HF3937
Criminal penalty for impersonating a peace officer increased, crime of impersonating while possessing a firearm established, enhanced penalties for committing an offense while impersonating established, and individuals presenting as peace officers required to identify themselves.
Legislative Session 94 (2025-2026)
AI Generated Summary
Purpose
- Strengthen and broaden penalties for impersonating a peace officer.
- Create rules requiring peace officers to clearly identify themselves and their agency in certain situations.
- Clarify what counts as a law enforcement vehicle or equipment, and when impersonation can lead to harsher penalties.
- Address how penalties rise if a firearm is involved or if impersonation is used while committing another crime.
Main Provisions
Impersonating a Peace Officer (Base offense)
- If someone falsely pretends to be a peace officer with the intent to mislead others, the offense carries increased penalties and can be treated as a higher-level crime than before (potentially a felony, with notable punishment limits).
Impersonation in Circumstances Involving Access or Vehicle Insignia
- If impersonation is used to gain access to a public or government building not open to the public, or if the impersonator acts as or directs others in ways that mimic law enforcement, or if they operate a vehicle that is marked or themed to look like a law enforcement vehicle, the offense becomes a gross misdemeanor with stricter penalties (up to five years in prison or up to $10,000 in fines, or both).
Prior Violation and Firearm Involvement
- If someone commits this impersonation within five years of a previous violation, the offense can be charged as a felony with higher punishment (up to about ten years in prison and/or up to a sizable fine).
- If the impersonation is committed while the offender is in possession of a firearm, it is a felony with substantial penalties (up to about ten years in prison and/or up to $20,000 fine, or both).
Enhanced Penalties When a Crime Is Committed While Impersonating
- If a crime is committed while the person is falsely impersonating a peace officer, penalties can be increased based on the underlying crime’s category:
- If the underlying crime is a misdemeanor, the result can be a gross misdemeanor.
- If the underlying crime is a gross misdemeanor, the result can be a felony with higher jail time and fines.
- If the underlying crime is a felony, the maximum penalty for the impersonation offense can be extended by up to five years beyond the normal maximum for that felony.
- The enhanced penalties still allow charging under other applicable laws.
Duty to Identify (Requirements for Peace Officers)
- Peace officers must identify:
- The agency or entity employing the officer.
- The officer’s last name.
- The officer’s identification number (if the officer is licensed or part of certain official programs or mutual aid arrangements).
- Methods to satisfy identification:
- Wearing a uniform that clearly identifies the agency and displaying identifying elements (badge, nameplate, patch, etc.).
- Wearing body armor or protective gear used for crowd control or special units, with identifying elements visible.
- Providing the required information upon request or offering a card with the information.
- Exceptions and protections:
- Undercover officers are not required to reveal identity in certain situations (e.g., when not detaining, arresting, or executing a warrant).
- If an officer fails to identify as required, it does not automatically make an arrest unlawful and does not require suppressing evidence obtained during the arrest.
Significant Changes to Existing Law
- Raises the seriousness of impersonation, especially when firearms are involved or when the impersonation is used to commit other crimes.
- Expands circumstances in which impersonation is treated as a gross misdemeanor or felony.
- Introduces a documented duty for peace officers to identify themselves and their agency, with clear standards for how identification should be presented and when it can be withheld (undercover scenarios).
- Adds protections that the failure to identify does not nullify arrests or suppress evidence, preserving prosecutorial and investigative outcomes.
- Establishes clearer definitions around what constitutes a law enforcement vehicle or equipment intended to convey police authority.
Practical Implications
- Potentially harsher penalties for impersonating a peace officer, especially in high-risk situations (firearm involvement, access to restricted buildings, or when impersonation is used to commit other crimes).
- Officers have clearer expectations and protocols for identification, which could improve transparency and reduce confusion in encounters with the public.
- The bill aims to deter impersonators by making it riskier and more punitive to pretend to be a police officer.
Relevant Terms - impersonating a peace officer - misdemeanor - gross misdemeanor - felony - firearm - law enforcement vehicle - identify/identification - identification number - agency - undercover - access to public/government buildings - siren provisions - equipment/insignia - mutual aid/emergency management compact - body armor/SWAT - enhanced penalties - previous violation - legitimate authority
Actions
| Date | Chamber | Where | Type | Name | Committee Name |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| March 05, 2026 | House | Action | Introduction and first reading, referred to | Public Safety Finance and Policy | |
| March 09, 2026 | House | Action | Authors added | ||
| March 12, 2026 | House | Action | Authors added | ||
| April 07, 2026 | House | Action | Author added | ||
| Showing the 5 most recent stages. This bill has 4 stages in total. Log in to view all stages | |||||
Citations
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Progress through the legislative process
In Committee
Sponsors
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