Ch. 179 1997 Session Laws of Kansas 1289
An Act concerning crimes, punishment, criminal procedure and
corrections; amending
K.S.A. 21-3826, 21-3826, as amended by section 2 of this act,
22a-215, 65-904, 74-9102
and 75-5291 and K.S.A. 1996 Supp. 74-9101 and repealing the
existing sections; also
repealing K.S.A. 21-3826, as amended by section 26 of Chapter 229
of the 1996 Session
Laws of Kansas.
Be it enacted by the Legislature of the State of
Kansas:
New Section 1. (a) The joint committee on corrections and
juvenile
justice oversight shall develop and adopt a 10 year corrections
master
plan to guide the development and expansion of correctional
programs
and facilities.
(b) In order to assist the committee in the development of such
mas-
ter plan, the secretary of corrections, on or before September 1,
1997,
shall draft a scope statement concerning the master plan to be
presented
to the committee. The secretary may retain such experts and
consultants
as are necessary to develop the scope statement.
(c) In developing the master plan, the committee may request
assis-
tance and expertise from the secretary of corrections as well as
other state
agencies.
(d) The master plan shall address or develop, or both:
(1) Enhanced or expanded community corrections programs. The
plan shall address how such programs may slow the growth of the
need
for new prison beds or reduce the need for new prison beds. Review
of
1290 1997 Session Laws of Kansas Ch. 179
community correction programs may include, but not be limited
to, in-
tensive supervision, short-term jail sentences, halfway houses and
com-
munity-based work;
(2) any future expansion of state correctional
facilities;
(3) other alternatives to incarceration consistent with public
safety;
(4) allowing the court to revoke a defendant's probation,
assignment
to community corrections or conditional release, order the offender
com-
mitted to the custody of the secretary of corrections and retain
jurisdiction
for 120 days to modify the sentence or order for
revocation;
(5) a guide for community-based facilities;
(6) consolidation or centralization of field services;
(7) private expansion with specific recommendations on criteria
to
guide the determination of any program appropriate for
privatization, to
assist in determining the placement of any such facility and to
guide in
the selection of any private provider;
(8) specific programs to deal with specific populations within
the ex-
isting state facilities that could be served in the community to
ease ca-
pacity demands on the existing state institutions and the cost
basis and
effectiveness of such programs;
(9) contracts with profit or nonprofit corporations which would
serve
to reduce the demands on the state facilities;
(10) projected costs of any such plans developed or
recommended;
and
(11) identify any revenue source sufficient to appropriately
fund any
plans developed or recommended.
Sec. 2. K.S.A. 21-3826 is hereby amended to read as follows:
21-
3826. (a) Traffic in contraband in a correctional institution is
introducing
or attempting to introduce into or upon the grounds of any
correctional
institution or taking, sending, attempting to take or attempting to
send
from any correctional institution or any unauthorized possession
while in
any correctional institution or distributing within any
correctional insti-
tution, any item without the consent of the administrator of the
correc-
tional institution.
(b) For purposes of this section, ``correctional institution''
means any
state correctional institution or facility, conservation camp,
state security
hospital, state youth center, community correction center or
facility for
detention or confinement, juvenile detention facility or
jail.
(c) (1) Traffic in contraband in a correctional
institution is a severity of firearms, ammunition,
explosives or a con-
level 6, nonperson felony.
trolled substance which is defined in subsection (e) of K.S.A.
65-4101, and
amendments thereto, is a severity level 5, nonperson
felony.
(2) Traffic in any contraband, as defined by rules and
regulations
adopted by the secretary, in a correctional institution by an
employee of
a correctional institution is a severity level 5, nonperson
felony.
Ch. 179 1997 Session Laws of Kansas 1291
(d) Except as provided in subsection (c), traffic in
contraband in a
correctional institution is a severity level 6, nonperson
felony.
Sec. 3. On and after July 1, 1997, K.S.A. 21-3826, as amended
by
section 2 of this act, is hereby amended to read as follows:
21-3826. (a)
Traffic in contraband in a correctional institution is introducing
or at-
tempting to introduce into or upon the grounds of any correctional
insti-
tution or taking, sending, attempting to take or attempting to send
from
any correctional institution or any unauthorized possession while
in any
correctional institution or distributing within any correctional
institution,
any item without the consent of the administrator of the
correctional
institution.
(b) For purposes of this section, ``correctional institution''
means any
state correctional institution or facility, conservation camp,
state security
hospital, state youth center juvenile
correctional facility, community cor-
rection center or facility for detention or confinement, juvenile
detention
facility or jail.
(c) (1) Traffic in contraband in a correctional institution of
firearms,
ammunition, explosives or a controlled substance which is defined
in sub-
section (e) of K.S.A. 65-4101, and amendments thereto, is a
severity level
5, nonperson felony.
