WeVote

Bill

Bill

LC 1802

Generally revise safety laws

2025 Regular Session

LC 1802 would broadly revise safety laws affecting Indians and law enforcement; however the draft died in process and did not advance beyond drafting by May 27, 2025.

(LC) Draft Died in Process
0
WeVote Research Nonpartisan
Bill Summary · LC 1802

Summary of LC 1802 — Generally revise safety laws

Overview

  • Bill Number: LC 1802
  • Title: Generally revise safety laws
  • Subject: Indians, Law Enforcement (Criminal Procedure)
  • Classification: bill
  • Introduced: November 22, 2024
  • Current Status: Draft Died in Process (as of May 27, 2025)

This bill appears to be a broad measure aimed at revising safety-related statutes, with particular emphasis suggested by its subject area on Indians and law enforcement. The exact text and substantive provisions are not provided in the available information.

Legislation Details

  • Introduced by: Drafter assigned (Nov 22, 2024).
  • Legislative Actions (summary):
    • 2024-11-22: Drafter Assigned
    • 2025-02-12: Draft On Hold
    • 2025-05-27: Draft Died in Process

These entries show the bill moved from drafting to a hold status and ultimately to a termination of the draft process, indicating it did not advance toward formal consideration or enactment.

Status and Timeline

  • The bill was introduced late in 2024 and remained in a drafting stage through early 2025.
  • By May 27, 2025, the draft had died in process, meaning the proposal did not progress to committee or floor action. Earlier, it had been placed on hold in February 2025.
  • No enacted provisions or committee reports are available in the provided information.

Scope, Provisions, and Impacts (What is Known vs. Unknown)

  • What is known: The bill’s title suggests a broad revision of safety laws, with focus indicated by the subject areas of Indians and law enforcement. No specific provisions, changes in standards, penalties, enforcement mechanisms, or definitions are provided here.
  • What is unknown: The exact changes proposed, affected statutes, enforcement rules, funding implications, tribal-government or jurisdictional implications, procedural reforms, or implementation timelines.

Potential Affected Parties (depending on final text)

  • State and local law enforcement agencies
  • Safety and regulatory agencies governed by the revised statutes
  • Indian tribes and tribal law-enforcement authorities (given the Indian-related subject matter)
  • Individuals and entities subject to safety laws

Next Steps

  • If you have access to the bill’s full text or committee notes, I can provide a detailed provision-by-provision summary, identify fiscal impacts, and assess implications for tribal jurisdiction and criminal procedure.
  • For ongoing tracking, monitor updates on the bill’s status in the legislative database, as drafts can be reintroduced in future sessions.

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

Sign in to ask a question.