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Public Act 098-0558 |
SB1192 Enrolled | LRB098 02592 RLC 32597 b |
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AN ACT concerning criminal law.
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Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
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represented in the General Assembly:
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Section 5. The Illinois Identification Card Act is amended |
by changing Section 4 as follows:
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(15 ILCS 335/4) (from Ch. 124, par. 24)
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Sec. 4. Identification Card.
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(a) The Secretary of State shall issue a
standard Illinois |
Identification Card to any natural person who is a resident
of |
the State of Illinois who applies for such card, or renewal |
thereof,
or who applies for a standard Illinois Identification |
Card upon release as a
committed person on parole, mandatory |
supervised release, aftercare release, final discharge, or
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pardon from the Department of Corrections or Department of |
Juvenile Justice by submitting an identification card
issued by |
the Department of Corrections or Department of Juvenile Justice |
under Section 3-14-1 or Section 3-2.5-70 of the Unified
Code of |
Corrections,
together with the prescribed fees. No |
identification card shall be issued to any person who holds a |
valid
foreign state
identification card, license, or permit |
unless the person first surrenders to
the Secretary of
State |
the valid foreign state identification card, license, or |
permit. The card shall be prepared and
supplied by the |
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Secretary of State and shall include a photograph and signature |
or mark of the
applicant. However, the Secretary of State may |
provide by rule for the issuance of Illinois Identification |
Cards without photographs if the applicant has a bona fide |
religious objection to being photographed or to the display of |
his or her photograph. The Illinois Identification Card may be |
used for
identification purposes in any lawful situation only |
by the person to
whom it was issued.
As used in this Act, |
"photograph" means any color photograph or digitally
produced |
and captured image of an applicant for an identification card. |
As
used in this Act, "signature" means the name of a person as |
written by that
person and captured in a manner acceptable to |
the Secretary of State. |
(a-5) If an applicant for an identification card has a |
current driver's license or instruction permit issued by the |
Secretary of State, the Secretary may require the applicant to |
utilize the same residence address and name on the |
identification card, driver's license, and instruction permit |
records maintained by the Secretary. The Secretary may |
promulgate rules to implement this provision.
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(a-10) If the applicant is a judicial officer as defined in |
Section 1-10 of the Judicial Privacy Act, the applicant may |
elect to have his or her office or work address listed on the |
card instead of the applicant's residence or mailing address. |
The Secretary may promulgate rules to implement this provision. |
(b) The Secretary of State shall issue a special Illinois
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Identification Card, which shall be known as an Illinois Person |
with a Disability
Identification Card, to any natural person |
who is a resident of the State
of Illinois, who is a person |
with a disability as defined in Section 4A of this Act,
who |
applies for such card, or renewal thereof. No Illinois Person |
with a Disability Identification Card shall be issued to any |
person who
holds a valid
foreign state identification card, |
license, or permit unless the person first
surrenders to the
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Secretary of State the valid foreign state identification card, |
license, or
permit. The Secretary of State
shall charge no fee |
to issue such card. The card shall be prepared and
supplied by |
the Secretary of State, and shall include a photograph and |
signature or mark of the
applicant, a designation indicating |
that the card is an Illinois
Person with a Disability |
Identification Card, and shall include a comprehensible |
designation
of the type and classification of the applicant's |
disability as set out in
Section 4A of this Act. However, the |
Secretary of State may provide by rule for the issuance of |
Illinois Disabled Person with a Disability Identification |
Cards without photographs if the applicant has a bona fide |
religious objection to being photographed or to the display of |
his or her photograph. If the applicant so requests, the card |
shall
include a description of the applicant's disability and |
any information
about the applicant's disability or medical |
history which the Secretary
determines would be helpful to the |
applicant in securing emergency medical
care. If a mark is used |
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in lieu of a signature, such mark
shall be affixed to the card |
in the presence of two witnesses who attest to
the authenticity |
of the mark. The Illinois
Person with a Disability |
Identification Card may be used for identification purposes
in |
any lawful situation by the person to whom it was issued.
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The Illinois Person with a Disability Identification Card |
may be used as adequate
documentation of disability in lieu of |
a physician's determination of
disability, a determination of |
disability from a physician assistant who has
been delegated |
the authority to make this determination by his or her
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supervising physician, a determination of disability from an |
advanced practice
nurse who has a written collaborative |
agreement with a collaborating physician
that
authorizes the |
advanced practice nurse to make this determination, or any
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other documentation
of disability whenever
any
State law
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requires that a disabled person provide such documentation of |
disability,
however an Illinois Person with a Disability |
Identification Card shall not qualify
the cardholder to |
participate in any program or to receive any benefit
which is |
not available to all persons with like disabilities.
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Notwithstanding any other provisions of law, an Illinois Person |
with a Disability
Identification Card, or evidence that the |
Secretary of State has issued an
Illinois Person with a |
Disability Identification Card, shall not be used by any
person |
other than the person named on such card to prove that the |
person
named on such card is a disabled person or for any other |
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purpose unless the
card is used for the benefit of the person |
named on such card, and the
person named on such card consents |
to such use at the time the card is so used.
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An optometrist's determination of a visual disability |
under Section 4A of this Act is acceptable as documentation for |
the purpose of issuing an Illinois Person with a Disability |
Identification Card. |
When medical information is contained on an Illinois Person |
with a Disability
Identification Card, the Office of the |
Secretary of State shall not be
liable for any actions taken |
based upon that medical information.
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(c) The Secretary of State shall provide
that each original |
or renewal Illinois Identification Card or Illinois
Person with |
a Disability Identification Card issued to a person under the |
age of 21 ,
shall be of a distinct nature from those Illinois |
Identification Cards or
Illinois Person with a Disability |
Identification Cards issued to individuals 21
years of age or |
older. The color designated for Illinois Identification
Cards |
or Illinois Person with a Disability Identification Cards for |
persons under
the age of 21 shall be at the discretion of the |
Secretary of State.
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(c-1) Each original or renewal Illinois
Identification |
Card or Illinois Person with a Disability Identification Card |
issued to
a person under the age of 21 shall display the date |
upon which the person
becomes 18 years of age and the date upon |
which the person becomes 21 years of
age.
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(c-3) The General Assembly recognizes the need to identify |
military veterans living in this State for the purpose of |
ensuring that they receive all of the services and benefits to |
which they are legally entitled, including healthcare, |
education assistance, and job placement. To assist the State in |
identifying these veterans and delivering these vital services |
and benefits, the Secretary of State is authorized to issue |
Illinois Identification Cards and Illinois Disabled Person |
with a Disability Identification Cards with the word "veteran" |
appearing on the face of the cards. This authorization is |
predicated on the unique status of veterans. The Secretary may |
not issue any other identification card which identifies an |
occupation, status, affiliation, hobby, or other unique |
characteristics of the identification card holder which is |
unrelated to the purpose of the identification card.
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(c-5) Beginning on or before July 1, 2015, the Secretary of |
State shall designate a space on each original or renewal |
identification card where, at the request of the applicant, the |
word "veteran" shall be placed. The veteran designation shall |
be available to a person identified as a veteran under |
subsection (b) of Section 5 of this Act who was discharged or |
separated under honorable conditions. |
(d) The Secretary of State may issue a Senior Citizen
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discount card, to any natural person who is a resident of the |
State of
Illinois who is 60 years of age or older and who |
applies for such a card or
renewal thereof. The Secretary of |
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State shall charge no fee to issue such
card. The card shall be |
issued in every county and applications shall be
made available |
at, but not limited to, nutrition sites, senior citizen
centers |
and Area Agencies on Aging. The applicant, upon receipt of such
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card and prior to its use for any purpose, shall have affixed |
thereon in
the space provided therefor his signature or mark.
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(e) The Secretary of State, in his or her discretion, may |
designate on each Illinois
Identification Card or Illinois |
Person with a Disability Identification Card a space where the |
card holder may place a sticker or decal, issued by the |
Secretary of State, of uniform size as the Secretary may |
specify, that shall indicate in appropriate language that the |
card holder has renewed his or her Illinois
Identification Card |
or Illinois Person with a Disability Identification Card. |
(Source: P.A. 96-146, eff. 1-1-10; 96-328, eff. 8-11-09; |
96-1231, eff. 7-23-10; 97-371, eff. 1-1-12; 97-739, eff. |
1-1-13; 97-847, eff. 1-1-13; 97-1064, eff. 1-1-13; revised |
9-5-12.)
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Section 10. The Alcoholism and Other Drug Abuse and |
Dependency Act is amended by changing Section 40-15 as follows:
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(20 ILCS 301/40-15)
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Sec. 40-15. Acceptance for treatment as a parole or |
aftercare release condition. Acceptance
for treatment for drug |
addiction or alcoholism under the supervision of a
designated |
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program may be made a condition of parole or aftercare release , |
and failure to comply
with such treatment may be treated as a |
violation of parole or aftercare release . A designated
program |
shall establish the conditions under which a parolee or |
releasee is accepted
for treatment. No parolee or releasee may |
be placed under the supervision of a designated
program for |
treatment unless the designated program accepts him or her for |
treatment.
The designated program shall make periodic progress |
reports regarding each such
parolee or releasee to the |
appropriate parole authority and shall report failures to |
comply
with the prescribed treatment program.
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(Source: P.A. 88-80.)
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Section 15. The Children and Family Services Act is amended |
by changing Section 34.2 as follows:
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(20 ILCS 505/34.2) (from Ch. 23, par. 5034.2)
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Sec. 34.2.
To conduct
meetings in each service region |
between local youth
service, police, probation and aftercare |
parole workers to
develop inter-agency plans to combat gang |
crime.
The Department
shall develop a model policy for local |
interagency cooperation in dealing with gangs.
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(Source: P.A. 84-660.)
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Section 20. The Child Death Review Team Act is amended by |
changing Section 25 as follows:
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(20 ILCS 515/25)
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Sec. 25. Team access to information.
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(a) The Department shall provide to a child death review |
team, on the
request of the team chairperson, all records and |
information in the
Department's
possession that are relevant to |
the team's review of a child death, including
records and |
information concerning previous reports or investigations of
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suspected child abuse or neglect.
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(b) A child death review team shall have access to all |
records and
information that are relevant to its review of a |
child death
and in the
possession of a State or local |
governmental agency, including, but not limited to, |
information gained through the Child Advocacy Center protocol |
for cases of serious or fatal injury to a child. These records |
and
information include, without limitation, birth |
certificates, all relevant
medical and mental health records, |
records of law
enforcement agency investigations, records of |
coroner or medical examiner
investigations, records of the |
Department of Corrections and Department of Juvenile Justice |
concerning a person's
parole or aftercare release , records of a |
probation and court services department, and records of a
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social services agency that provided services
to the child or |
the child's family.
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(Source: P.A. 95-527, eff. 6-1-08 .)
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Section 25. The Illinois Criminal Justice Information Act |
is amended by changing Section 3 as follows:
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(20 ILCS 3930/3) (from Ch. 38, par. 210-3)
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Sec. 3. Definitions. Whenever used in this Act, and for the |
purposes
of this Act unless the context clearly denotes |
otherwise:
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(a) The term "criminal justice system" includes all |
activities by
public agencies pertaining to the prevention or
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reduction of crime or enforcement of the criminal law, and |
particularly,
but without limitation, the prevention, |
detection, and investigation of
crime; the apprehension of |
offenders; the protection of victims and
witnesses; the |
administration of juvenile justice; the prosecution and
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defense of criminal cases; the trial, conviction, and |
sentencing of
offenders; as well as the correction and |
rehabilitation of offenders,
which includes imprisonment, |
probation, parole , aftercare release, and treatment.
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(b) The term "Authority" means the Illinois Criminal |
Justice Information
Authority created by this Act.
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(c) The term "criminal justice information" means any and |
every type of
information that is collected, transmitted, or |
maintained by the criminal
justice system.
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(d) The term "criminal history record information" means |
data
identifiable to an individual and consisting of |
descriptions or notations
of arrests, detentions, indictments, |
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informations, pre-trial proceedings,
trials, or other formal |
events in the criminal justice system or
descriptions or |
notations of criminal charges (including criminal
violations |
of local municipal ordinances) and the nature of any |
disposition
arising therefrom, including sentencing, court or |
correctional supervision,
rehabilitation, and release. The |
term does not apply to statistical
records and reports in which |
individuals are not identified and from which
their identities |
are not ascertainable, or to information that is for
criminal |
investigative or intelligence purposes.
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(e) The term "unit of general local government" means any |
county,
municipality or other general purpose political |
subdivision of this State.
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(Source: P.A. 85-653.)
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Section 30. The Sex Offender Management Board Act is |
amended by changing Section 17 as follows: |
(20 ILCS 4026/17)
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Sec. 17. Sentencing of sex offenders; treatment based upon |
evaluation required.
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(a) Each felony sex offender sentenced by the court for a |
sex offense shall
be
required as a part of any sentence to |
probation, conditional release, or
periodic imprisonment to |
undergo treatment based upon the recommendations of
the |
evaluation made pursuant to Section 16 or based upon any |
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subsequent
recommendations by the Administrative Office of the |
Illinois Courts or the
county probation department, whichever |
is appropriate. Beginning on January 1, 2014, the treatment |
shall be with a sex offender treatment provider or associate |
sex offender provider as defined in Section 10 of this Act and |
at
the offender's own expense based upon the offender's ability |
to pay for such
treatment.
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(b) Beginning on January 1, 2004, each sex offender placed |
on parole , aftercare release, or mandatory supervised
release |
by the Prisoner Review Board shall be required as a condition |
of parole or aftercare release
to undergo treatment based upon |
any evaluation or subsequent reevaluation
regarding such |
offender during the offender's incarceration or any period of
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parole or aftercare release . Beginning on January 1, 2014, the |
treatment shall be by a sex offender treatment provider or |
associate sex offender provider as defined in Section 10 of |
this Act and
at the offender's expense based upon the |
offender's ability to pay for such
treatment.
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(Source: P.A. 97-1098, eff. 1-1-13.) |
Section 35. The Abuse Prevention Review Team Act is amended |
by changing Section 25 as follows:
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(210 ILCS 28/25)
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Sec. 25. Review team access to information.
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(a) The Department shall provide to a
review team, on the |
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request of the review team chairperson, all
records and |
information in the Department's possession that are relevant to
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the review team's review of a sexual assault or death described |
in subsection (b) of Section 20, including records and
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information concerning previous reports or investigations of |
suspected
abuse or neglect.
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(b) A review team shall have access to all records and |
information
that are relevant to its review of a sexual assault |
or death and in the
possession of a State or local governmental |
agency. These records and
information include, without |
limitation, death certificates, all relevant
medical and |
mental health records, records of law enforcement agency
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investigations, records of coroner or medical examiner |
investigations,
records of the Department of Corrections and |
Department of Juvenile Justice concerning a person's parole or |
aftercare release ,
records of a probation and court services |
department, and records of a
social services agency that |
provided services to the resident.
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(Source: P.A. 93-577, eff. 8-21-03; 94-931, eff. 6-26-06.)
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Section 40. The Nursing Home Care Act is amended by |
changing Section 2-110 as follows:
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(210 ILCS 45/2-110) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 4152-110)
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Sec. 2-110. (a) Any employee or agent of a public agency, |
any
representative of a community legal services program or any |
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other member
of the general public shall be permitted access at |
reasonable hours to
any individual resident of any facility, |
but only if there is neither a
commercial purpose nor
effect to |
such access and if the purpose is to do any of the following:
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(1) Visit, talk with and make personal, social and |
legal services
available to all residents;
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(2) Inform residents of their rights and entitlements |
and their
corresponding obligations, under federal and |
State laws, by means of
educational materials and |
discussions in groups and with individual
residents;
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(3) Assist residents in asserting their legal rights |
regarding
claims for public assistance, medical assistance |
and social security
benefits, as well as in all other |
matters in which residents are
aggrieved. Assistance may |
include counseling and litigation; or
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(4) Engage in other methods of asserting, advising and |
representing
residents so as to extend to them full |
enjoyment of their rights. |
(a-5) If a resident of a licensed facility is an identified |
offender, any federal, State, or local law enforcement officer |
or county probation officer shall be permitted reasonable |
access to the individual resident to verify compliance with the |
requirements of the Sex Offender Registration Act, to verify |
compliance with the requirements of Public Act 94-163 and this |
amendatory Act of the 94th General Assembly, or to verify |
compliance with applicable terms of probation, parole, |
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aftercare release, or mandatory supervised release.
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(b) All persons entering a facility under this Section |
shall
promptly notify appropriate facility personnel of their |
presence. They
shall, upon request, produce identification to |
establish their identity.
No such person shall enter the |
immediate living area of any resident
without first identifying |
himself and then receiving permission from the
resident to |
enter. The rights of other residents present in the room
shall |
be respected. A resident may terminate at any time a visit by a
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person having access to the resident's living area under this |
Section.
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(c) This Section shall not limit the power of the |
Department or
other public agency otherwise permitted or |
required by law to enter and
inspect a facility.
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(d) Notwithstanding paragraph (a) of this Section, the |
administrator
of a facility may refuse access to the facility |
to any person if the
presence of that person in the facility |
would be injurious to the health
and safety of a resident or |
would threaten the security of the property
of a resident or |
the facility, or if the person seeks access to the
facility for |
commercial purposes. Any person refused access to a
facility |
may within 10 days request a hearing under Section 3-703. In
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that proceeding, the burden of proof as to the right of the |
facility to
refuse access under this Section shall be on the |
facility.
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(Source: P.A. 94-163, eff. 7-11-05; 94-752, eff. 5-10-06.)
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Section 45. The ID/DD Community Care Act is amended by |
changing Section 2-110 as follows: |
(210 ILCS 47/2-110)
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Sec. 2-110. Access to residents.
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(a) Any employee or agent of a public agency, any |
representative of a community legal services program or any |
other member of the general public shall be permitted access at |
reasonable hours to any individual resident of any facility, |
but only if there is neither a commercial purpose nor effect to |
such access and if the purpose is to do any of the following: |
(1) Visit, talk with and make personal, social and
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legal services available to all residents; |
(2) Inform residents of their rights and entitlements
|
and their corresponding obligations, under federal and |
State laws, by means of educational materials and |
discussions in groups and with individual residents; |
(3) Assist residents in asserting their legal rights
|
regarding claims for public assistance, medical assistance |
and social security benefits, as well as in all other |
matters in which residents are aggrieved. Assistance may |
include counseling and litigation; or |
(4) Engage in other methods of asserting, advising
and |
representing residents so as to extend to them full |
enjoyment of their rights. |
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(a-5) If a resident of a licensed facility is an identified |
offender, any federal, State, or local law enforcement officer |
or county probation officer shall be permitted reasonable |
access to the individual resident to verify compliance with the |
requirements of the Sex Offender Registration Act or to verify |
compliance with applicable terms of probation, parole, |
aftercare release, or mandatory supervised release. |
(b) All persons entering a facility under this Section |
shall promptly notify appropriate facility personnel of their |
presence. They shall, upon request, produce identification to |
establish their identity. No such person shall enter the |
immediate living area of any resident without first identifying |
himself or herself and then receiving permission from the |
resident to enter. The rights of other residents present in the |
room shall be respected. A resident may terminate at any time a |
visit by a person having access to the resident's living area |
under this Section. |
(c) This Section shall not limit the power of the |
Department or other public agency otherwise permitted or |
required by law to enter and inspect a facility. |
(d) Notwithstanding paragraph (a) of this Section, the |
administrator of a facility may refuse access to the facility |
to any person if the presence of that person in the facility |
would be injurious to the health and safety of a resident or |
would threaten the security of the property of a resident or |
the facility, or if the person seeks access to the facility for |
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commercial purposes. Any person refused access to a facility |
may within 10 days request a hearing under Section 3-703. In |
that proceeding, the burden of proof as to the right of the |
facility to refuse access under this Section shall be on the |
facility.
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(Source: P.A. 96-339, eff. 7-1-10 .) |
Section 50. The Specialized Mental Health Rehabilitation |
Act is amended by changing Section 2-110 as follows: |
(210 ILCS 48/2-110)
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Sec. 2-110. Access to residents.
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(a) Any employee or agent of a public agency, any |
representative of a community legal services program or any |
other member of the general public shall be permitted access at |
reasonable hours to any individual resident of any facility, |
but only if there is neither a commercial purpose nor effect to |
such access and if the purpose is to do any of the following: |
(1) Visit, talk with and make personal, social and
|
legal services available to all residents; |
(2) Inform residents of their rights and entitlements
|
and their corresponding obligations, under federal and |
State laws, by means of educational materials and |
discussions in groups and with individual residents; |
(3) Assist residents in asserting their legal rights
|
regarding claims for public assistance, medical assistance |
|
and social security benefits, as well as in all other |
matters in which residents are aggrieved. Assistance may |
include counseling and litigation; or |
(4) Engage in other methods of asserting, advising
and |
representing residents so as to extend to them full |
enjoyment of their rights. |
(a-5) If a resident of a licensed facility is an identified |
offender, any federal, State, or local law enforcement officer |
or county probation officer shall be permitted reasonable |
access to the individual resident to verify compliance with the |
requirements of the Sex Offender Registration Act or to verify |
compliance with applicable terms of probation, parole, |
aftercare release, or mandatory supervised release. |
(b) All persons entering a facility under this Section |
shall promptly notify appropriate facility personnel of their |
presence. They shall, upon request, produce identification to |
establish their identity. No such person shall enter the |
immediate living area of any resident without first identifying |
himself or herself and then receiving permission from the |
resident to enter. The rights of other residents present in the |
room shall be respected. A resident may terminate at any time a |
visit by a person having access to the resident's living area |
under this Section. |
(c) This Section shall not limit the power of the |
Department or other public agency otherwise permitted or |
required by law to enter and inspect a facility. |
|
(d) Notwithstanding paragraph (a) of this Section, the |
administrator of a facility may refuse access to the facility |
to any person if the presence of that person in the facility |
would be injurious to the health and safety of a resident or |
would threaten the security of the property of a resident or |
the facility, or if the person seeks access to the facility for |
commercial purposes. Any person refused access to a facility |
may within 10 days request a hearing under Section 3-703. In |
that proceeding, the burden of proof as to the right of the |
facility to refuse access under this Section shall be on the |
facility.
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(Source: P.A. 97-38, eff. 6-28-11.) |
Section 55. The Illinois Public Aid Code is amended by |
changing Section 12-10.4 as follows:
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(305 ILCS 5/12-10.4)
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Sec. 12-10.4. Juvenile Rehabilitation Services Medicaid |
Matching Fund.
There is created in the State Treasury the |
Juvenile Rehabilitation Services
Medicaid Matching Fund. |
Deposits to this Fund shall consist of all moneys
received from |
the federal government for behavioral health services secured |
by
counties pursuant to an agreement with the Department of |
Healthcare and Family Services with respect to Title XIX of the
|
Social Security Act or under the Children's Health Insurance |
Program pursuant
to the Children's Health Insurance Program Act |
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and Title XXI of the Social
Security Act for minors who are |
committed to mental health facilities by the
Illinois court |
system and for residential placements secured by the
Department |
of Juvenile Justice for minors as a condition of their |
aftercare release parole .
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Disbursements from the Fund shall be made, subject to |
appropriation, by the
Department of Healthcare and Family |
Services for grants to the Department of Juvenile Justice
and |
those counties which secure behavioral health services ordered |
by the
courts and which have an interagency agreement with the |
Department and submit
detailed bills according to standards |
determined by the Department.
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(Source: P.A. 95-331, eff. 8-21-07; 96-1100, eff. 1-1-11.)
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Section 60. The Developmental Disability and Mental Health |
Safety Act is amended by changing Section 20 as follows: |
(405 ILCS 82/20)
|
Sec. 20. Independent team of experts' access to |
information. |
(a) The Secretary of Human Services shall provide to the |
independent team of experts, on the request of the team |
Chairperson, all records and information in the Department's |
possession that are relevant to the team's examination of a |
death of the sort described in subsection (c) of Section 10, |
including records and information concerning previous reports |
|
or investigations of any matter, as determined by the team. |
(b) The independent team shall have access to all records |
and information that are relevant to its review of a death and |
in the possession of a State or local governmental agency or |
other entity. These records and information shall include, |
without limitation, death certificates, all relevant medical |
and mental health records, records of law enforcement agency |
investigations, records of coroner or medical examiner |
investigations, records of the Department of Corrections and |
Department of Juvenile Justice concerning a person's parole, |
aftercare release, records of a probation and court services |
department, and records of a social services agency that |
provided services to the person who died.
|
(Source: P.A. 96-1235, eff. 1-1-11.) |
Section 65. The Juvenile Court Act of 1987 is amended by |
changing Sections 5-105, 5-750, 5-815, and 5-820 as follows:
|
(705 ILCS 405/5-105)
|
Sec. 5-105. Definitions. As used in this Article:
|
(1) "Aftercare release" means the conditional and |
revocable release of an adjudicated delinquent juvenile |
committed to the Department of Juvenile Justice under the |
supervision of the Department of Juvenile Justice. |
(1.5) (1) "Court" means the circuit court in a session or |
division
assigned to hear proceedings under this Act, and |
|
includes the term Juvenile
Court.
|
(2) "Community service" means uncompensated labor for a |
community service
agency as hereinafter defined.
|
(2.5) "Community service agency" means a not-for-profit |
organization,
community
organization, church, charitable |
organization, individual, public office,
or other public body |
whose purpose is to enhance
the physical or mental health of a |
delinquent minor or to rehabilitate the
minor, or to improve |
the environmental quality or social welfare of the
community |
which agrees to accept community service from juvenile |
delinquents
and to report on the progress of the community |
service to the State's
Attorney pursuant to an agreement or to |
the court or to any agency designated
by the court or to the |
authorized diversion program that has referred the
delinquent |
minor for community service.
|
(3) "Delinquent minor" means any minor who prior to his or |
her 17th birthday
has
violated or attempted to violate, |
regardless of where the act occurred, any
federal or State law, |
county or municipal ordinance, and any minor who prior to his |
or her 18th birthday has violated or attempted to violate, |
regardless of where the act occurred, any federal, State, |
county or municipal law or ordinance classified as a |
misdemeanor offense.
|
(4) "Department" means the Department of Human Services |
unless specifically
referenced as another department.
|
(5) "Detention" means the temporary care of a minor who is |
|
alleged to be or
has been adjudicated
delinquent and who |
requires secure custody for the minor's own
protection or the |
community's protection in a facility designed to physically
|
restrict the minor's movements, pending disposition by the |
court or
execution of an order of the court for placement or |
commitment. Design
features that physically restrict movement |
include, but are not limited to,
locked rooms and the secure |
handcuffing of a minor to a rail or other
stationary object. In |
addition, "detention" includes the court ordered
care of an |
alleged or adjudicated delinquent minor who requires secure
|
custody pursuant to Section 5-125 of this Act.
|
(6) "Diversion" means the referral of a juvenile, without |
court
intervention,
into a program that provides services |
designed to educate the juvenile and
develop a productive and |
responsible approach to living in the community.
|
(7) "Juvenile detention home" means a public facility with |
specially trained
staff that conforms to the county juvenile |
detention standards promulgated by
the Department of |
Corrections.
|
(8) "Juvenile justice continuum" means a set of delinquency |
prevention
programs and services designed for the purpose of |
preventing or reducing
delinquent acts, including criminal |
activity by youth gangs, as well as
intervention, |
rehabilitation, and prevention services targeted at minors who
|
have committed delinquent acts,
and minors who have previously |
been committed to residential treatment programs
for |
|
delinquents. The term includes children-in-need-of-services |
and
families-in-need-of-services programs; aftercare and |
reentry services;
substance abuse and mental health programs;
|
community service programs; community service
work programs; |
and alternative-dispute resolution programs serving
|
youth-at-risk of delinquency and their families, whether |
offered or delivered
by State or
local governmental entities, |
public or private for-profit or not-for-profit
organizations, |
or religious or charitable organizations. This term would also
|
encompass any program or service consistent with the purpose of |
those programs
and services enumerated in this subsection.
|
(9) "Juvenile police officer" means a sworn police officer |
who has completed
a Basic Recruit Training Course, has been |
assigned to the position of juvenile
police officer by his or |
her chief law enforcement officer and has completed
the |
necessary juvenile officers training as prescribed by the |
Illinois Law
Enforcement Training Standards Board, or in the |
case of a State police officer,
juvenile officer training |
approved by the Director of State
Police.
|
(10) "Minor" means a person under the age of 21 years |
subject to this Act.
|
(11) "Non-secure custody" means confinement where the |
minor is not
physically
restricted by being placed in a locked |
cell or room, by being handcuffed to a
rail or other stationary |
object, or by other means. Non-secure custody may
include, but |
is not limited to, electronic monitoring, foster home |
|
placement,
home confinement, group home placement, or physical |
restriction of movement or
activity solely through facility |
staff.
|
(12) "Public or community service" means uncompensated |
labor for a
not-for-profit organization
or public body whose |
purpose is to enhance physical or mental stability of the
|
offender, environmental quality or the social welfare and which |
agrees to
accept public or community service from offenders and |
to report on the progress
of the offender and the public or |
community service to the court or to the
authorized diversion |
program that has referred the offender for public or
community
|
service.
|
(13) "Sentencing hearing" means a hearing to determine |
whether a minor
should
be adjudged a ward of the court, and to |
determine what sentence should be
imposed on the minor. It is |
the intent of the General Assembly that the term
"sentencing |
hearing" replace the term "dispositional hearing" and be |
synonymous
with that definition as it was used in the Juvenile |
Court Act of 1987.
|
(14) "Shelter" means the temporary care of a minor in |
physically
unrestricting facilities pending court disposition |
or execution of court order
for placement.
|
(15) "Site" means a not-for-profit organization, public
|
body, church, charitable organization, or individual agreeing |
to
accept
community service from offenders and to report on the |
progress of ordered or
required public or community service to |
|
the court or to the authorized
diversion program that has |
referred the offender for public or community
service.
|
(16) "Station adjustment" means the informal or formal |
handling of an
alleged
offender by a juvenile police officer.
|
(17) "Trial" means a hearing to determine whether the |
allegations of a
petition under Section 5-520 that a minor is |
delinquent are proved beyond a
reasonable doubt. It is the |
intent of the General Assembly that the term
"trial" replace |
the term "adjudicatory hearing" and be synonymous with that
|
definition as it was used in the Juvenile Court Act of 1987.
|
(Source: P.A. 95-1031, eff. 1-1-10 .)
|
(705 ILCS 405/5-750)
|
Sec. 5-750. Commitment to the Department of Juvenile |
Justice. |
(1) Except as provided in subsection (2) of this Section, |
when any
delinquent has been adjudged a ward of the court under |
this Act, the court may
commit him or her to the Department of |
Juvenile Justice, if it
finds
that (a) his or her parents, |
guardian or legal custodian are unfit or are
unable, for
some |
reason other than financial circumstances alone, to care for, |
protect,
train or discipline the minor, or are unwilling to do |
so,
and the best interests of the minor and
the public will not |
be served by placement under Section 5-740,
or it is
necessary |
to ensure the protection of the public from the consequences of
|
criminal activity of the delinquent; and (b)
commitment to the |
|
Department of Juvenile Justice is the least
restrictive |
alternative based on evidence that efforts were
made to locate |
less restrictive alternatives to secure
confinement and the |
reasons why efforts were unsuccessful in
locating a less |
restrictive alternative to secure confinement. Before the |
court commits a minor to the Department of Juvenile Justice, it |
shall make a finding that secure confinement is necessary,
|
following a review of the following individualized factors: |
(A) Age of the minor. |
(B) Criminal background of the minor. |
(C) Review of results of any assessments of the minor,
|
including child centered assessments such as the CANS. |
(D) Educational background of the minor, indicating
|
whether the minor has ever been assessed for a learning
|
disability, and if so what services were provided as well |
as any disciplinary incidents at school. |
(E) Physical, mental and emotional health of the minor,
|
indicating whether the minor has ever been diagnosed with a
|
health issue and if so what services were provided and |
whether the minor was compliant with services. |
(F) Community based services that have been provided to
|
the minor, and whether the minor was compliant with the |
services, and the reason the services were unsuccessful. |
(G) Services within the Department of Juvenile Justice
|
that will meet the individualized needs of the minor.
|
(1.5) Before the court commits a minor to the Department of |
|
Juvenile Justice, the court must find reasonable efforts have |
been made to prevent or eliminate the need for the minor to be |
removed from the home, or reasonable efforts cannot, at this |
time, for good cause, prevent or eliminate the need for |
removal, and removal from home is in the best interests of the |
minor, the minor's family, and the public. |
(2) When a minor of the age of at least 13 years is |
adjudged delinquent
for the offense of first degree murder, the |
court shall declare the minor a
ward of the court and order the |
minor committed to the Department of
Juvenile Justice until the |
minor's 21st birthday, without the
possibility of aftercare |
release parole , furlough, or non-emergency authorized absence |
for a
period of 5 years from the date the minor was committed |
to the Department of
Juvenile Justice, except that the time |
that a minor spent in custody for the instant
offense before |
being committed to the Department of Juvenile Justice shall be |
considered as time
credited towards that 5 year period. Nothing |
in this subsection (2) shall
preclude the State's Attorney from |
seeking to prosecute a minor as an adult as
an alternative to |
proceeding under this Act.
|
(3) Except as provided in subsection (2), the commitment of |
a
delinquent to the Department of Juvenile Justice shall be for |
an indeterminate term
which shall automatically terminate upon |
the delinquent attaining the age of 21
years unless the |
delinquent is sooner discharged from aftercare release parole |
or custodianship
is otherwise terminated in accordance with |
|
this Act or as otherwise provided
for by law.
|
(3.5) Every delinquent minor committed to the Department of |
Juvenile Justice under this Act shall be eligible for aftercare |
release without regard to the length of time the minor has been |
confined or whether the minor has served any minimum term |
imposed. Aftercare release shall be administered by the |
Department of Juvenile Justice, under the direction of the |
Director. |
(4) When the court commits a minor to the Department of |
Juvenile Justice, it
shall order him or her conveyed forthwith |
to the appropriate reception station
or
other place designated |
by the Department of Juvenile Justice, and shall appoint the
|
Director of Juvenile Justice legal custodian of the
minor. The |
clerk of the court shall issue to the
Director of Juvenile |
Justice a certified copy of the order,
which constitutes proof |
of the Director's authority. No other process need
issue to
|
warrant the keeping of the minor.
|
(5) If a minor is committed to the Department of Juvenile |
Justice, the clerk of the court shall forward to the |
Department:
|
(a) the disposition ordered;
|
(b) all reports;
|
(c) the court's statement of the basis for ordering the |
disposition; and
|
(d) all additional matters which the court directs the |
clerk to transmit.
|
|
(6) Whenever the Department of Juvenile Justice lawfully |
discharges from its
custody and
control a minor committed to |
it, the Director of Juvenile Justice shall petition the court |
for an order terminating his or her
custodianship. The |
custodianship shall terminate automatically 30 days after
|
receipt of the petition unless the court orders otherwise.
|
(Source: P.A. 97-362, eff. 1-1-12.)
|
(705 ILCS 405/5-815)
|
Sec. 5-815. Habitual Juvenile Offender.
|
(a) Definition. Any minor
having been twice adjudicated a |
delinquent minor for offenses which, had he
been prosecuted as |
an adult, would have been felonies under the laws of
this |
State, and who is thereafter adjudicated a delinquent minor for |
a
third time shall be adjudged an Habitual Juvenile Offender |
where:
|
1. the third adjudication is for an offense occurring |
after
adjudication on the second; and
|
2. the second adjudication was for an offense occurring |
after
adjudication on the first; and
|
3. the third offense occurred after January 1, 1980; |
and
|
4. the third offense was based upon the commission of |
or attempted
commission of the following offenses: first |
degree murder, second
degree murder or involuntary |
manslaughter; criminal sexual assault or
aggravated |
|
criminal sexual assault; aggravated or heinous
battery |
involving permanent disability or disfigurement or great |
bodily
harm to the victim; burglary of a home or other |
residence intended for
use as a temporary or permanent |
dwelling place for human beings; home
invasion; robbery or |
armed robbery; or aggravated arson.
|
Nothing in this Section shall preclude the State's Attorney |
from
seeking to prosecute a minor as an adult as an alternative |
to
prosecution as an habitual juvenile offender.
|
A continuance under supervision authorized by Section |
5-615 of
this Act
shall not be permitted under this Section.
|
(b) Notice to minor. The State shall serve upon the minor |
written
notice of intention to prosecute under the provisions |
of this Section within
5 judicial days of the filing of any |
delinquency petition, adjudication
upon which would mandate |
the minor's disposition as an Habitual Juvenile
Offender.
|
(c) Petition; service. A notice to seek adjudication as an
|
Habitual Juvenile Offender shall be filed only by the State's |
Attorney.
|
The petition upon which such Habitual Juvenile Offender |
notice is
based shall contain the information and averments |
required for all
other delinquency petitions filed under this |
Act and its service shall
be according to the provisions of |
this Act.
|
No prior adjudication shall be alleged in the petition.
|
(d) Trial. Trial on such petition shall be by jury unless |
|
the minor
demands, in open court and with advice of counsel, a |
trial by the court
without jury.
|
Except as otherwise provided herein, the provisions of this
|
Act concerning delinquency proceedings generally shall be |
applicable to
Habitual Juvenile Offender proceedings.
|
(e) Proof of prior adjudications. No evidence or other |
disclosure of prior
adjudications shall be presented
to the |
court or jury during any adjudicatory hearing provided for |
under this
Section unless otherwise permitted by the issues |
properly raised in such
hearing. In the event the minor who is |
the subject of these
proceedings elects to testify on his own |
behalf, it shall be competent to
introduce evidence, for |
purposes of impeachment, that he has previously
been |
adjudicated a delinquent minor upon facts which, had he been |
tried as an
adult, would have resulted in his conviction of a |
felony or of any offense
that involved dishonesty or false |
statement. Introduction of
such evidence shall be according to |
the rules and procedures applicable to
the impeachment of an |
adult defendant by prior conviction.
|
After an admission of the facts in the petition or |
adjudication of
delinquency, the State's Attorney may file with |
the court a verified
written statement signed by the State's |
Attorney concerning any prior
adjudication of an offense set |
forth in subsection (a) of this Section
which offense would |
have been a felony or of any offense that involved
dishonesty |
or false statement had the minor been tried as an adult.
|
|
The court shall then cause the minor to be brought before |
it; shall
inform him of the allegations of the statement so |
filed, and of his
right to a hearing before the court on the |
issue of such prior
adjudication and of his right to counsel at |
such hearing; and unless the
minor admits such adjudication, |
the court shall hear and determine such
issue, and shall make a |
written finding thereon.
|
A duly authenticated copy of the record of any such alleged |
prior
adjudication shall be prima facie evidence of such prior |
adjudication or of
any offense that involved dishonesty or |
false statement.
|
Any claim that a previous adjudication offered by the |
State's
Attorney is not a former adjudication of an offense |
which, had the minor
been prosecuted as an adult, would have |
resulted in his conviction of a
felony or of any offense that |
involved dishonesty or false statement, is
waived unless duly |
raised at the hearing on such
adjudication, or unless the |
State's Attorney's proof shows that such
prior adjudication was |
not based upon proof of what would have been a
felony.
|
(f) Disposition. If the court finds that the prerequisites |
established in
subsection (a)
of this Section have been proven, |
it shall adjudicate the minor an Habitual
Juvenile Offender and |
commit him to the Department of Juvenile Justice until his 21st |
birthday, without possibility of aftercare release parole ,
|
furlough, or non-emergency authorized absence.
However, the |
minor shall be entitled to earn one day of good conduct credit
|
|
for each day served as reductions against the period of his |
confinement.
Such good conduct credits shall be earned or |
revoked according to the
procedures applicable to the allowance |
and revocation of good conduct
credit for adult prisoners |
serving determinate sentences for felonies.
|
For purposes of determining good conduct credit, |
commitment as an Habitual
Juvenile Offender shall be considered |
a determinate commitment, and the
difference between the date |
of the commitment and the minor's 21st birthday
shall be |
considered the determinate period of his confinement.
|
(Source: P.A. 94-696, eff. 6-1-06 .)
|
(705 ILCS 405/5-820)
|
Sec. 5-820. Violent Juvenile Offender.
|
(a) Definition. A minor having
been previously adjudicated |
a delinquent minor for an offense which, had he or
she been |
prosecuted as an adult, would have been a Class 2 or greater |
felony
involving the use or
threat of physical force or |
violence against an individual or a Class 2 or
greater felony |
for
which an element of the offense is possession or use of a |
firearm, and who is
thereafter adjudicated a delinquent minor |
for a second time for any of those
offenses shall be |
adjudicated a Violent Juvenile Offender if:
|
(1) The second adjudication is for an offense occurring |
after adjudication
on the first; and
|
(2) The second offense occurred on or after January 1, |
|
1995.
|
(b) Notice to minor. The State shall serve upon the minor |
written notice of
intention to prosecute under the provisions |
of this Section within 5 judicial
days of the filing of a |
delinquency petition, adjudication upon which would
mandate |
the minor's disposition as a Violent Juvenile Offender.
|
(c) Petition; service. A notice to seek adjudication as a |
Violent Juvenile
Offender shall be filed only by the State's |
Attorney.
|
The petition upon which the Violent Juvenile Offender |
notice is based shall
contain the information and averments |
required for all other delinquency
petitions filed under this |
Act and its service shall be according to the
provisions of |
this Act.
|
No prior adjudication shall be alleged in the petition.
|
(d) Trial. Trial on the petition shall be by jury unless |
the minor demands,
in open court and with advice of counsel, a |
trial by the court without a jury.
|
Except as otherwise provided in this Section, the |
provisions of this Act
concerning delinquency proceedings |
generally shall be applicable to Violent
Juvenile Offender |
proceedings.
|
(e) Proof of prior adjudications. No evidence or other |
disclosure of prior
adjudications shall be presented to the |
court or jury during an adjudicatory
hearing provided for under |
this Section unless otherwise permitted by the
issues properly |
|
raised in that hearing. In the event the minor who is the
|
subject of these proceedings elects to testify on his or her |
own behalf, it
shall be competent to introduce evidence, for |
purposes of impeachment, that he
or she has previously been |
adjudicated a delinquent minor upon facts which, had
the minor |
been tried as an adult, would have resulted in the minor's |
conviction
of a felony or of any offense that involved |
dishonesty or false statement.
