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JJC Corrections and IAIU

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Title: JJC Corrections and IAIU


1
JJC Corrections and IAIU
  • Understanding the roles and responsibilities of
    each organization.

2
Introduction
  • How do we protect the personal rights of the
    juvenile resident housed within the JJC secure
    facilities?
  • How do we protect the professional rights of the
    juvenile correction officer who is working under
    the direction of the AG guidelines when using
    force within the JJC secure facilities?

3
Agenda
  • Defining the Correction Officers Role
  • Defining the Investigative Process
  • Internal Affairs
  • Institutional Abuse
  • Defining the Rights Of the Officers
  • Weingarten
  • Garrity
  • Appeal /Hearing Process

4
Overview
  • How do we put the two organizational puzzle
    pieces together so both objectives are
    accomplished without violating personal /
    professional rights.

Garrity
DYFUS
I / A
I/A
Roles
DYFUS
Roles
Right
Weingarten
Protection
5
Vocabulary
  • IAIU Institutional Abuse Investigative Unit
  • I/A JJC Internal Affairs
  • Garrity Right of Immunity Protection against
    self incrimination granted to Law Enforcement
    Officers
  • Weingarten Right of Invoking Union
    Representation, narrowly and specifically
    defining investigative questioning
  • AG Attorney General
  • UOF Use Of Force Policy

6
IAIU
  • The Institutional Abuse Investigation Unit (IAIU)
    is a child protective service unit that
    investigates allegations of child abuse and
    neglect in out-of-home settings such as foster
    homes, residential centers, schools, detention
    centers, etc.  The IAIU Chief of Investigations
    reports to the Director of Central Operations.
  • The investigative staff responds to allegations
    of institutional child abuse/neglect in their
    assigned region.  After the investigation is
    completed, a final report is issued within 60
    days of the initial report
  • Example JJC Secure Facilities

7
IAIU Definitions
  • Abuse is the physical, sexual or emotional harm
    or risk of harm to a child under the age of 18
    caused by a parent or other person who acts as a
    caregiver for the child. (The JJC Correction
    Officer is not a care giver, (see JJC job
    description) we are the front lines to firm,
    fair, and Consistent safety and security
    measures.)
  • Neglect occurs when a parent or caregiver fails
    to provide proper supervision for a child or
    adequate food, clothing, shelter, education or
    medical care although financially able or
    assisted to do so.

8
IAIU Indicators of Child Abuse
  • Unexplained bruises and welts
  • Unexplained burns
  • Unexplained fractures
  • Unexplained laceration or abrasions
  • All of the actions and procedures initiated by
    the Law Enforcement Officer are EXPLAINED in the
    Officers package, which includes the following
  • Medical Report(s)
  • Witness Report(s)
  • Supervisors Report(s)
  • Responders Report(s)
  • The packet articulates all of their (Officers)
    roles in maintaining order in regards to their
    response to all situations in dealing with the
    residents.

9
Internal Affairs
  • The New Jersey Legislature recognized the
    importance of the internal affairs function in
    1996 with the enactment of N.J.S.A. 40A14-181.
    The statute provides that
  • Every law enforcement agency shall adopt and
    implement guidelines which shall be consistent
    with the guidelines governing the "Internal
    Affairs Policy and Procedures" of the Police
    Management Manual promulgated by the Police
    Bureau of the Division of Criminal Justice in the
    Department of Law and Public Safety, and shall be
    consistent with any tenure or civil service laws,
    and shall not supersede any existing contractual
    agreements.

10
  • Duties and Responsibilities
  • The purpose of the internal affairs unit is to
    establish a mechanism for the receipt,
    investigation and resolution of complaints of
    officer misconduct. The goal of internal affairs
    is to insure that the integrity of the department
    is maintained through a system of internal
    discipline where fairness and justice are assured
    by an objective and impartial investigation and
    review.
  • The Internal Affairs Unit was solely and
    purposely established to investigate and resolve
    ALL allegations of Officer misconduct. A unit
    with all the Law Enforcement Rights granted it
    under the Attorney Generals Office.

