§52D-8 Police officers; counsel for. Whenever a police officer is prosecuted for a crime or sued in a civil action for acts done in the performance of the officer's duty as a police officer, the police officer shall be represented and defended:
(1) In criminal proceedings by an attorney to be employed and paid by the county in which the officer is serving; and
(2) In civil cases by the corporation counsel or county attorney of the county in which the police officer is serving. [L 1989, c 136, pt of §2]
Case Notes
An attorney "employed and paid by the county" for the benefit of a police officer, to defend the officer in a criminal case pursuant to this section and in related civil cases, in which the county has asserted claims adverse to the officer, is not per se, by virtue of such employment and payment, deemed ineffective counsel. 95 H. 9, 18 P.3d 871.
Section provides officers with a constitutionally protected property interest--the right to legal representation for acting within the scope of their duty; due process thus entitles an officer to a contested case hearing under chapter 91 before the officer can be deprived of this interest. 89 H. 221 (App.), 971 P.2d 310.
Structure Hawaii Revised Statutes
Title 6. County Organization and Administration
52D-3 Powers and duties of chief of police.
52D-3.5 Reports to legislature.
52D-5 Powers of chief of police outside own county.
52D-6 Police force; employees.
52D-7 Traffic control surrounding school premises.
52D-8 Police officers; counsel for.
52D-9 Determination of scope of duty.
52D-10 Disposition of found, stolen, or unclaimed property.
52D-11 Reports by common carriers and court clerks.
52D-12 Duty of police officer to owner.
52D-14 Duty and right of finders.
52D-15 Off-duty police officers; benefits for personal injuries.
52D-16 Domestic violence policies; standard of conduct policies.
52D-17 Citizen administrative complaints; officer-involved domestic violence.