HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES |
H.B. NO. |
2748 |
THIRTY-SECOND LEGISLATURE, 2024 |
H.D. 2 |
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STATE OF HAWAII |
S.D. 1 |
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A BILL FOR AN ACT
RELATING TO LAW ENFORCEMENT.
BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF HAWAII:
SECTION 1. The legislature appreciates the sanctity of life, and acknowledges that vehicular pursuits are inherently dangerous due to the conditions of the State's roads. Accordingly, the purpose of this Act is to statutorily establish statewide vehicular law enforcement pursuit policies.
SECTION 2. Chapter 139, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by adding a new section to be appropriately designated and to read as follows:
"§139- Vehicular
pursuit. (a)
No law enforcement officer shall engage in a vehicular pursuit unless:
(1) The law
enforcement officer has a reasonable suspicion to believe that a person in the
vehicle to be pursued has committed or is committing one or more of the
following:
(A) A felony offense under chapter 707 or 708 that involves physical
injury to the person of another;
(B) A sexual offense under part V of chapter 707;
(C) A first or second degree assault offense under section 707-710 or 707-711 by a person operating a vehicle:
(i) In
a reckless manner; or
(ii) Without
regard for the safety of others;
(D) The
offense of abuse of family or household members under section 709-906;
(E) The offense of escape in the first degree
under section 710-1020;
(F) The
offense of escape in the second degree under section 710-1021; or
(G) The
offense of operating a vehicle under the influence of an intoxicant under
section 291E-61;
(2) The
vehicular pursuit is necessary to identify or apprehend the person;
(3) The person
poses a serious risk of harm to others and the law enforcement officer
reasonably believes that, under the circumstances, the safety risks of failing
to identify or apprehend the person are greater than the safety risks of the vehicular
pursuit; and
(4) The pursuing
law enforcement officer notifies a supervising law enforcement officer
immediately upon initiating the vehicular pursuit; the supervising law
enforcement officer oversees the vehicular pursuit; and the pursuing law
enforcement officer, in consultation with the supervising law enforcement
officer, considers alternatives to the vehicular pursuit, the justification for
the vehicular pursuit, and other safety considerations, including speed,
weather, traffic, road conditions, and any known presence of minors in the vehicle.
(b) In any vehicular pursuit performed under this
section:
(1) The pursuing
law enforcement officer and the supervising law enforcement officer shall
comply with any applicable procedures for designating the primary pursuit
vehicle and determining the appropriate number of vehicles permitted to engage
in the vehicular pursuit;
(2) Either the
supervising law enforcement officer, pursuing law enforcement officer, or
dispatcher shall notify other law enforcement agencies that may be impacted by
the vehicular pursuit or called upon to assist with the vehicular pursuit;
(3) To the extent
practicable, the pursuing law enforcement officer shall use a common radio
channel or other direct means of communication to directly communicate with
other law enforcement officers engaging in the vehicular pursuit, the
supervising law enforcement officer, and the dispatching law enforcement
agency;
(4) As soon as
practicable after initiating a vehicular pursuit, the pursuing law enforcement
officer, supervising law enforcement officer, or responsible law enforcement agency
shall develop a plan to end the vehicular pursuit through the use of available
pursuit intervention options, techniques, or tactics approved by the applicable
law enforcement agency; and
(5) The pursuing
law enforcement officer shall be certified in at least one pursuit intervention
option and, within the two years preceding the vehicular pursuit, have
completed an initial emergency vehicle operators course or emergency vehicle
operators course update, as applicable; provided that the initial emergency
vehicle operators course or emergency vehicle operators course update shall
include training on performing the risk assessment analysis described in
subsection (a)(3).
(c) Any law enforcement officer engaging in a vehicular
pursuit that fails to satisfy the requirements of this section shall terminate
the pursuit.
(d) No law enforcement officer shall fire a
weapon upon a moving vehicle unless necessary to protect against an imminent
threat of serious physical harm resulting from the operator's or a passenger's
use of a deadly weapon; provided that if the operator is using the vehicle as a
deadly weapon, a law enforcement officer shall only fire a weapon upon the vehicle
if no other reasonable means to avoid potential serious physical harm are
immediately available to the law enforcement officer.
(e) Each law enforcement agency shall annually
furnish to the department of the attorney general, in a manner defined and
prescribed by the department of the attorney general, a report of all vehicular
pursuits conducted in the prior year by law enforcement officers employed by
the law enforcement agency.
(f) Each report required under subsection (e) shall
include, at a minimum, the following information for each vehicular pursuit:
(1) The reason for
the pursuit, including the offense that served as a basis for the pursuit;
(2) The date, start
time, and end time of the pursuit;
(3) The start and end
locations of the pursuit;
(4) A summary of
the circumstances surrounding the pursuit;
(5) Whether a
body-worn camera was worn and active for the duration of the pursuit;
(6) Whether a
dashboard camera was present and active for the duration of the pursuit;
(7) Whether the
pursuit resulted in an accident, injury requiring medical treatment, or death
to a law enforcement officer or member of the public;
(8) If the pursuit
resulted in an accident, injury requiring medical treatment, or death, a description
of the accident and details of each law enforcement officer or member of the
public injured or killed, including the type and severity of the injuries
sustained by each, if any;
(9) Unique
identification numbers for each pursuing and supervising law enforcement officer;
(10) If a citation
was issued, the violations cited;
(11) If an arrest
was made, the offense charged; and
(12) Whether the law enforcement officer searched the person or any property, and, if so, the type of search, the basis for the search, and type of contraband or evidence discovered, if any.
(g) The department of the attorney general shall
make all information obtained from law enforcement agencies under subsection
(e) publicly available on the department of the attorney general's website,
classified by law enforcement agency, in a manner that is clear,
understandable, and machine-readable.
(h) Law enforcement agencies subject to subsection
(e) shall not report or make publicly available the name, address, social
security number, or other unique personal identifying information of the
persons pursued. Law enforcement
agencies are solely responsible for ensuring that personally identifying
information of individuals pursued is not transmitted to the department of the
attorney general or otherwise released to the public.
(i) As used in this section:
"Authorized law enforcement
vehicle" means a county law enforcement vehicle, department of law
enforcement vehicle, or department of land and natural resources division of
conservation and resources enforcement vehicle authorized and approved pursuant
to section 291-31.5.
"Law enforcement
agency" shall have the same meaning as in section 78-52.
"Vehicle" shall have
the same meaning as in section 286-2.
"Vehicular pursuit" or
"pursuit" means an attempt by a law enforcement officer in an
authorized law enforcement vehicle to stop a moving vehicle where the operator
of the moving vehicle appears to be aware that the law enforcement officer is
signaling the operator of the moving vehicle to stop the vehicle and the operator
of the moving vehicle appears to be wilfully resisting or ignoring the law
enforcement officer's attempt to stop the vehicle by increasing vehicle speed,
making evasive maneuvers, or operating the vehicle in a reckless manner that
endangers the safety of the community or law enforcement officer."
SECTION 3. This Act does not affect rights and duties that matured, penalties that were incurred, and proceedings that were begun before its effective date.
SECTION 4. New statutory material is underscored.
SECTION 5. This Act shall take effect on July 1, 3000.
Report Title:
Law Enforcement Officers; Vehicular Pursuits; Policies; Restrictions
Description:
Establishes statewide vehicular law enforcement pursuit policies. Effective 7/1/3000. (SD1)
The summary description
of legislation appearing on this page is for informational purposes only and is
not legislation or evidence of legislative intent.