Connecticut 2022 Regular Session

Connecticut House Bill HB05351 Latest Draft

Bill / Introduced Version Filed 03/02/2022

                                
 
 
 
 
 
 
LCO No. 2613  	1 of 15 
 
General Assembly  Raised Bill No. 5351  
February Session, 2022 
LCO No. 2613 
 
 
Referred to Committee on JUDICIARY  
 
 
Introduced by:  
(JUD)  
 
 
 
 
AN ACT REVISING VARIOUS POLICE ACCREDITATION, 
CERTIFICATION, TRAINING, IMMUNITY, USE OF MILITARY GRADE 
EQUIPMENT AND SEARCH AND PURSUIT STATUTES, AND 
CONCERNING THE STATE POLICE SHOOTING RANGE. 
Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives in General 
Assembly convened: 
 
Section 1. Section 7-294ee of the general statutes is repealed and the 
following is substituted in lieu thereof (Effective from passage): 
(a) [Until December 31, 2024, the] The Police Officer Standards and 
Training Council, established under section 7-294b, and the 
Commissioner of Emergency Services and Public Protection or the 
commissioner's designee, shall jointly develop, adopt and revise, as 
necessary, minimum standards and practices for the administration, 
[and] management and operation of law enforcement units, as defined 
in section 7-294a. Such minimum standards and practices shall be based 
upon standards established by the International Association of Chiefs of 
Police and the Commission on Accreditation for Law Enforcement 
Agencies, Inc., and shall include, but need not be limited to, standards  Raised Bill No.  5351 
 
 
 
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and practices regarding bias-based policing, use of force, response to 
crimes of family violence, use of body-worn recording equipment, 
complaints that allege misconduct by police officers, use of electronic 
defense weapons, eyewitness identification procedures, notifications in 
death and related events and pursuits by police officers and compliance 
with the guidance issued by the council pursuant to subdivision (1) of 
subsection (g) of section 7-294d regarding reporting procedures to be 
followed by chief law enforcement officers for certificate suspension, 
cancellation or revocation. Not later than January 1, 2023, the council 
shall, within available appropriations, divide the minimum standards 
and practices into three tiers, to be known as tier one, tier two and tier 
three. Tier one shall consist of minimum standards and practices 
designed to protect law enforcement units from liability, enhance the 
delivery of services and improve public confidence in law enforcement 
units. Tier two shall consist of minimum standards and practices for the 
administration, management and operation of law enforcement units. 
Tier three shall consist of higher minimum standards and practices for 
the administration, management and operation of law enforcement 
units. The council shall post [such] the minimum standards and 
practices of each tier on the council's Internet web site and disseminate 
[such] the minimum standards and practices of each tier to law 
enforcement units. The council and commissioner or the commissioner's 
designee shall jointly develop a process to review a law enforcement 
unit's compliance with [such] the minimum standards and practices of 
each tier and issue a certificate of compliance with [law enforcement] 
the minimum standards and practices of tier one, tier two or tier three, 
as the case may be, to a law enforcement unit that meets or exceeds 
[such] the minimum standards and practices of such tier. 
(b) On and after January 1, 2019, and until December 31, [2024] 2022, 
each law enforcement unit shall adopt and maintain (1) the minimum 
standards and practices developed by the council pursuant to 
subsection (a) of this section, or (2) a higher level of accreditation 
standards developed by the council or the Commission on Accreditation 
for Law Enforcement Agencies, Inc.  Raised Bill No.  5351 
 
 
 
