HB 36 Introduced

Relating to the monitoring of certain family violence offenders, the provision of resources for family violence victims, and the collection of information about conditions of bond imposed in family violence cases and certain other criminal cases. 

​ 
 

 

A BILL TO BE ENTITLED

 

AN ACT

 

relating to the monitoring of certain family violence offenders,

 

the provision of resources for family violence victims, and the

 

collection of information about conditions of bond imposed in

 

family violence cases and certain other criminal cases.

 

       BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF TEXAS:

 

       SECTION 1.  This Act shall be known as the Sharon Radebaugh

 

Family Violence Protection Act.

 

       SECTION 2.  (a) The legislature finds that:

 

             (1)  family violence remains a critical issue affecting

 

the safety and well-being of Texas residents; and

 

             (2)  one in four women and one in seven men in this

 

country will experience family violence.

 

       (b)  The purpose of this Act is to:

 

             (1)  strengthen monitoring of family violence

 

offenders;

 

             (2)  implement monitoring through a global positioning

 

monitoring system for high-risk offenders;

 

             (3)  enhance victim safety; and

 

             (4)  prevent further acts of family violence.

 

       SECTION 3.  Article 17.292(c-1), Code of Criminal Procedure,

 

is amended to read as follows:

 

       (c-1)  In addition to the conditions described by Subsection

 

(c), the magistrate in the order for emergency protection may

 

impose a condition described by Article 17.49(b) in the manner

 

provided by that article, including ordering a defendant’s

 

participation in a global positioning monitoring system or allowing

 

participation in the system by an alleged victim or other person

 

protected under the order.  If applicable, the magistrate shall

 

impose the condition described by Article 17.49(b-1).

 

       SECTION 4.  Article 17.49(a)(2), Code of Criminal Procedure,

 

is amended to read as follows:

 

             (2)  “Global positioning monitoring system” means a

 

system that electronically determines and reports the location of

 

an individual through the use of a transmitter or similar device

 

[carried or] worn by the individual that transmits latitude and

 

longitude data to a monitoring entity through global positioning

 

satellite technology.  The term does not include a system that

 

contains or operates global positioning system technology, radio

 

frequency identification technology, or any other similar

 

technology that is implanted in or otherwise invades or violates

 

the individual’s body.

 

       SECTION 5.  Article 17.49, Code of Criminal Procedure, is

 

amended by amending Subsections (b), (d), (f), (h), (j), and (k) and

 

adding Subsections (b-1), (m), and (n) to read as follows:

 

       (b)  Except as provided by Subsection (b-1), a [A] magistrate

 

may require as a condition of release on bond that a defendant

 

charged with an offense involving family violence:

 

             (1)  refrain from going to or near a residence, school,

 

place of employment, or other location, as specifically described

 

in the bond, frequented by an alleged victim of the offense;

 

             (2)  [carry or] wear a global positioning monitoring

 

system device and, except as provided by Subsection (h), pay a

 

reimbursement fee for the costs associated with operating that

 

system in relation to the defendant;

 

             (3)  except as provided by Subsection (h), if the

 

alleged victim of the offense consents after receiving the

 

information described by Subsection (d), pay a reimbursement fee

 

for the costs associated with providing the victim with an

 

electronic receptor device or with notification software installed

 

on the victim’s personal electronic device that:

 

                   (A)  is capable of receiving the global

 

positioning monitoring system information from the device [carried

 

or] worn by the defendant; and

 

                   (B)  contemporaneously notifies the victim if the

 

defendant is at or near a location that the defendant has been

 

ordered to refrain from going to or near under Subdivision (1); or

 

             (4)  refrain from tracking or monitoring personal

 

property or a motor vehicle in the possession of the alleged victim

 

of the offense, without the victim’s effective consent, including

 

by:

 

                   (A)  using a tracking application on a personal

 

electronic device in the possession of the victim or using a

 

tracking device; or

 

                   (B)  physically following the victim or causing

 

another to physically follow the victim.

 

       (b-1)  A magistrate shall require as a condition of release

 

on bond that a defendant wear a global positioning monitoring

 

system device and, except as provided by Subsection (h), pay a

 

reimbursement fee for the costs associated with operating that

 

system in relation to the defendant if the defendant poses a

 

continuing threat to the victim. A defendant is considered to pose

 

a continuing threat to the victim if the defendant has a history of:

 

             (1)  conduct violating a provision of Title 5, Penal

 

Code;

 

             (2)  the use of firearms outside a professional,

 

sporting, recreational, or hunting context;

 

             (3)  violating a previous protective order issued to

 

protect any person; or

 

             (4)  making threats to or against the victim.

