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A BILL TO BE ENTITLED
|
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AN ACT
|
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relating to the powers and duties of the Texas Department of Public |
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Safety and the investigation, prosecution, punishment, and |
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prevention of certain offenses; creating an offense and increasing |
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a criminal penalty. |
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BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF TEXAS: |
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SECTION 1. Article 2.12, Code of Criminal Procedure, is |
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amended to read as follows: |
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Art. 2.12. WHO ARE PEACE OFFICERS. The following are peace |
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officers: |
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(1) sheriffs, their deputies, and those reserve |
|
deputies who hold a permanent peace officer license issued under |
|
Chapter 1701, Occupations Code; |
|
(2) constables, deputy constables, and those reserve |
|
deputy constables who hold a permanent peace officer license issued |
|
under Chapter 1701, Occupations Code; |
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(3) marshals or police officers of an incorporated |
|
city, town, or village, and those reserve municipal police officers |
|
who hold a permanent peace officer license issued under Chapter |
|
1701, Occupations Code; |
|
(4) rangers, [and] officers, and members of the |
|
reserve officer corps commissioned by the Public Safety Commission |
|
and the Director of the Department of Public Safety; |
|
(5) investigators of the district attorneys', criminal |
|
district attorneys', and county attorneys' offices; |
|
(6) law enforcement agents of the Texas Alcoholic |
|
Beverage Commission; |
|
(7) each member of an arson investigating unit |
|
commissioned by a city, a county, or the state; |
|
(8) officers commissioned under Section 37.081, |
|
Education Code, or Subchapter E, Chapter 51, Education Code; |
|
(9) officers commissioned by the General Services |
|
Commission; |
|
(10) law enforcement officers commissioned by the |
|
Parks and Wildlife Commission; |
|
(11) airport police officers commissioned by a city |
|
with a population of more than 1.18 million located primarily in a |
|
county with a population of 2 million or more that operates an |
|
airport that serves commercial air carriers; |
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(12) airport security personnel commissioned as peace |
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officers by the governing body of any political subdivision of this |
|
state, other than a city described by Subdivision (11), that |
|
operates an airport that serves commercial air carriers; |
|
(13) municipal park and recreational patrolmen and |
|
security officers; |
|
(14) security officers and investigators commissioned |
|
as peace officers by the comptroller; |
|
(15) officers commissioned by a water control and |
|
improvement district under Section 49.216, Water Code; |
|
(16) officers commissioned by a board of trustees |
|
under Chapter 54, Transportation Code; |
|
(17) investigators commissioned by the Texas Medical |
|
Board; |
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(18) officers commissioned by: |
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(A) the board of managers of the Dallas County |
|
Hospital District, the Tarrant County Hospital District, the Bexar |
|
County Hospital District, or the El Paso County Hospital District |
|
under Section 281.057, Health and Safety Code; |
|
(B) the board of directors of the Ector County |
|
Hospital District under Section 1024.117, Special District Local |
|
Laws Code; and |
|
(C) the board of directors of the Midland County |
|
Hospital District of Midland County, Texas, under Section 1061.121, |
|
Special District Local Laws Code; |
|
(19) county park rangers commissioned under |
|
Subchapter E, Chapter 351, Local Government Code; |
|
(20) investigators employed by the Texas Racing |
|
Commission; |
|
(21) officers commissioned under Chapter 554, |
|
Occupations Code; |
|
(22) officers commissioned by the governing body of a |
|
metropolitan rapid transit authority under Section 451.108, |
|
Transportation Code, or by a regional transportation authority |
|
under Section 452.110, Transportation Code; |
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(23) investigators commissioned by the attorney |
|
general under Section 402.009, Government Code; |
|
(24) security officers and investigators commissioned |
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as peace officers under Chapter 466, Government Code; |
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(25) an officer employed by the Department of State |
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Health Services under Section 431.2471, Health and Safety Code; |
|
(26) officers appointed by an appellate court under |
