11.07[2/2] – PROCEDURE AFTER CONVICTION WITHOUT DEATH PENALTY
Texas Code of Criminal Procedure § 11.07[2/2]
Summary
This law outlines the conditions under which a court can consider a subsequent application for a writ of habeas corpus after an initial application has been decided. It specifically states that the new application must present specific facts that were not previously addressed to be considered valid.
Limits subsequent habeas corpus applications after initial decisions.
Requires new applications to present specific, previously unaddressed facts.
Excludes forensic DNA testing from the definition of additional forensic testing.
Frequently Asked Questions
Why Attorneys Choose FlawFinder
Side-by-side with Westlaw and LexisNexis
Feature
FlawFinder
Westlaw
LexisNexis
Monthly price
$19 - $99
$133 - $646
$153 - $399
Contract
None
1-3 year min
1-6 year min
Hidden fees
$0, always
Up to $469/search
$25/mo + per-doc
Police SOPs
✓ 310+ departments
✗
✗
Zero-hallucination AI
✓ CitationGuard
✗
✗
Cancel
One click
Termination fees
No option to cancel
Explain Like I'm 5
In simple terms: Learn about Texas's PROCEDURE AFTER CONVICTION WITHOUT DEATH PENALTY law, including definitions, penalties, and legal implications.. This means people must follow this rule, and breaking it can lead to criminal penalties.
FlawFinder provides legal information, not legal advice. Consult a licensed attorney for specific legal guidance.