Amend CSHB 1320 by adding the following appropriately 
numbered SECTIONS to the bill and renumbering subsequent SECTIONS 
of the bill accordingly:
	SECTION ___.  Subsection (d), Article 59.03, Code of 
Criminal Procedure, is amended to read as follows:
	(d)  A person in the possession of property at the time a 
peace officer seizes the property under this chapter may at the time 
of seizure assert the person's interest in or right to the property.  
Any peace officer, including the [A] peace officer who seizes the
property, [under this chapter] may not [at the time of seizure] 
request, require, or in any manner induce any person, including a 
person who asserts an interest in or right to the property [seized], 
to execute a document purporting to waive the person's interest in 
or rights to [the] property seized under this chapter.
	SECTION ___.  Article 59.03, Code of Criminal Procedure, is 
amended by adding Subsection (e) to read as follows:
	(e)  At any time before notice is filed under Article 
59.04(b), an attorney representing the state may not request, 
require, or in any manner induce any person, including a person who 
asserts an interest in or right to property seized under this 
chapter, to execute a document purporting to waive the person's 
interest in or rights to the property.
	SECTION ___.  Article 59.06, Code of Criminal Procedure, is 
amended by adding Subsections (c-1), (d-1), and (d-2) and amending 
Subsections (d) and (g) to read as follows:
	(c-1)  Any postjudgment interest from money, securities, 
negotiable instruments, stocks or bonds, or things of value, or 
proceeds from the sale of those items, that are deposited in an 
interest-bearing bank account under Subsection (c) shall be used 
for the same purpose as the principal.
	(d)  Proceeds awarded under this chapter to a law enforcement 
agency or to the attorney representing the state may be spent by the 
agency or the attorney after a budget for the expenditure of the 
proceeds has been submitted to the commissioners court or governing 
body of the municipality.  The budget must be detailed and clearly 
list and define the categories of expenditures, but may not list 
details that would endanger the security of an investigation or 
prosecution.  Expenditures are subject to the audit and enforcement
provisions established under this chapter [article].  A 
commissioners court or governing body of a municipality may not use 
the existence of an award to offset or decrease total salaries, 
expenses, and allowances that the agency or the attorney receives 
from the commissioners court or governing body at or after the time 
the proceeds are awarded.
	(d-1)  The head of a law enforcement [the] agency or an 
attorney representing the state may not use proceeds or property 
received under this chapter to:
		(1)  contribute to a political campaign;                               
		(2)  make a donation to any entity, except as provided 
by Subsection (d-2);
		(3)  pay expenses related to the training or education 
of any member of the judiciary;
		(4)  pay any travel expenses related to attendance at 
training or education seminars if the expenses violate generally 
applicable restrictions established by the commissioners court or 
governing body of the municipality, as applicable;
		(5)  purchase alcoholic beverages;                                     
		(6)  make any expenditure not approved by the 
commissioners court or governing body of the municipality, as 
applicable, if the head of a law enforcement agency or attorney 
representing the state holds an elective office and:
			(A)  the deadline for filing an application for a 
place on the ballot as a candidate for reelection to that office in 
the general primary election has passed and the person did not file 
an application for a place on that ballot; or
			(B)  during the person's current term of office, 
the person was a candidate in a primary, general, or runoff election 
for reelection to that office and was not the prevailing candidate 
in that election; or
		(7)  [the existence of an award to] increase a salary, 
expense, or allowance for an employee of the law enforcement agency 
or attorney representing the state [or agency] who is budgeted by 
the commissioners court or governing body of the municipality
unless the commissioners court or governing body first approves the 
increase [expenditure].
	(d-2)  The head of a law enforcement agency or an attorney 
representing the state may use as an official purpose of the agency 
or attorney proceeds or property received under this chapter to 
make a donation to an entity that assists in:
		(1)  the detection, investigation, or prosecution of:                  
			(A)  criminal offenses; or                                            
			(B)  instances of abuse, as defined by Section 
261.001, Family Code;
		(2)  the provision of:                                                 
			(A)  mental health, drug, or rehabilitation 
services; or            
			(B)  services for victims or witnesses of criminal 
offenses or instances of abuse described by Subdivision (1); or
		(3)  the provision of training or education related to 
duties or services described by Subdivision (1) or (2).
	(g)(1)  All law enforcement agencies and attorneys 
representing the state who receive proceeds or property under this 
chapter shall account for the seizure, forfeiture, receipt, and 
specific expenditure of all the [such] proceeds and property in an 
audit, which is to be performed annually by the commissioners court 
or governing body of a municipality, as appropriate.  The annual 
period of the audit for a law enforcement agency is the fiscal year 
of the appropriate county or municipality and the annual period for 
an attorney representing the state is the state fiscal year.  The 
audit must [shall] be completed on a form provided by the attorney 
general and must include a detailed report and explanation of all 
expenditures, including salaries and overtime pay, officer 
training, investigative equipment and supplies, and other items.  
Certified copies of the audit shall be delivered by the law 
enforcement agency or attorney representing the state to [the 
comptroller's office and] the attorney general not later than the 
60th day after the date on which the annual period that is the 
subject of the audit ends.
		(2)  If a copy of the audit is not delivered to the 
attorney general within the period required by Subdivision (1), 
within five days after the end of the period the attorney general 
shall notify the law enforcement agency or the attorney 
representing the state of that fact.  On a showing of good cause, 
the attorney general may grant an extension permitting the agency 
or attorney to deliver a copy of the audit after the period required 
by Subdivision (1) and before the 76th day after the date on which 
the annual period that is the subject of the audit ends.  If the law 
enforcement agency or the attorney representing the state fails to 
establish good cause for not delivering the copy of the audit within 
the period required by Subdivision (1) or fails to deliver a copy of 
an audit within the extension period, the attorney general shall 
notify the comptroller of that fact.
