Member
| Quite often it will not be reasonably practical to inform the victim. I suppose the court could determine otherwise before accepting the plea and thus delay the proceeding. But, we can hope this will be the exception and not the rule. |
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Member
| The process for handling a guilty plea set out in article 26.13, CCP, only applies to felony cases. See article 27.13; McGuire v. State, 617 SW2d 259 (Tex. Crim. App. 1981), as discussed in The Perfect Plea, page 106. For misdemeanors, see article 27.14, CCP.
And, it isn't pending legislation. It's the law, effective for any felony plea agreement presented to a court after 8/31/11. |
| Posts: 7860 | Location: Georgetown, Texas | Registered: January 25, 2001 |
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Administrator Member
| I don't read it as requiring victim notification before the plea is offered; it says "notice of the existence and terms of any plea bargain agreement," not offer.
The bill also only applies to victims as defined in CCP Art. 56.01, which are limited to victims of certain listed crimes or victims who suffers "personal injury or death". |
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Administrator Member
| quote: Originally posted by David H:
I agree that the language of the law uses the word "agreement," Shannon. But (in the context I was envisioning) there would be no viable way to plead people out at an initial setting, since I can't have an agreement until I talk to them and see what they want to do. Unless the victim just happened to be in court for me to discuss things with there would have to be a lot of reset cases. However, as John points out, I won't have that problem in misdemeanor court.
I agree with that interpretation. |
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