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Title: University of Indianapolis


1
University of Indianapolis
  • Police Administration
  • CRIM 340-50
  • Police Misconduct Remedies
  • Thomas N. Davidson, J.D.
  • www.thinblueline.ws

2
Police Ethics and Misconduct
  • Police have a property interest in their jobs.
  • Cannot be terminated or disciplined without due
    process.

3
Police Ethics and Misconduct
  • Internal Investigation
  • Founded
  • Unfounded
  • Exonerated
  • Not determined.

4
Garrity Rule
  • By invoking the Garrity rule, the officer is
    invoking his or her right against self
    incrimination. Any statements made after invoking
    Garrity, may only be used for department
    investigation purposes and not for criminal
    prosecution purposes. The Garrity Rule stems from
    the court case Garrity v. New Jersey, 385 U.S.
    493 (1967), which was decided in 1966 by the
    United States Supreme Court. It was a traffic
    ticket fixing case.  

5
Garrity Warning
6
Bifurcated Investigation
Criminal Investigation Interview
Internal Investigation
Internal Investigation Interview
Criminal Investigation
7
Is drug testing employees legal?
  • For private employers there is no 4th Amendment
    or other constitutional issues.
  • Look to your state law for prohibition or
    regulation on drug testing.
  • Government employers must be cognizant of USC
    issues
  • Articulable suspicion
  • Safety sensitive employees
  • Watch out for tort traps such as false
    imprisonment, IIED, defamation, wrongful
    termination.

8
Last chance agreements
  • In general, last chance agreements are
    probationary contracts negotiated by an employer
    with an employee who faces termination or serious
    discipline. The employer agrees not to execute
    the discipline, and the employee promises to
    rehabilitate his or her performance in definite
    ways. Last chance agreements usually contain a
    clause by which the employee waives his or her
    right to any administrative disciplinary appeal
    if the employee violates the agreement within a
    distinct timeframe.

9
Enforceability of last chance agreements
  • The courts have found 1) employees may
    voluntarily waive their statutory rights 2) the
    fact that an employee may face serious discipline
    or termination does not nullify the voluntariness
    of the agreement 3) employers may not illegally
    discriminate, negotiate in bad faith, abuse
    discretion or engage in prohibited personnel
    practices 4) employers must inform the employee
    of the alternatives and consequences of the
    agreement and not misstate the employees options
    5) to avoid findings of unfair arbitrary and
    capricious agreements, the agreements should not
    be open ended (usually one year) and be directed
    towards correcting the employees specific
    behaviors, conduct and derivative unsatisfactory
    performance and 6) there must be review for
    determining whether the agreement was breached by
    the employee

10
Enforceability of last chance agreements
  • The courts have found 1) employees may
    voluntarily waive their statutory rights 2) the
    fact that an employee may face serious discipline
    or termination does not nullify the voluntariness
    of the agreement 3) employers may not illegally
    discriminate, negotiate in bad faith, abuse
    discretion or engage in prohibited personnel
    practices 4) employers must inform the employee
    of the alternatives and consequences of the
    agreement and not misstate the employees options
    5) to avoid findings of unfair arbitrary and
    capricious agreements, the agreements should not
    be open ended (usually one year) and be directed
    towards correcting the employees specific
    behaviors, conduct and derivative unsatisfactory
    performance and 6) there must be review for
    determining whether the agreement was breached by
    the employee

11
42 USCA 1983 Liability
12
Section 1983 Actions
  • Cannot be filed against the state, but it can
    against its employees.
  • Cannot be filed against the Federal Government.
    Claims against the federal government employees
    are brought under the Federal Tort Claims Act (
    28 USCA 1346 2671 -2680). These are often
    called Bivens actions named for a USC ruling.

13
Section1983 Elements
  • Person (individual officers and local
    government entities may be sued) acting under -
  • Color of Law (misused powers under auspices of
    state local law) -
  • Willful or wanton (negligence is not enough)
    action that -
  • Violated US constitutional right or right
    protected under federal law of a person
    (corporations are not protected).

14
Section 1983 Immunity
  • States are not persons under 1983.
  • Sovereign immunity cannot file a lawsuit in
    federal court against the state without its
    permission (11th Amendment).
  • Qualified immunity Officials cannot be liable
    for performing discretionary functions
    (ministerial duties not covered).

15
Qualified Immunity
  • Decision is made
  • No clearly established constitutional right
    exists
  • The right was clearly established, but the
    officer could not reasonably have known that his
    conduct was violating that right.

16
Objective Reasonableness Test
  • Claims of excessive use of force by police invoke
    protections under the 4th Amendment.
  • The question is decided by whether the officers
    actions are objectively reasonable in light of
    the facts and circumstances confronting them,
    without regard to motivation. An allowance must
    be made for the fact that officers are forced to
    make split-second decisions.
  • Graham v. Connor, 490 US 386 (1989).

