Texas 2017 85th Regular

Texas House Bill HB34 Comm Sub / Bill

Filed 04/26/2017

                    85R22596 AJZ-D
 By: Smithee H.B. No. 34
 Substitute the following for H.B. No. 34:
 By:  Moody C.S.H.B. No. 34


 A BILL TO BE ENTITLED
 AN ACT
 relating to measures to prevent wrongful convictions.
 BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF TEXAS:
 SECTION 1.  Chapter 2, Code of Criminal Procedure, is
 amended by adding Articles 2.023 and 2.32 to read as follows:
 Art. 2.023.  TRACKING USE OF CERTAIN TESTIMONY. (a) In this
 article:
 (1)  "Attorney representing the state" means a district
 attorney, a criminal district attorney, or a county attorney with
 criminal jurisdiction.
 (2)  "Correctional facility" has the meaning assigned
 by Section 1.07, Penal Code.
 (b)  An attorney representing the state shall track:
 (1)  the use of proffered testimony of a person to whom
 a defendant made a statement against the defendant's interest while
 the person was imprisoned or confined in the same correctional
 facility as the defendant, regardless of whether the testimony is
 presented at trial; and
 (2)  any benefits offered or provided to a person in
 exchange for testimony described by Subdivision (1).
 Art. 2.32.  ELECTRONIC RECORDING OF CUSTODIAL
 INTERROGATIONS. (a) In this article:
 (1)  "Electronic recording" means an audio or
 audiovisual electronic recording that begins at the time the person
 being interrogated enters the area of the place of detention in
 which the interrogation will take place and that continues until
 the time the interrogation ceases.
 (2)  "Place of detention" means a police station or
 other building that is a place of operation for a law enforcement
 agency, including a municipal police department or county sheriff's
 department, and is owned or operated by the law enforcement agency
 for the purpose of detaining individuals in connection with the
 suspected violation of a penal law. The term does not include a
 courthouse.
 (b)  A law enforcement agency shall make an electronic
 recording of any custodial interrogation that is of a person
 suspected of committing or charged with the commission of a felony
 offense and that the law enforcement agency conducts in a place of
 detention.
 (c)  An electronic recording of a custodial interrogation
 that complies with this article is exempt from public disclosure as
 provided by Section 552.108, Government Code.
 SECTION 2.  Article 38.075, Code of Criminal Procedure, is
 amended by adding Subsection (c) to read as follows:
 (c)  Evidence of a prior offense committed by a person who
 gives testimony described by Subsection (a) may be admitted for the
 purpose of impeachment if the person received a benefit described
 by Article 39.14(h-1)(2) with respect to the offense, regardless of
 whether the person was convicted of the offense.
 SECTION 3.  Section 3, Article 38.20, Code of Criminal
 Procedure, is amended by amending Subsection (c) and adding
 Subsection (d) to read as follows:
 (c)  The model policy or any other policy adopted by a law
 enforcement agency under Subsection (a) must:
 (1)  be based on:
 (A)  credible field, academic, or laboratory
 research on eyewitness memory;
 (B)  relevant policies, guidelines, and best
 practices designed to reduce erroneous eyewitness identifications
 and to enhance the reliability and objectivity of eyewitness
 identifications; and
 (C)  other relevant information as appropriate;
 and
 (2)  include [address] the following information
 regarding evidence-based practices [topics]:
 (A)  procedures for selecting [the selection of]
 photograph and live lineup filler photographs or participants to
 ensure that the photographs or participants:
 (i)  are consistent in appearance with the
 description of the alleged perpetrator that was provided by a
 witness; and
 (ii)  do not make the suspect noticeably
 stand out;
 (B)  instructions given to a witness before
 conducting a photograph or live lineup identification procedure
 that must include a statement that the person who committed the
 offense may or may not be present in the procedure and that the
 investigation will continue regardless of whether the witness
 identifies a person in the procedure;
 (C)  procedures for documenting and preserving
 the [documentation and preservation of] results of a photograph or
 live lineup identification procedure, including the documentation
 of witness statements, regardless of the outcome of the procedure;
 (D)  procedures for administering a photograph or
 live lineup identification procedure to an illiterate person or a
 person with limited English language proficiency;
 (E)  for a live lineup identification procedure,
 [if practicable,] procedures for assigning an administrator who is
 unaware of which member of the live lineup is the suspect in the
 case [or alternative procedures designed to prevent opportunities
 to influence the witness];
 (F)  for a photograph identification procedure,
 procedures for assigning an administrator who is capable of
 administering a photograph array in a blind manner or in a manner
 consistent with other proven or supported best practices designed
 to prevent opportunities to influence the witness; and
 (G)  any other procedures or best practices
 supported by credible research or commonly accepted as a means to
 reduce erroneous eyewitness identifications and to enhance the
 objectivity and reliability of eyewitness identifications.
