Utah Code § 63A-14-702

General procedures for conducting a hearing on an ethics complaint
Open in Lexace · Ask the AI about this section
(1) In conducting a hearing on a complaint, the commission shall comply with the following process
in the order specified:
(a) introduction and instructions for procedure and process, at the discretion of the chair;
(b) procedural motions, adoption of evidentiary standards, or other general matters;
(c) complainants' opening argument, to be presented by a complainant or complainants' counsel;
(d) complainants' presentation of evidence and witnesses in support of allegations in the
complaint;
(e) consideration of motions to dismiss the complaint or motions for a directed verdict, as
applicable;
(f) respondent's opening argument, to be presented by the respondent or respondent's counsel;
(g) respondent's presentation of evidence and witnesses refuting the allegations in the complaint;
(h) presentation of rebuttal evidence and witnesses by the complainants, at the discretion of the
chair;
(i) presentation of rebuttal evidence and witnesses by the respondent, at the discretion of the
chair;
(j) complainants' closing argument, to be presented by a complainant or complainants' counsel;
(k) respondent's closing argument, to be presented by the respondent or respondent's counsel;
(l) deliberations by the commission; and
(m) adoption of the commission's findings.
(2) The commission may, in extraordinary circumstances, and consistent with due process
considerations, vary the order described in Subsection (1) by majority vote and by providing
notice to the parties.

(3) In addition to witnesses or evidence subpoenaed at the request of a complainant or a
respondent, the chair or the commission may, consistent with due process considerations,
subpoena and schedule the examination of witnesses or evidence that the chair or the
commission determines will assist the commission in making a determination on the merits of
the complaint.

‹ Prev All Utah sections Next ›


Lexace provides legal information, not legal advice, and no attorney–client relationship is created. Statute text is provided for general information and may not reflect the most recent amendments; verify against the official state code.