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APPENDIX 5: Policies and Rules Governing
the Conduct of National Hearings:
(see 1980-105, 1989-017, 2003-003, 2004-025, 2004120, and 2005-018)
Adopted by the
American Mensa Committee
November 29, 1980
Amended March 30, 1985
Amended March 16, 2002
Amended March 29, 2003
Amended March 20, 2004
Amended December 4, 2004
Amended March 19, 2005
STATEMENT OF POLICY
These Rules are adopted by the American Mensa Committee ("AMC")
in fulfillment of its duty to assure all members of American Mensa, Ltd.
("AML") the opportunity for a fair and impartial hearing of
any charges brought under Article IX (5) of the American Mensa bylaws
("bylaws"). These Rules are binding upon all members of AML.
The function of the Hearings Committee is limited to:
- Receiving and reviewing charges of acts inimical to Mensa;
- Determining whether sufficient facts have been alleged to warrant
a hearing on some or all of such charges;
- Judging whether or not the preponderance of the evidence presented
in a hearing shows the respondent to have committed acts inimical to
Mensa;
- Imposing sanctions, as specified in the bylaws, if the respondent
is adjudged to have committed an act or acts inimical to Mensa; and
- Enforcing these rules.
The Hearings Committee only hears charges of acts inimical to Mensa.
The Hearings Committee shall rule only on the facts as presented to it.
The Hearings Committee does not exist to resolve personal conflicts between
members, nor is it a mediator, arbitrator, or counselor.
All members of the Hearings Committee must maintain an arms-length impartiality
in all matters pertaining to charges, or the possibility of charges. Notwithstanding
the foregoing, a putative Hearings Committee member who is in the line
of succession to the Committee, but not on the Committee as of the time
charges are brought, shall not be held to the same standard of arms-length
dealing with the Parties as is a standing member of the Committee, but
is encouraged to conduct him/herself with the understanding that he/she
may be called upon to serve on the Hearings Committee. Members of the
Hearings Committee must:
- Refrain from giving counsel as to whether charges should or should
not be filed;
- Insist that all communications between any individual and a Hearings
Committee member with respect to charges or a pending hearing be in
writing; and
- Transmit to the other members of the Hearings Committee all communications
received with respect to charges or a pending hearing that have not
also been received by the other members.
The Hearings Committee is a standing empowered committee. Its membership
is not fixed for the hearing of particular charges until after any challenges
to its composition have been decided. Thus, from time to time there may
be formed different panels of the Hearings Committee consisting of different
members. The three Hearings Committee members finally seated in accordance
with these Rules shall be the ones to consider the matter, regardless
of subsequent changes in AMC composition that change the makeup of the
Hearings Committee under the bylaws. Once charges are filed on a given
matter, there will be no changes in the membership of the Hearings Committee,
except for those provided for in the bylaws and these Rules.
RULES GOVERNING THE CONDUCT OF NATIONAL HEARINGS
RULE 1
- Charges of acts inimical to Mensa may be made by any member or group
of members, or by the Advocate or one acting under the authority of
the Advocate, or by mandate of a majority vote of the members present
and voting at an Annual Business Meeting. The party bringing such charges
shall be the "Complainant." The party accused of committing
the acts inimical shall be referred to as the "Respondent."
The Complainant and the Respondent may together be referred to as the
"Parties."
- In the event that charges are brought as the result of a mandate
from the members at an Annual Business Meeting, the membership shall
be the Complainant, and the Chairman of AML shall select one or more
Mensa members to represent the Complainant in the matter.
- Written communications between the Hearings Committee and the Parties
may be transmitted in any form acceptable to the Hearings Committee
Chairman (the "H. C. Chair"), including email, fax, regular
U.S. Mail, and overnight mail services, but only if the chosen method
is available to all of the Parties. The H. C. Chair shall advise the
Parties as to which methods shall be acceptable in a given case and
the H. C. Chair's decision shall be final. In the event no chosen method
is available to all Parties, Regular U.S. Mail shall be the default
method. All notices required to be sent to the Parties by the H. C.
