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14 Facts About Kelly Moller

1.

Kelly Moller was born on February 2,1972 and is an American politician serving in the Minnesota House of Representatives since 2019.

2.

Kelly Moller attended the University of Notre Dame, graduating with a Bachelor of Business Administration in marketing and later Hamline University School of Law, graduating with a Juris Doctor.

3.

Kelly Moller worked as a staff attorney in the Minnesota Attorney General's Office for a decade, is a victim rights activist, and works as an assistant attorney for Hennepin County, Minnesota.

4.

Kelly Moller served on the Shoreview City Public Safety Committee.

5.

Kelly Moller was elected to the Minnesota House of Representatives in 2018 and has been reelected every two years since.

6.

Kelly Moller sits on the Judiciary Finance and Civil Law, Rules and Legislative Administration, and Ways and Means Committees.

7.

Kelly Moller served as vice chair of the Judiciary Finance and Civil Law Committee from 2021 to 2022.

8.

Kelly Moller has said that the state's criminal justice system has done "a pretty bad job" at rehabilitation.

9.

Kelly Moller authored changes to civil forfeiture laws for cases ending forfeitures worth less than $1,500 in most cases.

10.

Kelly Moller supported legislation eliminating the "severe or pervasive" standard for determining whether harassment creates a hostile working environment.

11.

Kelly Moller introduced a bill that would amend the relevant statute to include victims such as those in the case the court ruled on, and said it was "an example of victim blaming".

12.

The Peace Officers Standards and Training Board adopted similar policies, and Kelly Moller authored a bill requiring departments to follow the guidance, with officers that failed facing consequences including losing their police officer's license.

13.

Kelly Moller authored legislation to repeal a law from Minnesota's territorial days that criminalized adultery that only applied to women, not men.

14.

Kelly Moller authored legislation to increase transparency around ticket prices, requiring upfront pricing and regulating ticket resellers.