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(c) On and after January 1, 2023, and until December 31, 2023, each 
law enforcement unit shall adopt and maintain (1) the minimum 
standards and practices of tier one developed by the council pursuant 
to subsection (a) of this section, or (2) a higher level of accreditation 
standards developed by the council or the Commission on Accreditation 
for Law Enforcement Agencies, Inc. 
(d) On and after January 1, 2024, and until December 31, 2025, each 
law enforcement unit shall adopt and maintain (1) the minimum 
standards and practices of tier two developed by the council pursuant 
to subsection (a) of this section, or (2) a higher level of accreditation 
standards developed by the council or the Commission on Accreditation 
for Law Enforcement Agencies, Inc. 
[(c)] (e) On and after January 1, [2025] 2026, each law enforcement 
unit shall [obtain and maintain accreditation] adopt and maintain (1) the 
minimum standards and practices of tier three developed by the council 
pursuant to subsection (a) of this section, or (2) a higher level of 
accreditation standards developed by the Commission on Accreditation 
for Law Enforcement Agencies, Inc. 
(f) If a law enforcement unit fails to [obtain] adopt or maintain [such 
accreditation] the minimum standards and practices or a higher level of 
accreditation standards developed by the council or the Commission on 
Accreditation for Law Enforcement Agencies, Inc., in accordance with 
the provisions of subsections (b) to (e), inclusive, of this section, the 
council shall work with the law enforcement unit to [obtain] assist such 
unit to adopt and maintain [such] the minimum standards and practices 
or the higher level of accreditation standards. 
(g) If a law enforcement unit fails to comply with the guidance issued 
by the council pursuant to subdivision (1) of subsection (g) of section 7-
294d regarding reporting procedures to be followed by chief law 
enforcement officers for certificate suspension, cancellation or 
revocation, the council may revoke the certificate of compliance with the 
minimum standards and practices of tier one, tier two or tier three, as  Raised Bill No.  5351 
 
 
 
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the case may be, issued pursuant to this section. 
[(d)] (h) No civil action may be brought against a law enforcement 
unit for damages arising from the failure of the law enforcement unit to 
[(1)] adopt and maintain [such] the minimum standards and practices 
or a higher level of accreditation standards developed by the council or 
the Commission on Accreditation for Law Enforcement Agencies, Inc., 
pursuant to [subsection] subsections (b) to (e), inclusive, of this section. 
[, or (2) obtain and maintain accreditation by the Commission on 
Accreditation for Law Enforcement Agencies, Inc., pursuant to 
subsection (c) of this section.]  
Sec. 2. Subdivision (22) of subsection (a) of section 7-294d of the 2022 
supplement to the general statutes is repealed and the following is 
substituted in lieu thereof (Effective from passage): 
(22) (A) [Until December 31, 2024, to] To develop, adopt and revise, 
as necessary, comprehensive accreditation standards for the 
administration and management of law enforcement units, to grant 
accreditation to those law enforcement units that demonstrate their 
compliance with such standards and, at the request and expense of any 
law enforcement unit, to conduct such surveys as may be necessary to 
determine such unit's compliance with such standards; and (B) [on and 
after January 1, 2025,] to work with any law enforcement unit that has 
failed to [obtain] adopt or maintain [accreditation from] the minimum 
standards and practices or a higher level of accreditation standards 
developed by the council or the Commission on Accreditation for Law 
Enforcement Agencies, Inc., pursuant to section 7-294ee, as amended by 
this act; 
Sec. 3. Subsection (a) of section 7-291d of the general statutes is 
repealed and the following is substituted in lieu thereof (Effective from 
passage): 
(a) (1) No law enforcement unit, as defined in section 7-294a, shall 
discharge, discipline, discriminate against or otherwise penalize a police 
officer, as defined in section 7-294a, who is employed by such law  Raised Bill No.  5351 
 
 
 
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enforcement unit solely because the police officer (A) seeks or receives 
mental health care services, [or] including such services as a result of a 
behavioral health assessment conducted pursuant to section 7-291e, or 
(B) surrenders his or her firearm, ammunition or electronic defense 
weapon used in the performance of the police officer's official duties to 
such law enforcement unit during the time the police officer receives 
mental health care services. 
(2) The provisions of this subsection shall not be applicable to a police 
officer who [(1)] (A) seeks or receives mental health care services to 
avoid disciplinary action by such law enforcement unit, or [(2)] (B) 
refuses to submit himself or herself to an examination as provided in 
subsection (b) of this section. 
Sec. 4. (NEW) (Effective from passage) (a) Not later than July 1, 2023, 
the Police Officer Standards and Training Council, after consultation 
with persons with mental or physical disabilities and advocates on 
behalf of such persons, shall develop a training curriculum for police 
officers regarding interactions with persons who have mental or 
physical disabilities. 
(b) On and after October 1, 2023, each police basic or review training 
program conducted or administered by the Police Officer Standards and 
Training Council, the Division of State Police within the Department of 
Emergency Services and Public Protection or a municipal police 
department shall include the training curriculum developed pursuant 
to subsection (a) of this section. 
Sec. 5. Subdivision (6) of subsection (a) of section 29-6d of the 2022 
supplement to the general statutes, as amended by section 19 of public 
act 20-1 of the July special session, section 3 of public act 21-33 and 
section 26 of public act 21-40, is repealed and the following is substituted 
in lieu thereof (Effective July 1, 2022): 
(6) "Police patrol vehicle" means any state or local police vehicle, 
[other than] but does not include an administrative vehicle in which an 
occupant is wearing body-worn camera equipment, a bicycle, a motor  Raised Bill No.  5351 
 