(2) Traffic in any contraband, as defined by rules and
regulations
adopted by the secretary, in a correctional institution by an
employee of
a correctional institution is a severity level 5, nonperson
felony.
(d) Except as provided in subsection (c), traffic in contraband
in a
correctional institution is a severity level 6, nonperson
felony.
Sec. 4. On and after July 1, 1997, K.S.A. 1996 Supp. 74-9101
is
hereby amended to read as follows: 74-9101. (a) There is hereby
estab-
lished the Kansas sentencing commission.
(b) The commission shall:
(1) Develop a sentencing guideline model or grid based on
fairness
and equity and shall provide a mechanism for linking justice and
correc-
tions policies. The sentencing guideline model or grid shall
establish ra-
tional and consistent sentencing standards which reduce sentence
dis-
parity, to include, but not be limited to, racial and regional
biases which
may exist under current sentencing practices. The guidelines shall
specify
the circumstances under which imprisonment of an offender is
appro-
priate and a presumed sentence for offenders for whom imprisonment
is
appropriate, based on each appropriate combination of reasonable
of-
fense and offender characteristics. In developing its recommended
sen-
tencing guidelines, the commission shall take into substantial
considera-
tion current sentencing and release practices and correctional
resources,
including but not limited to the capacities of local and state
correctional
facilities. In its report, the commission shall make
recommendations re-
garding whether there is a continued need for and what is the
projected
1292 1997 Session Laws of Kansas Ch. 179
role of, if any, the Kansas parole board and whether the policy
of allo-
cating good time credits for the purpose of determining an inmate's
eli-
gibility for parole or conditional release should be
continued;
(2) consult with and advise the legislature with reference to
the im-
plementation, management, monitoring, maintenance and operations
of
the sentencing guidelines system;
(3) direct implementation of the sentencing guidelines
system;
(4) assist in the process of training judges, county and
district attor-
neys, court services officers, state parole officers, correctional
officers,
law enforcement officials and other criminal justice groups. For
these
purposes, the sentencing commission shall develop an
implementation
policy and shall construct an implementation manual for use in its
training
activities;
(5) receive presentence reports and journal entries for all
persons
who are sentenced for crimes committed on or after July 1, 1993,
to
develop post-implementation monitoring procedures and reporting
methods to evaluate guideline sentences. In developing the
evaluative
criteria, the commission shall take into consideration rational and
consis-
tent sentencing standards which reduce sentence disparity to
include, but
not be limited to, racial and regional biases;
(6) advise and consult with the secretary of corrections and
members
of the legislature in developing a mechanism to link guidelines
sentence
practices with correctional resources and policies, including but
not lim-
ited to the capacities of local and state correctional facilities.
Such linkage
shall include a review and determination of the impact of the
sentencing
guidelines on the state's prison population, review of corrections
pro-
grams and a study of ways to more effectively utilize correction
dollars
and to reduce prison population;
(7) make recommendations relating to modification to the
sentencing
guidelines as provided in K.S.A. 21-4725 and amendments
thereto;
(8) prepare and submit fiscal impact and correctional resource
state-
ment as provided in K.S.A. 1996 Supp. 74-9106 and amendments
thereto;
(9) make recommendations to those responsible for developing
a
working philosophy of sentencing guideline consistency and
rationality;
(10) develop prosecuting standards and guidelines to govern the
con-
duct of prosecutors when charging persons with crimes and when
engag-
ing in plea bargaining;
(11) analyze problems in criminal justice, identify alternative
solu-
tions and make recommendations for improvements in criminal law,
pros-
ecution, community and correctional placement, programs, release
pro-
cedures and related matters including study and recommendations
concerning the statutory definition of crimes and criminal
penalties and
review of proposed criminal law changes;
(12) perform such other criminal justice studies or tasks as may
be
Ch. 179 1997 Session Laws of Kansas 1293
assigned by the governor or specifically requested by the
legislature, de-
partment of corrections, the chief justice or the attorney
general;
(13) develop a program plan which includes involvement of
business
and industry in the public or other social or fraternal
organizations for
admitting back into the mainstream those offenders who
demonstrate
both the desire and ability to reconstruct their lives during their
incar-
ceration or during conditional release;
and
(14) appoint a task force to make recommendations concerning
the
consolidation of probation, parole and community corrections
services.;
(15) produce official inmate population projections annually
on or
before six weeks following the date of receipt of the data from the
de-
partment of corrections. When the commission's projections indicate
that
the inmate population will exceed available prison capacity within
two
years of the date of the projection, the commission shall identify
and an-
alyze the impact of specific options for (A) reducing the number of
prison
admissions; or (B) adjusting sentence lengths for specific groups
of of-
fenders. Options for reducing the number of prison admissions shall
in-
clude, but not be limited to, possible modification of both
sentencing grids
to include presumptive intermediate dispositions for certain
categories of
offenders. Intermediate sanction dispositions shall include, but
not be lim-
ited to: intensive supervision; short-term jail sentences; halfway
houses;
community-based work release; electronic monitoring and house
arrest;
substance abuse treatment; and pre-revocation incarceration.
