101ST GENERAL ASSEMBLY
State of Illinois
2019 and 2020
HB3212

 

Introduced , by Rep. Justin Slaughter

 

SYNOPSIS AS INTRODUCED:
 
See Index

    Amends the Criminal Code of 2012. Increases the threshold amount of theft not from the person and retail theft that enhances the offense from a misdemeanor to a felony to $2,000 and if based on a prior conviction must only be for felony theft. Amends the Illinois Identification Card Act. Provides that the Secretary of State may, upon request of a person committed to the Department of Corrections, issue a limited period identification card to the committed person that shall be valid during the period of his or her incarceration. Amends the Code of Criminal Procedure of 1963 concerning the reduction or modification of a defendant's sentence. Amends the Unified Code of Corrections. Provides that not later than 2 years after the effective date of the amendatory Act, the Director of Corrections, in consultation with the Independent Review Committee created by the amendatory Act, shall develop and release publicly on the Department of Corrections website a risk and needs assessment system. Describes the system. Provides that a committed person shall be assigned to an institution or facility of the Department that is located within 200 miles of his or her residence immediately before the committed person's admission to the Department. Provides that a committed person who successfully completes evidence-based recidivism reduction programming or productive activities shall receive additional sentence credits. Prohibits handcuffs, shackles, or restraints of any kind to be used on new mothers for 3 months after delivery. Provides that a person at least 60 years of age who has served at least two-thirds of his or her sentence may petition the Department for participation in an atonement and restorative justice program prepared by the Department. Amends the County Jail Act to make conforming changes.


LRB101 07501 RLC 56420 b

FISCAL NOTE ACT MAY APPLY

 

 

A BILL FOR

 

HB3212LRB101 07501 RLC 56420 b

1    AN ACT concerning criminal law.
 
2    Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
3represented in the General Assembly:
 
4    Section 1. This Act may be referred to as the Illinois
5First Step Act.
 
6    Section 5. The Illinois Identification Card Act is amended
7by changing Section 4 as follows:
 
8    (15 ILCS 335/4)  (from Ch. 124, par. 24)
9    (Text of Section before amendment by P.A. 100-717)
10    Sec. 4. Identification card.
11    (a) The Secretary of State shall issue a standard Illinois
12Identification Card to any natural person who is a resident of
13the State of Illinois who applies for such card, or renewal
14thereof. No identification card shall be issued to any person
15who holds a valid foreign state identification card, license,
16or permit unless the person first surrenders to the Secretary
17of State the valid foreign state identification card, license,
18or permit. The card shall be prepared and supplied by the
19Secretary of State and shall include a photograph and signature
20or mark of the applicant. However, the Secretary of State may
21provide by rule for the issuance of Illinois Identification
22Cards without photographs if the applicant has a bona fide

 

 

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1religious objection to being photographed or to the display of
2his or her photograph. The Illinois Identification Card may be
3used for identification purposes in any lawful situation only
4by the person to whom it was issued. As used in this Act,
5"photograph" means any color photograph or digitally produced
6and captured image of an applicant for an identification card.
7As used in this Act, "signature" means the name of a person as
8written by that person and captured in a manner acceptable to
9the Secretary of State.
10    (a-5) If an applicant for an identification card has a
11current driver's license or instruction permit issued by the
12Secretary of State, the Secretary may require the applicant to
13utilize the same residence address and name on the
14identification card, driver's license, and instruction permit
15records maintained by the Secretary. The Secretary may
16promulgate rules to implement this provision.
17    (a-10) If the applicant is a judicial officer as defined in
18Section 1-10 of the Judicial Privacy Act or a peace officer,
19the applicant may elect to have his or her office or work
20address listed on the card instead of the applicant's residence
21or mailing address. The Secretary may promulgate rules to
22implement this provision. For the purposes of this subsection
23(a-10), "peace officer" means any person who by virtue of his
24or her office or public employment is vested by law with a duty
25to maintain public order or to make arrests for a violation of
26any penal statute of this State, whether that duty extends to

 

 

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1all violations or is limited to specific violations.
2    (a-15) The Secretary of State may provide for an expedited
3process for the issuance of an Illinois Identification Card.
4The Secretary shall charge an additional fee for the expedited
5issuance of an Illinois Identification Card, to be set by rule,
6not to exceed $75. All fees collected by the Secretary for
7expedited Illinois Identification Card service shall be
8deposited into the Secretary of State Special Services Fund.
9The Secretary may adopt rules regarding the eligibility,
10process, and fee for an expedited Illinois Identification Card.
11If the Secretary of State determines that the volume of
12expedited identification card requests received on a given day
13exceeds the ability of the Secretary to process those requests
14in an expedited manner, the Secretary may decline to provide
15expedited services, and the additional fee for the expedited
16service shall be refunded to the applicant.
17    (a-20) The Secretary of State shall issue a standard
18Illinois Identification Card to a committed person upon release
19on parole, mandatory supervised release, aftercare release,
20final discharge, or pardon from the Department of Corrections
21or Department of Juvenile Justice, if the released person
22presents a certified copy of his or her birth certificate,
23social security card or other documents authorized by the
24Secretary, and 2 documents proving his or her Illinois
25residence address. Documents proving residence address may
26include any official document of the Department of Corrections

 

 

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1or the Department of Juvenile Justice showing the released
2person's address after release and a Secretary of State
3prescribed certificate of residency form, which may be executed
4by Department of Corrections or Department of Juvenile Justice
5personnel.
6    (a-25) The Secretary of State shall issue a limited-term
7Illinois Identification Card valid for 90 days to a committed
8person upon release on parole, mandatory supervised release,
9aftercare release, final discharge, or pardon from the
10Department of Corrections or Department of Juvenile Justice, if
11the released person is unable to present a certified copy of
12his or her birth certificate and social security card or other
13documents authorized by the Secretary, but does present a
14Secretary of State prescribed verification form completed by
15the Department of Corrections or Department of Juvenile
16Justice, verifying the released person's date of birth and
17social security number and 2 documents proving his or her
18Illinois residence address. The verification form must have
19been completed no more than 30 days prior to the date of
20application for the Illinois Identification Card. Documents
21proving residence address shall include any official document
22of the Department of Corrections or the Department of Juvenile
23Justice showing the person's address after release and a
24Secretary of State prescribed certificate of residency, which
25may be executed by Department of Corrections or Department of
26Juvenile Justice personnel.

 

 

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1    Prior to the expiration of the 90-day period of the
2limited-term Illinois Identification Card, if the released
3person submits to the Secretary of State a certified copy of
4his or her birth certificate and his or her social security
5card or other documents authorized by the Secretary, a standard
6Illinois Identification Card shall be issued. A limited-term
7Illinois Identification Card may not be renewed.
8    (b) The Secretary of State shall issue a special Illinois
9Identification Card, which shall be known as an Illinois Person
10with a Disability Identification Card, to any natural person
11who is a resident of the State of Illinois, who is a person
12with a disability as defined in Section 4A of this Act, who
13applies for such card, or renewal thereof. No Illinois Person
14with a Disability Identification Card shall be issued to any
15person who holds a valid foreign state identification card,
16license, or permit unless the person first surrenders to the
17Secretary of State the valid foreign state identification card,
18license, or permit. The Secretary of State shall charge no fee
19to issue such card. The card shall be prepared and supplied by
20the Secretary of State, and shall include a photograph and
21signature or mark of the applicant, a designation indicating
22that the card is an Illinois Person with a Disability
23Identification Card, and shall include a comprehensible
24designation of the type and classification of the applicant's
25disability as set out in Section 4A of this Act. However, the
26Secretary of State may provide by rule for the issuance of

 

 

HB3212- 6 -LRB101 07501 RLC 56420 b

1Illinois Person with a Disability Identification Cards without
2photographs if the applicant has a bona fide religious
3objection to being photographed or to the display of his or her
4photograph. If the applicant so requests, the card shall
5include a description of the applicant's disability and any
6information about the applicant's disability or medical
7history which the Secretary determines would be helpful to the
8applicant in securing emergency medical care. If a mark is used
9in lieu of a signature, such mark shall be affixed to the card
10in the presence of two witnesses who attest to the authenticity
11of the mark. The Illinois Person with a Disability
12Identification Card may be used for identification purposes in
13any lawful situation by the person to whom it was issued.
14    The Illinois Person with a Disability Identification Card
15may be used as adequate documentation of disability in lieu of
16a physician's determination of disability, a determination of
17disability from a physician assistant, a determination of
18disability from an advanced practice registered nurse, or any
19other documentation of disability whenever any State law
20requires that a person with a disability provide such
21documentation of disability, however an Illinois Person with a
22Disability Identification Card shall not qualify the
23cardholder to participate in any program or to receive any
24benefit which is not available to all persons with like
25disabilities. Notwithstanding any other provisions of law, an
26Illinois Person with a Disability Identification Card, or

 

 

HB3212- 7 -LRB101 07501 RLC 56420 b

1evidence that the Secretary of State has issued an Illinois
2Person with a Disability Identification Card, shall not be used
3by any person other than the person named on such card to prove
4that the person named on such card is a person with a
5disability or for any other purpose unless the card is used for
6the benefit of the person named on such card, and the person
7named on such card consents to such use at the time the card is
8so used.
9    An optometrist's determination of a visual disability
10under Section 4A of this Act is acceptable as documentation for
11the purpose of issuing an Illinois Person with a Disability
12Identification Card.
13    When medical information is contained on an Illinois Person
14with a Disability Identification Card, the Office of the
15Secretary of State shall not be liable for any actions taken
16based upon that medical information.
17    (c) The Secretary of State shall provide that each original
18or renewal Illinois Identification Card or Illinois Person with
19a Disability Identification Card issued to a person under the
20age of 21 shall be of a distinct nature from those Illinois
21Identification Cards or Illinois Person with a Disability
22Identification Cards issued to individuals 21 years of age or
23older. The color designated for Illinois Identification Cards
24or Illinois Person with a Disability Identification Cards for
25persons under the age of 21 shall be at the discretion of the
26Secretary of State.

 

 

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1    (c-1) Each original or renewal Illinois Identification
2Card or Illinois Person with a Disability Identification Card
3issued to a person under the age of 21 shall display the date
4upon which the person becomes 18 years of age and the date upon
5which the person becomes 21 years of age.
6    (c-3) The General Assembly recognizes the need to identify
7military veterans living in this State for the purpose of
8ensuring that they receive all of the services and benefits to
9which they are legally entitled, including healthcare,
10education assistance, and job placement. To assist the State in
11identifying these veterans and delivering these vital services
12and benefits, the Secretary of State is authorized to issue
13Illinois Identification Cards and Illinois Person with a
14Disability Identification Cards with the word "veteran"
15appearing on the face of the cards. This authorization is
16predicated on the unique status of veterans. The Secretary may
17not issue any other identification card which identifies an
18occupation, status, affiliation, hobby, or other unique
19characteristics of the identification card holder which is
20unrelated to the purpose of the identification card.
21    (c-5) Beginning on or before July 1, 2015, the Secretary of
22State shall designate a space on each original or renewal
23identification card where, at the request of the applicant, the
24word "veteran" shall be placed. The veteran designation shall
25be available to a person identified as a veteran under
26subsection (b) of Section 5 of this Act who was discharged or

 

 

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1separated under honorable conditions.
2    (d) The Secretary of State may issue a Senior Citizen
3discount card, to any natural person who is a resident of the
4State of Illinois who is 60 years of age or older and who
5applies for such a card or renewal thereof. The Secretary of
6State shall charge no fee to issue such card. The card shall be
7issued in every county and applications shall be made available
8at, but not limited to, nutrition sites, senior citizen centers
9and Area Agencies on Aging. The applicant, upon receipt of such
10card and prior to its use for any purpose, shall have affixed
11thereon in the space provided therefor his signature or mark.
12    (e) The Secretary of State, in his or her discretion, may
13designate on each Illinois Identification Card or Illinois
14Person with a Disability Identification Card a space where the
15card holder may place a sticker or decal, issued by the
16Secretary of State, of uniform size as the Secretary may
17specify, that shall indicate in appropriate language that the
18card holder has renewed his or her Illinois Identification Card
19or Illinois Person with a Disability Identification Card.
20(Source: P.A. 99-143, eff. 7-27-15; 99-173, eff. 7-29-15;
2199-305, eff. 1-1-16; 99-642, eff. 7-28-16; 99-907, eff. 7-1-17;
22100-513, eff. 1-1-18.)
 
23    (Text of Section after amendment by P.A. 100-717)
24    Sec. 4. Identification card.
25    (a) The Secretary of State shall issue a standard Illinois

 

 

HB3212- 10 -LRB101 07501 RLC 56420 b

1Identification Card to any natural person who is a resident of
2the State of Illinois who applies for such card, or renewal
3thereof. No identification card shall be issued to any person
4who holds a valid foreign state identification card, license,
5or permit unless the person first surrenders to the Secretary
6of State the valid foreign state identification card, license,
7or permit. The card shall be prepared and supplied by the
8Secretary of State and shall include a photograph and signature
9or mark of the applicant. However, the Secretary of State may
10provide by rule for the issuance of Illinois Identification
11Cards without photographs if the applicant has a bona fide
12religious objection to being photographed or to the display of
13his or her photograph. The Illinois Identification Card may be
14used for identification purposes in any lawful situation only
15by the person to whom it was issued. As used in this Act,
16"photograph" means any color photograph or digitally produced
17and captured image of an applicant for an identification card.
18As used in this Act, "signature" means the name of a person as
19written by that person and captured in a manner acceptable to
20the Secretary of State.
21    (a-5) If an applicant for an identification card has a
22current driver's license or instruction permit issued by the
23Secretary of State, the Secretary may require the applicant to
24utilize the same residence address and name on the
25identification card, driver's license, and instruction permit
26records maintained by the Secretary. The Secretary may

 

 

HB3212- 11 -LRB101 07501 RLC 56420 b

1promulgate rules to implement this provision.
2    (a-10) If the applicant is a judicial officer as defined in
3Section 1-10 of the Judicial Privacy Act or a peace officer,
4the applicant may elect to have his or her office or work
5address listed on the card instead of the applicant's residence
6or mailing address. The Secretary may promulgate rules to
7implement this provision. For the purposes of this subsection
8(a-10), "peace officer" means any person who by virtue of his
9or her office or public employment is vested by law with a duty
10to maintain public order or to make arrests for a violation of
11any penal statute of this State, whether that duty extends to
12all violations or is limited to specific violations.
13    (a-15) The Secretary of State may provide for an expedited
14process for the issuance of an Illinois Identification Card.
15The Secretary shall charge an additional fee for the expedited
16issuance of an Illinois Identification Card, to be set by rule,
17not to exceed $75. All fees collected by the Secretary for
18expedited Illinois Identification Card service shall be
19deposited into the Secretary of State Special Services Fund.
20The Secretary may adopt rules regarding the eligibility,
21process, and fee for an expedited Illinois Identification Card.
22If the Secretary of State determines that the volume of
23expedited identification card requests received on a given day
24exceeds the ability of the Secretary to process those requests
25in an expedited manner, the Secretary may decline to provide
26expedited services, and the additional fee for the expedited