 
 
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scooter, an all-terrain vehicle, an electric personal assistive mobility 
device, as defined in subsection (a) of section 14-289h, or an animal 
control vehicle. 
Sec. 6. Section 7-291c of the general statutes is repealed and the 
following is substituted in lieu thereof (Effective July 1, 2022): 
(a) No law enforcement unit, as defined in section 7-294a, shall hire 
any person as a police officer, as defined in said section, [7-294a,] who 
was previously employed as a police officer by such unit or in any other 
jurisdiction and who (1) was dismissed for malfeasance or other serious 
misconduct calling into question such person's fitness to serve as a 
police officer; or (2) resigned or retired from such officer's position while 
under investigation for such malfeasance or other serious misconduct. 
(b) Any law enforcement unit that has knowledge that any former 
police officer of such unit who (1) (A) was dismissed for malfeasance or 
other serious misconduct, or (B) resigned or retired from such officer's 
position while under investigation for such malfeasance or other serious 
misconduct; and (2) is an applicant for the position of police officer with 
any other law enforcement unit, shall inform such other unit and the 
Police Officer Standards and Training Council established under section 
7-294b of such dismissal, resignation or retirement. 
(c) The Police Officer Standards and Training Council shall not certify 
any police officer who (1) was dismissed for malfeasance or other 
serious misconduct, or (2) resigned or retired from such officer's 
position while under investigation for malfeasance or other serious 
misconduct. 
[(c)] (d) The provisions of this section shall not apply to any police 
officer who is exonerated of each allegation against such officer of such 
malfeasance or other serious misconduct. 
(e) The Police Officer Standards and Training Council may afford any 
law enforcement unit prohibited from hiring a person as a police officer 
pursuant to subsection (a) of this section and any police officer denied  Raised Bill No.  5351 
 
 
 
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certification pursuant to subsection (c) of this section an opportunity for 
a hearing in accordance with the provisions of chapter 54 to determine 
whether (1) the police officer was dismissed for such malfeasance or 
other serious misconduct, (2) the police officer resigned or retired while 
under investigation for such malfeasance or other serious misconduct, 
(3) the police officer was exonerated of each allegation of such 
malfeasance or other serious misconduct, or (4) the conduct at issue 
constituted malfeasance or serious misconduct. 
(f) Nothing in this section shall preclude the Police Officer Standards 
and Training Council from suspending, cancelling or revoking the 
certification of a police officer pursuant to subsection (c) of section 7-
294d. 
[(d)] (g) For purposes of this section, (1) "malfeasance" means the 
commonly approved usage of "malfeasance"; and (2) "serious 
misconduct" means improper or illegal actions taken by a police officer 
in connection with such officer's official duties that could result in a 
miscarriage of justice, [or] discrimination or a gross deviation of the 
generally accepted standards and behavior of a police officer, including, 
but not limited to, (A) a conviction of a felony, (B) fabrication or 
falsification of evidence, (C) [repeated] use of [excessive] physical force 
in a manner found to not be justifiable after an investigation conducted 
pursuant to section 51-277a, (D) acceptance of a bribe, [or] (E) the 
commission of fraud, (F) failure to intervene or stop unreasonable, 
excessive or illegal use of force by another police officer, or (G) 
intimidation or harassment causing injury based upon actual or 
perceived protected class membership, identity or expression.  
Sec. 7. Section 7-294e of the general statutes is repealed and the 
following is substituted in lieu thereof (Effective July 1, 2022): 
(a) Notwithstanding the provisions of any general statute or special 
act or local law, ordinance or charter, [to the contrary,] each police 
officer shall forfeit such officer's appointment and position unless 
recertified by the council according to procedures and within the time  Raised Bill No.  5351 
 
 
 
