Ms. Cheryln K. Townsend Executive Director
Texas Youth Commission Post Office Box 4260, Austin, Texas 78765
Re: Information that must be provided by the Texas Youth Commission to an independent school district pursuant to article
Dear Ms. Townsend:
You ask a series of questions regarding the information that must be provided by the Texas Youth Commission (the "TYC") to an independent school district pursuant to article
You pose a scenario in which an individual who is currently on parole from the TYC has newly enrolled in a school district. Request Letter at 1. Subsection (c) of article 15.27 requires the TYC, "within 24 hours of learning of the student's transfer or reenrollment [to] notify the [school district's] superintendent . . . of the arrest or referral in a manner similar to that provided for by Subsection (a) or (e)(1), 2 or of the conviction or delinquent adjudication in a manner similar to that provided for by Subsection (b) or (e)(2)."3
TEX. CODE CRIM. PROC. ANN. art.
By its terms, subsection (c) incorporates subsections (a) and (b). Subsection (a) requires the TYC to "orally notify the superintendent . . . within 24 hours after the arrest or referral is made, or on the next school day." Id. art. 15.27(a). Then, "[w]ithin seven days after the date the oral notice is given," the TYC is instructed to "mail written notification" to the superintendent or his designee. Id. Subsection (a) directs that "[b]oth the oral and written notice shall contain sufficient details of *Page 2 the arrest or referral and the acts allegedly committed by the student to enable the superintendent or the superintendent's designee to determine whether there is a reasonable belief that the student has engaged in conduct defined as a felony offense by the Penal Code."Id. In a 1994 opinion, this office construed this provision to mean to require notice of
the nature of the charges against an arrested or detained student, the identities of any alleged victims who are students or school personnel, and all other information about the arrest or detention of a student that will enable the school official to take appropriate action to prevent violence, protect students and school personnel, and further educational purposes.
Tex. Att'y Gen. Op. No.
While subsection (a) specifies the type of information that the TYC must furnish to a school district superintendent in the event of a parolee's arrest, subsection (b) describes the information that must be provided of a parolee's conviction of an offense, or when prosecution is deferred, or when the parolee is placed on deferred adjudication, or adjudged guilty of delinquent conduct.4See TEX. CODE CRIM. PROC. ANN. art.
You first ask what constitutes a "statement of [the] offense" in subsection (b) and whether "stating the name of the crime alone [is] sufficient as a `statement of offense.'" Request Letter at 5. The term "statement of offense" is not defined in article 15.27 or elsewhere in statutes or judicial opinions. But a closely related phrase, "statement about the offense," has been the subject of Texas appellate opinions. A 2005 case involving the meaning of the term for purposes of a conviction for aggravated child abuse declared that "[t]he phrase `statement about the offense' means a statement that in some discernible manner describes the alleged offense. The statement must be more than words which give a general allusion that something in the area of child abuse was going on." Garcia v. State,
You next ask whether requests by a school district for additional information, such as the kind of information that is the subject of subsection (a), are beyond the scope of article 15.27(b). Request Letter at 5. They are. Subsection (b), which prescribes the form of information that the TYC must provide by virtue of subsection (c), does not require the TYC to furnish any information beyond that which is described in its language, i.e., the statement of offense as we have construed it, together with a statement of whether the student is required to register as a sex offender.
Finally, you inquire whether Attorney General Opinion
Very truly yours,
GREG ABBOTT Attorney General of Texas
DANIEL T. HODGE First Assistant Attorney General
DAVID J. SCHENCK Deputy Attorney General for Legal Counsel
JASON BOATRIGHT Chair, Opinion Committee
Rick Gilpin Assistant Attorney General, Opinion Committee
