By: Carriker S.B. No. 157
A BILL TO BE ENTITLED
AN ACT
1-1 relating to peace officers of medical facilities in certain
1-2 municipalities.
1-3 BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF TEXAS:
1-4 SECTION 1. Subchapter A, Chapter 311, Health and Safety
1-5 Code, is amended by adding Section 311.004 to read as follows:
1-6 Sec. 311.004. PEACE OFFICERS OF HOSPITALS IN CERTAIN
1-7 MUNICIPALITIES. (a) A hospital in a municipality with a
1-8 population of 50,000 or more may employ and commission a peace
1-9 officer to protect the hospital.
1-10 (b) The primary jurisdiction of a peace officer commissioned
1-11 by a hospital under this section includes:
1-12 (1) the property of the hospital; and
1-13 (2) any part of a public street or highway that is
1-14 adjacent to, or that part of a public street or highway that passes
1-15 through, the hospital.
1-16 (c) Within a peace officer's primary jurisdiction, a peace
1-17 officer commissioned under this section:
1-18 (1) is vested with all the powers, privileges, and
1-19 immunities of peace officers;
1-20 (2) may, in accordance with Chapter 14, Code of
1-21 Criminal Procedure, arrest without a warrant any person who
1-22 violates a law of the state; and
1-23 (3) may enforce all traffic laws on streets and
2-1 highways.
2-2 (d) Outside a peace officer's primary jurisdiction a peace
2-3 officer commissioned under this section is vested with all the
2-4 powers, privileges, and immunities of peace officers and may arrest
2-5 any person who violates any law of the state if the peace officer:
2-6 (1) is summoned by a law enforcement agency to provide
2-7 assistance;
2-8 (2) is assisting a law enforcement agency; or
2-9 (3) is otherwise performing duties as a peace officer
2-10 for the hospital that employs the peace officer.
2-11 SECTION 2. Article 2.12, Code of Criminal Procedure, is
2-12 amended to read as follows:
2-13 Art. 2.12. WHO ARE PEACE OFFICERS. The following are peace
2-14 officers:
2-15 (1) sheriffs and their deputies;
2-16 (2) constables and deputy constables;
2-17 (3) marshals or police officers of an incorporated
2-18 city, town, or village;
2-19 (4) rangers and officers commissioned by the Public
2-20 Safety Commission and the Director of the Department of Public
2-21 Safety;
2-22 (5) investigators of the district attorneys', criminal
2-23 district attorneys', and county attorneys' offices;
2-24 (6) law enforcement agents of the Texas Alcoholic
2-25 Beverage Commission;
3-1 (7) each member of an arson investigating unit
3-2 commissioned by a city, a county, or the state;
3-3 (8) officers commissioned under Subchapter E, Chapter
3-4 51, Education Code;
3-5 (9) officers commissioned by the State Purchasing and
3-6 General Services Commission;
3-7 (10) law enforcement officers commissioned by the
3-8 Parks and Wildlife Commission;
3-9 (11) airport police officers commissioned by a city
3-10 with a population of more than one million, according to the most
3-11 recent federal census, that operates an airport that serves
3-12 commercial air carriers;
3-13 (12) airport security personnel commissioned as peace
3-14 officers by the governing body of any political subdivision of this
3-15 state, other than a city described by Subdivision (11), that
3-16 operates an airport that serves commercial air carriers;
3-17 (13) municipal park and recreational patrolmen and
3-18 security officers;
3-19 (14) security officers commissioned as peace officers
3-20 by the State Treasurer;
3-21 (15) officers commissioned by a water control and
3-22 improvement district under Section 51.132, Water Code;
3-23 (16) officers commissioned by a board of trustees
3-24 under Chapter 341, Acts of the 57th Legislature, Regular Session,
3-25 1961 (Article 1187f, Vernon's Texas Civil Statutes);
4-1 (17) investigators commissioned by the Texas State
4-2 Board of Medical Examiners;
4-3 (18) officers commissioned by the board of managers of
4-4 the Dallas County Hospital District, the Tarrant County Hospital
4-5 District, or the Bexar County Hospital District under
4-6 Section 281.057, Health and Safety Code;
4-7 (19) county park rangers commissioned under Subchapter
4-8 E, Chapter 351, Local Government Code;
4-9 (20) investigators employed by the Texas Racing
4-10 Commission;
4-11 (21) officers commissioned by the State Board of
4-12 Pharmacy;
4-13 (22) officers commissioned by the governing body of a
4-14 metropolitan rapid transit authority under Section 13, Chapter 141,
4-15 Acts of the 63rd Legislature, Regular Session, 1973 (Article 1118x,
4-16 Vernon's Texas Civil Statutes), or by a regional transportation
4-17 authority under Section 10, Chapter 683, Acts of the 66th
4-18 Legislature, Regular Session, 1979 (Article 1118y, Vernon's Texas
4-19 Civil Statutes);
4-20 (23) officers commissioned by the Texas High-Speed
4-21 Rail Authority;
4-22 (24) investigators commissioned by the attorney
4-23 general under Section 402.009, Government Code; <and>
4-24 (25) security officers and investigators commissioned
4-25 as peace officers under the State Lottery Act; and
5-1 (26) officers commissioned by a hospital under
5-2 Section 311.004, Health and Safety Code.
5-3 SECTION 3. Section 51.214, Education Code, is repealed.
5-4 SECTION 4. The importance of this legislation and the
5-5 crowded condition of the calendars in both houses create an
5-6 emergency and an imperative public necessity that the
5-7 constitutional rule requiring bills to be read on three several
5-8 days in each house be suspended, and this rule is hereby suspended,
5-9 and that this Act take effect and be in force from and after its
5-10 passage, and it is so enacted.