17
Tennessee v. Garner
  • Deadly force by police is justified
  • To protect/defend oneself or a third party from
    the threat of immanent serious bodily injury or
    death
  • To interdict a forcible felony
  • To apprehend a fleeing forcible felon once less
    lethal means of capture have failed, and suspect
    will get away if you dont (provide a warning
    whenever possible.).

18
Use of Force Continuum
19
Lethal Event
20
Section 1983 Remedies
  • Injunctive relief
  • Money damages
  • Punitive damages
  • Attorney fees for prevailing party

21
State Tort Law
  • Legal duty
  • Breach of duty
  • Proximate cause
  • Injury
  • Identifiable damages

22
Defenses Proof
  • Contributory negligence (State of Indiana)
  • Comparative negligence (Private and political
    subdivisions).
  • Assumption of Risks.
  • Proof by preponderance of the evidence.

23
Indiana State Tort Claims Act IC 34-13-3
  • Notice of tort claim 270 days for state 180 days
    for political subdivision.
  • IC 34-13-3-3 Immunity of governmental entity or
    employee The performance of a discretionary
    function The adoption and enforcement of or
    failure to adopt or enforce a law, unless the act
    of enforcement constitutes false arrest or false
    imprisonment and an act or omission performed in
    good faith and without malice under the apparent
    authority of a statute which is invalid if the
    employee would not have been liable had the
    statute been valid.
  • The Act provides for 23 express instances of
    immunity.

24
Liability Cases
  • Quakenbush v. Lackey, 622 N.E.2d 1284 (1993)
    (Overruling Seymour Natl Bank v. State, 422
    N.E.2d 1223 (1981) the Public Private duty
    test-officer owes private duty while responding
    to calls.)
  • Minks v. Pina, 709 N.E.2d 379 (Ind. Ct. App.
    1999).
  • Conner v. State, 724 N.E.2d 1125 (2000)
    (dispensing with private-public duty test).

25
Public v. Private Duty
26
Special Relationship
  • Abandoning assault victims when reoccurrence is
    likely.
  • Abandoning children when parent is arrested.
  • Assurances of protection.
  • Knowledge, risk is foreseeable, police give
    direction, person changes their action to abide
    by the direction, and is harmed.

27
Police Pursuits Section 1983
  • County of Sacramento v. Lewis, 118 S.Ct. 1708
    (1998). Section 1983 USC case.
  • Reiterated that negligence is not enough, conduct
    causing the harm must be deliberate, willful, or
    wonton.
  • 4th Amendment objective reasonableness test did
    not apply since chase was not a seizure.
  • Chase with no intent to harm does not violate due
    process.

28
Police Pursuits - Torts
  • Reason for the pursuit.
  • Type of pursuing car and training of driver
    (unmarked?).
  • Urban/Rural.
  • Hills, sharp corners.
  • Traffic pedestrians present?
  • Construction areas.
  • Intersections.
  • Schools.
  • Likelihood of apprehension at another time.
  • Weather.
  • Speeds involved and recklessness of offender.
  • Pursuer's knowledge of location.
  • Adequate communication and equipment.
  • Alternative methods tried, available.

29
Pursuit Management
  • Preemption means stopping a vehicle's opportunity
    to flee.
  • Control means measures designed to make continued
    apprehension efforts safer.
  • Termination means measures designed to bring a
    fleeing vehicle to a stop.

30
Tactical Pursuit Intervention
  • Stop sticks - tire deflation.
  • Pursuit intervention technique (spin out).
  • Boxing in.
  • Ramming (Use of force).
  • Channelization.
  • Barricades.

31
Pursuit Policies
  • Severely restrict pursuits
  • Set standards with supervisory control
  • Minimal standards.

32
Pursuit Phases
  • Pursuit Phases 1983 Study-5 stages that precede
    a pursuit.
  • Commission of a violation or crime.
  • Observation by the police.
  • Suspect becomes aware of the police.
  • Violator deciding to flee.
  • Police deciding to chase.

33
California Highway Patrol Pursuit Phases
  • Pre-pursuit Phase - the time between the decision
    to stop and the officer's recognition that the
    suspect is going to flee. What actions can the
    officer take to reduce the risk of the pursuit
    taking place?
  • Communication Phase - the time between the start
    of chase and arrival of back up officers.
  • Arrival of Resources Phase - the period when
    assisting personnel and equipment arrive to
    attempt to terminate the pursuit.
  • Post-pursuit Phase - the time after the pursuit
    ends and actions by the police after the chase
    ends.

