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Interim Update: December 2019

December 19, 2019


With most courthouses closing up shop for the holidays, we are sending this, our final missive of year, ahead of the holiday break and closing the books on 2019 as well. It’s been a wild year in Austin! Happy holidays and happy new year to all of you, and here’s to Santa leaving something boring and uneventful in our collective stocking for the new year.

New leadership for 2020

Please congratulate the following members on being promoted or selected to new board positions at TDCAA’s annual business meeting earlier this month:

Chairman of the Board: Jarvis Parsons, DA for Brazos County
President: Kenda Culpepper, CDA for Rockwall County
President-Elect: John Dodson, CA for Uvalde County
Secretary/Treasurer: Jack Roady, CDA for Galveston County

District Attorney-at-Large: Julie Renken, DA for Washington County
Assistant Prosecutor-at-Large: Tiana Sanford, ADA for Montgomery County
Region 3 Director: Ricky Thompson, DA for Nolan, Fisher, and Mitchell Counties
Region 5 Director: Bob Wortham, CDA for Jefferson County
Region 6 Director: Greg Willis, CDA for Collin County
Region 8 Director: Natalie Cobb Koehler, CA for Bosque County

Thank you to all who ran for an association office, win or lose! TDCAA is a member-driven association and we cannot fulfill our service mission without your active involvement and support.

Start your engines

Now that the election filing deadline has passed, we have started compiling prosecutor election information for 2020. Of roughly 170 potential contested elections at the felony prosecutor level, we have found 25 primary contests and just three contested general elections. That means most of the uncertainty at the felony level will be over by March* (*offer not valid for run-offs). In the new year, we’ll start compiling information on local county attorney elections and let you know how that looks too.

Statewide sexual assault audit

Those of you who attended our Elected Prosecutor Conference earlier this month heard staff from the State Auditor’s Office describe their plans for a legislatively-mandated audit of recent sexual assault cases. As promised, the agency has now released its planned methodology for that audit, which can be accessed at https://www.sao.texas.gov/Reports/Main/20-014.pdf. Read that short memo for an overview of this process and look for more information in our next update on the impending survey that all felony-level prosecutor offices will be asked to complete.

Prosecutor Trial Skills Course coming up

TDCAA’s next Prosecutor Trial Skills Course is open for registration! Join us in Austin from January 12–17, 2020, for this weeklong event—it is the perfect training for both new prosecutors and more seasoned prosecutors looking for a refresher. We have already received more than 100 registrations but we have room for plenty more people, so click here for more information and to register yourself or your new attorneys online.

Quotes of the Month

“In my school, a lot of kids don’t like being sober. They have to have a buzz. They have to be high.”
            —Anonymous 16-year-old student at La Porte High School who was disciplined for skipping class with other students suspected of vaping THC, an increasingly common problem for Texas schools and one that has been complicated by the state’s new hemp law.

“If I don’t do it, who will? If not me, who will find these children?”
            —Investigator with the Child Exploitation Investigations lab housed in ICE’s Homeland Security Investigations section, in an article about the difficult child pornography cases cracked by that unit.

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Interim Update: November 2019

November 22, 2019


            With the upcoming holiday week expected to be a slow one for news (and for office attendance), we are sending out this monthly update a week early to give you something to chew on while you are enjoying time with family and friends.

No news is good news?

            Frankly, we’re hard-pressed to think of any urgent legislative news to pass along this month. Perhaps that’s the beauty of a legislature that takes long interims between sessions—although it may also have a little something to do with the fact that campaign filings started this month. (P.S. For those of you on the ballot next year … good luck!)

NOTICE: TDCAA Annual Business Meeting

            The Texas District and County Attorneys Association will hold its Annual Business Meeting in conjunction with the Elected Prosecutor Conference on Wednesday, December 4, 2019, at 5:00 p.m. at the Lakeway Resort and Spa in Lakeway, Texas. The agenda will include the election of officers for terms beginning on January 1, 2020.  The board positions to be selected are President-Elect, Secretary/Treasurer, District Attorney-at-Large, Assistant Prosecutor-at-Large, and Regional Directors for Regions 3, 5, 6, and 8 (use the search bar on our website to see the counties in those regions).

            Last week, the Nominations Committee met and forwarded the following nominations to the full membership for consideration at the annual business meeting:

President-Elect: John Dodson, Uvalde County Attorney
Secretary/Treasurer: Jack Roady, Galveston County Criminal District Attorney
District Attorney-at-Large: Julie Renken, Washington County District Attorney
Assistant Prosecutor-at-Large: Tiana Sanford, Montgomery County Assistant DA 

For more information, contact Rob Kepple.

Elected Prosecutor Conference

            Our 2019 Elected Prosecutor Conference will be held at the Lakeway Resort & Spa just west of Austin the week after Thanksgiving. In addition to a curriculum that includes topics such as the rise in domestic terrorism, responding effectively to cases of domestic violence and adult sexual assault, and the latest information from the DPS crime labs, we are also scheduled to recognize Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick (R-Houston) and State Rep. Andrew Murr (R-Junction) for their work on DWI-related legislation (among other policy work) last session. Registration information is available here; sign up today and help us show appreciation of their hard work!

            Note that immediately prior to the Elected course, TDCAA is offering a special Prosecutor Management Institute (PMI) Course designed specifically for elected prosecutors. Click here for information regarding that stand-alone course.

Prosecutor Trial Skills Course coming up

            TDCAA’s next Prosecutor Trial Skills Course is open for registration! Join us in Austin from January 12–17, 2020, for this weeklong event—it is the perfect training for both new prosecutors and more seasoned prosecutors looking for a refresher. Click here for more information and to register online.

Quotes of the Month

“Some might have overestimated the degree to which horrific shootings move public opinion.”
            —James Henson, head of the Texas Politics Project at UT-Austin, interpreting the results of one of its recent polls that shows most of the Republican voters they polled are opposed to a so-called “assault weapon” ban.

“People are tired and fed up that those in control—and at this point in time, Republicans—are doing nothing about this. Virginia Tech happened 12 years ago and people thought there would be something. … [T]he voters are fed up and demanding change. If we can’t change the laws, we’re going to change your seats.”
            —Lori Haas, Virginia state director of Stop Gun Violence, in a Houston Chronicle article on how gun control groups hope to use recent electoral victories in that state to achieve similar changes in Texas.

“I think as a state we’ve become very numb to it. This is probably one of the most deadly [sic] situations we have in the state, and it’s one of the most controllable situations we have in the state. Ninety percent of the deaths that we’ve had over the [last] 19 years are preventable.”
            —Laura Ryan, a member of the Texas Transportation Commission, referring to the more than 67,000 people who have died on Texas roadways since November 7, 2000, the state’s last day with no traffic fatalities.

“I think the closest analogy to CBD is caffeine. I really believe it’s kind of ‘the caffeine of the 21st Century.’ And, you know, what are the biggest caffeine companies? It’s Starbucks, it’s Red Bull, et cetera. And they don’t market caffeine. They market the feeling that the compound enables, which kind of inspired our approach. … We’re saying Recess is an antidote to modern times. The idea is like, ‘The world’s gone crazy, and we all need a Recess.’”
            —Benjamin Witte, founder and CEO of Recess, a CBD-infused sparkling water brand sold on the East Coast and in California, explaining how he thinks the cannabis-related industry should market its products.

“We are legalizing marijuana before we can actually finish studies that take 10 to 20 years to complete to find out that answer. To some degree we have opted to do the experiment on ourselves as a society and see what results. … [I]t’s not called ‘dope’ for no reason.”
            —Dr. Hans Breiter, a professor of psychiatry at Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine, in an article discussing the challenges of determining a driver’s impairment from recreational marijuana, which will be legal in Illinois as of January 1, 2020.

