Bill: HB 2613, 86(R) - 2019

Committee

House Criminal Jurisprudence

2nd Chamber Committee

Senate State Affairs

Vote Recommendation

Vote Recommendation Economic Freedom Property Rights Personal Responsibility Limited Government Individual Liberty
No Neutral Negative Neutral Negative Neutral

Author(s)

John Frullo
Sergio Munoz Jr.
Richard Raymond

Sponsor(s)

Joan Huffman

Bill Caption

Relating to the offense of operation of a stash house and to the use of proceeds from a civil asset forfeiture of contraband related to that offense and to human smuggling and trafficking offenses to fund certain crime victim services; creating a criminal offense.

Fiscal Notes

The bill would have an indeterminate fiscal impact to the state due to revenue collections associated with the creation of the new offense and the expansion of the definition of contraband effecting property or proceeds being subject to forfeiture. The number of defendants that would pay court costs and fees and the extent to which property and proceeds that would be subject to forfeiture would impact revenues is unknown.

Bill Analysis

HB 2613 would create the offense "operation of a stash house" which is when one uses or permits another to use property they own to commit an offense or to facilitate the commission of the smuggling of persons, the continuous smuggling of persons, trafficking of persons, the continuous trafficking of persons, aggravated promotion of prostitution and compelling prostitution. The offense would also include renting or leasing property with the intent that the property be used for the above offenses. The bill expands what can be defined as contraband in the civil context to allow convictionless civil forfeiture for cases where traditional contraband definitions related to drugs and felonies, don’t apply. New stash house provisions related to civil forfeiture would apply in these instances. 

The bill would credit proceeds from the sale of contraband forfeited relating to aggravated promotion of prostitution or compelling prostitution to the special fund of the office of the state's attorney or a law enforcement agency. The office or agency would be required to use the funds they receive for providing direct victim services or covering the costs of a contract with a local nonprofit organization to provide direct victim services. 

Vote Recommendation Notes

Texas Action opposes HB 2613 because it violates the principles of property rights and limited government. We oppose civil asset forfeiture regardless of what the proceeds are used for. The government should not be able to seize an individual's property without a related criminal conviction. The burden of proof for civil asset forfeiture is only preponderance of the evidence, this is the lowest burden of proof and property should not be able to be seized having only met this low burden. 


Source URL (retrieved on 03/28/2024 02:03 PM): http://reports.texasaction.com/bill/86r/hb2613?print_view=true