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THE SENATE |
S.B. NO. |
3322 |
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THIRTY-THIRD LEGISLATURE, 2026 |
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STATE OF HAWAII |
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A BILL FOR AN ACT
relating to law enforcement.
BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF HAWAII:
The legislature further finds that, according to the American Immigration Council, Hawaii is home to approximately two hundred fifty-eight thousand immigrants, comprising eighteen per cent of the State's population. About thirty thousand of these foreign-born individuals are believed to be undocumented. The legislature recognizes that the State is justifiably proud of its rich immigrant heritage, which has woven many residents into a valued tapestry of races, ancestral groups, religions, cultures, and languages from people throughout the world. Accordingly, it is necessary to establish clear policies and limits on federal immigration enforcement occurring within the State. This includes upholding due process and judicial oversight standards; restricting immigration enforcement activity from occurring in sensitive places such as schools, places of worship, and health care facilities; and requiring reporting on enforcement activity and the use of personal data.
Accordingly, the purpose of this Act is to:
(1) Prohibit, with certain exceptions, the use of facial coverings; require the visible identification of law enforcement officers and their vehicles in the performance of their duties; and require state and county law enforcement agencies to adopt related policies;
(2) Establish
a policy on civil immigration enforcement and status inquiries under the
department of law enforcement; require
state and county
law enforcement agencies
to establish their own policies; and require the department to assist with compliance;
and
(3) Establishes criminal offenses for:
(A) Improper facial coverings and lack of visible identification for law enforcement officers; and
(B) Unauthorized civil immigration interrogation, arrest, or detention.
SECTION 2. Chapter 139, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by adding three new sections to be appropriately designated and to read as follows:
"§139-A Facial coverings; visible identification;
marking of vehicles; written policy.
(a) By July 1, 2027, each law
enforcement agency operating in the State shall establish and publicly post on
the agency's website a written policy regarding the use of facial coverings,
visibility of badges, and the conspicuous marking of law enforcement vehicles.
(b) The policy shall include:
(1) A
purpose statement affirming the agency's commitment to:
(A) Transparency, accountability, and public
trust;
(B) Restricting the use of facial coverings to specific, clearly defined,
and limited circumstances; and
(C) The
principle that generalized and undifferentiated fear and apprehension about law enforcement officer
safety shall not be sufficient to justify the use of facial
coverings or the concealment of badges;
(2) A
requirement that:
(A) No law enforcement officer shall
wear a facial covering that conceals or obscures the law enforcement officer's facial
identity while the officer is
performing official duties;
(B) Each law enforcement officer, at all
times while on duty, shall wear identification displayed in a manner that is
clearly visible and readable during direct engagement with the public;
displayed on the outmost garment or gear; not obscured by tactical equipment,
body armor, or accessories; and that shall include:
(i) The full name or widely recognized
initials of the officer's employing agency; and
(ii) The officer's last name or unique
badge or identification number; and
(C) Each vehicle used in law enforcement operations shall bear conspicuous markings identifying the law enforcement agency to which the vehicle
belongs;
(3) A
list of narrowly
tailored exemptions for
the following:
(A) Active undercover operations or assignments authorized by supervising personnel or court order;
(B) Tactical
operations where protective gear is required for physical safety;
(C) Applicable
law governing occupational health and safety;
(D) Protection
of identity during prosecution;
(E) Applicable
law governing reasonable accommodations; and
(F) Plainclothes
officers, as designated by the officer's agency; provided that no plainclothes
officer shall wear a facial covering that conceals or obscures the plainclothes
officer's facial identity while the officer performs official duties;
(4) Notice that opaque facial
coverings shall only be used when no other reasonable alternative exists, and
the necessity is documented; provided that the identification required under
this policy is still visible;
(5) Notice that, pursuant to the
policy, a supervisor shall not knowingly allow a law enforcement officer under
their supervision to violate state law or
agency policy regarding the use of a facial covering or display of
identification on the officer or vehicle; and
(6) Appropriate penalties.
(c) A policy adopted pursuant to this section
shall be deemed consistent with section 710-A unless a written complaint challenging
its legality is submitted to the head of the agency by a member of the public,
an oversight body, or a local governing authority, at which time the agency
shall be afforded ninety days to correct any deficiencies in the policy. If, after ninety days, the agency has failed
to adequately address the complaint, the complaining party may proceed to a
court of competent jurisdiction for a judicial determination of whether an
exemption applies pursuant to section 710-A(2).
The agency's policy and its employees' exemptions shall remain in effect
unless a court rules that the agency's policy is not in compliance with section
710-A and all potential appeals to higher courts have been exhausted by the
agency.
(d) For the purposes of this section:
"Facial
covering" shall have the same meaning as in section 710-A.
"Law
enforcement agency" includes any federal agency that employs law
enforcement officers or other sworn personnel.
"Law
enforcement officer" means any officer of a local, state, or federal law
enforcement agency, or any person acting on behalf of a local, state, or
federal law enforcement agency.
