Public Act 102-0244
 
SB0701 EnrolledLRB102 04507 KTG 14526 b

    AN ACT concerning aging.
 
    Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
represented in the General Assembly:
 
    Section 5. The Adult Protective Services Act is amended by
changing Sections 2, 3, 3.5, 4, 4.1, 4.2, 5, 7.1, 7.5, 8, 9,
13, and 15 and by adding Sections 3.3 and 3.6 as follows:
 
    (320 ILCS 20/2)  (from Ch. 23, par. 6602)
    Sec. 2. Definitions. As used in this Act, unless the
context requires otherwise:
    (a) "Abandonment" means the desertion or willful forsaking
of an eligible adult by an individual responsible for the care
and custody of that eligible adult under circumstances in
which a reasonable person would continue to provide care and
custody. Nothing in this Act shall be construed to mean that an
eligible adult is a victim of abandonment because of health
care services provided or not provided by licensed health care
professionals.
    (a-1) (a) "Abuse" means causing any physical, mental or
sexual injury to an eligible adult, including exploitation of
such adult's financial resources, and abandonment.
    Nothing in this Act shall be construed to mean that an
eligible adult is a victim of abuse, abandonment, neglect, or
self-neglect for the sole reason that he or she is being
furnished with or relies upon treatment by spiritual means
through prayer alone, in accordance with the tenets and
practices of a recognized church or religious denomination.
    Nothing in this Act shall be construed to mean that an
eligible adult is a victim of abuse because of health care
services provided or not provided by licensed health care
professionals.
    (a-5) "Abuser" means a person who abuses, abandons,
neglects, or financially exploits an eligible adult.
    (a-6) "Adult with disabilities" means a person aged 18
through 59 who resides in a domestic living situation and
whose disability as defined in subsection (c-5) impairs his or
her ability to seek or obtain protection from abuse,
abandonment, neglect, or exploitation.
    (a-7) "Caregiver" means a person who either as a result of
a family relationship, voluntarily, or in exchange for
compensation has assumed responsibility for all or a portion
of the care of an eligible adult who needs assistance with
activities of daily living or instrumental activities of daily
living.
    (b) "Department" means the Department on Aging of the
State of Illinois.
    (c) "Director" means the Director of the Department.
    (c-5) "Disability" means a physical or mental disability,
including, but not limited to, a developmental disability, an
intellectual disability, a mental illness as defined under the
Mental Health and Developmental Disabilities Code, or dementia
as defined under the Alzheimer's Disease Assistance Act.
    (d) "Domestic living situation" means a residence where
the eligible adult at the time of the report lives alone or
with his or her family or a caregiver, or others, or other
community-based unlicensed facility, but is not:
        (1) A licensed facility as defined in Section 1-113 of
    the Nursing Home Care Act;
        (1.5) A facility licensed under the ID/DD Community
    Care Act;
        (1.6) A facility licensed under the MC/DD Act;
        (1.7) A facility licensed under the Specialized Mental
    Health Rehabilitation Act of 2013;
        (2) A "life care facility" as defined in the Life Care
    Facilities Act;
        (3) A home, institution, or other place operated by
    the federal government or agency thereof or by the State
    of Illinois;
        (4) A hospital, sanitarium, or other institution, the
    principal activity or business of which is the diagnosis,
    care, and treatment of human illness through the
    maintenance and operation of organized facilities
    therefor, which is required to be licensed under the
    Hospital Licensing Act;
        (5) A "community living facility" as defined in the
    Community Living Facilities Licensing Act;
        (6) (Blank);
        (7) A "community-integrated living arrangement" as
    defined in the Community-Integrated Living Arrangements
    Licensure and Certification Act or a "community
    residential alternative" as licensed under that Act;
        (8) An assisted living or shared housing establishment
    as defined in the Assisted Living and Shared Housing Act;
    or
        (9) A supportive living facility as described in
    Section 5-5.01a of the Illinois Public Aid Code.
    (e) "Eligible adult" means either an adult with
disabilities aged 18 through 59 or a person aged 60 or older
who resides in a domestic living situation and is, or is
alleged to be, abused, abandoned, neglected, or financially
exploited by another individual or who neglects himself or
herself. "Eligible adult" also includes an adult who resides
in any of the facilities that are excluded from the definition
of "domestic living situation" under paragraphs (1) through
(9) of subsection (d), if either: (i) the alleged abuse,
abandonment, or neglect occurs outside of the facility and not
under facility supervision and the alleged abuser is a family
member, caregiver, or another person who has a continuing
relationship with the adult; or (ii) the alleged financial
exploitation is perpetrated by a family member, caregiver, or
another person who has a continuing relationship with the
adult, but who is not an employee of the facility where the
adult resides.
    (f) "Emergency" means a situation in which an eligible
adult is living in conditions presenting a risk of death or
physical, mental or sexual injury and the provider agency has
reason to believe the eligible adult is unable to consent to
services which would alleviate that risk.
    (f-1) "Financial exploitation" means the use of an
eligible adult's resources by another to the disadvantage of
that adult or the profit or advantage of a person other than
that adult.
    (f-5) "Mandated reporter" means any of the following
persons while engaged in carrying out their professional
duties:
        (1) a professional or professional's delegate while
    engaged in: (i) social services, (ii) law enforcement,
    (iii) education, (iv) the care of an eligible adult or
    eligible adults, or (v) any of the occupations required to
    be licensed under the Clinical Psychologist Licensing Act,
    the Clinical Social Work and Social Work Practice Act, the
    Illinois Dental Practice Act, the Dietitian Nutritionist
    Practice Act, the Marriage and Family Therapy Licensing
    Act, the Medical Practice Act of 1987, the Naprapathic
    Practice Act, the Nurse Practice Act, the Nursing Home
    Administrators Licensing and Disciplinary Act, the
    Illinois Occupational Therapy Practice Act, the Illinois
    Optometric Practice Act of 1987, the Pharmacy Practice
    Act, the Illinois Physical Therapy Act, the Physician
    Assistant Practice Act of 1987, the Podiatric Medical
    Practice Act of 1987, the Respiratory Care Practice Act,
    the Professional Counselor and Clinical Professional
    Counselor Licensing and Practice Act, the Illinois
    Speech-Language Pathology and Audiology Practice Act, the
    Veterinary Medicine and Surgery Practice Act of 2004, and
    the Illinois Public Accounting Act;
        (1.5) an employee of an entity providing developmental
    disabilities services or service coordination funded by
    the Department of Human Services;
        (2) an employee of a vocational rehabilitation
    facility prescribed or supervised by the Department of
    Human Services;
        (3) an administrator, employee, or person providing
    services in or through an unlicensed community based
    facility;
        (4) any religious practitioner who provides treatment
    by prayer or spiritual means alone in accordance with the
    tenets and practices of a recognized church or religious
    denomination, except as to information received in any
    confession or sacred communication enjoined by the
    discipline of the religious denomination to be held
    confidential;
        (5) field personnel of the Department of Healthcare
    and Family Services, Department of Public Health, and
    Department of Human Services, and any county or municipal
    health department;
        (6) personnel of the Department of Human Services, the
    Guardianship and Advocacy Commission, the State Fire
    Marshal, local fire departments, the Department on Aging
    and its subsidiary Area Agencies on Aging and provider
    agencies, and the Office of State Long Term Care
    Ombudsman;
        (7) any employee of the State of Illinois not
    otherwise specified herein who is involved in providing
    services to eligible adults, including professionals
    providing medical or rehabilitation services and all other
    persons having direct contact with eligible adults;
        (8) a person who performs the duties of a coroner or
    medical examiner; or
        (9) a person who performs the duties of a paramedic or
    an emergency medical technician.
    (g) "Neglect" means another individual's failure to
provide an eligible adult with or willful withholding from an
eligible adult the necessities of life including, but not
limited to, food, clothing, shelter or health care. This
subsection does not create any new affirmative duty to provide
support to eligible adults. Nothing in this Act shall be
construed to mean that an eligible adult is a victim of neglect
because of health care services provided or not provided by
licensed health care professionals.
    (h) "Provider agency" means any public or nonprofit agency
in a planning and service area that is selected by the
Department or appointed by the regional administrative agency
with prior approval by the Department on Aging to receive and
assess reports of alleged or suspected abuse, abandonment,
neglect, or financial exploitation. A provider agency is also
referenced as a "designated agency" in this Act.
    (i) "Regional administrative agency" means any public or
nonprofit agency in a planning and service area that provides
regional oversight and performs functions as set forth in
subsection (b) of Section 3 of this Act. The Department shall
designate an Area Agency on Aging as the regional
administrative agency or, in the event the Area Agency on
Aging in that planning and service area is deemed by the
Department to be unwilling or unable to provide those
functions, the Department may serve as the regional
administrative agency or designate another qualified entity to
serve as the regional administrative agency; any such
designation shall be subject to terms set forth by the
Department.
    (i-5) "Self-neglect" means a condition that is the result
of an eligible adult's inability, due to physical or mental
impairments, or both, or a diminished capacity, to perform
essential self-care tasks that substantially threaten his or
her own health, including: providing essential food, clothing,
shelter, and health care; and obtaining goods and services
necessary to maintain physical health, mental health,
emotional well-being, and general safety. The term includes
compulsive hoarding, which is characterized by the acquisition
and retention of large quantities of items and materials that
produce an extensively cluttered living space, which
significantly impairs the performance of essential self-care
tasks or otherwise substantially threatens life or safety.
    (j) "Substantiated case" means a reported case of alleged
or suspected abuse, abandonment, neglect, financial
exploitation, or self-neglect in which a provider agency,
after assessment, determines that there is reason to believe
abuse, abandonment, neglect, or financial exploitation has
occurred.
    (k) "Verified" means a determination that there is "clear
and convincing evidence" that the specific injury or harm
alleged was the result of abuse, abandonment, neglect, or
financial exploitation.
(Source: P.A. 99-180, eff. 7-29-15; 100-641, eff. 1-1-19.)
 