11
  • Accepting Reports Alleging Officer Misconduct
  • All complaints of officer misconduct shall be
    accepted from all persons who wish to file a
    complaint regardless of the hour or day of the
    week. This includes reports from anonymous
    sources, juveniles and persons under arrest or in
    custody.
  • The Internal Affairs Unit must accept all
    Juvenile Complaints and process them into the
    investigative unit initiating an investigation.

12
  • The agency must notify an officer in writing that
    a complaint has been made against him, and that
    an investigation will begin, unless this
    notification would interfere with the
    investigation.
  • There is NO written notification sent to the
    officer in regards to an allegation being made
    against her / him by the Institutional Abuse
    Investigative Unit

13
Attorney Generals Guidelines
  • INTERNAL AFFAIRS POLICY PROCEDURES
  • Issued August 1991
  • Revised November 1992
  • Revised November 2000

14
AG Guidelines
  • The law enforcement executive, upon reviewing the
    report, supporting documentation and information
    gathered during any supplemental investigation,
    shall direct whatever action is deemed
    appropriate. If the complaint is unfounded or not
    sustained, or the subject officer is exonerated,
    the disposition shall be entered in the index
    file and the report filed. If the complaint is
    sustained and it is determined that formal
    charges should be made, the law enforcement
    executive will direct either internal affairs or
    the appropriate commanding officer to prepare,
    sign, and serve charges upon the subject officer
    or employee. The individual assigned shall
    prepare the formal notice of charges and hearing
    on the charging form. This form will also be
    served upon the officer charged in accordance
    with N.J.S.A. 40A14-147
  • AG Guideline 11-23

15
  • If the subject officer enters a plea of not
    guilty and requests a hearing, the law
    enforcement executive will set the date for the
    hearing as provided by statute and arrange for
    the hearing of the charges. Internal affairs
    shall be responsible for or assist the assigned
    supervisor or prosecutor in the preparation of
    the department's prosecution of the charges. This
    includes proper notification of all witnesses and
    preparing all documentary and physical evidence
    for presentation at the hearing.
  • AG Guideline 11-23
  • There is no procedural (steps) process for
    the Law Enforcement Officer to follow in regards
    to appealing the findings of the Institutional
    Abuse Investigative Unit. We must go before OAL
    and are required to present before the Board with
    an Attorney, thus, infringing on the contractual
    rights of the officers.

16
  • The hearing shall be held before the designated
    hearing (This process does not exist within the
    findings issued by the IAIU, yet it is a
    requirement by the AGs guidelines) officer. The
    hearing officer should be empowered to enter a
    finding of guilty or not guilty, or to modify in
    any manner deemed appropriate the charges in
    question. The decision of the hearing officer
    must be in writing and should be accompanied by
    findings of fact for each issue in the case. AG
    guideline 11-24

17
  • The difficulty in conducting officer interviews,
    particularly subject officer interviews, is the
    differing legal principles that apply depending
    on the nature of the interview and the type of
    investigation being conducted. For example, a
    subject officer suspected of (IAIU
    investigations) criminal conduct will be
    interviewed in a manner far different than an
    officer suspected of committing a disciplinary
    infraction. A further distinction may be made
    when the officer to be interviewed is believed to
    be a witness to either criminal conduct or an
    administrative infraction.
  • AG Guideline 11-36

18
  • While a police officer has the same
    constitutional rights as any other citizen during
    a criminal investigation, their status as a
    police officer may create special (non-existent
    during the IAIU investigation, solely because the
    IAIU is not a Law Enforcement Agency) concerns.
    For the most part, the internal affairs
    investigator should utilize the same procedures
    and apply the same legal principles to the
    subject officer as he or she would to any other
    target or suspect in a criminal investigation.
    However, the internal affairs investigator should
    recognize that the interview process of a police
    officer (The officer has rights granted him / her
    by the supreme court, ie Miranda / Garrity) is
    somewhat different than the interview of any
    other citizen
  • AG Guideline 11-36

