Texas 2021 - 87th 1st C.S.

Texas House Bill HB2 Latest Draft

Bill / Introduced Version Filed 07/07/2021

                            87S10423 LHC-D
 By: Smith H.B. No. 2


 A BILL TO BE ENTITLED
 AN ACT
 relating to rules for setting the amount of bail, to the release of
 certain defendants on a monetary bond or personal bond, to related
 duties of certain officers taking bail bonds and of a magistrate in
 a criminal case, to charitable bail organizations, and to the
 reporting of information pertaining to bail bonds.
 BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF TEXAS:
 SECTION 1.  This Act may be cited as the Damon Allen Act.
 SECTION 2.  Article 1.07, Code of Criminal Procedure, is
 amended to read as follows:
 Art. 1.07.  RIGHT TO BAIL. Any person [All prisoners] shall
 be eligible for bail [bailable] unless denial of bail is expressly
 permitted by the Texas Constitution or by other law [for capital
 offenses when the proof is evident]. This provision may [shall] not
 be [so] construed [as] to prevent bail after indictment found upon
 examination of the evidence, in such manner as may be prescribed by
 law.
 SECTION 3.  Article 17.02, Code of Criminal Procedure, is
 amended to read as follows:
 Art. 17.02.  DEFINITION OF "BAIL BOND". A "bail bond" is a
 written undertaking entered into by the defendant and the
 defendant's sureties for the appearance of the principal therein
 before a court or magistrate to answer a criminal accusation;
 provided, however, that the defendant on execution of the bail bond
 may deposit with the custodian of funds of the court in which the
 prosecution is pending current money of the United States in the
 amount of the bond in lieu of having sureties signing the same. Any
 cash funds deposited under this article shall be receipted for by
 the officer receiving the funds and, on order of the court, be
 refunded in the amount shown on the face of the receipt less the
 administrative fee authorized by Section 117.055, Local Government
 Code, if applicable, after the defendant complies with the
 conditions of the defendant's bond, to:
 (1)  any person in the name of whom a receipt was
 issued, including the defendant if a receipt was issued to the
 defendant; or
 (2)  the defendant, if no other person is able to
 produce a receipt for the funds.
 SECTION 4.  Chapter 17, Code of Criminal Procedure, is
 amended by adding Articles 17.021, 17.022, 17.023, 17.024, 17.027,
 and 17.028 to read as follows:
 Art. 17.021.  PUBLIC SAFETY REPORT SYSTEM. (a) The Office
 of Court Administration of the Texas Judicial System shall develop
 and maintain a public safety report system that is available for use
 for purposes of Article 17.15.
 (b)  The public safety report system must:
 (1)  state the requirements for setting bail under
 Article 17.15;
 (2)  provide identifying information regarding the
 defendant, the case filed against the defendant, and the offense
 with which the defendant is charged;
 (3)  provide information on the eligibility of the
 defendant for a personal bond;
 (4)  provide information regarding the applicability
 of any required or discretionary bond conditions; and
 (5)  provide, in summary form, the criminal history of
 the defendant, including information regarding any:
 (A)  previous misdemeanor or felony convictions;
 (B)  pending charges;
 (C)  previous sentences imposing a term of
 confinement;
 (D)  previous convictions or pending charges for
 offenses involving violence as defined by Article 17.03; and
 (E)  previous failures of the defendant to appear
 in court following release on bail.
 (c)  The office shall provide access to the public safety
 report system to the appropriate officials in each county at no
 cost. This subsection may not be construed to require the office to
 provide a county official or magistrate with any equipment or
 support related to accessing or using the public safety report
 system.
 (d)  The public safety report system may not:
 (1)  be the only item relied on by a judge or magistrate
 in making a bail decision;
 (2)  include a score, rating, or assessment of a
 defendant's risk or make any recommendation regarding the
 appropriate bail for the defendant; or
 (3)  include any information other than the information
 listed in Subsection (b).
 Art. 17.022.  PUBLIC SAFETY REPORT. (a) A magistrate
 considering the release on bail of a defendant charged with an
 offense punishable as a Class B misdemeanor or any higher category
 of offense shall order that:
 (1)  the personal bond office established under Article
 17.42 for the county in which the defendant is being detained, or
 other suitably trained person, use the public safety report system
 developed under Article 17.021 to prepare a public safety report
 with respect to the defendant; and
 (2)  the public safety report prepared under
 Subdivision (1) be provided to the magistrate as soon as
 practicable but not later than 48 hours after the defendant's
 arrest.