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frame established by the council. Any sworn member of the Division of 
State Police within the Department of Emergency Services and Public 
Protection who is deemed certified under subsection (d) of section 7-
294d is required to apply for recertification by the council within the 
time frame established by the council, unless such member retires from 
said division within such time frame. 
(b) The Police Officer Standards and Training Council may 
recommend to the Commissioner of Emergency Services and Public 
Protection any regulations it deems necessary to carry out the 
provisions of section 7-291c, as amended by this act, 7-294a, subsection 
(a) of section 7-294b, sections 7-294c and 7-294d, as amended by this act, 
and this section, giving due consideration to the varying factors and 
special requirements of law enforcement units. 
(c) The Commissioner of Emergency Services and Public Protection 
may adopt regulations, in accordance with the provisions of chapter 54, 
as are necessary to implement the provisions of section 7-291c, as 
amended by this act, 7-294a, subsection (a) of section 7-294b, sections 7-
294c and 7-294d, as amended by this act, and this section. Such 
regulations shall be binding upon all law enforcement units. 
Sec. 8. Section 7-294jj of the general statutes is repealed and the 
following is substituted in lieu thereof (Effective from passage): 
(a) For purposes of this section: 
(1) "Law enforcement agency" means the Division of State Police 
within the Department of Emergency Services and Public Protection or 
any municipal police department; and 
(2) "Controlled equipment" means military designed equipment 
classified by the United States Department of Defense as part of the 
federal 1033 program that is (A) a controlled firearm, ammunition, 
bayonet, grenade launcher, grenade, including stun and flash-bang, or 
an explosive, (B) a controlled vehicle, highly mobile multi-wheeled 
vehicle, mine-resistant ambush-protected vehicle, truck, truck dump,  Raised Bill No.  5351 
 
 
 
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truck utility or truck carryall, (C) a drone that is armored or 
weaponized, (D) controlled aircraft that is combat configured or combat 
coded or has no established commercial flight application, (E) a silencer, 
(F) a long-range acoustic device, or (G) an item in the federal supply 
class of banned items. 
(b) On and after July 31, 2020, no law enforcement agency may 
acquire controlled equipment, except a municipal police department 
may acquire controlled equipment provided (1) the municipal police 
department holds a public hearing in the municipality it serves 
concerning the proposed purchase of controlled equipment, and (2) the 
Commissioner of Emergency Services and Public Protection approves 
the proposed purchase in writing. 
(c) Not later than December 31, 2020, each law enforcement agency 
shall report, in accordance with the provisions of section 11-4a, to the 
joint standing committees of the General Assembly having cognizance 
of matters relating to the judiciary and public safety its inventory of 
controlled equipment possessed on July 31, 2020. As part of such report, 
the agency shall include the use or proposed use of each item in its 
inventory and whether such use or proposed use is necessary for the 
operation and safety of the department or is for emergency response or 
relief or rescue efforts in the case of a natural disaster or for other public 
safety purposes. 
(d) (1) The office of the Governor and the Commissioner of 
Emergency Services and Public Protection may order a law enforcement 
agency to lawfully sell, transfer or otherwise dispose of controlled 
equipment they jointly find is unnecessary for public protection. A 
municipal police department may request the office of the Governor and 
the commissioner to reconsider such order. The office of the Governor 
and the commissioner may jointly amend or rescind such order if the 
police department has held a public hearing in the municipality it serves 
concerning the proposed request for reconsideration and the 
department demonstrates in its request for reconsideration that the use 
or proposed use of the controlled equipment is necessary for the  Raised Bill No.  5351 
 
 
 
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operation and safety of the department or is for emergency response or 
relief or rescue efforts in the case of a natural disaster or for other public 
safety purposes. The provisions of this subdivision shall not apply to 
controlled equipment purchased by a municipal police department 
pursuant to the provisions of subsection (b) of this section. 
(2) The office of the Governor and the Commissioner of Emergency 
Services and Public Protection shall notify the joint standing committees 
of the General Assembly having cognizance of matters relating to the 
judiciary and public safety of controlled equipment that is ordered to be 
sold, transferred or otherwise disposed of pursuant to subdivision (1) of 
this subsection. 
(e) No law enforcement agency [that is permitted to retain controlled 
equipment] may use any such equipment for crowd management or 
intimidation tactics. 
Sec. 9. Subsection (d) of section 52-571k of the 2022 supplement to the 
general statutes is repealed and the following is substituted in lieu 
thereof (Effective July 1, 2022): 
(d) (1) In any civil action brought under this section, governmental 
immunity shall [only] be a defense to a claim for damages, [when] 
unless, at the time of the conduct complained of, the police officer [had 
an objectively good faith belief that such officer's conduct did not violate 
the law. There shall be no] deprived any person or class of persons of 
the protections, privileges and immunities guaranteed under article first 
of the Constitution of this state. A party may make an interlocutory 
appeal of a trial court's denial of the application of the defense of 
governmental immunity. Governmental immunity shall not be a 
defense in a civil action brought solely for equitable relief. 
(2) In any civil action brought under this section, the trier of fact may 
draw an adverse inference from a police officer's deliberate failure, in 
violation of section 29-6d, as amended by this act, to record any event 
that is relevant to such action.  Raised Bill No.  5351 
 