		(3)  On notice under Subdivision (2) [this 
subdivision], the comptroller shall perform the audit otherwise 
required by Subdivision (1).  At the conclusion of the audit, the 
comptroller shall forward a copy of the audit to the attorney 
general.  The law enforcement agency or attorney representing the 
state is liable to the comptroller for the costs of the comptroller 
in performing the audit.
	SECTION ___.  Chapter 59, Code of Criminal Procedure, is 
amended by adding Articles 59.061 and 59.062 to read as follows:
	Art. 59.061.  AUDITS AND INVESTIGATIONS.  (a)  The state 
auditor may at any time perform an audit or conduct an 
investigation, in accordance with this article and Chapter 321, 
Government Code, related to the seizure, forfeiture, receipt, and 
specific expenditure of proceeds and property received under this 
chapter.
	(b)  The state auditor is entitled at any time to access any 
book, account, voucher, confidential or nonconfidential report, or 
other record of information, including electronic data, maintained 
under Article 59.06, except that if the release of the applicable 
information is restricted under state or federal law, the state 
auditor may access the information only with the approval of a court 
or federal administrative agency, as appropriate.
	(c)  If the results of an audit or investigation under this 
article indicate that a law enforcement agency or attorney 
representing the state has knowingly violated or is knowingly 
violating a provision of this chapter relating to the disposition 
of proceeds or property received under this chapter, the state 
auditor shall promptly notify the attorney general for the purpose 
of initiating appropriate enforcement proceedings under Article 
59.062.
	Art. 59.062.  ENFORCEMENT.  (a)  In the name of the state, 
the attorney general may institute in a district court in Travis 
County or in a county served by the law enforcement agency or 
attorney representing the state, as applicable, a suit for 
injunctive relief, to recover a civil penalty, or for both 
injunctive relief and a civil penalty if the results of an audit or 
investigation under Article 59.061 indicate that the law 
enforcement agency or attorney representing the state has knowingly 
violated or is knowingly violating a provision of this chapter 
relating to the disposition of proceeds or property received under 
this chapter.
	(b)  On application for injunctive relief and a finding that 
the law enforcement agency or attorney representing the state is 
knowingly violating a provision of this chapter relating to the 
disposition of proceeds or property received under this chapter, 
the district court shall grant the injunctive relief the facts may 
warrant, without requirement for bond.
	(c)  A law enforcement agency or attorney representing the 
state who knowingly commits a violation described by Subsection (a) 
is liable to the state for a civil penalty in an amount not to exceed 
$100,000 as determined by the district court to be appropriate for 
the nature and seriousness of the violation.  In determining an 
appropriate penalty for the violation, the court shall consider:
		(1)  any previous violations committed by the agency or 
attorney;    
		(2)  the seriousness of the violation, including the 
nature, circumstances, extent, and gravity of the violation;
		(3)  the demonstrated good faith of the agency or 
attorney; and      
		(4)  the amount necessary to deter future violations.                  
	(d)  If the attorney general brings a suit under this article 
and an injunction is granted or a civil penalty is imposed, the 
attorney general may recover reasonable expenses, court costs, 
investigative costs, and attorney's fees.
	(e)  Notwithstanding any other provision of this article, a 
law enforcement agency or attorney representing the state ordered 
to pay a civil penalty, expense, cost, or fee under this article 
shall make the payment out of money available in any fund 
established by the agency or attorney, as applicable, for the 
purpose of administering proceeds or property received under this 
chapter.  If sufficient money is not available to make payment in 
full at the time the court enters an order requiring payment, the 
agency or attorney shall continue to make payments out of money 
available in any fund described by this subsection until the 
payment is made in full.
	(f)  A civil penalty collected under this article shall be 
deposited to the credit of the drug court account in the general 
revenue fund to help fund drug court programs established under 
Chapter 469, Health and Safety Code.
	(g)  A law enforcement agency or attorney representing the 
state is immune from liability under this article if the agency or 
attorney reasonably relied on:
		(1)  the advice, consent, or approval of an entity that 
conducts an audit of the agency or attorney under this chapter; or
		(2)  a written opinion of the attorney general relating 
to:          
			(A)  the statute or other provision of law the 
agency or attorney is alleged to have knowingly violated; or
			(B)  a fact situation that is substantially 
similar to the fact situation in which the agency or attorney is 
involved.
	SECTION ___.  The changes in law made by this Act in amending 
Article 59.03, Code of Criminal Procedure, apply only to property 
seized on or after the effective date of this Act.  Property seized 
before the effective date of this Act is covered by the law in 
effect when the property was seized, and the former law is continued 
in effect for that purpose.  For purposes of this section, property 
was seized before the effective date of this Act if any portion of 
the property was seized before that date.
	SECTION ___.  (a)  Except as provided by Subsection (b) of 
this section, the changes in law made by this Act in amending 
Article 59.06, Code of Criminal Procedure, apply to the disposition 
or use, on or after the effective date of this Act, of proceeds or 
property received by a law enforcement agency or attorney 
representing the state under Chapter 59, Code of Criminal 
Procedure, regardless of whether the receipt of the proceeds or 
property occurred before, on, or after the effective date of this 
Act.
	(b)  The changes in law made by this Act in amending 
Subsection (g), Article 59.06, Code of Criminal Procedure, and 
adding Articles 59.061 and 59.062, Code of Criminal Procedure, 
apply to any audit performed on or after the effective date of this 
Act.