Use of Deadly Force by a Police Officer.
Deadly force means the intentional application of force using firearms or any other means reasonably likely to cause death or serious physical injury. Whether a police officer may be held criminally liable for use of deadly force depends on the specific crime alleged and any applicable defense. An officer has the same right of self-defense as other individuals. In addition, an officer's use of deadly force is justified when, in good faith, the deadly force is:
Good faith exists when, objectively considering all facts, circumstances, and information known to the officer at the time, a similarly situated, reasonable officer would have believed that the use of deadly force was necessary to prevent death or serious physical harm to the officer or another individual.
Office of Independent Investigations.
In 2021 the Legislature established the Office of Independent Investigations (OII) within the Office of the Governor and authorized the OII to conduct investigations into any incident:
After July 1, 2024, the OII may also report recommendations, if any, for expanding the scope of investigations or jurisdiction of the OII.
Criminal Prosecutions by the Office of the Attorney General.
The Office of the Attorney General (AGO) is authorized, with jurisdiction concurrent with county prosecuting attorneys, to investigate crimes and conduct prosecutions upon the request or with the concurrence of:
If both the county prosecuting attorney and the AGO file an information or indictment charging an individual with substantially the same offense, the court must determine whose prosecution of the case will best promote the interests of justice and enter an order designating the prosecuting authority in the case and dismissing the duplicative information or indictment.
Upon the written request of the Governor, the AGO must investigate violations of criminal law. If the AGO believes after the investigation that criminal laws are being improperly enforced in any county, and that the county prosecuting attorney has failed or neglected to prosecute criminal actions, the AGO must direct the county prosecuting attorney to take any remedial action the AGO deems necessary and proper. If the county prosecuting attorney fails or neglects to comply with the AGO's directions in a reasonable timeframe, the AGO may prosecute those criminal actions in place of the county prosecuting attorney. If the AGO initiates or takes over a criminal prosecution, the county prosecuting attorney may not take any legal steps relating to the prosecution, except as authorized or directed by the AGO.
Office of Independent Prosecutions.
The Office of Independent Prosecutions (OIP), led by an independent counsel, is established as a separate division within the Office of the Attorney General (AGO). The OIP has jurisdiction concurrent with prosecuting attorneys to review investigations, and initiate and conduct prosecutions of crimes involving use of deadly force by involved officers, as those terms are defined in the Office of Independent Investigations (OII) statute. The independent counsel is authorized to review investigations of applicable cases, decline or file criminal charges when appropriate, and prosecute applicable cases to conclusion, including appeals and collateral attacks.
Advisory Board.
An Office of Independent Prosecutions Advisory Board (Advisory Board) is created with 11 members, including three members of the general public, two members representing families affected by an incident within OIP's jurisdiction, one representative of a federally recognized tribe, one defense attorney, two prosecuting attorneys, and two active or retired law enforcement.
The Advisory Board must recommend three candidates for the position of independent counsel. It must also, in consultation with the independent counsel, submit a report to the Legislature and Governor by November 1, 2026, on cases reviewed by the OIP and whether changes in state law are needed to increase public confidence.
Attorney General.
The Attorney General is authorized to select the independent counsel from the candidates put forward by the Advisory Board. If the Attorney General declines to select one of the recommended candidates, they may request that the Advisory Board provides additional qualified nominees for consideration, or offer an alternative candidate, who may be approved by a majority vote of the Advisory Board.
The Attorney General is also authorized to set the independent counsel's compensation and remove the independent counsel for misconduct or inability to perform the duties of the role. If the independent counsel resigns, becomes incapacitated, or is removed as provided for, the Attorney General must appoint an interim independent counsel. The Attorney General is otherwise screened from the work of the OIP including that the Attorney General may have no input or decision-making authority over whether criminal charges are filed in a case within the OIP's jurisdiction.
Independent Counsel.
The independent counsel must meet specified professional criteria and is authorized to: (1) oversee the OIP; (2) hire personnel as needed, including assistant attorneys general; (3) provide trainings that promote recognition and respect for diverse races, ethnicities, and cultures of the state; (4) enter into contracts and memoranda of understanding; (5) ensure persons subjected to use of deadly force or their survivors are kept apprised of a case's status and charging decisions; (6) establish policies to ensure personnel with actual or apparent conflicts are screened from the review of investigations for criminal charges; and (7) make charging decisions. No action may be instituted against the independent counsel or the independent counsel's employees for any act done in good faith in the execution of the person's duty.
Public Records Act.
The case records of the OIP are confidential and exempt from disclosure under the Public Records act until:
If the independent counsel decides not to file criminal charges in an applicable case, they must issue a public report with the results of the investigation and an explanation of the decision, and post it on the OIP's website.
County Prosecuting Attorneys.
In any case involving use of deadly force by an involved officer, the county prosecuting attorney has a duty to determine whether recusal is necessary to preserve public confidence or prevent a conflict of interest. A conflict of interest exists if:
If recusal is necessary, the county prosecuting attorney must transfer the case to the OIP within 30 days of receiving it from the OII. If the county prosecuting attorney fails to transfer the case when recusal is necessary, a court must order the OIP to discharge the responsibilities of the county prosecuting attorney.
Designating the Prosecuting Authority.
