Texas Code § 21.013

CONFIDENTIALITY OF JUDICIAL WORK PRODUCT; CRIMINAL OFFENSE
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Sec. 21.013. CONFIDENTIALITY OF JUDICIAL WORK PRODUCT; CRIMINAL OFFENSE. (a) In this section:
(1) "Judicial work product" means written, electronic, or oral material prepared or communications made in the course of an adjudicatory proceeding before a court determining legal rights, powers, duties, or privileges. The term includes all drafts of opinions or orders and memoranda of law. The term does not include information related to a person who is required to submit to electronic monitoring of a person's location as part of an electronic monitoring program under Article 42.035 , Code of Criminal Procedure, or as a condition of community supervision, parole, mandatory supervision, or release on bail.
(2) "Non-public judicial work product" means:
(A) any written or electronic judicial work product other than documents filed with the clerk of a court for release to the public; or
(B) any oral statement relating to judicial work product made in a closed session of a court or in judicial chambers.
(b) This section applies to:
(1) a court established under Section 1 , Article V, Texas Constitution, other than a commissioners court; and
(2) a court subject to this subtitle.
(c) A justice or judge of a court shall comply with supreme court rules governing the confidentiality of non-public judicial work product.
(d) A person, other than a justice or judge, who is involved in crafting an opinion or decision for an adjudicatory proceeding, including a court staff attorney, court clerk, or law clerk, shall maintain the confidentiality of all non-public judicial work product in accordance with supreme court rules.
(e) A person, other than a justice or judge, with access to non-public judicial work product commits an offense if the person knowingly discloses, wholly or partly, the contents of any non-public judicial work product to a person who is not a justice, judge, court staff attorney, court clerk, law clerk, employee of an agency established under Chapter 71 or 72 , or other court staff routinely involved in crafting an opinion or decision for an adjudicatory proceeding.
(f) An offense under this section is a Class A misdemeanor.
(g) It is a defense to prosecution under this section that the disclosure of the non-public judicial work product is authorized:
(1) in writing by the justice or judge for whom the work product is prepared; or
(2) under supreme court rules.

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