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AR 15-6 INVESTIGATIONS

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Title: AR 15-6 INVESTIGATIONS


1
AR 15-6 INVESTIGATIONS
  • Captain W. Lance Blanco
  • Telephone 916-854-3505

2
Purpose of AR 15-6 Investigations
  • To conduct timely, thorough, and legally
    sufficient investigations.
  • Most investigations conducted IAW AR 15-6 are
    INFORMAL investigations.
  • A 15-6 investigation may be performed by itself,
    or it may be performed in conjunction with
    another investigation (Reports of Survey, Line of
    Duty Investigations).

3
INVESTIGATING OFFICER
4
DUTIES OF INVESTIGATING OFFICER
  • Ascertain and consider the evidence on all sides
    of an issue
  • Investigate thoroughly and impartially
  • Make findings and recommendations supported by
    the facts
  • Comply with the specific instructions of the
    appointing authority
  • Report findings and recommendations to the
    appointing authority

5
FORMAL VS. INFORMAL
  • INFORMAL
  • No respondent designated
  • Single Investigative Officer (IO)
  • No hearing
  • FORMAL
  • Respondent designated
  • Hearing required
  • Due Process (notice, counsel, discovery)

6
INFORMAL INVESTIGATIONS
  • 99 of all 15-6 investigations are informal.
  • Informal proceedings are designed for
    fact-gathering only. They are not intended to
    serve as a forum for a suspect or an interested
    person to present a case in their defense.
  • Formal proceedings are designed to allow the
    respondent to take an active role in the
    investigation. More due process is afforded to a
    designated respondent.

7
Who Can Be an Investigating Officer?
  • Commissioned Officers
  • Warrant Officers
  • DA Civilians (GS-13 and above)

8
CONDUCTING THE INVESTIGATION
  • Develop an investigative plan
  • Obtain documentary and physical evidence
  • Obtain witness testimony
  • Giving rights advisements
  • Scheduling witness interviews
  • Conducting witness interviews
  • Rules of Evidence
  • Standard of Proof

9
Develop an Investigative Plan
  • Plan should consist of
  • 1) an understanding of the facts required for
    you to make a conclusion
  • 2) a strategy for obtaining evidence, including
    a list of potential witnesses, a list of
    questions for each witness, and the order in
    which witnesses will be questioned
  • 3) identify the information already available in
    determining what additional information is
    required for you to reach a conclusion.

10
Obtaining Documentary and Physical Evidence
  • Prior to witness interviewing, gather all related
    documentary evidence such as, regulations,
    existing witness statements, police reports,
    incident reports, correspondence, emails,
    photographs, recordings, maps, videotapes, etc.
  • Even investigations with a finding of no
    fault or no wrongdoing require evidence to
    support this finding. Gather all relevant
    evidence.

11
How to Obtain Witness Statements
12
Obtaining Witness Testimony
  • All witness interviews should be conducted
    face-to-face as practicable.
  • Use mail, phone, email if necessary (use
    memorandum for record).
  • Witness statements should be taken on DA form
    2823. Make sure that handwritten statements are
    legible.

13
Witness Statements
  • Sworn statements are not specifically required
    under AR 15-6, but may be required by specific
    direction of appointing authority.
  • IO may at his or her own discretion swear
    witnesses to their statements (IAW Article 136,
    UCMJ, officers are authorized to administer the
    oath required to provide a sworn statement).

14
Witnesses
  • You have no subpoena power to compel civilian
    witnesses to appear.
  • Commanders can order military members to appear
    and testify (subject to the prohibition against
    self-incrimination).
  • Supervisors can order federal employees to appear
    and testify (subject to the prohibition against
    self-incrimination).
  • Civilian employees may be asked to testify,
    coordinate with employees supervisor or labor
    counselor. (ITOs may be obtained for this purpose
    coordinate with legal advisor).

15
Rights Advisement
  • All soldiers suspected of criminal misconduct
    must first be advised of their rights.
  • DA Form 3881 should be used prior to questioning
    a suspect.
  • You do not have to advise every witness, only
    those who you suspect of criminal liability.
    Provide rights warning as soon as you suspect
    criminal involvement.
  • If suspect invokes right to remain silent,
    immediately cease questioning and do not
    re-initiate without speaking to legal advisor.

16
Rights Warning
  • A witness may only invoke the right to remain
    silent to avoid incriminating themselves. They
    may not refuse to answer a question because it
    may tend to incriminate someone else.
  • Never encourage a witness to speak off the
    record. Never imply that incriminating
    responses will not be used as the basis of
    criminal action against the witness this may
    constitute a grant of de facto immunity.

17
Scheduling Witness Interviews
  • Determine who you want to speak with.
  • Start with witnesses who will give you an overall
    picture of the events, then move to the witnesses
    who know details about the events.
  • Use witnesses to identify other potential
    witnesses.
  • Obtain your information from direct sources,
    avoid second-hand information.
  • Consider consulting with expert witnesses to
    educate yourself about the subject of the
    investigation.

18
Conducting Witness Interviews
  • Prepare
  • List of questions
  • Timeline of events
  • Arrange for a private and discreet location for
    witness interview
  • Focus on relevant information
  • Let witness use own words, do not lead/coach/put
    words in their mouths
  • Advise witness not to discuss interview with
    other witnesses

19
Rules of Evidence
  • AR 15-6 investigations are administrative and do
    not require that you follow the rules of
    evidence.
  • HOWEVER some rules do apply
  • Relevance information must be relevant to
    inquiry
  • Coercion testimony must not be obtained in
    violation of Article 31 (prohibition against
    self-incrimination)
  • No polygraph evidence is admissible (unless
    witness consents)
  • Privileged communications are not admissible
    (husband/wife, priest/penitent, attorney/client,
    IG)
  • Certain medical information is not admissible
  • Off the record statements are not admissible

20
Standard of Proof
  • Findings must be supported by a greater weight
    of evidence than supports a contrary conclusion.
  • Translation 51
  • Compare to
  • Criminal Standard Beyond a Reasonable Doubt
    99
  • Legal Intermediate Std. Substantial Certainty
    75
  • Civil / Administrative Preponderance of the
    Evidence 51

21
Concluding the Investigation
  • Prepare Findings and Recommendations
  • Prepare Submission to Appointing Authority
  • Obtain Legal Review

22
Findings and Recommendations
  • Facts fix dates, places, persons, and events
    definitely and accurately (who, what, when,
    where, how, to what extent?)
  • Findings a clear and concise statement based on
    the facts and reasonable inferences drawn from
    the evidence.
  • Recommendations propose courses of action based
    on the findings (disciplinary action, imposition
    of financial liability, corrective action)

23
IMPORTANT
  • Be specific in your findings. State facts. Your
    findings are based on these facts and reasonable
    inferences thereof. Explanations as to how you
    arrived at these findings are not required. A
    simple statement such as, the findings are
    supported by the evidence is sufficient.

24
Preparing the Submission to the Appointing
Authority
  • Complete DA form 1574 and assemble the following
    documents in order.
  • 1-Appointing Order
  • 2-Initial information collected
  • 3-Rights warning statements
  • 4-Chronology of events
  • 5-Exhibits (with tabs and index)

25
Legal Review
  • Matters involving serious and complex facts, or
    matters involving potential adverse action
    require a legal review. Judge Advocates will
    review 15-6 Investigations for
  • 1 Does the investigation comply with the
    appointing order?
  • 2 Were there any prejudicial errors made in the
    investigation?
  • 3 Does the evidence support the findings?
  • 4 Are the recommendations consistent with the
    findings?

26
  • THE
  • END
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