Attorney General's Opinion
Attorney General, Richard Blumenthal
September 23, 2004
Honorable Marc Ryan
Secretary
Office of Policy and Management
410 Capitol Avenue
Hartford, CT 06106
Dear Secretary Ryan:
This letter responds to your August 3, 2004 amended request for a formal opinion as to whether Dr. D. Ray Sirry, the Juan F. Court Monitor, would be entitled to indemnification from the State in connection with services he has agreed to provide to the State to assist it in implementing reforms at the Connecticut Juvenile Training School (CJTS). We conclude that under the circumstances as you describe them and pursuant to the Revised Monitoring Order, as long as Dr. Sirry's activities relate to "the performance of his duties" in the Juan F. class action, the State is required to indemnify him.
We understand the relevant facts to be as follows: On December 31, 2003, the District Court entered the Revised Monitoring Order, in accordance with a Stipulation of the parties. Pursuant to the Revised Monitoring Order, the Court established a three person Transition Task Force (Task Force) comprised of Dr. Sirry, the Commissioner of the Department of Children and Families (DCF) and the Secretary of the Office of Policy and Management (OPM). The Task Force "shall assume all decision-making authority having a substantial impact on the safety and welfare of members of the Juan F. class, which authority is otherwise reserved solely to the Commissioner of DCF . . . ." Stipulation, ¶ 2.
According to your letter, the State has asked Dr. Sirry to assist it in "implementing important reforms at the CJTS" by "sharing his vast experience and knowledge with the State to better the conditions at the training school." You state that Dr. Sirry's services at CJTS "would be related to his present duties as the Juan F. court monitor and as a member of the Transition Task Force under the recent court order." CJTS provides services to members of the Juan F. class who are in the custody of DCF as a result of being abused, neglected or abandoned and are therefore subject to the consent decree and Revised Monitoring Order. In particular, approximately ten percent of the CJTS client population are members of the Juan F. class1 and it is likely that, in the future, members of the Juan F. class may also be committed to CJTS.
I trust that this letter responds to your question.
RICHARD BLUMENTHAL
ATTORNEY GENERAL
1 The plaintiffs in the Juan F class are composed of (1) all children who are, or will be in the future, in the care, custody or supervision of the Commissioner of the Department of Children and Families (DCF), as a result of being abused, neglected or abandoned or being found at risk of such maltreatment; and (2) all children about whom DCF knows, or should know, are now, or will be abused, neglected or abandoned, or who are, or will be at risk of such maltreatment.