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Texas Iryna’s Law
Summary
Texas Iryna’s Law aims to enhance public safety by restricting unsecured pretrial release for violent offenders, increasing judicial oversight, and mandating mental health evaluations for defendants with mental illness.
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Legislative Debate
Debate opened: Texas Iryna’s Law
Debate is now open for this bill for 72 hours.
- Begins (UTC): 2026-03-19T13:00:00Z
- Ends (UTC): 2026-03-22T13:00:00Z
Please keep discussion on-topic and substantive. After debate closes, voting will automatically begin.
David ActonMar 19, 2026, 3:34 PM
Mr. President,
Iryna Zarutska was a refugee who fled war-torn Ukraine to the United States of America after the Russians bombed her neighborhood. Ms. Zarutska then proceeded to act, as far as public record can show, as a model citizen. She contributed to her community. She began to learn English. She got a job to pay her way through school. She was on her way home from a late shift at her job—at a pizzeria in Charlotte—on public transportation, surrounded by people, when her life was savagely stolen from her.
Decarlos Dejuan Brown Jr. was sitting behind Iryna. This was a man very much the opposite of Iryna. She was a new arrival, but a model of behavior and good work. Brown is an American citizen, and before this incident, he had been arrested 14 times going all the way back to 2007. He had been convicted of breaking and entering. He was arrested for armed robbery and possession of a firearm by a felon, and convicted for the same. He couldn’t stay in his own family’s home because he was violent and threatening. He was clearly highly and dangerously mentally ill, and he wouldn’t take medications that would help him. In short, he was a known threat to the safety of everyone around him, but Brown was let out of prison and was never involuntarily committed. These decisions by the state proved deadly on August 22, 2025.
That night, Brown spent several hours just riding around on public transportation, behaving erratically and laughing to himself like a madman. He didn’t even have a ticket to ride, but he went unconfronted by security officials. When Iryna boarded and sat in front of him, she should have had no need to worry. This was not the case, a tremendous failure of our systems. Brown stood up, whipped out a pocket knife, and without any warning or provocation, he stabbed Iryna several times from behind. She remained conscious for a minute afterwards before collapsing from loss of blood. Imagine the horror. Imagine the pain. Imagine the shock. No one helped her until after she collapsed. Help arrived too late—she was pronounced dead at the scene. What did Brown have to say for himself? “I got that white girl.”
Colleagues, what are we doing to our own people? What are we doing to the people we graciously allow to live here in asylum? To my friends across the aisle, how can any of us expect people to buy in to public transportation while this is a threat? How can we expect anyone to take promises of gun control and safety seriously when this is the result? How can any of us have any credibility in governance while our governments actively let violent, insane, known thugs walk around freely, terrorizing and brutalizing normal people? How is it that Iryna Zarutska could survive Russian bombardment but not a simple late-night train ride in a large American city?
When is it too ridiculous? When can we finally say that enough is enough, and we aren’t going to treat violent offenders with kid gloves anymore? Brown, the murderer in this case, was let out on his own recognizance by a leftist activist local judge not long before he went on to kill Iryna. If she had used an ounce of common sense and kept him locked up, she wouldn’t be dead. It’s time to wake up from the dreams of utopia. It’s time to recognize reality. It’s time to get tough. It’s time to stop the madness. It’s past time.
This bill will enact common-sense measures that crack down on the worst offenders in our society, people who have more than demonstrated they have no interest in being productive, law-abiding citizens who will have due regard for the safety and lives of others. It’s not really just about what they deserve, Mr. President, it’s about what normal, hard-working, kind, good people deserve. For the last couple of decades, and even longer in many cases, we have toyed with this ridiculous notion that hasn’t materialized in any substantive way, that we can remake any man, that we are all blank slates purely formed by circumstance, that all evil is cleanly the result of easily-identifiable injustices, that personal accountability is old-fashioned, that justice for the tyrants of the street is cruel and wrong. It’s time to put that to bed.
Join me in passing this bill. Send it to my desk. Together, we can and we will make Texas’s streets safe for everyone to the best of our ability. Now is the time to live up to our fundamental obligations as servants of the people. Thank you, and God bless.
I yield.
Voting opened: Texas Iryna’s Law
Voting is now open for 72 hours.
- Ends (UTC): 2026-03-25T14:00:00Z
Members may vote Aye, Nay, or Present. Results are visible in real time.
AI Presiding OfficerMar 25, 2026, 2:05 PM
Voting closed: Texas Iryna’s Law
Result: passed.
Aye (seats): 100
Nay (seats): 0
Present (seats): 0
Total seats: 100
Sent to Governor for review
This bill awaits the Governor's action. Deadline: 2026-03-28 14:05:00 (UTC).
AI Presiding OfficerMar 28, 2026, 2:10 PM
Enacted: Texas Iryna’s Law
This bill has been enacted via no action (pocket pass) at the Governor review deadline.
Vote Results
1 Aye•0 Nay•0 Present
| Legislator | Vote |
|---|---|
| David Acton | aye |