BILL NUMBER: SB 1066	AMENDED
	BILL TEXT

	AMENDED IN ASSEMBLY  AUGUST 16, 2010
	AMENDED IN ASSEMBLY  JUNE 23, 2010
	AMENDED IN SENATE  MAY 24, 2010
	AMENDED IN SENATE  MARCH 22, 2010

INTRODUCED BY   Senator Oropeza
   (Coauthor: Senator Padilla)

                        FEBRUARY 17, 2010

   An act to amend Section 6126 of, and to add Section 5040 to, the
Penal Code, relating to corrections.


	LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST


   SB 1066, as amended, Oropeza. Corrections: Inspector General.
   Existing law establishes the office of the Inspector General, and
charges the Inspector General with various duties and
responsibilities. Existing law establishes the Department of
Corrections and Rehabilitation, and charges it with various duties
and responsibilities.
   This bill would require the Inspector General to oversee, and the
Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation to oversee and conduct,
periodic and random searches of  all  employees and
vendors entering  all   the secure perimeter
 of the state prisons under the jurisdiction of the department
for contraband, and to report to the  Legislature 
 Inspector General  quarterly regarding those searches, as
specified.
   Vote: majority. Appropriation: no. Fiscal committee: yes.
State-mandated local program: no.


THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA DO ENACT AS FOLLOWS:

  SECTION 1.  Section 5040 is added to the Penal Code, to read:
   5040.  (a) The Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation shall
oversee and conduct periodic and random searches of  all
 employees and vendors entering  all of the
  the secure perimeter of  state prisons under the
jurisdiction of the department for contraband. These searches shall
include random searches of  all  property, personal
or otherwise, brought into the prison by those individuals. These
searches shall be conducted at each institution at least once
 a   per  month  for each staff
shift  . The department shall provide the Inspector General
with a minimum of  five   three  working
days notice prior to the date of those random searches the department
plans to conduct.
   (b) (1) The department shall  , in consultation with the
Inspector General pursuant to Section 6126,  provide a
written report to the  Legislature   Inspector
General at least  quarterly detailing the following:
   (A) The names of the prisons where the searches took place.
   (B) The dates of the searches.
   (C) The shifts during which the searches took place.
   (D) The number of employees searched. 
   (E) The number of employees scheduled to work on those shifts.
 
   (F) 
    (E)  The number of vendors searched. 
   (G) The number of vendors scheduled to arrive during those shifts.
 
   (H) 
    (F)  The number of cell phones discovered. 
   (I) 
    (G)  The number of items of portable computer equipment
found, including, but not limited to, iPods, MP3 players, DVD
players, CD players, CDs, and portable video game players. 
   (J) 
    (H)  Tobacco products found  , including
lighters and matches  . 
   (K) 
    (I)  Illegal substances found, broken out by type of
substance.
   (2) The report  shall also contain a general comment
section for use by the Inspector General and the department to
discuss the issues they find relevant to the searches and 
shall include a section detailing the actions taken as a result of
the discovery of contraband possessed by an employee or vendor and
the results of any disciplinary process resulting from the discovery
of contraband. 
   (c) The reports to be submitted pursuant to subdivision (b) shall
be submitted in compliance with Section 9795 of the Government Code.

  SEC. 2.  Section 6126 of the Penal Code is amended to read:
   6126.  (a) (1) The Inspector General shall review departmental
policy and procedures, conduct audits of investigatory practices and
other audits, be responsible for contemporaneous oversight of
internal affairs investigations and the disciplinary process, and
conduct investigations of the Department of Corrections and
Rehabilitation, as requested by either the Secretary of the
Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation or a Member of the
Legislature, pursuant to the approval of the Inspector General under
policies to be developed by the Inspector General. The Inspector
General may, under policies developed by the Inspector General,
initiate an investigation or an audit on his or her own accord.
   (2) The Inspector General shall audit each warden of an
institution one year after his or her appointment, and shall audit
each correctional institution at least once every four years. Each
audit of a warden shall include, but not be limited to, issues
relating to personnel, training, investigations, and financial
matters. Each four-year audit shall include an assessment of the
maintenance of the facility managed by the warden. The audit report
shall include all significant findings of the Inspector General's
assessment of facility maintenance. These audit reports shall be
provided to the Legislature and shall be made public. The
requirements of this paragraph shall be phased in by the Inspector
General so that they are fully met by July 1, 2009.
   (3) The Inspector General shall oversee, at a minimum,  11 of
 the department's  search of one staff shift per year at
each adult institution, in order to ensure the integrity of the
process and of the searches, and the accuracy of the reports
submitted   searches  pursuant to Section 5040 
each year  . Nothing in this paragraph shall be interpreted to
allow the Inspector General to direct the department regarding when
the random searches shall take place, to allow the Inspector General
to direct the department regarding how the random searches shall be
carried out, or as requiring the Inspector General's approval prior
to the department conducting the random searches.
   (b) Upon completion of an investigation or audit, the Inspector
General shall provide a response to the requester.
   (c) The Inspector General shall, during the course of an
investigatory audit, identify areas of full and partial compliance,
or noncompliance, with departmental investigatory policies and
procedures, specify deficiencies in the completion and documentation
of investigatory processes, and recommend corrective actions,
including, but not limited to, additional training with respect to
investigative policies, additional policies, or changes in policy, as
well as any other findings or recommendations that the Inspector
General deems appropriate.
   (d) The Inspector General, pursuant to Section 6126.6, shall
review the Governor's candidates for appointment to serve as warden
for the state's adult correctional institutions and as
superintendents for the state's juvenile facilities.
   (e) The Inspector General shall, in consultation with the
Department of Finance, develop a methodology for producing a workload
budget to be used for annually adjusting the budget of the Office of
the Inspector General, beginning with the budget for the 2005-06
fiscal year.