Establishes certain credits against income tax for nurses
Raises hate-crime penalties in Mass. by boosting terms and moving some offenders from county jails to state prison, increasing consequences for bias-motivated offenses.
Raises hate-crime penalties in Mass. by boosting terms and moving some offenders from county jails to state prison, increasing consequences for bias-motivated offenses.
Status: Introduced (MA Senate No. 1262). Filed Jan 9, 2025. Sponsor: Sen. Bruce E. Tarr. Referred to Judiciary; hearing(s) scheduled and rescheduled for Nov 25, 2025. (See Procedural Timeline below.)
This bill amends Section 39 of Chapter 265 of the Massachusetts General Laws (the state hate‑crimes statute) to increase the severity of criminal penalties and to change certain custody designations for offenders convicted under that section.
To strengthen criminal penalties for offenses classified as hate crimes under Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 265, § 39 by increasing maximum terms and altering where certain sentences are served (shifting some custody from county houses of correction to state prison).
The bill makes multiple numeric and custody‑designation substitutions in Section 39 of Chapter 265. As drafted it:
(Those substitutions effectively increase multiple statutory penalty levels and shift at least some convictions from house‑of‑correction custody to state prison custody. The bill edits are targeted to the existing hate‑crime enhancement section, thereby amplifying the enhanced punishments that attach when an offense is motivated by bias.)
The materials provided include unrelated legislative language (detailed federal/state land‑exchange language referencing “Deli, Inc.” and the Black River State Forest) and references to U.S. Senate committees and sponsors (Ron Johnson, Tammy Baldwin). Those items appear to come from different bills or jurisdictions and are not part of Massachusetts Senate No. 1262’s hate‑crimes amendment. This summary focuses on the substantive text labeled “An Act relative to hate crimes” (MA S.1262).
Compiled from official sources — confirm details with the bill’s official record.
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