83R7006 SCL-D By: Davis S.B. No. 1418 A BILL TO BE ENTITLED AN ACT relating to the authority of the Department of Public Safety and certain local law enforcement agencies to establish a temporary checkpoint on a highway or street to determine whether persons are driving while intoxicated. BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF TEXAS: SECTION 1. Title 1, Code of Criminal Procedure, is amended by adding Chapter 65 to read as follows: CHAPTER 65. SOBRIETY CHECKPOINTS Art. 65.01. DEFINITIONS. In this chapter: (1) "Department" means the Department of Public Safety. (2) "Highway or street" and "limited-access or controlled-access highway" have the meanings assigned by Section 541.302, Transportation Code. (3) "Law enforcement agency" means: (A) the department; (B) the sheriff's department of a county with a population of 250,000 or more; or (C) the police department of a municipality with a population of 350,000 or more. (4) "Sobriety checkpoint" means a checkpoint authorized under Article 65.02. Art. 65.02. AUTHORIZATION FOR OPERATION OF SOBRIETY CHECKPOINTS. (a) Except as otherwise provided by Subsections (b) and (c), a law enforcement agency may operate on a highway or street a temporary sobriety checkpoint as provided by this chapter to determine whether motor vehicle operators are intoxicated and in violation of Section 49.04 or 49.045, Penal Code. (b) A law enforcement agency may not operate a sobriety checkpoint on: (1) a limited-access or controlled-access highway; (2) an overpass; (3) a bridge or causeway; or (4) the single ingress to or egress from a designated area. (c) The department may not operate a sobriety checkpoint in a county with a population of less than 250,000. Art. 65.03. LAW ENFORCEMENT AGENCY COORDINATION. Each law enforcement agency shall coordinate efforts with other law enforcement agencies as appropriate to implement this chapter. Art. 65.04. APPROVAL OF AND PROCEDURES FOR OPERATION OF SOBRIETY CHECKPOINTS. (a) Before a law enforcement agency begins operating a sobriety checkpoint, the procedures to be used in the operation of the checkpoint must be approved by: (1) a captain for the Texas Highway Patrol for a checkpoint operated by the department; (2) the elected sheriff of a county for a checkpoint operated by the sheriff's department of the county; or (3) the police chief of a municipality for a checkpoint operated by the police department of the municipality. (b) The law enforcement agency must record in writing and publish on an appropriate publicly accessible Internet website: (1) the criteria for and procedures used in selecting each location of a sobriety checkpoint; and (2) the procedures to be used in the operation of each sobriety checkpoint, including procedures for selecting motor vehicles to be stopped. (c) The procedures for the operation of a sobriety checkpoint must ensure that the selection of motor vehicles to be stopped is reasonably predictable and nonarbitrary. (d) The criteria for selecting the location for a sobriety checkpoint must include the number of traffic accidents in the vicinity of the location in which the use of alcohol was a factor and that occurred in the preceding 12 months and the number of arrests for intoxication-related offenses in that vicinity in the preceding 12 months. The criteria for selecting the location of a sobriety checkpoint may not include, and the selection of the location of a sobriety checkpoint must be made without regard to, the ethnic or socioeconomic characteristics of the area in which the checkpoint is located. (e) The law enforcement agency, in establishing the location, time, and design of a sobriety checkpoint, shall consider the safety of the public entering the checkpoint and the peace officers operating the checkpoint. The law enforcement agency shall make reasonable efforts to place signs or other devices to advise an operator of an oncoming motor vehicle of the existence and purpose of the sobriety checkpoint, to demarcate the checkpoint with flares, flags, or traffic cones, and to otherwise illuminate the checkpoint as necessary. The design of a sobriety checkpoint may require each motor vehicle passing through the checkpoint to be diverted to a location adjacent to the highway or street to ensure safety. (f) The peace officer who makes the initial traffic directive to or other communication with the operator of a motor vehicle at the sobriety checkpoint must be wearing a uniform of the law enforcement agency that is distinguishable from civilian dress. (g) The law enforcement agency shall establish procedures governing the encounters between motor vehicle operators and the peace officers to ensure that: (1) a video and audio recording is made of each encounter; (2) intrusion on the operator is minimized; and (3) any inquiry by the peace officer is reasonably related to determining whether the operator is intoxicated and in violation of Section 49.04 or 49.045, Penal Code. (h) Notwithstanding Section 521.025 or 601.053, Transportation Code, or Section 411.205, Government Code, a peace officer may not request a motor vehicle operator at the sobriety checkpoint to display the operator's driver's license or license to carry a concealed handgun or to furnish evidence of financial responsibility unless the officer has reasonable suspicion or probable cause to believe that the operator has committed or is committing an offense. A peace officer