Oklahoma Code § 22-472

Title 22. Criminal Procedure: Anna McBride Act – Mental health courts
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A.  This section shall be known and may be cited as the “Anna
McBride Act”.
B.  Any district or municipal court of this state may establish
a mental health court program pursuant to the provisions of this
section, subject to the availability of funds.
C.  The court may request assistance from the Department of
Mental Health and Substance Abuse Services which shall be the
primary agency to assist in developing and implementing a mental
health court program.
D.  For purposes of this section, “mental health court” means a
judicial process that utilizes specially trained court personnel to
expedite a case and explore alternatives to incarceration for an
offender charged with criminal offenses other than a crime listed in
paragraph 2 of Section 571 of Title 57 of the Oklahoma Statutes who
has a mental illness or a developmental disability, or a co-
occurring mental illness and substance abuse disorder.  The district
attorney’s office may use discretion in the prosecution of an
offender specified in this subsection subject to the restrictions
provided in subsection E of this section.
E.  The court shall have the authority to exclude from mental
health court any offender arrested or charged with any violent
offense or any offender who has a prior felony conviction in this
state or another state for a violent offense.  Eligibility and entry
by an offender into the mental health court program is dependent
upon prior approval of the district attorney.  Eligible offenses may
further be restricted by the rules of the specific mental health
court program.  The court shall have the authority to exclude
persons from mental health court who have a propensity for violence.
F.  The mental health court judge shall recognize relapses and
restarts in the program which shall be considered as part of the
rehabilitation and recovery process.  The court shall accomplish

monitoring and offender accountability by ordering progressively
increasing sanctions or providing incentives, rather than removing
the offender from the program when a violation occurs, except when
the conduct of the offender requires revocation from the program.
Any revocation from the mental health court program shall require
notice to the offender and other participating parties in the case
and a revocation hearing.  At the revocation hearing, if the
offender is found to have violated the conditions of the plea
agreement or performance contract and disciplinary sanctions have
been insufficient to gain compliance, the offender shall be revoked
from the program and sentenced for the offense as provided in the
plea agreement.
G.  Any criminal case which has been filed and processed in the
traditional manner shall be cross-referenced to a mental health
court case file by the court clerk if the case is subsequently
assigned to a mental health court program.  The originating criminal
case file shall remain open to public inspection.  The court shall
determine what information or pleadings are to be retained in the
mental health case court file, which shall be closed to public
inspection.
Added by Laws 2002, c. 285, § 1.  Amended by Laws 2003, c. 76, § 1,
eff. Nov. 1, 2003; Laws 2014, c. 180, § 1, eff. Nov. 1, 2014; Laws
2021, c. 170, § 1, eff. Nov. 1, 2021.

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