HF4967

Policy for theft of public funds, school safety, and emergency vehicles provided; crimes of first-degree murder and impersonating a peace officer modified; new crimes created; firearms policy provided; criminal penalties provided; and money appropriated.
Legislative Session 94 (2025-2026)

AI Generated Summary

Purpose

  • Update Minnesota law and state spending to strengthen public safety, school safety, and government security; create and modify penalties for certain crimes; and set up new programs and processes related to firearms, emergency vehicles, and judiciary funding.

Main Provisions

  • Article 1: Judiciary and courthouse security funding

    • Funds to protect the Chief Justice with security detail when at events or traveling officially.
    • Money to staff and operate the Judicial Branch Security Unit.
    • A one-time appropriation of 1,000,000 to support a competitive grant program for courthouse safety upgrades (assessments, equipment, technology, construction, training). Requires a 50 percent nonstate match and is available through June 30, 2029.
  • Article 2: Public safety appropriations and policies

    • Public Safety Administration: 500,000 in the second year for a one-time public awareness campaign for extreme risk protection orders (ERPOs).
    • Emergency Management:
    • School Safety Grant Program: 4,565,000 in the second year to help K-12 schools fund all-hazards safety and security initiatives.
    • Minnesota School Safety Center Team: 435,000 in the second year for staffing and operations.
    • Criminal Apprehension:
    • Behavioral Threat Assessment and Management Team: 2,084,000 (second year) to assess and manage threats and prevent targeted violence.
    • Financial Crimes and Fraud Section (within the same program area): 1,531,000 (second year) for staffing and operations.
    • Ownership Certifications: 450,000 (second year) to establish and run a process for obtaining a certificate of legal ownership for semiautomatic military-style assault weapons; base funding set at 146,000 beginning in 2028.
    • General note: These are all part of a broader plan to fund public safety and modernize threat detection, financial crime response, and firearm-related governance.
  • Article 2: Corrections

    • Incarceration and prerelease services: Adds 256,000 in 2028 and 319,000 in 2029 to the base budget for incarceration and prerelease services (specific line items adjusted upward).
  • Other moving parts

    • BCA building: Exemption allowing construction of a new 8-foot security perimeter fence and access controls at the Bureau of Criminal Apprehension site without a building permit under the State Building Code (a permitting exception carried forward).
  • Article 3: Policy changes related to emergency vehicles, safety, and firearms

    • Authorized Emergency Vehicles defined and expanded (169.011 subd.3 and 169.033):
    • Defines which vehicles count as authorized emergency vehicles (fire, police, ambulances, certain municipal or public service vehicles, and others designated when necessary for life/property protection or emergency government functions).
    • The Commissioner of Public Safety may issue emergency vehicle permits; operators must obtain a permit, be listed as the operator, and complete training.
    • The section is exempt from standard rulemaking.
    • Decommissioning of law enforcement vehicles (169.98): When a vehicle is removed from service, the agency must remove all markings and equipment that could lead a reasonable person to think it’s a law enforcement vehicle.
    • School Safety Grant Program (new language added under 299A.956):
    • Establishes an all-hazards approach to school safety, with goals including development of safety and emergency plans, staff and student training, threat assessment, and improved coordination with emergency responders.
    • Eligible applicants include all K-12 public and nonpublic schools, including Tribal schools; grants support plans, drills, behavioral threat assessments, security improvements, and emergency communications.
    • Grant administration with transparent, competitive processes and clear eligibility and allowable expenses.
    • Prohibited activities include routine operational costs not directly tied to safety, replacing ongoing funding, or activities inconsistent with an all-hazards approach.
    • Authorized emergency vehicle policy details include training requirements and a commissioner's rulemaking exemption.
  • Article 3: First-Degree Murder expansion (609.185)

    • Expands the circumstances that make a murder a first-degree offense, all carrying life imprisonment.
    • New triggers include death during or in the course of burglary, aggravated robbery, carjacking in the first or second degree, kidnapping, arson in the first or second degree, drive-by shooting, witness tampering, or other felony violations involving serious harm.
    • Special provisions define who is a prosecuting attorney and a judge for purposes of these sections; clarifies terms related to child abuse, domestic abuse, and terrorism when connected to the murder case.
    • Includes killings of certain public figures (prosecuting attorneys, judges, guards) while they’re performing official duties.
    • Adds patterns of prior abuse (child or domestic) and acts of terrorism as factors that can elevate the offense to first-degree murder.
  • Overall policy and enforcement themes

    • Emphasis on all-hazards approaches to safety and security (schools, courthouses, public agencies).
    • Strengthened processes for emergency vehicle operation and vehicle decommissioning to reduce misidentification risk.
    • Expanded tools and programs to prevent violence, assess threats, and respond to emergencies across government and school settings.
    • Tightened penalties for murder in certain high-risk or intentional contexts, including violence connected with other felonies and terrorism.

Significant Changes to Existing Law

  • Creation and expansion of a statewide all-hazards approach to school safety, with a formal grant program and mandatory coordination among schools, law enforcement, and emergency services.
  • Broader definition and oversight of authorized emergency vehicles, including required permits, training, and training exemptions.
  • Mandatory decommissioning procedures for former law enforcement vehicles to avoid misidentification.
  • New and expanded funding for judiciary security, courthouse safety, and state public safety operations.
  • New process for ownership certification of semiautomatic military-style weapons, signaling tighter firearm governance.
  • Expanded list of acts and circumstances that qualify for first-degree murder charges, including certain domestic abuse and terrorism-related scenarios, with life imprisonment as the sentence.

Potential Impacts

  • Schools: More funding and structured programs to improve safety, threat assessment, drills, and emergency response readiness.
  • Law enforcement and public safety: Additional resources for investigations, financial crimes, threat assessment, and specialized units; improved coordination with emergency management and public health.
  • Courts and judiciary: Increased security for high-ranking officials and court facilities.
  • Firearms policy: New ownership certification process for certain firearms; potential administrative and enforcement changes.
  • Residents: Enhanced safety measures in schools and public spaces, with some provisions involving new funding mechanisms and potential changes to permissible activities and compliance requirements.

Relevant Terms - authorized emergency vehicle - all-hazards approach - school safety grant program - Minnesota School Safety Center - Behavioral Threat Assessment and Management Team - Financial Crimes and Fraud Section - ownership certifications - semiautomatic military-style assault weapons - first-degree murder - terrorism - domestic abuse (prior pattern) - child abuse (prior pattern) - drive-by shooting - witness tampering - emergency vehicle permits - emergency management - chief justice security - courthouse safety - extreme risk protection orders (ERPOs)

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Actions

DateChamberWhereTypeNameCommittee Name
April 13, 2026HouseActionIntroduction and first reading, referred toRules and Legislative Administration
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Progress through the legislative process

17%
In Committee

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