Arizona Legislature

Arizona Won't Let a Bed Shortage Become a Public Safety Crisis Anymore

A quiet but consequential gap in Arizona law has allowed some of the state's most dangerous defendants to walk free, not because a judge ordered it, but because there was simply no bed available to hold them. This week, the Arizona Senate moved to change that.

HB 2307, titled "Dangerous Incompetent Defendants; Out-of-State Facilities," passed the Senate with bipartisan support and now awaits Governor Katie Hobbs’ signature. The bill was introduced by Senator Hildy Angius (R-AZ), a member of the Senate Health & Human Services Committee, and she has been direct about what is at stake.

"Public safety must come first," Sen. Angius said. "When someone is found dangerous and incompetent to stand trial, they need to be placed in a secure facility where they can receive treatment while protecting the public."

Moreover, Arizona courts can find a defendant both dangerous and mentally unfit to stand trial, meaning the person poses a public threat but cannot meaningfully participate in their own defense.

Those individuals are supposed to receive treatment in a secure facility. However,  Arizona's shortage of secure mental health beds has meant that the process sometimes stalls, leaving communities in an uncomfortable position while the system waits to catch up.

Practical Solutions

The bill offers a practical solution: when no in-state beds are available, the Arizona Department of Health Services would be authorized to place defendants in secure facilities outside the state.

Meanwhile, the department would cover all associated costs. As the bill carries an emergency designation, it would take effect the moment Gov. Hobbs signs it.

The legislation also mandates more rigorous tracking of court orders, commitments, conditional releases, and discharges, creating a clearer picture of how the system is functioning and laying groundwork for longer-term capacity solutions.

“This bill helps close a gap in our system and ensures dangerous offenders do not fall through the cracks simply because there is not a bed available in Arizona,” Angius concluded. 

Ericka Rodriguez Diaz

Ericka Piñon is a reporter for Cactus Politics specializing in Arizona Legislative Correspondent. With 1 year on the ground in Phoenix, Arizona, they have been cited by Cactus Politics, Big Energy News, The Floridian Press, and Texas Politics. Her focus is on Public Relations and Communications. Email: Ericka@dnm.news

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