Skip navigation

Center for Media and Democracy Alec Model Legislation Shock Incarceration Act

Download original document:
Brief thumbnail
This text is machine-read, and may contain errors. Check the original document to verify accuracy.
Exposed

D I D YOU KNOW? Corporations VOTED to adopt this. Through ALEC, global companies

ALEC EXPOSED
Search

ABOUT

GO

MEMBERS

LOGIN | LOGOUT | HOME | JOIN ALEC | CONTACT
work as “equals” in “unison” with politicians
to write laws to govern your life. Big
MODEL LEGISLATION
ALEC INITIATIVES
PUBLICATIONS
Business
has “a VOICE TASK
and aFORCES
VOTE,” according
to newly exposed
documents. DO YOU?

EVENTS & MEETINGS

“ALEC”
NEWShas long been a
secretive collaboration
between
BigLegislation
Business and
Model
“conservative” politicians.
Civil Justice
Behind closed doors, they
ghostwrite
“model”
bills to
Commerce,
Insurance,
and Economic
be introduced
in state
Development
capitols
across the country.
This agenda--underwritten
Education
by global corporations-Energy,
includes
majorEnvironment,
tax
and Agriculture
loopholes
for big industries
and the
super rich,
Federal Relations
proposals to offshore U.S.
Health
Human
jobs and
gut and
minimum
wage,Services
and efforts to
weaken public health,
International Relations
safety, and environmental
protections.
Public Although
Safety andmany
Elections
of these
bills have become
law, until now, their origin
Tax and Fiscal Policy
has been largely unknown.
With ALEC
EXPOSED, the
Telecommunications
Centerand
forInformation
Media and
Technology
Democracy
hopes more
Americans will study the
bills to understand
the
Print this Page
depth and breadth of how
Text-Only Page
big corporations are
Email
this Page
changing the
legal
rules
and undermining democracy
across the nation.

ALEC’s’Corporate Board
--in recent past or present

• AT&T Services, Inc.
• centerpoint360
• UPS
• Bayer Corporation
• GlaxoSmithKline
• Energy Future Holdings
• Johnson & Johnson
• Coca-Cola Company
• PhRMA
• Kraft Foods, Inc.
• Coca-Cola Co.
• Pfizer Inc.
• Reed Elsevier, Inc.
• DIAGEO
• Peabody Energy
• Intuit, Inc.
• Koch Industries, Inc.
• ExxonMobil
• Verizon
• Reynolds American Inc.
• Wal-Mart Stores, Inc.
• Salt River Project
• Altria Client Services, Inc.
• American Bail Coalition
• State Farm Insurance
For more on these corporations,
search at www.SourceWatch.org.

By the Center for
Media and Democracy
www.prwatch.org

Home

Model Legislation

Public Safety and Elections

Shock Incarceration Act
Summary

Did you know the
NRA--the National
Rifle Association-was the corporate
co-chair in 2011?

This Act would allow courts the option of sentencing offenders who have not committed
specified violent offenses, have never previously served time in an incarceration facility,
and who are aged 17 to 25 to a 120-day sentence in a military-style boot camp. Consent
of the participant would be required. The Act would also establish requirements of
participants in the program and would stipulate the conditions that would result in
expulsion. Participants expelled from the program would be required to serve their term
of incarceration.

Model Legislation
{Title, enacting clause, etc.}
Section 1. {Title.) This Act may be cited as the Shock Incarceration Act.
Section 2. (Definitions.}
(A) "Department" means the department of corrections.
(B) "Unit" means a shock incarceration unit.

Section 3. {Administration of the shock incarceration program.}
(A) In addition to any other terms or conditions of sentencing provided for under (state
chapter), the court may require that a person convicted of a crime for which a sentence
in a state correctional facility may be imposed, except a crime specified in Subsection
(D) of Section 4 of this Act, satisfactorily complete a program of incarceration in a shock
incarceration unit in place of such a sentence.
(B) The department shall establish alternative incarceration units for the purpose of
housing and training probationers eligible for shock incarceration.
(C) A person who is placed in a unit by the court shall be transported by the county
sheriff directly to the unit and shall not be processed through the department's
reception center for prisoners. The department may transfer an individual from one unit
to another unit at the department's discretion during the person's incarceration in the
unit.
(D) In every case in which a person is placed in a shock incarceration unit, the clerk of
the sentencing court shall, within five working days after the placement, mail to the
department of corrections a certified copy of the judgment of sentence and the
investigation report of the person being placed.
(E) The unit shall provide a program of physically strenuous work and exercise patterned
after military basic training, enrollment in a drug treatment program, and other
programming as determined by the department and approved by the commission of
corrections. The term of incarceration shall not exceed 120 days.

Section 4. {Qualifications for participation.}
(A) In order for a person to be placed in a shock incarceration program, the person shall
meet all of the following requirements:
(1) the person is not less than 17 years of age nor more than 25 years of age at the time
of sentencing;
(2) the person has never served a sentence of imprisonment in a state correctional
facility nor previously served a sentence in a boot camp unit;
(3) the person is physically able to participate in the boot camp program;
(4) the person does not appear to have any mental handicap that would prevent
participation in the boot camp program.
(B) Before a court can place a person pursuant to this Act, an initial investigation shall
be completed by the probation officer. The initial investigation shall establish that the
person meets the requirements of Subsection (A) of this section.
(C) A person shall not be placed in a program unless the person consents to the
placement.

(D) A person who is convicted of the following crimes shall not be eligible for shock
incarceration:
(1) [list appropriate
(2) state chapter].

Section 5. {Completion of the program.}
(A) At any time during a participant's incarceration in a unit, but not less than five days
before the participant's expected date of release, the department shall certify to the
sentencing court as to whether the participant has satisfactorily completed the course of
training at the unit.
(B) Upon receiving a satisfactory report of performance in the program from the
department of corrections, the court shall authorize the release of the person from
confinement in the boot camp unit. However, a person shall not be placed in a unit for
more than 120 days.

Section 6. {Expulsion from the program.}
(A) A participant who fails to work diligently and productively at the program of the unit,
or who fails to obey the rules of behavior established for the unit, may be reported to the
sentencing court for possible revocation from the program and may be housed in a
county jail while awaiting a program revocation determination.
(B) A participant who is expelled following a sentencing court determination against him
must immediately be sent to a state correctional facility to serve his full incarceration
sentence.

Section 7. {Severability clause.}
Section 8. {Repealer clause.}
Section 9. {Effective date.}
ALEC's Sourcebook of American State Legislation 1995

About Us and ALEC EXPOSED. The Center
Media andLogin
Democracy
reports
on &corporate
About forMembers
Logout
Events
Meetings spin and government
Model
Task Forces
ALEC Initiatives
Publicationswww.SourceWatch.org,
Home
propaganda.! We are located
in Legislation
Madison, Wisconsin,
and publish
www.PRWatch.org,
Join ALEC
Contact
News
and now www.ALECexposed.org. For more information
contact:
editor@prwatch.org
or 608-260-9713.