SELECTED
LEGAL MATERIALS
RELATING TO
THE PUBLIC SAFETY OFFICERS' BENEFITS ACT OF 1976
(GENERALLY
CODIFIED AT
42 U.S.C. CHAPTER 46, SUBCHAPTER XII)
Public Safety Officers' Benefits
Act of 1976 – implementing regulations
(28 C.F.R. pt. 32)
***************************************
PUBLIC SAFETY OFFICERS' DEATH BENEFITS
Pub. L. No. 90‑351, Title I,
Part L
[42 U.S.C.
Chapter 46, Subchapter XII]
Sec.
1201 [§ 3796] [Payment
of death benefits]
1202 [§ 3796a] [Limitation
on benefits]
1205 [§ 3796c] [Administrative
provisions]
[§ 3796c‑2] [Use
of funds for appeals and expenses of representation of hearing examiner]
Sec.
1212 [§ 3796d‑1] Basic eligibility
1213 [§ 3796d‑2] Applications; approval
1215 [§ 3796d‑4] Discontinuation for unsatisfactory conduct
or progress
1218 [§ 3796d‑7] Authorization of appropriations
Pub. L.
No. 90‑351, Title I, Part L, Subpart 1
[42 U.S.C. Chapter 46, Subchapter XII,
Part A]
42 U.S.C. § 3796 Sec. 1201 [Payment of death benefits]
(a) In
any case in which the Bureau of Justice Assistance
(hereinafter in this part [subchapter] referred to as the "Bureau") determines, under regulations
issued pursuant to this part [subchapter]
that a public safety officer has died as the direct and proximate result of a personal injury sustained in the line of duty,
the Bureau shall pay a benefit
of $250,000, adjusted in accordance with subsection (h),
as follows:
(1) if there is no surviving child of such officer, to
the surviving spouse of such officer;
(2) if there is a surviving child
or children and a surviving spouse, one‑half to
the surviving child or children of such officer
in equal shares and one‑half to the surviving spouse;
(3) if there is no surviving spouse, to the child or children of such
officer in equal shares;
(4) if there is no surviving spouse
or surviving child—
(A) in
the case of a claim made on or after the date that is 90 days after the date of enactment of this subparagraph, to the individual designated by such officer
as beneficiary under this section in such
officer's most recently executed designation
of beneficiary on file at the time of death
with such officer's public safety agency,
organization, or unit, provided that such individual survived such officer; or
(B) if
there is no individual qualifying under subparagraph (A), to the
individual designated by such officer
as beneficiary under such officer's
most recently executed life insurance policy on file at the time of death with such officer's public safety agency, organization, or unit,
provided that such individual survived such officer; or
(5) if none
of the above, to the parent or parents
of such officer in equal shares.
(6) The public
safety agency, organization, or unit responsible for maintaining on file an
executed designation of beneficiary or recently executed life insurance policy pursuant
to paragraph (4) shall maintain the
confidentiality of such designation or policy in the same manner as it
maintains personnel or other similar records of the
officer.
(b) In
accordance with regulations issued pursuant to this
part [subchapter], in any
case in which the Bureau determines that a public
safety officer has become permanently and totally
disabled as the direct result of a catastrophic injury sustained in the line of duty, the Bureau shall pay,
to the extent that appropriations are provided, the same benefit in any year that is payable
under subsection (a) in such year, adjusted in
accordance with subsection (h), to such officer: Provided, That the total annual benefits
paid under this subsection may not exceed
$5,000,000. For the purposes of making these
benefit payments, there are authorized to be appropriated for each fiscal year
such sums as may be necessary: Provided further, That these benefit
payments are subject to the availability of appropriations and that each beneficiary's
payment shall be reduced by a proportionate share to the extent that sufficient
funds are not appropriated.
(c) Whenever
the Bureau determines
upon showing of need and prior to final action
that the death of a public safety officer is one with respect to which
a benefit will probably be paid, the Bureau may
make an interim benefit payment not exceeding
$3,000 to the individual entitled to receive a benefit under subsection (a) of this
section.
(d) The
amount of an interim payment under subsection (c) shall be deducted from the amount
of any final benefit paid to such individual.
(e) Where
there is no final benefit paid, the recipient of any interim
payment under subsection (c) shall be
liable for repayment of such amount. The Bureau
may waive all or part of such repayment, considering for this purpose the
hardship which would result from such repayment.
(f) The benefit payment under this
part [subchapter], shall
be in addition to any other benefit that may be due from any other source,
except—
(1) payments authorized by section 12(k) of the Act of
September 1, 1916, as amended [D.C. Code,
sec. 5‑716]; or
(2) benefits authorized by section 8191 of title 5, United States Code. Such beneficiaries shall only receive
benefits under such section 8191 that are in excess of the benefits
received under this
part [subchapter].
(g) No benefit paid under this part [subchapter] shall be subject
to execution or attachment.
(h) On
October 1 of each fiscal year beginning after the effective date of this subsection, the Bureau
shall adjust the level of the benefit payable immediately
before such October 1 under subsection (a),
to reflect the annual percentage change in the Consumer Price Index for All
Urban Consumers, published by the Bureau of Labor Statistics, occurring in the
1‑year period ending on June 1 immediately preceding such
October 1.
(i) The amount payable
under subsection (a) with respect to the death of a public safety
officer shall be the amount payable under subsection (a) as of the
date of death of such officer.
(j)(1) No benefit is
payable under this
part [subchapter] with
respect to the death of a public safety officer if a benefit is paid under this part [subchapter] with respect to the disability of such
officer.
(2) No benefit
is payable under this
part [subchapter] with
respect to the disability of a public safety officer if a benefit is payable under this part [subchapter] with respect to the death of such public
safety officer.
(k) For
purposes of this section, if a public safety officer dies as the direct
and proximate result of a heart attack or stroke,
that officer shall be presumed to have died as the direct and proximate result of a personal
injury sustained in the line of duty, if—
(1) that officer,
while on duty—
(A) engaged
in a situation, and such engagement
involved nonroutine stressful or strenuous
physical law enforcement, fire suppression, rescue,
hazardous material response, emergency medical services, prison security, disaster
relief, or other emergency response
activity; or
(B) participated
in a training exercise, and such participation
involved nonroutine stressful or
strenuous physical activity;
(2) that officer
died as a result of a heart attack or stroke
suffered—
(A) while engaging
or participating as
described under paragraph (1);
(B) while still on that duty
after so engaging or participating; or
(C) not later than 24 hours after so engaging or participating; and
(3) such presumption
is not overcome by competent
medical evidence to the contrary.
(l) For purposes of subsection (k),
"nonroutine stressful or strenuous
physical" excludes actions of a clerical, administrative, or nonmanual
nature.
(m) The
Bureau may suspend or end collection action on an amount disbursed
pursuant to a statute enacted retroactively or otherwise disbursed in error
under subsection (a) or (c), where such collection would be impractical, or
would cause undue hardship to a debtor who acted in good faith.
42 U.S.C § 3796a Sec. 1202 [Limitations on benefits]
No
benefit shall be paid under this part [subchapter]—
(1) if the death
or catastrophic injury was caused
by the intentional misconduct of the public safety officer
or by such officer's intention to bring about his death
or catastrophic injury;
(2) if the public safety officer was voluntarily intoxicated at the
time of his death or catastrophic injury;
(3) if the public safety officer was performing his duties in a grossly
negligent manner at the time of his death
or catastrophic injury;
(4) to any individual
who would otherwise be entitled to a benefit under this part [subchapter] if such
individual's actions were a substantial
contributing factor to the death or catastrophic injury of the public safety officer; or
(5) with respect to any individual employed in a capacity other than a civilian capacity.
42 U.S.C. § 3796a‑1 Sec. 1203 [National
programs for families of public safety officers who have died in line of duty]
The Director is authorized to use no less than $150,000 of the
funds appropriated for this
part [subchapter] to
maintain and enhance national peer support and counseling programs to assist
families of public safety officers who
have died in the line
of duty.
42 U.S.C. § 3796b Sec. 1204 [Definitions]
As
used in this
part [subchapter]—
(1) "catastrophic
injury" means consequences [sic] of an injury that permanently
prevent an individual from performing any gainful work;
(2) " chaplain"
includes any individual serving as an officially
recognized or designated member of a legally organized volunteer fire
department or legally organized police department, or an officially recognized or designated public
employee of a legally organized fire or police department who was
responding to a fire, rescue, or police
emergency;
(3) "child"
means any natural, illegitimate,
adopted, or posthumous
child or stepchild of a deceased public
safety officer who, at the time of the public
safety officer's death, is—
(i) 18 years of age
or under;
(ii) over 18 years of age and
a student as defined in section 8101
of title 5, United States Code; or
(iii) over 18 years of age and incapable of self‑support because of physical or
mental disability;
(4) "firefighter"
includes an individual serving as an officially
recognized or designated member of a legally organized volunteer fire
department;
(5) "intoxication"
means a disturbance of mental
or physical faculties resulting from the introduction of alcohol
into the body as evidenced by—
(i) a post‑mortem blood alcohol level of .20 per
centum or greater; or
(ii) a post‑mortem blood
alcohol level of at least .10 per centum but less than .20 per centum
unless the Bureau receives convincing evidence that the public safety officer was not acting in an
intoxicated manner immediately prior to his death;
or
resulting from drugs or other substances
in the body;
(6) "law enforcement officer" means an
individual involved in crime and
juvenile delinquency control or reduction, or enforcement of the criminal laws (including juvenile delinquency),
including, but not limited to, police, corrections,
probation, parole, and judicial officers;
(7) "member
of a rescue squad or ambulance crew" means an officially recognized or designated public
employee member of a rescue squad
or ambulance crew;
(8) "public
agency" means the United States, any State of the United States, the District of
Columbia, the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, the Virgin Islands of the United
States, Guam, American Samoa, the Trust Territory of the Pacific Islands, the
Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands, and any territory or possession
of the United States, or any unit of local government,
department, agency, or instrumentality of any of the foregoing; and
(9) "public
safety officer" means—
(A) an individual serving a public agency in an official
capacity, with or without compensation, as a law enforcement officer, as a firefighter, as a chaplain,
or as a member of a rescue squad or
ambulance crew;
(B) an employee
of the Federal Emergency Management Agency who is performing official duties of the Agency in an
area, if those official duties—
(i) are related to a
major disaster or emergency that has been, or is later, declared to exist with
respect to the area under the Robert T. Stafford
Disaster Relief and Emergency Assistance Act; and
(ii) are determined by the
Director of the Federal Emergency Management Agency to be hazardous duties; or
(C) an
employee of a State, local, or tribal emergency
management or civil defense agency who is performing official duties in cooperation with the Federal
Emergency Management Agency in an area, if those
official duties—
(i) are related to a
major disaster or emergency that has been, or is later, declared to exist with
respect to the area under the Robert T.
Stafford Disaster Relief and Emergency Assistance Act; and
(ii) are determined by the head
of the agency to be hazardous
duties.
42 U.S.C. § 3796c Sec. 1205 [Administrative provisions]
(a) The
Bureau is authorized to establish such rules,
regulations, and procedures as may be necessary to
carry out the purposes of this part [subchapter].
Such rules, regulations, and procedures will be determinative of
conflict of laws issues arising under this part [subchapter]. Rules, regulations,
and procedures issued under this part [subchapter]
may include regulations governing the recognition of agents or
other persons representing claimants under this part [subchapter] before the Bureau.
The Bureau may prescribe the maximum fees which may be
charged for services performed in connection with any claim under this part
[subchapter] before the Bureau, and
any agreement in violation of such rules and regulations shall be void.
(b) In making determinations
under section 1201 the Bureau may utilize such administrative and
investigative assistance as may be available from State
and local agencies. Responsibility for making final
determinations shall rest with the Bureau.
(c) Notwithstanding any other provision of law,
the Bureau is authorized to use appropriated funds to conduct appeals of public
safety officers' death and disability
claims.
42 U.S.C. § 3796c‑1 Expedited
payment for public safety officers involved in the prevention, investigation,
rescue, or recovery efforts related to a terrorist attack
(a) In general. Notwithstanding
the limitations of subsection (b) of section 1201
or the provisions of subsections (c), (d), and (e) of such
section or section 1202 of title I of the Omnibus Crime Control and Safe Streets
Act of 1968, upon certification (containing
identification of all eligible payees of benefits
pursuant to section 1201 of such Act) by a public
agency that a public safety officer employed by such
agency was killed or suffered a catastrophic injury producing permanent and total disability
as a direct and proximate result of a personal injury sustained
in the line of duty as described in section 1201 of such Act in
connection with prevention, investigation, rescue,
or recovery efforts related to a terrorist attack,
the Director of the Bureau of Justice Assistance shall authorize payment to qualified
beneficiaries, said payment to be made not later than 30 days after
receipt of such certification, benefits [sic]
described under subpart 1 of part L of [title I of] such Act.
(b) Definitions. For purposes of this
section, the terms "catastrophic injury",
"public agency", and "public safety officer" have the same
meanings given such terms in section 1204
of title I of the Omnibus Crime Control and Safe
Streets Act of 1968.
42
[On and
after December 26, 2007], funds available to conduct appeals under section 1205(c)
of [title I of the Omnibus Crime Control and Safe Streets Act of 1968],
which includes all claims processing, shall be available also for the same
under subpart 2 of . . . part L [of such title I] and under any statute authorizing payment of benefits
described under subpart 1 thereof,
and for appeals from final decisions
of the Bureau (under such part or any such statute) to the
Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit, which shall have exclusive
jurisdiction thereof (including those, and any related matters, pending), and for expenses of representation of hearing examiners (who shall be presumed
irrebuttably to enjoy quasi-judicial immunity in the discharge of their duties under such part or any such
statute) in connection with litigation against them arising from such discharge.
EDUCATIONAL ASSISTANCE TO DEPENDENTS OF PUBLIC SAFETY
OFFICERS KILLED OR DISABLED IN THE LINE OF DUTY
Pub. L. No. 90-351, Title I, Part L, Subpart 2
[42 U.S.C. Chapter 46, subchapter XII, Part B]
42 U.S.C. § 3796d Sec. 1211 Purposes
The
purposes of this subpart [this part of this subchapter] are—
(1) to enhance the appeal of service in public safety agencies;
(2) to extend the benefits of higher
education to qualified and deserving persons who, by virtue of the death of or total
disability of an eligible officer,
may not be able to afford it otherwise; and
(3) to allow the family members of eligible officers to attain the
vocational and educational status which they would have attained had a parent or spouse
not been killed or disabled in the line of duty.
