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SB 112

An Act providing for consumer data privacy, for duties of controllers and for duties of processors; and imposing penalties.

2025-2026 Regular Session Introduced by Lisa Boscola and 12 co-sponsors

The bill adds sports officials to the protected class for second-degree assault, making it illegal to intentionally injure an official officiating a sporting event.

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Bill Summary · SB 112

SB 112 — Criminal Law: Second‑Degree Assault — Sports Official (Summary)

Status and timing
- Bill number: SB 112
- Title: Criminal Law — Second Degree Assault — Sports Official
- Introduced: January 23, 2025
- Next action: Hearing scheduled 1/16 at 1:00 p.m. (per status information)

Purpose and intent
- SB 112 would amend Maryland’s criminal statutes to add sports officials to the list of persons specially protected from intentional physical attacks while performing officiating duties. The bill aims to deter and criminally sanction assaults on referees, umpires, judges, and other officials who are officiating at sporting events.

Key provisions
- Adds a new protected class under the second‑degree assault statute (Criminal Law §3‑203): it is unlawful to intentionally cause physical injury to another person when the actor knows or has reason to know the victim is “an official, an umpire, a referee, or a judge who is officiating at a sporting event.”
- Classifies that conduct under the existing misdemeanor second‑degree assault offense (the bill retains the current statutory penalties for misdemeanor second‑degree assault).
- Penalty (as referenced in current law): up to 10 years imprisonment and/or a fine up to $2,500.
- Amends the arrest statute (Criminal Procedure §2‑203) to authorize warrantless arrest when a police officer has probable cause to believe a person committed the newly specified second‑degree assault against a sports official. The offense is added to the list of crimes for which an officer may make a warrantless arrest based on probable cause.

Who would be affected
- Protected individuals: sports officials (officials, umpires, referees, judges) officiating at sporting events.
- Perpetrators: spectators, participants, or any person who intentionally causes physical injury to an on‑duty sports official could be arrested and prosecuted under second‑degree assault.
- Law enforcement: police gain explicit warrantless‑arrest authority for probable cause arrests of this offense.
- Courts and prosecutors: will handle any increase in cases charging the added statutory offense.

Procedural/fiscal notes
- Fiscal impact: official fiscal analysis indicates the bill is not expected to materially affect State or local government finances or operations.
- Enforcement: because the bill uses existing misdemeanor second‑degree assault penalties and procedures (with added warrantless‑arrest authority), implementation relies on existing enforcement and prosecution processes.

Observations (neutral)
- The bill extends statutory protections that already exist for certain public‑safety personnel to sports officials, while keeping the offense classified as misdemeanor second‑degree assault (rather than upgrading to felony status).
- Practical elements for adjudication may include proving the defendant knew (or had reason to know) the victim was officiating at the time of the assault.

If you want, I can:
- Draft a one‑page explainer comparing current law and the bill’s changes;
- Prepare potential amendment language (e.g., clarifying “officiating” or specifying event types/locations).

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

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