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Subchapter F, Chapter 53, Government Code; |
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(27) officers commissioned by the state fire marshal |
|
under Chapter 417, Government Code; |
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(28) an investigator commissioned by the commissioner |
|
of insurance under Section 701.104, Insurance Code; |
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(29) apprehension specialists and inspectors general |
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commissioned by the Texas Juvenile Justice Department as officers |
|
under Sections 242.102 and 243.052, Human Resources Code; |
|
(30) officers appointed by the inspector general of |
|
the Texas Department of Criminal Justice under Section 493.019, |
|
Government Code; |
|
(31) investigators commissioned by the Texas |
|
Commission on Law Enforcement under Section 1701.160, Occupations |
|
Code; |
|
(32) commission investigators commissioned by the |
|
Texas Private Security Board under Section 1702.061 [1702.061(f)], |
|
Occupations Code; |
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(33) the fire marshal and any officers, inspectors, or |
|
investigators commissioned by an emergency services district under |
|
Chapter 775, Health and Safety Code; |
|
(34) officers commissioned by the State Board of |
|
Dental Examiners under Section 254.013, Occupations Code, subject |
|
to the limitations imposed by that section; |
|
(35) investigators commissioned by the Texas Juvenile |
|
Justice Department as officers under Section 221.011, Human |
|
Resources Code; and |
|
(36) the fire marshal and any related officers, |
|
inspectors, or investigators commissioned by a county under |
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Subchapter B, Chapter 352, Local Government Code. |
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SECTION 2. Section 4, Article 18.20, Code of Criminal |
|
Procedure, is amended to read as follows: |
|
Sec. 4. OFFENSES FOR WHICH INTERCEPTIONS MAY BE |
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AUTHORIZED. A judge of competent jurisdiction may issue an order |
|
authorizing interception of wire, oral, or electronic |
|
communications only if the prosecutor applying for the order shows |
|
probable cause to believe that the interception will provide |
|
evidence of the commission of: |
|
(1) a felony under Section 19.02, 19.03, or 43.26, |
|
Penal Code; |
|
(2) a felony under: |
|
(A) Chapter 481, Health and Safety Code, other |
|
than felony possession of marihuana; |
|
(B) Section 485.032, Health and Safety Code; or |
|
(C) Chapter 483, Health and Safety Code; |
|
(3) an offense under Section 20.03 or 20.04, Penal |
|
Code; |
|
(4) an offense under Chapter 20A, Penal Code; |
|
(5) an offense under Chapter 34, Penal Code, if the |
|
criminal activity giving rise to the proceeds involves the |
|
commission of an offense under Title 5, Penal Code, or an offense |
|
under federal law or the laws of another state containing elements |
|
that are substantially similar to the elements of an offense under |
|
Title 5; |
|
(6) an offense under Section 38.11, Penal Code; [or] |
|
(7) an offense under Section 43.04 or 43.05, Penal |
|
Code; or |
|
(8) an attempt, conspiracy, or solicitation to commit |
|
an offense listed in this section. |
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SECTION 3. Article 59.01(2), Code of Criminal Procedure, as |
|
amended by Chapters 427 (S.B. 529) and 1357 (S.B. 1451), Acts of the |
|
83rd Legislature, Regular Session, 2013, is reenacted and amended |
|
to read as follows: |
|
(2) "Contraband" means property of any nature, |
|
including real, personal, tangible, or intangible, that is: |
|
(A) used in the commission of: |
|
(i) any first or second degree felony under |
|
the Penal Code; |
|
(ii) any felony under Section 15.031(b), |
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20.05, 20.06, 21.11, 38.04, or Chapter 43, 20A, 29, 30, 31, 32, 33, |
|
33A, or 35, Penal Code; |
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(iii) any felony under The Securities Act |
|
(Article 581-1 et seq., Vernon's Texas Civil Statutes); or |
|
(iv) any offense under Chapter 49, Penal |
|
Code, that is punishable as a felony of the third degree or state |
|
jail felony, if the defendant has been previously convicted three |
|
times of an offense under that chapter; |
|
(B) used or intended to be used in the commission |
|
of: |
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(i) any felony under Chapter 481, Health |
|
and Safety Code (Texas Controlled Substances Act); |
|
(ii) any felony under Chapter 483, Health |
|
and Safety Code; |
|
(iii) a felony under Chapter 151, Finance |
|
Code; |
|
(iv) any felony under Chapter 34, Penal |
|
Code; |
|
(v) a Class A misdemeanor under Subchapter |
|
B, Chapter 365, Health and Safety Code, if the defendant has been |
|
previously convicted twice of an offense under that subchapter; |
|
(vi) any felony under Chapter 32, Human |
|
Resources Code, or Chapter 31, 32, 35A, or 37, Penal Code, that |
|
involves the state Medicaid program; |
|
(vii) a Class B misdemeanor under Chapter |
|
522, Business & Commerce Code; |
|
(viii) a Class A misdemeanor under Section |