 (b)  A magistrate may not, without the consent of the
 sheriff, order a sheriff or sheriff's department personnel to
 prepare a public safety report under Subsection (a).
 (c)  Notwithstanding Subsection (a), a magistrate may
 personally prepare a public safety report, before or while making a
 bail decision, using the public safety report system developed
 under Article 17.021.
 (d)  The magistrate shall consider the public safety report
 before setting bail.
 Art. 17.023.  AUTHORITY TO RELEASE ON BAIL IN CERTAIN CASES.
 (a) This article applies only to a defendant charged with an
 offense that is:
 (1)  punishable as a felony; or
 (2)  a misdemeanor punishable by confinement.
 (b)  Notwithstanding any other law, a defendant to whom this
 article applies may be released on bail only by a magistrate who is:
 (1)  either:
 (A)  a resident of this state and one of the
 counties served by the magistrate; or
 (B)  a justice of the peace serving under Section
 27.054 or 27.055, Government Code; and
 (2)  in compliance with the training requirements of
 Article 17.024.
 (c)  A magistrate is not eligible to release on bail a
 defendant described by Subsection (a) if the magistrate:
 (1)  has been removed from office by impeachment, by
 the supreme court, by the governor on address to the legislature, by
 a tribunal reviewing a recommendation of the State Commission on
 Judicial Conduct, or by the legislature's abolition of the
 magistrate's court; or
 (2)  has resigned from office after having received
 notice that formal proceedings by the State Commission on Judicial
 Conduct have been instituted as provided by Section 33.022,
 Government Code, and before final disposition of the proceedings.
 Art. 17.024.  TRAINING ON DUTIES REGARDING BAIL. (a) The
 Office of Court Administration of the Texas Judicial System shall,
 in consultation with the court of criminal appeals, develop or
 approve training courses regarding a magistrate's duties,
 including duties with respect to setting bail in criminal cases.
 The courses developed must include:
 (1)  an eight-hour initial training course; and
 (2)  a two-hour continuing education course.
 (b)  The office shall provide for a method of certifying that
 a magistrate has successfully completed a training course required
 under this article and has demonstrated competency of the course
 content in a manner acceptable to the office.
 (c)  A magistrate is in compliance with the training
 requirements of this article if:
 (1)  not later than the 90th day after the date the
 magistrate takes office, the magistrate successfully completes the
 course described by Subsection (a)(1);
 (2)  the magistrate successfully completes the course
 described by Subsection (a)(2) in each subsequent state fiscal
 biennium in which the magistrate serves; and
 (3)  the magistrate demonstrates competency in a manner
 acceptable to the office.
 (c-1)  Notwithstanding Subsection (c), a magistrate who is
 serving on December 1, 2021, is considered to be in compliance with
 Subsection (c)(1) if the magistrate successfully completes the
 training course not later than July 1, 2022. This subsection
 expires February 1, 2023.
 (d)  Any course developed or approved by the office under
 this article may be administered by the Texas Justice Court
 Training Center, the Texas Municipal Courts Education Center, the
 Texas Association of Counties, the Texas Center for the Judiciary,
 or a similar entity.
 Art. 17.027.  RELEASE ON BAIL OF DEFENDANT CHARGED WITH
 OFFENSE COMMITTED WHILE ON BAIL. (a) Notwithstanding any other
 law, if a defendant is charged with committing an offense while
 released on bail for another offense:
 (1)  if the subsequent offense was committed in the
 same county as the previous offense, only the court before whom the
 case for the previous offense is pending may release the defendant
 on bail; and
 (2)  if the subsequent offense was committed in a
 different county than the previous offense, electronic notice of
 the charge must be promptly given to the court specified by
 Subdivision (1) for purposes of reevaluating the bail decision,
 determining whether any bail conditions were violated, or taking
 any other applicable action.
 (b)  This article may not be construed to extend any deadline
 provided by Article 15.17.
 Art. 17.028.  BAIL DECISION. (a) Without unnecessary delay
 but not later than 48 hours after a defendant is arrested, a
 magistrate shall order, after individualized consideration of all
 circumstances and of the factors required by Article 17.15(a), that
 the defendant be:
 (1)  granted personal bond with or without conditions;
 (2)  granted monetary bond with or without conditions;
 or
 (3)  denied bail in accordance with the Texas
 Constitution and other law.
