Texas 2009 81st Regular

Texas Senate Bill SB390 Introduced / Bill

Filed 02/01/2025

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                    81R2633 ACP-D
 By: Patrick, Dan S.B. No. 390


 A BILL TO BE ENTITLED
 AN ACT
 relating to confidentiality of certain information under the public
 information law and in local tax appraisal records regarding
 federal law enforcement officers.
 BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF TEXAS:
 SECTION 1. Articles 2.122(a) and (c), Code of Criminal
 Procedure, are amended to read as follows:
 (a) The following named criminal investigators of the
 United States shall not be deemed peace officers, but shall have the
 powers of arrest, search and seizure as to felony offenses only
 under the laws of the State of Texas:
 (1) Special Agents of the Federal Bureau of
 Investigation;
 (2) Special Agents of the Secret Service;
 (3) Special Agents of the United States Immigration
 and Customs Enforcement agency [Customs Service];
 (4) Special Agents of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms;
 (5) Special Agents of Federal Drug Enforcement Agency;
 (6) Inspectors of the United States Postal Service;
 (7) Special Agents of the Criminal Investigation
 Division and Inspectors of the Internal Security Division of the
 Internal Revenue Service;
 (8) Civilian Special Agents of the United States Naval
 Investigative Service;
 (9) Marshals and Deputy Marshals of the United States
 Marshals Service;
 (10) Special Agents of the United States Citizenship
 and Immigration Services [Immigration and Naturalization Service];
 and
 (11) Special Agents of the United States Department of
 State, Bureau of Diplomatic Security.
 (c) A Customs and Border Protection Officer of the United
 States Customs and Border Protection [customs inspector of the
 United States Customs Service] or a Border Patrol agent,
 immigration enforcement agent, or deportation [border patrolman or
 immigration] officer of the Department of Homeland Security [United
 States Department of Justice] is not a peace officer under the laws
 of this state but, on the premises of a port facility designated by
 the commissioner of the United States Customs and Border Protection
 [Immigration and Naturalization Service] as a port of entry for
 arrival in the United States by land transportation from the United
 Mexican States into the State of Texas or at a permanent established
 border patrol traffic check point, has the authority to detain a
 person pending transfer without unnecessary delay to a peace
 officer if the agent [inspector, patrolman,] or officer has
 probable cause to believe that the person has engaged in conduct
 that is a violation of Section 49.02, 49.04, 49.07, or 49.08, Penal
 Code, regardless of whether the violation may be disposed of in a
 criminal proceeding or a juvenile justice proceeding.
 SECTION 2. Section 552.1175(a), Government Code, is amended
 to read as follows:
 (a) This section applies only to:
 (1) peace officers as defined by Article 2.12, Code of
 Criminal Procedure;
 (2) county jailers as defined by Section 1701.001,
 Occupations Code;
 (3) current or former employees of the Texas
 Department of Criminal Justice or of the predecessor in function of
 the department or any division of the department;
 (4) commissioned security officers as defined by
 Section 1702.002, Occupations Code;
 (5) employees of a district attorney, criminal
 district attorney, or county or municipal attorney whose
 jurisdiction includes any criminal law or child protective services
 matters; [and]
 (6) officers and employees of a community supervision
 and corrections department established under Chapter 76 who perform
 a duty described by Section 76.004(b);
 (7)  criminal investigators of the United States as
 described by Article 2.122(a), Code of Criminal Procedure; and
 (8)  police officers and inspectors of the United
 States Federal Protective Service.
 SECTION 3. Section 25.025(a), Tax Code, as amended by
 Chapters 594 (H.B. 41), 621 (H.B. 455), and 851 (H.B. 1151), Acts of
 the 80th Legislature, Regular Session, 2007, is reenacted and
 amended to read as follows:
 (a) This section applies only to:
 (1) a current or former peace officer as defined by
 Article 2.12, Code of Criminal Procedure;
 (2) a county jailer as defined by Section 1701.001,
 Occupations Code;
 (3) an employee of the Texas Department of Criminal
 Justice;
 (4) a commissioned security officer as defined by
 Section 1702.002, Occupations Code;
 (5) a victim of family violence as defined by Section
 71.004, Family Code, if as a result of the act of family violence
 against the victim, the actor is convicted of a felony or a Class A
 misdemeanor; [and]
 (6) a federal judge or state judge;
 (7) [(6)] a current or former employee of a district
 attorney, criminal district attorney, or county or municipal
 attorney whose jurisdiction includes any criminal law or child
 protective services matters;
 (8) [(6)] an officer or employee of a community
 supervision and corrections department established under Chapter
 76, Government Code, who performs a duty described by Section
 76.004(b) of that code;
 (9)  a criminal investigator of the United States as
 described by Article 2.122(a), Code of Criminal Procedure; and
 (10)  a police officer or inspector of the United
 States Federal Protective Service.
 SECTION 4. The changes in law made by this Act to Section
 552.1175, Government Code, and Section 25.025, Tax Code, apply only
 to a request for information that is received by a governmental body
 or an officer for public information on or after the effective date
 of this Act. A request for information that was received before the
 effective date of this Act is governed by the law in effect on the
 date the request was received, and the former law is continued in
 effect for that purpose.
 SECTION 5. This Act takes effect September 1, 2009.