2025 Session Last amended: 2020 session

§ 253D.07 — Proceedings

Plain-Language Summary

This section sets out the process for committing someone as a sexually dangerous person or a person with a sexual psychopathic personality. A county attorney must review the facts and decide whether to file a petition with the district court. If the court finds the person meets the legal standard by clear and convincing evidence, the person is committed indefinitely to the Minnesota Sex Offender Program. Being committed does not prevent criminal prosecution for the same conduct.

Practical Notes
Civil commitment under this chapter is not a criminal sentence — it is a civil legal process that can result in indefinite confinement. People facing a commitment petition have the right to an attorney and to contest the petition at a hearing. The fact that a person was convicted of a sex crime creates a basis for the petition, but the county must still prove the person meets the commitment criteria by clear and convincing evidence.