“People come from all over the country to come to Austin because it’s famous. This is a famous place to live on the streets. Everybody knows that. If you want to live on the streets, go to Austin. You don’t even have to buy food. Everybody feeds you, give you money. You can party. It’s a blast, man!”
            —Unidentified homeless man interviewed by Fox News correspondent Aishah Hasnie as part of her story on state efforts to clean up homeless camps in the state capital.

“The news is true. It is why I chose not seek re-election. I had imperiled my health. I do not have anyone to blame but myself. I accept this because it is true and it will help me get better. … In a weird way I am grateful. Grief and addiction were consuming me, but oddly enough, I feel better now than I have in a long time, and I mean that. … I have many relationships to repair, starting at home, and I intend to seek treatment. I apologize to each and every person that feels I have let them down. I look forward to a future with my family and friends, to being healthy, and finally, home.”
            —Statement by State Rep. Poncho Nevarez (D-Eagle Pass), chairman of the House Homeland Security and Public Safety Committee, upon publication of the news that he has been charged with POCS (1–4g) in Travis County after an envelope he dropped at a private airport terminal in Austin was found to contain cocaine.

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Interim Update: October 2019

October 31, 2019


            Tonight’s freezing Halloween #protip: Stay home, light a fire in your fireplace, and eat your own candy.

NOTICE: TDCAA Annual Business Meeting

            The Texas District and County Attorneys Association will hold its Annual Business Meeting in conjunction with the Elected Prosecutor Conference on Wednesday, December 4, 2019, at 5:00 p.m. at the Lakeway Resort and Spa in Lakeway, Texas. The agenda will include the election of officers for terms beginning on January 1, 2020.  The board positions to be selected are President-Elect, Secretary/Treasurer, District Attorney-at-Large, Assistant Prosecutor-at-Large, and Regional Directors for Regions 3, 5, 6, and 8 (see map, below, for regional boundaries).

            Last week, the Nominations Committee met and forwarded the following nominations to the full membership for consideration at the annual business meeting:

President-Elect: John Dodson, Uvalde County CA
Secretary/Treasurer: Jack Roady, Galveston County Criminal DA
District Attorney-at-Large: Julie Renken, Washington County DA
Assistant Prosecutor-at-Large: Tiana Sanford, Montgomery County Asst. DA

For more information, contact Rob Kepple.

Lame duck Speaker

            By now, we assume all of you have seen the big news from Austin: Speaker Dennis Bonnen (R-Angleton) will not run for re-election following multiple public “no confidence” statements from former supporters on both sides of the political aisle. Those statements followed the release of a surreptitious recording of a private meeting at which the speaker made several controversial statements—both personal and political—to the CEO of Empower Texans, a right-wing PAC. (For more details on this saga, read this recap by the Texas Tribune and this discussion of the resulting criminal investigation by the Texas Monitor.) Your news source of choice will no doubt have its own hot take on these recent developments, but allow us to point out some aspects of this story that might not be covered in detail by those sources.

            For starters, we note that this was the first time the legislature’s new public integrity system (adopted in 2015) was invoked in a case in which a legislator was a potential suspect. While the situation was resolved in a manner that did not result in a criminal prosecution, the fact that the Speaker’s retirement announcement came just two days before his local district attorney declined to file charges led to immediate—and wholly unsubstantiated—claims by some political opponents that “the fix was in,” implying that the speaker avoided prosecution by agreeing to eventually step down. Leaving aside the fact that such agreements may be a just result in a particular case, this politicization of the prosecutor’s decision should serve as a reminder to all of you of how sticky these public integrity cases can be. In light of those complications, we want to commend Brazoria County Criminal DA Jeri Yenne and her office for their professional conduct in this investigation and encourage you to read her public letter explaining her decision.

            Second, among the many reasons Speaker Bonnen lost support among his own party was his controversial anti-local government commentary. The speaker was recorded referring to certain city and county officials as “dumbasses,” and he and State Rep. Dennis Burrows (R-Lubbock)—who has resigned from his position as chairman of the House Republican Caucus but is still seeking re-election to his House seat as of now—both bragged about how much they “hated” local government officials. (Yes, that is the word they used.) All of this was in the context of their professed desire to pass a ban on taxpayer-funded lobbying, which—as we’ve told you before on multiple occasions—(1) is not limited to hired-gun lobbyists but also includes professional associations like TDCAA, TAC, and TML, and (2) is sought by certain conservative and libertarian activists who want to silence opposition to their policy proposals for property tax restrictions, school vouchers, and certain criminal justice “reforms” like eliminating civil asset forfeiture or grand jury secrecy, among other ideas. The speaker’s display of animosity on the secret recording toward local officials had the potential to make things very uncomfortable for other House Republicans seeking their endorsement for the upcoming elections, so his retirement announcement is seen by some observers as an olive branch to assuage local officials’ fears. You’ll have to judge the sincerity of your local legislators for yourself, of course. All we will add is to note that this recording is yet further proof of the validity of that old saying that “just because you are paranoid doesn’t mean you are wrong!”

            So … what’s next? Speaker Bonnen is still the speaker for another 14 months, meaning he has the power to appoint committee chairmen (such as a replacement for the recently retired chairman of the Appropriations Committee), assign committees interim charges to study, and perform other ministerial acts. However, all his decisions now have an expiration date, and House members will operate under a cloud of uncertainty between now and January 2021. As a result, all bets are off when it comes to making predictions about the politics or policy of the 86th Regular Session that begins that month. If anything, this change only heightened the significance of the 2020 elections (if that is possible).

Senate’s interim charges

            Meanwhile, over on the quiet side of the capitol rotunda, the lieutenant governor issued his list of interim charges for various senate committees to tackle over the next 14 months. The full list of more than 100 topics is available here. Some of the more interesting (listed by committee) include:

Criminal Justice: Crime victim support, gang violence, implementation and use of deferred adjudication for DWIs
Health & Human Services: DFPS investigations and parental terminations, Medicaid fraud
State Affairs: Human trafficking prevention, taxpayer-funded lobbying, lobby registration exemptions (such as for government employees), misdemeanor theft prosecutions, court costs
Transportation: Reducing traffic-related collisions and fatalities (including those caused by intoxication)
Veterans Affairs & Border Security: Expansion of veteran treatment courts, border security technology and information-sharing
Water & Rural Affairs: Implementation of HB 1325 (hemp legalization)

We will update you on relevant interim hearings throughout 2020, but if you have specific questions about any of these issues, don’t hesitate to contact Shannon for more information.

Ring out the year with one last CLE

            Our 2019 Elected Prosecutor Conference will be held at the Lakeway Resort & Spa just west of Austin. The curriculum will include topics such as the rise in domestic terrorism, responding effectively to cases of domestic violence and adult sexual assault, the latest information from the DPS crime labs, and numerous opportunities for networking and solution-sharing. Registration information is available here.

            Note that immediately prior to the Elected course, TDCAA is offering a special Prosecutor Management Institute (PMI) Course designed specifically for elected prosecutors. Click here for information regarding that stand-alone course.

Quotes of the Month

“There isn’t a person who is over 45 growing up in Texas—even in metropolitan areas—who didn’t have trucks in the high school parking with a gun rack in ’em, because every boy went hunting in the fall. It wasn’t the ‘killing machine’ that it is today. The philosophy has very much changed.”
            —Karen Funk, athletic director for North East ISD in San Antonio, quoted in an article on how gun violence is changing Friday night football culture in Texas.