 (d)  A witness who makes an identification based on a
 photograph or live lineup identification procedure shall be asked
 immediately after the procedure to state, in the witness's own
 words, the witness's level of confidence in making the
 identification.  A law enforcement agency shall document in
 accordance with Subsection (c)(2)(C) any statement made under this
 subsection.
 SECTION 4.  Section 5, Article 38.20, Code of Criminal
 Procedure, is amended to read as follows:
 Sec. 5.  (a)  Any evidence or expert testimony presented by
 the state or the defendant on the subject of eyewitness
 identification is admissible only subject to compliance with the
 Texas Rules of Evidence.  Except as provided by Subsection (c),
 evidence [Evidence] of compliance with the model policy or any
 other policy adopted under this article [or with the minimum
 requirements of this article] is not a condition precedent to the
 admissibility of an out-of-court eyewitness identification.
 (b)  Notwithstanding Article 38.23 as that article relates
 to a violation of a state statute and except as provided by
 Subsection (c), a failure to conduct a photograph or live lineup
 identification procedure in substantial compliance with the model
 policy or any other policy adopted under this article [or with the
 minimum requirements of this article] does not bar the admission of
 eyewitness identification testimony in the courts of this state.
 (c)  If a witness makes an in-court identification of the
 accused, the eyewitness identification is admissible into evidence
 against the accused only if the evidence is accompanied by:
 (1)  the details of any prior identification made of
 the accused by the witness, including the manner in which that
 identification procedure was conducted; and
 (2)  evidence showing the witness's confidence level as
 described by the witness at the time of the prior identification.
 SECTION 5.  Section 1, Article 38.22, Code of Criminal
 Procedure, is amended to read as follows:
 Sec. 1.  In this article:
 (1)  "Electronic recording" has the meaning assigned by
 Article 2.32.
 (2)  "Written [, a written] statement" [of an accused]
 means:
 (A) [(1)]  a statement made by the accused in the
 accused's [his] own handwriting; or
 (B) [(2)]  a statement made in a language the
 accused can read or understand that:
 (i) [(A)]  is signed by the accused; or
 (ii) [(B)]  bears the mark of the accused,
 if the accused is unable to write and the mark is witnessed by a
 person other than a peace officer.
 SECTION 6.  Sections 3(a) and (b), Article 38.22, Code of
 Criminal Procedure, are amended to read as follows:
 (a)  Except as provided by Section 9, no oral, sign language,
 or written statement made as a result of a custodial interrogation
 of a person accused of a felony offense is admissible against the
 accused in a criminal proceeding, and no [No] oral or sign language
 statement made as a result of a custodial interrogation of a person
 [of an] accused of any other offense is [made as a result of
 custodial interrogation shall be] admissible against the accused in
 a criminal proceeding, unless:
 (1)  an electronic recording [, which may include
 motion picture, video tape, or other visual recording,] is made of
 the custodial interrogation [statement];
 (2)  after being [prior to the statement but during the
 recording the accused is] given the warning described by Section
 2(a), [in Subsection (a) of Section 2 above and] the accused
 knowingly, intelligently, and voluntarily waives any rights set out
 in the warning;
 (3)  the recording device was capable of making an
 accurate recording, the operator was competent, and the recording
 is accurate and has not been altered;
 (4)  all voices on the recording are identified; and
 (5)  not later than the 20th day before the date of the
 proceeding, the attorney representing the defendant is provided
 with a true, complete, and accurate copy of all recordings of the
 defendant made under this article.