 

       (d)  Before imposing a condition described by Subsection

 

(b)(3), a magistrate must provide to an alleged victim information

 

regarding:

 

             (1)  the victim’s right to participate in a global

 

positioning monitoring system or to refuse to participate in that

 

system and the procedure for requesting that the magistrate

 

terminate the victim’s participation;

 

             (2)  the manner in which the global positioning

 

monitoring system technology functions and the risks and

 

limitations of that technology, and the extent to which the system

 

will contemporaneously track and record the victim’s location and

 

movements;

 

             (3)  any locations that the defendant is ordered to

 

refrain from going to or near and the minimum distances, if any,

 

that the defendant must maintain from those locations;

 

             (4)  any sanctions that the court may impose on the

 

defendant for violating a condition of bond imposed under this

 

article and any criminal penalties for the violation;

 

             (5)  the procedure that the victim is to follow, and

 

support services available to assist the victim, if the defendant

 

violates a condition of bond or if the global positioning

 

monitoring system equipment or the victim’s electronic receptor

 

device or notification software fails;

 

             (6)  community services available to assist the victim

 

in obtaining shelter, counseling, education, child care, legal

 

representation, and other assistance available to address the

 

consequences of family violence; and

 

             (7)  the fact that the victim’s communications with the

 

court concerning the global positioning monitoring system and any

 

restrictions to be imposed on the defendant’s movements are not

 

confidential.

 

       (f)  In determining whether to order a defendant’s

 

participation in a global positioning monitoring system under

 

Subsection (b) [this article], the magistrate shall consider the

 

likelihood that the defendant’s participation will deter the

 

defendant from seeking to kill, physically injure, stalk, or

 

otherwise threaten the alleged victim before trial.

 

       (h)  If the magistrate determines that a defendant is

 

indigent, the magistrate may, based on a sliding scale established

 

by local rule, require the defendant to pay a reimbursement fee

 

under Subsection (b)(2) or (3) or (b-1) in an amount that is less

 

than the full amount of the costs associated with:

 

             (1)  operating the global positioning monitoring

 

system in relation to the defendant; or

 

             (2)  providing the victim with an electronic receptor

 

device or with notification software installed on the victim’s

 

personal electronic device, as applicable.

 

       (j)  A magistrate who [that] imposes a condition requiring

 

the wearing of a global positioning monitoring system device

 

[described by Subsection (b)(1) or (2)] shall order the entity that

 

operates the global positioning monitoring system to notify the

 

court, the Department of Public Safety, the victim, and the

 

appropriate local law enforcement agency if a defendant violates a

 

condition of bond imposed under this article. The entity must be

 

capable of providing an immediate, automatic electronic

 

notification, by text message or otherwise, on the defendant’s

 

violation of a condition of bond. If the defendant violates the

 

condition of bond by entering a prohibited location, the

 

notification must state with specificity the location of the

 

defendant.

 

       (k)  A magistrate who [that] imposes a condition described by

 

Subsection (b) or (b-1) may only allow or require the defendant to

 

execute or be released under a type of bond that is authorized by

 

this chapter.

 

       (m)  As soon as possible but not later than the next business

 

day after the date the magistrate issues an order imposing a

 

condition of bond involving a global positioning monitoring system,

 

the magistrate shall send a copy of the order to:

 

             (1)  the appropriate attorney representing the state

 

and either:

 

                   (A)  the chief of police in the municipality where

 

the victim of the offense resides, if the victim resides in a

 

municipality; or 

 

                   (B)  the sheriff of the county where the victim

 

resides, if the victim does not reside in a municipality; and

 

             (2)  the victim at the victim’s last known address.

 

       (n)  On receipt of the order under Subsection (m), the local

 

law enforcement agency shall immediately, but not later than the

 

third business day after the date the order is received, enter the

 

information required by Section 411.042(b)(7), Government Code,

 

into the statewide law enforcement information system maintained by

 

the Department of Public Safety.

 

       SECTION 6.  Section 85.022, Family Code, is amended by

 

adding Subsections (b-1), (f), (g), (h), (i), and (j) and amending

 

Subsection (e) to read as follows:

 

       (b-1)  For purposes of Subsection (b)(6), “firearm” has the

 

meaning assigned by Section 46.01, Penal Code.