42 U.S.C. § 3796d‑1 Sec. 1212 Basic eligibility
(a) Benefits.
(1) Subject to the availability of
appropriations, the Attorney General shall provide financial assistance to a dependent
who attends a program of education and is—
(A) the child of any
eligible public safety officer under subpart 1; or
(B) the spouse
of an officer described in subparagraph
(A) at the time of the officer's death or on the date of a totally and permanently
disabling injury.
(2) Except as provided in paragraph (3), financial
assistance under this
subpart [this part of this subchapter]
shall consist of direct payments to an eligible dependent and shall be computed on the
basis set forth in section 3532 of
title 38, United States Code.
(3) The financial
assistance referred to in paragraph (2)
shall be reduced by the sum of—
(A) the amount of educational assistance benefits from
other Federal, State, or local governmental sources to [sic] which the eligible dependent would otherwise be entitled to
receive; and
(B) the amount, if any, determined under section 1214(b).
(b) Duration
of benefits. No dependent
shall receive assistance under this subpart [this part of this subchapter]
for a period in excess of forty‑five months of full‑time education
or training or a proportional period of time for a part‑time program.
(c) Age
limitation for dependent children. No dependent child
shall be eligible for assistance under this
subpart [this part of this subchapter]
after the child's 27th birthday absent a finding by the Attorney General of extraordinary circumstances precluding the
child from pursuing a program of education.
42 U.S.C. § 3796d‑2 Sec. 1213 Applications; approval
(a) Application.
A person seeking assistance
under this
subpart [this part of this subchapter]
shall submit an application
to the Attorney General in such form and containing such
information as the Attorney General reasonably may require.
(b) Approval. The Attorney General
shall approve an application
for assistance under this subpart [this part of this subchapter]
unless the Attorney General finds that—
(1) the dependent
is not eligible for, is no longer eligible for, or is not entitled to the assistance for which application
is made;
(2) the dependent's
selected educational institution fails to meet a requirement under this
subpart [this part of this subchapter]
for eligibility;
(3) the dependent's
enrollment in or pursuit of the educational program selected would fail to meet
the criteria established in this subpart [this part of this subchapter] for programs; or
(4) the dependent
already is qualified by previous education or training for the educational,
professional, or vocational objective for which the educational
program is offered.
(c) Notification. The Attorney General
shall notify a dependent
applying for assistance
under this
subpart [this part of this subchapter]
of approval or disapproval of the application in writing.
42 U.S.C. § 3796d‑3 Sec. 1214 Regulations
(a) In general. The Attorney General may promulgate reasonable and necessary regulations to implement this subpart [this part of this subchapter].
(b) Sliding
scale. Notwithstanding section 1213(b), the Attorney
General shall issue regulations regarding
the use of a sliding scale based on financial need
to ensure that an eligible dependent who is in
financial need receives priority in receiving funds under this
subpart [this part of this subchapter].
42 U.S.C. § 3796d‑4 Sec. 1215 Discontinuation for unsatisfactory conduct or
progress
The Attorney General may discontinue assistance
under this
subpart [this part of this subchapter]
when the Attorney General finds that, according to the regularly prescribed
standards and practices of the educational
institution, the recipient fails to maintain satisfactory progress as
described in section 484(c) of the Higher
Education Act of 1965.
42 U.S.C. § 3796d‑5 Sec. 1216
Special rule
(a) Retroactive
eligibility. Notwithstanding any other
provision of law, each dependent of a Federal law enforcement officer killed in the line of duty on or after January 1, 1978, and each dependent of a public safety officer killed in the line of
duty on or after January 1, 1978, shall be
eligible for assistance under this subpart [this part of this subchapter],
subject to the other limitations of this subpart [this part of this subchapter].
(b) Retroactive assistance. The Attorney General may provide retroactive assistance to dependents
eligible under this section for each
month in which the dependent pursued a program of education
at an eligible educational institution. The Attorney General shall apply the
limitations contained in this subpart [this part of this subchapter] to retroactive assistance.
(c) Prospective
assistance. The Attorney
General may provide prospective assistance to dependents eligible under this section on the same basis as assistance
to dependents otherwise eligible. In
applying the limitations on assistance under this subpart [this part of this subchapter],
the Attorney General shall include assistance provided retroactively. A dependent eligible under this section may
waive retroactive assistance and apply only for prospective assistance on the
same basis as dependents otherwise eligible.
42 U.S.C. § 3796d‑6 Sec. 1217 Definitions
For
purposes of this
subpart [this part of this subchapter]:
(1) The term "Attorney
General" means the Attorney General of the
(2) The term "program of education" means any curriculum or
any combination of unit courses or subjects pursued at an eligible educational institution, which
generally is accepted as necessary to fulfill requirements for the attainment
of a predetermined and identified educational, professional, or vocational
objective. It includes course work for
the attainment of more than one objective if in addition to the previous
requirements, all the objectives generally are recognized as reasonably related
to a single career field.
(3) The term "eligible educational institution" means
an institution which—
(A) is described in section 481
of the Higher Education Act of 1965, as in effect on the date of the
enactment of this section [i.e., Oct. 3,
1996]; and
(B) is eligible to participate in programs
under title IV of such Act.
42 U.S.C. § 3796d‑7 Sec. 1218 Authorization of appropriations
There
are authorized to be appropriated to carry out this subpart [this part of this subchapter]
such sums as may be necessary.
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Part 32 ‑ PUBLIC
SAFETY OFFICERS' DEATH, DISABILITY, AND EDUCATIONAL ASSISTANCE BENEFIT CLAIMS
Sec.
Subpart A ‑ General
Provisions
Sec.
32.2 Computation of time; filing.
32.4 Terms; construction, severability.
32.7 Fees for representative services.
32.8 Exhaustion of administrative remedies.
Subpart B ‑ Death
Benefit Claims
Sec.
32.14 PSOB Office determination.
32.15 Prerequisite certification.
32.17 Request for Hearing Officer determination.
Subpart C ‑ Disability
Benefit Claims
Sec.
32.24 PSOB Office determination.
32.25 Prerequisite certification.
32.27 Motion for reconsideration of negative disability
finding.
32.28 Reconsideration of negative disability
finding.
32.29 Request for Hearing Officer determination.
Subpart D ‑ Educational
Assistance Benefit Claims
Sec.
32.34 PSOB Office determination.
32.37 Request for Hearing Officer determination.
Subpart E ‑ Hearing
Officer Determinations
Sec.
32.42 Time for filing request for determination.
32.43 Appointment and assignment of Hearing Officers.
32.44 Hearing Officer determination.
Subpart F ‑ Director
Appeals & Reviews
Sec.
32.52 Time for filing Director appeal.
Authority
42 U.S.C.
ch. 46, subch. XII; 42 U.S.C. 3782(a),
3787, 3788, 3791(a), 3793(a)(4)
& (b), 3795a,
3796c‑1, 3796c‑2;
sec. 1601, title XI, Pub. L. 90‑351,
82 Stat. 239; secs. 4
through 6, Pub. L. 94‑430,
90 Stat. 1348; secs. 1 and 2, Pub. L. 107‑37,
115 Stat. 219.
This part implements the Act,
which, as a general matter, authorizes the payment of three different legal
gratuities:
(a) Death benefits;
(b) Disability benefits; and
(c) Educational assistance benefits.
Subpart A ‑ General Provisions
§ 32.1 Scope of subpart.
This subpart contains provisions generally applicable
to this part.
§ 32.2 Computation
of time; filing.
(a) In
computing any period of time prescribed or allowed, the day of the act, event,
or default from which the designated period of time begins to run shall not be
included. The last day of the period so
computed shall be included, unless it is a Saturday, a Sunday, or a federal
legal holiday, or, when the act to be done is a filing
with the PSOB Office, a day on which weather or other
conditions have caused that Office to be closed or inaccessible, in which event
the period runs until the end of the next day that is not one of the
aforedescribed days.
(b) A
filing is deemed filed with the PSOB
Office, a Hearing Officer, the Director, or any
other OJP office, ‑officer, ‑employee,
or ‑agent, only on the day that it actually is received at the office of
the same. When a filing is prescribed to
be filed with more than one of the foregoing, it shall be deemed filed as of
the day the last such one so receives it.
(c) Notice
is served by the PSOB Office upon an individual on
the day that it is—
(1) Mailed, by
(2) Delivered to a courier or other
delivery service, addressed to the individual (or to his representative) at his
(or his representative's) last address known to such Office; or
(3) Sent by electronic means such as
telefacsimile or electronic mail, addressed to the individual (or to his
representative) at his (or his representative's) last telefacsimile number or
electronic-mail address, or other electronic address, known to such Office.
(d) In
the event of withdrawal or abandonment of a filing, the
time periods prescribed for the filing thereof shall not be tolled, unless, for
good cause shown, the Director grants a waiver.
(e) No
claim may be filed (or approved) under the Act, at 42 U.S.C. 3796(a)
or (b), with respect to an injury,
if a claim under the Act, at 42 U.S.C. 3796c‑1
or Public
Law 107‑37, has been approved, with respect to the
same injury.
(f) No
claim may be filed (or approved) under the Act, at 42 U.S.C. 3796c‑1
or Public
Law 107‑37, with respect to an injury,
if a claim under the Act, at 42 U.S.C. 3796(a)
or (b), has been approved, with respect to the
same injury.
Act means the Public
Safety Officers' Benefits Act of 1976 (generally codified at 42 U.S.C. 3796, et seq.; part L of title I of
the Omnibus Crime Control and Safe Streets Act of 1968) (including (uncodified) sections 4 through 6 thereof (payment in
advance of appropriations, rule of construction and severability, and effective date
and applicability)), as applicable
(cf. § 32.4(d)) according to its effective date and those of its
various amendments (e.g., Sept. 29, 1976 (deaths of State and local law enforcement officers and firefighters); Jan. 1, 1978 (educational assistance (officer died)); Oct. 1, 1984 (deaths of federal law enforcement officers and firefighters);
Oct. 18, 1986 (deaths of rescue squad and ambulance crew members); Nov. 29, 1990 (disabilities); Oct. 3,
1996 (educational assistance (officer disabled)); Oct. 30, 2000 (disaster relief
workers); Sept. 11, 2001 (chaplains and insurance beneficiaries); Dec. 15, 2003 (certain heart attacks
and strokes); and Apr. 5, 2006 (designated beneficiaries)); and also includes Public Law 107‑37 and section 611 of the USA PATRIOT
Act (both of which
relate to payment of benefits, described under subpart 1 of such part L, in connection, respectively,
with the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, or with such terrorist attacks as may occur after Oct. 26, 2001), as well as the proviso under the Public
Safety Officers Benefits heading in title II of
division B of section 6 of Public Law 110‑161.
Adopted child —
An individual is an adopted child of a public
safety officer
only if—
(1) The individual is legally adopted by the officer; or
(2) As of the injury
date, and not being a stepchild, the individual
was—
(i) Known by the officer not to be his biological
first-generation offspring; and
(ii) After the officer obtained such knowledge, in a parent-child
relationship with him.
Authorized commuting
means travel (not being described in the Act,
at 42 U.S.C. 3796a(1), and not being
a frolic or detour) by a public
safety officer—
(1) In the course of actually responding
(as authorized) to a fire‑, rescue‑,
or police emergency, or to a particular and extraordinary request (by the public agency he serves) for that specific officer to perform public safety activity (including emergency response activity the agency is
authorized to perform), within his line of duty; or
(2) Between home and work (at a situs (for
the performance of line of duty activity or
action) authorized or required by the public agency he serves), or
between any such authorized or required situs and another—
(i) Using a vehicle
provided by such agency,
pursuant to a requirement or authorization by such agency that he use the same
for commuting; or
(ii) Using
a vehicle not provided by such
agency, pursuant to a requirement by such agency that he use the same for
work.
Biological means
genetic, but does not include circumstances where the genetic donation (under
the laws of the jurisdiction where the offspring is conceived) does not (as of
the time of such conception) legally confer parental rights and ‑obligations.
BJA means the Bureau of Justice Assistance, OJP.
Cause — A death, injury,
or disability is caused by intentional misconduct
if—
(1) The
misconduct is a substantial factor in
bringing it about; and
(2) It is a reasonably foreseeable result
of the misconduct.
Certification
means a formal assertion of a fact (or facts),
in a writing that is—
(1) Expressly intended to be relied upon by
the PSOB determining official in
connection with the determination of a claim
specifically identified therein;
(2) Expressly directed to the PSOB determining official;
(3) Legally subject to the provisions of 18 U.S.C. 1001 (false statements) and 1621 (perjury), and 28 U.S.C. 1746
(declarations under penalty of perjury), and expressly declares the same to be
so;
(4) Executed by a natural person with
knowledge of the fact (or facts) asserted
and with legal authority to execute the writing (such as to make the assertion
legally that of the certifying party), and expressly declares the same (as to
knowledge and authority) to be so;
(5) In such form as the Director
may prescribe from time to time;
(6) True, complete, and accurate (or, at a
minimum, not known or believed by the PSOB
determining official to contain any material falsehood, incompleteness, or
inaccuracy); and
(7) Unambiguous, precise, and unequivocal,
in the judgment of the PSOB determining
official, as to any fact asserted,
any matter otherwise certified, acknowledged, indicated, or declared, and
any provision of this definition.
Certification
described in the Act, at 42 U.S.C. 3796c‑1 or Public Law 107‑37 means a certification,
acknowledging all the matter specified in § 32.5(f)(1) and (2)—
(1) In which the fact (or facts) asserted is the matter
specified in § 32.5(f)(3);
(2) That expressly indicates that all of
the terms used in making the assertion
described in paragraph (1) of this definition (or used in connection with
such assertion) are within the meaning of the Act,
at 42 U.S.C. 3796c‑1 or Public
Law 107‑37, and of this
part; and
(3) That otherwise satisfies the provisions
of the Act, at 42 U.S.C. 3796c‑1
or Public
Law 107‑37, and of this
part.
Chaplain
means a clergyman, or other
individual trained in pastoral counseling, who meets the definition provided in
the Act, at 42 U.S.C. 3796b(2).
Child of a public safety officer means an
individual—
(1) Who—
(i) Meets the definition
provided in the Act, at 42 U.S.C. 3796b(3),
in any claim—
(A) Arising from the public safety officer's death, in which the death was simultaneous (or
practically simultaneous) with the injury; or
(B) Filed after the public
safety officer's death, in which the
claimant is the officer's—
(1) Biological child, born
after the injury date;
(2) Adopted child,
adopted by him after the injury date; or
(3) Stepchild, pursuant
to a marriage entered into by him after the injury date; or
(ii) In any claim not described in paragraph (1)(i) of this definition—
(A) Meets (as of the injury
date) the definition provided in the Act,
at 42 U.S.C. 3796b(3), mutatis mutandis
(i.e., with "deceased" and "death" being substituted, respectively, by "deceased
or disabled" and "injury"); or
(B) Having been born after the injury date, is described in paragraph (1)(i)(B)(1), (2), or (3) of this definition; and
(2) With respect to whom the public safety officer's parental rights have not been terminated, as of the injury date.
