IC 15-17-5
Chapter 5. Meat and Poultry Inspection; Humane Slaughter Act
IC 15-17-5-1
Purpose
Sec. 1. The purpose of this chapter is to do the following:
(1) Safeguard the public health and promote public welfare by:
(A) preventing the slaughter of dead, dying, disabled, or
diseased livestock or poultry for human food purposes; and
(B) preventing the manufacture, processing, storage,
transportation, and sale of adulterated meat and poultry
products for human food purposes.
(2) Eliminate the manufacture, processing, distribution, and sale
of fraudulent, misbranded, or deceptive products of livestock
and poultry origin.
(3) Prohibit the use of nonhumane methods in the slaughter of
livestock and poultry.
(4) Provide for humane slaughter of livestock and poultry and
for meat and poultry products inspection programs that will
impose and enforce requirements with respect to intrastate
operations and commerce that are at least equal to those
imposed and enforced under the federal Humane Slaughter Act
(7 U.S.C. 1901 et seq.), the federal Meat Inspection Act (21
U.S.C. 601 et seq.), and the federal Poultry Products Inspection
Act (21 U.S.C. 451 et seq.) with respect to operations and
transactions in interstate commerce.
(5) Aid in the control of livestock and poultry diseases by
discovering the origins of diseased livestock and poultry found
in antemortem inspections and obtaining samples of blood and
tissue specimens as considered necessary for the control of
livestock and poultry diseases.
As added by P.L.2-2008, SEC.8.
IC 15-17-5-2
Administration
Sec. 2. The state veterinarian shall administer this chapter to
accomplish the purposes set forth in section 1 of this chapter.
As added by P.L.2-2008, SEC.8.
IC 15-17-5-3
Designation of board
Sec. 3. The board is designated as the appropriate state agency to
cooperate with the Secretary of Agriculture of the United States in
the administration of this chapter.
As added by P.L.2-2008, SEC.8.
IC 15-17-5-4
Duties of board
Sec. 4. To accomplish the objectives of this chapter, the board or
an agent of the board may do the following:
(1) Require by rules the following:
(A) Antemortem inspection and postmortem inspection of
livestock and poultry slaughtered for distribution as human
food.
(B) Except for the operations of establishments exempt
under section 11 of this chapter, the quarantine, segregation,
and inspection of livestock and poultry slaughtered, and of
livestock products and poultry products processed or
prepared for distribution at all establishments in Indiana.
(2) Require by rules the following:
(A) The identification of livestock and poultry for inspection
purposes.
(B) The marking and labeling of livestock products, poultry
products, livestock and poultry product containers, or both
the product and containers as:
(i) "Indiana Inspected and Passed" if the products are
found upon inspection to be not adulterated;
(ii) "Indiana Inspected and Condemned" if the products are
found upon inspection to be adulterated; or
(iii) "Not for Sale" if the products are produced under an
exemption from inspection.
(C) The destruction for food purposes of all condemned
products under the supervision of an inspector.
(3) Prohibit the entry into official establishments of livestock
products and poultry products not prepared under federal
inspection or inspection under this chapter and further limit the
entry of the products and other materials into official
establishments under conditions that the board considers
necessary to effectuate the purposes of this chapter.
(4) Require by rules that when livestock products and poultry
products leave official establishments, the products bear
directly on the products or on the containers, or both, as the
board requires, all information necessary to prevent a product
from being misbranded, and that all labeling and containers to
be used for the products when sold or transported in commerce
be approved by the board to ensure that the products comply
with this chapter.
(5) Investigate the sanitary conditions of each establishment and
withdraw or refuse to provide inspection service at an
establishment where the sanitary conditions are such as to make
adulterated any livestock products or poultry products prepared
or handled at the establishment.
(6) Adopt rules concerning sanitation for all establishments,
including custom slaughterers or processors, engaged in the
slaughtering of livestock or poultry or preparing meat food
products or poultry products capable of use as human food.