Chair ("served") shall be deemed served on the day they are
sent by the H. C. Chair to the Parties, by whatever means has been selected
by the H. C. Chair.
RULE 2
Reserved for future use.
RULE 3
Charges of acts inimical shall be made in writing, signed by the individual(s)
making the charges or by the representative of same as defined in Rule
1A or 1B, and contain:
- A specific statement of each alleged act inimical (each such statement
to constitute a "charge"),
- The name(s) of the individual(s) alleged to have committed each act,
- Sufficient facts in support of each charge to convince the Hearings
Committee that a hearing is warranted, and
- An acknowledgement by each Complainant that s/he understands that
knowingly making a false or misleading oral or written statement to
the Hearings Committee is an act inimical for which sanctions may be
imposed by the Hearings Committee.
- A postal address to which communications from the Hearings Committee
to the Complainant may be sent, and, if available, an email address
and a fax number for the Complainant. Multiple persons filing charges
together shall not designate more than one postal address, email address,
or fax number.
RULE 4
Charges shall be "filed" by delivering them to the H. C. Chair
identified in the most recent Mensa Bulletin. Supporting documentation
may be included with the charges. Charges shall be deemed filed on the
date they are received by the H. C. Chair.
RULE 5
- The Chair shall, within 30 days of the H. C. Chair's receipt of a
complaint, send a notice to the other members of the Hearings Committee,
the Respondent, and the Chairman of the AMC that a complaint has been
filed. The notice shall also identify the charges alleged in the complaint.
- The Hearings Committee shall promptly decide whether the facts alleged
warrant a hearing on any of the charges. The H. C. Chair shall serve
a copy of this decision on each of the Parties, and on the AMC's Chairman,
within 60 days after the H. C. Chair's receipt of the complaint. Should
the Hearings Committee decide that a hearing is not warranted, the charges
will be deemed dismissed and no further action shall be taken on the
complaint.
- If the Hearings Committee decides to hold a hearing, the H. C. Chair
shall promptly:
- Serve upon the Respondent a copy of any supporting documentation
furnished by the Complainant.
- Transmit to the Parties a list of the names of the three members
of the Hearings Committee as originally constituted, plus the names
of any members who have succeeded to the Hearings Committee after
the Rule 5(B) decision was issued, and finally a list of the names
of every remaining potential member of the Hearings Committee as given
in Article IX, section 5(a) of the bylaws of AML, in the order in
which they would succeed to Committee membership.
- (a) The H. C. Chair shall promptly ask the Respondent whether the
charges are contested. If the Respondent advises the H. C. Chair that
s/he does not contest the charges, but still wants a hearing to determine
penalties, the Respondent may ask for a hearing limited to the penalty
phase. If the Respondent does not contest the charges and does not
want a hearing, the Respondent may waive the right to a hearing, and,
if such waiver is made, the Hearings Committee may render a decision
without actually holding a hearing (Rule 12).
(b) A Respondent's failure to timely cooperate with the Hearings Committee
or the hearings process may be considered by the Hearings Committee
in rendering a decision on the merits.
RULE 6
- If any committee member is incapacitated, elects to withdraw from
service, or is otherwise unavailable to serve, that member shall not
serve on the Hearings Committee. The resulting committee vacancy shall
be filled as set forth in the bylaws. If a new member is added to the
Hearings Committee to fill a vacancy, that new member is subject to
challenge as provided for below.
- Any Party may challenge any members of the Hearings Committee, and
any potential members of the Hearings Committee as given in Rule 5(C)(2)
above, by filing a written challenge with the H. C. Chair. Any and all
such challenges to Hearings Committee members and potential members
must be received by the H. C. Chair no later than fifteen calendar days
after the H. C. Chair has served upon the Parties the list of Committee
members and potential Committee members per Rule 5(C)(2). Each challenge
shall state the name of the member being challenged and the reasons
for the challenge.
- All challenges to potential Hearings Committee members shall be
held in abeyance until such time as the potential member succeeds
to Committee membership.
