Sec. 11. (a) As used in this section, “particular matter” means any of the following:

(1) An application.

Terms Used In Indiana Code 4-2-6-11

  • Advisory body: means an authority, a board, a commission, a committee, a task force, or other body designated by any name of the executive department that is authorized only to make nonbinding recommendations. See Indiana Code 4-2-6-1
  • Agency: means an authority, a board, a branch, a bureau, a commission, a committee, a council, a department, a division, an office, a service, or other instrumentality of the executive, including the administrative, department of state government. See Indiana Code 4-2-6-1
  • Appointing authority: means the following:

    Indiana Code 4-2-6-1

  • Assist: means to:

    Indiana Code 4-2-6-1

  • Business relationship: includes the following:

    Indiana Code 4-2-6-1

  • Commission: refers to the state ethics commission created under section 2 of this chapter. See Indiana Code 4-2-6-1
  • Compensation: means any money, thing of value, or financial benefit conferred on, or received by, any person in return for services rendered, or for services to be rendered, whether by that person or another. See Indiana Code 4-2-6-1
  • Contract: A legal written agreement that becomes binding when signed.
  • Employee: means an individual, other than a state officer, who is employed by an agency on a full-time, a part-time, a temporary, an intermittent, or an hourly basis. See Indiana Code 4-2-6-1
  • Employer: means any person from whom a state officer or employee or the officer's or employee's spouse received compensation. See Indiana Code 4-2-6-1
  • Lawsuit: A legal action started by a plaintiff against a defendant based on a complaint that the defendant failed to perform a legal duty, resulting in harm to the plaintiff.
  • Person: means any individual, proprietorship, partnership, unincorporated association, trust, business trust, group, limited liability company, or corporation, whether or not operated for profit, or a governmental agency or political subdivision. See Indiana Code 4-2-6-1
  • Represent: means to do any of the following on behalf of a person:

    Indiana Code 4-2-6-1

  • Special state appointee: means a person who is:

    Indiana Code 4-2-6-1

  • State officer: means any of the following:

    Indiana Code 4-2-6-1

(2) A business transaction.

(3) A claim.

(4) A contract.

(5) A determination.

(6) An enforcement proceeding.

(7) An investigation.

(8) A judicial proceeding.

(9) A lawsuit.

(10) A license.

(11) An economic development project.

(12) A public works project.

The term does not include the proposal or consideration of a legislative matter or the proposal, consideration, adoption, or implementation of a rule or an administrative policy or practice of general application.

     (b) A former state officer, employee, or special state appointee may not accept employment or receive compensation:

(1) as a lobbyist;

(2) from an employer if the former state officer, employee, or special state appointee was:

(A) engaged in the negotiation or the administration of one (1) or more contracts with that employer on behalf of the state or an agency; and

(B) in a position to make a discretionary decision affecting the:

(i) outcome of the negotiation; or

(ii) nature of the administration; or

(3) from an employer if the former state officer, employee, or special state appointee made a regulatory or licensing decision that directly applied to the employer or to a parent or subsidiary of the employer;

before the elapse of at least three hundred sixty-five (365) days after the date on which the former state officer, employee, or special state appointee ceases to be a state officer, employee, or special state appointee.

     (c) A former state officer, employee, or special state appointee may not represent or assist a person in a particular matter involving the state if the former state officer, employee, or special state appointee personally and substantially participated in the matter as a state officer, employee, or special state appointee, even if the former state officer, employee, or special state appointee receives no compensation for the representation or assistance.

     (d) A former state officer, employee, or special state appointee may not accept employment or compensation from an employer if the circumstances surrounding the employment or compensation would lead a reasonable person to believe that:

(1) employment; or

(2) compensation;

is given or had been offered for the purpose of influencing the former state officer, employee, or special state appointee in the performance of the individual’s duties or responsibilities while a state officer, an employee, or a special state appointee.

     (e) A written advisory opinion issued by the commission certifying that:

(1) employment of;

(2) consultation by;

(3) representation by; or

(4) assistance from;

the former state officer, employee, or special state appointee does not violate this section is conclusive proof that a former state officer, employee, or special state appointee is not in violation of this section.

     (f) Subsection (b) does not apply to the following:

(1) A special state appointee who serves only as a member of an advisory body.

(2) A former state officer, employee, or special state appointee who has:

(A) not negotiated or administered any contracts with that employer in the two (2) years before the beginning of employment or consulting negotiations with that employer; and

(B) any contract that:

(i) the former state officer, employee, or special state appointee may have negotiated or administered before the two (2) years preceding the beginning of employment or consulting negotiations; and

(ii) is no longer active.

     (g) An employee’s or a special state appointee’s state officer or appointing authority may waive application of subsection (b) or (c) in individual cases when consistent with the public interest. A waiver must satisfy all of the following:

(1) The waiver must be signed by an employee’s or a special state appointee’s:

(A) state officer or appointing authority authorizing the waiver; and

(B) agency ethics officer attesting to form.

(2) The waiver must include the following information:

(A) Whether the employee’s prior job duties involved substantial decision making authority over policies, rules, or contracts.

(B) The nature of the duties to be performed by the employee for the prospective employer.

(C) Whether the prospective employment is likely to involve substantial contact with the employee’s former agency and the extent to which any such contact is likely to involve matters where the agency has the discretion to make decisions based on the work product of the employee.

(D) Whether the prospective employment may be beneficial to the state or the public, specifically stating how the intended employment is consistent with the public interest.

(E) The extent of economic hardship to the employee if the request for a waiver is denied.

(3) The waiver must be filed with and presented to the commission by the state officer or appointing authority authorizing the waiver.

(4) The waiver must be limited to an employee or a special state appointee who obtains the waiver before engaging in the conduct that would give rise to a violation of subsection (b) or (c).

The commission may conduct an administrative review of a waiver and approve a waiver only if the commission is satisfied that the information provided under subdivision (2) is specifically and satisfactorily articulated. The inspector general may adopt rules under IC 4-22-2 to establish criteria for post employment waivers.

     (h) Subsection (b) applies, subject to waiver under subsection (g), to a former state officer, employee, or special state appointee who:

(1) made decisions as an administrative law judge; or

(2) presided over information gathering or order drafting proceedings;

that directly applied to the employer or to a parent or subsidiary of the employer in a material manner.

     (i) A former state officer, employee, or special state appointee who forms a sole proprietorship or a professional practice and engages in a business relationship with an entity that would otherwise violate this section must file a disclosure statement with the commission not later than one hundred eighty (180) days after separation from state service. The disclosure must:

(1) be signed by the former state officer, employee, or special state appointee;

(2) certify that the former state officer, employee, or special state appointee is not an employee of the entity; and

(3) state in detail the treatment of taxes, insurance, and any other benefits between the entity and the former state officer, employee, or state appointee.

     (j) The inspector general may not seek a state elected office before the elapse of at least three hundred sixty-five (365) days after leaving the inspector general position.

As added by P.L.9-1990, SEC.9. Amended by P.L.15-1992, SEC.6; P.L.222-2005, SEC.9; P.L.89-2006, SEC.10; P.L.1-2007, SEC.3; P.L.123-2015, SEC.25.