Justice Committee moves dozens of bills; key votes and referrals from criminal and civil dockets
Loading...
Summary
The Justice Committee advanced a wide package of criminal and civil bills—reporting several with substitutes and referring some to Appropriations or other committees. Notable outcomes include HB 1298 (reported and referred with substitute, 22–0), HB 1219 (drones, reported as amended, 22–0), and HB 193 (reported and referred to Appropriations, 14–7).
The Justice Committee considered a large docket of criminal and civil legislation and reported many bills with substitutes or referrals across subcommittees.
Procedural actions: early in the session the committee voted to continue a block of bills under Rule 22 to 2027 by voice vote. The panel also reconsidered and reported HB 1298 with substitute to Appropriations (roll-call recorded 22–0).
Criminal-subcommittee highlights: Chair Watts presented a series of criminal-law bills that the committee reported with substitutes or amendments. Notable results included:
- HB 1219 (Sewell) — substitute adopted with line amendments addressing effective dates and model-policy consultation; reported as amended by roll-call 22–0. - HB 862 (summary block) — reported as amended (vote recorded in committee as 21–0 for the block listing that included this bill). - HB 637 — possession-of-residue offense (except fentanyl) reported with substitute as amended (16–6). - HB 648 — restrictions on nitrous-oxide sales and devices, referred to General Laws as substitute (22–0). - HB 974 — review process when Commonwealth designates an officer with impeachment-impeachment-evidence designation reported as amended (16–6). - HB 1070 — rules on using prior convictions to prove an element or enhance punishment reported with substitute (15–7). - HB 1411 — expanded admissibility rules for mental-condition evidence reported and referred to Appropriations (15–7).
Civil-subcommittee highlights: Chair Simon moved a block of 13 uncontested civil bills that passed 22–0; among the contested calendar items:
- HB 440 — repeal of certain driver-license suspensions related to unsatisfied judgments and limited child-support suspensions (delayed effective date 01/01/2027); reported and referred to Appropriations (14–7). - HB 444 — creation of a uniform consumer-debt default-judgments act (substitute adopted; reported 20–2). - HB 901 — expanded procedures for emergency substantial-risk orders, line amendments adopted (state DSS references replaced with local boards in some sections); reported with substitute as amended (14–7). - HB 1479 — allows punitive damages in civil actions arising from felony hit-and-run; reported 22–0.
What this means: Several bills were advanced to the Appropriations Committee for fiscal review, and several were referred to General Laws for enforcement and implementation considerations. Many bills were advanced with substitutes or line amendments that change effective dates, add reenactment clauses, or direct agencies (for example DCJS) to draft model policies.
For reporters and stakeholders: the committee’s forwarded bills will face additional committee scrutiny (especially Appropriations) and may be amended further before floor votes. The docket included a mix of criminal-justice reforms, evidence and procedure changes, victims’ service funding directions, public-safety technology rules, and civil-court process reforms.

