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HR4922: D. C. Criminal Reforms to Immediately Make Everyone Safe Act of 2025
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HR4922
D. C. Criminal Reforms to Immediately Make Everyone Safe Act of 2025

1
Roll Calls
239
Yea (latest vote)
179
Nay (latest vote)
House
2025-09-16 – 2025-09-16

About HR4922

D. C. Criminal Reforms to Immediately Make Everyone Safe Act of 2025

Policy Area: Crime and Law Enforcement

Sponsor: Rep. Donalds, Byron [R-FL-19] (R-FL)

Latest Action (2025-09-17): Received in the Senate.

Summary

DC Criminal Reforms to Immediately Make Everyone Safe Act or the DC CRIMES ActThis bill limits the authority of the District of Columbia (DC) government over its criminal sentencing laws. The bill eliminates the DC government’s authority to enact any act, resolution, or rule to change any criminal liability sentence in effect on the date of the bill's enactment.The bill also (1) reduces the maximum age of a youth offender from 24 years to 18 years, and (2) repeals a provision that allows a DC criminal court to issue a sentence to a youth offender that is less than the mandatory minimum term otherwise required by law. A DC criminal court currently has the discretion to reduce or modify certain criminal sentences for a youth offender under specified circumstances. For example, a DC court may sentence a youth offender to probation in lieu of confinement. (However, this discretion does not apply to several specified violent crimes.) Additionally, the bill directs the Office of the Attorney General for DC to publish, and update monthly, certain youth offender crime data on a publicly accessible website. 

Subjects: Criminal justice information and records, Criminal procedure and sentencing, District of Columbia, Government information and archives, Internet, web applications, social media, Juvenile crime and gang violence

Who Voted How on HR4922

Filter by Yea, Nay, or Absent

Vote Breakdown — HR4922

How members voted on HR4922. 429 total positions across all roll calls for this bill.

