Johnson v. Department of Public Safety Standards & Training

293 P.3d 228, 253 Or. App. 307, 2012 WL 5429461, 2012 Ore. App. LEXIS 1385
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedNovember 7, 2012
Docket901306; A147361
StatusPublished

This text of 293 P.3d 228 (Johnson v. Department of Public Safety Standards & Training) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Johnson v. Department of Public Safety Standards & Training, 293 P.3d 228, 253 Or. App. 307, 2012 WL 5429461, 2012 Ore. App. LEXIS 1385 (Or. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

SCHUMAN, P. J.

Petitioner seeks judicial review of a final order of the Department of Public Safety Standards and Training (DPSST) revoking his license as a private investigator. The order was based on a conclusion that petitioner, while working on behalf of a criminal defense attorney, interviewed crime victims without making certain disclosures mandated by Article I, section 42(l)(c), of the Oregon Constitution, as well as several other rules and statutes, including ORS 135.970(2). The constitutional provision grants crime victims “[t]he right to refuse an interview *** request by the criminal defendant or other person acting on behalf of the criminal defendant.” The statute provides:

“If contacted by the defense, the victim must be clearly informed by the defendant’s attorney, either in person or in writing, of the identity and capacity of the person contacting the victim, that the victim does not have to talk to the defendant’s attorney, or other agents of the defendant, or provide other discovery unless the victim wishes, and that the victim may have a district attorney present during any interview.”

ORS 135.970(2). Petitioner asserts that the constitutional provision confers a right on crime victims but imposes no corollary obligation on him, and the statute imposes a legal obligation only on defense attorneys — not their agents. We agree. He also maintains that, even if he may have violated some other rules or statutes, the board’s erroneous conclusions regarding Article I, section 42(l)(c), and ORS 135.970(2) contributed to the board’s decision to impose what petitioner argues was an overly severe sanction. We agree with that point as well. We therefore reverse and remand the agency order for further proceedings.

In October 2007, petitioner applied for and was granted a private investigator license by DPSST. He began working for private defense attorneys who represented indigent criminal defendants. In August 2009, responding to a complaint, DPSST filed a notice of intent to revoke petitioner’s license, alleging that petitioner’s contacts with victims in four separate criminal cases violated ORS 135.970(2), Article I, section 42, and DPSST’s rules [310]*310regulating ethics and moral fitness standards for private investigators.1 Petitioner requested a contested case hearing pursuant to ORS 183.745.

The hearing was held before an administrative law judge (ALJ) on May 3, 2010. One of the witnesses, Detective Mott, a police officer for the City of Dallas, testified about his involvement in one of the cases, State v. Benkle, a criminal sex abuse case in which petitioner worked as an investigator for the defendant’s attorney. Mott testified about statements that some of the juvenile victims and their parents made to Mott and another detective about their contacts with a private investigator who misrepresented himself as a police officer, and Mott identified that investigator as petitioner. Petitioner objected to the admission of these statements as hearsay. The ALJ overruled the objections, pointing out that hearsay was not categorically inadmissible in administrative hearings. Mott also testified that he personally observed petitioner misrepresenting his status to one of the victims and the victim’s mother by telling them that he worked for the City of Dallas and the State of Oregon.

At the end of the hearing, the ALJ left the record open so that petitioner and DPSST could submit written closing arguments. On June 15,2010, DPSST filed a “Second Amended Notice of Intent to Revoke License,” adding another statute, ORS 703.450(15), to the list of provisions that petitioner allegedly violated.2 During a telephone status conference on July 20, 2010, the parties agreed that the record could be closed; petitioner’s counsel stated, “I do not know that there is any need [from] my point to put on any more evidence.”

Three months later, the ALJ issued a proposed order. The ALJ concluded that (1) petitioner’s conduct while [311]*311investigating crimes on behalf of a defense attorney violated ORS 135.970(2) and Article I, section 42; (2) petitioner failed to “[o]bey all laws in the pursuit of [his] investigations” in violation of OAR 259-061-0190(1); (3) petitioner failed to “report the truth in the performance of [his] professional duties” in violation of OAR 259-061-0190(9); (4) petitioner’s conduct demonstrated a lack of moral fitness in violation of OAR 259-06l-0040(2)(b); (5) petitioner’s conduct while investigating cases on behalf of a defense attorney gave “an impression that [he was] connected *** with a law enforcement or other governmental agency” in violation of ORS 703.450(15); and (6) the appropriate penalty for the violations was revocation of petitioner’s private investigator’s license and imposition of a civil penalty and costs.

Thereafter, on September 27, 2010, petitioner wrote a letter to the ALJ stating that he had new evidence that exonerated him from the charges: new statements by petitioner, statements from the parents and juvenile victims in the Benkle case indicating that they had never met petitioner, and a witness statement discrediting the complaining victim in State v. Young, one of the other cases. On the same day, petitioner filed a “[mjotion to reopen, to reconsider, and supplement to exceptions,” requesting that the record be reopened to include the new evidence. The ALJ, after receiving petitioner’s letter, wrote to petitioner (copy to DPSST) to inform petitioner that the ALJ’s involvement with the case had ended upon issuing the September 14 proposed order and that he no longer had any jurisdiction over the matter. Subsequently, on December 16, 2010, DPSST denied petitioner’s motion, concluding that the ALJ’s proposed order was supported by the record and that petitioner had “not shown good cause why the new evidence he proposes to offer could not have been presented at the hearing.” Accordingly, DPSST adopted the ALJ’s proposed order as its final order and revoked petitioner’s license.

Petitioner advances four assignments of error on review. He first argues that he did not violate the Oregon Constitution or ORS 135.970(2) because neither provision imposes an obligation on private investigators; further, because several of the other provisions incorporate violations of the law as elements, he did not violate those [312]*312either. Second, he contends that DPSST erred by denying his motion to reopen the record. Third, he maintains that the ALJ’s findings of fact were not supported by substantial evidence because they derived from Mott’s hearsay testimony.

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Bluebook (online)
293 P.3d 228, 253 Or. App. 307, 2012 WL 5429461, 2012 Ore. App. LEXIS 1385, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnson-v-department-of-public-safety-standards-training-orctapp-2012.