34
Limitations on Liability
  • IC 34-13-3-4 (a) The combined aggregate
    liability of all governmental entities and of all
    public employees, acting within the scope of
    their employment and not excluded from liability
    under gt section 3 of this chapter, does not
    exceed
  • (1) for injury to or death of one (1) person in
    any one (1) occurrence
  • (A) three hundred thousand dollars (300,000) for
    a cause of action that accrues before January 1,
    2006
  • (B) five hundred thousand dollars (500,000) for
    a cause of action that accrues on or after
    January 1, 2006, and before January 1, 2008 or
  • (C) seven hundred thousand dollars (700,000) for
    a cause of action that accrues on or after
    January 1, 2008 and
  • (2) for injury to or death of all persons in that
    occurrence, five million dollars (5,000,000).
  • (b) A governmental entity or an employee of a
    governmental entity acting within the scope of
    employment is not liable for punitive damages.

35
IC 36-8-16.5-46 Immunity 911 Wireless
  • Notwithstanding any other law, a political
    subdivision (among others) is not liable for
    damages in a civil action or subject to criminal
    prosecution resulting from death, injury, or loss
    to persons or property incurred by any person in
    connection with establishing, developing,
    implementing, maintaining, operating, and
    providing enhanced wireless 911 service in
    compliance with the requirements established by
    the FCC order and rules adopted under the FCC
    order, except in the case of willful or wanton
    misconduct.

36
Remedies
  • Criminal sanctions fines, imprisonment,
    probation.
  • Civil sanctions money damages, restitution,
    retraining.
  • Internal sanctions counseling, transfer,
    suspension, demotion, termination.

37
Who pays?
  • IC 34-13-4-1 Personal civil liability under civil
    rights laws of employee acting within scope of
    employment.
  • Government entity had an opportunity to defend.
  • Non-criminal act.
  • Consistent with public policy the agency will pay
    the judgment and costs.

38
Risk Management
  • Job task analysis screening, training, testing.
  • Job descriptions performance evaluations.
  • Risk control program.
  • Policy development.
  • Risk reduction strategies avoidance,
    prevention, reduction, transfer.

39
Stress
40
Eustress
  • Eustress can be defined as a pleasant or curative
    stress. We can't always avoid stress, in fact,
    sometimes we don't want to. Often, it is
    controlled stress that gives us our competitive
    edge in performance related activities like
    athletics, giving a speech, or acting.

41
Distress
  • Distress is an unpleasant emotional experience of
    a psychological (cognitive, behavioral,
    emotional), social, and/or spiritual nature that
    interferes with the ability to cope effectively.
    It exists along a continuum that extends from
    normal distress (fear, worry, sadness) to
    disabling distress (depression, anxiety, panic,
    social isolation, spiritual crisis)

42
Stress Acute Stress
  • Acute stress is the most common form of stress.
    It comes from demands and pressures of the recent
    past and anticipated demands and pressures of the
    near future. Acute stress is thrilling and
    exciting in small doses, but too much is
    exhausting. Overdoing on short-term stress can
    lead to psychological distress, tension
    headaches, upset stomach, and other symptoms.
    American Psychological Association

43
Episodic Acute Stress
  • There are those who suffer acute stress
    frequently. They're always in a rush, but always
    late. They take on too much, have too many irons
    in the fire, and can't organize the slew of
    self-inflicted demands and pressures clamoring
    for their attention. They seem perpetually in the
    clutches of acute stress. The symptoms of
    episodic acute stress are extended over arousal
    persistent tension headaches, migraines,
    hypertension, chest pain, and heart disease.
    Treating episodic acute stress requires
    intervention on a number of levels, generally
    requiring professional help, which may take many
    months. American Psychological Association

44
Chronic Stress
  • Grinding stress that wears people away day after
    day, year after year. Chronic stress destroys
    bodies, minds and lives. It wreaks havoc through
    long-term attrition. Often found in people who
    live in poverty, dysfunctional families, an
    unhappy marriage, or in a despised job. Chronic
    stress kills through suicide, violence, heart
    attack, stroke, and, perhaps, even cancer.
    Because physical and mental resources are
    depleted through long-term attrition, the
    symptoms of chronic stress are difficult to treat
    and may require extended treatment and stress
    management. American Psychological Association

45
Types of Stress
Physical stress involves stressors in the
environment - factors such as extremes in
temperature, environmental pollution, constant
noise, or electric shock. Researchers also
categorize physiological factors as physical
stress. Examples include injury, surgery,
hypoglycemia, prolonged exercise, or an
inadequate supply of oxygen. Psychological
stress stems from the way we feel, the attitudes
we have, and the way we react toward anything
that is threatening us, whether the threat is
real or imagined. As in the example of the roller
coaster, one person may react calmly, while
another may become extremely stressed.
Psychosocial stress involves stressors from
interpersonal relationships, arguments or
conflicts with family members, neighbors,
employers, friends, or other people around us.
http//www.fsis.usda.gov/PDF/PHVs1-Wellness.pdf
46
General Adaptation Syndrome
  • 3 stages of psychological reaction to stress.
  • Alarm.
  • Resistance.
  • Exhaustion.

