SENATOR TAYLOR introduced HB 137 (PAROLE OF TERMINALLY ILL PRISONERS) and invited the sponsor, REPRESENTATIVE ELDON MULDER, to testify. REPRESENTATIVE MULDER explained his bill was also an outgrowth of recommendations from the Sentencing Commission and related to special medical parole for terminally ill inmates. He quoted the Department of Corrections as asking for this useful tool to be used by the parole board. He referred to the stipulation in the bill that the use of the allowance would not be used if it would diminish the crime or the parole board thought the inmate was a risk to society. REPRESENTATIVE MULDER explained the present practice in regards to ill inmates with the state picking up 100% of the cost, but a special medical parole would allow Medicare or Medicaid to pick up the cost. He thought the issue was doubly important with AIDS in the inmate population, and he said there were six identified HIV positive cases within the prison community, although it might be higher. SENATOR LITTLE clarified it would only be used in a few cases, and REPRESENTATIVE MULDER agreed it would only be used in very special cases. SENATOR JACKO moved to pass CS FOR HOUSE BILL NO. 137(JUD) from committee with individual recommendations. Without objections, so ordered.