (1) take the driver's license or permit, if any, invalidate 
143.32  the person's driver's license or permit card by clipping the 
143.33  upper corner of the card in such a way that no identifying 
143.34  information including the photo is destroyed, and immediately 
143.35  return the card to the person; 
143.36     (2) issue the person a temporary license effective for only 
144.1   seven days; and 
144.2      (3) send it the notification of this action to the 
144.3   commissioner along with the certificate required by subdivision 
144.4   3 or 4, and issue a temporary license effective only for seven 
144.5   days; or 
144.6      (2) invalidate the driver's license or permit in such a way 
144.7   that no identifying information is destroyed. 
144.8      [EFFECTIVE DATE.] This section is effective July 1, 2004. 
144.9      Sec. 2.  Minnesota Statutes 2002, section 169A.60, 
144.10  subdivision 11, is amended to read: 
144.11     Subd. 11.  [RESCISSION OF REVOCATION; AND DISMISSAL OR 
144.12  ACQUITTAL; NEW PLATES.] If: 
144.13     (1) the driver's license revocation that is the basis for 
144.14  an impoundment order is rescinded; and 
144.15     (2) the charges for the plate impoundment violation have 
144.16  been dismissed with prejudice; or 
144.17     (3) the violator has been acquitted of the plate 
144.18  impoundment violation; 
144.19  then the registrar of motor vehicles shall issue new 
144.20  registration plates for the vehicle at no cost, when the 
144.21  registrar receives an application that includes a copy of the 
144.22  order rescinding the driver's license revocation, and the order 
144.23  dismissing the charges, or the judgment of acquittal. 
144.24     [EFFECTIVE DATE.] This section is effective the day 
144.25  following final enactment. 
144.26     Sec. 3.  Minnesota Statutes 2002, section 169A.63, 
144.27  subdivision 8, is amended to read: 
144.28     Subd. 8.  [ADMINISTRATIVE FORFEITURE PROCEDURE.] (a) A 
144.29  motor vehicle used to commit a designated offense or used in 
144.30  conduct resulting in a designated license revocation is subject 
144.31  to administrative forfeiture under this subdivision. 
144.32     (b) When a motor vehicle is seized under subdivision 2, the 
144.33  appropriate agency shall serve the driver or operator of the 
144.34  vehicle with a notice of the seizure and intent to forfeit the 
144.35  vehicle.  Additionally, when a motor vehicle is seized under 
144.36  subdivision 2, or within a reasonable time after that, all 
145.1   persons known to have an ownership, possessory, or security 
145.2   interest in the vehicle must be notified of the seizure and the 
145.3   intent to forfeit the vehicle.  For those vehicles required to 
145.4   be registered under chapter 168, the notification to a person 
145.5   known to have a security interest in the vehicle is required 
145.6   only if the vehicle is registered under chapter 168 and the 
145.7   interest is listed on the vehicle's title.  Notice mailed by 
145.8   certified mail to the address shown in Department of Public 
145.9   Safety records is sufficient notice to the registered owner of 
145.10  the vehicle.  For motor vehicles not required to be registered 
145.11  under chapter 168, notice mailed by certified mail to the 
145.12  address shown in the applicable filing or registration for the 
145.13  vehicle is sufficient notice to a person known to have an 
145.14  ownership, possessory, or security interest in the vehicle. 
145.15  Otherwise, notice may be given in the manner provided by law for 
145.16  service of a summons in a civil action. 
145.17     (c) The notice must be in writing and contain: 
145.18     (1) a description of the vehicle seized; 
