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Sections 1 and 2 of the bill require a licensee, nurse, or certified midwife who performs a medical forensic examination to inform the victim-survivor about how to determine when the testing related to the examination is complete and how to obtain the results and records. Section 3 of the bill authorizes a hospital employee or agent who is treating an emergency room patient for sexual assault to dispense a 30-day supply of drugs for prophylaxis of sexually transmitted infections to the patient. Section 4 3 subjects a cause of action against a person arising from any protected statement by a victim-survivor to a special motion to dismiss unless the court determines that the plaintiff has established that there is a reasonable likelihood that the plaintiff will prevail on the claim. Section 5 4 of the bill makes a predispute arbitration agreement and predispute joint-action waiver void and unenforceable upon request of an individual who alleges conduct that results in a sexual harassment dispute or a sexual misconduct dispute or upon request of a named representative of a joint action, class action, or collective action that results in a sexual harassment dispute or a sexual misconduct dispute. Section 6 5 of the bill requires a judge to allow a forensic scientist to testify remotely in a criminal proceeding if a party requests and both parties consent to the remote testimony. Section 7 6 of the bill authorizes the court to order that the testimony of a victim-survivor of domestic violence, unlawful sexual behavior, stalking, human trafficking for involuntary servitude, or human trafficking for sexual servitude be taken in a room other than the courtroom and be televised by closed-circuit television in the courtroom under certain circumstances. Section 8 7 of the bill requires peace officer annual in-service training programs to include a 2-hour training to improve a peace officer's understanding of the impact of trauma on victim-survivors of crimes and the optimal way for a peace officer to respond to victim-survivors who are experiencing trauma. Section 10 9 of the bill includes trauma-informed investigation and response training as a permissible use of peace officer training and support fund money. Section 9 8 of the bill renames the Colorado sexual assault forensic medical evidence review board as the Colorado sexual assault response review board and adds 3 4 members to the board.(Note: Italicized words indicate new material added to the original summary; dashes through words indicate deletions from the original summary.)(Note: This summary applies to the reengrossed version of this bill as introduced in the second house.)
Introduced
Mar 9, 2026
Last Action
Feb 11, 2026
Session
CO 2026A
Sponsors
3 primary · 13 co
Introduced In House - Assigned to Judiciary
Senate Third Reading Passed - No Amendments
Senate Second Reading Passed with Amendments - Committee, Floor
Senate Committee on Judiciary Refer Amended - Consent Calendar to Senate Committee of the Whole
Introduced In Senate - Assigned to Judiciary
Get a plain-English explanation of what this bill does, who it affects, and why it matters.
Introduced In Senate - Assigned to Judiciary
M. Weissman
M. Froelich
J. Willford
J. Amabile
M. Ball
A. Benavidez
J. Bridges
J. Coleman
T. Exum
J. Gonzales
I. Jodeh
C. Kipp
J. Marchman
D. Roberts
M. Snyder
K. Wallace