South DakotaVoteScope
Kevin Jensen
Kevin Jensen

Sen. Kevin Jensen on

Courts & Criminal Justice

20 bills voted on

Votes

HB 1140Voted Yes

Allows courts to order treatment at certain nonprofits as part of probation or parole.

This bill expands probation and parole conditions to allow courts to require defendants to participate in treatment programs at nonprofit entities that receive alternative care program grants. It adds this as an option alongside existing conditions like fines, community service, drug courts, and chemical dependency treatment. The bill also updates DUI penalty sections to reference these alternative care programs as options for suspended sentences in repeat DUI cases.

Passed3/9/2026
HB 1176Voted No

Clarifies bail rules for people in sobriety programs.

This bill modifies the 24/7 sobriety program requirements for defendants on bond or pre-trial release. It prohibits jailing defendants or revoking their bond solely for inability to pay program costs unless the court finds they have present and continued ability to pay. It places the burden on defendants to prove they didn't willfully fail to pay or made good faith efforts to pay. It also allows unpaid program costs to be imposed at case disposition if the defendant has ability to pay.

3/9/2026
SB 41Voted Yes

Bans creating and sharing deepfake images or videos of real people.

This bill expands South Dakota's criminal invasion of privacy law to criminalize the creation and distribution of deepfake pornography and non-consensual intimate images. It adds specific intent requirements (to harm, embarrass, harass, etc.) and creates new criminal penalties: Class 1 misdemeanor for basic violations, Class 6 felony for repeat offenses or when victims are minors, and Class 5 felony for creating/distributing digitally fabricated sexual material (deepfakes). The bill defines 'digitally fabricated material' as images that appear authentic but are modified to falsely depict someone's appearance or conduct.

Passed1/16/2026
HB 1108Voted Yes

Seals court records when protection order requests are dismissed or denied.

This bill allows courts to immediately seal court files containing dismissed protection order petitions. It applies to both domestic violence protection orders (chapter 22-19A) and harassment protection orders (chapter 25-10). When a court dismisses a protection order petition either initially or after a hearing, the court may then grant immediate sealing of the court file containing that petition.

Passed3/5/2026
HB 1262Voted Yes

Provides emergency funding for a therapy center for students in Brown County.

This bill appropriates $2,000,000 from the general fund to the Department of Corrections to construct, complete, and equip a regional juvenile corrections center in Brown County. The appropriation includes funding for heating, plumbing, water, sewer, electric facilities, architectural and engineering services, and other required services. The Bureau of Human Resources and Administration will supervise the project, and the bill includes standard provisions for voucher approval and fund reversion procedures.

Passed3/4/2026
HB 1066Voted Yes

Updates theft laws for contractors and suppliers.

This bill completely rewrites the theft statute for contractors, subcontractors, and suppliers working on real estate improvements. The current law makes it theft when someone 'knowingly uses more than five hundred dollars' of payment proceeds for purposes other than paying for labor, skills, materials, and machinery while accounts remain unpaid. The new law removes the 'knowingly' requirement and dollar threshold, making it theft when someone 'having received or been entrusted with the property of another for the purpose of improvement of real estate, and with the intent to defraud, appropriates that property' for any purpose other than the real estate improvement it was received for.

Passed3/3/2026
HB 1179Nay · Amended

Changes the fee for preparing wage garnishment paperwork.

This bill increases the reimbursement fee that garnishees must be paid for preparing garnishment disclosures from $15 to $50. The fee is taxed as part of the plaintiff's costs, and if not paid, the garnishment proceeding is void. The bill also makes minor language changes replacing 'shall' with 'must' throughout the statute.

Failed3/3/2026
SB 220Voted Yes

Funds a study of juvenile detention and residential facilities.

This bill directs the Department of Corrections to conduct a comprehensive study of juvenile correctional and residential facilities, evaluating best practices in juvenile detention and treatment, therapeutic housing models, vocational training and mental health integration, and staff-to-youth ratios and safety protocols. The study must include on-site inspections at three out-of-state facilities. The bill appropriates $50,000 for this purpose and requires a report by September 1, 2026.

Passed3/2/2026
HB 1046Voted Yes

Funds demolition of the Pierre Minimum Center prison facility.

This bill authorizes the Department of Corrections to demolish the Pierre Minimum Center, appropriates $682,825 from the general fund for the demolition project, places the project under supervision of the Bureau of Human Resources and Administration, and includes standard appropriation procedures for voucher approval and fund reversion.

Passed2/26/2026
HB 1062Nay · Amended

Changes the definition of aggravated assault.

