If a person is found incompetent to stand trial or not guilty of a crime due to mental illness or developmental delay, is the person automatically committed to a treatment facility?
No. A commitment petition must still be filed and a hearing held in civil court, before the person can be committed, and the criteria for civil commitment must still be met. It is therefore possible for a person to have engaged in criminal activity, be incapable of participating in the criminal proceeding, or be found not guilty due to mental illness or developmental delay, and at the same time, not be subject to commitment in a civil commitment proceeding. This is most likely to happen in the case of crimes that do not involve physical harm to self or others.

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1. What is civil commitment?
2. If I think someone should be committed, do I have to go through the county, or can I file my own petition with the court?
3. What if the pre-petition screening team does not support commitment?
4. What criteria must be met for a petition to be filed?
5. Can the court require a mentally ill person to take antipsychotic medication?
6. Do persons who are civilly committed lose any rights/privileges of citizenship?
7. If a person is found incompetent to stand trial or not guilty of a crime due to mental illness or developmental delay, is the person automatically committed to a treatment facility?