The bill establishes a prohibition on warrant resolution clinics in Iowa, defining such clinics as any organized event or program that allows individuals with outstanding arrest warrants to resolve those warrants without facing immediate arrest. It explicitly states that no entity, including law enforcement agencies, judicial officers, or nonprofit organizations, may organize, sponsor, or participate in these clinics. Instead, individuals with outstanding warrants must resolve them through standard judicial procedures, such as surrendering to law enforcement or appearing at scheduled court hearings. The bill also prohibits the use of public funds or facilities for hosting these clinics and outlines that attempts to circumvent this prohibition by conducting similar programs under different names are also forbidden.

Violations of this bill carry significant penalties, including simple misdemeanors for public officials and private individuals who knowingly participate in warrant resolution clinics, with fines up to $10,000 for private individuals. The bill empowers the attorney general to investigate suspected violations and allows residents to bring civil actions against those conducting prohibited clinics. Additionally, counties involved in organizing such clinics will be barred from receiving funds related to court debt. The bill is set to take effect immediately upon enactment.