TO: | Honorable Abel Herrero, Chair, House Committee on Criminal Jurisprudence |
FROM: | Ursula Parks, Director, Legislative Budget Board |
IN RE: | SB1173 by West (Relating to procedures for the sentencing and placement on community supervision of defendants charged with the commission of a state jail felony.), Committee Report 2nd House, Substituted |
The bill would amend the Code of Criminal Procedure as it relates to the procedures for the sentencing and placement on community supervision of defendants charged with the commission of a state jail felony. For a defendant convicted of a state jail felony, the bill's provisions would allow the judge, in certain circumstances, to order a sentence of incarceration followed by a term of community supervision. Under current law, the judge may order a sentence of community supervision or incarceration but not both.
A state jail felony is punishable by confinement in a state jail for a term from 180 days to 2 years and, in addition to confinement, an optional fine not to exceed $10,000 or Class A Misdemeanor punishment (mandatory post conviction community supervision).
The bill's expansion of judges' sentencing options is expected to decrease demands upon state correctional resources due to shorter terms of confinement in state jail. State jail felons' length of incarceration would be reduced if judges allowed state jail felons to serve part of their term of incarceration under community supervision. Whether the bill would result in significant savings is indeterminate due to a lack of statewide data on judges' sentencing practices under the sentencing conditions provided by the bill.
Source Agencies: |
LBB Staff: | UP, ESi, GG, JGA
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