Introduction of such evidence |
shall be according to the rules and
procedures applicable to |
the impeachment of an adult defendant by prior
conviction.
|
After an admission of the facts in the petition or |
adjudication of
delinquency, the State's Attorney may file with |
the court a verified written
statement signed by the State's |
Attorney concerning any prior adjudication of
an offense set |
forth in subsection (a) of this Section that would have
been a |
felony or of any offense that involved
dishonesty or false |
statement had the minor been tried as an adult.
|
The court shall then cause the minor to be brought before |
it; shall inform
the minor of the allegations of the statement |
so filed, of his or her right to
a hearing before the court on |
the issue of the prior adjudication and of his or
her right to |
counsel at the hearing; and unless the minor admits the
|
adjudication, the court shall hear and determine the issue, and |
shall make a
written finding of the issue.
|
A duly authenticated copy of the record of any alleged |
prior
adjudication shall be prima facie evidence of the prior |
|
adjudication or of any
offense that involved dishonesty or |
false statement.
|
Any claim that a previous adjudication offered by the |
State's Attorney is not
a former adjudication of an offense |
which, had the minor been prosecuted as an
adult, would have |
resulted in his or her conviction of a Class 2 or greater
|
felony involving the
use or threat of force or violence, or a |
firearm, a felony or of any offense
that involved dishonesty or |
false statement is waived unless duly raised
at the hearing on |
the adjudication, or unless the State's Attorney's proof
shows |
that the prior adjudication was not based upon proof of what |
would have
been a felony.
|
(f) Disposition. If the court finds that the prerequisites |
established in
subsection (a) of this Section have been proven, |
it shall adjudicate the minor
a Violent Juvenile Offender and |
commit the minor to the Department of
Juvenile Justice until |
his or her 21st birthday, without possibility of aftercare |
release
parole , furlough, or non-emergency authorized absence. |
However, the minor
shall be entitled to earn one day of good |
conduct credit for each day served as
reductions against the |
period of his or her confinement. The good conduct
credits |
shall be earned or revoked according to the procedures |
applicable to
the allowance and revocation of good conduct |
credit for adult prisoners serving
determinate sentences for |
felonies.
|
For purposes of determining good conduct credit, |
|
commitment as a Violent
Juvenile Offender shall be considered a |
determinate commitment, and the
difference between the date of |
the commitment and the minor's 21st birthday
shall be |
considered the determinate period of his or her confinement.
|
(g) Nothing in this Section shall preclude the State's |
Attorney from seeking
to prosecute a minor as a habitual |
juvenile offender or as an adult as an
alternative to |
prosecution as a Violent Juvenile Offender.
|
(h) A continuance under supervision authorized by Section |
5-615
of this Act
shall not be permitted under this Section.
|
(Source: P.A. 94-696, eff. 6-1-06 .)
|
Section 70. The Criminal Code of 2012 is amended by |
changing Sections 11-9.2, 31-1, 31-6, 31-7, and 31A-0.1 as |
follows:
|
(720 ILCS 5/11-9.2)
|
Sec. 11-9.2. Custodial sexual misconduct.
|
(a) A person commits custodial sexual misconduct
when: (1) |
he or
she is an employee of a penal system and engages in |
sexual conduct or sexual
penetration with a person who is in |
the custody of that penal system or (2)
he or she is an |
employee of a treatment and detention facility and engages in
|
sexual conduct or sexual penetration with a person who is in |
the custody of
that
treatment and detention facility.
|
(b) A probation or supervising officer , or surveillance |
|
agent , or aftercare specialist commits custodial
sexual |
misconduct when the probation or supervising officer , or |
surveillance
agent , or aftercare specialist engages in sexual
|
conduct or sexual penetration with a probationer, parolee, or |
releasee or
person serving a term of conditional release who is
|
under the supervisory, disciplinary, or custodial authority of |
the
officer or agent or employee so
engaging in the sexual |
conduct or sexual penetration.
|
(c) Custodial sexual misconduct is a Class 3 felony.
|
(d) Any person convicted of violating this Section |
immediately shall forfeit
his or her employment with a penal |
system, treatment and detention facility,
or conditional |
release program.
|
(e) For purposes of this Section, the consent of the |
probationer, parolee,
releasee, or inmate in custody of the |
penal system or person detained or
civilly committed under the |
Sexually Violent Persons Commitment Act
shall not be a defense |
to a
prosecution under this Section. A person is deemed |
incapable of consent, for
purposes of this Section, when he or |
she is a probationer, parolee, releasee,
or inmate in custody |
of a penal system or person detained or civilly
committed under |
the Sexually Violent Persons Commitment Act.
|
(f) This Section does not apply to:
|
(1) Any employee, probation or supervising officer, or |
surveillance
agent , or aftercare specialist who is |
lawfully
married to a person in custody if the marriage |
|
occurred before the date of
custody.
|
(2) Any employee, probation or supervising officer, or |
surveillance
agent , or aftercare specialist who has no |
knowledge,
and would have no reason to believe, that the |
person with whom he or she
engaged in custodial sexual |
misconduct was a person in custody.
|
(g) In this Section:
|
(0.5) "Aftercare specialist" means any person employed |
by the Department of Juvenile Justice to supervise and |
facilitate services for persons placed on aftercare |
release.
|
(1) "Custody" means:
|
(i) pretrial incarceration or detention;
|
(ii) incarceration or detention under a sentence |
or commitment to a
State or local penal institution;
|
(iii) parole , aftercare release, or mandatory |
supervised release;
|
(iv) electronic home detention;
|
(v) probation;
|
(vi) detention or civil commitment either in |
secure care or in the
community under the Sexually |
Violent Persons Commitment Act.
|
(2) "Penal system" means any system which includes |
institutions as defined
in Section 2-14 of this Code or a |
county shelter care or detention home
established under |
Section 1 of the County Shelter Care and Detention Home |
|
Act.
|
(2.1) "Treatment and detention facility" means any |
Department of Human
Services facility established for the |
detention or civil commitment of persons
under the Sexually |
Violent Persons Commitment Act.
|
(2.2) "Conditional release" means a program of |
treatment and services,
vocational services, and alcohol |
or other drug abuse treatment provided to any
person |
civilly committed and conditionally released to the |
community under
the Sexually Violent Persons Commitment |
Act;
|
(3) "Employee" means:
|
(i) an employee of any governmental agency of this |
State or any county
or
municipal corporation that has |
by statute, ordinance, or court order the
|
responsibility for the care, control, or supervision |
of pretrial or sentenced
persons in a penal system or |
persons detained or civilly committed under the
|
Sexually Violent Persons Commitment Act;
|
(ii) a contractual employee of a penal system as |
defined in paragraph
(g)(2) of
this Section who works |
in a penal institution as defined in Section 2-14 of
|
this Code;
|
(iii) a contractual employee of a "treatment and |
detention facility"
as defined in paragraph (g)(2.1) |
of this Code or a contractual employee of the
|
|
Department of Human Services who provides supervision |
of persons serving a
term of conditional release as |
defined in paragraph (g)(2.2) of this Code.
|
(4) "Sexual conduct" or "sexual penetration" means any |
act of sexual
conduct or sexual penetration as defined in |
Section 11-0.1 of this Code.
|
(5) "Probation officer" means any person employed in a |
probation or court
services department as defined in |
Section 9b of the Probation and Probation
Officers Act.
|
(6) "Supervising officer" means any person employed to |
supervise persons
placed on parole or mandatory supervised |
release with the duties described in
Section 3-14-2 of the |
Unified Code of Corrections.
|
(7) "Surveillance agent" means any person employed or |
contracted to
supervise persons placed on conditional |
release in the community under
the Sexually Violent Persons |
Commitment Act.
|
(Source: P.A. 96-1551, eff. 7-1-11 .)
|
(720 ILCS 5/31-1) (from Ch. 38, par. 31-1)
|
Sec. 31-1. Resisting or obstructing a peace officer, |
firefighter, or correctional
institution employee. |
(a) A person who knowingly resists or obstructs the |
performance by one known
to the person to be a peace officer, |
firefighter, or correctional institution employee of any
|
authorized act within his or her official capacity commits a |
|
Class A misdemeanor.
|
(a-5) In addition to any other sentence that may be |
imposed, a court
shall
order any person convicted of resisting |
or obstructing a peace officer, firefighter, or correctional
|
institution employee to be
sentenced to a minimum of 48 |
consecutive hours of imprisonment or
ordered to perform |
community service for not less than 100 hours as
may be |
determined by the court. The person shall not be eligible for |
probation
in order to reduce the sentence of imprisonment or |
community service.
|
(a-7) A person convicted for a violation of this Section |
whose violation was
the proximate cause of an injury to a peace |
officer, firefighter, or correctional
institution employee is |
guilty of a Class 4
felony.
|
(b) For purposes of this Section, "correctional |
institution employee"
means
any person employed to supervise |
and control inmates incarcerated in a
penitentiary, State farm, |
reformatory, prison, jail, house of correction,
police |
detention area, half-way house, or other institution or place |
for the
incarceration or custody of persons under sentence for |
offenses or awaiting
trial or sentence for offenses, under |
arrest for an offense, a violation of
probation, a violation of |
parole, a violation of aftercare release, or a violation of |
mandatory supervised
release, or awaiting a bail setting |
hearing or preliminary hearing, or who
are
sexually dangerous |
persons or who are sexually violent persons; and "firefighter" |
|
means any individual, either as an employee or volunteer, of a |
regularly
constituted fire department of a municipality or fire |
protection district who
performs fire fighting duties, |
including, but not limited to, the fire chief, assistant fire
|
chief, captain, engineer, driver, ladder person, hose person, |
pipe person, and any
other member of a regularly constituted |
fire department. "Firefighter" also means a person employed by |
the Office of the State Fire Marshal to conduct arson |
investigations.
|
(c) It is an affirmative defense to a violation of this |
Section if a person resists or obstructs the performance of one |
known by the person to be a firefighter by returning to or |
remaining in a dwelling, residence, building, or other |
structure to rescue or to attempt to rescue any person. |
(Source: P.A. 95-801, eff. 1-1-09.)
|
(720 ILCS 5/31-6) (from Ch. 38, par. 31-6)
|
Sec. 31-6. Escape; failure to report to a penal institution |
or to report
for periodic imprisonment. |
(a) A person convicted of a felony or charged with the |
commission of a
felony, or charged with or adjudicated |
delinquent for an act which, if committed by an adult, would |
constitute a felony, who intentionally escapes from any penal |
institution or from the custody
of an employee of that |
institution commits a Class 2 felony; however, a person
|
convicted of a felony, or adjudicated delinquent for an act |
|
which, if committed by an adult, would constitute a felony, who |
knowingly fails to report to a penal institution or
to report |
for periodic imprisonment at any time or knowingly fails to |
return
from furlough or from work and day release or who |
knowingly fails to abide
by the terms of home confinement is |
guilty of a Class 3 felony.
|
(b) A person convicted of a misdemeanor or charged with the
|
commission of a misdemeanor, or charged with or adjudicated |
delinquent for an act which, if committed by an adult, would |
constitute a misdemeanor, who intentionally escapes from any
|
penal institution or from the custody of an employee of that
|
institution commits a Class A misdemeanor; however, a person |
convicted
of a misdemeanor, or adjudicated delinquent for an |
act which, if committed by an adult, would constitute a |
misdemeanor, who knowingly fails to report to a penal |
institution or to
report for periodic imprisonment at any time |
or knowingly fails to return from
furlough or from work and day |
release or who knowingly fails to abide by
the terms of home |
confinement is guilty of a Class B misdemeanor.
|
(b-1) A person committed to the Department of Human |
Services under the
provisions of the Sexually Violent Persons |
Commitment Act or in detention with
the Department of Human |
Services awaiting such a commitment who intentionally
escapes |
from any secure residential facility or from the custody of an |
employee
of that facility commits a Class 2 felony.
|
(c) A person in the lawful custody of a peace officer for |
|
the alleged
commission of a felony offense or an act which, if |
committed by an adult, would constitute a felony, and who |
intentionally escapes from custody
commits a Class 2 felony; |
however, a person in the lawful custody of a
peace officer for |
the alleged commission of a misdemeanor offense or an act |
which, if committed by an adult, would constitute a |
misdemeanor, who
intentionally escapes from custody commits a |
Class A misdemeanor.
|
(c-5) A person in the lawful custody of a peace officer for |
an alleged
violation of a term or condition of probation, |
conditional discharge, parole, aftercare release,
or mandatory |
supervised release for a felony or an act which, if committed |
by an adult, would constitute a felony, who intentionally |
escapes
from custody is guilty of a Class 2 felony.
|
(c-6) A person in the lawful custody of a peace officer for |
an alleged
violation of a term or condition of supervision, |
probation, or conditional
discharge for a misdemeanor or an act |
which, if committed by an adult, would constitute a |
misdemeanor, who intentionally escapes from custody is
guilty |
of a Class A misdemeanor.
|
(d) A person who violates this Section
while armed with a |
dangerous weapon commits a Class 1 felony.
|
(Source: P.A. 95-839, eff. 8-15-08; 95-921, eff. 1-1-09; |
96-328, eff. 8-11-09.)
|
(720 ILCS 5/31-7) (from Ch. 38, par. 31-7)
|
|
Sec. 31-7. Aiding escape.
|
(a) Whoever, with intent to aid any prisoner in
escaping |
from any penal institution, conveys into the institution or
|
transfers to the prisoner anything for use in escaping commits |
a Class A
misdemeanor.
|
(b) Whoever knowingly aids a person convicted of a felony |
or charged
with the commission of a felony, or charged with or |
adjudicated delinquent for an act which, if committed by an |
adult, would constitute a felony, in escaping from any penal |
institution or
from the custody of any employee of that |
institution commits a Class 2
felony; however, whoever |
knowingly aids a person convicted of a felony
or charged with |
the commission of a felony, or charged with or adjudicated |
delinquent for an act which, if committed by an adult, would |
constitute a felony, in failing to return from furlough
or from |
work and day release is guilty of a Class 3 felony.
|
(c) Whoever knowingly aids a person convicted of a |
misdemeanor or
charged with the commission of a misdemeanor, or |
charged with or adjudicated delinquent for an act which, if |
committed by an adult, would constitute a misdemeanor, in |
escaping from any penal
institution or from the custody of an |
employee of that institution commits
a Class A misdemeanor; |
however, whoever knowingly aids a person convicted
of a |
misdemeanor or charged with the commission of a misdemeanor, or |
charged with or adjudicated delinquent for an act which, if |
committed by an adult, would constitute a misdemeanor, in |
|
failing
to return from furlough or from work and day release is |
guilty of a Class
B misdemeanor.
|
(d) Whoever knowingly aids a person in escaping from any |
public
institution, other than a penal institution, in which he |
is lawfully
detained, or from the custody of an employee of |
that institution, commits a
Class A misdemeanor.
|
(e) Whoever knowingly aids a person in the lawful custody |
of a peace
officer for the alleged commission of a felony |
offense or an act which, if committed by an adult, would |
constitute a felony, in escaping from
custody commits a Class 2 |
felony; however, whoever knowingly aids a
person in the lawful |
custody of a peace officer for the alleged commission of
a |
misdemeanor offense or an act which, if committed by an adult, |
would constitute a misdemeanor, in escaping from custody |
commits a Class A misdemeanor.
|
(f) An officer or employee of any penal institution who |
recklessly
permits any prisoner in his custody to escape |
commits a Class A
misdemeanor.
|
(f-5) With respect to a person in the lawful custody of a |
peace
officer for an alleged violation of a term or condition |
of probation,
conditional discharge, parole, aftercare |
release, or mandatory supervised release for a felony,
whoever |
intentionally aids that person to escape from that custody is |
guilty of
a Class 2 felony.
|
(f-6) With respect to a person who is in the lawful custody |
of a peace
officer for an alleged violation of a term or |
|
condition of supervision,
probation, or conditional discharge |
for a misdemeanor, whoever intentionally
aids that person to |
escape from that custody is guilty of a Class A
misdemeanor.
|
(g) A person who violates this Section while armed with a |
dangerous weapon
commits a Class 2 felony.
|
(Source: P.A. 95-839, eff. 8-15-08; 95-921, eff. 1-1-09; |
96-328, eff. 8-11-09.)
|
(720 ILCS 5/31A-0.1) |
Sec. 31A-0.1. Definitions. For the purposes of this |
Article: |
"Deliver" or "delivery" means the actual, constructive or |
attempted
transfer of possession of an item of contraband, with |
or without consideration,
whether or not there is an agency |
relationship. |
"Employee" means any elected or appointed officer, trustee |
or
employee of a penal institution or of the governing |
authority of the penal
institution, or any person who performs |
services for the penal institution
pursuant to contract with |
the penal institution or its governing
authority. |
"Item of contraband" means any of the following: |
(i) "Alcoholic liquor" as that term is defined in |
Section 1-3.05 of the
Liquor Control Act of 1934. |
(ii) "Cannabis" as that term is defined in subsection |
(a) of Section 3
of the Cannabis Control Act. |
(iii) "Controlled substance" as that term is defined in |
|
the Illinois
Controlled Substances Act. |
(iii-a) "Methamphetamine" as that term is defined in |
the Illinois Controlled Substances Act or the |
Methamphetamine Control and Community Protection Act. |
(iv) "Hypodermic syringe" or hypodermic needle, or any |
instrument
adapted for use of controlled substances or |
cannabis by subcutaneous injection. |
(v) "Weapon" means any knife, dagger, dirk, billy, |
razor, stiletto,
broken bottle, or other piece of glass |
which could be used as a dangerous
weapon. This term |
includes any of the devices or implements designated in
|
subsections (a)(1), (a)(3) and (a)(6) of Section 24-1 of |
this
Code, or any other dangerous weapon or instrument of |
like character. |
(vi) "Firearm" means any device, by whatever name |
known, which is
designed to expel a projectile or |
projectiles by the action of an
explosion, expansion of gas |
or escape of gas, including but not limited to: |
(A) any pneumatic gun, spring gun, or B-B gun which |
expels a single
globular projectile not exceeding .18 |
inch in diameter; or |
(B) any device used exclusively for signaling or |
safety and required
as
recommended by the United States |
Coast Guard or the Interstate Commerce
Commission; or |
(C) any device used exclusively for the firing of |
stud cartridges,
explosive rivets or industrial |
|
ammunition; or |
(D) any device which is powered by electrical |
charging units, such as
batteries, and which fires one |
or several barbs attached to a length of
wire and |
which, upon hitting a human, can send out current |
capable of
disrupting the person's nervous system in |
such a manner as to render him or her incapable of |
normal functioning, commonly referred to as a stun gun |
or taser. |
(vii) "Firearm ammunition" means any self-contained |
cartridge or shotgun
shell, by whatever name known, which |
is designed to be used or adaptable to
use in a firearm, |
including but not limited to: |
(A) any ammunition exclusively designed for use |
with a device used
exclusively for signaling or safety |
and required or recommended by the
United States Coast |
Guard or the Interstate Commerce Commission; or |
(B) any ammunition designed exclusively for use |
with a stud or rivet
driver or other similar industrial |
ammunition. |
(viii) "Explosive" means, but is not limited to, bomb, |
bombshell,
grenade, bottle or other container containing |
an explosive substance of
over one-quarter ounce for like |
purposes such as black powder bombs and
Molotov cocktails |
or artillery projectiles. |
(ix) "Tool to defeat security mechanisms" means, but is |
|
not limited to,
handcuff or security restraint key, tool |
designed to pick locks, popper, or any device or
instrument |
used to or capable of unlocking or preventing from locking |
any handcuff or security restraints, doors to
cells, rooms, |
gates or other areas of the penal institution. |
(x) "Cutting tool" means, but is not limited to, |
hacksaw blade,
wirecutter,
or device, instrument or file |
capable of cutting through metal. |
(xi) "Electronic contraband" for the purposes of |
Section 31A-1.1 of this Article means, but is not limited |
to, any
electronic, video recording device, computer, or |
cellular communications
equipment, including, but not
|
limited to, cellular telephones, cellular telephone |
batteries, videotape
recorders, pagers,
computers, and |
computer peripheral equipment brought into or possessed in |
a
penal institution without the written authorization of |
the Chief Administrative
Officer. "Electronic contraband" |
for the purposes of Section 31A-1.2 of this Article, means, |
but is not limited to, any
electronic, video recording |
device, computer, or cellular communications
equipment, |
including, but not
limited to, cellular telephones, |
cellular telephone batteries, videotape
recorders, pagers,
|
computers, and computer peripheral equipment. |
"Penal institution" means any penitentiary, State farm,
|
reformatory, prison, jail, house of correction, police |
detention area,
half-way house or other institution or place |
|
for the incarceration or
custody of persons under sentence for |
offenses awaiting trial or sentence
for offenses, under arrest |
for an offense, a violation of probation, a
violation of |
parole, a violation of aftercare release, or a violation of |
mandatory supervised release, or
awaiting a bail setting |
hearing or preliminary hearing; provided that where
the place |
for incarceration or custody is housed within another public
|
building this Article shall not apply to that part of the |
building unrelated
to the incarceration or custody of persons.
|
(Source: P.A. 97-1108, eff. 1-1-13.) |
Section 75. The Illinois Controlled Substances Act is |
amended by changing Section 509 as follows:
|
(720 ILCS 570/509) (from Ch. 56 1/2, par. 1509)
|
Sec. 509.
|
Whenever any court in this State grants probation to any |
person that the
court has reason to believe is or has been an |
addict or unlawful possessor
of controlled substances, the |
court shall require, as a condition of
probation, that the |
probationer submit to periodic tests by the Department
of |
Corrections to determine by means of appropriate chemical |
detection
tests whether the probationer is using controlled |
substances. The court may
require as a condition of probation |
that the probationer enter an approved
treatment program, if |
the court determines that the probationer is addicted
to a |
|
controlled substance. Whenever the Parole and Pardon Board |
grants
parole or aftercare release to a person whom the Board |
has reason to believe has been an
unlawful possessor or addict |
of controlled substances, the Board shall
require as a |
condition of parole that the parolee or aftercare releasee |
submit to appropriate
periodic chemical tests by the Department |
of Corrections or the Department of Juvenile Justice to |
determine
whether the parolee or aftercare releasee is using |
controlled substances.
|
(Source: P.A. 77-757.)
|
Section 80. The Code of Criminal Procedure of 1963 is |
amended by changing Sections 102-16, 103-5, 110-5, 110-6.1, |
110-6.3, 112A-2, 112A-20, 112A-22, and 112A-22.10 and by adding |
Section 102-3.5 as follows: |
(725 ILCS 5/102-3.5 new) |
Sec. 102-3.5. "Aftercare release". |
"Aftercare release" means the conditional and revocable |
release of a person committed to the Department of Juvenile |
Justice under the Juvenile Court Act of 1987, under the |
supervision of the Department of Juvenile Justice.
|
(725 ILCS 5/102-16) (from Ch. 38, par. 102-16)
|
Sec. 102-16. "Parole".
|
"Parole" means the conditional and revocable release of a |
|
person committed to the Department of Corrections
person under |
the supervision of a paroling authority.
|
(Source: P.A. 77-2476.)
|
(725 ILCS 5/103-5) (from Ch. 38, par. 103-5)
|
Sec. 103-5. Speedy trial.)
|
(a) Every person in custody in this State for an alleged |
offense shall
be tried by the court having jurisdiction within |
120 days from the date he or she
was taken into custody unless |
delay is occasioned by the defendant, by an
examination for |
fitness ordered pursuant to Section 104-13 of this Act, by
a |
fitness hearing, by an adjudication of unfitness to stand |
trial, by a
continuance allowed pursuant to Section 114-4 of |
this Act after a court's
determination of the defendant's |
physical incapacity for trial, or by an
interlocutory appeal. |
Delay shall be considered to be agreed to by the
defendant |
unless he or she objects to the delay by making a written |
demand for
trial or an oral demand for trial on the record. The |
provisions of this subsection
(a) do not apply to a person on |
bail or recognizance for an offense
but who is in custody for a |
violation of his or her parole , aftercare release, or mandatory
|
supervised release for another offense.
|
The 120-day term must be one continuous period of |
incarceration. In
computing the 120-day term, separate periods |
of incarceration may not be
combined. If a defendant is taken |
into custody a second (or subsequent) time
for the same |
|
offense, the term will begin again at day zero.
|
(b) Every person on bail or recognizance shall be tried by |
the court
having jurisdiction within 160 days from the date |
defendant demands
trial unless delay is occasioned by the |
defendant, by an examination for
fitness ordered pursuant to |
Section 104-13 of this Act, by a fitness
hearing, by an |
adjudication of unfitness to stand trial, by a continuance
|
allowed pursuant to Section 114-4 of this Act after a court's |
determination
of the defendant's physical incapacity for |
trial, or by an interlocutory
appeal. The defendant's failure |
to appear for any court date set by the
court operates to waive |
the defendant's demand for trial made under this
subsection.
|
For purposes of computing the 160 day period under this |
subsection (b),
every person who was in custody for an alleged |
offense and demanded trial
and is subsequently released on bail |
or recognizance and demands trial,
shall be given credit for |
time spent in custody following the making of the
demand while |
in custody. Any demand for trial made under this
subsection (b)
|
shall be in writing; and in the
case of a defendant not in |
custody, the
demand for trial shall include the date of any |
prior demand made under this
provision while the defendant was |
in custody.
|
(c) If the court determines that the State has exercised |
without
success due diligence to obtain evidence material to |
the case and that
there are reasonable grounds to believe that |
such evidence may be
obtained at a later day the court may |
|
continue the cause on application
of the State for not more |
than an additional 60 days. If the court
determines that the |
State has exercised without success due diligence to
obtain |
results of DNA testing that is material to the case and that |
there
are reasonable grounds to believe that such results may |
be obtained at a
later day, the court may continue the cause on |
application of the State for
not more than an additional 120 |
days.
|
(d) Every person not tried in accordance with subsections |
(a), (b)
and (c) of this Section shall be discharged from |
custody or released
from the obligations of his bail or |
recognizance.
|
(e) If a person is simultaneously in custody upon more than |
one
charge pending against him in the same county, or |
simultaneously demands
trial upon more than one charge pending |
against him in the same county,
he shall be tried, or adjudged |
guilty after waiver of trial, upon at
least one such charge |
before expiration relative to any of such pending
charges of |
the period prescribed by subsections (a) and (b) of this
|
Section. Such person shall be tried upon all of the remaining |
charges
thus pending within 160 days from the date on which |
judgment relative to
the first charge thus prosecuted is |
rendered pursuant to the Unified Code of
Corrections or, if |
such trial upon such first charge is terminated
without |
judgment and there is no subsequent trial of, or adjudication |
of
guilt after waiver of trial of, such first charge within a |
|
reasonable
time, the person shall be tried upon all of the |
remaining charges thus
pending within 160 days from the date on |
which such trial is terminated;
if either such period of 160 |
days expires without the commencement of
trial of, or |
adjudication of guilt after waiver of trial of, any of such
|
remaining charges thus pending, such charge or charges shall be
|
dismissed and barred for want of prosecution unless delay is |
occasioned
by the defendant, by an examination for fitness |
ordered pursuant to
Section 104-13 of this Act, by a fitness |
hearing, by an adjudication
of unfitness for trial, by a |
continuance allowed pursuant to Section
114-4 of this Act after |
a court's determination of the defendant's
physical incapacity |
for trial, or by an interlocutory appeal; provided,
however, |
that if the court determines that the State has exercised
|
without success due diligence to obtain evidence material to |
the case
and that there are reasonable grounds to believe that |
such evidence may
be obtained at a later day the court may |
continue the cause on
application of the State for not more |
than an additional 60 days.
|
(f) Delay occasioned by the defendant shall temporarily |
suspend for
the time of the delay the period within which a |
person shall be tried as
prescribed by subsections (a), (b), or |
(e) of this Section and on the
day of expiration of the delay |
the said period shall continue at the
point at which it was |
suspended. Where such delay occurs within 21 days
of the end of |
the period within which a person shall be tried as
prescribed |
|
by subsections (a), (b), or (e) of this Section, the court
may |
continue the cause on application of the State for not more |
than an
additional 21 days beyond the period prescribed by |
subsections (a), (b), or
(e). This subsection (f) shall become |
effective on, and apply to persons
charged with alleged |
offenses committed on or after, March 1, 1977.
|
(Source: P.A. 94-1094, eff. 1-26-07.)
|
(725 ILCS 5/110-5) (from Ch. 38, par. 110-5)
|
Sec. 110-5. Determining the amount of bail and conditions |
of release.
|
(a) In determining the amount of monetary bail or |
conditions of release, if
any,
which will reasonably assure the |
appearance of a defendant as required or
the safety of any |
other person or the community and the likelihood of
compliance |
by the
defendant with all the conditions of bail, the court |
shall, on the
basis of available information, take into account |
such matters as the
nature and circumstances of the offense |
charged, whether the evidence
shows that as part of the offense |
there was a use of violence or threatened
use of violence, |
whether the offense involved corruption of public
officials or |
employees, whether there was physical harm or threats of |
physical
harm to any
public official, public employee, judge, |
prosecutor, juror or witness,
senior citizen, child or |
handicapped person, whether evidence shows that
during the |
offense or during the arrest the defendant possessed or used a
|
|
firearm, machine gun, explosive or metal piercing ammunition or |
explosive
bomb device or any military or paramilitary armament,
|
whether the evidence
shows that the offense committed was |
related to or in furtherance of the
criminal activities of an |
organized gang or was motivated by the defendant's
membership |
in or allegiance to an organized gang,
the condition of the
|
victim, any written statement submitted by the victim or |
proffer or
representation by the State regarding the
impact |
which the alleged criminal conduct has had on the victim and |
the
victim's concern, if any, with further contact with the |
defendant if
released on bail, whether the offense was based on |
racial, religious,
sexual orientation or ethnic hatred,
the |
likelihood of the filing of a greater charge, the likelihood of
|
conviction, the sentence applicable upon conviction, the |
weight of the evidence
against such defendant, whether there |
exists motivation or ability to
flee, whether there is any |
verification as to prior residence, education,
or family ties |
in the local jurisdiction, in another county,
state or foreign |
country, the defendant's employment, financial resources,
|
character and mental condition, past conduct, prior use of |
alias names or
dates of birth, and length of residence in the |
community,
the consent of the defendant to periodic drug |
testing in accordance with
Section 110-6.5,
whether a foreign |
national defendant is lawfully admitted in the United
States of |
America, whether the government of the foreign national
|
maintains an extradition treaty with the United States by which |
|
the foreign
government will extradite to the United States its |
national for a trial for
a crime allegedly committed in the |
United States, whether the defendant is
currently subject to |
deportation or exclusion under the immigration laws of
the |
United States, whether the defendant, although a United States |
citizen,
is considered under the law of any foreign state a |
national of that state
for the purposes of extradition or |
non-extradition to the United States,
the amount of unrecovered |
proceeds lost as a result of
the alleged offense, the
source of |
bail funds tendered or sought to be tendered for bail,
whether |
from the totality of the court's consideration,
the loss of |
funds posted or sought to be posted for bail will not deter the
|
defendant from flight, whether the evidence shows that the |
defendant is
engaged in significant
possession, manufacture, |
or delivery of a controlled substance or cannabis,
either |
individually or in consort with others,
whether at the time of |
the offense
charged he or she was on bond or pre-trial release |
pending trial, probation,
periodic imprisonment or conditional |
discharge pursuant to this Code or the
comparable Code of any |
other state or federal jurisdiction, whether the
defendant is |
on bond or
pre-trial release pending the imposition or |
execution of sentence or appeal of
sentence for any offense |
under the laws of Illinois or any other state or
federal |
jurisdiction, whether the defendant is under parole , aftercare |
release, or mandatory
supervised release , or
work release from |
the Illinois Department of Corrections or Illinois Department |
|
of Juvenile Justice or any penal
institution or corrections |
department of any state or federal
jurisdiction, the |
defendant's record of convictions, whether the defendant has |
been
convicted of a misdemeanor or ordinance offense in |
Illinois or similar
offense in other state or federal |
jurisdiction within the 10 years
preceding the current charge |
or convicted of a felony in Illinois, whether
the defendant was |
convicted of an offense in another state or federal
|
jurisdiction that would
be a felony if committed in Illinois |
within the 20 years preceding the
current charge or has been |
convicted of such felony and released from the
penitentiary |
within 20 years preceding the current charge if a
penitentiary |
sentence was imposed in Illinois or other state or federal
|
jurisdiction, the defendant's records of juvenile adjudication |
of delinquency in any
jurisdiction, any record of appearance or |
failure to appear by
the defendant at
court proceedings, |
whether there was flight to avoid arrest or
prosecution, |
whether the defendant escaped or
attempted to escape to avoid |
arrest, whether the defendant refused to
identify himself or |
herself , or whether there was a refusal by the defendant to be
|
fingerprinted as required by law. Information used by the court |
in its
findings or stated in or
offered in connection with this |
Section may be by way of proffer based upon
reliable |
information offered by the State or defendant.
All evidence |
shall be admissible if it is relevant and
reliable regardless |
of whether it would be admissible under the rules of
evidence |
|
applicable at criminal trials.
If the State presents evidence |
that the offense committed by the defendant
was related to or |
in furtherance of the criminal activities of an organized
gang |
or was motivated by the defendant's membership in or allegiance |
to an
organized gang, and if the court determines that the |
evidence may be
substantiated, the court shall prohibit the |
defendant from associating with
other members of the organized |
gang as a condition of bail or release.
For the purposes of |
this Section,
"organized gang" has the meaning ascribed to it |
in Section 10 of the Illinois
Streetgang Terrorism Omnibus |
Prevention Act.
|
(b) The amount of bail shall be:
|
(1) Sufficient to assure compliance with the |
conditions set forth in the
bail bond, which shall include |
the defendant's current address with a written
|
admonishment to the defendant that he or she must comply |
with the provisions of
Section 110-12 regarding any change |
in his or her address. The defendant's
address shall at all |
times remain a matter of public record with the clerk
of |
the court.
|
(2) Not oppressive.
|
(3) Considerate of the financial ability of the |
accused.
|
(4) When a person is charged with a drug related |
offense involving
possession or delivery of cannabis or |
possession or delivery of a
controlled substance as defined |
|
in the Cannabis Control Act,
the Illinois Controlled |
Substances Act, or the Methamphetamine Control and |
Community Protection Act, the full street value
of the |
drugs seized shall be considered. "Street value" shall be
|
determined by the court on the basis of a proffer by the |
State based upon
reliable information of a law enforcement |
official contained in a written
report as to the amount |
seized and such proffer may be used by the court as
to the |
current street value of the smallest unit of the drug |
seized.
|
(b-5) Upon the filing of a written request demonstrating |
reasonable cause, the State's Attorney may request a source of |
bail hearing either before or after the posting of any funds.
|
If the hearing is granted, before the posting of any bail, the |
accused must file a written notice requesting that the court |
conduct a source of bail hearing. The notice must be |
accompanied by justifying affidavits stating the legitimate |
and lawful source of funds for bail. At the hearing, the court |
shall inquire into any matters stated in any justifying |
affidavits, and may also inquire into matters appropriate to |
the determination which shall include, but are not limited to, |
the following: |
(1) the background, character, reputation, and |
relationship to the accused of any surety; and |
(2) the source of any money or property deposited by |
any surety, and whether any such money or property |
|
constitutes the fruits of criminal or unlawful conduct; and |
(3) the source of any money posted as cash bail, and |
whether any such money constitutes the fruits of criminal |
or unlawful conduct; and |
(4) the background, character, reputation, and |
relationship to the accused of the person posting cash |
bail. |
Upon setting the hearing, the court shall examine, under |
oath, any persons who may possess material information. |
The State's Attorney has a right to attend the hearing, to |
call witnesses and to examine any witness in the proceeding. |
The court shall, upon request of the State's Attorney, continue |
the proceedings for a reasonable period to allow the State's |
Attorney to investigate the matter raised in any testimony or |
affidavit.
If the hearing is granted after the accused has |
posted bail, the court shall conduct a hearing consistent with |
this subsection (b-5). At the conclusion of the hearing, the |
court must issue an order either approving of disapproving the |
bail.
|
(c) When a person is charged with an offense punishable by |
fine only the
amount of the bail shall not exceed double the |
amount of the maximum penalty.
|
(d) When a person has been convicted of an offense and only |
a fine has
been imposed the amount of the bail shall not exceed |
double the amount of
the fine.
|
(e) The State may appeal any order granting bail or setting
|
|
a given amount for bail. |
(f) When a person is charged with a violation of an order |
of protection under Section 12-3.4 or 12-30 of the Criminal |
Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012, |
(1) whether the alleged incident involved harassment |
or abuse, as defined in the Illinois Domestic Violence Act |
of 1986; |
(2) whether the person has a history of domestic |
violence, as defined in the Illinois Domestic Violence Act, |
or a history of other criminal acts; |
(3) based on the mental health of the person; |
(4) whether the person has a history of violating the |
orders of any court or governmental entity; |
(5) whether the person has been, or is, potentially a |
threat to any other person; |
(6) whether the person has access to deadly weapons or |
a history of using deadly weapons; |
(7) whether the person has a history of abusing alcohol |
or any controlled substance; |
(8) based on the severity of the alleged incident that |
is the basis of the alleged offense, including, but not |
limited to, the duration of the current incident, and |
whether the alleged incident involved physical injury, |
sexual assault, strangulation, abuse during the alleged |
victim's pregnancy, abuse of pets, or forcible entry to |
gain access to the alleged victim; |
|
(9) whether a separation of the person from the alleged |
victim or a termination of the relationship between the |
person and the alleged victim has recently occurred or is |
pending; |
(10) whether the person has exhibited obsessive or |
controlling behaviors toward the alleged victim, |
including, but not limited to, stalking, surveillance, or |
isolation of the alleged victim or victim's family member |
or members; |
(11) whether the person has expressed suicidal or |
homicidal ideations; |
(12) based on any information contained in the |
complaint and any police reports, affidavits, or other |
documents accompanying the complaint, |
the court may, in its discretion, order the respondent to |
undergo a risk assessment evaluation conducted by an Illinois |
Department of Human Services approved partner abuse |
intervention program provider, pretrial service, probation, or |
parole agency. These agencies shall have access to summaries of |
the defendant's criminal history, which shall not include |
victim interviews or information, for the risk evaluation. |
Based on the information collected from the 12 points to be |
considered at a bail hearing for a violation of an order of |
protection, the results of any risk evaluation conducted and |
the other circumstances of the violation, the court may order |
that the person, as a condition of bail, be placed under |
|
electronic surveillance as provided in Section 5-8A-7 of the |
Unified Code of Corrections.
|
(Source: P.A. 96-688, eff. 8-25-09; 96-1551, eff. 7-1-11; |
97-1150, eff. 1-25-13.)
|
(725 ILCS 5/110-6.1) (from Ch. 38, par. 110-6.1)
|
Sec. 110-6.1. Denial of bail in non-probationable felony |
offenses.
|
(a) Upon verified petition by the State, the court shall |
hold a hearing to
determine whether bail should be denied to a |
defendant who is charged with
a felony offense for which a |
sentence of imprisonment, without probation,
periodic |
imprisonment or conditional discharge, is required by law upon
|
conviction, when it is alleged that the defendant's admission |
to bail poses
a real and present threat to the physical safety |
of any person or persons.
|
(1) A petition may be filed without prior notice to the |
defendant at the
first appearance before a judge, or within |
the 21 calendar days, except as
provided in Section 110-6, |
after arrest and release of the defendant upon
reasonable |
notice to defendant; provided that while such petition is
|
pending before the court, the defendant if previously |
released shall not be
detained.
|
(2) The hearing shall be held immediately upon the |
defendant's appearance
before the court, unless for good |
cause shown the defendant or the State
seeks a continuance. |
|
A continuance on motion of the
defendant may not exceed 5 |
calendar days, and a continuance on the motion
of the State |
may not exceed 3 calendar days. The defendant may be held |
in
custody during such continuance.
|
(b) The court may deny bail to the defendant where, after |
the hearing, it
is determined that:
|
(1) the proof is evident or the presumption great that |
the defendant has
committed an offense for which a sentence |
of imprisonment, without
probation, periodic imprisonment |
or conditional discharge, must be imposed
by law as a |
consequence of conviction, and
|
(2) the defendant poses a real and present threat to |
the physical safety
of any person or persons, by conduct |
which may include, but is not limited
to, a forcible |
felony, the obstruction of justice,
intimidation, injury, |
physical harm, an offense under the Illinois
Controlled |
Substances Act which is a Class X felony, or an offense |
under the Methamphetamine Control and Community Protection |
Act which is a Class X felony, and
|
(3) the court finds that no condition or combination of |
conditions set
forth in subsection (b) of Section 110-10 of |
this Article,
can reasonably assure the physical safety of |
any other person or persons.
|
(c) Conduct of the hearings.
|
(1) The hearing on the defendant's culpability and |
dangerousness shall be
conducted in accordance with the |
|
following provisions:
|
(A) Information used by the court in its findings |
or stated in or
offered at such hearing may be by way |
of proffer based upon reliable
information offered by |
the State or by defendant. Defendant has the right to
|
be represented by counsel, and if he is indigent, to |
have counsel appointed
for him. Defendant shall have |
the opportunity to testify, to present
witnesses in his |
own behalf, and to cross-examine witnesses if any are
|
called by the State. The defendant has the right to |
present witnesses in
his favor. When the ends of |
justice so require, the court may exercises
its |
discretion and compel the appearance of a complaining
|
witness. The court shall state on the record reasons |
for granting a
defense request to compel the presence |
of a complaining witness.
Cross-examination of a |
complaining witness at the pretrial detention hearing
|
for the purpose of impeaching the witness' credibility |
is insufficient reason
to compel the presence of the |
witness. In deciding whether to compel the
appearance |
of a complaining witness, the court shall be |
considerate of the
emotional and physical well-being |
of the witness. The pre-trial detention
hearing is not |
to be used for purposes of discovery, and the post
|
arraignment rules of discovery do not apply. The State |
shall tender to the
defendant, prior to the hearing, |
|
copies of defendant's criminal history, if
any, if |
available, and any written or recorded statements and |
the substance
of any oral statements made by any |
person, if relied upon by the State in
its petition. |
The rules concerning the admissibility of evidence in
|
criminal trials do not apply to the presentation and |
consideration of
information at the hearing. At the |
trial concerning the offense for which
the hearing was |
conducted neither the finding of the court nor any
|
transcript or other record of the hearing shall be |
admissible in the
State's case in chief, but shall be |
admissible for impeachment, or as
provided in Section |
115-10.1 of this Code, or in a perjury proceeding.
|
(B) A motion by the defendant to suppress evidence |
or to suppress a
confession shall not be entertained. |
Evidence that proof may have been
obtained as the |
result of an unlawful search and seizure or through
|
improper interrogation is not relevant to this state of |
the prosecution.
|
(2) The facts relied upon by the court to support a |
finding that the
defendant poses a real and present threat |
to the physical safety of any
person or persons shall be |
supported by clear and convincing evidence
presented by the |
State.
|
(d) Factors to be considered in making a determination of |
dangerousness.
