Bill Text: FL S1334 | 2016 | Regular Session | Introduced
Bill Title: Confidential Informants
Spectrum: Partisan Bill (Republican 1-0)
Status: (Failed) 2016-03-11 - Died in Criminal Justice [S1334 Detail]
Download: Florida-2016-S1334-Introduced.html
Florida Senate - 2016 SB 1334 By Senator Dean 5-00195-16 20161334__ 1 A bill to be entitled 2 An act relating to confidential informants; amending 3 s. 914.28, F.S.; requiring a law enforcement agency 4 that uses confidential informants to adopt policies 5 and procedures providing reasonable protective 6 measures; requiring such agencies to provide certain 7 prospective and current confidential informants with 8 information on substance abuse treatment options that 9 may be available; requiring that the policies and 10 procedures adopted by a law enforcement agency provide 11 general guidelines for the management and safety of 12 confidential informants and training requirements for 13 certain agency personnel; revising factors used in 14 assessing a person’s suitability as a confidential 15 informant; requiring a law enforcement agency that 16 solicits a person to act as a confidential informant 17 to inform such person of his or her right to consult 18 with legal counsel before signing a Substantial 19 Assistance Agreement; authorizing such agencies to 20 advise prospective confidential informants that they 21 may waive that right; prohibiting a person under 18 22 years of age from participating in certain activities 23 without written parental or guardian consent; allowing 24 such person to provide confidential information to a 25 law enforcement agency; prohibiting a person who is 26 receiving certain substance abuse treatment from 27 participating in certain activities; allowing such 28 person to provide confidential information to a law 29 enforcement agency; prohibiting a person who is under 30 the jurisdiction of a drug court program from 31 participating in certain activities without the 32 consent of the state attorney assigned to the drug 33 court program; requiring a law enforcement agency to 34 report to the state attorney a drug court participant 35 who the agency believes has violated any drug court 36 rule; requiring a law enforcement agency to annually 37 collect and submit confidential informant data to the 38 Department of Law Enforcement; prohibiting such data 39 from disclosing certain information; specifying 40 information required to be submitted to the 41 department; requiring the department to publicly 42 release such data by a specified date; providing 43 penalties; providing an effective date. 44 45 Be It Enacted by the Legislature of the State of Florida: 46 47 Section 1. Paragraphs (f) and (g) are added to subsection 48 (3) of section 914.28, Florida Statutes, subsections (4), (5), 49 and (7) of that section are amended, present subsection (8) of 50 that section is redesignated as subsection (12) and amended, and 51 new subsections (8) through (11) are added to that section, to 52 read: 53 914.28 Confidential informants.— 54 (3) A law enforcement agency that uses confidential 55 informants shall: 56 (f) Adopt policies and procedures that provide reasonable 57 protective measures for confidential informants when it knows or 58 should have known of a risk or threat of harm to a person 59 serving as a confidential informant and the risk or threat of 60 harm is a result of his or her service to the law enforcement 61 agency. 62 (g) Provide prospective and current confidential informants 63 who are known to be substance abusers or to be at risk for 64 substance abuse with information on substance abuse treatment 65 options that may be available in their community or region. 66 (4) A law enforcement agency that uses confidential 67 informants shall establish policies and procedures addressing 68 the recruitment, control, and use of confidential informants. 69 The policies and procedures must state the: 70 (a) Information that the law enforcement agency mustshall71 maintain concerning each confidential informant; 72 (b) General guidelines for the management and safety of 73handlingconfidential informants; 74 (c) Process to advise a confidential informant of 75 conditions, restrictions, and procedures associated with 76 participating in the agency’s investigative or intelligence 77 gathering activities; 78 (d) Designated supervisory or command-level review and 79 oversight in the use of a confidential informant; 80 (e) Limits or restrictions on off-duty association or 81 social relationships by agency personnel involved in 82 investigative or intelligence gathering with confidential 83 informants; 84 (f) Guidelines to deactivate confidential informants, 85 including guidelines for deactivating communications with 86 confidential informants; and 87 (g) Training requirements that agency personnel must 88 complete in order to recruit and manage confidential informants, 89 which must be consistent with national law enforcement standards 90Level of supervisory approval required before a juvenile is used91as a confidential informant. 