Texas 2025 - 89th Regular

Texas House Bill HB2566 Latest Draft

Bill / Introduced Version Filed 02/07/2025

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                            89R6341 JCG-F
 By: Spiller H.B. No. 2566




 A BILL TO BE ENTITLED
 AN ACT
 relating to the enforcement of state and federal immigration laws
 by state agencies, local entities, and peace officers; creating a
 civil penalty.
 BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF TEXAS:
 SECTION 1.  This Act may be cited as the Texas Criminal Alien
 Track and Report Act.
 SECTION 2.  Article 2A.059, Code of Criminal Procedure, is
 amended to read as follows:
 Art. 2A.059.  NATIONALITY OR IMMIGRATION STATUS INQUIRY.
 (a) Subject to Subsection (b), in the course of investigating an
 alleged criminal offense, a peace officer may inquire as to the
 nationality or immigration status of a victim of or witness to the
 offense [only] if the officer determines that the inquiry is
 necessary to:
 (1)  investigate the offense; or
 (2)  provide the victim or witness with information
 about federal visas designed to protect individuals providing
 assistance to law enforcement.
 (b)  Subsection (a) does not prevent a peace officer from:
 (1)  conducting a separate investigation of any other
 alleged criminal offense; or
 (2)  inquiring as to the nationality or immigration
 status of a victim of or witness to a criminal offense if the
 officer has reasonable suspicion [probable cause to believe] that
 the victim or witness has engaged in specific conduct constituting
 a separate criminal offense.
 SECTION 3.  Subchapter B, Chapter 2A, Code of Criminal
 Procedure, is amended by adding Articles 2A.0595 and 2A.0596 to
 read as follows:
 Art. 2A.0595.  DUTY TO INVESTIGATE IMMIGRATION STATUS ON
 PERSON'S FAILURE TO PROVIDE CERTAIN IDENTIFICATION DOCUMENTS. (a)
 A peace officer who has detained a person on reasonable suspicion
 that the person has committed an offense may request that the person
 provide a document to verify the identity of the person and the
 person's immigration status.
 (b)  The person may satisfy a request under Subsection (a) by
 providing:
 (1)  a driver's license or personal identification
 certificate issued under Chapter 521, Transportation Code;
 (2)  a commercial driver's license issued under Chapter
 522, Transportation Code;
 (3)  a driver's license or commercial driver's license
 issued by another state that to be issued required proof of lawful
 presence in the United States;
 (4)  an unexpired United States passport book or card;
 (5)  an unexpired document issued by the United States
 Department of Homeland Security or United States Citizenship and
 Immigration Services with verifiable data and a photograph
 sufficiently clear to enable identification of the person;
 (6)  an unexpired foreign passport with an attached
 visa issued by the United States; or
 (7)  any other documentation or combination of
 documentation that is sufficient to allow the peace officer to
 verify the person's identity and immigration status.
 (c)  If a person fails to provide documentation listed in
 Subsection (b) after a peace officer's request under Subsection
 (a), not later than 48 hours after the person's failure to provide
 required documentation, the officer shall make reasonable efforts
 to verify the person's immigration status, including by contacting
 the Law Enforcement Support Center of the United States Department
 of Homeland Security or a successor agency.
 (d)  This article does not apply to a peace officer enforcing
 federal immigration laws as authorized by an agreement with United
 States Immigration and Customs Enforcement under Section 287(g),
 Immigration and Nationality Act (8 U.S.C. Section 1357(g)) or any
 other federal law authorizing an officer of a state or a political
 subdivision of a state to enforce federal immigration law.
 (e)  A peace officer may not consider a person's race, color,
 religion, language, or national origin while exercising the powers
 or performing the duties of this article except to the extent
 permitted by the United States Constitution and the Texas
 Constitution.