The court may, in determining whether the |
|
defendant poses a real and
present threat to the physical |
safety of any person or persons, consider but
shall not be |
limited to evidence or testimony concerning:
|
(1) The nature and circumstances of any offense |
charged, including
whether the offense is a crime of |
violence, involving a weapon.
|
(2) The history and characteristics of the defendant |
including:
|
(A) Any evidence of the defendant's prior criminal |
history indicative of
violent, abusive or assaultive |
behavior, or lack of such behavior. Such
evidence may |
include testimony or documents received in juvenile
|
proceedings, criminal, quasi-criminal, civil |
commitment, domestic relations
or other proceedings.
|
(B) Any evidence of the defendant's psychological, |
psychiatric or other
similar social history which |
tends to indicate a violent, abusive, or
assaultive |
nature, or lack of any such history.
|
(3) The identity of any person or persons to whose |
safety the defendant
is believed to pose a threat, and the |
nature of the threat;
|
(4) Any statements made by, or attributed to the |
defendant, together with
the circumstances surrounding |
them;
|
(5) The age and physical condition of any person |
assaulted
by the defendant;
|
|
(6) Whether the defendant is known to possess or have |
access to any
weapon or weapons;
|
(7) Whether, at the time of the current offense or any |
other offense or
arrest, the defendant was on probation, |
parole, aftercare release, mandatory supervised
release or |
other release from custody pending trial, sentencing, |
appeal or
completion of sentence for an offense under |
federal or state law;
|
(8) Any other factors, including those listed in |
Section 110-5 of this
Article deemed by the court to have a |
reasonable bearing upon the
defendant's propensity or |
reputation for violent, abusive or assaultive
behavior, or |
lack of such behavior.
|
(e) Detention order. The court shall, in any order for |
detention:
|
(1) briefly summarize the evidence of the defendant's |
culpability and its
reasons for concluding that the |
defendant should be held without bail;
|
(2) direct that the defendant be committed to the |
custody of the sheriff
for confinement in the county jail |
pending trial;
|
(3) direct that the defendant be given a reasonable |
opportunity for
private consultation with counsel, and for |
communication with others of his
choice by visitation, mail |
and telephone; and
|
(4) direct that the sheriff deliver the defendant as |
|
required for
appearances in connection with court |
proceedings.
|
(f) If the court enters an order for the detention of the |
defendant
pursuant to subsection (e) of this Section, the |
defendant
shall be brought to trial on the offense for which he |
is
detained within 90 days after the date on which the order |
for detention was
entered. If the defendant is not brought to |
trial within the 90 day period
required by the preceding |
sentence, he shall not be held longer without
bail. In |
computing the 90 day period, the court shall omit any period of
|
delay resulting from a continuance granted at the request of |
the defendant.
|
(g) Rights of the defendant. Any person shall be entitled |
to appeal any
order entered under this Section denying bail to |
the defendant.
|
(h) The State may appeal any order entered under this |
Section denying any
motion for denial of bail.
|
(i) Nothing in this Section shall be construed as modifying |
or limiting
in any way the defendant's presumption of innocence |
in further criminal
proceedings.
|
(Source: P.A. 94-556, eff. 9-11-05.)
|
(725 ILCS 5/110-6.3) (from Ch. 38, par. 110-6.3)
|
Sec. 110-6.3. Denial of bail in stalking and aggravated |
stalking
offenses. |
(a) Upon verified petition by the State, the court shall |
|
hold a
hearing to determine whether bail should be denied to a |
defendant who is
charged with
stalking or aggravated stalking, |
when it is alleged that the defendant's
admission to bail poses |
a real and present threat to the physical safety of
the alleged |
victim of the offense, and denial of release on bail or
|
personal recognizance is necessary to prevent fulfillment of |
the threat
upon which the charge is based.
|
(1) A petition may be filed without prior notice to the |
defendant at the
first appearance before a judge, or within |
21 calendar days, except as
provided in Section 110-6, |
after arrest and release of the defendant upon
reasonable |
notice to defendant; provided that while the petition is
|
pending before the court, the defendant if previously |
released shall not be
detained.
|
(2) The hearing shall be held immediately upon the |
defendant's
appearance before the court, unless for good |
cause shown the defendant or
the State seeks a continuance. |
A continuance on motion of the defendant
may not exceed 5 |
calendar days, and the defendant may be held in custody
|
during the continuance. A continuance on the motion of the |
State may not
exceed 3 calendar days; however, the |
defendant may be held in custody
during the continuance |
under this provision if the defendant has been
previously |
found to have violated an order of protection or has been
|
previously convicted of, or granted court supervision for, |
any of the
offenses set forth in Sections 11-1.20, 11-1.30, |
|
11-1.40, 11-1.50, 11-1.60, 12-2,
12-3.05, 12-3.2, 12-3.3, |
12-4, 12-4.1, 12-7.3, 12-7.4, 12-13,
12-14, 12-14.1, 12-15 |
or 12-16 of the Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code |
of 2012, against the
same person
as the alleged victim of |
the stalking or aggravated stalking offense.
|
(b) The court may deny bail to the defendant when, after |
the hearing, it
is determined that:
|
(1) the proof is evident or the presumption great that |
the defendant has
committed the offense of stalking or |
aggravated stalking; and
|
(2) the defendant poses a real and present threat to |
the physical safety
of the alleged victim of the offense; |
and
|
(3) the denial of release on bail or personal |
recognizance is
necessary to prevent fulfillment of the |
threat upon which the charge is based;
and
|
(4) the court finds that no condition or combination of |
conditions set
forth in subsection (b) of Section 110-10 of |
this Code, including mental
health treatment at a community |
mental health center, hospital, or
facility of the |
Department of Human Services,
can reasonably assure the |
physical safety of the alleged victim of the offense.
|
(c) Conduct of the hearings.
|
(1) The hearing on the defendant's culpability and |
threat to the
alleged victim of the offense shall be
|
conducted in accordance with the following provisions:
|
|
(A) Information used by the court in its findings |
or stated in or
offered
at the hearing may be by way of |
proffer based upon reliable information
offered by the |
State or by defendant. Defendant has the right to be
|
represented by counsel, and if he is indigent, to have |
counsel appointed
for him. Defendant shall have the |
opportunity to testify, to present
witnesses in his own |
behalf, and to cross-examine witnesses if any are
|
called by the State. The defendant has the right to |
present witnesses in
his favor. When the ends of |
justice so require, the court may exercise
its |
discretion and compel the appearance of a complaining
|
witness. The court shall state on the record reasons |
for granting a
defense request to compel the presence |
of a complaining witness.
Cross-examination of a |
complaining witness at the pretrial detention hearing |
for
the purpose of impeaching the witness' credibility |
is insufficient reason
to compel the presence of the |
witness. In deciding whether to compel the
appearance |
of a complaining witness, the court shall be |
considerate of the
emotional and physical well-being |
of the witness.
The pretrial detention hearing is not |
to be used for the purposes of
discovery, and the post |
arraignment rules of discovery do not apply. The
State |
shall tender to the
defendant, prior to the hearing, |
copies of defendant's criminal history, if
any, if |
|
available, and any written or recorded statements and |
the substance
of any oral statements made by any |
person, if relied upon by the State.
The rules |
concerning the admissibility of evidence in
criminal |
trials do not apply to the presentation and |
consideration of
information at the hearing. At the |
trial concerning the offense for which
the hearing was |
conducted neither the finding of the court nor any
|
transcript or other record of the hearing shall be |
admissible in the
State's case in chief, but shall be |
admissible for impeachment, or as
provided in Section |
115-10.1 of this Code, or in a perjury proceeding.
|
(B) A motion by the defendant to suppress evidence |
or to suppress a
confession shall not be entertained. |
Evidence that proof may have been
obtained as the |
result of an unlawful search and seizure or through
|
improper interrogation is not relevant to this state of |
the prosecution.
|
(2) The facts relied upon by the court to support a |
finding that:
|
(A) the
defendant poses a real and present threat |
to the physical safety of the
alleged victim of the |
offense; and
|
(B) the denial of release on bail or personal
|
recognizance is necessary to prevent fulfillment of |
the threat upon which
the charge is based;
|
|
shall be supported by clear and convincing evidence
|
presented by the State.
|
(d) Factors to be considered in making a determination of |
the threat to
the alleged victim of the offense.
The court may, |
in determining whether the defendant poses, at the time of
the |
hearing, a real and
present threat to the physical safety of |
the alleged victim of the offense,
consider but
shall not be |
limited to evidence or testimony concerning:
|
(1) The nature and circumstances of the offense |
charged;
|
(2) The history and characteristics of the defendant |
including:
|
(A) Any evidence of the defendant's prior criminal |
history indicative of
violent, abusive or assaultive |
behavior, or lack of that behavior. The
evidence may |
include testimony or documents received in juvenile
|
proceedings, criminal, quasi-criminal, civil |
commitment, domestic relations
or other proceedings;
|
(B) Any evidence of the defendant's psychological, |
psychiatric or other
similar social history that tends |
to indicate a violent, abusive, or
assaultive nature, |
or lack of any such history.
|
(3) The nature of the threat which is the basis of the |
charge against the defendant;
|
(4) Any statements made by, or attributed to the |
defendant, together with
the circumstances surrounding |
|
them;
|
(5) The age and physical condition of any person |
assaulted
by the defendant;
|
(6) Whether the defendant is known to possess or have |
access to any
weapon or weapons;
|
(7) Whether, at the time of the current offense or any |
other offense or
arrest, the defendant was on probation, |
parole, aftercare release, mandatory supervised
release or |
other release from custody pending trial, sentencing, |
appeal or
completion of sentence for an offense under |
federal or state law;
|
(8) Any other factors, including those listed in |
Section 110-5 of this
Code, deemed by the court to have a |
reasonable bearing upon the
defendant's propensity or |
reputation for violent, abusive or assaultive
behavior, or |
lack of that behavior.
|
(e) The court shall, in any order denying bail to a person |
charged with
stalking or aggravated stalking:
|
(1) briefly summarize the evidence of the defendant's |
culpability and its
reasons for concluding that the |
defendant should be held without bail;
|
(2) direct that the defendant be committed to the |
custody of the sheriff
for confinement in the county jail |
pending trial;
|
(3) direct that the defendant be given a reasonable |
opportunity for
private consultation with counsel, and for |
|
communication with others of his
choice by visitation, mail |
and telephone; and
|
(4) direct that the sheriff deliver the defendant as |
required for
appearances in connection with court |
proceedings.
|
(f) If the court enters an order for the detention of the |
defendant
under subsection (e) of this Section, the defendant |
shall be brought to
trial on the offense for which he is |
detained within 90 days after the date
on which the order for |
detention was entered. If the defendant is not
brought to trial |
within the 90 day period required by this subsection (f),
he |
shall not be held longer without bail. In computing the 90 day |
period,
the court shall omit any period of delay resulting from |
a continuance
granted at the request of the defendant.
The |
court shall immediately notify the alleged victim of the |
offense that the defendant
has been admitted to bail under this |
subsection.
|
(g) Any person shall be entitled to appeal any
order |
entered under this Section denying bail to the defendant.
|
(h) The State may appeal any order entered under this |
Section denying any
motion for denial of bail.
|
(i) Nothing in this Section shall be construed as modifying |
or limiting
in any way the defendant's presumption of innocence |
in further criminal
proceedings.
|
(Source: P.A. 96-1551, Article 1, Section 965, eff. 7-1-11; |
96-1551, Article 2, Section 1040, eff. 7-1-11; 97-1109, eff. |
|
1-1-13; 97-1150, eff. 1-25-13.)
|
(725 ILCS 5/112A-2) (from Ch. 38, par. 112A-2)
|
Sec. 112A-2. Commencement of Actions.
|
(a) Actions for orders of protection are commenced in |
conjunction with a
delinquency petition or a criminal |
prosecution by filing a petition for an
order of protection, |
under the same case number as the delinquency petition
or the |
criminal prosecution, to be granted during pre-trial release of |
a
defendant, with any dispositional order issued under Section |
5-710
of the
Juvenile Court Act of 1987, or as a condition of |
release, supervision,
conditional discharge, probation, |
periodic imprisonment, parole , aftercare release, or
mandatory |
supervised release, or in conjunction with imprisonment or a |
bond
forfeiture warrant, provided that:
|
(i) the violation is alleged in an information, |
complaint, indictment
or delinquency petition on file, and |
the alleged offender and victim are
family or household |
members; and
|
(ii) the petition, which is filed by the State's |
Attorney, names a
victim of the alleged crime as a |
petitioner.
|
(b) Withdrawal or dismissal of any petition for an order of |
protection
prior to adjudication where the petitioner is |
represented by the state
shall operate as a dismissal without |
prejudice.
|
|
(c) Voluntary dismissal or withdrawal of any delinquency |
petition or
criminal prosecution or a finding of not guilty |
shall not require dismissal
of the action for the order of |
protection; instead, in the discretion of
the State's Attorney, |
it may be treated as an independent action and, if
necessary |
and appropriate, transferred to a different court or division.
|
Dismissal of any delinquency petition or criminal prosecution |
shall not
affect the validity of any previously issued order of |
protection, and
thereafter subsection (b) of Section 112A-20 |
shall be inapplicable to that order.
|
(Source: P.A. 90-590, eff. 1-1-99.)
|
(725 ILCS 5/112A-20) (from Ch. 38, par. 112A-20)
|
Sec. 112A-20. Duration and extension of orders.
|
(a) Duration of emergency and interim orders. Unless |
re-opened or
extended or voided by entry of
an order of greater |
duration:
|
(1) Emergency orders issued under Section 112A-17 |
shall be
effective for not less than 14 nor more than 21 |
days;
|
(2) Interim orders shall be effective for up to 30 |
days.
|
(b) Duration of plenary orders. Except as otherwise |
provided in this
Section, a plenary order of protection shall |
be valid for a fixed period
of time not to exceed 2 years.
A |
plenary order of protection entered in conjunction with a |
|
criminal
prosecution shall remain in effect as follows:
|
(1) if entered during pre-trial release, until |
disposition, withdrawal,
or dismissal of the underlying |
charge; if, however, the case is continued as an
|
independent cause of action, the order's duration may be |
for a fixed period
of time not to exceed 2 years;
|
(2) if in effect in conjunction with a bond forfeiture |
warrant, until
final disposition or an additional period
of |
time not
exceeding 2 years; no order of
protection, |
however, shall be terminated by a dismissal that is |
accompanied
by the issuance of a bond forfeiture warrant;
|
(3) until expiration of any supervision, conditional |
discharge,
probation, periodic imprisonment, parole , |
aftercare release, or mandatory supervised release and for |
an additional period of time thereafter not
exceeding 2 |
years; or
|
(4) until the date set by the court for expiration of |
any sentence of
imprisonment and subsequent parole , |
aftercare release, or mandatory supervised release
and for |
an additional period of time
thereafter not exceeding 2 |
years.
|
(c) Computation of time. The duration of an order of |
protection shall
not be reduced by the duration of any prior |
order of protection.
|
(d) Law enforcement records. When a plenary order of |
protection expires
upon the occurrence of a specified event, |
|
rather than upon a specified date
as provided in subsection |
(b), no expiration date shall be entered in
Department of State |
Police records. To remove the plenary order from
those records, |
either party shall request the clerk of the court to file a
|
certified copy of an order stating that the specified event has |
occurred or
that the plenary order has been vacated or modified |
with the sheriff, and the
sheriff shall direct that law |
enforcement records shall be promptly
corrected in accordance |
with the filed order.
|
(e) Extension of Orders. Any emergency, interim or plenary |
order of
protection may be extended one or more times, as |
required, provided that
the requirements of Section 112A-17, |
112A-18 or 112A-19, as appropriate, are satisfied.
If the |
motion for extension is uncontested and petitioner seeks no
|
modification of the order,
the order may be extended on the |
basis of petitioner's motion or
affidavit stating that there |
has been no material change in relevant
circumstances since |
entry of the order and stating the reason for the
requested |
extension. An extension of a plenary order of protection may be |
granted, upon good cause shown, to remain in effect until the |
order of protection is vacated or modified. Extensions may be |
granted only in
open court and not under the provisions of |
Section 112A-17(c), which
applies only when the court is |
unavailable at the close of business or on a
court holiday.
|
(f) Termination date. Any order of protection which would |
expire on a
court holiday shall instead expire at the close of |
|
the next court business day.
|
(g) Statement of purpose. The practice of dismissing or |
suspending a
criminal prosecution in exchange for issuing an |
order of protection
undermines the purposes of this Article. |
This Section shall not be
construed as encouraging that |
practice.
|
(Source: P.A. 95-886, eff. 1-1-09.)
|
(725 ILCS 5/112A-22) (from Ch. 38, par. 112A-22)
|
Sec. 112A-22. Notice of orders.
|
(a) Entry and issuance. Upon issuance
of any order of |
protection, the clerk shall
immediately, or on the next court |
day if an emergency order is
issued in accordance with |
subsection (c) of Section 112A-17,
(i) enter the order on the |
record and file it
in accordance with the circuit court
|
procedures and (ii) provide a file stamped copy of the order to
|
respondent, if present, and to petitioner.
|
(b) Filing with sheriff. The clerk of the issuing judge |
shall, or
the petitioner may, on the same day that an order of |
protection is
issued, file a copy of that order with the |
sheriff or other law enforcement
officials charged with |
maintaining Department of State Police records or
charged with |
serving the order upon respondent.
If the order was issued in |
accordance with subsection (c) of Section 112A-17,
the
clerk |
shall on the next court day, file a certified copy of the order |
with the
Sheriff or other law enforcement officials charged |
|
with maintaining Department
of State Police records. If the |
respondent, at the time of the issuance of the order, is |
committed to the custody of the Illinois Department of |
Corrections or Illinois Department of Juvenile Justice or is on |
parole , aftercare release, or mandatory supervised release, |
the sheriff or other law enforcement officials charged with |
maintaining Department of State Police records shall notify the |
Department of Corrections or Department of Juvenile Justice |
within 48 hours of receipt of a copy of the order of protection |
from the clerk of the issuing judge or the petitioner. Such |
notice shall include the name of the respondent, the |
respondent's IDOC inmate number or IDJJ youth identification |
number , the respondent's date of birth, and the LEADS Record |
Index Number.
|
(c) Service by sheriff. Unless respondent was present in |
court when the
order was issued, the sheriff, other law |
enforcement official or special
process server shall
promptly |
serve that order upon respondent and file proof of such |
service,
in the manner provided for service of process in civil |
proceedings.
Instead of serving the order upon the respondent, |
however, the sheriff, other
law enforcement official, special |
process server, or other persons defined in Section 112A-22.10 |
may serve the respondent
with a short form notification as |
provided in Section 112A-22.10.
If
process has not yet been |
served upon the respondent, it shall be served
with the order |
or short form notification if such service is made by the |
|
sheriff, other law enforcement official, or special process |
server.
|
(c-5) If the person against whom the order of protection is |
issued is
arrested and the written order is issued in |
accordance with subsection (c) of
Section 112A-17
and received |
by the custodial law enforcement agency before the respondent |
or
arrestee is released from custody, the custodial law |
enforcement agent shall
promptly serve the order upon the |
respondent or arrestee before the
respondent or arrestee is |
released from custody. In no event shall detention
of the |
respondent or arrestee be extended for hearing on the petition |
for order
of protection or receipt of the order issued under |
Section 112A-17 of this
Code.
|
(d) Extensions, modifications and revocations. Any order |
extending,
modifying or revoking any order of protection shall |
be promptly recorded,
issued and served as provided in this |
Section.
|
(e) Notice to health care facilities and health care |
practitioners. Upon the request of the petitioner, the clerk of |
the circuit court shall send a certified copy of the order of |
protection to any specified health care facility or health care |
practitioner requested by the petitioner at the mailing address |
provided by the petitioner. |
(f) Disclosure by health care facilities and health care |
practitioners. After receiving a certified copy of an order of |
protection that prohibits a respondent's access to records, no |
|
health care facility or health care practitioner shall allow a |
respondent access to the records of any child who is a |
protected person under the order of protection, or release |
information in those records to the respondent, unless the |
order has expired or the respondent shows a certified copy of |
the court order vacating the corresponding order of protection |
that was sent to the health care facility or practitioner. |
Nothing in this Section shall be construed to require health
|
care facilities or health care practitioners to alter |
procedures related to billing and payment. The health care |
facility or health care practitioner may file the copy of the |
order of protection in the records of a child who is a |
protected person under the order of protection, or may employ |
any other method to identify the records to which a respondent |
is prohibited access. No health care facility or health care |
practitioner shall be civilly or professionally liable for
|
reliance on a copy of an order of protection, except for |
willful and wanton misconduct. |
(g) Notice to schools. Upon the request of the petitioner, |
within 24
hours of the issuance of an order of
protection, the |
clerk of the issuing judge shall
send a certified copy of
the |
order of protection to the day-care facility,
pre-school or |
pre-kindergarten, or private school or the principal
office of |
the public school district or any college or university in |
which any child who
is a protected person under the order of |
protection or any child
of
the
petitioner is enrolled as |
|
requested by the petitioner at the mailing address provided by |
the petitioner.
If the child transfers enrollment to another |
day-care facility, pre-school,
pre-kindergarten,
private |
school, public school, college, or university, the petitioner |
may,
within 24 hours
of the transfer, send to the clerk written |
notice of the transfer, including
the name and
address of the |
institution to which the child is transferring.
Within 24 hours |
of receipt of notice
from the petitioner that a child is |
transferring to another day-care facility,
pre-school, |
pre-kindergarten, private school, public school, college, or
|
university, the clerk shall send a certified copy of the order |
to the institution to which the child
is
transferring. |
(h) Disclosure by schools. After receiving a certified copy |
of an order
of protection that prohibits a respondent's access |
to records, neither a
day-care facility, pre-school, |
pre-kindergarten, public
or private school, college, or |
university nor its employees shall allow a
respondent access to |
a
protected child's records or release information in those |
records to the
respondent. The school shall file
the copy of |
the order of protection in the records of a child who
is a |
protected person under the order of protection. When a child |
who is a
protected person under the order of protection |
transfers to another day-care
facility, pre-school, |
pre-kindergarten, public or private school, college, or
|
university, the institution from which the child is |
transferring may, at the
request of the petitioner, provide,
|
|
within 24 hours of the transfer, written notice of the order of |
protection,
along with a certified copy of the order, to the |
institution to which the child
is
transferring. |
(Source: P.A. 96-651, eff. 1-1-10; 97-50, eff. 6-28-11; 97-904, |
eff. 1-1-13.)
|
(725 ILCS 5/112A-22.10)
|
Sec. 112A-22.10. Short form notification.
|
(a) Instead of personal service of an order of protection |
under Section
112A-22, a sheriff, other law enforcement |
official, special process server, or personnel assigned by the |
Department of Corrections or Department of Juvenile Justice to |
investigate the alleged misconduct of committed persons or |
alleged violations of a parolee's or releasee's conditions of |
parole , aftercare release, or mandatory supervised release
may |
serve a respondent with a short form notification. The short |
form
notification must include the following
items:
|
(1) The respondent's name.
|
(2) The respondent's date of birth, if known.
|
(3) The petitioner's name.
|
(4) The names of other protected parties.
|
(5) The date and county in which the order of |
protection was filed.
|
(6) The court file number.
|
(7) The hearing date and time, if known.
|
(8) The conditions that apply to the respondent, either |
|
in checklist form
or handwritten.
|
(9) The name of the judge who signed the order.
|
(b) The short form notification must contain the following |
notice in bold
print:
|
"The order of protection is now enforceable. You must |
report to the office
of the sheriff or the office of the |
circuit court in (name of county) County to
obtain a copy |
of the order of protection. You are subject to arrest and |
may be
charged with a misdemeanor or felony if you violate |
any of the terms of the
order of protection."
|
(c) Upon verification of the identity of the respondent and |
the existence of
an unserved order of protection against the |
respondent, a sheriff or other law
enforcement official may |
detain the respondent for a reasonable time necessary
to |
complete and serve the short form notification.
|
(d) When service is made by short form notification under |
this Section, it
may be proved by the affidavit of the person |
making the service.
|
(e) The Attorney General shall provide adequate copies of |
the short form
notification form to law enforcement agencies in |
this State.
|
(Source: P.A. 97-50, eff. 6-28-11.)
|
Section 85. The Rights of Crime Victims and Witnesses Act |
is amended by changing Sections 3, 4.5, and 5 as follows:
|
|
(725 ILCS 120/3) (from Ch. 38, par. 1403)
|
Sec. 3. The terms used in this Act, unless the context |
clearly
requires otherwise, shall have the following meanings:
|
(a) "Crime victim" and "victim" mean (1) a person |
physically injured in this State as a
result of a violent crime |
perpetrated or attempted against that person or (2) a
person |
who suffers injury to or loss of property as a result of a |
violent crime
perpetrated or attempted against that person or |
(3) a single
representative who
may be the spouse, parent, |
child or sibling of a person killed as a result of a
violent |
crime perpetrated against the person killed or the spouse, |
parent,
child or sibling of any person granted rights under |
this Act who is physically
or mentally incapable of exercising |
such rights, except where the spouse,
parent, child or sibling |
is also the defendant or prisoner or (4) any person
against |
whom a violent crime has been committed or (5) any person
who |
has suffered personal injury as a result of a violation of |
Section 11-501
of the Illinois Vehicle Code, or of a similar |
provision of a local ordinance,
or of Section 9-3 of the |
Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012 or (6) in |
proceedings under the Juvenile Court Act of 1987, both parents, |
legal guardians, foster parents, or a single adult |
representative of a minor or disabled person who is a crime |
victim.
|
(b) "Witness" means any person who personally observed the |
commission of
a violent crime and who will testify on behalf of |
|
the State of Illinois in
the criminal prosecution of the |
violent crime.
|
(c) "Violent Crime" means any felony in which force or |
threat of force was
used against the victim, or any offense |
involving sexual exploitation, sexual
conduct or sexual |
penetration, or a violation of Section 11-20.1, 11-20.1B, or |
11-20.3 of the Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of |
2012, domestic battery, violation of an order of
protection, |
stalking, or any misdemeanor which results in death or great |
bodily
harm to the victim or any violation of Section 9-3 of |
the Criminal Code of
1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012, or |
Section 11-501 of the Illinois Vehicle
Code, or a similar |
provision of a local ordinance, if the violation resulted
in |
personal injury or death, and includes any action committed by |
a juvenile
that would be a violent crime if committed by an |
adult. For the purposes of
this paragraph, "personal injury" |
shall include any Type A injury as indicated
on the traffic |
accident report completed by a law enforcement officer that
|
requires immediate professional attention in either a doctor's |
office or
medical facility. A type A injury shall include |
severely bleeding wounds,
distorted extremities, and injuries |
that require the injured party to be
carried from the scene.
|
(d) "Sentencing Hearing" means any hearing where a sentence |
is imposed
by the court on a convicted defendant and includes |
hearings conducted
pursuant to Sections 5-6-4, 5-6-4.1, 5-7-2 |
and 5-7-7 of the Unified Code of
Corrections.
|
|
(e) "Court proceedings" includes the preliminary hearing, |
any hearing the
effect of which may be the release of the |
defendant from custody or to alter
the conditions of bond, the |
trial, sentencing hearing, notice of appeal, any
modification |
of sentence, probation revocation hearings , aftercare release |
or parole hearings.
|
(f) "Concerned citizen"
includes relatives of the victim, |
friends of the victim, witnesses to the
crime, or any other |
person associated with the victim or prisoner. |
(Source: P.A. 96-292, eff. 1-1-10; 96-875, eff. 1-22-10; |
96-1551, eff. 7-1-11; 97-572, eff. 1-1-12; 97-1150, eff. |
1-25-13.)
|
(725 ILCS 120/4.5)
|
Sec. 4.5. Procedures to implement the rights of crime |
victims. To afford
crime victims their rights, law enforcement, |
prosecutors, judges and
corrections will provide information, |
as appropriate of the following
procedures:
|
(a) At the request of the crime victim, law enforcement |
authorities
investigating the case shall provide notice of the |
status of the investigation,
except where the State's Attorney |
determines that disclosure of such
information would |
unreasonably interfere with the investigation, until such
time |
as the alleged assailant is apprehended or the investigation is |
closed.
|
(a-5) When law enforcement authorities re-open a closed |
|
case to resume investigating, they shall provide notice of the |
re-opening of the case, except where the State's Attorney |
determines that disclosure of such information would |
unreasonably interfere with the investigation. |
(b) The office of the State's Attorney:
|
(1) shall provide notice of the filing of information, |
the return of an
indictment by which a prosecution for any |
violent crime is commenced, or the
filing of a petition to |
adjudicate a minor as a delinquent for a violent
crime;
|
(2) shall provide notice of the date, time, and place |
of trial;
|
(3) or victim advocate personnel shall provide |
information of social
services and financial assistance |
available for victims of crime, including
information of |
how to apply for these services and assistance;
|
(3.5) or victim advocate personnel shall provide |
information about available victim services, including |
referrals to programs, counselors, and agencies that |
assist a victim to deal with trauma, loss, and grief;
|
(4) shall assist in having any stolen or other personal |
property held by
law enforcement authorities for |
evidentiary or other purposes returned as
expeditiously as |
possible, pursuant to the procedures set out in Section |
115-9
of the Code of Criminal Procedure of 1963;
|
(5) or victim advocate personnel shall provide |
appropriate employer
intercession services to ensure that |
|
employers of victims will cooperate with
the criminal |
justice system in order to minimize an employee's loss of |
pay and
other benefits resulting from court appearances;
|
(6) shall provide information whenever possible, of a |
secure waiting
area during court proceedings that does not |
require victims to be in close
proximity to defendant or |
juveniles accused of a violent crime, and their
families |
and friends;
|
(7) shall provide notice to the crime victim of the |
right to have a
translator present at all court proceedings |
and, in compliance with the federal Americans
with |
Disabilities Act of 1990, the right to communications |
access through a
sign language interpreter or by other |
means;
|
(8) in the case of the death of a person, which death |
occurred in the same
transaction or occurrence in which |
acts occurred for which a defendant is
charged with an |
offense, shall notify the spouse, parent, child or sibling |
of
the decedent of the date of the trial of the person or |
persons allegedly
responsible for the death;
|
(9) shall inform the victim of the right to have |
present at all court
proceedings, subject to the rules of |
evidence, an advocate or other support
person of the |
victim's choice, and the right to retain an attorney, at |
the
victim's own expense, who, upon written notice filed |
with the clerk of the
court and State's Attorney, is to |
|
receive copies of all notices, motions and
court orders |
filed thereafter in the case, in the same manner as if the |
victim
were a named party in the case;
|
(10) at the sentencing hearing shall make a good faith |
attempt to explain
the minimum amount of time during which |
the defendant may actually be
physically imprisoned. The |
Office of the State's Attorney shall further notify
the |
crime victim of the right to request from the Prisoner |
Review Board
information concerning the release of the |
defendant under subparagraph (d)(1)
of this Section;
|
(11) shall request restitution at sentencing and shall |
consider
restitution in any plea negotiation, as provided |
by law; and
|
(12) shall, upon the court entering a verdict of not |
guilty by reason of insanity, inform the victim of the |
notification services available from the Department of |
Human Services, including the statewide telephone number, |
under subparagraph (d)(2) of this Section. |
(c) At the written request of the crime victim, the office |
of the State's
Attorney shall:
|
(1) provide notice a reasonable time in advance of the |
following court
proceedings: preliminary hearing, any |
hearing the effect of which may be the
release of defendant |
from custody, or to alter the conditions of bond and the
|
sentencing hearing. The crime victim shall also be notified |
of the
cancellation of the court proceeding in sufficient |
|
time, wherever possible, to
prevent an unnecessary |
appearance in court;
|
(2) provide notice within a reasonable time after |
receipt of notice from
the custodian, of the release of the |
defendant on bail or personal recognizance
or the release |
from detention of a minor who has been detained for a |
violent
crime;
|
(3) explain in nontechnical language the details of any |
plea or verdict of
a defendant, or any adjudication of a |
juvenile as a delinquent for a violent
crime;
|
(4) where practical, consult with the crime victim |
before the Office of
the State's Attorney makes an offer of |
a plea bargain to the defendant or
enters into negotiations |
with the defendant concerning a possible plea
agreement, |
and shall consider the written victim impact statement, if |
prepared
prior to entering into a plea agreement;
|
(5) provide notice of the ultimate disposition of the |
cases arising from
an indictment or an information, or a |
petition to have a juvenile adjudicated
as a delinquent for |
a violent crime;
|
(6) provide notice of any appeal taken by the defendant |
and information
on how to contact the appropriate agency |
handling the appeal;
|
(7) provide notice of any request for post-conviction |
review filed by the
defendant under Article 122 of the Code |
of Criminal Procedure of 1963, and of
the date, time and |
|
place of any hearing concerning the petition. Whenever
|
possible, notice of the hearing shall be given in advance;
|
(8) forward a copy of any statement presented under |
Section 6 to the
Prisoner Review Board to be considered by |
the Board in making its determination
under subsection (b) |
of Section 3-3-8 of the Unified Code of Corrections.
|
(d) (1) The Prisoner Review Board shall inform a victim or |
any other
concerned citizen, upon written request, of the |
prisoner's release on parole, aftercare release,
mandatory |
supervised release, electronic detention, work release, |
international transfer or exchange, or by the
custodian of the |
discharge of any individual who was adjudicated a delinquent
|
for a violent crime from State custody and by the sheriff of |
the appropriate
county of any such person's final discharge |
from county custody.
The Prisoner Review Board, upon written |
request, shall provide to a victim or
any other concerned |
citizen a recent photograph of any person convicted of a
|
felony, upon his or her release from custody.
The Prisoner
|
Review Board, upon written request, shall inform a victim or |
any other
concerned citizen when feasible at least 7 days prior |
to the prisoner's release
on furlough of the times and dates of |
such furlough. Upon written request by
the victim or any other |
concerned citizen, the State's Attorney shall notify
the person |
once of the times and dates of release of a prisoner sentenced |
to
periodic imprisonment. Notification shall be based on the |
most recent
information as to victim's or other concerned |
|
citizen's residence or other
location available to the |
notifying authority.
|
(2) When the defendant has been committed to the Department |
of
Human Services pursuant to Section 5-2-4 or any other
|
provision of the Unified Code of Corrections, the victim may |
request to be
notified by the releasing authority of the |
approval by the court of an on-grounds pass, a supervised |
off-grounds pass, an unsupervised off-grounds pass, or |
conditional release; the release on an off-grounds pass; the |
return from an off-grounds pass; transfer to another facility; |
conditional release; escape; death; or final discharge from |
State
custody. The Department of Human Services shall establish |
and maintain a statewide telephone number to be used by victims |
to make notification requests under these provisions and shall |
publicize this telephone number on its website and to the |
State's Attorney of each county.
|
(3) In the event of an escape from State custody, the |
Department of
Corrections or the Department of Juvenile Justice |
immediately shall notify the Prisoner Review Board of the |
escape
and the Prisoner Review Board shall notify the victim. |
The notification shall
be based upon the most recent |
information as to the victim's residence or other
location |
available to the Board. When no such information is available, |
the
Board shall make all reasonable efforts to obtain the |
information and make
the notification. When the escapee is |
apprehended, the Department of
Corrections or the Department of |
|
Juvenile Justice immediately shall notify the Prisoner Review |
Board and the Board
shall notify the victim.
|
(4) The victim of the crime for which the prisoner has been |
sentenced
shall receive reasonable written notice not less than |
30 days prior to the
parole or aftercare release hearing |
interview and may submit, in writing, on film, videotape or |
other
electronic means or in the form of a recording or in |
person at the parole or aftercare release hearing
interview
or |
if a victim of a violent crime, by calling the
toll-free number |
established in subsection (f) of this Section, information
for
|
consideration by the Prisoner Review Board. The
victim shall be |
notified within 7 days after the prisoner has been granted
|
parole or aftercare release and shall be informed of the right |
to inspect the registry of parole or aftercare release
|
decisions, established under subsection (g) of Section 3-3-5 of |
the Unified
Code of Corrections. The provisions of this |
paragraph (4) are subject to the
Open Parole Hearings Act.
|
(5) If a statement is presented under Section 6, the |
Prisoner Review Board
shall inform the victim of any order of |
discharge entered by the Board pursuant
to Section 3-3-8 of the |
Unified Code of Corrections.
|
(6) At the written request of the victim of the crime for |
which the
prisoner was sentenced or the State's Attorney of the |
county where the person seeking parole or aftercare release was |
prosecuted, the Prisoner Review Board shall notify the victim |
and the State's Attorney of the county where the person seeking |
|
parole or aftercare release was prosecuted of
the death of the |
prisoner if the prisoner died while on parole or aftercare |
release or mandatory
supervised release.
|
(7) When a defendant who has been committed to the |
Department of
Corrections, the Department of Juvenile Justice, |
or the Department of Human Services is released or discharged |
and
subsequently committed to the Department of Human Services |
as a sexually
violent person and the victim had requested to be |
notified by the releasing
authority of the defendant's |
discharge, conditional release, death, or escape from State |
custody, the releasing
authority shall provide to the |
Department of Human Services such information
that would allow |
the Department of Human Services to contact the victim.
|
(8) When a defendant has been convicted of a sex offense as |
defined in Section 2 of the Sex Offender Registration Act and |
has been sentenced to the Department of Corrections or the |
Department of Juvenile Justice, the Prisoner Review Board shall |
notify the victim of the sex offense of the prisoner's |
eligibility for release on parole, aftercare release,
|
mandatory supervised release, electronic detention, work |
release, international transfer or exchange, or by the
|
custodian of the discharge of any individual who was |
adjudicated a delinquent
for a sex offense from State custody |
and by the sheriff of the appropriate
county of any such |
person's final discharge from county custody. The notification |
shall be made to the victim at least 30 days, whenever |
|
possible, before release of the sex offender. |
(e) The officials named in this Section may satisfy some or |
all of their
obligations to provide notices and other |
information through participation in a
statewide victim and |
witness notification system established by the Attorney
|
General under Section 8.5 of this Act.
|
(f) To permit a victim of a violent crime to provide |
information to the
Prisoner Review Board for consideration by |
the
Board at a parole or aftercare release hearing of a person |
who committed the crime against
the victim in accordance with |
clause (d)(4) of this Section or at a proceeding
to determine |
the conditions of mandatory supervised release of a person
|
sentenced to a determinate sentence or at a hearing on |
revocation of mandatory
supervised release of a person |
sentenced to a determinate sentence, the Board
shall establish |
a toll-free number that may be accessed by the victim of
a |
violent crime to present that information to the Board.
|
(Source: P.A. 96-328, eff. 8-11-09; 96-875, eff. 1-22-10; |
97-457, eff. 1-1-12; 97-572, eff. 1-1-12; 97-813, eff. 7-13-12; |
97-815, eff. 1-1-13.)
|
(725 ILCS 120/5) (from Ch. 38, par. 1405)
|
Sec. 5. Rights of Witnesses.
|
(a) Witnesses as defined in subsection (b) of
Section 3 of |
this Act shall have the following rights:
|
(1) to be notified by the Office of the State's |
|
Attorney of all court
proceedings at which the witness' |
presence is required in a reasonable
amount of time prior |
to the proceeding, and to be notified of the
cancellation |
of any scheduled court proceeding in sufficient time to
|
prevent an unnecessary appearance in court, where |
possible;
|
(2) to be provided with appropriate employer |
intercession services by
the Office of the State's Attorney |
or the victim advocate personnel to
ensure
that employers |
of witnesses will cooperate with the criminal justice |
system
in order to minimize an employee's loss of pay and |
other benefits resulting
from court appearances;
|
(3) to be provided, whenever possible, a secure waiting |
area during
court proceedings that does not require |
witnesses to be in close proximity
to defendants and their |
families and friends;
|
(4) to be provided with notice by the Office of the |
State's Attorney,
where necessary, of the right to have a |
translator
present whenever the witness' presence is |
required and, in compliance with the federal Americans
with |
Disabilities Act of 1990, to be provided with notice of the |
right to communications access through a
sign language |
interpreter or by other means.
|
(b) At the written request of the witness, the witness |
shall:
|
(1) receive notice from the office of the State's |
|
Attorney of any request
for post-conviction review filed by |
the defendant under Article 122 of the Code
of Criminal |
Procedure of 1963, and of the date, time, and place of any |
hearing
concerning the petition for post-conviction |
review; whenever possible, notice
of the hearing on the |
petition shall be given in advance;
|
(2) receive notice by the releasing authority of the |
defendant's discharge
from State custody if the defendant |
was committed to the Department of Human Services under |
Section 5-2-4 or any other
provision of the Unified Code of |
Corrections;
|
(3) receive notice from the Prisoner Review Board of |
the prisoner's escape
from State custody, after the Board |
has been notified of the escape by the
Department of |
Corrections or the Department of Juvenile Justice;
when the |
escapee is apprehended, the Department of Corrections or |
the Department of Juvenile Justice shall
immediately |
notify the Prisoner Review Board and the Board shall notify |
the
witness;
|
(4) receive notice from the Prisoner Review Board of |
the prisoner's
release on parole , aftercare release , |
electronic detention, work release or mandatory supervised
|
release and of the prisoner's final
discharge from parole , |
aftercare release , electronic detention, work release, or |
mandatory
supervised release.
|
(Source: P.A. 94-696, eff. 6-1-06; 95-897, eff. 1-1-09.)
|
|
Section 90. The Privacy of Child Victims of Criminal Sexual |
Offenses Act is amended by changing Section 3 as follows:
|
(725 ILCS 190/3) (from Ch. 38, par. 1453)
|
Sec. 3. Confidentiality of Law Enforcement and Court |
Records. Notwithstanding any other law to the contrary, |
inspection and copying of
law enforcement records maintained by |
any law enforcement agency or circuit
court records maintained |
by any circuit clerk relating to any investigation
or |
proceeding pertaining to a criminal sexual offense, by any |
person, except a
judge, state's attorney, assistant state's |
attorney, psychologist,
psychiatrist, social worker, doctor, |
parent, parole agent, aftercare specialist, probation officer,
|
defendant or defendant's
attorney in any criminal proceeding or |
investigation related thereto, shall
be restricted to exclude |
the identity of any child who is a victim of such
criminal |
sexual offense or alleged criminal sexual offense. A court may |
for
the child's protection and for good cause shown, prohibit |
any person or
agency present in court from further disclosing |
the child's identity.
|
When a criminal sexual offense is committed or alleged to |
have been
committed by a school district employee or any |
individual contractually employed by a school district, a copy |
of the criminal history record information relating to the |
investigation of the offense or alleged offense shall be
|
|
transmitted to the superintendent of schools
of the district |
immediately upon request or if the law enforcement agency knows |
that a school district employee or any individual contractually |
employed by a school district has committed or is alleged to |
have committed a criminal sexual offense, the superintendent of |
schools
of the district shall be immediately provided a copy of |
the criminal history record information. The superintendent |
shall be restricted from specifically
revealing the name of the |
victim without written consent of the victim or
victim's parent |
or guardian.
|
A court may prohibit such disclosure only after giving |
notice and a
hearing to all affected parties. In determining |
whether to prohibit
disclosure of the minor's identity the |
court shall consider:
|
(a) the best interest of the child; and
|
(b) whether such nondisclosure would further a |
compelling State interest.