(7) Require by rules that the following persons keep records
that fully and correctly disclose all transactions involving meat
food products and poultry products:
(A) Persons in the business of slaughtering livestock or
poultry or preparing, freezing, packaging, labeling, buying,
selling (as dealers, wholesalers, or other similar persons),
transporting, or storing any livestock products or poultry
products for human or animal food.
(B) Persons in business as renderers or in the business of
buying, selling, or transporting dead, dying, disabled, or
diseased livestock or poultry, or parts of the carcasses of
animals, including poultry, that died other than by slaughter.
The board shall adopt rules that require persons described under
clauses (A) and (B) to give the state veterinarian access to the
places of business, an opportunity at all reasonable times to
examine the facilities, inventory, and records, an opportunity to
copy the records, and an opportunity to take reasonable samples
of the inventory.
(8) If necessary to permit interstate shipment, enter into
reciprocal agreements with states adjoining Indiana and the
United States Department of Agriculture concerning the
inspection of livestock, poultry, and other animals.
As added by P.L.2-2008, SEC.8.
IC 15-17-5-5
Powers of board or state veterinarian
Sec. 5. To accomplish the purposes in section 1 of this chapter,
the board or state veterinarian may do the following:
(1) Remove inspectors from an establishment that:
(A) fails to destroy condemned products as required under
this chapter; or
(B) repeatedly violates this chapter.
(2) Refuse to provide inspection service under this chapter with
respect to an establishment for violations of this chapter and
causes specified in Section 401 of the Federal Meat Inspection
Act or Section 18 of the Federal Poultry Products Inspection
Act.
(3) Order labeling and containers to be withheld from use if the
state veterinarian determines that the:
(A) labeling is false or misleading; or
(B) containers are unsafe or of a misleading size or form.
(4) Adopt rules, after consultation with the Secretary of
Agriculture of the United States, to prescribe the sizes and style
of type to be used for labeling information required under this
chapter and definitions and standards of identity or composition
or standards of fill of container identical with federal standards
when the board considers this action appropriate for the
protection of the public.
(5) Adopt rules to prescribe conditions of storage and handling
of livestock products and poultry products by persons engaged
in the business of buying, selling, freezing, storing, or
transporting the products in commerce to ensure that the
products will not be adulterated or misbranded when delivered
to the consumer.
(6) Require that equines be slaughtered and prepared in separate
establishments from where other livestock are slaughtered or
the products of other livestock are prepared.
(7) Adopt rules to require that every person who is engaged in
business in commerce as a dealer, a renderer, a manufacturer of
food for animals derived from livestock or poultry carcasses, or
a wholesaler or public warehouseman of livestock products or
poultry products, or who is engaged in the business of buying,
selling, or transporting in commerce dead, dying, disabled, or
diseased livestock or poultry or parts of the carcasses of such
animals, including poultry, that died other than by slaughter
shall register with the board the person's name and the address
of each place of business and all trade names under which the
person conducts the person's business.
(8) Adopt rules adopting provisions of federal regulations with
changes the board considers appropriate to make the regulations
applicable to operations and transactions subject to this chapter.
(9) Adopt other rules the board considers necessary for the
efficient execution of this chapter, including rules of practice
providing an opportunity for a hearing in connection with
issuance of rules or orders under this chapter and prescribing
procedure for proceedings as provided in IC 4-21.5 and this
article. This subdivision and subdivision (8) do not preclude a
requirement that a label or container be withheld from use or a
requirement for a refusal of inspection under this chapter
pending issuance of a final order in a proceeding.
(10) Appoint and prescribe the duties of inspectors and other
personnel as the state veterinarian considers necessary for the
efficient execution of this chapter.
(11) Cooperate with the Secretary of Agriculture of the United
States in the administration of this chapter to effectuate the
purposes of this chapter, accept federal assistance for that
purpose, and spend state public funds appropriated for the
administration of this chapter to pay not more than fifty percent
(50%) of the estimated total cost of the cooperative program.
(12) Recommend to the Secretary of Agriculture of the United
States for appointment to the advisory committees provided for
in the federal acts the officials or employees of the board that
the board designates.
(13) Serve at the pleasure of the governor as the representative
for consultation with the Secretary of Agriculture of the United
States under Section 301(c) of the federal Meat Inspection Act
and Section 5(c) of the federal Poultry Products Inspection Act.
