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SB0812 • 2026

Public Records/Sealed Criminal History Records

Public Records/Sealed Criminal History Records

Crime
Passed Legislature

This bill passed both chambers and reached final enrollment, even if later executive action is not shown here.

Sponsor
Simon
Last action
2026-03-13
Official status
Senate - Died in Appropriations Committee on Criminal and Civil Justice
Effective date
On the sam

Plain English Breakdown

Using official source text because the generated explanation was unavailable or could not be confirmed against the official bill text.

Public Records/Sealed Criminal History Records

Public Records/Sealed Criminal History Records; Expanding an existing public records exemption to include sealed criminal history records of persons adjudicated guilty of certain acts or nonviolent misdemeanor offenses; authorizing disclosure of criminal history records to a state attorney for a specified purpose; providing for future review and repeal of the expanded exemption; providing a statement of public necessity, etc.

What This Bill Does

  • Public Records/Sealed Criminal History Records; Expanding an existing public records exemption to include sealed criminal history records of persons adjudicated guilty of certain acts or nonviolent misdemeanor offenses; authorizing disclosure of criminal history records to a state attorney for a specified purpose; providing for future review and repeal of the expanded exemption; providing a statement of public necessity, etc.

Limits and Unknowns

  • This entry is temporarily using official source text because the generated explanation could not be confirmed against the official bill text during the last sync.

Amendments

These notes stay tied to the official amendment files and metadata from the legislature.

616754

Committee amendment S 812 Filed • Criminal Justice (Simon)

Replaced by Committee Substitute 1/20/2026

Plain English: Florida Senate - 2026 COMMITTEE AMENDMENT Bill No.

  • Florida Senate - 2026 COMMITTEE AMENDMENT Bill No.
  • SB 812 Ì616754<Î616754 LEGISLATIVE ACTION Senate .
  • House Comm: RCS .
  • 01/20/2026 .

Bill History

  1. 2026-03-13 Senate

    • Died in Appropriations Committee on Criminal and Civil Justice

  2. 2026-01-22 Senate

    • Now in Appropriations Committee on Criminal and Civil Justice • CS by Criminal Justice read 1st time

  3. 2026-01-21 Senate

    • Pending reference review under Rule 4.7(2) - (Committee Substitute)

  4. 2026-01-20 Senate

    • CS by Criminal Justice; YEAS 7 NAYS 1

  5. 2026-01-15 Senate

    • On Committee agenda-- Criminal Justice, 01/20/26, 3:30 pm, 37 Senate Building

  6. 2026-01-13 Senate

    • Introduced

  7. 2025-12-16 Senate

    • Referred to Criminal Justice; Appropriations Committee on Criminal and Civil Justice; Rules

  8. 2025-12-09 Senate

    • Filed

Official Summary Text

Public Records/Sealed Criminal History Records; Expanding an existing public records exemption to include sealed criminal history records of persons adjudicated guilty of certain acts or nonviolent misdemeanor offenses; authorizing disclosure of criminal history records to a state attorney for a specified purpose; providing for future review and repeal of the expanded exemption; providing a statement of public necessity, etc.

Current Bill Text

Read the full stored bill text
Florida Senate
-
2026

CS for SB 812

By
the Committee on Criminal Justice; and Senator Simon

591-02059-26 2026812c1
1 A bill to be entitled
2 An act relating to public records; reenacting and
3 amending s. 943.059, F.S.; expanding an existing
4 public records exemption to include sealed criminal
5 history records of persons adjudicated guilty of
6 certain acts or nonviolent misdemeanor offenses;
7 authorizing disclosure of criminal history records to
8 a state attorney for a specified purpose; providing
9 for future review and repeal of the expanded
10 exemption; providing for reversion to specified
11 statutory text if the exemption is not saved from
12 repeal; providing for expiration; providing a
13 directive to the Division of Law Revision; providing a
14 statement of public necessity; providing a contingent
15 effective date.
16
17 Be It Enacted by the Legislature of the State of Florida:
18
19 Section 1. Paragraph (e) is added to subsection (6) of
20 section 943.059, Florida Statutes, paragraph (a) of that
21 subsection is reenacted and amended, and paragraph (d) of that
22 subsection is reenacted, to read:
23 943.059 Court-ordered sealing of criminal history records.—
24 (6) EFFECT OF ORDER.—
25 (a) A criminal history record of a minor or an adult which
26 is ordered sealed by a court pursuant to this section is
27 confidential and exempt from s. 119.07(1) and s. 24(a), Art. I
28 of the State Constitution and is available only to the following
29 persons:
30 1. The subject of the record;
31 2. The subject’s attorney;
32 3. Criminal justice agencies for their respective criminal
33 justice purposes, which include conducting a criminal history
34 background check for approval of firearms purchases or transfers
35 as authorized by state or federal law;
36 4.
A state attorney for the purpose of prosecuting any