|
For the purposes of this Act, "criminal history record |
information" means: |
(i) chronologically maintained arrest information, |
such as traditional
arrest logs or blotters; |
(ii) the name of a person in the custody of a law |
enforcement agency and
the charges for which that person is |
being held; |
(iii) court records that are public; |
(iv) records that are otherwise available under State |
|
or local law; or |
(v) records in which the requesting party is the |
individual
identified, except as provided under part (vii) |
of
paragraph (c) of subsection (1) of Section 7 of the |
Freedom of Information Act.
|
(Source: P.A. 95-69, eff. 1-1-08; 95-599, eff. 6-1-08; 95-876, |
eff. 8-21-08.) |
Section 95. The Sexually Violent Persons Commitment Act is |
amended by changing Sections 15, 30, and 40 as follows:
|
(725 ILCS 207/15)
|
Sec. 15. Sexually violent person petition; contents; |
filing.
|
(a) A petition alleging that a person is a sexually violent
|
person must be filed before the release or discharge of the |
person or within 30 days of placement onto parole , aftercare |
release, or mandatory supervised release for an offense |
enumerated in paragraph (e) of Section 5 of this Act. A |
petition may be filed by the following:
|
(1) The Attorney General on his or her own motion, |
after consulting with and advising the State's Attorney of |
the county in which the person was convicted of a sexually |
violent offense, adjudicated delinquent for a sexually |
violent offense or found not guilty of or not responsible |
for a sexually violent offense by reason of insanity, |
|
mental disease, or mental defect; or
|
(2) The State's Attorney of the county referenced in |
paragraph (1)(a)(1) of this Section, on his or her own |
motion; or
|
(3) The Attorney General and the State's Attorney of |
the county referenced in paragraph (1)(a)(1) of this |
Section may jointly file a petition on their own motion; or |
(4) A petition may be filed at the request of the |
agency with jurisdiction over the person, as defined in |
subsection (a) of Section 10 of this Act, by: |
(a) the Attorney General; |
(b) the State's Attorney of the county referenced |
in paragraph (1)(a)(1) of this Section; or |
(c) the Attorney General and the State's Attorney |
jointly.
|
(b) A petition filed under this Section shall allege that |
all of the
following apply to the person alleged to be a |
sexually violent person:
|
(1) The person satisfies any of the following criteria:
|
(A) The person has been convicted of a sexually |
violent offense;
|
(B) The person has been found delinquent for a |
sexually
violent offense; or
|
(C) The person has been found not guilty of a |
sexually
violent offense by reason of insanity, mental |
disease, or mental
defect.
|
|
(2) (Blank).
|
(3) (Blank).
|
(4) The person has a mental disorder.
|
(5) The person is dangerous to others because the |
person's
mental disorder creates a substantial probability |
that he or she
will engage in acts of sexual violence.
|
(b-5) The petition must be filed no more than 90 days |
before discharge or entry into mandatory
supervised release |
from a Department of Corrections or the Department of Juvenile |
Justice correctional facility for
a sentence that was imposed |
upon a conviction for a sexually violent offense. For inmates |
sentenced under the law in effect prior to February 1, 1978, |
the petition shall be filed no more than 90 days after the |
Prisoner Review Board's order granting parole pursuant to |
Section 3-3-5 of the Unified Code of Corrections.
|
(b-6) The petition must be filed no more than 90 days |
before discharge or release:
|
(1) from a Department of Juvenile Justice juvenile |
correctional facility if
the person was placed in the |
facility for being adjudicated delinquent under
Section |
5-20 of the Juvenile Court Act of 1987 or found guilty
|
under Section 5-620 of that Act on the basis of a sexually |
violent offense; or
|
(2) from a commitment order that was entered as a |
result of a sexually
violent offense.
|
(b-7) A person convicted of a sexually violent offense |
|
remains eligible for commitment as a sexually violent person |
pursuant to this Act under the following circumstances:
(1) the |
person is in custody for a sentence that is being served |
concurrently or consecutively with a sexually violent offense;
|
(2) the person returns to the custody of the Illinois |
Department of Corrections or the Department of Juvenile Justice |
for any reason during the term of parole , aftercare release, or |
mandatory supervised release being served for a sexually |
violent offense;
or (3) the person is convicted or adjudicated |
delinquent for any offense committed during the term of parole , |
aftercare release, or mandatory supervised release being |
served for a sexually violent offense, regardless of whether |
that conviction or adjudication was for a sexually violent |
offense.
|
(c) A petition filed under this Section shall state with
|
particularity essential facts to establish probable cause to
|
believe the person is a sexually violent person. If the |
petition
alleges that a sexually violent offense or act that is |
a basis for
the allegation under paragraph (b)(1) of this |
Section was an act
that was sexually motivated as provided |
under paragraph (e)(2) of Section
5 of this Act, the petition |
shall state the grounds on which the
offense or act is alleged |
to be sexually motivated.
|
(d) A petition under this Section shall be filed in either |
of
the following:
|
(1) The circuit court for the county in which the |
|
person was
convicted of a sexually violent offense, |
adjudicated delinquent
for a sexually violent offense or |
found not guilty of a sexually
violent offense by reason of |
insanity, mental disease or mental
defect.
|
(2) The circuit court for the county in which the |
person is
in custody under a sentence, a placement to a |
Department of
Corrections correctional facility or a |
Department of Juvenile Justice juvenile correctional
|
facility, or a commitment order. |
(e) The filing of a petition under this Act shall toll the |
running of the term of parole or mandatory supervised release |
until: |
(1) dismissal of the petition filed under this Act; |
(2) a finding by a judge or jury that the respondent is |
not a sexually violent person; or |
(3) the sexually violent person is discharged under |
Section 65 of this Act.
|
(f) The State has the right to have the person evaluated by |
experts chosen by the State. The agency with jurisdiction as |
defined in Section 10 of this Act shall allow the expert |
reasonable access to the person for purposes of examination, to |
the person's records, and to past and present treatment |
providers and any other staff members relevant to the |
examination. |
(Source: P.A. 96-1128, eff. 1-1-11.)
|
|
(725 ILCS 207/30)
|
Sec. 30. Detention; probable cause hearing; transfer for
|
examination.
|
(a) Upon the filing of a petition under Section 15 of this |
Act,
the court shall review the petition to determine whether |
to issue
an order for detention of the person who is the |
subject of the
petition. The person shall be detained only if |
there is cause to
believe that the person is eligible for |
commitment under subsection (f) of
Section
35 of this Act. A |
person detained under this Section shall be
held in a facility |
approved by the Department. If the person is
serving a sentence |
of imprisonment, is in a Department of
Corrections correctional |
facility or juvenile correctional
facility or is committed to |
institutional care, and the court
orders detention under this |
Section, the court shall order that
the person be transferred |
to a detention facility approved by the
Department. A detention |
order under this Section remains in
effect until the person is |
discharged after a trial under Section
35 of this Act or until |
the effective date of a commitment order
under Section 40 of |
this Act, whichever is applicable.
|
(b) Whenever a petition is filed under Section 15 of this |
Act,
the court shall hold a hearing to determine whether there |
is
probable cause to believe that the person named in the |
petition is
a sexually violent person. If the person named in |
the petition is
in custody, the court shall hold the probable |
cause hearing within
72 hours after the petition is filed, |
|
excluding Saturdays, Sundays
and legal holidays. The court may |
grant a continuance of the probable cause
hearing for no more |
than 7 additional days upon the motion of the respondent,
for |
good cause. If the person named in the petition has been |
released, is
on parole, is on aftercare release, is on |
mandatory supervised release, or otherwise is not in
custody, |
the court shall hold the probable cause hearing within a
|
reasonable time after the filing of the petition.
At the |
probable cause hearing, the court shall admit and consider all
|
relevant hearsay evidence.
|
(c) If the court determines after a hearing that there is
|
probable cause to believe that the person named in the petition |
is
a sexually violent person, the court shall order that the |
person
be taken into custody if he or she is not in custody and |
shall
order the person to be transferred within a reasonable |
time to an
appropriate facility for an evaluation as to whether |
the person is
a sexually violent person.
If the person who is |
named in the petition refuses to speak to, communicate
with, or |
otherwise fails to cooperate with the examining evaluator from |
the
Department of Human Services or the Department of |
Corrections, that person may
only introduce evidence and |
testimony from any expert or professional person
who is |
retained or court-appointed to conduct an examination of the |
person
that results from a review of the records and may not |
introduce evidence
resulting from an examination of the person.
|
Notwithstanding the provisions of Section 10 of
the
Mental |
|
Health and Developmental Disabilities Confidentiality Act, all
|
evaluations conducted pursuant to this Act and all Illinois |
Department of
Corrections treatment records shall be |
admissible at all proceedings held
pursuant to this Act, |
including the probable cause hearing and the trial.
|
If the court determines that probable
cause does not exist |
to believe that the person is a sexually
violent person, the |
court shall dismiss the petition.
|
(d) The Department shall promulgate rules that provide the
|
qualifications for persons conducting evaluations under |
subsection
(c) of this Section.
|
(e) If the person named in the petition claims or appears |
to be
indigent, the court shall, prior to the probable cause |
hearing
under subsection (b) of this Section, appoint
counsel.
|
(Source: P.A. 92-415, eff. 8-17-01; 93-616, eff. 1-1-04; |
93-970, eff. 8-20-04.)
|
(725 ILCS 207/40)
|
(Text of Section before amendment by P.A. 97-1098 ) |
Sec. 40. Commitment.
|
(a) If a court or jury determines that the person who is |
the
subject of a petition under Section 15 of this Act is a |
sexually
violent person, the court shall order the person to be |
committed
to the custody of the Department for control, care |
and treatment
until such time as the person is no longer a |
sexually violent
person.
|
|
(b)(1) The court shall enter an initial commitment order |
under
this Section pursuant to a hearing held as soon as |
practicable
after the judgment is entered that the person who |
is the subject of a
petition under Section 15 is a sexually |
violent person.
If the court lacks sufficient information to |
make the
determination required by paragraph (b)(2) of this |
Section
immediately after trial, it may adjourn the hearing and |
order the
Department to conduct a predisposition investigation |
or a
supplementary mental examination, or both, to assist the |
court in
framing the commitment order. If the Department's |
examining evaluator previously rendered an opinion that the |
person who is the subject of a petition under Section 15 does |
not meet the criteria to be found a sexually violent person, |
then another evaluator shall conduct the predisposition |
investigation and/or supplementary mental examination. A |
supplementary mental examination
under this Section shall be |
conducted in accordance with Section
3-804 of the Mental Health |
and Developmental Disabilities Code.
The State has the right to |
have the person evaluated by experts chosen by the State.
|
(2) An order for commitment under this Section shall |
specify
either institutional care in a secure facility, as |
provided under
Section 50 of this Act, or conditional release. |
In determining
whether commitment shall be for institutional |
care in a secure
facility or for conditional release, the court |
shall consider the
nature and circumstances of the behavior |
that was the basis of the
allegation in the petition under |
|
paragraph (b)(1) of Section 15, the person's
mental history and |
present mental condition, and what
arrangements are available |
to ensure that the person has access to
and will participate in |
necessary treatment.
All treatment, whether in institutional |
care, in a secure facility, or while
on
conditional release, |
shall be conducted in conformance
with the standards developed |
under the Sex Offender Management Board
Act and conducted by a |
treatment provider approved by the Board.
The Department shall
|
arrange for control, care and treatment of the person in the |
least
restrictive manner consistent with the requirements of |
the person
and in accordance with the court's commitment order.
|
(3) If the court finds that the person is appropriate for
|
conditional release, the court shall notify the Department. The
|
Department shall prepare a plan that identifies the treatment |
and
services, if any, that the person will receive in the |
community.
The plan shall address the person's need, if any, |
for
supervision, counseling, medication, community support |
services,
residential services, vocational services, and |
alcohol or other
drug abuse treatment. The Department may |
contract with a county
health department, with another public |
agency or with a private
agency to provide the treatment and |
services identified in the
plan. The plan shall specify who |
will be responsible for
providing the treatment and services |
identified in the plan. The
plan shall be presented to the |
court for its approval within 60
days after the court finding |
that the person is appropriate for
conditional release, unless |
|
the Department and the person to be
released request additional |
time to develop the plan.
The conditional release program |
operated under this Section is not
subject to the provisions of |
the Mental Health and Developmental Disabilities
|
Confidentiality Act.
|
(4) An order for conditional release places the person in
|
the custody and control of the Department. A person on
|
conditional release is subject to the conditions set by the |
court
and to the rules of the Department. Before a person is |
placed on
conditional release by the court under this Section, |
the court
shall so notify the municipal police department and |
county sheriff
for the municipality and county in which the |
person will be
residing. The notification requirement under |
this Section does
not apply if a municipal police department or |
county sheriff
submits to the court a written statement waiving |
the right to be
notified. Notwithstanding any other provision |
in the Act, the person being supervised on conditional release |
shall not reside at the same street address as another sex |
offender being supervised on conditional release under this |
Act, mandatory supervised release, parole, aftercare release, |
probation, or any other manner of supervision. If the |
Department alleges that a released person has
violated any |
condition or rule, or that the safety of others
requires that |
conditional release be revoked, he or she may be
taken into |
custody under the rules of the Department.
|
At any time during which the person is on conditional |
|
release, if the
Department determines that the person has |
violated any condition or rule, or
that the safety of others |
requires that conditional release be revoked, the
Department |
may request the Attorney General or State's Attorney to request |
the
court to issue an emergency ex parte order directing any |
law enforcement
officer
to take the person into custody and |
transport the person to the county jail.
The Department may |
request, or the Attorney General or State's Attorney may
|
request independently of the Department, that a petition to |
revoke conditional
release be filed. When a petition is filed, |
the court may order the Department
to issue a notice to the |
person to be present at the Department or other
agency |
designated by the court, order a summons to the person to be |
present, or
order a body attachment for all law enforcement |
officers to take the person
into custody and transport him or |
her to the county jail, hospital, or
treatment
facility.
The
|
Department shall submit a statement showing probable cause of |
the
detention and a petition to revoke the order for |
conditional
release to the committing court within 48 hours |
after the
detention. The court shall hear the petition within |
30 days,
unless the hearing or time deadline is waived by the |
detained
person. Pending the revocation hearing, the |
Department may detain
the person in a jail, in a hospital or |
treatment facility. The
State has the burden of proving by |
clear and convincing evidence
that any rule or condition of |
release has been violated, or that
the safety of others |
|
requires that the conditional release be
revoked. If the court |
determines after hearing that any rule or
condition of release |
has been violated, or that the safety of
others requires that |
conditional release be revoked, it may revoke
the order for |
conditional release and order that the released
person be |
placed in an appropriate institution until the person is
|
discharged from the commitment under Section 65 of this Act or
|
until again placed on conditional release under Section 60 of |
this
Act.
|
(5) An order for conditional release places the person in |
the custody,
care, and control of the Department. The court |
shall order the person be
subject to the following rules of |
conditional release, in addition to any other
conditions |
ordered, and the person shall be given a certificate setting |
forth
the
conditions of conditional release. These conditions |
shall be that the person:
|
(A) not violate any criminal statute of any |
jurisdiction;
|
(B) report to or appear in person before such person or |
agency as
directed by the court and the Department;
|
(C) refrain from possession of a firearm or other |
dangerous weapon;
|
(D) not leave the State without the consent of the |
court or, in
circumstances in which the reason for the |
absence is of such an emergency
nature, that prior consent |
by the court is not possible without the prior
notification |
|
and approval of the Department;
|
(E) at the direction of the Department, notify third |
parties of the
risks that may be occasioned by his or her |
criminal record or sexual offending
history or |
characteristics, and permit the supervising officer or |
agent to make
the
notification requirement;
|
(F) attend and fully participate in assessment, |
treatment, and behavior
monitoring including, but not |
limited to, medical, psychological or psychiatric
|
treatment specific to sexual offending, drug addiction, or |
alcoholism, to the
extent appropriate to the person based |
upon the recommendation and findings
made in the Department |
evaluation or based upon any subsequent recommendations
by |
the Department;
|
(G) waive confidentiality allowing the court and |
Department access to
assessment or treatment results or |
both;
|
(H) work regularly at a Department approved occupation |
or pursue a
course of study or vocational training and |
notify the Department within
72 hours of any change in |
employment, study, or training;
|
(I) not be employed or participate in any volunteer |
activity that
involves contact with children, except under |
circumstances approved in advance
and in writing by the |
Department officer;
|
(J) submit to the search of his or her person, |
|
residence, vehicle, or
any personal or
real property under |
his or her control at any time by the Department;
|
(K) financially support his or her dependents and |
provide the Department
access
to any requested financial |
information;
|
(L) serve a term of home confinement, the conditions of |
which shall be
that the person:
|
(i) remain within the interior premises of the |
place designated for
his or her confinement during the |
hours designated by the Department;
|
(ii) admit any person or agent designated by the |
Department into the
offender's place of confinement at |
any time for purposes of verifying the
person's |
compliance with the condition of his or her |
confinement;
|
(iii) if deemed necessary by the Department, be |
placed on an
electronic monitoring device;
|
(M) comply with the terms and conditions of an order of |
protection
issued by the court pursuant to the Illinois |
Domestic Violence Act of 1986. A
copy of the order of |
protection shall be
transmitted to the Department by the |
clerk of the court;
|
(N) refrain from entering into a designated geographic |
area except upon
terms the Department finds appropriate. |
The terms may include
consideration of the purpose of the |
entry, the time of day, others accompanying
the person, and |
|
advance approval by the Department;
|
(O) refrain from having any contact, including written |
or oral
communications, directly or indirectly, with |
certain specified persons
including, but not limited to, |
the victim or the victim's family, and
report any |
incidental contact with the victim or the victim's family |
to
the Department within 72 hours; refrain from entering |
onto the premises of,
traveling
past,
or loitering near the |
victim's residence, place of employment, or other places
|
frequented by the victim;
|
(P) refrain from having any contact, including written |
or oral
communications, directly or indirectly, with |
particular types of persons,
including but not limited to |
members of street gangs, drug users, drug dealers,
or |
prostitutes;
|
(Q) refrain from all contact, direct or indirect, |
personally, by
telephone, letter, or through another |
person, with minor children without prior
identification |
and approval of the Department;
|
(R) refrain from having in his or her body the presence |
of alcohol
or any illicit drug prohibited by the Cannabis |
Control Act, the
Illinois
Controlled Substances Act, or the |
Methamphetamine Control and Community Protection Act, |
unless prescribed by a physician, and submit samples
of his |
or her breath, saliva, blood, or urine
for tests to |
determine the
presence of alcohol or any illicit drug;
|
|
(S) not establish a dating, intimate, or sexual |
relationship with a
person without prior written |
notification to the Department;
|
(T) neither possess or have under his or her control |
any material that
is
pornographic, sexually oriented, or |
sexually stimulating, or that depicts or
alludes to sexual |
activity or depicts minors under the age of 18, including |
but
not limited to visual, auditory, telephonic, |
electronic media, or any matter
obtained through access to |
any computer or material linked to computer access
use;
|
(U) not patronize any business providing sexually |
stimulating or
sexually oriented entertainment nor utilize |
"900" or
adult telephone numbers or any other sex-related |
telephone numbers;
|
(V) not reside near, visit, or be in or about parks, |
schools, day care
centers, swimming pools, beaches, |
theaters, or any other places where minor
children |
congregate without advance approval of the Department and |
report any
incidental contact with minor children to the |
Department within 72 hours;
|
(W) not establish any living arrangement or residence |
without prior
approval of the Department;
|
(X) not publish any materials or print any |
advertisements without
providing a copy of the proposed |
publications to the Department officer and
obtaining
|
permission prior to publication;
|
|
(Y) not leave the county except with prior permission |
of the Department
and provide the Department officer or |
agent with written travel routes to and
from work and any |
other designated destinations;
|
(Z) not possess or have under his or her control |
certain specified items
of
contraband related to the |
incidence of sexually offending items including video
or
|
still camera items or children's toys;
|
(AA) provide a written daily log of activities as |
directed by the
Department;
|
(BB) comply with all other special conditions that the |
Department may
impose that restrict the person from |
high-risk situations and limit access or
potential |
victims.
|
(6) A person placed on conditional release and who during |
the term
undergoes mandatory drug or alcohol testing or is |
assigned to be
placed on an approved electronic monitoring |
device may be ordered to pay all
costs incidental to the |
mandatory drug or alcohol testing and all
costs incidental to |
the approved electronic monitoring in accordance with the
|
person's ability to pay those costs. The Department may |
establish reasonable
fees for the cost of maintenance, testing, |
and incidental expenses related to
the mandatory drug or |
alcohol testing and all costs incidental to
approved electronic |
monitoring.
|
(Source: P.A. 96-1128, eff. 1-1-11.)
|
|
(Text of Section after amendment by P.A. 97-1098 ) |
Sec. 40. Commitment.
|
(a) If a court or jury determines that the person who is |
the
subject of a petition under Section 15 of this Act is a |
sexually
violent person, the court shall order the person to be |
committed
to the custody of the Department for control, care |
and treatment
until such time as the person is no longer a |
sexually violent
person.
|
(b)(1) The court shall enter an initial commitment order |
under
this Section pursuant to a hearing held as soon as |
practicable
after the judgment is entered that the person who |
is the subject of a
petition under Section 15 is a sexually |
violent person.
If the court lacks sufficient information to |
make the
determination required by paragraph (b)(2) of this |
Section
immediately after trial, it may adjourn the hearing and |
order the
Department to conduct a predisposition investigation |
or a
supplementary mental examination, or both, to assist the |
court in
framing the commitment order. If the Department's |
examining evaluator previously rendered an opinion that the |
person who is the subject of a petition under Section 15 does |
not meet the criteria to be found a sexually violent person, |
then another evaluator shall conduct the predisposition |
investigation and/or supplementary mental examination. A |
supplementary mental examination
under this Section shall be |
conducted in accordance with Section
3-804 of the Mental Health |
|
and Developmental Disabilities Code.
The State has the right to |
have the person evaluated by experts chosen by the State.
|
(2) An order for commitment under this Section shall |
specify
either institutional care in a secure facility, as |
provided under
Section 50 of this Act, or conditional release. |
In determining
whether commitment shall be for institutional |
care in a secure
facility or for conditional release, the court |
shall consider the
nature and circumstances of the behavior |
that was the basis of the
allegation in the petition under |
paragraph (b)(1) of Section 15, the person's
mental history and |
present mental condition, and what
arrangements are available |
to ensure that the person has access to
and will participate in |
necessary treatment.
All treatment, whether in institutional |
care, in a secure facility, or while
on
conditional release, |
shall be conducted in conformance
with the standards developed |
under the Sex Offender Management Board
Act and conducted by a |
treatment provider licensed under the Sex Offender Evaluation |
and Treatment Provider Act.
The Department shall
arrange for |
control, care and treatment of the person in the least
|
restrictive manner consistent with the requirements of the |
person
and in accordance with the court's commitment order.
|
(3) If the court finds that the person is appropriate for
|
conditional release, the court shall notify the Department. The
|
Department shall prepare a plan that identifies the treatment |
and
services, if any, that the person will receive in the |
community.
The plan shall address the person's need, if any, |
|
for
supervision, counseling, medication, community support |
services,
residential services, vocational services, and |
alcohol or other
drug abuse treatment. The Department may |
contract with a county
health department, with another public |
agency or with a private
agency to provide the treatment and |
services identified in the
plan. The plan shall specify who |
will be responsible for
providing the treatment and services |
identified in the plan. The
plan shall be presented to the |
court for its approval within 60
days after the court finding |
that the person is appropriate for
conditional release, unless |
the Department and the person to be
released request additional |
time to develop the plan.
The conditional release program |
operated under this Section is not
subject to the provisions of |
the Mental Health and Developmental Disabilities
|
Confidentiality Act.
|
(4) An order for conditional release places the person in
|
the custody and control of the Department. A person on
|
conditional release is subject to the conditions set by the |
court
and to the rules of the Department. Before a person is |
placed on
conditional release by the court under this Section, |
the court
shall so notify the municipal police department and |
county sheriff
for the municipality and county in which the |
person will be
residing. The notification requirement under |
this Section does
not apply if a municipal police department or |
county sheriff
submits to the court a written statement waiving |
the right to be
notified. Notwithstanding any other provision |
|
in the Act, the person being supervised on conditional release |
shall not reside at the same street address as another sex |
offender being supervised on conditional release under this |
Act, mandatory supervised release, parole, aftercare release, |
probation, or any other manner of supervision. If the |
Department alleges that a released person has
violated any |
condition or rule, or that the safety of others
requires that |
conditional release be revoked, he or she may be
taken into |
custody under the rules of the Department.
|
At any time during which the person is on conditional |
release, if the
Department determines that the person has |
violated any condition or rule, or
that the safety of others |
requires that conditional release be revoked, the
Department |
may request the Attorney General or State's Attorney to request |
the
court to issue an emergency ex parte order directing any |
law enforcement
officer
to take the person into custody and |
transport the person to the county jail.
The Department may |
request, or the Attorney General or State's Attorney may
|
request independently of the Department, that a petition to |
revoke conditional
release be filed. When a petition is filed, |
the court may order the Department
to issue a notice to the |
person to be present at the Department or other
agency |
designated by the court, order a summons to the person to be |
present, or
order a body attachment for all law enforcement |
officers to take the person
into custody and transport him or |
her to the county jail, hospital, or
treatment
facility.
The
|
|
Department shall submit a statement showing probable cause of |
the
detention and a petition to revoke the order for |
conditional
release to the committing court within 48 hours |
after the
detention. The court shall hear the petition within |
30 days,
unless the hearing or time deadline is waived by the |
detained
person. Pending the revocation hearing, the |
Department may detain
the person in a jail, in a hospital or |
treatment facility. The
State has the burden of proving by |
clear and convincing evidence
that any rule or condition of |
release has been violated, or that
the safety of others |
requires that the conditional release be
revoked. If the court |
determines after hearing that any rule or
condition of release |
has been violated, or that the safety of
others requires that |
conditional release be revoked, it may revoke
the order for |
conditional release and order that the released
person be |
placed in an appropriate institution until the person is
|
discharged from the commitment under Section 65 of this Act or
|
until again placed on conditional release under Section 60 of |
this
Act.
|
(5) An order for conditional release places the person in |
the custody,
care, and control of the Department. The court |
shall order the person be
subject to the following rules of |
conditional release, in addition to any other
conditions |
ordered, and the person shall be given a certificate setting |
forth
the
conditions of conditional release. These conditions |
shall be that the person:
|
|
(A) not violate any criminal statute of any |
jurisdiction;
|
(B) report to or appear in person before such person or |
agency as
directed by the court and the Department;
|
(C) refrain from possession of a firearm or other |
dangerous weapon;
|
(D) not leave the State without the consent of the |
court or, in
circumstances in which the reason for the |
absence is of such an emergency
nature, that prior consent |
by the court is not possible without the prior
notification |
and approval of the Department;
|
(E) at the direction of the Department, notify third |
parties of the
risks that may be occasioned by his or her |
criminal record or sexual offending
history or |
characteristics, and permit the supervising officer or |
agent to make
the
notification requirement;
|
(F) attend and fully participate in assessment, |
treatment, and behavior
monitoring including, but not |
limited to, medical, psychological or psychiatric
|
treatment specific to sexual offending, drug addiction, or |
alcoholism, to the
extent appropriate to the person based |
upon the recommendation and findings
made in the Department |
evaluation or based upon any subsequent recommendations
by |
the Department;
|
(G) waive confidentiality allowing the court and |
Department access to
assessment or treatment results or |
|
both;
|
(H) work regularly at a Department approved occupation |
or pursue a
course of study or vocational training and |
notify the Department within
72 hours of any change in |
employment, study, or training;
|
(I) not be employed or participate in any volunteer |
activity that
involves contact with children, except under |
circumstances approved in advance
and in writing by the |
Department officer;
|
(J) submit to the search of his or her person, |
residence, vehicle, or
any personal or
real property under |
his or her control at any time by the Department;
|
(K) financially support his or her dependents and |
provide the Department
access
to any requested financial |
information;
|
(L) serve a term of home confinement, the conditions of |
which shall be
that the person:
|
(i) remain within the interior premises of the |
place designated for
his or her confinement during the |
hours designated by the Department;
|
(ii) admit any person or agent designated by the |
Department into the
offender's place of confinement at |
any time for purposes of verifying the
person's |
compliance with the condition of his or her |
confinement;
|
(iii) if deemed necessary by the Department, be |
|
placed on an
electronic monitoring device;
|
(M) comply with the terms and conditions of an order of |
protection
issued by the court pursuant to the Illinois |
Domestic Violence Act of 1986. A
copy of the order of |
protection shall be
transmitted to the Department by the |
clerk of the court;
|
(N) refrain from entering into a designated geographic |
area except upon
terms the Department finds appropriate. |
The terms may include
consideration of the purpose of the |
entry, the time of day, others accompanying
the person, and |
advance approval by the Department;
|
(O) refrain from having any contact, including written |
or oral
communications, directly or indirectly, with |
certain specified persons
including, but not limited to, |
the victim or the victim's family, and
report any |
incidental contact with the victim or the victim's family |
to
the Department within 72 hours; refrain from entering |
onto the premises of,
traveling
past,
or loitering near the |
victim's residence, place of employment, or other places
|
frequented by the victim;
|
(P) refrain from having any contact, including written |
or oral
communications, directly or indirectly, with |
particular types of persons,
including but not limited to |
members of street gangs, drug users, drug dealers,
or |
prostitutes;
|
(Q) refrain from all contact, direct or indirect, |
|
personally, by
telephone, letter, or through another |
person, with minor children without prior
identification |
and approval of the Department;
|
(R) refrain from having in his or her body the presence |
of alcohol
or any illicit drug prohibited by the Cannabis |
Control Act, the
Illinois
Controlled Substances Act, or the |
Methamphetamine Control and Community Protection Act, |
unless prescribed by a physician, and submit samples
of his |
or her breath, saliva, blood, or urine
for tests to |
determine the
presence of alcohol or any illicit drug;
|
(S) not establish a dating, intimate, or sexual |
relationship with a
person without prior written |
notification to the Department;
|
(T) neither possess or have under his or her control |
any material that
is
pornographic, sexually oriented, or |
sexually stimulating, or that depicts or
alludes to sexual |
activity or depicts minors under the age of 18, including |
but
not limited to visual, auditory, telephonic, |
electronic media, or any matter
obtained through access to |
any computer or material linked to computer access
use;
|
(U) not patronize any business providing sexually |
stimulating or
sexually oriented entertainment nor utilize |
"900" or
adult telephone numbers or any other sex-related |
telephone numbers;
|
(V) not reside near, visit, or be in or about parks, |
schools, day care
centers, swimming pools, beaches, |
|
theaters, or any other places where minor
children |
congregate without advance approval of the Department and |
report any
incidental contact with minor children to the |
Department within 72 hours;
|
(W) not establish any living arrangement or residence |
without prior
approval of the Department;
|
(X) not publish any materials or print any |
advertisements without
providing a copy of the proposed |
publications to the Department officer and
obtaining
|
permission prior to publication;
|
(Y) not leave the county except with prior permission |
of the Department
and provide the Department officer or |
agent with written travel routes to and
from work and any |
other designated destinations;
|
(Z) not possess or have under his or her control |
certain specified items
of
contraband related to the |
incidence of sexually offending items including video
or
|
still camera items or children's toys;
|
(AA) provide a written daily log of activities as |
directed by the
Department;
|
(BB) comply with all other special conditions that the |
Department may
impose that restrict the person from |
high-risk situations and limit access or
potential |
victims.
|
(6) A person placed on conditional release and who during |
the term
undergoes mandatory drug or alcohol testing or is |
|
assigned to be
placed on an approved electronic monitoring |
device may be ordered to pay all
costs incidental to the |
mandatory drug or alcohol testing and all
costs incidental to |
the approved electronic monitoring in accordance with the
|
person's ability to pay those costs. The Department may |
establish reasonable
fees for the cost of maintenance, testing, |
and incidental expenses related to
the mandatory drug or |
alcohol testing and all costs incidental to
approved electronic |
monitoring.
|
(Source: P.A. 96-1128, eff. 1-1-11; 97-1098, eff. 1-1-14.)
|
Section 100. The Uniform Criminal Extradition Act is |
amended by changing Section 22 as follows:
|
(725 ILCS 225/22) (from Ch. 60, par. 39)
|
Sec. 22.
Fugitives
from this state; duty of Governors.
|
Whenever the Governor of this State shall demand a person |
charged with
crime or with escaping from confinement or |
breaking the terms of his or her bail,
probation , aftercare |
release, or parole in this State, from the Executive Authority |
of any
other state, or from the chief justice or an associate |
justice of the
Supreme Court of the District of Columbia |
authorized to receive such demand
under the laws of the United |
States, he or she shall issue a warrant under the
seal of this |
State, to some agent, commanding him or her to receive the |
person so
charged if delivered to him or her and convey him or |
|
her to the proper officer of the
county in this State in which |
the offense was committed.
|
(Source: Laws 1955, p. 1982.)
|
Section 105. The Unified Code of Corrections is amended by |
changing Sections 3-1-2, 3-2-2, 3-2.5-20, 3-2.5-65, 3-3-1, |
3-3-2, 3-3-3, 3-3-4, 3-3-5, 3-3-7, 3-3-8, 3-3-9, 3-3-10, 3-4-3, |
3-5-1, 3-10-6, 5-1-16, 5-4-3, 5-8A-3, 5-8A-5, and 5-8A-7 and by |
adding Sections 3-2.5-70, 3-2.5-75, 3-2.5-80, and 5-1-1.1 as |
follows:
|
(730 ILCS 5/3-1-2) (from Ch. 38, par. 1003-1-2)
|
Sec. 3-1-2. Definitions. |
(a) "Chief Administrative Officer" means the
person |
designated by the Director to exercise the powers and duties of |
the
Department of Corrections in regard to committed persons |
within
a correctional institution or facility, and includes the
|
superintendent of any juvenile institution or facility.
|
(a-3) "Aftercare release" means the conditional and |
revocable release of a person committed to the Department of |
Juvenile Justice under the Juvenile Court Act of 1987, under |
the supervision of the Department of Juvenile Justice. |
(a-5) "Sex offense" for the purposes of paragraph (16) of |
subsection (a) of Section 3-3-7, paragraph (10) of subsection |
(a) of Section 5-6-3, and paragraph (18) of subsection (c) of |
Section 5-6-3.1 only means: |
|
(i) A violation of any of the following Sections of the |
Criminal Code of
1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012: 10-7 |
(aiding or abetting child abduction under Section |
10-5(b)(10)),
10-5(b)(10) (child luring), 11-6 (indecent |
solicitation of a child), 11-6.5
(indecent solicitation of |
an adult), 11-14.4 (promoting juvenile prostitution),
|
11-15.1 (soliciting for a juvenile
prostitute), 11-17.1 |
(keeping a place of juvenile prostitution), 11-18.1
|
(patronizing a juvenile prostitute), 11-19.1 (juvenile |
pimping),
11-19.2 (exploitation of a child), 11-20.1 |
(child pornography), 11-20.1B or 11-20.3 (aggravated child |
pornography), 11-1.40 or 12-14.1
(predatory criminal |
sexual assault of a child), or 12-33 (ritualized abuse of a
|
child). An attempt to commit any of
these offenses. |
(ii) A violation of any of the following Sections of |
the Criminal Code
of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012: |
11-1.20 or 12-13 (criminal
sexual assault), 11-1.30 or |
12-14 (aggravated criminal sexual assault), 11-1.60 or |
12-16 (aggravated criminal sexual abuse), and subsection |
(a) of Section 11-1.50 or subsection (a) of Section 12-15
|
(criminal sexual abuse). An attempt to commit
any of these |
offenses. |
(iii) A violation of any of the following Sections of |
the Criminal Code
of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012 when |
the defendant is
not a parent of the victim: |
10-1 (kidnapping),
|
|
10-2 (aggravated kidnapping), |
10-3 (unlawful restraint),
|
10-3.1 (aggravated unlawful restraint). |
An attempt to commit any of these offenses. |
(iv) A violation of any former law of this State |
substantially
equivalent to any offense listed in this |
subsection (a-5). |
An offense violating federal law or the law of another |
state
that is substantially equivalent to any offense listed in |
this
subsection (a-5) shall constitute a sex offense for the |
purpose of
this subsection (a-5). A finding or adjudication as |
a sexually dangerous person under
any federal law or law of |
another state that is substantially equivalent to the
Sexually |
Dangerous Persons Act shall constitute an adjudication for a |
sex offense for the
purposes of this subsection (a-5).
|
(b) "Commitment" means a judicially determined placement
|
in the custody of the Department of Corrections on the basis of
|
delinquency or conviction.
|
(c) "Committed Person" is a person committed to the |
Department,
however a committed person shall not be considered |
to be an employee of
the Department of Corrections for any |
purpose, including eligibility for
a pension, benefits, or any |
other compensation or rights or privileges which
may be |
provided to employees of the Department.
|
(c-5) "Computer scrub software" means any third-party |
added software, designed to delete information from the |
|
computer unit, the hard drive, or other software, which would |
eliminate and prevent discovery of browser activity, including |
but not limited to Internet history, address bar or bars, cache |
or caches, and/or cookies, and which would over-write files in |
a way so as to make previous computer activity, including but |
not limited to website access, more difficult to discover. |
(d) "Correctional Institution or Facility" means any |
building or
part of a building where committed persons are kept |
in a secured manner.
|
(e) In the case of functions performed before the effective |
date of this amendatory Act of the 94th General Assembly, |
"Department" means the Department of Corrections of this State. |
In the case of functions performed on or after the effective |
date of this amendatory Act of the 94th General Assembly, |
"Department" has the meaning ascribed to it in subsection |
(f-5).
|
(f) In the case of functions performed before the effective |
date of this amendatory Act of the 94th General Assembly, |
"Director" means the Director of the Department of Corrections. |
In the case of functions performed on or after the effective |
date of this amendatory Act of the 94th General Assembly, |
"Director" has the meaning ascribed to it in subsection (f-5).
|
(f-5) In the case of functions performed on or after the |
effective date of this amendatory Act of the 94th General |
Assembly, references to "Department" or "Director" refer to |
either the Department of Corrections or the Director of |
|
Corrections or to the Department of Juvenile Justice or the |
Director of Juvenile Justice unless the context is specific to |
the Department of Juvenile Justice or the Director of Juvenile |
Justice.
|
(g) "Discharge" means the final termination of a commitment
|
to the Department of Corrections.
|
(h) "Discipline" means the rules and regulations for the
|
maintenance of order and the protection of persons and property
|
within the institutions and facilities of the Department and
|
their enforcement.
|
(i) "Escape" means the intentional and unauthorized |
absence
of a committed person from the custody of the |
Department.
|
(j) "Furlough" means an authorized leave of absence from |
the
Department of Corrections for a designated purpose and |
period of time.
|
(k) "Parole" means the conditional and revocable release
of |
a person committed to the Department of Corrections person |
under the supervision of a parole officer.
|
(l) "Prisoner Review Board" means the Board established in
|
Section 3-3-1(a), independent of the Department, to review
|
rules and regulations with respect to good time credits, to
|
hear charges brought by the Department against certain |
prisoners
alleged to have violated Department rules with |
respect to good
time credits, to set release dates for certain |
prisoners
sentenced under the law in effect prior to the |
|
effective
date of this Amendatory Act of 1977, to hear and |
decide the time of aftercare release for persons committed to |
the Department of Juvenile Justice under the Juvenile Court Act |
of 1987 to hear requests and
make recommendations to the |
Governor with respect to pardon,
reprieve or commutation, to |
set conditions for parole , aftercare release, and
mandatory |
supervised release and determine whether violations
of those |
conditions justify revocation of parole or release,
and to |
assume all other functions previously exercised by the
Illinois |
Parole and Pardon Board.
|
(m) Whenever medical treatment, service, counseling, or
|
care is referred to in this Unified Code of Corrections,
such |
term may be construed by the Department or Court, within
its |
discretion, to include treatment, service or counseling by
a |
Christian Science practitioner or nursing care appropriate
|
therewith whenever request therefor is made by a person subject
|
to the provisions of this Act.
|
(n) "Victim" shall have the meaning ascribed to it in |
subsection (a) of
Section 3 of the Bill of Rights for Victims |
and Witnesses of Violent Crime Act.
|
(o) "Wrongfully imprisoned person" means a person who has |
been discharged from a prison of this State and
has received: |
(1) a pardon from the Governor stating that such pardon |
is issued on the ground of innocence of the crime for which |
he or she was imprisoned; or |
(2) a certificate of innocence from the Circuit Court |
|
as provided in Section 2-702 of the Code of Civil |
Procedure. |
(Source: P.A. 96-362, eff. 1-1-10; 96-710, eff. 1-1-10; |
96-1000, eff. 7-2-10; 96-1550, eff. 7-1-11; 96-1551, eff. |
7-1-11; 97-1109, eff. 1-1-13; 97-1150, eff. 1-25-13.)
|
(730 ILCS 5/3-2-2) (from Ch. 38, par. 1003-2-2)
|
Sec. 3-2-2. Powers and Duties of the Department.
|
(1) In addition to the powers, duties and responsibilities |
which are
otherwise provided by law, the Department shall have |
the following powers:
|
(a) To accept persons committed to it by the courts of |
this State for
care, custody, treatment and |
rehabilitation, and to accept federal prisoners and aliens |
over whom the Office of the Federal Detention Trustee is |
authorized to exercise the federal detention function for |
limited purposes and periods of time.
|
(b) To develop and maintain reception and evaluation |
units for purposes
of analyzing the custody and |
rehabilitation needs of persons committed to
it and to |
assign such persons to institutions and programs under its |
control
or transfer them to other appropriate agencies. In |
consultation with the
Department of Alcoholism and |
Substance Abuse (now the Department of Human
Services), the |
Department of Corrections
shall develop a master plan for |
the screening and evaluation of persons
committed to its |
|
custody who have alcohol or drug abuse problems, and for
|
making appropriate treatment available to such persons; |
the Department
shall report to the General Assembly on such |
plan not later than April 1,
1987. The maintenance and |
implementation of such plan shall be contingent
upon the |
availability of funds.
|
(b-1) To create and implement, on January 1, 2002, a |
pilot
program to
establish the effectiveness of |
pupillometer technology (the measurement of the
pupil's
|
reaction to light) as an alternative to a urine test for |
purposes of screening
and evaluating
persons committed to |
its custody who have alcohol or drug problems. The
pilot |
program shall require the pupillometer technology to be |
used in at
least one Department of
Corrections facility. |
The Director may expand the pilot program to include an
|
additional facility or
facilities as he or she deems |
appropriate.
A minimum of 4,000 tests shall be included in |
the pilot program.
