It’s the 12 Days of Ballotpedia! Your gift powers the trusted, unbiased information voters need heading into 2026. Donate now!
Texas county attorney: Difference between revisions
m (Text replacement - "==Taxpayer-funded lobbying==" to "==Government sector lobbying==") |
|||
| Line 12: | Line 12: | ||
The county attorney enforces criminal statutes and does not represent the county in its general legal or civil business.<ref name=const /> | The county attorney enforces criminal statutes and does not represent the county in its general legal or civil business.<ref name=const /> | ||
== | ==Government sector lobbying== | ||
County attorneys join district attorneys in the Texas District and County Attorneys Association, which is a [[Taxpayer-funded lobbying (Sunshine Review)|government sector lobbying organization]] associated with the [[Texas Association of Counties|Texas Association of Counties]]. | County attorneys join district attorneys in the Texas District and County Attorneys Association, which is a [[Taxpayer-funded lobbying (Sunshine Review)|government sector lobbying organization]] associated with the [[Texas Association of Counties|Texas Association of Counties]]. | ||
Latest revision as of 16:04, 26 July 2022
County attorney is an elected position in the state of Texas according to the state's constitution.
Election
County attorneys are elected to four-year terms by the voters of their county in the same election as the President of the United States.[1][2]
Government roles
If the county has appointed a criminal district attorney, the county attorney position is abolished. When the position is occupied, county attorneys prosecute misdemeanor criminal cases, enforce election violations, vice laws, "going-out-of-business" sale violations and liquor law offenses, act as a juvenile prosecutor, represent county officials and employees in lawsuits related to their duties, represent the county in collecting delinquent taxes and file suit against property violations.
The county attorney may act as an assistant to the commissioners court, assuring the court of legality in lawmaking and contracts, acting as a checkpoint for legal questions, screening open records requests and reviewing claims made against the county.[3]
Position overview
The county attorney enforces criminal statutes and does not represent the county in its general legal or civil business.[1]
Government sector lobbying
County attorneys join district attorneys in the Texas District and County Attorneys Association, which is a government sector lobbying organization associated with the Texas Association of Counties.
External links
Footnotes