37
subsequent case
s
.

38
5.
Judges in the state courts system for the purpose of
39 assisting them in their case-related decisionmaking
40 responsibilities, as set forth in s. 943.053(5); or
41
6.
5.
To those entities set forth in subparagraphs (b)1.,
42 4.-6., and 8.-10. for their respective licensing access
43 authorization and employment purposes.
44 (d) Information relating to the existence of a sealed
45 criminal history record provided in accordance with paragraph
46 (b) is confidential and exempt from s. 119.07(1) and s. 24(a),
47 Art. I of the State Constitution, except that the department
48 shall disclose the sealed criminal history record to the
49 entities set forth in subparagraphs (b)1., 4.-6., and 8.-10. for
50 their respective licensing, access authorization, and employment
51 purposes. An employee of an entity set forth in subparagraph
52 (b)1., subparagraph (b)4., subparagraph (b)5., subparagraph
53 (b)6., subparagraph (b)8., subparagraph (b)9., or subparagraph
54 (b)10. may not disclose information relating to the existence of
55 a sealed criminal history record of a person seeking employment,
56 access authorization, or licensure with such entity or
57 contractor, except to the person to whom the criminal history
58 record relates or to persons having direct responsibility for
59 employment, access authorization, or licensure decisions. A
60 person who violates this paragraph commits a misdemeanor of the
61 first degree, punishable as provided in s. 775.082 or s.
62 775.083.
63
(e)

The expansion of the public records exemption under

64
this subsection to include criminal history records described in

65
paragraph (1)(b) is subject to the Open Government Sunset Review

66
Act in accordance with s. 119.15, and that paragraph shall stand

67
repealed on October 2, 2031, unless reviewed and saved from

68
repeal through reenactment by the Legislature. If the expansion

69
of the exemption is not saved from repeal, paragraph (1)(b)

70
reverts to that in existence on June 30, 2026, except that any

71
amendments to such text enacted other than by SB 810, 2026

72
Regular Session, are preserved and continue to operate to the

73
extent that such amendments are not dependent upon the portions

74
of text which expire pursuant to this paragraph.
This
paragraph

75
expires
October 31, 2031.

76 Section 2.
The Division of Law Revision is directed to

77
replace the phrase “SB 810, 2026 Regular Session”
wherever it

78
occurs
in this act with the
assigned
chapter
number of that act
.

79 Section 3.
The Legislature finds that it is a public

80
necessity that a criminal history record described in s.

81
943.059(1)(b), Florida Statutes, which is sealed be made

82
confidential and exempt from s. 119.07(1), Florida Statutes, and

83
s. 24(a), Article I of the State Constitution, and be made

84
available only in accordance with s. 943.059(6), Florida

85
Statutes. If a sealed criminal history record remains accessible

86
to potential employers, landlords, and other members of the

87
public, the person who obtained the sealing of the record faces

88
barriers to obtaining work, housing, or other resources

89
necessary to be a productive member of society. Increasing

90
opportunities for persons to seal a criminal history record

91
promotes economic stability, reduces crime and recidivism, and

92
makes communities safer. For these reasons, the Legislature

93
finds that it is a public necessity that the criminal history

94
record of persons adjudicated guilty of certain nonviolent

95
misdemeanor offenses be confidential and exempt from public

96
records requirements.

97 Section 4. This act shall take effect on the same date that
98 SB 810 or similar legislation takes effect, if such legislation
99 is adopted in the same legislative session or an extension
100 thereof and becomes a law.