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HB 1194

Firefighters; Firefighters Act of 2025; effective date.

2025 Regular Session Introduced by Rick West

HB1194 retains and tightens criminal penalties for knowingly giving false information or fabricating reports to police or security officials.

Second Reading referred to Rules
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Bill Summary · HB 1194

HB 1194 — Summary (North Dakota, 69th Legislative Assembly)

Status & timeline
- Introduced: November 12, 2024.
- Judiciary Committee (House) adopted a committee report (Feb 3, 2025).
- Senate Judiciary adopted an amendment (Apr 1, 2025).
- Passed both chambers (House and Senate votes recorded on enrolled copy).
- Filed with Secretary of State: April 16, 2025 (status shown as filed with Secretary of State).

Purpose
- To revise North Dakota Century Code § 12.1‑11‑03 to clarify and update the criminal offense for giving false information or reports to law enforcement or security officials, to specify who must report suspected violations, and to preserve a criminal penalty.

Key provisions
- Criminal offense retained and clarified:
- An individual is guilty of a class A misdemeanor if the person:
1. Gives false information or a false report to a law enforcement officer that the individual knows is false, and the information may interfere with an investigation or materially mislead an officer; or
2. Falsely reports to a law enforcement officer or other security official the occurrence of a crime of violence or other incident calling for emergency response when the individual knows the incident did not occur.
- “Security official” is defined in the statute as a public servant responsible for averting or dealing with emergencies involving public safety.
- Duty to report by on‑duty officers (amended language):
- An on‑duty law enforcement officer who has probable cause to suspect that an individual has vexatiously provided a false report regarding another individual to a law enforcement officer or security official must report that information to the county state's attorney where the violation occurred.
- The Senate amendment’s insertion of the term “vexatiously” and the phrase “regarding another individual” narrows the officer reporting duty to suspected intentionally harassing/abusive false reports about other persons.

Penalty
- Violation is a class A misdemeanor under other statutory sentencing provisions (the bill itself does not change the classification or prescribe a new sentence amount).

Who is affected
- Individuals who knowingly give false information to police or knowingly report fabricated violent incidents/emergencies (potential criminal exposure).
- On‑duty law enforcement officers (new statutory duty to report probable‑cause suspicions of vexatious false reports to the county state's attorney).
- County state's attorneys, who may receive more referrals and decide whether to prosecute.
- “Security officials” and agencies involved in emergency responses may see reduced false call burdens if enforced.

Practical/administrative notes and potential impacts
- Narrowing language (e.g., “vexatiously,” “regarding another individual,” and “probable cause”) may limit prosecutions to intentional/harassing false reporting rather than accidental or mistaken reports.
- The reporting requirement delegates gatekeeping responsibility to on‑duty officers and could increase referrals to county prosecutors; may require training or guidance for law enforcement about the statute’s evidentiary threshold (probable cause and vexatious intent).
- No appropriation or fiscal analysis is contained in the bill text; any administrative workload (officer reports, prosecutions) would be handled within existing criminal justice budgets unless volumes increase materially.

Primary sponsors (per enrolled document)
- Representatives/authors listed on enrolled copy include Representatives Vetter, Christianson, Murphy, Dockter, Hauck, D. Johnston, Koppelman, Jonas, Motschenbacher and Senators Paulson, Luick. (Sponsorship listings may vary across versions.)

Notes
- The bill amends existing criminal-law language and does not create civil remedies or change definitions beyond those specified. Readers should consult the enrolled/official statute text for final wording and check the effective date once the Secretary of State posts the enacted law.

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

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