Which of the following is the role that the Texas state legislature plays in the criminal justice system?

Overview of the Legislative Process (Transcript)

Article I of the U.S. Constitution grants all legislative powers to a bicameral Congress: a House of Representatives and a Senate that are the result of a “Great Compromise” seeking to balance the effects of popular majorities with the interests of the states. Our system currently provides for a two-year term of office for House members from the 435 population-based districts. In the Senate, voters of each state elect two Senators, who serve 6-year terms that overlap (such that only one-third of the chamber is up for election in any given election cycle).

The two chambers are fundamentally equal in their legislative roles and functions. Only the House can originate revenue legislation, and only the Senate confirms presidential nominations and approves treaties, but the enactment of law always requires both chambers to separately agree to the same bill in the same form before presenting it to the President.

Because each chamber has the constitutional authority to make its own rules, the House and Senate have developed some very different ways of processing legislation, perhaps partially flowing from their constitutional differences. In general, House rules and practices allow a numerical majority to process legislation relatively quickly. Senate rules and procedures, on the other hand, favor deliberation over quick action, as they provide significant procedural leverage to individual Senators.

Congressional action is typically planned and coordinated by party leaders in each chamber, who have been chosen by members of their own caucus or conference – that is, the group of members in a chamber who share a party affiliation. Majority party leaders in the House have important powers and prerogatives to effectively set the policy agenda and decide which proposals will receive floor consideration. In the Senate, the leader of the majority party is generally expected to propose items for consideration, but formal tools that allow a numerical majority to take action are few. Instead, majority party leadership typically must negotiate with minority party leaders (and often all Senators) to effectively conduct Senate floor action.

In both chambers, much of the policy expertise resides in the standing committees – panels of members from both parties that typically take the lead in developing and assessing legislation. Members typically serve on a small number of committees, often for many years, allowing them to become highly knowledgeable in certain policy areas. All committees are chaired by a member of the majority party, though chairs often work closely with the committee’s ranking member, the most senior member of the minority party on the committee. In almost all cases, the ratio of majority party to minority party members on a committee roughly reflects the overall partisan ratio in the congressional chamber.

Committee members and staff focus much of their time on drafting and considering legislative proposals, but committees engage in other activities, as well. Once law is enacted, Congress has the prerogative and responsibility to provide oversight of policy implementation, and its committees take the lead in this effort. Both chambers provide their committees with significant powers and latitude for oversight and investigations into questions of public policy and its effects.

While the engine of legislative ideas and action is Congress itself, the President has influence in the legislative process, as well. The President recommends an annual budget for federal agencies and often suggests legislation. Perhaps more significantly, the power to veto legislation can affect the content of bills passed by Congress. Since it is quite unusual for law to be enacted over a presidential veto, Congress typically must accommodate the president’s position on proposed policies.

The process by which a bill becomes law is rarely predictable and can vary significantly from bill to bill. In fact, for many bills, the process will not follow the sequence of congressional stages that are often understood to make up the legislative process. The presentations on specific topics that follow present a more detailed look at each of the common stages through which a bill may move, but keep in mind that complications and variations abound in practice.

  1. Texas.StateRecords.org
  2. Texas Criminal Records
  3. Criminal Justice Systems

Texas’s Criminal Justice system is responsible for providing public safety by deterring and preventing crime, punishing offenders, and reintroducing those who have served their time back into the community. The criminal justice system is based on the body of laws that define crimes and offenses, and specify what punishments are appropriate for those crimes.

There are two types of crimes that are defined by Texas State law: felonies, misdemeanors, and infractions.

Conditions in Texas Prisons as reported by Peabody Award winning reporter Robert Riggs of Texas Channel 8 News.

  • Felonies are usually the most serious crime. An individual that is convicted of a felony may face jail time, though that time may be spent in either a county jail, or a state prison. Felonies cover crimes that are considered both serious, and/or violent. Commonly known felonies include murder, robbery, rape, burglary of a residence, and assault. Felony punishments vary in harshness depending on the nature of the crime, discretion of the court, and the offender’s criminal history.

