Bill would add photo‑ID at county recorder and increase penalties for forged deeds, sponsors say
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Senate Bill 14 79 would require photo identification for documents at county recorder offices, set notarization identifying measures for real‑property documents, and reclassify knowingly submitting a false deed or forgery from a misdemeanor to a class 5 felony; sponsors described bipartisan stakeholder work and urged support to deter deed and title fraud.
Senate Bill 14 79, presented to the caucus on the consent calendar, would add a photo‑identification requirement for documents presented at county recorder offices, outline identity‑verification measures for deeds and other real‑property documents when notarized, and increase the criminal classification for knowingly submitting a false deed or forgery to real property from a class 1 misdemeanor to a class 5 felony, according to committee staff.
A committee member who said she had been involved with stakeholder groups described the bill as bipartisan and the result of work with the Maricopa County recorder's office and other groups. She said the package contains more protections than the brief bill summary suggests and emphasized the goal is to deter deed and title fraud from both domestic and foreign bad actors. Staff confirmed there were no sign‑ins in opposition and noted organizations including Childhelp Inc. had signed in supportive.
Members asked clarifying questions about the bill's specific actions — including how photo‑ID requirements and notarization checks would operate — and sponsors urged colleagues to support the measure to address what they described as an emerging fraud problem. The bill was listed on the third‑reading consent calendar and staff stood ready to answer follow‑up questions.
