SF4785
Theft of public funds stand-alone crime establishment provision
Legislative Session 94 (2025-2026)
Related bill: HF4900
AI Generated Summary
Purpose
- Establishes a new standalone crime called theft of public funds.
- Aims to protect money held or managed by government entities from being taken or used without permission.
Main Provisions
- Definitions:
- Government entity: an organization as defined elsewhere in Minnesota law.
- Public funds: money from all general, special, permanent trust, and other funds held or managed by a government entity, regardless of source or purpose.
- Acts that constitute theft of public funds:
- Someone intentionally and without a right takes, uses, transfers, conceals, or retains public funds or funds managed for a government program, with the intent to permanently deprive the government entity.
- Someone intentionally deceives a government entity or a third party administering a program funded by public funds to obtain public funds or services funded by public funds (obtains for themselves or another the money or services by deceit).
- False representations include, but are not limited to, promises made with intent not to perform.
- Deception can also occur through claims or documents (like reimbursement claims, rate applications, or cost reports) that falsely state costs or services provided by a vendor.
- Swindling by any means (artifice, trick device, or other) to obtain public funds or services funded by public funds from a government entity or a third party administering a program funded by public funds.
- Alternative phrases in everyday language include fraud, deception, and misrepresentation in relation to public funds.
- sentence-specific rules:
- If the value of the property or funds stolen is more than certain thresholds, different maximum penalties apply (see penalties section).
- The value of money or property obtained within a six-month period can be added together for sentencing (aggregation).
Penalties (Sentence Ranges)
- If the value of the property or funds stolen is more than $35,000:
- Up to 24 years in prison and/or fines up to $100,000 (or both).
- If the value is more than $5,000 (but not more than $35,000):
- Up to 12 years in prison and/or fines up to $20,000 (or both).
- If the value is more than $1,000 but not more than $5,000:
- Up to 6 years in prison and/or fines up to $10,000 (or both).
Significant Changes to Existing Law
- Creates a new standalone crime specifically for theft of public funds, rather than moving these acts into an existing theft statute.
- Establishes clear definitions for public funds and government entities to guide prosecutions.
- Specifies detailed acts that constitute theft, including deceit, false representations, and swindling related to public funds and related services.
- Introduces a tiered penalty structure based on the value involved, plus an aggregation rule to consider multiple related thefts within a six-month period.
Enforcement Considerations
- The bill clarifies what counts as theft of public funds and how prosecutors may charge and sentence based on the value involved.
- Aggregation provision could affect sentencing by combining multiple small thefts into a single charge when they occur within six months.
Relevant Terms - theft of public funds - public funds - government entity - false representation - deceit - fraud - swindling - aggregation - penalty/sentencing - imprisonment - fines - value thresholds - reimbursement claims - rate application - cost report - vendor - services funded by public funds
Actions
| Date | Chamber | Where | Type | Name | Committee Name |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| March 25, 2026 | Senate | Action | Introduction and first reading | ||
| March 25, 2026 | Senate | Action | Referred to | Judiciary and Public Safety | |
| Showing the 5 most recent stages. This bill has 2 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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