|
306.051, Business & Commerce Code; |
|
(ix) any offense under Section 42.10, Penal |
|
Code; |
|
(x) any offense under Section 46.06(a)(1) |
|
or 46.14, Penal Code; |
|
(xi) any offense under Chapter 71, Penal |
|
Code; |
|
(xii) any offense under Section 20.05 or |
|
20.06, Penal Code; or |
|
(xiii) [(xiv)] an offense under Section |
|
326.002, Business & Commerce Code; |
|
(C) the proceeds gained from the commission of a |
|
felony listed in Paragraph (A) or (B) of this subdivision, a |
|
misdemeanor listed in Paragraph (B)(vii), (ix), (x), or (xi) of |
|
this subdivision, or a crime of violence; |
|
(D) acquired with proceeds gained from the |
|
commission of a felony listed in Paragraph (A) or (B) of this |
|
subdivision, a misdemeanor listed in Paragraph (B)(vii), (ix), (x), |
|
or (xi) of this subdivision, or a crime of violence; |
|
(E) used to facilitate or intended to be used to |
|
facilitate the commission of a felony under Section 15.031 or |
|
43.25, Penal Code; or |
|
(F) used to facilitate or intended to be used to |
|
facilitate the commission of a felony under Section 20A.02 or |
|
Chapter 43, Penal Code. |
|
SECTION 4. Section 411.0043, Government Code, is amended to |
|
read as follows: |
|
Sec. 411.0043. TECHNOLOGY POLICY; REVIEW. (a) The |
|
commission shall implement a policy requiring the department to use |
|
appropriate technological solutions to improve the department's |
|
ability to perform its functions. The policy must ensure that the |
|
public is able to interact with the department on the Internet. |
|
(b) The department shall periodically: |
|
(1) review the department's existing information |
|
technology system to determine whether: |
|
(A) the system's security should be upgraded; and |
|
(B) the system provides the department with the |
|
best ability to monitor and investigate criminal activity on the |
|
Internet; and |
|
(2) make any necessary improvements to the |
|
department's information technology system. |
|
SECTION 5. Section 411.007(g), Government Code, is amended |
|
to read as follows: |
|
(g) Except as provided by Section 411.0164, a [A] |
|
noncommissioned employee inducted into the service of the |
|
department is on probation for the first one year of service, and an |
|
officer is on probation from the date the officer is inducted into |
|
the service of the department until the anniversary of the date the |
|
officer is commissioned. At any time during the probationary |
|
period, an officer or employee may be discharged if the director, |
|
with the advice and consent of the commission, finds the officer or |
|
employee to be unsuitable for the work. |
|
SECTION 6. Subchapter A, Chapter 411, Government Code, is |
|
amended by adding Sections 411.0163 and 411.0164 to read as |
|
follows: |
|
Sec. 411.0163. 50-HOUR WORK WEEK. Notwithstanding any |
|
other law, for a commissioned officer of the department assigned to |
|
a department region that includes counties along the Texas-Mexico |
|
border, 10 hours of work in a calendar day constitutes a day's work |
|
and 50 hours of work in a week constitutes a week's work. |
|
Sec. 411.0164. HIRING OFFICERS WITH PREVIOUS LAW |
|
ENFORCEMENT EXPERIENCE. Notwithstanding any other provision of |
|
law, the department may start a commissioned officer in the |
|
position of Trooper II if the officer has at least four years of |
|
experience as a peace officer in the state. |
|
SECTION 7. Subchapter A, Chapter 411, Government Code, is |
|
amended by adding Sections 411.0208 and 411.0209 to read as |
|
follows: |
|
Sec. 411.0208. RESERVE OFFICER CORPS. (a) The commission |
|
may provide for the establishment of a reserve officer corps |
|
consisting of retired or previously commissioned officers of the |
|
department. |
|
(b) The commission shall establish qualifications and |
|
standards of training for members of the reserve officer corps. |
|
(c) The commission may limit the size of the reserve officer |
|
corps. |
|
(d) The director shall appoint the members of the reserve |
|
officer corps. Members serve at the director's discretion. |
|
(e) The director may call the reserve officer corps into |
|
service at any time the director considers it necessary to have |
|
additional officers to assist the department in conducting |
|
background investigations, sex offender compliance checks, and |
|
other duties as determined necessary by the director. |
|
Sec. 411.0209. INTERNATIONAL BORDER CHECKPOINTS. (a) To |
|
prevent human trafficking and the unlawful transfer of firearms and |
|
bulk currency from this state to the United Mexican States, the |
|
department shall investigate the feasibility of assisting federal |
|
authorities in establishing checkpoints along the international |
|
border of this state for the purpose of conducting inspections of |
|
vehicles leaving this state and entering the United Mexican States. |
|
If the department determines that assistance to be feasible, the |
|
department shall cooperate with appropriate federal agencies to set |
|
up the checkpoints. |
|
(b) A checkpoint described by Subsection (a) must be: |
|
(1) located at or within 250 yards of a federally |
|
designated crossing facility located at or near the actual boundary |
|
between this state and the United Mexican States; |
