Texas 2011 82nd Regular

Texas Senate Bill SB1843 Introduced / Bill

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                    By: Carona S.B. No. 1843


 A BILL TO BE ENTITLED
 AN ACT
 relating to providing resources designed to combat crimes against
 children, especially crimes regarding child exploitation and child
 pornography trafficking involving the Internet.
 BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF TEXAS:
 SECTION 1.  Subchapter A, Chapter 102, Code of Criminal
 Procedure, is amended by adding Article 102.023 to read as follows:
 Art. 102.023.  COSTS RELATED TO CERTAIN INTERNET CRIMES
 AGAINST CHILDREN. (a) In addition to other costs on conviction
 imposed by this chapter, a person shall pay a cost of $10 on
 conviction of an offense for which the defendant on conviction is
 required to register as a sex offender under Chapter 62.
 (b)  The clerk of the court shall transmit the costs
 collected under this section to the comptroller for deposit in the
 state treasury to the credit of a special fund known as the Internet
 Crimes Against Children Fund. The fund consists of all costs
 collected under this section, money appropriated directly to the
 fund, and any other grants or gifts made to the fund. Money in the
 fund many be appropriated only to support the administration of the
 activities of the three existing Internet Crimes Against Children
 (ICAC) task forces operating under the Attorney General and other
 various law enforcement entities. The money from the fund shall be
 disbursed so that approximately one-third of the fund goes to each
 of the existing ICAC's.
 SECTION 2.  Chapter 402, Government Code, is amended by
 adding Section 402.02811 to read as follows:
 Sec. 402.02811.  ADMINISTRATIVE SUBPOENA FOR INVESTIGATION
 OF CERTAIN OFFENSES INVOLVING EXPLOITATION OF MINOR. (a) The
 Attorney General shall assist felony prosecutors in this state in
 obtaining administrative subpoenas for the purposes of
 investigating and prosecuting crimes involving the exploitation of
 a minor.
 (b)  In any investigation relating to offenses involving the
 sexual exploitation of a minor and on reasonable cause to believe
 that an Internet service account has been used in the exploitation
 or attempted exploitation of a minor, the attorney general or
 district attorney may issue in writing and cause to be served a
 subpoena requiring the production and testimony described by
 Subsection (c).
 (c)  Except as provided by Subsection (d), a subpoena issued
 under this section is authorized to require the production of any
 records or other documentation relevant to the investigation
 including:
 (1)  name;
 (2)  address;
 (3)  local and long distance telephone connection
 records, or records of session times and durations;
 (4)  length of service, including start date, and
 types of service utilized;
 (5)  telephone or instrument number or other
 subscriber number of identity, including any temporarily assigned
 network address; and
 (6)  means and source of payment for such service,
 including any credit card or bank account number.
 (d)  The provider of electronic communication service or
 remote computing service may not disclose the following pursuant to
 a subpoena but shall do so pursuant to a warrant issued by a court of
 competent jurisdiction:
 (1)  in-transit electronic communications;
 (2)  account memberships related to internet groups,
 newsgroups, mailing lists or specific areas of interest;
 (3)  account passwords; and
 (4)  account content to include:
 (A)  electronic mail in any form;
 (B)  address books, contact lists, or buddy
 lists;
 (C)  financial records;
 (D)  Internet proxy content or Internet history;
 and
 (E)  files or other digital documents stored
 within the account or pursuant to use of the account.
 (e)  At any time before the return date specified on the
 subpoena, the person summoned may, in the appropriate court of the
 county in which the person resides or does business, petition for an
 order modifying or quashing the subpoena, or a prohibition of
 disclosure by a court.
 (f)  A subpoena under this section must describe the objects
 required to be produced and must prescribe a return date within a
 reasonable period within which the objects can be assembled and
 made available.
 (g)  If no case or proceeding arises from the production of
 records or other documentation pursuant to this section within a
 reasonable time after those records or documentation are produced,
 the prosecuting attorney shall either destroy the records and
 documentation or return them to the person who produced them.
 (h)  A subpoena issued under this section may be served by
 any person who is authorized to serve process under the Texas Rules
 of Civil Procedure and the subpoena shall be served in accordance
 with those rules.
 (i)  Any information, records, or data reported or obtained
 under a subpoena issued pursuant to this section is confidential
 and may not be further disclosed unless in connection with a
 criminal case related to the subpoenaed materials.
 SECTIONāσ.  This Act takes effect September 1, 2011.