HF3854 (Legislative Session 94 (2025-2026))
Penalties for criminal vehicular homicide increased, driver education programs required to instruct on the penalties for criminal vehicular homicide, and money appropriated.
Related bill: SF3605
AI Generated Summary
Purpose
This bill aims to improve public safety by creating and defining a formal offense called criminal vehicular homicide, increasing penalties when certain dangerous driving conditions cause a death, requiring driver education about these penalties, and providing funding to implement the changes.
Main Provisions
- Creates a defined offense called criminal vehicular homicide for deaths caused by operating a motor vehicle in specific ways.
- Defines when a person commits criminal vehicular homicide and the potential penalties.
- Requires driver education programs to teach about the penalties for criminal vehicular homicide.
- Allocates money to implement the act.
- Amends Minnesota Statutes 2024 section 609.2112 subdivision 1 by adding a new subdivision that lays out the offense and penalties.
What counts as criminal vehicular homicide (key elements)
A death caused by operating a motor vehicle in:
- a grossly negligent manner, or
- a negligent manner while under the influence of:
- alcohol
- a controlled substance
- cannabis (flower), a cannabis product, a lower-potency hemp edible, a hemp-derived consumer product, artificially derived cannabinoids, or tetrahydrocannabinols (THC), or any combination of these
- while having an alcohol concentration of 0.08 or more
- as measured within two hours of driving
- in a negligent manner while under the influence of an intoxicating substance, where the person knows or should know the substance can cause impairment
- while any amount of a Schedule I or II controlled substance (or its metabolite, excluding cannabis-related products) is present in the body
- where the driver leaves the scene of the collision (hit-and-run)
- where the driver had actual knowledge that the vehicle was defectively maintained and remedial action was not taken, and the death was caused by the defect
- where the driver had actual knowledge of a police citation or warning, or knowledge that the defect created a present danger to others
The death must be caused by the described conduct, and the act applies to deaths that do not constitute murder or manslaughter.
Penalties (base and enhanced)
- Base penalties (for criminal vehicular homicide) can include imprisonment up to a long term (up to 10 years or up to 25 years) or a fine up to $20,000, or both, depending on the specific circumstances described above.
- If the offense described in the elements occurs within ten years of a qualified prior driving offense, the penalties are enhanced, potentially increasing imprisonment up to about 30 years and fines up to $30,000, or both.
Driver Education and Funding
- Requires driver education programs to instruct on the penalties for criminal vehicular homicide.
- Provides funding (appropriations) to support implementing these changes.
Significant Changes to Existing Law
- Adds a new subdivision to Minnesota Statutes 2024 section 609.2112 to establish criminal vehicular homicide as a distinct offense with defined elements and penalties.
- Expands the list of substances and impairment scenarios that can trigger the offense, including specific cannabis, hemp, and synthetic cannabinoid categories and BAC evidence (0.08+).
- Introduces enhanced penalties when there is a prior driving offense within the last ten years.
- Ties the offense to specific aggravating factors (leaving the scene, known defects, and maintenance failure) and to knowledge of impairment or defect that caused death.
- Adds a mandatory driver education component and dedicates funding to support these provisions.
Relevant notes from the text: - The offense targets deaths caused by negligent or grossly negligent driving under the influence or impairment from alcohol, controlled substances, Cannabis-related products, or certain cannabinoids. - BAC threshold of 0.08 or higher is a factor, with timing (within two hours of driving) specified. - Certain aggravating factors (such as hit-and-run or known maintenance defects) can influence liability and penalties. - There is a tiered penalty structure that increases if a prior qualifying driving offense exists within ten years.
Relevant Terms - Criminal vehicular homicide - Grossly negligent - Negligent - Driving under the influence (DUI) - Alcohol concentration 0.08 or more - Cannabis flower - Cannabis product - Hemp edible (lower-potency) - Hemp-derived consumer product - Artificially derived cannabinoids - Tetrahydrocannabinols (THC) - Schedule I or II controlled substances - Leaving the scene (hit-and-run) - Defective maintenance - Peace officer - Citation or warning - Qualified prior driving offense - Imprisonment - Fine - Driver education programs - Appropriation / funding
If you'd like, I can break down the exact language into a side-by-side comparison with current law or provide a simple example scenario showing how the elements and penalties would apply.
Bill text versions
- Introduction PDF PDF file
Actions
| Date | Chamber | Where | Type | Name | Committee Name |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| March 02, 2026 | House | Action | Introduction and first reading, referred to | Public Safety Finance and Policy |
Citations
[
{
"analysis": {
"added": [
"Driver education programs must instruct on the penalties for criminal vehicular homicide.",
"Appropriates money to implement the act."
],
"removed": [],
"summary": "This bill amends Minnesota Statutes 2024 section 609.2112, subdivision 1 to increase penalties for criminal vehicular homicide and to require driver education programs to instruct on the penalties for criminal vehicular homicide; it also references appropriating money to implement these provisions.",
"modified": [
"Increases the maximum imprisonment for criminal vehicular homicide to up to 25 years.",
"Increases the maximum fine to up to $20,000.",
"Adds enhanced penalties if the offender has a qualified prior driving offense within 10 years (up to 30 years imprisonment and up to $30,000 fine)."
]
},
"citation": "609.2112",
"subdivision": "Subdivision 1"
},
{
"analysis": {
"added": [],
"removed": [],
"summary": "The bill references Minnesota Statutes section 169.09, subdivision 1 or 6, in establishing a violation related to leaving the scene of a collision or related officer interactions; this is a cross-reference to existing law.",
"modified": [
"No explicit textual changes to 169.09 are shown; it is cited as a cross-reference within the bill."
]
},
"citation": "169.09",
"subdivision": "Subdivision 1 or 6"
}
]