145.19     (2) the date of seizure; and 
145.20     (3) notice of the right to obtain judicial review of the 
145.21  forfeiture and of the procedure for obtaining that judicial 
145.22  review, printed in English, Hmong, and Spanish.  Substantially 
145.23  the following language must appear conspicuously:  "IF YOU DO 
145.24  NOT DEMAND JUDICIAL REVIEW EXACTLY AS PRESCRIBED IN MINNESOTA 
145.25  STATUTES, SECTION 169A.63, SUBDIVISION 8, YOU LOSE THE RIGHT TO 
145.26  A JUDICIAL DETERMINATION OF THIS FORFEITURE AND YOU LOSE ANY 
145.27  RIGHT YOU MAY HAVE TO THE ABOVE DESCRIBED PROPERTY.  YOU MAY NOT 
145.28  HAVE TO PAY THE FILING FEE FOR THE DEMAND IF DETERMINED YOU ARE 
145.29  UNABLE TO AFFORD THE FEE.  IF THE PROPERTY IS WORTH $7,500 OR 
145.30  LESS, YOU MAY FILE YOUR CLAIM IN CONCILIATION COURT.  YOU DO NOT 
145.31  HAVE TO PAY THE CONCILIATION COURT FILING FEE IF THE PROPERTY IS 
145.32  WORTH LESS THAN $500." 
145.33     (d) Within 30 days following service of a notice of seizure 
145.34  and forfeiture under this subdivision, a claimant may file a 
145.35  demand for a judicial determination of the forfeiture.  The 
145.36  demand must be in the form of a civil complaint and must be 
146.1   filed with the court administrator in the county in which the 
146.2   seizure occurred, together with:  (1) proof of service of a copy 
146.3   of the complaint on the prosecuting authority having 
146.4   jurisdiction over the forfeiture, as well as on the appropriate 
146.5   agency that initiated the forfeiture; and (2) the standard 
146.6   filing fee for civil actions unless the petitioner has the right 
146.7   to sue in forma pauperis under section 563.01.  If the value of 
146.8   the seized property is $7,500 or less, the claimant may file an 
146.9   action in conciliation court for recovery of the seized 
146.10  vehicle.  A copy of the conciliation court statement of claim 
146.11  must be served personally or by mail on the prosecuting 
146.12  authority having jurisdiction over the forfeiture and on the 
146.13  appropriate agency that initiated the forfeiture within 30 days 
146.14  following service of the notice of seizure and forfeiture under 
146.15  this subdivision.  If the value of the seized property is less 
146.16  than $500, the claimant does not have to pay the conciliation 
146.17  court filing fee.  No responsive pleading is required of the 
146.18  prosecuting authority or the appropriate agency and no court 
146.19  fees may be charged for the prosecuting authority's appearance 
146.20  in the matter.  The prosecuting authority may appear for the 
146.21  appropriate agency.  Except as provided in this section, 
146.22  judicial reviews and hearings are governed by section 169A.53, 
146.23  subdivisions 2 and 3, and, at the option of the prosecuting 
146.24  authority, may take place at the same time as any judicial 
146.25  review of the person's license revocation under section 
146.26  169A.53.  If the judicial review and hearing under this section 
146.27  do not take place at the same time as the judicial review of the 
146.28  person's license revocation under section 169A.53, the review 
146.29  and hearing must take place at the earliest practicable date.  
146.30  The proceedings may be combined with any hearing on a petition 
146.31  filed under section 169A.53, subdivision 2, and are governed by 
146.32  the Rules of Civil Procedure. 
146.33     (e) The complaint must be captioned in the name of the 
146.34  claimant as plaintiff and the seized vehicle as defendant, and 
146.35  must state with specificity the grounds on which the claimant 
146.36  alleges the vehicle was improperly seized and the plaintiff's 
147.1   interest in the vehicle seized.  Notwithstanding any law to the 
147.2   contrary, an action for the return of a vehicle seized under 
147.3   this section may not be maintained by or on behalf of any person 
147.4   who has been served with a notice of seizure and forfeiture 
147.5   unless the person has complied with this subdivision. 
147.6      (f) If the claimant makes a timely demand for a judicial 
147.7   determination under this subdivision, the appropriate agency 
147.8   must conduct the forfeiture under subdivision 9. 
147.9      (g) If a demand for judicial determination of an 
147.10  administrative forfeiture is filed under this subdivision and 
147.11  the court orders the return of the seized vehicle, the court 
147.12  shall order that filing fees be reimbursed to the person who 
147.13  filed the demand.  In addition, the court may order sanctions 
147.14  under section 549.211 (sanctions in civil actions). 
147.15     [EFFECTIVE DATE.] This section is effective August 1, 2004. 
147.16     Sec. 4.  Minnesota Statutes 2002, section 241.336, is 
147.17  amended by adding a subdivision to read: 
147.18     Subd. 3.  [PROCEDURES WITHOUT CONSENT; EXPEDITED PROCESS; 
147.19  INMATE NOTICE.] (a) An inmate in a correctional facility is 
147.20  subject to the collection and testing of a blood sample if a 
147.21  significant exposure occurs.  In the absence of affirmative 
147.22  consent and cooperation in the collection of a blood sample, the 
147.23  head of a correctional facility may order an inmate to provide a 
147.24  blood sample for testing for bloodborne pathogens if the 
147.25  requirements of this subdivision are met. 
