Judges: Robert A. Butterworth Attorney General
Filed Date: 7/12/2001
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 7/5/2016
Mr. Joel D. Cantor Police Legal Advisor City of Hollywood Police Department 3250 Hollywood Boulevard Hollywood, Florida 33021-6967
Dear Mr. Cantor:
On behalf of the City of Hollywood Chief of Police, you ask substantially the following question:
May the special law enforcement trust fund established under the Florida Contraband Forfeiture Act be used to pay for the LASIK eye surgery of a law enforcement officer?
In sum:
The special law enforcement trust fund established under the Florida Contraband Forfeiture Act may not be used to pay for the LASIK eye surgery of a law enforcement officer since the benefit from such expenses would be primarily personal rather than for a law enforcement function.
Sections
If seized property is sold, the proceeds are disbursed in the manner prescribed by statute.2 When the seizing agency is a municipality, any remaining proceeds are to be deposited in a special law enforcement trust fund established by the governing body of the municipality.3 Pursuant to section
In specifying the uses for such proceeds in the special law enforcement trust fund, section
"Such proceeds and interest earned therefrom shall be used for school resource officer, crime prevention, safe neighborhood, drug abuse education and prevention programs, or for other law enforcement purposes, which include defraying the cost of protracted or complex investigations, providing additional equipment or expertise and providing matching funds to obtain federal grants. The proceeds and interest may not be used to meet normal operating expenses of the law enforcement agency."
Funds received through an appropriation from the contraband forfeiture fund may be expended in accordance with statutorily prescribed procedures:
"1. Such funds may be used only for school resource officer, crime prevention, safe neighborhood, drug abuse education, or drug prevention programs or such other law enforcement purposes as the board of county commissioners or governing body of the municipality deems appropriate.
2. Such funds shall not be a source of revenue to meet normal operating needs of the law enforcement agency.
3. . . . [A]ny local law enforcement agency that acquires at least $15,000 pursuant to the Florida Contraband Forfeiture Act within a fiscal year must expend or donate no less than 15 percent of such proceeds for the support or operation of any drug treatment, drug abuse education, drug prevention, crime prevention, safe neighborhood, or school resource officer program(s). The local law enforcement agency has the discretion to determine which program(s) will receive the designated proceeds."4
Contraband forfeiture funds may be used only for those purposes set forth in the statute and for appropriate law enforcement purposes, except normal operating expenses, as determined by the governing body of the municipality. While this office has on occasion concluded that proposed expenditures were outside the scope of permissible uses for contraband forfeiture,5 ultimately the decision of whether the expenditure is for an appropriate law enforcement purpose must be made by the governing body of the city.6
You state that the vision standards for police officers can directly affect the quality of public safety, and therefore inquire whether contraband forfeiture funds may be used for a law enforcement officer's LASIK surgery to correct the officer's vision. Although indirectly beneficial to the law enforcement agency, such an expenditure would be primarily of personal benefit to the individual involved. As such, it would not appear to serve a law enforcement function or purpose as contemplated by the Contraband Forfeiture Act.
Moreover, as noted above, section
Accordingly, I am of the opinion that the special law enforcement trust fund established under the Florida Contraband Forfeiture Act may not be used to pay for the LASIK eye surgery of a law enforcement officer since the benefit from such expenses would be primarily personal rather than for a law enforcement function.
Sincerely,
Robert A. Butterworth Attorney General
RAB/tjw
"Notwithstanding the drug abuse education, drug treatment, drug prevention, crime prevention, safe neighborhood, or school resource officer minimum expenditures or donations, . . . the chief of police and the governing body of the municipality may agree to expend or donate such funds over a period of years if the expenditure or donation of such minimum amount in any given fiscal year would exceed the needs of the . . . municipality for such program(s). Nothing in this section precludes the expenditure or donation of forfeiture proceeds in excess of the minimum amounts established herein."