    (320 ILCS 20/3)  (from Ch. 23, par. 6603)
    Sec. 3. Responsibilities.
    (a) The Department shall establish, design, and manage a
protective services program for eligible adults who have been,
or are alleged to be, victims of abuse, abandonment, neglect,
financial exploitation, or self-neglect. The Department shall
contract with or fund, or contract with and fund, regional
administrative agencies, provider agencies, or both, for the
provision of those functions, and, contingent on adequate
funding, with attorneys or legal services provider agencies
for the provision of legal assistance pursuant to this Act.
For self-neglect, the program shall include the following
services for eligible adults who have been removed from their
residences for the purpose of cleanup or repairs: temporary
housing; counseling; and caseworker services to try to ensure
that the conditions necessitating the removal do not reoccur.
    (a-1) The Department shall by rule develop standards for
minimum staffing levels and staff qualifications. The
Department shall by rule establish mandatory standards for the
investigation of abuse, abandonment, neglect, financial
exploitation, or self-neglect of eligible adults and mandatory
procedures for linking eligible adults to appropriate services
and supports.
    (a-5) A provider agency shall, in accordance with rules
promulgated by the Department, establish a multi-disciplinary
team to act in an advisory role for the purpose of providing
professional knowledge and expertise in the handling of
complex abuse cases involving eligible adults. Each
multi-disciplinary team shall consist of one volunteer
representative from the following professions: banking or
finance; disability care; health care; law; law enforcement;
mental health care; and clergy. A provider agency may also
choose to add representatives from the fields of substance
abuse, domestic violence, sexual assault, or other related
fields. To support multi-disciplinary teams in this role, law
enforcement agencies and coroners or medical examiners shall
supply records as may be requested in particular cases.
    (b) Each regional administrative agency shall designate
provider agencies within its planning and service area with
prior approval by the Department on Aging, monitor the use of
services, provide technical assistance to the provider
agencies and be involved in program development activities.
    (c) Provider agencies shall assist, to the extent
possible, eligible adults who need agency services to allow
them to continue to function independently. Such assistance
shall include, but not be limited to, receiving reports of
alleged or suspected abuse, abandonment, neglect, financial
exploitation, or self-neglect, conducting face-to-face
assessments of such reported cases, determination of
substantiated cases, referral of substantiated cases for
necessary support services, referral of criminal conduct to
law enforcement in accordance with Department guidelines, and
provision of case work and follow-up services on substantiated
cases. In the case of a report of alleged or suspected abuse,
abandonment, or neglect that places an eligible adult at risk
of injury or death, a provider agency shall respond to the
report on an emergency basis in accordance with guidelines
established by the Department by administrative rule and shall
ensure that it is capable of responding to such a report 24
hours per day, 7 days per week. A provider agency may use an
on-call system to respond to reports of alleged or suspected
abuse, abandonment, or neglect after hours and on weekends.
    (c-5) Where a provider agency has reason to believe that
the death of an eligible adult may be the result of abuse,
abandonment, or neglect, including any reports made after
death, the agency shall immediately report the matter to both
the appropriate law enforcement agency and the coroner or
medical examiner. Between 30 and 45 days after making such a
report, the provider agency again shall contact the law
enforcement agency and coroner or medical examiner to
determine whether any further action was taken. Upon request
by a provider agency, a law enforcement agency and coroner or
medical examiner shall supply a summary of its action in
response to a reported death of an eligible adult. A copy of
the report shall be maintained and all subsequent follow-up
with the law enforcement agency and coroner or medical
examiner shall be documented in the case record of the
eligible adult. If the law enforcement agency, coroner, or
medical examiner determines the reported death was caused by
abuse, abandonment, or neglect by a caregiver, the law
enforcement agency, coroner, or medical examiner shall inform
the Department, and the Department shall report the
caregiver's identity on the Registry as described in Section
7.5 of this Act.
    (d) Upon sufficient appropriations to implement a
statewide program, the Department shall implement a program,
based on the recommendations of the Self-Neglect Steering
Committee, for (i) responding to reports of possible
self-neglect, (ii) protecting the autonomy, rights, privacy,
and privileges of adults during investigations of possible
self-neglect and consequential judicial proceedings regarding
competency, (iii) collecting and sharing relevant information
and data among the Department, provider agencies, regional
administrative agencies, and relevant seniors, (iv) developing
working agreements between provider agencies and law
enforcement, where practicable, and (v) developing procedures
for collecting data regarding incidents of self-neglect.
(Source: P.A. 98-49, eff. 7-1-13; 98-1039, eff. 8-25-14.)
 
    (320 ILCS 20/3.3 new)
    Sec. 3.3. Adult protective services trauma-informed
training.
    (a) This Section applies to any person who is employed by
the Department in the Adult Protective Services division, or
is contracted with the Department, and works on the
development and implementation of social services to respond
to and prevent adult abuse, neglect, or exploitation.
    (b) Subject to appropriation, the Department shall offer
an annual trauma-informed training program that includes (i)
instruction on how trauma impacts caseworkers and other
employees who respond to and prevent adult abuse, neglect,
exploitation, or abandonment, (ii) a review of the meaning and
impact of secondary trauma, and (iii) information about
strategies to identify and address secondary trauma in
caseworkers and other employees who work with adults who may
have experienced abuse, neglect, exploitation, or abandonment.
    (c) Any trauma-informed training offered by the Department
shall cover the following:
        (1) The widespread impact of secondary trauma on
    caseworkers and other employees who work with adults who
    may have experienced abuse, neglect, exploitation, or
    abandonment.
        (2) An understanding of who is at risk for developing
    secondary trauma.
        (3) Relevant and realistic case studies involving
    traumatic situations that other caseworkers and employees
    who work with adults who may have experienced abuse,
    neglect, exploitation, or abandonment have encountered in
    their work.
        (4) Symptoms and causes of secondary trauma in
    caseworkers and other employees who work with adults who
    may have experienced abuse, neglect, exploitation, or
    abandonment.
        (5) Strategies for prevention and intervention in
    cases of secondary trauma involving caseworkers or other
    employees who work with adults who may have experienced
    abuse, neglect, exploitation, or abandonment, including
    the development of a self-care plan.
        (6) How to incorporate monitoring and support
    techniques for employees experiencing secondary trauma
    into departmental policies, guidelines, and protocols.
    (d) This Section is designed to address gaps in current
trauma-informed training requirements for employees of the
Office of Adult Protective Services and to improve the quality
of training. If any law or rule existing on the effective date
of this amendatory Act of the 102nd General Assembly contains
more rigorous training requirements for employees of the
Office of Adult Protective Services, then that law or rule
applies. If there is overlap between this Section and other
laws and rules, the Department shall interpret this Section to
avoid duplication of requirements while ensuring that the
minimum requirements set in this Section are met.
    (e) The Department may adopt rules to implement this
Section.
 
