Connecticut 2022 2022 Regular Session

Connecticut House Bill HB05349 Comm Sub / Analysis

Filed 04/28/2022

                     
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OLR Bill Analysis 
sHB 5349 (as amended by House “A”)*  
 
AN ACT CONCERNING THE TIMELY REPORTING BY THE POLICE 
OF A DEATH.  
 
SUMMARY 
This bill generally requires peace officers (i.e., law enforcement 
officers) to notify a deceased person’s next of kin (i.e., spouse, adult 
child, parent, adult sibling, or grandparent) about the deceased’s death 
as soon as practicable, but within 24 hours after identifying the 
deceased. 
The bill also requires the Office of the Inspector General (OIG) to 
investigate any failure to report a death as required by the bill. It allows 
OIG to make recommendations to the Police Officer Standards and 
Training Council (POST) or to the employing agency to discipline an 
officer or his or her supervisor.  
The bill also makes minor, technical, and conforming changes. 
*House Amendment “A” (1) adds the provisions on notifying next of 
kin residing in another town, (2) modifies the OIG recommendations 
provision by (a) limiting the recommendation to POST to intentional 
failures or those made with reckless indifference and (b) allowing 
recommendations for discipline to the officer’s employing agency, and 
(3) makes technical changes.  
EFFECTIVE DATE: October 1, 2022 
POLICE NOTIFICATION REQUIREMENT 
Under the bill, if a sworn on-duty peace officer responds to an 
incident involving, or otherwise encounters, a deceased person or a 
person’s remains, the officer must ensure that the deceased person’s 
next of kin is notified about the death according to the officer’s law 
enforcement agency’s applicable guidelines. The law enforcement  2022HB-05349-R01-BA.DOCX 
 
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agency must ensure the notification is made as soon as practicable, but 
within 24 hours after the identification of the person. 
If a next of kin resides in a town where the peace officer does not 
serve, the officer may notify the (1) next of kin of the person’s death 
according to the officer’s law enforcement agency’s applicable 
guidelines or (2) law enforcement agency that serves the town where the 
next of kin resides, and that agency must ensure notification based on 
its applicable guidelines. 
If a peace officer is unable to notify any next of kin, the officer must 
document the reason for the failure or delay and any attempts to make 
the notification. If no person who is a next of kin is notified, a deceased 
person’s next of kin may request an OIG investigation into the lack of 
notification or timely notification. 
Under the bill, the following individuals are designated peace 
officers: state and local police, Division of Criminal Justice inspectors, 
state marshals exercising statutory powers, judicial marshals 
performing their duties, conservation or special conservation officers, 
constables who perform criminal law enforcement duties, appointed 
special policemen, adult probation officers, Department of Correction 
officials authorized to make arrests in a correctional institution or 
facility, investigators in the Office of the State Treasurer, POST-certified 
motor vehicle inspectors, U.S. marshals and deputy marshals, U.S. 
special agents authorized to enforce federal food and drug laws, and 
certified police officers of a law enforcement unit created and governed 
under a state-tribal memorandum (CGS § 53a-3(9)). 
Under the bill, a “law enforcement agency” is the State Police or any 
municipal police department. 
OIG INVESTIGATIONS 
Upon a next of kin’s request (see above), the bill requires OIG to 
investigate and determine whether there was malfeasance on the part of 
the peace officer or his or her supervisor for failing to provide the 
notification or timely notification the bill requires.    2022HB-05349-R01-BA.DOCX 
 
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If OIG finds malfeasance, it may make recommendations to POST 
concerning censuring, suspending, renewing, canceling, or revoking the 
officer or supervisor’s certification. But OIG may only make these 
recommendations if it finds that the officer’s failure is intentional or 
made with reckless indifference. Otherwise, OIG may recommend to the 
officer’s or supervisor’s employing agency any further disciplinary 
action as the employing agency determines. 
CANCELLATION OR REVOCATION OF POLICE CERTIFICATION 
Existing law sets various grounds upon which POST may cancel or 
revoke a police officer’s certification, including for undermining public 
confidence in law enforcement. The bill expands these grounds by 
specifying that undermining public confidence includes failing to report 
or timely report a death in violation of the bill. 
COMMITTEE ACTION 
Judiciary Committee 
Joint Favorable Substitute 
Yea 37 Nay 2 (03/29/2022) 
 
Public Safety and Security Committee 
Joint Favorable 
Yea 13 Nay 10 (04/25/2022)