Texas 2011 82nd Regular

Texas House Bill HB12 Comm Sub / Bill

                    82R14861 PAM-D
 By: Solomons, Bohac, Harless, et al. H.B. No. 12
 Substitute the following for H.B. No. 12:
 By:  Cook C.S.H.B. No. 12


 A BILL TO BE ENTITLED
 AN ACT
 relating to the enforcement of state and federal laws governing
 immigration by certain governmental entities.
 BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF TEXAS:
 SECTION 1.  Chapter 370, Local Government Code, is amended
 by adding Section 370.0031 to read as follows:
 Sec. 370.0031.  LOCAL GOVERNMENT POLICY REGARDING
 ENFORCEMENT OF STATE AND FEDERAL IMMIGRATION LAWS. (a) This
 section applies to:
 (1)  the governing body of a municipality, county, or
 special district or authority, subject to Subsection (b);
 (2)  an officer, employee, or other body that is part of
 a municipality, county, or special district or authority, including
 a sheriff, municipal police department, municipal attorney, or
 county attorney; and
 (3)  a district attorney or criminal district attorney.
 (b)  This section does not apply to a school district or
 open-enrollment charter school or a junior college district, except
 that this subsection does not exclude the application of this
 section to a commissioned peace officer employed or commissioned by
 a school district or open-enrollment charter school or a junior
 college district.
 (c)  An entity described by Subsection (a) may not adopt a
 rule, order, ordinance, or policy under which the entity prohibits
 the enforcement of the laws of this state or federal law relating to
 immigrants or immigration, including the federal Immigration and
 Nationality Act (8 U.S.C. Section 1101 et seq.).
 (d)  In compliance with Subsection (c), an entity described
 by Subsection (a) may not prohibit a person employed by or otherwise
 under the direction or control of the entity from doing any of the
 following:
 (1)  inquiring into the immigration status of a person
 lawfully detained for the investigation of a criminal offense or
 arrested;
 (2)  with respect to information relating to the
 immigration status, lawful or unlawful, of any person lawfully
 detained for the investigation of a criminal offense or arrested:
 (A)  sending the information to or requesting or
 receiving the information from United States Citizenship and
 Immigration Services or United States Immigration and Customs
 Enforcement, including information regarding an individual's place
 of birth;
 (B)  maintaining the information; or
 (C)  exchanging the information with another
 federal, state, or local governmental entity;
 (3)  assisting or cooperating with a federal
 immigration officer as reasonable and necessary, including
 providing enforcement assistance; or
 (4)  permitting a federal immigration officer to enter
 and conduct enforcement activities at a municipal or county jail to
 enforce federal immigration laws.
 (e)  An entity described by Subsection (a) may not receive
 state grant funds if the entity adopts a rule, order, ordinance, or
 policy under which the entity prohibits the enforcement of the laws
 of this state or federal laws relating to Subsection (c) or, by
 consistent actions, prohibits the enforcement of the laws of this
 state or federal laws relating to Subsection (c). State grant funds
 for the entity shall be denied for the fiscal year following the
 year in which a final judicial determination in an action brought
 under this section is made that the entity has intentionally
 prohibited the enforcement of the laws of this state or federal laws
 relating to Subsection (c).
 (f)  Any citizen residing in the jurisdiction of an entity
 described by Subsection (a) may file a complaint with the attorney
 general if the citizen offers evidence to support an allegation
 that the entity has adopted a rule, order, ordinance, or policy
 under which the entity prohibits the enforcement of the laws of this
 state or federal laws relating to Subsection (c) or that, by
 consistent actions, prohibits the enforcement of the laws of this
 state or federal laws relating to Subsection (c). The citizen must
 include with the complaint the evidence the citizen has that
 supports the complaint.
 (g)  If the attorney general determines that a complaint
 filed under Subsection (f) against an entity described by
 Subsection (a) is valid, the attorney general may file a petition
 for a writ of mandamus or apply for other appropriate equitable
 relief in a district court in Travis County or in a county in which
 the principal office of an entity described by Subsection (a) is
 located to compel the entity that adopts a rule, order, ordinance,
 or policy under which the local entity prohibits the enforcement of
 the laws of this state or federal laws relating to Subsection (c) or
 that, by consistent actions, prohibits the enforcement of the laws
 of this state or federal laws relating to Subsection (c) to comply
 with Subsection (c).  The attorney general may recover reasonable
 expenses incurred in obtaining relief under this subsection,
 including court costs, reasonable attorney's fees, investigative
 costs, witness fees, and deposition costs.
 (h)  An appeal of a suit brought under Subsection (g) is
 governed by the procedures for accelerated appeals in civil cases
 under the Texas Rules of Appellate Procedure. The appellate court
 shall render its final order or judgment with the least possible
 delay.
 SECTION 2.  The heading to Chapter 370, Local Government
 Code, is amended to read as follows:
 CHAPTER 370. MISCELLANEOUS PROVISIONS RELATING TO [MUNICIPAL
 AND COUNTY] HEALTH AND PUBLIC SAFETY APPLYING TO MORE THAN ONE
 TYPE OF LOCAL GOVERNMENT
 SECTION 3.  This Act takes effect immediately if it receives
 a vote of two-thirds of all the members elected to each house, as
 provided by Section 39, Article III, Texas Constitution.  If this
 Act does not receive the vote necessary for immediate effect, this
 Act takes effect September 1, 2011.