GeorgeWallace

  • Subscribe to our RSS feed.
  • Twitter
  • StumbleUpon
  • Reddit
  • Facebook
  • Digg

Monday, November 19, 2012

Taking a look at notable criminal justice bills in the Texas House

Posted on 5:00 AM by Unknown
It's that time of year again. It's time for our beloved state legislators to pre-file bills before the beginning of the biennial session in January. And, it's probably time to be thankful that they only meet for 140 days every other year - because, otherwise, they could do some real damage.

Today we'll look at some notable bills filed in the house.

First we have Rep. Tom Craddick's (R-Midland) latest attempt to criminalize texting while driving. Under Mr. Craddick's bill, it would be a Class C misdemeanor (traffic ticket) to send a text, read a text, send an e-mail or read an e-mail on a phone or tablet while driving. That is, unless your phone allows you to dictate a text or e-mail or listen to a text or e-mail.

I think we can all agree that it's just not a good idea to text while driving. There is too much else to worry about when out on the road without checking your Facebook status or Twitter timeline at the same time. The bill does not address talking on the cellphone while driving which, even though one's hands may be free, is just as distracting as trying to send that text message.

Rep. Harold Dutton (D-Houston) has put forward a bill that would abolish the death penalty in Texas and replace it with life in prison without parole (or as Jeff Gamso would say, death in prison). Rep. Dutton's bill would also change the procedures by which appointed counsel is chosen in criminal cases.

In a contest to see who can submit the most obnoxious bill, Rep. Van Taylor (R-Plano) has filed a bill that would require law enforcement personnel to determine the identity of a driver by use of various forms of state-issued identification or, if necessary, finger-printing. Of course we all know the purpose of the bill is to target Latino drivers in Texas and to force motorists to show that they are citizens if stopped for a minor traffic offense.

Mr. Taylor's offering is followed closely by Rep. Richard Raymond's (D-Laredo) bill that would create an on-line data base of everyone in Texas who has been convicted of driving while intoxicated (or other offense involving drinking and driving) in the last ten years.

The database would contain a photograph and the person's last known address. The next step in this march to stupidity will be to require a person convicted of an intoxication offense to register on an annual basis in order to create another offense with which they could be charged.

This idea, along with the current sex offender registration laws, are absurd. When a person has been convicted and has served their time in prison or on community supervision they have paid their debt to society. These registration bills force these folks to continue to pay a debt long after they have served their sentence.

Rep. Raymond has also filed a bill that would do away with the Court of Criminal Appeals and let the Supreme Court be the court of last resort for both civil and criminal matters. I have mixed thoughts about this proposal.

On the one hand, I think it makes sense to have one court handle nothing but civil matters and one court handle criminal matters. It streamlines the courts' dockets and, in a perfect world, provides us with judges who are well-versed in a particular branch of the law.

On the other hand, doing away with the CCA would do away with Judge Sharon Killer Keller which wouldn't be a bad idea. I don't know what Rep. Raymond's purpose in this bill is, but I am interested in finding out.

And finally we have Rep. Allen Fletcher (R-Cypress) who wants to do away with what we in the criminal bar fondly refer to as The Rule.

Texas Rule of Evidence 614 states that no potential witnesses may be in the courtroom when another witness is on the stand. The purpose of the rule is to prevent witnesses from changing their testimony in response to questions they hear another witness being asked.

Rep. Fletcher's bill would allow the prosecutor to designate a courtroom representative for the state during a criminal proceeding. The purpose, of course, is to help the state's witnesses keep their stories straight when testifying before a jury. As anyone who has ever tried a criminal case with multiple police officers knows, The Rule is observed more in the breach than in the observance once the witnesses leave the courthouse. I guess it shouldn't surprise anyone that Rep. Fletcher is a former police officer.

