Texas 2015 84th Regular

Texas Senate Bill SB725 Senate Committee Report / Bill

Filed 02/02/2025

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                    By: Perry S.B. No. 725
 (In the Senate - Filed February 24, 2015; March 2, 2015,
 read first time and referred to Committee on Criminal Justice;
 April 8, 2015, reported adversely, with favorable Committee
 Substitute by the following vote:  Yeas 7, Nays 0; April 8, 2015,
 sent to printer.)
Click here to see the committee vote
 COMMITTEE SUBSTITUTE FOR S.B. No. 725 By:  Perry


 A BILL TO BE ENTITLED
 AN ACT
 relating to the creation of DNA records for the DNA database system.
 BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF TEXAS:
 SECTION 1.  Articles 102.020(a) and (h-1), Code of Criminal
 Procedure, are amended to read as follows:
 (a)  A person shall pay as a cost of court:
 (1)  $250 on conviction of an offense listed in Section
 411.1471(a)(1), Government Code;
 (2)  $50 on conviction of an offense described by
 [listed in] Section 411.1471(a)(3), Government Code, other than an
 offense described by Subdivision (1) of this subsection [of that
 code]; or
 (3)  $34 on placement of the person on:
 (A)  community supervision, including deferred
 adjudication community supervision, if the person is required to
 submit a DNA sample under Section 11(j), Article 42.12; or
 (B)  deferred adjudication community supervision
 for an offense described by Section 411.1471(a)(4), Government
 Code.
 (h-1)  The clerk of the court shall transfer to the
 comptroller any funds received under Subsection (a)(2) or (3)
 [(a)(3)].  The comptroller shall credit the funds to the Department
 of Public Safety to help defray the cost of collecting or analyzing
 [any analyses performed on] DNA samples provided by defendants who
 are required to pay a court cost under this article.
 SECTION 2.  Section 102.021, Government Code, is amended to
 read as follows:
 Sec. 102.021.  COURT COSTS ON CONVICTION:  CODE OF CRIMINAL
 PROCEDURE.  A person convicted of an offense shall pay the following
 under the Code of Criminal Procedure, in addition to all other
 costs:
 (1)  court cost on conviction of any offense, other
 than a conviction of an offense relating to a pedestrian or the
 parking of a motor vehicle (Art. 102.0045, Code of Criminal
 Procedure)$4;
 (2)  a fee for services of prosecutor (Art. 102.008,
 Code of Criminal Procedure)$25;
 (3)  fees for services of peace officer:
 (A)  issuing a written notice to appear in court
 for certain violations (Art. 102.011, Code of Criminal
 Procedure)$5;
 (B)  executing or processing an issued arrest
 warrant, capias, or capias pro fine (Art. 102.011, Code of Criminal
 Procedure)$50;
 (C)  summoning a witness (Art. 102.011, Code of
 Criminal Procedure)$5;
 (D)  serving a writ not otherwise listed (Art.
 102.011, Code of Criminal Procedure)$35;
 (E)  taking and approving a bond and, if
 necessary, returning the bond to courthouse (Art. 102.011, Code of
 Criminal Procedure)$10;
 (F)  commitment or release (Art. 102.011, Code of
 Criminal Procedure)$5;
 (G)  summoning a jury (Art. 102.011, Code of
 Criminal Procedure)$5;
 (H)  attendance of a prisoner in habeas corpus
 case if prisoner has been remanded to custody or held to bail (Art.
 102.011, Code of Criminal Procedure)$8 each day;
 (I)  mileage for certain services performed (Art.
 102.011, Code of Criminal Procedure)$0.29 per mile; and
 (J)  services of a sheriff or constable who serves
 process and attends examining trial in certain cases (Art. 102.011,
 Code of Criminal Procedure)not to exceed $5;
 (4)  services of a peace officer in conveying a witness
 outside the county (Art. 102.011, Code of Criminal Procedure) . . .
 $10 per day or part of a day, plus actual necessary travel expenses;
 (5)  overtime of peace officer for time spent
 testifying in the trial or traveling to or from testifying in the
 trial (Art. 102.011, Code of Criminal Procedure) actual cost;
 (6)  court costs on an offense relating to rules of the
 road, when offense occurs within a school crossing zone (Art.
 102.014, Code of Criminal Procedure)$25;
 (7)  court costs on an offense of passing a school bus
 (Art. 102.014, Code of Criminal Procedure)$25;
 (8)  court costs on an offense of truancy or
 contributing to truancy (Art. 102.014, Code of Criminal
 Procedure)$20;
 (9)  cost for visual recording of intoxication arrest
 before conviction (Art. 102.018, Code of Criminal Procedure)$15;
 (10)  cost of certain evaluations (Art. 102.018, Code
 of Criminal Procedure)actual cost;
 (11)  additional costs attendant to certain
 intoxication convictions under Chapter 49, Penal Code, for
 emergency medical services, trauma facilities, and trauma care
 systems (Art. 102.0185, Code of Criminal Procedure) $100;
 (12)  additional costs attendant to certain child
 sexual  assault and related convictions, for child abuse
 prevention programs (Art. 102.0186, Code of Criminal
 Procedure)$100;
