Texas 2011 82nd 1st C.S.

Texas Senate Bill SB29 Senate Committee Report / Bill

Filed 02/01/2025

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                    By: Patrick, et al. S.B. No. 29
 (In the Senate - Filed June 2, 2011; June 21, 2011, read
 first time and referred to Committee on Transportation and Homeland
 Security; June 27, 2011, reported adversely, with favorable
 Committee Substitute by the following vote:  Yeas 5, Nays 3;
 June 27, 2011, sent to printer.)
 COMMITTEE SUBSTITUTE FOR S.B. No. 29 By:  Hinojosa


 A BILL TO BE ENTITLED
 AN ACT
 relating to prosecution and punishment for the offense of official
 oppression by the intrusive touching of persons seeking access to
 public buildings and transportation; providing penalties.
 BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF TEXAS:
 SECTION 1.  Section 39.03, Penal Code, is amended by
 amending Subsections (a) and (b) and adding Subsections (c-1),
 (c-2), (c-3), (c-4), and (c-5) to read as follows:
 (a)  A person who is a public servant [acting under color of
 his office or employment] commits an offense if the person:
 (1)  while acting under color of the person's office or
 employment [he]:
 (A) [(1)]  intentionally subjects another person
 to mistreatment or to arrest, detention, search, seizure,
 dispossession, assessment, or lien that the actor [he] knows is
 unlawful;
 (B) [(2)]  intentionally denies or impedes
 another person in the exercise or enjoyment of any right,
 privilege, power, or immunity, knowing the actor's [his] conduct is
 unlawful; or
 (C) [(3)]  intentionally subjects another person
 to sexual harassment; or
 (2)  while acting under color of the person's office or
 employment without reasonable suspicion to believe the other person
 committed an offense:
 (A)  performs a constitutionally unreasonable
 search without effective consent for the purpose of granting access
 to a publicly accessible building or form of transportation; and
 (B)  intentionally, knowingly, or recklessly, and
 in violation of the United States Constitution, touches the anus,
 sexual organ, buttocks, or breast of the other person, including
 touching through clothing.
 (b)  For purposes of this section, a person who is a public
 servant acts under color of the person's [his] office or employment
 if the person [he] acts or purports to act in an official capacity
 or takes advantage of such actual or purported capacity.
 (c-1)  For purposes of Subsection (a)(2), "public servant"
 includes:
 (1)  an officer, employee, or agent of:
 (A)  the United States;
 (B)  a branch, department, or agency of the United
 States; or
 (C)  another person acting under contract with a
 branch, department, or agency of the United States for the purpose
 of providing a security or law enforcement service; and
 (2)  any other person acting under color of federal
 law.
 (c-2)  For a person described by Subsection (c-1)(1) or (2),
 it is a defense to prosecution for an offense under Subsection
 (a)(2) that the actor performed the search pursuant to and
 consistent with the United States Constitution.
 (c-3)  For purposes of Subsection (a)(2), and
 notwithstanding Sections 1.07(a)(11) and (19), consent is
 effective only if, immediately before any search:
 (1)  the actor verbally describes:
 (A)  the area of the other person to be searched;
 and
 (B)  the method to be used in the search; and
 (2)  the actor receives express consent for the search
 only from:
 (A)  the other person; or
 (B)  the parent or guardian of the other person.
 (c-4)  It is a defense to prosecution for a person described
 by Subsection (c-1)(1) or (2) that a reasonable person in the
 defendant's position would have believed the defendant's conduct to
 be lawful.
 (c-5)  This section shall be construed, as a matter of state
 law, to be enforceable up to but no further than the maximum
 possible extent consistent with federal constitutional
 requirements, even if that construction is not readily apparent, as
 such constructions are authorized only to the extent necessary to
 save the section from judicial invalidation.  If any court
 determines that a provision of this section is unconstitutionally
 vague, the court shall interpret the provision, as a matter of state
 law, to avoid the vagueness issue and shall enforce the provision to
 the maximum possible extent.
 SECTION 2.  (a)  This section applies only to a prosecution
 of an offense under Subdivision (2), Subsection (a), Section 39.03,
 Penal Code, as added by this Act, in which the defendant was, at the
 time of the alleged offense, acting under the color of federal law.
 (b)  In a prosecution described by Subsection (a) of this
 section, if the government of the United States, the defendant, or
 the defendant's employer challenges the validity of Subdivision
 (2), Subsection (a), Section 39.03, Penal Code, as added by this
 Act, on grounds of unconstitutionality, preemption, or sovereign
 immunity, the attorney general of this state, with the consent of
 the appropriate local county or district attorney, shall take any
 actions necessary on behalf of the state to defend the validity of
 the statute. The attorney general may make any legal arguments the
 attorney general considers appropriate, including that this Act
 constitutes a valid exercise of:
 (1)  the state's police powers;
 (2)  the liberty interests of the people that are
 secured by the United States Constitution;
 (3)  the powers reserved to the states by the Tenth
 Amendment to the United States Constitution; or
 (4)  the rights and protections secured by the Texas
 Constitution.
 SECTION 3.  This Act takes effect on the 91st day after the
 last day of the legislative session.
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