19
  • Because the county prosecutor is ultimately
    responsible for the prosecution of criminal
    cases, the internal affairs investigator shall
    defer to the supervision and direction of the
    county prosecutor in conducting officer
    interviews. The investigator shall ( The IAIU
    does not conform to this AG directive) consult
    with the county prosecutor prior to the
    initiation of an officer interview in matters
    that could involve (IAIU investigations) criminal
    conduct. The investigator shall pay particular
    attention to the county prosecutors instructions
    concerning the type of interview to be conducted
    and types of procedures to be utilized
    (e.g.Miranda warning, Garrity warning, etc.). AG
    Guideline 11-37

20
  • Police officer interviews during an internal
    affairs investigation are rendered difficult by
    the conflict that exists between the officers
    right against self-incrimination in criminal
    interviews and the officers obligation to answer
    questions truthfully during an administrative
    investigation. In other words, while an agency
    may compel an officer to answer questions posed
    during the course of an administrative
    investigation, an officer cannot be forced to
    give answers that could be used against him or
    her in a criminal action, cannot have that
    evidence used against them in a criminal
    prosecution.
  • AG Guideline 11-37

21
  • A subject officer who reasonably believes that
    what he or she might say during an internal
    affairs interview could be used against him or
    her in a criminal case cannot ordinarily be
    disciplined for exercising his or her Miranda
    rights. However, an officer can be disciplined
    for refusing to answer questions during an
    internal affairs interview if he or she has been
    told that whatever he or she says during the
    interview will not be used against the officer in
    a criminal case. The procedure by which an
    officer is informed that his or her statement
    will not be used against him or her in a criminal
    case is called a Garrity warning.
  • (I/A claims the officer cannot invoke their
    Garrity Right during an administrative only
    investigation, yet, Internal Affairs shares their
    findings with the IAIU investigator who can
    proceed criminally against the officer.) Through
    this warning, the officer being interviewed is
    informed that he or she must cooperate with the
    investigation and can be disciplined for failing
    to do so because the county prosecutor has
    decided to provide the officer with use
    immunity. Under this doctrine, the officers
    statement cannot be introduced as evidence
    against him or her in a criminal case. (IAIU is a
    criminal investigation, yet Garrity is
    non-existent)
  • AG Guideline 11-37

22
  • It is for this reason (use immunity) that the
    internal affairs investigator must continually
    reassess (INFORMATION SHARING should not be done
    with the IAIU investigator) the nature of an
    internal affairs investigation as evidence is
    being gathered. Having initially determined that
    a particular allegation is criminal or
    administrative in nature, it is important for the
    internal affairs investigator to revisit that
    decision during the course of an investigation to
    determine whether any of the evidence gathered
    following the initial determination changes the
    nature and scope of the investigation. In the
    event the nature and scope of an investigation
    has changed, the investigator must be prepared to
    change the methods and procedures he or she was
    utilizing to reflect the new focus.
  • For example, if an investigator initially
    determines that an allegation appears to be a
    disciplinary matter, but later evidence leads the
    investigator to conclude that criminal conduct
    may have occurred, the investigator must cease
    (IAIU unknowingly causes the I/A unit to violate
    this AG directive) using the methods and
    procedures appropriate for an administrative
    investigation and notify the county prosecutor
    immediately before proceeding further. AG
    Guideline 11-37

23
AG Guidelines and IAIU Conflicting Concerns
  • Serious allegations of misconduct by a law
    enforcement officer may implicate both a
    violation of a criminal statute and a violation
    of an agencys rules and regulations. As a
    result, a criminal investigation and an
    administrative disciplinary investigation may be
    needed to properly resolve a misconduct
    complaint. In those cases where both a criminal
    investigation and an administrative disciplinary
    investigation are needed, the internal affairs
    investigator from the subject officers agency is
    often expected to perform both investigations.
    Under these circumstances, the methods employed
    in the criminal investigation conflict (IAIU
    investigation automatically conflicts with this
    AG directive) with the methods used in the
    administrative investigation.
  • AG Guideline 11-38

