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Bill Enforcing Texas Law-Enforcement Requirement to Report Shooting Heading to Governor's Desk

State Rep. Eric Johnson (courtesy of Eric Johnson)

Updated Monday, May 23, 2017, 9:40 p.m. EDT: HB 245 passed the Texas State Senate on Tuesday with a vote of 28-3. The bill now heads to the desk of Governor Greg Abbott to be signed into law.

Rep. Eric Johnson (D-Dallas), who wrote the bill, told The Root that he was proud of his colleagues for “overwhelmingly supporting House Bill 245 in both the House and Senate.”

“In order to address officer involved shootings and also peace officer safety, it is important that we have accurate data relating to violent interactions between civilians and the police,” Johnson said. “HB 245 goes a long way toward making sure Texas continues to lead the nation in collecting this type of information and hopefully, armed with facts, Texas can lead the nation in reducing fatal encounters involving law enforcement.”

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Updated Friday, May 19, 2017, 3:57 p.m. EDT: Texas state Sen. John Whitmire (D-Houston) sponsored Rep. Eric Johnson’s bill and scheduled an immediate hearing in the Senate Criminal Justice Committee to lay it out and get a vote Thursday. Whitmire is chair of the Criminal Justice Committee.

The vote to approve the bill was unanimous, and Whitmire told The Root that the bill will go to the state Senate floor in the next few days, and he is confident that it will pass.

“It’s a logical deal following last session’s efforts to have agencies report their violent-incident data,” Whitmire said. “Compliance has gotten better, but this bill provides more incentive to stay compliant.”

Johnson was happy with the progress his bill made Thursday, and looks forward to the Senate voting to approve it so that it can move on to the governor and be signed into law.

“House Bill 245 is the logical next step in improving Texas’ data collection on officer-involved shootings and peace officer injuries and deaths,” Johnson said. “Once we have complete data, we can accurately assess how frequently these instances occur and proceed as policymakers in developing solutions to problems based on facts.

“Sen. John Whitmire has championed criminal-justice reform in Texas over the years, and I applaud his role as the Senate sponsor of this bill,” Johnson continued. “We are one step closer to the finish line, and I have full confidence that Sen. Whitmire will get it there.”

Earlier:

The clock is running down for police in Balch Springs, Texas, to report the data pertaining to the April 29 shooting of 15-year-old Jordan Edwards by now-fired Police Officer Roy Oliver.

Critical information, including the demographic details (age, race or ethnicity, gender) of both Oliver and Edwards and the location of the shooting, has to be turned over to the state attorney general for collection in a searchable database.

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Two years ago this wasn’t the law, but thanks to the hard work of Democratic state Rep. Eric Johnson—who represents District 100, which includes Dallas and part of Mesquite—H.B. 1036 passed in the last state legislative session with a vote of 141-1, and now Johnson is back with H.B. 245, which picks up where 1036 left off by creating punitive damages for departments that do not follow the data-reporting protocol.

“H.B. 1036 is a great bill, but the biggest problem with it is that there was no enforcement mechanism built into it last session,” Johnson told The Root. “There was no recourse if a department did not comply with the law. H.B. 245 adds that enforcement mechanism.”

With H.B. 1036, departments have 30 days to report shooting data to the Texas attorney general. If someone complains to the attorney general that a shooting should have been reported but hasn’t been, the attorney general’s office investigates.

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“Up to this point, in every shooting that the attorney general has investigated, they have agreed that the shooting should have been reported,” Johnson said.

With H.B. 245, once the attorney general investigates and finds that a shooting should have been reported, the law-enforcement agency is notified that they have seven days to comply or else they face a fine of $1,000 per day until they do. If a law-enforcement agency fails to report a shooting in the required time twice within a five-year period, it incurs a penalty of $10,000 and then $1,000 each day until it is reported.

Getting bills like H.B. 245 and 1036 passed in the conservative Texas Legislature is no easy feat, especially for Democrats.

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“Donald Trump likes to brag that he raised more money for his presidential campaign in the state of Texas than he did in both California and New York combined,” Johnson notes, but even up against a tough conservative Legislature, Johnson knew what he had to do to get his bill passed.

Bills in the Texas Legislature are filed sequentially, and Johnson wanted his colleagues to know that he was serious about passing this legislation, so he filed early. H.B. 245 was the 245th bill to be filed in a state legislative session where some 4,000-5,000 bills are filed. He then set out to talk to those who would be naturally opposed to his bill.

Johnson said that his thinking in filing any bill is figuring out why something is not already the law, and who has an interest in keeping it from becoming law.

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“People think the two most powerful parties in the legislature or Congress are the Republicans and Democrats,” Johnson said. ‘That’s not true. The two most dominant parties in any legislature are the people who want to make some changes and the people who want to keep things the same.

“The status quo party and the change party are the two dominant parties in the legislature,” Johnson continued, “and whenever you want to make legislative change, you have to figure out what the status quo party wants. Why is the law the way it is, and who has an interest in keeping it exactly the same? Who will fight this because they don’t want to see anything change? Once you ask yourself that question and have thought it through, then you know exactly who you need to get to the table right away to try and get them on board.”

For Johnson, that meant getting both law enforcement and the Texas attorney general on his side early on. He knew the attorney general could be a huge stumbling block that could kill his bill early.

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“All it would take is for them to say they don’t have the time to enforce this and that it should be reported to the U.S. attorney general instead,” Johnson said. “That would have made the bill dead to begin with.”

Johnson made personal phone calls, had intense meetings, and was eventually able to convince the attorney general and Texas law-enforcement agencies that the bill was important and not meant to be a “gotcha” for anyone.

“Keeping track of this information makes us all look good,” Johnson said.

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With the state attorney general and the head of the Texas Municipal Police Association on record as saying that they were absolutely supportive of the legislation, Johnson took his bill to the floor of the Texas House.

On May 10, the bill was initially voted down in the House and failed by one vote, 70-71. This was a blow to Johnson, but through a procedural move, the bill was brought back up for reconsideration on May 11, and it was approved on the voice vote. It came up for record vote May 12 and passed 112-21.

“Texas has the opportunity to lead the nation in transparency and accountability in policing. We made great strides by passing a law last session to require officer-involved shootings and peace officer injuries and deaths to be reported, but need to make sure our data is complete,” Johnson said after the vote.

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“Given the recent tragic shooting of Jordan Edwards, it is imperative that we get to the root cause of why these events keep happening. However, it is difficult to have a thorough and fact-based discussion when we lack the necessary data to do so,” he added.

And that is at the root of why Johnson wants to make this law happen.

“We can’t get the part of America that believes ‘Black Lives Matter’ should be ‘All Lives Matter’ … we can’t get that part of society to even begin to support policy changes if we can’t prove to them that we have a problem, and the only way we prove that we have a problem is overwhelming data,” Johnson said.

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H.B. 245 now moves to the Texas Senate, where Johnson said he plans to appeal to Sen. John Whitmire, the chair of the Senate Committee on Criminal Justice, and ask him to be the person who sponsors the bill in the state Senate. Johnson said he plans to get Whitmire’s word that he will work as hard in the Senate as Johnson worked in the House to get the bill passed.

“People will continually hide behind the idea that these shootings are one-off situations,” Johnson said. “‘That’s sad, but that’s not the norm. We don’t need policy to address that.’ I’m trying to get us to the point that it becomes so overwhelmingly clear that we have a problem that a policy solution is the next step and no one can deny it.”

Creating change almost always has to start at the local level, and Rep. Eric Johnson is showing everyone how it should be done.

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