Commonly
accepted means generally agreed upon within the medical
profession.
Consequences
of an injury that permanently prevent an individual from performing any gainful
work means an injury whose
consequences permanently prevent an
individual from performing any gainful work.
Convincing evidence
means clear and convincing evidence.
Crime means an act or omission punishable as a criminal
misdemeanor or felony.
Criminal laws means that body of law that
declares what acts or omissions are crimes and prescribes
the punishment that may be imposed for the same.
Department or agency —
An entity is a department or agency within the meaning of the Act, at 42 U.S.C. 3796b(8),
and this part, only if the entity is—
(1) A court;
(2) An agency described in the Act, at 42 U.S.C. 3796b(9)(B)
or (C); or
(3) Otherwise a public entity—
(i) That is legally an
express part of the internal organizational structure of the relevant
government;
(ii) That has no legal
existence independent of such government; and
(iii) Whose obligations, acts,
omissions, officers, and employees are legally those of
such government.
Determination means the approval or
denial of a claim (including an affirmance or reversal pursuant to a motion for reconsideration under § 32.27), the determination described in the Act, at 42 U.S.C. 3796(c),
or any recommendation under § 32.54(c)(3).
Director means the Director of BJA.
Direct and
proximate cause —
Except as may be provided in the Act, at 42 U.S.C. 3796(k), something directly and
proximately causes a wound, condition, or cardiac-event,
if it is a substantial factor in bringing the
wound, condition, or cardiac-event about.
Direct and proximate result of an injury — Except as may be provided in the Act,
at 42 U.S.C. 3796(k), a death or
disability results directly and proximately from an injury
if the injury is a substantial factor in
bringing it about.
Disaster
relief activity means activity or an action encompassed within the
duties described in the Act, at 42 U.S.C. 3796b(9)(B)
or (C).
Disaster relief worker
means any individual who meets the definition provided in the Act, at 42 U.S.C. 3796b(9)(B)
or (C).
Disturbance includes any significant
and negative alteration, any significant negative deviation from the
objectively normal, or any significant deterioration.
Divorce means a legally-valid divorce from the bond of
wedlock (i.e., the bond of marriage), except that,
otherwise, and notwithstanding any other provision of law, a spouse
(or purported spouse) of an individual shall be
considered to be divorced from that individual within the meaning of this definition if, subsequent to his marriage (or
purported marriage) to that individual (and while that individual is living), the
spouse (or purported spouse)—
(1) Holds himself out as being divorced
from, or not being married to, the individual;
(2) Holds himself out as being married to
another individual; or
(3) Was a party to a ceremony purported by
the parties thereto to be a marriage between the spouse
(or purported spouse) and another individual.
Drugs or other substances
means controlled substances within the meaning of the drug control and
enforcement laws, at 21 U.S.C. 802(6).
Educational/academic
institution means an institution whose primary purpose is
educational or academic learning.
Eligible
payee means—
(1) An individual (other than the officer) described in the Act, at 42 U.S.C. 3796(a),
with respect to a claim under subpart B of this part; or
(2) An individual described in the Act, at 42 U.S.C. 3796(b),
with respect to a claim under subpart C of this part.
Emergency
medical services
means—
(1) Provision of first-response emergency
medical care (other than in a permanent medical-care facility); or
(2) Transportation of persons in medical
distress (or under emergency conditions) to medical-care facilities.
Emergency
response activity means response to a fire‑, rescue‑, or police
emergency.
Employed by a
public agency — A public safety officer is employed, within
the meaning of the Act, at 42 U.S.C. 3796c‑1 or Public
Law 107‑37, by a public
agency, when he—
(1) Is employed
by the agency in a civilian capacity; and
(2) Is—
(i) Serving the agency in an official
capacity (with respect to officers
of any kind but disaster
relief workers); or
(ii) Performing official duties as described in the Act, at 42 U.S.C. 3796b(9)(B)
or (C) (with respect to disaster relief workers).
Employee does not include—
(1) Any independent
contractor; or
(2) Any individual who is not eligible to
receive death or disability benefits from the purported employer on the same
basis as a regular employee of such employer would.
Employment in
a civilian capacity refers to status as a civilian, rather than to the
performance of civilian functions.
Filing means any claim, request, motion, election, petition,
or appeal, and any item or matter (e.g., evidence,
certifications, authorizations, waivers,
legal arguments, or lists) that is, or may be, filed
with the PSOB Office.
Fire
protection means—
(2) Hazardous-material
response; or
(3) Emergency
medical services or rescue activity of the
kind performed by firefighters.
Fire‑,
rescue‑, or police emergency includes
disaster-relief emergency.
Firefighter means an individual who—
(1) Is trained in—
(i) Suppression of fire; or
(ii) Hazardous-material
response; and
(2) Has the legal authority and ‑responsibility
to engage in the suppression of fire, as—
(i) An employee
of the public agency he serves,
which legally recognizes him to have such (or, at a minimum, does not deny (or
has not denied) him to have such); or
(ii) An individual otherwise
included within the definition provided in the Act,
at 42 U.S.C. 3796b(4).
Functionally
within or ‑part of — No
individual shall be understood to be functionally within or ‑part of a public agency solely by virtue of an independent contractor relationship.
Gross negligence means great, heedless, wanton, indifferent, or
reckless departure from ordinary care, prudence, diligence, or safe practice—
(1) In the presence of serious risks that
are known or obvious;
(2) Under circumstances where it is highly
likely that serious harm will follow; or
(3) In situations where a high degree of
danger is apparent.
Hazardous-material response means emergency response to the threatened or
actual release of hazardous materials, where life, property, or the environment
is at significant risk.
Heart attack means—
(1) A myocardial infarction; or
(2) A cardiac-event
(i.e., cessation, interruption,
arrest, or other similar disturbance of heart
function), not included in paragraph (1) of
this definition, that is—
(i) Acute; and
(ii) Directly
and proximately caused by a pathology (or pathological condition) of the
heart or of the coronary arteries.
Illegitimate child — An
individual is an illegitimate child of a public
safety officer only if he is a natural child of the officer, and the officer is not married to the other biological
parent at
(or at any time after) the time of his conception.
Incapable of
self‑support because of physical or mental disability — An
individual is incapable of self-support because of physical or mental
disability if he is under a disability within the meaning of the Social
Security Act, at 42 U.S.C. 423(d)(1)(A),
applicable mutatis mutandis.
Independent contractor includes
any volunteer, servant, employee, contractor, or agent,
of an independent contractor.
Injury means a traumatic physical wound (or a traumatized
physical condition of the body) directly and
proximately caused by external force (such as bullets, explosives, sharp
instruments, blunt objects, or physical blows), chemicals, electricity,
climatic conditions, infectious disease, radiation, virii, or bacteria, but
does not include—
(1) Any occupational
disease; or
(2) Any condition of the body caused or
occasioned by stress or strain.
Injury date — Except with respect to
claims under the Act, at 42 U.S.C. 3796(k)
(where, for purposes of determining beneficiaries under the Act, at 42 U.S.C. 3796(a), it generally means the
time of the heart attack or stroke referred to in the Act, at 42 U.S.C. 3796(k)(2)), injury date means the
time of the line of duty injury that—
(1) Directly
and proximately results in the public
safety officer's death, with respect to a claim under—
(i) Subpart B
of this part; or
(ii) Subpart D
of this part, by virtue of his death; or
(2) Directly
(or directly and proximately) results
in the public safety officer's total and permanent
disability, with respect to a claim under—
(i) Subpart C
of this part; or
(ii) Subpart D
of this part, by virtue of his disability.
Instrumentality means entity, and does
not include any individual, except that no entity shall be considered an
instrumentality within the meaning of the Act,
at 42 U.S.C. 3796b(8), or this part, unless, as of the injury
date,
(1) The entity—
(i) Is legally established,
‑recognized, or ‑organized, such that it has legal
existence; and
(ii) Is so organized and
controlled, and its affairs so conducted, that it operates and acts solely and
exclusively as a functional part of the relevant government, which legally
recognizes it as such (or, at a minimum, does not deny (or has not denied) it
to be such); and
(2) The entity's—
(i) Functions and duties
are solely and exclusively of a public character;
(ii) Services are provided
generally to the public as such government would provide if acting directly
through its public employees (i.e., they are provided without
regard to any particular relationship (such as a subscription) a member of the
public may have with such entity); and
(iii) Acts and omissions are, and are
recognized by such government as (or, at a minimum, not denied by such
government to be), legally—
(A) Those of such government, for purposes
of sovereign immunity; or
(B) The responsibility of such government,
for purposes of tort liability.
Intention — A death,
injury, or disability is brought
about by a public safety officer's
intention if—
(1) An intentional
action or activity of his is a substantial factor in bringing it about; and
(2) It is a reasonably foreseeable result of
the intentional action or activity.
Intentional
action or activity means activity or action (other than line of duty activity or action), including
behavior, that is—
(1) A result of conscious volition, or
otherwise voluntary;
(2) Not a result of legal insanity or of
impulse that is legally and objectively uncontrollable; and
(3) Not performed under legal duress or
legal coercion of the will.
Intentional misconduct —
A public safety officer's action or activity is intentional misconduct
if—
(1) As of the date it is performed,
(A) Is in violation of, or otherwise
prohibited by, any statute, rule, regulation, condition of employment or
service, official mutual-aid agreement, or other law; or
(B) Is contrary to the ordinary, usual, or
customary practice of similarly-situated officers
within the public agency in which he
serves; and
(ii) He knows, or reasonably
should know, that it is so in
violation, prohibited, or contrary; and
(i) Is intentional; and
(ii) Is—
(A) Performed without reasonable
excuse; and
(B) Objectively unjustified.
Involvement — An individual is
involved in crime and juvenile delinquency control or
reduction, or enforcement of the criminal laws
(including juvenile delinquency), only if he is an officer of a public agency and, in that capacity, has legal
authority and ‑responsibility to arrest, apprehend, prosecute,
adjudicate, correct or detain (in a prison or other detention or confinement
facility), or supervise (as a parole or probation officer), persons who are
alleged or found to have violated the criminal laws, and is recognized by such
agency, or the relevant government (or, at a minimum, not denied by such agency,
or the relevant government), to have such authority and responsibility.
Itemized description of representative services
provided — A description of representative services
provided is itemized only when it includes—
(1) The beginning and end dates of the
provision of the services;
(2) An itemization of the services provided
and the amount of time spent in providing them; and
(3) An itemization of the expenses incurred
in connection with the services provided for which reimbursement is sought.
Kinds of public safety officers — The
following are the different kinds of public
safety officers:
(2) Firefighters;
(3) Chaplains;
(4) Members
of rescue squads or ambulance crews; and
Law enforcement means enforcement
of the criminal
laws, including—
(1) Control or reduction of crime
or of juvenile delinquency;
(2) Prosecution or adjudication of
individuals who are alleged or found to have violated such laws;
(3) Prison security activity; and
(4) Supervision of individuals on parole or
probation for having violated such laws.
Line of duty activity or action — Activity or an action is performed in the line
of duty, in the case of a public safety officer who is—
(1) A
law enforcement officer, a firefighter, or a member of a rescue squad or ambulance crew—
(i) Whose
primary function (as applicable) is public safety activity, only if, not being described in the Act, at 42 U.S.C. 3796a(1), and not being a frolic or detour, it is activity or
an action that he is obligated or authorized
by statute, rule, regulation, condition of employment or service, official
mutual-aid agreement, or other law, to perform (including any social,
ceremonial, or athletic functions (or any official training
programs of his public agency) to which he is assigned, or for which he is
compensated), under the auspices of the public
agency he serves, and
such agency (or the relevant government) legally recognizes that activity or
action to have been so obligated or authorized at the time performed (or, at a
minimum, does not deny (or has not denied) it to have been such); or
(ii) Whose
primary function is not public safety
activity, only if, not
being described in the Act, at 42 U.S.C. 3796a(1), and not being a frolic or detour—
(A) It
is activity or an action that he
is obligated or authorized by
statute, rule, regulation, condition of employment or service, official
mutual-aid agreement, or other law, to perform, under the auspices of the public agency he serves, and
such agency (or the relevant government) legally recognizes that activity or
action to have been so obligated or authorized at the time performed (or, at a
minimum, does not deny (or has not denied) it to have been such); and
(B) It
is performed (as applicable) in the course of public safety activity (including emergency response activity the agency is authorized to perform), or taking part
(as a trainer or trainee) in an official
training program of his public agency for such activity, and such agency (or the relevant government) legally recognizes it to
have been such at the time performed (or, at a minimum, does not deny (or has
not denied) it to have been such);
(2) A disaster
relief worker, only if, not being described in the
Act, at 42 U.S.C. 3796a(1), and
not being a frolic or detour, it is disaster relief
activity, and the agency he serves (or the relevant government), being described
in the Act, at 42 U.S.C. 3796b(9)(B)
or (C), legally recognizes
it to have been such at the time performed (or, at a minimum, does not deny (or
has not denied) it to have been such); or
(3) A chaplain,
only if, not being described in the Act, at 42 U.S.C. 3796a(1), and not being a
frolic or detour—
(i) It is activity or an
action that he is obligated or authorized by statute, rule, regulation,
condition of employment or service, official mutual-aid agreement, or other
law, to perform, under the auspices of the public agency he serves,
and such agency (or the relevant government) legally recognizes it to have been
such at the time performed (or, at a minimum, does not deny (or has not denied)
it to have been such); and
(ii) It is performed in the
course of responding to a fire‑, rescue‑,
or police emergency, and such
agency (or the relevant government) legally recognizes it to have been such
at the time performed (or, at a minimum, does not deny (or has not denied) it
to have been such).
Line of duty injury —
An injury is sustained in the line of
duty only if—
(1) It is sustained in the course of—
(i) Performance of line of duty activity or a line of duty action; or
(ii) Authorized commuting; or
(2) Convincing
evidence demonstrates that such injury
resulted from the injured party's status as a public
safety officer.
Mental faculties means brain function.
Natural child —
An individual is a natural child of a public
safety officer only if he is a biological child of the officer, and the officer
is alive at the time of his birth.
