Ombudsman

Office of the Ombudsman of the Cook Islands

Cook Islands Ombudsman

45/100

Summary

The Office of the Ombudsman was established under the Ombudsman Act 1984 as an officer of and responsible to Parliament. The Ombudsman is appointed by the Queen's Representative on the advice of the Prime Minister and serves a 3-year term. Under the Police Act 2012 (ss.91–92), jurisdiction was extended to include the Cook Islands Police Service: the Ombudsman may investigate police complaints that remain unresolved after being lodged with the Police Commissioner, and must be notified if death or serious injury results from police action. Findings and recommendations are reported to Parliament, but are advisory — the Ombudsman cannot directly impose discipline. No subpoena or compelled testimony powers are evident from the statute. No corrections or prison oversight mandate exists.

Independence Scorecard

Independence Score: 45/100 (moderate)
45/100
Weak
Methodology v0.1
AppointmentExecutive appointment
Term length3 years
Removal standardFor cause only
Budget independenceLegislative line item
Subpoena powerNo
Compel testimonyNo
Records accessRestricted
Public reports requiredYes
Pre-publication reviewNone — reports published directly

Statute

Name
Ombudsman Act 1984; Police Act 2012
Citation
Ombudsman Act 1984 (Cook Islands); Police Act 2012, ss.91–92
Full text
Full text of law →

Jurisdiction scope

Investigates complaints against government ministries and Crown agencies (Ombudsman Act 1984); jurisdiction extended by Police Act 2012 (ss.91–92) to cover complaints about Cook Islands Police Service conduct, policies, and procedures. Complaints must first be lodged with the Police Commissioner; the Ombudsman may investigate if the complaint is uninvestigated or unresolved, or if death or serious injury results from police action. No corrections jurisdiction. Reports findings and recommendations to Parliament.