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5 results for “criminal penalties”

  • 26-0328: Amends Chapters 1, 34, and 38 of the DRMC to revise the criminal penalties for municipal crimes.

    Mar 10, 2026

    ·Denver, CO
    Proposal
    Source
  • RS2025-1681: A resolution urging the Tennessee General Assembly to support House Bill 1444 to increase criminal penalties for aggravated animal cruelty convictions.

    Nov 24, 2025

    ·Nashville, TN
    Proposal
    Source

State

State College, PA
Budget

House Bill 1300 amends the Fiscal Code to implement the 2023-2024 budget and includes provisions across multiple areas including COVID-19 response programs, mental health funding, and tenant protections. The bill allocates significant funds including $360.2 million from the Tobacco Settlement Fund for FY 2023/24, $100 million in Department of Human Services mental health funding ($34 million for workforce programs, $31.5 million for criminal justice initiatives, and $34.5 million for mental health services expansion), and creates protections prohibiting Senior Citizens' property tax and rent rebate assistance from being used as lease payments, with penalties for violating landlords including full reimbursement plus 25% additional penalties. The bill also addresses unclaimed federal ARPA funds in education and continues community economic development programs, with fiscal impacts ranging from no impact for directed appropriations to indeterminate impacts for new enforcement provisions.

AI summary

budget allocationmental health fundingtenant protectionjudicial fundingtobacco settlement
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  • 17-171 Introduce: 11-20-17 ORDINANCE NO. _________________

    Lincoln, NE
    Proposal

    This ordinance amends Lincoln Municipal Code Title 10 to expand the scope and penalties for driving with a suspended, revoked, or impounded operator's license. The amendment extends violations beyond streets, alleys, and highways to include private property open to public access, aligning the city code with state law and Nebraska Supreme Court interpretation. The ordinance introduces judicial discretion to impose probation without mandatory license revocation upon conviction, consistent with recent amendments to Nebraska Revised Statutes §60-4,108 and §60-4,109. First-time offenders face up to six months jail time and/or fines up to $500, with a one-year motor vehicle operation prohibition and license revocation, unless the court places the person on probation, in which case revocation becomes discretionary. The ordinance was introduced on November 20, 2017.

    AI summary

    suspended licensetraffic violationscriminal penalties
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  • City Council Executive Session Agendas | City of Phoenix

    Phoenix, AZ
    Agenda

    This page provides access to Phoenix City Council Executive Session agendas in PDF format, with sessions scheduled at noon on dates including April 28, 2026; April 14, 2026; March 24, 2026; and earlier dates back to December 9, 2025. The city's official bulletin board for posting notices is located on the ground floor at the west side of Phoenix City Hall, 200 W. Washington St., and is accessible 24 hours daily. All E-session discussions and materials are confidential under Arizona Revised Statutes § 38-431(2), and individuals who disclose E-session information face criminal penalties and potential forfeiture of office or employment under A.R.S. § 38-431.07.

    AI summary

    Source