Conn. Gen. Stat. § 18-65
Persons over sixteen years of age who have been committed by any court of criminal jurisdiction to the Commissioner of Correction may be confined in the York Correctional Institution.
(1949 Rev., S. 2742; 1959, P.A. 28, S. 201; 1961, P.A. 580, S. 4; 1967, P.A. 152, S. 20; 555, S. 74; 1969, P.A. 301; 1972, P.A. 28, S. 1; 127, S. 33; P.A. 75-633, S. 1; P.A. 15-14, S. 29.)
History: 1959 act deleted requirement for commitment by sheriff or police officer; 1961 act added women sentenced to jails and deleted stipulation that expenses be paid as for commitments to other penal institutions; 1967 acts changed “committed ... to said institution” to “committed ... to the commissioner of correction”; and “drug using” to “illicit traffic or possession of controlled drugs” and omitted requirement that a woman accompany committing officer; Sec. 17-360 transferred to Sec. 18-65 in 1968; 1969 act replaced Connecticut State Farm for Women with Connecticut Correctional Institution, Niantic, replaced duration of “commitment, including the time spent on parole,” with duration of “confinement”, added provision re computation of served sentence and stated that parole violator is subject to Sec. 54-128; 1972 acts removed “unmarried girls between ... sixteen and twenty-one years ... in manifest danger of falling into habits of vice or ... leading vicious lives and who are convicted thereof ...” from confinement provision; P.A. 75-633 replaced “women” with “persons”, made confinement optional rather than mandatory and deleted provisions describing specific offenders to whom provisions are applicable, limiting term of confinement and describing computation of time served; P.A. 15-14 made a technical change.