 

 

HB3212- 12 -LRB101 07501 RLC 56420 b

1service shall be refunded to the applicant.
2    (a-20) The Secretary of State shall issue a standard
3Illinois Identification Card to a committed person upon release
4on parole, mandatory supervised release, aftercare release,
5final discharge, or pardon from the Department of Corrections
6or Department of Juvenile Justice, if the released person
7presents a certified copy of his or her birth certificate,
8social security card or other documents authorized by the
9Secretary, and 2 documents proving his or her Illinois
10residence address. Documents proving residence address may
11include any official document of the Department of Corrections
12or the Department of Juvenile Justice showing the released
13person's address after release and a Secretary of State
14prescribed certificate of residency form, which may be executed
15by Department of Corrections or Department of Juvenile Justice
16personnel.
17    (a-25) Upon request of a person incarcerated in a
18Department of Corrections facility, the Secretary of State may
19issue a limited-term Illinois Identification Card valid during
20the period of incarceration of the committed person in a
21Department of Corrections institution or facility. The
22Secretary of State shall issue a limited-term Illinois
23Identification Card valid for 90 days to a committed person
24upon release on parole, mandatory supervised release,
25aftercare release, final discharge, or pardon from the
26Department of Corrections or Department of Juvenile Justice, if

 

 

HB3212- 13 -LRB101 07501 RLC 56420 b

1the released person is unable to present a certified copy of
2his or her birth certificate and social security card or other
3documents authorized by the Secretary, but does present a
4Secretary of State prescribed verification form completed by
5the Department of Corrections or Department of Juvenile
6Justice, verifying the released person's date of birth and
7social security number and 2 documents proving his or her
8Illinois residence address. The verification form must have
9been completed no more than 30 days prior to the date of
10application for the Illinois Identification Card. Documents
11proving residence address shall include any official document
12of the Department of Corrections or the Department of Juvenile
13Justice showing the person's address after release and a
14Secretary of State prescribed certificate of residency, which
15may be executed by Department of Corrections or Department of
16Juvenile Justice personnel.
17    Prior to the expiration of the 90-day period of the
18limited-term Illinois Identification Card, if the released
19person submits to the Secretary of State a certified copy of
20his or her birth certificate and his or her social security
21card or other documents authorized by the Secretary, a standard
22Illinois Identification Card shall be issued. A limited-term
23Illinois Identification Card may not be renewed.
24    (a-30) The Secretary of State shall issue a standard
25Illinois Identification Card to a person upon conditional
26release or absolute discharge from the custody of the

 

 

HB3212- 14 -LRB101 07501 RLC 56420 b

1Department of Human Services, if the person presents a
2certified copy of his or her birth certificate, social security
3card, or other documents authorized by the Secretary, and a
4document proving his or her Illinois residence address. The
5Secretary of State shall issue a standard Illinois
6Identification Card to a person no sooner than 14 days prior to
7his or her conditional release or absolute discharge if
8personnel from the Department of Human Services bring the
9person to a Secretary of State location with the required
10documents. Documents proving residence address may include any
11official document of the Department of Human Services showing
12the person's address after release and a Secretary of State
13prescribed verification form, which may be executed by
14personnel of the Department of Human Services.
15    (a-35) The Secretary of State shall issue a limited-term
16Illinois Identification Card valid for 90 days to a person upon
17conditional release or absolute discharge from the custody of
18the Department of Human Services, if the person is unable to
19present a certified copy of his or her birth certificate and
20social security card or other documents authorized by the
21Secretary, but does present a Secretary of State prescribed
22verification form completed by the Department of Human
23Services, verifying the person's date of birth and social
24security number, and a document proving his or her Illinois
25residence address. The verification form must have been
26completed no more than 30 days prior to the date of application

 

 

HB3212- 15 -LRB101 07501 RLC 56420 b

1for the Illinois Identification Card. The Secretary of State
2shall issue a limited-term Illinois Identification Card to a
3person no sooner than 14 days prior to his or her conditional
4release or absolute discharge if personnel from the Department
5of Human Services bring the person to a Secretary of State
6location with the required documents. Documents proving
7residence address shall include any official document of the
8Department of Human Services showing the person's address after
9release and a Secretary of State prescribed verification form,
10which may be executed by personnel of the Department of Human
11Services.
12    (b) The Secretary of State shall issue a special Illinois
13Identification Card, which shall be known as an Illinois Person
14with a Disability Identification Card, to any natural person
15who is a resident of the State of Illinois, who is a person
16with a disability as defined in Section 4A of this Act, who
17applies for such card, or renewal thereof. No Illinois Person
18with a Disability Identification Card shall be issued to any
19person who holds a valid foreign state identification card,
20license, or permit unless the person first surrenders to the
21Secretary of State the valid foreign state identification card,
22license, or permit. The Secretary of State shall charge no fee
23to issue such card. The card shall be prepared and supplied by
24the Secretary of State, and shall include a photograph and
25signature or mark of the applicant, a designation indicating
26that the card is an Illinois Person with a Disability

 

 

HB3212- 16 -LRB101 07501 RLC 56420 b

1Identification Card, and shall include a comprehensible
2designation of the type and classification of the applicant's
3disability as set out in Section 4A of this Act. However, the
4Secretary of State may provide by rule for the issuance of
5Illinois Person with a Disability Identification Cards without
6photographs if the applicant has a bona fide religious
7objection to being photographed or to the display of his or her
8photograph. If the applicant so requests, the card shall
9include a description of the applicant's disability and any
10information about the applicant's disability or medical
11history which the Secretary determines would be helpful to the
12applicant in securing emergency medical care. If a mark is used
13in lieu of a signature, such mark shall be affixed to the card
14in the presence of two witnesses who attest to the authenticity
15of the mark. The Illinois Person with a Disability
16Identification Card may be used for identification purposes in
17any lawful situation by the person to whom it was issued.
18    The Illinois Person with a Disability Identification Card
19may be used as adequate documentation of disability in lieu of
20a physician's determination of disability, a determination of
21disability from a physician assistant, a determination of
22disability from an advanced practice registered nurse, or any
23other documentation of disability whenever any State law
24requires that a person with a disability provide such
25documentation of disability, however an Illinois Person with a
26Disability Identification Card shall not qualify the

 

 

HB3212- 17 -LRB101 07501 RLC 56420 b

1cardholder to participate in any program or to receive any
2benefit which is not available to all persons with like
3disabilities. Notwithstanding any other provisions of law, an
4Illinois Person with a Disability Identification Card, or
5evidence that the Secretary of State has issued an Illinois
6Person with a Disability Identification Card, shall not be used
7by any person other than the person named on such card to prove
8that the person named on such card is a person with a
9disability or for any other purpose unless the card is used for
10the benefit of the person named on such card, and the person
11named on such card consents to such use at the time the card is
12so used.
13    An optometrist's determination of a visual disability
14under Section 4A of this Act is acceptable as documentation for
15the purpose of issuing an Illinois Person with a Disability
16Identification Card.
17    When medical information is contained on an Illinois Person
18with a Disability Identification Card, the Office of the
19Secretary of State shall not be liable for any actions taken
20based upon that medical information.
21    (c) The Secretary of State shall provide that each original
22or renewal Illinois Identification Card or Illinois Person with
23a Disability Identification Card issued to a person under the
24age of 21 shall be of a distinct nature from those Illinois
25Identification Cards or Illinois Person with a Disability
26Identification Cards issued to individuals 21 years of age or

 

 

HB3212- 18 -LRB101 07501 RLC 56420 b

1older. The color designated for Illinois Identification Cards
2or Illinois Person with a Disability Identification Cards for
3persons under the age of 21 shall be at the discretion of the
4Secretary of State.
5    (c-1) Each original or renewal Illinois Identification
6Card or Illinois Person with a Disability Identification Card
7issued to a person under the age of 21 shall display the date
8upon which the person becomes 18 years of age and the date upon
9which the person becomes 21 years of age.
10    (c-3) The General Assembly recognizes the need to identify
11military veterans living in this State for the purpose of
12ensuring that they receive all of the services and benefits to
13which they are legally entitled, including healthcare,
14education assistance, and job placement. To assist the State in
15identifying these veterans and delivering these vital services
16and benefits, the Secretary of State is authorized to issue
17Illinois Identification Cards and Illinois Person with a
18Disability Identification Cards with the word "veteran"
19appearing on the face of the cards. This authorization is
20predicated on the unique status of veterans. The Secretary may
21not issue any other identification card which identifies an
22occupation, status, affiliation, hobby, or other unique
23characteristics of the identification card holder which is
24unrelated to the purpose of the identification card.
25    (c-5) Beginning on or before July 1, 2015, the Secretary of
26State shall designate a space on each original or renewal

 

 

HB3212- 19 -LRB101 07501 RLC 56420 b

1identification card where, at the request of the applicant, the
2word "veteran" shall be placed. The veteran designation shall
3be available to a person identified as a veteran under
4subsection (b) of Section 5 of this Act who was discharged or
5separated under honorable conditions.
6    (d) The Secretary of State may issue a Senior Citizen
7discount card, to any natural person who is a resident of the
8State of Illinois who is 60 years of age or older and who
9applies for such a card or renewal thereof. The Secretary of
10State shall charge no fee to issue such card. The card shall be
11issued in every county and applications shall be made available
12at, but not limited to, nutrition sites, senior citizen centers
13and Area Agencies on Aging. The applicant, upon receipt of such
14card and prior to its use for any purpose, shall have affixed
15thereon in the space provided therefor his signature or mark.
16    (e) The Secretary of State, in his or her discretion, may
17designate on each Illinois Identification Card or Illinois
18Person with a Disability Identification Card a space where the
19card holder may place a sticker or decal, issued by the
20Secretary of State, of uniform size as the Secretary may
21specify, that shall indicate in appropriate language that the
22card holder has renewed his or her Illinois Identification Card
23or Illinois Person with a Disability Identification Card.
24(Source: P.A. 99-143, eff. 7-27-15; 99-173, eff. 7-29-15;
2599-305, eff. 1-1-16; 99-642, eff. 7-28-16; 99-907, eff. 7-1-17;
26100-513, eff. 1-1-18; 100-717, eff. 7-1-19.)
 

 

 

HB3212- 20 -LRB101 07501 RLC 56420 b

1    Section 10. The Criminal Code of 2012 is amended by
2changing Sections 16-1 and 16-25 as follows:
 
3    (720 ILCS 5/16-1)  (from Ch. 38, par. 16-1)
4    Sec. 16-1. Theft.
5    (a) A person commits theft when he or she knowingly:
6        (1) Obtains or exerts unauthorized control over
7    property of the owner; or
8        (2) Obtains by deception control over property of the
9    owner; or
10        (3) Obtains by threat control over property of the
11    owner; or
12        (4) Obtains control over stolen property knowing the
13    property to have been stolen or under such circumstances as
14    would reasonably induce him or her to believe that the
15    property was stolen; or
16        (5) Obtains or exerts control over property in the
17    custody of any law enforcement agency which any law
18    enforcement officer or any individual acting in behalf of a
19    law enforcement agency explicitly represents to the person
20    as being stolen or represents to the person such
21    circumstances as would reasonably induce the person to
22    believe that the property was stolen, and
23            (A) Intends to deprive the owner permanently of the
24        use or benefit of the property; or

 

 

HB3212- 21 -LRB101 07501 RLC 56420 b

1            (B) Knowingly uses, conceals or abandons the
2        property in such manner as to deprive the owner
3        permanently of such use or benefit; or
4            (C) Uses, conceals, or abandons the property
5        knowing such use, concealment or abandonment probably
6        will deprive the owner permanently of such use or
7        benefit.
8    (b) Sentence.
9        (1) Theft of property not from the person and not
10    exceeding $2,000 $500 in value is a Class A misdemeanor.
11        (1.1) Theft of property not from the person and not
12    exceeding $2,000 $500 in value is a Class 4 felony if the
13    theft was committed in a school or place of worship or if
14    the theft was of governmental property.
15        (2) A person who has been convicted of theft of
16    property not from the person and not exceeding $2,000 $500
17    in value who has been previously convicted of felony any
18    type of theft, robbery, armed robbery, burglary,
19    residential burglary, possession of burglary tools, home
20    invasion, forgery, a violation of Section 4-103, 4-103.1,
21    4-103.2, or 4-103.3 of the Illinois Vehicle Code relating
22    to the possession of a stolen or converted motor vehicle,
23    or a violation of Section 17-36 of the Criminal Code of
24    1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012, or Section 8 of the
25    Illinois Credit Card and Debit Card Act is guilty of a
26    Class 4 felony.

 

 

HB3212- 22 -LRB101 07501 RLC 56420 b

1        (3) (Blank).
2        (4) Theft of property from the person not exceeding
3    $500 in value, or theft of property exceeding $2,000 $500
4    and not exceeding $10,000 in value, is a Class 3 felony.
5        (4.1) Theft of property from the person not exceeding
6    $500 in value, or theft of property exceeding $2,000 $500
7    and not exceeding $10,000 in value, is a Class 2 felony if
8    the theft was committed in a school or place of worship or
9    if the theft was of governmental property.
10        (5) Theft of property exceeding $10,000 and not
11    exceeding $100,000 in value is a Class 2 felony.
12        (5.1) Theft of property exceeding $10,000 and not
13    exceeding $100,000 in value is a Class 1 felony if the
14    theft was committed in a school or place of worship or if
15    the theft was of governmental property.
16        (6) Theft of property exceeding $100,000 and not
17    exceeding $500,000 in value is a Class 1 felony.
18        (6.1) Theft of property exceeding $100,000 in value is
19    a Class X felony if the theft was committed in a school or
20    place of worship or if the theft was of governmental
21    property.
22        (6.2) Theft of property exceeding $500,000 and not
23    exceeding $1,000,000 in value is a Class 1
24    non-probationable felony.
25        (6.3) Theft of property exceeding $1,000,000 in value
26    is a Class X felony.

