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Texas’s New Nondisclosure Law

When Texas first passed its nondisclosure statute, it allowed some people with successfully completed deferred-adjudication probation to seek an order of nondisclosure effectively sealing the public records of their arrest. Nondisclosure had to be “in the best interest of justice,” so it was effectively at the trial court’s discretion.

Since then the right to nondisclosure has been broadened.

Section 411.074 General requirements for Nondisclosure

To be eligible for nondisclosure, every defendant must:

Nondisclosure of Deferred-Adjudication Probation

Section 411.072 Mandatory Nondisclosure of Deferred-Adjudication Probation

A defendant who successfully completes a deferred-adjudication probation for a misdemeanor after September 1, 2017 and satisfies the general requirements of section 411.074 is entitled to expunction nondisclosure (the court has no discretion to deny it) if:

Section 411.0725 Discretionary Nondisclosure of Deferred-Adjudication Probation

A person who is not eligible for mandatory nondisclosure under section 411.072 (because of a felony deferred-adjudication probation, or a misdemeanor excluded under section 411.072’s laundry list, or priors) but satisfies the general requirements of section 411.074 may still seek discretionary nondisclosure (“in the best interest of justice”).

He may do so:

Nondisclosure of Straight Probations

In deferred adjudication the court withholds a finding of guilt pending probation, so that a person who successfully completes deferred-adjudication probation is never found guilty. Deferred-adjudication probation has never been available for DWI in Texas, but straight probation always has been. Straight probation is probation after a finding of guilt: the court finds the defendant guilty, then puts the defendant on probation.

Section 411.073 Nondisclosure of Non-Alcohol Misdemeanor Straight Probation

A defendant who satisfies the general requirements of section 411.074 but had a conviction with jail time or straight probation rather than deferred-adjudication probation may still seek discretionary nondisclosure (“in the best interest of justice”) if:

Section 411.0731 Nondisclosure of DWI Probation

A defendant who satisfies the general requirements of section 411.074 but had a DWI conviction straight probation may seek discretionary nondisclosure (“in the best interest of justice”) if:

Nondisclosure of Jail Sentences

Even defendants who served misdemeanor jail sentences rather than probation may now be eligible for discretionary nondisclosure.

Section 411.0735 Nondisclosure of Non-DWI Misdemeanor Jail Sentences

A defendant who satisfies the general requirements of section 411.074 and is not eligible under section 411.073 may seek discretionary nondisclosure (“in the best interest of justice”) if:

Section 411.0736 Nondisclosure of DWI-First Jail Sentences

A defendant who satisfies the general requirements of section 411.074 and is not eligible under section 411.0731 may seek discretionary nondisclosure (“in the best interest of justice”) if:

Procedure

Section 411.072 requires the trial court to determine whether a defendant completing his probation is eligible under section 411.074, and if he is, to issue an order of nondisclosure.

All other sections require that the defendant petition the court and that the court give the state notice and an opportunity to be heard on whether nondisclosure is in the best interest of justice.

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