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HB228 • 2026

Pretrial detention hearings; procedure revised

Pretrial detention hearings; procedure revised

Crime
Passed Legislature

This bill passed both chambers and reached final enrollment, even if later executive action is not shown here.

Sponsor
Hill (J)
Last action
2026-03-11
Official status
Read Second Time in Second House
Effective date
Not listed

Plain English Breakdown

The official bill text does not provide detailed information on the timing of pretrial detention hearings beyond extending the preliminary hearing time limit to 45 days from arrest.

Pretrial Detention Hearings; Procedure Revised

This act changes the rules for pretrial detention hearings in Alabama to extend the time limit and specify conditions under which bail can be denied.

What This Bill Does

  • Changes the time limit for a preliminary hearing from 30 days after arrest to 45 days.
  • Requires that a defendant's right to a pretrial detention hearing is not delayed unless there is good cause shown by the court.
  • Specifies offenses where bail can be denied if certain conditions are met, such as murder and kidnapping in the first degree.

Who It Names or Affects

  • People charged with serious crimes who are awaiting trial
  • Courts handling criminal cases

Terms To Know

pretrial detention hearing
A court hearing to decide if a person accused of a crime should be held in jail before their trial.
bail
Money or other security given by someone charged with a crime to be allowed out of jail until the trial.

Limits and Unknowns

  • The bill does not specify what happens if there is no adequate record for an appeal.
  • It's unclear how this act will affect existing cases when it becomes law.
  • The effective date of the legislation has not been determined yet.

Amendments

These notes stay tied to the official amendment files and metadata from the legislature.

I37QQZ6-1

R 353

Adopted

Plain English: I37QQZ6-1 01/28/2026 THR (H) HSE 2025-3416 House Judiciary Reported Substitute for HB228 Page 1 A BILL TO BE ENTITLED AN ACT Relating to criminal procedure; to amend Sections 15-11-1 and 15-13-3, Code of Alabama 1975; to further provide for preliminary hearings and further provide for pretrial detention hearings; and to repeal Section 15-13-3.1, Code of Alabama 1975, relating to pretrial detention.

  • I37QQZ6-1 01/28/2026 THR (H) HSE 2025-3416 House Judiciary Reported Substitute for HB228 Page 1 A BILL TO BE ENTITLED AN ACT Relating to criminal procedure; to amend Sections 15-11-1 and 15-13-3, Code of Alabama 1975; to further provide for preliminary hearings and further provide for pretrial detention hearings; and to repeal Section 15-13-3.1, Code of Alabama 1975, relating to pretrial detention.
  • BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF ALABAMA: Section 1.
  • Sections 15-11-1 and 15-13-3, Code of Alabama 1975, are amended to read as follows: "§15-11-1 (a) Every person individual charged with and arrested for a felony before his or her indictment shall have an absolute right to a preliminary hearing on said the charge upon such person's his or her demand within 30 45 days following said the arrest ;, provided , that such person's his or her failure or refusal to appear for such the preliminary hearing or his or her absence from the state at the time of the setting for the preliminary hearing shall not delay or invalidate an indictment pursuant to said the charge.
  • (b) A pretrial detention hearing held pursuant to Section 15-13-3 shall satisfy a defendant's rights under this 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 I37QQZ6-1 01/28/2026 THR (H) HSE 2025-3416 House Judiciary Reported Substitute for HB228 Page 2 Section 15-13-3 shall satisfy a defendant's rights under this section unless otherwise ordered by the court for good cause shown.
  • This amendment summary is using official source text because generated interpretation was skipped for this run.

Bill History

  1. 2026-03-11 Senate

    Read for the Second Time and placed on the Calendar

  2. 2026-03-11 Senate

    Reported Out of Committee Second House

  3. 2026-02-10 House

    Motion to Read a Third Time and Pass as Amended - Adopted Roll Call 354 (Yeas 103, Nays 0)

  4. 2026-02-10 House

    Motion to Adopt - Adopted Roll Call 353 (Yeas 103, Nays 0)

  5. 2026-02-10 House

    Third Reading in House of Origin (Yeas 104, Nays 0)