(14) Negotiate agreements with the state or local governmental
agencies providing meat inspections as necessary in the opinion
of the board to further the provisions provided in this section
for the proper administration of this chapter.
As added by P.L.2-2008, SEC.8.
IC 15-17-5-6
Prohibitions regarding livestock and poultry products
Sec. 6. (a) A person may not do the following:
(1) Slaughter livestock or poultry or prepare any meat products
or poultry products that are capable of use as human food for
commerce, except in compliance with this chapter.
(2) Sell, transport, offer for sale or transportation, or receive for
transportation in commerce any meat products or poultry
products that are:
(A) capable of use as human food and are adulterated or
misbranded; or
(B) required to be inspected under this chapter unless the
products have been inspected and passed.
(3) With respect to articles that are capable of use as human
food, perform an act:
(A) while the articles are being transported in commerce or
held for sale after transportation in commerce; and
(B) that is intended to cause or has the effect of causing the
articles to be adulterated or misbranded.
(b) A person may not sell, transport, offer for sale or
transportation, or receive for transportation, in commerce, or from an
official establishment, slaughtered poultry from which the blood,
feathers, feet, head, or viscera have not been removed in accordance
with rules adopted by the board except as authorized by rule.
As added by P.L.2-2008, SEC.8.
IC 15-17-5-7
Transportation of equine carcasses, livestock, poultry not intended
for human consumption, and carcasses of animals that died other
than by slaughter.
Sec. 7. (a) A person may not sell, transport, offer for sale or
transportation, or receive for transportation, in commerce, carcasses
or parts of carcasses of horses, mules, or other equines or the meat or
meat food products of equines, unless the carcasses are plainly and
conspicuously marked or labeled or identified as required by rules
adopted by the board to show the kinds of animals from which the
carcasses were derived.
(b) A person may not buy, sell, transport, offer for sale or
transportation, or receive for transportation, in commerce, livestock
products or poultry products that are not intended for use as human
food unless the products are denatured or identified as required by
the rules of the board or are naturally inedible by humans.
(c) A person engaged in the business of buying, selling, or
transporting in commerce, dead, dying, disabled, or diseased animals,
or any parts of the carcasses of any animals that died other than by
slaughter, may not buy, sell, transport, offer for sale or
transportation, or receive for transportation, in commerce, dead,
dying, disabled, or diseased livestock or poultry or the products of
such animals that died other than by slaughter unless the transaction
or transportation is made in accordance with rules adopted by the
board to ensure that the animals, or the unwholesome parts or
products of the animals, will be prevented from being used for
human food purposes.
As added by P.L.2-2008, SEC.8.
IC 15-17-5-8
Anesthetic measures before severance of carotid arteries
Sec. 8. The board shall adopt rules governing humane methods to
make livestock or poultry insensible to pain before incision of an
instrument for severance of the carotid arteries. The rules must
conform to the extent applicable to the regulations promulgated
under the federal Humane Slaughter Act, as amended.
As added by P.L.2-2008, SEC.8.
IC 15-17-5-9
Granting of inspection service
Sec. 9. (a) Before a person may engage in slaughtering livestock
or poultry or processing meat or poultry, meat food products, or
poultry products for commerce, the person must apply for, and upon
compliance with this chapter and the rules adopted under this
chapter, shall receive from the state veterinarian, inauguration of
inspection service in the establishment where the:
(1) livestock or poultry are to be slaughtered for human
consumption; or
(2) meat or poultry, meat food products, or poultry products are
processed or manufactured.
(b) The board shall adopt rules governing the granting of
inspection to the establishments that trade in commerce.
As added by P.L.2-2008, SEC.8.
IC 15-17-5-10
Completion of inspection; reasonable access
Sec. 10. (a) An inspection of products placed in a container at an
official establishment is not complete until the products are sealed or
enclosed in the container under the supervision of an inspector.
(b) For purposes of an inspection of products required by this
chapter, inspectors authorized by the state veterinarian shall have
access at reasonable times, by day or night, to every part of every
establishment required to have inspection under this chapter, whether
or not the establishment is operating.