  • A misdemeanor is typically a less serious crime, and common punishments include probation, county jail time, fines, or a combination of all three. Common misdemeanors include assault, theft, and public drunkenness.

  • An infraction is the least serious crime and is nearly always punished with a fine. Nearly all infractions are crimes committed while operating a motor vehicle, and include speeding, and inappropriate parking.

Which of the following is the role that the Texas state legislature plays in the criminal justice system?
Texas has a reputation as a tough state on crime. But some legislators are pushing for lighter conditions in the prison system with some success.

Texas political culture favors a swift and stern punishment for offenses against the law, especially in the areas of violent crime. As of August 2000, according to the Bureau of Justice Statistics, Texas lead the nation in imprisoning its citizens with the largest incarcerated population under the jurisdiction of its prison system.

Texas has been the top state for state prison growth, with a rate of nearly 12% compared to the nation’s average of 6%. Nearly one in five new prisoners added to the nation’s prisons was in Texas, and one fourth of the nations parole and probationers are in Texas.

At the end of 1999, 706,600 Texans were in prison, jail or on probation, which accounts for roughly 5% of the adult population in the state. To put this in context, There are more Texans under the criminal justice system than the entire population of Vermont, Wyoming or Alaska individually.

Texas’s Criminal Justice System has three components. Those three stages consist of law enforcement and criminal prosecution, trial and appeals, and corrections. Each of these stages is comprised of multiple levels, organizations and many thousands of personnel.

  • The first, and most decentralized of the stages is that of law enforcement and prosecution. It includes the sheriffs departments that patrol the state’s 254 counties, and the police departments that enforce laws in Texas’s 1,202 municipalities. It also accounts for highway patrolman agencies that enforce laws on the state’s roadways.

  • The court system is complex and decentralized at lower levels, but nonetheless are comprehensively regulated by the Texas Supreme Court. This means that they operate within a well-defined court hierarchy, despite their different approaches to criminal justice.

  • The corrections system in Texas is sprawling and multi-layered, but arguably the most tightly organized of these stages. There are numerous municipal and county jail systems, but offenders that incur substantial jail time are often regulated to state jails and prisons.

Texas Law Enforcement Agencies all operate under an umbrella authority known as the Texas Commission on Law Enforcement, or TCOLE. TCOLE includes sheriff's, deputies, constables, police officers, marshals, troopers, Texas Rangers, agents of the Alcoholic Beverage Commission, investigators of the Attorney General, game wardens, and correctional officers. TCOLE itself operates under the Texas Legislature, which grants it authority under Chapter 1701 or the Texas Occupations Code. TCOLE’s Board of Commissioners forms the administrative body of the organization, and has several duties, including making recommendations to the Governor of Texas and the state’s legislature. Its nine members are appointed by the Governor of Texas, and confirmed by the state Senate. Each of the nine members of the TCOLE Board of Commissioners serves six years, and must consist of three sheriffs, constables, or police chiefs, three members who have been TCOLE licensees for at least five years, and three members of the general population.

The idea for TCOLE started in 1965, and was imagined as a way to improve law enforcement proficiency and effectiveness. Since then several milestones have been achieved. By 1969, mandatory standards for the employment of law enforcement officers were rising in popularity. In 1970, the first iteration of the standards for the Basic Peace Officer Course (BPOC) was issued, and called for a 140-hour minimum curriculum. In 1971, the appointment of trained reserve officers was authorized, and in 1976, medical and psychological examinations were added as part of the licensure. Almost a decade later in 1983, continuing education became a mandatory standard of peace officer employment. In 2004, the BPOC standards we know today were implemented, which most notably called for a minimum of 618 hours of instruction for new officers to gain licensure.

Which of the following is the role that the Texas state legislature plays in the criminal justice system?
One of the latest cases held in the Texas Supreme Court involves a restrictive abortion law.

The Texas court system includes, starting from the lowest levels, municipal courts with 1,559 Judges and 926 City jurisdictions, Justice Courts with 815 courts and judges, county-level courts with 508 courts and judges, 456 district court and judges, the 14 Texas Court of Appeals with 80 justices, and finally both the Texas Court of Appeals and the Texas Supreme Court, which both employee 9 judges or justices.