 

 

HB3212- 23 -LRB101 07501 RLC 56420 b

1        (7) Theft by deception, as described by paragraph (2)
2    of subsection (a) of this Section, in which the offender
3    obtained money or property valued at $5,000 or more from a
4    victim 60 years of age or older is a Class 2 felony.
5        (8) Theft by deception, as described by paragraph (2)
6    of subsection (a) of this Section, in which the offender
7    falsely poses as a landlord or agent or employee of the
8    landlord and obtains a rent payment or a security deposit
9    from a tenant is a Class 3 felony if the rent payment or
10    security deposit obtained does not exceed $500.
11        (9) Theft by deception, as described by paragraph (2)
12    of subsection (a) of this Section, in which the offender
13    falsely poses as a landlord or agent or employee of the
14    landlord and obtains a rent payment or a security deposit
15    from a tenant is a Class 2 felony if the rent payment or
16    security deposit obtained exceeds $500 and does not exceed
17    $10,000.
18        (10) Theft by deception, as described by paragraph (2)
19    of subsection (a) of this Section, in which the offender
20    falsely poses as a landlord or agent or employee of the
21    landlord and obtains a rent payment or a security deposit
22    from a tenant is a Class 1 felony if the rent payment or
23    security deposit obtained exceeds $10,000 and does not
24    exceed $100,000.
25        (11) Theft by deception, as described by paragraph (2)
26    of subsection (a) of this Section, in which the offender

 

 

HB3212- 24 -LRB101 07501 RLC 56420 b

1    falsely poses as a landlord or agent or employee of the
2    landlord and obtains a rent payment or a security deposit
3    from a tenant is a Class X felony if the rent payment or
4    security deposit obtained exceeds $100,000.
5    (c) When a charge of theft of property exceeding a
6specified value is brought, the value of the property involved
7is an element of the offense to be resolved by the trier of
8fact as either exceeding or not exceeding the specified value.
9    (d) Theft by lessee; permissive inference. The trier of
10fact may infer evidence that a person intends to deprive the
11owner permanently of the use or benefit of the property (1) if
12a lessee of the personal property of another fails to return it
13to the owner within 10 days after written demand from the owner
14for its return or (2) if a lessee of the personal property of
15another fails to return it to the owner within 24 hours after
16written demand from the owner for its return and the lessee had
17presented identification to the owner that contained a
18materially fictitious name, address, or telephone number. A
19notice in writing, given after the expiration of the leasing
20agreement, addressed and mailed, by registered mail, to the
21lessee at the address given by him and shown on the leasing
22agreement shall constitute proper demand.
23    (e) Permissive inference; evidence of intent that a person
24obtains by deception control over property. The trier of fact
25may infer that a person "knowingly obtains by deception control
26over property of the owner" when he or she fails to return,

 

 

HB3212- 25 -LRB101 07501 RLC 56420 b

1within 45 days after written demand from the owner, the
2downpayment and any additional payments accepted under a
3promise, oral or in writing, to perform services for the owner
4for consideration of $3,000 or more, and the promisor knowingly
5without good cause failed to substantially perform pursuant to
6the agreement after taking a down payment of 10% or more of the
7agreed upon consideration. This provision shall not apply where
8the owner initiated the suspension of performance under the
9agreement, or where the promisor responds to the notice within
10the 45-day notice period. A notice in writing, addressed and
11mailed, by registered mail, to the promisor at the last known
12address of the promisor, shall constitute proper demand.
13    (f) Offender's interest in the property.
14        (1) It is no defense to a charge of theft of property
15    that the offender has an interest therein, when the owner
16    also has an interest to which the offender is not entitled.
17        (2) Where the property involved is that of the
18    offender's spouse, no prosecution for theft may be
19    maintained unless the parties were not living together as
20    man and wife and were living in separate abodes at the time
21    of the alleged theft.
22(Source: P.A. 96-496, eff. 1-1-10; 96-534, eff. 8-14-09;
2396-1000, eff. 7-2-10; 96-1301, eff. 1-1-11; 96-1532, eff.
241-1-12; 96-1551, eff. 7-1-11; 97-597, eff. 1-1-12; 97-1150,
25eff. 1-25-13.)
 

 

 

HB3212- 26 -LRB101 07501 RLC 56420 b

1    (720 ILCS 5/16-25)
2    Sec. 16-25. Retail theft.
3    (a) A person commits retail theft when he or she knowingly:
4        (1) Takes possession of, carries away, transfers or
5    causes to be carried away or transferred any merchandise
6    displayed, held, stored or offered for sale in a retail
7    mercantile establishment with the intention of retaining
8    such merchandise or with the intention of depriving the
9    merchant permanently of the possession, use or benefit of
10    such merchandise without paying the full retail value of
11    such merchandise; or
12        (2) Alters, transfers, or removes any label, price tag,
13    marking, indicia of value or any other markings which aid
14    in determining value affixed to any merchandise displayed,
15    held, stored or offered for sale in a retail mercantile
16    establishment and attempts to purchase such merchandise at
17    less than the full retail value with the intention of
18    depriving the merchant of the full retail value of such
19    merchandise; or
20        (3) Transfers any merchandise displayed, held, stored
21    or offered for sale in a retail mercantile establishment
22    from the container in or on which such merchandise is
23    displayed to any other container with the intention of
24    depriving the merchant of the full retail value of such
25    merchandise; or
26        (4) Under-rings with the intention of depriving the

 

 

HB3212- 27 -LRB101 07501 RLC 56420 b

1    merchant of the full retail value of the merchandise; or
2        (5) Removes a shopping cart from the premises of a
3    retail mercantile establishment without the consent of the
4    merchant given at the time of such removal with the
5    intention of depriving the merchant permanently of the
6    possession, use or benefit of such cart; or
7        (6) Represents to a merchant that he, she, or another
8    is the lawful owner of property, knowing that such
9    representation is false, and conveys or attempts to convey
10    that property to a merchant who is the owner of the
11    property in exchange for money, merchandise credit or other
12    property of the merchant; or
13        (7) Uses or possesses any theft detection shielding
14    device or theft detection device remover with the intention
15    of using such device to deprive the merchant permanently of
16    the possession, use or benefit of any merchandise
17    displayed, held, stored or offered for sale in a retail
18    mercantile establishment without paying the full retail
19    value of such merchandise; or
20        (8) Obtains or exerts unauthorized control over
21    property of the owner and thereby intends to deprive the
22    owner permanently of the use or benefit of the property
23    when a lessee of the personal property of another fails to
24    return it to the owner, or if the lessee fails to pay the
25    full retail value of such property to the lessor in
26    satisfaction of any contractual provision requiring such,

 

 

HB3212- 28 -LRB101 07501 RLC 56420 b

1    within 10 days after written demand from the owner for its
2    return. A notice in writing, given after the expiration of
3    the leasing agreement, by registered mail, to the lessee at
4    the address given by the lessee and shown on the leasing
5    agreement shall constitute proper demand.
6    (b) Theft by emergency exit. A person commits theft by
7emergency exit when he or she commits a retail theft as defined
8in subdivisions (a)(1) through (a)(8) of this Section and to
9facilitate the theft he or she leaves the retail mercantile
10establishment by use of a designated emergency exit.
11    (c) Permissive inference. If any person:
12        (1) conceals upon his or her person or among his or her
13    belongings unpurchased merchandise displayed, held, stored
14    or offered for sale in a retail mercantile establishment;
15    and
16        (2) removes that merchandise beyond the last known
17    station for receiving payments for that merchandise in that
18    retail mercantile establishment,
19then the trier of fact may infer that the person possessed,
20carried away or transferred such merchandise with the intention
21of retaining it or with the intention of depriving the merchant
22permanently of the possession, use or benefit of such
23merchandise without paying the full retail value of such
24merchandise.
25    To "conceal" merchandise means that, although there may be
26some notice of its presence, that merchandise is not visible

 

 

HB3212- 29 -LRB101 07501 RLC 56420 b

1through ordinary observation.
2    (d) Venue. Multiple thefts committed by the same person as
3part of a continuing course of conduct in different
4jurisdictions that have been aggregated in one jurisdiction may
5be prosecuted in any jurisdiction in which one or more of the
6thefts occurred.
7    (e) For the purposes of this Section, "theft detection
8shielding device" means any laminated or coated bag or device
9designed and intended to shield merchandise from detection by
10an electronic or magnetic theft alarm sensor.
11    (f) Sentence.
12        (1) A violation of any of subdivisions (a)(1) through
13    (a)(6) and (a)(8) of this Section, the full retail value of
14    which does not exceed $2,000 $300 for property other than
15    motor fuel or $150 for motor fuel, is a Class A
16    misdemeanor. A violation of subdivision (a)(7) of this
17    Section is a Class A misdemeanor for a first offense and a
18    Class 4 felony for a second or subsequent offense. Theft by
19    emergency exit of property, the full retail value of which
20    does not exceed $2,000 $300, is a Class 4 felony.
21        (2) A person who has been convicted of retail theft of
22    property under any of subdivisions (a)(1) through (a)(6)
23    and (a)(8) of this Section, the full retail value of which
24    does not exceed $2,000 $300 for property other than motor
25    fuel or $150 for motor fuel, and who has been previously
26    convicted of any type of theft, robbery, armed robbery,

 

 

HB3212- 30 -LRB101 07501 RLC 56420 b

1    burglary, residential burglary, possession of burglary
2    tools, home invasion, unlawful use of a credit card, or
3    forgery is guilty of a Class 4 felony. A person who has
4    been convicted of theft by emergency exit of property, the
5    full retail value of which does not exceed $2,000 $300, and
6    who has been previously convicted of felony any type of
7    theft, robbery, armed robbery, burglary, residential
8    burglary, possession of burglary tools, home invasion,
9    unlawful use of a credit card, or forgery is guilty of a
10    Class 3 felony.
11        (3) Any retail theft of property under any of
12    subdivisions (a)(1) through (a)(6) and (a)(8) of this
13    Section, the full retail value of which exceeds $2,000 $300
14    for property other than motor fuel or $150 for motor fuel
15    in a single transaction, or in separate transactions
16    committed by the same person as part of a continuing course
17    of conduct from one or more mercantile establishments over
18    a period of one year, is a Class 3 felony. Theft by
19    emergency exit of property, the full retail value of which
20    exceeds $2,000 $300 in a single transaction, or in separate
21    transactions committed by the same person as part of a
22    continuing course of conduct from one or more mercantile
23    establishments over a period of one year, is a Class 2
24    felony. When a charge of retail theft of property or theft
25    by emergency exit of property, the full value of which
26    exceeds $2,000 $300, is brought, the value of the property

 

 

HB3212- 31 -LRB101 07501 RLC 56420 b

1    involved is an element of the offense to be resolved by the
2    trier of fact as either exceeding or not exceeding $2,000
3    $300.
4(Source: P.A. 97-597, eff. 1-1-12.)
 
5    Section 11. The Code of Criminal Procedure of 1963 is
6amended by adding Section 116-2.2 as follows:
 
7    (725 ILCS 5/116-2.2 new)
8    Sec. 116-2.2. Motion to resentence; statutory penalty
9reduction.
10    (a) A motion may be filed with the trial court that entered
11the judgment of conviction in a defendant's case at any time
12following the entry of a guilty verdict or a finding of guilt
13for any offense under the Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal
14Code of 2012 or a similar local ordinance by the defendant
15provided:
16        (1) the motion clearly states the penalty for the
17    offense for which the defendant was found guilty or
18    convicted has been amended or changed and became effective
19    after his or her plea of guilty or conviction, which
20    includes but is not limited to:
21            (A) reduces the minimum or maximum sentence for the
22        offense;
23            (B) grants the court more discretion over the range
24        of penalties available for the offense;

 

 

HB3212- 32 -LRB101 07501 RLC 56420 b

1            (C) the underlying conduct relating to the offense
2        was decriminalized; or
3            (D) other instances in which the penalties
4        associated with the offense or conduct underlying the
5        offense were reduced in any way; and
6        (2) reasonable notice of the motion shall be served
7    upon the State.
8    (b) If the petitioner's motion under this Section
9accurately reflects that the conditions described in paragraph
10(1) of subsection (a) are present at the time of the hearing on
11the motion by the court, the court must reduce the penalty
12imposed on the defendant so that it is consistent with the
13penalty the defendant would have received if the law in effect
14at the time of the hearing on the motion by the court was in
15effect at the time the offense was committed. The court may
16take any additional action it deems appropriate under the
17circumstances.
 
18    Section 15. The Unified Code of Corrections is amended by
19changing Sections 3-1-2, 3-4-3, 3-6-1, 3-6-3, 3-6-7, 3-7-2,
203-7-2a, 3-8-4, 3-14-4, and 5-4-1 and by adding Sections
213-2-2.5, 3-2-2.6, 3-2-2.7, 3-2-2.8, and 3-14-1.1 and Article 8B
22of Chapter V as follows:
 
23    (730 ILCS 5/3-1-2)  (from Ch. 38, par. 1003-1-2)
24    Sec. 3-1-2. Definitions.

 

 

HB3212- 33 -LRB101 07501 RLC 56420 b

1    (a) "Chief Administrative Officer" means the person
2designated by the Director to exercise the powers and duties of
3the Department of Corrections in regard to committed persons
4within a correctional institution or facility, and includes the
5superintendent of any juvenile institution or facility.
6    (a-3) "Aftercare release" means the conditional and
7revocable release of a person committed to the Department of
8Juvenile Justice under the Juvenile Court Act of 1987, under
9the supervision of the Department of Juvenile Justice.
10    (a-5) "Sex offense" for the purposes of paragraph (16) of
11subsection (a) of Section 3-3-7, paragraph (10) of subsection
12(a) of Section 5-6-3, and paragraph (18) of subsection (c) of
13Section 5-6-3.1 only means:
14        (i) A violation of any of the following Sections of the
15    Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012: 10-7
16    (aiding or abetting child abduction under Section
17    10-5(b)(10)), 10-5(b)(10) (child luring), 11-6 (indecent
18    solicitation of a child), 11-6.5 (indecent solicitation of
19    an adult), 11-14.4 (promoting juvenile prostitution),
20    11-15.1 (soliciting for a juvenile prostitute), 11-17.1
21    (keeping a place of juvenile prostitution), 11-18.1
22    (patronizing a juvenile prostitute), 11-19.1 (juvenile
23    pimping), 11-19.2 (exploitation of a child), 11-20.1
24    (child pornography), 11-20.1B or 11-20.3 (aggravated child
25    pornography), 11-1.40 or 12-14.1 (predatory criminal
26    sexual assault of a child), or 12-33 (ritualized abuse of a

 

 

