Section 3454 Of Title 2.05. Postrelease Community Supervision Act Of 2011 From California Penal Code >> Title 2.05. >> Part 3.
3454
. (a) Each supervising county agency, as established by the
county board of supervisors pursuant to subdivision (a) of Section
3451, shall establish a review process for assessing and refining a
person's program of postrelease supervision. Any additional
postrelease supervision conditions shall be reasonably related to the
underlying offense for which the offender spent time in prison, or
to the offender's risk of recidivism, and the offender's criminal
history, and be otherwise consistent with law.
(b) Each county agency responsible for postrelease supervision, as
established by the county board of supervisors pursuant to
subdivision (a) of Section 3451, may determine additional appropriate
conditions of supervision listed in Section 3453 consistent with
public safety, including the use of continuous electronic monitoring
as defined in Section 1210.7, order the provision of appropriate
rehabilitation and treatment services, determine appropriate
incentives, and determine and order appropriate responses to alleged
violations, which can include, but shall not be limited to,
immediate, structured, and intermediate sanctions up to and including
referral to a reentry court pursuant to Section 3015, or flash
incarceration in a city or county jail. Periods of flash
incarceration are encouraged as one method of punishment for
violations of an offender's condition of postrelease supervision.
(c) As used in this title, "flash incarceration" is a period of
detention in a city or county jail due to a violation of an offender'
s conditions of postrelease supervision. The length of the detention
period can range between one and 10 consecutive days. Flash
incarceration is a tool that may be used by each county agency
responsible for postrelease supervision. Shorter, but if necessary
more frequent, periods of detention for violations of an offender's
postrelease supervision conditions shall appropriately punish an
offender while preventing the disruption in a work or home
establishment that typically arises from longer term revocations.