Work session roundup: Committee advances a package of House bills to the floor

Senate Committee on Judiciary · February 25, 2026

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Summary

The Senate Judiciary Committee advanced a slate of House bills to the Senate floor with due‑pass recommendations, including measures on social‑media warrants (Christelle's Law), traffic‑ticket procedure changes, an arraignment timing change, a public‑safety omnibus, hearsay exceptions for trafficking, scrap‑metal reforms and a new felony for causing enhanced law‑enforcement responses.

The Senate Committee on Judiciary moved a package of House bills to the Senate floor with due‑pass recommendations during a packed work session.

Among the bills advanced:

- House Bill 4,045 A ("Christelle's Law"): Requires social‑media platforms to respond to search warrants in domestic‑violence or stalking cases within 72 hours and other communications providers within five days; contains an emergency clause and a delayed operative date of May 1, 2026.

- House Bill 4,137 A: Modifies first‑appearance procedures for traffic tickets when interest in a vehicle has been transferred, enabling certificate‑based proofs and court discretion to dismiss when appropriate.

- House Bill 4,072: Excludes holidays, weekends and court‑closure days from the 96‑hour arraignment window after arrest and release in specified circumstances.

- House Bill 4,041 A (public‑safety omnibus): Includes sentence‑calculation fixes, changes to driving‑while‑suspended classifications, new procedural rules for post‑conviction relief and transitional‑leave requirements; the committee adopted dash A12 amendments and advanced the bill as amended.

- House Bill 4,114 A: Creates a civil cause of action against persons acting under color of law who enter property without a warrant or judicially recognized exception; members asked detailed statutory and Fourth Amendment questions and received legal counsel responses before advancing the bill.

- House Bill 4,140 A: Expands the types of telecommunications entities covered by scrap‑metal laws and requires scrap‑metal sellers to subscribe to a free theft‑alert system.

- House Bill 4,151 A: Creates a Class C felony for intentionally causing an enhanced law‑enforcement response that recklessly causes serious injury or death.

Committee roll calls and carrier assignments were recorded on each bill; members also filed notices of potential minority reports on several items. The committee adjourned after scheduling an informational hearing for the coming week on the Oregon Youth Authority.