HR-3497-119
Passed Senate without amendment by Unanimous Consent. (consideration: CR S2204; text: CR S2204)
Sponsored by Brian Mast (R-FL)
What it does
This bill would direct the President to create a "Medal of Sacrifice" awarded to eligible law enforcement officers and first responders who are killed in the line of duty. It would also require the President to establish a commission to advise on the medal's design and determine how it is presented. Officers or first responders found to have committed an official act of wrongdoing — such as acting outside the scope of their duties or violating official policies — would generally be ineligible, though the commission would be required to investigate and issue a final eligibility determination in those cases.
Who benefits
Families of law enforcement officers and first responders killed in the line of duty, who would receive formal federal recognition of their loved one's sacrifice. Active-duty law enforcement officers, firefighters, emergency medical personnel, and other first responders at the federal, state, local, tribal, and territorial levels, who may feel affirmed by the recognition. Law enforcement and first responder professional associations that have advocated for greater federal acknowledgment of line-of-duty deaths.
Who is hurt
Families of officers or first responders who are found ineligible due to an official act of wrongdoing determination may experience additional grief or a sense of stigma from the exclusion. Taxpayers would bear the administrative costs of establishing and operating the commission, though those costs are likely modest. Civil liberties and police accountability organizations may object to a federal honor program that could be seen as conferring prestige on officers whose conduct is disputed.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that law enforcement officers and first responders who give their lives in service to their communities deserve formal, lasting federal recognition, and that no such dedicated presidential medal currently exists for this purpose. They contend that the bill's eligibility framework — which excludes officers found to have committed wrongdoing while still requiring a formal investigation — strikes a responsible balance between honoring sacrifice and maintaining accountability standards.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that the bill's wrongdoing exclusion, while well-intentioned, places significant discretionary power in a presidentially appointed commission to make final eligibility determinations, raising concerns about political influence over who is honored. They contend that the eligibility criteria — particularly the phrase "outside the scope of their duties" — are vague enough that the commission's rulings could be inconsistent or subject to political pressure, potentially undermining both the medal's integrity and the fairness owed to affected families.