The
Department must report to the
|
General Assembly on the
effectiveness of the program by |
January 1, 2003.
|
(b-5) To develop, in consultation with the Department |
of State Police, a
program for tracking and evaluating each |
inmate from commitment through release
for recording his or |
her gang affiliations, activities, or ranks.
|
(c) To maintain and administer all State correctional |
institutions and
facilities under its control and to |
|
establish new ones as needed. Pursuant
to its power to |
establish new institutions and facilities, the Department
|
may, with the written approval of the Governor, authorize |
the Department of
Central Management Services to enter into |
an agreement of the type
described in subsection (d) of |
Section 405-300 of the
Department
of Central Management |
Services Law (20 ILCS 405/405-300). The Department shall
|
designate those institutions which
shall constitute the |
State Penitentiary System.
|
Pursuant to its power to establish new institutions and |
facilities, the
Department may authorize the Department of |
Central Management Services to
accept bids from counties |
and municipalities for the construction,
remodeling or |
conversion of a structure to be leased to the Department of
|
Corrections for the purposes of its serving as a |
correctional institution
or facility. Such construction, |
remodeling or conversion may be financed
with revenue bonds |
issued pursuant to the Industrial Building Revenue Bond
Act |
by the municipality or county. The lease specified in a bid |
shall be
for a term of not less than the time needed to |
retire any revenue bonds
used to finance the project, but |
not to exceed 40 years. The lease may
grant to the State |
the option to purchase the structure outright.
|
Upon receipt of the bids, the Department may certify |
one or more of the
bids and shall submit any such bids to |
the General Assembly for approval.
Upon approval of a bid |
|
by a constitutional majority of both houses of the
General |
Assembly, pursuant to joint resolution, the Department of |
Central
Management Services may enter into an agreement |
with the county or
municipality pursuant to such bid.
|
(c-5) To build and maintain regional juvenile |
detention centers and to
charge a per diem to the counties |
as established by the Department to defray
the costs of |
housing each minor in a center. In this subsection (c-5),
|
"juvenile
detention center" means a facility to house |
minors during pendency of trial who
have been transferred |
from proceedings under the Juvenile Court Act of 1987 to
|
prosecutions under the criminal laws of this State in |
accordance with Section
5-805 of the Juvenile Court Act of |
1987, whether the transfer was by operation
of
law or |
permissive under that Section. The Department shall |
designate the
counties to be served by each regional |
juvenile detention center.
|
(d) To develop and maintain programs of control, |
rehabilitation and
employment of committed persons within |
its institutions.
|
(d-5) To provide a pre-release job preparation program |
for inmates at Illinois adult correctional centers.
|
(e) To establish a system of supervision and guidance |
of committed persons
in the community.
|
(f) To establish in cooperation with the Department of |
Transportation
to supply a sufficient number of prisoners |
|
for use by the Department of
Transportation to clean up the |
trash and garbage along State, county,
township, or |
municipal highways as designated by the Department of
|
Transportation. The Department of Corrections, at the |
request of the
Department of Transportation, shall furnish |
such prisoners at least
annually for a period to be agreed |
upon between the Director of
Corrections and the Director |
of Transportation. The prisoners used on this
program shall |
be selected by the Director of Corrections on whatever |
basis
he deems proper in consideration of their term, |
behavior and earned eligibility
to participate in such |
program - where they will be outside of the prison
facility |
but still in the custody of the Department of Corrections. |
Prisoners
convicted of first degree murder, or a Class X |
felony, or armed violence, or
aggravated kidnapping, or |
criminal sexual assault, aggravated criminal sexual
abuse |
or a subsequent conviction for criminal sexual abuse, or |
forcible
detention, or arson, or a prisoner adjudged a |
Habitual Criminal shall not be
eligible for selection to |
participate in such program. The prisoners shall
remain as |
prisoners in the custody of the Department of Corrections |
and such
Department shall furnish whatever security is |
necessary. The Department of
Transportation shall furnish |
trucks and equipment for the highway cleanup
program and |
personnel to supervise and direct the program. Neither the
|
Department of Corrections nor the Department of |
|
Transportation shall replace
any regular employee with a |
prisoner.
|
(g) To maintain records of persons committed to it and |
to establish
programs of research, statistics and |
planning.
|
(h) To investigate the grievances of any person |
committed to the
Department, to inquire into any alleged |
misconduct by employees
or committed persons, and to |
investigate the assets
of committed persons to implement |
Section 3-7-6 of this Code; and for
these purposes it may |
issue subpoenas and compel the attendance of witnesses
and |
the production of writings and papers, and may examine |
under oath any
witnesses who may appear before it; to also |
investigate alleged violations
of a parolee's or |
releasee's conditions of parole or release; and for this
|
purpose it may issue subpoenas and compel the attendance of |
witnesses and
the production of documents only if there is |
reason to believe that such
procedures would provide |
evidence that such violations have occurred.
|
If any person fails to obey a subpoena issued under |
this subsection,
the Director may apply to any circuit |
court to secure compliance with the
subpoena. The failure |
to comply with the order of the court issued in
response |
thereto shall be punishable as contempt of court.
|
(i) To appoint and remove the chief administrative |
officers, and
administer
programs of training and |
|
development of personnel of the Department. Personnel
|
assigned by the Department to be responsible for the
|
custody and control of committed persons or to investigate |
the alleged
misconduct of committed persons or employees or |
alleged violations of a
parolee's or releasee's conditions |
of parole shall be conservators of the peace
for those |
purposes, and shall have the full power of peace officers |
outside
of the facilities of the Department in the |
protection, arrest, retaking
and reconfining of committed |
persons or where the exercise of such power
is necessary to |
the investigation of such misconduct or violations. This |
subsection shall not apply to persons committed to the |
Department of Juvenile Justice under the Juvenile Court Act |
of 1987 on aftercare release.
|
(j) To cooperate with other departments and agencies |
and with local
communities for the development of standards |
and programs for better
correctional services in this |
State.
|
(k) To administer all moneys and properties of the |
Department.
|
(l) To report annually to the Governor on the committed
|
persons, institutions and programs of the Department.
|
(l-5) (Blank).
|
(m) To make all rules and regulations and exercise all |
powers and duties
vested by law in the Department.
|
(n) To establish rules and regulations for |
|
administering a system of
sentence credits, established in |
accordance with Section 3-6-3, subject
to review by the |
Prisoner Review Board.
|
(o) To administer the distribution of funds
from the |
State Treasury to reimburse counties where State penal
|
institutions are located for the payment of assistant |
state's attorneys'
salaries under Section 4-2001 of the |
Counties Code.
|
(p) To exchange information with the Department of |
Human Services and the
Department of Healthcare and Family |
Services
for the purpose of verifying living arrangements |
and for other purposes
directly connected with the |
administration of this Code and the Illinois
Public Aid |
Code.
|
(q) To establish a diversion program.
|
The program shall provide a structured environment for |
selected
technical parole or mandatory supervised release |
violators and committed
persons who have violated the rules |
governing their conduct while in work
release. This program |
shall not apply to those persons who have committed
a new |
offense while serving on parole or mandatory supervised |
release or
while committed to work release.
|
Elements of the program shall include, but shall not be |
limited to, the
following:
|
(1) The staff of a diversion facility shall provide |
supervision in
accordance with required objectives set |
|
by the facility.
|
(2) Participants shall be required to maintain |
employment.
|
(3) Each participant shall pay for room and board |
at the facility on a
sliding-scale basis according to |
the participant's income.
|
(4) Each participant shall:
|
(A) provide restitution to victims in |
accordance with any court order;
|
(B) provide financial support to his |
dependents; and
|
(C) make appropriate payments toward any other |
court-ordered
obligations.
|
(5) Each participant shall complete community |
service in addition to
employment.
|
(6) Participants shall take part in such |
counseling, educational and
other programs as the |
Department may deem appropriate.
|
(7) Participants shall submit to drug and alcohol |
screening.
|
(8) The Department shall promulgate rules |
governing the administration
of the program.
|
(r) To enter into intergovernmental cooperation |
agreements under which
persons in the custody of the |
Department may participate in a county impact
|
incarceration program established under Section 3-6038 or |
|
3-15003.5 of the
Counties Code.
|
(r-5) (Blank).
|
(r-10) To systematically and routinely identify with |
respect to each
streetgang active within the correctional |
system: (1) each active gang; (2)
every existing inter-gang |
affiliation or alliance; and (3) the current leaders
in |
each gang. The Department shall promptly segregate leaders |
from inmates who
belong to their gangs and allied gangs. |
"Segregate" means no physical contact
and, to the extent |
possible under the conditions and space available at the
|
correctional facility, prohibition of visual and sound |
communication. For the
purposes of this paragraph (r-10), |
"leaders" means persons who:
|
(i) are members of a criminal streetgang;
|
(ii) with respect to other individuals within the |
streetgang, occupy a
position of organizer, |
supervisor, or other position of management or
|
leadership; and
|
(iii) are actively and personally engaged in |
directing, ordering,
authorizing, or requesting |
commission of criminal acts by others, which are
|
punishable as a felony, in furtherance of streetgang |
related activity both
within and outside of the |
Department of Corrections.
|
"Streetgang", "gang", and "streetgang related" have the |
meanings ascribed to
them in Section 10 of the Illinois |
|
Streetgang Terrorism Omnibus Prevention
Act.
|
(s) To operate a super-maximum security institution, |
in order to
manage and
supervise inmates who are disruptive |
or dangerous and provide for the safety
and security of the |
staff and the other inmates.
|
(t) To monitor any unprivileged conversation or any |
unprivileged
communication, whether in person or by mail, |
telephone, or other means,
between an inmate who, before |
commitment to the Department, was a member of an
organized |
gang and any other person without the need to show cause or |
satisfy
any other requirement of law before beginning the |
monitoring, except as
constitutionally required. The |
monitoring may be by video, voice, or other
method of |
recording or by any other means. As used in this |
subdivision (1)(t),
"organized gang" has the meaning |
ascribed to it in Section 10 of the Illinois
Streetgang |
Terrorism Omnibus Prevention Act.
|
As used in this subdivision (1)(t), "unprivileged |
conversation" or
"unprivileged communication" means a |
conversation or communication that is not
protected by any |
privilege recognized by law or by decision, rule, or order |
of
the Illinois Supreme Court.
|
(u) To establish a Women's and Children's Pre-release |
Community
Supervision
Program for the purpose of providing |
housing and services to eligible female
inmates, as |
determined by the Department, and their newborn and young
|
|
children.
|
(u-5) To issue an order, whenever a person committed to |
the Department absconds or absents himself or herself, |
without authority to do so, from any facility or program to |
which he or she is assigned. The order shall be certified |
by the Director, the Supervisor of the Apprehension Unit, |
or any person duly designated by the Director, with the |
seal of the Department affixed. The order shall be directed |
to all sheriffs, coroners, and police officers, or to any |
particular person named in the order. Any order issued |
pursuant to this subdivision (1) (u-5) shall be sufficient |
warrant for the officer or person named in the order to |
arrest and deliver the committed person to the proper |
correctional officials and shall be executed the same as |
criminal process.
|
(v) To do all other acts necessary to carry out the |
provisions
of this Chapter.
|
(2) The Department of Corrections shall by January 1, 1998, |
consider
building and operating a correctional facility within |
100 miles of a county of
over 2,000,000 inhabitants, especially |
a facility designed to house juvenile
participants in the |
impact incarceration program.
|
(3) When the Department lets bids for contracts for medical
|
services to be provided to persons committed to Department |
facilities by
a health maintenance organization, medical |
service corporation, or other
health care provider, the bid may |
|
only be let to a health care provider
that has obtained an |
irrevocable letter of credit or performance bond
issued by a |
company whose bonds have an investment grade or higher rating |
by a bond rating
organization.
|
(4) When the Department lets bids for
contracts for food or |
commissary services to be provided to
Department facilities, |
the bid may only be let to a food or commissary
services |
provider that has obtained an irrevocable letter of
credit or |
performance bond issued by a company whose bonds have an |
investment grade or higher rating by a bond rating |
organization.
|
(Source: P.A. 96-1265, eff. 7-26-10; 97-697, eff. 6-22-12; |
97-800, eff. 7-13-12; 97-802, eff. 7-13-12; revised 7-23-12.)
|
(730 ILCS 5/3-2.5-20)
|
Sec. 3-2.5-20. General powers and duties. |
(a) In addition to the powers, duties, and responsibilities |
which are otherwise provided by law or transferred to the |
Department as a result of this Article, the Department, as |
determined by the Director, shall have, but are not limited to, |
the following rights, powers, functions and duties: |
(1) To accept juveniles committed to it by the courts |
of this State for care, custody, treatment, and |
rehabilitation. |
(2) To maintain and administer all State juvenile |
correctional institutions previously under the control of |
|
the Juvenile and Women's & Children Divisions of the |
Department of Corrections, and to establish and maintain |
institutions as needed to meet the needs of the youth |
committed to its care. |
(3) To identify the need for and recommend the funding |
and implementation of an appropriate mix of programs and |
services within the juvenile justice continuum, including |
but not limited to prevention, nonresidential and |
residential commitment programs, day treatment, and |
conditional release programs and services, with the |
support of educational, vocational, alcohol, drug abuse, |
and mental health services where appropriate. |
(3.5) To assist youth committed to the Department of |
Juvenile Justice under the Juvenile Court Act of 1987 with |
successful reintegration into society, the Department |
shall retain custody and control of all adjudicated |
delinquent juveniles released under Section 3-3-10 of this |
Code, shall provide a continuum of post-release treatment |
and services to those youth, and shall supervise those |
youth during their release period in accordance with the |
conditions set by the Prisoner Review Board. |
(4) To establish and provide transitional and |
post-release treatment programs for juveniles committed to |
the Department. Services shall include but are not limited |
to: |
(i) family and individual counseling and treatment |
|
placement; |
(ii) referral services to any other State or local |
agencies; |
(iii) mental health services; |
(iv) educational services; |
(v) family counseling services; and |
(vi) substance abuse services. |
(5) To access vital records of juveniles for the |
purposes of providing necessary documentation for |
transitional services such as obtaining identification, |
educational enrollment, employment, and housing. |
(6) To develop staffing and workload standards and |
coordinate staff development and training appropriate for |
juvenile populations. |
(7) To develop, with the approval of the Office of the |
Governor and the Governor's Office of Management and |
Budget, annual budget requests.
|
(8) To administer the Interstate Compact for |
Juveniles, with respect to all juveniles under its |
jurisdiction, and to cooperate with the Department of Human |
Services with regard to all non-offender juveniles subject |
to the Interstate Compact for Juveniles.
|
(b) The Department may employ personnel in accordance with |
the Personnel Code and Section 3-2.5-15 of this Code, provide |
facilities, contract for goods and services, and adopt rules as |
necessary to carry out its functions and purposes, all in |
|
accordance with applicable State and federal law.
|
(Source: P.A. 94-696, eff. 6-1-06; 95-937, eff. 8-26-08.) |
(730 ILCS 5/3-2.5-65)
|
Sec. 3-2.5-65. Juvenile Advisory Board. |
(a) There is created a Juvenile Advisory Board composed of |
11 persons, appointed by the Governor to advise the Director on |
matters pertaining to juvenile offenders. The members of the |
Board shall be qualified for their positions by demonstrated |
interest in and knowledge of juvenile correctional work |
consistent with the definition of purpose and mission of the |
Department in Section 3-2.5-5 and shall not be officials of the |
State in any other capacity. The members under this amendatory |
Act of the 94th General Assembly shall be appointed as soon as |
possible after the effective date of this amendatory Act of the |
94th General Assembly and be appointed to staggered terms 3 |
each expiring in 2007, 2008, and 2009 and 2 of the members' |
terms expiring in 2010. Thereafter all members will serve for a |
term of 6 years, except that members shall continue to serve |
until their replacements are appointed. Any vacancy occurring |
shall be filled in the same manner for the remainder of the |
term. The Director of Juvenile Justice shall be an ex officio |
member of the Board. The Board shall elect a chair from among |
its appointed members. The Director shall serve as secretary of |
the Board. Members of the Board shall serve without |
compensation but shall be reimbursed for expenses necessarily |
|
incurred in the performance of their duties. The Board shall |
meet quarterly and at other times at the call of the chair. |
(b) The Board shall: |
(1) Advise the Director concerning policy matters and |
programs of the Department with regard to the custody, |
care, study, discipline, training, and treatment of |
juveniles in the State juvenile correctional institutions |
and for the care and supervision of juveniles on aftercare |
release released on parole .
|
(2) Establish, with the Director and in conjunction |
with the Office of the Governor, outcome measures for the |
Department in order to ascertain that it is successfully |
fulfilling the mission mandated in Section 3-2.5-5 of this |
Code. The annual results of the Department's work as |
defined by those measures shall be approved by the Board |
and shall be included in an annual report transmitted to |
the Governor and General Assembly jointly by the Director |
and the Board.
|
(Source: P.A. 94-696, eff. 6-1-06 .) |
(730 ILCS 5/3-2.5-70 new) |
Sec. 3-2.5-70. Aftercare. |
(a) The Department shall implement an aftercare program |
that includes, at a minimum, the following program elements: |
(1) A process for developing and implementing a case |
management plan for timely and successful reentry into the |
|
community beginning upon commitment. |
(2) A process for reviewing committed youth for |
recommendation for aftercare release. |
(3) Supervision in accordance with the conditions set |
by the Prisoner Review Board and referral to and |
facilitation of community-based services including |
education, social and mental health services, substance |
abuse treatment, employment and vocational training, |
individual and family counseling, financial counseling, |
and other services as appropriate; and assistance in |
locating appropriate residential placement and obtaining |
suitable employment. The Department may purchase necessary |
services for a releasee if they are otherwise unavailable |
and the releasee is unable to pay for the services. It may |
assess all or part of the costs of these services to a |
releasee in accordance with his or her ability to pay for |
the services. |
(4) Standards for sanctioning violations of conditions |
of aftercare release that ensure that juvenile offenders |
face uniform and consistent consequences that hold them |
accountable taking into account aggravating and mitigating |
factors and prioritizing public safety. |
(5) A process for reviewing youth on aftercare release |
for discharge. |
(b) The Department of Juvenile Justice shall have the |
following rights, powers, functions, and duties: |
|
(1) To investigate alleged violations of an aftercare |
releasee's conditions of release; and for this purpose it |
may issue subpoenas and compel the attendance of witnesses |
and the production of documents only if there is reason to |
believe that the procedures would provide evidence that the |
violations have occurred. If any person fails to obey a |
subpoena issued under this subsection, the Director may |
apply to any circuit court to secure compliance with the |
subpoena. The failure to comply with the order of the court |
issued in response thereto shall be punishable as contempt |
of court. |
(2) To issue a violation warrant for the apprehension |
of an aftercare releasee for violations of the conditions |
of aftercare release. Aftercare specialists and |
supervisors have the full power of peace officers in the |
retaking of any youth alleged to have violated the |
conditions of aftercare release. |
(c) The Department of Juvenile Justice shall designate |
aftercare specialists qualified in juvenile matters to perform |
case management and post-release programming functions under |
this Section. |
(730 ILCS 5/3-2.5-75 new) |
Sec. 3-2.5-75. Release from Department of Juvenile |
Justice. |
(a) Upon release of a youth on aftercare, the Department |
|
shall return all property held for the youth, provide the youth |
with suitable clothing, and procure necessary transportation |
for the youth to his or her designated place of residence and |
employment. It may provide the youth with a grant of money for |
travel and expenses which may be paid in installments. The |
amount of the money grant shall be determined by the |
Department. |
(b) Before a wrongfully imprisoned person, as defined in |
Section 3-1-2 of this Code, is discharged from the Department, |
the Department shall provide him or her with any documents |
necessary after discharge, including an identification card |
under subsection (e) of this Section. |
(c) The Department of Juvenile Justice may establish and |
maintain, in any institution it administers, revolving funds to |
be known as "Travel and Allowances Revolving Funds". These |
revolving funds shall be used for advancing travel and expense |
allowances to committed, released, and discharged youth. The |
moneys paid into these revolving funds shall be from |
appropriations to the Department for committed, released, and |
discharged prisoners. |
(d) Upon the release of a youth on aftercare, the |
Department shall provide that youth with information |
concerning programs and services of the Department of Public |
Health to ascertain whether that youth has been exposed to the |
human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) or any identified causative |
agent of Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome (AIDS). |
|
(e) Upon the release of a youth on aftercare or who has |
been wrongfully imprisoned, the Department shall provide the |
youth with an identification card identifying the youth as |
being on aftercare or wrongfully imprisoned, as the case may |
be. The Department, in consultation with the Office of the |
Secretary of State, shall prescribe the form of the |
identification card, which may be similar to the form of the |
standard Illinois Identification Card. The Department shall |
inform the youth that he or she may present the identification |
card to the Office of the Secretary of State upon application |
for a standard Illinois Identification Card in accordance with |
the Illinois Identification Card Act. The Department shall |
require the youth to pay a $1 fee for the identification card.
|
The Department shall adopt rules governing the issuance of |
identification cards to youth being released on aftercare or |
pardon. |
(730 ILCS 5/3-2.5-80 new) |
Sec. 3-2.5-80. Supervision on Aftercare Release. |
(a) The Department shall retain custody of all youth placed |
on aftercare release or released under Section 3-3-10 of this |
Code. The Department shall supervise those youth during their |
aftercare release period in accordance with the conditions set |
by the Prisoner Review Board. |
(b) A copy of youth's conditions of aftercare release shall |
be signed by the youth and given to the youth and to his or her |
|
aftercare specialist who shall report on the youth's progress |
under the rules of the Prisoner Review Board. Aftercare |
specialists and supervisors shall have the full power of peace |
officers in the retaking of any releasee who has allegedly |
violated his or her aftercare release conditions. The aftercare |
specialist shall request the Department of Juvenile Justice to |
issue a warrant for the arrest of any releasee who has |
allegedly violated his or her aftercare release conditions. |
(c) The aftercare supervisor shall request the Department |
of Juvenile Justice to issue an aftercare release violation |
warrant, and the Department of Juvenile Justice shall issue an |
aftercare release violation warrant, under the following |
circumstances: |
(1) if the releasee commits an act that constitutes a |
felony using a firearm or knife; |
(2) if the releasee is required to and fails to comply |
with the requirements of the Sex Offender Registration Act; |
(3) if the releasee is charged with: |
(A) a felony offense of domestic battery under |
Section 12-3.2 of the Criminal Code of 2012; |
(B) aggravated domestic battery under Section |
12-3.3 of the Criminal Code of 2012; |
(C) stalking under Section 12-7.3 of the Criminal |
Code of 2012; |
(D) aggravated stalking under Section 12-7.4 of |
the Criminal Code of 2012; |
|
(E) violation of an order of protection under |
Section 12-3.4 of the Criminal Code of 2012; or |
(F) any offense that would require registration as |
a sex offender under the Sex Offender Registration Act; |
or |
(4) if the releasee is on aftercare release for a |
murder, a Class X felony or a Class 1 felony violation of |
the Criminal Code of 2012, or any felony that requires |
registration as a sex offender under the Sex Offender |
Registration Act and commits an act that constitutes first |
degree murder, a Class X felony, a Class 1 felony, a Class |
2 felony, or a Class 3 felony. |
Personnel designated by the Department of Juvenile |
Justice or another peace officer may detain an alleged |
aftercare release violator until a warrant for his or her |
return to the Department of Juvenile Justice can be issued. |
The releasee may be delivered to any secure place until he |
or she can be transported to the Department of Juvenile |
Justice. The aftercare specialist or the Department of |
Juvenile Justice shall file a violation report with notice |
of charges with the Prisoner Review Board. |
(d) The aftercare specialist shall regularly advise and |
consult with the releasee and assist the youth in adjusting to |
community life in accord with this Section. |
(e) If the aftercare releasee has been convicted of a sex |
offense as defined in the Sex Offender Management Board Act, |
|
the aftercare specialist shall periodically, but not less than |
once a month, verify that the releasee is in compliance with |
paragraph (7.6) of subsection (a) of Section 3-3-7. |
(f) The aftercare specialist shall keep those records as |
the Prisoner Review Board or Department may require. All |
records shall be entered in the master file of the youth.
|
(730 ILCS 5/3-3-1) (from Ch. 38, par. 1003-3-1)
|
Sec. 3-3-1. Establishment and Appointment of Prisoner |
Review Board.
|
(a) There shall be a Prisoner Review Board independent of |
the Department
of Corrections which shall be:
|
(1) the paroling authority for persons sentenced under |
the
law in effect prior to the effective date of this |
amendatory
Act of 1977;
|
(1.5) the authority for hearing and deciding the time |
of aftercare release for persons adjudicated delinquent |
under the Juvenile Court Act of 1987;
|
(2) the board of review for cases involving the |
revocation
of sentence credits or a suspension or reduction |
in the
rate of accumulating the credit;
|
(3) the board of review and recommendation for the |
exercise
of executive clemency by the Governor;
|
(4) the authority for establishing release dates for
|
certain prisoners sentenced under the law in existence |
prior
to the effective date of this amendatory Act of 1977, |
|
in
accordance with Section 3-3-2.1 of this Code;
|
(5) the authority for setting conditions for parole,
|
mandatory supervised release under Section 5-8-1(a) of |
this
Code, and aftercare release, and determining whether a |
violation of those conditions
warrant revocation of |
parole , aftercare release, or mandatory supervised release
|
or the imposition of other sanctions.
|
(b) The Board shall consist of 15 persons appointed by
the |
Governor by and with the advice and consent of the Senate.
One |
member of the Board shall be designated by the Governor
to be |
Chairman and shall serve as Chairman at the pleasure of
the |
Governor. The members of the Board shall have had at
least 5 |
years of actual experience in the fields of penology,
|
corrections work, law enforcement, sociology, law, education,
|
social work, medicine, psychology, other behavioral sciences,
|
or a combination thereof. At least 6 members so appointed
must |
have had at least 3 years experience in the field of
juvenile |
matters. No more than 8 Board members may be members
of the |
same political party.
|
Each member of the Board shall serve on a full-time basis
|
and shall not hold any other salaried public office, whether |
elective or
appointive, nor any other office or position of |
profit, nor engage in any
other business, employment, or |
vocation. The Chairman of the Board shall
receive $35,000 a |
year, or an amount set by the Compensation Review Board,
|
whichever is greater, and each other member $30,000, or an |
|
amount set by the
Compensation Review Board, whichever is |
greater.
|
(c) Notwithstanding any other provision of this Section,
|
the term of each member of the Board
who was appointed by the |
Governor and is in office on June 30, 2003 shall
terminate at |
the close of business on that date or when all of the successor
|
members to be appointed pursuant to this amendatory Act of the |
93rd General
Assembly have been appointed by the Governor, |
whichever occurs later. As soon
as possible, the Governor shall |
appoint persons to fill the vacancies created
by this |
amendatory Act.
|
Of the initial members appointed under this amendatory Act |
of the 93rd
General Assembly, the Governor shall appoint 5 |
members whose terms shall expire
on the third Monday
in January |
2005, 5 members whose terms shall expire on the
third Monday in |
January 2007, and 5 members whose terms
shall expire on the |
third Monday in January 2009. Their respective successors
shall |
be appointed for terms of 6 years from the third Monday
in |
January of the year of appointment. Each member shall
serve |
until his or her successor is appointed and qualified.
|
Any member may be removed by the Governor for incompetence, |
neglect of duty,
malfeasance or inability to serve.
|
(d) The Chairman of the Board shall be its chief executive |
and
administrative officer. The Board may have an Executive |
Director; if so,
the Executive Director shall be appointed by |
the Governor with the advice and
consent of the Senate. The |
|
salary and duties of the Executive Director shall
be fixed by |
the Board.
|
(Source: P.A. 97-697, eff. 6-22-12.)
|
(730 ILCS 5/3-3-2) (from Ch. 38, par. 1003-3-2)
|
Sec. 3-3-2. Powers and Duties.
|
(a) The Parole and Pardon Board is abolished and the term |
"Parole and
Pardon Board" as used in any law of Illinois, shall |
read "Prisoner Review
Board." After the effective date of this |
amendatory Act of 1977, the
Prisoner Review Board shall provide |
by rule for the orderly transition of
all files, records, and |
documents of the Parole and Pardon Board and for
such other |
steps as may be necessary to effect an orderly transition and |
shall:
|
(1) hear by at least one member and through a panel of |
at least 3 members
decide, cases of prisoners
who were |
sentenced under the law in effect prior to the effective
|
date of this amendatory Act of 1977, and who are eligible |
for parole;
|
(2) hear by at least one member and through a panel of |
at least 3 members decide, the conditions of
parole and the |
time of discharge from parole, impose sanctions for
|
violations of parole, and revoke
parole for those sentenced |
under the law in effect prior to this amendatory
Act of |
1977; provided that the decision to parole and the |
conditions of
parole for all prisoners who were sentenced |
|
for first degree murder or who
received a minimum sentence |
of 20 years or more under the law in effect
prior to |
February 1, 1978 shall be determined by a majority vote of |
the
Prisoner Review Board. One representative supporting |
parole and one representative opposing parole will be |
allowed to speak. Their comments shall be limited to making |
corrections and filling in omissions to the Board's |
presentation and discussion;
|
(3) hear by at least one member and through a panel of |
at least 3 members decide, the conditions
of mandatory |
supervised release and the time of discharge from mandatory
|
supervised release, impose sanctions for violations of |
mandatory
supervised release, and revoke mandatory |
supervised release for those
sentenced under the law in |
effect after the effective date of this
amendatory Act of |
1977;
|
(3.5) hear by at least one member and through a panel |
of at least 3 members decide, the conditions of mandatory |
supervised release and the time of discharge from mandatory |
supervised release, to impose sanctions for violations of |
mandatory supervised release and revoke mandatory |
supervised release for those serving extended supervised |
release terms pursuant to paragraph (4) of subsection (d) |
of Section 5-8-1;
|
(3.6) hear by at least one member and through a panel |
of at least 3 members decide, the time of aftercare |
|
release, the conditions of aftercare release and the time |
of discharge from aftercare release, impose sanctions for |
violations of aftercare release, and revoke aftercare |
release for those adjudicated delinquent under the |
Juvenile Court Act of 1987;
|
(4) hear by at least one member and through a panel of |
at least 3
members,
decide cases brought by the Department |
of Corrections against a prisoner in
the custody of the |
Department for alleged violation of Department rules
with |
respect to sentence credits under Section 3-6-3 of this |
Code
in which the Department seeks to revoke sentence |
credits, if the amount
of time at issue exceeds 30 days or |
when, during any 12 month period, the
cumulative amount of |
credit revoked exceeds 30 days except where the
infraction |
is committed or discovered within 60 days of scheduled |
release.
In such cases, the Department of Corrections may |
revoke up to 30 days of
sentence credit. The Board may |
subsequently approve the revocation of
additional sentence |
credit, if the Department seeks to revoke sentence credit |
in excess of thirty days. However, the Board shall not be
|
empowered to review the Department's decision with respect |
to the loss of
30 days of sentence credit for any prisoner |
or to increase any penalty
beyond the length requested by |
the Department;
|
(5) hear by at least one member and through a panel of |
at least 3
members decide, the
release dates for certain |
|
prisoners sentenced under the law in existence
prior to the |
effective date of this amendatory Act of 1977, in
|
accordance with Section 3-3-2.1 of this Code;
|
(6) hear by at least one member and through a panel of |
at least 3 members
decide, all requests for pardon, |
reprieve or commutation, and make confidential
|
recommendations to the Governor;
|
(7) comply with the requirements of the Open Parole |
Hearings Act;
|
(8) hear by at least one member and, through a panel of |
at least 3
members, decide cases brought by the Department |
of Corrections against a
prisoner in the custody of the |
Department for court dismissal of a frivolous
lawsuit |
pursuant to Section 3-6-3(d) of this Code in which the |
Department seeks
to revoke up to 180 days of sentence |
credit, and if the prisoner has not
accumulated 180 days of |
sentence credit at the time of the dismissal, then
all |
sentence credit accumulated by the prisoner shall be |
revoked;
|
(9) hear by at least 3 members, and, through a panel of |
at least 3
members, decide whether to grant certificates of |
relief from
disabilities or certificates of good conduct as |
provided in Article 5.5 of
Chapter V; and |
(10) upon a petition by a person who has been convicted |
of a Class 3 or Class 4 felony and who meets the |
requirements of this paragraph, hear by at least 3 members |
|
and, with the unanimous vote of a panel of 3 members, issue |
a certificate of eligibility for sealing recommending that |
the court order the sealing of all official
records of the |
arresting authority, the circuit court clerk, and the |
Department of State Police concerning the arrest and |
conviction for the Class 3 or 4 felony. A person may not |
apply to the Board for a certificate of eligibility for |
sealing: |
(A) until 5 years have elapsed since the expiration |
of his or her sentence; |
(B) until 5 years have elapsed since any arrests or |
detentions by a law enforcement officer for an alleged |
violation of law, other than a petty offense, traffic |
offense, conservation offense, or local ordinance |
offense; |
(C) if convicted of a violation of the Cannabis |
Control Act, Illinois Controlled Substances Act, the |
Methamphetamine Control and Community Protection Act, |
the Methamphetamine Precursor Control Act, or the |
Methamphetamine Precursor Tracking Act unless the |
petitioner has completed a drug abuse program for the |
offense on which sealing is sought and provides proof |
that he or she has completed the program successfully; |
(D) if convicted of: |
(i) a sex offense described in Article 11 or |
Sections 12-13, 12-14, 12-14.1, 12-15, or 12-16 of |
|
the Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of |
2012; |
(ii) aggravated assault; |
(iii) aggravated battery; |
(iv) domestic battery; |
(v) aggravated domestic battery; |
(vi) violation of an order of protection; |
(vii) an offense under the Criminal Code of |
1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012 involving a |
firearm; |
(viii) driving while under the influence of |
alcohol, other drug or drugs, intoxicating |
compound or compounds or any combination thereof; |
(ix) aggravated driving while under the |
influence of alcohol, other drug or drugs, |
intoxicating compound or compounds or any |
combination thereof; or |
(x) any crime defined as a crime of violence |
under Section 2 of the Crime Victims Compensation |
Act. |
If a person has applied to the Board for a certificate of |
eligibility for sealing and the Board denies the certificate, |
the person must wait at least 4 years before filing again or |
filing for pardon from the Governor unless the Chairman of the |
Prisoner Review Board grants a waiver. |
The decision to issue or refrain from issuing a certificate |
|
of eligibility for sealing shall be at the Board's sole |
discretion, and shall not give rise to any cause of action |
against either the Board or its members. |
The Board may only authorize the sealing of Class 3 and 4 |
felony convictions of the petitioner from one information or |
indictment under this paragraph (10). A petitioner may only |
receive one certificate of eligibility for sealing under this |
provision for life.
|
(a-5) The Prisoner Review Board, with the cooperation of |
and in
coordination with the Department of Corrections and the |
Department of Central
Management Services, shall implement a |
pilot project in 3 correctional
institutions providing for the |
conduct of hearings under paragraphs (1) and
(4)
of subsection |
(a) of this Section through interactive video conferences.
The
|
project shall be implemented within 6 months after the |
effective date of this
amendatory Act of 1996. Within 6 months |
after the implementation of the pilot
project, the Prisoner |
Review Board, with the cooperation of and in coordination
with |
the Department of Corrections and the Department of Central |
Management
Services, shall report to the Governor and the |
General Assembly regarding the
use, costs, effectiveness, and |
future viability of interactive video
conferences for Prisoner |
Review Board hearings.
|
(b) Upon recommendation of the Department the Board may |
restore sentence credit previously revoked.
|
(c) The Board shall cooperate with the Department in |
|
promoting an
effective system of parole , aftercare release, and |
mandatory supervised release.
|
(d) The Board shall promulgate rules for the conduct of its |
work,
and the Chairman shall file a copy of such rules and any |
amendments
thereto with the Director and with the Secretary of |
State.
|
(e) The Board shall keep records of all of its official |
actions and
shall make them accessible in accordance with law |
and the rules of the
Board.
|
(f) The Board or one who has allegedly violated the |
conditions of
his or her parole , aftercare release, or |
mandatory supervised release may require by subpoena the
|
attendance and testimony of witnesses and the production of |
documentary
evidence relating to any matter under |
investigation or hearing. The
Chairman of the Board may sign |
subpoenas which shall be served by any
agent or public official |
authorized by the Chairman of the Board, or by
any person |
lawfully authorized to serve a subpoena under the laws of the
|
State of Illinois. The attendance of witnesses, and the |
production of
documentary evidence, may be required from any |
place in the State to a
hearing location in the State before |
the Chairman of the Board or his or her
designated agent or |
agents or any duly constituted Committee or
Subcommittee of the |
Board. Witnesses so summoned shall be paid the same
fees and |
mileage that are paid witnesses in the circuit courts of the
|
State, and witnesses whose depositions are taken and the |
|
persons taking
those depositions are each entitled to the same |
fees as are paid for
like services in actions in the circuit |
courts of the State. Fees and
mileage shall be vouchered for |
payment when the witness is discharged
from further attendance.
|
In case of disobedience to a subpoena, the Board may |
petition any
circuit court of the State for an order requiring |
the attendance and
testimony of witnesses or the production of |
documentary evidence or
both. A copy of such petition shall be |
served by personal service or by
registered or certified mail |
upon the person who has failed to obey the
subpoena, and such |
person shall be advised in writing that a hearing
upon the |
petition will be requested in a court room to be designated in
|
such notice before the judge hearing motions or extraordinary |
remedies
at a specified time, on a specified date, not less |
than 10 nor more than
15 days after the deposit of the copy of |
the written notice and petition
in the U.S. mails addressed to |
the person at his last known address or
after the personal |
service of the copy of the notice and petition upon
such |
person. The court upon the filing of such a petition, may order |
the
person refusing to obey the subpoena to appear at an |
investigation or
hearing, or to there produce documentary |
evidence, if so ordered, or to
give evidence relative to the |
subject matter of that investigation or
hearing. Any failure to |
obey such order of the circuit court may be
punished by that |
court as a contempt of court.
|
Each member of the Board and any hearing officer designated |
|
by the
Board shall have the power to administer oaths and to |
take the testimony
of persons under oath.
|
(g) Except under subsection (a) of this Section, a majority |
of the
members then appointed to the Prisoner Review Board |
shall constitute a
quorum for the transaction of all business |
of the Board.
|
(h) The Prisoner Review Board shall annually transmit to |
the
Director a detailed report of its work for the preceding |
calendar year.
The annual report shall also be transmitted to |
the Governor for
submission to the Legislature.
|
(Source: P.A. 96-875, eff. 1-22-10; 97-697, eff. 6-22-12; |
97-1120, eff. 1-1-13; 97-1150, eff. 1-25-13.)
|
(730 ILCS 5/3-3-3) (from Ch. 38, par. 1003-3-3)
|
Sec. 3-3-3. Eligibility for Parole or Release.
|
(a) Except for those offenders who accept the fixed release
|
date established by the Prisoner Review Board under Section
|
3-3-2.1, every person serving a term of imprisonment under
the |
law in effect prior to the effective date of this
amendatory |
Act of 1977 shall be eligible for parole when
he or she has |
served:
|
(1) the minimum term of an indeterminate sentence less
|
time credit for good behavior, or 20 years less time credit
|
for good behavior, whichever is less; or
|
(2) 20 years of a life sentence less time credit for |
good behavior; or
|
|
(3) 20 years or one-third of a determinate sentence,
|
whichever is less, less time credit for good behavior.
|
(b) No person sentenced under this amendatory Act of 1977 |
or who accepts
a release date under Section 3-3-2.1 shall be |
eligible for parole.
|
(c) Except for those sentenced to a term of natural
life |
imprisonment, every person sentenced to imprisonment
under |
this amendatory Act of 1977 or given a release date
under |
Section 3-3-2.1 of this Act shall serve the full term
of a |
determinate sentence less time credit for good behavior
and |
shall then be released under the mandatory supervised
release |
provisions of paragraph (d) of Section 5-8-1 of this Code.
|
(d) No person serving a term of natural life imprisonment |
may be paroled
or released except through executive clemency.
|
(e) Every person committed to the Department of Juvenile |
Justice under Section
5-10 of the Juvenile Court Act or Section |
5-750 of the Juvenile
Court Act
of 1987 or Section 5-8-6 of |
this Code and confined in the State correctional
institutions |
or facilities if such juvenile has not been
tried as an adult |
shall be eligible for aftercare release parole without
regard |
to the length of time the person has been confined
or whether |
the person has served any minimum term imposed.
However, if a |
juvenile has been tried as an adult he or she shall
only be |
eligible for parole or mandatory supervised release
as an adult |
under this Section.
|
(Source: P.A. 94-696, eff. 6-1-06 .)
|
|
(730 ILCS 5/3-3-4) (from Ch. 38, par. 1003-3-4)
|
Sec. 3-3-4. Preparation for Parole Hearing.
|
(a) The Prisoner Review Board shall consider the parole
of |
each eligible person committed to the Department of Corrections |
at
least 30 days prior to the date he or she shall first become
|
eligible for parole, and shall consider the aftercare release |
parole of each
person committed to the Department of Juvenile |
Justice as a delinquent
at least 30 days prior to the |
expiration of the first year
of confinement.
|
(b) A person eligible for parole or aftercare release |
shall, no less than 15 days in advance of
his or her parole |
interview, prepare a parole or aftercare release plan in |
accordance
with the rules of the Prisoner Review Board. The |
person
shall be assisted in preparing his or her parole or |
aftercare release plan by personnel
of the Department of |
Corrections, or the Department of Juvenile Justice in the case |
of a person committed to that Department, and may, for this |
purpose, be released
on furlough under Article 11 or on |
authorized absence under
Section 3-9-4. The appropriate |
Department shall also provide
assistance in obtaining |
information and records helpful to
the individual for his or |
her parole hearing. If the person eligible for parole or |
aftercare release has a petition or any written submissions |
prepared on his or her behalf by an attorney or other |
representative, the attorney or representative for the person |
|
eligible for parole or aftercare release must serve by |
certified mail the State's Attorney of the county where he or |
she was prosecuted with the petition or any written submissions |
15 days after his or her parole interview. The State's Attorney |
shall provide the attorney for the person eligible for parole |
or aftercare release with a copy of his or her letter in |
opposition to parole or aftercare release via certified mail |
within 5 business days of the en banc hearing.
|
(c) Any member of the Board shall have access at all
|
reasonable times to any committed person and to his or her |
master
record file within the Department, and the Department |
shall
furnish such a report to the Board
concerning the conduct |
and character of any such person prior to his or her parole |
interview.
|
(d) In making its determination of parole or aftercare |
release , the Board
shall consider:
|
(1) material transmitted to the Department of Juvenile |
Justice by the
clerk of the committing court under Section |
5-4-1 or Section
5-10 of the Juvenile Court Act or Section |
5-750 of the Juvenile
Court Act of 1987;
|
(2) the report under Section 3-8-2 or 3-10-2;
|
(3) a report by the Department and any report by the
|
chief administrative officer of the institution or |
facility;
|
(4) a parole or aftercare release progress report;
|
(5) a medical and psychological report, if requested
by |
|
the Board;
|
(6) material in writing, or on film, video tape or |
other electronic
means in the form of a recording submitted |
by the person whose parole or aftercare release
is being |
considered;
|
(7) material in writing, or on film, video tape or |
other electronic
means in the form of a recording or |
testimony submitted by the State's
Attorney and the victim |
or a concerned citizen pursuant to the Rights of Crime |
Victims and Witnesses Act; and
|
(8) the person's eligibility for commitment under the |
Sexually Violent Persons Commitment Act. |
(e) The prosecuting State's Attorney's office shall |
receive from the Board reasonable
written notice not less than |
30 days prior to the parole or aftercare release interview and |
may
submit relevant information by oral argument or testimony |
of victims and concerned citizens, or both, in writing, or on |
film, video tape or other
electronic means or in the form of a |
recording to the Board for its
consideration. Upon written |
request of the State's Attorney's office, the Prisoner Review |
Board shall hear protests to parole, or aftercare release, |
except in counties of 1,500,000 or more inhabitants where there |
shall be standing objections to all such petitions. If a |
State's Attorney who represents a county of less than 1,500,000 |
inhabitants requests a protest hearing, the inmate's counsel or |
other representative shall also receive notice of such request.
|
|
This hearing shall take place the month following the inmate's |
parole or aftercare release interview. If the inmate's parole |
or aftercare release interview is rescheduled then the Prisoner |
Review Board shall promptly notify the State's Attorney of the |
new date. The person eligible for parole or aftercare release |
shall be heard at the next scheduled en banc hearing date. If |
the case is to be continued, the State's Attorney's office and |
the attorney or representative for the person eligible for |
parole or aftercare release will be notified of any continuance |
within 5 business days. The State's Attorney may waive the |
written notice.
|
(f) The victim of the violent crime for which the prisoner |
has been
sentenced shall receive notice of a parole or |
aftercare release hearing as provided in paragraph
(4) of |
subsection (d) of Section 4.5 of the Rights of Crime Victims |
and Witnesses
Act.
|
(g) Any recording considered under the provisions of |
subsection (d)(6),
(d)(7) or (e) of this Section shall be in |
the form designated by the Board.
