Texas 2025 - 89th Regular

Texas House Bill HB507 Latest Draft

Bill / Introduced Version Filed 11/12/2024

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                            89R3623 MEW-F
 By: Gervin-Hawkins H.B. No. 507




 A BILL TO BE ENTITLED
 AN ACT
 relating to policies and standards for providing legal
 representation to indigent defendants in certain capital felony
 cases.
 BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF TEXAS:
 SECTION 1.  Article 26.052, Code of Criminal Procedure, is
 amended by adding Subsections (c-1) and (c-2) and amending
 Subsections (d) and (m) to read as follows:
 (c-1)  Each local selection committee described by
 Subsection (c) shall evaluate and determine the list of attorneys
 in the applicable administrative judicial region qualified under
 this article to be appointed to represent indigent defendants in
 capital cases in which the death penalty is sought and post the list
 on the Internet website of that administrative judicial region.
 (c-2)(1)  A statewide capital defense training and standards
 committee is created.  The committee must be composed of nine
 members, including:
 (A)  two judges jointly selected by the presiding
 judges of the administrative judicial regions;
 (B)  a criminal defense attorney appointed by the
 president of the Texas Criminal Defense Lawyers Association;
 (C)  the chief public defender of the Regional
 Public Defender for Capital Cases office, or the chief public
 defender's designee;
 (D)  the chief capital defender of a county public
 defender office appointed by the executive director of the Texas
 Indigent Defense Commission;
 (E)  a member of the State Bar of Texas committee
 on legal services to the poor in criminal matters selected by the
 chair of the committee; and
 (F)  three attorneys appointed by the executive
 director of the Texas Indigent Defense Commission.
 (2)  Each member of the statewide capital defense
 training and standards committee must:
 (A)  be a licensed attorney; and
 (B)  have significant experience in capital
 defense or indigent criminal defense policy or practice.
 (3)  A member of the statewide capital defense training
 and standards committee may not be a prosecutor, a law enforcement
 officer, or an employee of the office of capital and forensic writs.
 (4)  Members of the statewide capital defense training
 and standards committee serve four-year terms and may be
 reappointed. If a vacancy occurs, the appropriate appointing
 authority shall appoint a successor in the same manner as the
 original appointment to serve for the remainder of the unexpired
 term.
 (5)  The members of the statewide capital defense
 training and standards committee shall select a chair from among
 the committee's members.
 (6)  A member of the statewide capital defense training
 and standards committee may not receive compensation for service on
 the committee but is entitled to be reimbursed for actual and
 necessary expenses incurred in discharging committee duties. The
 expenses are paid from funds appropriated to the Texas Indigent
 Defense Commission.
 (7)  The Texas Indigent Defense Commission shall
 provide administrative support to the statewide capital defense
 training and standards committee as necessary to carry out the
 purposes of the committee.
 (d)(1)  The statewide capital defense training and standards
 committee created under Subsection (c-2) shall adopt policies and
 standards for providing legal representation [the qualification of
 attorneys to be appointed] to [represent] indigent defendants in
 capital cases in which the death penalty is sought. The policies and
 standards must include, with respect to the qualification of
 attorneys to be appointed in capital cases, the following:
 (A)  training requirements and curricula;
 (B)  qualification standards;
 (C)  continuing legal education requirements; and
 (D)  other policies and standards as necessary to
 ensure quality legal representation in capital cases.
 (2)  The standards described by Subdivision (1) must
 require that a trial attorney appointed as lead counsel to a capital
 case:
 (A)  be a member of the State Bar of Texas;
 (B)  exhibit proficiency and commitment to
 providing quality representation to defendants in death penalty
 cases;
 (C)  have not been found by a local selection
 committee described by Subsection (c) to have provided deficient
 legal representation [a federal or state court to have rendered
 ineffective assistance of counsel] during the trial or appeal of
 any capital case if [, unless] the local selection committee has
 determined [determines under Subsection (n)] that the conduct
 underlying the deficient representation [finding no longer]
 accurately reflects the attorney's inability [ability] to provide
 effective representation in the future;
 (D)  have at least five years of criminal law
 experience;
 (E)  have tried to a verdict as lead defense