“There is much more that we don’t know about cannabis and CBD than we do know.”
            —Kevin Hill, addiction psychiatrist and assistant professor of psychiatry at Harvard Medical School, in an article on a recent British study that found scarce evidence to support claims that cannabis use improves certain mental health disorders.

“They are a group that you are fooling yourself and you are not respecting your constituents, you are not respecting this institution, if you are chasing their wants and their desires because you will never meet their wants and their desires.”
            —Texas House Speaker Dennis Bonnen (R-Angleton), quoted in an interview on May 27, 2019, in reference to right-wing political action group Empower Texans. (He would meet privately with Empower Texans’ CEO two weeks later, a decision leading to the eventual end of his tenure at the legislature.)

Transcript excerpt (page 34) from the private meeting between Speaker Bonnen, then-House Republic Caucus Chairman Rep. Dustin Burrows, and Michael Quinn Sullivan of Empower Texans on June 12, 2019 (secretly recorded by Sullivan):
Speaker Bonnen:        “I’m that much closer to passing [a ban on] taxpayer-funded lobbying. Let me tell you something … any mayor [or] county judge who was dumbass enough to come meet with me [last session], I told them with great clarity, ‘My goal is for this to be the worst session in the history of the legislature for cities and counties.’”
Rep. Burrows:             “I hope next session is even worse.”
Speaker Bonnen:         “And I’m all for that.”

Another transcript excerpt (pages 42–43):
Rep. Burrows:             “So, [banning] taxpayer-funded lobbying is the benchmark for next session. … [W]e’re going to spend the entire interim trying to expose what those dollars are being used on, try and get public support built around it, and we want to come back and take [away] taxpayer-funded lobbying.”

“I knew when I requested this [public integrity investigation] that there are no winners and there’s no way to win. All I knew is, I had to make my honest decision because there would be criticism no matter what. That’s probably a good assessment of public integrity investigations. I was willing to assume that because that to me is a district attorney’s job.”
            —Brazoria County Criminal DA Jeri Yenne, replying to unsubstantiated claims that her resolution of the speaker’s public integrity investigation was an act of political favoritism.

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Interim Update: September 2019

September 30, 2019

           
What a fantastic turnout we had at this year’s Annual Criminal & Civil Law Update in Corpus Christi! If you missed this one, be sure to mark your calendars for our next Annual Update in South Padre Island, which will be held September 16–18, 2020.

Mass shootings lead to new interim committees

            The recent mass shootings in El Paso and Odessa have resulted in a flurry of activity at the state capitol, although it may be awhile before any of it bears fruit (more on that in a minute).

            For starters, Governor Abbott issued a series of eight executive orders, most of which focused on making the Texas Suspicious Activity Reporting Network more robust. (If you’ve never heard of “TxSARNet,” you can find a primer about it here.) For your purposes, the most relevant of the executive orders will require quicker entry of court events and dispositions by local counties starting next year, upon pain of financial sanctions for counties that fail to comply. (But don’t count on any additional funding to help with that compliance, of course.)

            Meanwhile, the speaker and lieutenant governor have each created a Select Committee on Mass Violence Prevention and Community Safety for their respective chambers. The House select committee held its organizational meeting during our annual conference, and the Senate select committee met last week for similar purposes. The committees’ charges for the interim overlap but are not identical, so it will be interesting to see how their ultimate recommendations differ heading into next session.

            And yes, it is likely to be next session (2021) before the legislature takes any concrete action in response to the recent spate of mass shootings in Texas. There are several reasons for that, but perhaps the main impediment is that there is no consensus on what laws should be changed in response to these events, and governors rarely call a legislature back to Austin without having a proposed solution already baking in the oven. Furthermore, if the state House re-convenes in Austin, there is a non-zero chance that the current speaker might face a palace coup and be deposed, which could further complicate any attempt to limit future mass shootings (not to mention the upcoming elections and the constitutionally-mandated redistricting efforts to come). As a result, you can probably expect more studying than actual legislating on this issue between now and when the next regularly-scheduled session will convene in January 2021.

State audit of sexual assault cases

            The State Auditor’s Office (SAO) is starting to tackle the sexual assault audit it has been tasked with conducting this interim by the legislature. (Click this link and scroll down to Rider No. 5 for all the details.) As we told attendees of our recent Legislative Update tour, the SAO may be reaching out to offices with felony jurisdiction to collect data on how sexual assault cases between 2014–2018 were handled, so don’t be surprised if you receive such a request. We have been cooperating with that agency to help the auditors better understand prosecutors’ role in those cases, but only you can ultimately provide them with the data and other information they need to complete their task, so please cooperate with them if they come and knock on your door. This may be an excellent opportunity to both brag on your office’s positive outcomes while also identifying any lack of resources you may experience in trying to obtain justice in these important cases.

            If you have any questions about this audit, contact Shannon.

Legislative Update tour recap

            Speaking of our Legislative Update tour, it is D-O-N-E done! We trained almost 3,400 people this summer, shattering all previous attendance records for this course. Some of that may be due to our legislature creating enough hemp-related confusion this session to increase demand for our products, but we also like to think that our updates are popular because we give our customers the earliest and most thorough review of the changes they need to know about to properly do their jobs, both through our regional presentations and our various code books. Special thanks go to Montgomery County Assistant DA Tiana Sanford and Tarrant County Assistant CDA Vincent Giardino (and their bosses!) for extending their legislative liaison duties into the summer and sharing their knowledge and insights with our attendees. Getting this important information out to our members and others in the criminal justice community in a timely (and entertaining!) fashion is a team effort, and our team came through in the clutch this year.

Only two (and a half) trainings left in 2019!

            Registration is now open for TDCAA’s Key Personnel & Victim Assistance Coordinator Seminar. This year’s event will be held November 6–8 at the Embassy Suites in beautiful San Marcos. Event and registration information can be found here.

            Our 2019 Elected Prosecutor Conference will be held at the Lakeway Resort & Spa in Lakeway, Texas (just outside Austin on half-full-but-still-lovely Lake Travis). The curriculum will include topics such as the rise in domestic terrorism and responding effectively to cases of domestic violence and adult sexual assault, as well as numerous opportunities for networking and solution sharing. Registration information is available here.

            Note that immediately prior to the Elected course, TDCAA is offering a special Prosecutor Management Institute (PMI) Course designed specifically for elected prosecutors. Click here for information regarding that stand-alone course.

New code books

            We have received several pallets’ worth of shiny new code books that are ready to be shipped in the upcoming weeks, so now is the time to order your copies of the 2019–’21 Penal Code, Code of Criminal Procedure, and Annotated Criminal Laws of Texas if you haven’t already placed an order. Visit www.tdcaa.com/books to get that ball rolling and guarantee that you have the right code books at hand when enforcing all the new laws that recently went into effect.

Quotes of the Month

“It is a national issue. This is not anything that is limited to just a few states.”
            —Duffie Stone, 14th Judicial Circuit Solicitor (SC) and president of the National District Attorneys Association, on the problems various states’ prosecutors are experiencing when trying to prosecute marijuana cases in the wake of hemp legalization.

“We at least have to talk about these things. … We just can’t say ‘thoughts and prayers.’ We’ve had five mass shootings in Texas in the last five years.”
            —Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick (R-Houston), in a WOAI (San Antonio) news radio interview regarding Patrick’s willingness to consider requiring background checks for private gun sales between strangers.

