Bill
Bill > HSB780
IA HSB780
IA HSB780A bill for an act prohibiting warrant resolution clinics, including enforcement mechanisms, providing penalties, and including effective date provisions.(See HF 2787.)
summary
Introduced
04/22/2026
04/22/2026
In Committee
04/22/2026
04/22/2026
Crossed Over
Passed
Dead
05/03/2026
05/03/2026
Introduced Session
91st General Assembly
Bill Summary
This bill prohibits warrant resolution clinics and includes enforcement mechanisms. H.F. _____ The bill defines “warrant resolution clinic” as any prearranged event, program, assembly, arrangement, docket setting, or coordinated effort, whether formal or informal, other than a regularly scheduled court proceeding held within a courthouse or judicial facility, designed or having the practical effect of allowing individuals with outstanding arrest warrants to appear and resolve such warrants without being subject to immediate arrest and custodial processing, regardless of how such event, program, assembly, arrangement, docket setting, or effort is designated or characterized. The bill provides that an entity, organization, county attorney, law enforcement agency, judicial officer, nonprofit organization, or any other person shall not organize, sponsor, host, fund, promote, or participate in a warrant resolution clinic. A person who has an outstanding warrant for the person’s arrest may only resolve the warrant by surrendering to a peace officer or at a law enforcement agency, appearing at a scheduled court hearing as directed by a magistrate or judge under standard judicial procedures, or through a written motion filed in an individual, pending case, agreed to by the prosecuting attorney, and ruled on by the court under standard judicial procedures in the ordinary course of the case. The bill prohibits the use of public funds or facilities for the purpose of hosting a warrant resolution clinic. The bill provides that a person shall not evade or attempt to evade the prohibitions of the bill by conducting a substantially equivalent program, event, or arrangement under a different name, structure, or designation. The bill provides examples of substantially equivalent programs that are prohibited. A public official or employee who knowingly violates the bill commits a simple misdemeanor, and is also subject to removal from office or employment pursuant to applicable law. A private person that knowingly organizes, sponsors, hosts, or funds a warrant resolution clinic or substantially equivalent H.F. _____ program in violation of the bill commits a simple misdemeanor and is also subject to a civil penalty of not more than $10,000 per violation, recoverable by the attorney general in an action in district court. A simple misdemeanor is punishable by confinement for no more than 30 days and a fine of at least $105 but not more than $855. The bill provides that any person may report a suspected violation of the bill to the office of the attorney general. The attorney general may investigate suspected violations and may bring a civil enforcement action in district court seeking injunctive relief, civil penalties, and recovery of costs and reasonable attorney fees. The bill provides that any resident of a county in which a warrant resolution clinic or substantially equivalent program is conducted or planned in violation of the bill may bring a civil action in district court to obtain injunctive or declaratory relief to prevent or restrain the violation, recover actual damages, and recover reasonable attorney fees and court costs. The bill provides that any county organizing, sponsoring, hosting, funding, promoting, or participating in a warrant resolution clinic is not entitled to receive any funds having their origin in court debt including but not limited to fees or remittances arising from or related to the collection of past due fines and fees constituting court debt. The bill takes effect upon enactment.
AI Summary
This Study Bill prohibits "warrant resolution clinics," which are defined as any organized event or effort, outside of regular court proceedings, designed to allow individuals with outstanding arrest warrants to resolve them without immediate arrest. The bill makes it illegal for any entity, organization, or individual to organize, sponsor, fund, or participate in such clinics, and clarifies that warrants can only be resolved by surrendering to law enforcement, appearing at a scheduled court hearing, or through a specific written motion in an ongoing case. Public funds and facilities cannot be used for these clinics, and attempts to circumvent the law by using different names or structures for substantially similar programs are also prohibited. Violators face penalties including simple misdemeanors (punishable by up to 30 days in jail and fines), removal from office for public officials, and civil penalties of up to $10,000 for private individuals, with the Attorney General empowered to investigate and bring civil actions. Residents can also sue to stop violations, and counties that host these clinics will lose access to court debt funds. The bill takes effect immediately upon enactment.
Committee Categories
Government Affairs
Sponsors (0)
No sponsors listed
Other Sponsors (1)
Government Oversight (House)
Last Action
Committee report approving bill, renumbered as HF 2787. (on 04/24/2026)
Official Document
bill text
bill summary
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bill summary
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bill summary
| Document Type | Source Location | Created |
|---|---|---|
| State Bill Page | https://www.legis.iowa.gov/legislation/BillBook?ga=91&ba=HSB780 | 04/22/2026 |
| BillText | https://www.legis.iowa.gov/docs/publications/LGI/91/attachments/HSB780.html | 04/22/2026 |
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