|
(2) located on a public highway or street leading |
|
directly to an international border crossing; and |
|
(3) designed to stop only traffic leaving this state |
|
and entering the United Mexican States. |
|
(c) A peace officer employed by the department may not |
|
conduct an inspection of a vehicle under this section unless the |
|
officer has reasonable suspicion or probable cause to believe that |
|
a passenger in the vehicle has violated Chapter 20A or Section 34.02 |
|
or 46.14, Penal Code, or 18 U.S.C. Section 554, 922, 1589, 1590, |
|
1591, 1592, or 1956 or 31 U.S.C. Section 5332. |
|
(d) The department and local law enforcement authorities |
|
may share with the federal government the cost of staffing any |
|
checkpoints established as described by this section. |
|
(e) The department shall establish procedures governing the |
|
encounter between the driver and the peace officers operating the |
|
checkpoint that ensure that any intrusion on the driver is |
|
minimized and that the inquiries made are reasonably related to the |
|
purpose of the checkpoint. |
|
(f) If necessary to implement this section, the attorney |
|
general, subject to approval by the governor, shall enter into an |
|
agreement under 8 U.S.C. Section 1357(g) with the United States |
|
Office of the Attorney General or other appropriate federal agency. |
|
(g) An agreement entered into under Subsection (f) must be |
|
signed on behalf of this state by the attorney general of this state |
|
and the governor of this state and as otherwise required by the |
|
appropriate federal agency. |
|
(h) A law enforcement agency may enter into an agreement |
|
with a corporation or other private entity to provide goods or |
|
services for the establishment and operation of a checkpoint or the |
|
performance of inspections under this section. |
|
(i) The director shall adopt rules as necessary to |
|
administer this section. |
|
SECTION 8. Subchapter D, Chapter 411, Government Code, is |
|
amended by adding Section 411.054 to read as follows: |
|
Sec. 411.054. CRIME STATISTICS REPORTING. (a) Each local |
|
law enforcement agency shall: |
|
(1) implement an incident-based reporting system that |
|
meets the reporting requirements of the National Incident-Based |
|
Reporting System of the Uniform Crime Reporting Program of the |
|
Federal Bureau of Investigation; and |
|
(2) use the system described by Subdivision (1) to |
|
submit to the department information and statistics concerning |
|
criminal offenses committed in the jurisdiction of the local law |
|
enforcement agency. |
|
(b) The department shall adopt rules to implement this |
|
section, including rules prescribing: |
|
(1) the form and manner of the submission of |
|
information and statistics; and |
|
(2) the frequency of reporting. |
|
(c) Notwithstanding any other law, a local law enforcement |
|
agency that is not in compliance with this section and that receives |
|
grant funds from the department or the criminal justice division of |
|
the governor's office may only use those funds to come into |
|
compliance with this section. |
|
SECTION 9. Chapter 362, Local Government Code, is amended |
|
by adding Section 362.005 to read as follows: |
|
Sec. 362.005. SOUTH TEXAS BORDER CRIME INFORMATION CENTER. |
|
(a) The sheriff's department of the county having the largest |
|
population that borders the Texas-Mexico border and the police |
|
department of the municipality having the largest population in |
|
that county shall jointly establish and operate the South Texas |
|
Border Crime Information Center as a central repository of |
|
information relating to criminal activity in the counties along the |
|
Texas-Mexico border. The Texas Department of Public Safety shall |
|
assist the county sheriff's department and the municipal police |
|
department in the establishment and operation of the center. |
|
(b) Each law enforcement agency in a county located along |
|
the Texas-Mexico border shall report to the South Texas Border |
|
Crime Information Center information regarding criminal activity |
|
in the law enforcement agency's jurisdiction, including |
|
information on kidnappings, home invasions, and incidents of |
|
impersonation of law enforcement officers. |
|
(c) The information in the South Texas Border Crime |
|
Information Center shall be made available to each law enforcement |
|
agency in the state. |
|
SECTION 10. Section 20.05, Penal Code, is amended to read as |
|
follows: |
|
Sec. 20.05. SMUGGLING OF PERSONS. (a) A person commits an |
|
offense if the person recklessly [intentionally uses a motor
|
|
vehicle, aircraft, or watercraft to transport an individual with
|
|
the intent to]: |
|
(1) conceals, harbors, or shields from detection a |
|
person who is present in this country in violation of federal law |
|
[conceal the individual from a peace officer or special
|
|
investigator]; or |
|
(2) encourages or induces a person to enter or remain |
|
in this country in violation of federal law [flee from a person the
|
|
actor knows is a peace officer or special investigator attempting
|
|
to lawfully arrest or detain the actor]. |
|
(b) An [Except as provided by Subsection (c), an] offense |
|
under this section is a state jail felony, except that the[.
