Sandra Bland Act could make sweeping changes in Texas

AUSTIN — While a proposal to prevent incidents such as the 2015 arrest that ended with Sandra Bland’s jail-house death is winning support, opponents say it would strip peace officers of vital tools. 

“We’ll be actively opposing the bill,” said Kevin Lawrence, executive director of the Texas Municipal Police Association. “It would hinder our ability to protect the public.”

Authored by state Rep. Garnet Coleman, D-Houston, the Sandra Bland Act would address racial profiling and provide jail-diversion programs for those with mental health and substance-abuse problems.

“The events leading up to Sandra Bland’s unnecessary jailing and tragic death sparked statewide and national outrage,” Coleman said in a statement. “The Sandra Bland Act aims to improve and correct Texas’ criminal justice system to make it better for all people and prevent future tragedies like Sandra Bland’s.”

Her death, ruled a suicide, came after she was left alone in the Waller County Jail.

Coleman’s House Bill 2702 would address issues, including:

• Racial disparities in how the Texas Department of Public Safety treats blacks when compared to whites after they have been stopped for traffic violations.

• Strengthening Texas’ racial profiling law and ensuring that data collection is robust, clear and accurate.

• Ending pretext stops, consent searches and raising the burden of proof needed to both stop and search vehicles in Texas.

A later-fired Department of Public Safety officer arrested Bland for a misdemeanor, fine-only violation.  

Coleman said that sending someone to jail for an offense that carries no penalty of jail time is not logical and potentially unconstitutional.

Charley Wilkison, executive director of Combined Law Enforcement Associations of Texas, wants to keep the fine-only Class C arrest.

But Michele Deitch, a senior lecturer at the University of Texas School of Law and the Lyndon B. Johnson School of Public Affairs, said such procedures punish people in advance, “more than if they were convicted of the offense.”

Ending the misdemeanor arrest, or expanding personal recognizance bail, are only just a part of the omnibus bill, which Deitch said addresses real issues. 

“There were various points [and] any one of them could have gone a very different way,” Deitch said. “What the Sandra Bland Act does is stop and examine each stage of the process and say what could be done differently.” 

Coleman would also mandate changes to how law enforcement handles people in custody who have mental-health challenges. 

Greg Hansch, public policy director for the National Alliance on Mental Health Texas, said diversion programs such as those contemplated in Coleman’s House Bill 2702 “would make a tremendous positive” difference if adopted. 

“It’s 11 times more costly to treat people in the criminal justice system than in the community,” Hansch said. “It’s better for the individual and it’s better for the public.”

Deitch said jail is “absolutely the wrong place” for people with substance-abuse and mental-health problems.

And on that point, Wilkison, who said much of Coleman’s bill is “a solution to a nonexistent problem,” agreed. 

“The sleeper story is that Sandra Bland went into a world where those people didn’t have mental-health training,” Wilkison said. “I support the idea that we can do better on mental health.”

County jails are the No. 1 providers of mental-health care in Texas.

Jackson County Sheriff A.J. “Andy” Louderback said Texas is using its jails inappropriately. 

“There’s 191 rural counties in Texas,” said Louderback, who is legislative affairs director for the Sheriffs’ Association of Texas. “We don’t have mental-health professionals in those jails.”

Rectifying that part of Texas criminal justice, Louderback said, could create “some tensions when it comes to cost.”

Still, Louderback said, “you’re going to pay early or you’re going to pay later.”

Wilkison said he expects to see “mega-bits” of the Bland bill appear in amendments to other proposals. 

“The good parts, we’ll look at and support,” Wilkison said. 

John Austin covers the Texas Statehouse for CNHI’s newspapers and websites. Reach him at jaustin@cnhi.com.

Local News

A major adaptive gardening decision!

Local News

An Evening in the Garden raises funds for scholarships

Local News

Reps. Taylor and Cannon work to lower “tort tax”

Local News

Cassidy Rd. to see temporary lane closure

Local News

Georgia Foundation for Agriculture, Georgia Farm Bureau & Georgia EMC donate ag books to local libraries

Local News

Incident Reports & Arrests 03-24

Local News

Thomas County Farm Bureau announces winners of high school art contest

Local News

Colonial Dames 17th Century members attend State Conference

Education

Brookwood School announces two National Merit Finalists

Education

Small shines in Regional Spelling Bee

Local News

New Grady County Sheriff works to combat addiction

Local News

TEF preps for US Navy Band Concert, no ‘Velveteen Rabbit’ this weekend

Local News

Tax Assessors Board honors Len Powell

Local News

Voters approve FLOST referendum

Local News

Thomasville Center for the Arts showcases youth art and announces YAM Competition winners

Education

Johnson chosen as Garrison-Pilcher’s Teacher of the Year

Local News

Rotary Club of Thomasville offers free tax preparation for retired residents

Local News

Incident Reports & Arrests 03-19

Local News

Anne McCudden steps down as History Center Director

Local News

Spring and March pointers in the landscape!

Local News

Pope’s Museum to debut new mural, exhibit on Saturday

Local News

Dan Bellamy wins 2nd Place Large Artistic Sculpture at International Twist & Shout competition

Local News

Reps. Taylor and Cannon enter final stretch of Legislative Session

Local News

Imagine Thomasville celebrates ribbon cutting for the Army Recruiting Station