LCO No. 2416 1 of 7 General Assembly Raised Bill No. 5448 February Session, 2024 LCO No. 2416 Referred to Committee on GOVERNMENT ADMINISTRATION AND ELECTIONS Introduced by: (GAE) AN ACT CONCERNING SECURITY OF CERTAIN ELECTION WORKERS AND ELECTIONS-RELATED LOCATIONS. Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives in General Assembly convened: Section 1. Section 1-217 of the general statutes is repealed and the 1 following is substituted in lieu thereof (Effective July 1, 2024): 2 (a) No public agency may disclose, under the Freedom of Information 3 Act, from its personnel, medical or similar files, the residential address 4 of any of the following persons employed by such public agency: 5 (1) A federal court judge, federal court magistrate, judge of the 6 Superior Court, Appellate Court or Supreme Court of the state, or 7 family support magistrate; 8 (2) A sworn member of a municipal police department, a sworn 9 member of the Division of State Police within the Department of 10 Emergency Services and Public Protection or a sworn law enforcement 11 officer within the Department of Energy and Environmental Protection; 12 Raised Bill No. 5448 LCO No. 2416 2 of 7 (3) An employee of the Department of Correction; 13 (4) An attorney-at-law who represents or has represented the state in 14 a criminal prosecution; 15 (5) An attorney-at-law who is or has been employed by the Division 16 of Public Defender Services or a social worker who is employed by the 17 Division of Public Defender Services; 18 (6) An inspector employed by the Division of Criminal Justice; 19 (7) A firefighter; 20 (8) An employee of the Department of Children and Families; 21 (9) A member or employee of the Board of Pardons and Paroles; 22 (10) An employee of the judicial branch; 23 (11) An employee of the Department of Mental Health and Addiction 24 Services who provides direct care to patients; 25 (12) A member or employee of the Commission on Human Rights 26 and Opportunities; or 27 (13) A state marshal appointed by the State Marshal Commission 28 pursuant to section 6-38b. 29 (b) The business address of any person described in this section shall 30 be subject to disclosure under section 1-210. The provisions of this 31 section shall not apply to Department of Motor Vehicles records 32 described in section 14-10. 33 (c) (1) Except as provided in subsections (a) and [(d)] (e) of this 34 section, no public agency may disclose the residential address of any 35 person listed in subsection (a) of this section from any record described 36 in subdivision (2) of this subsection that is requested in accordance with 37 the provisions of said subdivision, regardless of whether such person is 38 an employee of the public agency, provided such person has (A) 39 Raised Bill No. 5448 LCO No. 2416 3 of 7 submitted a written request for the nondisclosure of the person's 40 residential address to the public agency, and (B) furnished his or her 41 business address to the public agency. 42 (2) Any public agency that receives a request for a record subject to 43 disclosure under this chapter where such request (A) specifically names 44 a person who has requested that his or her address be kept confidential 45 under subdivision (1) of this subsection, shall make a copy of the record 46 requested to be disclosed and shall redact the copy to remove such 47 person's residential address prior to disclosing such record, (B) is for an 48 existing list that is derived from a readily accessible electronic database, 49 shall make a reasonable effort to redact the residential address of any 50 person who has requested that his or her address be kept confidential 51 under subdivision (1) of this subsection prior to the release of such list, 52 or (C) is for any list that the public agency voluntarily creates in 53 response to a request for disclosure, shall make a reasonable effort to 54 redact the residential address of any person who has requested that his 55 or her address be kept confidential under subdivision (1) of this 56 subsection prior to the release of such list. 57 (3) Except as provided in subsection (a) of this section, an agency shall 58 not be prohibited from disclosing the residential address of any person 59 listed in subsection (a) of this section from any record other than the 60 records described in subparagraphs (A) to (C), inclusive, of subdivision 61 (2) of this subsection. 62 (d) (1) Except as provided in subsections (a) and (e) of this section and 63 subject to the provisions of subdivisions (2) and (3) of this subsection, 64 no public agency of a municipality may disclose, under the Freedom of 65 Information Act, from a public record, including any record described 66 in subdivision (2) of subsection (c) of this section, the residential address 67 of any person who is a municipal clerk, registrar of voters, deputy 68 registrar of voters, election official described in section 9-258, primary 69 official described in section 9-436 or audit official described in section 9-70 320f, regardless of whether such person is an employee of the public 71 agency, provided such person has (A) submitted a written request for 72 Raised Bill No. 5448 LCO No. 2416 4 of 7 the nondisclosure of the person's residential address to the public 73 agency, and (B) furnished (i) his or her business address to the public 74 agency, or (ii) if such person does not have a business address, the 75 address of the town or city hall or the municipal building in which the 76 office of the registrars of voters of such municipality is located. 77 (2) (A) If a person submits a written request described in subdivision 78 (1) of this subsection prior to the ninetieth day preceding an election, the 79 prohibition in said subdivision against disclosing such person's 80 residential address shall take effect on the ninetieth day preceding such 81 election and shall expire on the ninetieth day following such election. 82 (B) If a person submits a written request described in subdivision (1) 83 of this subsection on or after the ninetieth day preceding an election, the 84 prohibition in said subdivision against disclosing such person's 85 residential address shall take effect upon such submission and shall 86 expire on the ninetieth day following such election. 