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Elder Abuse Reporting ORS 124.060 Elder Abuse Reporting ORS 124.060

Elder Abuse Reporting ORS 124.060 - PowerPoint Presentation

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Elder Abuse Reporting ORS 124.060 - PPT Presentation

ORS 124060 Any public or private official having reasonable cause to believe that any person 65 years of age or older with whom the official comes in contact has suffered abuse or that any person with whom the official comes in contact has abused a person 65 years of age or older shall report or ID: 1042974

client report ors attorney report client attorney ors required 124 abuse official contact duty reasonable person information 050 detrimental

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Presentation Transcript

1. Elder Abuse ReportingORS 124.060

2. ORS 124.060Any public or private official having reasonable cause to believe that any person 65 years of age or older with whom the official comes in contact has suffered abuse, or that any person with whom the official comes in contact has abused a person 65 years of age or older, shall report or cause a report to be made in the manner required in ORS 124.065. Nothing contained in ORS 40.225 to 40.295 affects the duty to report imposed by this section, except that a psychiatrist, psychologist, member of the clergy or attorney is not required to report such information communicated by a person if the communication is privileged under ORS 40.225 to 40.295. An attorney is not required to make a report under this section by reason of information communicated to the attorney in the course of representing a client if disclosure of the information would be detrimental to the client.

3. When is this applicable?

4. When is this applicable?Although we are mandatory reporters due to being attorneys…

5. When is this applicable?Although we are mandatory reporters due to being attorneys…Reporting is for work AND personal life

6. When is this applicable?Although we are mandatory reporters due to being attorneys…Reporting is for work AND personal lifeThis means 24/7

7. “Elderly”ORS 124.050(2) – Duty to report is for ALL adults 65 and older who are NOT in a Long Term Care facilityMental capacity / vulnerability of person does NOT matter

8. “Public or Private Official”ORS 124.050(9) – defines who is included as a mandatory reporterNote: “Public or private” is a termORS does not differentiate definitions for “public” v. “private” official

9. “Reasonable Cause to Believe”Not defined in ORSRules of Professional ConductORPC 1.0(L) - "Reasonable belief" references when the lawyer believes the matter in question and that the circumstances are such that the belief is reasonable.Case LawBerger v. State Office for Services to Children & Families – cite in materialsReasonable cause = reasonable suspicionChild abuse case

10. “Official Comes in Contact”Legal duty requires actual contact with alleged victim or alleged perpetratorNO duty if contact is with a 3rd partyNote: no definition of contactContact when? Prior client? Current client?

11. “Official Comes in Contact”Attorney does not need to be in legal role; also have duty in personal life (ie: grocery store). There are no exceptions for attorney to get out of required reporting for contact in attorney’s personal lifeIssue of whether to report does not necessarily end when there is no duty to reportMoral codePrevention of civil liabilityPrevent harm

12. “Abuse”Note: assumption of abuse in statute, but it is really “alleged abuse”

13. “Abuse”ORS 124.050(L)non-accidental physical injury or painneglectabandonmentsexual abuseverbal abuse

14. “Abuse”ORS 124.050(L)**financial exploitationprivate indecencyinvoluntary seclusionwrongful use of physical or chemical restraints

15. “Shall Report or Cause a Report to be made”“Shall”, not “may”ORS 124.065 discusses the method to reportMust be an oral reportMade immediately By telephone or otherwise to the local office of DHS or to a law enforcement agencyWithin the county where the person making the report is at the time of contact.

16. If known, reports shall contain…Name and address of elderly personNames and addresses of persons responsible for care of elderly personNature and extent of abuse (including previous abuse)Explanation given for abuse (if any)Anything helpful for report to establish cause of abuseIdentity of the perpetrator

17. Now we get to the exceptions….

18. But first…Things to remember:ORPC 1.2(a): attorney must follow client’s decisions concerning the objective of the client’s representation and is required to consult with the client as to the means of pursuing such objectivesORPC 1.4(b): Attorney is required to explain information to the client to the extent reasonably necessary to make an informed decisionORPC 1.6: For the most part, attorney cannot discuss information relating to representation of the client unless given consent by client

19. 1st Exception: PrivilegeNot required to report if stems from attorney-client privilegeORS 40.225 (Oregon Evidence Code 503) Confidential communication: “communication not intended to be disclosed to 3rd party other than those to whom disclosure is in furtherance of the rendition of professional legal services to the client or those reasonable necessary for the transmission of the communication” Client holds the privilege and can prevent disclosure of confidential communicationsNote: there are some communications that are not privileged under ORS 40.225(4)No privilege if 3rd party is in the room

20. Privilege, but…If privileged, but client wants to report…then the attorney is required to report under ORS 124.060 if the duty is triggered.If not triggered, attorney still may need to report under ORPC 1.2(a) which requires lawyer to comply with client’s decisions

21. 2nd Exception: Not Required to Report if Disclosure if Detrimental to ClientAttorney may still make reportORCP 1.6 – Confidentiality issue still appliesDoes not say “most detrimental of possible outcomes”; Detrimental is broad!No balancing test requiredSubjective to client and possibly even attorney**Not offered to any other official – specific to attorneys

22. What is an example?Son lives with Mom. Mom tells Attorney that Son is using her funds without her consent and she is aware of financial abuse. Mom does not want report made because it would affect the relationship with her son and grandchildren.

23. What is an example?Not required to report under ORS 124.060Cannot report under ORPC 1.6 confidentiality

24. PenaltyAttorney’s failure to report:Class A violation = Penalty of $2,000Possibly subject to discipline (May also be subject to discipline if you make the report using confidential information, so be aware of interplay)Abuser = Treble Damages (eek!)

25. ConclusionIt is really important to do the analysis! It is worth the time to figure out the right route.Feel free to contact the Oregon State Bar for questions on reporting.