Such recording shall be both |
visual and aural. Every voice on the
recording and person |
present shall be identified and the recording shall
contain |
either a visual or aural statement of the person submitting |
such
recording, the date of the recording and the name of the |
person whose
parole or aftercare release eligibility is being |
considered. Such recordings shall be retained by
the Board and |
shall be deemed to be submitted at any subsequent parole or |
|
aftercare release hearing
if the victim or State's Attorney |
submits in writing a declaration clearly
identifying such |
recording as representing the present position of the
victim or |
State's Attorney regarding the issues to be considered at the |
parole or aftercare release
hearing.
|
(h) The Board shall not release any material to the inmate, |
the inmate's attorney, any third party, or any other person |
containing any information from the victim or from a person |
related to the victim by blood, adoption, or marriage who has |
written objections, testified at any hearing, or submitted |
audio or visual objections to the inmate's parole, or aftercare |
release, unless provided with a waiver from that objecting |
party. |
(Source: P.A. 96-875, eff. 1-22-10; 97-523, eff. 1-1-12; |
97-1075, eff. 8-24-12; 97-1083, eff. 8-24-12; revised |
9-20-12.)
|
(730 ILCS 5/3-3-5) (from Ch. 38, par. 1003-3-5)
|
Sec. 3-3-5. Hearing and Determination.
|
(a) The Prisoner
Review Board shall meet as often as need |
requires to consider
the cases of persons eligible for parole |
and aftercare release . Except as otherwise
provided in |
paragraph (2) of subsection (a) of Section 3-3-2
of this Act, |
the Prisoner Review Board may meet and
order its actions in |
panels of 3 or more members. The action
of a majority of the |
panel shall be the action of the Board.
In consideration of |
|
persons committed to the Department of Juvenile Justice,
the |
panel shall have at least a majority of members experienced
in |
juvenile matters.
|
(b) If the person under consideration for parole or |
aftercare release is in the
custody of the Department, at least |
one member of the Board
shall interview him or her , and a |
report of that interview shall be
available for the Board's |
consideration. However, in the
discretion of the Board, the |
interview need not be conducted
if a psychiatric examination |
determines that the person could
not meaningfully contribute to |
the Board's consideration. The
Board may in its discretion |
parole or release on aftercare a person who is then outside
the |
jurisdiction on his or her record without an interview. The |
Board
need not hold a hearing or interview a person who is |
paroled or released on aftercare
under paragraphs (d) or (e) of |
this Section or released on
Mandatory release under Section |
3-3-10.
|
(c) The Board shall not parole or release a person eligible |
for
parole or aftercare release if it determines that:
|
(1) there is a substantial risk that he or she will not
|
conform to reasonable conditions of parole or aftercare |
release ; or
|
(2) his or her release at that time would deprecate the
|
seriousness of his or her offense or promote disrespect for |
the law; or
|
(3) his or her release would have a substantially |
|
adverse
effect on institutional discipline.
|
(d) A person committed under the Juvenile Court Act
or the |
Juvenile Court Act of 1987
who has not been sooner released |
shall be released on aftercare paroled on or before
his or her |
20th birthday to begin serving a period of aftercare release |
parole under
Section 3-3-8.
|
(e) A person who has served the maximum term of
|
imprisonment imposed at the time of sentencing less time
credit |
for good behavior shall be released on parole to
serve a period |
of parole under Section 5-8-1.
|
(f) The Board shall render its decision within a
reasonable |
time after hearing and shall state the basis
therefor both in |
the records of the Board and in written
notice to the person on |
whose application it has acted.
In its decision, the Board |
shall set the person's time
for parole or aftercare release , or |
if it denies parole or aftercare release it shall provide for
a |
rehearing not less frequently than once every
year, except that |
the Board may,
after denying parole,
schedule a rehearing no |
later than 5 years from the date of the parole
denial, if the |
Board finds that it is not reasonable to expect that parole
|
would be granted at a hearing prior to the scheduled rehearing |
date. If the
Board shall parole or release a person, and, if he |
or she is not released within 90 days from
the effective date |
of the order granting parole or aftercare release , the matter |
shall be
returned to the Board for review.
|
(f-1) If the Board paroles or releases a person who is |
|
eligible for commitment as a sexually violent person, the |
effective date of the Board's order shall be stayed for 90 days |
for the purpose of evaluation and proceedings under the |
Sexually Violent Persons Commitment Act. |
(g) The Board shall maintain a registry of decisions in |
which parole
has been granted, which shall include the name and |
case number of the
prisoner, the highest charge for which the |
prisoner was sentenced, the
length of sentence imposed, the |
date of the sentence, the date of the
parole, and the basis for |
the decision of the Board to grant parole and the
vote of the |
Board on any such decisions. The registry shall be made |
available
for public inspection and copying during business |
hours and shall be a public
record pursuant to the provisions |
of the Freedom of Information Act.
|
(h) The Board shall promulgate rules regarding the exercise
|
of its discretion under this Section.
|
(Source: P.A. 96-875, eff. 1-22-10; 97-522, eff. 1-1-12; |
97-1075, eff. 8-24-12.)
|
(730 ILCS 5/3-3-7) (from Ch. 38, par. 1003-3-7) |
Sec. 3-3-7. Conditions of Parole , or Mandatory Supervised |
Release , or Aftercare Release .
|
(a) The conditions of parole , aftercare release, or |
mandatory
supervised release shall be such as the Prisoner |
Review
Board deems necessary to assist the subject in leading a
|
law-abiding life. The conditions of every parole , aftercare |
|
release, and mandatory
supervised release are that the subject:
|
(1) not violate any criminal statute of any |
jurisdiction
during the parole , aftercare release, or |
release term;
|
(2) refrain from possessing a firearm or other |
dangerous
weapon;
|
(3) report to an agent of the Department of Corrections |
or to the Department of Juvenile Justice ;
|
(4) permit the agent or aftercare specialist to visit |
him or her at his or her home, employment,
or
elsewhere to |
the
extent necessary for the agent or aftercare specialist |
to discharge his or her duties;
|
(5) attend or reside in a facility established for the |
instruction or
residence
of persons on
parole , aftercare |
release, or mandatory supervised release;
|
(6) secure permission before visiting or writing a |
committed person in an
Illinois Department
of Corrections |
facility;
|
(7) report all arrests to an agent of the Department of |
Corrections or to the Department of Juvenile Justice as
|
soon as
permitted by the
arresting authority but in no |
event later than 24 hours after release from
custody and |
immediately report service or notification of an order of |
protection, a civil no contact order, or a stalking no |
contact order to an agent of the Department of Corrections;
|
(7.5) if convicted of a sex offense as defined in the |
|
Sex Offender
Management Board Act, the individual shall |
undergo and successfully complete
sex offender treatment |
conducted in conformance with the standards developed by
|
the Sex
Offender Management Board Act by a treatment |
provider approved by the Board;
|
(7.6) if convicted of a sex offense as defined in the |
Sex Offender
Management Board Act, refrain from residing at |
the same address or in the same condominium unit or |
apartment unit or in the same condominium complex or |
apartment complex with another person he or she knows or |
reasonably should know is a convicted sex offender or has |
been placed on supervision for a sex offense; the |
provisions of this paragraph do not apply to a person |
convicted of a sex offense who is placed in a Department of |
Corrections licensed transitional housing facility for sex |
offenders, or is in any facility operated or licensed by |
the Department of Children and Family Services or by the |
Department of Human Services, or is in any licensed medical |
facility;
|
(7.7) if convicted for an offense that would qualify |
the accused as a sexual predator under the Sex Offender |
Registration Act on or after January 1, 2007 (the effective |
date of Public Act 94-988), wear an approved electronic |
monitoring device as defined in Section 5-8A-2 for the |
duration of the person's parole, aftercare release, |
mandatory supervised release term, or extended mandatory |
|
supervised release term and if convicted for an offense of |
criminal sexual assault, aggravated criminal sexual |
assault, predatory criminal sexual assault of a child, |
criminal sexual abuse, aggravated criminal sexual abuse, |
or ritualized abuse of a child committed on or after August |
11, 2009 (the effective date of Public Act 96-236) when the |
victim was under 18 years of age at the time of the |
commission of the offense and the defendant used force or |
the threat of force in the commission of the offense wear |
an approved electronic monitoring device as defined in |
Section 5-8A-2 that has Global Positioning System (GPS) |
capability for the duration of the person's parole, |
aftercare release, mandatory supervised release term, or |
extended mandatory supervised release term;
|
(7.8) if convicted for an offense committed on or after |
June 1, 2008 (the effective date of Public Act 95-464) that |
would qualify the accused as a child sex offender as |
defined in Section 11-9.3 or 11-9.4 of the Criminal Code of |
1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012, refrain from |
communicating with or contacting, by means of the Internet, |
a person who is not related to the accused and whom the |
accused reasonably believes to be under 18 years of age; |
for purposes of this paragraph (7.8), "Internet" has the |
meaning ascribed to it in Section 16-0.1 of the Criminal |
Code of 2012; and a person is not related to the accused if |
the person is not: (i) the spouse, brother, or sister of |
|
the accused; (ii) a descendant of the accused; (iii) a |
first or second cousin of the accused; or (iv) a step-child |
or adopted child of the accused;
|
(7.9)
if convicted under Section 11-6, 11-20.1, |
11-20.1B, 11-20.3, or 11-21 of the Criminal Code of 1961 or |
the Criminal Code of 2012, consent to search of computers, |
PDAs, cellular phones, and other devices under his or her |
control that are capable of accessing the Internet or |
storing electronic files, in order to confirm Internet |
protocol addresses reported in accordance with the Sex |
Offender Registration Act and compliance with conditions |
in this Act;
|
(7.10)
if convicted for an offense that would qualify |
the accused as a sex offender or sexual predator under the |
Sex Offender Registration Act on or after June 1, 2008 (the |
effective date of Public Act 95-640), not possess |
prescription drugs for erectile dysfunction;
|
(7.11) if convicted for an offense under Section 11-6, |
11-9.1, 11-14.4 that involves soliciting for a juvenile |
prostitute, 11-15.1, 11-20.1, 11-20.1B, 11-20.3, or 11-21 |
of the Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012, |
or any attempt to commit any of these offenses, committed |
on or after June 1, 2009 (the effective date of Public Act |
95-983): |
(i) not access or use a computer or any other |
device with Internet capability without the prior |
|
written approval of the Department; |
(ii) submit to periodic unannounced examinations |
of the offender's computer or any other device with |
Internet capability by the offender's supervising |
agent, aftercare specialist, a law enforcement |
officer, or assigned computer or information |
technology specialist, including the retrieval and |
copying of all data from the computer or device and any |
internal or external peripherals and removal of such |
information, equipment, or device to conduct a more |
thorough inspection; |
(iii) submit to the installation on the offender's |
computer or device with Internet capability, at the |
offender's expense, of one or more hardware or software |
systems to monitor the Internet use; and |
(iv) submit to any other appropriate restrictions |
concerning the offender's use of or access to a |
computer or any other device with Internet capability |
imposed by the Board, the Department or the offender's |
supervising agent or aftercare specialist ; |
(7.12) if convicted of a sex offense as defined in the |
Sex Offender
Registration Act committed on or after January |
1, 2010 (the effective date of Public Act 96-262), refrain |
from accessing or using a social networking website as |
defined in Section 17-0.5 of the Criminal Code of 2012;
|
(7.13) if convicted of a sex offense as defined in |
|
Section 2 of the Sex Offender Registration Act committed on |
or after January 1, 2010 (the effective date of Public Act |
96-362) that requires the person to register as a sex |
offender under that Act, may not knowingly use any computer |
scrub software on any computer that the sex offender uses; |
(8) obtain permission of an agent of the Department of |
Corrections or the Department of Juvenile Justice before
|
leaving the
State of Illinois;
|
(9) obtain permission of an agent of the Department of |
Corrections or the Department of Juvenile Justice before
|
changing
his or her residence or employment;
|
(10) consent to a search of his or her person, |
property, or residence
under his or her
control;
|
(11) refrain from the use or possession of narcotics or |
other controlled
substances in
any form, or both, or any |
paraphernalia related to those substances and submit
to a
|
urinalysis test as instructed by a parole agent of the |
Department of
Corrections or an aftercare specialist of the |
Department of Juvenile Justice ;
|
(12) not frequent places where controlled substances |
are illegally sold,
used,
distributed, or administered;
|
(13) not knowingly associate with other persons on |
parole , aftercare release, or mandatory
supervised
release |
without prior written permission of his or her parole agent |
or aftercare specialist and not
associate with
persons who |
are members of an organized gang as that term is defined in |
|
the
Illinois
Streetgang Terrorism Omnibus Prevention Act;
|
(14) provide true and accurate information, as it |
relates to his or her
adjustment in the
community while on |
parole , aftercare release, or mandatory supervised release |
or to his or her
conduct
while incarcerated, in response to |
inquiries by his or her parole agent or of
the
Department |
of Corrections or by his or her aftercare specialist or of |
the Department of Juvenile Justice ;
|
(15) follow any specific instructions provided by the |
parole agent or aftercare specialist that
are consistent
|
with furthering conditions set and approved by the Prisoner |
Review Board or by
law,
exclusive of placement on |
electronic detention, to achieve the goals and
objectives |
of his
or her parole , aftercare release, or mandatory |
supervised release or to protect the public. These
|
instructions by the parole agent or aftercare specialist |
may be modified at any time, as the agent or aftercare |
specialist
deems
appropriate;
|
(16) if convicted of a sex offense as defined in |
subsection (a-5) of Section 3-1-2 of this Code, unless the |
offender is a parent or guardian of the person under 18 |
years of age present in the home and no non-familial minors |
are present, not participate in a holiday event involving |
children under 18 years of age, such as distributing candy |
or other items to children on Halloween, wearing a Santa |
Claus costume on or preceding Christmas, being employed as |
|
a department store Santa Claus, or wearing an Easter Bunny |
costume on or preceding Easter; |
(17) if convicted of a violation of an order of |
protection under Section 12-3.4 or Section 12-30 of the |
Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012, be |
placed under electronic surveillance as provided in |
Section 5-8A-7 of this Code; |
(18) comply with the terms and conditions of an order |
of protection issued pursuant to the Illinois Domestic |
Violence Act of 1986; an order of protection issued by the |
court of another state, tribe, or United States territory; |
a no contact order issued pursuant to the Civil No Contact |
Order Act; or a no contact order issued pursuant to the |
Stalking No Contact Order Act; and |
(19) if convicted of a violation of the Methamphetamine |
Control and Community Protection Act, the Methamphetamine
|
Precursor Control Act, or a methamphetamine related |
offense, be: |
(A) prohibited from purchasing, possessing, or |
having under his or her control any product containing |
pseudoephedrine unless prescribed by a physician; and |
(B) prohibited from purchasing, possessing, or |
having under his or her control any product containing |
ammonium nitrate. |
(b) The Board may in addition to other conditions
require |
that the subject:
|
|
(1) work or pursue a course of study or vocational |
training;
|
(2) undergo medical or psychiatric treatment, or |
treatment
for drug addiction or alcoholism;
|
(3) attend or reside in a facility established for the
|
instruction or residence of persons on probation or parole;
|
(4) support his or her dependents;
|
(5) (blank);
|
(6) (blank);
|
(7) (blank);
|
(7.5) if convicted for an offense committed on or after |
the effective date of this amendatory Act of the 95th |
General Assembly that would qualify the accused as a child |
sex offender as defined in Section 11-9.3 or 11-9.4 of the |
Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012, refrain |
from communicating with or contacting, by means of the |
Internet, a person who is related to the accused and whom |
the accused reasonably believes to be under 18 years of |
age; for purposes of this paragraph (7.5), "Internet" has |
the meaning ascribed to it in Section 16-0.1 of the |
Criminal Code of 2012; and a person is related to the |
accused if the person is: (i) the spouse, brother, or |
sister of the accused; (ii) a descendant of the accused; |
(iii) a first or second cousin of the accused; or (iv) a |
step-child or adopted child of the accused; |
(7.6) if convicted for an offense committed on or after |
|
June 1, 2009 (the effective date of Public Act 95-983) that |
would qualify as a sex offense as defined in the Sex |
Offender Registration Act: |
(i) not access or use a computer or any other |
device with Internet capability without the prior |
written approval of the Department; |
(ii) submit to periodic unannounced examinations |
of the offender's computer or any other device with |
Internet capability by the offender's supervising |
agent or aftercare specialist , a law enforcement |
officer, or assigned computer or information |
technology specialist, including the retrieval and |
copying of all data from the computer or device and any |
internal or external peripherals and removal of such |
information, equipment, or device to conduct a more |
thorough inspection; |
(iii) submit to the installation on the offender's |
computer or device with Internet capability, at the |
offender's expense, of one or more hardware or software |
systems to monitor the Internet use; and |
(iv) submit to any other appropriate restrictions |
concerning the offender's use of or access to a |
computer or any other device with Internet capability |
imposed by the Board, the Department or the offender's |
supervising agent or aftercare specialist ; and
|
(8) in addition, if a minor:
|
|
(i) reside with his or her parents or in a foster |
home;
|
(ii) attend school;
|
(iii) attend a non-residential program for youth; |
or
|
(iv) contribute to his or her own support at home |
or in a foster
home.
|
(b-1) In addition to the conditions set forth in |
subsections (a) and (b), persons required to register as sex |
offenders pursuant to the Sex Offender Registration Act, upon |
release from the custody of the Illinois Department of |
Corrections or Department of Juvenile Justice , may be required |
by the Board to comply with the following specific conditions |
of release: |
(1) reside only at a Department approved location; |
(2) comply with all requirements of the Sex Offender |
Registration Act;
|
(3) notify
third parties of the risks that may be |
occasioned by his or her criminal record; |
(4) obtain the approval of an agent of the Department |
of Corrections or the Department of Juvenile Justice prior |
to accepting employment or pursuing a course of study or |
vocational training and notify the Department prior to any |
change in employment, study, or training; |
(5) not be employed or participate in any
volunteer |
activity that involves contact with children, except under |
|
circumstances approved in advance and in writing by an |
agent of the Department of Corrections or the Department of |
Juvenile Justice ; |
(6) be electronically monitored for a minimum of 12 |
months from the date of release as determined by the Board;
|
(7) refrain from entering into a designated
geographic |
area except upon terms approved in advance by an agent of |
the Department of Corrections or the Department of Juvenile |
Justice . The terms may include consideration of the purpose |
of the entry, the time of day, and others accompanying the |
person; |
(8) refrain from having any contact, including
written |
or oral communications, directly or indirectly, personally |
or by telephone, letter, or through a third party with |
certain specified persons including, but not limited to, |
the victim or the victim's family without the prior written |
approval of an agent of the Department of Corrections or |
the Department of Juvenile Justice ; |
(9) refrain from all contact, directly or
indirectly, |
personally, by telephone, letter, or through a third party, |
with minor children without prior identification and |
approval of an agent of the Department of Corrections or |
the Department of Juvenile Justice ; |
(10) neither possess or have under his or her
control |
any material that is sexually oriented, sexually |
stimulating, or that shows male or female sex organs or any |
|
pictures depicting children under 18 years of age nude or |
any written or audio material describing sexual |
intercourse or that depicts or alludes to sexual activity, |
including but not limited to visual, auditory, telephonic, |
or electronic media, or any matter obtained through access |
to any computer or material linked to computer access use; |
(11) not patronize any business providing
sexually |
stimulating or sexually oriented entertainment nor utilize |
"900" or adult telephone numbers; |
(12) not reside near, visit, or be in or about
parks, |
schools, day care centers, swimming pools, beaches, |
theaters, or any other places where minor children |
congregate without advance approval of an agent of the |
Department of Corrections or the Department of Juvenile |
Justice and immediately report any incidental contact with |
minor children to the Department; |
(13) not possess or have under his or her control
|
certain specified items of contraband related to the |
incidence of sexually offending as determined by an agent |
of the Department of Corrections or the Department of |
Juvenile Justice ; |
(14) may be required to provide a written daily log of |
activities
if directed by an agent of the Department of |
Corrections or the Department of Juvenile Justice ; |
(15) comply with all other special conditions
that the |
Department may impose that restrict the person from |
|
high-risk situations and limit access to potential |
victims; |
(16) take an annual polygraph exam; |
(17) maintain a log of his or her travel; or |
(18) obtain prior approval of his or her parole officer |
or aftercare specialist before driving alone in a motor |
vehicle.
|
(c) The conditions under which the parole , aftercare |
release, or mandatory
supervised release is to be served shall |
be communicated to
the person in writing prior to his or her |
release, and he or she shall
sign the same before release. A |
signed copy of these conditions,
including a copy of an order |
of protection where one had been issued by the
criminal court, |
shall be retained by the person and another copy forwarded to
|
the officer or aftercare specialist in charge of his or her |
supervision.
|
(d) After a hearing under Section 3-3-9, the Prisoner
|
Review Board may modify or enlarge the conditions of parole , |
aftercare release,
or mandatory supervised release.
|
(e) The Department shall inform all offenders committed to
|
the Department of the optional services available to them
upon |
release and shall assist inmates in availing themselves
of such |
optional services upon their release on a voluntary
basis. |
(f) (Blank).
|
(Source: P.A. 96-236, eff. 8-11-09; 96-262, eff. 1-1-10; |
96-328, eff. 8-11-09; 96-362, eff. 1-1-10; 96-1000, eff. |
|
7-2-10; 96-1539, eff. 3-4-11; 96-1551, Article 2, Section 1065, |
eff. 7-1-11; 96-1551, Article 10, Section 10-150, eff. 7-1-11; |
97-50, eff. 6-28-11; 97-531, eff. 1-1-12; 97-560, eff. 1-1-12; |
97-597, eff. 1-1-12; 97-1109, eff. 1-1-13; 97-1150, eff. |
1-25-13.)
|
(730 ILCS 5/3-3-8) (from Ch. 38, par. 1003-3-8)
|
Sec. 3-3-8. Length of parole , aftercare release, and |
mandatory supervised
release; discharge.) |
(a) The length of parole
for a person sentenced under the |
law in effect prior to
the effective date of this amendatory |
Act of 1977 and the
length of mandatory supervised release for |
those sentenced
under the law in effect on and after such |
effective date
shall be as set out in Section 5-8-1 unless |
sooner terminated
under paragraph (b) of this Section. The |
aftercare release parole period
of a juvenile committed to the |
Department under the Juvenile
Court Act or the Juvenile Court |
Act of 1987 shall extend until he or she is 21
years of age |
unless sooner terminated under paragraph (b) of this Section.
|
(b) The Prisoner Review Board may enter an order
releasing |
and discharging one from parole , aftercare release, or |
mandatory
supervised release, and his or her commitment to the |
Department,
when it determines that he or she is likely to |
remain at liberty
without committing another offense.
|
(b-1) Provided that the subject is in compliance with the |
terms and conditions of his or her parole , aftercare release, |
|
or mandatory supervised release, the Prisoner Review Board may |
reduce the period of a parolee or releasee's parole , aftercare |
release, or mandatory supervised release by 90 days upon the |
parolee or releasee receiving a high school diploma or upon |
passage of the high school level Test of General Educational |
Development during the period of his or her parole , aftercare |
release, or mandatory supervised release. This reduction in the |
period of a subject's term of parole , aftercare release, or |
mandatory supervised release shall be available only to |
subjects who have not previously earned a high school diploma |
or who have not previously passed the high school level Test of |
General Educational Development. |
(c) The order of discharge shall become effective upon |
entry of the
order of the Board. The Board shall notify the |
clerk of the committing
court of the order. Upon receipt of |
such copy, the clerk shall make an
entry on the record judgment |
that the sentence or commitment has been
satisfied pursuant to |
the order.
|
(d) Rights of the person discharged under this
Section |
shall be restored under Section 5-5-5. This Section is subject |
to
Section 5-750 of the Juvenile Court Act of 1987.
|
(Source: P.A. 97-531, eff. 1-1-12.)
|
(730 ILCS 5/3-3-9) (from Ch. 38, par. 1003-3-9)
|
Sec. 3-3-9. Violations; changes of conditions; preliminary
|
hearing; revocation of parole , aftercare release, or mandatory |
|
supervised release;
revocation hearing. |
(a) If prior to expiration or termination of the term of
|
parole , aftercare release, or mandatory supervised release, a |
person violates a
condition set by the Prisoner Review Board or |
a condition of parole , aftercare release, or
mandatory |
supervised release under Section 3-3-7 of this Code to govern |
that
term,
the Board may:
|
(1) continue the existing term, with or without |
modifying or
enlarging the conditions; or
|
(2) parole or release the person to a half-way house; |
or
|
(3) revoke the parole , aftercare release, or mandatory |
supervised release and
reconfine the person for a term |
computed in the following
manner:
|
(i) (A) For those sentenced under the law in effect |
prior to
this amendatory Act of 1977, the recommitment |
shall be for any
portion of the imposed maximum term of |
imprisonment or confinement
which had not been served |
at the time of parole and the parole
term, less the |
time elapsed between the parole of the person and
the |
commission of the violation for which parole was |
revoked;
|
(B) Except as set forth in paragraph (C), for
those |
subject to mandatory supervised release under
|
paragraph (d) of Section 5-8-1 of this Code, the |
recommitment
shall be for the total mandatory |
|
supervised release term, less
the time elapsed between |
the release of the person and the
commission of the |
violation for which mandatory supervised
release is |
revoked. The Board may also order that a prisoner
serve |
up to one year of the sentence imposed by the court |
which
was not served due to the accumulation of |
sentence credit;
|
(C) For those subject to sex offender supervision |
under clause (d)(4) of Section 5-8-1 of this Code, the |
reconfinement period for violations of clauses (a)(3) |
through (b-1)(15) of Section 3-3-7 shall not exceed 2 |
years from the date of reconfinement ; .
|
(ii) the person shall be given credit against the |
term of
reimprisonment or reconfinement for time spent |
in custody
since he or she was paroled or released |
which has not been credited
against another sentence or |
period of confinement;
|
(iii) persons committed under the Juvenile Court |
Act or the Juvenile
Court Act of 1987 may be continued |
under the existing term of aftercare release parole |
with or without modifying the conditions of aftercare |
release parole , paroled or released on aftercare |
release to a group home or other residential facility, |
or recommitted until the age of 21 unless sooner |
terminated;
|
(iv) this Section is subject to the release under
|
|
supervision and the reparole and rerelease provisions |
of Section
3-3-10.
|
(b) The Board may revoke parole , aftercare release, or |
mandatory supervised
release for violation of a condition for |
the duration of the
term and for any further period which is |
reasonably necessary
for the adjudication of matters arising |
before its expiration.
The issuance of a warrant of arrest for |
an alleged violation
of the conditions of parole , aftercare |
release, or mandatory supervised release
shall toll the running |
of the term until the final determination of the
charge. When
|
parole , aftercare release, or mandatory supervised release is |
not revoked
that period shall be credited to the term, unless a |
community-based sanction is imposed as an alternative to |
revocation and reincarceration, including a diversion |
established by the Illinois Department of Corrections Parole |
Services Unit prior to the holding of a preliminary parole |
revocation hearing. Parolees who are diverted to a |
community-based sanction shall serve the entire term of parole |
or mandatory supervised release, if otherwise appropriate.
|
(b-5) The Board shall revoke parole , aftercare release, or |
mandatory supervised release for violation of the conditions |
prescribed in paragraph (7.6) of subsection (a) of Section |
3-3-7. |
(c) A person charged with violating a condition of parole , |
aftercare release, or
mandatory supervised release shall have a |
preliminary hearing
before a hearing officer designated by the |
|
Board to determine
if there is cause to hold the person for a |
revocation hearing.
However, no preliminary hearing need be |
held when revocation is based
upon new criminal charges and a |
court finds probable cause on the new
criminal charges or when |
the revocation
is based upon a new criminal conviction and a |
certified copy of
that conviction is available.
|
(d) Parole , aftercare release, or mandatory supervised |
release shall not be
revoked without written notice to the |
offender setting forth
the violation of parole , aftercare |
release, or mandatory supervised release charged
against him or |
her .
|
(e) A hearing on revocation shall be conducted before at
|
least one member of the Prisoner Review Board. The Board may
|
meet and order its actions in panels of 3 or more members.
The |
action of a majority of the panel shall be the action of
the |
Board. In consideration of persons committed to the Department |
of Juvenile Justice, the member hearing the matter and at least |
a majority
of the panel shall be experienced in juvenile |
matters. A record
of the hearing shall be made. At the hearing |
the offender shall
be permitted to:
|
(1) appear and answer the charge; and
|
(2) bring witnesses on his or her behalf.
|
(f) The Board shall either revoke parole , aftercare |
release, or mandatory
supervised release or order the person's |
term continued with
or without modification or enlargement of |
the conditions.
|
|
(g) Parole , aftercare release, or mandatory supervised |
release shall not be
revoked for failure to make payments under |
the conditions of
parole or release unless the Board determines |
that such failure is
due to the offender's willful refusal to |
pay.
|
(Source: P.A. 96-1271, eff. 1-1-11; 97-697, eff. 6-22-12; |
revised 8-3-12.)
|
(730 ILCS 5/3-3-10) (from Ch. 38, par. 1003-3-10)
|
Sec. 3-3-10. Eligibility after Revocation; Release under
|
Supervision.
|
(a) A person whose parole , aftercare release, or mandatory |
supervised release
has been revoked may be reparoled or |
rereleased by the
Board at any time to the full parole , |
aftercare release, or mandatory supervised
release term under |
Section 3-3-8, except that the time which
the person shall |
remain subject to the Board shall not exceed
(1) the imposed |
maximum term of imprisonment or confinement
and the parole term |
for those sentenced under the law in
effect prior to the |
effective date of this amendatory Act of
1977 or (2) the term |
of imprisonment imposed by the court and
the mandatory |
supervised release term for those sentenced
under the law in |
effect on and after such effective date.
|
(b) If the Board sets no earlier release date:
|
(1) A person sentenced for any violation of law which
|
occurred before January 1, 1973, shall be released under
|
|
supervision 6 months prior to the expiration of his or her |
maximum
sentence of imprisonment less good time credit |
under Section
3-6-3.
|
(2) Any person who has violated the conditions of his |
or her
parole or aftercare release and been reconfined |
under Section 3-3-9 shall be
released under supervision 6 |
months prior to the expiration
of the term of his or her |
reconfinement under paragraph (a) of
Section 3-3-9 less |
good time credit under Section 3-6-3.
This paragraph shall |
not apply to persons serving terms of
mandatory supervised |
release.
|
(3) Nothing herein shall require the release of a |
person
who has violated his or her parole within 6 months |
of the date when
his or her release under this Section |
would otherwise be mandatory.
|
(c) Persons released under this Section shall be subject
to |
Sections 3-3-6, 3-3-7, 3-3-9, 3-14-1, 3-14-2, 3-14-2.5,
|
3-14-3, and
3-14-4.
|
(Source: P.A. 94-165, eff. 7-11-05; 95-331, eff. 8-21-07.)
|
(730 ILCS 5/3-4-3) (from Ch. 38, par. 1003-4-3) |
Sec. 3-4-3. Funds and Property of Persons Committed.
|
(a) The Department of Corrections and the Department of |
Juvenile Justice shall establish accounting records with |
accounts
for each person who has or receives money while in an |
institution or
facility of that Department and it shall allow |
|
the withdrawal and
disbursement of money by the person under |
rules and regulations of that
Department. Any interest or other |
income from moneys deposited with the
Department by
a resident |
of the Department of Juvenile Justice in excess of $200
shall |
accrue to the individual's account, or in balances up to $200 |
shall
accrue to the Residents'
Benefit Fund. For an individual |
in an institution or facility
of the Department of Corrections |
the interest shall accrue to the Residents' Benefit
Fund. The |
Department shall disburse all
moneys so held no later than the
|
person's final discharge from the Department. Moneys in the |
account of a
committed person who files a lawsuit determined |
frivolous under Article XXII of
the Code
of Civil Procedure |
shall be deducted to pay for the filing fees and cost of the
|
suit as
provided in that Article. The Department shall under
|
rules and regulations record and receipt all personal property |
not
allowed to committed persons. The Department shall return |
such property
to the individual no later than the person's |
release on parole or aftercare .
|
(b) Any money held in accounts of committed persons |
separated from
the Department by death, discharge, or |
unauthorized absence and
unclaimed for a period of 1 year |
thereafter by the person or his legal
representative shall be |
transmitted to the State Treasurer who shall deposit
it into |
the General Revenue Fund. Articles of personal
property of
|
persons so separated may be sold or used by the Department if |
unclaimed
for a period of 1 year for the same purpose. |
|
Clothing, if unclaimed
within 30 days, may be used or disposed |
of as determined by the
Department.
|
(c) Forty percent of the profits on sales from commissary |
stores shall
be
expended by the
Department for the special |
benefit of committed persons which shall include
but not be |
limited to the advancement of inmate payrolls, for the special
|
benefit of employees, and for the advancement or reimbursement |
of employee
travel,
provided that amounts expended for |
employees shall not exceed the amount
of profits derived from |
sales made to employees by such commissaries, as
determined by |
the Department. The remainder of the profits from sales from
|
commissary
stores must be used first to pay for wages and |
benefits of employees covered
under a
collective bargaining |
agreement who are employed at commissary facilities of
the
|
Department and then to pay the costs of dietary staff.
|
(d) The Department shall confiscate any unauthorized |
currency found in the
possession of a committed person. The |
Department shall transmit the
confiscated currency to the State |
Treasurer who shall deposit it into the
General Revenue Fund.
|
(Source: P.A. 97-1083, eff. 8-24-12.)
|
(730 ILCS 5/3-5-1) (from Ch. 38, par. 1003-5-1)
|
Sec. 3-5-1. Master Record File.
|
(a) The Department of Corrections and the Department of |
Juvenile Justice shall
maintain a master record file on each |
person committed to it,
which shall contain the following |
|
information:
|
(1) all information from the committing court;
|
(2) reception summary;
|
(3) evaluation and assignment reports and |
recommendations;
|
(4) reports as to program assignment and progress;
|
(5) reports of disciplinary infractions and |
disposition, including tickets and Administrative Review |
Board action;
|
(6) any parole or aftercare release plan;
|
(7) any parole or aftercare release reports;
|
(8) the date and circumstances of final discharge; |
(9) criminal history; |
(10) current and past gang affiliations and ranks; |
(11) information regarding associations and family |
relationships; |
(12) any grievances filed and responses to those |
grievances; and |
(13) other information that the respective Department |
determines is relevant to the secure confinement and |
rehabilitation of the committed person.
|
(b) All files shall be confidential and access shall be
|
limited to authorized personnel of the respective Department.
|
Personnel of other correctional, welfare or law enforcement
|
agencies may have access to files under rules and regulations
|
of the respective Department. The respective Department shall |
|
keep a record of all
outside personnel who have access to |
files, the files reviewed,
any file material copied, and the |
purpose of access. If the
respective Department or the Prisoner |
Review Board makes a determination
under this Code which |
affects the length of the period of
confinement or commitment, |
the committed person and his counsel
shall be advised of |
factual information relied upon by the
respective Department or |
Board to make the determination, provided that
the Department |
or Board shall not be required to advise a
person committed to |
the Department of Juvenile Justice any such information
which |
in the opinion of the Department of Juvenile Justice or Board |
would be
detrimental to his treatment or rehabilitation.
|
(c) The master file shall be maintained at a place
|
convenient to its use by personnel of the respective Department |
in
charge of the person. When custody of a person is |
transferred
from the Department to another department or |
agency, a
summary of the file shall be forwarded to the |
receiving
agency with such other information required by law or
|
requested by the agency under rules and regulations of the
|
respective Department.
|
(d) The master file of a person no longer in the custody
of |
the respective Department shall be placed on inactive status |
and its
use shall be restricted subject to rules and |
regulations of
the Department.
|
(e) All public agencies may make available to the
|
respective Department on request any factual data not otherwise
|
|
privileged as a matter of law in their possession in respect
to |
individuals committed to the respective Department.
|
(Source: P.A. 97-696, eff. 6-22-12.)
|
(730 ILCS 5/3-10-6) (from Ch. 38, par. 1003-10-6)
|
Sec. 3-10-6. Return and Release from Department of Human |
Services.
|
(a) The Department of Human Services shall return to the |
Department of Juvenile Justice
any person
committed to a |
facility of the Department under paragraph (a) of Section
|
3-10-5 when the person no longer meets the standard for |
admission of a
minor to a mental health facility, or is |
suitable for administrative
admission to a developmental |
disability facility.
|
(b) If a person returned to the Department of Juvenile |
Justice under paragraph (a)
of this Section has not had an |
aftercare release a parole hearing within the preceding 6 |
months,
he or she shall have an aftercare release a parole |
hearing within 45 days after his or her return.
|
(c) The Department of Juvenile Justice shall notify the |
Secretary of Human Services
of the expiration of the
commitment |
or sentence of any person transferred to the Department of |
Human
Services under Section
3-10-5. If the Department of Human |
Services determines that such person
transferred to it under |
paragraph (a) of Section 3-10-5 requires further
|
hospitalization, it shall file a petition for commitment of |
|
such person
under the Mental Health and Developmental |
Disabilities Code.
|
(d) The Department of Human Services shall
release under |
the Mental Health and Developmental Disabilities Code, any
|
person transferred to it pursuant to paragraph (c) of Section |
3-10-5, whose
sentence has expired and whom it deems no longer |
meets the standard for
admission of a minor to a mental health |
facility, or is suitable for
administrative admission to a |
developmental disability facility. A person
committed to the |
Department of Juvenile Justice under the Juvenile Court Act
or |
the Juvenile Court Act of 1987 and transferred to the |
Department of Human
Services under paragraph (c)
of Section
|
3-10-5 shall be released to the committing juvenile court when |
the
Department of Human Services determines that
he or she no |
longer requires hospitalization for treatment.
|
(Source: P.A. 94-696, eff. 6-1-06 .)
|
(730 ILCS 5/5-1-1.1 new) |
Sec. 5-1-1.1. Aftercare release. "Aftercare release" means |
the conditional and revocable release of a person committed to |
the Department of Juvenile Justice under the Juvenile Court Act |
of 1987, under the Department of Juvenile Justice.
|
(730 ILCS 5/5-1-16) (from Ch. 38, par. 1005-1-16)
|
Sec. 5-1-16. Parole.
|
"Parole" means the conditional and revocable release of a |
|
person committed to the Department of Corrections
person under |
the supervision of a parole officer.
|
(Source: P.A. 78-939.)
|
(730 ILCS 5/5-4-3) (from Ch. 38, par. 1005-4-3)
|
Sec. 5-4-3. Specimens;
genetic marker groups. |
(a) Any person convicted of, found guilty under the |
Juvenile Court Act of
1987 for, or who received a disposition |
of court supervision for, a qualifying
offense or attempt of a |
qualifying offense, convicted or found guilty of any
offense |
classified as a felony under Illinois law, convicted or found |
guilty of any offense requiring registration under the Sex |
Offender Registration Act, found guilty or given
supervision |
for any offense classified as a felony under the Juvenile Court |
Act
of 1987, convicted or found guilty of, under the Juvenile |
Court Act of 1987, any offense requiring registration under the |
Sex Offender Registration Act, or institutionalized as a |
sexually dangerous person under the Sexually
Dangerous Persons |
Act, or committed as a sexually violent person under the
|
Sexually Violent Persons Commitment Act shall, regardless of |
the sentence or
disposition imposed, be required to submit |
specimens of blood, saliva, or
tissue to the Illinois |
Department of State Police in accordance with the
provisions of |
this Section, provided such person is:
|
(1) convicted of a qualifying offense or attempt of a |
qualifying offense
on or after July 1, 1990 and sentenced |
|
to a term of imprisonment, periodic imprisonment, fine,
|
probation, conditional discharge or any other form of |
sentence, or given a
disposition of court supervision for |
the offense;
|
(1.5) found guilty or given supervision under the |
Juvenile Court Act of
1987 for a qualifying offense or |
attempt of a qualifying offense on or after
January 1, |
1997;
|
(2) ordered institutionalized as a sexually dangerous |
person on or after
July 1, 1990;
|
(3) convicted of a qualifying offense or attempt of a |
qualifying offense
before July 1, 1990
and is presently |
confined as a result of such conviction in any State
|
correctional facility or county jail or is presently |
serving a sentence of
probation, conditional discharge or |
periodic imprisonment as a result of such
conviction;
|
(3.5) convicted or found guilty of any offense |
classified as a felony
under Illinois law or found guilty |
or given supervision for such an offense
under the Juvenile |
Court Act of 1987 on or after August 22, 2002;
|
(4) presently institutionalized as a sexually |
dangerous person or
presently institutionalized as a |
person found guilty but mentally ill of a
sexual offense or |
attempt to commit a sexual offense; or
|
(4.5) ordered committed as a sexually violent person on |
or after the
effective date of the Sexually Violent Persons |
|
Commitment Act.
|
(a-1) Any person incarcerated in
a facility of the Illinois |
Department of Corrections or the Illinois Department of |
Juvenile Justice on or after August 22,
2002, whether for a |
term of years, natural life, or a sentence of death, who has |
not yet submitted a specimen of blood, saliva, or tissue shall |
be required to submit a specimen of blood, saliva, or tissue
|
prior to his or her final discharge, or release on parole , |
aftercare release, or mandatory
supervised release, as a
|
condition of his or her parole , aftercare release, or mandatory |
supervised release, or within 6 months from August 13, 2009 |
(the effective date of Public Act 96-426), whichever is sooner. |
A person incarcerated on or after August 13, 2009 (the |
effective date of Public Act 96-426) shall be required to |
submit a specimen within 45 days of incarceration, or prior to |
his or her final discharge, or release on parole , aftercare |
release, or mandatory supervised release, as a condition of his |
or her parole , aftercare release, or mandatory supervised |
release, whichever is sooner. These specimens shall be placed |
into the State or national DNA database, to be used in |
accordance with other provisions of this Section, by the |
Illinois State Police.
|
(a-2) Any person sentenced to life imprisonment in a |
facility of the Illinois Department of Corrections after the |
effective date of this amendatory Act of the 94th General |
Assembly or sentenced to death after the effective date of this |
|
amendatory Act of the 94th General Assembly shall be required |
to provide a specimen of blood, saliva, or tissue within 45 |
days after sentencing or disposition at a collection site |
designated by the Illinois Department of State Police. Any |
person serving a sentence of life imprisonment in a facility of |
the Illinois Department of Corrections on the effective date of |
this amendatory Act of the 94th General Assembly or any person |
who is under a sentence of death on the effective date of this |
amendatory Act of the 94th General Assembly shall be required |
to provide a specimen of blood, saliva, or tissue upon request |
at a collection site designated by the Illinois Department of |
State Police.
|
(a-3) Any person seeking transfer to or residency in |
Illinois under Sections 3-3-11.05
through 3-3-11.5 of this |
Code, the Interstate Compact
for Adult Offender Supervision, or |
the Interstate Agreements on Sexually
Dangerous Persons Act |
shall be required to provide a specimen of blood, saliva, or |
tissue within 45 days after transfer to or residency in |
Illinois at a collection site designated by the Illinois |
Department of State Police. |
(a-3.1) Any person required by an order of the court to |
submit a DNA specimen shall be required to provide a specimen |
of blood, saliva, or tissue within 45 days after the court |
order at a collection site designated by the Illinois |
Department of State Police. |
(a-3.2) On or after January 1, 2012 (the effective date of |
|
Public Act 97-383), any person arrested for any of the |
following offenses, after an indictment has been returned by a |
grand jury, or following a hearing pursuant to Section 109-3 of |
the Code of Criminal Procedure of 1963 and a judge finds there |
is probable cause to believe the arrestee has committed one of |
the designated offenses, or an arrestee has waived a |
preliminary hearing shall be required to provide a specimen of |
blood, saliva, or tissue within 14 days after such indictment |
or hearing at a collection site designated by the Illinois |
Department of State Police: |
(A) first degree murder; |
(B) home invasion; |
(C) predatory criminal sexual assault
of a child; |
(D) aggravated criminal sexual assault; or |
(E) criminal sexual assault. |
(a-3.3) Any person required to register as a sex offender |
under the Sex Offender Registration Act, regardless of the date |
of conviction as set forth in subsection (c-5.2) shall be |
required to provide a specimen of blood, saliva, or tissue |
within the time period prescribed in subsection (c-5.2) at a |
collection site designated by the Illinois Department of State |
Police. |
(a-5) Any person who was otherwise convicted of or received |
a disposition
of court supervision for any other offense under |
the Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012 or
who |
was found guilty or given supervision for such a violation |
|
under the
Juvenile Court Act of 1987, may, regardless of the |
sentence imposed, be
required by an order of the court to |
submit specimens of blood, saliva, or
tissue to the Illinois |
Department of State Police in accordance with the
provisions of |
this Section.
|
(b) Any person required by paragraphs (a)(1), (a)(1.5), |
(a)(2), (a)(3.5),
and (a-5) to provide specimens of blood, |
saliva, or tissue shall provide
specimens of blood, saliva, or |
tissue within 45 days after sentencing or
disposition at a |
collection site designated by the Illinois Department of
State |
Police.
|
(c) Any person required by paragraphs (a)(3), (a)(4), and |
(a)(4.5) to
provide specimens of blood, saliva, or tissue shall |
be required to provide
such specimens prior to final discharge |
or within 6 months from August 13, 2009 (the effective date of |
Public Act 96-426), whichever is sooner. These specimens shall |
be placed into the State or national DNA database, to be used |
in accordance with other provisions of this Act, by the |
Illinois State Police.
|
(c-5) Any person required by paragraph (a-3) to provide |
specimens of
blood, saliva, or tissue shall, where feasible, be |
required to provide the
specimens before being accepted for |
conditioned residency in Illinois under
the interstate compact |
or agreement, but no later than 45 days after arrival
in this |
State.
|
(c-5.2) Unless it is determined that a registered sex |
|
offender has previously submitted a specimen of blood, saliva, |
or tissue that has been placed into the State DNA database, a |
person registering as a sex offender shall be required to |
submit a specimen at the time of his or her initial |
registration pursuant to the Sex Offender Registration Act or, |
for a person registered as a sex offender on or prior to |
January 1, 2012 (the effective date of Public Act 97-383), |
within one year of January 1, 2012 (the effective date of |
Public Act 97-383) or at the time of his or her next required |
registration. |
(c-6) The Illinois Department of State Police may determine |
which type of
specimen or specimens, blood, saliva, or tissue, |
is acceptable for submission
to the Division of Forensic |
Services for analysis. The Illinois Department of State Police |
may require the submission of fingerprints from anyone required |
to give a specimen under this Act.
|
(d) The Illinois Department of State Police shall provide |
all equipment
and instructions necessary for the collection of |
blood specimens.
