- A. Within thirty (30) days after the Insurance Commissioner, district attorney, Attorney General, or opposing party in a civil, criminal or administrative proceeding, serves on an insurer a written request by certified mail for disclosure of an insurance compliance self-evaluative audit document under this act, the company that prepared or caused the document to be prepared may file with the appropriate court a petition requesting an in camera hearing on whether the insurance compliance self-evaluative audit document or portions of the document are privileged or subject to disclosure. Failure by the company to file a petition waives the privilege for this request only.
- B. A company asserting the insurance compliance self-evaluative privilege in response to a request for disclosure under this act shall include in its request for an in camera hearing all of the information set forth in subsection E of this section.
- C. Upon the filing of a petition under this section, the court shall issue an order scheduling, within forty-five (45) days after the filing of the petition, an in camera hearing to determine whether the insurance compliance self-evaluative audit document or portions of the document are privileged under this section or subject to disclosure.
- D. The court, after an in camera review, may require disclosure of material for which the privilege in Section 1 of this act is asserted if the court determines, based upon its in camera review, that any one of the conditions set forth in subsection B of Section 2 of this act is applicable as to a civil or administrative proceeding or that any one of the conditions set forth in subsection C of Section 2 of this act is applicable as to a criminal proceeding. Upon making such a determination, the court may only compel the disclosure of those portions of an insurance compliance self-evaluative audit document relevant to issues in dispute in the underlying proceeding. Any compelled disclosure will not be considered to be a public document or be deemed to be a waiver of the privilege for any other civil, criminal, or administrative proceeding. A party unsuccessfully opposing disclosure may apply to the court for an appropriate order protecting the document from further disclosure.
E. A company asserting the insurance compliance self-evaluative privilege in response to a request for disclosure under this act shall provide to the Insurance Commissioner, district attorney, Attorney General, or opposing party in a civil, criminal or administrative proceeding, as the case may be, at the time of filing any objection to the disclosure, all of the following information:
- 1. The date of the insurance compliance self-evaluative audit document;
- 2. The identity of the entity conducting the audit;
- 3. The general nature of the activities covered by the insurance compliance self-evaluative audit; and
- 4. An identification of the portions of the insurance compliance self-evaluative audit document for which the privilege is being asserted.
Laws 2012, SB 1474, c. 257, § 3, eff. November 1, 2012.