Texas House passes court security bill

May 16, 2017

The Texas House on Tuesday gave unanimous preliminary approval to a court security bill inspired by a 2015 assassination attempt on an Austin judge. The chamber needs to pass the measure one more time before it heads back to the Senate. 

The bill, by state Sen. Judith Zaffirini, D-Laredo, would require local law enforcement to send reports to the Office of Court Administration about any court security incidents. It would also create a filing fee in civil cases to fund support for training for court security. And it would create a judicial security division that would be a central point for court security information. It would take effect on Sept. 1. 

The bill is named in honor of state District Judge Julie Kocurek, who was severely injured when an assailant shot at her several times in an attack outside her home. She suffered serious injuries from shattered glass and shrapnel but returned to the bench in early 2016 after months of rehabilitation. 

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A phoned-in tip a couple of weeks before the shooting that a judge’s life had been threatened was briefly investigated, but with few details it was deemed not credible. Kocurek had no knowledge of the threat. 

After the attack on Kocurek, the state’s Office of Court Administration emailed a survey to judges across the state. Of the 1,115 judges who responded, 38 percent said they feared for their personal safety at least once at work in the past two years. Forty-two percent said they were afraid at least once when away from work. 

Texas Supreme Court Chief Justice Nathan Hecht pushed for the bill’s passage in his State of the Judiciary speech in February. 

Hecht said the attack on Kocurek highlighted gaps in security for judges, courthouses and their staff, such as “inadequate training, communication and security protocols; inadequate resources; no state-level direction; and the ready availability of judges’ personal information in publicly searchable government databases.” 

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Hecht has praised Kocurek since her return to the bench. 

“I asked Julie about her plans,” the chief justice said in February. “She could retire. She was eligible. But if she left the bench, people would think you can threaten a judge and scare her off, maybe scare off other judges, intimidate them, show that justice cannot stand up to violence. She would not do that.” 

This article originally appeared in The Texas Tribune at https://www.texastribune.org/2017/05/16/texas-house-passes-court-security-bill/.

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