Texas 2015 - 84th Regular

Texas House Bill HB1660 Latest Draft

Bill / Introduced Version Filed 02/19/2015

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                            84R8993 JSC-F
 By: Moody H.B. No. 1660


 A BILL TO BE ENTITLED
 AN ACT
 relating to certain protective orders and magistrate's orders for
 emergency protection.
 BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF TEXAS:
 SECTION 1.  Article 17.292, Code of Criminal Procedure, is
 amended by amending Subsections (h) and (k) and adding Subsections
 (h-1) and (k-1) to read as follows:
 (h)  As soon as possible but not later than the next business
 day after the date the [The] magistrate issues [issuing] an order
 for emergency protection under this article, the magistrate shall
 send a copy of the order to the chief of police in the municipality
 where the member of the family or household or individual protected
 by the order resides, if the person resides in a municipality, or to
 the sheriff of the county where the person resides, if the person
 does not reside in a municipality. The magistrate may send the copy
 of the order and any related information electronically or in any
 other manner that can be accessed by the chief of police or sheriff.
 If the victim of the offense is not present when the order is
 issued, the magistrate issuing the order shall order an appropriate
 peace officer to make a good faith effort to notify, within 24
 hours, the victim that the order has been issued by calling the
 victim's residence and place of employment. The clerk of the court
 shall send a copy of the order to the victim at the victim's last
 known address as soon as possible but not later than the next
 business day after the date the order is issued.
 (h-1)  A magistrate or clerk of the court may delay sending
 the order under Subsection (h) only if the magistrate or clerk lacks
 information necessary to ensure service and enforcement.
 (k)  To ensure that an officer responding to a call is aware
 of the existence and terms of an order for emergency protection
 issued under this article, not later than the next business day
 after the date the law enforcement agency with jurisdiction over
 the location of the victim's current or last known address receives
 a copy of the order, the law enforcement agency shall enter the
 information required under Section 411.042(b)(6), Government Code,
 into the statewide law enforcement information system maintained by
 the Department of Public Safety [each municipal police department
 and sheriff shall establish a procedure within the department or
 office to provide adequate information or access to information for
 peace officers of the names of persons protected by an order for
 emergency protection issued under this article and of persons to
 whom the order is directed. The police department or sheriff may
 enter an order for emergency protection issued under this article
 in the department's or office's record of outstanding warrants as
 notice that the order has been issued and is in effect].
 (k-1)  A law enforcement agency may delay entering the
 information required under Subsection (k) only if the agency lacks
 information necessary to ensure service and enforcement.
 SECTION 2.  Article 17.292(m), Code of Criminal Procedure,
 is amended by adding Subdivision (3) to read as follows:
 (3)  "Business day" means a day other than a Saturday,
 Sunday, or state or national holiday.
 SECTION 3.  Section 85.042, Family Code, is amended by
 amending Subsections (a) and (d) and adding Subsections (f) and (g)
 to read as follows:
 (a)  Not later than the next business day after the date [The
 clerk of] the court issues [issuing] an original or modified
 protective order under this subtitle, the clerk of the court shall
 send a copy of the order, along with the information provided by the
 applicant or the applicant's attorney that is required under
 Section 411.042(b)(6), Government Code, to:
 (1)  the chief of police of the municipality in which
 the person protected by the order resides, if the person resides in
 a municipality;
 (2)  the appropriate constable and the sheriff of the
 county in which the person resides, if the person does not reside in
 a municipality; and
 (3)  the Title IV-D agency, if the application for the
 protective order indicates that the applicant is receiving services
 from the Title IV-D agency.
 (d)  The applicant or the applicant's attorney shall provide
 to the clerk of the court:
 (1)  the name and address of each law enforcement
 agency, child-care facility, school, and other individual or entity
 to which the clerk is required to send [mail] a copy of the order
 under this section; and
 (2)  any other information required under Section
 411.042(b)(6), Government Code.
 (f)  The clerk of the court may transmit the order and any
 related information electronically or in another manner that can be
 accessed by the recipient.
 (g)  In this section, "business day" means a day other than a
 Saturday, Sunday, or state or national holiday.