47
Stress Personality Types
  • Type A Personality
  • Constant stress
  • Demanding
  • Urgency
  • Intense
  • Type B Personality
  • Easy going
  • Less rushed
  • Philosophical
  • Separate work from leisure

48
Workaholic
  • Similar to Type A
  • Addiction to work
  • Agitated when not working
  • Buck the system
  • Perfectionist
  • Prefer labor to leisure

49
Police Job Stress
  • Stressors in law enforcement have been identified
    in a variety of ways
  • Organizational practices
  • Criminal justice practices
  • Public practices
  • Police work itself

50
Relationship Between Stress and Performance
http//www.fsis.usda.gov/PDF/PHVs1-Wellness.pdf
51
http//www.fsis.usda.gov/PDF/PHVs1-Wellness.pdf
52
Responses to Stress Alcohol Abuse
  • Signs of police alcohol abuse include
  • Slipping away from duty for short periods
  • Drinking at lunch or during breaks
  • Red and bleary eyes
  • Mood changes
  • Reduced quality of work
  • Absenteeism
  • Loud talking
  • Hangovers
  • Hand tremors
  • Punctuality and late to work

53
Responses to Stress Suicide
  • Police work is an emotionally and physically
    dangerous job. Police officers continually face
    the effects of murder, violence, accidents and
    disasters. Rotating shifts, long hours and
    exposure to life's tragedies exact a heavy toll
    on police officers and their families. The
    results are disturbing high divorce rates,
    suicide, domestic violence, heart attacks,
    cancer, depression and alcoholism. Law
    enforcement, the media, and the public foster the
    myth that police officers can experience trauma
    and violence without suffering ill effects.
    However, when stressors are prolonged and
    overwhelming, an individual's ability to cope
    becomes difficult.

54
Police Suicide
  • Suicide among police occurs at a greater rate
    than that of the general population. Studies
    suggest that the police commit suicide at a rate
    of 29 per 100,000 as compared to 12 per 100,000
    for the general population.
  • Columbia University Record -- September 16, 1994
    -- Vol. 20, No. 2

55
Police Suicide Risk Factors
  • Feelings of hopelessness and helplessness lead to
    suicide.

1. Personal and financial problems for which the
officer feels there are no solutions2. Increase
in alcohol use3. Work-related problems4.
Divorce or break-up of a relationship5. Increase
in sick days6. Mood swings7. Depression8.
Recent death in the family9. Exposure to a
work-related trauma10. Use of deadly force
56
Police Suicide
  • Typically, when police officers experience
    serious, long-term emotional problems that can
    lead to suicide, 2 reactions occur that hinder
    the helping process. 1st, everyone--from the
    affected officers to friends co-workers to the
    department's hierarchy--initially denies that a
    problem exists. 2nd, even when a problem
    eventually is acknowledged, the affected officers
    often resist seeking help for fear of losing
    their jobs, being demoted, or having their
    personal problems exposed for public ridicule.

57
Police Suicide Warning Signs
  • Typically, multiple problems plague suicidal
    police officers, so supervisors should look for a
    cluster of warning signs.
  • recent loss
  • Sadness
  • Frustration
  • Disappointment
  • Grief
  • Alienation
  • Depression /or mental anguish
  • Loneliness
  • Physical pain
  • Mental illness.

58
Police Suicide Clues
  • Suicide Ritual
  • Giving away prized possessions
  • Putting affairs in order
  • Pre-paying burial expenses
  • Veiled statements or threats
  • Means (Usually their service handgun)
  • Mood swing from depression to ambivalence or
    pragmatism

59
Police Suicide Intervention Prevention
  • EAP
  • Drug awareness and prevention programs
  • Chaplain programs
  • Training
  • Officers
  • Supervisors

60
Post-traumatic Stress
  • Post-traumatic stress is defined as "...the
    development of characteristic symptoms following
    a psychologically distressing event that is
    outside the range of human experience. Symptoms
    are characterized by intrusive recollections,
    excessive stress arousal, withdrawal, numbing,
    and depression. The signs and symptoms must last
    more than 30 days for an individual to be
    diagnosed with PTSD. An estimated 4 to 10 percent
    of individuals who experience a critical incident
    will develop a full-fledged post-traumatic stress
    disorder.
  • FBI Law Enforcement Bulletin

61
Post-traumatic Stress
  • Critical Incident debriefing.
  • Discuss feelings, fears, and concerns with others
    involved.
  • Accepting and understanding environment.
  • Other public safety responders who have had
    earlier, similar experiences who give insight on
    what to expect down the road.
  • EAP offered.
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