 (b)  In setting bail under this article, the magistrate shall
 impose the least restrictive conditions, if any, and the personal
 bond or monetary bond necessary to reasonably ensure the
 defendant's appearance in court as required and the safety of the
 community, law enforcement, and the victim of the alleged offense.
 (c)  In each criminal case, unless specifically provided by
 other law, there is a rebuttable presumption that bail, conditions
 of release, or both bail and conditions of release are sufficient to
 reasonably ensure the defendant's appearance in court as required
 and the safety of the community, law enforcement, and the victim of
 the alleged offense. For purposes of setting bail or rebutting the
 presumption, the court may not consider testimonial evidence.
 (d)  A judge may not adopt a bail schedule or enter a standing
 order related to bail that:
 (1)  is inconsistent with this article; or
 (2)  authorizes a magistrate to make a bail decision
 for a defendant without considering each of the factors in Article
 17.15(a).
 (e)  A defendant who is denied bail or who is unable to give
 bail in the amount required by any bail schedule or standing order
 related to bail shall be provided with the warnings described by
 Article 15.17.
 (f)  A defendant who claims to be unable to give bail as
 described by Subsection (e) may file with the applicable magistrate
 a sworn affidavit in substantially the following form:
 "On this ___ day of _____ , 2____, I have been advised by the
 (name of the court) Court of the importance of providing true and
 complete information about my financial situation in connection
 with the charge pending against me.  I am without means to pay
 ______ and I hereby request the court to set an appropriate bail.
 (signature of defendant)."
 (g)  A defendant filing an affidavit under Subsection (f)
 shall complete a form to allow a magistrate to assess information
 relevant to the defendant's financial situation. The form must be
 the form used to request appointment of counsel under Article 26.04
 or a form promulgated by the Office of Court Administration of the
 Texas Judicial System that collects, at a minimum and to the best of
 the defendant's knowledge, the following information:
 (1)  any income received by the defendant and the
 defendant's spouse in the preceding two years;
 (2)  the defendant's employment history and the
 employment history of the defendant's spouse, including gross
 monthly pay, for the preceding two years;
 (3)  any cash holdings available to the defendant or
 the defendant's spouse and the financial institution in which the
 cash is held;
 (4)  the defendant's major noncash assets, including
 real estate and motor vehicles;
 (5)  money owed to the defendant or to the defendant's
 spouse;
 (6)  any dependents of the defendant or of the
 defendant's spouse, and the dependents' ages;
 (7)  an itemized estimate of the defendant's monthly
 expenses;
 (8)  an estimate of the defendant's tax and legal
 expenses;
 (9)  any anticipated major changes in the defendant's
 income or expenses; and
 (10)  any additional relevant information the
 defendant is able to provide to explain the defendant's inability
 to pay bail according to the schedule.
 (h)  A defendant who files an affidavit under Subsection (f)
 is entitled to a hearing before the magistrate on the bail amount.
 The hearing must be held not later than 48 hours after the defendant
 is arrested. At the hearing, the defendant must be given the
 opportunity to present evidence and respond to evidence presented
 by the attorney representing the state. After the hearing, the
 magistrate shall consider the facts presented and the rules
 established by Article 17.15(a) and shall set the defendant's bail.
 If the magistrate does not set the defendant's bail in an amount
 below the amount required by the schedule, the magistrate shall
 issue written findings of fact supporting the bail decision.
 (i)  The judges of the courts trying criminal cases in a
 county must report to the Office of Court Administration of the
 Texas Judicial System each defendant for whom a hearing under
 Subsection (h) was not held within 48 hours of the defendant's
 arrest. If a delay occurs that will cause the hearing under
 Subsection (h) to be held later than 48 hours after the defendant's
 arrest, the magistrate or an employee of the court or of the county
 in which the defendant is confined must notify the defendant's
 counsel of the delay.
 (j)  The magistrate may enter an order or take other action
 authorized by Article 16.22 with respect to a defendant who does not
 appear competent to execute an affidavit under Subsection (f).
 (k)  This article may not be construed to require the filing
 of an affidavit before a magistrate considers the defendant's
 ability to make bail under Article 17.15.
 (l)  A written or oral statement obtained under this article
 or evidence derived from the statement may be used only to determine
 whether the defendant is indigent, to impeach the direct testimony
 of the defendant, or to prosecute the defendant for an offense under
 Chapter 37, Penal Code.
