Ex parte Victor Elias Martinez, 03-25-00314-CR, March 04, 2026.
On appeal from the 423rd District Court of Bastrop County, Texas.
Synopsis
The Third Court of Appeals held that the 90-day mandatory pretrial release or bond reduction period under Article 17.151 is measured by the specific "criminal action" for which a defendant is detained, not the broader "criminal episode." Consequently, the 90-day clock for the State’s readiness does not relate back to an initial arrest for a separate offense, even if both offenses arise from the same series of events.
Relevance to Family Law
For family law litigators managing high-conflict cases involving domestic violence or sexual abuse, this decision provides a critical tactical roadmap for maintaining the detention of a dangerous party. By understanding that separate charges within the same "criminal episode" trigger independent 90-day clocks under Article 17.151, practitioners can better coordinate with prosecutors to ensure that a client's safety is not compromised by the "automatic" bond reductions that typically occur when the State is not ready for trial within three months of an initial arrest.
Case Summary
Fact Summary
Victor Elias Martinez was arrested in September 2024 following an investigation into the kidnapping of two minors, whom he allegedly held for several months. While he was initially detained on kidnapping charges, the State’s investigation continued, leading to subsequent warrants for smuggling, aggravated assault, and—eventually—aggravated sexual assault in January 2025. Martinez remained in continuous pretrial detention throughout this period. In March 2025, Martinez sought habeas corpus relief under Article 17.151, arguing that the State was not ready for trial within 90 days of his initial detention in September 2024. He contended that because all charges arose from the same "criminal episode," the clock for all charges should relate back to his first day in jail. The trial court granted relief (bond reduction) on the charges where the warrant was older than 90 days but denied relief for the aggravated sexual assault charge, for which the warrant had been issued in January 2025.
Issues Decided
- Does the 90-day period for mandatory pretrial release under Article 17.151 commence upon the defendant’s initial arrest for any offense within a "criminal episode"?
- Is the term "criminal action" in Article 17.151 synonymous with "criminal episode" for the purposes of calculating the State’s deadline for readiness?
Rules Applied
- Texas Code of Criminal Procedure Art. 17.151: Mandates that a defendant accused of a felony must be released on a personal bond or have their bail reduced to an affordable amount if the State is not ready for trial within 90 days of the commencement of detention.
- Texas Penal Code §§ 3.01 & 3.02: Distinguishes between a "criminal episode" (the underlying facts) and a "criminal action" (the specific prosecution), noting that the State has the permissive authority to consolidate or sever these actions.
- Ex parte Lanclos, 624 S.W.3d 923: Establishes that the requirements of Article 17.151 are mandatory and the trial court's discretion is limited to release or reduction to an amount the defendant can pay.
Application
The Court analyzed the statutory construction of Article 17.151, specifically the phrase "the criminal action for which he is being detained." Martinez argued for a broad interpretation that would encompass the entire "criminal episode" starting from his first arrest. The Court rejected this, noting that the Texas Penal Code treats these as distinct concepts. The Court reasoned that because the State has the discretion to prosecute offenses separately, each set of charges initiated by a distinct warrant or cause number constitutes a separate "criminal action." Since Martinez was detained for the specific aggravated sexual assault charge under a warrant issued in January 2025, and the State obtained an indictment within 90 days of that specific arrest, the mandatory release provision was not triggered for that offense. The fact that he was already in jail for other related offenses did not "start the clock" for the later-charged offense.
Holding
The Third Court of Appeals affirmed the trial court’s denial of the habeas application. The Court held that Article 17.151 applies to specific "criminal actions" rather than broader "criminal episodes." The Court further clarified that the 90-day deadline for State readiness is calculated from the start of detention for the specific accusation at issue. Therefore, even if a defendant is already in custody for related conduct, the filing of a new, distinct criminal charge resets the 17.151 clock for that specific accusation.
Practical Application
This holding is a powerful tool in crossover litigation where a party in a divorce or custody matter is facing criminal charges.
- Laddering Charges: If the State is struggling to indict on a complex charge (like Continuous Sexual Abuse of a Child), but has probable cause for a simpler, related charge (like Assault), the initial arrest on the simpler charge does not "burn" the 90-day clock for the more complex charge filed later.
- Safety Planning: Family law attorneys can advise victims that the "90-day automatic release" rule is not an absolute shield for the defendant if the investigation uncovers additional, distinct crimes that lead to new charges.
Checklists
Strategic Coordination with Prosecutors
- Identify if multiple offenses occur within the "criminal episode."
- Determine if the State intends to file a single multi-count indictment or separate "criminal actions."
- Monitor the 90-day readiness deadline for each specific charge separately.
- Assess whether additional outcries or evidence (e.g., forensic interviews) warrant new, separate charges to maintain detention.
Challenging a 17.151 Motion for Release
- Verify the date of the specific arrest warrant for the charge in question.
- Confirm whether the defendant was "being detained" for that specific "criminal action" or a different one.
- Analyze whether the State’s indictment was returned within 90 days of the specific detention for that charge.
- Ensure the record reflects the distinction between the "criminal episode" and the specific "criminal action" being challenged.
Citation
Ex parte Martinez, 03-25-00314-CR (Tex. App.—Austin Mar. 4, 2026, no pet. h.).
Full Opinion
Family Law Crossover
In Texas family law, the first 90 days following a family violence arrest are often the most dangerous. Defendants frequently rely on Article 17.151 as a "get out of jail free" card if the District Attorney’s office is backlogged and fails to indict within the 90-day window. Martinez provides a strategic loophole for the protection of your client. If a defendant is approaching the 90-day mark on an initial Assault Family Violence charge, but further discovery in the family law case (such as a child's outcry or recovered digital evidence) reveals separate acts of violence or sexual abuse, those new charges will trigger their own 90-day windows. This allows for "stacked" detention periods that can keep a violent spouse incarcerated while the family court hears applications for Protective Orders or moves to terminate parental rights. Understanding the distinction between "criminal episode" and "criminal action" ensures you can effectively communicate with the DA to prevent the premature release of a party who poses a significant threat to your client or the children. ~~aecd6c6b-3b7f-43f5-8597-3f09a1c1b5c6~~