HB3212- 34 -LRB101 07501 RLC 56420 b

1    child). An attempt to commit any of these offenses.
2        (ii) A violation of any of the following Sections of
3    the Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012:
4    11-1.20 or 12-13 (criminal sexual assault), 11-1.30 or
5    12-14 (aggravated criminal sexual assault), 11-1.60 or
6    12-16 (aggravated criminal sexual abuse), and subsection
7    (a) of Section 11-1.50 or subsection (a) of Section 12-15
8    (criminal sexual abuse). An attempt to commit any of these
9    offenses.
10        (iii) A violation of any of the following Sections of
11    the Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012 when
12    the defendant is not a parent of the victim:
13            10-1 (kidnapping),
14            10-2 (aggravated kidnapping),
15            10-3 (unlawful restraint),
16            10-3.1 (aggravated unlawful restraint).
17            An attempt to commit any of these offenses.
18        (iv) A violation of any former law of this State
19    substantially equivalent to any offense listed in this
20    subsection (a-5).
21    An offense violating federal law or the law of another
22state that is substantially equivalent to any offense listed in
23this subsection (a-5) shall constitute a sex offense for the
24purpose of this subsection (a-5). A finding or adjudication as
25a sexually dangerous person under any federal law or law of
26another state that is substantially equivalent to the Sexually

 

 

HB3212- 35 -LRB101 07501 RLC 56420 b

1Dangerous Persons Act shall constitute an adjudication for a
2sex offense for the purposes of this subsection (a-5).
3    (b) "Commitment" means a judicially determined placement
4in the custody of the Department of Corrections on the basis of
5delinquency or conviction.
6    (c) "Committed person" is a person committed to the
7Department, however a committed person shall not be considered
8to be an employee of the Department of Corrections for any
9purpose, including eligibility for a pension, benefits, or any
10other compensation or rights or privileges which may be
11provided to employees of the Department.
12    (c-5) "Computer scrub software" means any third-party
13added software, designed to delete information from the
14computer unit, the hard drive, or other software, which would
15eliminate and prevent discovery of browser activity, including
16but not limited to Internet history, address bar or bars, cache
17or caches, and/or cookies, and which would over-write files in
18a way so as to make previous computer activity, including but
19not limited to website access, more difficult to discover.
20    (c-10) "Content-controlled tablet" means any device that
21can only access visitation applications or content relating to
22educational or personal development.
23    (d) "Correctional institution or facility" means any
24building or part of a building where committed persons are kept
25in a secured manner.
26    (e) "Department" means both the Department of Corrections

 

 

HB3212- 36 -LRB101 07501 RLC 56420 b

1and the Department of Juvenile Justice of this State, unless
2the context is specific to either the Department of Corrections
3or the Department of Juvenile Justice.
4    (f) "Director" means both the Director of Corrections and
5the Director of Juvenile Justice, unless the context is
6specific to either the Director of Corrections or the Director
7of Juvenile Justice.
8    (f-5) (Blank).
9    (g) "Discharge" means the final termination of a commitment
10to the Department of Corrections.
11    (h) "Discipline" means the rules and regulations for the
12maintenance of order and the protection of persons and property
13within the institutions and facilities of the Department and
14their enforcement.
15    (h-5) "Dyslexia" means an unexpected difficulty in reading
16for an individual who has the intelligence to be a much better
17reader, most commonly caused by a difficulty in the
18phonological processing (the appreciation of the individual
19sounds of spoken language), which affects the ability of an
20individual to speak, read, and spell.
21    (h-10) "Dyslexia screening program" means a screening
22program for dyslexia that is:
23        (1) evidence-based (as defined in Section 8101(21) of
24    the Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965 with
25    proven psychometrics for validity;
26        (2) efficient and low-cost; and

 

 

HB3212- 37 -LRB101 07501 RLC 56420 b

1        (3) readily available.
2    (i) "Escape" means the intentional and unauthorized
3absence of a committed person from the custody of the
4Department.
5    (i-5) "Evidence-based recidivism reduction program" means
6either a group or individual activity that:
7        (1) has been shown by empirical evidence to reduce
8    recidivism or is based on research indicating that it is
9    likely to be effective in reducing recidivism;
10        (2) is designed to help committed persons succeed in
11    their communities upon release from a Department
12    institution or facility; and
13        (3) may include:
14            (A) social learning and communication,
15        interpersonal, anti-bullying, rejection response, and
16        other life skills;
17            (B) family relationship building, structured
18        parent-child interaction, and parenting skills;
19            (C) classes on morals or ethics;
20            (D) academic classes;
21            (E) cognitive behavioral treatment;
22            (F) mentoring;
23            (G) substance abuse treatment;
24            (H) vocational training;
25            (I) faith-based classes or services;
26            (J) civic engagement and re-integrative community

 

 

HB3212- 38 -LRB101 07501 RLC 56420 b

1        services;
2            (K) a correctional institution job, including
3        through an Illinois Correctional Industries program;
4            (L) victim impact classes or other restorative
5        justice programs; and
6            (M) trauma counseling and trauma-informed support
7        programs.
8    (j) "Furlough" means an authorized leave of absence from
9the Department of Corrections for a designated purpose and
10period of time.
11    (j-5) "Mentoring, reentry, and spiritual services" means a
12prerelease custody into which a committed person is placed and
13may not include a condition prohibiting the committed person
14from receiving mentoring, reentry, or spiritual services from a
15person who provided those services to the committed person
16while the committed person was incarcerated, except that the
17chief administrative officer of the correctional institution
18or facility at which the committed person was incarcerated may
19waive the requirement under this paragraph if the chief
20administrative officer finds that the provision of such
21services would pose a significant security risk to the
22committed person, persons who provide such services, or any
23other person. The chief administrative officer shall provide
24written notice of any such waiver to the person providing such
25services and to the committed person.
26    (k) "Parole" means the conditional and revocable release of

 

 

HB3212- 39 -LRB101 07501 RLC 56420 b

1a person committed to the Department of Corrections under the
2supervision of a parole officer.
3    (l) "Prisoner Review Board" means the Board established in
4Section 3-3-1(a), independent of the Department, to review
5rules and regulations with respect to good time credits, to
6hear charges brought by the Department against certain
7prisoners alleged to have violated Department rules with
8respect to good time credits, to set release dates for certain
9prisoners sentenced under the law in effect prior to the
10effective date of this Amendatory Act of 1977, to hear and
11decide the time of aftercare release for persons committed to
12the Department of Juvenile Justice under the Juvenile Court Act
13of 1987 to hear requests and make recommendations to the
14Governor with respect to pardon, reprieve or commutation, to
15set conditions for parole, aftercare release, and mandatory
16supervised release and determine whether violations of those
17conditions justify revocation of parole or release, and to
18assume all other functions previously exercised by the Illinois
19Parole and Pardon Board.
20    (l-5) "Productive activity" means either a group or
21individual activity that is designed to allow committed persons
22determined as having a minimum or low risk of recidivating to
23remain productive and thereby maintain a minimum or low risk of
24recidivating, and may include the delivery of the programs
25described in subsection (i-5) to other committed persons.
26    (l-10) "Risk and needs assessment tool" means an objective

 

 

HB3212- 40 -LRB101 07501 RLC 56420 b

1and statistically validated method through which information
2is collected and evaluated to determine:
3        (1) as part of the intake process, the risk that a
4    committed person will recidivate upon release from the
5    correctional institution or facility;
6        (2) the recidivism reduction programs that will best
7    minimize the risk that the committed person will recidivate
8    upon release from the correctional institution or
9    facility; and
10        (3) the periodic reassessment of risk that a committed
11    person will recidivate upon release from the correctional
12    institution or facility, based on factors including
13    indicators of progress and of regression, that are dynamic
14    and that can reasonably be expected to change while in the
15    correctional institution or facility.
16    (l-15) "System" means the risks and needs assessment system
17established by this amendatory Act of the 101st General
18Assembly.
19    (m) Whenever medical treatment, service, counseling, or
20care is referred to in this Unified Code of Corrections, such
21term may be construed by the Department or Court, within its
22discretion, to include treatment, service or counseling by a
23Christian Science practitioner or nursing care appropriate
24therewith whenever request therefor is made by a person subject
25to the provisions of this Act.
26    (n) "Victim" shall have the meaning ascribed to it in

 

 

HB3212- 41 -LRB101 07501 RLC 56420 b

1subsection (a) of Section 3 of the Bill of Rights for Victims
2and Witnesses of Violent Crime Act.
3    (o) "Wrongfully imprisoned person" means a person who has
4been discharged from a prison of this State and has received:
5        (1) a pardon from the Governor stating that such pardon
6    is issued on the ground of innocence of the crime for which
7    he or she was imprisoned; or
8        (2) a certificate of innocence from the Circuit Court
9    as provided in Section 2-702 of the Code of Civil
10    Procedure.
11(Source: P.A. 100-198, eff. 1-1-18.)
 
12    (730 ILCS 5/3-2-2.5 new)
13    Sec. 3-2-2.5. Duties of the Director of Corrections;
14reduction of recidivism.
15    (a) The Director of Corrections shall carry out this
16Section in consultation with:
17        (1) the Director of Juvenile Justice;
18        (2) the Director of the Administrative Office of the
19    Illinois Courts;
20        (3) the Executive Director of the Illinois Sentencing
21    Policy Advisory Council;
22        (4) the Executive Director of the Illinois Criminal
23    Justice Information Authority; and
24        (5) the Independent Review Committee authorized by
25    Section 3-2-2.7.

 

 

HB3212- 42 -LRB101 07501 RLC 56420 b

1    (b) The Director of Corrections shall:
2        (1) conduct a review of the existing committed person
3    risk and needs assessment systems in operation on the
4    effective date of this amendatory Act of the 101st General
5    Assembly;
6        (2) develop recommendations regarding evidence-based
7    recidivism reduction programs and productive activities in
8    accordance with Section 3-2-2.6;
9        (3) conduct ongoing research and data analysis on:
10            (A) evidence-based recidivism reduction programs
11        relating to the use of committed person risk and needs
12        assessment tools;
13            (B) the most effective and efficient uses of those
14        programs;
15            (C) which evidence-based recidivism reduction
16        programs are the most effective at reducing
17        recidivism, and the type, amount, and intensity of
18        programming that most effectively reduces the risk of
19        recidivism; and
20            (D) products purchased by State agencies that are
21        manufactured in other states or foreign countries and
22        could be manufactured by committed persons
23        participating in a correctional institution or
24        facility work program without reducing job
25        opportunities for other workers in this State;
26        (4) on an annual basis, review and validate the risk

 

 

HB3212- 43 -LRB101 07501 RLC 56420 b

1    and needs assessment system, which review shall include:
2            (A) any subsequent changes to the risk and needs
3        assessment system made after the effective date of this
4        amendatory Act of the 101st General Assembly General
5        Assembly;
6            (B) the recommendations developed under paragraph
7        (2), using the research conducted under paragraph (3);
8            (C) an evaluation to ensure that the risk and needs
9        assessment system bases the assessment of each
10        committed person's risk of recidivism on indicators of
11        progress, and of regression that are dynamic and that
12        can reasonably be expected to change while in the
13        correctional institution or facility;
14            (D) statistical validation of any tools that the
15        risk and needs assessment system uses; and
16            (E) an evaluation of the rates of recidivism among
17        similarly classified committed persons to identify any
18        unwarranted disparities, including disparities among
19        similarly classified committed persons of different
20        demographic groups, in such rates;
21        (5) make any revisions or updates to the risk and needs
22    assessment system that the Director of Corrections
23    determines appropriate under the review under paragraph
24    (4), including updates to ensure that any disparities
25    identified in paragraph (4)(E) are reduced to the greatest
26    extent possible; and

 

 

HB3212- 44 -LRB101 07501 RLC 56420 b

1        (6) report to the General Assembly in accordance with
2    Section 3-2-2.8.
 
3
4    (730 ILCS 5/3-2-2.6 new)
5    Sec. 3-2-2.6. Development of risk and needs assessment
6system.
7    (a) Not later than 2 years after the effective date of this
8amendatory Act of the 101st General Assembly, the Director of
9Corrections, in consultation with the Independent Review
10Committee created in Section 3-2-2.7, shall develop and release
11publicly on the Department of Corrections website a risk and
12needs assessment system, which shall be used to:
13        (1) determine the recidivism risk of each committed
14    person as part of the intake process, and classify each
15    committed person as having minimum, low, medium, or high
16    risk for recidivism;
17        (2) assess and determine, to the extent practicable,
18    the risk of violent or serious misconduct of each committed
19    person;
20        (3) determine the type and amount of evidence-based
21    recidivism reduction programming that is appropriate for
22    each committed person and assign each committed person to
23    such programming accordingly, based on the committed
24    person's specific criminogenic needs, and in accordance
25    with subsection (b);

 

 

HB3212- 45 -LRB101 07501 RLC 56420 b

1        (4) reassess the recidivism risk of each committed
2    person periodically, based on factors including indicators
3    of progress, and of regression, that are dynamic and that
4    can reasonably be expected to change while in the
5    correctional institution or facility;
6        (5) reassign the committed person to appropriate
7    evidence-based recidivism reduction programs or productive
8    activities based on the revised determination to ensure
9    that:
10            (A) all committed persons at each risk level have a
11        meaningful opportunity to reduce their classification
12        during the period of incarceration;
13            (B) to address the specific criminogenic needs of
14        the committed person; and
15            (C) all committed persons are able to successfully
16        participate in those programs;
17        (6) determine when to provide incentives and rewards
18    for successful participation in evidence-based recidivism
19    reduction programs or productive activities in accordance
20    with subsection (e);
21        (7) determine when a committed person is ready to
22    transfer into prerelease custody or supervised release
23    under Section; and
24        (8) determine the appropriate use of audio technology
25    for program course materials with an understanding of
26    dyslexia. In carrying out this paragraph, the Director of

 

 

HB3212- 46 -LRB101 07501 RLC 56420 b

1    Corrections may use existing risk and needs assessment
2    tools, as appropriate.
3    (b) The system shall provide guidance on the type, amount, and
4    intensity of evidence-based recidivism reduction
5    programming and productive activities that shall be
6    assigned for each committed person, including:
7        (1) programs in which the Department of Corrections
8    shall assign the committed person to participate,
9    according to the committed person's specific criminogenic
10    needs; and
11        (2) information on the best ways that the Department of
12    Corrections can tailor the programs to the specific
13    criminogenic needs of each committed person so as to most
14    effectively lower each committed person's risk of
15    recidivism.
16    (c) The system shall provide guidance on program grouping
17and housing assignment determinations and, after accounting
18for the safety of each committed person and other individuals
19at the correctional institution or facility, provide that
20committed persons with a similar risk level be grouped together
21in housing and assignment decisions to the extent practicable.
22    (d) The system shall provide incentives and rewards for
23committed persons to participate in and complete
24evidence-based recidivism reduction programs as follows:
25        (1) A committed person who is successfully
26    participating in an evidence-based recidivism reduction

 

 