- The other members of the Hearings Committee, i.e., those members
of the Hearings Committee who have not been challenged, shall decide
the challenge. If the challenge is sustained, the challenged member(s)
shall not serve on the Hearings Committee and the vacancy shall be
filled as set forth in the bylaws and these Rules.
- In the event that all three Hearings Committee members are simultaneously
challenged, the Ombudsman shall decide all three challenges. The Ombudsman
shall serve copies of this decision on the three members of the Hearings
Committee and the Parties, using the method designated by the H. C.
Chair under Rule 1(C). The Ombudsman shall only decide challenges
if there is no "other member" of the Hearings Committee
who is not challenged. Should a challenged member(s) recuse him/herself
prior to service of a decision by the Ombudsman, then the Ombudsman
shall not issue a decision on any of the pending challenges. The new
member of the Hearings Committee, and not the Ombudsman, shall decide
the remaining one or two challenges under Rule 6(B)(2). If the new
member was also challenged, the decision as to all three challenged
members will again revert to the Ombudsman, unless another Hearings
Committee member recuses him/herself prior to the Ombudsman's service
of his/her decision on the H. C. Chair. The Ombudsman shall decide
all three challenges in the same decision.
- The Hearings Committee (or Ombudsman, as appropriate) shall notify
the Parties, the Chairman of the AMC and the Ombudsman of its decision
regarding any and all challenges.
- In the event that the list of persons eligible to serve on a Hearings
Committee pursuant to the bylaws is exhausted by challenges, recusals,
or otherwise, additional Hearings Committee members shall be selected
as follows, in accordance with the membership and interest criteria
listed in the bylaws for the original Hearings Committee members: first,
the three most recent Treasurers who are not currently serving on the
American Mensa Committee; then the most recent RVC from each Region
who is not currently serving on the AMC, ordered by a random draw conducted
by the Ombudsman; then the second-most recent RVC from each Region who
is not currently serving on the AMC, ordered by a random draw conducted
by the Ombudsman; and then the third-most recent RVC from each Region
who is not currently serving on the AMC, ordered by a random draw conducted
by the Ombudsman.
RULE 7
If the Hearings Committee determines that a hearing shall be held, the
time, means, and venue thereof shall be determined by the Hearings Committee
as finally constituted after all challenges have been resolved. The hearing
shall not be set for a date sooner than thirty days after notice of the
charges has been served upon the Respondent. Notice of the date and venue
of the hearing shall be served on the Parties by the Hearings Committee
Chair.
RULE 8
- The Hearings Committee may appoint persons to assist it for any purpose.
No person who has any direct interest in the charges may be so appointed.
- The Hearings Committee may appoint persons to assist a Party in the
interest of providing a fair hearing or to otherwise prevent manifest
injustice.
RULE 9
All decisions of the Hearings Committee regarding any matter, at any
time, shall be made by majority vote of the Hearings Committee as then
constituted. The reasoning behind such decisions shall not be publicly
disclosed, but may be disclosed to the AMC, in executive session, in connection
with its review of the Hearings Committee's report, if any, pursuant to
Rule 13.
RULE 10
The following procedures shall apply to all hearings:
- The Parties are responsible for presenting sufficient evidence to
support or refute the charges;
- Each Complainant shall be offered a reasonable opportunity to present
all relevant evidence in support of the charges;
- Each Respondent shall be offered a reasonable opportunity to present
all relevant evidence in defense against the charges;
- The Parties may call and question witnesses in their behalf at the
calling Party's own arrangement and expense, and the Parties themselves
may be called and questioned as witnesses;
- The Hearings Committee shall have the right to call and question
witnesses and to question any witness called by the Parties;
- Any Party shall have the right to be represented by another person
of his or her choosing;
- The Hearings Committee may authorize and limit discovery as it sees
fit;
- All "in person" hearings shall be recorded by audio recording
or a similar medium ("verbatim record"), for the sole purpose
of assisting the Hearings Committee in preparing its Decision. Such
verbatim record shall be retained at the AML National Office until the
matter is finally concluded in accordance with Rule 13(E). Once the
matter is finally concluded, such tapes shall be retained for a period
of time consistent with AML's record retention policy. In the event
that a hearing is held as an on-line chat, the verbatim record may be
a hard copy printout of such chat signed by each hearings committee
member. The verbatim record shall not be made available to any person
other than the Hearings Committee members for any reason, except in
the event of a discovery request made in a civil litigation where AML
is a party, or under court order or subpoena.