 
 
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Sec. 10. Subsection (b) of section 14-283a of the general statutes is 
repealed and the following is substituted in lieu thereof (Effective October 
1, 2022):  
(b) (1) The Commissioner of Emergency Services and Public 
Protection, in conjunction with the Chief State's Attorney, the Police 
Officer Standards and Training Council, the Connecticut Police Chiefs 
Association and the Connecticut Coalition of Police and Correctional 
Officers, shall adopt, in accordance with the provisions of chapter 54, a 
uniform, state-wide policy for handling pursuits by police officers. Such 
policy shall specify: (A) The conditions under which a police officer may 
engage in a pursuit and discontinue a pursuit, (B) alternative measures 
to be employed by any such police officer in order to apprehend any 
occupant of the fleeing motor vehicle or to impede the movement of 
such motor vehicle, including permitting the use of stop sticks or a 
similar tire-deflation device without requiring the officer to obtain prior 
authorization for such use for the purpose of preventing a crime or 
reckless driving, (C) the coordination and responsibility, including 
control over the pursuit, of supervisory personnel and the police officer 
engaged in such pursuit, (D) in the case of a pursuit that may proceed 
and continue into another municipality, (i) the requirement to notify 
and the procedures to be used to notify the police department in such 
other municipality or, if there is no organized police department in such 
other municipality, the officers responsible for law enforcement in such 
other municipality, that there is a pursuit in progress, and (ii) the 
coordination and responsibility of supervisory personnel in each such 
municipality and the police officer engaged in such pursuit, (E) the type 
and amount of training in pursuits, that each police officer shall 
undergo, which may include training in vehicle simulators, if vehicle 
simulator training is determined to be necessary, and (F) that a police 
officer immediately notify supervisory personnel or the officer in charge 
after the police officer begins a pursuit. The chief of police or 
Commissioner of Emergency Services and Public Protection, as the case 
may be, shall inform each officer within such chief's or said 
commissioner's department and each officer responsible for law  Raised Bill No.  5351 
 
 
 
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enforcement in a municipality in which there is no such department of 
the existence of the policy of pursuit to be employed by any such officer 
and shall take whatever measures that are necessary to assure that each 
such officer understands the pursuit policy established. 
(2) Not later than January 1, 2021, and at least once during each five-
year period thereafter, the Commissioner of Emergency Services and 
Public Protection, in conjunction with the Chief State's Attorney, the 
Police Officer Standards and Training Council, the Connecticut Police 
Chiefs Association and the Connecticut Coalition of Police and 
Correctional Officers, shall adopt regulations in accordance with the 
provisions of chapter 54, to update such policy adopted pursuant to 
subdivision (1) of this subsection. 
Sec. 11. Section 54-33o of the general statutes is repealed and the 
following is substituted in lieu thereof (Effective October 1, 2022): 
(a) (1) No law enforcement official may ask an operator of a motor 
vehicle to conduct a search of a motor vehicle or the contents of the 
motor vehicle that is stopped by a law enforcement official solely for a 
motor vehicle violation, except as provided in subdivision (2) of this 
subsection. 
(2) Any search by a law enforcement official of a motor vehicle or the 
contents of the motor vehicle that is stopped by a law enforcement 
official solely for a motor vehicle violation shall be (A) based on 
probable cause, (B) solicited consent by the operator of the vehicle if the 
official has reasonable and articulable suspicion that weapons, 
contraband or other evidence of a crime is contained within the motor 
vehicle, provided such official complies with the provisions provided in 
subdivision (3) of this subsection, or [(B)] (C) after having received the 
unsolicited consent to such search from the operator of the motor 
vehicle in written form or recorded by body-worn recording equipment 
or a dashboard camera, each as defined in section 29-6d, as amended by 
this act. 
(3) Any law enforcement official who solicits consent of an operator  Raised Bill No.  5351 
 
 
 
