IOWA STATUTES AND CODES
125.91 - EMERGENCY DETENTION.
125.91 EMERGENCY DETENTION.
1. The procedure prescribed by this section shall only be used
for an intoxicated person who has threatened, attempted, or inflicted
physical self-harm or harm on another, and is likely to inflict
physical self-harm or harm on another unless immediately detained, or
who is incapacitated by a chemical substance, if that person cannot
be taken into immediate custody under sections 125.75 and 125.81
because immediate access to the court is not possible.
2. a. A peace officer who has reasonable grounds to believe
that the circumstances described in subsection 1 are applicable may,
without a warrant, take or cause that person to be taken to the
nearest available facility referred to in section 125.81, subsection
2, paragraph "b" or "c". Such an intoxicated or
incapacitated person may also be delivered to a facility by someone
other than a peace officer upon a showing of reasonable grounds.
Upon delivery of the person to a facility under this section, the
examining physician may order treatment of the person, but only to
the extent necessary to preserve the person's life or to
appropriately control the person's behavior if the behavior is likely
to result in physical injury to the person or others if allowed to
continue. The peace officer or other person who delivered the person
to the facility shall describe the circumstances of the matter to the
examining physician. If the person is a peace officer, the peace
officer may do so either in person or by written report. If the
examining physician has reasonable grounds to believe that the
circumstances in subsection 1 are applicable, the examining physician
shall at once communicate with the nearest available magistrate as
defined in section 801.4, subsection 10. The magistrate shall, based
upon the circumstances described by the examining physician, give the
examining physician oral instructions either directing that the
person be released forthwith, or authorizing the person's detention
in an appropriate facility. The magistrate may also give oral
instructions and order that the detained person be transported to an
appropriate facility.
b. If the magistrate orders that the person be detained, the
magistrate shall, by the close of business on the next working day,
file a written order with the clerk in the county where it is
anticipated that an application may be filed under section 125.75.
The order may be filed by facsimile if necessary. The order shall
state the circumstances under which the person was taken into custody
or otherwise brought to a facility and the grounds supporting the
finding of probable cause to believe that the person is a chronic
substance abuser likely to result in physical injury to the person or
others if not detained. The order shall confirm the oral order
authorizing the person's detention including any order given to
transport the person to an appropriate facility. The clerk shall
provide a copy of that order to the chief medical officer of the
facility to which the person was originally taken, any subsequent
facility to which the person was transported, and to any law
enforcement department or ambulance service that transported the
person pursuant to the magistrate's order.
3. The chief medical officer of the facility shall examine and
may detain the person pursuant to the magistrate's order for a period
not to exceed forty-eight hours from the time the order is dated,
excluding Saturdays, Sundays, and holidays, unless the order is
dismissed by a magistrate. The facility may provide treatment which
is necessary to preserve the person's life or to appropriately
control the person's behavior if the behavior is likely to result in
physical injury to the person or others if allowed to continue or is
otherwise deemed medically necessary by the chief medical officer,
but shall not otherwise provide treatment to the person without the
person's consent. The person shall be discharged from the facility
and released from detention no later than the expiration of the
forty-eight-hour period, unless an application for involuntary
commitment is filed with the clerk pursuant to section 125.75. The
detention of a person by the procedure in this section, and not in
excess of the period of time prescribed by this section, shall not
render the peace officer, physician, or facility detaining the person
liable in a criminal or civil action for false arrest or false
imprisonment if the peace officer, physician, or facility had
reasonable grounds to believe that the circumstances described in
subsection 1 were applicable.
4. The cost of detention in a facility under the procedure
prescribed in this section shall be paid in the same way as if the
person had been committed to the facility pursuant to an application
filed under section 125.75. Section History: Early Form
[C75, 77, § 125.17, 125.18; C79, 81, § 125.34(4), 125.35; 82 Acts,
ch 1212, § 19] Section History: Recent Form
90 Acts, ch 1085, § 19; 2003 Acts, ch 68, §1, 2; 2009 Acts, ch 41,
§188
Referred to in § 125.12, 125.34, 125.44, 125.92, 229.21, 602.6405