 SECTION 5.  Article 17.03, Code of Criminal Procedure, as
 effective September 1, 2021, is amended by amending Subsection (b)
 and adding Subsections (b-2) and (b-3) to read as follows:
 (b)  Only the court before whom the case is pending may
 release on personal bond a defendant who:
 (1)  is charged with an offense under the following
 sections of the Penal Code:
 (A)  [Section 19.03 (Capital Murder);
 [(B)  Section 20.04 (Aggravated Kidnapping);
 [(C)  Section 22.021 (Aggravated Sexual Assault);
 [(D)  Section 22.03 (Deadly Assault on Law
 Enforcement or Corrections Officer, Member or Employee of Board of
 Pardons and Paroles, or Court Participant);
 [(E)  Section 22.04 (Injury to a Child, Elderly
 Individual, or Disabled Individual);
 [(F)  Section 29.03 (Aggravated Robbery);
 [(G)]  Section 30.02 (Burglary); or
 (B) [(H)]  Section 71.02 (Engaging in Organized
 Criminal Activity);
 [(I)  Section 21.02 (Continuous Sexual Abuse of
 Young Child or Disabled Individual); or
 [(J)  Section 20A.03 (Continuous Trafficking of
 Persons);]
 (2)  is charged with a felony under Chapter 481, Health
 and Safety Code, or Section 485.033, Health and Safety Code,
 punishable by imprisonment for a minimum term or by a maximum fine
 that is more than a minimum term or maximum fine for a first degree
 felony; or
 (3)  does not submit to testing for the presence of a
 controlled substance in the defendant's body as requested by the
 court or magistrate under Subsection (c) of this article or submits
 to testing and the test shows evidence of the presence of a
 controlled substance in the defendant's body.
 (b-2)  Notwithstanding any other law, a defendant may not be
 released on personal bond if the defendant:
 (1)  is charged with an offense involving violence; or
 (2)  while released on bail or community supervision
 for an offense involving violence, is charged with committing:
 (A)  any offense punishable as a felony; or
 (B)  an offense under the following provisions of
 the Penal Code:
 (i)  Section 22.01(a)(1) (assault);
 (ii)  Section 22.05 (deadly conduct);
 (iii)  Section 22.07 (terroristic threat);
 or
 (iv)  Section 42.01(a)(7) or (8) (disorderly
 conduct involving firearm).
 (b-3)  In this article:
 (1)  "Controlled substance" has the meaning assigned by
 Section 481.002, Health and Safety Code.
 (2)  "Offense involving violence" means an offense
 under the following provisions of the Penal Code:
 (A)  Section 19.02 (murder);
 (B)  Section 19.03 (capital murder);
 (C)  Section 20.03 (kidnapping);
 (D)  Section 20.04 (aggravated kidnapping);
 (E)  Section 20A.02 (trafficking of persons);
 (F)  Section 20A.03 (continuous trafficking of
 persons);
 (G)  Section 21.02 (continuous sexual abuse of
 young child or disabled individual);
 (H)  Section 21.11 (indecency with a child);
 (I)  Section 22.01(a)(1) (assault), if the
 offense:
 (i)  is punishable as a felony of the second
 degree under Subsection (b-2) of that section; or
 (ii)  involved family violence as defined by
 Section 71.004, Family Code;
 (J)  Section 22.011 (sexual assault);
 (K)  Section 22.02 (aggravated assault);
 (L)  Section 22.021 (aggravated sexual assault);
 (M)  Section 22.04 (injury to a child, elderly
 individual, or disabled individual);
 (N)  Section 25.072 (repeated violation of
 certain court orders or conditions of bond in family violence,
 child abuse or neglect, sexual assault or abuse, indecent assault,
 stalking, or trafficking case);
 (O)  Section 25.11 (continuous violence against
 the family);
 (P)  Section 29.03 (aggravated robbery);
 (Q)  Section 38.14 (taking or attempting to take
 weapon from peace officer, federal special investigator, employee
 or official of correctional facility, parole officer, community
 supervision and corrections department officer, or commissioned
 security officer);
 (R)  Section 43.04 (aggravated promotion of
 prostitution);
 (S)  Section 43.05 (compelling prostitution); or
 (T)  Section 43.25 (sexual performance by a
 child).
 SECTION 6.  Chapter 17, Code of Criminal Procedure, is
 amended by adding Articles 17.0501 and 17.071 to read as follows:
 Art. 17.0501.  REQUIRED TRAINING. The Department of Public
 Safety shall develop training courses that relate to the use of the
 statewide telecommunications system maintained by the department
 and that are directed to each magistrate, judge, sheriff, peace
 officer, or jailer required to obtain criminal history record
 information under this chapter, as necessary to enable the person
 to fulfill those requirements.