As added by P.L.2-2008, SEC.8.
IC 15-17-5-11
Exemptions from antemortem and postmortem inspection
requirements
Sec. 11. (a) The board shall exempt the operations of a person
from antemortem inspection and postmortem inspection and other
requirements of this chapter if any of the following conditions exist:
(1) To the extent the operations would be exempt from the
corresponding requirements under the federal Meat Inspection
Act, Section 23 (21 U.S.C. 623), or the Poultry Products
Inspection Act, Section 14 (21 U.S.C. 464), if the operations
were conducted in or for interstate commerce.
(2) The state is designated under the federal acts as one in
which the federal requirements apply to commerce in Indiana.
(b) When the operation of an establishment that is exempt under
subsection (a) appears to be a detriment to health and public welfare,
the establishment may be brought under this chapter by executive
order of the state veterinarian issued in compliance with IC 4-21.5.
(c) Livestock and poultry slaughtered according to the ritual
requirements of a religious faith that prescribes a method of slaughter
by which the livestock or poultry suffers loss of consciousness by
anemia of the brain caused by the simultaneous and instantaneous
severance of the carotid arteries with a sharp instrument is a humane
method under this chapter. However, livestock must be slaughtered
immediately following total suspension from the floor.
(d) Except as required in an agreement between the United States
Department of Agriculture and the board, a person operating under
the inspection program of the federal acts, as amended, is exempt
from this chapter.
As added by P.L.2-2008, SEC.8.
IC 15-17-5-12
Duty of board to provide inspection service; fee
Sec. 12. (a) Except as provided in subsection (b), the board is not
required to furnish meat or poultry inspection under this chapter:
(1) for more than eight (8) hours in one (1) day;
(2) for more than forty (40) hours in one (1) calendar week; or
(3) on Saturdays, Sundays, or the following legal holidays:
(A) New Year's Day.
(B) Washington's Birthday.
(C) Memorial Day.
(D) Martin Luther King, Jr. Day.
(E) Columbus Day.
(F) Independence Day.
(G) Labor Day.
(H) Veterans Day.
(I) Thanksgiving Day.
(J) Christmas.
(b) If the operator of an establishment under inspection pays to the
board an hourly fee for each hour of state meat or poultry inspection
furnished:
(1) more than eight (8) hours in one (1) day;
(2) more than forty (40) hours in one (1) calendar week; or
(3) on Saturdays, Sundays, and legal holidays;
the board shall furnish the inspection service.
(c) Subject to the approval of the budget agency, the board shall
establish an hourly rate for overtime at an amount sufficient to defray
the cost of the inspection service. The establishment shall reimburse
the board not later than thirty (30) days after assessment for overtime
or legal overtime fees collected under this chapter. The fees must be
deposited with the treasurer of state. All overtime fees deposited with
the treasurer of state under this subsection are appropriated to the
budget agency for allotment to the board for the administration and
enforcement of this chapter.
(d) The board may assign inspection personnel to more than one
(1) establishment in order to efficiently use board personnel and
resources.
As added by P.L.2-2008, SEC.8.
IC 15-17-5-13
No inspection for products not intended for use as human food
Sec. 13. Inspection may not be provided under this chapter at an
establishment for the slaughter of livestock or poultry or the
preparation of livestock products or poultry products that are not
intended for use as human food. However, the articles must, before
being offered for sale or transportation in commerce, unless naturally
inedible by humans, be denatured or identified as prescribed by rules
of the board to deter use for human food.
As added by P.L.2-2008, SEC.8.
IC 15-17-5-14
Inspection of bison, farm raised cervidae, or ratitae
Sec. 14. (a) After passing the postmortem inspection and upon
request by the owner of a bison, farm raised cervidae, or ratitae, an
establishment shall immediately upon slaughter return to the owner
the head, hide, horns, and hooves.
(b) The board shall conduct field antemortem inspections of
bison, farm raised cervidae, and ratitae only if a means of expeditious
delivery of the exsanguinated carcass to an establishment is
available.