What Rep. Fletcher doesn't seem to understand is that the state already has a representative in most courts - it's called the judge.
Email ThisBlogThis!Share to XShare to FacebookShare to Pinterest
Posted in criminal justice, criminal procedure, politics | No comments
Newer Post Older Post Home

0 comments:

Post a Comment

Subscribe to: Post Comments (Atom)

Popular Posts

  • Book review - The Fall of the House of Dixie
    The War Between the States. The War of Northern Aggression. The Civil War. No matter how you slice it, no matter what you call it, one thing...
  • School district climbs in bed with oil industry
    What a surprise to find, on my way back from lunch, that HISD's new Energy Institute High School is practically just around the corner ...
  • False equation
    In his latest shot at the defense bar, Grits for Breakfast seems to be making the argument that everyone should ignore the defense bar's...
  • How many innocent men must die?
    You know it's happened. We all know it's happened. We all try to pretend that there is no way it could happen. But that's just a...
  • History doesn't have to repeat itself to create a farce
    farce     [ fahrs ]   noun,   verb,   farced,   farc·ing. noun 1. a   light,   humorous   play   in   which   the   plot   depends   upon   ...
  • Book review: The Impeachment of Abraham Lincoln
    Ever play "what if?" Sure you have. What if the referee had ruled that Mike Renfro caught that ball in the end zone against the St...
  • Summer forecast - rolling blackouts?
    And once again it's time for our annual look at why our reverence with the concepts of free markets is misguided. Back when Texas deregu...
  • On being held up at the bank
    Update: I suppose I should first apologize for blaming this mess on Bank of America since, as I realized on my drive to court this morning, ...
  • Correct me if I'm wrong
    As I drove back in the rain from South Texas the other day I was listening to Talk of the Nation  on NPR. If you haven't tuned in, it...
  • Now for something completely different...
    What you are about to see (H/T NPR) is three years of the sun's life compressed into three minutes. NASA took two pictures a day of the ...

