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Bill

AB 469

Relating to: the unemployment insurance waiting period.

2025-2026 Regular Session Introduced by Deb Andraca and 25 co-sponsors

AB 469 aims to strengthen penalties for impersonating first responders during emergencies, boosting deterrence and protecting public safety while specifics await later amendments.

Representative Sinicki added as a coauthor
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Bill Summary · AB 469

Summary of AB 469 (Crimes: impersonation of first responders)

Overview

  • Bill number: AB 469
  • Title: Crimes: impersonation of first responders
  • Introduced: February 6, 2025
  • Author: Assembly Member Gabriel
  • Status: From printer. May be heard in committee March 9.
  • Subject: Crimes; impersonation of first responders

Purpose and Intent

  • The bill expresses the Legislature’s intent to enact legislation that would strengthen penalties for impersonating first responders during a state of emergency.
  • It builds on existing law regarding impersonation of first responders, but the introduced version does not itself specify new penalties or define enhanced offenses. Those details would be addressed in subsequent amendments.

Key Provisions (as introduced)

  • Section 1 (Intent): States the Legislature’s intent to strengthen penalties for impersonating first responders during a state of emergency.
  • Relation to current law: Acknowledges that impersonation of certain first responders is currently unlawful (existing law).
  • No concrete penalty levels, new offenses, or procedural changes are listed in the introduced text provided. The bill’s future amendments would be expected to specify any new offenses, penalties, or enforcement provisions.

Who is Affected

  • Potential impersonators: Individuals who impersonate first responders, particularly during a state of emergency.
  • First responders and public safety agencies: Their safety and credibility could be impacted by impersonation attempts; agencies may face increased enforcement and deterrence incentives.
  • General public: Protection against misinformation or dangerous actions during emergencies; potential changes in how emergencies are enforced.

Procedural and Timeline Aspects

  • Hearing timeline: The bill may be heard in committee on March 9 (per the “From printer” status note).
  • Next steps if advanced: If the committee approves, the bill would proceed through standard legislative processes (floor votes, potential amendments, and eventual Governor signature) to become law.
  • Current stage: Introductory/intent stage; no enacted penalties or new offenses are specified in the version provided.

Context and Background

  • The bill references the California Emergency Services Act, under which the Governor can proclaim a state of emergency under certain circumstances.
  • A “first responder” is defined in existing law as an employee of the state or a local public agency who provides emergency response services.
  • Existing law already makes it a misdemeanor to impersonate certain first responders (including a member of a fire department). AB 469 seeks to strengthen those penalties during a state of emergency, though specific provisions are not included in the introduced text.

If you want, I can update this summary with any later amendments or committee analyses you provide, and highlight any changes to penalties, definitions, or enforcement provisions.

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

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