As added by P.L.2-2008, SEC.8.
IC 15-17-5-15
Fee schedule
Sec. 15. The board may establish a schedule of fees for inspection
services provided under this chapter. The fees must be reasonable but
are not required to be equal to the costs of the inspection services.
As added by P.L.2-2008, SEC.8.
IC 15-17-5-16
Prohibition against use of official device, mark, or certificate
Sec. 16. (a) A brand manufacturer, printer, or other person may
not cast, print, lithograph, or otherwise make:
(1) a device containing an official mark or a simulation of an
official mark or a label bearing the mark or simulation; or
(2) any form of official certificate or simulation of an official
certificate;
except as authorized by the board.
(b) A person may not do any of the following:
(1) Forge an official device, mark, or certificate.
(2) Use an official device, mark, certificate, or a simulation of
an official device, mark, or certificate or alter, detach, deface,
or destroy an official device, mark, or certificate without
authorization from the board.
(3) Contrary to the rules adopted by the board, fail to use or
detach, deface, or destroy an official device, mark, or
certificate.
(4) Knowingly possess, without promptly notifying the state
veterinarian or the state veterinarian's representative, any of the
following:
(A) An official device.
(B) A counterfeit, simulated, forged, or improperly altered
official certificate.
(C) A device or label on a carcass of an animal, including
poultry, or part or product of a carcass, bearing a counterfeit,
simulated, forged, or improperly altered official mark.
(5) Knowingly make a false statement in a shipper's certificate
or other nonofficial or official certificate provided for in the
rules adopted by the board.
(6) Knowingly represent that an article has been inspected and
passed or exempted under this chapter when the article has not
been inspected and passed or exempted.
As added by P.L.2-2008, SEC.8.
IC 15-17-5-17
Violations; penalties
Sec. 17. (a) A person subject to this chapter that has not been
approved for inspection may not offer for sale meat or poultry, a
meat food product, or a poultry product in commerce in Indiana.
(b) The board may take the following actions for a violation of
this section:
(1) Issue an order of compliance under IC 4-21.5-3-6,
IC 4-21.5-3-8, or IC 4-21.5-4.
(2) Levy a civil penalty under IC 4-21.5-3-6.
(3) Both of the actions listed in subdivisions (1) and (2).
(c) The board may, by rules adopted under IC 4-22-2, adopt a
schedule of civil penalties that may be levied for violations of this
section. A penalty included in the schedule of civil penalties may not
exceed one thousand dollars ($1,000) per violation for each day of
the violation.
As added by P.L.2-2008, SEC.8.
IC 15-17-5-18
Schedule of slaughter
Sec. 18. If an establishment conducts operations that require an
inspection for less than eight (8) hours a day, fewer than five (5) days
a week, or for a period that is different from a normal Monday
through Friday, eight (8) hours per day, five (5) days per week work
week, the state veterinarian shall arrange a schedule of slaughter for
each establishment so that proper and efficient antemortem
inspection and postmortem inspection of livestock or poultry is
provided in each establishment while efficiently using inspection
resources among the establishments. The schedule must be arranged
in conference with the recognized establishments involved.
As added by P.L.2-2008, SEC.8.
IC 15-17-5-19
Duties of establishments
Sec. 19. (a) For purposes of this section, references in IC 16-42-1
through IC 16-42-4 to:
(1) "state health commissioner" refer to the state veterinarian;
and
(2) "department" refer to the board.
(b) An establishment operating under this chapter shall do the
following:
(1) Provide information considered necessary by the state
veterinarian to enforce this chapter.
(2) Supply samples of ingredients used in the formulation of
products.
(3) Supply samples of products manufactured, processed, or
prepared in the establishment for laboratory examination or
other examination required by the board to ensure that the
products comply with this chapter and IC 16-42-1 through
IC 16-42-4.
As added by P.L.2-2008, SEC.8.
IC 15-17-5-20
Detention of livestock or poultry products or animals pending
investigation
Sec. 20. (a) For purposes of this section, references in IC 16-42-1
through IC 16-42-4 to:
(1) "state health commissioner" refer to the state veterinarian;
and
(2) "department" refer to the board.