 counsel a significant number of felony cases, including homicide
 trials and other trials for offenses punishable as second or first
 degree felonies or capital felonies;
 (F)  have trial experience in[:
 [(i)]  the use of and challenges to mental
 health or forensic expert witnesses[;] and have:
 (i)  trial experience in [(ii)]
 investigating and presenting mitigating evidence at the penalty
 phase of a death penalty trial, regardless of whether:
 (a)  the case resulted in a judgment or
 dismissal; or
 (b)  the state subsequently waived the
 death penalty in the case; or
 (ii)  an equivalent amount of trial
 experience, as determined by the applicable local selection
 committee; and
 (G)  have participated in continuing legal
 education courses or other training relating to criminal defense in
 death penalty cases.
 (3)  The standards described by Subdivision (1) must
 require that an attorney appointed as lead appellate counsel in the
 direct appeal of a capital case:
 (A)  be a member of the State Bar of Texas;
 (B)  exhibit proficiency and commitment to
 providing quality representation to defendants in death penalty
 cases;
 (C)  have not been found by a local selection
 committee described by Subsection (c) to have provided deficient
 legal representation [a federal or state court to have rendered
 ineffective assistance of counsel] during the trial or appeal of
 any capital case if [, unless] the local selection committee has
 determined [determines under Subsection (n)] that the conduct
 underlying the deficient representation [finding no longer]
 accurately reflects the attorney's inability [ability] to provide
 effective representation in the future;
 (D)  have at least five years of criminal law
 experience;
 (E)  have authored a significant number of
 appellate briefs, including appellate briefs for homicide cases and
 other cases involving an offense punishable as a capital felony or a
 felony of the first degree or an offense described by Article
 42A.054(a);
 (F)  have trial or appellate experience in[:
 [(i)]  the use of and challenges to mental
 health or forensic expert witnesses[;] and have:
 (i)  trial or appellate experience in [(ii)]
 the use of mitigating evidence at the penalty phase of a death
 penalty trial, regardless of whether:
 (a)  the case resulted in a judgment or
 dismissal; or
 (b)  the state subsequently waived the
 death penalty in the case; or
 (ii)  an equivalent amount of trial or
 appellate experience, as determined by the applicable local
 selection committee; and
 (G)  have participated in continuing legal
 education courses or other training relating to criminal defense in
 appealing death penalty cases.
 (4)  The Texas Indigent Defense Commission [committee]
 shall prominently post the policies and standards adopted by the
 statewide capital defense training and standards committee under
 Subdivision (1) on the commission's Internet website [in each
 district clerk's office in the region with a list of attorneys
 qualified for appointment].
 (5)  Not later than the second anniversary of the date
 an attorney is placed on a local selection committee's [the] list of
 attorneys qualified for appointment in death penalty cases under
 Subsection (c-1) and each year following the second anniversary,
 the attorney must present a list of death penalty trial, direct
 appeal, and habeas corpus cases in which the attorney served as
 counsel and proof to the local selection committee for the
 applicable administrative judicial region that the attorney has
 successfully completed the training, minimum continuing legal
 education requirements, and other standards adopted by the
 statewide capital defense training and standards committee under
 Subdivision (1) [of the State Bar of Texas, including a course or
 other form of training relating to criminal defense in death
 penalty cases or in appealing death penalty cases, as applicable].
 The applicable local selection committee shall remove the
 attorney's name from the list of qualified attorneys under
 Subsection (c-1) if the attorney fails to provide the local
 selection committee with the materials required under this
 subdivision [proof of completion of the continuing legal education
 requirements].
 (m)  Each [The] local selection committee shall annually
 review the list of attorneys posted under Subsection (c-1) [(d)] to
 ensure that each listed attorney satisfies the requirements under
 this chapter.
 SECTION 2.  Article 26.052(n), Code of Criminal Procedure,
 is repealed.
 SECTION 3.  The change in law made by this Act applies only
 to a capital felony case that is filed on or after the effective
 date of this Act. A capital felony case that is filed before the
 effective date of this Act is governed by the law in effect on the
 date the case was filed, and the former law is continued in effect
 for that purpose.
 SECTION 4.  This Act takes effect September 1, 2025.