This bill makes minor technical revisions to South Dakota's aggravated assault statute, changing the language structure from 'Any person who...' to 'No person may...' and updating verb forms for consistency (changing 'Attempts' to 'Attempt', 'causes' to 'cause', etc.). The bill also adds 'physical object simulating a deadly weapon' to the existing provision about physical menace with deadly weapons. The substantive elements and requirements for aggravated assault charges remain unchanged.

Passed2/20/2026
SB 150Nay · Amended

Protects one car per person from being seized for debt collection.

This bill expands South Dakota's debtor exemption laws to allow each debtor to protect one motor vehicle worth up to $5,000 (over any security interest) from seizure in legal proceedings. The bill also removes the requirement that only 'heads of families' can claim certain exemptions, extending exemption rights to all debtors.

Failed2/19/2026
SB 87Voted Yes

Sets standards for medical exams used as evidence in criminal cases.

This bill establishes comprehensive requirements for forensic medical examinations related to rape and sexual offenses. It specifies who can administer these examinations (physicians, physician assistants, nurse practitioners, or sexual assault nurse examiners), requires specialized training based on National Training Standards, expands the definition to include specific components like physical trauma examination and evidence collection, creates immunity provisions for healthcare providers making good faith determinations about patient consent capacity, and establishes payment structures where counties must pay examination costs based on Medicaid methodology.

Passed2/18/2026
SB 179Voted YesCo-Sponsor

Allows courts to send juveniles convicted of weapons crimes to adult prison.

This bill expands the circumstances under which juvenile courts can commit delinquent children to the Department of Corrections by adding weapons offenses (under sections 22-14-5, 22-14-7, 22-14-20, 23-7-44, or subdivision 22-30A-17(2)) to the list of qualifying offenses. The bill also makes various technical language changes throughout the juvenile disposition statute, changing 'shall' to 'must' and making other minor wording adjustments.

Passed2/17/2026
SB 156Voted Yes

Increases penalties for animal cruelty.

This bill creates a new Class 4 felony offense for animal cruelty committed in an especially depraved, heinous, sadistic, or wicked manner. It adds enhanced penalties for aggravated forms of the existing animal cruelty offense under section 40-1-2.4.

Passed2/11/2026
HB 1076Voted Yes

Changes where certain offenders can live near schools and parks.

This bill changes the grandfather date for sex offender residence restrictions in community safety zones from July 1, 2024 back to July 1, 2006. Sex offenders who established residence before July 1, 2006 would be exempt from community safety zone restrictions, while those who established residence between 2006-2024 would lose their exemption. The bill is declared an emergency measure.

Passed2/6/2026
SB 113Voted YesCo-Sponsor

Increases penalties for interfering with religious practices.

This bill increases the penalty for preventing someone from practicing their religion through threats or violence from a Class 1 misdemeanor to a Class 6 felony. The bill also makes a minor grammatical change from 'threats' (plural) to 'threat' (singular).

Passed2/4/2026
SB 107Voted Yes

Adds daycare centers to school safety zones with stricter penalties for crimes.

This bill expands the definition of 'community safety zone' to include licensed day care centers, licensed group family day care homes, and registered family day care facilities. The existing definition already included schools, public parks, playgrounds, pools, domestic abuse shelters, and sexual assault shelters. Community safety zones are areas within 500 feet of these facilities where registered sex offenders are prohibited from residing, with certain exceptions. The bill reorganizes the definition into a clearer list format while adding the three new child care facility types.

Passed2/4/2026
HB 1011Voted Yes

Changes fees for court record copies.

This bill modifies court clerk fees by increasing the fee for reproducing authenticated, exemplified, or double certificates of court records from $2 to $15, removes the $2 certification fee for documents, and makes minor grammatical corrections to the statute. The bill does not change any liability standards, legal procedures, or substantive law - only administrative fees charged by court clerks.

Passed2/4/2026
SB 42Voted Yes

Increases penalties for drug crimes in state prisons.

This bill enhances criminal penalties for controlled substance violations in state correctional facilities by: 1) Increasing penalties for inmate possession of controlled substances from Class 4 to Class 3 felony, 2) Increasing penalties for delivering controlled substances to inmates from Class 4 to Class 3 felony, 3) Creating new Class 5 felony penalties for controlled substance ingestion by inmates in correctional facilities and by persons under parole supervision.

Passed1/29/2026
SB 44Voted Yes

Gives investigators power to demand business records in certain cases.

This bill creates new investigative subpoena authority for the attorney general in criminal investigations involving internet crimes against children or human trafficking. It allows the attorney general to obtain judicial approval to issue subpoenas compelling electronic service providers, internet service providers, and telecommunications carriers to produce business records including subscriber information, account details, IP addresses, and device identifiers. The bill requires judicial approval based on 'reasonable cause' standard and includes non-disclosure provisions preventing providers from notifying account holders. It also provides legal immunity for providers who comply with these subpoenas.

Passed1/23/2026