HR-7120-116
Read the second time. Placed on Senate Legislative Calendar under General Orders. Calendar No. 490.
What it does
This bill would make sweeping changes to federal law governing police conduct and accountability. It would lower the legal standard needed to criminally prosecute a law enforcement officer for misconduct, limit the qualified immunity defense that shields officers from civil lawsuits, and restrict specific policing tactics such as chokeholds, carotid holds, and no-knock warrants. It would also create a national database of police misconduct records, establish new federal data-reporting requirements on use of force and officer conduct, and require training on racial profiling, implicit bias, and the duty to intervene against excessive force.
Who benefits
Individuals who have experienced or allege police misconduct, particularly Black Americans and other racial minorities who are statistically more likely to be subject to use-of-force incidents and racial profiling. Civil rights attorneys and plaintiffs in lawsuits against law enforcement officers would benefit from the reduced qualified immunity shield. Communities seeking greater transparency about local policing practices would gain access to more public data. Federal and state prosecutors would gain new investigative tools, including DOJ administrative subpoena power in pattern-or-practice investigations.
Who is hurt
Law enforcement officers who would face a lower legal bar for criminal prosecution and reduced civil liability protections, potentially increasing their personal financial and legal exposure. Police unions and departments argue officer recruitment and retention could suffer if the profession is perceived as carrying greater legal risk. Local and state governments could face increased compliance costs from new reporting, training, and accreditation mandates. Officers in jurisdictions with limited resources may find it harder to meet new federal training and data-collection requirements.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that existing legal standards — particularly the "willful" intent requirement for criminal prosecution and the broad qualified immunity doctrine — have made it extremely difficult to hold officers accountable even when misconduct is well-documented. They contend that a national misconduct registry would prevent officers fired for serious violations from simply moving to another jurisdiction and continuing to serve. Supporters also argue that banning chokeholds and no-knock warrants addresses specific tactics that have resulted in preventable deaths, and that mandatory training on implicit bias and the duty to intervene would reduce racially disparate outcomes in policing. They maintain that greater transparency through data collection is essential for the public to assess whether policing is being conducted fairly and lawfully.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that lowering the criminal intent standard and curtailing qualified immunity would expose officers to prosecution and civil liability for split-second decisions made in dangerous, rapidly evolving situations, undermining their ability to act decisively. They contend that qualified immunity is a necessary protection that allows officers to enforce the law without constant fear of personal financial ruin from lawsuits, and that removing it would deter qualified individuals from entering or remaining in law enforcement. Opponents also argue that blanket federal restrictions on tactics like no-knock warrants and chokeholds remove necessary tools in specific high-risk scenarios, and that policing policy is constitutionally and practically best handled at the state and local level rather than through a uniform federal mandate. They further contend that new reporting and accreditation requirements would impose significant unfunded burdens on smaller departments with limited administrative capacity.
Constitutional context
The bill implicates multiple constitutional provisions. The Fourth Amendment governs unreasonable searches and seizures, directly relevant to no-knock warrant restrictions and stop-and-frisk profiling limits. The Fourteenth Amendment's Equal Protection Clause underpins the racial profiling framework. The Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments' due process clauses are relevant to changes in the criminal intent standard for officer prosecutions. Qualified immunity, while a judicially created doctrine rather than a constitutional one, intersects with 42 U.S.C. § 1983 civil rights enforcement. The anti-commandeering doctrine (Murphy v. NCAA, 2018) raises questions about whether federal mandates on state and local law enforcement agencies are permissible under the Tenth Amendment, though Congress may use conditional spending to incentivize compliance. Carpenter v. US (2018) is relevant to digital data collection provisions.
Checks and balances
The bill would expand executive branch authority by granting the DOJ new administrative subpoena power in pattern-or-practice investigations, increasing federal oversight of state and local law enforcement. It would shift some power away from the judicial branch by legislatively curtailing qualified immunity, a doctrine developed through court decisions. Congress would assert a stronger federal role in setting policing standards that have historically been a state and local function, raising federalism questions about the balance between federal authority and state police powers under the Tenth Amendment.
Historical precedent
The Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement Act of 1994 established the DOJ's existing pattern-or-practice investigation authority (34 U.S.C. § 12601). The Law Enforcement Trust and Integrity Act has been introduced in prior Congresses with similar accountability provisions. The Civil Rights Act of 1964 and 42 U.S.C. § 1983 (enacted 1871) form the foundational federal civil rights enforcement framework this bill would modify.