Categories

  • 14th Amendment (1)
  • 1st Amendment (11)
  • 2nd Amendment (2)
  • 4th Amendment (35)
  • 5th Amendment (1)
  • 6th Amendment (1)
  • 8th Amendment (5)
  • abortion (1)
  • addiction (3)
  • airlines (1)
  • alcohol concentration (8)
  • Andy Griffith (1)
  • Annise Parker (3)
  • Anthony Graves (1)
  • Anthony Kennedy (1)
  • Antonin Scalia (1)
  • Arizona (1)
  • asset forfeiture (1)
  • Austin Police Department (2)
  • automobile racing (1)
  • barbecue (1)
  • baseball (23)
  • basketball (2)
  • Bill Clinton (1)
  • Bill of Rights (4)
  • blogs (1)
  • blood test (6)
  • bombing (1)
  • bonds (1)
  • Brad Hart (1)
  • Bradley Manning (7)
  • Brady v. Maryland (3)
  • breath test (6)
  • Brett Ligon (1)
  • California (1)
  • Cameron County (1)
  • Cameron Willingham (1)
  • capital punishment (77)
  • Chicago (1)
  • Chile (1)
  • Chris Kyle (1)
  • Christoper Dupuy (9)
  • CIA (2)
  • civil liberties (3)
  • civil rights (1)
  • Civil War (1)
  • Clarence Thomas (1)
  • coercion (1)
  • college football (5)
  • Conroe (1)
  • controlled substance (1)
  • corruption (1)
  • court appointments (2)
  • court martial (1)
  • Court of Criminal Appeals (1)
  • courts (1)
  • crime and punishment (10)
  • crime labs (3)
  • criminal justice (43)
  • criminal procedure (6)
  • cycling (1)
  • Darrell Royal (1)
  • David Dewhurst (1)
  • DEA (1)
  • deadly weapon (1)
  • death penalty (78)
  • Declaration of Independence (4)
  • democracy (6)
  • developers (1)
  • discovery (8)
  • discrimination (1)
  • dissent (3)
  • DIVERT (2)
  • DNA (1)
  • domestic assault (1)
  • domestic surveillance (5)
  • driverless cars (1)
  • drones (2)
  • drought (1)
  • drug laws (3)
  • drug possession (3)
  • drugs (5)
  • drunk driving (26)
  • due process (10)
  • DWI (29)
  • economics (32)
  • education (7)
  • Egypt (2)
  • election (7)
  • Elizabeth Coker (1)
  • England (1)
  • entrapment (2)
  • environment (3)
  • equal protection (3)
  • Eric Holder (2)
  • espionage (2)
  • ethics (27)
  • European Union (1)
  • evidence (1)
  • execution (77)
  • exoneration (3)
  • expert testimony (1)
  • Facebook (1)
  • false confessions (1)
  • Fayette County (1)
  • FBI (3)
  • federal budget (1)
  • federal crimes (4)
  • federal judges (1)
  • federalism (1)
  • field sobriety tests (1)
  • First Amendment (1)
  • FISA (1)
  • football (1)
  • forensics (4)
  • France (1)
  • fraud (1)
  • freedom of expression (5)
  • Galveston County (11)
  • George Bush (1)
  • George McGovern (1)
  • George W. Bush (8)
  • George Zimmerman (1)
  • Gideon v. Wainwright (2)
  • Google (1)
  • Gov. Rick Perry (6)
  • Greece (2)
  • Greg Gladden (1)
  • Guantanamo (4)
  • Guatemala (1)
  • handguns (6)
  • Harris County (10)
  • Harris County courts (17)
  • Harris County DA's Office (15)
  • Harris County Democratic Party (1)
  • Harris County Jail (1)
  • Harris County Sheriff's Office (3)
  • HCCLA (3)
  • healthcare (2)
  • HISD (1)
  • history (2)
  • homeland security (1)
  • homeless (1)
  • Houston (7)
  • Houston municipal courts (3)
  • Houston Museum of Natural Science (1)
  • Houston Police Department (8)
  • HPD (1)
  • human rights (12)
  • humor (1)
  • ignition interlock (1)
  • immigration (3)
  • incentives (1)
  • indigent defense (6)
  • innocence (1)
  • internet (1)
  • intoxication manslaughter (1)
  • intoxilyzer (4)
  • Iran (2)
  • Iraq (1)
  • Italy (1)
  • Jackson County (1)
  • Japan (1)
  • jazz (1)
  • Jerry Sandusky (1)
  • John Boehner (2)
  • John Bradley (1)
  • John Kiriakou (1)
  • John Lewis (1)
  • journalism (1)
  • Judge Bill Harmon (1)
  • Judge David Hittner (1)
  • Judge John Phillips (1)
  • Judge Kelly Case (1)
  • Judge Kevin Fine (1)
  • Judge Mike Fields (2)
  • Judge Reece Rondon (1)
  • Judge Susan Criss (1)
  • Julian Assange (2)
  • junk science (6)
  • jurors (2)
  • jury (1)
  • Justice of the Peace (2)
  • juvenile law (1)
  • juveniles (6)
  • Ken Anderson (1)
  • KPFT (1)
  • labor (3)
  • Lance Armstrong (2)
  • Larry Swearingen (1)
  • Latin America (1)
  • law school (2)
  • Liberty County (1)
  • limited government (1)
  • Lloyd Oliver (3)
  • logic (1)
  • Longhorns (4)
  • Lynne Stewart (1)
  • Mack Brown (1)
  • Mali (1)
  • Manny Diaz (1)
  • marijuana (3)
  • marketing (2)
  • Martin Luther King (2)
  • mathematics (2)
  • medicine (1)
  • mental illness (6)
  • Mesquite (1)
  • METRO (2)
  • Mexico (1)
  • Michael Morton (2)
  • Middle East (3)
  • Mike Anderson (7)
  • military coup (1)
  • Mitt Romney (3)
  • Montgomery County (2)
  • Montgomery County DA's Office (2)
  • municipal court (1)
  • murder (5)
  • NASCAR (3)
  • National Lawyers Guild (1)
  • NATO (1)
  • NCAA (1)
  • New York (1)
  • Newt Gingrich (1)
  • NHTSA (2)
  • No Refusal Weekend (2)
  • Nobel Prize (1)
  • NSA (2)
  • official oppression (1)
  • oil (3)
  • Olympics (1)
  • parking (1)
  • Pat Lykos (4)
  • Patriot Act (1)
  • Pearland (1)
  • Penn State (1)
  • pentobarbital (1)
  • personal bonds (1)
  • philosophy (2)
  • Pine Shadows (1)
  • poker (1)
  • police brutality (4)
  • police tactics (3)
  • politics (50)
  • Polk County (1)
  • President Obama (25)
  • presumption of innocence (2)
  • pretrial diversion (2)
  • prison (4)
  • privacy (14)
  • prosecutorial misconduct (2)
  • psychiatry (1)
  • psychology (1)
  • public defender's office (1)
  • punishment (2)
  • Pussy Riot (1)
  • R. Allen Stanford (1)
  • racism (4)
  • rape (1)
  • religion (7)
  • revenge (1)
  • Roger Clemens (1)
  • rule of law (1)
  • running (3)
  • Russia (1)
  • same-sex marriage (2)
  • schools (2)
  • science (6)
  • scientific evidence (1)
  • search warrant (8)
  • sentencing (5)
  • Sharon Keller (1)
  • smuggling (1)
  • soccer (3)
  • social media (4)
  • social security (1)
  • South Africa (2)
  • Spring Branch (1)
  • surcharges (1)
  • Syria (2)
  • taser (2)
  • technology (1)
  • television (1)
  • Texas (4)
  • Texas Constitution (3)
  • Texas DPS (5)
  • Texas Supreme Court (2)
  • Thane Rosenbaum (1)
  • The Gambia (1)
  • torture (9)
  • Tour de France (2)
  • traffic (1)
  • traffic court (3)
  • Trayvon Martin (1)
  • trial preparation (2)
  • trial tactics (10)
  • Troy Anthony Davis (1)
  • TSA (3)
  • Twitter (1)
  • University of Texas (2)
  • US Constitution (7)
  • US Supreme Court (6)
  • Victoria County (1)
  • Vietnam (1)
  • violence (1)
  • Visa (1)
  • voir dire (3)
  • voting (3)
  • war (7)
  • war crimes (6)
  • war on terrorism (24)
  • Washington (1)
  • Wells Fargo (2)
  • white collar crime (1)
  • Wikileaks (6)
  • Williamson County (1)
  • writ of habeas corpus (1)