HB3212- 47 -LRB101 07501 RLC 56420 b

1    program shall receive:
2            (A) phone privileges, or, if available, video
3        conferencing privileges, for up to 30 minutes per day,
4        and up to 510 minutes per month; and
5            (B) additional time for visitation at the
6        correctional institution or facility, as determined by
7        the chief administrative officer of the correctional
8        institution or facility.
9        (2) A committed person who is successfully
10    participating in an evidence-based recidivism reduction
11    program shall be considered by the Department of
12    Corrections for placement in a correctional institution or
13    facility closer to the committed person's release
14    residence upon request from the committed person and
15    subject to:
16            (A) bed availability at the transfer correctional
17        institution or facility;
18            (B) the committed person's security designation;
19        and
20            (C) the recommendation from the chief
21        administrative officer of the correctional institution
22        or facility at which the committed person is
23        incarcerated at the time of making the request.
24        (3) The Director of Corrections shall develop
25    additional policies to provide appropriate incentives for
26    successful participation and completion of evidence-based

 

 

HB3212- 48 -LRB101 07501 RLC 56420 b

1    recidivism reduction programming. The incentives shall
2    include not less than 2 of the following:
3            (A) Increased commissary spending limits and
4        product offerings.
5            (B) Extended opportunities to access the email
6        system.
7            (C) Consideration of transfer to preferred housing
8        units (including transfer to different prison
9        facilities).
10            (D) Other incentives solicited from committed
11        persons and determined appropriate by the Director.
12        (4) A committed person who successfully participates
13    in evidence-based recidivism reduction programming or
14    productive activities shall receive periodic risk
15    reassessments not less often than annually, and a committed
16    person determined to be at a medium or high risk of
17    recidivating and who has less than 5 years until his or her
18    projected release date shall receive more frequent risk
19    reassessments. If the reassessment shows that the
20    committed person's risk of recidivating or specific needs
21    have changed, the Department of Corrections shall update
22    the determination of the committed person's risk of
23    recidivating or information regarding the committed
24    person's specific needs and reassign the committed person
25    to appropriate evidence-based recidivism reduction
26    programming or productive activities based on such

 

 

HB3212- 49 -LRB101 07501 RLC 56420 b

1    changes.
2        (5) The incentives described in this subsection (d)
3    shall be in addition to any other rewards or incentives for
4    which a committed person may be eligible.
5    (e) The Director of Corrections shall develop guidelines
6for the reduction of rewards and incentives earned under
7subsection (d) for committed persons who violate correctional
8institution or facility rules or evidence-based recidivism
9reduction program or productive activity rules, which shall
10provide:
11        (1) general levels of violations and resulting
12    reductions;
13        (2) that any reduction that includes the loss of
14    sentence credits shall require written notice to the
15    committed person, shall be limited to sentence credits that
16    a committed person earned as of the date of the committed
17    person's rule violation, and shall not include any future
18    sentence credits that the committed person may earn; and
19        (3) for a procedure to restore sentence credits that a
20    committed person lost as a result of a rule violation,
21    based on the committed person's individual progress after
22    the date of the rule violation.
23    (f) The Director of Corrections shall develop and implement
24training programs for Department of Corrections officers and
25employees responsible for administering the system, which
26shall include:

 

 

HB3212- 50 -LRB101 07501 RLC 56420 b

1        (1) initial training to educate officers and employees
2    on how to use the system in an appropriate and consistent
3    manner, as well as the reasons for using the system;
4        (2) continuing education;
5        (3) periodic training updates; and
6        (4) a requirement that such officers and employees
7    demonstrate competence in administering the system,
8    including interrater reliability, on a biannual basis.
9    (g) In order to ensure that the Department of Corrections
10is using the system in an appropriate and consistent manner,
11the Director of Corrections shall monitor and assess the use of
12the system, which shall include conducting annual audits of the
13Department of Corrections regarding the use of the system.
14    (h) The Director of Corrections shall incorporate a
15dyslexia screening program into the system, including by
16screening for dyslexia during:
17        (1) the intake process; and
18        (2) each periodic risk reassessment of a committed
19    person.
20    The Director of Corrections shall incorporate programs
21designed to treat dyslexia into the evidence-based recidivism
22reduction programs or productive activities required to be
23implemented under this Section. he Director of Corrections may
24also incorporate programs designed to treat other learning
25disabilities.
26    (i) Beginning on the date that is 2 years after the

 

 

HB3212- 51 -LRB101 07501 RLC 56420 b

1effective date of this amendatory Act of the 101st General
2Assembly and annually thereafter for a period of 5 years, the
3Director of Corrections shall submit a report to the General
4Assembly that contains the following:
5        (1) A summary of the activities and accomplishments of
6    the Director of Corrections in carrying out this amendatory
7    Act of the 101st General Assembly.
8        (2) A summary and assessment of the types and
9    effectiveness of the evidence-based recidivism reduction
10    programs and productive activities in institutions and
11    facilities operated by the Department of Corrections,
12    including:
13            (A) evidence about which programs have been shown
14        to reduce recidivism;
15            (B) the capacity of each program and activity at
16        each correctional institution or facility, including
17        the number of committed persons along with the
18        recidivism risk of each committed person enrolled in
19        each program; and
20            (C) identification of any gaps or shortages in
21        capacity of those programs and activities.
22        (3) Rates of recidivism among individuals who have been
23    released from a correctional institution or facility,
24    based on the following criteria:
25            (A) the primary offense of conviction;
26            (B) the length of the sentence imposed and served;

 

 

HB3212- 52 -LRB101 07501 RLC 56420 b

1            (C) the Department of Corrections correctional
2        institution or facility in which the committed
3        person's sentence was served;
4            (D) the evidence-based recidivism reduction
5        programming that the committed person successfully
6        completed, if any;
7            (E) the committed person's assessed and reassessed
8        risk of recidivism; and
9            (F) the productive activities that the committed
10        person successfully completed, if any.
11        (4) The status of correctional industries programs at
12    facilities operated by the Department of Corrections,
13    including:
14            (A) a strategy to expand the availability of those
15        programs without reducing job opportunities for
16        workers in this State who are not in the custody of the
17        Department of Corrections, including the feasibility
18        of committed persons manufacturing products purchased
19        by State agencies that are manufactured in other
20        states;
21            (B) an assessment of the feasibility of expanding
22        such programs, consistent with the strategy required
23        under subparagraph (A), with the goal that 5 years
24        after the effective date of this amendatory Act of the
25        101st General Assembly, not less than 75% of eligible
26        minimum-risk and low-risk offenders have the

 

 

HB3212- 53 -LRB101 07501 RLC 56420 b

1        opportunity to participate in a correctional
2        industries program for not less than 20 hours per week;
3        and
4            (C) a detailed discussion of legal authorities
5        that would be useful or necessary to achieve the goals
6        described in subparagraphs (A) and (B).
7        (5) An assessment of the Department of Corrections'
8    compliance with this Section.
9        (6) An assessment of progress made toward carrying out
10    the purposes of this amendatory Act of the 101st General
11    Assembly, including any savings associated with:
12            (A) the transfer of committed persons into
13        prerelease custody or supervised release under Article
14        8B of Chapter V, including savings resulting from the
15        avoidance or deferral of future construction,
16        acquisition, and operations costs; and
17            (B) any decrease in recidivism that may be
18        attributed to the system or the increase in
19        evidence-based recidivism reduction programs required
20        under this Section.
21        (7) An assessment of budgetary savings resulting from
22    this Section, including:
23            (A) a summary of the amount of savings resulting
24        from the transfer of committed persons into prerelease
25        custody under Article 8B of Chapter V, including
26        savings resulting from the avoidance or deferral of

 

 

HB3212- 54 -LRB101 07501 RLC 56420 b

1        future construction, acquisition, or operations costs;
2            (B) a summary of the amount of savings resulting
3        from any decrease in recidivism that may be attributed
4        to the implementation of the risk and needs assessment
5        system or the increase in recidivism reduction
6        programs and productive activities required by Article
7        8B of Chapter V;
8            (C) a strategy to reinvest the savings described in
9        subparagraphs (A) and (B) in other:
10                (i) State and local law enforcement
11            activities; and
12                (ii) expansions of recidivism reduction
13            programs and productive activities in the
14            Department of Corrections; and
15            (D) a description of how the reduced expenditures
16            on State corrections and the budgetary savings
17            resulting from the implementation of Article 8B of
18            Chapter V are currently being used and will be used
19            to:
20                (i) increase investment in law enforcement and
21            crime prevention to combat gangs of national
22            significance and high-level drug traffickers
23            through drug task forces;
24                (ii) hire, train, and equip law enforcement
25            officers and prosecutors; and
26                (iii) promote crime reduction programs using

 

 

HB3212- 55 -LRB101 07501 RLC 56420 b

1            evidence-based practices and strategic planning to
2            help reduce crime and criminal recidivism.
3        (8) Statistics on:
4            (A) the prevalence of dyslexia among committed
5        persons in correctional institutions and facilities
6        operated by the Department of Corrections; and
7            (B) any change in the effectiveness of dyslexia
8        mitigation programs among such committed persons that
9        may be attributed to the incorporation of dyslexia
10        screening into the system and of dyslexia treatment
11        into the evidence-based recidivism reduction programs,
12        as required under this Section.
13    (j) In order to expand evidence-based recidivism reduction
14programs and productive activities, the Director of
15Corrections shall develop policies for the chief
16administrative officer of each correctional institution or
17facility of the Department of Corrections to enter into
18partnerships, subject to the availability of appropriations,
19with any of the following:
20        (1) Nonprofit and other private organizations,
21    including faith-based, art, and community-based
22    organizations that will deliver recidivism reduction
23    programming on a paid or volunteer basis.
24        (2) Public institutions of higher education as defined
25    in Section 1 of the Board of Higher Education Act that will
26    deliver instruction on a paid or volunteer basis.

 

 

HB3212- 56 -LRB101 07501 RLC 56420 b

1        (3) Private entities that:
2            (A) deliver vocational training and
3        certifications;
4            (B) provide equipment to facilitate vocational
5        training or employment opportunities for committed
6        persons;
7            (C) employ committed persons; or
8            (D) assist committed persons in prerelease custody
9        or supervised release in finding employment.
10    (k) The Director of Corrections shall provide each
11committed persons with the opportunity to actively participate
12in evidence-based recidivism reduction programs or productive
13activities, according to his or her specific criminogenic
14needs, throughout his or her entire term of incarceration.
15Priority for participation in recidivism reduction programs
16shall be given to medium-risk and high-risk committed persons,
17with access to productive activities given to minimum-risk and
18low-risk committed persons.
19    (l) The Director of Corrections shall ensure there is
20sufficient prerelease custody capacity to accommodate all
21eligible committed persons.
 
22    (730 ILCS 5/3-2-2.7 new)
23    Sec. 3-2-2.7. Independent Review Committee.
24    (a) The Director of Corrections shall consult with an
25Independent Review Committee in carrying out the Director of

 

 

HB3212- 57 -LRB101 07501 RLC 56420 b

1Corrections's duties under Sections 3-2-2.5 through 3-2-2.8.
2The Illinois Sentencing Policy Advisory Council shall select a
3nonpartisan and nonprofit organization with expertise in the
4study and development of risk and needs assessment tools to
5host the Independent Review Committee.
6    (b) The Independent Review Committee shall be established
7not later than 30 days after the effective date of this
8amendatory Act of the 101st General Assembly.
9    (c) The organization selected by the Illinois Sentencing
10Policy Advisory Council shall appoint not fewer than 6 members
11to the Independent Review Committee.
12    (d) The members of the Independent Review Committee shall
13all have expertise in risk and needs assessment systems and
14shall include:
15        (1) 2 individuals who have published peer-reviewed
16    scholarship about risk and needs assessments in both
17    corrections and community settings;
18        (2) 2 corrections practitioners who have developed and
19    implemented a risk assessment tool in a corrections system
20    or in a community supervision setting, including one with
21    prior experience working within the Department of
22    Corrections; and
23        (3) one individual with expertise in assessing risk
24    assessment implementation.
25    (e) The Independent Review Committee shall assist the
26Director of Corrections in carrying out the Director of

 

 

HB3212- 58 -LRB101 07501 RLC 56420 b

1Corrections's duties under Sections 3-2-2.5 through 3-2-2.8,
2including by assisting in:
3        (1) conducting a review of the existing committed
4    person risk and needs assessment systems in operation on
5    the effective date of this amendatory Act of the 101st
6    General Assembly;
7        (2) developing recommendations regarding
8    evidence-based recidivism reduction programs and
9    productive activities;
10        (3) conducting research and data analysis on:
11            (A) evidence-based recidivism reduction programs
12        relating to the use of committed person risk and needs
13        assessment tools;
14            (B) the most effective and efficient uses of such
15        programs; and
16            (C) which evidence-based recidivism reduction
17        programs are the most effective at reducing
18        recidivism, and the type, amount, and intensity of
19        programming that most effectively reduces the risk of
20        recidivism; and
21        (4) reviewing and validating the risk and needs
22    assessment system.
23    Each member of the Independent Review Committee shall serve
24for a period of 3 years or until the risk and needs assessment
25tools are implemented by the Department of Corrections,
26whichever occurs first.

 

 

HB3212- 59 -LRB101 07501 RLC 56420 b

1    (f) The Director of Corrections shall assist the
2Independent Review Committee in performing the Committee's
3duties and promptly respond to requests from the Committee for
4access to Department of Corrections facilities, personnel, and
5information.
6    (g) The risk and needs assessment tools shall be developed
7and implemented within 2 years after the effective date of this
8amendatory Act of the 101st General Assembly. One year after
9the implementation of the needs and risk assessment tools for
10the Department of Corrections, the Independent Review
11Committee shall be dissolved.
 
12    (730 ILCS 5/3-2-2.8 new)
13    Sec. 3-2-2.8. Evidence-based recidivism reduction program
14and recommendations.
15    (a) Prior to releasing the system, in consultation with the
16Independent Review Committee, the Director of Corrections
17shall:
18        (1) review the effectiveness of evidence-based
19    recidivism reduction programs that exist as of the
20    effective date of this amendatory Act of the 101st General
21    Assembly in correctional institutions or facilities
22    operated by the Department of Corrections;
23        (2) review available information regarding the
24    effectiveness of evidence-based recidivism reduction
25    programs and productive activities that exist in

 

 

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1    State-operated correctional institutions or facilities
2    throughout this State;
3        (3) identify the most effective evidence-based
4    recidivism reduction programs;
5        (4) review the policies for entering into
6    evidence-based recidivism reduction partnerships; and
7        (5) direct the Department of Corrections regarding:
8            (A) evidence-based recidivism reduction programs;
9            (B) the ability for faith-based organizations to
10        function as a provider of educational evidence-based
11        programs outside of the religious classes and services
12        provided through the Chaplaincy; and
13            (C) the addition of any new effective
14        evidence-based recidivism reduction programs that the
15        Director of Corrections finds.
16    (b) In carrying out subsection (a), the Director of
17Corrections shall consider the prevalence and mitigation of
18dyslexia in correctional institutions and facilities of the
19Department, including by:
20        (1) reviewing statistics on the prevalence of
21    dyslexia, and the effectiveness of any programs
22    implemented to mitigate the effects of dyslexia, in
23    correctional institutions and facilities operated by the
24    Department of Corrections; and
25        (2) incorporating the findings of the Director of
26    Corrections under paragraph (1) of this subsection (b) into

 

 

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1    any directives given to the Department of Corrections under
2    paragraph (5) of subsection (a).
 
