LEGISLATIVE BUDGET BOARD
Austin, Texas
 
CRIMINAL JUSTICE IMPACT STATEMENT
 
78TH LEGISLATIVE REGULAR SESSION
 
May 9, 2003

TO:
Honorable Terry Keel, Chair, House Committee on Criminal Jurisprudence
 
FROM:
John Keel, Director, Legislative Budget Board
 
IN RE:
SB177 by Shapiro (Relating to enhancement of the penalty for an offender who manufactures or delivers a controlled substance causing death or serious bodily injury.), As Engrossed

The bill would amend the Health and Safety Code by increasing the punishment for an offense by one degree if at the guilt or innocence phase of the trial it is determined that a person died or suffered serious bodily injury as a result of the controlled substance provided by the defendant.  The enhancement provision would apply to certain drug offenses otherwise punishable as a state jail felony, felony of the third degree, or felony of the second degree.  The bill would also require offenders punished by the enhancement provision of the bill to serve any other sentence imposed by the court consecutively rather than concurrently. 

 

For the year 2000 the Texas Commission on Alcohol and Drug Abuse estimated 2,605 drug-related deaths in Texas, based on vital statistics death records provided by the Texas Department of Health. 

 

The impact of implementing the bill would depend on the number of drug-related deaths that could be successfully prosecuted under the provisions of the bill and the amount of additional time that offenders would spend incarcerated due to the enhancement provision.  It is assumed that the number of offenders convicted under this statute would not result in a significant impact on the programs and workload of state corrections agencies or on the demand for resources and services of those agencies. 



Source Agencies:
LBB Staff:
JK, GG