Texas Administrative Code
Title 37 - PUBLIC SAFETY AND CORRECTIONS
Part 5 - TEXAS BOARD OF PARDONS AND PAROLES
Chapter 145 - PAROLE
Subchapter A - PAROLE PROCESS
Section 145.3 - Policy Statements Relating to Parole Release Decisions by the Board of Pardons and Paroles
Current through Reg. 49, No. 52; December 27, 2024
To aid the Board in its analysis and research of parole release, the Board adopts the following policies.
(1) Release to parole is a privilege, not an offender right, and the parole decision maker is vested with complete discretion to grant, or to deny, parole release as defined by statutory law.
(2) The Board will reconsider for release an offender, other than an offender serving a sentence for an offense listed in Section 508.149(a), Government Code as soon as practicable after the first anniversary of the date of denial.
(3) The Board will reconsider for release an offender who is serving a sentence for an offense under Section 508.149(a), Government Code or an offense punishable as a second or third degree felony under Section 22.04, Penal Code, after the first anniversary date of the denial and end before the fifth anniversary date of the denial, but in no event shall it be less than one (1) calendar year from the panel decision date.
(4) The Board will reconsider for release an offender who is serving a sentence for an offense under Section 22.021, Penal Code; or serving a life sentence for a capital felony, who is eligible for parole, after the first anniversary of the date of the denial and before the 10th anniversary of the date of denial.
(5) An offender will be considered for parole when eligible and when the offender meets the following criteria with regard to behavior during incarceration.
(6) Any consideration by a Board Member or Parole Commissioner of an offender's litigation activities when determining an offender's candidacy for parole is strictly prohibited. No offender will be denied the opportunity to present to the judiciary, including appellate courts, his or her allegations concerning violations of fundamental constitutional rights. Any consideration of such legal activity during the parole review, supervision, or revocation process is a violation of Board policy. In the event parole is denied in violation of this section, the offender may pursue a remedy under the special review provisions of § 145.17 of this title (relating to Action upon Special Review--Release Denied). In the event parole or mandatory supervision is revoked in violation of this section, the offender may pursue a remedy under the motion to reopen hearing provisions of § 146.11 of this title (relating to Releasee's Motion to Reopen Hearing or Reinstate Supervision).