  • The municipal courts and justice courts make up the local trial court level, and both have the most limited jurisdiction of the Texas courts. The municipal courts handle cases involving misdemeanors punishable by fines, maintain limited civil jurisdiction, orchestrate magistrate functions, and maintain exclusive original jurisdiction over municipal ordinance criminal cases. The Justice courts oversee cases involving civil actions of under $10,000 in claims, handle small claims court, oversee criminal misdemeanors punishable by fines, and orchestrate magistrate functions.

  • The county level courts have much wider jurisdictions, responsibilities, and are made up of 254 Constitutional County Courts, 236 Statutory County Courts, and 18 Statutory Probate Courts. The Constitutional County Courts oversee civil actions in their jurisdiction that result in between $200 and $10,000 in fines, probate court, Juvenile matters, Appeals de novo from lower courts or on the record from municipal courts of record, and maintain exclusive jurisdiction over misdemeanors with fines greater than $500 or a jail sentence. The Statutory County Courts are responsible for officiating all civil, criminal, original and appellate actions prescribed by law for constitutional county courts, and maintain jurisdiction over civil matters involving holding of up to $200,000. Finally, the Statutory Probate Courts oversee probate matters.

  • The District level courts are technically more powerful than the county level courts, yet county level courts do not appeal to them. Instead, both lower courts, and district level courts both appeal to the Texas court of appeals. The district level courts are responsible for providing judgement in cases involving civil action of over $200, divorces, land titles, and contested elections. They are also responsible for felony criminal matters and juvenile matters. Of the 456 courts, 359 contain one county, 97 contain two counties, and 13 courts are designated criminal district courts.

  • At the State Intermediate Appellate level, the Court of Appeals supplies judgment for intermediate appeals from trial courts. For criminal appeals, cases are escalated to the Court of Criminal Appeals, while civil cases are appealed to the Texas Supreme Court. Both upper courts are the highest in Texas, and provide final jurisdiction in their respective areas of law.

Which of the following is the role that the Texas state legislature plays in the criminal justice system?
The first televised report of the Texas Supreme Court covering a case on the equality of school financing in Texas.

The Texas justice system precedes its own statehood, with municipal alcaldes holding judicial power until the 1836 revolution. After 1836, the newly independent government established a judicial system based on Anglo-American common law. In this system, the newly founded Texas Supreme Court would be the highest court in the land. In 1840, the Texas Supreme Court held its first term. In 1845, along with it’s induction into the United States, the Texas Supreme Court was restructured from its previous eight judges down to just two associate judges and one chief justice. In 1850, a constitutional amendment makes the offices of the Supreme Court elected, and between 1867-69, Texas came under U.S. military command following the Texas Civil War. The serving justices were called impediments to reconstruction, and replaced by the victorious United States. In 1876, to relieve the Texas Supreme Court of it’s then heavy caseload, a three judge Court of Appeals was established, but in 1891, the judicial system was completely reconstructed after it had failed to provide the relief the Supreme Court needed. The newly constructed judicial system began in 1892. Then in 1918, Texas Legislature once again established The Commision of Appeals to help with the Supreme Court’s docket. It wouldn't be until 1945 that Texas legislation would reinstall an eight judge supreme court headed by a chief justice. Further changes and additions would be made up until 1980, with most additional courts serving to reduce supreme court workloads.

How does the Texas criminal justice system work?

Texas's Criminal Justice System has three components. Those three stages consist of law enforcement and criminal prosecution, trial and appeals, and corrections. Each of these stages is comprised of multiple levels, organizations and many thousands of personnel.

Which of the following organizations currently has the responsibility of overseeing the Texas juvenile justice system?

Overview. The Texas Interstate Compact for Juveniles (ICJ) Office is responsible for overseeing the transfer of juveniles on probation and parole supervision both into and out of the State of Texas, as well as the return of juveniles who have runaway, absconded or escaped from their home or demanding state.

What is the body of criminal law called in Texas?

Texas criminal law is found primarily in the set of state laws called the Texas Penal Code.

What are the four major responsibilities of the US criminal justice system?

The adult criminal justice system is comprised of four components; legislation, law enforcement, courts, and corrections.