 Art. 2A.0596.  DUTY TO INVESTIGATE IMMIGRATION STATUS ON
 ARREST. As soon as practicable after a peace officer arrests a
 person, the officer shall:
 (1)  review the person's criminal history record
 information available through the National Crime Information
 Center and the Texas Crime Information Center;
 (2)  ensure that the person's fingerprints are
 obtained; and
 (3)  investigate the person's immigration status in the
 manner required by Article 2A.0595 unless the officer has
 previously confirmed the person's immigration status in accordance
 with that article.
 SECTION 4.  Subchapter B, Chapter 2A, Code of Criminal
 Procedure, is amended by adding Article 2A.0605 to read as follows:
 Art. 2A.0605.  INVESTIGATION OF IMMIGRATION STATUS OF PERSON
 CONFINED IN JAIL. (a) Except as provided by Subsection (b), a
 municipal or county jail that takes custody of a person arrested for
 an offense shall make reasonable efforts to investigate the
 person's immigration status as soon as practicable after taking
 custody of the person if the arresting peace officer:
 (1)  could not determine the person's immigration
 status after conducting the investigation required by Article
 2A.0596; or
 (2)  did not provide the results of an investigation
 conducted under Article 2A.0596 to the jail.
 (b)  If the municipal or county jail receives custody of a
 person described by Subsection (a) transferred from another jail,
 and the transferring jail has completed or already begun
 investigating the person's immigration status, the receiving jail
 is not required to investigate the person's immigration status
 under this article.
 (c)  If a municipal or county jail takes custody of a person
 described by Subsection (a) and subsequently transfers the person
 to another jail, the transferring jail shall:
 (1)  continue any investigation into the person's
 immigration status that was begun before the transfer; and
 (2)  on completion of the investigation described by
 Subdivision (1), notify the receiving jail of the results of the
 investigation.
 SECTION 5.  Chapter 493, Government Code, is amended by
 adding Section 493.0153 to read as follows:
 Sec. 493.0153.  REPORT ON INMATES AND STATE JAIL FELONY
 DEFENDANTS SUBJECT TO IMMIGRATION DETAINER REQUEST BY IMMIGRATION
 AND CUSTOMS ENFORCEMENT. (a) For each 90-day period, the
 department shall:
 (1)  identify each inmate and state jail felony
 defendant who is:
 (A)  confined in a facility operated by or for the
 department during the 90-day period; and
 (B)  subject to an immigration detainer request
 issued by United States Immigration and Customs Enforcement;
 (2)  compile a report regarding the immigration status
 of the inmates and defendants identified under Subdivision (1), the
 offenses for which the inmates and defendants are serving a
 sentence, and the home country of each of those inmates and
 defendants; and
 (3)  publish on the department's publicly accessible
 Internet website the report compiled under Subdivision (2) as soon
 as practicable after the expiration of the 90-day period covered by
 the report.
 (b)  The report required under Subsection (a)(2) must
 include the total numbers for each data category, and if an inmate
 or state jail felony defendant is a citizen of both the United
 States and one or more other countries, data for those inmates and
 defendants must be reported separately.
 SECTION 6.  Section 511.0101, Government Code, is amended by
 amending Subsection (a) and adding Subsection (c) to read as
 follows:
 (a)  Each county shall submit to the commission on or before
 the fifth day of each month a report containing the following
 information:
 (1)  the number of prisoners confined in the county
 jail on the first day of the month, classified on the basis of the
 following categories:
 (A)  total prisoners;
 (B)  pretrial Class C misdemeanor offenders;
 (C)  pretrial Class A and B misdemeanor offenders;
 (D)  convicted misdemeanor offenders;
 (E)  felony offenders whose penalty has been
 reduced to a misdemeanor;
 (F)  pretrial felony offenders;
 (G)  convicted felony offenders;
 (H)  prisoners detained on bench warrants;
 (I)  prisoners detained for parole violations;
 (J)  prisoners detained for federal officers;
 (K)  prisoners awaiting transfer to the
 institutional division of the Texas Department of Criminal Justice
 following conviction of a felony or revocation of probation,
 parole, or release on mandatory supervision and for whom paperwork
 and processing required for transfer have been completed;
 (L)  prisoners detained after having been
 transferred from another jail and for whom the commission has made a
 payment under Subchapter F, Chapter 499, Government Code;
 (M)  prisoners for whom an immigration detainer
 has been issued by United States Immigration and Customs
 Enforcement, and of those prisoners:
 (i)  the number transferred to the custody
 of United States Immigration and Customs Enforcement in the
 previous month; and
 (ii)  the number released from custody in
 the previous month;
 (N)  prisoners who were known or reasonably
 believed to be present in the United States in violation of federal
 immigration laws or Chapter 51, Penal Code;
 (O)  female prisoners; and
 (P) [(O)]  other prisoners;
 (2)  the total capacity of the county jail on the first
 day of the month;
 (3)  the total number of prisoners who were confined in
 the county jail during the preceding month, based on a count
 conducted on each day of that month, who were known or had been
 determined to be pregnant;
 (4)  the total cost to the county during the preceding
 month of housing prisoners described by Subdivisions [Subdivision]
 (1)(M) and (N), calculated based on the average daily cost of
 housing a prisoner in the county jail; and
 (5)  certification by the reporting official that the
 information in the report is accurate.