3    (730 ILCS 5/3-4-3)  (from Ch. 38, par. 1003-4-3)
4    Sec. 3-4-3. Funds and Property of Persons Committed.
5    (a) The Department of Corrections and the Department of
6Juvenile Justice shall establish accounting records with
7accounts for each person who has or receives money while in an
8institution or facility of that Department and it shall allow
9the withdrawal and disbursement of money by the person under
10rules and regulations of that Department. Any interest or other
11income from moneys deposited with the Department by a resident
12of the Department of Juvenile Justice in excess of $200 shall
13accrue to the individual's account, or in balances up to $200
14shall accrue to the Residents' Benefit Fund. For an individual
15in an institution or facility of the Department of Corrections
16the interest shall accrue to the Residents' Benefit Fund. The
17Department shall disburse all moneys so held no later than the
18person's final discharge from the Department. Moneys in the
19account of a committed person who files a lawsuit determined
20frivolous under Article XXII of the Code of Civil Procedure
21shall be deducted to pay for the filing fees and cost of the
22suit as provided in that Article. The Department shall under
23rules and regulations record and receipt all personal property
24not allowed to committed persons. The Department shall return
25such property to the individual no later than the person's

 

 

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1release on parole or aftercare.
2    (b) Any money held in accounts of committed persons
3separated from the Department by death, discharge, or
4unauthorized absence and unclaimed for a period of 1 year
5thereafter by the person or his legal representative shall be
6transmitted to the State Treasurer who shall deposit it into
7the General Revenue Fund. Articles of personal property of
8persons so separated may be sold or used by the Department if
9unclaimed for a period of 1 year for the same purpose.
10Clothing, if unclaimed within 30 days, may be used or disposed
11of as determined by the Department.
12    (b-5) The Department of Corrections shall establish a
13savings account for each committed person participating in the
14correctional industries program under Article 12 of this
15Chapter. The savings account shall be equal to 15% of the
16compensation received by the committed person from
17participating in the program.
18    (c) Forty percent of the profits on sales from commissary
19stores shall be expended by the Department for the special
20benefit of committed persons which shall include but not be
21limited to the advancement of inmate payrolls, for the special
22benefit of employees, and for the advancement or reimbursement
23of employee travel, provided that amounts expended for
24employees shall not exceed the amount of profits derived from
25sales made to employees by such commissaries, as determined by
26the Department. The remainder of the profits from sales from

 

 

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1commissary stores must be used first to pay for wages and
2benefits of employees covered under a collective bargaining
3agreement who are employed at commissary facilities of the
4Department and then to pay the costs of dietary staff.
5    (d) The Department shall confiscate any unauthorized
6currency found in the possession of a committed person. The
7Department shall transmit the confiscated currency to the State
8Treasurer who shall deposit it into the General Revenue Fund.
9(Source: P.A. 97-1083, eff. 8-24-12; 98-558, eff. 1-1-14.)
 
10    (730 ILCS 5/3-6-1)  (from Ch. 38, par. 1003-6-1)
11    Sec. 3-6-1. Institutions; Facilities; and Programs.
12    (a) The Department shall designate those institutions and
13facilities which shall be maintained for persons assigned as
14adults and as juveniles.
15    (b) The types, number and population of institutions and
16facilities shall be determined by the needs of committed
17persons for treatment and the public for protection. A
18committed person shall be assigned to an institution or
19facility of the Department that is located within 200 miles of
20his or her residence immediately before the committed person's
21admission to the Department. All institutions and programs
22shall conform to the minimum standards under this Chapter.
23(Source: P.A. 77-2097.)
 
24    (730 ILCS 5/3-6-3)  (from Ch. 38, par. 1003-6-3)

 

 

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1    Sec. 3-6-3. Rules and regulations for sentence credit.
2    (a)(1) The Department of Corrections shall prescribe rules
3and regulations for awarding and revoking sentence credit for
4persons committed to the Department which shall be subject to
5review by the Prisoner Review Board.
6    (1.5) As otherwise provided by law, sentence credit may be
7awarded for the following:
8        (A) successful completion of programming while in
9    custody of the Department or while in custody prior to
10    sentencing;
11        (B) compliance with the rules and regulations of the
12    Department; or
13        (C) service to the institution, service to a community,
14    or service to the State.
15    (2) Except as provided in paragraph (4.7) of this
16subsection (a), the rules and regulations on sentence credit
17shall provide, with respect to offenses listed in clause (i),
18(ii), or (iii) of this paragraph (2) committed on or after June
1919, 1998 or with respect to the offense listed in clause (iv)
20of this paragraph (2) committed on or after June 23, 2005 (the
21effective date of Public Act 94-71) or with respect to offense
22listed in clause (vi) committed on or after June 1, 2008 (the
23effective date of Public Act 95-625) or with respect to the
24offense of being an armed habitual criminal committed on or
25after August 2, 2005 (the effective date of Public Act 94-398)
26or with respect to the offenses listed in clause (v) of this

 

 

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1paragraph (2) committed on or after August 13, 2007 (the
2effective date of Public Act 95-134) or with respect to the
3offense of aggravated domestic battery committed on or after
4July 23, 2010 (the effective date of Public Act 96-1224) or
5with respect to the offense of attempt to commit terrorism
6committed on or after January 1, 2013 (the effective date of
7Public Act 97-990), the following:
8        (i) that a prisoner who is serving a term of
9    imprisonment for first degree murder or for the offense of
10    terrorism shall receive no sentence credit and shall serve
11    the entire sentence imposed by the court;
12        (ii) that a prisoner serving a sentence for attempt to
13    commit terrorism, attempt to commit first degree murder,
14    solicitation of murder, solicitation of murder for hire,
15    intentional homicide of an unborn child, predatory
16    criminal sexual assault of a child, aggravated criminal
17    sexual assault, criminal sexual assault, aggravated
18    kidnapping, aggravated battery with a firearm as described
19    in Section 12-4.2 or subdivision (e)(1), (e)(2), (e)(3), or
20    (e)(4) of Section 12-3.05, heinous battery as described in
21    Section 12-4.1 or subdivision (a)(2) of Section 12-3.05,
22    being an armed habitual criminal, aggravated battery of a
23    senior citizen as described in Section 12-4.6 or
24    subdivision (a)(4) of Section 12-3.05, or aggravated
25    battery of a child as described in Section 12-4.3 or
26    subdivision (b)(1) of Section 12-3.05 shall receive no more

 

 

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1    than 4.5 days of sentence credit for each month of his or
2    her sentence of imprisonment;
3        (iii) that a prisoner serving a sentence for home
4    invasion, armed robbery, aggravated vehicular hijacking,
5    aggravated discharge of a firearm, or armed violence with a
6    category I weapon or category II weapon, when the court has
7    made and entered a finding, pursuant to subsection (c-1) of
8    Section 5-4-1 of this Code, that the conduct leading to
9    conviction for the enumerated offense resulted in great
10    bodily harm to a victim, shall receive no more than 4.5
11    days of sentence credit for each month of his or her
12    sentence of imprisonment;
13        (iv) that a prisoner serving a sentence for aggravated
14    discharge of a firearm, whether or not the conduct leading
15    to conviction for the offense resulted in great bodily harm
16    to the victim, shall receive no more than 4.5 days of
17    sentence credit for each month of his or her sentence of
18    imprisonment;
19        (v) that a person serving a sentence for gunrunning,
20    narcotics racketeering, controlled substance trafficking,
21    methamphetamine trafficking, drug-induced homicide,
22    aggravated methamphetamine-related child endangerment,
23    money laundering pursuant to clause (c) (4) or (5) of
24    Section 29B-1 of the Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal
25    Code of 2012, or a Class X felony conviction for delivery
26    of a controlled substance, possession of a controlled

 

 

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1    substance with intent to manufacture or deliver,
2    calculated criminal drug conspiracy, criminal drug
3    conspiracy, street gang criminal drug conspiracy,
4    participation in methamphetamine manufacturing, aggravated
5    participation in methamphetamine manufacturing, delivery
6    of methamphetamine, possession with intent to deliver
7    methamphetamine, aggravated delivery of methamphetamine,
8    aggravated possession with intent to deliver
9    methamphetamine, methamphetamine conspiracy when the
10    substance containing the controlled substance or
11    methamphetamine is 100 grams or more shall receive no more
12    than 7.5 days sentence credit for each month of his or her
13    sentence of imprisonment;
14        (vi) that a prisoner serving a sentence for a second or
15    subsequent offense of luring a minor shall receive no more
16    than 4.5 days of sentence credit for each month of his or
17    her sentence of imprisonment; and
18        (vii) that a prisoner serving a sentence for aggravated
19    domestic battery shall receive no more than 4.5 days of
20    sentence credit for each month of his or her sentence of
21    imprisonment.
22    (2.1) For all offenses, other than those enumerated in
23subdivision (a)(2)(i), (ii), or (iii) committed on or after
24June 19, 1998 or subdivision (a)(2)(iv) committed on or after
25June 23, 2005 (the effective date of Public Act 94-71) or
26subdivision (a)(2)(v) committed on or after August 13, 2007

 

 

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1(the effective date of Public Act 95-134) or subdivision
2(a)(2)(vi) committed on or after June 1, 2008 (the effective
3date of Public Act 95-625) or subdivision (a)(2)(vii) committed
4on or after July 23, 2010 (the effective date of Public Act
596-1224), and other than the offense of aggravated driving
6under the influence of alcohol, other drug or drugs, or
7intoxicating compound or compounds, or any combination thereof
8as defined in subparagraph (F) of paragraph (1) of subsection
9(d) of Section 11-501 of the Illinois Vehicle Code, and other
10than the offense of aggravated driving under the influence of
11alcohol, other drug or drugs, or intoxicating compound or
12compounds, or any combination thereof as defined in
13subparagraph (C) of paragraph (1) of subsection (d) of Section
1411-501 of the Illinois Vehicle Code committed on or after
15January 1, 2011 (the effective date of Public Act 96-1230), the
16rules and regulations shall provide that a prisoner who is
17serving a term of imprisonment shall receive one day of
18sentence credit for each day of his or her sentence of
19imprisonment or recommitment under Section 3-3-9. Each day of
20sentence credit shall reduce by one day the prisoner's period
21of imprisonment or recommitment under Section 3-3-9.
22    (2.2) A prisoner serving a term of natural life
23imprisonment or a prisoner who has been sentenced to death
24shall receive no sentence credit.
25    (2.3) Except as provided in paragraph (4.7) of this
26subsection (a), the rules and regulations on sentence credit

 

 

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1shall provide that a prisoner who is serving a sentence for
2aggravated driving under the influence of alcohol, other drug
3or drugs, or intoxicating compound or compounds, or any
4combination thereof as defined in subparagraph (F) of paragraph
5(1) of subsection (d) of Section 11-501 of the Illinois Vehicle
6Code, shall receive no more than 4.5 days of sentence credit
7for each month of his or her sentence of imprisonment.
8    (2.4) Except as provided in paragraph (4.7) of this
9subsection (a), the rules and regulations on sentence credit
10shall provide with respect to the offenses of aggravated
11battery with a machine gun or a firearm equipped with any
12device or attachment designed or used for silencing the report
13of a firearm or aggravated discharge of a machine gun or a
14firearm equipped with any device or attachment designed or used
15for silencing the report of a firearm, committed on or after
16July 15, 1999 (the effective date of Public Act 91-121), that a
17prisoner serving a sentence for any of these offenses shall
18receive no more than 4.5 days of sentence credit for each month
19of his or her sentence of imprisonment.
20    (2.5) Except as provided in paragraph (4.7) of this
21subsection (a), the rules and regulations on sentence credit
22shall provide that a prisoner who is serving a sentence for
23aggravated arson committed on or after July 27, 2001 (the
24effective date of Public Act 92-176) shall receive no more than
254.5 days of sentence credit for each month of his or her
26sentence of imprisonment.

 

 

HB3212- 70 -LRB101 07501 RLC 56420 b

1    (2.6) Except as provided in paragraph (4.7) of this
2subsection (a), the rules and regulations on sentence credit
3shall provide that a prisoner who is serving a sentence for
4aggravated driving under the influence of alcohol, other drug
5or drugs, or intoxicating compound or compounds or any
6combination thereof as defined in subparagraph (C) of paragraph
7(1) of subsection (d) of Section 11-501 of the Illinois Vehicle
8Code committed on or after January 1, 2011 (the effective date
9of Public Act 96-1230) shall receive no more than 4.5 days of
10sentence credit for each month of his or her sentence of
11imprisonment.
12    (3) In addition to the sentence credits earned under
13paragraphs (2.1), (4), (4.1), and (4.7) of this subsection (a),
14the rules and regulations shall also provide that the Director
15may award up to 180 days of earned sentence credit for good
16conduct in specific instances as the Director deems proper. The
17good conduct may include, but is not limited to, compliance
18with the rules and regulations of the Department, service to
19the Department, service to a community, or service to the
20State.
21    Eligible inmates for an award of earned sentence credit
22under this paragraph (3) may be selected to receive the credit
23at the Director's or his or her designee's sole discretion.
24Eligibility for the additional earned sentence credit under
25this paragraph (3) shall be based on, but is not limited to,
26the results of any available risk/needs assessment or other

 

 

HB3212- 71 -LRB101 07501 RLC 56420 b

1relevant assessments or evaluations administered by the
2Department using a validated instrument, the circumstances of
3the crime, any history of conviction for a forcible felony
4enumerated in Section 2-8 of the Criminal Code of 2012, the
5inmate's behavior and disciplinary history while incarcerated,
6and the inmate's commitment to rehabilitation, including
7participation in programming offered by the Department.
8    The Director shall not award sentence credit under this
9paragraph (3) to an inmate unless the inmate has served a
10minimum of 60 days of the sentence; except nothing in this
11paragraph shall be construed to permit the Director to extend
12an inmate's sentence beyond that which was imposed by the
13court. Prior to awarding credit under this paragraph (3), the
14Director shall make a written determination that the inmate:
15        (A) is eligible for the earned sentence credit;
16        (B) has served a minimum of 60 days, or as close to 60
17    days as the sentence will allow;
18        (B-1) has received a risk/needs assessment or other
19    relevant evaluation or assessment administered by the
20    Department using a validated instrument; and
21        (C) has met the eligibility criteria established by
22    rule for earned sentence credit.
23    The Director shall determine the form and content of the
24written determination required in this subsection.
25    (3.5) The Department shall provide annual written reports
26to the Governor and the General Assembly on the award of earned

