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HB 5359

Individual income tax: credit; credit for certain motor fuel retail dealers; provide for. Amends 1967 PA 281 (MCL 206.1 - 206.847) by adding secs. 279 & 679.

2025-2026 Regular Session Introduced by Greg Alexander and 6 co-sponsors

Strengthens privacy by banning warrantless on-property recording devices and bars Rhode Island prosecutions after federal or other-state acquittals, with an exception for newly dis

bill electronically reproduced 12/11/2025
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Bill Summary · HB 5359

HB 5359 — Summary (2025)

Purpose

HB 5359 seeks to strengthen privacy protections and limit duplicative prosecutions by: (1) prohibiting law enforcement placement of audio/video recording devices on another person’s private property without consent or a valid warrant; and (2) barring state prosecution where the same facts produced an acquittal in federal or another-state court, except when newly discovered evidence justifies a new prosecution.

Key provisions

  • Adds R.I. Gen. Laws § 12-5-11 (Search Warrants)

    • Prohibits any law enforcement or peace officer (see § 12-7-21) from placing audio or video recording device(s) on another person’s private property to capture, preserve, transmit or document activities without:
    • the property owner’s consent, or
    • a valid search warrant issued by a neutral and detached magistrate or judge upon a finding of probable cause.
    • Any audio or video evidence obtained in violation of this subsection is inadmissible in any criminal or civil proceeding against the property owner, tenants, or guests.
  • Adds R.I. Gen. Laws § 12-12-23 (Indictments, Informations and Complaints)

    • Provides that an acquittal under federal law or another state’s law for the same set of facts or acts bars prosecution in Rhode Island.
    • Exception: prosecution may proceed if there is newly discovered evidence that would substantially indicate prosecution in this state is warranted.
  • Effective date: upon passage.

Who is affected

  • Law enforcement agencies and peace officers operating in Rhode Island — changes investigative authority and use of surveillance devices on private property.
  • Criminal defendants — potential additional protection from subsequent state prosecution after acquittal elsewhere (subject to the newly discovered evidence exception).
  • Prosecutors — limits prosecutorial options in cases with prior acquittals in other jurisdictions; evidence suppression rules affect case strategy.
  • Property owners, tenants, and guests — enhanced protections for on-property audio/video privacy; suppressed evidence applies to civil and criminal cases.

Procedural status and timeline

  • Introduced: February 7, 2025 (Sponsors: Reps. Place, Fascia, Quattrocchi, J. Lombardi, Cruz, Felix, Hull)
  • Referred to House Judiciary; hearing scheduled Feb 21, 2025
  • 02/25/2025: Committee recommended measure be held for further study
  • Read first time: April 7, 2025; referred to Environmental Regulation thereafter
  • Classification: bill

Potential legal and practical considerations

  • Scope is limited to devices placed “on” private property and does not expressly address surveillance from public locations, aerial or remote monitoring, or body-worn cameras.
  • The suppression provision applies to civil as well as criminal proceedings, which is broader than many state statutes.
  • The acquittal-as-bar provision may raise questions about the “dual sovereignty” doctrine (federal and state prosecutorial independence) and could prompt constitutional or appellate review if enacted.

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

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