“I don’t regret it. I just checked Twitter again, and I still can’t use it. … It was good for both of us. I trended [on Twitter]. I increased my name ID. It is what I believe. I don’t regret it at all.”
            —State Rep. Briscoe Cain (R-Houston), when asked if he regretted tweeting “My AR is ready for you” at presidential candidate Beto O’Rourke (D-El Paso) in response to the latter’s proposal to confiscate certain types of firearms. (The perceived threat resulted in Cain’s Twitter account being suspended.)

“[He] hates trees because one fell on him.”
            —Travis County Judge Sarah Eckhardt (D), on why she thinks the governor encouraged the legislature to override Austin’s local tree ordinance. (She subsequently apologized for her “flippant comment.”)

“We probably do a better job criticizing ourselves in our dissents than anybody else could.”
            —U.S. Supreme Court Chief Justice John Roberts, on why he doesn’t pay much attention to criticisms of the Court from members of the other branches of the federal government.

“It is fair to say that ending taxpayer-funded lobbying is the foundation’s top goal moving into next session.”
            —James Quintero, director of the Texas Public Policy Foundation’s Center for Local Governance, in a news story discussing one of his group’s priorities last session as well.

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Interim Update: August 2019

August 29, 2019

We have a mea culpa regarding this heat wave. We led off our July Update as follows:

Not sure what we did to deserve such a relatively mild summer so far, but we’ll take our blessings where we can find them after this session!

That went out on July 25, 2019. Three days later, Austin hit 100*F for the first time this year and then did so again and again and again, for 20 of the next 30 days after that—and some of you have had it even worse than us! Sorry about that.

Retirement fix ends

Consider this your unhappy reminder that as of September 1, 2019, the comptroller will no longer send counties the $3,640 per year it takes to cover the increased retirement contributions that elected felony prosecutors started making in 2015. Those of you getting a nice pay raise on that date might not notice this decrease in take-home pay (about $70/week), but others could feel it unless their counties decide to pick up the tab. Sorry to be the bearer of bad news!

For more information on raises and the like, review our June posting on this topic.

New info on mental health resources

In conjunction with the Judicial Commission on Mental Health, Judge Barbara Hervey and the Court of Criminal Appeals recently issued their first Texas Mental Health Resource Guide cataloguing various treatment resources available across the State of Texas. An online PDF version of the report is available on our website.

Legislative Update tour recap

Our Legislative Update tour has almost wrapped up! After classes this week in Georgetown (today), Richmond (Friday), and El Paso (Friday), our final legislative update event will be held in Corpus Christi on Tuesday, September 17 (that’s the day before the Annual Update, for those of you headed that way). If you have yet to attend one of our Legislative Updates, consider coming this week as a walk-in registrant or signing up online for the Corpus event here. Almost 3,000 prosecutors, defense lawyers, peace officers, judges, and other interested professionals have already attended one of these courses this summer, so don’t get left behind!

Annual Update is almost here!

It will soon be time to pack up and head to the coast for our Annual Criminal & Civil Law Update in Corpus Christi (September 18–20, 2019)! Registration is still open, so if you have put off making a decision, now is the time to register online. And don’t forget to reserve your hotel room, too—check out our recommended lodging options and book your room today!

Note No. 1: Texas Tech Law School is hosting an alumni reception in conjunction with the TDCAA Annual on September 18 at 5:00 p.m.; please RSVP to [email protected] if you plan to attend.

Note No. 2: Baylor Law School is also hosting a reception at the Annual for alumni and friends. The event will be held on September 19 at 5:00 p.m.; to RSVP, go to www.baylor.edu/law/tdcaareception.

Note No. 3: If your law school isn’t hosting such a reception … why the heck not?!? It’s a great way for them to show appreciation for their alumni who go on to careers in public service, not to mention a chance for people to catch up with old friends. Reach out to your law school and get them thinking about something for the 2020 Annual at South Padre Island!

The new code books are here! The new code books are here!

We have received several pallets’ worth of shiny new books that are ready to be shipped in the upcoming weeks, so now is the time to order your copies of the 2019–21 Penal Code, Code of Criminal Procedure, and Annotated Criminal Laws of Texas if you haven’t already placed an order. Visit www.tdcaa.com/books to get that ball rolling and guarantee that you have your updated code books before most of the new laws go into effect next week.

Quotes of the Month

“The Texas House is a durable institution. It’s in the Constitution, it has survived the Civil War, it has survived the Great Depression, it has survived the Sharpstown Scandal, and it will survive this.”

State Rep. James White (R-Hillister), in response to the ongoing kerfuffle in Austin over a recording of House Speaker Dennis Bonnen (R-Angleton) allegedly targeting fellow GOP House members for primary attacks.

“We’ve got a little work to do but it’ll come back. I’m not done with that issue and I don’t think the House or the Senate is done with that issue.”

State Rep. Dustin Burrows (R-Lubbock), chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee, promising members of the State Republic Executive Committee that the House would try again to restrict so-called “taxpayer-funded lobbying” next session.

“The biggest shock to the Austin media was that I actually had a heart.”

Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick (R-Houston), after his office announced that he was admitted to a hospital earlier this month to insert a stent to relieve heart pressure.

Interim Update: July 2019

July 25, 2019

Not sure what we did to deserve such a relatively mild summer so far, but we’ll take our blessings where we can find them after this session!

Legislative awards

After every legislative session, the TDCAA Board of Directors selects a handful of legislators to receive a “Law and Order Award” in recognition of their service to prosecutors, public safety, or the criminal justice system in general. This year’s winners are (drum roll, please):

State Rep. Craig Goldman (R-Fort Worth)
State Rep. Joe Moody (D-El Paso)
State Rep. Andy Murr (R-Junction)
State Rep. Four Price (R-Amarillo)
Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick (R-Houston)
State Sen. Royce West (D-Dallas)

If any of these legislators hail from your neck of the woods, please be sure to congratulate them as appropriate. And if you would like to participate in a future award presentation, contact Shannon to be notified when those details are nailed down. (The only presentation confirmed so far is for Sen. West at the Dallas Legislative Update on August 2.)

Assistant prosecutor longevity pay update

We have some good news on this subject and we have some bad news, so let us sandwich the bad news between two slices of good news.

As previously reported, the legislature propped up this year’s funding for the assistant prosecutor longevity supplement with a supplemental appropriation. (That’s good.) Unfortunately, the revenue stream has continued to decline in this last state fiscal quarter and the comptroller is statutorily obligated to reduce the amount of state funds sent to the counties on an equal percentage basis (per §41.255(f), Tex. Gov’t Code). (That’s bad.) The amount of the reduction will likely be 10–20 percent. In an effort to mitigate that impending shortfall in this last check of the fiscal quarter, the comptroller will probably delay sending out those checks to counties until the first or second week of August (instead of July 31, the usual date of issuance). This gives the comptroller the chance to include all the fee collections in that final check. And thanks to some clever budget-writing by the legislature, this won’t happen again in the next biennium—even if the fund runs short, the comptroller will be authorized to pay 100% of the longevity supplement owed. (That’s good).  If you have any questions, contact Rob.    

Hemp

On the heels of the recent letter from state leadership about the newly-enacted hemp law, the DPS crime laboratory has also issued a letter on this topic for your perusal, a PDF copy of which can be found on our website. As with the previous letter from on high, you can read this new letter and decide for yourself whether or how it will change your policies going forward, but if you have any questions, feel free to contact Shannon or Rob first.

