Senate Bill 159, reintroduced after a sponsor withdrawal to fix technical issues, passed the committee with a favorable recommendation after supporters described it as a limited alignment with federal requirements.
Sponsor Senator Deneen said the earlier version contained drafting errors that failed to align state reporting responsibilities with a 2022 federal regulation (referred to in the transcript as "Billy's Act"). The revised bill adds the National Missing and Unidentified Persons System (NamUs) alongside NCIC and clarifies that local investigating agencies, not solely the state police, may be the reporting agents for entries.
Sean Baller, executive director for the Kentucky Association of Chiefs of Police, told the committee the bill "is an excellent bill" and said the time frames required are reasonable for local departments. He said the measure helps both locate living missing people and recover remains.
With no questions during the hearing, the clerk called the roll and senators voted to report the bill favorably to the chamber.
The committee record indicates the technical corrections were the primary motivation for resubmission; the bill will advance with the committee's favorable recommendation.