Texas Constitution talk:Article I, Section 11-d: Difference between revisions

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{{DISPLAYTITLE:{{PAGENAME}} of the Texas Constitution–discussion page}}__NOTOC__This page is available for comment and discussion regarding the page ''{{PAGENAME}} of the Texas Constitution''.
{{DISPLAYTITLE:{{PAGENAME}} of the Texas Constitution–discussion page}}__NOTOC__This page is available for comment and discussion regarding the page ''{{PAGENAME}} of the Texas Constitution''.
==Amendments 2025==
This section, proposed by [https://capitol.texas.gov/BillLookup/History.aspx?LegSess=89R&Bill=SJR5 SJR 5], will be voted on at the 2025 constitutional amendment election.
==Texas Tribune ==
"This proposition would require judges to deny bail in certain cases for individuals accused of committing specific felonies, such as murder, aggravated assault and indecency with a child. The state would have to demonstrate that bail is not enough to prevent the defendant from being a flight or public safety risk. Defendants, who are legally presumed innocent, would also be entitled to the right to an attorney during their bail hearings.
The proposal is part of a broad legislative package that Texas Republican leaders have said is needed to reduce violent crimes committed by people out on bond and to curb the ability of “activist judges” to set “weak bail.” Civil rights groups said keeping more people behind bars would add to overcrowded jails without actually improving public safety, while also pointing to a U.S. Supreme Court ruling that says “liberty is the norm, and detention prior to trial or without trial is the carefully limited exception.”
Under the Texas Constitution, most defendants have the right to be released on bail except for certain cases, such as those charged with capital murder or accused of certain repeat felonies."
== HRO ==
Supporters say
By requiring judges to deny bail for certain cases
involving felonies such as murder, aggravated sexual
assault, and human trafficking, Proposition 3 would
prevent high-risk offenders from committing additional
crimes while awaiting trial. Pretrial releases on low bail or
personal recognizance can allow dangerous individuals to
remain in the community, as high-risk defendants who can
afford bail may be released, even if they pose a significant
threat to public safety. By limiting this authority to only
the most serious offenses, the constitutional amendment
would ensure that only those individuals who posed the
greatest risk were denied bail.
The proposed constitutional amendment also
would provide a distinct threshold for denying bail by
establishing two evidentiary standards: a preponderance of
the evidence for nonappearance and clear and convincing
evidence for public safety. The evidentiary structure is
compatible with the federal Bail Reform Act of 1984 and
consistent with existing constitutional precedent, which
could help protect the amendment from legal challenges.
Additionally, this determination could only be made after
a judge found probable cause that the defendant had
committed the underlying offense. This discretionary
approach would apply multiple evidentiary standards
that the state must meet before a judge could deny bail,
balancing public safety concerns with the constitutional
rights of the accused. Proposition 3 would give judges the
tools to make informed decisions about pretrial detention,
ensuring that detention was based on specific findings and
grounded in the required evidentiary standards.
Proposition 3 also would include several procedural
safeguards to protect defendants’ rights. Defendants
would have the right to be represented by counsel at bail
denial hearings, ensuring legal representation during this
critical stage of the pretrial process. Additionally, if a
judge determined that probable cause existed for one of
the charged offenses and that the applicable evidentiary
standard was met, the defendant would retain the right
to appeal the decision. Current law also requires that
prosecutors meet certain indictment timelines under the
Code of Criminal Procedure to protect a defendant’s right
to a speedy trial. If these deadlines were not met, a judge
would have to lower a defendant’s bond amount.
Proposition 3 could lead to longer pretrial detentions
for individuals who had not been convicted of a
crime, increasing financial and personal burdens and
undermining the presumption of innocence. The proposed
constitutional amendment also could be ineffective at
addressing its stated goal of increasing public safety,
as high pretrial incarceration rates have been shown
to be associated with increased recidivism, difficulty
reintegrating into the community, and poorer long
term outcomes for defendants. The proposition could
exacerbate racial disparities in the state’s criminal justice
system, as people of color are already overrepresented in
Texas jails.
Creating evidentiary standards for denying bail
without establishing a specific timeline by which this
determination must be made also could lead to delays in
trial proceedings, causing alleged offenders to be held for
longer without meaningful recourse and undermining
defendants’ right to a speedy trial.
Texas judges already have the discretion to deny
bail to potentially dangerous individuals by setting
cash bonds at amounts that effectively prevent release.
Additionally, Texas consistently ranks among the states
with the highest pretrial detention rates even as violent
crime rates have decreased, suggesting that the current
system already provides for substantial pretrial detention.
Increasing reliance on pretrial detention could exacerbate
overcrowding in county jails, which are often understaffed
and struggling with limited resources. This strain on
resources could ultimately limit the effectiveness of the
criminal justice system, potentially leading to higher
taxpayer costs without commensurate public safety
benefits.
Other critics say
Proposition 3 should include a requirement for
judges to consider the “least restrictive conditions” that
would reasonably ensure public safety and the defendant’s
appearance in court, rather than requiring judges to
impose conditions that are “necessary only” to reasonably
prevent the person’s wilful nonappearance or ensure public
safety. This approach would create procedural safeguards
to ensure that pretrial detention was reserved for truly
high-risk cases and reduce the risk of unnecessarily lengthy
incarceration for lower-risk defendants.

Latest revision as of 16:26, October 26, 2025

This page is available for comment and discussion regarding the page Article I, Section 11-d of the Texas Constitution.