The collection of specimens shall be performed |
in a medically approved
manner. Only a physician authorized to |
practice medicine, a registered
nurse or other qualified person |
trained in venipuncture may withdraw blood
for the purposes of |
this Act. The specimens
shall thereafter be forwarded to the |
Illinois Department of State Police,
Division of Forensic |
Services, for analysis and
categorizing into genetic marker |
groupings.
|
|
(d-1) The Illinois Department of State Police shall provide |
all equipment
and instructions necessary for the collection of |
saliva specimens. The
collection of saliva specimens shall be |
performed in a medically approved manner.
Only a person trained |
in the instructions promulgated by the Illinois State
Police on |
collecting saliva may collect saliva for the purposes of this
|
Section. The specimens shall thereafter be forwarded to the |
Illinois Department
of State Police, Division of Forensic |
Services, for analysis and categorizing
into genetic marker |
groupings.
|
(d-2) The Illinois Department of State Police shall provide |
all equipment
and instructions necessary for the collection of |
tissue specimens. The
collection of tissue specimens shall be |
performed in a medically approved
manner. Only a person trained |
in the instructions promulgated by the Illinois
State Police on |
collecting tissue may collect tissue for the purposes of this
|
Section. The specimens shall thereafter be forwarded to the |
Illinois Department
of State Police, Division of Forensic |
Services, for analysis and categorizing
into genetic marker |
groupings.
|
(d-5) To the extent that funds are available, the Illinois |
Department of
State Police shall contract with qualified |
personnel and certified laboratories
for the collection, |
analysis, and categorization of known specimens, except as |
provided in subsection (n) of this Section.
|
(d-6) Agencies designated by the Illinois Department of |
|
State Police and
the Illinois Department of State Police may |
contract with third parties to
provide for the collection or |
analysis of DNA, or both, of an offender's blood,
saliva, and |
tissue specimens, except as provided in subsection (n) of this |
Section.
|
(e) The genetic marker groupings shall be maintained by the |
Illinois
Department of State Police, Division of Forensic |
Services.
|
(f) The genetic marker grouping analysis information |
obtained pursuant
to this Act shall be confidential and shall |
be released only to peace
officers of the United States, of |
other states or territories, of the
insular possessions of the |
United States, of foreign countries duly
authorized to receive |
the same, to all peace officers of the State of
Illinois and to |
all prosecutorial agencies, and to defense counsel as
provided |
by Section 116-5 of the Code of Criminal Procedure of 1963.
The |
genetic marker grouping analysis information obtained pursuant |
to
this Act shall be used only for (i) valid law enforcement |
identification
purposes and as required by the Federal Bureau |
of Investigation for
participation in the National DNA |
database, (ii) technology
validation
purposes, (iii) a |
population statistics database, (iv) quality
assurance
|
purposes if personally identifying information is removed,
(v) |
assisting in the defense of the criminally accused pursuant
to
|
Section 116-5 of the Code of Criminal Procedure of 1963, or |
(vi) identifying and assisting in the prosecution of a person |
|
who is suspected of committing a sexual assault as defined in |
Section 1a of the Sexual Assault Survivors Emergency Treatment |
Act. Notwithstanding
any other statutory provision to the |
contrary,
all information obtained under this Section shall be |
maintained in a single
State data base, which may be uploaded |
into a national database, and which
information may be subject |
to expungement only as set forth in subsection
(f-1).
|
(f-1) Upon receipt of notification of a reversal of a |
conviction based on
actual innocence, or of the granting of a |
pardon pursuant to Section 12 of
Article V of the Illinois |
Constitution, if that pardon document specifically
states that |
the reason for the pardon is the actual innocence of an |
individual
whose DNA record has been stored in the State or |
national DNA identification
index in accordance with this |
Section by the Illinois Department of State
Police, the DNA |
record shall be expunged from the DNA identification index, and
|
the Department shall by rule prescribe procedures to ensure |
that the record and
any specimens, analyses, or other documents |
relating to such record, whether in
the possession of the |
Department or any law enforcement or police agency, or
any |
forensic DNA laboratory, including any duplicates or copies |
thereof, are
destroyed and a letter is sent to the court |
verifying the expungement is
completed. For specimens required |
to be collected prior to conviction, unless the individual has |
other charges or convictions that require submission of a |
specimen, the DNA record for an individual shall be expunged |
|
from the DNA identification databases and the specimen |
destroyed upon receipt of a certified copy of a final court |
order for each charge against an individual in which the charge |
has been dismissed, resulted in acquittal, or that the charge |
was not filed within the applicable time period. The Department |
shall by rule prescribe procedures to ensure that the record |
and any specimens in the possession or control of the |
Department are destroyed and a letter is sent to the court |
verifying the expungement is completed.
|
(f-5) Any person who intentionally uses genetic marker |
grouping analysis
information, or any other information |
derived from a DNA specimen, beyond the
authorized uses as |
provided under this Section, or any other Illinois law, is
|
guilty of a Class 4 felony, and shall be subject to a fine of |
not less than
$5,000.
|
(f-6) The Illinois Department of State Police may contract |
with third
parties for the purposes of implementing this |
amendatory Act of the 93rd
General Assembly, except as provided |
in subsection (n) of this Section. Any other party contracting |
to carry out the functions of
this Section shall be subject to |
the same restrictions and requirements of this
Section insofar |
as applicable, as the Illinois Department of State Police, and
|
to any additional restrictions imposed by the Illinois |
Department of State
Police.
|
(g) For the purposes of this Section, "qualifying offense" |
means any of
the following:
|
|
(1) any violation or inchoate violation of Section |
11-1.50, 11-1.60, 11-6, 11-9.1, 11-11,
11-18.1, 12-15, or |
12-16 of the Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of |
2012;
|
(1.1) any violation or inchoate violation of Section |
9-1, 9-2, 10-1,
10-2, 12-11, 12-11.1, 18-1, 18-2, 18-3, |
18-4, 18-6, 19-1, 19-2, or 19-6 of the Criminal
Code of |
1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012 for which persons are |
convicted on or after July 1, 2001;
|
(2) any former statute of this State which defined a |
felony sexual
offense;
|
(3) (blank);
|
(4) any inchoate violation of Section 9-3.1, 9-3.4, |
11-9.3, 12-7.3, or 12-7.4 of
the Criminal Code of 1961 or |
the Criminal Code of 2012; or
|
(5) any violation or inchoate violation of Article 29D |
of the Criminal
Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012.
|
(g-5) (Blank).
|
(h) The Illinois Department of State Police shall be the |
State central
repository for all genetic marker grouping |
analysis information obtained
pursuant to this Act. The |
Illinois Department of State Police may
promulgate rules for |
the form and manner of the collection of blood, saliva,
or |
tissue specimens and other procedures for the operation of this |
Act. The
provisions of the Administrative Review Law shall |
apply to all actions taken
under the rules so promulgated.
|
|
(i) (1) A person required to provide a blood, saliva, or |
tissue specimen
shall
cooperate with the collection of the |
specimen and any deliberate act by
that person intended to |
impede, delay or stop the collection of the blood,
saliva, |
or tissue specimen is a Class 4 felony.
|
(2) In the event that a person's DNA specimen is not |
adequate for any
reason, the person shall provide another |
DNA specimen for analysis. Duly
authorized law
enforcement |
and corrections personnel may employ reasonable force in |
cases in
which an individual refuses to provide a DNA |
specimen required under this
Act.
|
(j) Any person required by subsection (a), or any person |
who was previously required by subsection (a-3.2), to submit |
specimens of blood,
saliva, or tissue to
the Illinois |
Department of State Police for analysis and categorization into
|
genetic marker grouping, in addition to any other disposition, |
penalty, or
fine imposed, shall pay an analysis fee of $250. If |
the analysis fee is not
paid at the time of sentencing, the |
court shall establish a fee schedule by
which the entire amount |
of the analysis fee shall be paid in full, such
schedule not to |
exceed 24 months from the time of conviction. The inability to
|
pay this analysis fee shall not be the sole ground to |
incarcerate the person.
|
(k) All analysis and categorization fees provided for by |
subsection (j)
shall be regulated as follows:
|
(1) The State Offender DNA Identification System Fund |
|
is hereby created as
a special fund in the State Treasury.
|
(2) All fees shall be collected by the clerk of the |
court and forwarded to
the State Offender DNA |
Identification System Fund for deposit. The
clerk of the |
circuit court may retain the amount of $10 from each |
collected
analysis fee to offset administrative costs |
incurred in carrying out the
clerk's responsibilities |
under this Section.
|
(3) Fees deposited into the State Offender DNA |
Identification System Fund
shall be used by Illinois State |
Police crime laboratories as designated by the
Director of |
State Police. These funds shall be in addition to any |
allocations
made pursuant to existing laws and shall be |
designated for the exclusive use of
State crime |
laboratories. These uses may include, but are not limited |
to, the
following:
|
(A) Costs incurred in providing analysis and |
genetic marker
categorization as required by |
subsection (d).
|
(B) Costs incurred in maintaining genetic marker |
groupings as required
by subsection (e).
|
(C) Costs incurred in the purchase and maintenance |
of equipment for use
in performing analyses.
|
(D) Costs incurred in continuing research and |
development of new
techniques for analysis and genetic |
marker categorization.
|
|
(E) Costs incurred in continuing education, |
training, and professional
development of forensic |
scientists regularly employed by these laboratories.
|
(l) The failure of a person to provide a specimen, or of |
any person or
agency to collect a specimen, shall in no way |
alter
the obligation of the person to submit such specimen, or |
the authority of the
Illinois Department of State Police or |
persons designated by the Department to
collect the specimen, |
or the authority of the Illinois Department of State
Police to |
accept, analyze and maintain the specimen or to maintain or |
upload
results of genetic marker grouping analysis information |
into a State or
national database.
|
(m) If any provision of this amendatory Act of the 93rd |
General Assembly
is
held unconstitutional or otherwise |
invalid, the remainder of this amendatory
Act
of the 93rd |
General Assembly is not affected.
|
(n) Neither the Department of State Police, the Division of |
Forensic Services, nor any laboratory of the Division of |
Forensic Services may contract out forensic testing for the |
purpose of an active investigation or a matter pending before a |
court of competent jurisdiction without the written consent of |
the prosecuting agency. For the purposes of this subsection |
(n), "forensic testing" includes the analysis of physical |
evidence in an investigation or other proceeding for the |
prosecution of a violation of the Criminal Code of 1961 or the |
Criminal Code of 2012 or for matters adjudicated under the |
|
Juvenile Court Act of 1987, and includes the use of forensic |
databases and databanks, including DNA, firearm, and |
fingerprint databases, and expert testimony. |
(o) Mistake does not invalidate a database match. The |
detention, arrest, or conviction of a person based upon a |
database match or database information is not invalidated if it |
is determined that the specimen was obtained or placed in the |
database by mistake. |
(p) This Section may be referred to as the Illinois DNA |
Database Law of 2011. |
(Source: P.A. 96-426, eff. 8-13-09; 96-642, eff. 8-24-09; |
96-1000, eff. 7-2-10; 96-1551, eff. 7-1-11; 97-383, eff. |
1-1-12; 97-1109, eff. 1-1-13; 97-1150, eff. 1-25-13.)
|
(730 ILCS 5/5-8A-3) (from Ch. 38, par. 1005-8A-3)
|
Sec. 5-8A-3. Application.
|
(a) Except as provided in subsection (d), a person charged |
with
or convicted of an
excluded offense may not be placed in |
an electronic home
detention program, except for bond pending |
trial or appeal or while on parole , aftercare release,
or |
mandatory supervised release.
|
(b) A person serving a sentence for a conviction of a Class |
1 felony,
other than an excluded offense, may be placed in an |
electronic home detention
program for a period not to exceed |
the last 90 days of incarceration.
|
(c) A person serving a sentence for a conviction
of a Class |
|
X felony, other than an excluded offense, may be placed
in an |
electronic home detention program for a period not to exceed |
the last 90
days of incarceration, provided that the person was |
sentenced on or after the
effective date of this amendatory Act |
of 1993 and provided that the court has
not prohibited the |
program for the person in the sentencing order.
|
(d) A person serving a sentence for conviction of an |
offense other than
for predatory criminal sexual assault of a |
child, aggravated criminal
sexual assault, criminal sexual |
assault, aggravated
criminal sexual abuse, or felony criminal |
sexual abuse, may be placed in an
electronic home detention |
program for a period not to exceed the last 12 months
of |
incarceration, provided that (i) the person is 55 years of age |
or older;
(ii) the person is serving a determinate sentence; |
(iii) the person has served
at least 25% of the sentenced |
prison term; and (iv) placement in an electronic
home detention |
program is approved by the Prisoner Review Board.
|
(e) A person serving a sentence for conviction
of a Class |
2, 3 or 4 felony offense which is not an excluded offense may |
be
placed in an
electronic home detention program pursuant to |
Department administrative
directives.
|
(f) Applications for electronic home detention
may include |
the following:
|
(1) pretrial or pre-adjudicatory detention;
|
(2) probation;
|
(3) conditional discharge;
|
|
(4) periodic imprisonment;
|
(5) parole , aftercare release, or mandatory supervised |
release;
|
(6) work release;
|
(7) furlough or
|
(8) post-trial incarceration.
|
(g) A person convicted of an offense described in clause |
(4) or (5) of
subsection (d) of Section 5-8-1 of this Code |
shall be placed in an electronic
home detention program for at |
least the first 2 years of the person's mandatory
supervised |
release term.
|
(Source: P.A. 91-279, eff. 1-1-00.)
|
(730 ILCS 5/5-8A-5) (from Ch. 38, par. 1005-8A-5)
|
Sec. 5-8A-5. Consent of the participant. Before entering an |
order for
commitment for electronic home detention, the |
supervising authority shall
inform the participant and other |
persons residing in the home of the nature
and extent of the |
approved electronic monitoring devices by doing the
following:
|
(A) Securing the written consent of the participant in the |
program to
comply with the rules and regulations of the program |
as stipulated in
subsections (A) through (I) of Section 5-8A-4.
|
(B) Where possible, securing the written consent of other |
persons
residing in the home
of the participant, including the |
person in whose name the telephone is
registered, at the time |
of the order or commitment for electronic
home detention is |
|
entered and acknowledge the nature and extent of approved
|
electronic monitoring devices.
|
(C) Insure that the approved electronic devices be |
minimally
intrusive upon the privacy of the participant
and |
other persons residing in the home
while remaining in |
compliance with subsections (B) through (D)
of Section 5-8A-4.
|
(D) This Section does not apply to persons subject to |
Electronic Home
Monitoring as a term or condition of parole , |
aftercare release, or mandatory supervised release
under |
subsection (d) of Section 5-8-1 of this Code.
|
(Source: P.A. 90-399, eff. 1-1-98; 91-279, eff. 1-1-00.)
|
(730 ILCS 5/5-8A-7)
|
Sec. 5-8A-7. Domestic violence surveillance program. If |
the Prisoner Review Board, Department of Corrections, or court |
(the supervising authority) orders electronic surveillance as |
a condition of parole, aftercare release, mandatory supervised |
release, early release, probation, or conditional discharge |
for a violation of an order of protection or as a condition of |
bail for a person charged with a violation of an order of |
protection, the supervising authority shall use the best |
available global positioning technology to track domestic |
violence offenders. Best available technology must have |
real-time and interactive capabilities that facilitate the |
following objectives: (1) immediate notification to the |
supervising authority of a breach of a court ordered exclusion |
|
zone; (2) notification of the breach to the offender; and (3) |
communication between the supervising authority, law |
enforcement, and the victim, regarding the breach.
|
(Source: P.A. 95-773, eff. 1-1-09; 96-688, eff. 8-25-09.) |
Section 110. The Open Parole Hearings Act is amended by |
changing Sections 5, 10, 15, 20, and 35 as follows:
|
(730 ILCS 105/5) (from Ch. 38, par. 1655)
|
Sec. 5. Definitions. As used in this Act:
|
(a) "Applicant" means an inmate who is being considered for |
parole or aftercare release by
the Prisoner Review Board.
|
(a-1) "Aftercare releasee" means a person released from the |
Department of Juvenile Justice on aftercare release subject to |
aftercare revocation proceedings. |
(b) "Board" means the Prisoner Review Board as established |
in Section
3-3-1 of the Unified Code of Corrections.
|
(c) "Parolee" means a person subject to parole revocation |
proceedings.
|
(d) "Parole or aftercare release hearing" means the formal |
hearing and determination of an
inmate being considered for |
release from incarceration on community
supervision.
|
(e) "Parole , aftercare release, or mandatory supervised |
release revocation hearing" means
the formal hearing and |
determination of allegations that a parolee , aftercare |
releasee, or
mandatory supervised releasee has violated the |
|
conditions of his or her
release agreement.
|
(f) "Victim" means a victim or witness of a violent crime |
as defined in
subsection (a) of Section 3 of the Bill of Rights |
for Victims and Witnesses
of Violent Crime Act, or any person |
legally related to the victim by blood, marriage, adoption, or |
guardianship, or any friend of the victim, or any concerned |
citizen.
|
(g) "Violent crime" means a crime defined in subsection (c) |
of
Section 3 of the Bill of Rights for Victims and Witnesses of |
Violent
Crime Act.
|
(Source: P.A. 97-299, eff. 8-11-11.)
|
(730 ILCS 105/10) (from Ch. 38, par. 1660)
|
Sec. 10. Victim's statements.
|
(a) Upon request of the victim, the State's Attorney shall |
forward a
copy of any statement presented at the time of trial |
to the Prisoner Review
Board to be considered at the time of a |
parole or aftercare release hearing.
|
(b) The victim may enter a statement either oral, written, |
on video
tape, or other electronic means in the form and manner |
described by the
Prisoner Review Board to be considered at the |
time of a parole or aftercare release consideration
hearing.
|
(Source: P.A. 87-224.)
|
(730 ILCS 105/15) (from Ch. 38, par. 1665)
|
Sec. 15. Open hearings.
|
|
(a) The Board may restrict the number of individuals |
allowed to attend
parole or aftercare release, or parole or |
aftercare release revocation hearings in accordance with |
physical
limitations, security requirements of the hearing |
facilities or those
giving repetitive or cumulative testimony. |
The Board may also restrict attendance at an aftercare release |
or aftercare release revocation hearing in order to protect the |
confidentiality of the youth.
|
(b) The Board may deny admission or continued attendance at |
parole or aftercare release hearings, or
parole or aftercare |
release revocation hearings to individuals who:
|
(1) threaten or present danger to the security of the |
institution in
which the hearing is being held;
|
(2) threaten or present a danger to other attendees or |
participants; or
|
(3) disrupt the hearing.
|
(c) Upon formal action of a majority of the Board members |
present, the
Board may close parole or aftercare release |
hearings and parole or aftercare release revocation hearings in |
order to:
|
(1) deliberate upon the oral testimony and any other |
relevant
information received from applicants, parolees, |
releasees, victims, or others; or
|
(2) provide applicants , releasees, and parolees the |
opportunity to challenge
information other than that which |
if the person's identity were to be
exposed would possibly |
|
subject them to bodily harm or death, which they
believe |
detrimental to their parole or aftercare release |
determination hearing or revocation
proceedings.
|
(Source: P.A. 87-224.)
|
(730 ILCS 105/20) (from Ch. 38, par. 1670)
|
Sec. 20. Finality of Board decisions. A Board decision |
concerning
parole or aftercare release, or parole or aftercare |
release revocation shall be final at the time the decision is
|
delivered to the inmate, subject to any rehearing granted under |
Board rules.
|
(Source: P.A. 87-224.)
|
(730 ILCS 105/35) (from Ch. 38, par. 1685)
|
Sec. 35. Victim impact statements.
|
(a) The Board shall receive and consider victim impact |
statements.
|
(b) Victim impact statements either oral, written, |
video-taped, tape recorded or made by other electronic means |
shall not be considered public
documents under provisions of |
the Freedom of Information Act.
|
(c) The inmate or his or her attorney shall be informed of |
the existence of a
victim impact statement and its contents |
under provisions of Board rules.
This shall not be construed to |
permit disclosure to an inmate of any
information which might |
result in the risk of threats or physical harm to a
victim or |
|
complaining witness.
|
(d) The inmate shall be given the opportunity to answer a |
victim impact
statement, either orally or in writing.
|
(e) All written victim impact statements shall be part of |
the applicant's , releasee's,
or parolee's parole file.
|
(Source: P.A. 97-299, eff. 8-11-11.)
|
Section 115. The Sex Offender Registration Act is amended |
by changing Sections 3, 4, and 8-5 as follows: |
(730 ILCS 150/3) |
Sec. 3. Duty to register.
|
(a) A sex offender, as defined in Section 2 of this Act, or |
sexual
predator shall, within the time period
prescribed in |
subsections (b) and (c), register in person
and provide |
accurate information as required by the Department of State
|
Police. Such information shall include a current photograph,
|
current address,
current place of employment, the sex |
offender's or sexual predator's telephone number, including |
cellular telephone number, the employer's telephone number, |
school attended, all e-mail addresses, instant messaging |
identities, chat room identities, and other Internet |
communications identities that the sex offender uses or plans |
to use, all Uniform Resource Locators (URLs) registered or used |
by the sex offender, all blogs and other Internet sites |
maintained by the sex offender or to which the sex offender has |
|
uploaded any content or posted any messages or information, |
extensions of the time period for registering as provided in |
this Article and, if an extension was granted, the reason why |
the extension was granted and the date the sex offender was |
notified of the extension. The information shall also include a |
copy of the terms and conditions of parole or release signed by |
the sex offender and given to the sex offender by his or her |
supervising officer or aftercare specialist , the county of |
conviction, license plate numbers for every vehicle registered |
in the name of the sex offender, the age of the sex offender at |
the time of the commission of the offense, the age of the |
victim at the time of the commission of the offense, and any |
distinguishing marks located on the body of the sex offender. A |
sex offender convicted under Section 11-6, 11-20.1, 11-20.1B, |
11-20.3, or 11-21 of the Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal |
Code of 2012 shall provide all Internet protocol (IP) addresses |
in his or her residence, registered in his or her name, |
accessible at his or her place of employment, or otherwise |
under his or her control or custody. If the sex offender is a |
child sex offender as defined in Section 11-9.3 or 11-9.4 of |
the Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012, the sex |
offender shall report to the registering agency whether he or |
she is living in a household with a child under 18 years of age |
who is not his or her own child, provided that his or her own |
child is not the victim of the sex offense. The sex offender or
|
sexual predator shall register:
|
|
(1) with the chief of police in the municipality in |
which he or she
resides or is temporarily domiciled for a |
period of time of 3 or more
days, unless the
municipality |
is the City of Chicago, in which case he or she shall |
register
at the Chicago Police Department Headquarters; or
|
(2) with the sheriff in the county in which
he or she |
resides or is
temporarily domiciled
for a period of time of |
3 or more days in an unincorporated
area or, if |
incorporated, no police chief exists.
|
If the sex offender or sexual predator is employed at or |
attends an institution of higher education, he or she shall |
also register:
|
(i) with: |
(A) the chief of police in the municipality in |
which he or she is employed at or attends an |
institution of higher education, unless the |
municipality is the City of Chicago, in which case he |
or she shall register at the Chicago Police Department |
Headquarters; or |
(B) the sheriff in the county in which he or she is |
employed or attends an institution of higher education |
located in an unincorporated area, or if incorporated, |
no police chief exists; and
|
(ii) with the public safety or security director of the |
institution of higher education which he or she is employed |
at or attends.
|
|
The registration fees shall only apply to the municipality |
or county of primary registration, and not to campus |
registration. |
For purposes of this Article, the place of residence or |
temporary
domicile is defined as any and all places where the |
sex offender resides
for an aggregate period of time of 3 or |
more days during any calendar year.
Any person required to |
register under this Article who lacks a fixed address or |
temporary domicile must notify, in person, the agency of |
jurisdiction of his or her last known address within 3 days |
after ceasing to have a fixed residence. |
A sex offender or sexual predator who is temporarily absent |
from his or her current address of registration for 3 or more |
days shall notify the law enforcement agency having |
jurisdiction of his or her current registration, including the |
itinerary for travel, in the manner provided in Section 6 of |
this Act for notification to the law enforcement agency having |
jurisdiction of change of address. |
Any person who lacks a fixed residence must report weekly, |
in person, with the sheriff's office of the county in which he |
or she is located in an unincorporated area, or with the chief |
of police in the municipality in which he or she is located. |
The agency of jurisdiction will document each weekly |
registration to include all the locations where the person has |
stayed during the past 7 days.
|
The sex offender or sexual predator shall provide accurate |
|
information
as required by the Department of State Police. That |
information shall include
the sex offender's or sexual |
predator's current place of employment.
|
(a-5) An out-of-state student or out-of-state employee |
shall,
within 3 days after beginning school or employment in |
this State,
register in person and provide accurate information |
as required by the
Department of State Police. Such information |
will include current place of
employment, school attended, and |
address in state of residence. A sex offender convicted under |
Section 11-6, 11-20.1, 11-20.1B, 11-20.3, or 11-21 of the |
Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012 shall |
provide all Internet protocol (IP) addresses in his or her |
residence, registered in his or her name, accessible at his or |
her place of employment, or otherwise under his or her control |
or custody. The out-of-state student or out-of-state employee |
shall register:
|
(1) with: |
(A) the chief of police in the municipality in |
which he or she attends school or is employed for a |
period of time of 5
or more days or for an
aggregate |
period of time of more than 30 days during any
calendar |
year, unless the
municipality is the City of Chicago, |
in which case he or she shall register at
the Chicago |
Police Department Headquarters; or
|
(B) the sheriff in the county in which
he or she |
attends school or is
employed for a period of time of 5 |
|
or more days or
for an aggregate period of
time of more |
than 30 days during any calendar year in an
|
unincorporated area
or, if incorporated, no police |
chief exists; and |
(2) with the public safety or security director of the |
institution of higher education he or she is employed at or |
attends for a period of time of 5 or more days or for an |
aggregate period of time of more than 30 days during a |
calendar year. |
The registration fees shall only apply to the municipality |
or county of primary registration, and not to campus |
registration. |
The out-of-state student or out-of-state employee shall |
provide accurate
information as required by the Department of |
State Police. That information
shall include the out-of-state |
student's current place of school attendance or
the |
out-of-state employee's current place of employment.
|
(a-10) Any law enforcement agency registering sex |
offenders or sexual predators in accordance with subsections |
(a) or (a-5) of this Section shall forward to the Attorney |
General a copy of sex offender registration forms from persons |
convicted under Section 11-6, 11-20.1, 11-20.1B, 11-20.3, or |
11-21 of the Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of |
2012, including periodic and annual registrations under |
Section 6 of this Act. |
(b) Any sex offender, as defined in Section 2 of this Act, |
|
or sexual
predator, regardless of any initial,
prior, or other |
registration, shall, within 3 days of beginning school,
or |
establishing a
residence, place of employment, or temporary |
domicile in
any county, register in person as set forth in |
subsection (a)
or (a-5).
|
(c) The registration for any person required to register |
under this
Article shall be as follows:
|
(1) Any person registered under the Habitual Child Sex |
Offender
Registration Act or the Child Sex Offender |
Registration Act prior to January
1, 1996, shall be deemed |
initially registered as of January 1, 1996; however,
this |
shall not be construed to extend the duration of |
registration set forth
in Section 7.
|
(2) Except as provided in subsection (c)(2.1) or |
(c)(4), any person convicted or
adjudicated prior to |
January 1, 1996, whose liability for registration under
|
Section 7 has not expired, shall register in person prior |
to January 31,
1996.
|
(2.1) A sex offender or sexual predator, who has never |
previously been required to register under this Act, has a |
duty to register if the person has been convicted of any |
felony offense after July 1, 2011. A person who previously |
was required to register under this Act for a period of 10 |
years and successfully completed that registration period |
has a duty to register if: (i) the person has been |
convicted of any felony offense after July 1, 2011, and |
|
(ii) the offense for which the 10 year registration was |
served currently requires a registration period of more |
than 10 years. Notification of an offender's duty to |
register under this subsection shall be pursuant to Section |
5-7 of this Act. |
(2.5) Except as provided in subsection (c)(4), any |
person who has not
been notified of his or her |
responsibility to register shall be notified by a
criminal |
justice entity of his or her responsibility to register. |
Upon
notification the person must then register within 3 |
days of notification of
his or her requirement to register. |
Except as provided in subsection (c)(2.1), if notification |
is not made within the
offender's 10 year registration |
requirement, and the Department of State
Police determines |
no evidence exists or indicates the offender attempted to
|
avoid registration, the offender will no longer be required |
to register under
this Act.
|
(3) Except as provided in subsection (c)(4), any person |
convicted on
or after January 1, 1996, shall register in |
person within 3 days after the
entry of the sentencing |
order based upon his or her conviction.
|
(4) Any person unable to comply with the registration |
requirements of
this Article because he or she is confined, |
institutionalized,
or imprisoned in Illinois on or after |
January 1, 1996, shall register in person
within 3 days of |
discharge, parole or release.
|
|
(5) The person shall provide positive identification |
and documentation
that substantiates proof of residence at |
the registering address.
|
(6) The person shall pay a $100
initial registration |
fee and
a $100
annual
renewal fee. The fees shall be used |
by the registering agency for official
purposes. The agency |
shall establish procedures to document receipt and use
of |
the funds.
The law enforcement agency having jurisdiction |
may waive the registration fee
if it determines that the |
person is indigent and unable to pay the registration
fee. |
Thirty-five
dollars for the initial registration fee and |
$35 of the annual renewal fee
shall be used by the |
registering agency for official purposes. Five dollars of
|
the initial registration fee and $5 of the annual fee shall |
be deposited into
the Sex Offender Management Board Fund |
under Section 19 of the Sex Offender
Management Board Act. |
Money deposited into the Sex Offender Management Board
Fund |
shall be administered by the Sex Offender Management Board |
and shall be
used by the Board to comply with the |
provisions of the Sex Offender Management Board Act.
Thirty |
dollars of the initial registration fee and $30 of the |
annual renewal fee shall be deposited into the Sex Offender |
Registration Fund and shall be used by the Department of |
State Police to maintain and update the Illinois State |
Police Sex Offender Registry. Thirty dollars of the initial |
registration fee and $30 of the annual renewal fee shall be |
|
deposited into the Attorney General Sex Offender |
Awareness, Training, and Education Fund. Moneys deposited |
into the Fund shall be used by the Attorney General to |
administer the I-SORT program and to alert and educate the |
public, victims, and witnesses of their rights under |
various victim notification laws and for training law |
enforcement agencies, State's Attorneys, and medical |
providers of their legal duties concerning the prosecution |
and investigation of sex offenses. |
(d) Within 3 days after obtaining or changing employment |
and, if employed
on January 1, 2000, within 5 days after that |
date, a person required to
register under this Section must |
report, in person to the law
enforcement agency having |
jurisdiction, the business name and address where he
or she is |
employed. If the person has multiple businesses or work |
locations,
every business and work location must be reported to |
the law enforcement agency
having jurisdiction.
|
(Source: P.A. 96-1094, eff. 1-1-11; 96-1096, eff. 1-1-11; |
96-1097, eff. 1-1-11; 96-1102, eff. 1-1-11; 96-1104, eff. |
1-1-11; 96-1551, eff. 7-1-11; 97-155, eff 1-1-12; 97-333, eff. |
8-12-11; 97-578, eff. 1-1-12; 97-1098, eff. 1-1-13; 97-1109, |
eff. 1-1-13; 97-1150, eff. 1-25-13.)
|
(730 ILCS 150/4) (from Ch. 38, par. 224)
|
Sec. 4. Discharge of sex offender, as defined in Section 2 |
of this Act,
or sexual predator from Department of
Corrections
|
|
facility or other penal institution; duties of
official in |
charge. Any sex offender, as defined in Section 2 of this Act,
|
or sexual predator, as defined by this
Article, who
is |
discharged, paroled or released from a Department of
|
Corrections or Department of Juvenile Justice facility, a |
facility where such person was placed by the
Department of |
Corrections or Department of Juvenile Justice or another penal |
institution, and
whose liability for
registration has not |
terminated under Section 7 shall, prior to discharge,
parole or |
release from the facility or institution, be informed of his or |
her
duty to register in person within 3 days of release by the
|
facility or institution in which he or she was confined.
The |
facility or institution shall also inform any person who must |
register
that if he or she establishes a residence outside of |
the State of Illinois,
is employed outside of the State of |
Illinois, or attends school outside of
the
State of Illinois,
|
he
or she must register in the new state within 3 days
after |
establishing
the
residence, beginning employment, or beginning |
school.
|
The facility shall require the person to read and sign such |
form as may
be required by the Department of State Police |
stating that the duty to
register and the procedure for |
registration has been explained to him or her
and that he or |
she understands the duty to register and the procedure for
|
registration. The facility shall further advise the person in |
writing that the
failure to register or other violation of this |
|
Article shall result in
revocation of parole, aftercare |
release, mandatory supervised release or conditional release.
|
The facility shall obtain information about where the
person |
expects to reside, work, and attend school upon
his or her |
discharge, parole or release and shall report the information |
to the
Department of State Police. The facility shall give one |
copy of the form
to the person and shall send one copy to each |
of the law enforcement agencies
having
jurisdiction where the |
person expects to reside, work, and attend school
upon his or |
her discharge,
parole or release and retain one copy for the |
files.
Electronic data files which includes all notification |
form information and
photographs of sex offenders being |
released from an Illinois Department of
Corrections or Illinois |
Department of Juvenile Justice facility will be shared on a |
regular basis as determined between
the Department of State |
Police , and the Department of Corrections , and Department of |
Juvenile Justice .
|
(Source: P.A. 94-168, eff. 1-1-06; 95-640, eff. 6-1-08 .)
|
(730 ILCS 150/8-5)
|
Sec. 8-5. Verification requirements. |
(a) Address verification. The agency having
jurisdiction
|
shall verify the
address of sex offenders, as defined in |
Section 2 of this Act, or sexual
predators required to register |
with their
agency at least once per year. The verification must |
be documented in
LEADS in the form and manner required by the |
|
Department of State Police. |
(a-5) Internet Protocol address verification. The agency |
having jurisdiction may verify the Internet protocol (IP) |
address of sex offenders, as defined in Section 2 of this Act, |
who are required to register with their agency under Section 3 |
of this Act. A copy of any such verification must be sent to |
the Attorney General for entrance in the Illinois Cyber-crimes |
Location Database pursuant to Section 5-4-3.2 of the Unified |
Code of Corrections.
|
(b) Registration verification. The supervising officer or |
aftercare specialist, shall, within 15 days of sentencing to |
probation or release from an Illinois Department of Corrections |
or Illinois Department of Juvenile Justice facility or other |
penal institution , contact the law enforcement agency in the |
jurisdiction in which the sex offender or sexual predator |
designated as his or her intended residence and verify |
compliance with the requirements of this Act. Revocation |
proceedings shall be immediately commenced against a sex |
offender or sexual predator on probation, parole, aftercare |
release, or mandatory supervised release who fails to comply |
with the requirements of this Act.
|
(c) In an effort to ensure that sexual predators and sex |
offenders who fail to respond to address-verification attempts |
or who otherwise abscond from registration are located in a |
timely manner, the Department of State Police shall share |
information with local law enforcement agencies. The |
|
Department shall use analytical resources to assist local law |
enforcement agencies to determine the potential whereabouts of |
any sexual predator or sex offender who fails to respond to |
address-verification
attempts or who otherwise absconds from |
registration. The Department shall review and analyze all |
available information concerning any such predator or offender |
who fails to respond to address-verification attempts or who |
otherwise absconds from registration and provide the |
information to local law enforcement agencies in order to |
assist the agencies in locating and apprehending the sexual |
predator or sex offender.
|
(Source: P.A. 94-988, eff. 1-1-07; 95-579, eff. 6-1-08 .)
|
Section 120. The Murderer and Violent Offender Against |
Youth Registration Act is amended by changing Sections 15 and |
50 as follows: |
(730 ILCS 154/15)
|
Sec. 15. Discharge of violent offender against youth. |
Discharge of violent offender against youth from Department of
|
Corrections
facility or other penal institution; duties of
|
official in charge. Any violent offender against youth who
is |
discharged, paroled, or released from a Department of
|
Corrections facility, a facility where such person was placed |
by the
Department of Corrections or another penal institution, |
and
whose liability for
registration has not terminated under |
|
Section 40 shall, prior to discharge,
parole or release from |
the facility or institution, be informed of his or her
duty to |
register in person within 5 days of release by the
facility or |
institution in which he or she was confined.
The facility or |
institution shall also inform any person who must register
that |
if he or she establishes a residence outside of the State of |
Illinois,
is employed outside of the State of Illinois, or |
attends school outside of
the
State of Illinois,
he
or she must |
register in the new state within 5 days after establishing
the
|
residence, beginning employment, or beginning school. |
The facility shall require the person to read and sign such |
form as may
be required by the Department of State Police |
stating that the duty to
register and the procedure for |
registration has been explained to him or her
and that he or |
she understands the duty to register and the procedure for
|
registration. The facility shall further advise the person in |
writing that the
failure to register or other violation of this |
Act shall result in
revocation of parole, aftercare release, |
mandatory supervised release or conditional release.
The |
facility shall obtain information about where the
person |
expects to reside, work, and attend school upon
his or her |
discharge, parole or release and shall report the information |
to the
Department of State Police. The facility shall give one |
copy of the form
to the person and shall send one copy to each |
of the law enforcement agencies
having
jurisdiction where the |
person expects to reside, work, and attend school
upon his or |
|
her discharge,
parole or release and retain one copy for the |
files.