    (320 ILCS 20/3.5)
    Sec. 3.5. Other responsibilities. The Department shall
also be responsible for the following activities, contingent
upon adequate funding; implementation shall be expanded to
adults with disabilities upon the effective date of this
amendatory Act of the 98th General Assembly, except those
responsibilities under subsection (a), which shall be
undertaken as soon as practicable:
        (a) promotion of a wide range of endeavors for the
    purpose of preventing abuse, abandonment, neglect,
    financial exploitation, and self-neglect, including, but
    not limited to, promotion of public and professional
    education to increase awareness of abuse, abandonment,
    neglect, financial exploitation, and self-neglect; to
    increase reports; to establish access to and use of the
    Registry established under Section 7.5; and to improve
    response by various legal, financial, social, and health
    systems;
        (b) coordination of efforts with other agencies,
    councils, and like entities, to include but not be limited
    to, the Administrative Office of the Illinois Courts, the
    Office of the Attorney General, the State Police, the
    Illinois Law Enforcement Training Standards Board, the
    State Triad, the Illinois Criminal Justice Information
    Authority, the Departments of Public Health, Healthcare
    and Family Services, and Human Services, the Illinois
    Guardianship and Advocacy Commission, the Family Violence
    Coordinating Council, the Illinois Violence Prevention
    Authority, and other entities which may impact awareness
    of, and response to, abuse, abandonment, neglect,
    financial exploitation, and self-neglect;
        (c) collection and analysis of data;
        (d) monitoring of the performance of regional
    administrative agencies and adult protective services
    agencies;
        (e) promotion of prevention activities;
        (f) establishing and coordinating an aggressive
    training program on the unique nature of adult abuse cases
    with other agencies, councils, and like entities, to
    include but not be limited to the Office of the Attorney
    General, the State Police, the Illinois Law Enforcement
    Training Standards Board, the State Triad, the Illinois
    Criminal Justice Information Authority, the State
    Departments of Public Health, Healthcare and Family
    Services, and Human Services, the Family Violence
    Coordinating Council, the Illinois Violence Prevention
    Authority, the agency designated by the Governor under
    Section 1 of the Protection and Advocacy for Persons with
    Developmental Disabilities Act, and other entities that
    may impact awareness of and response to abuse,
    abandonment, neglect, financial exploitation, and
    self-neglect;
        (g) solicitation of financial institutions for the
    purpose of making information available to the general
    public warning of financial exploitation of adults and
    related financial fraud or abuse, including such
    information and warnings available through signage or
    other written materials provided by the Department on the
    premises of such financial institutions, provided that the
    manner of displaying or distributing such information is
    subject to the sole discretion of each financial
    institution;
        (g-1) developing by joint rulemaking with the
    Department of Financial and Professional Regulation
    minimum training standards which shall be used by
    financial institutions for their current and new employees
    with direct customer contact; the Department of Financial
    and Professional Regulation shall retain sole visitation
    and enforcement authority under this subsection (g-1); the
    Department of Financial and Professional Regulation shall
    provide bi-annual reports to the Department setting forth
    aggregate statistics on the training programs required
    under this subsection (g-1); and
        (h) coordinating efforts with utility and electric
    companies to send notices in utility bills to explain to
    persons 60 years of age or older their rights regarding
    telemarketing and home repair fraud.
(Source: P.A. 98-49, eff. 7-1-13; 98-1039, eff. 8-25-14;
99-143, eff. 7-27-15.)
 
    (320 ILCS 20/3.6 new)
    Sec. 3.6. Elder abuse risk assessment tool.
    (a) The Department shall develop and implement a
demonstration project to allow for the use of a risk
assessment tool to assist in identifying elderly persons,
including homebound persons, who may be experiencing elder
abuse, abandonment, neglect, or exploitation and providing the
necessary support to address elder abuse, abandonment,
neglect, or exploitation. The Department shall finalize
planning on the demonstration project no later than December
1, 2023 with implementation beginning no later than January 1,
2024. The risk assessment tool shall identify (i) the level of
risk for elder abuse, abandonment, neglect, or exploitation;
(ii) risk factors causing the abuse, abandonment, neglect, or
exploitation; and (iii) appropriate follow-up and action in
response to any suspected abuse, abandonment, neglect, or
exploitation. In identifying a risk assessment tool, the
Department shall coordinate with all of the following:
        (1) The Department of Healthcare and Family Services.
        (2) A hospital, hospital system, or a statewide
    association representing hospitals.
        (3) A managed care organization or a statewide
    association representing managed care organizations.
        (4) A Care Coordination Unit.
        (5) An Area Agency on Aging or a statewide association
    representing Area Agencies on Aging.
        (6) Legal aid providers.
        (7) A financial institution or a statewide association
    representing financial institutions.
        (8) Adult Protective Services providers.
    (b) The risk assessment tool shall be comprehensive and
include all of the following components:
        (1) Client demographics.
        (2) Indicators of elder abuse, abandonment, neglect,
    or exploitation.
        (3) Contributing risk factors for abuse, abandonment,
    neglect, or exploitation.
        (4) Overall level of risk on a scale of low, medium,
    and high-risk level.
        (5) Appropriate follow-up and action.
        (6) Client outcomes.
    (c) If any hospital employee, social worker, or other
employee utilizing the risk assessment tool identifies that an
elderly person is at risk for elder abuse, abandonment,
neglect, or exploitation, the employee shall utilize the risk
assessment tool to refer the elderly person to a managed care
organization, legal aid service, Adult Protective Services
provider, or other needed services and supports.
    (d) The Department may adopt rules to implement this
Section.
 
    (320 ILCS 20/4)  (from Ch. 23, par. 6604)
    Sec. 4. Reports of abuse, abandonment, or neglect.
    (a) Any person who suspects the abuse, abandonment,
neglect, financial exploitation, or self-neglect of an
eligible adult may report this suspicion to an agency
designated to receive such reports under this Act or to the
Department.
    (a-5) If any mandated reporter has reason to believe that
an eligible adult, who because of a disability or other
condition or impairment is unable to seek assistance for
himself or herself, has, within the previous 12 months, been
subjected to abuse, abandonment, neglect, or financial
exploitation, the mandated reporter shall, within 24 hours
after developing such belief, report this suspicion to an
agency designated to receive such reports under this Act or to
the Department. The agency designated to receive such reports
under this Act or the Department may establish a manner in
which a mandated reporter can make the required report through
an Internet reporting tool. Information sent and received
through the Internet reporting tool is subject to the same
rules in this Act as other types of confidential reporting
established by the designated agency or the Department.
Whenever a mandated reporter is required to report under this
Act in his or her capacity as a member of the staff of a
medical or other public or private institution, facility, or
agency, he or she shall make a report to an agency designated
to receive such reports under this Act or to the Department in
accordance with the provisions of this Act and may also notify
the person in charge of the institution, facility, or agency
or his or her designated agent that the report has been made.
Under no circumstances shall any person in charge of such
institution, facility, or agency, or his or her designated
agent to whom the notification has been made, exercise any
control, restraint, modification, or other change in the
report or the forwarding of the report to an agency designated
to receive such reports under this Act or to the Department.
The privileged quality of communication between any
professional person required to report and his or her patient
or client shall not apply to situations involving abused,
abandoned, neglected, or financially exploited eligible adults
and shall not constitute grounds for failure to report as
required by this Act.
    (a-7) A person making a report under this Act in the belief
that it is in the alleged victim's best interest shall be
immune from criminal or civil liability or professional
disciplinary action on account of making the report,
notwithstanding any requirements concerning the
confidentiality of information with respect to such eligible
adult which might otherwise be applicable.
    (a-9) Law enforcement officers shall continue to report
incidents of alleged abuse pursuant to the Illinois Domestic
Violence Act of 1986, notwithstanding any requirements under
this Act.
    (b) Any person, institution or agency participating in the
making of a report, providing information or records related
to a report, assessment, or services, or participating in the
investigation of a report under this Act in good faith, or
taking photographs or x-rays as a result of an authorized
assessment, shall have immunity from any civil, criminal or
other liability in any civil, criminal or other proceeding
brought in consequence of making such report or assessment or
on account of submitting or otherwise disclosing such
photographs or x-rays to any agency designated to receive
reports of alleged or suspected abuse, abandonment, or
neglect. Any person, institution or agency authorized by the
Department to provide assessment, intervention, or
administrative services under this Act shall, in the good
faith performance of those services, have immunity from any
civil, criminal or other liability in any civil, criminal, or
other proceeding brought as a consequence of the performance
of those services. For the purposes of any civil, criminal, or
other proceeding, the good faith of any person required to
report, permitted to report, or participating in an
investigation of a report of alleged or suspected abuse,
abandonment, neglect, financial exploitation, or self-neglect
shall be presumed.
    (c) The identity of a person making a report of alleged or
suspected abuse, abandonment, neglect, financial exploitation,
or self-neglect under this Act may be disclosed by the
Department or other agency provided for in this Act only with
such person's written consent or by court order, but is
otherwise confidential.
    (d) The Department shall by rule establish a system for
filing and compiling reports made under this Act.
    (e) Any physician who willfully fails to report as
required by this Act shall be referred to the Illinois State
Medical Disciplinary Board for action in accordance with
subdivision (A)(22) of Section 22 of the Medical Practice Act
of 1987. Any dentist or dental hygienist who willfully fails
to report as required by this Act shall be referred to the
Department of Professional Regulation for action in accordance
with paragraph 19 of Section 23 of the Illinois Dental
Practice Act. Any optometrist who willfully fails to report as
required by this Act shall be referred to the Department of
Financial and Professional Regulation for action in accordance
with paragraph (15) of subsection (a) of Section 24 of the
Illinois Optometric Practice Act of 1987. Any other mandated
reporter required by this Act to report suspected abuse,
abandonment, neglect, or financial exploitation who willfully
fails to report the same is guilty of a Class A misdemeanor.
(Source: P.A. 97-860, eff. 7-30-12; 98-49, eff. 7-1-13;
98-1039, eff. 8-25-14.)
 
