An independent investigation team (IIT) must investigate a peace officer's use of deadly force resulting in death, substantial bodily harm, or great bodily harm to determine whether the use of deadly force was justified. 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.
An IIT investigating the use of deadly force must be comprised of members who operate completely independently of the law enforcement agency under investigation. An IIT must include:
An agency under investigation may not participate in the IIT's investigation except to:
The Office of the State Auditor (SAO) is required, in cooperation with the Criminal Justice Training Commission (Commission), to conduct a process compliance audit of any completed deadly force investigation to determine whether the involved law enforcement agency, investigative body, and prosecutor's office acted in compliance with specific statutory and administrative rules for conducting deadly force investigations. A deadly force investigation is concluded when the prosecutor's office makes a charging decision and any resulting criminal case reaches disposition. Before conducting a process compliance audit of a deadly force investigation, the SAO must issue a request for proposal and contract with persons with appropriate subject matter expertise in law enforcement and investigative audits until the SAO is adequately staffed with subject matter expertise.
Upon the request of the Commission, the SAO may audit any law enforcement agency to ensure the agency is in compliance with all rules and procedures governing the training and certification of the agency's peace officers. A copy of the audit must be sent to the Commission, law enforcement agency, city or county council, county prosecutor, and relevant committees of the Legislature.
Law enforcement agencies do not pay any costs or fees for either type of audit.
House | 80 | 18 | |
Senate | 42 | 7 | (Senate amended) |
House | 69 | 29 | (House concurred) |
July 25, 2021