Current with legislation from the 2023 Regular and Special Sessions signed by the Governor as of November 21, 2023.
Section 574.202 - Certain Testimony By Closed-Circuit Video Teleconferencing Permitted(a) A judge or magistrate may permit a physician or a nonphysician mental health professional to testify at a hearing or proceeding by closed-circuit video teleconferencing if:(1) closed-circuit video teleconferencing is available to the judge or magistrate for that purpose;(2) the proposed patient and the attorney representing the proposed patient do not file with the court a written objection to the use of closed-circuit video teleconferencing;(3) the closed-circuit video teleconferencing system provides for a simultaneous, compressed full-motion video and interactive communication of image and sound between all persons involved in the hearing; and(4) on request of the proposed patient, the proposed patient and the proposed patient's attorney can communicate privately without being recorded or heard by the judge or magistrate or by the attorney representing the state.(b) The judge or magistrate must provide written notice of the use of closed-circuit video teleconferencing to the proposed patient, the proposed patient's attorney, and the attorney representing the state not later than the third day before the date of the hearing.(c) On motion of the proposed patient or of the attorney representing the state the court shall, or on the court's discretion the court may, terminate testimony by closed-circuit video teleconferencing under this section at any time during the testimony and require the physician or nonphysician mental health professional to testify in person.(d) A recording of the testimony under Subsection (a) shall be made and preserved with the court's record of the hearing.Tex. Health and Safety Code § 574.202
Added by Acts 2003, 78th Leg., ch. 358, Sec. 3, eff. 6/18/2003.