    (320 ILCS 20/4.1)
    Sec. 4.1. Employer discrimination. No employer shall
discharge, demote or suspend, or threaten to discharge, demote
or suspend, or in any manner discriminate against any employee
who makes any good faith oral or written report of suspected
abuse, abandonment, neglect, or financial exploitation or who
is or will be a witness or testify in any investigation or
proceeding concerning a report of suspected abuse,
abandonment, neglect, or financial exploitation.
(Source: P.A. 98-49, eff. 7-1-13.)
 
    (320 ILCS 20/4.2)
    Sec. 4.2. Testimony by mandated reporter and investigator.
Any mandated reporter who makes a report or any person who
investigates a report under this Act shall testify fully in
any judicial proceeding resulting from such report, as to any
evidence of abuse, abandonment, neglect, or financial
exploitation or the cause thereof. Any mandated reporter who
is required to report a suspected case of abuse, abandonment,
neglect, or financial exploitation under Section 4 of this Act
shall testify fully in any administrative hearing resulting
from such report, as to any evidence of abuse, abandonment,
neglect, or financial exploitation or the cause thereof. No
evidence shall be excluded by reason of any common law or
statutory privilege relating to communications between the
alleged abuser or the eligible adult subject of the report
under this Act and the person making or investigating the
report.
(Source: P.A. 90-628, eff. 1-1-99.)
 
    (320 ILCS 20/5)  (from Ch. 23, par. 6605)
    Sec. 5. Procedure.
    (a) A provider agency designated to receive reports of
alleged or suspected abuse, abandonment, neglect, financial
exploitation, or self-neglect under this Act shall, upon
receiving such a report, conduct a face-to-face assessment
with respect to such report, in accord with established law
and Department protocols, procedures, and policies.
Face-to-face assessments, casework, and follow-up of reports
of self-neglect by the provider agencies designated to receive
reports of self-neglect shall be subject to sufficient
appropriation for statewide implementation of assessments,
casework, and follow-up of reports of self-neglect. In the
absence of sufficient appropriation for statewide
implementation of assessments, casework, and follow-up of
reports of self-neglect, the designated adult protective
services provider agency shall refer all reports of
self-neglect to the appropriate agency or agencies as
designated by the Department for any follow-up. The assessment
shall include, but not be limited to, a visit to the residence
of the eligible adult who is the subject of the report and
shall include interviews or consultations regarding the
allegations with service agencies, immediate family members,
and individuals who may have knowledge of the eligible adult's
circumstances based on the consent of the eligible adult in
all instances, except where the provider agency is acting in
the best interest of an eligible adult who is unable to seek
assistance for himself or herself and where there are
allegations against a caregiver who has assumed
responsibilities in exchange for compensation. If, after the
assessment, the provider agency determines that the case is
substantiated it shall develop a service care plan for the
eligible adult and may report its findings at any time during
the case to the appropriate law enforcement agency in accord
with established law and Department protocols, procedures, and
policies. In developing a case plan, the provider agency may
consult with any other appropriate provider of services, and
such providers shall be immune from civil or criminal
liability on account of such acts. The plan shall include
alternative suggested or recommended services which are
appropriate to the needs of the eligible adult and which
involve the least restriction of the eligible adult's
activities commensurate with his or her needs. Only those
services to which consent is provided in accordance with
Section 9 of this Act shall be provided, contingent upon the
availability of such services.
    (b) A provider agency shall refer evidence of crimes
against an eligible adult to the appropriate law enforcement
agency according to Department policies. A referral to law
enforcement may be made at intake or any time during the case.
Where a provider agency has reason to believe the death of an
eligible adult may be the result of abuse, abandonment, or
neglect, the agency shall immediately report the matter to the
coroner or medical examiner and shall cooperate fully with any
subsequent investigation.
    (c) If any person other than the alleged victim refuses to
allow the provider agency to begin an investigation,
interferes with the provider agency's ability to conduct an
investigation, or refuses to give access to an eligible adult,
the appropriate law enforcement agency must be consulted
regarding the investigation.
(Source: P.A. 101-496, eff. 1-1-20.)
 
    (320 ILCS 20/7.1)
    Sec. 7.1. Final investigative report. A provider agency
shall prepare a final investigative report, upon the
completion or closure of an investigation, in all cases of
reported abuse, abandonment, neglect, financial exploitation,
or self-neglect of an eligible adult, whether or not there is a
substantiated finding.
(Source: P.A. 98-49, eff. 7-1-13.)
 
