Organizational detention
Organization adhesion is temporary detention of a final offender sentenced in a prison , if against the offender in addition to a so-called imprisonment a measure of correction and assurance has been placed. The principle applies that the measure must in principle be carried out before imprisonment . The convicted person, who is in a penal institution at the time the decision becomes final, is held in organizational detention until he can be admitted to a psychiatric hospital or a rehab facility for therapy. This organizational detention is to be taken into account after completion of the sentence. A credit towards the measure is ruled out.
There is no specific duration stipulated for organizational detention. The maximum period of three months ("organization period") previously considered permissible is no longer applicable. Rather, organizational detention may no longer be carried out if a place in the penal system is available or the criminal enforcement authorities delay efforts to get a place.
In the opinion of the Federal Constitutional Court, organizational detention is not fundamentally unconstitutional. However, the enforcement authority must speed up its efforts to find accommodation in the penal system.
As far as organizational detention is permissibly executed, the provisions of the Prison Act apply to the structure of the execution .