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Committee gives due‑pass to bill exposing attorney general to damages after dismissed nuisance suits

March 11, 2026 | 2026 Legislature Arizona, Arizona


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Committee gives due‑pass to bill exposing attorney general to damages after dismissed nuisance suits
The Senate Judiciary and Elections Committee on March 4 voted to give House Bill 2167 a due‑pass recommendation after members debated whether the measure constituted proper legislative oversight or an undue restriction on the attorney general's authority.

Staff summarized the bill as creating liability for the attorney general when an AG‑filed public nuisance or consumer‑fraud action is dismissed or found to lack merit and where the AG knew or should have known a legal basis was insufficient. The bill would allow total damages to include a civil penalty equal to three times the damages assessed against the injured party and require payment from the AG's operating budget; damages could include loss of sales when the injured party is a business.

Several senators described concerns about the bill's implications for the AG's discretion. Senator Ortiz characterized the measure as an "attack on our AG," saying the legislature should be cautious about interfering with the AG's ability to bring actions that have, in some instances, protected Arizonans. Other members said the measure may be a proper message about overreach in nuisance litigation.

After members' explanations, the roll call produced a 4‑3 vote in favor of a due pass recommendation. The committee forwarded the bill to the next stage with that recommendation.

Committee debate referenced prior cases and the public nuisance doctrine; members asking for additional sponsor engagement and clarity as the bill proceeds.

The committee did not amend the bill at this hearing. Parties supporting and opposing the measure may provide additional briefings as it moves through the process.

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