Fellow attorneys:
One of my smallest towns has a five-member Town Trustee Board of Government.
This Board votes on any and all issues to govern the police chief and the
police department.
I have learned that one of the Town Trustees has volunteered to be a reserve
police officer (no pay), and is driving (alone) in a police car, wearing a
reserve officer badge.
"On patrol", I would guess.
I have also learned that the Police Chief has scheduled him to attend
classes for reserve officers.
In my opinion, this is a great conflict. If I am wrong, it will be a
relief, because I will not have to disappoint the police chief and the town
trustee, with my advice.
I have asked OMAG, our insurance carrier, for an opinion. Just wondering
what some of you think about this situation.
Thoughts?
Kay Wall
918.689.7737 office
This would be considered dual office holding if the Trustee were an officer for any entity other than his/her own town. However, and as a general rule, if the Trustee is not being paid for the second work for the same town, there is no prohibition that I know of which prevents a trustee from being given additional duties, even that of a reserve police officer (assuming that the needed training is in place.)
Just remember, that any reserve officer can generate the same liability for the town as any other police officer and that this liability under federal law can be personal to the officer and not just general to the town. In fact, under 1983 litigation, the federal and personal liability can include punitives which the town is prohibited from indemnifying.
Mike Vanderburg
Sent from Mail for Windows 10
From: Kay Wall
Sent: Monday, March 9, 2020 2:07 PM
To: OAMA@lists.imla.org
Subject: [Oama] conflict of interest question
Fellow attorneys:
One of my smallest towns has a five-member Town Trustee Board of Government. This Board votes on any and all issues to govern the police chief and the police department.
I have learned that one of the Town Trustees has volunteered to be a reserve police officer (no pay), and is driving (alone) in a police car, wearing a reserve officer badge.
“On patrol”, I would guess.
I have also learned that the Police Chief has scheduled him to attend classes for reserve officers.
In my opinion, this is a great conflict. If I am wrong, it will be a relief, because I will not have to disappoint the police chief and the town trustee, with my advice.
I have asked OMAG, our insurance carrier, for an opinion. Just wondering what some of you think about this situation.
Thoughts?
Kay Wall
918.689.7737 office