1. When a superior court, following a hearing conducted pursuant to
subdivision three or four of section 730.30 of this article, is
satisfied that the defendant is not an incapacitated person, the
criminal action against him or her must proceed. If it is satisfied that
the defendant is an incapacitated person, or if no motion for such a
hearing is made, it must adjudicate him or her an incapacitated person,
and must issue a final order of observation or an order of commitment.
When the indictment does not charge a felony or when the defendant has
been convicted of an offense other than a felony, such court (a) must
issue a final order of observation committing the defendant to the
custody of the commissioner for care and treatment in an appropriate
institution for a period not to exceed ninety days from the date of such
order, provided, however, that the commissioner may designate an
appropriate hospital for placement of a defendant for whom a final order
of observation has been issued, where such hospital is licensed by the
office of mental health and has agreed to accept, upon referral by the
commissioner, defendants subject to final orders of observation issued
under this subdivision, and (b) must dismiss the indictment filed in
such court against the defendant, and such dismissal constitutes a bar
to any further prosecution of the charge or charges contained in such
indictment. Upon the issuance of a final order of observation, the
district attorney shall immediately transmit to the commissioner, in a
manner intended to protect the confidentiality of the information, a
list of names and contact information of persons who may reasonably be
expected to be the victim of any assault or any violent felony offense,
as defined in the penal law, or any offense listed in section 530.11 of
this chapter which would be carried out by the committed person;
provided that the person who reasonably may be expected to be a victim
does not need to be a member of the same family or household as the
committed person. When the indictment charges a felony or when the
defendant has been convicted of a felony, it must issue an order of
commitment committing the defendant to the custody of the commissioner
for care and treatment in an appropriate institution or, upon the
consent of the district attorney, committing him or her to the custody
of the commissioner for care and treatment on an out-patient basis, for
a period not to exceed one year from the date of such order. Upon the
issuance of an order of commitment, the court must exonerate the
defendant's bail if he or she was previously at liberty on bail;
provided, however, that exoneration of bail is not required when a
defendant is committed to the custody of the commissioner for care and
treatment on an out-patient basis. When the defendant is in the custody
of the commissioner pursuant to a final order of observation, the
commissioner or his or her designee, which may include the director of
an appropriate institution, immediately upon the discharge of the
defendant, must certify to such court that he or she has complied with
the notice provisions set forth in paragraph (a) of subdivision six of
section 730.60 of this article.
2. When a defendant is in the custody of the commissioner immediately
prior to the expiration of the period prescribed in a temporary order of
commitment and the superintendent of the institution wherein the
defendant is confined is of the opinion that the defendant continues to
be an incapacitated person, such superintendent must apply to the court
that issued such order for an order of retention. Such application must
be made within sixty days prior to the expiration of such period on
forms that have been jointly adopted by the judicial conference and the
commissioner. The superintendent must give written notice of the
application to the defendant and to the mental hygiene legal service.
Upon receipt of such application, the court may, on its own motion,
conduct a hearing to determine the issue of capacity, and it must
conduct such hearing if a demand therefor is made by the defendant or
the mental hygiene legal service within ten days from the date that
notice of the application was given them. If, at the conclusion of a
hearing conducted pursuant to this subdivision, the court is satisfied
that the defendant is no longer an incapacitated person, the criminal
action against him must proceed. If it is satisfied that the defendant
continues to be an incapacitated person, or if no demand for a hearing
is made, the court must adjudicate him an incapacitated person and must
issue an order of retention which shall authorize continued custody of
the defendant by the commissioner for a period not to exceed one year.
3. When a defendant is in the custody of the commissioner immediately
prior to the expiration of the period prescribed in the first order of
retention, the procedure set forth in subdivision two shall govern the
application for and the issuance of any subsequent order of retention,
except that any subsequent orders of retention must be for periods not
to exceed two years each; provided, however, that the aggregate of the
periods prescribed in the temporary order of commitment, the first order
of retention and all subsequent orders of retention must not exceed
two-thirds of the authorized maximum term of imprisonment for the
highest class felony charged in the indictment or for the highest class
felony of which he was convicted.
4. When a defendant is in the custody of the commissioner at the
expiration of the authorized period prescribed in the last order of
retention, the criminal action pending against him in the superior court
that issued such order shall terminate for all purposes, and the
commissioner must promptly certify to such court and to the appropriate
district attorney that the defendant was in his custody on such
expiration date. Upon receipt of such certification, the court must
dismiss the indictment, and such dismissal constitutes a bar to any
further prosecution of the charge or charges contained in such
indictment.
5. When, on the effective date of this subdivision, any defendant
remains in the custody of the commissioner pursuant to an order issued
under former code of criminal procedure section six hundred sixty-two-b,
the superintendent or director of the institution where such defendant
is confined shall, if he believes that the defendant continues to be an
incapacitated person, apply forthwith to a court of record in the county
where the institution is located for an order of retention. The
procedures for obtaining any order pursuant to this subdivision shall be
in accordance with the provisions of subdivisions two, three and four of
this section, except that the period of retention pursuant to the first
order obtained under this subdivision shall be for not more than one
year and any subsequent orders of retention must be for periods not to
exceed two years each; provided, however, that the aggregate of the time
spent in the custody of the commissioner pursuant to any order issued in
accordance with the provisions of former code of criminal procedure
section six hundred sixty-two-b and the periods prescribed by the first
order obtained under this subdivision and all subsequent orders of
retention must not exceed two-thirds of the authorized maximum term of
imprisonment for the highest class felony charged in the indictment or
the highest class felony of which he was convicted.
Structure New York Laws
Part 3 - Special Proceedings and Miscellaneous Procedures
Title U - Special Proceedings Which Replace,suspend or Abate Criminal Actions
Article 730 - Mental Disease or Defect Excluding Fitness to Proceed
730.10 - Fitness to Proceed; Definitions.
730.20 - Fitness to Proceed; Generally.
730.30 - Fitness to Proceed; Order of Examination.
730.40 - Fitness to Proceed; Local Criminal Court Accusatory Instrument.
730.50 - Fitness to Proceed; Indictment.
730.60 - Fitness to Proceed; Procedure Following Custody by Commissioner.
730.70 - Fitness to Proceed; Procedure Following Termination of Custody by Commissioner.