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Apr 28, 2026 Legislature & Policy

Texas Legislature Advances Sweeping Bail Reform Bill

A bipartisan bail-reform measure passed the Texas House 98–51, moving the state closer to requiring risk assessments before releasing defendants charged with violent felonies.

Texas Legislature Advances Sweeping Bail Reform Bill

The Texas House of Representatives passed HB 1422 on Wednesday, a comprehensive bail-reform bill that would mandate the use of validated risk-assessment tools in all felony cases and restrict personal-recognizance bonds for defendants charged with crimes involving weapons.

Key Provisions

  • Mandatory pretrial risk assessments for Class A and B misdemeanors and felonies
  • Prohibition on cash-only bail schedules without judicial review
  • Expanded pretrial detention for defendants with prior violent convictions
  • New reporting requirements for county bail-bond boards

Supporters and Critics

Supporters argue the bill strikes a balance between public safety and fairness for lower-income defendants who cannot afford cash bail. Critics from civil-liberties groups warn the risk-assessment algorithms embed historical racial disparities.

The bill moves to the Senate Jurisprudence Committee, where its fate is uncertain.