Relating to rapid fire activators; declaring an emergency.
SB 696 tightens no-knock warrants: demands probable-cause findings, advance notice, and a reasonable wait before entry, unless danger to life or safety is shown.
SB 696 tightens no-knock warrants: demands probable-cause findings, advance notice, and a reasonable wait before entry, unless danger to life or safety is shown.
Status: Passed 1st Reading (Mar 26, 2025)
Introduced: Feb 21, 2025
Primary Sponsors: Senators Smith and Theodros
Subject areas: Courts; criminal procedure; law enforcement; warrants; public safety
SB 696 narrows the circumstances under which law enforcement may execute a search warrant without prior announcement (commonly called a “no‑knock” warrant) and clarifies procedural duties when officers serve search warrants. The bill’s intent is to ensure a judicial finding of probable cause supports forcible, unannounced entry and to require officers to provide warning and allow a reasonable opportunity before using force to enter, except where adequate danger to life or safety exists.
SB 696 formalizes and elevates procedural safeguards around no‑knock and “quick‑knock” entries by requiring specific judicial findings and particularized factual allegations to be included in warrant applications. It also clarifies that officers must announce and wait a reasonable period before forcible entry except when a documented danger to life or safety exists. The bill is likely to change warrant drafting and review practices and require updated training for officers and issuing officials.
Compiled from official sources — confirm details with the bill’s official record.
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