 

 

HB3212- 72 -LRB101 07501 RLC 56420 b

1sentence credit no later than February 1 of each year. The
2Department must publish both reports on its website within 48
3hours of transmitting the reports to the Governor and the
4General Assembly. The reports must include:
5        (A) the number of inmates awarded earned sentence
6    credit;
7        (B) the average amount of earned sentence credit
8    awarded;
9        (C) the holding offenses of inmates awarded earned
10    sentence credit; and
11        (D) the number of earned sentence credit revocations.
12    (4) Except as provided in paragraph (4.7) of this
13subsection (a), the rules and regulations shall also provide
14that the sentence credit accumulated and retained under
15paragraph (2.1) of subsection (a) of this Section by any inmate
16during specific periods of time in which such inmate is engaged
17full-time in substance abuse programs, correctional industry
18assignments, educational programs, behavior modification
19programs, life skills courses, or re-entry planning provided by
20the Department under this paragraph (4) and satisfactorily
21completes the assigned program as determined by the standards
22of the Department, shall be multiplied by a factor of 1.25 for
23program participation before August 11, 1993 and 1.50 for
24program participation on or after that date. The rules and
25regulations shall also provide that sentence credit, subject to
26the same offense limits and multiplier provided in this

 

 

HB3212- 73 -LRB101 07501 RLC 56420 b

1paragraph, may be provided to an inmate who was held in
2pre-trial detention prior to his or her current commitment to
3the Department of Corrections and successfully completed a
4full-time, 60-day or longer substance abuse program,
5educational program, behavior modification program, life
6skills course, or re-entry planning provided by the county
7department of corrections or county jail. Calculation of this
8county program credit shall be done at sentencing as provided
9in Section 5-4.5-100 of this Code and shall be included in the
10sentencing order. However, no inmate shall be eligible for the
11additional sentence credit under this paragraph (4) or (4.1) of
12this subsection (a) while assigned to a boot camp or electronic
13detention.
14    Educational, vocational, substance abuse, behavior
15modification programs, life skills courses, re-entry planning,
16and correctional industry programs under which sentence credit
17may be increased under this paragraph (4) and paragraph (4.1)
18of this subsection (a) shall be evaluated by the Department on
19the basis of documented standards. The Department shall report
20the results of these evaluations to the Governor and the
21General Assembly by September 30th of each year. The reports
22shall include data relating to the recidivism rate among
23program participants.
24    Availability of these programs shall be subject to the
25limits of fiscal resources appropriated by the General Assembly
26for these purposes. Eligible inmates who are denied immediate

 

 

HB3212- 74 -LRB101 07501 RLC 56420 b

1admission shall be placed on a waiting list under criteria
2established by the Department. The inability of any inmate to
3become engaged in any such programs by reason of insufficient
4program resources or for any other reason established under the
5rules and regulations of the Department shall not be deemed a
6cause of action under which the Department or any employee or
7agent of the Department shall be liable for damages to the
8inmate.
9    (4.1) Except as provided in paragraph (4.7) of this
10subsection (a), the rules and regulations shall also provide
11that an additional 90 days of sentence credit shall be awarded
12to any prisoner who passes high school equivalency testing
13while the prisoner is committed to the Department of
14Corrections. The sentence credit awarded under this paragraph
15(4.1) shall be in addition to, and shall not affect, the award
16of sentence credit under any other paragraph of this Section,
17but shall also be pursuant to the guidelines and restrictions
18set forth in paragraph (4) of subsection (a) of this Section.
19The sentence credit provided for in this paragraph shall be
20available only to those prisoners who have not previously
21earned a high school diploma or a high school equivalency
22certificate. If, after an award of the high school equivalency
23testing sentence credit has been made, the Department
24determines that the prisoner was not eligible, then the award
25shall be revoked. The Department may also award 90 days of
26sentence credit to any committed person who passed high school

 

 

HB3212- 75 -LRB101 07501 RLC 56420 b

1equivalency testing while he or she was held in pre-trial
2detention prior to the current commitment to the Department of
3Corrections.
4    (4.5) The rules and regulations on sentence credit shall
5also provide that when the court's sentencing order recommends
6a prisoner for substance abuse treatment and the crime was
7committed on or after September 1, 2003 (the effective date of
8Public Act 93-354), the prisoner shall receive no sentence
9credit awarded under clause (3) of this subsection (a) unless
10he or she participates in and completes a substance abuse
11treatment program. The Director may waive the requirement to
12participate in or complete a substance abuse treatment program
13in specific instances if the prisoner is not a good candidate
14for a substance abuse treatment program for medical,
15programming, or operational reasons. Availability of substance
16abuse treatment shall be subject to the limits of fiscal
17resources appropriated by the General Assembly for these
18purposes. If treatment is not available and the requirement to
19participate and complete the treatment has not been waived by
20the Director, the prisoner shall be placed on a waiting list
21under criteria established by the Department. The Director may
22allow a prisoner placed on a waiting list to participate in and
23complete a substance abuse education class or attend substance
24abuse self-help meetings in lieu of a substance abuse treatment
25program. A prisoner on a waiting list who is not placed in a
26substance abuse program prior to release may be eligible for a

 

 

HB3212- 76 -LRB101 07501 RLC 56420 b

1waiver and receive sentence credit under clause (3) of this
2subsection (a) at the discretion of the Director.
3    (4.6) The rules and regulations on sentence credit shall
4also provide that a prisoner who has been convicted of a sex
5offense as defined in Section 2 of the Sex Offender
6Registration Act shall receive no sentence credit unless he or
7she either has successfully completed or is participating in
8sex offender treatment as defined by the Sex Offender
9Management Board. However, prisoners who are waiting to receive
10treatment, but who are unable to do so due solely to the lack
11of resources on the part of the Department, may, at the
12Director's sole discretion, be awarded sentence credit at a
13rate as the Director shall determine.
14    (4.7) On or after the effective date of this amendatory Act
15of the 100th General Assembly, sentence credit under paragraph
16(3), (4), or (4.1) of this subsection (a) may be awarded to a
17prisoner who is serving a sentence for an offense described in
18paragraph (2), (2.3), (2.4), (2.5), or (2.6) for credit earned
19on or after the effective date of this amendatory Act of the
20100th General Assembly; provided, the award of the credits
21under this paragraph (4.7) shall not reduce the sentence of the
22prisoner to less than the following amounts:
23        (i) 85% of his or her sentence if the prisoner is
24    required to serve 85% of his or her sentence; or
25        (ii) 60% of his or her sentence if the prisoner is
26    required to serve 75% of his or her sentence, except if the

 

 

HB3212- 77 -LRB101 07501 RLC 56420 b

1    prisoner is serving a sentence for gunrunning his or her
2    sentence shall not be reduced to less than 75%.
3    This paragraph (4.7) shall not apply to a prisoner serving
4a sentence for an offense described in subparagraph (i) of
5paragraph (2) of this subsection (a).
6    (5) Whenever the Department is to release any inmate
7earlier than it otherwise would because of a grant of earned
8sentence credit under paragraph (3) of subsection (a) of this
9Section given at any time during the term, the Department shall
10give reasonable notice of the impending release not less than
1114 days prior to the date of the release to the State's
12Attorney of the county where the prosecution of the inmate took
13place, and if applicable, the State's Attorney of the county
14into which the inmate will be released. The Department must
15also make identification information and a recent photo of the
16inmate being released accessible on the Internet by means of a
17hyperlink labeled "Community Notification of Inmate Early
18Release" on the Department's World Wide Web homepage. The
19identification information shall include the inmate's: name,
20any known alias, date of birth, physical characteristics,
21commitment offense and county where conviction was imposed. The
22identification information shall be placed on the website
23within 3 days of the inmate's release and the information may
24not be removed until either: completion of the first year of
25mandatory supervised release or return of the inmate to custody
26of the Department.

 

 

HB3212- 78 -LRB101 07501 RLC 56420 b

1    (6)(A) A prisoner, except for an ineligible prisoner under
2subparagraph (D), who successfully completes evidence-based
3recidivism reduction programming or productive activities,
4shall earn sentence credits as follows:
5        (i) A prisoner shall earn 10 days of sentence credits
6    for every 30 days of successful participation in
7    evidence-based recidivism reduction programming or
8    productive activities.
9        (ii) A prisoner determined by the Department of
10    Corrections to be at a minimum or low risk for
11    recidivating, who, over 2 consecutive assessments, has not
12    increased their risk of recidivism, shall earn an
13    additional 5 days of sentence credits for every 30 days of
14    successful participation in evidence-based recidivism
15    reduction programming or productive activities.
16        (iii) A prisoner shall earn 7 days additional sentence
17    credits per year.
18    (B) A prisoner may not earn sentence credits under this
19paragraph (6) for an evidence-based recidivism reduction
20program that the prisoner successfully completed:
21        (i) prior to the effective date of this amendatory Act
22    of the 101st General Assembly; or
23        (ii) during official detention prior to the date that
24    the prisoner's sentence commences.
25    (C) Sentence credits earned under this paragraph (6) by
26prisoners who successfully participate in recidivism reduction

 

 

HB3212- 79 -LRB101 07501 RLC 56420 b

1programs or productive activities shall be applied toward time
2in prerelease custody or mandatory supervised release. The
3Director of Corrections shall transfer eligible prisoners, as
4determined under Section 5-8B-5, into prerelease custody or
5supervised release.
6    (D) A prisoner who is serving a term of imprisonment for
7first degree murder or for the offense of terrorism shall
8receive no sentence credits under this paragraph (6).
9    There shall be no limits on the number of prisoners who may
10participate in evidence-based recidivism reduction programming
11or productive activities.
12    The additional sentence credits provided in this paragraph
13(6) apply to prisoners who are or were committed to an
14institution or facility of the Department before, on, or after
15the effective date of this amendatory Act of the 101st General
16Assembly.
17    (b) Whenever a person is or has been committed under
18several convictions, with separate sentences, the sentences
19shall be construed under Section 5-8-4 in granting and
20forfeiting of sentence credit.
21    (c) The Department shall prescribe rules and regulations
22for revoking sentence credit, including revoking sentence
23credit awarded under paragraph (3) of subsection (a) of this
24Section. The Department shall prescribe rules and regulations
25for suspending or reducing the rate of accumulation of sentence
26credit for specific rule violations, during imprisonment.

 

 

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1These rules and regulations shall provide that no inmate may be
2penalized more than one year of sentence credit for any one
3infraction.
4    When the Department seeks to revoke, suspend or reduce the
5rate of accumulation of any sentence credits for an alleged
6infraction of its rules, it shall bring charges therefor
7against the prisoner sought to be so deprived of sentence
8credits before the Prisoner Review Board as provided in
9subparagraph (a)(4) of Section 3-3-2 of this Code, if the
10amount of credit at issue exceeds 30 days or when during any 12
11month period, the cumulative amount of credit revoked exceeds
1230 days except where the infraction is committed or discovered
13within 60 days of scheduled release. In those cases, the
14Department of Corrections may revoke up to 30 days of sentence
15credit. The Board may subsequently approve the revocation of
16additional sentence credit, if the Department seeks to revoke
17sentence credit in excess of 30 days. However, the Board shall
18not be empowered to review the Department's decision with
19respect to the loss of 30 days of sentence credit within any
20calendar year for any prisoner or to increase any penalty
21beyond the length requested by the Department.
22    The Director of the Department of Corrections, in
23appropriate cases, may restore up to 30 days of sentence
24credits which have been revoked, suspended or reduced. Any
25restoration of sentence credits in excess of 30 days shall be
26subject to review by the Prisoner Review Board. However, the

 

 

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1Board may not restore sentence credit in excess of the amount
2requested by the Director.
3    Nothing contained in this Section shall prohibit the
4Prisoner Review Board from ordering, pursuant to Section
53-3-9(a)(3)(i)(B), that a prisoner serve up to one year of the
6sentence imposed by the court that was not served due to the
7accumulation of sentence credit.
8    (d) If a lawsuit is filed by a prisoner in an Illinois or
9federal court against the State, the Department of Corrections,
10or the Prisoner Review Board, or against any of their officers
11or employees, and the court makes a specific finding that a
12pleading, motion, or other paper filed by the prisoner is
13frivolous, the Department of Corrections shall conduct a
14hearing to revoke up to 180 days of sentence credit by bringing
15charges against the prisoner sought to be deprived of the
16sentence credits before the Prisoner Review Board as provided
17in subparagraph (a)(8) of Section 3-3-2 of this Code. If the
18prisoner has not accumulated 180 days of sentence credit at the
19time of the finding, then the Prisoner Review Board may revoke
20all sentence credit accumulated by the prisoner.
21    For purposes of this subsection (d):
22        (1) "Frivolous" means that a pleading, motion, or other
23    filing which purports to be a legal document filed by a
24    prisoner in his or her lawsuit meets any or all of the
25    following criteria:
26            (A) it lacks an arguable basis either in law or in

 

 

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1        fact;
2            (B) it is being presented for any improper purpose,
3        such as to harass or to cause unnecessary delay or
4        needless increase in the cost of litigation;
5            (C) the claims, defenses, and other legal
6        contentions therein are not warranted by existing law
7        or by a nonfrivolous argument for the extension,
8        modification, or reversal of existing law or the
9        establishment of new law;
10            (D) the allegations and other factual contentions
11        do not have evidentiary support or, if specifically so
12        identified, are not likely to have evidentiary support
13        after a reasonable opportunity for further
14        investigation or discovery; or
15            (E) the denials of factual contentions are not
16        warranted on the evidence, or if specifically so
17        identified, are not reasonably based on a lack of
18        information or belief.
19        (2) "Lawsuit" means a motion pursuant to Section 116-3
20    of the Code of Criminal Procedure of 1963, a habeas corpus
21    action under Article X of the Code of Civil Procedure or
22    under federal law (28 U.S.C. 2254), a petition for claim
23    under the Court of Claims Act, an action under the federal
24    Civil Rights Act (42 U.S.C. 1983), or a second or
25    subsequent petition for post-conviction relief under
26    Article 122 of the Code of Criminal Procedure of 1963

 

 

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1    whether filed with or without leave of court or a second or
2    subsequent petition for relief from judgment under Section
3    2-1401 of the Code of Civil Procedure.
4    (e) Nothing in Public Act 90-592 or 90-593 affects the
5validity of Public Act 89-404.
6    (f) Whenever the Department is to release any inmate who
7has been convicted of a violation of an order of protection
8under Section 12-3.4 or 12-30 of the Criminal Code of 1961 or
9the Criminal Code of 2012, earlier than it otherwise would
10because of a grant of sentence credit, the Department, as a
11condition of release, shall require that the person, upon
12release, be placed under electronic surveillance as provided in
13Section 5-8A-7 of this Code.
14(Source: P.A. 99-241, eff. 1-1-16; 99-275, eff. 1-1-16; 99-642,
15eff. 7-28-16; 99-938, eff. 1-1-18; 100-3, eff. 1-1-18; 100-575,
16eff. 1-8-18.)
 
