Texas 2017 - 85th Regular

Texas Senate Bill SB481 Latest Draft

Bill / Introduced Version Filed 01/12/2017

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                            85R1696 AJZ-D
 By: Burton S.B. No. 481


 A BILL TO BE ENTITLED
 AN ACT
 relating to the reporting and disposition of proceeds and property
 from asset forfeiture proceedings under the Code of Criminal
 Procedure.
 BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF TEXAS:
 SECTION 1.  Articles 59.06(d-3) and (d-4), Code of Criminal
 Procedure, are amended to read as follows:
 (d-3)  Except as otherwise provided by this article, an
 expenditure of proceeds or property received under this chapter is
 considered to be for a law enforcement purpose if the expenditure is
 made for an activity of a law enforcement agency that relates to the
 criminal and civil enforcement of the laws of this state, including
 an expenditure made for:
 (1)  equipment, including vehicles, computers,
 firearms, protective body armor, furniture, software, uniforms,
 and maintenance equipment;
 (2)  supplies, including office supplies, mobile phone
 and data account fees for employees, and Internet services;
 (3)  investigative and training-related travel
 expenses, including payment for hotel rooms, airfare, meals, rental
 of and fuel for a motor vehicle, and parking;
 (4)  conferences and training expenses, including fees
 and materials;
 (5)  investigative costs, including payments to
 informants and lab expenses;
 (6)  crime prevention and treatment programs;
 (7)  facility costs, including building purchase,
 lease payments, remodeling and renovating, maintenance, and
 utilities;
 (8)  witness-related costs, including travel and
 security; and
 (9)  audit costs and fees, including:
 (A)  audit preparation and professional fees paid
 to a person or entity under a contract or as otherwise authorized by
 law; and
 (B)  costs of preparing any reports required to be
 submitted with the audit form to the attorney general.
 (d-4)  Except as otherwise provided by this article, an
 expenditure of proceeds or property received under this chapter is
 considered to be for an official purpose of an attorney's office if
 the expenditure is made for an activity of an attorney or office of
 an attorney representing the state that relates to the
 preservation, enforcement, or administration of the laws of this
 state, including an expenditure made for:
 (1)  equipment, including vehicles, computers, visual
 aid equipment for litigation, firearms, body armor, furniture,
 software, and uniforms;
 (2)  supplies, including office supplies, legal
 library supplies and access fees, mobile phone and data account
 fees for employees, and Internet services;
 (3)  prosecution and training-related travel expenses,
 including payment for hotel rooms, airfare, meals, rental of and
 fuel for a motor vehicle, and parking;
 (4)  conferences and training expenses, including fees
 and materials;
 (5)  investigative costs, including payments to
 informants and lab expenses;
 (6)  crime prevention and treatment programs;
 (7)  facility costs, including building purchase,
 lease payments, remodeling and renovating, maintenance, and
 utilities;
 (8)  legal fees, including court costs and[,] witness
 fees[,] and other witness-related [related] costs such as[,
 including] travel and security[, audit costs, and professional
 fees]; [and]
 (9)  state bar and legal association dues; and
 (10)  audit costs and fees, including:
 (A)  audit preparation and professional fees paid
 to a person or entity under a contract or as otherwise authorized by
 law; and
 (B)  costs of preparing any reports required to be
 submitted with the audit form to the attorney general.
 SECTION 2.  Article 59.06(g)(1), Code of Criminal Procedure,
 is amended to read as follows:
 (1)  All law enforcement agencies and attorneys
 representing the state who receive proceeds or property under this
 chapter shall account for the seizure, forfeiture, receipt, and
 specific expenditure of all the proceeds and property in an audit,
 which is to be performed annually by the commissioners court or
 governing body of a municipality, as appropriate. The annual
 period of the audit for a law enforcement agency is the fiscal year
 of the appropriate county or municipality and the annual period for
 an attorney representing the state is the state fiscal year. The
 audit must be completed on a form provided by the attorney general
 and must include a detailed report and explanation of all
 expenditures, including salaries and overtime pay, officer
 training, investigative equipment and supplies, and other items.
 The audit must also include a detailed report that itemizes all
 seizures of proceeds or property under this chapter and that
 indicates the specific criminal offense on which each seizure was
 based and, if charges were brought in connection with the offense,
 the disposition of those charges. Certified copies of the audit
 shall be delivered by the law enforcement agency or attorney
 representing the state to the attorney general not later than the
 60th day after the date on which the annual period that is the
 subject of the audit ends.
 SECTION 3.  Article 59.06(m), Code of Criminal Procedure, is
 repealed.
 SECTION 4.  The changes in law made by this Act in amending
 Article 59.06(g)(1), Code of Criminal Procedure, apply to any audit
 performed under that subsection on or after the effective date of
 this Act.
 SECTION 5.  This Act takes effect September 1, 2017.