|
|
[(c) An] offense [under this section] is: |
|
(1) a felony of the third degree if the actor commits |
|
the offense [:
|
|
[(1)] for pecuniary benefit; [or] |
|
(2) a felony of the second degree if: |
|
(A) the actor commits the offense in a manner |
|
that creates a substantial likelihood that the smuggled |
|
[transported] individual will suffer serious bodily injury or |
|
death; or |
|
(B) the smuggled individual is a child younger |
|
than 18 years of age at the time of the offense; or |
|
(3) a felony of the first degree if: |
|
(A) it is shown on the trial of the offense that, |
|
as a direct result of the commission of the offense, the smuggled |
|
individual became a victim of sexual assault, as defined by Section |
|
22.011, or aggravated sexual assault, as defined by Section 22.021; |
|
or |
|
(B) the smuggled individual suffered serious |
|
bodily injury or death. |
|
(c) [(d)
It is an affirmative defense to prosecution under
|
|
this section that the actor is related to the transported
|
|
individual within the second degree of consanguinity or, at the
|
|
time of the offense, within the second degree of affinity.
|
|
[(e)] If conduct constituting an offense under this section |
|
also constitutes an offense under another section of this code, the |
|
actor may be prosecuted under either section or under both |
|
sections. |
|
SECTION 11. Chapter 20, Penal Code, is amended by adding |
|
Section 20.06 to read as follows: |
|
Sec. 20.06. CONTINUOUS SMUGGLING OF PERSONS. (a) A person |
|
commits an offense if, during a period that is 30 or more days in |
|
duration, the person engages two or more times in conduct that |
|
constitutes an offense under Section 20.05. |
|
(b) If a jury is the trier of fact, members of the jury are |
|
not required to agree unanimously on which specific conduct engaged |
|
in by the defendant constituted an offense under Section 20.05 or on |
|
which exact date the defendant engaged in that conduct. The jury |
|
must agree unanimously that the defendant, during a period that is |
|
30 or more days in duration, engaged two or more times in conduct |
|
that constitutes an offense under Section 20.05. |
|
(c) If the victim of an offense under Subsection (a) is the |
|
same victim as a victim of an offense under Section 20.05, a |
|
defendant may not be convicted of the offense under Section 20.05 in |
|
the same criminal action as the offense under Subsection (a), |
|
unless the offense under Section 20.05: |
|
(1) is charged in the alternative; |
|
(2) occurred outside the period in which the offense |
|
alleged under Subsection (a) was committed; or |
|
(3) is considered by the trier of fact to be a lesser |
|
included offense of the offense alleged under Subsection (a). |
|
(d) A defendant may not be charged with more than one count |
|
under Subsection (a) if all of the conduct that constitutes an |
|
offense under Section 20.05 is alleged to have been committed |
|
against the same victim. |
|
(e) Except as provided by Subsections (f) and (g), an |
|
offense under this section is a felony of the third degree. |
|
(f) An offense under this section is a felony of the first |
|
degree if: |
|
(1) the conduct constituting an offense under Section |
|
20.05 is conducted in a manner that creates a substantial |
|
likelihood that the smuggled individual will suffer serious bodily |
|
injury or death; or |
|
(2) the smuggled individual is a child younger than 18 |
|
years of age at the time of the offense. |
|
(g) An offense under this section is a felony of the first |
|
degree, punishable by imprisonment in the Texas Department of |
|
Criminal Justice for life or for any term of not more than 99 years |
|
or less than 25 years, if: |
|
(1) it is shown on the trial of the offense that, as a |
|
direct result of the commission of the offense, the smuggled |
|
individual became a victim of sexual assault, as defined by Section |
|
22.011, or aggravated sexual assault, as defined by Section 22.021; |
