HB 1538
AN ACT relating to the authority of a peace officer to apprehend a person
89th Regular Session
Jan 14, 2025 - Jun 2, 2025 • Session ended
Awaiting Committee Assignment
Bill filed, pending referral to House committee
Committee
Not yet assigned
Fiscal Note
Not available
What This Bill Does
Expands the authority of peace officers and medical facilities to temporarily detain individuals with mental illness who may pose a risk to themselves or others. It allows physicians at certain healthcare facilities to temporarily detain a patient for up to four hours if the patient expresses a desire to leave and the physician believes the person has a mental illness that could lead to serious harm. The bill provides legal protection for facilities and medical staff acting in good faith, while establishing specific notification and documentation requirements for such detentions.
Subject Areas
Bill Text
relating to the authority of a peace officer to apprehend a person for emergency detention and of certain facilities and physicians to temporarily detain a person with mental illness. BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF TEXAS: SECTION 1. The heading to Subchapter A, Chapter 573, Health and Safety Code, is amended to read as follows: SUBCHAPTER A. APPREHENSION, [BY PEACE OFFICER OR] TRANSPORTATION, OR DETENTION WITHOUT JUDGE'S OR MAGISTRATE'S ORDER [FOR EMERGENCY SECTION 2. Section 573.001, Health and Safety Code, is amended by adding Subsection (i) to read as follows: (i) A peace officer may take into custody under this section a person who has been admitted as a patient to a facility listed in SECTION 3. Subchapter A, Chapter 573, Health and Safety Code, is amended by adding Section 573.006 to read as follows: Sec. 573.006. TEMPORARY DETENTION IN CERTAIN FACILITIES. (a) In this section, "facility" means: (1) an inpatient mental health facility other than a community center, a facility operated by or under contract with a community center, an entity the executive commissioner designates to provide mental health services, a local mental health authority, or a facility operated by or under contract with a local mental health authority, unless the facility is licensed under Chapter (2) a hospital, or the emergency department of a hospital, licensed under Chapter 241; and (3) a freestanding emergency medical care facility (b) The governing body of a facility may adopt and implement a written policy authorizing a physician at the facility to temporarily detain a person who voluntarily requested treatment from the facility or who lacks the capacity to consent to treatment, as provided by this section, if: (1) the person expresses a desire to leave the facility or attempts to leave the facility before the examination (A) has reason to believe and does believe that: (i) the person has a mental illness; and (ii) because of that mental illness there is a substantial risk of serious harm to the person or to others unless the person is immediately restrained; and (B) believes there is insufficient time to file an application for emergency detention or for an order of (c) A policy a facility adopts and implements under this section may not authorize a physician at the facility to detain a person who has been transported to the facility for emergency (d) A policy a facility adopts and implements under this (1) the facility staff or the physician who intends to detain the person under the policy to notify the person of that (2) a physician to document a decision to detain a person under the policy and to place a notice of detention in the person's medical record that contains the same information as required in a peace officer's notification of detention under (3) the period of a person's detention under the policy to be less than four hours following the time the person first expressed a desire to leave or attempted to leave the facility, and the physician to release the person not later than the end of the four-hour period unless the facility staff or physician arranges for a peace officer to take the person into custody under Section 573.001 or a judge or magistrate issues an order of protective (e) Detention of a person under a policy a facility adopts and implements under this section is not considered involuntary psychiatric hospitalization for purposes of Section 411.172(e), (f) A physician, facility staff, or facility that detains or does not detain a person under a policy a facility adopts and implements under this section and that acts in good faith and without malice is not civilly or criminally liable for that action. (g) A facility is not civilly or criminally liable for the decision of the facility's governing body to adopt or not to adopt a SECTION 4. This Act takes effect September 1, 2025.
Bill Sponsors
Legislators who authored or co-sponsored this bill.
Expert Lobbyists for This Bill
These lobbyists specialize in Law Enforcement and related subject areas.
Beverly C. Cornwell
PremiumMichael J. Johnson
Allison Billodeau
Sarah Hicks
Ky Ash
Andria Baum
David H. Cain
Ashley Michelle Juergens
Elizabeth Hadley
Matthew Bentley
Bill History
Bill filed: AN ACT relating to the authority of a peace officer to apprehend a person
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