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Judiciary committee roundup: which bills moved, which failed

March 23, 2026 | 2026 Legislature TN, Tennessee


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Judiciary committee roundup: which bills moved, which failed
The Senate Judiciary Committee considered a broad calendar and recorded votes on multiple bills. Key committee actions recorded on the official roll include:

- SB 14‑67 (Taylor): Amendment adopted by committee; recorded committee tally 6 ayes, 1 no; amendment requires weekly disclosure of certain prosecutorial actions tied to the Memphis Safe Task Force (sponsor: Sen. Chip Taylor).

- SB 19‑29 (Taylor): Motion to move the bill passed and the measure was referred to the finance committee for a fiscal note; recorded committee tally 6 ayes and 2 noes.

- SB 5‑91 (Hale): Amendment adopted to align "threats of mass violence" reporting with school threat‑assessment practices (require only credible threats to be reported); committee recorded 8 ayes.

- SB 19‑92 (Hale): Amendment adopted to create a class E felony for manipulating outcomes tied to prediction‑market contracts; committee approved the amendment and recorded the bill as amended.

- SB 22‑10 (Hill): Amendment adopted to ensure clerks provide case data to the sheriff's association for victim notification; recorded 8 ayes.

- SB 23‑23 (Hale): Amendment adopted modernizing pseudoephedrine sales and allowing online purchases with identity verification standards; recorded 8 ayes.

- SB 25‑33 (Hill): Amendment adopted to target opioid‑abatement dollars to mobile crisis and residential treatment and refer to finance for a fiscal review; recorded 7 ayes and 1 no.

- SB 16‑02 (Hatcher): Amendment adopted increasing penalties for hit‑and‑run incidents; recorded 8 ayes.

- SB 26‑19 (Yarbrough): The committee heard testimony and the DA conference testified in opposition; recorded outcome was 3 ayes, 3 noes and 2 present/not voting — the bill did not advance from committee.

- SB 9‑04 (Lamar): Proposal for QMHPs on mental‑health emergency responses failed to advance (committee recorded 2 ayes, 5 noes, 1 present not voting).

- SB 20‑11 (Kyle) to ban masked law‑enforcement identification during arrests failed on a 2‑to‑6 recorded vote.

These roll‑call tallies and committee actions are based on the committee record as announced by the clerk during the hearing.

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