The Honorable Mark W. Taddiken State Senator, 21st District
2614 Hackberry Road Clifton, Kansas 66937
Dear Senator Taddiken:
You inquire whether an applicant for law enforcement training and eventual certification as a law enforcement officer1 is disqualified where the applicant was placed on diversion, as a juvenile, for a felony crime. K.S.A. 2009 Supp.
*Page 2Prior to admission to a course conducted at the [law enforcement] training center or at a certified state or local law enforcement agency, the applicant shall furnish to the director of police training a statement . . . certifying the applicant's fulfillment of the following requirements. The applicant:
. . . .
(3) has not been convicted, does not have an expunged conviction, and on and after July 1, 1995, has not been placed on diversion by any state or the federal government for a crime which is a felony. . . .2
You indicate that in Attorney General Opinion No.
Adjudication means that a court determines that sufficient evidence exists to believe that a juvenile committed the offense.3 The purpose of diversion is to avoid prosecution. Diversion — whether in juvenile or adult proceedings — is an agreement between the offender and the prosecutor whereby if the offender meets certain conditions, prosecution is avoided. If the offender breaches the diversion agreement, prosecution may ensue.
While we concur with General Stovall's conclusion that an adjudication is not a "conviction" for purposes of K.S.A.
K.S.A. 2009 Supp.
In 1995, the legislature amended K.S.A.
Attorney General Stovall relied on the case of State v.Busse, 8 to support her conclusion that applicants placed on juvenile diversion are disqualified. In Busse, the district court dismissed a charge of aiding a felon because the felon that the defendant aided was a juvenile. State law at the time defined the crime of aiding a felon as "knowingly harboring, concealing or aiding any person who has committed afelony. . . ."9 The Kansas Supreme Court reversed the dismissal because the statute prohibited aiding "any person" who committed a felony regardless of the status of the person aided. General Stovall concluded that the same rationale should apply to K.S.A.
However, in Busse, the Court noted that interpreting the statute to include aiding juvenile offenders should not undermine "the benefits and protection that the juvenile offenders code extends to the young offender."10 Thus, while the plain language of K.S.A.
We are also mindful of the statutory rule of construction that the legislature is presumed to intend that a statute be given a reasonable construction, so as to avoid unreasonable or absurd results.12 Interpreting K.S.A.
Sincerely,
Steve Six Attorney General
Mary Feighny Deputy Attorney General
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