(b) Whenever:
(1) a:
(A) livestock product;
(B) poultry product;
(C) product exempted from the definition of a livestock
product and from the definition of a poultry product; or
(D) dead, dying, disabled, or diseased livestock or poultry;
is found by an authorized representative of the board upon any
premises where the product or animal is held for purposes of or
during or after distribution in commerce or is subject to this
chapter; and
(2) there is reason to believe that:
(A) the product or animal is adulterated or misbranded and
is capable of use as human food;
(B) the product or animal has not been inspected in violation
of this chapter, IC 16-42-1 through IC 16-42-4, the federal
Meat Inspection Act (21 U.S.C. 601 et seq.), or the federal
Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act (21 U.S.C. 301 et seq.); or
(C) the product or animal has been or is intended to be
distributed in violation of a law listed under clause (B);
the product or animal may be detained by the representative for not
more than twenty (20) days, pending action under section 21 of this
chapter or notification of federal authorities having jurisdiction over
the product or animal, and may not be moved by a person from the
place at which the product or animal is located when the product or
animal is detained until released by the representative.
(c) All official marks may be required by the representative to be
removed from the product or animal before the product or animal is
released unless it appears to the satisfaction of the state veterinarian
that the product or animal is eligible to retain the official marks.
As added by P.L.2-2008, SEC.8.
IC 15-17-5-21
Procedures for seizure and condemnation of article or animal
Sec. 21. (a) A livestock product, a poultry product, or dead, dying,
disabled, or diseased livestock or poultry:
(1) that is:
(A) being transported in commerce;
(B) subject to this chapter; or
(C) held for sale in Indiana after transportation in commerce;
and
(2) that:
(A) is or has been prepared, sold, transported, or distributed
or offered or received for distribution in violation of this
chapter;
(B) is capable of use as human food and is adulterated or
misbranded; or
(C) in any other way is in violation of this chapter;
may be seized and condemned, at any time, on furnishing evidence
of a violation of this chapter in any proper court as provided in
section 28 of this chapter within whose jurisdiction the article or
animal is found.
(b) After entry of a decree condemning an article or animal, the
article or animal must be disposed of by destruction or sale, as the
court directs.
(c) If the article or animal is sold, the proceeds from the sale, less:
(1) court costs and fees; and
(2) storage and other proper expenses;
must be paid into the state treasury.
(d) The article or animal may not be sold contrary to any of the
following:
(1) This chapter.
(2) The federal Meat Inspection Act (21 U.S.C. 601 et seq.).
(3) The federal Poultry Products Inspection Act (21 U.S.C. 451
et seq.).
(4) The federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act (21 U.S.C. 301
et seq.).
However, upon the execution and delivery of a sufficient agreement
conditioned that the article or animal will not be sold or disposed of
contrary to this chapter, the article or animal may be delivered to the
owner of the article or animal subject to supervision by authorized
representatives of the board necessary to ensure compliance with the
applicable laws.
(e) When a decree of condemnation is entered against the article
or animal and the article or animal is released under the agreement
or destroyed, court costs, fees, storage, and other proper expenses
must be awarded against the person, if any, intervening as claimant
of the article or animal.
(f) The proceedings in cases for condemnation of an article or
animal must conform, as much as possible, to the proceedings in
admiralty, except that either party may demand trial by jury of any
issue of fact joined in any case and all of the proceedings must be at
the suit of and in the name of the state of Indiana.
(g) This section does not derogate from authority for
condemnation or seizure conferred by this chapter or other laws.
As added by P.L.2-2008, SEC.8.
IC 15-17-5-22
Investigatory powers of state veterinarian
Sec. 22. (a) The state veterinarian may do the following:
(1) Investigate, gather, and compile information concerning the
organization, business, conduct, practices, and management of
a person engaged in commerce and the relation of the person to
other persons.
(2) Require, by general or special orders, that a person engaged
in commerce file with the state veterinarian, in a form
prescribed by the state veterinarian, annual or special, or both,
reports or answers in writing to specific questions. The person
shall furnish to the state veterinarian the information required
by the state veterinarian concerning the organization, business,
conduct, practices, management, and relation to other persons.
