Texas 2011 82nd Regular

Texas House Bill HB913 Introduced / Bill

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                    82R4673 JSC-D
 By: Dutton H.B. No. 913


 A BILL TO BE ENTITLED
 AN ACT
 relating to the automatic expunction of criminal records.
 BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF TEXAS:
 SECTION 1.  Article 55.01(a), Code of Criminal Procedure, is
 amended to read as follows:
 (a)  A person who has been placed under a custodial or
 noncustodial arrest for commission of either a felony or
 misdemeanor is entitled to have all records and files relating to
 the arrest expunged if:
 (1)  the person is tried for the offense for which the
 person was arrested and is:
 (A)  acquitted by the trial court, except as
 provided by Subsection (c) [of this section]; or
 (B)  convicted and subsequently pardoned; or
 (2)  either [each] of the following conditions exists
 [exist]:
 (A)  an indictment, complaint, or information
 charging the person with commission of an offense [a felony] has not
 been presented against the person for an offense arising out of the
 transaction for which the person was arrested before the second
 anniversary of the date of the arrest; or
 (B)  [,] if an indictment, complaint, or
 information charging the person with commission of an offense [a
 felony] was presented, the indictment or information has been
 dismissed or quashed[, and:
 [(i)     the limitations period expired before
 the date on which a petition for expunction was filed under Article
 55.02; or
 [(ii)     the court finds that the indictment
 or information was dismissed or quashed because the person
 completed a pretrial intervention program authorized under Section
 76.011, Government Code, or because the presentment had been made
 because of mistake, false information, or other similar reason
 indicating absence of probable cause at the time of the dismissal to
 believe the person committed the offense or because it was void;
 [(B)     the person has been released and the charge,
 if any, has not resulted in a final conviction and is no longer
 pending and there was no court ordered community supervision under
 Article 42.12 for any offense other than a Class C misdemeanor; and
 [(C)     the person has not been convicted of a
 felony in the five years preceding the date of the arrest].
 SECTION 2.  Section 1, Article 55.02, Code of Criminal
 Procedure, is amended to read as follows:
 Sec. 1.  (a)  The [At the request of the defendant and after
 notice to the state, the] trial court [presiding over the case in
 which the defendant was acquitted, if the trial court is a district
 court, or a district court in the county in which the trial court is
 located] shall enter an order of expunction for a person entitled to
 expunction because:
 (1)  the person was acquitted;
 (2)  the person was pardoned; or
 (3)  the offense was dismissed [under Article
 55.01(a)(1)(A) not later than the 30th day after the date of the
 acquittal. Upon acquittal, the trial court shall advise the
 defendant of the right to expunction. The defendant shall provide
 to the district court all of the information required in a petition
 for expunction under Section 2(b). The attorney for the defendant
 in the case in which the defendant was acquitted, if the defendant
 was represented by counsel, or the attorney for the state, if the
 defendant was not represented by counsel, shall prepare the order
 for the court's signature].
 (b)  The attorney representing the state whose office would
 have prosecuted the offense shall bring a motion for expunction for
 a person who was arrested but against whom an indictment,
 complaint, or information is not filed before the second
 anniversary of the date of arrest.
 (c)  The court shall enter an order of expunction under this
 section not later than the 30th day after the date of acquittal,
 pardon, dismissal, or filing of the motion by the attorney
 representing the state. The court shall include in the order a
 listing of each official, agency, or other entity of this state or
 political subdivision of this state and each private entity that
 there is reason to believe has any record or file that is subject to
 the order.
 SECTION 3.  Section 2a, Article 55.02, Code of Criminal
 Procedure, is amended by adding Subsection (e) to read as follows:
 (e)  The director of the Department of Public Safety or the
 director's authorized representative may file on behalf of a person
 under this section the application described by Subsection (a).
 The application must be verified and must include all of the
 information otherwise required of an application under this
 section, including the information described by Subsections (c)(1)
 and (3).  The director of the Department of Public Safety or the
 director's authorized representative shall forward a copy of the
 application to the district court for the county in which the person
 resides and shall request the court to enter an order directing
 expunction based on an entitlement to expunction under Article
 55.01(d).  On receipt of a request under this subsection, the court
 shall, without holding a hearing on the matter, enter a final order
 directing expunction.
 SECTION 4.  Sections 3(a), (c), and (d), Article 55.02, Code
 of Criminal Procedure, are amended to read as follows:
 (a)  In an order of expunction issued under this article, the
 court shall require any state agency that sent information
 concerning the arrest to a central federal depository to request
 the depository to return all records and files subject to the order
 of expunction. A [The] person who is the subject of an [the]
