This bill prohibits the disclosure of certain deceptive media within 90 days of an election, but details on definitions, penalties, and exceptions are speculative.
If you operate in media or advertising, you must ensure compliance with deceptive media regulations by 90 days before elections or face criminal penalties.
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What This Means
New Jersey's Senate Bill S2129 aims to curb the spread of deceptive media during election periods, but details on scope, penalties, and exceptions remain speculative.
Key Provisions
- Prohibits disclosure of certain deceptive audio or visual media within 90 days of an election.
- Mentions criminal penalties for violations, though details are speculative.
- Any definition of 'intentionally deceptive' media is speculative.
- References to applicability to media entities are speculative.
Latest Legislative Action
Introduced in the Senate, Referred to Senate State Government, Wagering, Tourism & Historic Preservation Committee
Bill Sponsors (showing 5 of 64)
| Name | Role |
|---|---|
| Armato, John | Primary |
| Cruz-Perez, Nilsa D | Primary |
| Gill, Nia H. | Primary |
| Lopez, Yvonne D | Primary |
| Madden, Fred H. | Primary |
Compliance Checklist
Who: Natural persons involved in media disclosure.
Deadline: Within 90 days prior to an election.
Penalty: Fourth-degree crime for first violation; third-degree crime for subsequent violations.
Who: Individuals or entities creating or distributing deceptive media.
Deadline: At the time of disclosure.
Penalty: Potential civil action for failure to comply.
Related & Companion Bills
Full Legal Analysis
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