Occupational disease
means a disease (including an ailment or condition of the body) that routinely
constitutes a special hazard in, or is commonly regarded as a concomitant of,
an individual's occupation.
Official capacity — An individual serves a public agency in an official capacity only if—
(1) He is officially authorized, ‑recognized,
or ‑designated (by such agency) as functionally within
or ‑part of it; and
(2) His acts and omissions, while so
serving, are legally those of such agency, which legally recognizes them as such (or, at a
minimum, does not deny (or has not denied) them to be such).
Official duties means duties that are
officially authorized, ‑recognized, or ‑designated by an employing
entity, such that the performance of those duties is legally the action of such
entity, which legally recognizes it as such (or, at a minimum, does not deny
(or has not denied) it to be such).
Official
training program of a public safety
officer's public agency means a program—
(1) That is officially sponsored, ‑conducted,
or ‑authorized by the public agency in
which he serves; and
(2) Whose purpose is to train public safety officers of his kind in (or to improve their skills in), specific activity or actions encompassed within their
respective lines of duty.
Officially recognized or designated member of a
department or agency means a member of a department
or agency, or of an instrumentality, of a
government described in the Act, at 42 U.S.C. 3796b(8), who is officially
recognized (or officially designated) as such a member by the same.
Officially recognized or designated public employee of
a department or agency means a public employee
of a department or agency who is officially recognized (or officially
designated) as a public safety officer,
by the same.
Officially
recognized or designated public employee member of a squad or crewr means a public employee member
of a squad or crew who is officially recognized (or officially designated)
as such a public employee member, by the public
agency under whose auspices the squad or crew operates.
OJP means the Office of Justice Programs,
U.S. Department of Justice.
Parent
means a father or a mother.
Parent-child relationship means a relationship between a public
safety officer and another individual, in which the officer has the role of
parent (other than biological
or legally-adoptive), as shown by convincing
evidence.
Performance
of duties in a grossly negligent manner at the time of death or catastrophic injury means gross
negligence, as of or near the injury date, in the course of authorized commuting or performance of line of duty activity or a line of duty action,
where such negligence is a substantial
contributing factor in bringing such death
or injury about.
Posthumous
child — An individual is a posthumous child of a public safety officer only if he is a biological
child of the officer, and the officer is—
(1) Alive at the time of his
conception; and
(2) Deceased at or before the time of his
birth.
Prison
security activity means correctional or detention activity (in a prison
or other detention or confinement facility) of individuals who are alleged or
found to have violated the criminal laws.
PSOB determining official means, as applicable, any of the following:
(1) The PSOB Office;
(2) The Hearing
Officer; or
(3) The Director.
PSOB Office means the unit of BJA that directly administers the
Public Safety Officers' Benefits program, except that, with respect to the
making of any finding, determination, affirmance,
reversal, assignment, authorization, decision, judgment, waiver, or other
ruling, it means such unit, acting with the concurrence of OJP's
General Counsel.
Public employee means—
(1) An
employee of a government described
in the Act,
at 42 U.S.C. 3796b(8),
(or of a department or agency thereof) and
whose acts and omissions while so employed are legally those of such
government, which legally recognizes them as such (or, at a minimum, does not
deny (or has not denied) them to be such); or
(2) An employee of
an instrumentality of a government described in the Act, at 42 U.S.C. 3796b(8),
who is eligible to receive disability benefits (or whose survivors are eligible
to receive death benefits) from such government on the same basis as an employee
of that government (within the meaning of paragraph (1)
of this definition), or his survivors, would.
Public employee member of a squad or crew means a member of a squad or crew who is a public
employee under the auspices of whose public
agency employer the squad or crew operates.
Public employee of a department or agency
means a public employee whose public agency employer is the department or agency.
Public safety
activity means any of the following:
(1) Law
enforcement;
(2) Fire
protection;
(3) Rescue
activity; or
(4) The provision of emergency medical services.
Qualified
beneficiary — An individual is a qualified beneficiary under
the Act, at 42 U.S.C. 3796c‑1
or Public
Law 107‑37, only if he is an eligible payee—
(1) Who qualifies as a beneficiary pursuant
to a final agency determination
that—
(i) The requirements of the Act, at 42 U.S.C. 3796(a)
or (b) (excluding the limitations relating to
appropriations), as applicable, have been met; and
(ii) The provisions of this
part, as applicable, relating to payees otherwise
have been met; and
(2) Whose actions were not a substantial contributing factor to the death of the public safety officer (with respect to a
claim under subpart B of this
part).
Representative
services include expenses incurred in connection with such
services.
Rescue
activity means search or rescue assistance in locating or
extracting from danger persons lost, missing, or in imminent danger of serious
bodily harm.
Rescue
squad or ambulance crew means a squad or crew whose members are rescue
workers, ambulance drivers, paramedics, health-care responders, emergency
medical technicians, or other similar workers, who—
(1) Are trained in rescue
activity or the provision of emergency medical
services; and
(2) As such members, have the legal
authority and ‑responsibility to—
(i) Engage in rescue activity; or
(ii) Provide emergency medical services.
Spouse means an individual's lawful husband,
‑wife, ‑widower, or ‑widow (i.e., with whom the
individual lawfully entered into marriage), and includes a spouse living apart from the individual, other than pursuant
to divorce, except that, notwithstanding any other
provision of law—
(1) For an individual purporting to be a spouse on the basis of a common-law marriage
(or a putative marriage) to be considered a spouse within the
meaning of this definition, it is necessary (but not sufficient) for the jurisdiction of domicile of the parties to recognize such
individual as the lawful spouse of the other; and
(2) In deciding who may be the spouse of a public safety officer—
(i) The relevant jurisdiction of domicile is the officer's (as of the injury
date); and
(ii) With respect to a claim
under subpart B of this
part, the relevant date is that of the officer's
death.
Stepchild — An individual is a stepchild of a public
safety officer only if the individual is the
legally-adoptive or biological first-generation
offspring of a public safety officer's current,
deceased, or former spouse, which offspring (not having been legally adopted
by the officer)—
(1) Was conceived before the marriage
of the officer and the
spouse; and
(2) As of the injury
date—
(i) Was known by the officer not to be his biological
first-generation offspring; and
(ii) After the officer obtained such knowledge—
(A) Received over half of his support from the officer;
(B) Had as his principal place of abode the
home of the officer and was a member of the
officer's household; or
(C) Was in a parent-child relationship with the officer.
Stress or strain
includes physical stress or strain, mental stress or strain, post-traumatic
stress disorder, and depression.
Stroke means
cerebral vascular accident.
Student means an individual who meets the definition provided in the Act, at 42 U.S.C. 3796b(3)(ii),
with respect to an educational/academic institution.
Substantial
contributing factor – A factor substantially
contributes to a death, injury, or disability,
if the factor—
(1) Contributed to the death, injury, or
disability to a significant degree; or
(2) Is a substantial
factor in bringing the death, injury, or disability about.
Substantial factor — A factor
substantially brings about a death, injury, disability, wound, condition, cardiac-event, heart attack, or stroke if—
(1) The
factor alone was sufficient to have caused the death, injury, disability, wound, condition, cardiac-event, heart attack, or stroke; or
(2) No
other factor (or combination of factors) contributed to the death, injury, disability, wound, condition, cardiac-event, heart attack, or stroke to so great a degree as it did.
Suppression of fire
means extinguishment, physical prevention, or containment of fire, including
on-site hazard evaluation.
Terrorist attack — An event or act is a
terrorist attack within the meaning of the Act,
at 42 U.S.C. 3796c‑1(a), only if
the Attorney General determines that—
(1) There is a
reasonable indication that the event or act
was (or would be or would have been, with respect to a priori prevention or investigation efforts) an act of domestic
or international terrorism within the meaning of the
criminal terrorism laws, at 18 U.S.C. 2331; and
(2) The event or act (or the circumstances of death or injury) was of
such extraordinary or cataclysmic character as to make particularized factual
findings impossible, impractical, unnecessary, or unduly burdensome.
Voluntary
intoxication at the time of death or catastrophic injury means the following, as shown by any commonly-accepted tissue, ‑fluid, or ‑breath
test or by other competent evidence:
(1) With respect to alcohol,
(i) In any claim arising
from a public safety officer's
death in which the death was simultaneous (or
practically simultaneous) with the injury, it means intoxication as defined in the Act, at 42 U.S.C. 3796b(5),
unless convincing evidence demonstrates that the
officer did not introduce the alcohol into his body intentionally; and
(ii) In any claim not described
in paragraph (1)(i) of this definition, unless convincing evidence demonstrates that the officer did not introduce the alcohol
into his body intentionally, it
means intoxication—
(A) As defined in the Act, at 42 U.S.C. 3796b(5),
mutatis mutandis (i.e., with "post-mortem"
(each place it occurs) and "death" being
substituted, respectively, by "post-injury" and
"injury"); and
(B) As of the injury date; and
(2) With respect to drugs
or other substances, it means intoxication as defined in the Act, at 42 U.S.C. 3796b(5),
as evidenced by the presence (as of the injury date) in the body of the public
safety officer—
(i) Of any controlled
substance included on Schedule I of the drug control and enforcement laws
(see 21 U.S.C. 812(a)),
or any controlled substance included on Schedule II, III, IV, or V of
such laws (see 21 U.S.C. 812(a))
and with respect to which there is no therapeutic range or maximum recommended
dosage, unless convincing evidence
demonstrates that such introduction was not a culpable act of the officer's under the criminal
laws; or
(ii) Of any controlled
substance included on Schedule II, III, IV, or V of the drug control
and enforcement laws (see 21 U.S.C. 812(a)) and with respect to
which there is a therapeutic range or maximum recommended dosage—
(A) At levels above or in excess of such
range or dosage, unless convincing evidence
demonstrates that such introduction was not a culpable act of the officer's under the criminal
laws; or
(B) At levels at, below, or within such
range or dosage, unless convincing evidence
demonstrates that—
(1) Such
introduction was not a culpable act of the officer's
under the criminal laws; or
(2) The officer was not acting in an intoxicated manner
immediately prior to the injury date.
§ 32.4 Terms;
construction, severability; effect.
(a) In
determining the meaning of any provision of this part,
unless the context should indicate otherwise, the first three provisions of 1 U.S.C. 1 (rules of construction) shall
apply.
(b) If
benefits are denied to any individual pursuant to the
Act, at 42 U.S.C. 3796a(4), or
otherwise because his actions were a substantial
contributing factor to the death of the public safety officer, such individual
shall be presumed irrebuttably, for all purposes, not to have survived the
officer.
(c) Any provision of this part
held to be invalid or unenforceable by its terms, or as applied to any person
or circumstance, shall be construed so as to give it the maximum effect
permitted by law, unless such holding shall be one of utter invalidity or
unenforceability, in which event such provision shall be deemed severable herefrom and shall not affect the remainder hereof or the application of such provision to other
persons not similarly situated or to other, dissimilar circumstances.
(d) Unless the same should expressly provide
otherwise (e.g., by use of the word
“hereafter” in an appropriations proviso), any amendment to the Act (or any statutory enactment otherwise
directly referent or ‑applicable to the program that is the subject of this part), shall apply only with respect to injuries
(or, in connection with claims under the Act, at 42 U.S.C. 3796(k),
shall apply only with respect to heart attacks or strokes referred to in the Act, at 42 U.S.C. 3796(k)(2))
occurring on or after the date it takes effect.
(a) Except as otherwise may be expressly provided
in the Act or this part,
a claimant has the burden of persuasion as to all material issues of fact, and
by the standard of proof of "more likely than not."
(b) Except as otherwise may be expressly provided
in this part, the PSOB
determining official may, at his discretion, consider (but shall not be
bound by) the factual findings of a public agency.
(c) Rules 301
(presumptions), 401 (relevant evidence), 402
(admissibility), 602 to 604 (witnesses), 701 to 704 (testimony), 901
to 903 (authentication), and 1001 to 1007
(contents of writings, records, and photographs) of the Federal Rules of
Evidence shall apply, mutatis mutandis,
to all filings, hearings, and other proceedings or
matters. No extrinsic evidence of
authenticity as a condition precedent to admissibility shall be required with
respect to any document purporting to bear the signature of an expert engaged
by the BJA.
(d) In determining
a claim, the PSOB determining official
may, at his discretion, draw an adverse inference if, without reasonable
justification or excuse—
(1) A claimant fails or refuses to file with the PSOB Office—
(i) Such material‑
or relevant evidence or ‑information within his
possession, control, or ken as may reasonably be requested from time to time by
such official; or
(ii) Such authorizations or
waivers as may reasonably be requested from time to time by such official to enable him (or to assist in
enabling him) to obtain access to material- or relevant evidence
or ‑information of a medical, personnel, financial, or other
confidential nature;
(2) A claimant
under subpart C of this
part fails or refuses to appear in person—
(i) At his hearing under subpart E of this part
(if there be such a hearing); or
(ii) Before such official (or otherwise permit such official
personally to observe his condition), at a time and location reasonably
convenient to both, as may reasonably be requested by such official; or
(3) A claimant under subpart B
or C of this part fails
or refuses to apply for (or to pursue to completion), in timely fashion, the
benefits, if any, described in § 32.15(a)(1)(i)
or § 32.25(a)(1)(i),
respectively.
(e) In determining
a claim, the PSOB determining official
may, at his discretion, draw an inference of voluntary intoxication at the time
of death or catastrophic injury if, without reasonable justification or
excuse, appropriate toxicologic analysis (including autopsy, in the event of
death) is not performed, and/or the results thereof are not filed
with the PSOB Office, where there is credible evidence suggesting that intoxication may have been a factor
in the death or injury, or that the public
safety officer—
(1) As of or near the injury
date, was—
(i) A consumer of alcohol—
(A) In amounts likely to produce a
blood-alcohol level of .10 per centum or greater in individuals similar to
the officer in weight and sex; or
(B) In any amount, after ever having been
treated at an inpatient facility for alcoholism;
(ii) A consumer of controlled
substances included on Schedule I of the drug control and enforcement laws
(see 21 U.S.C. 812(a)); or
(iii) An abuser of controlled
substances included on Schedule II, III, IV, or V of the drug control
and enforcement laws (see 21 U.S.C. 812(a)); or
(2) Immediately prior to the injury date, was under the influence of alcohol or drugs or other substances or otherwise acting
in an intoxicated manner.
