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Felony Battery; Revising the definition of “prison releasee reoffender” to include a defendant who commits or attempts to commit battery on a law enforcement officer which results in bodily injury; providing enhanced criminal penalties for persons who commit a second or subsequent battery after having a prior conviction for resisting an officer with violence, etc.
Introduced
Jan 13, 2026
Last Action
Mar 10, 2026
Session
FL 2026
Sponsors
3 primary · 0 co
Added to Third Reading Calendar
Read 2nd time
Read 3rd time
CS passed; YEAS 110, NAYS 1
1st Reading (Committee Substitute 2)
Bill referred to House Calendar
Bill added to Special Order Calendar (3/10/2026)
In Messages
Read 2nd time
Read 3rd time
CS passed; YEAS 37 NAYS 0
Immediately certified
Placed on Calendar, on 2nd reading
Placed on Special Order Calendar, 02/26/26
Favorable by- Rules; YEAS 23 NAYS 0
Now in Rules
Pending reference review under Rule 4.7(2) - (Committee Substitute)
On Committee agenda-- Rules, 02/24/26, 12:00 pm, 412 Knott Building
CS/CS by Appropriations Committee on Criminal and Civil Justice read 1st time
CS/CS by Appropriations Committee on Criminal and Civil Justice; YEAS 8 NAYS 0
On Committee agenda-- Appropriations Committee on Criminal and Civil Justice, 02/18/26, 10:30 am, 37 Senate Building
Now in Appropriations Committee on Criminal and Civil Justice
Pending reference review under Rule 4.7(2) - (Committee Substitute)
CS by Criminal Justice read 1st time
Introduced
CS by Criminal Justice; YEAS 8 NAYS 0
On Committee agenda-- Criminal Justice, 01/12/26, 1:30 pm, 37 Senate Building
Referred to Criminal Justice; Appropriations Committee on Criminal and Civil Justice; Rules
Filed
Get a plain-English explanation of what this bill does, who it affects, and why it matters.
CS passed; YEAS 110, NAYS 1