 (13)  court cost for DNA testing for certain felonies
 (Art. 102.020(a)(1), Code of Criminal Procedure) $250;
 (14)  court cost for DNA testing for certain
 misdemeanors and felonies [the offense of public lewdness or
 indecent exposure] (Art. 102.020(a)(2), Code of Criminal
 Procedure)$50;
 (15)  court cost for DNA testing for certain
 misdemeanors and felonies (Art. 102.020(a)(3), Code of Criminal
 Procedure)$34;
 (16)  if required by the court, a restitution fee for
 costs incurred in collecting restitution installments and for the
 compensation to victims of crime fund (Art. 42.037, Code of
 Criminal Procedure)$12;
 (17)  if directed by the justice of the peace or
 municipal court judge hearing the case, court costs on conviction
 in a criminal action (Art. 45.041, Code of Criminal Procedure)
 . . . part or all of the costs as directed by the judge; and
 (18)  costs attendant to convictions under Chapter 49,
 Penal Code, and under Chapter 481, Health and Safety Code, to help
 fund drug court programs established under Chapter 122, 123, 124,
 or 125, Government Code, or former law (Art. 102.0178, Code of
 Criminal Procedure) . . . $60.
 SECTION 3.  Section 411.142(c), Government Code, is amended
 to read as follows:
 (c)  The director may receive, analyze, store, and destroy a
 DNA record or DNA sample for the purposes described by Section
 411.143. If a DNA sample was collected solely for the purpose of
 creating a DNA record, the director shall destroy the sample
 immediately after any test results associated with the sample are
 entered into the DNA database and the CODIS database.
 SECTION 4.  The heading to Section 411.1471, Government
 Code, is amended to read as follows:
 Sec. 411.1471.  DNA RECORDS OF PERSONS ARRESTED FOR, CHARGED
 WITH, OR CONVICTED OF CERTAIN OFFENSES [FELONIES].
 SECTION 5.  Sections 411.1471(a), (b), and (f), Government
 Code, are amended to read as follows:
 (a)  This section applies to a defendant who is:
 (1)  indicted or waives indictment for a felony
 prohibited or punishable under any of the following Penal Code
 sections:
 (A)  Section 20.04(a)(4);
 (B)  Section 21.11;
 (C)  Section 22.011;
 (D)  Section 22.021;
 (E)  Section 25.02;
 (F)  Section 30.02(d);
 (G)  Section 43.05;
 (H)  Section 43.25;
 (I)  Section 43.26;
 (J)  Section 21.02; or
 (K)  Section 20A.03;
 (2)  arrested for a felony described by Subdivision (1)
 after having been previously convicted of or placed on deferred
 adjudication for an offense described by Subdivision (1) or an
 offense punishable under Section 30.02(c)(2), Penal Code; [or]
 (3)  convicted of an offense:
 (A)  under the Penal Code that is punishable as a
 Class A misdemeanor or any higher category of offense, other than an
 offense described by Subdivision (1); or
 (B)  under Title 5, Penal Code, that is punishable
 as a Class B misdemeanor; or
 (4)  placed on deferred adjudication for an offense
 under Section 21.07 or 21.08, Penal Code.
 (b)  After a defendant described by Subsection (a)(1) is
 indicted or waives indictment, the court in which the case is
 pending shall require the defendant to provide to a law enforcement
 agency one or more specimens for the purpose of creating a DNA
 record. A law enforcement agency arresting a defendant described
 by Subsection (a)(2), immediately after fingerprinting the
 defendant and at the same location as the fingerprinting occurs,
 shall require the defendant to provide one or more specimens for the
 purpose of creating a DNA record. After a defendant described by
 Subsection (a)(3) or (4) is convicted or placed on deferred
 adjudication, as applicable, the court shall require the defendant
 to provide to a law enforcement agency one or more specimens for the
 purpose of creating a DNA record.
 (f)  A defendant who provides a DNA sample under this section
 is not required to provide a DNA sample under Section 411.148 of
 this code or under Section 11(j), Article 42.12, Code of Criminal
 Procedure, unless the [an] attorney representing the state in the
 prosecution of the felony offense that makes Section 411.148 or
 11(j) applicable to the defendant [offenses] establishes to the
 satisfaction of the director that the interests of justice or
 public safety require that the defendant provide additional
 samples.
 SECTION 6.  The change in law made by this Act in amending
 Article 102.020, Code of Criminal Procedure, and Section 411.1471,
 Government Code, applies only to an offense committed on or after
 the effective date of this Act. An offense committed before the
 effective date of this Act is governed by the law in effect at the
 time the offense was committed, and the former law is continued in
 effect for that purpose. For purposes of this section, an offense
 was committed before the effective date of this Act if any element
 of the offense occurred before that date.
 SECTION 7.  This Act takes effect September 1, 2015.
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