Intermedi-
ate sanction options shall include, but not be limited to,
mechanisms to
explicitly target offenders that would otherwise be placed in
prison. Anal-
ysis of each option shall include an assessment of such options
impact on
the overall size of the prison population, the effect on public
safety and
costs. In preparing the assessment, the commission shall review the
ex-
perience of other states and shall review available research
regarding the
effectiveness of such option. The commission's findings relative to
each
sentencing policy option shall be presented to the governor and the
joint
committee on corrections and juvenile justice oversight no later
than
November 1; and
(16) at the request of the governor or the joint committee on
corrections
and juvenile justice oversight, initiate and complete an analysis
of other
sentencing policy adjustments not otherwise evaluated by the
commission.
Sec. 5. On and after July 1, 1997, K.S.A. 74-9102 is hereby
amended
to read as follows: 74-9102. (a) The Kansas sentencing commission
shall
consist of 13 19 members, as
follows:
(1) The chief justice of the supreme court or the chief
justice's des-
ignee;
(2) two district court judges appointed by the chief justice of
the
supreme court;
(3) the attorney general or the attorney general's
designee;
1294 1997 Session Laws of Kansas Ch. 179
(4) one public defender appointed by the governor;
(5) one private defense counsel appointed by the
governor;
(6) one county attorney or district attorney appointed by the
gover-
nor;
(7) the secretary of corrections or the secretary's
designee;
(8) the chairperson of the Kansas parole board or such
chairperson's
designee;
(9) two members of the general public, at least one of whom
shall be
a member of a racial minority group, appointed by the
governor;
(10) a director of a community corrections program appointed by
the
governor; and
(11) a court services officer appointed by the chief justice of
the su-
preme court. Not more than three members of the commission
appointed
by the governor shall be of the same political party.
(b) In addition to the members appointed pursuant to subsection
(a),
four members of the legislature, of which one shall be appointed by
the
president of the senate, one shall be appointed by the minority
leader of
the senate, one shall be appointed by the speaker of the house of
rep-
resentatives, and one shall be appointed by the minority leader of
the
house of representatives, shall serve as ex
officio voting members of the
commission. Such ex officio members of the commission shall
be non-
voting members.
(c) The governor shall appoint a chairperson.
The governor shall ap-
point a chairperson from the two district court judges appointed by
the
chief justice of the supreme court or the chief justice of the
supreme court.
The members of the commission appointed pursuant to subsection
(a)
shall elect any additional officers from among its members
necessary to
discharge its duties.
(d) The commission shall meet upon call of its chairperson as
nec-
essary to carry out its duties under this act.
(e) Each appointed member of the commission shall be
appointed
for a term of two years and shall continue to serve during that
time as
long as the member occupies the position which made the member
eli-
gible for the appointment. Each member shall continue in office
until a
successor is appointed and qualifies. Members shall be eligible for
reap-
pointment, and appointment may be made to fill an unexpired
term.
(f) Each member of the commission, including ex officio
members
appointed pursuant to subsection (b), shall receive compensation,
subsis-
tence allowances, mileage and other expenses as provided for in
K.S.A.
75-3223, and amendments thereto, except that the public members
of
the commission shall receive compensation in the amount provided
for
legislators pursuant to K.S.A. 75-3212, and amendments thereto, for
each
day or part thereof actually spent on commission
activities.
Sec. 6. K.S.A. 75-5291 is hereby amended to read as follows:
75-
Ch. 179 1997 Session Laws of Kansas 1295
5291. (a) The secretary of corrections may make grants to
counties for
the development, implementation, operation and improvement of
com-
munity correctional services including, but not limited to,
restitution pro-
grams, victim services programs, preventive or diversionary
correctional
programs, community corrections centers and facilities for the
detention
or confinement, care or treatment of adults charged with or
convicted of
crime or of juveniles being detained or adjudged to be delinquent,
mis-
creant or a juvenile offender except that no community corrections
funds
shall be expended by the secretary for the purpose of establishing
or
operating a conservation camp as provided by K.S.A.
75-52,127.
(b) (1) In order to establish a mechanism for community
correctional
services to participate in the department of corrections annual
budget
planning process, the secretary of corrections shall establish a
community
corrections advisory committee to identify new or enhanced
correctional
or treatment interventions designed to divert offenders from
prison.