- If the Hearings Committee permits or requests that any Party file
additional documents or written argument, the Party shall transmit copies
to the other Parties at the same time such materials are sent to the
H.C. Chair. The other Parties shall have ten days after such materials
are served in which to file comments or a response with the Hearings
Committee, which comments or response shall also be served upon the
other Parties.
- Hearings shall be deemed "confidential communications"
of AML. Attendance shall be limited to the Parties, the Hearings Committee
members, persons representing Parties or asked to assist either Party
or the Hearings Committee under Rule 8, the Ombudsman (if requested
by either Party), any witnesses to be called, and members of AML as
nonparticipating observers. Witnesses may be asked to leave the room
for all or part of the hearing other than their own testimony. The Hearings
Committee may, during a hearing, determine that all or part of the hearing
be closed to observers.
RULE 11
The Hearings Committee shall have broad discretion with respect to the
conduct of hearings, including, but not limited to:
- Dismissal of charges;
- Limiting any testimony that is irrelevant, cumulative or out of order;
- Ruling on the admissibility of documentary or physical evidence;
- Ordering that witnesses be sequestered;
- Ordering that testimony be given under oath;
- Ordering that any disruptive person be removed from the hearing;
or
- Taking any other action that it deems appropriate or necessary for
the fair, orderly, and efficient conduct of the hearing.
RULE 12
A decision shall be rendered by the Hearings Committee as soon as reasonably
possible after the hearing. This decision shall delineate findings of
fact and shall state whether, in the opinion of the fact-finder, the respondent
has committed an act inimical to Mensa.
If the decision states that the Respondent has committed an act inimical
to Mensa, the Hearings Committee shall decide whether a sanction is warranted.
The Hearings Committee may ask for written submissions from the parties
regarding possible sanctions and set time limits for receipt of same.
Such sanction may be permanent or may expire upon the passage of a specified
period of time, upon the occurrence of specified conditions, or both.
The Hearings Committee shall report its decision regarding sanctions in
writing and shall attach it to the fact-finding decision; together, these
two pieces are referred to in the following rules as the Decision.
At least two members of the Hearings Committee must sign a decision for
it to be a decision of the Hearings Committee. Minority reports by Hearings
Committee members are permitted. Hearings Committee decisions will normally
be drafted by the H.C. Chair, but the H.C. Chair may delegate the drafting
to another member of the Hearings Committee or to a Rule 8(A) appointee
if desired.
RULE 13
- After the Decision has been made final, and if such Decision recommends
the suspension or expulsion of a member, the Chairman of AML shall cause
such Decision to be copied and distributed to all members of the AMC,
prior to the AMC meeting at which the Decision will be reviewed. Such
material is deemed confidential information of AML and is to be treated
as such.
- The Complainant and each Respondent facing suspension or expulsion
shall have the right, in person or by his or her representative, to
address the AMC at the AMC meeting at which the Decision is reviewed.
Each Party intending to address the AMC shall so notify the Chairman
of AML such that the notice is received by the AML Chairman or the Executive
Director no less than seven calendar days prior to the day of the AMC
meeting. Such notice shall also identify any representative who is authorized
by the Party and has agreed to speak on behalf of the Party at the AMC
meeting.
- Each Party shall be permitted to speak to the AMC for a maximum of
fifteen (15) minutes. The Complainant may reserve a portion of his or
her allotted time for rebuttal. Either Party may request that their
presentation be given in Executive Session. Both Parties may be present
in such Executive Session for remarks by either Party. After the remarks
by the Parties, the Parties shall be excluded from the remainder of
such Executive Session.