 (c)  Not later than the 30th day after the date a county
 submits to the commission the report required under this section,
 the county shall publish on its publicly accessible Internet
 website the information described by Subsections (a)(1)(M) and (N)
 that was contained in the report.
 SECTION 7.  Chapter 752, Government Code, is amended by
 adding Subchapter D to read as follows:
 SUBCHAPTER D. COOPERATION WITH FEDERAL IMMIGRATION AUTHORITIES
 Sec. 752.081.  DEFINITIONS. In this subchapter:
 (1)  "Alien" has the meaning assigned by 8 U.S.C.
 Section 1101, as that provision existed on January 1, 2025.
 (2)  "Immigration laws" and "local entity" have the
 meanings assigned by Section 752.051.
 (3)  "Peace officer" means a person elected, employed,
 or appointed as a peace officer under Article 2A.001, Code of
 Criminal Procedure.
 Sec. 752.082.  ENFORCEMENT OF IMMIGRATION LAWS;
 COORDINATION WITH FEDERAL AUTHORITIES. (a) To the extent
 authorized by federal law, each employee of a state agency or local
 entity, including a peace officer, district attorney, criminal
 district attorney, and county attorney, shall send, receive, and
 maintain information relating to the immigration status of any
 individual as reasonably needed for public safety purposes. Except
 as provided by federal law, an employee of a state agency or local
 entity may not be prohibited from receiving or maintaining
 information related to the immigration status of any individual or
 sending or exchanging that information with other federal, state,
 or local governmental entities for official public safety purposes.
 (b)  Each state agency and local entity shall promote
 compliance with and enforcement of state laws related to deterring
 the presence of criminal illegal aliens in this state and may enter
 into memoranda of understanding with the United States Department
 of Justice, the United States Department of Homeland Security, or
 any other federal agency for the purpose of enforcing immigration
 laws, including agreements with United States Immigration and
 Customs Enforcement under Section 287(g), Immigration and
 Nationality Act (8 U.S.C. Section 1357(g)), or a successor federal
 program. The Department of Public Safety and each sheriff's
 office, municipal police department, and constable's office shall
 annually seek to enter into an agreement with United States
 Immigration and Customs Enforcement under Section 287(g),
 Immigration and Nationality Act (8 U.S.C. Section 1357(g)), or a
 successor federal program, when no agreement is in effect for that
 year.
 (c)  Except as provided by federal law, a state agency or
 local entity may use available federal resources, including
 databases, equipment, grant funds, training, or participation in
 incentive programs for any public safety purpose related to the
 enforcement of immigration laws.
 (d)  When reasonably possible, a state agency, in
 collaboration with the governor's office, shall pursue federal
 incentive programs and grant funding for the purpose of assisting
 and encouraging state agencies and local entities to enter into
 agreements with federal agencies regarding the enforcement of
 immigration laws and the use of federal resources, consistent with
 the provisions of this subchapter.