Legislative Update tour

Speaking of the new hemp law and its resulting collateral consequences, our Legislative Update tour is on the road and coming to a location near you! All the dates and locations are listed in this brochure, and online registration by location is available here. More than 2,500 prosecutors, defense lawyers, peace officers, judges, and others have registered to attend so far, but we want to break our all-time record of 2,700 attendees from the 2017 tour, so don’t get left behind—register you and your office today!

Annual Update hotel rooms are going fast!

We know you may be in the midst of summer’s doldrums right now, but it will be time to pack up and head to the coast for our Annual Criminal & Civil Law Update before you know it! If you plan to join us in Corpus Christi (September 18–20, 2019), then now is the time to register online. And don’t forget to reserve your hotel room, too—some host hotels are already sold out, and the discounted TDCAA rate at the other remaining hotels is available only until August 26, so check out your recommended lodging options and book your room as soon as possible.

The new code books are here! The new code books are here!

We have received several pallets’ worth of shiny new books that are ready to be shipped in the upcoming weeks, so now is the time to order your copies of the 2019–21 Penal Code, Code of Criminal Procedure, and Annotated Criminal Laws of Texas if you haven’t already placed an order. Visit www.tdcaa.com/books to get that ball rolling and guarantee that you have your updated code books before most of the new laws go into effect on September 1, 2019!

Scattershots

Here are articles that have crossed our radar that some of you might enjoy:

  • Forensic experts have a plan to fix Texas’ marijuana problem. (Texas Tribune)
  • Despite high hopes, self-driving cars are “way in the future.” (New York Times)
  • After defeats in 2019, some Texas lawmakers team up to push criminal justice reform. (Texas Tribune)
  • Houston is the card skimmer capital of the nation. What is being done about it? (Houstonian Magazine)
  • State leaders again want to review how Texas elects judges. (Texas Tribune)

Future updates

Remember, during the interim we send these updates only once a month (barring emergencies). Look for your next update at the end of August.

Quotes of the Month

“People need to understand [that] a special session is not a magic wand that solves all problems.”

Governor Greg Abbott (R-Houston), when asked earlier this month if he would call a special session to override Austin’s repeal of its camping ban that has resulted in an increase in homeless people camping and sleeping in public spaces. (But you can apply the statement to anything hemp-related as well!)

“You should just pay in cash.”

State Agriculture Commissioner Sid Miller (R-Stephenville), describing the only way to ensure your credit card information is not intercepted by card skimmers at gas stations.

“It’s the biggest cycle in memory. If Democrats take Texas, it’s game over, and both sides recognize the stakes.”

Austin lobbyist and political consultant Bill Miller, referring to the upcoming 2020 elections.

“Texas born. Texas bred. When I die, I’ll be Texas dead. Ha!”

H. Ross Perot, Sr. (1930–2019), in a quote from his final interview with the Dallas Morning News in 2016. (For a fascinating story of a life well-lived, read the full DMN article on his passing.)
  • Advanced Trial Advocacy Course 2019
  • Interim Update: Hemp

    June 24, 2019

    We had hoped to make it all the way to the end of the month before pestering you with legislative news, but no such luck. If you haven’t already heard from your local crime labs and/or your local media about the legislature’s mis-steps with the legalization of hemp, you soon will. Here is some information that may help you determine your plans going forward.

    It’s a brave new (hemp) world

    As you may have heard, the legislature recently passed HB 1325 to regulate the growth, production, transportation, sale, and consumption of legal hemp products in Texas. In passing that bill, the Texas Legislature joined roughly 40 other states and the federal government in legalizing some form of hemp, industrial hemp, or hemp-related products. However, the implementation of this new law is causing some headaches because the legislation took immediate effect as of June 10, 2019—something that is almost never a good idea when changing criminal law!—and crime laboratories have not been given the time or resources they need to properly equip laboratories with the instrumentation and expertise needed to distinguish legal hemp from illegal marijuana, nor have state agencies been able to implement the regulatory processes required to regulate hemp. We will have a more complete summary of this new law in our 2019–2021 Legislative Update book (which is going to the printer this week), and we will talk about it in detail on our Legislative Update tour (click here to register for a location near you), but because this law has taken effect before we can come tell you about it in person, here is what we can say for now.

    Testing

    As finally passed, HB 1325 distinguishes between (now legal) hemp and (still illegal) marijuana. Both terms reference the same plant—Cannabis sativa L.—with the sole difference being THC content. Specifically, “hemp” is defined as Cannabis sativa L. and any part of that plant, whether growing or not, with a delta-9 tetrahydrocannabinol concentration of not more than 0.3 percent on a dry weight basis. That type of cannabis is now excluded from the definition of “marihuana” in the Controlled Substances Act, and hemp and the tetrahydrocannabinols in hemp are also excluded from the definition of a “controlled substance” in that Act. As a result, hemp is no longer prosecutable as marijuana or as a Penalty Group 2 tetrahydrocannabinol other than marijuana. But how can one distinguish between hemp and marijuana? Well, there’s the rub.

    The distinction between marijuana and hemp requires proof of the THC concentration of a specific product or contraband, and for now, that evidence can come only from a laboratory capable of determining that type of potency—a category which apparently excludes most, if not all, of the crime labs in Texas right now. Various law enforcement agencies—including DPS—and other local or private crime labs will have to purchase new instrumentation and change certain testing procedures to be able to supply that new information to the courts before criminal cases involving marijuana go to trial. Until then, there will be no easy way to determine whether the weed your officers seized is illegal marijuana. (Interestingly, our post-session research shows at least two other states—Tennessee and Virginia—are experiencing the same problems resulting from their own state legislative bodies passing hemp legalization laws with immediate effect, but apparently no one who helped pass the Texas bill either knew about those problems or thought to mention them to our own legislature.)

    The takeaway is that you may have to put your marijuana cases on the same “waiting for lab results” shelf as your felony DNA cases and postpone them until the labs can provide the needed evidence for prosecution. We have been informally told that it should take labs anywhere from four to 12 months to purchase new equipment and adopt and validate the necessary protocols to be able to provide the evidence needed to prosecute a marijuana case at trial. This does not necessarily mean marijuana cases cannot be investigated or charged under the Controlled Substances Act during that time—after all, no one can legally possess or sell hemp when the rules necessary for doing so have not been implemented yet—but unless a defendant stipulates that his cannabis is marijuana and not hemp, any criminal cases may need to wait to go to trial until testing on them can be completed. And if your judges will not grant lab-induced continuances, then you may have to get creative in your disposition of those cases—if you accept them at all.

    Prospective Application

    Not only did HB 1325 have immediate effect, but it also lacked the usual transition language making a change in criminal law prospectively apply only to offenses occurring on or after that effective date. As a result, the law went into effect on June 10, 2019, but it is unclear whether it applies to previously-filed marijuana cases pending on that date. Y’all are welcome to plumb the depths of the annotations on Government Code §311.031 (Savings Provisions), which is the Code Construction Act statute that provides the default rules for such situations, but we already took that deep dive and there do not appear to be any prior annotations or attorney general opinions that directly apply to this type of decriminalization situation. There are cases relating to drug punishment ranges being reduced—which under §311.031(b) would apply to cases still pending on the effective date in the absence of specific language in a bill stating otherwise—but is HB 1325 a penalty reduction or just a revision/amendment/repeal described by §311.031(a) that does not apply to past violations of the statute? Your guess is as good as ours.

