Question Submitted by: Vicki Zemp Behenna, Office of the District Attorney, 7th District

2024 OK AG 15
CourtOklahoma Attorney General Reports
DecidedOctober 30, 2024
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2024 OK AG 15 (Question Submitted by: Vicki Zemp Behenna, Office of the District Attorney, 7th District) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oklahoma Attorney General Reports primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Question Submitted by: Vicki Zemp Behenna, Office of the District Attorney, 7th District, 2024 OK AG 15 (Okla. Super. Ct. 2024).

Opinion

Question Submitted by: Vicki Zemp Behenna, Office of the District Attorney, 7th District
2024 OK AG 15
Decided: 10/30/2024
Oklahoma Attorney General Opinions


Cite as: 2024 OK AG 15, __ __

¶0 This office has received your request for an official Attorney General Opinion in which you ask, in effect, the following question:
Whether the amendments to House Bill 2537 (2023) to title 22, section 34.1 prohibit the prosecution of peace officers who use excessive force?

I.

SUMMARY

¶1 House Bill 2537's amendments to section 34.1(A) of title 22 should not be construed to prohibit the prosecution of peace officers who utilize excessive force. The amendments to section 34.1(A) should instead be read to require the prosecution to establish that excessive force was used beyond a reasonable doubt in addition to all other elements of the charged offense.

II.

BACKGROUND

¶2 Since its enactment in 1992, section 34.1 of title 22 of the Oklahoma Statutes has subjected peace officers using excessive force while performing their law enforcement duties to the criminal laws of this state. Until 2023, peace officers could ostensibly be convicted for using force that violated only their law enforcement agency's internal policies and guidelines. At least theoretically, this created the anomalous situation where, for example, an Oklahoma City police officer who used a certain degree of force may have committed a crime while a Tulsa police officer who used the identical amount of force under precisely the same circumstances, would not have committed a crime if their respective department's policies differed.

¶3 Enter House Bill 2537 in 2023. Passed with significant support in both chambers, House Bill 2537 eliminated the reference to internal policies and guidelines as a basis for prosecuting a peace officer for using excessive force. Now, a peace officer cannot be charged and tried for violating his or her law enforcement agency's policies and guidelines. All peace officers in Oklahoma accused of utilizing excessive force are now judged using the same test: Was the force reasonably necessary under the circumstances at the time that the peace officer used force? (B).

¶4 However, another amendment in House Bill 2537 prompts this request, specifically the Legislature's insertion of the following emphasized language in section 34.1(A):

Any peace officer, as defined in Section 648 of Title 21 of the Oklahoma Statutes, who uses excessive force in pursuance of such officer's law enforcement duties shall be subject to the criminal laws of this state to the same degree as any other citizen, if excessive force is established as an element of any alleged violation under the criminal laws of this state. As used in this section and Section 34.2 of this title, "law enforcement duties" means duties carried out while acting as a peace officer pursuant to Section 99a of Title 21 of the Oklahoma Statutes.

(A) (emphasis added). Crucially, your question centers on the statute's use of the word "element." More specifically, you inquire (1) whether this new language requires a criminal offense to already include excessive force as an element of the offense or (2) if the State has to additionally prove that the officer used excessive force. Following an exhaustive review of the Oklahoma Statutes, this office did not identify any offenses within Oklahoma's criminal code that contain an independent element of "excessive force." As a result, the rules of statutory construction will be applied to ascertain the statute's purpose and intent.

III.

DISCUSSION

¶5 The Legislature did not alter the pre-existing language in section 34.1(A). The language still holds peace officers who utilize excessive force "subject to the criminal laws of this state to the same degree as any other citizen . . . ." The amendatory language after the word 'citizen,' clarifies that the use of "excessive force" must be proven by the prosecution beyond a reasonable doubt but does not limit the prosecution of peace officers who use excessive force to offenses that contain "excessive force" as an independent element.

¶6 Three considerations require this conclusion. First, the Legislature retained language contained within section 34.1 subjecting peace officers who utilize excessive force to Oklahoma's criminal laws, indicating a desire not to legalize the use of excessive force. Second, to avoid rendering section 34.1 useless and superfluous, the added language cannot be read in a vacuum to limit prosecutions only when the offense committed contains "excessive force" as an independent element. Third, the only reasonable construction consistent with the purpose of the statute and with Oklahoma public policy, as expressed by the Legislature in enacting , is to permit the prosecution of the small number of peace officers who violate the law by utilizing excessive force. Construing a statute designed to penalize and prevent police brutality in a manner that would effectively legalize the use of excessive force leads to an absurd result and would be contrary to the Legislature's intent.

¶7 "Statutes are to be construed to determine the intent of the Legislature, reconciling provisions, rendering them consistent and giving intelligent effect to each." State ex rel. Pruitt v. Steidley, , ¶ 12, , 557 (quoting State ex rel. Mashburn v. Stice, , ¶ 11, , 250) (internal punctuation and citations omitted):

To ascertain the intention of the Legislature in the enactment of a statute, we may look to each part of the statute, to other statutes upon the same or relative subjects, to the evils and mischiefs to be remedied, and to the natural or absurd consequences of any particular interpretation. Each part of the various statutes must be given intelligent effect. This Court will not presume the Legislature to have done a vain thing. We are mindful that elementary rules of statutory interpretation require us to avoid any statutory construction which would render any part of a statute superfluous or useless. Where possible, the statutory amendments should be reconciled or construed together.

¶8 If the Legislature desired to prohibit the prosecution of peace officers who utilize excessive force, it could have easily accomplished this policy shift with a one-word amendment to section 34.1(A). By inserting the word "not" after the word "shall," the amendment could have read, "Any peace officer . . . who uses excessive force in pursuance of such officer's law enforcement duties shall not be subject to the criminal laws of this state." In doing so, the Legislature could have simply and definitively legalized the use of excessive force by peace officers. It did not.

¶9 Even more, restricting the prosecution of peace officers to offenses that independently contain an excessive force element would render the entire statute useless and superfluous by effectively legalizing peace officers' use of excessive force contrary to both the pre-existing, unaltered statutory text and the primary purpose of the statute. Conceptually, similar provisions exist in other statutes, but the specific phrase "excessive force" is unique to section 34.1(A).

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Related

§ 648
21 U.S.C. § 648
§ 99a
21 U.S.C. § 99a

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