 Art. 17.071.  CHARITABLE BAIL ORGANIZATIONS. (a) In this
 article, "charitable bail organization" means a person who solicits
 donations from the public for the purpose of depositing money with a
 court in the amount of a defendant's bail bond. The term does not
 include:
 (1)  a person soliciting donations with respect to a
 defendant who is a member of the person's family, as determined
 under Section 71.003, Family Code; or
 (2)  a nonprofit corporation organized for the purpose
 of religious worship.
 (b)  This article does not apply to a charitable bail
 organization that pays a bail bond for not more than three
 defendants in any 180-day period.
 (c)  A charitable bail organization shall file in the office
 of the county clerk of each county where the organization intends to
 pay bail bonds an affidavit designating the individuals authorized
 to pay bonds on behalf of the organization.
 (d)  A charitable bail organization may only pay bail bonds
 for indigent defendants who:
 (1)  are not charged with an offense involving violence
 as defined by Article 17.03; and
 (2)  have not previously been convicted of an offense
 involving violence as defined by Article 17.03.
 (e)  Not later than the 10th day of each month, a charitable
 bail organization shall submit, to the sheriff of each county in
 which the organization files an affidavit under Subsection (c), a
 report that includes the following information for each defendant
 for whom the organization paid a bail bond in the preceding calendar
 month:
 (1)  the name of the defendant;
 (2)  the cause number of the case;
 (3)  the county in which the applicable charge is
 pending, if different from the county in which the bond was paid;
 and
 (4)  any dates on which the defendant has failed to
 appear in court as required for the charge for which the bond was
 paid.
 (f)  A charitable bail organization may not pay a bail bond
 for a defendant at any time the organization is considered to be out
 of compliance with the reporting requirements of this article.
 (g)  A sheriff may suspend a charitable bail organization
 from paying bail bonds in the sheriff's county for one year if the
 sheriff determines the organization has paid bonds in violation of
 this article.
 (h)  Chapter 22 applies to a bail bond paid by a charitable
 bail organization.
 (i)  A charitable bail organization may not accept a premium
 or compensation for paying a bail bond for a defendant.
 SECTION 7.  Article 17.15, Code of Criminal Procedure, is
 amended to read as follows:
 Art. 17.15.  RULES FOR SETTING [FIXING] AMOUNT OF BAIL. (a)
 The amount of bail and any conditions of bail to be required in any
 case are [is] to be regulated by the court, judge, magistrate, or
 officer taking the bail in accordance with Articles 17.20, 17.21,
 and 17.22 and [; they] are [to be] governed [in the exercise of this
 discretion] by the Constitution and [by] the following rules:
 1.  Bail and any conditions of bail [The bail] shall be
 sufficient [sufficiently high] to give reasonable assurance that
 the undertaking will be complied with.
 2.  The power to require bail is not to be [so] used
 [as] to make bail [it] an instrument of oppression.
 3.  The nature of the offense and the circumstances
 under which the offense [it] was committed are to be considered,
 including whether the offense:
 (A)  is an offense involving violence as defined
 by Article 17.03; or
 (B)  involves violence directed against a peace
 officer.
 4.  The ability to make bail shall [is to] be considered
 [regarded], and proof may be taken on [upon] this point.
 5.  The future safety of a victim of the alleged
 offense, law enforcement, and the community shall be considered.
 6.  The criminal history record information for the
 defendant, including information obtained through the statewide
 telecommunications system maintained by the Department of Public
 Safety and through the public safety report system developed under
 Article 17.021, shall be considered, including any acts of family
 violence, other pending criminal charges, and any instances in
 which the defendant failed to appear in court following release on
 bail.
 7.  The citizenship status of the defendant shall be
 considered.
 (b)  For purposes of determining whether clear and
 convincing evidence exists to deny a person bail under Section 11d,
 Article I, Texas Constitution, a magistrate shall consider all
 information relevant to the factors listed in Subsection (a).
 (c)  In this article, "family violence" has the meaning
 assigned by Section 71.004, Family Code.
 SECTION 8.  Article 17.20, Code of Criminal Procedure, is
 amended to read as follows:
 Art. 17.20.  BAIL IN MISDEMEANOR. (a) In cases of
 misdemeanor, the sheriff or other peace officer, or a jailer
 licensed under Chapter 1701, Occupations Code, may, whether during
 the term of the court or in vacation, where the officer has a
 defendant in custody, take the defendant's [of the defendant a]
 bail [bond].
