1. A person is guilty of hindering law enforcement if he intentionally interferes with, hinders, delays, or prevents the discovery, apprehension, prosecution, conviction, or punishment of another for an offense by: a. Harboring or concealing the other; b. Providing the other with a weapon, money, transportation, disguise, or other means of avoiding discovery or apprehension; c. Concealing, altering, mutilating, or destroying a document or thing, regardless of its admissibility in evidence; d. Warning the other of impending discovery or apprehension other than in connection with an effort to bring another into compliance with the law; or e. Giving false information or a false report to a law enforcement officer knowing such information or report to be false. 2. Hindering law enforcement is a class C felony if the actor: a. Knows of the conduct of the other and such conduct constitutes a class AA, class A, or class B felony; or b. Knows that the other has been charged with or convicted of a crime and such crime is a class AA, class A, or class B felony. Otherwise hindering law enforcement is a class A misdemeanor. 3. A person who commits the crime of hindering law enforcement is subject to prosecution in this state if the conduct interferes with or hinders an investigation of a crime occurring within this state. The venue of a criminal action involving the crime of hindering law enforcement is in any county in which the conduct of hindering is committed or in any county in which a criminal offense is being investigated which is hindered by the false information or other interfering conduct.
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