Bill

Bill > S1090


NJ S1090

NJ S1090
Creates crime of political violence; establishes independent review board and training requirement for law enforcement.


summary

Introduced
01/13/2026
In Committee
01/13/2026
Crossed Over
Passed
Dead

Introduced Session

2026-2027 Regular Session

Bill Summary

This bill creates the new crime of political violence, establishes an independent review board to insure that political violence is investigated, prosecuted and punished in a fair and unbiased manner, and establishes a training mandate for law enforcement officials. Political violence. Under the bill, political violence occurs when a person commits, attempts to commit, or conspires with another to commit specific criminal offenses against the target or other victim, a family or household member of the target or other victim, or a bystander with a purpose to interfere with or retaliate against the victim because of the victims political participation or expression or the political participation or expression of another. The following constitute those specific criminal offenses: (1) Criminal Homicide; (2) Murder; (3) Manslaughter; (4) Death by auto or vessel; (5) Assault; (6) Kidnapping; (7) Criminal Restraint; (8) False Imprisonment; (9) Sexual Assault or Aggravated Sexual Assault; (10) Aggravated Criminal Sexual Contact; (11) Robbery; (12) Carjacking; (13) Arson and Related Offenses; or (14) Terrorism. Political violence is graded as a crime one degree higher than the most serious underlying crime. However, where the underlying crime is a crime of the first degree, political violence is a first-degree crime and, upon conviction, the sentenced would be an ordinary term of imprisonment between 15 years and 30 years, with a presumptive term of 20 years. Procedural Elements and Defenses. The bill provides for a permissive inference concerning the selection of targeted persons by providing that proof that the target of the underlying offense was selected because of political affiliation or expression or the political affiliation or expression of another would give rise to the inference that the defendant acted with purpose to intimidate an individual or group. The bill would bar the merger of a conviction for political violence with a conviction of any of the underlying offenses, and no underlying offense shall merge with a conviction for political violence. The bill provides that it is not a defense to a prosecution for political violence that the defendant was mistaken as to the political affiliation or political expression of the victim.Political Violence Review Board. To ensure oversight and transparency in the investigation of political violence, the bill further creates the Political Violence Review Board (board) to review completed investigations of alleged violations of the newly created crime of political violence and collect data on such alleged violations. The board is required to analyze the collected data to identify any potential disparities in the handling of complaints based on the race, ethnicity, gender, age, or political affiliation of the complainant or of any other alleged victim or perpetrator. The board may request any relevant information and documents from appropriate law enforcement agencies, interview complainants, alleged perpetrators, witnesses, and other individuals as the board deems necessary and appropriate, and is entitled to call to its assistance the clerical, stenographic, and technical support of any employee of the Department of Law and Public Safety (department). The board may share the collected data and findings with other recognized entities that collect nationwide data on political violence events. However, the board is required to prepare and transmit an annual report, including the data collected and any findings to the Governor and the Legislature. The department is required to publish each annual report prepared by the board on its Internet website. The board would consist of 11 members, with no more than six members shall be of the same political party. Members would be appointed as follows. (1) two public members appointed by the Governor based upon the recommendation of the Senate President; (2) two public members appointed by the Governor based upon the recommendation of the Senate Minority Leader. (3) two public members appointed by the Governor based upon the recommendation of the Speaker of the General Assembly; (4) two public members appointed by the Governor based upon the recommendation of the Assembly Minority Leader (5) three public members appointed by the Governor, one of whom shall have experience in law enforcement and one who shall have experience with advocating for victim's rights. Except for the initial appointment as enumerated in the bill, the members would serve for four year terms and are required to serve without compensation, but they would be reimbursed for their actual expenses incurred in the performance of their other duties. Training Developed by the Division of Criminal Justice. The bill establishes a training mandate for law enforcement officers and prosecutors who investigate and prosecute political violence. The Division of Criminal Justice, within the department, is responsible for the creation of the training course and curriculum on the handling, investigation and response procedures concerning reports of violations of the newly created crime of political violence. Sponsor's Intent. It is the intention of the sponsor to penalize the increased tendency for actors to resort to violence to redress political grievances. The legislation is not intended to create restrictions to free speech. The incidence of attacks on individuals or groups of individuals on the basis of apparent or perceived political affiliation or expression is escalating according to experts in the field of political violence. The series of recent assassinations and attacks across the states, against elected and appointed officials, as well as private citizens, include the murder of Charlie Kirk and former Minnesota House of Representatives Speaker Melissa Hortman and her husband Mark, the attempted murder of Minnesota State Senator John Hoffman and his wife Yvette, attempts on the life of President Donald Trump, and the arson attacks on the home of Pennsylvania Governor Josh Shapiro. According to authoritative research from the University of Maryland, through the first half of 2025, the United States saw 150 politically motivated attacks, nearly twice as many as during the same period last year.

AI Summary

This bill establishes a new crime called "political violence," which occurs when someone commits, attempts to commit, or conspires to commit specific serious offenses, such as assault, kidnapping, or murder, with the intent to interfere with or retaliate against a victim because of their political affiliation or expression, or that of another. The severity of the political violence charge is one degree higher than the underlying crime, with first-degree crimes resulting in a sentence of 15 to 30 years. To ensure fair and unbiased investigations and prosecutions, the bill creates an independent 11-member Political Violence Review Board (Board) within the Department of Law and Public Safety. This Board will review completed investigations, collect data on alleged political violence incidents, and analyze this data for any disparities based on race, ethnicity, gender, age, or political affiliation, reporting its findings annually to the Governor and Legislature. Additionally, the bill mandates that the Division of Criminal Justice develop and implement training for law enforcement officers and prosecutors on how to handle, investigate, and respond to reports of political violence, with ongoing in-service training required. The bill clarifies that a mistaken belief about a victim's political affiliation or expression is not a defense to a political violence charge and that convictions for political violence will not merge with convictions for the underlying offenses.

Committee Categories

Justice

Sponsors (2)

Last Action

Introduced in the Senate, Referred to Senate Judiciary Committee (on 01/13/2026)

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