 Sec. 752.083.  AUTHORITY TO DETAIN AND TRANSPORT ILLEGAL
 ALIENS. (a) If a peace officer has probable cause to believe a
 person has committed an offense under Section 51.04, Penal Code,
 the officer shall securely transport the person to the custody of
 the United States Department of Homeland Security or to a temporary
 point of detention and reasonably detain the person when authorized
 by federal immigration detainer or federal arrest warrant.
 (b)  This section may not be construed to hinder or prevent a
 peace officer or law enforcement agency from arresting or detaining
 any criminal suspect on other criminal charges.
 Sec. 752.084.  IMMUNITY. A law enforcement officer or
 employee of a state agency or local entity who reasonably acts in
 good faith to enforce immigration laws pursuant to an agreement
 with federal authorities or to carry out any provision of this
 subchapter is immune from liability when enforcing those laws or
 carrying out this subchapter.
 Sec. 752.085.  REFUSAL TO ENFORCE IMMIGRATION LAWS; CIVIL
 PENALTY. (a) A local entity may not intentionally refuse to comply
 with the requirements of this subchapter relating to the
 enforcement of immigration laws.
 (b)  If the attorney general has reason to believe that a
 local entity has violated Subsection (a), the attorney general may
 bring an action for equitable relief against the local entity in a
 district court of Travis County or in a district court in the county
 where the violation occurred to compel the local entity to comply
 with the requirements of this subchapter.
 (c)  In addition to ordering the local entity to comply with
 the requirements of this subchapter, the court may impose a civil
 penalty on the local entity. The court has the discretion to
 determine the amount of the penalty based on:
 (1)  the extent and seriousness of the violation;
 (2)  the local entity's history of violations of this
 subchapter;
 (3)  the amount necessary to deter future violations of
 this subchapter;
 (4)  efforts made by the local entity to correct the
 violation; and
 (5)  any other matter that justice requires.
 (d)  The attorney general may recover reasonable expenses
 incurred in obtaining relief under this section, including court
 costs, reasonable attorney's fees, investigative costs, witness
 fees, and deposition costs.
 (e)  A civil penalty collected under this section shall be
 deposited to the credit of the compensation to victims of crime fund
 established under Subchapter J, Chapter 56B, Code of Criminal
 Procedure.
 (f)  Sovereign immunity of this state and governmental
 immunity of a local entity to suit and liability is waived and
 abolished to the extent of liability created by this section.
 SECTION 8.  (a) Article 2A.059, Code of Criminal Procedure,
 as amended by this Act, applies only to an inquiry that occurs on or
 after the effective date of this Act. An inquiry that occurs before
 the effective date of this Act is governed by the law in effect on
 the date the inquiry occurred, and the former law is continued in
 effect for that purpose.
 (b)  Article 2A.0595, Code of Criminal Procedure, as added by
 this Act, applies only to a detention that occurs on or after the
 effective date of this Act.
 (c)  Article 2A.0596, Code of Criminal Procedure, as added by
 this Act, applies only to an arrest that occurs on or after the
 effective date of this Act.
 (d)  Article 2A.0605, Code of Criminal Procedure, as added by
 this Act, applies only to confinement that begins on or after the
 effective date of this Act.
 (e)  Section 752.083, Government Code, as added by this Act,
 applies only to an offense committed under Section 51.04, Penal
 Code, 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 on the date the offense was committed, and the former
 law is continued in effect for that purpose. For purposes of this
 subsection, an offense was committed before the effective date of
 this Act if any element of the offense occurred before that date.
 SECTION 9.  Not later than January 1, 2026, the Texas
 Department of Criminal Justice shall compile and publish the first
 report required by Section 493.0153, Government Code, as added by
 this Act.
 SECTION 10.  If any provision of this Act or its application
 to any person or circumstance is held invalid, the invalidity does
 not affect other provisions or applications of this Act that can be
 given effect without the invalid provision or application, and to
 this end the provisions of this Act are declared severable.
 SECTION 11.  This Act takes effect September 1, 2025.