    (320 ILCS 20/7.5)
    Sec. 7.5. Registry.
    (a) To protect individuals receiving in-home and
community-based services, the Department on Aging shall
establish an Adult Protective Service Registry that will be
hosted by the Department of Public Health on its website
effective January 1, 2015, and, if practicable, shall propose
rules for the Registry by January 1, 2015.
    (a-5) The Registry shall identify caregivers against whom
a verified and substantiated finding was made under this Act
of abuse, abandonment, neglect, or financial exploitation.
    The information in the Registry shall be confidential
except as specifically authorized in this Act and shall not be
deemed a public record.
    (a-10) Reporting to the Registry. The Department on Aging
shall report to the Registry the identity of the caregiver
when a verified and substantiated finding of abuse,
abandonment, neglect, or financial exploitation of an eligible
adult under this Act is made against a caregiver, and all
appeals, challenges, and reviews, if any, have been completed
and a finding for placement on the Registry has been sustained
or upheld.
    A finding against a caregiver that is placed in the
Registry shall preclude that caregiver from providing direct
care, as defined in this Section, in a position with or that is
regulated by or paid with public funds from the Department on
Aging, the Department of Healthcare and Family Services, the
Department of Human Services, or the Department of Public
Health or with an entity or provider licensed, certified, or
regulated by or paid with public funds from any of these State
agencies.
    (b) Definitions. As used in this Section:
    "Direct care" includes, but is not limited to, direct
access to a person aged 60 or older or to an adult with
disabilities aged 18 through 59, his or her living quarters,
or his or her personal, financial, or medical records for the
purpose of providing nursing care or assistance with feeding,
dressing, movement, bathing, toileting, other personal needs
and activities of daily living or instrumental activities of
daily living, or assistance with financial transactions.
    "Participant" means an individual who uses the services of
an in-home care program funded through the Department on
Aging, the Department of Healthcare and Family Services, the
Department of Human Services, or the Department of Public
Health.
    (c) Access to and use of the Registry. Access to the
Registry shall be limited to the Department on Aging, the
Department of Healthcare and Family Services, the Department
of Human Services, and the Department of Public Health and
providers of direct care as described in subsection (a-10) of
this Section. These State agencies and providers shall not
hire, compensate either directly or on behalf of a
participant, or utilize the services of any person seeking to
provide direct care without first conducting an online check
of whether the person has been placed on the Registry. These
State agencies and providers shall maintain a copy of the
results of the online check to demonstrate compliance with
this requirement. These State agencies and providers are
prohibited from retaining, hiring, compensating either
directly or on behalf of a participant, or utilizing the
services of a person to provide direct care if the online check
of the person reveals a verified and substantiated finding of
abuse, abandonment, neglect, or financial exploitation that
has been placed on the Registry or when the State agencies or
providers otherwise gain knowledge of such placement on the
Registry. Failure to comply with this requirement may subject
such a provider to corrective action by the appropriate
regulatory agency or other lawful remedies provided under the
applicable licensure, certification, or regulatory laws and
rules.
    (d) Notice to caregiver. The Department on Aging shall
establish rules concerning notice to the caregiver in cases of
a verified and substantiated finding of abuse, abandonment,
neglect, or financial exploitation against him or her that may
make him or her eligible for placement on the Registry.
    (e) Notification to eligible adults, guardians, or agents.
As part of its investigation, the Department on Aging shall
notify an eligible adult, or an eligible adult's guardian or
agent, that his or her caregiver's name may be placed on the
Registry based on a finding as described in subsection (a-10)
of this Section.
    (f) Notification to employer. The Department on Aging
shall notify the appropriate State agency or provider of
direct care, as described in subsection (a-10), when there is
a verified and substantiated finding of abuse, abandonment,
neglect, or financial exploitation in a case under this Act
that is reported on the Registry and that involves one of its
caregivers. That State agency or provider is prohibited from
retaining or compensating that individual in a position that
involves direct care, and if there is an imminent risk of
danger to the victim or an imminent risk of misuse of personal,
medical, or financial information, that caregiver shall
immediately be barred from providing direct care to the victim
pending the outcome of any challenge, appeal, criminal
prosecution, or other type of collateral action.
    (g) Challenges and appeals. The Department on Aging shall
establish, by rule, procedures concerning challenges and
appeals to placement on the Registry pursuant to legislative
intent. The Department shall not make any report to the
Registry pending challenges or appeals.
    (h) Caregiver's rights to collateral action. The
Department on Aging shall not make any report to the Registry
if a caregiver notifies the Department in writing that he or
she is formally challenging an adverse employment action
resulting from a verified and substantiated finding of abuse,
abandonment, neglect, or financial exploitation by complaint
filed with the Illinois Civil Service Commission, or by
another means which seeks to enforce the caregiver's rights
pursuant to any applicable collective bargaining agreement. If
an action taken by an employer against a caregiver as a result
of such a finding is overturned through an action filed with
the Illinois Civil Service Commission or under any applicable
collective bargaining agreement after that caregiver's name
has already been sent to the Registry, the caregiver's name
shall be removed from the Registry.
    (i) Removal from Registry. At any time after a report to
the Registry, but no more than once in each successive 3-year
period thereafter, for a maximum of 3 such requests, a
caregiver may request removal of his or her name from the
Registry in relationship to a single incident. The caregiver
shall bear the burden of establishing, by a preponderance of
the evidence, that removal of his or her name from the Registry
is in the public interest. Upon receiving such a request, the
Department on Aging shall conduct an investigation and
consider any evidentiary material provided. The Department
shall issue a decision either granting or denying removal to
the caregiver and report it to the Registry. The Department
shall, by rule, establish standards and a process for
requesting the removal of a name from the Registry.
    (j) Referral of Registry reports to health care
facilities. In the event an eligible adult receiving services
from a provider agency changes his or her residence from a
domestic living situation to that of a health care or long term
care facility, the provider agency shall use reasonable
efforts to promptly inform the facility and the appropriate
Regional Long Term Care Ombudsman about any Registry reports
relating to the eligible adult. For purposes of this Section,
a health care or long term care facility includes, but is not
limited to, any residential facility licensed, certified, or
regulated by the Department of Public Health, Healthcare and
Family Services, or Human Services.
    (k) The Department on Aging and its employees and agents
shall have immunity, except for intentional willful and wanton
misconduct, from any liability, civil, criminal, or otherwise,
for reporting information to and maintaining the Registry.
(Source: P.A. 98-49, eff. 1-1-14; 98-756, eff. 7-16-14;
98-1039, eff. 8-25-14; 99-78, eff. 7-20-15.)
 
    (320 ILCS 20/8)  (from Ch. 23, par. 6608)
    Sec. 8. Access to records. All records concerning reports
of abuse, abandonment, neglect, financial exploitation, or
self-neglect and all records generated as a result of such
reports shall be confidential and shall not be disclosed
except as specifically authorized by this Act or other
applicable law. In accord with established law and Department
protocols, procedures, and policies, access to such records,
but not access to the identity of the person or persons making
a report of alleged abuse, abandonment, neglect, financial
exploitation, or self-neglect as contained in such records,
shall be provided, upon request, to the following persons and
for the following persons:
        (1) Department staff, provider agency staff, other
    aging network staff, and regional administrative agency
    staff, including staff of the Chicago Department on Aging
    while that agency is designated as a regional
    administrative agency, in the furtherance of their
    responsibilities under this Act;
        (1.5) A representative of the public guardian acting
    in the course of investigating the appropriateness of
    guardianship for the eligible adult or while pursuing a
    petition for guardianship of the eligible adult pursuant
    to the Probate Act of 1975;
        (2) A law enforcement agency or State's Attorney's
    office investigating known or suspected abuse,
    abandonment, neglect, financial exploitation, or
    self-neglect. Where a provider agency has reason to
    believe that the death of an eligible adult may be the
    result of abuse, abandonment, or neglect, including any
    reports made after death, the agency shall immediately
    provide the appropriate law enforcement agency with all
    records pertaining to the eligible adult;
        (2.5) A law enforcement agency, fire department
    agency, or fire protection district having proper
    jurisdiction pursuant to a written agreement between a
    provider agency and the law enforcement agency, fire
    department agency, or fire protection district under which
    the provider agency may furnish to the law enforcement
    agency, fire department agency, or fire protection
    district a list of all eligible adults who may be at
    imminent risk of abuse, abandonment, neglect, financial
    exploitation, or self-neglect;
        (3) A physician who has before him or her or who is
    involved in the treatment of an eligible adult whom he or
    she reasonably suspects may be abused, abandoned,
    neglected, financially exploited, or self-neglected or who
    has been referred to the Adult Protective Services
    Program;
        (4) An eligible adult reported to be abused,
    abandoned, neglected, financially exploited, or
    self-neglected, or such adult's authorized guardian or
    agent, unless such guardian or agent is the abuser or the
    alleged abuser;
        (4.5) An executor or administrator of the estate of an
    eligible adult who is deceased;
        (5) In cases regarding abuse, abandonment, neglect, or
    financial exploitation, a court or a guardian ad litem,
    upon its or his or her finding that access to such records
    may be necessary for the determination of an issue before
    the court. However, such access shall be limited to an in
    camera inspection of the records, unless the court
    determines that disclosure of the information contained
    therein is necessary for the resolution of an issue then
    pending before it;
        (5.5) In cases regarding self-neglect, a guardian ad
    litem;
        (6) A grand jury, upon its determination that access
    to such records is necessary in the conduct of its
    official business;
        (7) Any person authorized by the Director, in writing,
    for audit or bona fide research purposes;
        (8) A coroner or medical examiner who has reason to
    believe that an eligible adult has died as the result of
    abuse, abandonment, neglect, financial exploitation, or
    self-neglect. The provider agency shall immediately
    provide the coroner or medical examiner with all records
    pertaining to the eligible adult;
        (8.5) A coroner or medical examiner having proper
    jurisdiction, pursuant to a written agreement between a
    provider agency and the coroner or medical examiner, under
    which the provider agency may furnish to the office of the
    coroner or medical examiner a list of all eligible adults
    who may be at imminent risk of death as a result of abuse,
    abandonment, neglect, financial exploitation, or
    self-neglect;
        (9) Department of Financial and Professional
    Regulation staff and members of the Illinois Medical
    Disciplinary Board or the Social Work Examining and
    Disciplinary Board in the course of investigating alleged
    violations of the Clinical Social Work and Social Work
    Practice Act by provider agency staff or other licensing
    bodies at the discretion of the Director of the Department
    on Aging;
        (9-a) Department of Healthcare and Family Services
    staff and provider agency staff when that Department is
    funding services to the eligible adult, including access
    to the identity of the eligible adult;
        (9-b) Department of Human Services staff and provider
    agency staff when that Department is funding services to
    the eligible adult or is providing reimbursement for
    services provided by the abuser or alleged abuser,
    including access to the identity of the eligible adult;
        (10) Hearing officers in the course of conducting an
    administrative hearing under this Act; parties to such
    hearing shall be entitled to discovery as established by
    rule;
        (11) A caregiver who challenges placement on the
    Registry shall be given the statement of allegations in
    the abuse report and the substantiation decision in the
    final investigative report; and
        (12) The Illinois Guardianship and Advocacy Commission
    and the agency designated by the Governor under Section 1
    of the Protection and Advocacy for Persons with
    Developmental Disabilities Act shall have access, through
    the Department, to records, including the findings,
    pertaining to a completed or closed investigation of a
    report of suspected abuse, abandonment, neglect, financial
    exploitation, or self-neglect of an eligible adult.
(Source: P.A. 98-49, eff. 7-1-13; 98-1039, eff. 8-25-14;
99-143, eff. 7-27-15; 99-287, eff. 1-1-16; 99-547, eff.
7-15-16; 99-642, eff. 7-28-16.)
 