(2) The secretary shall appoint one member from the southeast
com-
munity corrections association region, one member from the
northeast
community corrections association region, one member from the
central
community corrections association region and one member from the
west-
ern community corrections association region. The deputy secretary
of
community corrections and field services shall designate two
members
from the state at large. The secretary shall have final appointment
ap-
proval of the members designated by the deputy secretary. The
committee
shall reflect the diversity of community correctional services with
respect
to geographical location and average daily population of offenders
under
supervision.
(3) Each member shall be appointed for a term of three years,
except
of the initial appointments, such terms shall be staggered as
determined
by the secretary. Members shall be eligible for
reappointment.
(4) The committee, in collaboration with the deputy secretary
of com-
munity corrections and field services or the deputy secretary's
designee,
shall routinely examine and report to the secretary on the
following issues:
(A) Efficiencies in the delivery of field supervision
services;
(B) offender assignment decisions;
(C) effectiveness and enhancement of existing interventions;
and
(D) identification of new interventions.
(5) The committee's report concerning enhanced or new
interventions
shall address:
(A) A target population;
(B) measurable goals and objectives;
(C) projected costs;
(D) the impact on public safety; and
(E) the evaluation process.
(6) The committee shall submit its report to the secretary
annually on
or before July 15 in order for the enhanced or new interventions to
be
1296 1997 Session Laws of Kansas Ch. 179
considered for inclusion within the department of corrections
budget re-
quest for community correctional services or in the department's
en-
hanced services budget request for the subsequent fiscal
year.
Sec. 7. K.S.A. 22a-215 is hereby amended to read as follows:
22a-
215. The coroner shall cause the body of a deceased person to be
deliv-
ered to the immediate family or the next of kin of the deceased in
accor-
dance with the provisions of K.S.A. 65-904, and amendments thereto.
If
there is no immediate family or next of kin the coroner shall
report and
make delivery in accordance with the provisions of article 9 of
chapter 65
of Kansas Statutes Annotated. If no such delivery is
required, the coroner
shall cause the body of such deceased person to be decently buried,
and
the expenses to be paid from any property found with the body. If
there
is no property found with the body and if the deceased was eligible
for
assistance under the provisions of article 7 of chapter 39 of
Kansas Stat-
utes Annotated, burial expenses shall be paid in accordance with
the pro-
visions of K.S.A. 39-713d, and amendments thereto. Otherwise such
bur-
ial expenses shall be paid from the county general fund unless
the
deceased died in the custody of the secretary of corrections.
Burial ex-
penses for the unclaimed bodies of deceased inmates in the custody
of the
secretary of corrections shall be paid by the department of
corrections.
Any coroner who, over the protest of the immediate family or
next of
kin of the deceased, delivers or causes to be delivered the body of
a
deceased person for final disposition to a particular embalmer,
funeral
director or funeral establishment, shall be deemed guilty of a
class B
nonperson misdemeanor and upon conviction thereof shall forfeit
the
coroner's office.
Sec. 8. K.S.A. 65-904 is hereby amended to read as follows:
65-904.
(a) If Except as provided by subsection
(b), if the deceased person during
his such person's last sickness of
his own accord requests to be buried, or
if his burial is provided for under article 3 of
chapter 73 of the Kansas
Statutes Annotated or acts amendatory thereof or supplemental
thereto,
the body shall not be surrendered, but shall be buried in the usual
man-
ner: Provided,
That. No body shall be delivered as provided in
K.S.A. 65-
902a and amendments thereto, if claimed by relatives or
friends within
seventy-two (72) 72 hours after death, nor
shall a body be delivered as
provided in K.S.A. 65-902a and amendments thereto unless the
person
or persons in charge of the deceased at the time of
death shall have made
diligent search by telegraph and otherwise for
relatives or friends, and no
response to such inquiry the search has
been received within seventy-two 96 hours after
(72)such notice:
Provided further, the
commencement of
such search. No dead body received by the department of anatomy
of the
medical school of the university of Kansas under the provisions of
this act
shall be dissected prior to ninety (90) 60
days after date of receipt
thereof:And provided
also, That of the dead body.
In case of the remains of any
Ch. 179 1997 Session Laws of Kansas 1297
person so delivered and received shall be claimed within
ninety (90) 60
days by any relative or friend, they shall be given
up to such relative or
friend for interment.
(b) The unclaimed body of a deceased inmate in the custody of
the
secretary of corrections may be cremated at the expense of the
department
of corrections.
Sec. 9. K.S.A. 21-3826, 22a-215, 65-904 and 75-5291 are hereby
re-
pealed.
Sec. 10. On and after July 1, 1997, K.S.A. 21-3826, as amended
by
section 2 of this act, 21-3826, as amended by section 26 of chapter
229
of the 1996 Session Laws of Kansas, 74-9102 and K.S.A. 1996
Supp.
74-9101 are hereby repealed.
Sec. 11. This act shall take effect and be in force from and
after its
publication in the Kansas register.
Approved May 15, 1997.
Published in the Kansas Register: May 22, 1997.