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House rejects amendment to place Capitol Police under State Police

Maine House of Representatives · April 6, 2026

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Summary

The Maine House debated whether to move the Capitol Police unit under the Maine State Police; after hours of floor debate on costs, jurisdiction and safety the House voted 64–78 to reject the majority 'ought to pass as amended' report. Lawmakers sent the minority 'ought not to pass' report to the Senate.

The Maine House narrowly rejected a measure to place the Capitol Police unit under the Maine State Police on Tuesday, voting 64 in favor and 78 opposed after extended floor debate.

Representative Brian Hassenfuss, sponsor of the committee amendment, urged colleagues to approve the change, saying it would "result in improved resource allocation, greater operational efficiency, and enhanced crisis response capabilities" by giving the Capitol unit access to state police personnel, technology and specialized units.

Opponents warned the amendment would create a costly two-tier system and questioned whether the problem required a structural change. Representative Ardell said the plan "creates a two-tier system" and cited a fiscal note of roughly $1,600,000 to bring state troopers into roles now filled by Capitol Police. Several members urged hiring a permanent chief and improving communication rather than folding the unit into another agency.

Lawmakers on both sides recounted instances of threats or harassment. Representative Graham described seeking help from Capitol Police after being videotaped and said the protection he received was real: "Capitol police walked me out to my car... They were awesome." Supporters argued the state police could provide broader investigative and tactical resources for threats originating outside Augusta.

After the majority report failed, Representative Hassenfuss moved the minority 'ought not to pass' report; the clerk and chair announced that matter would be sent forthwith to the Senate.