    (320 ILCS 20/9)  (from Ch. 23, par. 6609)
    Sec. 9. Authority to consent to services.
    (a) If an eligible adult consents to an assessment of a
reported incident of suspected abuse, abandonment, neglect,
financial exploitation, or self-neglect and, following the
assessment of such report, consents to services being provided
according to the case plan, such services shall be arranged to
meet the adult's needs, based upon the availability of
resources to provide such services. If an adult withdraws his
or her consent for an assessment of the reported incident or
withdraws his or her consent for services and refuses to
accept such services, the services shall not be provided.
    (b) If it reasonably appears to the Department or other
agency designated under this Act that a person is an eligible
adult and lacks the capacity to consent to an assessment of a
reported incident of suspected abuse, abandonment, neglect,
financial exploitation, or self-neglect or to necessary
services, the Department or other agency shall take
appropriate action necessary to ameliorate risk to the
eligible adult if there is a threat of ongoing harm or another
emergency exists. The Department or other agency shall be
authorized to seek the appointment of a temporary guardian as
provided in Article XIa of the Probate Act of 1975 for the
purpose of consenting to an assessment of the reported
incident and such services, together with an order for an
evaluation of the eligible adult's physical, psychological,
and medical condition and decisional capacity.
    (c) A guardian of the person of an eligible adult may
consent to an assessment of the reported incident and to
services being provided according to the case plan. If an
eligible adult lacks capacity to consent, an agent having
authority under a power of attorney may consent to an
assessment of the reported incident and to services. If the
guardian or agent is the suspected abuser and he or she
withdraws consent for the assessment of the reported incident,
or refuses to allow services to be provided to the eligible
adult, the Department, an agency designated under this Act, or
the office of the Attorney General may request a court order
seeking appropriate remedies, and may in addition request
removal of the guardian and appointment of a successor
guardian or request removal of the agent and appointment of a
guardian.
    (d) If an emergency exists and the Department or other
agency designated under this Act reasonably believes that a
person is an eligible adult and lacks the capacity to consent
to necessary services, the Department or other agency may
request an ex parte order from the circuit court of the county
in which the petitioner or respondent resides or in which the
alleged abuse, abandonment, neglect, financial exploitation,
or self-neglect occurred, authorizing an assessment of a
report of alleged or suspected abuse, abandonment, neglect,
financial exploitation, or self-neglect or the provision of
necessary services, or both, including relief available under
the Illinois Domestic Violence Act of 1986 in accord with
established law and Department protocols, procedures, and
policies. Petitions filed under this subsection shall be
treated as expedited proceedings. When an eligible adult is at
risk of serious injury or death and it reasonably appears that
the eligible adult lacks capacity to consent to necessary
services, the Department or other agency designated under this
Act may take action necessary to ameliorate the risk in
accordance with administrative rules promulgated by the
Department.
    (d-5) For purposes of this Section, an eligible adult
"lacks the capacity to consent" if qualified staff of an
agency designated under this Act reasonably determine, in
accordance with administrative rules promulgated by the
Department, that he or she appears either (i) unable to
receive and evaluate information related to the assessment or
services or (ii) unable to communicate in any manner decisions
related to the assessment of the reported incident or
services.
    (e) Within 15 days after the entry of the ex parte
emergency order, the order shall expire, or, if the need for
assessment of the reported incident or services continues, the
provider agency shall petition for the appointment of a
guardian as provided in Article XIa of the Probate Act of 1975
for the purpose of consenting to such assessment or services
or to protect the eligible adult from further harm.
    (f) If the court enters an ex parte order under subsection
(d) for an assessment of a reported incident of alleged or
suspected abuse, abandonment, neglect, financial exploitation,
or self-neglect, or for the provision of necessary services in
connection with alleged or suspected self-neglect, or for
both, the court, as soon as is practicable thereafter, shall
appoint a guardian ad litem for the eligible adult who is the
subject of the order, for the purpose of reviewing the
reasonableness of the order. The guardian ad litem shall
review the order and, if the guardian ad litem reasonably
believes that the order is unreasonable, the guardian ad litem
shall file a petition with the court stating the guardian ad
litem's belief and requesting that the order be vacated.
    (g) In all cases in which there is a substantiated finding
of abuse, abandonment, neglect, or financial exploitation by a
guardian, the Department shall, within 30 days after the
finding, notify the Probate Court with jurisdiction over the
guardianship.
(Source: P.A. 98-49, eff. 7-1-13; 98-1039, eff. 8-25-14.)
 
    (320 ILCS 20/13)
    Sec. 13. Access.
    (a) In accord with established law and Department
protocols, procedures, and policies, the designated provider
agencies shall have access to eligible adults who have been
reported or found to be victims of abuse, abandonment,
neglect, financial exploitation, or self-neglect in order to
assess the validity of the report, assess other needs of the
eligible adult, and provide services in accordance with this
Act.
    (a-5) A representative of the Department or a designated
provider agency that is actively involved in an abuse,
abandonment, neglect, financial exploitation, or self-neglect
investigation under this Act shall be allowed access to the
financial records, mental and physical health records, and
other relevant evaluative records of the eligible adult which
are in the possession of any individual, financial
institution, health care provider, mental health provider,
educational facility, or other facility if necessary to
complete the investigation mandated by this Act. The provider
or facility shall provide such records to the representative
upon receipt of a written request and certification from the
Department or designated provider agency that an investigation
is being conducted under this Act and the records are
pertinent to the investigation.
    Any records received by such representative, the
confidentiality of which is protected by another law or rule,
shall be maintained as confidential, except for such use as
may be necessary for any administrative or other legal
proceeding.
    (b) Where access to an eligible adult is denied, including
the refusal to provide requested records, the Office of the
Attorney General, the Department, or the provider agency may
petition the court for an order to require appropriate access
where:
        (1) a caregiver or third party has interfered with the
    assessment or service plan, or
        (2) the agency has reason to believe that the eligible
    adult is denying access because of coercion, extortion, or
    justifiable fear of future abuse, abandonment, neglect, or
    financial exploitation.
    (c) The petition for an order requiring appropriate access
shall be afforded an expedited hearing in the circuit court.
    (d) If the provider agency has substantiated financial
exploitation against an eligible adult, and has documented a
reasonable belief that the eligible adult will be irreparably
harmed as a result of the financial exploitation, the Office
of the Attorney General, the Department, or the provider
agency may petition for an order freezing the assets of the
eligible adult. The petition shall be filed in the county or
counties in which the assets are located. The court's order
shall prohibit the sale, gifting, transfer, or wasting of the
assets of the eligible adult, both real and personal, owned
by, or vested in, the eligible adult, without the express
permission of the court. The petition to freeze the assets of
the eligible adult shall be afforded an expedited hearing in
the circuit court.
(Source: P.A. 98-1039, eff. 8-25-14.)
 