The reports and answers must be made under oath or
affirmation as the state veterinarian prescribes. The reports and
answers must be filed with the state veterinarian within a
reasonable period prescribed by the state veterinarian, unless
the state veterinarian grants additional time.
(b) For purposes of this chapter, the state veterinarian has, at all
reasonable times, for the purpose of examination:
(1) access to; and
(2) the right to copy;
any documentary evidence of a person being investigated or
proceeded against. The state veterinarian may require by subpoena
the attendance and testimony of witnesses and the production of all
documentary evidence of a person relating to a matter under
investigation. The state veterinarian may sign subpoenas. The board
may sign subpoenas, administer oaths and affirmations, examine
witnesses, and receive evidence.
(c) The attendance of witnesses and the production of
documentary evidence may be required at a designated place of
hearing. In case of disobedience to a subpoena, the state veterinarian
or board may invoke the aid of any court in requiring the attendance
and testimony of witnesses and the production of documentary
evidence.
(d) A court may, in case of contumacy or refusal to obey a
subpoena issued to a person, issue an order requiring the person to:
(1) appear before the state veterinarian or board;
(2) produce documentary evidence; or
(3) give evidence concerning the matter in question.
A failure to obey an order of the court issued under this subsection
may be punished by the court for contempt.
(e) Upon the application of the attorney general at the request of
the state veterinarian or board, a court has jurisdiction to issue writs
of mandamus commanding a person to comply with this chapter or
any order of the state veterinarian or board under this chapter.
(f) The state veterinarian may order testimony to be taken by
deposition in a proceeding or investigation pending under this
chapter at any stage of the proceeding or investigation. The
deposition may be taken before a person who:
(1) is designated by the state veterinarian; and
(2) has power to administer oaths.
The testimony must be reduced to writing by the person taking the
deposition or under the person's direction and must be subscribed by
the deponent. Any person may be compelled to appear and depose
and to produce documentary evidence in the same manner as a
witness may be compelled to appear and testify and produce
documentary evidence before the state veterinarian or board.
(g) Witnesses summoned before the state veterinarian or board
shall be paid the same fees and mileage that are paid witnesses in
Indiana courts. Witnesses whose depositions are taken and the
persons taking the depositions are entitled to the same fees paid for
similar services in the courts.
As added by P.L.2-2008, SEC.8.
IC 15-17-5-23
No right against self-incrimination
Sec. 23. (a) A person may not be excused from attending and
testifying or from producing books, papers, schedules of charges,
contracts, agreements, or other documentary evidence:
(1) before the state veterinarian or board, or in obedience to a
subpoena of the state veterinarian or board, regardless of
whether the subpoena was signed or issued by the state
veterinarian, the state veterinarian delegate, or board; or
(2) in a cause or proceeding, criminal or civil, based upon or
growing out of an alleged violation of this chapter;
on the ground that the testimony, evidence, documents, or other
evidence required of the person may tend to incriminate the person
or subject the person to a penalty or forfeiture.
(b) A person may not be prosecuted or subjected to a penalty or
forfeiture for or on account of a transaction, matter, or thing
concerning which the person is compelled to testify or produce
testimony, evidence, documents, or other evidence after having
claimed the person's privilege against self-incrimination. However,
a person testifying is not exempt from prosecution and punishment
for perjury.
As added by P.L.2-2008, SEC.8.
IC 15-17-5-24
Failure to obey subpoena or other requirement
Sec. 24. A person who recklessly, knowingly, or intentionally fails
to:
(1) attend and testify;
(2) answer a lawful inquiry; or
(3) produce documentary evidence if in the person's power to do
so;
in obedience to a subpoena or lawful requirement of the state
veterinarian or board commits a Class A misdemeanor.
As added by P.L.2-2008, SEC.8.
