Citations Affected: IC 5-2.
Synopsis: Public safety training on Alzheimer's and dementia.
Specifies that the law enforcement academy must provide training
regarding persons with Alzheimer's disease or related senile dementia.
Effective: July 1, 2013.
January 7, 2013, read first time and referred to Committee on Veterans Affairs and Public
Safety.
January 15, 2013, reported _ Do Pass.
A BILL FOR AN ACT to amend the Indiana Code concerning state
and local administration.
county, and state law enforcement officer, police reserve officer,
and conservation reserve officer training schools.
(4) Minimum standards for a course of study on cultural diversity
awareness that must be required for each person accepted for
training at a law enforcement training school or academy.
(5) Minimum qualifications for instructors at approved law
enforcement training schools.
(6) Minimum basic training requirements which law enforcement
officers appointed to probationary terms shall complete before
being eligible for continued or permanent employment.
(7) Minimum basic training requirements which law enforcement
officers appointed on other than a permanent basis shall complete
in order to be eligible for continued employment or permanent
appointment.
(8) Minimum basic training requirements which law enforcement
officers appointed on a permanent basis shall complete in order
to be eligible for continued employment.
(9) Minimum basic training requirements for each person
accepted for training at a law enforcement training school or
academy that include six (6) hours of training in interacting with:
(A) persons with autism, mental illness, addictive disorders,
mental retardation, and developmental disabilities; and
(B) missing endangered adults (as defined in IC 12-7-2-131.3);
and
(C) persons with Alzheimer's disease or related senile
dementia;
to be provided by persons approved by the secretary of family and
social services and the board.
(10) Minimum standards for a course of study on human and
sexual trafficking that must be required for each person accepted
for training at a law enforcement training school or academy and
for inservice training programs for law enforcement officers. The
course must cover the following topics:
(A) Examination of the human and sexual trafficking laws
(IC 35-42-3.5).
(B) Identification of human and sexual trafficking.
(C) Communicating with traumatized persons.
(D) Therapeutically appropriate investigative techniques.
(E) Collaboration with federal law enforcement officials.
(F) Rights of and protections afforded to victims.
(G) Providing documentation that satisfies the Declaration of
Law Enforcement Officer for Victim of Trafficking in Persons
(Form I-914, Supplement B) requirements established under
federal law.
(H) The availability of community resources to assist human
and sexual trafficking victims.
(b) A law enforcement officer appointed after July 5, 1972, and
before July 1, 1993, may not enforce the laws or ordinances of the state
or any political subdivision unless the officer has, within one (1) year
from the date of appointment, successfully completed the minimum
basic training requirements established under this chapter by the board.
If a person fails to successfully complete the basic training
requirements within one (1) year from the date of employment, the
officer may not perform any of the duties of a law enforcement officer
involving control or direction of members of the public or exercising
the power of arrest until the officer has successfully completed the
training requirements. This subsection does not apply to any law
enforcement officer appointed before July 6, 1972, or after June 30,
1993.
(c) Military leave or other authorized leave of absence from law
enforcement duty during the first year of employment after July 6,
1972, shall toll the running of the first year, which shall be calculated
by the aggregate of the time before and after the leave, for the purposes
of this chapter.
(d) Except as provided in subsections (e), (l), (r), and (s), a law
enforcement officer appointed to a law enforcement department or
agency after June 30, 1993, may not:
(1) make an arrest;
(2) conduct a search or a seizure of a person or property; or
(3) carry a firearm;
unless the law enforcement officer successfully completes, at a board
certified law enforcement academy or at a law enforcement training
center under section 10.5 or 15.2 of this chapter, the basic training
requirements established by the board under this chapter.
(e) This subsection does not apply to:
(1) a gaming agent employed as a law enforcement officer by the
Indiana gaming commission; or
(2) an:
(A) attorney; or
(B) investigator;
designated by the securities commissioner as a police officer of
the state under IC 23-19-6-1(i).
Before a law enforcement officer appointed after June 30, 1993,
completes the basic training requirements, the law enforcement officer
may exercise the police powers described in subsection (d) if the
officer successfully completes the pre-basic course established in
subsection (f). Successful completion of the pre-basic course authorizes
a law enforcement officer to exercise the police powers described in
subsection (d) for one (1) year after the date the law enforcement
officer is appointed.
(f) The board shall adopt rules under IC 4-22-2 to establish a
pre-basic course for the purpose of training:
(1) law enforcement officers;
(2) police reserve officers (as described in IC 36-8-3-20); and
(3) conservation reserve officers (as described in IC 14-9-8-27);
regarding the subjects of arrest, search and seizure, the lawful use of
force, interacting with individuals with autism, and the operation of an
emergency vehicle. The pre-basic course must be offered on a periodic
basis throughout the year at regional sites statewide. The pre-basic
course must consist of at least forty (40) hours of course work. The
board may prepare the classroom part of the pre-basic course using
available technology in conjunction with live instruction. The board
shall provide the course material, the instructors, and the facilities at
the regional sites throughout the state that are used for the pre-basic
course. In addition, the board may certify pre-basic courses that may be
conducted by other public or private training entities, including
postsecondary educational institutions.
