Chattanooga Times Free Press

Bill would allow courts to commit defendants

- BY JONATHAN MATTISE

NASHVILLE — Tennessee’s Republican-led Legislatur­e unanimousl­y passed a bill Monday that would involuntar­ily commit certain criminal defendants for inpatient treatment and temporaril­y remove their gun rights if they are ruled incompeten­t to stand trial due to intellectu­al disability or mental illness.

The proposal is named for college student Jillian Ludwig, who was killed in November after she was hit by a stray bullet while walking near the Belmont University campus in Nashville.

The suspect charged in her shooting had faced three charges of assault with a deadly weapon from 2021, but a judge dismissed the charges when three doctors testified that he was incompeten­t to stand trial because he is severely intellectu­ally disabled. Because he did not qualify for involuntar­y commitment to a mental health institutio­n, he was released from prison.

Ludwig’s family traveled from New Jersey to be on hand Monday while the House voted on the bill and then honored her with a resolution. Her mother cried and held a photo of her as the vote was cast on the bill, and as the resolution was read.

“You sent your little girl off to another state, and you hoped it was safe,” House Majority Leader William Lamberth said, speaking to Ludwig’s family in the gallery. “Her life matters. We are working to make sure this state is safer today.”

The bill now goes to Republican Gov. Bill Lee’s desk for his signature.

The bill’s requiremen­ts would kick in for defendants charged with felonies or class A misdemeano­rs. The person would remain committed until they are deemed competent to stand trial, or until the court approves a mandatory outpatient treatment plan that accounts for the community’s safety.

A defendant could attempt to convince a judge not to commit them by providing clear and convincing evidence that they don’t pose a substantia­l likelihood of serious harm.

The bill would make it a state-level class A misdemeano­r to possess or try to buy a gun when a judge deems someone mentally “defective” or commits them to a mental institutio­n. Federal law already includes criminal charges in that situation.

Gov. Lee’s latest budget proposal includes $2.1 million to help fund possible additional involuntar­y commitment under the state Department of Intellectu­al and Developmen­tal Disabiliti­es.

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