  6. 2026-02-10 Senate

    Pending Committee Action in Second House

  7. 2026-02-10 Senate

    Read for the first time and referred to the Senate Committee on Judiciary

  8. 2026-02-10 House

    Engrossed

  9. 2026-02-10 House

    Judiciary Engrossed Substitute Offered

  10. 2026-01-29 House

    Read for the Second Time and placed on the Calendar

  11. 2026-01-28 House

    Reported Out of Committee House of Origin

  12. 2026-01-14 House

    Pending Committee Action in House of Origin

  13. 2026-01-14 House

    Read for the first time and referred to the House Committee on Judiciary

Official Summary Text

Pretrial detention hearings; procedure revised

Current Bill Text

Read the full stored bill text
HB228 ENGROSSED
Page 0
HB228
I37QQZ6-2
By Representative Hill
RFD: Judiciary
First Read: 14-Jan-26
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HB228 Engrossed
Page 1
First Read: 14-Jan-26
A BILL
TO BE ENTITLED
AN ACT
Relating to criminal procedure; to amend Sections
15-11-1 and 15-13-3, Code of Alabama 1975; to further provide
for preliminary hearings and further provide for pretrial
detention hearings; and to repeal Section 15-13-3.1, Code of
Alabama 1975, relating to pretrial detention.
BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF ALABAMA:
Section 1. Sections 15-11-1 and 15-13-3, Code of
Alabama 1975, are amended to read as follows:
"§15-11-1
(a) Every person individual charged with and arrested
for a felony before his or her indictment shall have an
absolute right to a preliminary hearing on said the charge
upon such person's his or her demand within 30 45 days
following said the arrest ;, provided , that such person's his
or her failure or refusal to appear for such the preliminary
hearing or his or her absence from the state at the time of
the setting for the preliminary hearing shall not delay or
invalidate an indictment pursuant to said the charge.
(b) A pretrial detention hearing held pursuant to
Section 15-13-3 shall satisfy a defendant's rights under this
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HB228 Engrossed
Page 2
Section 15-13-3 shall satisfy a defendant's rights under this
section unless otherwise ordered by the court for good cause
shown. "
"§15-13-3
(a) A defendant is not eligible for bail when he or she
is charged with capital murder pursuant to Section 13A-5-40,
if the court is of the opinion, on the evidence adduced, that
he or she is guilty of the offense.
(b)(1) A defendant charged with an offense listed in
subsection (c) shall be held without bail prior to a pretrial
detention hearing, unless the court is notified that there is
an agreement between the parties regarding conditions of bail.
(2) If there is an agreement regarding bail, no
pretrial detention hearing shall be held.
(c) (1) The court, after After a pretrial detention
hearing as provided in this subsection , for an offense
enumerated in this subsection and after the presentment of an
indictment or a showing of probable cause in the charged
offense, and if the court may deny a defendant bail if both of
the following apply:
(1) The prosecuting attorney proves by clear and
convincing evidence that no condition or combination of
conditions of release will reasonably ensure the defendant's
appearance in court or protect the safety of the community or
any person , may deny a defendant's bail, if he or she .
(2) The defendant is charged with any of the following
offenses:
a. Murder, as provided in Section 13A-6-2.
b. Kidnapping in the first degree, as provided in
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HB228 Engrossed
Page 3
b. Kidnapping in the first degree, as provided in
Section 13A-6-43.
c. Rape in the first degree, as provided in Section
13A-6-61.
d. Sodomy in the first degree, as provided in Section
13A-6-63.
e. Sexual torture, as provided in Section 13A-6-65.1.
f. Domestic violence in the first degree, as provided
in Section 13A-6-130.
g. Human trafficking in the first degree, as provided
in Section 13A-6-152.
h. Burglary in the first degree, as provided in Section
13A-7-5.
i. Arson in the first degree, as provided in Section
13A-7-41.
j. Robbery in the first degree, as provided in Section
13A-8-41.
k. Terrorism, as provided in subdivision (b)(2) of
Section 13A-10-152 (b)(2) .
l. Aggravated child abuse, as provided in subsection
(b) of Section 26-15-3.1 (b).
(2) A court shall order that a defendant charged with
an offense listed in this subsection be held without bail
prior to a pretrial detention hearing.
(3)(d)(1) The court shall hold a pretrial detention
hearing immediately , upon the defendant's first appearance
before the court, shall set a pretrial detention hearing
within 10 days of the arrest of a defendant for an offense
listed in subsection (c) unless the prosecuting attorney or the
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HB228 Engrossed
Page 4
listed in subsection (c) unless the prosecuting attorney or the
defendant requests a continuance. Except for good cause, a
continuance on a motion of the defendant may not exceed five
days, excluding Saturdays, Sundays, and state holidays, and a
continuance on motion by the prosecuting attorney may not
exceed three days, excluding Saturdays, Sundays, and state
holidays .
(2) A pretrial detention hearing may be continued for
up to 21 days following an arrest upon a determination of good
cause.
(3) A pretrial detention hearing may be continued
beyond 21 days on a joint motion of the parties.
