The Garrity rights, Garrity rule or Garrity warning is a protection that is utilized by many law enforcement officers each year.
Simply,
Garrity is an
invocation that may be made by an officer being questioned regarding actions
that may result in criminal prosecution.
The Garrity rule goes by several different names including the Garrity Right,
the Garrity Law, the Garrity Rule, the Garrity Advisement and the Garrity
Warning.
By invoking the Garrity rule, the officer is invoking his or her right against self incrimination. Any statements made after invoking Garrity,
may only be used for department investigation purposes and not for criminal prosecution purposes.
The Garrity Rule stems from the court case Garrity v. New Jersey, 385 U.S. 493 (1967), which was decided in 1966 by the United States Supreme Court.
It was a
traffic ticket fixing case of all things.
Officers were advised that they had to answer questions subjecting them to
criminal prosecution or lose their jobs.
The Court
held that this was Unconstitutional.
Technically, there are two prongs under the Garrity rights. First, if an officer
is compelled to answer questions as a condition of employment,
the officer's answers and the fruits of those answers may not be used against the officer in a subsequent criminal prosecution.
Second,
the department becomes limited as to what they may ask. Such questions must be
specifically, narrowly, and directly tailored to the officer's job.
Thus, the basic thrust of the Garrity Rights or Garrity Rule is that a
department member may be compelled to give statements under threat of discipline
or discharge but those statements may not be used in the criminal prosecution of the individual officer.
This means
that the Garrity Rule only protects a department member from criminal
prosecution based upon statements he or she might make under threat of
discipline or discharge.
Also, the Garrity Rule is not automatically triggered simply because questioning
is taking place. The officer must announce that he or she wants the protections
under Garrity.
The above statement should be prepared in writing, and the officer should obtain a copy of it.
If a written statement is being taken from an officer, the officer should insist that the Garrity Warning actually be typed in the statement.
*Consult your attorney and union delegate for the laws regarding Garrity in your state before providing any statement.