24
Where The Conflict Begins?
  • Typically, this conflict will become most
    apparent during subject officer interviews. As
    has already been pointed out, a subject officer
    has the right to remain silent during a criminal
    investigative interview. On the other hand, the
    same officer must cooperate and answer questions
    posed by his or her employer during an
    administrative disciplinary interview. Thus,
    while the internal affairs investigator cannot
    require a subject officer to answer questions
    during a criminal interview, the investigator can
    require a subject officer to answer questions
    during an administrative disciplinary interview.
    AG Guideline 11-38
  • This is truly a conflict because the officers are
    undergoing two simultaneous investigations, one
    by a Law Enforcement Agency which SHALL honor the
    officers rights and privileges due to his / her
    capacity under the protections of the AGs
    guidelines.
  • A second investigation by a NON-Law Enforcement
    Unit which is not compelled to honor the officers
    rights and privileges granted to his / her
    capacity under the protections of the AGs
    guidelines.

25
Conflict Examples
  • The Institutional Abuse Investigative Unit does
    not confer with the County Prosecutors Office.
  • The Institutional Abuse Investigative Unit holds
    no law enforcement power, thus cannot Mirandise
    an officer once the officer invokes his / her
    rights.
  • The Institutional Abuse Investigative Unit does
    not conform to the parameters outlined within the
    AGs guidelines.

26
  • The confusion caused by these issues can be
    alleviated several ways. One method is to
    separate the investigations by time - the
    criminal investigation is completed first, and
    then the administrative investigation may follow.
    Another method is the utilization of bifurcated
    investigations. In a bifurcated investigation,
    the responsibility for a criminal investigation
    is separated from the responsibility for an
    administrative investigation. Thus, one
    investigator (typically from the prosecutors
    office) (TWO LAW ENFORCEMENT AGENCIES, IAIU is
    not a Law Enforcement Agency) is assigned the
    responsibility of gathering evidence of criminal
    wrongdoing while a second investigator (typically
    the internal affairs investigator from the
    subject officers agency) is assigned the
    responsibility of gathering evidence of a
    disciplinary infraction.
  • AG Guidelines 11-38

27
The Two Investigations
  • Internal Affairs conducting a Disciplinary
    investigation (Administrative Only).
  • Institutional Abuse Investigative Unit conducting
    an investigation unabated by the Law Enforcement
    Officers rights and privileges outlined within
    the Attorney Generals Guidelines. Which could
    ultimately result in outside criminal charges
    being filed by the state.

28
Criminal Investigation, Officer Is
SubjectRequirement 7
  • Whenever there is a possibility that the
    investigation may result in criminal prosecution
    of the officer or that the county prosecutor may
    be conducting a separate criminal investigation,
    the internal affairs investigator must consult
    (The IAIU does not adhere to this, thus violating
    the officers rights) with the county prosecutor
    prior to interviewing the officer. AG Guideline
    11-39

29
  • Any questions asked of officers during an
    internal investigation must be narrowly and
    directly related to the performance of their
    duties and the ongoing investigation. Officers do
    not have the right to refuse to answer questions
    directly and narrowly related to the performance
    of their duties. All answers must be complete and
    truthful. However, officers cannot be forced to
    answer questions having little to do with their
    performance as law enforcement officers (IAIU
    perceives the Correction Officer as a caregiver)
    or questions unrelated to the investigation. AG
    Guideline 11-43

30
Confidentiality
  • The nature and source of internal allegations,
    the progress of internal affairs investigations,
    and the resulting materials are confidential
    information. The contents of the internal
    investigation case files shall be retained in the
    internal affairs unit and clearly marked as
    confidential. The information and records of an
    internal investigation shall only be released
    under the following limited circumstances
  • AG Guideline 11-46

31
Exceptions to confidentiality
  • In the event that administrative charges have
    been brought against an officer, and a hearing
    will be held, a copy of those internal
    investigation reports to be used as evidence in
    the administrative hearing shall be provided to
    the officer. (Investigative confidentiality is
    non-existent when TWO investigative units are
    sharing information.)
  • In the event that the subject officer, agency or
    governing jurisdiction has been named as a
    defendant in a lawsuit arising out of the
    specific incident covered by an internal
    investigation, a copy of the internal
    investigation reports may be released to the
    attorney representing the subject officer, agency
    or jurisdiction.
  • Upon the request or at the direction of the
    county prosecutor or Attorney General.
  • Upon a court order.

