Kelly Moller

[1] As Public Safety chair, Moller has supported offering more resources for police recruitment and retention as well as funding for community crime and violence prevention.

[11][12] In response to rising car thefts, she wrote a bill that would allow police departments to track stolen vehicles for 24 hours without first getting consent from owners.

[15] Moller has supported updating and strengthening Minnesota's sexual assault and harassment laws, citing testimony from survivors about problems with the current system.

[19][20] In 2021, the Minnesota Supreme Court ruled that a person who is sexually assaulted while intoxicated is not considered "mentally incapacitated" if they consumed the substance voluntarily.

[26] She also introduced a bill to form a working group, including representatives from victim coalitions, to examine and rewrite criminal sexual conduct laws.

[25][31] Moller called Minneapolis's backlog of untested rape kits "unacceptable" and pledged to work to get them tested, and supported a state supreme court ruling protecting communications between victims and sexual assault counselors.