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SB2747 • 2026

Foreign Third-Party Litigation Funders; require disclosure to the Attorney General.

AN ACT TO REQUIRE A FOREIGN THIRD-PARTY LITIGATION FUNDER TO DISCLOSE CERTAIN INFORMATION TO THE ATTORNEY GENERAL; TO REQUIRE SUCH DISCLOSURE IN WRITING TO THE ATTORNEY GENERAL; TO REQUIRE THE DISCLOSURE NO MORE THAN 30 DAYS AFTER EXECUTION OF THE AGREEMENT; AND FOR RELATED PURPOSES.

Enacted

This bill passed the Legislature and reached final enactment based on the latest official action.

Sponsor
Wiggins
Last action
2026-04-08
Official status
Law
Effective date
July 1, 20

Plain English Breakdown

The official source material does not specify the exact nature of 'foreign funding' beyond requiring disclosure from foreign third-party litigation funders.

Foreign Third-Party Litigation Funders Must Tell the Attorney General

This law requires foreign third-party litigation funders to disclose certain information in writing to the Attorney General within 30 days of signing an agreement or filing a lawsuit.

What This Bill Does

  • Requires foreign third-party litigation funders to give written information to the Attorney General within 30 days of signing an agreement or filing a lawsuit.
  • Includes details like names, addresses, and citizenships of involved entities.
  • Involves sharing agreements that create contingent rights related to lawsuits.

Who It Names or Affects

  • Foreign third-party litigation funders who provide money for legal cases.
  • The Attorney General, who receives the required disclosures.

Terms To Know

foreign entity of concern
A company or organization based in a foreign country that is considered risky due to government ties or terrorist involvement.
third-party litigation funder
An individual or group that gives money to help pay for legal costs, with the expectation of getting some of it back if they win the case.

Limits and Unknowns

  • The law only applies to foreign funders and does not cover domestic ones.
  • It is unclear how strictly this will be enforced or what penalties might apply for non-compliance.

Bill History

  1. 2026-04-08 Mississippi Legislative Bill Status System

    04/08 Approved by Governor

  2. 2026-04-06 Mississippi Legislative Bill Status System

    04/06 (H) Enrolled Bill Signed

  3. 2026-04-06 Mississippi Legislative Bill Status System

    04/06 (S) Enrolled Bill Signed

  4. 2026-04-01 Mississippi Legislative Bill Status System

    04/01 (S) Conference Report Adopted

  5. 2026-04-01 Mississippi Legislative Bill Status System

    04/01 (H) Conference Report Adopted

  6. 2026-03-31 Mississippi Legislative Bill Status System

    03/31 (H) Conference Report Filed

  7. 2026-03-31 Mississippi Legislative Bill Status System

    03/31 (S) Conference Report Filed

  8. 2026-03-31 Mississippi Legislative Bill Status System

    03/31 (S) Recommitted For Further Conf

  9. 2026-03-31 Mississippi Legislative Bill Status System

    03/31 (H) Recommitted For Further Conf

  10. 2026-03-30 Mississippi Legislative Bill Status System

    03/30 (S) Conference Report Filed

  11. 2026-03-30 Mississippi Legislative Bill Status System

    03/30 (H) Conference Report Filed

  12. 2026-03-23 Mississippi Legislative Bill Status System

    03/23 (H) Conferees Named Hood,Aguirre,Yates

  13. 2026-03-18 Mississippi Legislative Bill Status System

    03/18 (S) Conferees Named Wiggins,Thompson,Simmons (12th)

  14. 2026-03-17 Mississippi Legislative Bill Status System

    03/17 (S) Decline to Concur/Invite Conf

  15. 2026-03-11 Mississippi Legislative Bill Status System

    03/11 (H) Returned For Concurrence

  16. 2026-03-10 Mississippi Legislative Bill Status System

    03/10 (H) Passed As Amended

  17. 2026-03-10 Mississippi Legislative Bill Status System

    03/10 (H) Amended

  18. 2026-03-03 Mississippi Legislative Bill Status System

    03/03 (H) Title Suff Do Pass As Amended

  19. 2026-02-16 Mississippi Legislative Bill Status System

    02/16 (H) Referred To Judiciary A

  20. 2026-02-13 Mississippi Legislative Bill Status System

    02/13 (S) Transmitted To House

  21. 2026-02-12 Mississippi Legislative Bill Status System

    02/12 (S) Passed

  22. 2026-02-12 Mississippi Legislative Bill Status System

    02/12 (S) Committee Substitute Adopted

  23. 2026-02-03 Mississippi Legislative Bill Status System

    02/03 (S) Title Suff Do Pass Comm Sub

  24. 2026-01-19 Mississippi Legislative Bill Status System

    01/19 (S) Referred To Judiciary, Division A

Official Summary Text

Foreign Third-Party Litigation Funders; require disclosure to the Attorney General.

Current Bill Text

Read the full stored bill text
S. B. No. 2747 *SS08/R1201SG* ~ OFFICIAL ~ G3/5
26/SS08/R1201SG
PAGE 1

To: Judiciary, Division A
MISSISSIPPI LEGISLATURE REGULAR SESSION 2026

By: Senator(s) Wiggins

SENATE BILL NO. 2747
(As Sent to Governor)