32
Conflicts in confidentiality
  • The IAIU investigator is using the Internal
    Affairs Investigators findings / discoveries in
    whole or in part within their report findings, at
    times quoting the Internal Affairs Investigator
    within their own discoveries.
  • They are referencing the case as outlined with
    the Internal Affairs investigation. The
    confidentiality requirement under the AGs
    guideline is non-existent between the Internal
    Affairs department and the IAIU.

33
Weingarten
  • EMPLOYEE'S RIGHT TO UNION REPRESENTATION
  • The right of employees to have union
    representation at investigatory interviews was
    announced by the U.S. Supreme Court in a 1975
    case (NLRB vs. Weingarten, Inc. 420 U.S. 251, 88
    LRRM 2689). These rights have become known as the
    Weingarten rights.
  • Employees have Weingarten rights only during
    investigatory interviews. An investigatory
    interview occurs when a supervisor questions an
    employee to obtain information which could be
    used as a basis for discipline or asks an
    employee to defend his or her conduct.

34
Weingarten Q / A
  • Q What if I'm told to be in my Supervisor's
    office at 10am but I do not know the nature of
    the meeting?
  • A You have the right to know beforehand what
    the subject of the discussion will be. And, you
    have the right to consult (caucus) with your
    Steward before and during the meeting. (The IAIU
    investigator should notify the officer of an
    interview 24 hours prior to the interview so
    preparation can be made by the officer and the
    steward)
  • Q What is the role of a Steward in a
    investigatory meeting?
  • A 1. When a Steward arrives, the Supervisor
    must inform him/her of the subject matter of the
    interview, i.e. the type of action/misconduct for
    which discipline is being considered.2. The
    Steward must be allowed a private pre-interview
    conference before the questioning begins.3. The
    Steward must be allowed to speak during the
    interview.(IAIU perceives the steward as just a
    witness)
  • 4. The Steward can give advice on how the
    employee should answer questions

35
Garrity Right
  • Technically, there are two prongs under the
    Garrity rights. First, if an officer is compelled
    to answer questions as a condition of employment,
    the officer's answers and the fruits of those
    answers may not be used against the officer in a
    subsequent criminal prosecution. (Internal
    Affairs under their administrative Only
    investigative process does not allow the officer
    to invoke Garrity, yet, in turn shares the
    investigative findings with an Investigator from
    the IAIU Unit which can proceed with a criminal
    investigation and or charge). Second, the
    department becomes limited as to what they may
    ask. Such questions must be specifically,
    narrowly, and directly tailored to the officer's
    job.Thus, the basic thrust of the Garrity
    Rights or Garrity Rule is that a department
    member may be compelled to give statements under
    threat of discipline or discharge but those
    statements may not be used in the criminal
    prosecution of the individual officer. This means
    that the Garrity Rule only protects a department
    member from criminal prosecution based upon
    statements he or she might make under threat of
    discipline or discharge.

36
AG Use Of Force Policy
  • USE OF FORCE
  • Attorney General's Use of Force Policy
  • Issued April 1985
  • Revised June 2000

37
Policy
  • Sworn law enforcement officers have been granted
    the extraordinary authority to use force (This
    extraordinary authority is not considered within
    the IAIU investigators findings, and since the
    officer is denied an opportunity to appeal any
    IAIU finding through the hearing process the IAIU
    violates the officers extraordinary authority as
    a law enforcement officer) when necessary to
    accomplish lawful ends. That authority is
    grounded in the responsibility of every sworn law
    enforcement officer to comply with the laws of
    the State of New Jersey regarding the use of
    force and to comply with the provisions of this
    policy. Equally important is law enforcements
    obligation to prepare individual officers in the
    best way possible to exercise that authority.
  • (All JJC Correction Officers are Academy
    trained, certified under the PTC guidelines)