147.26     (b) The head of a correctional facility must not order the 
147.27  taking of a blood sample under this subdivision unless one or 
147.28  more affidavits have been executed attesting that: 
147.29     (1) the correctional facility followed the procedures in 
147.30  sections 241.33 to 241.342 and attempted to obtain bloodborne 
147.31  pathogen test results according to those sections; 
147.32     (2) a licensed physician knowledgeable about the most 
147.33  current recommendations of the United States Public Health 
147.34  Service has determined that a significant exposure has occurred 
147.35  to the corrections employee under section 241.341; and 
147.36     (3) a physician has documented that the corrections 
148.1   employee has provided a blood sample and consented to testing 
148.2   for bloodborne pathogens, and bloodborne pathogen test results 
148.3   are needed for beginning, continuing, modifying, or 
148.4   discontinuing medical treatment for the corrections employee 
148.5   under section 241.341. 
148.6      (c) The head of the correctional facility may order the 
148.7   inmate to provide a blood sample for bloodborne pathogen testing 
148.8   if, based on the affidavits submitted under paragraph (b) or 
148.9   other available evidence: 
148.10     (1) there is probable cause to believe the corrections 
148.11  employee has experienced a significant exposure to the inmate; 
148.12     (2) the correctional facility imposes appropriate 
148.13  safeguards against unauthorized disclosure, limits uses of 
148.14  samples to those authorized by section 241.338, limits access to 
148.15  the test results to the inmate and to persons who have a direct 
148.16  need for the test results, and establishes a protocol for the 
148.17  destruction of test results after they are no longer needed; 
148.18     (3) a physician for the corrections employee needs the test 
148.19  results for beginning, continuing, modifying, or discontinuing 
148.20  medical treatment for the corrections employee; and 
148.21     (4) the head of the correctional facility finds that the 
148.22  interests of the corrections employee and the state in obtaining 
148.23  the test results outweigh the interests of the inmate.  In that 
148.24  analysis, the head of the correctional facility may consider the 
148.25  corrections employee's interests, including health, safety, 
148.26  productivity, resumption of normal work and nonwork activities, 
148.27  and peace of mind against the interests of the inmate, including 
148.28  privacy, health, and safety.  The head of the correctional 
148.29  facility may also consider the interests of the state and 
148.30  public, including economic, productivity, and safety interests. 
148.31     (d) Facilities shall cooperate with petitioners in 
148.32  providing any necessary affidavits to the extent that facility 
148.33  staff can attest under oath to the facts in the affidavits.  
148.34     (e) The commissioner of corrections and local correctional 
148.35  facilities authorities must provide written notice to each 
148.36  inmate through the inmate handbook, or a comparable document, 
149.1   that an inmate may be subject to a blood draw without a hearing 
149.2   if the inmate causes bodily fluids to come into contact with 
149.3   employees of the Department of Corrections or local correctional 
149.4   facilities. 
149.5      [EFFECTIVE DATE.] This section is effective the day 
149.6   following final enactment. 
149.7      Sec. 5.  Minnesota Statutes 2002, section 243.24, 
149.8   subdivision 2, is amended to read: 
149.9      Subd. 2.  [CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER TO INCREASE FUND TO 
149.10  $100.] If the fund standing to the credit of the prisoner on the 
149.11  prisoner's leaving the facility by discharge, supervised 
149.12  release, or on parole be less than $100, the warden or chief 
149.13  executive officer is directed to pay out of the current expense 
149.14  fund of the facility sufficient funds to make the total of said 
149.15  earnings the sum of $100.  Offenders who have previously 
149.16  received the $100 upon their initial release from incarceration 
149.17  will not receive the $100 on any second or subsequent release 
149.18  from incarceration for the same offense.  Offenders who were 
149.19  sentenced as a short-term offender under section 609.105 shall 
149.20  not receive gate money. 
149.21     [EFFECTIVE DATE.] This section is effective July 1, 2004. 
