§ 8.01-216.15.Civil investigative demands; interrogatories.
Chapter 3. Actions · Article 19.1. Virginia Fraud Against Taxpayers Act · Last amended 2002 · Last verified July 16, 2026
Full Text of § 8.01-216.15
Plain-English Summary
Section 8.01-216.15 sets the procedure for answering written interrogatories served through a civil investigative demand. Each inquiry must be answered separately and fully, in writing, under oath, and the answers must be submitted with a sworn certificate in the form the demand specifies. The certificate is signed by the recipient personally if the recipient is a natural person, or by whoever within a business or other entity is responsible for answering each particular inquiry.
A recipient who objects to an inquiry states the reasons for the objection in the certificate rather than providing an answer. The certificate must confirm that all information required by the demand, and within the recipient’s possession, custody, control, or knowledge, has been submitted. Where any required information has not been furnished, it must be identified, together with a particular statement of the reasons it was not provided.
Frequently Asked Questions
How must interrogatories in a civil investigative demand be answered?
Each inquiry must be answered separately and fully, in writing, under oath, and submitted through a sworn certificate in the form the demand specifies.
Can a recipient object to answering a particular interrogatory?
Yes. The reasons for the objection are stated in the certificate in place of an answer to that inquiry.
Who signs the certificate for a business responding to interrogatories?
The person or persons within the business responsible for answering each particular inquiry, rather than a single designated signer for the entire response.
What happens if some requested information cannot be located or provided?
It must be identified specifically, along with a particular statement of the reasons it was not furnished.
Does the certificate need to confirm the response is complete?
Yes. It must state that all information required by the demand that is within the recipient’s possession, custody, control, or knowledge has been submitted.
Amendment History
2002, c. 842.