Minnesota · House Bill · Ninety-Third Session
HF252
Minnesota H.F. No. 252 — Requiring Use of Facial Recognition Technology as Part of the Driver's License and Minnesota Identification Card Application Process

Status ● Failed Effective N/A Passage Likelihood N/A

WHAT THIS BILL REGULATES · 1 REQUIREMENT TYPE

How Is This Bill Enforced

Enforcement Authority
No private right of action. Enforcement authority is not specified in the bill. The bill imposes duties on the Commissioner of the Department of Public Safety and on law enforcement entities as operational mandates. No civil or administrative enforcement mechanism is created.
Private Right of Action
No private right of action. Enforcement is exclusive to the designated authority.
Penalties
The bill does not specify any damages, penalties, or remedies. It creates operational mandates on state government entities without an enforcement or penalty provision.

What This Bill Requires

Verbatim statutory text on the left; plain-language analysis and a per-section checklist on the right. Numbered markers cross-link to the matching checklist row.

Statutory Text
Analysis & Obligations
Minn. Stat. § 171.0602
Fraud Detection; Facial Recognition
Government

(a) 1 The commissioner must, for each driver's license or Minnesota identification card application or renewal, use facial recognition technology as a means to (1) ensure no individual is issued multiple licenses or identification cards, (2) prevent identification fraud, and (3) expedite application processing times.

(b) 2 When evaluating a driver's license or Minnesota identification card application under this section, the commissioner must incorporate facial recognition software that uses mathematical algorithms to identify features of the applicant's face and compare the features against the photographs, algorithms, and other data stored in (1) the Department of Public Safety's driver and identification card records, (2) relevant Federal Bureau of Investigation records, and (3) any other relevant databases or record systems that provide law enforcement or criminal history information.

(c) 3 If a possible identity match is identified by the facial recognition software under paragraph (b), the application and record must be reviewed by a department employee to determine whether the match is valid. If the department employee determines the match is valid, the commissioner (1) is prohibited from issuing a driver's license or Minnesota identification card to the applicant subject to the identity match until the match is invalidated, and (2) must refer the matter to an appropriate law enforcement entity.

(d) 4 Upon receipt of an identity match confirmed by the department under paragraph (c), the law enforcement entity receiving the referral must reevaluate the identity match to determine whether the match is valid. The law enforcement entity must notify the commissioner of the evaluation results under this paragraph. If the law enforcement entity determines the identity match is valid, it may refer the matter for criminal prosecution. The commissioner is prohibited from issuing a driver's license or Minnesota identification card to an applicant if the law enforcement entity determines the referred identity match is valid. The commissioner may issue a driver's license or Minnesota identification card to an applicant if the law enforcement entity determines the referred identity match is invalid, subject to the other requirements of this chapter.

Effective Date This section is effective January 1, 2025, and applies to driver's license and Minnesota identification card applications and renewals occurring on or after that date.

This section creates a new mandate requiring the Commissioner of Public Safety to use facial recognition technology for every driver's license and Minnesota identification card application or renewal. The stated purposes are preventing duplicate issuance, combating identity fraud, and expediting processing. The software must compare applicant facial features against state driver records, FBI records, and other law enforcement databases.

The section builds in a two-tier human review process: first by a department employee, then by a law enforcement entity upon referral. Issuance is blocked whenever a valid identity match is confirmed at either tier, and the matter may be referred for criminal prosecution. The effective date is January 1, 2025.

Compliance actions 4 items
1
The Commissioner of Public Safety must use facial recognition technology for every driver's license and Minnesota identification card application or renewal to prevent duplicate issuance, identity fraud, and to expedite processing.
2
The Commissioner must incorporate facial recognition software that uses mathematical algorithms to compare applicant facial features against Department of Public Safety records, FBI records, and other law enforcement or criminal history databases.
3
The Commissioner must ensure that every possible identity match flagged by facial recognition software is reviewed by a department employee before any adverse action is taken; if the employee confirms the match, the Commissioner must withhold the license or ID card and refer the matter to law enforcement.
H-01.6
4
Law enforcement entities receiving a confirmed identity match referral must independently reevaluate the match, notify the Commissioner of the results, and may refer the matter for criminal prosecution if the match is confirmed valid; the Commissioner must deny the license or ID card if law enforcement confirms the match.
H-01.6

Passage Likelihood

Failed
Status Failed
Final action Second reading

Legislative History

2025-02-10 Introduction and first reading, referred to Energy Finance and Policy
2025-03-13 Committee report, to adopt
2025-03-13 Second reading

Entry Last Reviewed

2026-05-16
AI generated