Nevada Code § 171.1225

Peace officer to provide information to suspected victims of domestic violence
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1. When investigating an act of domestic
violence, a peace officer shall:
(a) Make a good faith effort to explain the
provisions of NRS 171.137 pertaining to
domestic violence and advise victims of all reasonable means to prevent further
abuse, including advising each person of the availability of a shelter or other
services in the community.
(b) Provide a person suspected of being the
victim of an act of domestic violence with a written copy of the following
statements:
(1) My name is Officer
......................... (naming the investigating officer). Nevada law
requires me to inform you of the following information.
(2) If I have probable cause to believe
that a battery has been committed against you, your minor child or the minor
child of the person believed to have committed the battery in the last 24 hours
by your spouse, your former spouse, any other person to whom you are related by
blood or marriage, a person with whom you have had or are having a dating
relationship or a person with whom you have a child in common, and if I had a
face-to-face encounter with the person suspected of committing the battery that
was of sufficient duration to determine whether probable cause existed while
responding to the initial incident or call for service, I am required, unless
mitigating circumstances exist, to arrest the person suspected of committing
the battery.
(3) If I have probable cause to believe
that a battery has been committed against you, your minor child or the minor
child of the person believed to have committed the battery in the last 7 days
by your spouse, your former spouse, any other person to whom you are related by
blood or marriage, a person with whom you have had or are having a dating
relationship or a person with whom you have a child in common, and if I did not
have a face-to-face encounter with the person suspected of committing the
battery that was of sufficient duration to determine whether probable cause
existed while responding to the initial incident or call for service, I am
required, unless mitigating circumstances exist, to arrest the person suspected
of committing the battery.
(4) If I am unable to arrest the person
suspected of committing the battery, you have the right to request that the
prosecutor file a criminal complaint against the person. I can provide you with
information on this procedure. If convicted, the person who committed the
battery may be placed on probation, ordered to see a counselor, put in jail or
fined.
(5) The law provides that you may seek a
court order for the protection of you, your minor children or any animal that
is owned or kept by you, by the person who committed or threatened the act of
domestic violence or by the minor child of either such person against further
threats or acts of domestic violence. You do not need to hire a lawyer to
obtain such an order for protection.
(6) An order for protection may require
the person who committed or threatened the act of domestic violence against you
to:
(I) Stop threatening, harassing or
injuring you or your children;
(II) Move out of your residence;
(III) Stay away from your place of
employment;
(IV) Stay away from the school
attended by your children;
(V) Stay away from any place you or
your children regularly go;
(VI) Avoid or limit all
communication with you or your children;
(VII) Stop physically injuring,
threatening to injure or taking possession of any animal that is owned or kept
by you or your children, either directly or through an agent; and
(VIII) Stop physically injuring or
threatening to injure any animal that is owned or kept by the person who
committed or threatened the act or his or her children, either directly or through
an agent.
(7) A court may make future orders for
protection which award you custody of your children and require the person who
committed or threatened the act of domestic violence against you to:
(I) Pay the rent or mortgage due on
the place in which you live;
(II) Pay the amount of money
necessary for the support of your children;
(III) Pay part or all of the costs
incurred by you in obtaining the order for protection; and
(IV) Comply with the arrangements
specified for the possession and care of any animal owned or kept by you or
your children or by the person who committed or threatened the act or his or
her children.
(8) To get an order for protection, go to
room number ....... (state the room number of the office at the court) at the
court, which is located at ......................... (state the address of the
court). Ask the clerk of the court to provide you with the forms for an order
of protection.
(9) If the person who committed or
threatened the act of domestic violence against you violates the terms of an
order for protection, the person may be arrested and, if:
(I) The arresting officer determines
that such a violation is accompanied by a direct or indirect threat of harm;
(II) The person has previously
violated a temporary or extended order for protection; or
(III) At the time of the violation
or within 2 hours after the violation, the person has a concentration of
alcohol of 0.08 or more in the persons blood or breath or an amount of a
prohibited substance in the persons blood or urine, as applicable, that is
equal to or greater than the amount set forth in subsection 3 or 4 of NRS 484C.110 ,
the person
will not be admitted to bail sooner than 12 hours after arrest.
(10) You may obtain emergency assistance
or shelter by contacting your local program against domestic violence at
......................... (state name, address and telephone number of local
program) or you may call, without charge to you, the Statewide Program Against
Domestic Violence at ........................ (state toll-free telephone number
of Statewide Program).
2. The failure of a peace officer to carry
out the requirements set forth in subsection 1 is not a defense in a criminal
prosecution for the commission of an act of domestic violence, nor may such an
omission be considered as negligence or as causation in any civil action
against the peace officer or the officers employer.
3. As used in this section:
(a) Act of domestic violence means any of the
following acts committed by a person against his or her spouse, former spouse,
any other person to whom he or she is related by blood or marriage, a person
with whom he or she has had or is having a dating relationship, a person with
whom he or she has a child in common, the minor child of any of those persons
or his or her minor child:
(1) A battery.
(2) An assault.
(3) Compelling the other by force or
threat of force to perform an act from which he or she has the right to refrain
or to refrain from an act which he or she has the right to perform.
(4) A sexual assault.
(5) A knowing, purposeful or reckless
course of conduct intended to harass the other. Such conduct may include, but
is not limited to:
(I) Stalking.
(II) Arson.
(III) Trespassing.
(IV) Larceny.
(V) Destruction of private property.
(VI) Carrying a concealed weapon
without a permit.
(VII) Injuring or killing an animal.
(6) False imprisonment.
(7) Unlawful entry of the others
residence, or forcible entry against the others will if there is a reasonably
foreseeable risk of harm to the other from the entry.
(b) Dating relationship means frequent,
intimate associations primarily characterized by the expectation of affectional
or sexual involvement. The term does not include a casual relationship or an
ordinary association between persons in a business or social context.

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