(f) In
determining a claim under the Act, at 42 U.S.C. 3796c-1
or Public
Law 107‑37, the certification described
therein shall constitute prima facie
evidence—
(1) Of the
public agency's acknowledgment that the public
safety officer, as of the injury date, was—
(i) A public safety officer of the kind
described in the certification;
(ii) Employed by the agency (i.e., performing official functions for,
or on behalf of, the agency); and
(iii) One of the following:
(A) With respect to a law enforcement officer, an officer of the agency;
(B) With respect to a firefighter,
(1) An
officially recognized or designated member
of the agency (if it is a legally
organized volunteer fire department); or
(2) An
employee of the agency;
(C) With respect to a chaplain,
(1) An
officially recognized or designated member
of the agency (if it is a legally
organized police or volunteer fire department); or
(2) An
officially recognized or designated public
employee of the agency (if it is a
legally organized police or fire department);
(D) With respect to a member of a rescue squad or ambulance crew,
an officially recognized or designated
public employee member of one of the agency's
rescue squads or ambulance crews; or
(E) With respect to a disaster relief worker, an employee
of the agency (if it is described in the Act, at 42 U.S.C. 3796b(9)(B)
or (C));
(2) Of the
public agency's acknowledgment that there are no eligible
payees other than those identified in the certification; and
(3) That the
public safety officer—
(i) Sustained a line of duty injury in connection with public
safety activity (or, otherwise, with efforts described in the Act, at 42 U.S.C. 3796c-1
or Public
Law 107‑37) related to a terrorist attack (under the former statute) or to the terrorist attacks of
September 11, 2001 (under the latter statute); and
(ii) As a direct and proximate result of such injury, was (as applicable)—
(A) Killed (with respect to a claim under subpart B of
this part); or
(B) Totally
and permanently disabled (with respect to a claim under subpart C
of this part).
(g) In
determining a claim, the PSOB determining
official shall have, in addition to the hearing-examiner powers specified
at 42 U.S.C. 3787 (hearings, subpoenas,
oaths, witnesses, evidence), and to the authorities specified at 42 U.S.C. 3788(b) ‑ (d)
(experts, consultants, government resources) and in the
Act and this part, the authority otherwise and
in any reasonable manner to conduct his own inquiries, as appropriate.
(h) Acceptance
of payment (by a payee (or on his behalf)) shall constitute prima facie evidence that the payee (or
the pay agent)—
(1) Endorses as his own (to the best of his
knowledge and belief) the statements and representations made, and the evidence
and information provided, pursuant to the claim; and
(2) Is aware (in connection with the claim)
of no—
(i) Fraud;
(ii) Concealment or withholding of
evidence or information;
(iii) False, incomplete, or inaccurate
statements or representations;
(iv) Mistake, wrongdoing, or
deception; or
(v) Violation of 18 U.S.C. 287 (false, fictitious, or
fraudulent claims), 1001 (false statements),
or 1621 (perjury), or 42 U.S.C. 3795a (falsification or
concealment of facts).
(i) A
public safety officer's response to an
emergency call from his public agency for him
to perform public safety activity (including emergency response activity the agency is
authorized to perform) shall constitute prima
facie evidence of such response's non-routine character.
(a) No
payment shall be made to (or on behalf of) more than one individual, on the
basis of being a particular public safety officer's
spouse. If more
than one should qualify, payment shall be made to the one with whom the officer
considered himself, as of the injury date, to have the
closest relationship, except that the individual (if any) who was a member of
the officer's household (as of such date) shall be
presumed rebuttably to be such one, unless legal proceedings (by the officer
against such member, or vice versa)
shall have been pending then in any court.
(b) No
payment shall be made, save—
(1) To (or on behalf of) a living beneficiary; and
(2) Pursuant to—
(i) A written claim filed by (or on
behalf of) such beneficiary; and
(ii) Except as provided in the Act, at 42 U.S.C. 3796(c),
approval of such claim.
(c) Any
amounts that would be paid but for the provisions of paragraph (b)
of this section shall be retained by the
(d) With
respect to the amount paid to a payee (or on his behalf) pursuant to a claim, the payee shall repay
the following, unless, for good cause shown, the Director
grants a full or partial waiver pursuant to the Act,
at 42 U.S.C. 3796(m):
(1) The entire amount, if approval of the claim
was based, in whole or in material part, on the payee's
(or any other person's or entity's) fraud, concealment or withholding of evidence or information, false, incomplete, or inaccurate
statements or representations, mistake, wrongdoing, or deception; or
(2) The entire amount subject to
divestment, if the payee's entitlement to such
payment is divested, in whole or in part, such as by the subsequent discovery of
individuals entitled to make equal or superior
claims.
(e) At
the discretion of the Director, repayment of amounts
owing or collectable under the Act or this part may, as applicable, be executed through
setoffs against future payments on financial claims
under subpart D of this part.
§ 32.7 Fees
for representative services.
(a) A
person seeking to receive any amount from (or with respect to) a claimant for representative services provided in connection
with any claim may petition
the PSOB Office for authorization
under this section. Such
petition shall include—
(1) An itemized description of the services;
(2) The total amount sought to be received,
from any source, as consideration for the
services;
(3) An itemized description of any
representative or other services provided to (or on behalf of) the claimant in connection with
other claims or causes of action, unrelated to the
Act, before any public agency or non-public
entity (including any insurer), arising from the public safety officer's death, disability, or injury;
(4) The total amount requested, charged,
received, or sought to be received, from any source, as consideration for the services described in paragraph (a)(3) of this
section;
(5) A statement of whether the petitioner has legal
training or is licensed to practice law, and a description of any special
qualifications possessed by the petitioner (other than legal training or a
license to practice law) that increased the value of his services to (or on behalf of) the claimant;
(6) A certification
that the claimant was provided,
simultaneously with the filing of the
petition, with—
(i) A copy of the petition; and
(ii) A letter advising the claimant that he could file his comments on the petition,
if any, with the PSOB Office, within
thirty-three days of the date of that letter;
and
(7) A copy of the letter described in paragraph (a)(6)(ii) of this section.
(b) Unless,
for good cause shown, the Director extends the time for
filing, no petition under paragraph (a) of this section shall
be considered if the petition is filed with the PSOB Office
later than one year after the date of the final
agency determination of the claim.
(c) Subject
to paragraph (d) of this section,
an authorization under paragraph (a)
of this section shall be based on consideration of the following factors:
(1) The nature of the services provided by the petitioner;
(2) The complexity of the claim;
(3) The level of skill and competence
required to provide the petitioner's
services;
(4) The amount of time spent on the claim by the petitioner;
(5) The results achieved as a function of the petitioner's services;
(6) The level of administrative or judicial
review to which the claim was
pursued and the point at which the
petitioner entered the proceedings;
(7) The ordinary, usual, or customary fee
charged by other persons (and by the
petitioner) for services of a similar nature; and
(8) The amount authorized
by the PSOB Office in similar cases.
(d) No
amount shall be authorized under paragraph (a)
of this section for—
(1) Any stipulated‑, percentage‑,
or contingency fee;
(2) Services at a rate in excess of that
specified in 5 U.S.C. 504(b)(1)(A)(ii)
(Equal Access to Justice Act); or
(3) Services provided in connection with—
(i) Obtaining or
providing evidence or information previously obtained by
the PSOB determining official;
(ii) Preparing the petition; or
(iii) Explaining or delivering an approved claim
to the claimant.
(e)
Upon a petitioner's failure
(without reasonable justification or excuse) to pursue in timely fashion his filed petition under paragraph (a) of this section, the Director may, at his discretion,
deem the same to be abandoned, as though never filed. Not less than thirty-three days prior
thereto, the PSOB Office shall serve
the petitioner and the claimant
with notice of the Director's intention to exercise such discretion.
(f) Upon
its authorizing or not authorizing the payment
of any amount under paragraph (a)
of this section, the PSOB Office
shall serve notice of the same upon the claimant and the petitioner. Such notice shall specify the amount, if any,
the petitioner is authorized to charge the claimant and the basis of the authorization.
(g) No
agreement for representative services in connection with a
claim shall be valid if the
agreement provides for any consideration other than under this
section. A person's receipt of
consideration for such services other than under this section may, among other
things, be the subject of referral by BJA to appropriate
professional, administrative, disciplinary, or other legal authorities.
§ 32.8 Exhaustion
of administrative remedies.
No determination or negative disability
finding that, at the time made, may be subject to a request
for a Hearing Officer determination, a motion
for reconsideration, or a Director appeal,
shall be considered a final agency determination for purposes of judicial review, unless all administrative remedies have
been exhausted.
Subpart B ‑ Death Benefit Claims
Consistent
with § 32.1, this
subpart contains provisions applicable to claims
made under the Act—
(a) At
42 U.S.C. 3796(a); or
(b) At
42 U.S.C. 3796c‑1 or Public Law 107‑37, with respect to a public safety officer's death.
§ 32.12 Time
for filing claim.
(a) Unless,
for good cause shown, the Director extends the time for
filing, no claim shall be
considered if it is filed with the PSOB Office after
the later of—
(1) Three years after the public safety officer's death; or
(2) One year after—
(i) A final determination of
entitlement to receive, or of denial of, the benefits,
if any, described in § 32.15(a)(1)(i); or
(ii) The receipt of the certification described in § 32.15(a)(1)(ii)).
(b) A
claimant may file with his claim
such supporting documentary, electronic, video, or other nonphysical evidence and legal arguments as he may wish to provide.
Adoptive parent of a public safety officer means any
individual who (not being a step‑parent),
as of the injury date, was the legally-adoptive parent of the public safety
officer, or otherwise was in a child-parent relationship
with him.
Beneficiary of a life insurance policy of a public
safety officer — An individual (living or deceased on the date of death of the public safety officer) is designated
as beneficiary of a life insurance policy of such officer as of such date,
only if the designation is, as of
such date, legal and valid (as a designation of beneficiary of a life insurance
policy) and unrevoked (by such officer or by operation of law) or otherwise
unterminated, except that—
(1) Any designation of an individual (including any designation
of the biological or adoptive offspring of such
individual) made in contemplation of such individual's marriage (or purported
marriage) to such officer shall be
considered to be revoked by such
officer as of such date of death
if the marriage (or purported marriage) did not take place, unless preponderant
evidence demonstrates that—
(i) It did not take place
for reasons other than personal differences between the officer and the individual; or
(ii) No such revocation was intended by the officer; and
(2) Any designation of a spouse (or purported spouse)
made in contemplation of or during such spouse's (or purported spouse's) marriage (or purported marriage) to such officer (including any designation of
the biological or adoptive offspring of such spouse
(or purported spouse)) shall be considered to be revoked by such officer as of such date of death if the spouse
(or purported spouse) is divorced from such officer
after the date of designation and before such date of death, unless
preponderant evidence demonstrates that no such revocation
was intended by the officer.
Beneficiary under the Act, at 42 U.S.C. 3796(a)(4)(A) — An individual (living or deceased on the date of death of the public safety officer) is designated, by such
officer (and as of such date), as beneficiary under the Act, at 42 U.S.C. 3796(a)(4)(A),
only if the designation is,
as of such date, legal and valid and unrevoked (by such officer or by operation
of law) or otherwise unterminated, except that—
(1) Any designation of an individual (including any designation
of the biological or adoptive offspring of such
individual) made in contemplation of such individual's marriage (or purported
marriage) to such officer shall be
considered to be revoked by such officer as
of such date of death if the
marriage (or purported marriage) did not take place, unless preponderant evidence demonstrates that—
(i) It did not take place
for reasons other than personal differences between the officer and the individual; or
(ii) No such revocation was intended by the officer; and
(2) Any designation of a spouse (or purported
spouse) made in contemplation of or during such spouse's (or purported spouse's)
marriage (or purported marriage) to such officer (including any designation of
the biological or adoptive offspring of such spouse
(or purported spouse)) shall be considered to be revoked
by such officer as of such date
of death if the spouse (or purported spouse) is divorced
from such officer subsequent to the date of designation and before such date of
death, unless preponderant evidence demonstrates that no such
revocation was intended by the officer.
Cardiovascular
disease includes heart attack and stroke.
Child-parent relationship means a
relationship between a public
safety officer and another individual, in which the individual (other than the
officer's biological or legally-adoptive parent) has
the role of parent, as shown by convincing evidence.
Competent medical evidence to the contrary — The presumption raised by the Act,
at 42 U.S.C. 3796(k), is overcome by competent medical evidence to the
contrary, when evidence indicates to a degree of medical probability that extrinsic circumstances, considered in
combination (as one circumstance) or alone, were a substantial factor
in bringing the heart attack or stroke about.
Designation
on file — A designation of beneficiary under the Act, at 42 U.S.C. 3796(a)(4)(A),
is on file with a public safety agency, ‑organization, or ‑unit,
only if it is deposited with the same by the public
safety officer making the designation, for it to maintain with its
personnel or similar records pertaining to him.
Direct and proximate result of a heart attack or
stroke — A death results directly and proximately from
a heart attack or stroke
if the heart attack or stroke is a substantial
factor in bringing it about.
Engagement in a situation involving law enforcement, fire suppression,
rescue, hazardous material response, emergency medical services, prison
security, disaster relief, or other emergency response activity —
A public safety officer is so engaged only when, within his line of duty—
(1) He is in the course of actually—
(i) Engaging in law enforcement;
(ii) Suppressing
fire;
(iii) Responding to
a hazardous-material emergency;
(iv) Performing rescue activity;
(v) Providing emergency medical services; or
(vi) Performing disaster relief activity; or
(vii) Otherwise engaging in emergency response activity; and
(2) The public
agency he serves (or the relevant government) legally recognizes him to have
been in such course at the time of such engagement (or, at a minimum, does not
deny (or has not denied) him so to have been).
Event includes
occurrence, but does not include any engagement
or participation described in the Act, at 42 U.S.C. 3796(k)(1).
Excessive consumption of alcohol — An
individual is an excessive consumer of alcohol if he consumes alcohol in
amounts commonly accepted to be associated with
substantially-increased risk of cardiovascular
disease.
Execution of a designation of beneficiary under the Act, at 42 U.S.C. 3796(a)(4)(A)
means the legal and valid execution, by the public
safety officer, of a writing that, designating a beneficiary, expressly,
specifically, or unmistakably refers to—
(1) The Act
(or the program it creates); or
(2) All the death benefits with respect to
which such officer lawfully could designate a
beneficiary (if there be no writing that satisfies paragraph (1) of this definition).
Execution of a life insurance policy
means, with respect to a life insurance policy, the legal and valid execution,
by the individual whose life is insured thereunder, of—
(1) The approved application for coverage;
(2) A designation of beneficiary; or
(3) A designation of the mode of benefit.
Extrinsic circumstances means—
(1) An event or events; or
(2) An intentional risky
behavior or intentional risky behaviors.