 (b)  Every electronic recording of [any statement made by an
 accused during] a custodial interrogation of an accused must be
 preserved until such time as the defendant's conviction for any
 offense relating thereto is final, all direct appeals therefrom are
 exhausted, or the prosecution of such offenses is barred by law.
 SECTION 7.  Article 38.22, Code of Criminal Procedure, is
 amended by adding Section 9 to read as follows:
 Sec. 9.  An oral, sign language, or written statement of an
 accused made as a result of a custodial interrogation is admissible
 without an electronic recording otherwise required by Section 3(a)
 if the attorney introducing the statement shows good cause for the
 lack of the recording. For purposes of this section, "good cause"
 includes:
 (1)  the accused refused to respond to questioning or
 cooperate in a custodial interrogation of which an electronic
 recording was made, provided that:
 (A)  a contemporaneous recording of the refusal
 was made; or
 (B)  the peace officer or agent of the law
 enforcement agency conducting the interrogation attempted, in good
 faith, to record the accused's refusal but the accused was
 unwilling to have the refusal recorded, and the peace officer or
 agent contemporaneously, in writing, documented the refusal;
 (2)  the statement was not made exclusively as the
 result of a custodial interrogation, including a statement that was
 made spontaneously by the accused and not in response to a question
 by a peace officer;
 (3)  the peace officer or agent of the law enforcement
 agency conducting the interrogation attempted, in good faith, to
 record the interrogation but the recording equipment did not
 function, the officer or agent inadvertently operated the equipment
 incorrectly, or the equipment malfunctioned or stopped operating
 without the knowledge of the officer or agent;
 (4)  exigent public safety concerns prevented or
 rendered infeasible the making of an electronic recording of the
 custodial interrogation; or
 (5)  the peace officer or agent of the law enforcement
 agency conducting the interrogation reasonably believed at the time
 the interrogation began that the accused was not taken into custody
 for or being interrogated concerning the commission of a felony
 offense.
 SECTION 8.  Article 39.14, Code of Criminal Procedure, is
 amended by adding Subsection (h-1) to read as follows:
 (h-1)  In this subsection, "correctional facility" has the
 meaning assigned by Section 1.07, Penal Code. Notwithstanding any
 other provision of this article, if the state intends to use at a
 defendant's trial testimony of a person to whom the defendant made a
 statement against the defendant's interest while the person was
 imprisoned or confined in the same correctional facility as the
 defendant, the state shall disclose to the defendant:
 (1)  the person's complete criminal history, including
 any charges that were dismissed or reduced as part of a plea
 bargain;
 (2)  any grant, promise, or offer of immunity from
 prosecution, reduction of sentence, or other leniency or special
 treatment, given by the state in exchange for the person's
 testimony;
 (3)  information concerning other criminal cases in
 which the person has testified, or offered to testify, against a
 defendant with whom the person was imprisoned or confined,
 including any grant, promise, or offer as described by Subdivision
 (2) given by the state in exchange for the testimony; and
 (4)  other information in the possession, custody, or
 control of the state that is relevant to the person's credibility.
 SECTION 9.  Section 1701.253, Occupations Code, is amended
 by adding Subsection (n) to read as follows:
 (n)  As part of the minimum curriculum requirements, the
 commission shall establish a statewide comprehensive education and
 training program on eyewitness identification, including the
 variables that affect a witness's vision and memory, practices for
 minimizing contamination, and effective eyewitness identification
 protocols.
