1 | A bill to be entitled |
2 | An act relating to confidential informants; creating |
3 | "Rachel's Law"; defining terms; requiring a law |
4 | enforcement agency that uses confidential informants to |
5 | disclose certain information to persons who are requested |
6 | to serve as confidential informants; providing that a law |
7 | enforcement agency must provide an opportunity to consult |
8 | with legal counsel to a person who is requested to serve |
9 | as a confidential informant; requiring training for |
10 | persons involved with the recruitment and use of |
11 | confidential informants; requiring a law enforcement |
12 | agency to adopt policies and procedures to preserve the |
13 | safety of confidential informants, law enforcement |
14 | personnel, target offenders, and the public; requiring a |
15 | law enforcement agency that uses confidential informants |
16 | to address the recruitment, control, and use of |
17 | confidential informants in policies and procedures of the |
18 | agency; requiring a law enforcement agency to establish |
19 | policies and procedures to assess the suitability of using |
20 | a person as a confidential informant; requiring a law |
21 | enforcement agency to establish procedures to maintain the |
22 | security of records relating to confidential informants; |
23 | requiring a law enforcement agency to periodically review |
24 | confidential informant practices; providing that the act |
25 | does not grant any right or entitlement to a confidential |
26 | informant or a person who is requested to be a |
27 | confidential informant; providing that any failure to |
28 | abide by the act does not create any additional right |
29 | enforceable by a defendant in a criminal proceeding; |
30 | providing an effective date. |
31 |
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32 | WHEREAS, by using confidential informants in law |
33 | enforcement undercover operations, law enforcement agencies can |
34 | improve efforts to reduce crime and remove dangerous criminals |
35 | from the community, and |
36 | WHEREAS, because most confidential informants are not |
37 | trained law enforcement personnel, a law enforcement agency that |
38 | elects to use a confidential informant must take special care to |
39 | evaluate the abilities of the confidential informant to perform |
40 | the required tasks of the undercover operation and must, at all |
41 | times, closely supervise the activities of the confidential |
42 | informant, and |
43 | WHEREAS, the participation of a confidential informant in a |
44 | law enforcement undercover operation may be detrimental and |
45 | dangerous to the informant and to others, and |
46 | WHEREAS, the Legislature intends for law enforcement |
47 | agencies to continue to use confidential informants subject to |
48 | policies and procedures that will ensure that such use is in a |
49 | fair and reasonably safe manner that reduces adverse risks, |
50 | including injury or death, to the confidential informant, law |
51 | enforcement personnel, and other persons, and |
52 | WHEREAS, there are currently no statewide mandatory and |
53 | uniform standards or guidelines that apply to the use of |
54 | confidential informants, and |
55 | WHEREAS, in March of 2009, the Florida Police Chiefs |
56 | Association, the Florida Sheriffs Association, the State Law |
57 | Enforcement and Chiefs Association, and the Florida Department |
58 | of Law Enforcement voluntarily adopted "Guidelines To Be Used By |
59 | Florida State And Local Law Enforcement Agencies In Dealing With |
60 | Confidential Informants," which provide minimum expectations for |
61 | agency policies for dealing with confidential informants, and |
62 | WHEREAS, if the minimum expectations contained in those |
63 | guidelines were to be required of every law enforcement agency |
64 | that uses confidential informants, the Legislature's intent to |
65 | promote safer use of confidential informants in the state would |
66 | be substantially advanced, and |
67 | WHEREAS, the Legislature intends to codify the standards |
68 | set forth in the "Guidelines To Be Used By Florida State And |
69 | Local Law Enforcement Agencies In Dealing With Confidential |
70 | Informants," and to require those standards to be followed by |
71 | all law enforcement agencies in this state which use |
72 | confidential informants, NOW, THEREFORE, |
73 |
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74 | Be It Enacted by the Legislature of the State of Florida: |
75 |
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76 | Section 1. Confidential informants.-- |
77 | (1) This section may be cited as "Rachel's Law." |
78 | (2) As used in this section, the term: |
79 | (a) "Confidential informant" means a person who cooperates |
80 | with a law enforcement agency confidentially in order to protect |
81 | the person or the agency's intelligence gathering or |
82 | investigative efforts and: |
83 | 1. Seeks to avoid arrest or prosecution for a crime, or |
84 | mitigate punishment for a crime in which a sentence will be or |
85 | has been imposed; and |
86 | 2. Is able, by reason of his or her familiarity or close |
87 | association with suspected criminals, to: |
88 | a. Make a controlled buy or controlled sale of contraband, |
89 | controlled substances, or other items that are material to a |
90 | criminal investigation; |
91 | b. Supply regular or constant information about suspected |
92 | or actual criminal activities to a law enforcement agency; or |
93 | c. Otherwise provide information important to ongoing |
94 | criminal intelligence gathering or criminal investigative |
95 | efforts. |
96 | (b) "Controlled buy" means the purchase of contraband, |
97 | controlled substances, or other items that are material to a |
98 | criminal investigation from a target offender which is |
99 | initiated, managed, overseen, or participated in by law |
100 | enforcement personnel with the knowledge of a confidential |
101 | informant. |
102 | (c) "Controlled sale" means the sale of contraband, |
103 | controlled substances, or other items that are material to a |
104 | criminal investigation to a target offender which is initiated, |
105 | managed, overseen, or participated in by law enforcement |
106 | personnel with the knowledge of a confidential informant. |
107 | (d) "Law enforcement agency" means an agency having a |
