{"bill":{"id":"119-hr-4334","congress":119,"type":"HR","number":4334,"title":"Restoring the Armed Career Criminal Act","originChamber":"House","introducedDate":"2025-07-10","sponsors":[{"bioguideId":"K000392","fullName":"Rep. Kustoff, David [R-TN-8]","party":"R","state":"TN","district":8}],"cosponsorsCount":0,"latestAction":{"actionDate":"2025-07-10","text":"Referred to the House Committee on the Judiciary."},"policyArea":"Crime and Law Enforcement","subjects":[],"actions":[{"date":"2025-07-10","text":"Referred to the House Committee on the Judiciary.","type":"IntroReferral","chamber":"House floor actions","hasVote":false},{"date":"2025-07-10","text":"Introduced in House","type":"IntroReferral","chamber":"Library of Congress","hasVote":false},{"date":"2025-07-10","text":"Introduced in House","type":"IntroReferral","chamber":"Library of Congress","hasVote":false}],"summary":"<p><strong>Restoring the Armed Career Criminal Act</strong><br/>&nbsp;<br/>This bill expands the criminal offenses that qualify as prior convictions for the purpose of enhanced sentencing under the Armed Career Criminal Act (ACCA).<br/>&nbsp;<br/>Currently, the ACCA imposes a 15-year mandatory minimum prison term on a defendant who possesses, receives, or transports a firearm as a prohibited person (e.g., felon) and has three or more prior convictions for a <em>serious drug offense</em> or <em>violent felony</em> (or both)&nbsp;committed on separate occasions.</p><p>The term <em>serious drug offense</em> means a federal or state offense with a statutory maximum prison term of 10 years or more. A state offense must involve the manufacture, distribution, or possession of a controlled substance as defined in the Controlled Substances Act.</p><p>The term <em>violent felony</em> means any crime punishable by a prison term of more than one year that (1) has as an element the use, attempted use, or threatened use of physical force; or (2) is burglary, arson, or extortion, or involves explosives.</p><p>This bill replaces <em>serious drug offense</em> and <em>violent felony</em> with a new category of qualifying prior offense: serious felony convictions. The term <em>serious felony conviction</em> means (1) any conviction that, at the time of sentencing, was a felony offense punishable by a statutory maximum prison term of 10 years or more; or (2) any group of convictions imposed in the same proceeding or in consolidated proceedings with a total prison term of 10 years of more, regardless of how many years the defendant served.</p>","updateDate":"2026-04-28T15:04:03Z"},"markets":[],"stateBills":[],"meta":{"sources":["congress.gov"],"latencyMs":436,"ts":"2026-07-14T04:21:22.300Z"},"nextActions":{"inspect":[],"related":[{"description":"Search related legislation","method":"GET","url":"https://simplefunctions.dev/api/public/query-gov?q=Restoring%20the%20Armed%20Career%20Criminal%20Act"}]}}