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Bill

SB 407

An Act amending Title 51 (Military Affairs) of the Pennsylvania Consolidated Statutes, in disabled veterans' real estate tax exemption, further providing for definitions and for duty of commission.

2025-2026 Regular Session Introduced by Lisa Boscola and 8 co-sponsors

Prohibits using a victim's sex, gender, gender identity, or sexual orientation as a defense or provocation to reduce murder or assault charges; removes bias-based excuses.

Referred to Veterans Affairs & Emergency Preparedness
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Bill Summary · SB 407

SB 407 — Prohibit Defense Based on Sex or Gender (Summary)

Status & Procedural History
- Introduced: February 14, 2025.
- Senate action: Passed first reading and referred to committees (committee hearing(s) scheduled March–April 2025).
- If enacted, the bill takes effect December 1, 2025, and applies to offenses committed on or after that date.
- Bill creates two new statutory sections added to Chapter 14 (Criminal Law): new § 14‑18.3 (Article 6 — Homicide) and new § 14‑34.11 (Article 8 — Assault).

Purpose / Intent
- To eliminate as a legally recognized defense the assertion that a defendant’s conduct (including homicide or assault) was provoked, justified, or mitigated by the defendant’s discovery of, perception of, or belief about another person’s sex, gender, gender identity, or sexual orientation.
- The measure addresses defenses historically described as “panic” or provocation defenses grounded on a victim’s sex/gender or sexual orientation/identity.

Key Provisions
- New § 14‑18.3 (Homicide)
- States that “the discovery of, perception of, or belief about another person’s actual or perceived sex, gender, gender identity, or sexual orientation, whether or not accurate, is not a defense to a prosecution under [Article 6] and is not provocation negating malice as an element of murder.”
- New § 14‑34.11 (Assault)
- Mirrors the homicide provision for prosecution under the assault statutes: such discovery/perception/belief is not a defense to an assault prosecution.
- Both sections include a construction clause: nothing in the statute prevents admission of evidence of a victim’s or witness’s conduct, behavior, or statements if that evidence is otherwise relevant and admissible under the rules of evidence.

Who and What Is Affected
- Defendants: Prohibits reliance on a defendant’s alleged reaction to a victim’s sex, gender, gender identity, or sexual orientation as a legal justification or mitigation for murder or assault charges.
- Criminal defense counsel and prosecutors: Changes the range of defenses that can be asserted and the way provocation arguments are presented in homicide and assault cases.
- Judges and juries: Alters jury instructions and the legal framework for considering provocation and malice in relevant cases.
- Potentially benefits victims (including LGBTQ+ victims) by removing a legally recognized basis for reduced culpability tied to bias about identity.

Practical and Legal Effects
- Eliminates a narrow category of mitigating/provocative defenses tied to protected characteristics, intending to prevent bias‑based reductions of criminal culpability (e.g., murder reduced to manslaughter on provocation grounds).
- Preserves courts’ ability to consider other relevant and admissible evidence about victim/witness behavior; it does not bar all contextual evidence.
- Does not apply retroactively to abate prosecutions for offenses committed before the statute’s effective date.
- May prompt litigation over interpretation, admissibility, and interaction with constitutional protections and common‑law defenses; courts will likely address those issues in post‑enactment cases.

Text references
- Adds new N.C. Gen. Stat. § 14‑18.3 and § 14‑34.11 (as quoted in the bill). Effective date: December 1, 2025; applies to offenses on or after that date.

Compiled from official sources — confirm details with the bill’s official record.

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