Bill: HB 1757, 87(R) - 2021

Committee

House Homeland Security & Public Safety

Vote Recommendation

Vote Recommendation Economic Freedom Property Rights Personal Responsibility Limited Government Individual Liberty
Yes Neutral Neutral Positive Positive Positive

Author(s)

Matt Krause
Carl Sherman

Bill Caption

Relating to recordings of peace officer performance of official duties and interactions with the public; creating a criminal offense.

Fiscal Notes

Creating a criminal offense is expected to result in additional demands on the correctional resources of the counties or of the State. The probable fiscal impact of implementing the bill is indeterminate due to the lack of information on peace officers and employees of law enforcement agencies who engage in the form of evidence tampering as defined in the bill.  This information is necessary to identify the cases affected by the provisions of the bill from all other evidence tampering cases.

Bill Analysis

HB 1757 would create a third degree felony offense for a peace officer or other employee of a law enforcement agency who alters, destroys, or conceals another person's audio, visual, or photographic recording of a peace officer's performance of official duties without obtaining that other person's written consent.

Vote Recommendation Notes

Texas Action supports HB 1757 on the principles of limited government, personal responsibility, and individual liberty. People generally (with some exceptions) have a right to record peace officers discharging their duties. Allowing individuals to record peace officer activity greatly increases government transparency. The destruction of a lawfully recorded video is offensive to individual liberty and private property rights and may, depending on the circumstances, constitute tampering with evidence. 


Source URL (retrieved on 08/18/2025 06:08 PM): http://reports.texasaction.com/bill/87r/hb1757?print_view=true