Protecting minors from exposure to indecent displays of sexually explicit nature
Establishes duties for on‑duty officers to intervene when safe and to report observed misconduct (within 72 hours) and protects whistleblowers from retaliation.
Establishes duties for on‑duty officers to intervene when safe and to report observed misconduct (within 72 hours) and protects whistleblowers from retaliation.
Purpose
- Establish statutory duties for law enforcement and other criminal-justice personnel to intervene (when safe and reasonably possible) and to report observed excessive or unlawful conduct, and to protect those who make such reports from retaliation.
- Provide limited state funding for training about the new duties and protections.
Key provisions
- Amend G.S. 15A‑401 (arrest/use of force statute):
- Adds a duty for an on‑duty officer who observes another officer using force that the observer reasonably believes exceeds authorized force to, if safe and feasible, attempt to intervene.
- Requires the observing officer to report the suspected unauthorized use of force within a “reasonable period of time not to exceed 72 hours” to a superior in the officer’s agency. If the agency head was involved or present, the report must be made to the highest ranking officer not involved or present.
- Making a knowingly false report under this subsection is a Class 2 misdemeanor.
- Provides that an officer who makes such a report “shall not be terminated, disciplined, or otherwise retaliated against” for making the report, but agencies may still discipline for conduct that occurred prior to the report.
Who is affected
- On‑duty law enforcement officers, criminal justice officers, and justice officers employed by State, county, and local agencies across North Carolina.
- Agency supervisors and internal affairs/disciplinary structures who must receive and process reports.
- The Criminal Justice Education and Training Standards Commission and the Sheriffs’ Education and Training Standards Commission (for training implementation).
Fiscal and implementation details
- One‑time appropriations: $50,000 (nonrecurring) from the General Fund to the Department of Justice to allocate to the Criminal Justice Education and Training Standards Commission, and $50,000 (nonrecurring) to allocate to the Sheriffs’ Education and Training Standards Commission — total $100,000 for training on the statutory changes (FY 2025‑26).
- Training funds are intended to inform officers about the new intervention/reporting duties and whistleblower protections.
Penalties and limits
- Knowingly false reports: Class 2 misdemeanor.
- Protections do not bar legitimate disciplinary action for misconduct occurring prior to making a report.
Timing / effective date
- The act becomes effective December 1, 2025.
- It applies to offenses committed and retaliatory actions taken on or after that date.
Practical considerations
- Agencies will need procedures for receiving/escalating reports, protecting reporting officers, and investigating allegations while preserving due process.
- Training and internal policy updates will be necessary to implement the 72‑hour reporting deadline, escalation routes, documentation, and anti‑retaliation safeguards.
Compiled from official sources — confirm details with the bill’s official record.
Sign in to ask a question.