(g) The board shall adopt rules under IC 4-22-2 to establish a
mandatory inservice training program for police officers. After June 30,
1993, a law enforcement officer who has satisfactorily completed basic
training and has been appointed to a law enforcement department or
agency on either a full-time or part-time basis is not eligible for
continued employment unless the officer satisfactorily completes the
mandatory inservice training requirements established by rules adopted
by the board. Inservice training must include training in interacting
with persons with mental illness, addictive disorders, mental
retardation, autism, and developmental disabilities, and Alzheimer's
disease or related senile dementia, to be provided by persons
approved by the secretary of family and social services and the board,
and training concerning human and sexual trafficking. The board may
approve courses offered by other public or private training entities,
including postsecondary educational institutions, as necessary in order
to ensure the availability of an adequate number of inservice training
programs. The board may waive an officer's inservice training
requirements if the board determines that the officer's reason for
lacking the required amount of inservice training hours is due to either
of the following:
(1) An emergency situation.
(2) The unavailability of courses.
(h) The board shall also adopt rules establishing a town marshal
basic training program, subject to the following:
(1) The program must require fewer hours of instruction and class
attendance and fewer courses of study than are required for the
mandated basic training program.
(2) Certain parts of the course materials may be studied by a
candidate at the candidate's home in order to fulfill requirements
of the program.
(3) Law enforcement officers successfully completing the
requirements of the program are eligible for appointment only in
towns employing the town marshal system (IC 36-5-7) and having
not more than one (1) marshal and two (2) deputies.
(4) The limitation imposed by subdivision (3) does not apply to an
officer who has successfully completed the mandated basic
training program.
(5) The time limitations imposed by subsections (b) and (c) for
completing the training are also applicable to the town marshal
basic training program.
(6) The program must require training in interacting with
individuals with autism.
(i) The board shall adopt rules under IC 4-22-2 to establish an
executive training program. The executive training program must
include training in the following areas:
(1) Liability.
(2) Media relations.
(3) Accounting and administration.
(4) Discipline.
(5) Department policy making.
(6) Lawful use of force.
(7) Department programs.
(8) Emergency vehicle operation.
(9) Cultural diversity.
(j) A police chief shall apply for admission to the executive training
program within two (2) months of the date the police chief initially
takes office. A police chief must successfully complete the executive
training program within six (6) months of the date the police chief
initially takes office. However, if space in the executive training
program is not available at a time that will allow completion of the
executive training program within six (6) months of the date the police
chief initially takes office, the police chief must successfully complete
the next available executive training program that is offered after the
police chief initially takes office.
(k) A police chief who fails to comply with subsection (j) may not
continue to serve as the police chief until completion of the executive
training program. For the purposes of this subsection and subsection
(j), "police chief" refers to:
(1) the police chief of any city;
(2) the police chief of any town having a metropolitan police
department; and
(3) the chief of a consolidated law enforcement department
established under IC 36-3-1-5.1.
A town marshal is not considered to be a police chief for these
purposes, but a town marshal may enroll in the executive training
program.
(l) A fire investigator in the division of fire and building safety
appointed after December 31, 1993, is required to comply with the
basic training standards established under this chapter.
(m) The board shall adopt rules under IC 4-22-2 to establish a
program to certify handgun safety courses, including courses offered
in the private sector, that meet standards approved by the board for
training probation officers in handgun safety as required by
IC 11-13-1-3.5(3).
(n) The board shall adopt rules under IC 4-22-2 to establish a
refresher course for an officer who:
(1) is hired by an Indiana law enforcement department or agency
as a law enforcement officer;
(2) has not been employed as a law enforcement officer for at
least two (2) years and less than six (6) years before the officer is
hired under subdivision (1) due to the officer's resignation or
retirement; and
(3) completed at any time a basic training course certified by the
board before the officer is hired under subdivision (1).
(o) The board shall adopt rules under IC 4-22-2 to establish a
refresher course for an officer who:
(1) is hired by an Indiana law enforcement department or agency
as a law enforcement officer;
(2) has not been employed as a law enforcement officer for at
least six (6) years and less than ten (10) years before the officer
is hired under subdivision (1) due to the officer's resignation or
retirement;
(3) is hired under subdivision (1) in an upper level policymaking
position; and
(4) completed at any time a basic training course certified by the
board before the officer is hired under subdivision (1).
A refresher course established under this subsection may not exceed
one hundred twenty (120) hours of course work. All credit hours
received for successfully completing the police chief executive training
program under subsection (i) shall be applied toward the refresher
course credit hour requirements.
(p) Subject to subsection (q), an officer to whom subsection (n) or
(o) applies must successfully complete the refresher course described
in subsection (n) or (o) not later than six (6) months after the officer's
date of hire, or the officer loses the officer's powers of:
(1) arrest;
(2) search; and
(3) seizure.
(q) A law enforcement officer who has worked as a law enforcement
officer for less than twenty-five (25) years before being hired under
subsection (n)(1) or (o)(1) is not eligible to attend the refresher course
described in subsection (n) or (o) and must repeat the full basic training
course to regain law enforcement powers. However, a law enforcement
officer who has worked as a law enforcement officer for at least
twenty-five (25) years before being hired under subsection (n)(1) or
(o)(1) and who otherwise satisfies the requirements of subsection (n)
or (o) is not required to repeat the full basic training course to regain
law enforcement power but shall attend the refresher course described
in subsection (n) or (o) and the pre-basic training course established
under subsection (f).
(r) This subsection applies only to a gaming agent employed as a
law enforcement officer by the Indiana gaming commission. A gaming
agent appointed after June 30, 2005, may exercise the police powers
described in subsection (d) if:
(1) the agent successfully completes the pre-basic course
established in subsection (f); and
(2) the agent successfully completes any other training courses
established by the Indiana gaming commission in conjunction
with the board.
(s) This subsection applies only to a securities enforcement officer
designated as a law enforcement officer by the securities
commissioner. A securities enforcement officer may exercise the police
powers described in subsection (d) if:
(1) the securities enforcement officer successfully completes the
pre-basic course established in subsection (f); and