    Other Options

    Under HB 1325, the growth, production, transport, sale, and use of hemp will be regulated by the state as an agricultural or consumer product, depending on whether the hemp is in a consumable or non-consumable form—but only once the Department of Agriculture (TDA) and Department of State Health Services (DSHS) can get their rules and regulations in place, which will also take several months. That means that for now, no one can legally possess hemp (with one exception noted at the end of this update). House Bill 1325 did enact new Agriculture Code §§122.356 and 122.360 to make it a Class C misdemeanor (up to $1,000 fine) to improperly transport hemp, and improper transportation can also be pursued as a civil penalty (up to $500 per violation) by the attorney general or a county or district attorney (see §122.359). However, any other violation of the new laws relating to the possession, sale, or purchase of non-consumable hemp products are to be handled as an administrative penalty by TDA, and that agency has yet to adopt the rules required to do it.

    For consumable hemp products such as oils, lotions, tinctures, and other health products, HB 1325 makes them subject to regulation under Health and Safety Code Chapter 431 (Texas Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act). That means that a violation of various consumer protection laws—such as those listed in §431.021 (Prohibited Acts) relating to mislabeling, misbranding, adulterating, false advertising, or counterfeiting—when made in regard to the commercial sale of consumable hemp products may subject the violator to:

    • administrative penalties from the Department of State Health Services (DSHS) or the Office of the Attorney General (OAG) under §431.054;
    • civil penalties from OAG or a district, county, or city attorney of up to $25,000 a day for each violation under §431.0585; or
    • criminal penalties of a Class A misdemeanor or a state jail felony under §431.059.

    In addition, certain other violations of the new law involving consumer products containing cannabinoid oil, including cannabidiol (CBD), are made actionable under the Deceptive Trade Practices Act (see §443.203). As a result, our friends in the Consumer Protection Division of the Office of Attorney General (OAG) may soon be developing an expertise in hemp regulation, so feel free to call in the “hemp cavalry” if you don’t know what to do with these cases now, because that’s whom the legislature has tasked with regulating hemp products.

    Interdiction

    The biggest challenge to marijuana interdiction in the post-hemp world is determining what is what on the street. Just as in the courtroom, there is no field test or drug dog qualified to distinguish between legal hemp and illegal marijuana, and many other states that have legalized hemp have run into this same problem.

    To provide guidance to those attempting to enforce this new law, HB 1325 enacts Agriculture Code §122.358 (Powers and Duties of Peace Officers). Subsection (b) of that law authorizes a peace officer to detain any hemp in transit and request documentation proving the product 1) is legal and 2) is legally possessed and transported. Subsection (c) also allows peace officers to seize and impound any cannabis product for which there is probable cause to believe that it is marijuana or “any other illegal substance”—such as hemp that does not meet various other regulations required or adopted under HB 1325. However, while subsection (a) says a peace officer may inspect and collect a sample of cannabis found in a vehicle to determine its THC content, there is no easy way to do that right now. Furthermore, that subsection also prohibits the officer from seizing all of the cannabis or arresting the person transporting it unless the officer has probable cause to believe the cannabis is marijuana. Fortunately, that PC threshold should be easy to clear with some logical police work.

    First, note that HB 1325 prohibits TDA or DSHS from adopting rules or regulations that would allow the processing or manufacturing of any hemp product in a form suitable for smoking or vaping (see Agriculture Code §122.301(b) and Health and Safety Code §443.204(4)). And second, new Agriculture Code §122.356(b) prohibits a person transporting hemp from transporting any other cargo at the same time, and it also requires that person to provide documentation proving the hemp is legal to any peace officer upon request. So, because legal hemp must be properly documented at all times, cannot be transported with non-hemp products, and cannot be manufactured or produced for the purposes of smoking or vaping, any cannabis plant material found without those documents or in a form meant for smoking or vaping should qualify as probable cause to believe it is not legal hemp. Simply put, if the paperwork is not in order, officers can assume the cannabis is marijuana—or at a minimum, legal hemp being illegally transported, which is also a criminal offense—and proceed accordingly.

    Exception

    While our statement under “Other Options” that no one can legally possess hemp is technically correct, there is one exception for certain CBD-related products. The transition language of HB 1325 includes language that allows a “retailer” to possess, transport, or sell a consumable hemp product (read: CBD oil) that became part of the retailer’s inventory before DSHS’s rules governing those products take effect (which describes the period in which we currently find ourselves). That means retailers can stock and sell CBD oil products now, without the proper licensure, registration, testing, and labelling required by HB 1325. The only exception to this exception is if the product is unsafe for consumption due to the presence of pesticides, solvents, or the like, or if the product has a THC concentration higher than 0.3 percent. But as we have already discussed, that requires the product to be seized and tested in a laboratory, which can be time-consuming and expensive for local authorities. As a result, there may now be a statutory reason to not prosecute non-smokable, low-THC CBD oil consumer product cases.

    Conclusion

    We will update you with further information on this topic as we receive it, but this is what we know as of now. Good luck with that!

    General Election Recap: Vetoes & Pay Raises

    June 17, 2019


    A belated Happy Father’s Day to anyone who didn’t get their favorite bill vetoed by the governor over the weekend.

    Bring out your dead

    The veto period ended this weekend, and the final body count consisted of 56 bills and two concurrent resolutions. The full list—with links to each bill’s home page, including the applicable veto proclamation—is available here, and includes:

    • HB 51 by Canales (D-Edinburg) creating statewide forms for use in criminal cases
    • HB 1771 by Thierry (D-Houston) decriminalizing prostitution for some juveniles
    • HB 3078 by S. Thompson (D-Houston) creating a clemency review panel for defendants claiming to be victims of human trafficking or family violence
    • HB 3490 by Cole (D-Austin) criminalizing abusive or harassing social media posts
    • HCR 86 by Springer (R-Muenster) designating the Bowie knife as the official state knife of Texas (read that veto proclamation and get a geography lesson thrown in for free!)
    • SB 1804 by Kolkhorst (R-Brenham) authorizing family violence bond conditions to be entered into TCIC

    With the ink now dry on all bills and resolutions, we can officially close the books on the 86th Regular Session. If you are curious about the final fate of any specific bills or issues, contact Shannon and he’ll give you the scoop.

    The Lege giveth, the Lege taketh away

    The Governor signed HB 2384 by Representative Leach (R-Plano) and Senator Huffman (R-Houston) late Friday afternoon. The bill discards the traditional across-the-board pay raise for judges and prosecutors and replaces it with a pay scheme based on tenure. The bill amends a number of Government Code provisions that you are probably not familiar with, so at the end of this update there is a summary of how the bill will work for prosecutors, including some examples to help you calculate what your own raise—or your own decrease in take-home pay, thanks to a repealed budget rider—may be come September 1, 2019. Be sure to read that “HB 2384 Explainer” for all the details.

    Legislative Update tour

    Our Legislative Update tour is coming soon to a location near you! All the dates and locations are listed in this brochure, and online registration by location is available here. More than 1,200 prosecutors, defense lawyers, peace officers, judges, and others have registered to attend so far, but we expect to double that number before we are done, so don’t get left behind—register your office today!

    Baby Prosecutor School

    Anyone who is new to a prosecutor’s office (less than six months on the job) should consider attending our Prosecutor Trial Skills Course this July in Austin. It’s a full week of intensive training that prepares newly hired prosecutors for their work both in the courtroom and out. New prosecutors won’t want to miss this intensive, high-quality training customized especially for them, so visit this webpage for more details and to register online.

    Quotes of the Week

    “It’s called the incumbent protection plan. At the end of the day, tax cuts, more money for schools—nothing big blew up.”

    State Rep. Giovanni Capriglione (R-Southlake), explaining the GOP leadership’s reasons for focusing on school finance and property tax reform to the exclusion of other, more controversial social issues this past session.