Electronic data files which includes all notification |
form information and
photographs of violent offenders against |
youth being released from an Illinois Department of
Corrections |
or Illinois Department of Juvenile Justice facility will be |
shared on a regular basis as determined between
the Department |
of State Police , and the Department of Corrections and |
Department of Juvenile Justice .
|
(Source: P.A. 94-945, eff. 6-27-06.) |
(730 ILCS 154/50)
|
Sec. 50. Verification requirements. |
(a) The agency having
jurisdiction
shall verify the
address |
of violent offenders against youth required to register with |
their
agency at least once per year. The verification must be |
documented in
LEADS in the form and manner required by the |
Department of State Police. |
(b) The supervising officer or aftercare specialist, |
shall, within 15 days of sentencing to probation or release |
from an Illinois Department of Corrections facility or other |
penal institution , contact the law enforcement agency in the |
jurisdiction which the violent offender against youth |
designated as his or her intended residence and verify |
compliance with the requirements of this Act. Revocation |
proceedings shall be immediately commenced against a violent |
offender against youth on probation, parole, aftercare |
|
release, or mandatory supervised release who fails to comply |
with the requirements of this Act.
|
(Source: P.A. 94-945, eff. 6-27-06.) |
Section 125. The Stalking No Contact Order Act is amended |
by changing Sections 20, 115, and 117 as follows: |
(740 ILCS 21/20)
|
Sec. 20. Commencement of action; filing fees. |
(a) An action for a stalking no contact order is commenced: |
(1) independently, by filing a petition for a stalking |
no contact order in any civil court, unless specific courts |
are designated by local rule or order; or |
(2) in conjunction with a delinquency petition or a |
criminal prosecution, by filing a petition for a stalking |
no contact order under the same case number as the |
delinquency petition or criminal prosecution, to be |
granted during pre-trial release of a defendant, with any |
dispositional order issued under Section 5-710 of the |
Juvenile Court Act of 1987 or as a condition of release, |
supervision, conditional discharge, probation, periodic |
imprisonment, parole, aftercare release, or mandatory |
supervised release, or in conjunction with imprisonment or |
a bond forfeiture warrant, provided that (i) the violation |
is alleged in an information, complaint, indictment, or |
delinquency petition on file and the alleged victim is a |
|
person protected by this Act, and (ii) the petition, which |
is filed by the State's Attorney, names a victim of the |
alleged crime as a petitioner. |
(b) Withdrawal or dismissal of any petition for a stalking |
no contact order prior to adjudication where the petitioner is |
represented by the State shall operate as a dismissal without |
prejudice. No action for a stalking no contact order shall be |
dismissed because the respondent is being prosecuted for a |
crime against the petitioner. For any action commenced under |
item (2) of subsection (a) of this Section, dismissal of the |
conjoined case (or a finding of not guilty) shall not require |
dismissal of the action for a stalking no contact order; |
instead, it may be treated as an independent action and, if |
necessary and appropriate, transferred to a different court or |
division. |
(c) No fee shall be charged by the clerk of the court for |
filing petitions or modifying or certifying orders. No fee |
shall be charged by the sheriff for service by the sheriff of a |
petition, rule, motion, or order in an action commenced under |
this Section. |
(d) The court shall provide, through the office of the |
clerk of the court, simplified forms for filing of a petition |
under this Section by any person not represented by counsel.
|
(Source: P.A. 96-246, eff. 1-1-10.)
|
(740 ILCS 21/115)
|
|
Sec. 115. Notice of orders. |
(a) Upon issuance of any stalking no contact order, the |
clerk shall immediately, or on the next court day if an |
emergency order is issued in accordance with subsection (c) of |
Section 95: |
(1) enter the order on the record and file it in |
accordance with the circuit court procedures; and |
(2) provide a file stamped copy of the order to the |
respondent, if present, and to the petitioner. |
(b) The clerk of the issuing judge shall, or the petitioner |
may, on the same day that a stalking no contact order is |
issued, file a certified copy of that order with the sheriff or |
other law enforcement officials charged with maintaining |
Department of State Police records or charged with serving the |
order upon the respondent. If the order was issued in |
accordance with subsection (c) of Section 95, the clerk shall, |
on the next court day, file a certified copy of the order with |
the sheriff or other law enforcement officials charged with |
maintaining Department of State Police records. If the |
respondent, at the time of the issuance of the order, is |
committed to the custody of the Illinois Department of |
Corrections or Illinois Department of Juvenile Justice or is on |
parole , aftercare release, or mandatory supervised release, |
the sheriff or other law enforcement officials charged with |
maintaining Department of State Police records shall notify the |
Department of Corrections or Department of Juvenile Justice |
|
within 48 hours of receipt of a copy of the stalking no contact |
order from the clerk of the issuing judge or the petitioner. |
Such notice shall include the name of the respondent, the |
respondent's IDOC inmate number or IDJJ youth identification |
number , the respondent's date of birth, and the LEADS Record |
Index Number. |
(c) Unless the respondent was present in court when the |
order was issued, the sheriff, other law enforcement official, |
or special process server shall promptly serve that order upon |
the respondent and file proof of such service in the manner |
provided for service of process in civil proceedings. Instead |
of serving the order upon the respondent, however, the sheriff, |
other law enforcement official, special process server, or |
other persons defined in Section 117 may serve the respondent |
with a short form notification as provided in Section 117. If |
process has not yet been served upon the respondent, it shall |
be served with the order or short form notification if such |
service is made by the sheriff, other law enforcement official, |
or special process server. |
(d) If the person against whom the stalking no contact |
order is issued is arrested and the written order is issued in |
accordance with subsection (c) of Section 95 and received by |
the custodial law enforcement agency before the respondent or |
arrestee is released from custody, the custodial law |
enforcement agent shall promptly serve the order upon the |
respondent or arrestee before the respondent or arrestee is |
|
released from custody. In no event shall detention of the |
respondent or arrestee be extended for hearing on the petition |
for stalking no contact order or receipt of the order issued |
under Section 95 of this Act. |
(e) Any order extending, modifying, or revoking any |
stalking no contact order shall be promptly recorded, issued, |
and served as provided in this Section. |
(f) Upon the request of the petitioner, within 24 hours of |
the issuance of a stalking no contact order, the clerk of the |
issuing judge shall send written notice of the order along with |
a certified copy of the order to any school, daycare, college, |
or university at which the petitioner is enrolled.
|
(Source: P.A. 96-246, eff. 1-1-10; 97-904, eff. 1-1-13; |
97-1017, eff. 1-1-13; revised 8-23-12.) |
(740 ILCS 21/117) |
Sec. 117. Short form notification. |
(a) Instead of personal service of a stalking no contact |
order under Section 115, a sheriff, other law enforcement |
official, special process server, or personnel assigned by the |
Department of Corrections or Department of Juvenile Justice to |
investigate the alleged misconduct of committed persons or |
alleged violations of a parolee's or releasee's conditions of |
parole , aftercare release, or mandatory supervised release may |
serve a respondent with a short form notification. The short |
form notification must include the following items: |
|
(1) The respondent's name. |
(2) The respondent's date of birth, if known. |
(3) The petitioner's name. |
(4) The names of other protected parties. |
(5) The date and county in which the stalking no |
contact order was filed. |
(6) The court file number. |
(7) The hearing date and time, if known. |
(8) The conditions that apply to the respondent, either |
in checklist form or handwritten. |
(b) The short form notification must contain the following |
notice in bold print: |
"The order is now enforceable. You must report to the |
office of the sheriff or the office of the circuit court in |
(name of county) County to obtain a copy of the order. You are |
subject to arrest and may be charged with a misdemeanor or |
felony if you violate any of the terms of the order." |
(c) Upon verification of the identity of the respondent and |
the existence of an unserved order against the respondent, a |
sheriff or other law enforcement official may detain the |
respondent for a reasonable time necessary to complete and |
serve the short form notification. |
(d) When service is made by short form notification under |
this Section, it may be proved by the affidavit of the person |
making the service. |
(e) The Attorney General shall make the short form |
|
notification form available to law enforcement agencies in this |
State. |
(f) A single short form notification form may be used for |
orders of protection under the Illinois Domestic Violence Act |
of 1986, stalking no contact orders under this Act, and civil |
no contact orders under the Civil No Contact Order Act.
|
(Source: P.A. 97-1017, eff. 1-1-13.) |
Section 130. The Civil No Contact Order Act is amended by |
changing Sections 202, 216, 218, and 218.1 as follows:
|
(740 ILCS 22/202)
|
Sec. 202. Commencement of action; filing fees.
|
(a) An action for a civil no contact order is commenced:
|
(1) independently, by filing a petition for a civil no |
contact order in any civil court,
unless specific courts |
are designated by local rule or order; or
|
(2) in conjunction with a
delinquency
petition or a |
criminal prosecution, by filing a petition for a civil no |
contact
order under
the same case number as the delinquency |
petition or criminal prosecution, to be
granted
during |
pre-trial release of a defendant, with any dispositional |
order issued
under Section
5-710 of the Juvenile Court Act |
of 1987 or as a condition of release,
supervision,
|
conditional discharge, probation, periodic imprisonment, |
parole, aftercare release, or mandatory
supervised
|
|
release, or in conjunction with imprisonment or a bond |
forfeiture warrant,
provided that (i) the violation is |
alleged in an information, complaint,
indictment, or
|
delinquency
petition on file and the alleged victim is a |
person protected by this Act, and
(ii) the
petition, which |
is filed by the State's Attorney, names a victim of the |
alleged
crime as a
petitioner.
|
(b) Withdrawal or dismissal of any petition for a
civil no |
contact order
prior to adjudication where the petitioner is |
represented by the State shall
operate as a dismissal without |
prejudice. No action for a civil no contact
order shall be |
dismissed because the respondent is being prosecuted for a |
crime
against the petitioner. For any action commenced under |
item (2) of subsection
(a) of
this Section, dismissal of the |
conjoined case (or a finding of not guilty)
shall not require |
dismissal of the action for a civil no contact order;
instead, |
it may be treated as an independent action and, if necessary |
and
appropriate, transferred to a different court or division.
|
(c) No fee shall be
charged by the clerk of the court for |
filing petitions or modifying or
certifying orders. No
fee
|
shall be charged by the sheriff for service by the sheriff of a
|
petition, rule, motion, or order in an action commenced under |
this
Section.
|
(d) The court shall provide, through the office
of the |
clerk of the court, simplified forms for filing of a petition |
under this Section by any
person not represented by counsel.
|
|
(Source: P.A. 93-236, eff. 1-1-04; 93-811, eff. 1-1-05.)
|
(740 ILCS 22/216)
|
Sec. 216. Duration and extension of orders.
|
(a) Unless re-opened or
extended or voided by entry of an |
order of greater duration, an emergency
order shall be |
effective for not less than 14 nor more than 21 days.
|
(b) Except as otherwise provided in
this Section, a plenary |
civil no contact order shall be effective for a fixed
period of |
time, not to exceed 2 years. A plenary civil no contact order
|
entered in conjunction with a criminal prosecution shall remain |
in effect as
follows:
|
(1) if entered during pre-trial release, until |
disposition, withdrawal,
or
dismissal of the underlying |
charge; if however, the case is continued as an
independent |
cause of action, the order's duration may be for a fixed |
period of
time not to exceed 2 years;
|
(2) if in effect in conjunction with a bond forfeiture |
warrant, until
final disposition or an additional period of |
time not exceeding 2 years; no
civil no contact order, |
however, shall be terminated by a dismissal that is
|
accompanied by the issuance of a bond forfeiture warrant;
|
(3) until expiration of any supervision, conditional |
discharge,
probation, periodic imprisonment, parole, |
aftercare release, or mandatory supervised release and
for |
an additional period of time thereafter not exceeding 2 |
|
years; or
|
(4) until the date set by the court for expiration of |
any sentence of
imprisonment and subsequent parole , |
aftercare release, or mandatory supervised release and for |
an
additional period of time thereafter not exceeding 2 |
years.
|
(c) Any emergency or plenary order
may be extended one or |
more times, as required, provided that the
requirements of |
Section 214 or 215, as appropriate, are satisfied.
If the |
motion for extension is uncontested and the petitioner seeks no
|
modification of the order, the order may be extended on the |
basis of
the petitioner's motion or affidavit stating that |
there has been no material
change in relevant circumstances |
since entry of the order and stating
the reason for the |
requested extension. Extensions may be granted only
in open |
court and not under the provisions of subsection (c) of Section
|
214, which applies only when the court is unavailable at the |
close of
business or on a court holiday.
|
(d) Any civil no contact order which would expire
on a |
court holiday shall instead expire at the close of the next |
court
business day.
|
(d-5) An extension of a plenary civil no contact order may |
be granted, upon good cause shown, to remain in effect until |
the civil no contact order is vacated or modified. |
(e) The practice of dismissing or suspending
a criminal |
prosecution in exchange for the issuance of a civil no contact
|
|
order undermines the purposes of this Act. This Section shall |
not
be construed as encouraging that practice.
|
(Source: P.A. 96-311, eff. 1-1-10.)
|
(740 ILCS 22/218)
|
Sec. 218. Notice of orders.
|
(a) Upon issuance of any civil no contact order, the clerk |
shall
immediately, or on the next court day if an emergency |
order is issued in
accordance with subsection (c) of Section |
214:
|
(1) enter the order on the record and file it in |
accordance with the
circuit court procedures; and
|
(2) provide a file stamped copy of the order to the |
respondent, if
present, and to the petitioner.
|
(b) The clerk of the issuing judge shall, or the petitioner |
may, on the
same day that a civil no contact order is issued, |
file a certified copy of that
order with the sheriff or other |
law enforcement officials charged with
maintaining Department |
of State Police records or charged with serving the
order upon |
the respondent. If the order was issued in accordance with
|
subsection (c) of Section 214, the clerk shall, on the next |
court day, file a
certified copy of the order with the Sheriff |
or other law enforcement officials
charged with maintaining |
Department of State Police records. If the respondent, at the |
time of the issuance of the order, is committed to the custody |
of the Illinois Department of Corrections or Illinois |
|
Department of Juvenile Justice, or is on parole , aftercare |
release, or mandatory supervised release, the sheriff or other |
law enforcement officials charged with maintaining Department |
of State Police records shall notify the Department of |
Corrections or Department of Juvenile Justice within 48 hours |
of receipt of a copy of the civil no contact order from the |
clerk of the issuing judge or the petitioner. Such notice shall |
include the name of the respondent, the respondent's IDOC |
inmate number or IDJJ youth identification number , the |
respondent's date of birth, and the LEADS Record Index Number.
|
(c) Unless the respondent was present in court when the |
order was
issued, the sheriff, other law enforcement official, |
or special process server
shall promptly serve that order upon |
the respondent and file proof of such
service in the manner |
provided for service of process in civil proceedings. Instead |
of serving the order upon the respondent, however, the sheriff, |
other law enforcement official, special process server, or |
other persons defined in Section 218.1 may serve the respondent |
with a short form notification as provided in Section 218.1. If
|
process has not yet been served upon the respondent, it shall |
be served with
the order or short form notification if such |
service is made by the sheriff, other law enforcement official, |
or special process server.
|
(d) If the person against whom the civil no contact order |
is issued is
arrested and the written order is issued in |
accordance with subsection (c) of
Section 214 and received by |
|
the custodial law enforcement agency before
the respondent or |
arrestee is released from custody, the custodial law
|
enforcement agent shall promptly serve the order upon the |
respondent or
arrestee before the respondent or arrestee is |
released from custody. In no
event shall detention of the |
respondent or arrestee be extended for hearing
on the petition |
for civil no contact order or receipt of the order issued under
|
Section 214 of this Act.
|
(e) Any order extending, modifying, or revoking any civil |
no contact
order shall be promptly recorded, issued, and served |
as provided in this
Section.
|
(f) Upon the request of the
petitioner, within 24 hours of |
the issuance of a civil no contact order, the
clerk of the |
issuing judge shall
send written notice of the order along with
|
a certified copy of the order to any school, college, or |
university at which
the
petitioner is enrolled.
|
(Source: P.A. 97-904, eff. 1-1-13; 97-1017, eff. 1-1-13; |
revised 8-23-12.)
|
(740 ILCS 22/218.1) |
Sec. 218.1. Short form notification. |
(a) Instead of personal service of a civil no contact order |
under Section 218, a sheriff, other law enforcement official, |
special process server, or personnel assigned by the Department |
of Corrections or Department of Juvenile Justice to investigate |
the alleged misconduct of committed persons or alleged |
|
violations of a parolee's or releasee's conditions of parole , |
aftercare release, or mandatory supervised release may serve a |
respondent with a short form notification. The short form |
notification must include the following items: |
(1) The respondent's name. |
(2) The respondent's date of birth, if known. |
(3) The petitioner's name. |
(4) The names of other protected parties. |
(5) The date and county in which the civil no contact |
order was filed. |
(6) The court file number. |
(7) The hearing date and time, if known. |
(8) The conditions that apply to the respondent, either |
in checklist form or handwritten. |
(b) The short form notification must contain the following |
notice in bold print: |
"The order is now enforceable. You must report to the |
office of the sheriff or the office of the circuit court in |
(name of county) County to obtain a copy of the order. You are |
subject to arrest and may be charged with a misdemeanor or |
felony if you violate any of the terms of the order." |
(c) Upon verification of the identity of the respondent and |
the existence of an unserved order against the respondent, a |
sheriff or other law enforcement official may detain the |
respondent for a reasonable time necessary to complete and |
serve the short form notification. |
|
(d) When service is made by short form notification under |
this Section, it may be proved by the affidavit of the person |
making the service. |
(e) The Attorney General shall make the short form |
notification form available to law enforcement agencies in this |
State. |
(f) A single short form notification form may be used for |
orders of protection under the Illinois Domestic Violence Act |
of 1986, stalking no contact orders under the Stalking No |
Contact Order Act, and civil no contact orders under this Act.
|
(Source: P.A. 97-1017, eff. 1-1-13.) |
Section 135. The Illinois Streetgang Terrorism Omnibus |
Prevention Act is amended by changing Section 30 as follows:
|
(740 ILCS 147/30)
|
Sec. 30. Service of process.
|
(a) All streetgangs and streetgang members engaged in a |
course or pattern
of gang-related criminal activity within this |
State impliedly consent to
service of process upon them as set |
forth in this Section, or as may be
otherwise authorized by the |
Code of Civil Procedure.
|
(b) Service of process upon a streetgang may be had by |
leaving a copy of
the complaint and summons directed to any |
officer of such gang, commanding
the gang to appear and answer |
the complaint or otherwise plead at a time
and place certain:
|
|
(1) with any gang officer; or
|
(2) with any individual member of the gang |
simultaneously named therein;
or
|
(3) in the manner provided for service upon a voluntary |
unincorporated
association in a civil action; or
|
(4) in the manner provided for service by publication |
in a civil action; or
|
(5) with any parent, legal guardian, or legal custodian |
of any persons
charged with a gang-related offense when any |
person sued civilly under
this Act is under 18 years of age |
and is also charged criminally or as a
delinquent minor; or
|
(6) with the director of any agency or department of |
this State who is
the legal guardian, guardianship |
administrator, or custodian of any person
sued under this |
Act; or
|
(7) with the probation or parole officer or aftercare |
specialist of any person sued under this Act; or
|
(8) with such other person or agent as the court may, |
upon petition of
the State's Attorney or his or her |
designee, authorize as appropriate and
reasonable under |
all of the circumstances.
|
(c) If after being summoned a streetgang does not appear, |
the court
shall enter an answer for the streetgang neither |
affirming nor denying the
allegations of the complaint but |
demanding strict proof thereof, and
proceed to trial and |
judgment without further process.
|
|
(d) When any person is named as a defendant streetgang |
member in any
complaint, or subsequently becomes known and is |
added or joined as a named
defendant, service of process may be |
had as authorized or provided for in
the Code of Civil |
Procedure for service of process in a civil case.
|
(e) Unknown gang members may be sued as a class and |
designated as such
in the caption of any complaint filed under |
this Act. Service of
process upon unknown members may be made |
in the manner prescribed for
provision of notice to members of |
a class in a class action, or as the court
may direct for |
providing the best service and notice practicable under the
|
circumstances which shall include individual, personal, or |
other service
upon all members who can be identified and |
located through reasonable effort.
|
(Source: P.A. 87-932.)
|
Section 140. The Local Governmental and Governmental |
Employees Tort
Immunity Act is amended by changing Section |
4-106 as follows:
|
(745 ILCS 10/4-106) (from Ch. 85, par. 4-106)
|
Sec. 4-106.
Neither a local public entity nor a public |
employee is liable
for:
|
(a) Any injury resulting from determining to parole or |
release a
prisoner, to revoke his or her parole or release, or |
the terms and conditions of
his or her parole or release .
|
|
(b) Any injury inflicted by an escaped or escaping |
prisoner.
|
(Source: Laws 1965, p. 2983.)
|
Section 145. The Illinois Domestic Violence Act of 1986 is |
amended by changing Sections 202, 220, 222, and 222.10 as |
follows:
|
(750 ILCS 60/202) (from Ch. 40, par. 2312-2)
|
Sec. 202. Commencement of action; filing fees; dismissal.
|
(a) How to commence action. Actions for orders of |
protection are commenced:
|
(1) Independently: By filing a petition for an order of |
protection in
any civil court, unless specific courts are |
designated by local rule or order.
|
(2) In conjunction with another civil proceeding: By
|
filing a petition for an order of protection under the same |
case number
as another civil proceeding involving the |
parties, including but not
limited to: (i) any proceeding |
under the Illinois Marriage and Dissolution of
Marriage |
Act, Illinois Parentage Act of 1984, Nonsupport of Spouse |
and
Children Act, Revised Uniform Reciprocal Enforcement |
of Support Act or an
action for nonsupport brought under |
Article 10 of the
Illinois Public Aid
Code, provided that a |
petitioner and
the respondent are a party to or the subject |
of that proceeding or (ii) a
guardianship proceeding under |
|
the Probate Act of
1975, or a proceeding for involuntary
|
commitment under the Mental Health and Developmental |
Disabilities Code, or
any proceeding, other than a |
delinquency petition, under the Juvenile Court
Act of 1987, |
provided that a petitioner or the
respondent is a party to |
or the subject of such proceeding.
|
(3) In conjunction with a delinquency petition or a
|
criminal prosecution: By filing a petition
for an order of |
protection, under the same case number as the delinquency
|
petition or criminal prosecution, to be
granted during |
pre-trial release of a defendant, with any dispositional |
order
issued under Section 5-710 of the Juvenile Court Act |
of 1987
or as a condition of release, supervision, |
conditional discharge,
probation, periodic imprisonment, |
parole , aftercare release, or mandatory supervised |
release, or
in conjunction with imprisonment or a bond |
forfeiture warrant; provided that:
|
(i) the violation is alleged in an information, |
complaint, indictment
or delinquency petition on file, |
and the alleged offender and victim are
family or |
household members or persons protected by this Act; and
|
(ii) the petition, which is filed by the State's |
Attorney, names a
victim of the alleged crime as a |
petitioner.
|
(b) Filing, certification, and service fees. No fee shall |
be charged
by the clerk for filing, amending, vacating, |
|
certifying, or photocopying
petitions or orders; or for issuing |
alias summons; or for any
related filing service. No
fee shall |
be charged by the sheriff for service by the sheriff of a
|
petition,
rule, motion, or order in an action commenced under |
this Section.
|
(c) Dismissal and consolidation. Withdrawal or dismissal |
of any
petition for an order of protection prior to |
adjudication where the
petitioner is represented by the State |
shall operate as a dismissal without
prejudice. No action for |
an order of protection shall be dismissed because
the |
respondent is being prosecuted for a crime against the |
petitioner. An
independent action may be consolidated with |
another civil proceeding, as
provided by paragraph (2) of |
subsection (a) of this Section. For any
action commenced under |
paragraph (2) or (3) of subsection (a) of this Section,
|
dismissal of the conjoined case (or a finding of not guilty) |
shall not
require dismissal of the action
for the order of |
protection; instead, it may be treated as an
independent action |
and, if necessary and appropriate, transferred to a
different |
court or division. Dismissal of any conjoined case shall not |
affect
the
validity of any previously issued order of |
protection, and thereafter
subsections (b)(1) and (b)(2) of |
Section 220 shall be inapplicable to
such order.
|
(d) Pro se petitions. The court shall provide, through the |
office of
the clerk of the court, simplified forms and clerical |
assistance to help
with the writing and filing of a petition |
|
under this Section by any person
not represented by counsel. In |
addition, that assistance may be provided
by the state's |
attorney.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-458, eff. 1-1-04.)
|
(750 ILCS 60/220) (from Ch. 40, par. 2312-20)
|
Sec. 220. Duration and extension of orders.
|
(a) Duration of emergency and interim orders. Unless |
re-opened or
extended or voided by entry of an order of greater |
duration:
|
(1) Emergency orders issued under Section 217 shall be |
effective for
not less than 14 nor more than 21 days;
|
(2) Interim orders shall be effective for up to 30 |
days.
|
(b) Duration of plenary orders. Except as otherwise |
provided in this
Section, a plenary order of protection shall |
be valid for a fixed period of
time, not to exceed two years.
|
(1) A plenary order of protection entered in |
conjunction with another
civil
proceeding shall remain in |
effect as follows:
|
(i) if entered as preliminary relief in that other |
proceeding, until
entry of final judgment in
that other |
proceeding;
|
(ii) if incorporated into the final judgment in |
that other
proceeding, until the order of protection is |
vacated or modified; or
|
|
(iii) if incorporated in an order for involuntary |
commitment, until
termination of both the involuntary |
commitment and any voluntary
commitment, or for a fixed |
period of time not exceeding 2 years.
|
(2) A plenary order of protection entered in |
conjunction with a criminal
prosecution shall remain in |
effect as follows:
|
(i) if entered during pre-trial release, until |
disposition, withdrawal,
or dismissal of the |
underlying charge;
if, however, the case is continued |
as an independent cause of action, the
order's duration |
may be for a fixed period of time not to exceed 2 |
years;
|
(ii) if in effect in conjunction with a bond |
forfeiture warrant, until
final disposition or an |
additional period of time not
exceeding 2 years;
no |
order of protection, however, shall be terminated by a |
dismissal that
is accompanied by the issuance of a bond |
forfeiture warrant;
|
(iii) until expiration of any supervision, |
conditional discharge,
probation, periodic |
imprisonment, parole , aftercare release, or mandatory |
supervised release and for an additional period of time |
thereafter not
exceeding 2 years; or
|
(iv) until the date set by the court for expiration |
of any sentence of
imprisonment and subsequent parole , |
|
aftercare release, or mandatory supervised release
and |
for an additional period of time thereafter
not |
exceeding 2 years.
|
(c) Computation of time. The duration of an order of |
protection shall
not be reduced by the duration of any prior |
order of protection.
|
(d) Law enforcement records. When a plenary order of |
protection expires
upon the occurrence of a specified event, |
rather than upon a specified date
as provided in subsection |
(b), no expiration date shall be entered in
Department of State |
Police records. To remove the plenary order from those
records, |
either party shall request the clerk of the court to file a
|
certified copy of an order stating that the specified event has |
occurred or
that the plenary order has been vacated or modified |
with the Sheriff, and the
Sheriff shall direct that law |
enforcement records shall be promptly
corrected in accordance |
with the filed order.
|
(e) Extension of orders. Any emergency, interim or plenary |
order
may be extended one or more times, as required, provided |
that
the requirements of Section 217, 218 or 219, as |
appropriate, are satisfied.
If the motion for extension is |
uncontested and petitioner seeks no
modification of the order,
|
the order may be extended on the basis of petitioner's motion |
or
affidavit stating that there has been no material change in |
relevant
circumstances since entry of the order and stating the |
reason for the
requested extension. An extension of a plenary |
|
order of protection may be granted, upon good cause shown, to |
remain in effect until the order of protection is vacated or |
modified.
Extensions may be granted only in open court and not |
under the provisions
of subsection (c) of Section 217, which |
applies only when the court is
unavailable at the close of |
business or on a court holiday.
|
(f) Termination date. Any order of protection which would |
expire on a
court holiday shall instead expire at the close of |
the next court business day.
|
(g) Statement of purpose. The practice of dismissing or |
suspending a
criminal prosecution in exchange for the issuance |
of an order of protection
undermines the purposes of this Act. |
This Section shall not be construed
as encouraging that |
practice.
|
(Source: P.A. 95-886, eff. 1-1-09.)
|
(750 ILCS 60/222) (from Ch. 40, par. 2312-22)
|
Sec. 222. Notice of orders.
|
(a) Entry and issuance. Upon issuance of any order of |
protection, the
clerk shall immediately, or on the next court |
day if an emergency order is
issued in accordance with |
subsection (c) of Section 217,
(i) enter the order on the |
record and file it
in accordance with the circuit court |
procedures and (ii) provide a file stamped
copy of the order to |
respondent, if
present, and to petitioner.
|
(b) Filing with sheriff. The clerk of the issuing judge |
|
shall, or
the petitioner may, on the same day that an order of |
protection is
issued, file a certified copy of that order with |
the sheriff or other law
enforcement officials charged with |
maintaining Department of State Police
records or charged with |
serving the order upon respondent.
If the order was issued in |
accordance with subsection (c) of Section 217,
the clerk
shall |
on the next court day, file a certified copy of the order with |
the
Sheriff or other law enforcement officials charged with |
maintaining Department
of State Police records. If the |
respondent, at the time of the issuance of the order, is |
committed to the custody of the Illinois Department of |
Corrections or Illinois Department of Juvenile Justice or is on |
parole , aftercare release, or mandatory supervised release, |
the sheriff or other law enforcement officials charged with |
maintaining Department of State Police records shall notify the |
Department of Corrections or Department of Juvenile Justice |
within 48 hours of receipt of a copy of the order of protection |
from the clerk of the issuing judge or the petitioner. Such |
notice shall include the name of the respondent, the |
respondent's IDOC inmate number or IDJJ youth identification |
number , the respondent's date of birth, and the LEADS Record |
Index Number.
|
(c) Service by sheriff. Unless respondent was present in |
court when the
order was issued, the sheriff, other law |
enforcement official or special
process server shall
promptly |
serve that order upon respondent and file proof of such |
|
service,
in the manner provided for service of process in civil |
proceedings.
Instead of serving the order upon the respondent, |
however, the sheriff, other
law enforcement official, special |
process server, or other persons defined in Section 222.10 may |
serve the respondent
with a short form notification as provided |
in Section 222.10.
If
process has not yet been served upon the |
respondent, it shall be served
with the order or short form |
notification if such service is made by the sheriff, other law |
enforcement official, or special process server. A single fee |
may be charged for
service of an order
obtained in civil court, |
or for service of such an order together with
process, unless |
waived or deferred under Section 210.
|
(c-5) If the person against whom the order of protection is |
issued is
arrested and the written order is issued in |
accordance with subsection (c) of
Section 217
and received by |
the custodial law enforcement agency before the respondent or
|
arrestee is released from custody, the custodial law |
enforcement agent shall
promptly serve the order upon the |
respondent or arrestee before the
respondent or arrestee is |
released from custody. In no event shall detention
of the |
respondent or arrestee be extended for hearing on the petition |
for order
of protection or receipt of the order issued under |
Section 217 of this Act.
|
(d) Extensions, modifications and revocations. Any order |
extending,
modifying or revoking any order of protection shall |
be promptly recorded,
issued and served as provided in this |
|
Section.
|
(e) Notice to schools. Upon the request of the petitioner, |
within 24
hours of the issuance of an order of
protection, the |
clerk of the issuing judge shall
send a certified copy of
the |
order of protection to the day-care facility,
pre-school or |
pre-kindergarten, or private school or the principal
office of |
the public school district or any college or university in |
which any child who
is a protected person under the order of |
protection or any child
of
the
petitioner is enrolled as |
requested by the petitioner at the mailing address provided by |
the petitioner.
If the child transfers enrollment to another |
day-care facility, pre-school,
pre-kindergarten,
private |
school, public school, college, or university, the petitioner |
may,
within 24 hours
of the transfer, send to the clerk written |
notice of the transfer, including
the name and
address of the |
institution to which the child is transferring.
Within 24 hours |
of receipt of notice
from the petitioner that a child is |
transferring to another day-care facility,
pre-school, |
pre-kindergarten, private school, public school, college, or
|
university, the clerk shall send a certified copy of the order |
to the institution to which the child
is
transferring.
|
(f) Disclosure by schools. After receiving a certified copy |
of an order
of protection that prohibits a respondent's access |
to records, neither a
day-care facility, pre-school, |
pre-kindergarten, public
or private school, college, or |
university nor its employees shall allow a
respondent access to |
|
a
protected child's records or release information in those |
records to the
respondent. The school shall file
the copy of |
the order of protection in the records of a child who
is a |
protected person under the order of protection. When a child |
who is a
protected person under the order of protection |
transfers to another day-care
facility, pre-school, |
pre-kindergarten, public or private school, college, or
|
university, the institution from which the child is |
transferring may, at the
request of the petitioner, provide,
|
within 24 hours of the transfer, written notice of the order of |
protection,
along with a certified copy of the order, to the |
institution to which the child
is
transferring.
|
(g) Notice to health care facilities and health care |
practitioners. Upon the request of the petitioner, the clerk of |
the circuit court shall send a certified copy of the order of |
protection to any specified health care facility or health care |
practitioner requested by the petitioner at the mailing address |
provided by the petitioner. |
(h) Disclosure by health care facilities and health care |
practitioners. After receiving a certified copy of an order of |
protection that prohibits a respondent's access to records, no |
health care facility or health care practitioner shall allow a |
respondent access to the records of any child who is a |
protected person under the order of protection, or release |
information in those records to the respondent, unless the |
order has expired or the respondent shows a certified copy of |
|
the court order vacating the corresponding order of protection |
that was sent to the health care facility or practitioner. |
Nothing in this Section shall be construed to require health |
care facilities or health care practitioners to alter |
procedures related to billing and payment. The health care |
facility or health care practitioner may file the copy of the |
order of protection in the records of a child who is a |
protected person under the order of protection, or may employ |
any other method to identify the records to which a respondent |
is prohibited access. No health care facility or health care |
practitioner shall be civilly or professionally liable for |
reliance on a copy of an order of protection, except for |
willful and wanton misconduct. |
(Source: P.A. 96-651, eff. 1-1-10; 97-50, eff. 6-28-11; 97-904, |
eff. 1-1-13.)
|
(750 ILCS 60/222.10)
|
Sec. 222.10. Short form notification.
|
(a) Instead of personal service of an order of protection |
under Section 222,
a sheriff, other law enforcement official, |
special process server, or personnel assigned by the Department |
of Corrections or Department of Juvenile Justice to investigate |
the alleged misconduct of committed persons or alleged |
violations of a parolee's or releasee's conditions of parole , |
aftercare release, or mandatory supervised release may serve
a |
respondent with a short form notification. The short form |
|
notification must
include the following items:
|
(1) The respondent's name.
|
(2) The respondent's date of birth, if known.
|
(3) The petitioner's name.
|
(4) The names of other protected parties.
|
(5) The date and county in which the order of |
protection was filed.
|
(6) The court file number.
|
(7) The hearing date and time, if known.
|
(8) The conditions that apply to the respondent, either |
in checklist form
or handwritten.
|
(b) The short form notification must contain the following |
notice in bold
print:
|
"The order is now enforceable. You must report to the |
office of
the sheriff or the office of the circuit court in |
(name of county) County to
obtain a copy of the order. You |
are subject to arrest and may be
charged with a misdemeanor |
or felony if you violate any of the terms of the
order."
|
(c) Upon verification of the identity of the respondent and |
the existence of
an unserved order against the respondent, a |
sheriff or other law
enforcement official may detain the |
respondent for a reasonable time necessary
to complete and |
serve the short form notification.
|
(d) When service is made by short form notification under |
this Section, it
may be proved by the affidavit of the person |
making the service.
|
|
(e) The Attorney General shall make the short form
|
notification form available to law enforcement agencies in this |
State.
|
(f) A single short form notification form may be used for |
orders of protection under this Act, stalking no contact orders |
under the Stalking No Contact Order Act, and civil no contact |
orders under the Civil No Contact Order Act. |
(Source: P.A. 97-50, eff. 6-28-11; 97-1017, eff. 1-1-13.)
|
Section 150. The Line of Duty Compensation Act is amended |
by changing Section 2 as follows:
|
(820 ILCS 315/2)
(from Ch. 48, par. 282)
|
Sec. 2. As used in this Act, unless the context otherwise |
requires:
|
(a) "Law enforcement officer" or "officer" means any person |
employed
by the State or a local governmental entity as a |
policeman, peace
officer, auxiliary policeman or in some like |
position involving the
enforcement of the law and protection of |
the public interest at the risk of
that person's life. This |
includes supervisors, wardens, superintendents and
their |
assistants, guards and keepers, correctional officers, youth
|
supervisors, parole agents, aftercare specialists, school |
teachers and correctional counsellors
in all facilities of both |
the
Department of Corrections and the Department of Juvenile |
Justice, while within the facilities under the control
of the |
|
Department of Corrections or the Department of Juvenile Justice |
or in the act of transporting inmates
or wards from one |
location to another or while performing their official
duties, |
and all other Department of Correction or Department of |
Juvenile Justice employees who have daily
contact with inmates.
|
The death of the foregoing employees of the Department of |
Corrections or the Department of Juvenile Justice
in order to |
be included herein must be by the direct or indirect willful
|
act of an inmate, ward, work-releasee, parolee, aftercare |
releasee, parole violator , aftercare release violator , person
|
under conditional release, or any person sentenced or |
committed, or
otherwise subject to confinement in or to the |
Department of Corrections or the Department of Juvenile |
Justice.
|
(b) "Fireman" means any person employed by the State or a |
local
governmental entity as, or otherwise serving as, a member |
or officer of
a fire department either for the purpose of the |
prevention or control of fire
or the underwater recovery of |
drowning victims, including volunteer firemen.
|
(c) "Local governmental entity" includes counties, |
municipalities
and municipal corporations.
|
(d) "State" means the State of Illinois and its |
departments,
divisions, boards, bureaus, commissions, |
authorities and colleges and
universities.
|
(e) "Killed in the line of duty" means losing one's life as |
a result
of injury received in the active performance of duties |
|
as a law
enforcement officer, civil defense worker, civil air |
patrol member,
paramedic, fireman, or chaplain if the death |
occurs within
one year from the date
the injury was received |
and if that injury arose from violence or other
accidental |
cause. In the case of a State employee, "killed in the line
of |
duty" means losing one's life as a result of injury received in |
the
active performance of one's duties as a State employee, if |
the death occurs
within one year from the date the injury was |
received and if that injury
arose from a willful act of |
violence by another State employee committed
during such other |
employee's course of employment and after January 1,
1988. The |
term excludes death resulting from the willful
misconduct or |
intoxication of the officer, civil defense worker, civil
air |
patrol member, paramedic, fireman, chaplain, or State |
employee.
However,
the burden of proof of
such willful |
misconduct or intoxication of the officer, civil defense
|
worker, civil air patrol member, paramedic,
fireman, chaplain, |
or State employee is on the Attorney
General. Subject to the |
conditions set forth in subsection (a) with
respect to |
inclusion under this Act of Department of Corrections and |
Department of Juvenile Justice employees
described in that |
subsection, for the purposes of this Act, instances in
which a |
law enforcement officer receives an injury in the active
|
performance of duties as a law enforcement officer include but |
are not
limited to instances when:
|
(1) the injury is received as a result of a wilful act |
|
of violence
committed other than by the officer and a |
relationship exists between the
commission of such act and |
the officer's
performance of his duties as a law |
enforcement officer, whether or not the
injury is received |
while the officer is on duty as a law enforcement officer;
|
(2) the injury is received by the officer while the |
officer is
attempting to prevent the commission of a |
criminal act by another or
attempting to apprehend an |
individual the officer suspects has committed a
crime, |
whether or not the injury is received while the officer is |
on duty
as a law enforcement officer;
|
(3) the injury is received by the officer while the |
officer is
travelling to or from his employment as a law |
enforcement officer or during
any meal break, or other |
break, which takes place during the period in
which the |
officer is on duty as a law enforcement officer.
|
In the case of an Armed Forces member, "killed in the line |
of duty" means
losing one's life while on active duty in |
connection with the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks on the |
United States, Operation Enduring Freedom, or Operation Iraqi |
Freedom.
|
(f) "Volunteer fireman" means a person having principal |
employment
other than as a fireman, but who is carried on the |
rolls of a regularly
constituted fire department either for the |
purpose of the prevention or
control of fire or the underwater |
recovery of drowning victims, the members
of which are under |
|
the
jurisdiction of the corporate authorities of a city, |
village,
incorporated town, or fire protection district, and |
includes a volunteer
member of a fire department organized |
under the "General Not for Profit
Corporation Act", approved |
July 17, 1943, as now or hereafter amended,
which is under |
contract with any city, village, incorporated town, fire
|
protection district, or persons residing therein, for fire |
fighting
services. "Volunteer fireman" does not mean an |
individual who
volunteers assistance without being regularly |
enrolled as a fireman.
|
(g) "Civil defense worker" means any person employed by the |
State or
a local governmental entity as, or otherwise serving |
as, a member of a
civil defense work force, including volunteer |
civil defense work forces
engaged in serving the public |
interest during periods of disaster,
whether natural or |
man-made.
|
(h) "Civil air patrol member" means any person employed by |
the State
or a local governmental entity as, or otherwise |
serving as, a member of
the organization commonly known as the |
"Civil Air Patrol", including
volunteer members of the |
organization commonly known as the "Civil Air Patrol".
|
(i) "Paramedic" means an Emergency Medical |
Technician-Paramedic certified by
the Illinois Department of |
Public Health under the Emergency Medical
Services (EMS) |
Systems Act, and all other emergency medical personnel
|
certified by the Illinois Department of Public Health who are |
|
members of an
organized body or not-for-profit corporation |
under the jurisdiction of
a city, village, incorporated town, |
fire protection district or county, that
provides emergency |
medical treatment to persons of a defined geographical area.
|
(j) "State employee" means any employee as defined in |
Section
14-103.05 of the Illinois Pension Code, as now or |
hereafter amended.
|
(k) "Chaplain" means an individual who:
|
(1) is a chaplain of (i) a fire
department or (ii) a |
police department
or other agency
consisting of law |
enforcement officers; and
|
(2) has been designated a chaplain by (i) the
fire |
department, police department, or other agency or an |
officer
or body having jurisdiction over the department or |
agency or (ii) a labor
organization representing the |
firemen or law enforcement officers.
|
(l) "Armed Forces member" means an Illinois resident who |
is: a member of
the
Armed Forces of the United States; a member |
of the Illinois National Guard
while on active military service |
pursuant to an order of the President of the
United States; or |
a member of any reserve component of the Armed Forces of the
|
United States while on active military service pursuant to an |
order of the
President of the United States.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-1047, eff. 10-18-04; 93-1073, eff. 1-18-05; |
94-696, eff. 6-1-06 .)
|