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of a motor vehicle to search such vehicle shall, whether or not the 
consent is granted, complete a police report documenting the reasonable 
and articulable suspicion for the solicitation of consent, or the facts and 
circumstances that support the search being reasonably necessary to 
further an ongoing law enforcement investigation. Such report shall be 
completed not later than forty-eight hours after such solicitation of 
consent. 
(b) No law enforcement official may ask an operator of a motor 
vehicle to provide any documentation or identification other than an 
operator's license, motor vehicle registration, insurance identity card or 
other documentation or identification directly related to the stop, when 
the motor vehicle has been stopped solely for a motor vehicle violation, 
unless there exists probable cause to believe that a felony or 
misdemeanor offense has been committed or the operator has failed to 
produce a valid operator's license. 
Sec. 12. Subsection (a) of section 7-282e of the 2022 supplement to the 
general statutes is repealed and the following is substituted in lieu 
thereof (Effective October 1, 2022): 
(a) (1) Any police officer, as defined in section 7-294a, who while 
acting in such officer's law enforcement capacity, witnesses another 
police officer use what the witnessing officer objectively knows to be 
[unreasonable, excessive or] illegal use of force, shall intervene and 
attempt to stop such other police officer from using such force. Any such 
police officer who fails to intervene in such an incident may be 
prosecuted and punished for the same acts in accordance with the 
provisions of section 53a-8 as the police officer who used [unreasonable, 
excessive or] illegal force. The provisions of this subdivision do not 
apply to any witnessing officer who is operating in an undercover 
capacity at the time he or she witnesses another officer use 
[unreasonable, excessive or] illegal force. 
(2) Any police officer who witnesses another police officer use what 
the witnessing officer objectively knows to be [unreasonable, excessive  Raised Bill No.  5351 
 
 
 
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or] illegal use of force [or is otherwise aware of such use of force] by 
another police officer shall report, as soon as is practicable, such use of 
force to the law enforcement unit, as defined in section 7-294a, that 
employs the police officer who used such force. Any police officer 
required to report such an incident who fails to do so may be prosecuted 
and punished in accordance with the provisions of sections 53a-165 to 
53a-167, inclusive. 
(3) No law enforcement unit employing a police officer who 
intervenes in an incident pursuant to subdivision (1) of this subsection 
or reports an incident pursuant to subdivision (2) of this subsection may 
take any retaliatory personnel action or discriminate against such officer 
because such police officer made such report and such intervening or 
reporting police officer shall be protected by the provisions of section 4-
61dd or section 31-51m, as applicable. 
Sec. 13. (Effective July 1, 2022) Any plan to improve or develop the 
Department of Emergency Services and Public Protection's shooting 
range in the town of Simsbury shall detail the sufficiency of any such 
proposed improvements or developments in providing the State Police 
safe and adequate training facilities and shall be submitted to the joint 
standing committees of the General Assembly having cognizance of 
matters relating to the judiciary, appropriations and the budgets of state 
agencies, public safety and government administration. No funds shall 
be expended by the Department of Emergency Services and Public 
Protection or the Department of Administrative Services in furtherance 
of such plan without approval by the majority of each such committee. 
Sec. 14. Section 7-294r of the general statutes is repealed. (Effective 
October 1, 2023) 
This act shall take effect as follows and shall amend the following 
sections: 
 
Section 1 from passage 7-294ee 
Sec. 2 from passage 7-294d(a)(22) 
Sec. 3 from passage 7-291d(a)  Raised Bill No.  5351 
 
 
 
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Sec. 4 from passage New section 
Sec. 5 July 1, 2022 29-6d(a)(6) 
Sec. 6 July 1, 2022 7-291c 
Sec. 7 July 1, 2022 7-294e 
Sec. 8 from passage 7-294jj 
Sec. 9 July 1, 2022 52-571k(d) 
Sec. 10 October 1, 2022 14-283a(b) 
Sec. 11 October 1, 2022 54-33o 
Sec. 12 October 1, 2022 7-282e(a) 
Sec. 13 July 1, 2022 New section 
Sec. 14 October 1, 2023 Repealer section 
 
Statement of Purpose:   
To revise statutes concerning police accreditation, certification, training, 
immunity, use of military grade equipment and search and pursuit 
statutes, and prohibit the improvement or development of the State 
Police shooting range without a majority vote by certain legislative 
committees. 
[Proposed deletions are enclosed in brackets. Proposed additions are indicated by underline, except 
that when the entire text of a bill or resolution or a section of a bill or resolution is new, it is not 
underlined.]