Tenn. Comp. R. & Regs. 1177-02-.04 - CONFLICT OF INTEREST - CODE OF PROFESSIONAL CONDUCT
(1) No private entity that provides probation
services, or employee, owner, or agent of the entity, may give or offer to give
anything of value to a governmental employee or the employee's immediate
family.
(2) No private entity that
provides probation services, or employee, owner, or agent of the entity, may
loan money to or have any other personal business dealings with probationers
under the entity's supervision.
(3)
No private entity that provides probation services may permit any person to
supervise a probationer who is a member of such supervisor's immediate family.
For purposes of this rule, "immediate family" shall mean mother, father,
sibling, adult children, or maternal and paternal grandparents.
(4) No private entity that provides
probations services, or employee owner or agent of the entity, may exchange a
gift, gratuity, or favor with a probationer, a probationer's family, or any
person who offers the gift, gratuity, or favor with the intent of influencing
the supervision of a probationer.
(5) The provisions of this rule shall not be
construed to amend or abridge any contract or operating agreement between any
court or county government and any agency or individual presently supplying
such services to such court or county government pursuant to T.C.A. §
40-35-101 et. seq.
(6) No private entity that provides probation
services, or employee, owner, or agent of the entity, may charge any fees not
in the private entity's fee schedule unless ordered by a court or otherwise
required by law.
(7) No employee,
owner, or agent of a private entity that provides probation services may engage
in a romantic or sexual relationship or have any sexual contact with a
probationer. No employee, owner, or agent of the private entity may use his or
her supervisory position or influence to encourage, threaten, or force a
probationer to engage in sexual activity.
(8) All employees, owners, or agents of the
private entity that provides probation services must treat all members of the
court and the probationers under its supervision in a manner consistent with
the Code of Professional Conduct set forth herein. Examples of unprofessional
treatment include, but are not limited to:
(a)
Engaging in abusive, aggressive, hostile, or disrespectful conduct towards
probationers or members of the court;
(b) Engaging in fraudulent or misleading
behavior;
(c) Giving any false
impression of arrest authority through the use of one's title or position with
the private entity;
(d) Collecting
any money from probationers in excess of the private entity's fee schedule
unless ordered by a court or otherwise required by law; and
(e) Engaging in harassment or discrimination
based on race, national origin, gender, age, sexual orientation, or ability to
pay.
Notes
Authority: T.C.A. §§ 16-3-902, 16-3-909, 40-35-302(g), and 40-35-302(g)(1)(H) and (I).
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