Substitute House Bill 1788 as Recommended by Public Safety

Source

Section 1

This section modifies existing section 10.116.060. Here is the modified chapter for context.

  1. A peace officer may not engage in a vehicular pursuit, unless:

    1. There is reasonable suspicion that a person in the vehicle has committed or is committing a violent offense as defined in RCW 9.94A.030, an escape under chapter 9A.76 RCW**,** or

a driving under the influence offense under RCW 46.61.502;

b.

The person poses an imminent threat to the safety of others**,** and the safety risks of failing to apprehend or identify the person are considered to be greater than the safety risks of the vehicular pursuit under the circumstances;

c. **The pursuing officer notifies** a supervising officer **immediately upon initiating the vehicular pursuit;**

d. **There** is supervisory **oversight** of the pursuit**by a** supervising officer **, and the supervising officer evaluates** the justification for the vehicular pursuit and other safety considerations, including but not limited to speed, weather, traffic, road conditions, and the known presence of minors in the vehicle

, and considers alternatives to the vehicular pursuit

;

e. **The pursuing officer and supervising officer comply** with any agency procedures for designating the primary pursuit vehicle and determining the appropriate number of vehicles permitted to participate in the vehicular pursuit **;**

f. **The supervising officer, the pursuing officer, or dispatcher notifies other law enforcement agencies or surrounding jurisdictions that may be impacted by the vehicular pursuit or called upon to assist with the vehicular pursuit, and the pursuing officer and supervising officer comply** with any agency procedures for coordinating operations with other jurisdictions, including available tribal police departments when applicable**;**

g. **The pursuing officer is able to directly communicate with other officers engaging in the pursuit, the supervising officer, and the dispatch agency, such as being on a common radio channel or having other direct means of communication;**

h. **As soon as practicable after initiating a vehicular pursuit, the pursuing officer, supervising officer, or responsible agency develops a plan to end the pursuit through the use of available pursuit intervention options, such as the use of the pursuit intervention technique, deployment of spike strips or other tire deflation devices, or other department-authorized pursuit intervention tactics; and**

i. **The pursuing officer has completed an emergency vehicle operator's course, has completed updated emergency vehicle operator training in the previous two years, and is certified in at least one pursuit intervention option.**
  1. A vehicular pursuit not meeting the requirements under subsection (1) of this section must be terminated.

  2. A peace officer may not fire a weapon upon a moving vehicle unless necessary to protect against an imminent threat of serious physical harm resulting from the operator's or a passenger's use of a deadly weapon. For the purposes of this subsection, a vehicle is not considered a deadly weapon unless the operator is using the vehicle as a deadly weapon and no other reasonable means to avoid potential serious harm are immediately available to the officer.

  3. For purposes of this section, "vehicular pursuit" means an attempt by a uniformed peace officer in a vehicle equipped with emergency lights and a siren to stop a moving vehicle where the operator of the moving vehicle appears to be aware that the officer is signaling the operator to stop the vehicle and the operator of the moving vehicle appears to be willfully resisting or ignoring the officer's attempt to stop the vehicle by increasing vehicle speed, making evasive maneuvers, or operating the vehicle in a reckless manner that endangers the safety of the community or the officer.


Created by @tannewt. Contribute on GitHub.