IC 15-17-5-25
Falsifying or interfering with documentary evidence or inspection
Sec. 25. A person who knowingly:
(1) makes a false entry or statement of fact in a report required
to be made under this chapter or in any account, record, or
memorandum kept by a person subject to this chapter;
(2) fails to make full, true, and correct entries in the accounts,
records, or memoranda of all facts and transactions pertaining
to the person's business;
(3) removes out of Indiana or damages, alters, or falsifies
documentary evidence of a person subject to this chapter; or
(4) refuses to submit to the state veterinarian or board or to the
state veterinarian's or board's authorized agent for the purpose
of inspection and taking copies of documentary evidence of a
person subject to this chapter in the person's possession or
within the person's control;
commits a Class D felony.
As added by P.L.2-2008, SEC.8.
IC 15-17-5-26
Failure to file report; forfeiture after notice of default
Sec. 26. (a) A person who fails to file an annual or a special report
as required by this chapter within the time fixed by the state
veterinarian for filing the report and for thirty (30) days after notice
of default shall forfeit to the state one hundred dollars ($100) for
each day of the continuance of the failure beginning thirty-one (31)
days after the notice of default. The forfeiture is payable into the
state treasury and is recoverable in a civil suit in the name of the state
of Indiana brought in the circuit court where the person has the
person's principal office or in any county in which the person does
business.
(b) The prosecuting attorneys, under the direction of the attorney
general, shall prosecute for the recovery of forfeitures. The costs and
expenses of prosecution must be paid out of the appropriation for the
expenses of the courts.
As added by P.L.2-2008, SEC.8.
IC 15-17-5-27
Adverse conditions in official establishment
Sec. 27. (a) If a condition exists in an official establishment that
may adversely affect the wholesomeness of meat, poultry, meat food
products, or meat byproducts prepared or processed in the official
establishment, the state veterinarian may suspend state meat or
poultry inspection until the condition is remedied.
(b) After notice and hearing in compliance with IC 4-21.5, the
board may revoke state meat and poultry inspection from an official
establishment if the person in authority at the establishment
repeatedly and persistently fails to comply with this chapter and the
rules adopted under this chapter.
As added by P.L.2-2008, SEC.8.
IC 15-17-5-28
Powers of state veterinarian or board upon finding of adverse
conditions
Sec. 28. (a) This section applies if, upon inspection of an
establishment, the state veterinarian or board finds a condition that
meets any of the following conditions:
(1) May affect adversely the wholesomeness of meat, poultry,
meat food products, meat byproducts, or poultry products.
(2) Is in violation of this chapter or rules adopted under this
chapter.
(b) The state veterinarian or board may do either of the following:
(1) Furnish evidence of the violation to the prosecuting attorney
of the judicial circuit in which the violation occurs.
(2) Issue an order to the person in authority at the offending
establishment to abate the condition or violation within five (5)
days or other reasonable time required to abate the condition or
violation. The proceedings to abate must be in accordance with
IC 4-21.5.
As added by P.L.2-2008, SEC.8.
IC 15-17-5-29
Notice of violation; right to counsel; hearing
Sec. 29. (a) Before a violation of this chapter is reported by the
state veterinarian or board to a prosecuting attorney for institution of
a criminal proceeding, the person against whom the proceeding is
contemplated must be given an opportunity to be heard and may be
represented by legal counsel.
(b) The state veterinarian or board shall give the person ten (10)
days notice in writing. The notice must do the following:
(1) Specify the charges for the action.
(2) Set the date, time, and place where the hearing is to be held.
(c) The board or the board's designee shall hold the hearing in
Indianapolis.
As added by P.L.2-2008, SEC.8.
IC 15-17-5-30
Interference with official duties
Sec. 30. A person who knowingly and forcibly resists, obstructs,
or interferes with another person while the other person is engaged
in or on account of the performance of the person's official duties
under this chapter commits a Class D felony. However, the offense
is a Class C felony if, while committing the offense, the person
draws or uses a deadly weapon or inflicts bodily injury on any other
person.
As added by P.L.2-2008, SEC.8.
IC 15-17-5-31
Violations
Sec. 31. (a) Except as otherwise provided, a person who
recklessly violates this chapter commits a Class B misdemeanor.
(b) Each day a violation continues constitutes a separate offense.
As added by P.L.2-2008, SEC.8.