Fiscal Note
Fiscal Services Division
HF 2576 – Fentanyl-Related Deaths, Murder (LSB6317HV)
Staff Contact: Molly Kilker (515.725.1286) molly.kilker@legis.iowa.gov
Fiscal Note Version – New
Description
House File 2576 provides that a person who unlawfully delivers, dispenses, or otherwise
provides fentanyl or a fentanyl-related substance to another person that results in the death of
that person commits murder in the first degree. The Bill also establishes that it may not be used
as a defense that the other person contributed to the person’s own death by the purposeful,
knowing, reckless, or negligent injection, inhalation, absorption, or ingestion of the controlled
substance, or by consenting to the administration of the controlled substance by another
person.
Background
Under Iowa Code section 707.2, a person commits murder in the first degree under the
following circumstances:
• The person willfully, deliberately, and with premeditation kills another person.
• The person kills another person while participating in a forcible felony.
• The person kills another person while escaping or attempting to escape from lawful custody.
• The person intentionally kills a peace officer, correctional officer, public employee, or
hostage while the person is imprisoned in a correctional institution of the Iowa Department
of Corrections (DOC) or a city or county jail.
• The person kills a child while committing child endangerment under Iowa Code section
726.6(1)(b), or while committing assault under Iowa Code section 708.1 upon the child, and
the death occurs under circumstances manifesting an extreme indifference to human life.
• The person kills another person while participating in an act of terrorism as defined in Iowa
Code section 708A.1(3).
As it relates to the Bill, fentanyl includes the substances listed under Iowa Code section
124.204(2)(“at” – “cl”), and “fentanyl substance” is defined under Iowa Code section
124.204(9)(a).
2023 Iowa Acts, chapter 86 (Controlled Substances, Penalty Enhancements and Fentanyl
Penalties Act), established that, under Iowa Code section 124.401(1)(c), a person who causes
the death of another person while manufacturing, delivering, or possessing certain controlled
substances, counterfeit substances, simulated controlled substances, or imitation controlled
substances will be sentenced to three times the term otherwise imposed by law, and no such
judgement, sentence, or part thereof can be deferred or suspended. The same Act also added
a mixture or substance containing a detectable amount of fentanyl or any fentanyl-related
substance as a punishable substance under Iowa Code section 124.401(1)(c).
In FY 2023, there were no convictions under Iowa Code section 124.401(1) for the manufacture,
delivery, or possession of fentanyl. In the same fiscal year, there were 27 convictions for
murder in the first degree under Iowa Code section 707.2.
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A Class A felony is punishable by confinement for life in prison without the possibility for parole
or probation.
Assumptions
• The following will not change over the projection period: charge, conviction, and sentencing
patterns and trends; prisoner length of stay (LOS); revocation rates; plea bargaining; and
other criminal justice system policies and practices.
• A delay of six months is assumed from the effective date of this Bill to the date of first entry
of affected offenders into the correctional system.
• Marginal costs for county jails cannot be estimated due to a lack of data. For purposes of
this analysis, the marginal cost for county jails is assumed to be $50 per day.
Correctional Impact
House File 2576 creates new penalties for delivering, dispensing, or providing fentanyl or
fentanyl-related substances that result in the death of another person. Bills that create penalties
cannot be assessed for a correctional impact due to a lack of conviction data. Class A felonies
are punishable by a mandatory life sentence and do not include parole, probation, or
Community-Based Corrections (CBC) marginal costs. The marginal cost per day for an
individual in prison is $24.94. Refer to the Legislative Services Agency (LSA) memo addressed
to the General Assembly, Cost Estimates Used for Correctional Impact Statements, dated
January 16, 2024, for information related to the correctional system.
Minority Impact
House File 2576 creates new penalties, and as a result, Criminal Juvenile Justice Planning
(CJJP) of the Department of Management (DOM) cannot use existing data to determine a
minority impact. Refer to the LSA memo addressed to the General Assembly, Minority Impact
Statement, dated January 16, 2024, for information related to minorities in the criminal justice
system.
Fiscal Impact
The fiscal impact of House File 2576 cannot be determined due to a lack of data. The average
State cost per Class A felony is between $198,300 and $202,500. This includes operating costs
incurred by the Judicial Branch, the Indigent Defense Fund, and the Department of Corrections
(DOC). The cost would be incurred across multiple fiscal years for prison supervision.
Sources
Department of Corrections
Criminal Juvenile Justice Planning, Department of Management
Legislative Services Agency
/s/ Jennifer Acton
February 29, 2024
Doc ID 1447493
The fiscal note for this Bill was prepared pursuant to Joint Rule 17 and the Iowa Code. Data used in developing this
fiscal note is available from the Fiscal Services Division of the Legislative Services Agency upon request.
www.legis.iowa.gov
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Statutes affected:
Introduced: 707.2