Life
insurance policy on file — A life insurance policy is on file with a public safety agency, ‑organization,
or ‑unit, only if—
(1) It is issued through (or on behalf of) the same; or
(2) The original (or a copy) of one of the
following is deposited with the same by the public safety officer whose life is insured
under the policy, for it to maintain with its personnel or similar records
pertaining to him:
(i) The policy (itself);
(ii) The declarations page or ‑statement
from the policy's issuer;
(iii) A certificate of insurance (for group
policies);
(iv) Any instrument whose execution
constitutes the execution of a life insurance policy; or
(v) The substantial equivalent of any
of the foregoing.
Medical
probability — A fact is indicated to a degree of medical
probability, when, pursuant to a medical assessment, the fact is indicated by a
preponderance of such evidence as may be available.
Most recently executed designation of beneficiary
under the Act, at 42 U.S.C. 3796(a)(4)(A)
means the most recently executed such designation
that, as of the date of death of the public safety
officer, designates a beneficiary.
Most recently executed life insurance policy of a public
safety officer means the most recently executed policy insuring the
life of a public
safety officer that, being legal and
valid (as a life insurance policy) upon its execution,
as of the date of death of such officer—
(1) Designates a beneficiary; and
(2) Remains legally unrevoked (by such officer or by operation of law) or
otherwise unterminated.
Nonroutine strenuous physical activity means line of duty activity that—
(1) Is not excluded by the Act, at 42 U.S.C. 3796(l);
(2) Is not performed as
a matter of routine; and
(3) Entails an unusually-high level of
physical exertion.
Nonroutine
stressful or strenuous physical activity means nonroutine stressful physical activity
or nonroutine strenuous physical activity.
Nonroutine
stressful physical activity means line of duty
activity that—
(1) Is not excluded by the Act, at 42 U.S.C. 3796(l);
(2) Is not performed as
a matter of routine;
(2) Entails non-negligible physical
exertion; and
(3) Occurs—
(i) With respect to a situation in which a public safety officer is
engaged, under circumstances that objectively and reasonably—
(A) Pose (or appear to pose) significant
dangers, threats, or hazards (or reasonably-foreseeable risks thereof), not
faced by similarly-situated members of the public in the ordinary
course; and
(B) Provoke, cause, or occasion an
unusually-high level of alarm, fear, or anxiety; or
(ii) With respect to a training exercise in which a public safety
officer participates, under circumstances that objectively and reasonably—
(A) Simulate in realistic fashion
situations that pose significant dangers, threats, or hazards; and
(B) Provoke, cause, or occasion an
unusually-high level of alarm, fear, or anxiety.
Parent of a
public safety officer means a public
safety officer's surviving—
(1) Biological or
adoptive parent whose
parental rights have not been terminated, as of the injury
date; or
(2) Step‑parent.
Participation
in a training exercise — A public safety
officer participates (as a trainer or
trainee) in a training exercise only when actually taking formal part in a structured
activity that itself is—
(1) Within an official training (or
–fitness) program of his public agency; and
(2) Mandatory, rated (i.e., officially tested, ‑graded, ‑judged, ‑timed,
etc.), or directly supervised, ‑proctored,
or ‑monitored.
Public safety
agency, ‑organization, or ‑unit
means a department or agency (or component
thereof)—
(1) In which a public safety officer serves in an official capacity, with or without compensation,
as such an officer (of any kind but disaster relief worker); or
(2) Of which a public safety officer is an employee, performing official duties
as described in the Act, at 42 U.S.C. 3796b(9)(B)
or (C), as a disaster relief worker.
Risky
behavior means—
(1) Failure (without reasonable
justification or excuse) to undertake treatment—
(i) Of any commonly-accepted cardiovascular-disease risk factor associated with
clinical values, where such risk factor is—
(A) Known (or should be known) to be
present; and
(B) Present to a degree that substantially
exceeds the minimum value commonly accepted as
indicating high risk;
(ii) Of any disease or condition commonly
accepted to be associated with
substantially-increased risk of cardiovascular
disease, where such associated disease or condition is known (or should be
known) to be present; or
(iii) Where a biological
parent, ‑sibling, or –first-generation offspring, is known to have (or
have a history of) cardiovascular disease;
(2) Smoking an average of more than
one-half of a pack of cigarettes (or its equivalent) per day;
(3) Excessive
consumption of alcohol;
(4) Consumption of controlled substances
included on Schedule I of the drug control and enforcement laws (see 21 U.S.C. 812(a)),
where such consumption is commonly accepted to
be associated with increased risk of cardiovascular
disease;
(5) Abuse of controlled substances included
on Schedule II, III, IV, or V of the drug control and enforcement
laws (see 21 U.S.C. 812(a)), where such abuse is commonly accepted to be associated with increased
risk of cardiovascular disease; or
(6) Any activity or action, specified in the Act, at 42 U.S.C. 3796a(1),
(2), or (3),
that is commonly accepted to be associated with
substantially-increased risk of cardiovascular
disease.
Routine —
Neither of the following shall be dispositive in determining whether an
activity or action shall be understood to have been performed as a matter of
routine:
(1) Being generally described by the public agency as routine or ordinary; or
(2) The frequency with which it may be
performed.
Step-parent of a public safety officer
means a current or former spouse of the legally-adoptive
or biological parent (living or deceased) of a public safety officer conceived (or legally adopted) by that parent
before the marriage of the spouse and the parent, which spouse
(not being a legally-adoptive parent of the officer), as of the injury date,
(1) Received over half of his support from the officer;
(2) Had as his principal place of abode the
home of the officer and was a member of the
officer's household; or
(3) Was in a child-parent
relationship with the officer.
Undertaking
of treatment — An individual undertakes treatment, when he
consults with a physician licensed to practice medicine in any jurisdiction
described in the Act, at 42 U.S.C. 3796b(8), and complies
substantially with his recommendations.
§ 32.14 PSOB
Office determination.
(a) Upon
its approving or denying a claim,
the PSOB Office shall serve
notice of the same upon the claimant (and upon any other claimant who may have filed a claim with respect to the same public safety officer). In the event of a denial, such notice shall—
(1) Specify the factual findings and legal
conclusions that support it; and
(2) Provide information as to requesting a Hearing Officer determination.
(b) Upon
a claimant's failure (without reasonable justification or excuse) to pursue in
timely fashion the determination, by the PSOB Office, of his filed claim, the Director may, at his discretion, deem the same to be abandoned. Not less than thirty-three days prior
thereto, the PSOB Office shall serve the claimant with
notice of the Director's intention to exercise such discretion.
(c) In
connection with its determination
(pursuant to a filed claim) of the existence of competent medical evidence to the contrary, the PSOB
Office shall serve the claimant with notice (indicating that he may file such
supporting documentary, electronic, video, or other nonphysical evidence (such as medical-history records, as appropriate) and
legal arguments in support of his claim as he may wish to provide), where there
is evidence before it that affirmatively suggests that—
(1) The public
safety officer actually knew or should have known that he had cardio‑vascular disease risk factors
and appears to have worsened or aggravated the same through his own intentional and risky behavior (as opposed to where the evidence
affirmatively suggests merely that cardio‑vascular disease risk factors
were present); or
(2) It is more likely than not that a public safety officer's heart attack or stroke was
imminent.
§ 32.15 Prerequisite
certification.
(a) Except
as provided in the Act, at 42 U.S.C. 3796c‑1 or Public
Law 107‑37, and unless, for good cause shown, the Director grants a waiver, no claim
shall be approved unless the following
(which shall be necessary, but not sufficient, for such approval) are filed with the PSOB Office:
(1) Subject to paragraphs (b) and (d) of this section,
a certification from the public agency in which the public safety officer
served (as of the injury date) that he died as a direct
and proximate result of a line of duty injury,
and either—
(i) That his survivors
(listed by name, address, relationship to him, and amount received) have
received (or legally are entitled to receive) the maximum
death benefits legally payable by the agency
with respect to deaths of public safety officers
of his kind, rank, and tenure; or
(ii) Subject to paragraph (c) of this section, that the
agency is not legally authorized to pay—
(A) Any benefits
described in paragraph (a)(1)(i)
of this section, to any person; or
(B) Any benefits
described in paragraph (a)(1)(i)
of this section, to public safety officers of the kind, rank, and tenure described in such paragraph;
(2) A copy of any findings or rulings made
by any public agency that relate to the officer's death; and
(3) A certification
from the claimant listing every individual known to him who is or might be the officer's child, spouse, or parent.
(b) The
provisions of paragraphs (a)(1)
and (d) of this section shall also apply with respect to
every public agency that legally is authorized
to pay death benefits with respect to the agency described in that paragraph.
(c) No
certification described in paragraph (a)(1)(ii) of this section shall be deemed complete for
purposes of this section unless it—
(1) Lists every public
agency (other than BJA) that legally is authorized to
pay death benefits with respect to the certifying
agency; or
(2) States that no public agency (other than BJA)
legally is authorized to pay death benefits with respect to the certifying agency.
(d) Subject
to paragraphs (b) and (c) of this
section, if the Director finds that the conditions
specified in the Act, at 42 U.S.C. 3796(k),
are satisfied with respect to a particular public
safety officer's death, and that no circumstance specified in the Act, at 42 U.S.C. 3796a(1), (2), or (3),
applies with respect thereto—
(1) The certification
as to death, described in paragraph (a)(1)
of this section, shall not be
required; and
(2) The certification
as to benefits, described in paragraph (a)(1)(ii)
of this section, shall be deemed complete for
purposes of this section if it—
(i) Describes the public agency's understanding of the circumstances
(including such causes of which it may be aware) of the
officer's death; and
(ii) States that, in connection with
deaths occurring under the circumstances described in paragraph (d)(2)(i) of this section, the public
agency is not legally authorized to pay any benefits described in paragraph (a)(1)(i) of this
section.
(a) No payment shall be made to (or on
behalf of) more than one individual, on the basis of being a public safety officer's parent
as his mother, or on that basis as his father.
If more than one parent qualifies as the officer's mother, or as his
father, payment shall be made to the one with whom the officer considered
himself, as of the injury date, to have the closest
relationship, except that any biological or
legally-adoptive parent whose parental rights have not been terminated as of
the injury date shall be presumed rebuttably to be such one.
(b) Any amount payable with respect to a
minor or incompetent shall be paid to his legal guardian, to be expended solely
for the benefit of such minor or incompetent.
(c) If
more than one individual should qualify for payment—
(1) Under the Act,
at 42 U.S.C. 3796(a)(4)(i)
[sic], payment shall be made to each
of them in equal shares, except that, if the
designation itself should manifest a different distribution, payment shall
be made to each of them in shares in accordance with such distribution; or
(2) Under the Act,
at 42 U.S.C. 3796(a)(4)(ii)
[sic], payment shall be made to each
of them in equal shares.
§ 32.17 Request
for Hearing Officer determination.
In
order to exhaust his administrative remedies,
a claimant seeking relief from the denial of his claim shall request a Hearing Officer
determination under subpart E of this part.
Consistent with § 32.8, any denial
that is not the subject of such a request shall constitute the final agency determination.
Subpart C ‑ Disability Benefit
Claims
Consistent
with § 32.1, this
subpart contains provisions applicable to claims
made under the Act—
(a) At
42 U.S.C. 3796(b); or
(b) At
42 U.S.C. 3796c‑1 or Public Law 107‑37, with respect to a public safety officer's disability.
§ 32.22 Time
for filing claim.
(a) Unless,
for good cause shown, the Director extends the time for
filing, no claim shall be
considered if it is filed with the PSOB Office after
the later of—
(1) Three years after the injury date; or
(2) One year after—
(i) A final determination of
entitlement to receive, or of denial of, the benefits,
if any, described in § 32.25(a)(1)(i); or
(ii) The receipt of the certification described in § 32.25(a)(1)(ii)).
(b) A
claimant may file with his claim
such supporting documentary, electronic, video, or other nonphysical evidence and legal arguments as he may wish to provide.
Direct result of an injury —
A disability results directly from an injury if the injury is a substantial
factor in bringing the disability about.
Gainful work means full‑ or
part-time activity that actually is compensated or commonly is
compensated.
Medical certainty —
A fact exists to a degree of medical certainty, when, pursuant to a medical
assessment, the fact is demonstrated by convincing
evidence.
Permanently disabled — An
individual is permanently disabled only if there is
a degree of medical certainty (given the
current state of medicine in the
(1) Will progressively deteriorate or
remain constant, over his expected lifetime; or
(2) Otherwise has reached maximum medical
improvement.
Product of an
injury — Permanent
and total disability is produced by a catastrophic
injury suffered as a direct and proximate
result of a personal injury if the disability is a direct result of the personal injury.
Residual functional capacity means that which an individual still is capable of doing, as shown by
medical (and, as appropriate, vocational) assessment, despite a disability.
Totally disabled — An individual is
totally disabled only if there is a degree of medical certainty (given the current state of
medicine in the
§ 32.24 PSOB
Office determination.
(a) Upon
its approving or denying a claim,
the PSOB Office shall serve
notice of the same upon the claimant. In
the event of a denial, such notice shall—
(1) Specify the factual findings and legal
conclusions that support it; and
(2) Provide information as to—
(i) Requesting a Hearing Officer determination; or
(ii) As applicable, moving to reconsider a negative disability finding.
(b) Upon
a claimant's failure (without reasonable justification or excuse) to pursue in
timely fashion the determination of his filed claim, the Director may, at his discretion,
deem the same to be abandoned. Not less
than thirty-three days prior thereto, the PSOB Office
shall serve the claimant with notice of the Director's
intention to exercise such discretion.
§ 32.25 Prerequisite
certification.
(a) Except
as provided in the Act, at 42 U.S.C. 3796c‑1 or Public
Law 107‑37, and unless, for good cause shown, the Director grants a waiver, no claim
shall be approved unless the
following (which shall be necessary, but not sufficient, for such approval) are
filed with the PSOB Office:
(1) Subject to paragraph (b) of this section, a certification
from the public agency in which the public safety officer served (as of the injury date) that he was permanently
and totally disabled as a direct result
of a line of duty injury, and either—
(i) That he has received (or
legally is entitled to receive) the maximum disability
benefits (including workers' compensation) legally payable by the agency with respect to disabled public safety officers of his kind, rank, and tenure; or
(ii) Subject to paragraph (c) of this section, that the agency is not legally authorized
to pay—
(A) Any benefits
described in paragraph (a)(1)(i)
of this section, to any person; or
(B) Any benefits
described in paragraph (a)(1)(i)
of this section, to public safety officers of the kind, rank, and tenure described in such paragraph; and
(2) A copy of—
(i) Each State, local,
and federal income tax return filed by or on behalf of the public safety officer from the year
before the injury date to the date of determination by the PSOB determining official; and
(ii) Any rulings made by any public agency that relate to the claimed disability.
