HF4314
Criminal penalties increased and scope of the doxxing crime increased.
Legislative Session 94 (2025-2026)
Related bill: SF4609
AI Generated Summary
Purpose
- To strengthen public safety by increasing criminal penalties and expanding the scope of the doxxing crime. The bill amends Minnesota law to create a specific offense called the dissemination of personal information about a law enforcement official and to impose harsher penalties in certain circumstances.
Main Provisions
- Creation of a new offense: Dissemination of Personal Information About a Law Enforcement Official.
- It is a crime to knowingly and without consent publicly disclose personal information about a law enforcement official or the official’s family or household member if doing so creates an imminent and serious threat to safety.
- Publicly available information can include details shared through the Internet.
- Definitions included:
- Law enforcement official: includes police officers and people employed by a law enforcement agency.
- Personal information: home phone number, personal cell number, personal email address, name, photographs, home address, directions to a home, and photographs of a home, among other details.
- Family or household member: as defined in Minnesota law.
- Penalties:
- If the victim is a law enforcement official or a family/household member of a law enforcement official, the offense is a gross misdemeanor (more serious than a standard misdemeanor).
- If the offense results in great bodily harm or death to the victim or the victim’s family, it is a felony with potential imprisonment up to two years and/or a fine up to $4,000.
- For a second or subsequent violation, the offense is a gross misdemeanor or felony with the same potential penalties (up to two years in prison and up to a $4,000 fine), depending on the circumstances.
- Scope and intent:
- The bill targets the public sharing of personal information that creates a credible threat to safety, not just any online posting.
- It focuses specifically on information about law enforcement officials and their families, expanding the traditional scope of “doxxing.”
Significant Changes to Existing Law
- Introduces a dedicated offense addressing the dissemination of personal information about law enforcement officials and their families.
- Elevates penalties for doxxing when the victim is a law enforcement official or their family member.
- Specifies that harm resulting in great bodily harm or death can lead to felony charges, with corresponding prison and fine penalties.
- Clarifies that information shared online or through other public means falls under this offense.
Practical Impact
- Persons who publicly share sensitive contact information or home details about a law enforcement official or their family, and that sharing creates a serious threat, could face criminal charges.
- The bill adds stronger consequences for repeat offenses and for situations where the sharing causes serious harm or death.
Relevant Terms - Dissemination of personal information - Doxxing - Law enforcement official - Personal information (home address, home phone number, personal cell number, personal email address, name, photographs) - Family or household member - Imminent and serious threat - Publicly available / Internet - Misdemeanor - Gross misdemeanor - Felony - Imprisonment - Fine - Second or subsequent violation
Actions
| Date | Chamber | Where | Type | Name | Committee Name |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| March 16, 2026 | House | Action | Introduction and first reading, referred to | Public Safety Finance and Policy | |
| Showing the 5 most recent stages. This bill has 1 stages in total. Log in to view all stages | |||||
Citations
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Progress through the legislative process
In Committee
Sponsors
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