R671-520-1. Treatment of Confidential Testimony


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  •   1. Confidential testimony shall be admitted at an evidentiary hearing on an alleged parole violation.

      2. The State shall make a specific, written preliminary showing of good cause for the testimony to be received in camera.

      3. Upon a finding of good cause for confidentiality, the Board shall conduct an in-camera inspection of the witness, the proffered testimony, and any supporting testimony to determine:

      a. the credibility and veracity of the witness;

      b. the overall reliability of the testimony itself; and

      c. whether keeping the information confidential will substantially impair the parolee's due process rights to notice of the evidence or to confront and cross-examine adverse witnesses.

      4. If the Board is satisfied with the three aspects in Subsection (3), it shall receive the testimony and give it whatever weight it considers appropriate. An electronic record shall be made of this in-camera proceeding.

      5. A summary of the testimony taken in-camera shall be prepared for disclosure to the parolee, informing the parolee of the general nature of the testimony received in-camera but without defeating the good cause found by the Board for treating the information confidentially. This summary shall be presented on the record at the public evidentiary hearing and the parolee shall be given an opportunity to respond.