    “Until the state of Texas gets its testing policies and procedures in place, there will still be a very high likelihood of significant amounts of snake oil, just basically placebo-type stuff, that could contain contaminants, it could contain toxins, and what it’s most likely to be is really expensive, crappy olive oil.”

    Morris Denton, CEO of Compassionate Cultivation, one of the companies licensed under Texas’ Compassionate Use Program (T-CUP), on the impact upon his business of CBD products derived from soon-to-be-legal hemp.

    “Since pot’s been legalized in California, there’s no money to be made because everyone got involved in it. They’ve got these big 50,000-square-foot [grow] houses, and they’re flooding the market. The money is outside of California.”

    Bill Kroger, Jr., a Los Angeles-based criminal defense lawyer, explaining why marijuana trafficking arrests at LAX airport have increased 166% since legalization in that state.

    “It is ironic that in a session in which they make progress on open government, they exempt themselves. … They probably should have captioned this bill … ‘Do as I say, not as I do.’”

    Bill Aleshire, an Austin-based attorney and former Travis County judge, on HB 4181 by Geren (R-Fort Worth), which expands the scope of legislative privilege against disclosure under the Open Records Act.

    “The fireworks this session were few and far between.”

    State Rep. Jessica Gonzalez (D-Dallas), when asked to recap the recent session.

    House Bill 2384 Explainer

    For Elected Felony Prosecutors (DAs, CDAs, And C&DAs):

    Benchmark: The benchmark salary for felony prosecutors in the Professional Prosecutors Act (PPA) is now $140,000; for those outside the Professional Prosecutors Act, it is $112,000. (Those amounts have not changed, but older, lower statutory minimums in the Government Code have been raised to match recent appropriations.) Because almost all of you are in the PPA, we will use those figures throughout the rest of this memo.

    Raises: After four years of service, a felony prosecutor is entitled to receive from the state 110 percent of the benchmark salary ($154,000). After eight years of service, a felony prosecutor is entitled to receive from the state 120 percent of the benchmark salary ($168,000). However, HB 2384 phases out these state salary increases for elected felony prosecutors whose county supplements exceed the applicable benchmark of $18,000, which is the maximum local supplement a district judge may receive. Unlike those judges, DAs have no maximum salary, but there is still a maximum amount that the state will contribute to that overall salary. As a result, some DAs with a lot of tenure, a large county supplement, or both will not receive a raise from the state under HB 2384.

    Factoring in a local supplement: If your local supplement exceeds $18,000, the excess amount will be subtracted from the state raise you would otherwise receive under HB 2384’s tenure scheme. Stated another way: If after four years of service, the benchmark salary plus your local supplement plus the 10-percent raise would equal more than $172,000, or if after eight years the benchmark salary plus your local supplement plus the 20-percent raise would equal more than $186,000, then the amount of the state raise over the benchmark of $140,000 will be reduced from $18,000 to zero or somewhere in-between, depending upon the amount of your supplement.

    Again, this does not mean a DA’s total salary cannot exceed those amounts if a county wants to provide a supplement that exceeds them; it means only that the state won’t contribute to a DA’s salary at or beyond those maximums.

    Still confused? Here are some examples so you can calculate the impact of a local supplement on your raise:

    Zero to four years of service (no raise from HB 2384):

    Felony prosecutor A: DA with two years of service and no local supplement = $140,000.
    Math: Benchmark $140,000 + $0 state raise + $0 local supplement = $140,000.

    Felony prosecutor B: CDA with two years of service and $35,000 local supplement = $175,000.
    Math: Benchmark $140,000 + $0 state raise + $35,000 local supplement = $175,000.

    Five to eight years of service (10% raise from HB 2384):

    Felony prosecutor C: C&DA with five years of service and a local supplement of $8,000 = $162,000 (a raise of $14,000).
    Math: Benchmark $140,000 + $8,000 local supplement = $148,000, which is $24,000 below the maximum combined salary of $172,000, so the full 10% state raise of $14,000 applies.

    Felony prosecutor D: DA with five years of service and a local supplement of $25,000 = $172,000 (a raise of $6,000).
    Math: Benchmark $140,000 + $26,000 local supplement = $166,000, which is only $6,000 less than $172,000 maximum, so the 10% state raise of $14,000 is reduced to $6,000 to avoid exceeding a combined maximum of $172,000.

    Felony prosecutor E: CDA with six years of service and a local supplement of $36,000 = $176,000 (no raise).
    Math: Benchmark $140,000 + $36,000 local supplement = $176,000 total salary, which exceeds the $172,000 combined maximum, so the 10% raise is zeroed out.)

    Nine or more years of service (20% raise from HB 2384):

    Felony prosecutor F: C&DA with 10 years of service and a local supplement of $10,000 = $178,000 (a raise of $28,000).
    Math: Benchmark $140,000 + $10,000 local supplement = $150,000 salary, which is $36,000 below the maximum combined salary of $186,000, so the full 20% state raise of $28,000 applies.

    Felony prosecutor G: DA with 12 years of service and a local supplement of $30,000 = $186,000 (a raise of $16,000).
    Math: Benchmark $140,000 + $30,000 local supplement = $170,000, which is $16,000 below the $186,000 combined maximum, so the 20% raise is reduced to $16,000 to avoid exceeding that combined maximum.

    Felony prosecutor H: CDA with 18 years of service and a local supplement of $45,000 = $186,000 (a raise of $1,000).
    Math: $140,000 + $45,000 local supplement = $185,000 total salary, which is only $1,000 less than $186,000 maximum, so the 20% state raise of $28,000 is reduced to $1,000 to avoid exceeding a combined maximum of $186,000.

    Felony prosecutor I: DA with 27 years of service and a local supplement of $65,000 = $205,000 (no raise).
    Math: $140,000 + $65,000 local supplement = $205,000 total salary, which exceeds the $186,000 combined maximum, so the 20% state raise is zeroed out.

    Reporting local supplements: The Judiciary Section of the Comptroller’s Department is tasked with collecting affidavits from elected felony prosecutors annually attesting to the amount of each prosecutor’s county supplement. We are currently working with the comptroller’s staff on that and will report back with more details when they are available.

    Impact of the deletion of the retirement “make-up” pay in HB 1: In 2015, the legislature increased elected felony prosecutors’ retirement withholding from 6.9% to 9.5% with no corresponding increase in salary, so to make sure those prosecutors did not see a reduction in take-home pay, the legislature also appropriated a $1.3 million rider for each biennia to be used for a county retirement “patch” of about $1,300 per prosecutor per year. However, the 2019 General Appropriations Act does not contain that patch. Therefore, elected felony prosecutors will see a reduction in their state take-home pay of about $1,300 a year. Some of you may not feel that because you are getting a raise, but those of you with four or fewer years of service or with a county supplement large enough to disqualify you from any state raise will see an actual reduction in your paycheck come September 1, 2019. (Although if it’s any consolation, that money in the state budget essentially went toward shoring up the assistant prosecutor longevity pay for the next two years.)

    Impact of HB 2384 on retirement: If you are an elected felony prosecutor who retired or will retire before September 1, 2019, your retirement will be calculated based on the current salary of a district judge ($140,000). There will be no COLA until that base pay is increased at some point in the future (if ever). If you are an elected felony prosecutor who retires on or after September 1, 2019, your retirement will be calculated using the state salary of a district judge with comparable years of service. However, note that your county supplement is not a factor for elected felony prosecutors. Thus, with five to eight years of service, your retirement will be based on 110% of the base pay ($154,000), and with nine or more years of service your retirement will be based on 120% of the base pay ($168,000).