149.22     Sec. 6.  Minnesota Statutes 2002, section 299A.38, 
149.23  subdivision 2, is amended to read: 
149.24     Subd. 2.  [STATE AND LOCAL REIMBURSEMENT.] Peace officers 
149.25  and heads of local law enforcement agencies who buy vests for 
149.26  the use of peace officer employees may apply to the commissioner 
149.27  for reimbursement of funds spent to buy vests.  On approving an 
149.28  application for reimbursement, the commissioner shall pay the 
149.29  applicant an amount equal to the lesser of one-half of the 
149.30  vest's purchase price or $300 $600, as adjusted according to 
149.31  subdivision 2a.  The political subdivision that employs the 
149.32  peace officer shall pay at least the lesser of one-half of the 
149.33  vest's purchase price or $300 $600, as adjusted according to 
149.34  subdivision 2a.  The political subdivision may not deduct or pay 
149.35  its share of the vest's cost from any clothing, maintenance, or 
149.36  similar allowance otherwise provided to the peace officer by the 
150.1   law enforcement agency. 
150.2      [EFFECTIVE DATE.] This section is effective July 1, 2004. 
150.3      Sec. 7.  Minnesota Statutes 2002, section 299A.38, 
150.4   subdivision 2a, is amended to read: 
150.5      Subd. 2a.  [ADJUSTMENT OF REIMBURSEMENT AMOUNT.] On October 
150.6   1, 1997 2005, the commissioner of public safety shall adjust 
150.7   the $300 $600 reimbursement amounts specified in subdivision 2, 
150.8   and in each subsequent year, on October 1, the commissioner 
150.9   shall adjust the reimbursement amount applicable immediately 
150.10  preceding that October 1 date.  The adjusted rate must reflect 
150.11  the annual percentage change in the Consumer Price Index for all 
150.12  urban consumers, published by the federal Bureau of Labor 
150.13  Statistics, occurring in the one-year period ending on the 
150.14  preceding June 1. 
150.15     [EFFECTIVE DATE.] This section is effective July 1, 2004. 
150.16     Sec. 8.  [299A.645] [GANG AND DRUG OVERSIGHT COUNCIL.] 
150.17     Subdivision 1.  [OVERSIGHT COUNCIL ESTABLISHED.] The Gang 
150.18  and Drug Oversight Council is established to provide guidance 
150.19  related to the investigation and prosecution of gang and drug 
150.20  crime. 
150.21     Subd. 2.  [MEMBERSHIP.] The oversight council shall consist 
150.22  of the following individuals or their designees: 
150.23     (1) the director of the Office of Special Investigations, 
150.24  as the representative of the commissioner of corrections; 
150.25     (2) the superintendent of the Bureau of Criminal 
150.26  Apprehension, as the representative of the commissioner of 
150.27  public safety; 
150.28     (3) the attorney general; 
150.29     (4) six chiefs of police, selected by the Minnesota Chiefs 
150.30  of Police Association; 
150.31     (5) six sheriffs, selected by the Minnesota Sheriffs 
150.32  Association to represent each district; 
150.33     (6) the United States Attorney for the District of 
150.34  Minnesota; 
150.35     (7) two county attorneys, selected by the Minnesota County 
150.36  Attorneys Association; 
151.1      (8) a command-level representative of a gang strike force; 
151.2      (9) a representative from a drug task force, selected by 
151.3   the Minnesota State Association of Narcotics Investigators; 
151.4      (10) a representative from the United States Drug 
151.5   Enforcement Administration; 
151.6      (11) a representative from the United States Bureau of 
151.7   Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms; and 
151.8      (12) two additional members may be selected by the 
151.9   oversight council. 
151.10  The oversight council may adopt procedures to govern its conduct 
151.11  as necessary and may select a chair from among its members. 
151.12     Subd. 3.  [OVERSIGHT COUNCIL'S DUTIES.] The oversight 
151.13  council shall develop an overall strategy to ameliorate the harm 
151.14  caused to the public by gang and drug crime within the state.  
151.15  This strategy may include the development of protocols and 
151.16  procedures to investigate gang and drug crime and a structure 
151.17  for best addressing these issues in a multijurisdictional 
151.18  manner.  Additionally, the oversight council shall have the 
151.19  following responsibilities: 
151.20     (1) identifying and recommending a candidate or candidates 
151.21  for statewide coordinator to the commissioner of public safety; 
151.22     (2) establishing multijurisdictional task and strike forces 
151.23  to combat gang and drug crime; 
151.24     (3) assisting the Department of Public Safety in developing 
151.25  an objective grant review application process that is free from 
151.26  conflicts of interests; 
151.27     (4) making funding recommendations to the commissioner of 
151.28  public safety on grants to support efforts to combat gang and 
151.29  drug crime; 
151.30     (5) assisting in developing a process to collect and share 
151.31  information to improve the investigation and prosecution of drug 
151.32  offenses; 
151.33     (6) developing and approving an operational budget for the 
151.34  office of the statewide coordinator and the oversight council; 
151.35  and 
151.36     (7) adopting criteria for use in determining whether 
152.1   individuals are or may be members of gangs involved in criminal 
152.2   activity. 