    (320 ILCS 20/15)
    Sec. 15. Fatality review teams.
    (a) State policy.
        (1) Both the State and the community maintain a
    commitment to preventing the abuse, abandonment, neglect,
    and financial exploitation of at-risk adults. This
    includes a charge to bring perpetrators of crimes against
    at-risk adults to justice and prevent untimely deaths in
    the community.
        (2) When an at-risk adult dies, the response to the
    death by the community, law enforcement, and the State
    must include an accurate and complete determination of the
    cause of death, and the development and implementation of
    measures to prevent future deaths from similar causes.
        (3) Multidisciplinary and multi-agency reviews of
    deaths can assist the State and counties in developing a
    greater understanding of the incidence and causes of
    premature deaths and the methods for preventing those
    deaths, improving methods for investigating deaths, and
    identifying gaps in services to at-risk adults.
        (4) Access to information regarding the deceased
    person and his or her family by multidisciplinary and
    multi-agency fatality review teams is necessary in order
    to fulfill their purposes and duties.
    (a-5) Definitions. As used in this Section:
        "Advisory Council" means the Illinois Fatality Review
    Team Advisory Council.
        "Review Team" means a regional interagency fatality
    review team.
    (b) The Director, in consultation with the Advisory
Council, law enforcement, and other professionals who work in
the fields of investigating, treating, or preventing abuse,
abandonment, or neglect of at-risk adults, shall appoint
members to a minimum of one review team in each of the
Department's planning and service areas. Each member of a
review team shall be appointed for a 2-year term and shall be
eligible for reappointment upon the expiration of the term. A
review team's purpose in conducting review of at-risk adult
deaths is: (i) to assist local agencies in identifying and
reviewing suspicious deaths of adult victims of alleged,
suspected, or substantiated abuse, abandonment, or neglect in
domestic living situations; (ii) to facilitate communications
between officials responsible for autopsies and inquests and
persons involved in reporting or investigating alleged or
suspected cases of abuse, abandonment, neglect, or financial
exploitation of at-risk adults and persons involved in
providing services to at-risk adults; (iii) to evaluate means
by which the death might have been prevented; and (iv) to
report its findings to the appropriate agencies and the
Advisory Council and make recommendations that may help to
reduce the number of at-risk adult deaths caused by abuse,
abandonment, and neglect and that may help to improve the
investigations of deaths of at-risk adults and increase
prosecutions, if appropriate.
    (b-5) Each such team shall be composed of representatives
of entities and individuals including, but not limited to:
        (1) the Department on Aging;
        (2) coroners or medical examiners (or both);
        (3) State's Attorneys;
        (4) local police departments;
        (5) forensic units;
        (6) local health departments;
        (7) a social service or health care agency that
    provides services to persons with mental illness, in a
    program whose accreditation to provide such services is
    recognized by the Division of Mental Health within the
    Department of Human Services;
        (8) a social service or health care agency that
    provides services to persons with developmental
    disabilities, in a program whose accreditation to provide
    such services is recognized by the Division of
    Developmental Disabilities within the Department of Human
    Services;
        (9) a local hospital, trauma center, or provider of
    emergency medicine;
        (10) providers of services for eligible adults in
    domestic living situations; and
        (11) a physician, psychiatrist, or other health care
    provider knowledgeable about abuse, abandonment, and
    neglect of at-risk adults.
    (c) A review team shall review cases of deaths of at-risk
adults occurring in its planning and service area (i)
involving blunt force trauma or an undetermined manner or
suspicious cause of death; (ii) if requested by the deceased's
attending physician or an emergency room physician; (iii) upon
referral by a health care provider; (iv) upon referral by a
coroner or medical examiner; (v) constituting an open or
closed case from an adult protective services agency, law
enforcement agency, State's Attorney's office, or the
Department of Human Services' Office of the Inspector General
that involves alleged or suspected abuse, abandonment,
neglect, or financial exploitation; or (vi) upon referral by a
law enforcement agency or State's Attorney's office. If such a
death occurs in a planning and service area where a review team
has not yet been established, the Director shall request that
the Advisory Council or another review team review that death.
A team may also review deaths of at-risk adults if the alleged
abuse, abandonment, or neglect occurred while the person was
residing in a domestic living situation.
    A review team shall meet not less than 4 times a year to
discuss cases for its possible review. Each review team, with
the advice and consent of the Department, shall establish
criteria to be used in discussing cases of alleged, suspected,
or substantiated abuse, abandonment, or neglect for review and
shall conduct its activities in accordance with any applicable
policies and procedures established by the Department.
    (c-5) The Illinois Fatality Review Team Advisory Council,
consisting of one member from each review team in Illinois,
shall be the coordinating and oversight body for review teams
and activities in Illinois. The Director may appoint to the
Advisory Council any ex-officio members deemed necessary.
Persons with expertise needed by the Advisory Council may be
invited to meetings. The Advisory Council must select from its
members a chairperson and a vice-chairperson, each to serve a
2-year term. The chairperson or vice-chairperson may be
selected to serve additional, subsequent terms. The Advisory
Council must meet at least 4 times during each calendar year.
    The Department may provide or arrange for the staff
support necessary for the Advisory Council to carry out its
duties. The Director, in cooperation and consultation with the
Advisory Council, shall appoint, reappoint, and remove review
team members.
    The Advisory Council has, but is not limited to, the
following duties:
        (1) To serve as the voice of review teams in Illinois.
        (2) To oversee the review teams in order to ensure
    that the review teams' work is coordinated and in
    compliance with State statutes and the operating protocol.
        (3) To ensure that the data, results, findings, and
    recommendations of the review teams are adequately used in
    a timely manner to make any necessary changes to the
    policies, procedures, and State statutes in order to
    protect at-risk adults.
        (4) To collaborate with the Department in order to
    develop any legislation needed to prevent unnecessary
    deaths of at-risk adults.
        (5) To ensure that the review teams' review processes
    are standardized in order to convey data, findings, and
    recommendations in a usable format.
        (6) To serve as a link with review teams throughout
    the country and to participate in national review team
    activities.
        (7) To provide the review teams with the most current
    information and practices concerning at-risk adult death
    review and related topics.
        (8) To perform any other functions necessary to
    enhance the capability of the review teams to reduce and
    prevent at-risk adult fatalities.
    The Advisory Council may prepare an annual report, in
consultation with the Department, using aggregate data
gathered by review teams and using the review teams'
recommendations to develop education, prevention, prosecution,
or other strategies designed to improve the coordination of
services for at-risk adults and their families.
    In any instance where a review team does not operate in
accordance with established protocol, the Director, in
consultation and cooperation with the Advisory Council, must
take any necessary actions to bring the review team into
compliance with the protocol.
    (d) Any document or oral or written communication shared
within or produced by the review team relating to a case
discussed or reviewed by the review team is confidential and
is not admissible as evidence in any civil or criminal
proceeding, except for use by a State's Attorney's office in
prosecuting a criminal case against a caregiver. Those records
and information are, however, subject to discovery or
subpoena, and are admissible as evidence, to the extent they
are otherwise available to the public.
    Any document or oral or written communication provided to
a review team by an individual or entity, and created by that
individual or entity solely for the use of the review team, is
confidential, is not subject to disclosure to or discoverable
by another party, and is not admissible as evidence in any
civil or criminal proceeding, except for use by a State's
Attorney's office in prosecuting a criminal case against a
caregiver. Those records and information are, however, subject
to discovery or subpoena, and are admissible as evidence, to
the extent they are otherwise available to the public.
    Each entity or individual represented on the fatality
review team may share with other members of the team
information in the entity's or individual's possession
concerning the decedent who is the subject of the review or
concerning any person who was in contact with the decedent, as
well as any other information deemed by the entity or
individual to be pertinent to the review. Any such information
shared by an entity or individual with other members of the
review team is confidential. The intent of this paragraph is
to permit the disclosure to members of the review team of any
information deemed confidential or privileged or prohibited
from disclosure by any other provision of law. Release of
confidential communication between domestic violence advocates
and a domestic violence victim shall follow subsection (d) of
Section 227 of the Illinois Domestic Violence Act of 1986
which allows for the waiver of privilege afforded to
guardians, executors, or administrators of the estate of the
domestic violence victim. This provision relating to the
release of confidential communication between domestic
violence advocates and a domestic violence victim shall
exclude adult protective service providers.
    A coroner's or medical examiner's office may share with
the review team medical records that have been made available
to the coroner's or medical examiner's office in connection
with that office's investigation of a death.
    Members of a review team and the Advisory Council are not
subject to examination, in any civil or criminal proceeding,
concerning information presented to members of the review team
or the Advisory Council or opinions formed by members of the
review team or the Advisory Council based on that information.
A person may, however, be examined concerning information
provided to a review team or the Advisory Council.
    (d-5) Meetings of the review teams and the Advisory
Council may be closed to the public under the Open Meetings
Act. Records and information provided to a review team and the
Advisory Council, and records maintained by a team or the
Advisory Council, are exempt from release under the Freedom of
Information Act.
    (e) A review team's recommendation in relation to a case
discussed or reviewed by the review team, including, but not
limited to, a recommendation concerning an investigation or
prosecution, may be disclosed by the review team upon the
completion of its review and at the discretion of a majority of
its members who reviewed the case.
    (e-5) The State shall indemnify and hold harmless members
of a review team and the Advisory Council for all their acts,
omissions, decisions, or other conduct arising out of the
scope of their service on the review team or Advisory Council,
except those involving willful or wanton misconduct. The
method of providing indemnification shall be as provided in
the State Employee Indemnification Act.
    (f) The Department, in consultation with coroners, medical
examiners, and law enforcement agencies, shall use aggregate
data gathered by and recommendations from the Advisory Council
and the review teams to create an annual report and may use
those data and recommendations to develop education,
prevention, prosecution, or other strategies designed to
improve the coordination of services for at-risk adults and
their families. The Department or other State or county
agency, in consultation with coroners, medical examiners, and
law enforcement agencies, also may use aggregate data gathered
by the review teams to create a database of at-risk
individuals.
    (g) The Department shall adopt such rules and regulations
as it deems necessary to implement this Section.
(Source: P.A. 98-49, eff. 7-1-13; 98-1039, eff. 8-25-14;
99-78, eff. 7-20-15; 99-530, eff. 1-1-17.)
 