92 (5) A law enforcement agency that uses confidential 93 informants shall establish policies and procedures to assess the 94 suitability of using a person as a confidential informant which, 95 at a minimum, consider all ofby consideringtheminimum96 following factors: 97 (a) The person’s age,andmaturity, and experience to serve 98 as a confidential informant.;99 (b) The risk the person poses to adversely affect a present 100 or potential investigation or prosecution.;101 (c) The effectupon agency effortsthat the disclosure of 102 the person’s cooperation may have on the agency’s investigative 103 or intelligence-gathering activities.in the community may have;104 (d) Whether the person is a substance abuser or has a 105 history of substance abuse.or is in a court-supervised drug106treatment program;107 (e) The risk of physical harm to the person, his or her 108 immediate family, or close associates as a result of providing 109 information or assistance, or upon the public disclosure of the 110 person’s assistance.to the community;111 (f) Whether the person has shown any indication of 112 emotional instability or,unreliability, or has furnishedof113furnishingfalse information.;114 (g) The person’s criminal history or prior criminal 115 record.; and116 (h) Whether the use of the person may be necessaryis117important to orvitalto the success of an investigation. 118 (7) Astate or locallaw enforcement agency that uses 119 confidential informants shall perform a periodic review of 120 actual agency confidential informant practices to ensure 121 conformity with the agency’s policies and procedures and this 122 section. 123 (8) A law enforcement agency that enlists a person to be a 124 confidential informant shall inform the person of the right to 125 consult with legal counsel before entering into a Substantial 126 Assistance Agreement to serve as a confidential informant. 127 However, the agency may advise the prospective confidential 128 informant that he or she may waive the right to consult with 129 legal counsel before entering into the Substantial Assistance 130 Agreement, and he or she may serve as a confidential informant 131 without consulting with legal counsel if such waiver is 132 documented. 133 (9)(a) A person who is younger than 18 years of age may not 134 participate in a controlled buy or sale of contraband or related 135 activities without the written consent of a parent or legal 136 guardian, but may provide confidential information to a law 137 enforcement agency. 138 (b) A person who is receiving inpatient or outpatient 139 substance abuse treatment from a licensed service provider 140 pursuant to chapter 394 may not participate in a controlled buy 141 or sale of contraband or related activities, but may provide 142 confidential information to a law enforcement agency while 143 receiving substance abuse treatment. A person who is under the 144 jurisdiction of a drug court or participating in a drug court 145 program may not participate in a controlled buy or sale or 146 related activities without the consent of the state attorney 147 assigned to the drug court program. If a law enforcement agency 148 believes that a drug court participant has violated any drug 149 court rule, the law enforcement agency shall promptly report the 150 participant to the state attorney assigned to the drug court. 151 (10) A law enforcement agency that uses confidential 152 informants shall collect and report data that include the 153 information required by paragraphs (a)—(h). The Department of 154 Law Enforcement shall develop and disseminate a standardized 155 form that must be completed by every law enforcement agency that 156 uses confidential informants. A law enforcement agency that uses 157 confidential informants shall collect such data for the 158 preceding calendar year and report the data by March 1 of each 159 year to the department. Upon receipt of the completed forms, the 160 department shall compile the data and, by June 1 of each year, 161 publicly release a report on paragraphs (a)-(h). The data and 162 report may not include categories of active confidential 163 informants compiled by race, ethnicity, gender, and zip code or 164 disclose the identity of a confidential informant, but must 165 include all of the following information: 166 (a) The number of active confidential informants. 167 (b) The ages of active confidential informants. 168 (c) The number of confidential informants used to conduct 169 controlled buys or sales of contraband or related activities on 170 behalf of the agency. 171 (d) The number of deaths of confidential informants which 172 occurred during controlled buys or sales of contraband or 173 related activities conducted on behalf of the agency. 174 (e) The number of injuries to confidential informants which 175 occurred during controlled buys or sales of contraband or 176 related activities conducted on behalf of the agency. 177 (f) The number of deaths of confidential informants whose 178 cause of death may be related to their service as a confidential 179 informant. 180 (g) The number of injuries to confidential informants whose 181 cause of injury may be related to their service as a 182 confidential informant. 183 (h) The total amount of cash payments provided to each 184 confidential informant by the agency. 185 (11) A law enforcement officer, or a person designated as 186 support personnel as defined in s. 943.10(11), who willfully 187 fails to comply with this act commits culpable negligence as 188 provided in s. 782.07(1) or s. 784.05(1). 189 (12)(8)The provisions ofThis section and policies and 190 procedures adopted pursuant to this section do not grant any 191 right or entitlement to a confidential informant or a person who 192 is requested to be a confidential informant, and any failure to 193 abide by this section may not be relied upon to create any 194 additional right, substantive or procedural, enforceable at law 195 by a defendant in a criminal proceeding. 196 Section 2. This act shall take effect October 1, 2016.