Wis. Admin. Code Department of Corrections DOC 303.84 - Due process hearing: witnesses
(1) The accused
inmate may make a request to the security director for no more than two
identified witnesses in addition to the reporting employee and shall explain
the relevance of the witness testimony. The inmate shall make this request
within two days of the service of notice of major disciplinary hearing rights.
The security director may waive the two day time limit for good
cause.
(2) After all witness
requests have been received, the security director shall review them to
determine whether the witnesses possess relevant information and shall be
called.
(3) Written witness
statements shall only be accepted if approved by the hearing officer. The
hearing officer may consider a legibly printed written statement limited to 500
words on no more than two sheets of paper, a transcript of an oral statement,
or a recorded statement.
(4)
Witnesses requested by the accused who are staff or inmates shall attend the
disciplinary hearing unless one of the following exists:
(a) The risk of harm to the witness if the
witness testifies.
(b) The witness
is unavailable. Unavailability means death, transfer, release, hospitalization,
or escape in the case of an inmate; unavailability means death, illness,
vacation, no longer being employed at that location, or being on a different
shift in the case of an employee.
(c) The testimony is irrelevant to the
question of guilt or innocence.
(d)
The testimony is merely cumulative of other evidence and would unduly prolong
the hearing.
(5) If the
security director finds that testifying would pose a risk of harm to the
witness, the hearing officer may consider a confidential statement signed under
oath from that witness without revealing the witness's identity or a signed
statement from an employee getting the statement from that witness. The hearing
officer shall reveal the contents of the statement to the accused inmate,
except the hearing officer may edit or summarize the statement to avoid
revealing the identity of the witness. The hearing officer may question a
confidential witness if the witness is available.
(6) The hearing officer may consider written
statements that can be corroborated in one of the following ways:
(a) By other evidence which substantially
corroborates the facts alleged in the statement, including an eyewitness
account by an employee or circumstantial evidence.
(b) By evidence of a very similar violation
by the same inmate.
(c) Two
confidential statements by different persons may be used to corroborate each
other.
(7) If it is not
possible to get a signed statement in accordance with subs. (3) and (5), the
hearing officer may consider other evidence of what the witness would say if
present.
(8) After determining
which witnesses shall be called for the accused inmate, staff shall notify the
inmate of the decision in writing.
(9) Witnesses other than inmates or employees
may not attend hearings but the staff representative with the hearing officer's
permission may contact them. The hearing officer may designate a staff member
to interview the witnesses and report to the hearing officer.
(10) The hearing officer may call additional
witnesses as deemed necessary.
(11)
After a decision has been reached by the hearing officer, and if a finding of
guilt results, the hearing officer shall forward restricted or confidential
information to the security director for retention in a restricted
file.
Notes
State regulations are updated quarterly; we currently have two versions available. Below is a comparison between our most recent version and the prior quarterly release. More comparison features will be added as we have more versions to compare.
No prior version found.