§139-B Civil immigration enforcement; written
policy. (a)
By July 1, 2027, each law enforcement agency operating in the State
shall establish and publicly post on its website a written policy regarding
civil immigration enforcement in the State.
(b) The policy shall provide that:
(1) Civil immigration enforcement
activity involving state or county participation or facilities shall proceed only
on the basis of documented, reviewable legal authority that prioritizes due
process and judicial oversight;
(2) Civil immigration enforcement
activity involving state or county participation shall not be conducted at
schools or early-learning sites, health facilities, emergency or domestic
violence shelters, courthouses, or places of worship, except in compliance with
narrowly tailored procedures for unavoidable civil immigration actions;
(3) State and county agencies shall
adopt clear limits on the collection, retention, and sharing of immigration‑related
personal data except as required by law, and any interagency data exchanges
shall operate under auditable agreements;
(4) Each state or county agency shall periodically
report and make publicly available aggregate data on civil immigration requests
to or from the agency;
(5) Immigration-based threats or
verification abuse shall be treated as prohibited retaliation in workplaces and
public services pursuant to state and federal law; and
(6) When notified of United States
Immigration and Customs Enforcement activity, each state and county law
enforcement agency shall require nearby personnel to use body cameras to monitor
the United States Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents' interactions with
the public.
(c) For the purposes
of this section:
"Law enforcement
agency" shall have the same meaning as in section
139-A(d).
"Law enforcement officer" shall have the same meaning
as in section 139-A(d).
§139-C Civil immigration status inquiries;
documentation; limitations. (a) Each law enforcement agency operating in the
State shall include in its written policy required under section 139-B
procedures governing a law enforcement officer's authority to make any inquiry
into a person's civil immigration status, including the authority to ask a
person about citizenship, immigration status, place of birth, or request
documentation for purposes of determining civil immigration status.
(b) No law enforcement officer shall initiate or
prolong a stop, detention, or arrest of a person for the purpose of determining
the person's civil immigration status unless the officer has reasonable
suspicion, based on specific and articulable facts, that the person is
unlawfully present in the United States and the inquiry is otherwise authorized
by state law and the agency's written policy.
(c) Reasonable suspicion under subsection (b)
shall not be based solely on race, color, ethnicity, national origin, ancestry,
language, accent, religion, manner of dress, presence in a particular location,
or the exercise of rights protected by the United States Constitution or the
Constitution of the State of Hawaii.
(d) For the purposes
of this section:
"Law enforcement
agency" shall have the same meaning as in section
139-A(d).
"Law enforcement officer" shall have the same meaning
as in section 139-A(d)."
SECTION 3. Chapter 353C, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by adding two new sections to be appropriately designated and to read as follows:
"§353C- Civil immigration enforcement policy. (a)
It is the policy of the department that civil immigration enforcement activity
involving state or
county participation or facilities shall proceed only on
the basis of documented, reviewable legal
authority that prioritizes due process and judicial oversight.
(b) Civil
immigration enforcement activity
involving state or
county participation shall not be conducted at schools, early‑learning sites, health
care facilities, emergency or
domestic violence shelters, courthouses,
or places of worship.
(c) No employee
or agent acting on behalf of these facilities shall provide voluntary consent
permitting a law enforcement agent to enter a nonpublic area of the facility
for the purpose, or in furtherance, of an operation executed in whole or part
by federal authorities or out-of-state authorities that seeks to:
(1) Identify or impose civil or criminal
liability upon a person or entity based on their participation in activities
protected by the First Amendment of the United States Constitution or state
constitution; or
(2) To identify, arrest or otherwise impose a penalty upon a person for purposes of federal immigration enforcement, including an immigration enforcement operation.
(d) This policy shall not prevent compliance with
a valid judicial warrant authorizing entry or entry under exigent
circumstances.
(e) The department shall assist state and county agencies in maintaining compliance with
the civil immigration enforcement policy in this section."
SECTION 4. Chapter 710, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by adding two new sections to part II to be appropriately designated and to read as follows:
"§710-A Facial coverings and visible
identification for law enforcement officers. (1)
Except as expressly
authorized in this section:
(a) No law
enforcement officer shall wear a facial covering
that conceals or obscures the law enforcement officer's facial
identity while the officer is
performing official duties; and
(b) Each law enforcement officer, at all times while
on duty, shall wear identification displayed in a manner that is
clearly visible and readable during direct engagement with the public;
displayed on the outmost garment or gear; not obscured by tactical equipment,
body armor, or accessories; and that shall include:
(i) The full name or widely recognized
initials of the officer's employing agency; and
(ii) The officer's last name or unique badge or
identification number.
(2) This section shall not apply to an officer:
(a) Subject to one or more of the exemptions
set forth in section 139-A(b)(3);
(b) Assigned to a special weapons
and tactics team unit while actively performing special weapons and tactics responsibilities;
or
(c) Acting in the officer's capacity as an employee
of an agency that maintains
and publicly posts on its website, no later than July 1, 2027, a written policy
pursuant to section
139-A.
