Within thirty (30) days of either the conclusion of the hearing, the submission of final briefs, if required, or the assignment to a complaint examiner of a case that does not require an evidentiary hearing, the complaint examiner shall make written findings of fact and a determination of the merits of the complaint.
In the merits determination, the complaint examiner shall make one of the following findings about each allegation in the complaint:
If the complaint examiner finds that no allegation in the complaint is sustained or the subject officer is exonerated on all allegations, the Executive Director shall dismiss the complaint and send written notice of such determination, along with copies of the merits determination, to the Chief of Police, the complainant, and the subject officer.
If the complaint examiner determines that one or more allegations in the complaint is sustained, the Executive Director shall transmit OPC's investigative report, together with the attached exhibits, as well as the merits determination of the complaint examiner, to the Chief of Police for appropriate action. OPC shall also provide the complainant and subject officer with written notices of such determination, along with copies of the merits determination.
The complaint examiner's written findings of fact and determination may not be rejected by the Chief of Police unless they clearly misapprehend the record before the complaint examiner and are not supported by substantial, reliable, and probative evidence in that record.
D.C. Mun. Regs. tit. 6, r. 6-A2122