If both the county prosecuting attorney and the OIP file charges for substantially the same offense in an applicable case, a court must determine whose prosecution of the case will best promote the interests of justice and enter an order designating the prosecuting authority in the case and dismissing the duplicative charges.
In making its determination, the court must prioritize the public's interest in ensuring a fair and impartial prosecution and trial that is free from bias and even the appearance of bias, prejudice, or conflict of interest, and the county prosecuting must overcome a presumption that they have an inherent conflict of interest in any matter arising from an investigation within the scope of the OII.
The Office of Independent Investigations.
The OII is directed to send its completed investigations and referrals to both the county prosecuting attorney of the jurisdiction where the offense occurred and the OIP, which must include information, if known, regarding the presence of a conflict of interest. The OII is also encouraged to cooperate with the OIP with respect to requests for interviews or provision of additional information and transport of evidence.
The substitute bill:
(In support) This policy comes to you with a lot of hard work, a lot of history from the last several years, but it comes to you with an interest in making sure the public has an independent process they can believe in and does not call into question constitutional concerns raised previously. We want to continue to foster trust, we want to make sure that processes are independent of politics, conflicts, and are transparent to the people impacted by decisions that are made. With assistance from the Attorney General's Office (AGO) the proposed substitute insulates the independent prosecutions office from concerns relating to operating independently within the AGO.
The AGO is primarily a civil office, with a small team of criminal prosecutors, a dozen state agency clients with law enforcement functions, six university clients with their own police departments, and sexually violent predator cases in 38 of the 39 counties. The AGO appreciates that the proposed substitute addresses two significant concerns of the AGO: the creation of the independent counsel and the independent prosecutor's office is a substantial step forward to addressing conflicts that would naturally arise if this work were in the AGO. The concern that hasn't been addressed is the time it will take to stand up the independent prosecutions office and the independent counsel position. Please consider delaying the effective date to allow the AGO time to set up the Advisory Board, allow time for the Advisory Board to do a national search for the independent counsel candidates, hire the independent counsel and then allow the independent counsel to staff up.
Washington's system was written and implemented with different intent and impact for BIPOC communities. The vicious killing of George Floyd and Tyre Nichols gave everyone else a look into the culture of policing. The 2021 reform package was not an end-all solution. More restructuring is desperately needed, and an independent prosecutor is needed to hold cities and counties accountable for the actions, or cover-ups, or harm or murder of another. Advocates are continuing to work with the sponsor to strengthen the language in the proposed substitutes.
Many families feel there have not been impartial investigations into incidents involving police use of deadly force or decisions not to file charges in these incidents. There are many accounts of conflicts of interest due to the close relationship a county prosecuting attorney holds with police. The Governor's task force on independent investigations speaks to how the newly created Office of Independent Investigations (OII) was meant to turn over their investigation to a special, independent prosecuting attorney. In that task force report, there was a recommendation for both an Office of Independent Investigations and an Office of Independent Prosecutions (OIP) because of the inherent conflict of interest present for local prosecuting attorneys. It is time to create the independent counsel so families and survivors can be able to trust the entire process. We would prefer exclusive jurisdiction within the OIP and to keep the county prosecuting attorneys out of this process altogether.
(Opposed) This proposal presumes incorrectly that prosecutors are not capable of charging law enforcement officers with criminal offenses, and that the AGO can be a neutral arbiter. If the Legislature sees the AGO as the watch dog of Washington law enforcement agencies, then please divest the AGO of all law enforcement and law enforcement-related activities, to provide clear and true objectivity.
There are three areas where the proposed substitute bill raises constitutional concerns. First, it creates a presumptive conflict of interest. Prosecuting attorneys do have to be screened from some conflicts of interest, but creating a presumptive conflict may have potential constitutional issues, if taking a core duty from a prosecuting and providing it to someone else. Second, there is a requirement that if there is a conflict of interest, a case must be transferred to the AGO independent counsel. The Drummond case casts doubt on this provision, and it is potentially unconstitutional to force a case transfer to one specific entity instead of letting a prosecuting attorney select a special deputy or an independent prosecutions office. Third, in current law, concurrent jurisdiction between county prosecuting attorneys and the AGO is triggered by a request from the Governor or a county prosecuting attorney; the AGO doesn't have original criminal jurisdiction.
Both local county prosecuting attorneys and the AGO have inherent conflicts of interest in making charging decisions in these cases and should be as far removed from charging decisions as possible. The OIP is more appropriately located outside of the AGO, and a policy from last year put it in the executive branch. Proposed Substitute House Bill 1579 from last session had the appropriate and necessary safeguards, instilling the greatest level of transparency, accountability, freedom from conflict of interest, and fairness. Having 39 counties making charging decisions in 39 different ways is not helpful for transparency, consistency, or for the community and involved officers.
(Other) More time is needed to evaluate the proposed substitute. With respect to potential constitutional problems that have been raised concerning sole jurisdiction for an OIP over cases involving use of deadly force by an involved officer, there are exceptions: (1) county prosecuting attorneys can be removed from a case against their objection if they are disabled from prosecuting, and the Washington State Supreme Court has said a conflict of interest is a disability; and (2) county prosecuting attorneys are prohibited from handling cases in which they have a conflict of interest, and they almost always have a conflict of interest from prosecuting police. The AGO also stated last year that the Supreme Court of Washington would probably give wide latitude given the importance of the objective of this policy and the lack of case law directly on point.