(3) Violation of this section shall be a petty misdemeanor for the
first offense and a misdemeanor for the second or subsequent offense.
(4) Notwithstanding any other law to the contrary, a person who is found to have committed an assault, battery,
false imprisonment, false arrest, abuse of process,
or malicious prosecution, while wearing a facial covering
or failing to comply with visible badge requirements in violation of this section shall not be entitled to assert any privilege or immunity for the tortious
conduct against a claim of civil liability, and shall be liable for the greater
of actual damages
or statutory damages
of not less than $10,000,
whichever is greater.
(5) For the purposes
of this section:
"Facial covering" means any opaque mask, garment,
helmet, headgear, or other item that conceals
or obscures the facial identity of an individual, including a balaclava, tactical mask, gaiter, ski mask, and any similar
type of facial
covering or face-shielding item. A "facial covering" shall not include:
(a) A
translucent face shield or clear mask that does not conceal the wearer's facial
identity and is used in compliance with the employing
agency's policy and procedures pursuant
to section 139-A;
(b) An
N95 medical mask or surgical
mask to protect against transmission of disease or infection or any
other mask, helmet;
or a device, including
an air-purifying respirator, full or half mask, or self-contained breathing
apparatus necessary to
protect against exposure
to any toxin, gas, smoke,
inclement weather, or any other hazardous or harmful environmental condition;
(c) A mask, helmet, or device, including
a self-contained breathing apparatus, necessary for underwater use;
(d) A motorcycle helmet when worn by an officer while in the performance of their duties and utilizing a motorcycle or other vehicle
that requires a helmet for
safe operations; or
(e) Eyewear necessary to protect from the use of retinal
weapons, including lasers;
provided
that the identification required under this section is still visible.
"Law enforcement agency" means any county
police department, the department of law enforcement, the department of the
attorney general, the division of conservation and resources enforcement of the
department of land and natural resources, and any federal, state, or county
public body that employs law enforcement officers or other sworn personnel.
"Law
enforcement officer" means any officer of a local, state, or federal law
enforcement agency, or any person acting on behalf of a local, state, or
federal law enforcement agency.
§710-B Unauthorized civil immigration
interrogation, arrest, or detention.
(1) A person commits the
offense of unauthorized civil immigration interrogation, arrest, or detention
if the person is a law enforcement officer, acting under color of law, who
intentionally or knowingly acts beyond the scope of the officer's lawful
authority by interrogating, arresting, or detaining another person for the
purpose of determining or enforcing the person's civil immigration status when
the officer lacks reasonable suspicion, based on specific and articulable
facts, that the person is unlawfully present in the United States.
(2)
It shall be an affirmative defense that the officer's conduct consisted
solely of:
(a) A stop, detention, or arrest
supported by reasonable suspicion or probable cause for a violation of state
law or county ordinance, including detention incident to a lawful arrest, provided
that the officer did not initiate or prolong the stop, detention, or arrest for
the purpose described in subsection (1); or
(b) Compliance with a valid judicial
warrant or court order.
(3)
Unauthorized civil immigration interrogation, arrest, or detention is a
class C felony.
(4) For purposes of this section:
"Civil immigration status"
means a persons status under federal immigration law that is civil in nature
and not, by itself, a criminal offense under state law.
"Interrogate" means to
question a person in a manner reasonably intended to elicit information
regarding the person's citizenship or civil immigration status, including
requesting immigration documentation, for the purpose of determining or
enforcing civil immigration status.
"Reasonable suspicion" shall not be based solely on race, color, ethnicity, national origin, ancestry, language, accent, religion, manner of dress, presence in a particular location, or the exercise of rights protected by the United States Constitution or the Constitution of the State of Hawaii."
SECTION 5. This Act does not affect rights and duties that matured, penalties that were incurred, and proceedings that were begun before its effective date.
SECTION 6. If any provision of this Act, or the application thereof to any person or circumstance, is held invalid, the invalidity does not affect other provisions or applications of the Act that can be given effect without the invalid provision or application, and to this end the provisions of this Act are severable.
SECTION 7. In codifying the new sections added by sections 2 and 4 of this Act, the revisor of statutes shall substitute appropriate section numbers for the letters used in designating the new sections in this Act.
SECTION 8. New statutory material is underscored.
SECTION 9. This Act shall take effect upon its approval.
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INTRODUCED BY: |
_____________________________ |
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Report Title:
Law Enforcement Officers; Law Enforcement Agencies; Facial Coverings; Visible Identification; Civil Immigration Enforcement
Description:
Prohibits
with certain exceptions, the use of facial coverings and requires visible
identification by law enforcement officers and their vehicles in the
performance of their duties. Requires
state and county law enforcement agencies to establish policies regarding state
and county cooperation with federal civil immigration enforcement. Prohibits law enforcement officers from
prolonging a stop to inquire about a person's civil immigration status. Establishes criminal offenses for improper
facial coverings, lack of visible identification, and unauthorized civil
immigration interrogation.
The summary description
of legislation appearing on this page is for informational purposes only and is
not legislation or evidence of legislative intent.