87 (3) The provisions of this subsection shall not be construed to prohibit 88 the disclosure of the residential address of any person described in 89 subdivision (1) of this subsection in the case where such residential 90 address appears on a public record by virtue of such person holding any 91 elective or appointive state or municipal office other than municipal 92 clerk, registrar of voters or deputy registrar of voters. 93 [(d)] (e) The provisions of this section shall not be construed to 94 prohibit the disclosure without redaction of any document, as defined 95 in section 7-35bb, any list prepared under title 9, or any list published 96 under section 12-55. 97 [(e)] (f) No public agency or public official or employee of a public 98 agency shall be penalized for violating a provision of this section, unless 99 such violation is wilful and knowing. Any complaint of such a violation 100 shall be made to the Freedom of Information Commission. Upon receipt 101 of such a complaint, the commission shall serve upon the public agency, 102 official or employee, as the case may be, by certified or registered mail, 103 a copy of the complaint. The commission shall provide the public 104 Raised Bill No. 5448 LCO No. 2416 5 of 7 agency, official or employee with an opportunity to be heard at a 105 hearing conducted in accordance with the provisions of chapter 54, 106 unless the commission, upon motion of the public agency, official or 107 employee or upon motion of the commission, dismisses the complaint 108 without a hearing if it finds, after examining the complaint and 109 construing all allegations most favorably to the complainant, that the 110 public agency, official or employee has not wilfully and knowingly 111 violated a provision of this section. If the commission finds that the 112 public agency, official or employee wilfully and knowingly violated a 113 provision of this section, the commission may impose against such 114 public agency, official or employee a civil penalty of not less than twenty 115 dollars nor more than one thousand dollars. Nothing in this section shall 116 be construed to allow a private right of action against a public agency, 117 public official or employee of a public agency. 118 Sec. 2. (NEW) (Effective July 1, 2024) (a) A person is guilty of 119 possession of a weapon near an elections site when, knowing that such 120 person is not licensed or privileged to do so, such person possesses a 121 firearm or deadly weapon, as defined in section 53a-3 of the general 122 statutes, within one thousand feet of any (1) polling place on the day of 123 an election, primary or referendum, (2) location designated for the 124 conduct of early voting during the period of early voting prior to an 125 election or primary, (3) location designated for same-day election 126 registration on the day of a regular election, (4) central location 127 designated for the counting of absentee ballots, early voting ballots or 128 same-day election registration ballots at an election, primary or 129 referendum, as applicable, (5) place where a recanvass is being 130 conducted, or (6) drop box designated for the deposit of absentee ballots 131 during the period beginning on the first day of issuance of absentee 132 voting sets and ending at the close of the polls at an election, primary or 133 referendum. 134 (b) The provisions of subsection (a) of this section shall not apply to 135 the otherwise lawful possession of a firearm by a peace officer, as 136 defined in subdivision (9) of section 53a-3 of the general statutes, while 137 engaged in the performance of such peace officer's official duties. 138 Raised Bill No. 5448 LCO No. 2416 6 of 7 (c) Possession of a weapon near an elections site is a class D felony. 139 Sec. 3. Section 9-364a of the general statutes is repealed and the 140 following is substituted in lieu thereof (Effective July 1, 2024): 141 (a) Any person who influences or attempts to influence by force or 142 threat the vote, or by force, threat, bribery or corrupt means, the speech, 143 of any other person [in] at a primary, caucus, referendum, convention 144 or election [;] shall be guilty of a class C felony. 145 (b) (1) Any person who influences or attempts to influence by force, 146 threat or harassment, including through publicly disclosing or 147 threatening to publicly disclose personal identifying information, any 148 election worker in the performance of any duty under the provisions of 149 this title related to election administration at a primary, referendum, 150 election or recanvass shall be guilty of a class C felony. As used in this 151 subsection, "election worker" means any municipal clerk, registrar of 152 voters, deputy registrar of voters, election official described in section 9-153 258, primary official described in section 9-436 or recanvass official 154 described in section 9-311, and "personal identifying information" has 155 the same meaning as provided in section 53a-129a. 156 (2) Any election worker upon whom any attempt to influence 157 described in subdivision (1) of this subsection has been made shall have 158 a civil cause of action against the person who made such attempt. 159 (c) Any person who wilfully and fraudulently suppresses or destroys 160 any vote or ballot properly given or cast or, in counting such votes or 161 ballots, wilfully miscounts or misrepresents the number [thereof ; and 162 any] of such votes or ballots at a primary, caucus, referendum, 163 convention or election, shall be guilty of a class C felony. 164 (d) Any presiding or other officer of a primary, caucus or convention 165 who wilfully announces the result of a ballot or vote of such primary, 166 caucus or convention, untruly and wrongfully, shall be guilty of a class 167 C felony. 168 Raised Bill No. 5448 LCO No. 2416 7 of 7 This act shall take effect as follows and shall amend the following sections: Section 1 July 1, 2024 1-217 Sec. 2 July 1, 2024 New section Sec. 3 July 1, 2024 9-364a Statement of Purpose: To (1) allow certain election workers to request that their residential addresses be exempt from disclosure under the Freedom of Information Act, (2) establish a criminal prohibition on the possession of a firearm or deadly weapon within one thousand feet of certain election-related locations, and (3) establish a criminal prohibition on, and a civil cause of action for, threatening or harassing conduct toward election workers performing election-related duties. [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.]