Monday, September 7, 2009

ATTORNEY GENERAL DIRECTIVE, 2006-02 SUPERSEDING DIRECTIVE REGARDING ELECTRONIC RECORDATION OF STATIONHOUSE INTERROGATIONS

ATTORNEY GENERAL DIRECTIVE, 2006-02
SUPERSEDING DIRECTIVE REGARDING ELECTRONIC RECORDATION OF
STATIONHOUSE INTERROGATIONS
(January 17, 2006)
On December 17, 2004, the Attorney General and the County
Prosecutors’ Association amended a prior policy statement so as to require that
when a statement is obtained following a stationhouse interrogation in any
case involving a first, second or third degree crime (or any case involving a
juvenile age 14 or older suspected of committing a crime enumerated in
N.J.S.A. 2A:4A-26a(2)(a)), the law enforcement entity involved either video or
audio record any final statement obtained, or any acknowledgment by the
suspect of the content of a written statement. That Amended Policy also put
into effect a staggered time table with regard to effective dates. For all first and
second degree crimes, the electronic recording requirement would go into effect
on September 1, 2005. For third degree and juvenile cases, the requirement
was to go into effect on January 1, 2006. The Amended Policy also noted that
the Attorney General, in consultation with the County Prosecutors’ Association,
would subsequently make a final determination as to whether to issue a law
enforcement directive “requiring expansion of the electronic recordation policy
so as to cover the entire stationhouse interrogation process in certain cases.”
Thereafter, on October 14, 2005, the New Jersey Supreme Court adopted
the recommendations of its Special Committee on the Recordation of Custodial
Interrogations. Most significantly, the recommendations included a
requirement that police electronically record the entirety of all custodial
interrogations occurring in a place of detention for cases in which the adult or
juvenile being interrogated is charged with an offense requiring the use of a
warrant pursuant to R. 3:3-1c. The effective dates for that requirement are
staggered so as to go into effect for all covered homicide cases on January 1,
2006, and for all other offenses specified in R. 3:3-1c on January 1, 2007.
Upon review and consideration of these two sets of requirements, the
Attorney General and the County Prosecutors’ Association have determined
that having different time frames may be difficult to implement and may cause
confusion in the law enforcement community. Accordingly, the Attorney
General, the Director of the Division of Criminal Justice, and the County
Prosecutors have jointly determined that the two sets of requirements must be
harmonized to the greatest extent possible. Electronic recording is a valuable
tool to law enforcement. It insures that the suspect’s or defendant’s statement
is accurately recorded and voluntarily made.