 (b)  Before taking bail under this article, the sheriff,
 peace officer, or jailer shall obtain the defendant's criminal
 history record information through the statewide
 telecommunications system maintained by the Department of Public
 Safety and through the public safety report system developed under
 Article 17.021.
 (c)  If the defendant is charged with or has previously been
 convicted of an offense involving violence as defined by Article
 17.03, the sheriff, officer, or jailer may not set the amount of the
 defendant's bail but may take the defendant's bail in the amount set
 by the court.
 SECTION 9.  Article 17.22, Code of Criminal Procedure, is
 amended to read as follows:
 Art. 17.22.  MAY TAKE BAIL IN FELONY. (a) In a felony case,
 if the court before which the case [same] is pending is not in
 session in the county where the defendant is in custody, the sheriff
 or other peace officer, or a jailer licensed under Chapter 1701,
 Occupations Code, who has the defendant in custody may take the
 defendant's bail [bond] in the [such] amount set [as may have been
 fixed] by the court or magistrate, or if no amount has been set
 [fixed], then in any [such] amount that the [as such] officer
 considers [may consider] reasonable and that is in compliance with
 Article 17.15.
 (b)  Before taking bail under this article, the sheriff,
 peace officer, or jailer shall obtain the defendant's criminal
 history record information through the statewide
 telecommunications system maintained by the Department of Public
 Safety and through the public safety report system developed under
 Article 17.021.
 (c)  If the defendant is charged with or has previously been
 convicted of an offense involving violence as defined by Article
 17.03, the sheriff, officer, or jailer may not set the amount of the
 defendant's bail but may take the defendant's bail in the amount set
 by the court.
 SECTION 10.  Chapter 17, Code of Criminal Procedure, is
 amended by adding Articles 17.51, 17.52, and 17.53 to read as
 follows:
 Art. 17.51.  NOTICE OF CONDITIONS. (a) As soon as
 practicable but not later than the next business day after the date
 a magistrate issues an order imposing a condition of release on bond
 for a defendant or modifying or removing a condition previously
 imposed, the clerk of the court shall send a copy of the order to:
 (1)  the appropriate attorney representing the state;
 and
 (2)  either:
 (A)  the chief of police in the municipality where
 the defendant resides, if the defendant resides in a municipality;
 or
 (B)  the sheriff of the county where the defendant
 resides, if the defendant does not reside in a municipality.
 (b)  A clerk of the court may delay sending a copy of the
 order under Subsection (a) only if the clerk lacks information
 necessary to ensure service and enforcement.
 (c)  If an order described by Subsection (a) prohibits a
 defendant from going to or near a child care facility or school, the
 clerk of the court shall send a copy of the order to the child care
 facility or school.
 (d)  The copy of the order and any related information may be
 sent electronically or in another manner that can be accessed by the
 recipient.
 (e)  The magistrate or the magistrate's designee shall
 provide written notice to the defendant of:
 (1)  the conditions of release on bond; and
 (2)  the penalties for violating a condition of
 release.
 (f)  The magistrate shall make a separate record of the
 notice provided to the defendant under Subsection (e).
 (g)  The Office of Court Administration of the Texas Judicial
 System shall promulgate a form for use by a magistrate or a
 magistrate's designee in providing notice to the defendant under
 Subsection (e). The form must include the relevant statutory
 language from the provisions of this chapter under which a
 condition of release on bond may be imposed on a defendant.
 Art. 17.52.  REPORTING OF CONDITIONS. A chief of police or
 sheriff who receives a copy of an order described by Article
 17.51(a), or the chief's or sheriff's designee, shall, as soon as
 practicable but not later than the 10th day after the date the copy
 is received, enter information relating to the condition of release
 into the appropriate database of the statewide law enforcement
 information system maintained by the Department of Public Safety or
 modify or remove information, as appropriate.
 Art. 17.53.  PROCEDURES AND FORMS RELATED TO MONETARY BOND.
 The Office of Court Administration of the Texas Judicial System
 shall develop statewide procedures and prescribe forms to be used
 by a court to facilitate:
 (1)  the refund of any cash funds paid toward a monetary
 bond, with an emphasis on refunding those funds to the person in
 whose name the receipt described by Article 17.02 was issued; and
 (2)  the application of those cash funds to the
 defendant's outstanding court costs, fines, and fees.