    For Elected County Attorneys (no felony jurisdiction):

    County attorney supplement: Your county attorney supplement will be based on the traditional formula that uses a combination of the number of counties served by your felony prosecutor and the salary of a district judge as the benchmark salary. However, beginning September 1, 2019, each county attorney’s benchmark salary will be that of a district judge with comparable years of service. Here are some examples so you can calculate your own supplement beginning September 1, 2019:

    County attorney A: In a one-county DA district with 5 years of service: Half of $154,000 = $77,000, not further divided (a $7,000 raise).
    County attorney B: In a one-county DA district with 10 years of service: Half of $168,000 = $84,000, not further divided (a $14,000 raise).

    County attorney C: In a two-county DA district with two years of service: Half of $140,000 = $70,000, divided again by 2 counties = $35,000 (no raise).
    County attorney B: In a two-county DA district with six years of service: Half of $154,000 = $77,000, divided again by 2 counties = $38,500 (a $3,500 raise).
    County attorney C: In a two-county DA district with 14 years of service: Half of $168,000 = $84,000 divided again by 2 counties = $42,000 (a $7,000 raise).

    County attorney D: In a three-county DA district with five years of service: Half of $154,000 = $77,000, divided again by 3 = $25,666 (a $2,333 raise).
    County attorney E: In a five-county DA district with nine years of service: Half of $168,000 = $84,000, divided again by 3 (the maximum divisor under the statute) = $28,000 (a $4,666 raise).       

    Reporting your longevity: As with felony prosecutors’ local supplements, the comptroller will be gathering accurate start dates for every county attorney before September 1, 2019, and your longevity as of that date will control for the following year. We are working with the comptroller on that and will report back when more details are available.

    If after reading through all of this you are still having trouble calculating your potential raise, please email Rob with your tenure in office and either your current state supplement (if you are an elected felony prosecutor) or the number of counties served by your felony prosecutor (if you are a county attorney), and he will walk you through it.

    TDCAA Legislative Update: Sine Die

    May 28, 2019

    The 86th Legislature adjourned sine die yesterday. What a wild ride it’s been!

    Game over

    The best news from this session might be that legislators can return home and stay there until January 2021. With the passage of HB 1 (the state budget), SB 2 (property taxes), and HB 3 (school finance), there’s no reason for the governor to call legislators back to Austin for a special session—and for that, we can all be grateful. (They did kinda-sorta-accidentally abolish the State Board of Plumbing Examiners, but that’s nothing a few extra plungers can’t keep in check until next session, right?)

    Now that the session is over, the frequency of these updates will decrease to once a month or as events warrant. We hope you found them to be informative and helpful this past session!

    Attorney general bill dies

    As you know by now, legislation to grant new prosecution authority to the attorney general in human trafficking-related cases failed to become law. That is a direct result of your personal communications with your local legislators. It is also something that we will no doubt be working on later in the interim. Until then, it’s good for you to know what some legislators said and heard about how that all went down on Sunday, so we want to share with you the video links to the relevant floor discussions on SB 1257:

    House: May 26, 2019 floor footage (Starts at 4:15:25, ends at 4:18:45)

    Senate: May 26, 2019 floor footage (Starts at 2:40:10, ends at 2:47:21)

    We’ll have more to say about this during our summer Legislative Update tour, but until then, be sure to thank those legislators who listened to you; there were many of them in the House, and they deserve credit for taking your concerns to heart.

    Veto period

    We are now in the veto period, the three weeks after a session during which the governor holds all the cards. This year, he has until Sunday, June 16 to sign or veto a bill. (In Texas, the governor can also allow a bill to become a law without his signature, but what’s the fun of being governor unless you take the opportunity to have the last word on everything?) To date, Governor Abbott has vetoed six bills sent to him, but more are sure to follow. If you want information on how to request a bill be vetoed, contact Shannon for more information.

    New laws with immediate effect

    More than 250 of our tracked bills made their way to the governor’s desk this session. It will take us several weeks to summarize them all for our Legislative Update book and related publications, but some have already been signed into law by the governor. Most new laws take effect on September 1, 2019, but a few bills take effect immediately upon being signed. Here are three “immediate effect” bills that have already been signed into law:

    • HB 81 by Canales/Hinojosa requiring disclosure of public information relating to certain public entertainment events (effective May 17, 2019)
    • SB 306 by Watson/Israel authorizing officers to divert certain intoxicated offenders to sobering centers (effective April 25, 2019)
    • SB 416 by Huffman/Walle authorizing the attorney general to provide legal counsel to local governments during a declared state of disaster (effective May 20, 2019)

    Curious about any other bills or issues? Contact Shannon with a bill number or issue and he’ll let you know what happened to it.

    Legislative Update tour coming soon!

        Online registration for our Legislative Update summer tour is now open. Here is the schedule:

    • Friday, July 19 – Austin
    • Thursday, July 25 – Midland
    • Friday, July 26 – San Antonio
    • Friday, July 26 – Bryan
    • Thursday, August 1 – Denton
    • Friday, August 2 – Dallas
    • Friday, August 2 – Waco
    • Thursday, August 8 – Galveston
    • Friday, August 9 – Houston
    • Thursday, August 15 – Amarillo
    • Thursday, August 15 – Beaumont
    • Friday, August 16 – Lubbock
    • Friday, August 16 – Conroe
    • Friday, August 16 – Jacksonville
    • Thursday, August 22 – McKinney
    • Thursday, August 22 – Laredo
    • Friday, August 23 – Fort Worth
    • Friday, August 23- Edinburg
    • Thursday, August 29 – Georgetown
    • Friday, August 30 – Richmond
    • Friday, August 30 – El Paso
    • Tuesday, Sept. 17 – Corpus Christi

    If you haven’t already received your brochure listing all the locations and details, a PDF version is available online here. Find a date and location convenient for you and your staff and sign up now—seating at some locations is limited and will be filled on a first-registered, first-served basis!

    Scattershots

    For your reading pleasure, here are some stories and articles we don’t have time to summarize, but they might be of interest to some of you:

    Quotes of Sine, Die

    “But even in states where the attorney general has prosecutorial powers, convictions are still low.”

    Conclusion reached in an AP story on the relatively poor success rates of human trafficking prosecutions around the country, regardless of who prosecutes them. (Coincidentally, this story was released the same day SB 1257 was withdrawn from consideration).

    “You will never please or appease those folks and I’m sure as hell not going to waste my time trying. … You are fooling yourself and you are not respecting your constituents and you are not respecting this institution if you are chasing their wants and their desires.”

    House Speaker Dennis Bonnen (R-Angleton), responding to press questions about criticism of the legislature’s performance by conservative grassroots organizations like Empower Texans and Texas Right to Life.

    “Pretty much, we just couldn’t get any buy in from our Senate colleagues on this.”


    State Rep. James White (R-Hillister), explaining the failure of various House attempts to limit officers’ ability to arrest for certain fine-only offenses.

    “I’m still doing penance for 2017.”

    State Sen. Kel Seliger (R-Amarillo), on why he thinks the Lt. Governor failed to recognize him to pass any bills this entire session.

    “I love being lieutenant governor. This is the coolest job in politics in the country, and it’s a very powerful job. … This rumor has absolutely been the craziest thing I’ve ever seen.”

    Lt. Governor Dan Patrick (R-Houston), denying rumors that he is seeking a job in President Trump’s administration.

    “Thanks Senators for your work with the House to pass legacy legislation that will improve the lives of every generation. See you in 2 years. NO SPECIAL SESSION. #txlege”

    Sine die tweet by Gov. Greg Abbott.