 

       (e)  The court shall require as a condition of the protective

 

order that the respondent wear a device to allow monitoring by a

 

global positioning monitoring system, as defined by Article 17.49,

 

Code of Criminal Procedure, and, except as provided by Subsection

 

(h), pay a reimbursement fee for the costs associated with

 

operating that system in relation to the respondent if the

 

respondent poses a continuing threat to a person protected by the

 

order. A respondent is considered to pose a continuing threat to a

 

person protected by the order if:

 

             (1)  the respondent has a history of:

 

                   (A)  conduct violating a provision of Title 5,

 

Penal Code;

 

                   (B)  the use of firearms outside a professional,

 

sporting, recreational, or hunting context;

 

                   (C)  violating a previous protective order issued

 

to protect any person; or

 

                   (D)  making threats to or against a person

 

protected by the order; or

 

             (2)  in the five-year period preceding the date of the

 

order, the respondent was convicted of an offense for which an

 

affirmative finding was made under Article 42.013, Code of Criminal

 

Procedure [In this section, “firearm” has the meaning assigned by

 

Section 46.01, Penal Code].

 

       (f)  Except as provided by Subsection (h), and if the person

 

protected by the order consents after receiving the information

 

described by Subsection (g), the court may order the respondent to

 

pay a reimbursement fee for the costs associated with providing the

 

person protected by the order with an electronic receptor device or

 

with notification software installed on the person’s personal

 

electronic device that:

 

             (1)  is capable of receiving the global positioning

 

monitoring system information from the device worn by the

 

respondent; and

 

             (2)  contemporaneously notifies the person if the

 

respondent is at or near a location that the respondent has been

 

ordered to refrain from going to or near under Subsection (b)(3) or

 

(4).

 

       (g)  Before imposing a condition described by Subsection

 

(f), the court must provide to the person protected by the order

 

information regarding:

 

             (1)  the person’s right to participate in a global

 

positioning monitoring system or to refuse to participate in that

 

system and the procedure for requesting that the court terminate

 

the person’s participation;

 

             (2)  the manner in which the global positioning

 

monitoring system technology functions, and the risks and

 

limitations of that technology, and the extent to which the system

 

will track and record the person’s location and movements;

 

             (3)  any locations that the respondent is ordered to

 

refrain from going to or near and the minimum distances, if any,

 

that the respondent must maintain from those locations;

 

             (4)  any sanctions that the court may impose on the

 

respondent for violating a protective order issued under this

 

section and any criminal penalties for the violation;

 

             (5)  the procedure that the person protected by the

 

order is to follow, and support services available to assist the

 

person, if the respondent violates a condition of bond or if the

 

global positioning monitoring system equipment or the person’s

 

electronic receptor device or notification software fails;

 

             (6)  community services available to assist the person

 

in obtaining shelter, counseling, education, child care, legal

 

representation, and other assistance available to address the

 

consequences of family violence; and

 

             (7)  the fact that the person’s communications with the

 

court concerning the global positioning monitoring system and any

 

restrictions to be imposed on the respondent’s movements are not

 

confidential.

 

       (h)  If the court finds that the respondent is indigent, the

 

court may, based on a sliding scale established by local rule,

 

require the respondent to pay a reimbursement fee in an amount that

 

is less than the full amount of the costs associated with:

 

             (1)  operating the global positioning monitoring

 

system in relation to the respondent; or 

 

             (2)  providing the person protected by the order with

 

an electronic receptor device or with notification software

 

installed on the person’s personal electronic device, as

 

applicable.

 

       (i)  If an indigent respondent pays to an entity that

 

operates a global positioning monitoring system the partial amount

 

ordered by the court under Subsection (h), the entity shall accept

 

the partial amount as payment in full.  The county in which the

 

court that enters an order under Subsection (h) is located is not

 

responsible for payment of any costs associated with operating the

 

global positioning monitoring system in relation to an indigent

 

respondent.

 

       (j)  A court that imposes a condition requiring the wearing

 

of a global positioning monitoring system device shall order the

 

entity that operates the global positioning monitoring system to

 

notify the court, the Department of Public Safety, the victim, and

 

the appropriate local law enforcement agency if a respondent

 

violates a condition of a protective order issued under this

 

section. The entity must be capable of providing an immediate,

 

automatic electronic notification, by text message or otherwise, on

 

the respondent’s violation of a condition of the protective order.

 

If the respondent violates the protective order by entering a

 

prohibited location, the notification must state with specificity

 

the location of the respondent.