38
  • In situations where law enforcement officers are
    justified in using force, the utmost restraint
    should be exercised. The use of force should
    never be considered routine. In determining to
    use force, the law enforcement officer shall be
    guided by the principle that the degree of force
    employed in any situation should be only that
    reasonably (To the Law Enforcement Officer who is
    trained in UOF) necessary. Law enforcement
    officers should exhaust all other reasonable
    means before resorting to the use of force. It is
    the policy of the State of New Jersey that law
    enforcement officers will use only that force
    which is objectively reasonable and necessary.

39
Definitions
  • A. Constructive Authority
  • 1. Constructive authority does not involve actual
    physical contact with the subject, but involves
    the use of the law enforcement officers
    authority to exert control over a subject. (This
    Authority Command is exhausted prior to any form
    of force being used unless an assault or fight
    has been initiated.)

40
  • Physical Contact
  • 1. Physical contact involves routine or
    procedural contact with a subject necessary to
    effectively accomplish a legitimate law
    enforcement objective. (If a resident pulls away,
    slaps away, or attempts to evade this contact,
    escalation to Physical Force is justified in
    accordance to the AGs policy.)
  • Physical Force
  • 2. Physical force involves contact with a
    subject beyond that which is generally utilized
    to effect an arrest or other law enforcement
    objective. Physical force is employed when
    necessary to overcome a subjects physical
    resistance to the exertion of the law enforcement
    officers authority, or to protect persons or
    property.
  • Examples include wrestling a resisting subject to
    the ground, using wrist locks or arm locks,
    striking with the hands or feet, or other similar
    methods of hand-to-hand confrontation.

41
  • Mechanical Force
  • 1. Mechanical force involves the use of some
    device or substance, other than a firearm, to
    overcome a subjects resistance to the exertion
    of the law enforcement officers authority.
  • Deadly Force
  • 1. Deadly force is force which a law enforcement
    officer uses with the purpose of causing, or
    which the officer knows to create a substantial
    risk of causing, death or serious bodily harm.

42
  • Reasonable Belief
  • 1. Reasonable belief is an objective assessment
    based upon an evaluation of how a reasonable law
    enforcement officer with comparable training and
    experience would react to, or draw inferences
    from, the facts and circumstances confronting and
    known by the law enforcement officer at the
    scene.
  • The understanding of reasonable belief is key
    to the Correction Officer WHO IS CALLED UPON TO
    ACT when a code 33 (emergency) is called over the
    all call or radio. A high percentage of the
    Correction Officers reasonable belief of the
    situation is initiated when he / she is called to
    quell an uprising, a fight, or a potential
    assault, etc. If there is no emergency there is
    NO CODE 33!!

43
  • Authorization and Limitations
  • A. Use of Force
  • 1. A law enforcement officer may use physical
    force or mechanical force when the officer
    reasonably believes it is immediately necessary
    at the time
  • a. to overcome resistance directed at the officer
    or others or
  • b. to protect the officer, or a third party, from
    unlawful force or
  • c. to protect property or
  • d. to effect other lawful objectives, such as to
    make an arrest.

44
Summary
The challenges we face in regards to the roles
and responsibilities of each department must be
met, and should be paramount in the discussion
and dialogue put before us today. We all must
adhere to the fundamental truths concerning the
RIGHTS of the residents within the care of the
JJC without impeding and diminishing the RIGHTS
and RESPONSIBILITIES of the Law Enforcement
Officers. The Officers are the front line in
maintaining firm, fair, and consistent order
within the secure facilities, and upon THEIR
RESONABLE BELIEF their rights to a firm, fair,
and consistent investigation should not be
diminished.
45
PBA 105 Questions and Answers
  • Thank you for taking the time out of your
    schedule to meet with the Collective Bargaining
    Agent representing all of the JJC Correction
    Officers.
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