Blog Archive

  • ►  2013 (242)
    • ►  September (11)
    • ►  August (26)
    • ►  July (27)
    • ►  June (22)
    • ►  May (33)
    • ►  April (32)
    • ►  March (29)
    • ►  February (29)
    • ►  January (33)
  • ▼  2012 (258)
    • ►  December (32)
    • ▼  November (32)
      • New per se limit in Washington is problematic
      • Book review: Subversives - The FBI's war on studen...
      • Shucking the mark of the beast
      • The truth comes with a hefty price tag
      • A couple sporting thoughts
      • Black day in Bentonville?
      • The joint that broke the camel's back
      • "A cell phone is not a pair of pants"
      • Taking a look at notable criminal justice bills in...
      • Taking a look at notable criminal justice bills in...
      • Update: Was he or wasn't he?
      • Assuming that was his real purpose
      • Update: Another one bites the dust
      • DOMA is doomed
      • Execution Watch: 11/15/2012
      • Execution Watch: 11/14/2012
      • Another season ends and this time I'm happy
      • On faux patriotism and propaganda
      • A tale of two men
      • Update: Killing changes nothing
      • The passing of a legend
      • Just another death in the Harris County Jail
      • A few thoughts on the morning after
      • Execution Watch: 11/8/12
      • A little food for thought on Election Day 2012
      • Stealing a paperless election
      • Don't mess with Texas
      • Democracy Now! comes to Houston tonight
      • Group rips school districts' priorities
      • Judicial anger in action
      • Update: Rick Perry is a serial killer
      • Modern day James Crow
    • ►  October (35)
    • ►  September (30)
    • ►  August (37)
    • ►  July (36)
    • ►  June (28)
    • ►  May (28)
Powered by Blogger.

About Me

Unknown
View my complete profile