SF3605 (Legislative Session 94 (2025-2026))
Penalties increase for criminal vehicular homicide
AI Generated Summary
Purpose
- Increase penalties for criminal vehicular homicide (CVH) and require driver education programs to teach about CVH penalties. The bill also allocates money to implement these changes.
Main Provisions
- Amends Minnesota Statutes 2024 section 609.2112, subdivision 1, to define CVH and expand the circumstances that qualify as CVH.
- Applies when death results from operating a motor vehicle in a grossly negligent or negligent manner while under the influence of:
- alcohol,
- a controlled substance,
- cannabis (flower or products),
- hemp products (lower-potency hemp edible or hemp-derived products),
- artificially derived cannabinoids or tetrahydrocannabinols (THC),
- or any combination of these elements.
- Includes a threshold of an alcohol concentration of 0.08 or more, with measurement within two hours of driving.
- Covers negligent operation while under the influence of an intoxicating substance if the driver knows or has reason to know the substance can impair.
- Extends to situations where any amount of certain Schedule I or II controlled substances (or their metabolites) is present in the driver’s body.
- Adds liability for death caused when the driver leaves the scene of the collision (hit and run).
- Adds liability when the driver had actual knowledge that a vehicle was defectively maintained and remedial action was not taken, with the defect contributing to death.
- Creates enhanced penalties if a violation occurs within ten years of a qualified prior driving offense.
Penalties (Enforcement and Enhancements)
- Base penalties for CVH include imprisonment and fines (specific maximums are set in the bill, including substantial prison terms and fines up to $20,000 in the baseline cases).
- If the CVH offense occurs within ten years of a qualified prior driving offense, the maximum penalties increase (up to higher prison terms and up to $30,000 in fines).
- The measure treats a subset of aggravated circumstances as eligible for the higher penalties described above.
Driver Education and Funding
- Requires driver education programs to instruct learners about the penalties for criminal vehicular homicide.
- Appropriates money to support these provisions (education and enforcement improvements).
Significance and Changes to Law
- This bill broadens the set of actions and substances that can trigger CVH charges (including certain cannabis, hemp, and synthetic cannabinoid contexts).
- It establishes a clearer, stricter framework for sentencing CVH cases, with explicit triggers like BAC 0.08+, presence of certain controlled substances, hit-and-run behavior, and known defective vehicle maintenance.
- It ties CVH penalties to a driver’s history by adding enhanced penalties for offenses within ten years of a prior qualifying driving offense.
- It links CVH to required public safety education and provides funding to implement these changes.
Relevant changes to the existing law: the bill amends the definition and penalties of criminal vehicular homicide in Minn. Stat. 609.2112, subdivision 1, introducing specified impairment contexts (alcohol, drugs, cannabis/hemp products, cannabinoids/THC), definable BAC thresholds, hit-and-run and defective maintenance considerations, and enhanced penalties tied to prior driving offenses.
Relevant Terms - criminal vehicular homicide - gross negligence - negligent operation - driving under the influence (DUI) - alcohol concentration 0.08 or more (BAC) - within two hours of driving - controlled substances (Schedule I and II) - cannabis (flower, cannabis products) - hemp edible / hemp-derived products - cannabinoids / tetrahydrocannabinols (THC) - leaving the scene / hit and run - defectively maintained vehicle / defective maintenance - knowledge / reason to know impairment - prior driving offense (qualified within ten years) - enhanced penalties - imprisonment - fines - driver education - funding / appropriation
Bill text versions
- Introduction PDF PDF file
Actions
| Date | Chamber | Where | Type | Name | Committee Name |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| February 17, 2026 | Senate | Action | Introduction and first reading | ||
| February 17, 2026 | Senate | Action | Referred to | Judiciary and Public Safety |
Citations
[
{
"analysis": {
"added": [],
"removed": [],
"summary": "Minnesota Statutes being amended to address criminal vehicular homicide under section 609.2112, subdivision 1.",
"modified": []
},
"citation": "609.2112",
"subdivision": "Subdivision 1"
},
{
"analysis": {
"added": [],
"removed": [],
"summary": "Reference to leaving the scene of a motor vehicle collision and related penalties, as cited within section 169.09, subdivisions 1 and 6.",
"modified": []
},
"citation": "169.09",
"subdivision": "Subdivision 1 and 6"
}
]