 SECTION 11.  Article 66.102(c), Code of Criminal Procedure,
 is amended to read as follows:
 (c)  Information in the computerized criminal history system
 relating to an arrest must include:
 (1)  the offender's name;
 (2)  the offender's state identification number;
 (3)  the arresting law enforcement agency;
 (4)  the arrest charge, by offense code and incident
 number;
 (5)  whether the arrest charge is a misdemeanor or
 felony;
 (6)  the date of the arrest;
 (7)  for an offender released on bail, whether a
 warrant was issued for any subsequent failure of the offender to
 appear in court;
 (8)  the exact disposition of the case by a law
 enforcement agency following the arrest; and
 (9) [(8)]  the date of disposition of the case by the
 law enforcement agency.
 SECTION 12.  Section 27.005, Government Code, is amended to
 read as follows:
 Sec. 27.005.  EDUCATIONAL REQUIREMENTS. (a) For purposes of
 removal under Chapter 87, Local Government Code, "incompetency" in
 the case of a justice of the peace includes the failure of the
 justice to successfully complete:
 (1)  within one year after the date the justice is first
 elected:
 (A)  [,] an 80-hour course in the performance of
 the justice's duties;
 (B)  the course described by Article
 17.024(a)(1), Code of Criminal Procedure; and
 (C)  the course described by Article 17.0501, Code
 of Criminal Procedure;
 (2)  each following year, a 20-hour course in the
 performance of the justice's duties, including not less than 10
 hours of instruction regarding substantive, procedural, and
 evidentiary law in civil matters; and
 (3)  each following state fiscal biennium, the course
 described by Article 17.024(a)(2), Code of Criminal Procedure.
 (b)  The courses described by Subsections (a)(1)(A) and
 (a)(2) may be completed in an accredited state-supported school of
 higher education.
 SECTION 13.  Subchapter C, Chapter 71, Government Code, is
 amended by adding Section 71.0351 to read as follows:
 Sec. 71.0351.  BAIL AND PRETRIAL RELEASE INFORMATION. (a)
 As a component of the official monthly report submitted to the
 Office of Court Administration of the Texas Judicial System under
 Section 71.035, the clerk of each court setting bail in criminal
 cases shall report:
 (1)  the number of defendants for whom bail was set,
 including:
 (A)  the number for each category of offense;
 (B)  the number of personal bonds; and
 (C)  the number of monetary bonds;
 (2)  the number of defendants released on bail who
 subsequently failed to appear;
 (3)  the number of defendants released on bail who
 subsequently violated a condition of release; and
 (4)  the number of defendants who committed an offense
 while released on bail or community supervision.
 (b)  The office shall post the information in a publicly
 accessible place on the agency's Internet website without
 disclosing any personal information of any defendant, judge, or
 magistrate.
 (c)  Not later than December 1 of each year, the office shall
 submit a report containing the data collected under this section
 during the previous state fiscal year to the governor, the
 lieutenant governor, the speaker of the house of representatives,
 and the standing committees of each house of the legislature with
 jurisdiction over the judiciary.
 SECTION 14.  Subchapter C, Chapter 72, Government Code, is
 amended by adding Section 72.038 to read as follows:
 Sec. 72.038.  BAIL FORM. (a) The office shall promulgate a
 form to be completed by a magistrate, judge, sheriff, peace
 officer, or jailer who sets a defendant's bail under Chapter 17,
 Code of Criminal Procedure.
 (b)  The form must:
 (1)  state the cause number of the case, if available,
 the defendant's name and date of birth, and the offense for which
 the defendant was arrested;
 (2)  state the name and the office or position of the
 person setting bail;
 (3)  state the requirements for setting bail under
 Article 17.15, Code of Criminal Procedure, and list each factor
 provided by Article 17.15(a) of that code;
 (4)  require the person setting bail to:
 (A)  identify the bail type, the amount of the
 bail, and any conditions of bail;
 (B)  certify that the person considered each
 factor provided by Article 17.15(a), Code of Criminal Procedure;
 and
 (C)  certify that the person considered the
 information provided by the public safety report system developed
 under Article 17.021, Code of Criminal Procedure; and
 (5)  be signed by the person setting the bail.
 (c)  The person setting bail, an employee of the court that
 set the defendant's bail, or an employee of the county in which the
 defendant's bail was set must promptly and electronically provide
 the form required under this section to the office on completion of
 the form.
 (d)  The office shall publish each form submitted under this
 section in a database that is publicly accessible on the office's
 Internet website.
