Texas 2017 - 85th Regular

Texas House Bill HB3080 Latest Draft

Bill / House Committee Report Version Filed 02/02/2025

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                            By: Rose, Coleman H.B. No. 3080
 Substitute the following for H.B. No. 3080:
 By:  Moody C.S.H.B. No. 3080


 A BILL TO BE ENTITLED
 AN ACT
 relating to the applicability of the death penalty to a capital
 offense committed by a person with severe mental illness.
 BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF TEXAS:
 SECTION 1.  Title 1, Code of Criminal Procedure, is amended
 by adding Chapter 46D to read as follows:
 CHAPTER 46D. CAPITAL CASE: EFFECT OF SEVERE MENTAL ILLNESS
 Art. 46D.001.  DEFINITION. In this chapter, "person with
 severe mental illness" means a person who has one of the following
 disorders: schizophrenia, schizo-affective disorder, or bipolar
 disorder, and as a result of that disorder has active psychotic
 symptoms that substantially impair the person's capacity to:
 (1)  appreciate the nature, consequences, or
 wrongfulness of the person's conduct; or
 (2)  exercise rational judgment in relation to the
 person's conduct.
 Art. 46D.002.  RESTRICTION ON DEATH PENALTY. A defendant
 who at the time of commission of a capital offense was a person with
 severe mental illness may not be sentenced to death.
 Art. 46D.003.  HEARING. (a)  Counsel for a defendant in a
 capital case, not later than the 30th day before the date trial
 begins, may file notice requesting that the judge hearing the case
 hold a hearing to determine whether the defendant was a person with
 severe mental illness at the time of the commission of the alleged
 offense.
 (b)  Notice filed under Subsection (a) must be accompanied by
 evidence supporting the claim that the defendant was a person with
 severe mental illness at the time of the alleged offense.
 (c)  If the defendant does not give timely notice as provided
 by Subsection (a), the court may not hold a hearing under this
 article unless the court finds that good cause existed for failure
 to give timely notice.
 (d)  On receipt of notice under Subsection (a), the judge
 shall notify all interested parties of the notice, and the attorney
 for the state shall have an opportunity to respond. If the judge
 determines that the notice was timely and was accompanied by the
 supporting evidence described by Subsection (b), a jury shall be
 impaneled to determine whether the defendant was a person with
 severe mental illness at the time of the commission of the alleged
 offense. A defendant may waive the right to jury determination
 under this subsection and request that the judge make the
 determination if the judge and the prosecuting attorney do not
 object.
 (e)  If the judge finds the notice was not timely filed or was
 not accompanied by supporting evidence required by Subsection (b),
 the judge shall:
 (1)  deny the defendant's request;
 (2)  make written findings of fact explaining the
 grounds for denial;
 (3)  provide the findings of fact to all interested
 parties; and
 (4)  file a copy of the findings of fact with the papers
 in the case.
 (f)  Instructions to the jury submitting the issue of severe
 mental illness shall require the jury to state in its verdict
 whether the defendant was a person with severe mental illness at the
 time of the commission of the alleged offense.
 (g)  If the jury is unable to agree on a unanimous verdict
 after a reasonable opportunity to deliberate, the judge shall
 declare a mistrial, discharge the jury, and impanel another jury to
 determine whether the defendant was a person with severe mental
 illness at the time of the commission of the alleged offense.
 (h)  At the conclusion of the hearing under this article, the
 judge shall dismiss the jury, and the members of that jury may not
 serve on a jury in any subsequent trial of the case.
 Art. 46D.004.  BURDEN OF PROOF. (a)  At a hearing under this
 chapter, the burden is on the defendant to prove by clear and
 convincing evidence that the defendant was a person with severe
 mental illness at the time of the commission of the alleged offense.
 Art. 46D.005.  SENTENCING ALTERNATIVES. (a) If the judge or
 jury, whichever is the finder of fact, determines that the
 defendant was a person with severe mental illness at the time of the
 commission of the alleged offense and the defendant is subsequently
 convicted of capital murder, Article 37.071 does not apply to the
 defendant, and the judge shall sentence the defendant to
 imprisonment in the Texas Department of Criminal Justice for life
 without parole.
 (b)  If the judge or jury, whichever is the finder of fact,
 determines that the defendant was not a person with severe mental
 illness at the time of the commission of the alleged offense, the
 judge shall conduct the trial in the same manner as if a hearing
 under this chapter had not been held. At the trial of the offense:
 (1)  the jury may not be informed of the fact that the
 judge or a jury has determined under this article that the defendant
 was not a person with severe mental illness; and
 (2)  the defendant may present at trial evidence of
 mental disability as permitted by Article 37.071.
 (c)  The judge or jury, whichever is the finder of fact,
 must, before the trial of the offense under Section 19.03, Penal
 Code, commences, make the determination described by Subsection
 (b).
 Art. 46D.006.  APPOINTMENT OF DISINTERESTED EXPERTS. (a)
 On the request of either party or on the judge's own motion, the
 judge shall appoint one or more disinterested experts experienced
 and qualified in the field of diagnosing mental illness to examine
 the defendant and determine whether the defendant is a person with
 severe mental illness.
 (b)  The judge may, after giving proper notice to the
 defendant, order the defendant to submit to an examination by
 experts appointed under this article.
 (c)  An examination described by this article:
 (1)  must be narrowly tailored to determine if the
 defendant has the specific illness claimed; and
 (2)  may not include:
 (C)  a future danger assessment.
 (d)  An expert appointed under this article must provide the
 counsel for the defendant with all underlying notes and data
 related to the examination.
 Art. 46D.007.  STATEMENTS NOT ADMISSIBLE. No statement made
 by the defendant in a hearing or examination under this chapter may
 be admitted into evidence during the trial of the alleged offense.
 Art. 46D.008.  INTERLOCUTORY APPEAL. Neither the defendant
 nor the state is entitled to an interlocutory appeal of a
 determination made under this chapter.
 SECTION 2.  Chapter 46D, Code of Criminal Procedure, as
 added by this Act, applies only to a trial that commences on or
 after the effective date of this Act, regardless of whether the
 alleged offense was committed before, on, or after that date.
 SECTION 3.  This Act takes effect September 1, 2017.