 SECTION 10.  STUDY REGARDING USE OF DRUG FIELD TEST KITS.
 (a) The Texas Forensic Science Commission shall conduct a study
 regarding the use of drug field test kits by law enforcement
 agencies in this state. The commission shall:
 (1)  evaluate the quality, accuracy, and reliability of
 drug field test kits;
 (2)  identify any common problems with drug field test
 kits;
 (3)  evaluate the availability and adequacy of training
 for law enforcement officers regarding the use of drug field test
 kits and the interpretation of the test results; and
 (4)  develop legislative recommendations regarding the
 use of drug field test kits by law enforcement agencies and
 regarding related training for law enforcement officers.
 (b)  Not later than December 1, 2018, the Texas Forensic
 Science Commission shall submit to the governor, the lieutenant
 governor, and each member of the legislature a written report that
 summarizes the results of the study conducted under this section
 and includes any legislative recommendations.
 SECTION 11.  CRIME SCENE INVESTIGATION STUDY. (a) The Texas
 Forensic Science Commission shall conduct a study regarding the
 manner in which crime scene investigations are conducted in this
 state. The commission shall:
 (1)  evaluate the standard procedures used in
 processing a crime scene and evaluate the quality of crime scene
 investigations;
 (2)  evaluate the availability and adequacy of the
 training or continuing education provided to crime scene
 investigators; and
 (3)  develop legislative recommendations regarding
 improvements to crime scene investigation procedures and training.
 (b)  Not later than December 1, 2018, the Texas Forensic
 Science Commission shall submit to the governor, the lieutenant
 governor, and each member of the legislature a written report that
 summarizes the results of the study conducted under this section
 and includes any legislative recommendations.
 SECTION 12.  Article 2.32 and Section 9, Article 38.22, Code
 of Criminal Procedure, as added by this Act, and Sections 1 and 3,
 Article 38.22, Code of Criminal Procedure, as amended by this Act,
 apply to the use of a statement made as a result of a custodial
 interrogation that occurs on or after the effective date of this
 Act, regardless of whether the criminal offense giving rise to that
 interrogation is committed before, on, or after the effective date
 of this Act.
 SECTION 13.  Article 38.075(c), Code of Criminal Procedure,
 as added by this Act, applies to the admissibility of evidence in a
 criminal proceeding that commences on or after the effective date
 of this Act. The admissibility of evidence in a criminal proceeding
 that commences before the effective date of this Act is governed by
 the law in effect on the date the proceeding commenced, and the
 former law is continued in effect for that purpose.
 SECTION 14.  (a)  Section 3(d), Article 38.20, Code of
 Criminal Procedure, as added by this Act, applies only to a
 photograph or live lineup identification procedure conducted on or
 after the effective date of this Act, regardless of whether the
 offense to which the procedure is related was committed before, on,
 or after the effective date of this Act.
 (b)  Section 5, Article 38.20, Code of Criminal Procedure, as
 amended by this Act, applies only to the trial of an offense with
 respect to which a prior identification of the accused occurred on
 or after the effective date of this Act, regardless of whether the
 offense that is the subject of the trial was committed before, on,
 or after the effective date of this Act.
 SECTION 15.  Article 39.14(h-1), Code of Criminal Procedure,
 as added by this Act, applies to the prosecution of an offense
 committed on or after the effective date of this Act. The
 prosecution of an offense committed before the effective date of
 this Act is governed by the law in effect on the date the offense was
 committed, and the former law is continued in effect for that
 purpose. For purposes of this section, an offense is committed
 before the effective date of this Act if any element of the offense
 occurs before the effective date.
 SECTION 16.  Not later than January 1, 2018, the Texas
 Commission on Law Enforcement shall establish the eyewitness
 identification education and training program as required by
 Section 1701.253(n), Occupations Code, as added by this Act.
 SECTION 17.  This Act takes effect September 1, 2017.