- After the Complainant and the Respondent have been heard (if they
have complied with the preceding paragraphs and exercised their rights
to speak), the AMC shall vote on whether to accept the Decision. Per
ASIE 2001-060, all discussion on such vote, and the vote itself, shall
be done in Executive Session. A separate vote shall be taken on each
charge for which the Hearings Committee has recommended a sanction of
suspension or expulsion. As to each such charge, the AMC may vote to:
- Concur with the Decision; or
- Concur with the Hearings Committee's findings, but reduce the
sanction; or
- Decline to concur with the Hearings Committee, at which point
those charges for which suspension or expulsion have been recommended
shall be dismissed; or
- Return the matter to the Hearings Committee for the development
of additional facts or for clarification of the Decision.
If the matter is returned to the Hearings Committee, the Decision shall
be considered withdrawn. The Hearings Committee shall take such further
steps in consideration of the AMC's return of the matter as it deems
appropriate. The Hearings Committee shall issue a new Decision that
addresses the AMC's stated concerns within a reasonable time. If the
Hearings Committee is unable to agree upon a resolution of the AMC's
concerns, the AMC shall make a final decision within the parameters
of Rule 13(D)(1) through (3).
- Any sanctions imposed that do not require AMC review shall take effect
immediately upon service of such Decision on the Parties. Any sanctions
approved by the AMC, when necessary, shall take effect immediately after
AMC approval.
- The matter shall be deemed finally concluded as follows:
- Upon the Hearings Committee's issuance of the Decision, if no sanction
is imposed, or if a sanction that does not include suspension or expulsion
of the Respondent is ordered.
- If a Decision is reviewed by the AMC, when the AMC has voted final
action on the matter, which includes any action contemplated in Rules
13(D)(1), (2) or (3); or
- If the matter is returned to the Hearings Committee pursuant to
Rule 13(D)(4), the matter is concluded after the AMC has voted final
action on the new Decision to be issued under that Rule, should such
AMC vote be necessary. If the result of the return of the matter to
the Hearings Committee is a lesser sanction not requiring AMC approval
(or no sanction at all), then the provisions of Rule 13(F)(1) shall
then apply.
RULE 14
After the matter is finally concluded under Rule 13(E), all documents
that relate to the charges and proceedings held shall be forwarded to
the Executive Director for storage in the National Office in accordance
with AML's record retention policy, after which they shall be destroyed.
RULE 15
The Hearings Committee is not restricted in any way by actions taken
by prior Hearings Committees, and is not bound to follow any precedent
from prior matters in making decisions on unrelated matters.
RULE 16
- Each gender used herein shall include the other gender, and singular
shall include plural, and vice versa, as the context requires.
- The Parties may, by mutual agreement and with the approval of the
Hearings Committee, extend or shorten any period of time provided under
these Rules.
- The reasonable and necessary costs incurred by the members of the
Hearings Committee; by persons appointed by the Chairman of AML to
act on behalf of the membership; by the Advocate; and by persons appointed
by the Hearings Committee to assist it, a Complainant, or a Respondent,
shall be borne by AML. Requests for reimbursement of any such costs
not paid directly by AML shall be supported by receipts or other evidence
of payment, in accordance with then-current AML reimbursement procedures.
- The Hearings Committee is authorized to spend a reasonable amount
for such additional costs incurred in connection with a proceeding
before it as it deems necessary and appropriate. Requests for reimbursement
of any such costs not paid directly by AML shall be supported by evidence
of the Hearings Committee's approval and by receipts or other evidence
of payment, in accordance with then-current AML reimbursement procedures.
- The Executive Committee may authorize payment of such additional
costs incurred in connection with a proceeding before the Hearings
Committee as it deems necessary and appropriate.
- The Parties (except for the Advocate) and their witnesses shall bear
their own costs (including legal fees) unless both the Hearings Committee
and the AMC vote to approve reimbursement of some or all of such costs.
- Amendments to these Rules shall only apply to a matter already initiated
upon the unanimous written consent of the Parties.
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