Bill Detail
H.R. 2853
Congress: 119
Title
Combating Organized Retail Crime Act of 2025
Summary
Combating Organized Retail Crime Act of 2025 This bill expands federal enforcement of criminal offenses related to organized retail and supply chain crime. The term organized retail and supply chain crime includes criminal offenses involving the interstate transportation of stolen property, the sale or receipt of stolen goods, or theft from an interstate or foreign shipment that is committed by, in coordination with, or at the instruction of an organization. First, with respect to criminal offenses involving the interstate transportation of stolen property or the sale or receipt of stolen goods, the bill broadens the scope of conduct that qualifies as offenses by allowing prosecutions to be based on the aggregate value of stolen items over a 12-month period. Additionally, the bill makes the offenses predicate offenses (i.e., underlying offenses) for prosecutions under the federal money laundering statute and authorizes the criminal forfeiture of any property obtained from the proceeds of an offense. Second, with respect to criminal offenses involving theft from an interstate or foreign shipment, the bill also makes an offense an underlying offense for prosecution under the federal money laundering statute and authorizes the criminal forfeiture of any associated property. Third, the bill expands the federal money laundering statute to include offenses involving general-use prepaid cards, gift certificates, or store gift cards. Finally, the bill temporarily establishes a center within the Department of Homeland Security to coordinate federal law enforcement activities related to organized retail and supply chain crime.
Sponsor
Rep. David Joyce [R-OH-14]
Status
Received in the Senate and Read twice and referred to the Committee on the Judiciary.
Status as of Jun 29, 6:28 PM · synced 1h ago
Introduced
2025-04-10
Data source mode: cache
Bill Engagement
Combating Organized Retail Crime Act of 2025 This bill expands federal enforcement of criminal offenses related to organized retail and supply chain crime.
Lobbyists on the case
- American Chemistry Council3 filings · 7 lobs
- Chamber of Commerce of the U.s.a.2 filings · 33 lobs
- The Reserve Component2 filings · 2 lobs
- Mehlman Consulting, Inc.1 filing · 23 lobs
- Amazon.com Services LLC1 filing · 15 lobs
- Ups (United Parcel Service)1 filing · 10 lobs
- Jill Brubaker2026 Q1
- Ryan Jackson2026 Q1
- Chris Jahn2026 Q1
- Neil Bradley2026 Q1
- Keelie Broom2026 Q1Chamber of Commerce of the U.s.a. · Deputy Dir., Chief Administrator Officers Congressional Excellence Program, Apr. 2025-Aug. 2025
- Suzanne Clark2026 Q1
- Kevin Courtois2026 Q1
- Nicholas Crocker2026 Q1