 SECTION 4.  Section 86.0011, Family Code, is amended to read
 as follows:
 Sec. 86.0011.  DUTY TO ENTER INFORMATION INTO STATEWIDE LAW
 ENFORCEMENT INFORMATION SYSTEM. On receipt of an original or
 modified protective order from the clerk of the issuing court, a law
 enforcement agency shall immediately, but not later than the third
 [10th] day after the date the order is received, enter the
 information required by Section 411.042(b)(6), Government Code,
 into the statewide law enforcement information system maintained by
 the Department of Public Safety.
 SECTION 5.  Section 411.042(b), Government Code, is amended
 to read as follows:
 (b)  The bureau of identification and records shall:
 (1)  procure and file for record photographs, pictures,
 descriptions, fingerprints, measurements, and other pertinent
 information of all persons arrested for or charged with a criminal
 offense or convicted of a criminal offense, regardless of whether
 the conviction is probated;
 (2)  collect information concerning the number and
 nature of offenses reported or known to have been committed in the
 state and the legal steps taken in connection with the offenses, and
 other information useful in the study of crime and the
 administration of justice, including information that enables the
 bureau to create a statistical breakdown of:
 (A)  offenses in which family violence was
 involved;
 (B)  offenses under Sections 22.011 and 22.021,
 Penal Code; and
 (C)  offenses under Sections 20A.02 and 43.05,
 Penal Code;
 (3)  make ballistic tests of bullets and firearms and
 chemical analyses of bloodstains, cloth, materials, and other
 substances for law enforcement officers of the state;
 (4)  cooperate with identification and crime records
 bureaus in other states and the United States Department of
 Justice;
 (5)  maintain a list of all previous background checks
 for applicants for any position regulated under Chapter 1702,
 Occupations Code, who have undergone a criminal history background
 check under Section 411.119, if the check indicates a Class B
 misdemeanor or equivalent offense or a greater offense;
 (6)  collect information concerning the number and
 nature of protective orders and magistrate's orders of emergency
 protection and all other pertinent information about all persons on
 active [protective] orders, including pertinent information about
 persons subject to conditions of bond imposed for the protection of
 the victim in any family violence, sexual assault or abuse, or
 stalking case.  Information in the law enforcement information
 system relating to an active [protective] order shall include:
 (A)  the name, sex, race, date of birth, personal
 descriptors, address, and county of residence of the person to whom
 the order is directed;
 (B)  any known identifying number of the person to
 whom the order is directed, including the person's social security
 number or driver's license number;
 (C)  the name and county of residence of the
 person protected by the order;
 (D)  the residence address and place of employment
 or business of the person protected by the order, unless that
 information is excluded from the order under Section 85.007, Family
 Code, or Article 17.292(e), Code of Criminal Procedure;
 (E)  the child-care facility or school where a
 child protected by the order normally resides or which the child
 normally attends, unless that information is excluded from the
 order under Section 85.007, Family Code;
 (F)  the relationship or former relationship
 between the person who is protected by the order and the person to
 whom the order is directed;
 (G)  the conditions of bond imposed on the person
 to whom the order is directed, if any, for the protection of a
 victim in any family violence, sexual assault or abuse, or stalking
 case; [and]
 (H)  the minimum distance the person subject to
 the order is required to maintain from the protected places or
 persons; and
 (I)  the date the order expires;
 (7)  grant access to criminal history record
 information in the manner authorized under Subchapter F;
 (8)  collect and disseminate information regarding
 offenders with mental impairments in compliance with Chapter 614,
 Health and Safety Code; and
 (9)  record data and maintain a state database for a
 computerized criminal history record system and computerized
 juvenile justice information system that serves:
 (A)  as the record creation point for criminal
 history record information and juvenile justice information
 maintained by the state; and
 (B)  as the control terminal for the entry of
 records, in accordance with federal law and regulations, federal
 executive orders, and federal policy, into the federal database
 maintained by the Federal Bureau of Investigation.
 SECTION 6.  The changes in law made by this Act apply to a
 protective order or magistrate's order of emergency protection
 issued on or after the effective date of this Act, regardless of
 whether the conduct on which the order is based occurred before, on,
 or after that date.
 SECTION 7.  This Act takes effect September 1, 2015.