 SECTION 15.  Section 117.055, Local Government Code, is
 amended by amending Subsection (a) and adding Subsections (a-1) and
 (a-2) to read as follows:
 (a)  Except as provided by Subsection (a-1), to [To]
 compensate the county for the accounting and administrative
 expenses incurred in handling the registry funds that have not
 earned interest, including funds in a special or separate account,
 the clerk shall, at the time of withdrawal, deduct from the amount
 of the withdrawal a fee in an amount equal to five percent of the
 withdrawal but that may not exceed $50. Withdrawal of funds
 generated from a case arising under the Family Code is exempt from
 the fee deduction provided by this section.
 (a-1)  A clerk may not deduct a fee under Subsection (a) from
 a withdrawal of funds generated by the collection of a cash bond or
 cash bail bond if in the case for which the bond was taken:
 (1)  the defendant was found not guilty after a trial or
 appeal; or
 (2)  the complaint, information, or indictment was
 dismissed without a plea of guilty or nolo contendere being
 entered.
 (a-2)  On the request of a person to whom withdrawn funds
 generated by the collection of a cash bond or cash bail bond were
 disbursed, the clerk shall refund to the person the amount of the
 fee deducted under Subsection (a) if:
 (1)  subsequent to the deduction, a court makes or
 enters an order or ruling in the case for which the bond was taken;
 and
 (2)  had the court made or entered the order or ruling
 before the withdrawal of funds occurred, the deduction under
 Subsection (a) would have been prohibited under Subsection (a-1).
 SECTION 16.  Article 17.03(f), Code of Criminal Procedure,
 is repealed.
 SECTION 17.  As soon as practicable but not later than
 December 1, 2021, the Office of Court Administration of the Texas
 Judicial System shall create the public safety report system
 developed under Article 17.021, Code of Criminal Procedure, as
 added by this Act, and any related forms and materials and shall
 provide to the appropriate officials in each county access to the
 system, forms, and materials at no cost. If those items are made
 available before December 1, 2021, the office shall notify each
 court clerk, judge or other magistrate, and office of an attorney
 representing the state.
 SECTION 18.  (a) As soon as practicable but not later than
 December 1, 2021, the Office of Court Administration of the Texas
 Judicial System shall:
 (1)  promulgate the forms required by Articles
 17.028(g) and 17.51(g), Code of Criminal Procedure, as added by
 this Act, and by Section 72.038, Government Code, as added by this
 Act; and
 (2)  develop or approve and make available the training
 courses and certification method as described by Article 17.024,
 Code of Criminal Procedure, as added by this Act, and develop the
 procedures and prescribe the forms required by Article 17.53, Code
 of Criminal Procedure, as added by this Act.
 (b)  If the items described by Subsection (a) of this section
 are made available before December 1, 2021, the office shall notify
 each court clerk, judge or other magistrate, and office of an
 attorney representing the state.
 SECTION 19.  Section 117.055, Local Government Code, as
 amended by this Act, applies only to a withdrawal of funds from a
 court registry under Section 117.055, Local Government Code, made
 on or after the effective date provided by Section 21(c) of this
 Act. A withdrawal of funds from a court registry made before the
 effective date provided by Section 21(c) of this Act is governed by
 the law in effect on the date the withdrawal was made, and the
 former law is continued in effect for that purpose.
 SECTION 20.  The changes in law made by this Act apply only
 to a person who is arrested on or after the effective date of this
 Act. A person arrested before the effective date of this Act is
 governed by the law in effect on the date the person was arrested,
 and the former law is continued in effect for that purpose.
 SECTION 21.  (a) Except as provided by Subsections (b) and
 (c) of this section, this Act takes effect December 1, 2021.
 (b)  Article 17.15(b), Code of Criminal Procedure, as added
 by this Act, takes effect December 1, 2021, but only if the
 constitutional amendment proposed by the 87th Legislature, 1st
 Called Session, 2021, requiring a judge or magistrate to impose the
 least restrictive conditions of bail that may be necessary and
 authorizing the denial of bail under some circumstances to a person
 accused of a violent or sexual offense or of continuous trafficking
 of persons is approved by the voters. If that amendment is not
 approved by the voters, Article 17.15(b), Code of Criminal
 Procedure, has no effect.
 (c)  Articles 17.021 and 17.024, Code of Criminal Procedure,
 as added by this Act, and Sections 3, 15, 17, 18, and 19 of this Act
 take effect on the 91st day after the last day of the legislative
 session.