(4) The defendant shall be detained until the pretrial
detention hearing is held and during any continuance unless
the court is notified of an agreement of the parties to
conditions of bail .
(5) If the last day to hold a pretrial detention
hearing falls on a Saturday, Sunday, legal holiday, or any
other day a court is closed, the hearing shall be set on the
following business day.
(4)a.(e)(1) A defendant shall have all of the following
rights at a pretrial detention hearing:
1.a. To be represented by counsel. If the defendant is
financially unable to obtain counsel, he or she shall have
counsel appointed.
2.b. To testify.
3.c. To present witnesses.
4.d. To present evidence.
5.e. To cross-examine witnesses.
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HB228 Engrossed
Page 5
5.e. To cross-examine witnesses.
b.(2) The judge shall have discretion as to who the
defendant may call as a witness as provided in this
subdivision at the pretrial detention hearing.
(5)(f) In considering whether there are any conditions
or combination of conditions that would reasonably ensure the
defendant's appearance in court or protect the safety of the
community and of any person, the court shall consider all of
the following factors:
a.(1) The nature and circumstances of the offenses
charged.
b.(2) The weight of the evidence against the defendant.
c.(3) The history and characteristics of the defendant,
including, but not limited to , the defendant's character,
physical and mental condition, family ties, employment,
financial resources, length of residence in the community,
community ties, past conduct, history relating to drug or
alcohol abuse, criminal history, and the defendant's record
concerning appearance at court proceedings, and whether, at
the time of the current offense, the defendant was on
probation, parole, or on other release pending trial,
sentencing, appeal, or completion of sentence for an offense.
d.(4) The nature and seriousness of the danger to any
person or the community if the defendant is released.
(6)(g) At any pretrial detention hearing, the rules
governing admissibility of evidence in criminal trials shall
not apply, and the court shall receive all relevant evidence.
All evidence shall be recorded. The testimony of a defendant
may not be admissible in any other criminal proceeding against
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HB228 Engrossed
Page 6
may not be admissible in any other criminal proceeding against
the defendant, except if being used for perjury based on the
testimony or for the purpose of impeachment in any subsequent
proceeding.
(h) A recording of a pretrial detention hearing shall
be kept by stenographic reporting, by mechanical or electronic
device or by some combination thereof, for the purpose of
creating an official record of the proceedings. The audio or
stenographic recording shall be preserved until the time for
making an appeal has expired. The trial court shall determine
whether there is an adequate record for purposes of appellate
review.
(7)a.(i)(1) A prosecuting attorney may file a motion
for a pretrial detention hearing at any time.
b.(2) A pretrial detention hearing may be reopened,
before or after a determination by the court, at any time
prior to trial if the court finds that information exists that
was not known by the movant at the time of the pretrial
detention hearing.
(8)(j) In an order denying bail, the judge shall make
written findings or state for the record findings of fact and
a statement of the reasons for denying bail. The judge shall
enter an order denying bail within 48 hours of the pretrial
detention hearing.
(k) An appeal of a pretrial detention order shall be
made to the Court of Criminal Appeals unless there is not an
adequate record, in which case the appeal shall be made to the
circuit court de novo.
(l)(1) Notwithstanding any provision of law, a judge
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HB228 Engrossed
Page 7
(l)(1) Notwithstanding any provision of law, a judge
may order, as a condition of bond, that a defendant charged
with any offense listed in subsection (c) be supervised by the
Board of Pardons and Paroles.
(2) The board shall adopt rules necessary to implement
this subsection. "
Section 2. If Section 4 of Act 2025-273, which amends
Section 15-13-3, Code of Alabama 1975, becomes effective
pursuant to the ratification of the constitutional amendment
proposed by Act 2025-227, the Code Commissioner shall give
effect to both this act and Section 4 of Act 2025-273 to the
extent that the language is not in substantive conflict and in
a manner that will make the code section intelligible.
Section 3. It is the intent of the Legislature that
pursuant to Section 150 of the Constitution of Alabama of
2022, the Supreme Court of Alabama shall amend its rules to
conform with this act.
Section 4. Section 15-13-3.1, Code of Alabama 1975,
relating to pretrial supervision of certain offenders, is
repealed.
Section 5. This act shall become effective on May 15,
2026.
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HB228 Engrossed
Page 8
2026.
House of Representatives
Read for the first time and referred
to the House of Representatives
committee on Judiciary
................14-Jan-26
Read for the second time and placed
on the calendar:
1 amendment
................29-Jan-26
Read for the third time and passed
as amended
Yeas 103
Nays 0
Abstains 0
................10-Feb-26
John Treadwell
Clerk
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