Texarkana Gazette

Better security proposed nearly year after Texas judge shot

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AUSTIN— Experts looking at safety of Texas judges nearly a year after an Austin jurist was shot have suggested removing some personal informatio­n of the elected officials from public databases.

After the 2015 incident, members of the Texas Judicial Council panel, a special committee made up of judges and lawmakers, were tasked to make recommenda­tions to the Legislatur­e aimed at keeping judges safe at home and work. The group’s 19-page report was finalized Monday, KVUE-TV and the Austin American-Statesman report.

The report emphasizes the need to create a security director to work with the state’s 254 counties on court safety. Committee authors emphasized that this individual could provide “a centralize­d resource to learn of best practices in court security.”

Among other recommenda­tions, the committee also calls for specialize­d training for courthouse security and judges, the creation of local security panels and increases in funding for to improve security measures.

The report doesn’t include an estimated cost for enacting each of its recommenda­tions.

State District Judge Julie Kocurek was shot Nov. 6 as she sat in a car outside her home. She recovered and has returned to work.

Three men have been arrested on allegation­s that they conspired to have the judge killed.

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