    Section 10. The Criminal Code of 2012 is amended by
changing Sections 3-5 and 17-56 as follows:
 
    (720 ILCS 5/3-5)  (from Ch. 38, par. 3-5)
    Sec. 3-5. General limitations.
    (a) A prosecution for: (1) first degree murder, attempt to
commit first degree murder, second degree murder, involuntary
manslaughter, reckless homicide, a violation of subparagraph
(F) of paragraph (1) of subsection (d) of Section 11-501 of the
Illinois Vehicle Code for the offense of aggravated driving
under the influence of alcohol, other drug or drugs, or
intoxicating compound or compounds, or any combination thereof
when the violation was a proximate cause of a death, leaving
the scene of a motor vehicle accident involving death or
personal injuries under Section 11-401 of the Illinois Vehicle
Code, failing to give information and render aid under Section
11-403 of the Illinois Vehicle Code, concealment of homicidal
death, treason, arson, residential arson, aggravated arson,
forgery, child pornography under paragraph (1) of subsection
(a) of Section 11-20.1, or aggravated child pornography under
paragraph (1) of subsection (a) of Section 11-20.1B, or (2)
any offense involving sexual conduct or sexual penetration, as
defined by Section 11-0.1 of this Code may be commenced at any
time.
    (a-5) A prosecution for theft of property exceeding
$100,000 in value under Section 16-1, identity theft under
subsection (a) of Section 16-30, aggravated identity theft
under subsection (b) of Section 16-30, financial exploitation
of an elderly person or a person with a disability under
Section 17-56; theft by deception of a victim 60 years of age
or older or a person with a disability under Section 16-1; or
any offense set forth in Article 16H or Section 17-10.6 may be
commenced within 7 years of the last act committed in
furtherance of the crime.
    (b) Unless the statute describing the offense provides
otherwise, or the period of limitation is extended by Section
3-6, a prosecution for any offense not designated in
subsection (a) or (a-5) must be commenced within 3 years after
the commission of the offense if it is a felony, or within one
year and 6 months after its commission if it is a misdemeanor.
(Source: P.A. 100-149, eff. 1-1-18; 100-863, eff. 8-14-18;
101-130, eff. 1-1-20.)
 
    (720 ILCS 5/17-56)  (was 720 ILCS 5/16-1.3)
    Sec. 17-56. Financial exploitation of an elderly person or
a person with a disability.
    (a) A person commits financial exploitation of an elderly
person or a person with a disability when he or she stands in a
position of trust or confidence with the elderly person or a
person with a disability and he or she knowingly:
        (1) by deception or intimidation obtains control over
    the property of an elderly person or a person with a
    disability; or
        (2) illegally uses the assets or resources of an
    elderly person or a person with a disability.
    (b) Sentence. Financial exploitation of an elderly person
or a person with a disability is: (1) a Class 4 felony if the
value of the property is $300 or less, (2) a Class 3 felony if
the value of the property is more than $300 but less than
$5,000, (3) a Class 2 felony if the value of the property is
$5,000 or more but less than $50,000, and (4) a Class 1 felony
if the value of the property is $50,000 or more or if the
elderly person is over 70 years of age and the value of the
property is $15,000 or more or if the elderly person is 80
years of age or older and the value of the property is $5,000
or more.
    (c) For purposes of this Section:
        (1) "Elderly person" means a person 60 years of age or
    older.
        (2) "Person with a disability" means a person who
    suffers from a physical or mental impairment resulting
    from disease, injury, functional disorder or congenital
    condition that impairs the individual's mental or physical
    ability to independently manage his or her property or
    financial resources, or both.
        (3) "Intimidation" means the communication to an
    elderly person or a person with a disability that he or she
    shall be deprived of food and nutrition, shelter,
    prescribed medication or medical care and treatment or
    conduct as provided in Section 12-6 of this Code.
        (4) "Deception" means, in addition to its meaning as
    defined in Section 15-4 of this Code, a misrepresentation
    or concealment of material fact relating to the terms of a
    contract or agreement entered into with the elderly person
    or person with a disability or to the existing or
    pre-existing condition of any of the property involved in
    such contract or agreement; or the use or employment of
    any misrepresentation, false pretense or false promise in
    order to induce, encourage or solicit the elderly person
    or person with a disability to enter into a contract or
    agreement.
    The illegal use of the assets or resources of an elderly
person or a person with a disability includes, but is not
limited to, the misappropriation of those assets or resources
by undue influence, breach of a fiduciary relationship, fraud,
deception, extortion, or use of the assets or resources
contrary to law.
    A person stands in a position of trust and confidence with
an elderly person or person with a disability when he (i) is a
parent, spouse, adult child or other relative by blood or
marriage of the elderly person or person with a disability,
(ii) is a joint tenant or tenant in common with the elderly
person or person with a disability, (iii) has a legal or
fiduciary relationship with the elderly person or person with
a disability, (iv) is a financial planning or investment
professional, or (v) is a paid or unpaid caregiver for the
elderly person or person with a disability, or (vi) is a friend
or acquaintance in a position of trust.
    (d) Limitations. Nothing in this Section shall be
construed to limit the remedies available to the victim under
the Illinois Domestic Violence Act of 1986.
    (e) Good faith efforts. Nothing in this Section shall be
construed to impose criminal liability on a person who has
made a good faith effort to assist the elderly person or person
with a disability in the management of his or her property, but
through no fault of his or her own has been unable to provide
such assistance.
    (f) Not a defense. It shall not be a defense to financial
exploitation of an elderly person or person with a disability
that the accused reasonably believed that the victim was not
an elderly person or person with a disability. Consent is not a
defense to financial exploitation of an elderly person or a
person with a disability if the accused knew or had reason to
know that the elderly person or a person with a disability
lacked capacity to consent.
    (g) Civil Liability. A civil cause of action exists for
financial exploitation of an elderly person or a person with a
disability as described in subsection (a) of this Section. A
person against whom a civil judgment has been entered for
financial exploitation of an elderly person or person with a
disability shall be liable to the victim or to the estate of
the victim in damages of treble the amount of the value of the
property obtained, plus reasonable attorney fees and court
costs. In a civil action under this subsection, the burden of
proof that the defendant committed financial exploitation of
an elderly person or a person with a disability as described in
subsection (a) of this Section shall be by a preponderance of
the evidence. This subsection shall be operative whether or
not the defendant has been charged or convicted of the
criminal offense as described in subsection (a) of this
Section. This subsection (g) shall not limit or affect the
right of any person to bring any cause of action or seek any
remedy available under the common law, or other applicable
law, arising out of the financial exploitation of an elderly
person or a person with a disability.
    (h) If a person is charged with financial exploitation of
an elderly person or a person with a disability that involves
the taking or loss of property valued at more than $5,000, a
prosecuting attorney may file a petition with the circuit
court of the county in which the defendant has been charged to
freeze the assets of the defendant in an amount equal to but
not greater than the alleged value of lost or stolen property
in the defendant's pending criminal proceeding for purposes of
restitution to the victim. The burden of proof required to
freeze the defendant's assets shall be by a preponderance of
the evidence.
(Source: P.A. 101-394, eff. 1-1-20.)