108 | primary mission of preventing and detecting crime and the |
109 | enforcement of the penal, criminal, traffic, or highway laws of |
110 | the state and that in furtherance of that primary mission |
111 | employs law enforcement officers as defined in s. 943.10. |
112 | (e) "Target offender" means the person suspected by law |
113 | enforcement personnel to be implicated in criminal acts by the |
114 | activities of a confidential informant. |
115 | (3) A law enforcement agency that uses confidential |
116 | informants shall: |
117 | (a) Inform each person who is requested to serve as a |
118 | confidential informant that the agency cannot promise |
119 | inducements such as a grant of immunity, dropped or reduced |
120 | charges, or reduced sentences or placement on probation in |
121 | exchange for serving as a confidential informant. |
122 | (b) Inform each person who is requested to serve as a |
123 | confidential informant that the value of his or her assistance |
124 | as a confidential informant and any effect that assistance may |
125 | have on pending criminal matters can be determined only by the |
126 | appropriate legal authority. |
127 | (c) Provide a person who is requested to serve as a |
128 | confidential informant with an opportunity to consult with legal |
129 | counsel upon request before the person agrees to perform any |
130 | activities as a confidential informant. However, this section |
131 | does not create a right to publicly funded legal counsel. |
132 | (d) Ensure that all personnel who are involved in the use |
133 | or recruitment of confidential informants are trained in the law |
134 | enforcement agency's policies and procedures. The agency shall |
135 | keep documentation demonstrating the date of such training. |
136 | (e) Adopt policies and procedures that assign the highest |
137 | priority in operational decisions and actions to the |
138 | preservation of the safety of confidential informants, law |
139 | enforcement personnel, target offenders, and the public. |
140 | (4) A law enforcement agency that uses confidential |
141 | informants shall establish policies and procedures addressing |
142 | the recruitment, control, and use of confidential informants. |
143 | The policies and procedures must state the: |
144 | (a) Information that the law enforcement agency shall |
145 | maintain concerning each confidential informant; |
146 | (b) General guidelines for handling confidential |
147 | informants; |
148 | (c) Process to advise a confidential informant of |
149 | conditions, restrictions, and procedures associated with |
150 | participating in the agency's investigative or intelligence |
151 | gathering activities; |
152 | (d) Designated supervisory or command-level review and |
153 | oversight in the use of a confidential informant; |
154 | (e) Limits or restrictions on off-duty association or |
155 | social relationships by agency personnel involved in |
156 | investigative or intelligence gathering with confidential |
157 | informants; |
158 | (f) Guidelines to deactivate confidential informants, |
159 | including guidelines for deactivating communications with |
160 | confidential informants; and |
161 | (g) Level of supervisory approval required before a |
162 | juvenile is used as a confidential informant. |
163 | (5) A law enforcement agency that uses confidential |
164 | informants shall establish policies and procedures to assess the |
165 | suitability of using a person as a confidential informant by |
166 | considering the minimum following factors: |
167 | (a) The person's age and maturity; |
168 | (b) The risk the person poses to adversely affect a |
169 | present or potential investigation or prosecution; |
170 | (c) The effect upon agency efforts that the disclosure of |
171 | the person's cooperation in the community may have; |
172 | (d) Whether the person is a substance abuser or has a |
173 | history of substance abuse or is in a court-supervised drug |
174 | treatment program; |
175 | (e) The risk of physical harm to the person, his or her |
176 | immediate family, or close associates as a result of providing |
177 | information or assistance, or upon the disclosure of the |
178 | person's assistance to the community; |
179 | (f) Whether the person has shown any indication of |
180 | emotional instability, unreliability, or of furnishing false |
181 | information; |
182 | (g) The person's criminal history or prior criminal |
183 | record; and |
184 | (h) Whether the use of the person is important to or vital |
185 | to the success of an investigation. |
186 | (6) A law enforcement agency that uses confidential |
187 | informants shall establish written security procedures that, at |
188 | a minimum: |
189 | (a) Provide for the secured retention of any records |
190 | related to the law enforcement agency's confidential sources, |
191 | including access to files identifying the identity of |
192 | confidential sources; |
193 | (b) Limit availability to records relating to confidential |
194 | informants to those within the law enforcement agency or law |
195 | enforcement community having a need to know or review those |
196 | records, or to those whose access has been required by court |
197 | process or order; |
198 | (c) Require notation of each person who accesses such |
199 | records and the date that the records are accessed; |
200 | (d) Provide for review and oversight by the law |
201 | enforcement agency to ensure that the security procedures are |
202 | followed; and |
203 | (e) Define the process by which records concerning a |
204 | confidential informant may be lawfully destroyed. |
205 | (7) A state or local law enforcement agency that uses |
206 | confidential informants shall perform a periodic review of |
207 | actual agency confidential informant practices to ensure |
208 | conformity with the agency's policies and procedures and this |
209 | section. |
210 | (8) The provisions of this section and policies and |
211 | procedures adopted pursuant to this section do not grant any |
212 | right or entitlement to a confidential informant or a person who |
213 | is requested to be a confidential informant, and any failure to |
214 | abide by this section may not be relied upon to create any |
215 | additional right, substantive or procedural, enforceable at law |
216 | by a defendant in a criminal proceeding. |
217 | Section 2. This act shall take effect July 1, 2009. |