Texan Lawmakers Want To Change It’s Constitution To Make Bail Rules Strict

Texas lawmakers are pushing for an amendment to the state’s constitution that would make it harder for some people to be released on bail. State senators Juan Hinojosa, D-McAllen, and Joan Huffman, R-Houston, are co-authors of Senate Joint Resolution 44, which if passed would ask voters to approve an amendment allowing judges to deny bail for people charged with violent and sexual offenses as well as human trafficking.

It would also require a judge to impose the “least restrictive conditions” of bail while still protecting the public and ensuring a defendant shows up in court. The Senate Committee on Criminal Justice heard public comment on the resolution Tuesday. Huffman said Texas lacks options for keeping habitual offenders in jail. “It has become starkly clear that our local officials making bail determinations day in and day out need this tool to protect the people of Texas from future harm,” Huffman said.

If the resolution passes in both the House and Senate, it could appear on the ballot for Texas voters as early as the upcoming election on Nov. 7. The proposed change comes amid a growing dispute over bail practices in Texas and across the country in recent years. Last legislative session, Gov. Greg Abbott signed into law Senate Bill 6, which placed restrictions on how judges set bail. Typically, judges can review a person’s charges and criminal history and determine whether a defendant must pay cash or be released without payment on what’s known as a personal recognizance bond, or “PR bond.”

That changed after SB 6. Now, judges are required to set a cash bail amount for violent offenses. The use of cash bail has come under fire from advocates for the accused who say it unfairly impacts people who can’t afford to pay to get out of jail pretrial, when a person is still legally presumed innocent. Nowhere in Texas has the debate over bail practices been more prominent than in Harris County. In 2016, the county was part of a class-action lawsuit over its use of cash bail for misdemeanor offenses. Plaintiffs in the case successfully argued that the county discriminated against people who could not afford to pay bail, and a federal judge found the practice unconstitutional.

The county’s court-mandated reforms did not apply to felonies, but a similar lawsuit targeting the county’s use of cash bail for felony offenses is ongoing. Lawmakers and law enforcement officials say their concern is that bail guidelines for felony offenders aren’t strict enough, and have sought for ways to deny bail altogether in some cases. Huffman and others also sponsored House Joint Resolution 4 in 2021, which made a similar proposal to SJR 44 but ultimately failed to pass before the end of the session.

Crime in Harris County was a repeated topic of discussion throughout Tuesday’s hearing — Huffman is a Houston Republican and committee Chair Sen. John Whitmire is a Democrat running for mayor of Houston. Andrew Wright, a lieutenant with the Houston Police Department, said the faster this proposed bail reform is passed, the better it would be for law enforcement and the public.

“I think in Houston, we don’t have more criminals, we have the same criminals let out time and time again for us to catch, and it is not a good situation,” Wright said. However, members of civil rights groups from across the state said Tuesday the proposed amendment is too broad and would unfairly impact those who are already disproportionately caught up in the criminal justice system — people from poor communities and communities of color.