AN ACT TO REQUIRE A FOREIGN THIRD-PARTY LITIGATION FUNDER TO 1
DISCLOSE CERTAIN INFORMATION TO THE ATTORNEY GENERAL; TO REQUIRE 2
SUCH DISCLOSURE IN WRITING TO THE ATTORNEY GENERAL; TO REQUIRE 3
THE DISCLOSURE NO MORE THAN 30 DAYS AFTER EXECUTION OF THE 4
AGREEMENT; AND FOR RELATED PURPOSES. 5
BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI: 6
SECTION 1. (1) The following words and phrases shall have 7
the meanings defined in this section, as follows: 8
(a) "Foreign entity of concern" means a partnership, 9
association, corporation, organization, or other combination of 10
persons: 11
(i) Organized or incorporated in a foreign country 12
of concern; 13
(ii) Owned or controlled by the government, a 14
political subdivision, or a political party of a foreign country 15
of concern; 16
(iii) That has a principal place of business in a 17
foreign country of concern; or 18
S. B. No. 2747 *SS08/R1201SG* ~ OFFICIAL ~
26/SS08/R1201SG
PAGE 2

(iv) That is owned, organized, or controlled by or 19
affiliated with a foreign organization that has been: 20
1. Placed on the federal Office of Foreign 21
Assets Control specially designated nationals and blocked persons 22
list; or 23
2. Designated by the United States Secretary 24
of State as a foreign terrorist organization. 25
(b) "Foreign person" means: 26
(i) An individual who is not a citizen of the 27
United States or an alien lawfully admitted for permanent 28
residence in the United States and is a citizen of a foreign 29
country of concern; 30
(ii) An unincorporated association, of which a 31
majority of members are not citizens of the United States and are 32
citizens of a foreign country of concern; or 33
(iii) A corporation that is incorporated in a 34
foreign country of concern. 35
(c) "Foreign third-party litigation funder" means a 36
foreign person, foreign entity of concern, or foreign sovereign 37
wealth fund other than the named parties, counsel of record, or 38
law firm of record, that is a third-party litigation funder. 39
(d) "Litigation expenses" means costs typically 40
incurred in the course of civil litigation, including, but not 41
limited to, filing fees, expert witness fees, transcript fees, 42
court costs, travel expenses, and office overhead, but not 43
S. B. No. 2747 *SS08/R1201SG* ~ OFFICIAL ~
26/SS08/R1201SG
PAGE 3

including funds intended for use by a party for personal or 44
familial expenses, such as food, rent, mortgage payments, car 45
payments, and medical bills. 46
(e) "Third-party litigation funder" means any person or 47
entity that provides funding intended to defray litigation 48
expenses or the financial impact of a negative judgment related to 49
a civil action and has the contractual right to receive or make 50
any payment that is contingent on the outcome of an identified 51
civil action by settlement, judgement, or otherwise, or on the 52
outcome of any matter within a portfolio that includes the action 53
and involves the same counsel or affiliated counsel. This term 54
does not apply to: (i) the named parties, counsel of record, or 55
law firm of record providing funding intended to defray litigation 56
expenses related to the civil action, (ii) a person or entity 57
providing funding solely intended to pay costs of living or other 58
personal or familial expenses during the pendency of such civil 59
action where such funds are not used to defray litigation 60
expenses, (iii) counsel of record, or law firm of record, or any 61
referring counsel providing legal services on a contingency fee 62
basis or to advance his or her client's legal costs where the 63
services or costs are provided by counsel of record or law firm of 64
record in accordance with the Rules of Professional Conduct, (iv) 65
a health insurer, medical provider, or assignee that has paid, is 66
obligated to pay, or is owed any sums for health care for an 67
injured person under the terms of a health insurance plan or other 68
S. B. No. 2747 *SS08/R1201SG* ~ OFFICIAL ~
26/SS08/R1201SG
PAGE 4

agreement, (v) a financial institution providing loans made 69
directly to a party, counsel of record, or a law firm of record 70
when repayment of the loan is not contingent upon the outcome of 71
such civil action or on the outcome of any matter within a 72
portfolio that includes such civil action and involves the same 73
counsel or affiliated counsel, (vi) any person or entity providing 74
funding to a nonprofit legal organization that represents clients 75
on a pro bono, no-cost basis, if the nonprofit legal organization 76
seeks only injunctive or declaratory relief on behalf of its 77
clients. This part does not affect the award of costs or 78
attorney's fees to a nonprofit legal organization in the pro bono, 79
no-cost pursuit of injunctive relief. 80
(2) In any civil action in which a foreign third-party 81
litigation funder provides funds intended to defray litigation 82
expenses or the financial impact of a negative judgment and the 83
source or sources of its funding includes a foreign entity of 84
concern, the third-party litigation funder shall meet all of the 85
following requirements: 86
(a) Disclose in writing to the Attorney General the 87
name, the address, and citizenship or the country of incorporation 88
or registration of any foreign entity of concern that has a right 89
to receive or an obligation to make any payment that is contingent 90
on the outcome of the civil action, or portfolio that includes the 91
civil action and involves the same counsel of record or affiliated 92
counsel, by settlement, judgment, or otherwise. 93
S. B. No. 2747 *SS08/R1201SG* ~ OFFICIAL ~
26/SS08/R1201SG
PAGE 5
ST: Foreign Third-Party Litigation Funders;
require disclosure to the Attorney General.
(b) Disclose in writing to the Attorney General the 94
name, address, citizenship or country of incorporation or the 95
registration of any foreign entity of concern that has received or 96
is entitled to receive proprietary information or information 97
affecting national security interests obtained as a result of the 98
funding agreement for such civil action. 99
This disclosure does not pertain to information received by a 100
party to the action, counsel of record, or law firm of record. 101
(c) Produce to the Attorney General a copy of any 102
agreement creating a contingent right described in this section. 103
(3) The disclosure and certification required by this 104
section shall be made no later than thirty (30) days after 105
execution of any agreement or the date on which the civil action 106
is filed. 107
(4) A party who enters into an agreement described in this 108
section after the date on which the civil action is filed shall 109
make the disclosure required by this section no later than thirty 110
(30) days after being served. 111
SECTION 2. This act shall take effect and be in force from 112
and after July 1, 2026. 113