 

       SECTION 7.  Subtitle C, Title 4, Family Code, is amended by

 

adding Chapter 94 to read as follows:

 

CHAPTER 94. VICTIM SERVICES

 

       Sec. 94.001.  DEFINITIONS. In this chapter:

 

             (1)  “Department” means the Department of Public

 

Safety.

 

             (2)  “Family violence” has the meaning assigned by

 

Section 71.004.

 

             (3)  “Family violence center” has the meaning assigned

 

by Section 51.002, Human Resources Code.

 

             (4)  “Victim of family violence” has the meaning

 

assigned by Section 51.002, Human Resources Code.

 

       Sec. 94.002.  VICTIM ASSISTANCE PROGRAM. (a)  The

 

department, in consultation or in conjunction with other

 

appropriate state agencies, shall administer a victim assistance

 

program to:

 

             (1)  provide resources to victims of family violence to

 

assist in accessing necessary services; and

 

             (2)  facilitate direct communications among victims of

 

family violence, victim service providers, family violence

 

centers, and law enforcement.

 

       (b)  The department shall create and administer a searchable

 

database of assistance programs for victims of family violence that

 

may be used to connect victims with necessary services.

 

       SECTION 8.  Section 411.042, Government Code, is amended by

 

amending Subsection (b) and adding Subsection (k) to read as

 

follows:

 

       (b)  The bureau of identification and records shall:

 

             (1)  procure and file for record photographs, pictures,

 

descriptions, fingerprints, measurements, and other pertinent

 

information of all persons arrested for or charged with a criminal

 

offense or convicted of a criminal offense, regardless of whether

 

the conviction is probated;

 

             (2)  collect information concerning the number and

 

nature of offenses reported or known to have been committed in the

 

state and the legal steps taken in connection with the offenses, and

 

other information useful in the study of crime and the

 

administration of justice, including information that enables the

 

bureau to create a statistical breakdown of:

 

                   (A)  offenses in which family violence was

 

involved;

 

                   (B)  offenses under Sections 22.011 and 22.021,

 

Penal Code; and

 

                   (C)  offenses under Sections 20A.02, 43.02,

 

43.021, 43.03, 43.031, 43.04, 43.041, and 43.05, Penal Code;

 

             (3)  make ballistic tests of bullets and firearms and

 

chemical analyses of bloodstains, cloth, materials, and other

 

substances for law enforcement officers of the state;

 

             (4)  cooperate with identification and crime records

 

bureaus in other states and the United States Department of

 

Justice;

 

             (5)  maintain a list of all previous background checks

 

for applicants for any position regulated under Chapter 1702,

 

Occupations Code, who have undergone a criminal history background

 

check as required by that chapter, if the check indicates a Class B

 

misdemeanor or equivalent offense or a greater offense;

 

             (6)  collect information concerning the number and

 

nature of protective orders and magistrate’s orders for [of]

 

emergency protection and all other pertinent information about all

 

persons subject to active orders, including, for each [pertinent

 

information about persons subject to conditions of bond imposed for

 

the protection of the victim in any family violence, sexual assault

 

or abuse, indecent assault, stalking, or trafficking case.  

 

Information in the law enforcement information system relating to

 

an] active order [shall include]:

 

                   (A)  the name, sex, race, date of birth, personal

 

descriptors, address, and county of residence of the person to whom

 

the order is directed;

 

                   (B)  any known identifying number of the person to

 

whom the order is directed, including the person’s social security

 

number or driver’s license number;

 

                   (C)  the name and county of residence of the

 

person protected by the order;

 

                   (D)  the residence address and place of employment

 

or business of the person protected by the order;

 

                   (E)  the child-care facility or school where a

 

child protected by the order normally resides or which the child

 

normally attends;

 

                   (F)  the relationship or former relationship

 

between the person who is protected by the order and the person to

 

whom the order is directed;

 

                   (G)  the conditions of bond imposed on the person

 

to whom the order is directed, if any, for the protection of a

 

victim in any family violence, sexual assault or abuse, indecent

 

assault, stalking, or trafficking case;

 

                   (H)  any minimum distance the person subject to

 

the order is required to maintain from the protected places or

 

persons;

 

                   (I)  whether a global positioning monitoring

 

system device is required for the person to whom the order is

 

directed and, if applicable, the method by which the person

 

protected by the order receives contemporaneous notifications of

 

any violations; and

 

                   (J) [(I)]  the date the order expires;

 

             (7)  collect information about defendants subject to

 

active conditions of bond imposed for the protection of the victim

 

in any family violence, sexual assault or abuse, indecent assault,

 

stalking, or trafficking case, including, for each defendant:

 

                   (A)  the name, sex, race, date of birth, personal

 

descriptors, address, and county of residence of the defendant;

 

                   (B)  any known identifying number of the

 

defendant, including the defendant’s social security number or

 

driver’s license number;

 

                   (C)  the name and county of residence of the

 

victim of the offense;

 

                   (D)  any locations that the defendant must refrain

 

from going to or near under the conditions of bond;

 

                   (E)  whether a global positioning monitoring

 

system device is required for the defendant and, if applicable, the

 

method by which the victim receives contemporaneous notifications

 

of any violations; and

 

                   (F)  any other conditions of bond imposed;

 

             (8)  grant access to criminal history record

 

information in the manner authorized under Subchapter F;

 

             (9) [(8)]  collect and disseminate information

 

regarding offenders with mental impairments in compliance with

 

Chapter 614, Health and Safety Code; and

 

             (10) [(9)]  record data and maintain a state database

 

for a computerized criminal history record system and computerized

 

juvenile justice information system that serves:

 

                   (A)  as the record creation point for criminal

 

history record information and juvenile justice information

 

maintained by the state; and

 

                   (B)  as the control terminal for the entry of

 

records, in accordance with federal law and regulations, federal

 

executive orders, and federal policy, into the federal database

 

maintained by the Federal Bureau of Investigation.

 

       (k)  Based on data collected under Subsections (b)(6) and

 

(7), the department shall submit an annual report to the

 

legislature on the effectiveness of using a global positioning

 

monitoring system to reduce repeat offenses.

 

       SECTION 9.  Section 411.0845(i), Government Code, is amended

 

to read as follows:

 

       (i)  The release under this section of any criminal history

 

record information maintained by the Federal Bureau of

 

Investigation, including the computerized information submitted to

 

the federal database maintained by the Federal Bureau of

 

Investigation as described by Section 411.042(b)(10)(B)

 

[411.042(b)(9)(B)], is subject to federal law and regulations,

 

federal executive orders, and federal policy.

 

       SECTION 10.  Section 772.0077(b), Government Code, is

 

amended to read as follows:

 

       (b)  The criminal justice division shall establish and

 

administer a grant program to reimburse counties for all or part of

 

the costs incurred by counties as a result of monitoring in cases

 

involving family violence defendants and victims who participate in

 

a global positioning monitoring system under Article 17.292 or

 

17.49, Code of Criminal Procedure, or persons who participate in a

 

global positioning monitoring system as a condition of a protective

 

order issued under Title 4, Family Code.  A grant recipient may use

 

funds from a grant awarded under the program only for monitoring

 

conducted for the purpose of restoring a measure of security and

 

safety for a victim of family violence.

 

       SECTION 11.  Section 38.112(a), Penal Code, is amended to

 

read as follows:

 

       (a)  A person who is required to submit to electronic

 

monitoring of the person’s location as a condition of a magistrate’s

 

order for emergency protection under Article 17.292, Code of

 

Criminal Procedure, or a protective order under Section 85.022,

 

Family Code, as part of an electronic monitoring program under

 

Article 42.035, Code of Criminal Procedure, or as a condition of

 

community supervision, parole, mandatory supervision, or release

 

on bail commits an offense if the person knowingly removes or

 

disables, or causes or conspires or cooperates with another person

 

to remove or disable, a tracking device that the person is required

 

to wear to enable the electronic monitoring of the person’s

 

location.

 

       SECTION 12.  The changes in law made by this Act to Articles

 

17.292 and 17.49, Code of Criminal Procedure, 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 13.  The changes in law made by this Act to Section

 

85.022, Family Code, and Section 772.0077(b), Government Code,

 

apply only to costs incurred by counties as a result of monitoring

 

that occurs on or after the effective date of this Act. Costs

 

incurred by counties as a result of monitoring that occurs before

 

the effective date of this Act are governed by the law in effect on

 

the date the costs were incurred, and the former law is continued in

 

effect for that purpose.

 

       SECTION 14.  The Department of Public Safety of the State of

 

Texas is not required to submit the initial report described by

 

Section 411.042(k), Government Code, as added by this Act, before

 

December 1, 2026.

 

       SECTION 15.  The change in law made by this Act to Section

 

38.112, Penal Code, applies only to an offense committed 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 section, an offense

 

was committed before the effective date of this Act if any element

 

of the offense occurred before that date.

 

       SECTION 16.  This Act takes effect September 1, 2025. 

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