152.3      Subd. 4.  [STATEWIDE COORDINATOR.] The commissioner shall 
152.4   appoint a statewide coordinator as selected by the oversight 
152.5   council.  The coordinator, serving in unclassified service, 
152.6   shall be responsible for the following: 
152.7      (1) coordinating and monitoring the activities of the task 
152.8   forces; 
152.9      (2) facilitating local efforts and ensuring statewide 
152.10  coordination with efforts to combat gang and drug crime; 
152.11     (3) facilitating training for personnel; 
152.12     (4) monitoring compliance with investigative protocols; and 
152.13     (5) implementing an outcome evaluation and data quality 
152.14  control process. 
152.15     Subd. 5.  [PARTICIPATING OFFICERS; EMPLOYMENT STATUS.] All 
152.16  participating law enforcement officers must be licensed peace 
152.17  officers as defined under section 626.84, subdivision 1, or 
152.18  qualified federal law enforcement officers as defined in section 
152.19  626.8453.  Participating officers remain employees of the same 
152.20  entity that employed them before joining any multijurisdictional 
152.21  entity established under this section.  Participating officers 
152.22  are not employees of the state. 
152.23     Subd. 6.  [JURISDICTION AND POWERS.] Law enforcement 
152.24  officers participating in any multijurisdictional entity 
152.25  established under this section have statewide jurisdiction to 
152.26  conduct criminal investigations and have the same powers of 
152.27  arrest as those possessed by a sheriff. 
152.28     Subd. 7.  [GRANTS AUTHORIZED.] After considering 
152.29  recommendations from the oversight council, the commissioner of 
152.30  public safety may make grants to state and local units of 
152.31  government to combat gang and drug crime. 
152.32     Subd. 8.  [OVERSIGHT COUNCIL IS PERMANENT.] Notwithstanding 
152.33  section 15.059, this section does not expire. 
152.34     Subd. 9.  [FUNDING.] Participating agencies may accept 
152.35  lawful grants or contributions from any federal source or legal 
152.36  business or entity. 
153.1      Subd. 10.  [ROLE OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL.] The attorney 
153.2   general or a designee shall generally advise on any matters that 
153.3   the oversight council deems appropriate. 
153.4      Subd. 11.  [ATTORNEY GENERAL; COMMUNITY LIAISON.] (a) The 
153.5   attorney general or a designee shall serve as a liaison between 
153.6   the oversight council and the councils created in sections 
153.7   3.922, 3.9223, 3.9225, and 3.9226.  The attorney general or 
153.8   designee will be responsible for: 
153.9      (1) informing the councils of the plans, activities, and 
153.10  decisions, and hearing their reactions to those plans, 
153.11  activities, and decisions; and 
153.12     (2) providing the oversight council with the council's 
153.13  position on the oversight council's plans, activities, and 
153.14  decisions. 
153.15     (b) In no event is the oversight council required to 
153.16  disclose the names of individuals identified by it to the 
153.17  councils referenced in this subdivision. 
153.18     (c) Nothing in this subdivision changes the data 
153.19  classification of any data held by the oversight council. 
153.20     [EFFECTIVE DATE.] This section is effective July 1, 2004. 
153.21     Sec. 9.  Minnesota Statutes 2002, section 357.021, is 
153.22  amended by adding a subdivision to read: 
153.23     Subd. 8.  [PROCEEDS COLLECTED FOR THE CRIMINAL JUSTICE 
153.24  SPECIAL PROJECTS ACCOUNT.] Any proceeds received under this 
153.25  section by the treasurer after June 30, 2003, for the criminal 
153.26  justice special projects account in the special revenue fund 
153.27  shall be transferred to the general fund. 
153.28     [EFFECTIVE DATE.] This section is effective the day 
153.29  following final enactment. 
153.30     Sec. 10.  [REPEALER.] 
153.31     Minnesota Statutes 2002, sections 299A.64; 299A.65; and 
153.32  299A.66, are repealed. 
153.33     [EFFECTIVE DATE.] This section is effective July 1, 2004.