 expunction order under Section 2a, or an agency protesting the
 expunction, may appeal the court's decision in the same manner as in
 other civil cases.
 (c)  When the order of expunction is final, the clerk of the
 court shall send a certified copy of the order to the Crime Records
 Service of the Department of Public Safety and to each official or
 agency or other governmental entity of this state or of any
 political subdivision of this state named in [designated by the
 person who is the subject of] the order.  The certified copy of the
 order must be sent by secure electronic mail, electronic
 transmission, or facsimile transmission or otherwise by certified
 mail, return receipt requested.  In sending the order to a
 governmental entity named in the order [designated by the person],
 the clerk may elect to substitute hand delivery for certified mail
 under this subsection, but the clerk must receive a receipt for that
 hand-delivered order.
 (d)  Any returned receipts received by the clerk from
 [notices of the hearing and] copies of the order shall be maintained
 in the file on the proceedings under this chapter.
 SECTION 5.  Section 4, Article 55.02, Code of Criminal
 Procedure, is amended to read as follows:
 Sec. 4.  (a)  If the state establishes that the person who is
 the subject of an expunction order is still subject to conviction
 for an offense arising out of the transaction for which the person
 was arrested because the statute of limitations has not run and
 there is reasonable cause to believe that the state may proceed
 against the person for the offense, the court may provide in its
 order that the law enforcement agency and the prosecuting attorney
 responsible for investigating the offense may retain any records
 and files that are necessary to the investigation.
 (b)  In the case of a person who is the subject of an
 expunction order on the basis of an acquittal, the court may provide
 in the expunction order that the law enforcement agency and the
 prosecuting attorney retain records and files if:
 (1)  the records and files are necessary to conduct a
 subsequent investigation and prosecution of a person other than the
 person who is the subject of the expunction order; or
 (2)  the state establishes that the records and files
 are necessary for use in:
 (A)  another criminal case, including a
 prosecution, motion to adjudicate or revoke community supervision,
 parole revocation hearing, mandatory supervision revocation
 hearing, punishment hearing, or bond hearing; or
 (B)  a civil case, including a civil suit or suit
 for possession of or access to a child.
 (c) [(b)]  Unless the person who is the subject of the
 expunction order is again arrested for or charged with an offense
 arising out of the transaction for which the person was arrested or
 unless the court provides for the retention of records and files
 under Subsection (b), [(a) of this section, the provisions of]
 Articles 55.03 and 55.04 [of this code] apply to files and records
 retained under this section.
 SECTION 6.  Section 5(c), Article 55.02, Code of Criminal
 Procedure, is amended to read as follows:
 (c)  Except in the case of a person who is the subject of an
 expunction order based on an entitlement under Article 55.01(d) and
 except as provided by Subsection (g), if an order of expunction is
 issued under this article, the court records concerning expunction
 proceedings are not open for inspection by anyone except the person
 who is the subject of the order unless the order permits retention
 of a record under Section 4(a) [4 of this article] and the person is
 again arrested for or charged with an offense arising out of the
 transaction for which the person was arrested or unless the court
 provides for the retention of records and files under Section 4(b)
 [4(a) of this article]. The clerk of the court issuing the order
 shall obliterate all public references to the proceeding and
 maintain the files or other records in an area not open to
 inspection.
 SECTION 7.  Section 411.151(b), Government Code, is amended
 to read as follows:
 (b)  If a [A person may petition for the expunction of a DNA
 record under the procedures established under Article 55.02, Code
 of Criminal Procedure, if the] person is entitled under Article
 55.01, Code of Criminal Procedure, to the expunction of records
 relating to the offense to which a [the] DNA record is related, the
 trial court shall enter an order of expunction of the DNA record
 under Section 1(a), Article 55.02 [under Article 55.01], Code of
 Criminal Procedure, or the attorney representing the state whose
 office would have prosecuted the offense shall bring a motion for
 expunction of the DNA record under Section 1(b) of that article, as
 applicable.
 SECTION 8.  The following provisions of the Code of Criminal
 Procedure are repealed:
 (1)  Subsection (a-1), Article 55.01;
 (2)  Section 2, Article 55.02;
 (3)  Article 55.05; and
 (4)  Article 102.006.
 SECTION 9.  (a) This Act applies only to the expunction of
 arrest records related to:
 (1)  a criminal offense for which an acquittal occurred
 on or after the effective date of this Act;
 (2)  a charge for an offense that was dismissed on or
 after the effective date of this Act; or
 (3)  an arrest made on or after the effective date of
 this Act.
 (b)  Expunction for an acquittal, dismissal, or arrest that
 occurred before the effective date of this Act is governed by the
 law in effect at that time, and the former law is continued in
 effect for that purpose.
 SECTION 10.  This Act takes effect September 1, 2011.