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Judge outlines civil-commitment process as filings rise

Bexar County Court (docket) · March 31, 2026

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Summary

During the docket call the judge explained how civil-commitment hearings work after certain violent-offender findings, described evidence and jury options, and said the attorney general's office has filed more such cases recently.

The judge explained the civil-commitment process to the courtroom, saying that after certain violent-offender determinations a defendant can face a civil commitment proceeding in addition to criminal sentences. The court described those proceedings as civil in nature, noting they can involve doctors' testimony, competing experts and, when requested, a jury trial.

"When this law first became inactive, it still was rare that anybody would file," the judge said, adding that the attorney general's office now files these hearings more frequently. The judge outlined that those found to meet criteria may be placed in a facility for treatment even after serving prison time and that periodic review hearings follow to assess whether commitment remains necessary.

The judge explained the fact pattern the jury or trier of fact must evaluate and described typical evidence: medical evaluations, clinicians' testimony and cross-examination by the defense. She noted defendants can accept the commitment or ask for a jury trial; juries sometimes find commitment inappropriate, though that is less common.

The explanation was delivered during the routine docket call and was given to help defense counsel and defendants understand possible downstream effects of violent-offender findings and the separate civil process for commitment. The court signaled it will continue scheduling such hearings as filings rise.