(b) The
provisions of paragraph (a)(1)
of this section shall also apply with respect to every
public agency that legally is authorized to pay
disability benefits with respect to the agency described in that paragraph.
(c) No
certification described in paragraph (a)(1)(ii) of this section shall be deemed complete unless it—
(1) Lists every public
agency (other than BJA) that legally is authorized to
pay disability benefits with respect to the
certifying agency; or
(2) States that no public agency (other than BJA)
legally is authorized to pay disability benefits with respect to the certifying agency.
The
amount payable on a claim shall be the amount payable, as of the injury date, pursuant to the
Act, at 42 U.S.C. 3796(b).
§ 32.27 Motion
for reconsideration of negative disability finding.
A
claimant whose claim is denied
in whole or in part on the ground that he has not shown that his claimed disability is total
and permanent may move for reconsideration, under § 32.28, of the specific finding as to the total and permanent character of the claimed
disability (in lieu of his requesting a Hearing Officer
determination with respect to the same).
§ 32.28 Reconsideration of negative disability
finding.
(a) Unless,
for good cause shown, the Director extends the time for
filing, no negative disability
finding described in § 32.27 shall
be reconsidered if the motion under that section
is filed with the PSOB Office later than thirty-three
days after the service of notice of the denial.
(b) Notwithstanding
any other provision of this section,
no negative disability finding described in § 32.27 shall be reconsidered—
(1) If or after such reconsideration is
rendered moot (e.g., by the final denial of the claim on
other grounds, without possibility of further administrative or judicial
recourse); or
(2) If a request
for a Hearing Officer determination has been filed in
timely fashion with respect to such finding.
(c) Unless,
for good cause shown, the Director grants a waiver,
upon the making of a motion under § 32.27, reconsideration of the negative disability finding described in that section
shall be stayed for three years. Upon
the conclusion of the stay, the claimant shall have not more than six years to file evidence with the PSOB Office in support of his claimed
disability.
(d) Upon
a claimant's failure (without reasonable justification or excuse) to file in timely fashion evidence
pursuant to paragraph (c) of this section, the Director may, at his discretion,
deem the motion for reconsideration to be
abandoned, as though never filed. Not
less than thirty-three days prior thereto, the PSOB Office
shall serve the claimant with notice of the Director's
intention to exercise such discretion.
(e) No
negative disability finding described in § 32.27 shall be reversed unless a copy (which shall be necessary, but
not sufficient, for such reversal) of each federal, State, and local income tax
return filed by or on behalf of the claimant from the year before the date of
the motion for reconsideration under that section
to the date of reversal is filed with the PSOB Office.
(f) Upon
its affirming or reversing a negative disability finding described in § 32.27, the PSOB Office
shall serve notice of the same upon the claimant. In the event of an affirmance, such notice
shall—
(1) Specify the factual findings and legal
conclusions that support it; and
(2) Provide information as to requesting a Hearing Officer determination of the disability finding.
§ 32.29 Request
for Hearing Officer determination.
(a) In
order to exhaust his administrative remedies,
a claimant seeking relief from the denial of his claim shall request a Hearing
Officer determination under subpart E of this part—
(1) Of—
(i) His entire claim, if he has not moved
for reconsideration of a negative disability finding
under § 32.27; or
(ii) Consistent with § 32.42(c), the grounds (if any) of the denial that are not the subject of such motion, if he has moved for reconsideration of
a negative disability finding under § 32.27; and
(2) Of
a negative disability finding that is affirmed pursuant to his motion for reconsideration under § 32.27.
(b) Consistent
with § 32.8, the following shall
constitute the final agency determination:
(1) Any denial
not described in § 32.27 that is not
the subject of a request for a Hearing Officer determination
under paragraph (a)(1)(i) of this section;
(2) Any denial
described in § 32.27 that is not the
subject of a request for a Hearing Officer determination
under paragraph (a)(1)(ii) of this section, unless the negative
disability finding is the subject of a motion
for reconsideration; and
(3) Any affirmance
that is not the subject of a request for a Hearing
Officer determination under paragraph (a)(2)
of this section.
Subpart D ‑ Educational
Assistance Benefit Claims
§ 32.31 Scope of subpart.
Consistent
with § 32.1, this subpart
contains provisions applicable to claims (i.e., threshold claims and financial
claims) made under the Act, at 42 U.S.C. 3796d‑1.
§ 32.32 Time
for filing claim.
(a) Subject
to the Act, at 42 U.S.C. 3796d‑1(c),
and to paragraph (b) of this section, a claim may be filed with the PSOB Office at
any time after the injury date.
(b) Unless, for good cause shown, the Director grants a waiver, no financial
claim may be filed with the PSOB
Office, with respect to a grading period that
commences more than six months after the date of filing.
(c) A
claimant may file with his claim
such supporting documentary, electronic, video, or other nonphysical evidence and legal arguments as he may wish to provide.
Application means claim (i.e., a threshold claim
or a financial claim).
Assistance means financial assistance.
Child of an eligible
public safety officer means
the child of a public safety officer, which officer is an eligible public safety officer.
Dependent — An individual is a dependent of an eligible public safety officer,
if—
(1) Being a child of
the officer, the
(i) Was claimed properly
as the officer's dependent (within the meaning of the
Internal Revenue Code, at 26 U.S.C. 152)
on the officer's federal income-tax return (or could have been claimed if such
a return had been required by law)—
(A) For the tax year of (or immediately
preceding) either the injury date or the date of the officer's death (with respect to a claim by virtue of such death); or
(B) For the relevant tax
year (with respect to a claim by virtue of the officer's disability); or
(ii) Is the
officer's posthumous child; or
(2) Being a spouse
of the officer at the time of the officer's death or on the date of the
officer's totally and permanently disabling injury, the
(i) As of either the injury date or the date of the officer's
death (with respect to a claim by virtue of such
death); or
(ii) In the relevant
tax year (with respect to a claim by virtue of the officer's disability).
Educational
assistance benefits means benefits specifically to assist in paying educational expenses.
Educational expenses
means such of the following as may be in furtherance of the educational,
professional, or vocational objective of the program
of education that forms the basis of a financial
claim:
(1) Tuition and fees, as described in 20 U.S.C. 1087ll(1) (higher education assistance);
(2) Reasonable expenses for—
(i) Room and board (if
incurred for attendance on at least a half-time basis);
(ii) Books;
(iii) Computer equipment;
(iv) Supplies; and
(v) Transportation; and
(3) For attendance on at least a
three-quarter-time basis, a standard allowance for miscellaneous personal
expenses that is the greater of—
(i) The allowance for
such expenses, as established by the eligible
educational institution for purposes of financial aid; or
(ii) $200.00 per month.
Eligible
dependent means an individual who—
(1) Is a dependent of
an eligible public safety officer;
(2) Attends a program
of education, as described in the Act, at 42 U.S.C. 3796d‑1(a)(1); and
(3) Is otherwise eligible to receive financial assistance pursuant to the Act or this subpart.
Eligible
educational expenses means a claimant's educational
expenses, reduced by the amount of educational
assistance benefits from non‑governmental organizations that the
claimant has received or will receive.
Eligible public
safety officer means a public
safety officer—
(1) With respect to whose death, benefits
under subpart B of this
part properly have been paid; or
(2) With respect to whose disability, benefits under subpart C
of this part properly—
(i) Have been paid; or
(ii) Would have been paid, but
for the operation of paragraph (b)(1) of § 32.6.
Financial
assistance means financial assistance, as described in the Act, at 42 U.S.C. 3796d‑1.
Financial
claim means a request for financial
assistance, with respect to attendance at a program
of education, for a particular grading period.
Financial need — An individual is
in financial need for a particular grading period
to the extent that the amount of his eligible
educational expenses for that period exceed the sum of—
(1) The amount of his educational
assistance benefits as described in the Act, at
42 U.S.C. 3796d‑1(a)(3)(A); and
(2) His expected family contribution
calculated pursuant to 20 U.S.C. 1087nn
(higher education assistance).
Funds means financial assistance.
Grading
period means the period of attendance (e.g., a semester, a
trimester, a quarter) in a program of education,
after (or with respect to) which period grades are assigned, units of credit
are awarded, or courses are considered completed, as determined by the eligible educational institution.
Prospective
financial claim means a financial claim
with respect to a grading period that ends after
the claim is filed.
Public safety agency means a public
agency—
(1) In which a public safety officer serves in an official capacity, with or without compensation,
as such an officer (of any kind but disaster relief worker); or
(2) Of which a public safety officer is an employee, performing official duties
as described in the Act, at 42 U.S.C. 3796b(9)(B)
or (C), as a disaster relief worker.
Retroactive
financial claim means a financial claim with respect to
a grading period that ends before the claim is filed.
Spouse of an
eligible public safety officer at the time of the officer's death or on the
date of a totally and permanently disabling injury
means the spouse of a public
safety officer (which officer is an eligible
public safety officer) as of—
(1) The date of the officer's death (with respect to a claim by virtue of such death); or
(2) The injury date
(with respect to a claim by virtue of the officer's disability).
Tax Year — With
respect to a claim by virtue of an eligible
public safety officer's disability, the relevant tax year is—
(1) The tax year of (or immediately
preceding) the injury date;
(2) Any tax year during which the program of education that forms the basis
of the claim is attended or is pursued;
(3) The tax year immediately preceding the
date on which the program of education
that forms the basis of the claim commenced (or is to
commence); or
(4) The tax year of (or immediately
preceding) the officer's death, where the program of education that forms the basis
of the claim commenced (or is to commence) after the
date of such death.
Threshold
claim means a request for determination
of general eligibility to receive financial assistance.
§ 32.34 PSOB
Office determination.
(a) In
the event of the PSOB Office's denying a claim, the notice it
serves upon the claimant shall—
(1) Specify the factual findings and legal
conclusions that support the denial; and
(2) Provide information as to requesting a Hearing Officer determination.
(b) No
financial claim shall be approved, unless the
claimant's threshold claim has been approved.
(c) Upon
a claimant's failure (without reasonable justification or excuse) to pursue in
timely fashion the determination of his filed claim, the Director may, at his discretion,
deem the same to be abandoned. Not less
than thirty-three days prior thereto, the PSOB Office
shall serve the claimant with notice of the Director's
intention to exercise such discretion.
No claim shall be approved if the claimant is—
(a) In
default on any student loan obtained under 20 U.S.C. 1091
(higher education assistance), unless, for good cause shown, the Director grants a waiver; or
(b) Subject
to a denial of federal benefits under 21 U.S.C. 862
(drug traffickers and possessors).
§ 32.36 Payment
and repayment.
(a) The
computation described in the Act, at 42 U.S.C. 3796d‑1(a)(2), shall be
based on a certification from the eligible educational
institution as to the claimant's
full‑, three-quarter‑, half‑, or less-than-half-time student
status, according to such institution's own academic standards and practices.
(b) No
payment shall be made with respect to any grading
period that ended before the injury date.
(c) With
respect to any financial claim, no amount shall
be payable that exceeds the amount of the eligible
educational expenses that form the basis of the claim.
(d) In the event that appropriations for
a fiscal year are insufficient for full payment of all approved
or anticipated financial claims, the following
payments shall be made—
(1) The
amounts payable on approved prospective financial claims from
claimants in financial need, to the extent of such
need (if sufficient funds be available therefor), in the order the claims are
approved;
(2) All
other amounts payable on approved prospective financial claims (in the
order the claims are approved), if sufficient funds be available therefor—
(i) After payment of all
amounts payable pursuant to paragraph (d)(1)
of this section; and
(ii) After making allowance for
anticipated amounts payable in the fiscal year pursuant to paragraph (d)(1) of this section; and
(3) The amounts payable on approved retroactive
financial claims (in the order the claims are approved), if sufficient
funds be available therefor—
(i) After payment of all
amounts payable pursuant to paragraphs (d)(1)
and (2) of this
section; and
(ii) After making allowance for
anticipated amounts payable in the fiscal year, pursuant to paragraphs (d)(1) and (2) of this section.
(e) In the event that, at the
conclusion of a fiscal year, any amounts remain payable on an approved financial claim,
such amounts shall remain payable thereafter until paid (when appropriations be
sufficient therefor).
(f) In the event that any amounts remain
payable on an approved prospective
financial claim after the end of the grading period that forms its basis, such claim shall
be deemed an approved retroactive financial claim for purposes
of paragraph (d) of this section.
(g) No payment shall be made to (or on behalf
of) any individual, on the basis of being a particular living public safety officer's
spouse, unless the individual is the officer's spouse on
the date of payment.
(h) Unless,
for good cause shown, the Director grants a full or
partial waiver, a payee shall repay the amount paid to him (or on his behalf)
pursuant to a prospective financial claim
if, during the grading period that forms its basis—
(1) He fails to maintain satisfactory
progress under 20 U.S.C. 1091(c)
(higher education assistance);
(2) He fails to maintain the enrollment
status described in his claim; or
(3) By his acts or omissions, he is or becomes
ineligible for financial assistance.
§ 32.37 Request
for Hearing Officer determination.
In
order to exhaust his administrative remedies,
a claimant seeking relief from the denial of his claim shall request a Hearing
Officer determination under subpart E of this part.
Consistent with § 32.8, any denial
that is not the subject of such a request shall constitute the final agency determination.
Subpart E ‑ Hearing Officer
Determinations
§ 32.41 Scope of subpart.
Consistent
with § 32.1, this
subpart contains provisions applicable to requests
for Hearing Officer determination of claims denied under subpart B,
C (including affirmances
of negative disability findings described in § 32.27), or D
of this part, and of claims remanded (or matters
referred) under § 32.54(c).
§ 32.42 Time
for filing request for determination.
(a) Subject
to paragraph (c) of this
section, and unless, for good cause shown, the Director
extends the time for filing, no claim
shall be determined if the request
therefor is filed with the PSOB Office later than
thirty-three days after the service of notice of—
(1) The denial
(under subpart B, C
(except as may be provided in paragraph (a)(2)
of this section), or D
of this part) of a claim; or
(2) The affirmance
(under subpart C of this
part) of a negative disability finding
described in § 32.27.
(b) A
claimant may file with his request
for a Hearing Officer determination such supporting documentary,
electronic, video, or other non‑physical evidence
and legal arguments as he may wish to provide.