Member Date Question Vote Result
Robert B. Aderholt (R-Alabama) 2025-09-16 Yea-and-Nay Yea Passed
Jake Auchincloss (D-Massachusetts) 2025-09-16 Yea-and-Nay Yea Passed
Mark E. Amodei (R-Nevada) 2025-09-16 Yea-and-Nay Yea Passed
Alma S. Adams (D-North Carolina) 2025-09-16 Yea-and-Nay Nay Passed
Pete Aguilar (D-California) 2025-09-16 Yea-and-Nay Nay Passed
Rick W. Allen (R-Georgia) 2025-09-16 Yea-and-Nay Yea Passed
Jodey C. Arrington (R-Texas) 2025-09-16 Yea-and-Nay Yea Passed
Mark Alford (R-Missouri) 2025-09-16 Yea-and-Nay Yea Passed
Gabe Amo (D-Rhode Island) 2025-09-16 Yea-and-Nay Nay Passed
Yassamin Ansari (D-Arizona) 2025-09-16 Yea-and-Nay Nay Passed
Sanford D. Bishop (D-Georgia) 2025-09-16 Yea-and-Nay Nay Passed
Cliff Bentz (R-Oregon) 2025-09-16 Yea-and-Nay Yea Passed
Stephanie I. Bice (R-Oklahoma) 2025-09-16 Yea-and-Nay Yea Passed
Lauren Boebert (R-Colorado) 2025-09-16 Yea-and-Nay Yea Passed
Gus M. Bilirakis (R-Florida) 2025-09-16 Yea-and-Nay Yea Passed
Vern Buchanan (R-Florida) 2025-09-16 Yea-and-Nay Yea Passed
Suzanne Bonamici (D-Oregon) 2025-09-16 Yea-and-Nay Nay Passed
Joyce Beatty (D-Ohio) 2025-09-16 Yea-and-Nay Nay Passed
Andy Barr (R-Kentucky) 2025-09-16 Yea-and-Nay Yea Passed
Julia Brownley (D-California) 2025-09-16 Yea-and-Nay Nay Passed
Ami Bera (D-California) 2025-09-16 Yea-and-Nay Nay Passed
Brian Babin (R-Texas) 2025-09-16 Yea-and-Nay Yea Passed
Donald S. Beyer (D-Virginia) 2025-09-16 Yea-and-Nay Nay Passed
Mike Bost (R-Illinois) 2025-09-16 Yea-and-Nay Yea Passed
Brendan F. Boyle (D-Pennsylvania) 2025-09-16 Yea-and-Nay Nay Passed
Don Bacon (R-Nebraska) 2025-09-16 Yea-and-Nay Yea Passed
Nanette Diaz Barragán (D-California) 2025-09-16 Yea-and-Nay Nay Passed
Jack Bergman (R-Michigan) 2025-09-16 Yea-and-Nay Yea Passed
Andy Biggs (R-Arizona) 2025-09-16 Yea-and-Nay Yea Passed
Troy Balderson (R-Ohio) 2025-09-16 Yea-and-Nay Yea Passed
James R. Baird (R-Indiana) 2025-09-16 Yea-and-Nay Yea Passed
Tim Burchett (R-Tennessee) 2025-09-16 Yea-and-Nay Yea Passed
Shontel M. Brown (D-Ohio) 2025-09-16 Yea-and-Nay Nay Passed
Aaron Bean (R-Florida) 2025-09-16 Yea-and-Nay Yea Passed
Nikki Budzinski (D-Illinois) 2025-09-16 Yea-and-Nay Nay Passed
Eric Burlison (R-Missouri) 2025-09-16 Yea-and-Nay Yea Passed
Josh Brecheen (R-Oklahoma) 2025-09-16 Yea-and-Nay Yea Passed
Becca Balint (D-Vermont) 2025-09-16 Yea-and-Nay Nay Passed
Tom Barrett (R-Michigan) 2025-09-16 Yea-and-Nay Yea Passed
Michael Baumgartner (R-Washington) 2025-09-16 Yea-and-Nay Yea Passed
Nicholas J. Begich (R-Alaska) 2025-09-16 Yea-and-Nay Yea Passed
Wesley Bell (D-Missouri) 2025-09-16 Yea-and-Nay Nay Passed
Sheri Biggs (R-South Carolina) 2025-09-16 Yea-and-Nay Yea Passed
Janelle S. Bynum (D-Oregon) 2025-09-16 Yea-and-Nay Nay Passed
Robert P. Bresnahan (R-Pennsylvania) 2025-09-16 Yea-and-Nay Yea Passed
Ken Calvert (R-California) 2025-09-16 Yea-and-Nay Yea Passed
James E. Clyburn (D-South Carolina) 2025-09-16 Yea-and-Nay Nay Passed
Kat Cammack (R-Florida) 2025-09-16 Yea-and-Nay Yea Passed
John R. Carter (R-Texas) 2025-09-16 Yea-and-Nay Yea Passed
Tom Cole (R-Oklahoma) 2025-09-16 Yea-and-Nay Yea Passed

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Frequently Asked

What is HR4922?

HR4922 is the D. C. Criminal Reforms to Immediately Make Everyone Safe Act of 2025, introduced in the House of the 119th U.S. Congress by Rep. Donalds, Byron [R-FL-19] (R-FL). DC Criminal Reforms to Immediately Make Everyone Safe Act or the DC CRIMES ActThis bill limits the authority of the District of Columbia (DC) government over its criminal sentencing laws. The bill eliminates the DC government’s authority to enact any act, resolution, or rule to change any criminal liability sentence in effect on the date of the bill’s enactment.The bill also (1) reduces the maximum age of a youth offender from 24 years to 18 years, and (2) repeals a provision that allows a DC criminal court to issue a sentence to a youth offender that is less than the mandatory minimum term otherwise required by law. A DC criminal court currently has the discretion to reduce or modify certain criminal sentences for a youth offender under specified circumstances.

Who sponsored HR4922?

HR4922 was sponsored by Rep. Donalds, Byron [R-FL-19] (R-FL). Cosponsors and roll-call positions are listed on this page.

What is the current status of HR4922?

As of 2025-09-17, HR4922 Received in the Senate..

How did Congress vote on HR4922?

HR4922 has had 1 roll-call vote on record. The most recent: 2025-09-16 — Yea-and-Nay (Passed).

What policy area does HR4922 cover?

HR4922 is categorized under "Crime and Law Enforcement." Browse other bills in this area at /topic-crime-and-law-enforcement/.

Where can I see all member positions on HR4922?

Each member’s vote is shown on this page, with party affiliation, state, and the official vote question. Click any member to see their full voting record.