may not direct a motor vehicle operator to leave the vehicle or move the vehicle off the highway or street or sobriety checkpoint diversion route unless the officer has reasonable suspicion or probable cause to believe that the operator has committed or is committing an offense. (i) A peace officer at the sobriety checkpoint may not require a motor vehicle operator to perform a sobriety test unless the officer has reasonable suspicion or probable cause to believe that the operator is in violation of Section 49.04 or 49.045, Penal Code. A peace officer who requests or requires an operator to provide a specimen of breath or blood must comply with Chapter 724, Transportation Code. (j) Unless a peace officer has reasonable suspicion or probable cause to detain a motor vehicle operator for a criminal offense, the time during which an officer makes an inquiry of an operator should not exceed three minutes, and the total time during which the operator must wait to pass through the checkpoint should not exceed 10 minutes. The law enforcement agency shall make reasonable efforts to reduce these periods to not more than one and five minutes, respectively. (k) Before beginning the operation of a sobriety checkpoint, the law enforcement agency shall publicize through the use of the media the date and time for the operation of that checkpoint but is not required to disclose the location of the checkpoint. (l) A law enforcement agency may not operate a sobriety checkpoint at one location for more than four hours and may not operate a checkpoint at the same location more than once in a 12-month period. For the purposes of this subsection, sobriety checkpoints located within one mile of each other are considered to be at the same location. (m) For each sobriety checkpoint operated under this chapter, the law enforcement agency operating the checkpoint shall maintain: (1) until at least the fifth anniversary of the date on which the agency concludes the operation of the checkpoint, a record of the operation of the checkpoint that contains: (A) the date, time, location, and duration of the checkpoint; (B) the procedures used in selecting the location for the checkpoint; (C) the number and characteristics of the motor vehicles stopped at the checkpoint; (D) the number and nature of any arrests made or citations issued at the checkpoint; and (E) the identity of each peace officer operating the checkpoint; and (2) until at least the second anniversary of the date on which the agency concludes the operation of the checkpoint, any video or audio recording made under Subsection (g)(1) of an encounter between a motor vehicle operator and a peace officer at the checkpoint. Art. 65.05. PUBLIC NOTICE. (a) Not later than the third day before the date the operation of a sobriety checkpoint is scheduled to begin, the captain, sheriff, or police chief who approved the checkpoint, as applicable, shall provide public notice of the date, time, location, and duration of the checkpoint by: (1) posting notice on the law enforcement agency's Internet website; or (2) if the law enforcement agency does not have an Internet website or is otherwise unable to comply with Subdivision (1): (A) requesting the secretary of state to post the notice on the secretary of state's Internet website, if the department will operate the checkpoint; (B) posting the notice on a bulletin board in the county courthouse at a location convenient and clearly visible to the public, if the sheriff's department of the county will operate the checkpoint; or (C) posting the notice on a bulletin board in the city hall at a location convenient and clearly visible to the public, if the police department of the municipality will operate the checkpoint. (b) On receipt of a request by the department under Subsection (a)(2)(A), the secretary of state shall post notice on the secretary of state's Internet website of the date, time, location, and duration of the sobriety checkpoint with respect to which the request is made. (c) The law enforcement agency or secretary of state shall post a notice required by this article continuously for the three-day period preceding the operation of the sobriety checkpoint. Art. 65.06. REPORT ON EFFECTIVENESS OF SOBRIETY CHECKPOINTS. (a) Not later than January 15 of each calendar year, each law enforcement agency that operated a sobriety checkpoint during the preceding calendar year shall submit a report on the operation of the checkpoint to the traffic safety section of the traffic operations division of the Texas Department of Transportation. (b) The traffic operations division is entitled to inspect any information in the possession of the law enforcement agency that relates to the operation of a sobriety checkpoint by the agency. (c) Not later than February 1, 2019, the traffic operations division shall submit a report on the effectiveness of sobriety checkpoints operated under this chapter to the governor, the lieutenant governor, and the speaker of the house of representatives. Art. 65.07. EXPIRATION. This chapter expires August 31, 2019. SECTION 2. A law enforcement agency authorized to operate a sobriety checkpoint under Chapter 65, Code of Criminal Procedure, as added by this Act, shall submit the first report required by Article 65.06, Code of Criminal Procedure, as added by this Act, not later than January 15, 2014. 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, 2013.