(c) The
timely filing of a motion for reconsideration under § 32.28(a) shall be deemed to constitute a
timely filing, under paragraph (a) of this section, of a request for determination with respect
to any grounds described in § 32.29(a)(1)(ii)
that may be applicable.
§ 32.43 Appointment
and assignment of Hearing Officers.
(a) Pursuant to 42 U.S.C. 3787
(employment and authority of hearing officers), Hearing Officers may be
appointed from time to time by the Director, to remain
on the roster of such Officers at his pleasure.
(b) Upon
the filing of a request for a
Hearing Officer determination (or upon remand or
referral), the PSOB
Office shall assign the claim to a Hearing Officer
on the roster; the PSOB Office may assign a particular claim
to a specific Hearing Officer if it judges, in its discretion, that his
experience or expertise suit him especially for it.
(c) Upon
its making the assignment described in paragraph (b)
of this section, the PSOB
Office shall serve notice of the same upon the claimant,
with an indication that any evidence or legal argument he
wishes to provide is to be filed simultaneously with
the PSOB Office and the Hearing Officer.
(d) With
respect to an assignment described in paragraph (b)
of this section, the Hearing
Officer's consideration shall be—
(1) De novo (unless the Director should expressly prescribe otherwise, with
respect to a particular remand or referral), rather
than in review of the findings, determinations,
affirmances, reversals, assignments, authorizations, decisions, judgments,
rulings, or other actions of the PSOB Office; and
(2) Consistent with subpart B,
C, or D of this part, as applicable.
(e) OJP's General Counsel shall provide advice to the Hearing Officer as to all questions of law relating to any
matter assigned pursuant to paragraph (b) of this section.
§ 32.44 Hearing
Officer determination.
(a) Upon
his determining a claim,
the Hearing Officer shall file
notice of the same simultaneously with the Director
(for his review under subpart F of this part (in the event of approval)),
the PSOB Office, and OJP's General
Counsel, which notice shall specify the factual findings and legal conclusions
that support it.
(b) Upon
a Hearing Officer's denying
a claim, the PSOB Office
shall serve notice of the same upon the claimant (and
upon any other claimant who may have filed a claim with
respect to the same public safety officer),
which notice shall—
(1) Specify the Hearing
Officer's factual findings and legal conclusions that support it; and
(2) Provide information as to Director appeals.
(c) Upon
a claimant's failure (without reasonable justification or excuse) to pursue in
timely fashion the determination of his claim pursuant to his filed
request therefor, the Director may, at his discretion, deem the request to be abandoned,
as though never filed. Not less than
thirty-three days prior thereto, the PSOB Office
shall serve the claimant with notice of the Director's
intention to exercise such discretion.
(a) Except
with respect to a remand or referral, at the
election of a claimant under subpart B or C of this part, the Hearing Officer
shall hold a hearing, at a location agreeable to the claimant and the Officer
(or, otherwise, at a location ruled by the Hearing Officer to be suitable), for
the sole purposes of obtaining, consistent with § 32.5(c),
(1) Evidence from the
claimant and his fact or expert witnesses; and
(2) Such other evidence
as the Hearing Officer, at his discretion, may rule to
be necessary or useful.
(b) Unless,
for good cause shown, the Director extends the time for
filing, no election
under paragraph (a) of this section shall be honored if it is filed with the
PSOB Office later than ninety days after service of the notice described in § 32.43(c).
(c) Not
less than seven days prior to any hearing, the claimant shall file simultaneously with the PSOB
Office and the Hearing Officer a list of all
expected fact‑ or expert witnesses and a brief summary of the evidence each witness is expected to provide.
(d) At
any hearing, the Hearing Officer—
(1) May exclude any evidence
whose probative value is substantially outweighed by considerations of undue
delay, waste of time, or needless presentation of cumulative evidence; and
(2) Shall exclude witnesses (other than the
claimant, or any person whose presence is shown by the claimant to be essential
to the presentation of his claim), so that they cannot hear the testimony of
other witnesses.
(e) Each
hearing shall be recorded, and the original of the complete record or
transcript thereof shall be made a part of the claim
file.
(f) Unless,
for good cause shown, the Director grants a waiver, a
claimant's failure to appear at a hearing (in person or through a
representative) shall constitute a withdrawal of his election
under paragraph (a) of this section.
(g) Upon
a claimant's failure to pursue in timely fashion his filed
election under paragraph (a) of this section, the Director
may, at his discretion, deem the same to
be abandoned. Not less than thirty-three
days prior thereto, the PSOB Office shall serve the claimant with notice of the Director's
intention to exercise such discretion.
(a) In
order to exhaust his administrative remedies,
a claimant seeking relief from the denial of his claim shall appeal to the Director
under subpart F of this
part.
(b) Consistent
with § 32.8, any claim
denial that is not appealed to the Director under paragraph (a)
of this section shall constitute the final agency determination,
unless the denial is reviewed otherwise under subpart F of this part.
Subpart F ‑ Director Appeals
& Reviews
§ 32.51 Scope of subpart.
Consistent
with § 32.1, this
subpart contains provisions applicable to Director
appeals and reviews of claim approvals
and denials made under subpart E
of this part, and reviews
of claim approvals under the Act, at 42 U.S.C. 3796c‑1
or Public
Law 107‑37.
§ 32.52 Time
for filing Director appeal.
(a) Unless,
for good cause shown, the Director extends the time for
filing, no Director appeal
shall be considered if it is filed with the PSOB Office
later than thirty-three days after the service of
notice of the denial (under subpart E
of this part) of a claim.
(b) A
claimant may file with his Director
appeal such supporting documentary, electronic, video, or other nonphysical
evidence and legal arguments as he may wish to provide.
(a) Upon
the filing of the approval
(under subpart E of this
part) of a claim, the Director shall review the
same.
(1) Any claim denial
made under subpart E of this
part; and
(2) Any claim approval
made under the Act, at 42 U.S.C. 3796c‑1 or Public
Law 107‑37.
(c) Unless
the Director judges that it would be unnecessary, the PSOB Office shall serve
notice upon the claimant (and upon any other claimant who may have filed a claim with respect to the same public safety officer) of the initiation of
a review under paragraph (a) or (b) of this section. Unless the Director judges that it would be
unnecessary, such notice shall—
(1) Indicate the principal factual findings
or legal conclusions at issue; and
(2) Offer a reasonable opportunity for filing of evidence or legal
arguments.
§ 32.54 Director
determination.
(a) Upon
the Director's approving or denying
a claim, the PSOB Office shall serve
notice of the same simultaneously upon the claimant (and upon any other
claimant who may have filed a claim with respect to the
same public safety officer), and upon
any Hearing Officer who made a determination
with respect to the claim. In the event
of a denial, such notice shall—
(1) Specify the factual findings and legal
conclusions that support it; and
(2) Provide information as to judicial appeals (for the claimant or claimants).
(b) Upon
a claimant's failure (without reasonable justification or excuse) to pursue in
timely fashion the determination of his claim
pursuant to his filed Director appeal,
the Director may, at his discretion, deem the same to be abandoned, as
though never filed. Not less than
thirty-three days prior thereto, the PSOB Office
shall serve the claimant with notice of the Director's
intention to exercise such discretion.
(c) With
respect to any claim before him, the Director, as appropriate, may—
(1) Remand the same to the PSOB Office, or to a Hearing
Officer;
(2) Vacate any related determination under this part; or
(3) Refer any related matters to a Hearing Officer (as a special master), to recommend
factual findings and dispositions in connection therewith.
(a) Consistent with § 32.8, any approval
or denial described in § 32.54(a) shall
constitute the final agency determination.
(b) A claimant seeking relief from the denial of his claim may
appeal judicially pursuant to the Act, at 42 U.S.C. 3796c‑2.
*************************************
REFERENCED IN OR HAVING
DIRECT APPLICATION TO
THE PUBLIC SAFETY
OFFICERS' BENEFITS ACT OF 1976
(GENERALLY CODIFIED AT
42 U.S.C. CHAPTER 46,
SUBCHAPTER XII)
OR
(updated as of Aug. 1, 2008)
1 U.S.C. § 1 Words denoting number, gender, and so forth
1 U.S.C. § 7 Definition of "marriage" and "spouse"
5 U.S.C. § 504 Costs and fees of parties
5 U.S.C. § 8191 Determination
of eligibility
18 U.S.C. § 287 False,
fictitious or fraudulent claims
18 U.S.C. § 1001 Statements or
entries generally
18 U.S.C. § 1621 Perjury generally
20 U.S.C. ch. 28,
subch. IV Student Assistance (range of sections)
20 U.S.C. § 1087ll Cost of attendance
20 U.S.C. § 1087nn Determination of
expected family contribution; data elements
20 U.S.C. § 1091 Student
eligibility
21 U.S.C. § 812 Schedule of
controlled substances
21 U.S.C. § 862 Denial of
Federal benefits to drug traffickers and possessors
26 U.S.C. § 152 Dependent defined
28 U.S.C. § 1746 Unsworn declarations under penalty of perjury
38 U.S.C. § 3532 Computation of
educational assistance allowance
42 U.S.C. § 423 Disability
insurance benefit payments
42 U.S.C. § 3782 Rules, regulations, and procedures;
consultations and establishment
42 U.S.C. § 3787 Subpoena power; employment of hearing officers;
authority to hold hearings
42 U.S.C. § 3788 Personnel and administrative authority
42 U.S.C. § 3791 General
provisions
42 U.S.C. § 3793 Authorization
of appropriations
42 U.S.C. § 3795a Falsification
or concealment of facts
42 U.S.C. ch. 68 Disaster
Relief (range of sections)
Pub. L. 89‑329, § 481 Higher Education Act
of 1965 (as in effect Oct. 3, 1996)
Pub. L. 90‑351,
§ 1601 Omnibus
Crime Control and Safe Streets Act of 1968
Pub. L. 94‑430,
§§ 3 to 6 Public
Safety Officers' Benefits Act of 1976
Pub. L. 98‑473,
§ 609AA Justice
Assistance Act of 1984
Pub. L. 99‑500,
§ 101(b), tit. II Department
of Justice Appropriation Act, 1987 (reference)
Pub. L. 101‑647,
§ 1301 Crime
Control Act of 1990
Pub. L. 106‑276 Act of
October 2, 2000
Pub. L. 106‑390,
§ 305 Disaster
Mitigation Act of 2000
Pub. L. 107‑37 Act of September 18,
2001 (as amended by Pub. L. 107‑56)
Pub. L. 107‑56,
§§ 2, 612 USA PATRIOT
Act
Pub. L. 108‑182 Hometown
Heroes Survivors Benefits Act of 2003 (reference)
Pub. L. 109‑162,
§ 1164 Department
of Justice Appropriations Authorization Act, 2006
28 C.F.R. § 0.94‑1 Bureau of
Justice Assistance
Fed R. Evid. 301 Presumptions
in General in Civil Actions and Proceedings
Fed R. Evid. 401 Definition of "Relevant Evidence"
Fed R. Evid. 402 Relevant Evidence Generally Admissible;
Irrelevant Evidence Inadmissible
Fed R. Evid. 602 Lack of
Personal Knowledge
Fed R. Evid. 603 Oath or
Affirmation
Fed R. Evid. 701 Opinion
Testimony by Lay Witnesses
Fed R. Evid. 702 Testimony by
Experts
Fed R. Evid. 703 Bases of
Opinion Testimony by Experts
Fed R. Evid. 704 Opinion on
Ultimate Issue
Fed R. Evid. 901 Requirement
of Authentication or Identification
Fed R. Evid. 902 Self-authentication
Fed R. Evid. 903 Subscribing
Witness' Testimony Unnecessary
Fed R. Evid. 1002 Requirement of
Original
Fed R. Evid. 1003 Admissibility
of Duplicates
Fed R. Evid. 1004 Admissibility
of Other Evidence of Contents
Fed R. Evid. 1005 Public Records
Fed R. Evid. 1007 Testimony or
Written Admission of Party
D.C. Stat. § 5‑716 Survivor benefits and annuities
*************************************
1
U.S.C. § 1 Words
denoting number, gender, and so forth
[as in effect
on Aug. 1, 2008]
In determining the meaning of any Act of Congress,
unless the context indicates otherwise—
words importing the singular include
and apply to several persons, parties, or things;
words importing the plural include
the singular;
words importing the masculine gender
include the feminine as well;
. . . .
1 U.S.C. § 1 (as in effect on Aug. 1, 2008)
*************************************
1 U.S.C. § 7 Definition
of "marriage" and "spouse"
[as in effect
on Aug. 1, 2008]
In determining the meaning of any Act of Congress, or
of any ruling, regulation, or interpretation of the various administrative
bureaus and agencies of the United States, the word "marriage" means
only a legal union between one man and one woman as husband and wife, and the
word "spouse" refers only to a person of the opposite sex who is a
husband or a wife.
1 U.S.C. § 7 (as in effect on Aug. 1, 2008)
*************************************
5 U.S.C. § 504 Costs
and fees of parties
[as in effect
on Aug. 1, 2008]
. . . .
(b)(1) For
the purposes of this section—
(A) . . . (ii) attorney
or agent fees shall not be awarded in excess of $125 per hour unless the agency
determines by regulation that an increase in the cost of living or a special
factor, such as the limited availability of qualified attorneys or agents for
the proceedings involved, justifies a higher fee.);
. . . .
5 U.S.C. § 504 (as in effect on Aug. 1, 2008)
*************************************
5 U.S.C. § 8101 Definitions
[as in effect
on Aug. 1, 2008]
For the purpose of this subchapter—
(17) "student" means an
individual under 23 years of age who has not completed 4 years of
education beyond the high school level and who is regularly pursuing a
full-time course of study or training at an institution which is—
(A) a school or college or
university operated or directly supported by the
(B) a school or college or
university which has been accredited by a State or by a State-recognized or
nationally recognized accrediting agency or body;
(C) a school or college or
university not so accredited but whose credits are accepted, on transfer, by at
least three institutions which are so accredited, for credit on the same basis
as if transferred from an institution so accredited; or
(D) an additional type of
educational or training institution as defined by the Secretary of Labor.
Such an individual is deemed not to
have ceased to be a student during an interim between school years if the
interim is not more than 4 months and if he shows to the satisfaction of
the Secretary that he has a bona fide intention of continuing to pursue a full-time
course of study or training during the semester or other enrollment period
immediately after the interim or during periods of reasonable duration during
which, in the judgment of the Secretary, he is prevented by factors beyond his
control from pursuing his education. A
student whose 23rd birthday occurs during a semester or other enrollment period
is deemed a student until the end of the semester or other enrollment period;
5 U.S.C. § 8101 (as in effect on Aug. 1, 2008)