|
or |
|
(2) the smuggled individual suffered serious bodily |
|
injury or death. |
|
SECTION 12. Section 71.02(a), Penal Code, is amended to |
|
read as follows: |
|
(a) A person commits an offense if, with the intent to |
|
establish, maintain, or participate in a combination or in the |
|
profits of a combination or as a member of a criminal street gang, |
|
the person commits or conspires to commit one or more of the |
|
following: |
|
(1) murder, capital murder, arson, aggravated |
|
robbery, robbery, burglary, theft, aggravated kidnapping, |
|
kidnapping, aggravated assault, aggravated sexual assault, sexual |
|
assault, continuous sexual abuse of young child or children, |
|
solicitation of a minor, forgery, deadly conduct, assault |
|
punishable as a Class A misdemeanor, burglary of a motor vehicle, or |
|
unauthorized use of a motor vehicle; |
|
(2) any gambling offense punishable as a Class A |
|
misdemeanor; |
|
(3) promotion of prostitution, aggravated promotion |
|
of prostitution, or compelling prostitution; |
|
(4) unlawful manufacture, transportation, repair, or |
|
sale of firearms or prohibited weapons; |
|
(5) unlawful manufacture, delivery, dispensation, or |
|
distribution of a controlled substance or dangerous drug, or |
|
unlawful possession of a controlled substance or dangerous drug |
|
through forgery, fraud, misrepresentation, or deception; |
|
(5-a) causing the unlawful delivery, dispensation, or |
|
distribution of a controlled substance or dangerous drug in |
|
violation of Subtitle B, Title 3, Occupations Code; |
|
(6) any unlawful wholesale promotion or possession of |
|
any obscene material or obscene device with the intent to wholesale |
|
promote the same; |
|
(7) any offense under Subchapter B, Chapter 43, |
|
depicting or involving conduct by or directed toward a child |
|
younger than 18 years of age; |
|
(8) any felony offense under Chapter 32; |
|
(9) any offense under Chapter 36; |
|
(10) any offense under Chapter 34, 35, or 35A; |
|
(11) any offense under Section 37.11(a); |
|
(12) any offense under Chapter 20A; |
|
(13) any offense under Section 37.10; |
|
(14) any offense under Section 38.06, 38.07, 38.09, or |
|
38.11; |
|
(15) any offense under Section 42.10; |
|
(16) any offense under Section 46.06(a)(1) or 46.14; |
|
(17) any offense under Section 20.05 or 20.06; or |
|
(18) any offense classified as a felony under the Tax |
|
Code. |
|
SECTION 13. The change in law made by this Act to Section 4, |
|
Article 18.20, Code of Criminal Procedure, applies only to an |
|
application for an interception order filed on or after the |
|
effective date of this Act. An application for an interception |
|
order filed before the effective date of this Act is governed by the |
|
law in effect on the date the application was filed, and the former |
|
law is continued in effect for that purpose. |
|
SECTION 14. (a) The Department of Public Safety shall adopt |
|
rules required under Section 411.054(b), Government Code, as added |
|
by this Act, not later than December 31, 2015. |
|
(b) A local law enforcement agency is not required to comply |
|
with Section 411.054, Government Code, as added by this Act, before |
|
September 1, 2019. |
|
(c) The Department of Public Safety or the criminal justice |
|
division of the governor's office may not deny a grant to a local |
|
law enforcement agency on the grounds that the local law |
|
enforcement agency is not in compliance with Section 411.054, |
|
Government Code, as added by this Act, before September 1, 2019. |
|
SECTION 15. The changes in law made by this Act to Sections |
|
20.05 and 71.02, Penal Code, apply 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. To the extent of any conflict, this Act prevails |
|
over another Act of the 84th Legislature, Regular Session, 2015, |
|
relating to nonsubstantive additions to and corrections in enacted |
|
codes. |
|
SECTION 17. This Act takes effect September 1, 2015. |