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SB 244

Creating WV Women's Bill of Rights

2025 Regular Session Introduced by Amy Grady and 1 co-sponsor

NC SB 244 makes riot with an attempted overthrow a Class F felony; inciting such riots also punished as Class F. Applies to offenses on/after Dec 1, 2025.

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Bill Summary · SB 244

SB 244 — "January 6 Riot / Attempt Overthrow of Gov't." (NC Senate Bill)

Jurisdiction: North Carolina
Bill Number / Title: SB 244 — January 6 Riot / Attempt Overthrow of Gov't.
Primary Sponsors: Senators Everitt and Garrett
Introduced: January 30, 2025
Status (as provided): Passed first reading
Planned effective date (if enacted): December 1, 2025 (applies to offenses committed on or after that date)

Main purpose

To increase criminal penalties for violent riots that include an attempt to overthrow government authority, and to punish persons who incite such riots. The bill responds to conduct similar to the January 6, 2021, U.S. Capitol events by creating a heightened felony for riots involving an attempted overthrow of government.

Key provisions

  • Amends G.S. 14‑288.2 (the North Carolina riot statute) by adding:
    • New subsection (c3): A person who willfully engages in a riot is guilty of a Class F felony where, in the course of the riot, the person attempts to overthrow the government of the United States, the State of North Carolina, or any political subdivision thereof.
    • New subsection (e2): A person who willfully incites or urges another to engage in a riot, and that incitement is a contributing cause of a riot in which a person attempts to overthrow government, shall be punished as a Class F felon.
  • Retains the existing structure of the riot statute for other riot-related offenses; the new subsections create a distinct, elevated offense tied specifically to an attempted overthrow.
  • The bill applies prospectively to offenses committed on or after its effective date.

Who would be affected

  • Individuals who participate in riots that go beyond disorderly conduct and include actions constituting an attempt to overthrow government authority.
  • Individuals who incite, urge, or organize others and whose words or actions are found to be a contributing cause of such a riot.
  • Prosecutors, defense attorneys, law enforcement, and courts—because of the increased felony exposure and potential evidentiary questions.
  • Political subdivisions and state entities potentially targeted by such efforts.

Practical and legal impact

  • Penalty increase: Class F felony status elevates potential punishment relative to lower-level riot offenses; sentencing will follow North Carolina’s felony sentencing regime.
  • Prosecution burdens: Prosecutors must prove elements including willfulness and an “attempt” to overthrow government—facts that may require complex factual and evidentiary showings (e.g., intent, overt acts toward overthrow).
  • Free speech & assembly considerations: The bill targets violent conduct and incitement tied to attempts to overthrow government; constitutional issues could be raised about the line between protected advocacy and criminal incitement or attempt.
  • Operational effects: Potential for more felony prosecutions stemming from large-scale political demonstrations that turn violent and for increased investigative and court resources.

Procedural notes / next steps

  • Having passed first reading, the bill would proceed through committee consideration, further floor votes, and (if enacted) be signed by the Governor to become law before the stated effective date.
  • If enacted as written, the December 1, 2025 effective date makes the statute applicable to conduct on or after that day.

If you want, I can:
- Provide the current statutory text before/after amendment for side‑by‑side comparison;
- Summarize legislative history (committees and votes) as it advances; or
- Outline likely legal issues and case law that could shape how the new provisions are interpreted in court.

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

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