17    (730 ILCS 5/3-6-7)
18    Sec. 3-6-7. Pregnant female committed persons and new
19mothers. Notwithstanding any other statute, directive, or
20administrative regulation, when a pregnant female committed
21person is brought to a hospital from an Illinois correctional
22center for the purpose of delivering her baby and for at least
233 months after delivery, no handcuffs, shackles, or restraints
24of any kind may be used during her transport to a medical
25facility for the purpose of delivering her baby. Under no

 

 

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1circumstances may leg irons or shackles or waist shackles be
2used on any pregnant female committed person who is in labor.
3Upon the pregnant female committed person's entry to the
4hospital delivery room, a correctional officer must be posted
5immediately outside the delivery room. The Department must
6provide for adequate personnel to monitor the pregnant female
7committed person during her transport to and from the hospital
8and during her stay at the hospital.
9(Source: P.A. 91-253, eff. 1-1-00.)
 
10    (730 ILCS 5/3-7-2)  (from Ch. 38, par. 1003-7-2)
11    Sec. 3-7-2. Facilities.
12    (a) All institutions and facilities of the Department shall
13provide every committed person with access to toilet
14facilities, barber facilities, bathing facilities at least
15once each week, a library of legal materials and published
16materials including newspapers and magazines approved by the
17Director. A committed person may not receive any materials that
18the Director deems pornographic.
19    (b) (Blank).
20    (c) All institutions and facilities of the Department shall
21provide facilities for every committed person to leave his cell
22for at least one hour each day unless the chief administrative
23officer determines that it would be harmful or dangerous to the
24security or safety of the institution or facility.
25    (d) All institutions and facilities of the Department shall

 

 

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1provide every committed person with a wholesome and nutritional
2diet at regularly scheduled hours, drinking water, clothing
3adequate for the season, bedding, soap and towels and medical
4and dental care.
5    (e) All institutions and facilities of the Department shall
6permit every committed person to send and receive an unlimited
7number of uncensored letters and to receive emails, provided,
8however, that the Director may order that mail be inspected and
9read for reasons of the security, safety or morale of the
10institution or facility.
11    (f) All of the institutions and facilities of the
12Department shall permit every committed person to receive
13in-person visitors and video contact, if available, except in
14case of abuse of the visiting privilege or when the chief
15administrative officer determines that such visiting would be
16harmful or dangerous to the security, safety or morale of the
17institution or facility. Each committed person is entitled to 7
18visits per month. Every committed person may submit a list of
19at least 30 persons to the Department that are authorized to
20visit the committed person. The list shall be kept in an
21electronic format by the Department beginning on August 1,
222019, as well as available in paper form for Department
23employees. The chief administrative officer shall have the
24right to restrict visitation to non-contact visits, video, or
25other forms of non-contact visits for reasons of safety,
26security, and order, including, but not limited to, restricting

 

 

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1contact visits for committed persons engaged in gang activity.
2No committed person in a super maximum security facility or on
3disciplinary segregation is allowed contact visits. Any
4committed person found in possession of illegal drugs or who
5fails a drug test shall not be permitted contact visits for a
6period of at least 6 months. Any committed person involved in
7gang activities or found guilty of assault committed against a
8Department employee shall not be permitted contact visits for a
9period of at least 6 months. The Department shall offer every
10visitor appropriate written information concerning HIV and
11AIDS, including information concerning how to contact the
12Illinois Department of Public Health for counseling
13information. The Department shall develop the written
14materials in consultation with the Department of Public Health.
15The Department shall ensure that all such information and
16materials are culturally sensitive and reflect cultural
17diversity as appropriate. Implementation of the changes made to
18this Section by Public Act 94-629 is subject to appropriation.
19The Department shall seek the lowest possible cost to provide
20video calling and shall charge to the extent of recovering any
21demonstrated costs of providing video calling. The Department
22shall not make a commission or profit from video calling
23services. Nothing in this Section shall be construed to permit
24video calling instead of in-person visitation. Under Section
253-2-2.6, the Director of Corrections shall determine whether
26the statutory visitation period in this Section should be

 

 

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1increased and may in his or her discretion increase that period
2in the best interest of committed persons. If the Director has
3established limits on the number and time periods of telephone
4calls that may be made by committed persons, the Director shall
5reassess the limitations and may increase the time periods and
6numbers of the telephone calls that may be made by committed
7persons.
8    (f-5) (Blank).
9    (f-10) The Department may not restrict or limit in-person
10visits to committed persons due to the availability of
11interactive video conferences.
12    (f-15)(1) The Department shall issue a standard written
13policy for each institution and facility of the Department that
14provides for:
15        (A) the number of in-person visits each committed
16    person is entitled to per week and per month including the
17    requirements of subsection (f) of this Section;
18        (B) the hours of in-person visits;
19        (C) the type of identification required for visitors at
20    least 18 years of age; and
21        (D) the type of identification, if any, required for
22    visitors under 18 years of age.
23    (2) This policy shall be posted on the Department website
24and at each facility.
25    (3) The Department shall post on its website daily any
26restrictions or denials of visitation for that day and the

 

 

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1succeeding 5 calendar days, including those based on a lockdown
2of the facility, to inform family members and other visitors.
3    (g) All institutions and facilities of the Department shall
4permit religious ministrations and sacraments to be available
5to every committed person, but attendance at religious services
6shall not be required.
7    (h) Within 90 days after December 31, 1996, the Department
8shall prohibit the use of curtains, cell-coverings, or any
9other matter or object that obstructs or otherwise impairs the
10line of vision into a committed person's cell.
11    (i) Priority shall be given to providing education,
12treatment, and psychological and psychiatric counseling to
13those committed persons deemed by the chief administrative
14officer to be of the greatest risk of causing physical harm to
15the committed person or others.
16    (j) If the committed person is female, feminine hygiene
17products shall be furnished to the committed person without
18cost.
19(Source: P.A. 99-933, eff. 1-27-17; 100-30, eff. 1-1-18;
20100-142, eff. 1-1-18; 100-677, eff. 1-1-19; 100-863, eff.
218-14-18.)
 
22    (730 ILCS 5/3-7-2a)  (from Ch. 38, par. 1003-7-2a)
23    Sec. 3-7-2a. If a facility maintains a commissary or
24commissaries serving inmates, the selling prices for all goods
25shall be sufficient to cover the costs of the goods and an

 

 

HB3212- 89 -LRB101 07501 RLC 56420 b

1additional charge of up to 35% for tobacco products and up to
225% for non-tobacco products. The amount of the additional
3charges for goods sold at commissaries serving inmates shall be
4based upon the amount necessary to pay for the wages and
5benefits of commissary employees who are employed in any
6commissary facilities of the Department. The Department shall
7determine the additional charges upon any changes in wages and
8benefits of commissary employees as negotiated in the
9collective bargaining agreement. If a facility maintains a
10commissary or commissaries serving employees, the selling
11price for all goods shall be sufficient to cover the costs of
12the goods and an additional charge of up to 10%. A compliance
13audit of all commissaries and the distribution of commissary
14funds shall be included in the regular compliance audit of the
15Department conducted by the Auditor General in accordance with
16the Illinois State Auditing Act.
17    Items purchased for sale at any such commissary shall be
18purchased, wherever possible, at wholesale costs. If a facility
19maintains a commissary or commissaries as of the effective date
20of this amendatory Act of the 93rd General Assembly, the
21Department may not contract with a private contractor or vendor
22to operate, manage, or perform any portion of the commissary
23services. The Department may not enter into any such contract
24for commissary services at a facility that opens subsequent to
25the effective date of this amendatory Act of the 93rd General
26Assembly.

 

 

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1    The correctional institution or facility that maintains a
2commissary may not limit the amount of a committed person's
3spending at the commissary.
4(Source: P.A. 93-607, eff. 1-1-04; 94-913, eff. 6-23-06.)
 
5    (730 ILCS 5/3-8-4)  (from Ch. 38, par. 1003-8-4)
6    Sec. 3-8-4. Intradivisional Transfers.
7    (a) After the initial assignments under Sections 3-8-2 and
83-8-3, all transfers of committed persons to another
9institution or facility shall be reviewed and approved by a
10person or persons designated by the Director. The review shall
11take into consideration, the distance that the family of the
12committed person resides away from the correctional
13institution or facility and the request of the committed person
14to be reassigned to another institution or facility of the
15Department. A record of each transfer and the reasons therefor
16shall be included in the person's master record file.
17    (b) Transfers to facilities for psychiatric treatment and
18care within the Department shall be made only after prior
19psychiatric examination and certification to the Director that
20such transfer is required. Persons in facilities for
21psychiatric treatment and care within the Department shall be
22reexamined at least every 6 months. Persons found to no longer
23require psychiatric treatment and care shall be transferred to
24other facilities of the Department.
25(Source: P.A. 77-2097.)
 

 

 

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1    (730 ILCS 5/3-14-1.1 new)
2    Sec. 3-14-1.1. Pathway to Community Program.
3    (a) In this Section:
4        "Committed person" means a currently incarcerated
5    person who (i) is at least 60 years of age and (ii) has
6    served at least two-thirds of her her sentence of
7    imprisonment in an institution or facility of the
8    Department of Corrections.
9        "Family member" means a spouse, parent, child, or
10    sibling.
11        "Program" means the Pathway to Community Program
12    created in this Section.
13    (b) A committed person may petition the Department of
14Corrections for participation in the Pathway to Community
15Program as provided in this Section. If a committed person
16files a petition, the Department shall make an exhaustive
17effort to find and notify the victim and the family members of
18the victim of the petitioner's offense.
19    (c) The petition shall contain a statement by the
20petitioner that he or she is qualified to participate in the
21Program, together with the petitioner's plans for reentry,
22including, but not limited to, information about where the
23petitioner will live, how the petitioner will be supported
24financially, and any plans for the petitioner's ongoing medical
25care if necessary. The petition may also contain supporting

 

 

HB3212- 92 -LRB101 07501 RLC 56420 b

1statements or documentation related to the factors listed in
2paragraphs (1) through (7) of subsection (d) of this Section.
3    (d) The petition shall, in the first instance, be screened
4by the Department of Corrections, who shall determine whether
5to recommend that the petitioner be considered for
6participation in the Program. In so doing, the Department shall
7draw on information in the petition and on its own resources,
8including its use of tools that assesses the petitioner's
9risks, assets, and needs to determine whether the petitioner
10may be released and, if so, under what specific conditions set
11by the Department. Among other factors, in making this
12determination the Department shall consider the following:
13        (1) the petitioner's successful participation in
14    programs designed to restore him or her to a useful and
15    productive life upon release (including educational
16    programs and programs designed to deal with substance abuse
17    or other issues) or, if the programs are not available,
18    information demonstrating that the petitioner has engaged
19    in self-education programs, correspondence courses, or
20    other self-improvement efforts;
21        (2) the genuine reform and changed behavior the
22    petitioner has demonstrated over a period of years;
23        (3) the petitioner's remorse for the consequences of
24    his or her criminal conduct;
25        (4) the petitioner's ability to socialize with others
26    in an acceptable manner;

 

 

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1        (5) the petitioner's renunciation of criminal activity
2    and gang affiliation if the petitioner was a member of a
3    gang;
4        (6) an appropriate plan for living arrangements,
5    financial support, and any medical care that will be needed
6    when the petitioner returns to society; and
7        (7) input from the victim of the petitioner's offense
8    and from their family members.
9    (e) Before a participant is selected for the Program, the
10petitioner shall successfully complete an atonement and
11restorative justice program prepared by the Department.
12Following completion of this program of atonement and
13restorative justice, the Department shall notify the victim and
14the family members of the victim of the petitioner's offense
15and to afford them the opportunity to participate in the
16Department's final selection process for the Pathway to
17Community Program. Up to $1,000 of trauma-informed victim
18services or trauma-certified professional therapy shall be
19provided by the Department to family members of the victim of
20the petitioner's offense. Insurance policies of the family
21members of the victim of the petitioner's offense or family
22members financial resources shall first be used to pay the
23costs of these services or therapy. Optional participation by
24family members of the victim of petitioner's offense shall be
25provided by the Department at no cost to the family members of
26the victim.

 

 

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1    (f) Time served in the Program shall be credited toward
2time served on the sentence. The end date of the period of
3mandatory supervised release shall remain the same as it would
4have been had the petitioner not been given early supervised
5release, and the petitioner shall remain under supervision of
6the Department until that date, except that the Department may
7enter an order releasing and discharging the petitioner from
8mandatory supervised release if it determines that he or she is
9likely to remain at liberty without committing another offense.
10Discharge of the petitioner from mandatory supervised release
11does not discharge the petitioner's sentence, if time to be
12served remains; nor does it deprive the Department of
13jurisdiction over the petitioner, if time to be served remains.
14    (g) Beginning on the effective date of this amendatory Act
15of the 101st General Assembly, notwithstanding any other law to
16the contrary, all persons serving sentences in the Department
17who meet the requirements of subsection (b) of this Section are
18eligible to petition to participate in the Program. The
19Department shall establish a system to allow for the orderly
20disposition of the applications of those presently
21incarcerated as they become eligible.
22    (h) After 8 years of participation in the Program, the
23participant may petition the Governor for executive clemency
24under Section 3-3-13 of this Code.
25    (i) The Department shall select a panel of independent
26researchers to assess the effectiveness of the Program and to

 

 

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1make annual recommendations to the Governor and General
2Assembly as to whether the Program should be extended.
3    (j) Notwithstanding any other provision of law to the
4contrary, this Section shall control any release under this
5Program.
 
6    (730 ILCS 5/3-14-4)  (from Ch. 38, par. 1003-14-4)
7    Sec. 3-14-4. Half-way Houses.
8    (a) The Department may establish and maintain half-way
9houses for the residence of persons on parole or mandatory
10release or placed in prerelease custody under Section 5-8B-5.
11Such half-way houses shall be maintained apart from security
12institutions, except that the Director of Corrections is
13authorized to designate that any work or day release facility,
14or any portion thereof, may be used as a half-way house for the
15residence of persons on parole or mandatory supervised release
16or placed in prerelease custody under Section 5-8B-5.
17    (b) For those persons to be placed in a half-way house
18directly upon release from an institution on parole or
19mandatory supervised release status or upon placement in
20prerelease custody, not less than 15 days prior to the
21placement of such a person in such a half-way house, the
22Department of Corrections shall give written notice to the
23State's Attorney and the Sheriff of the county and the proper
24law enforcement agency of the municipality in which the
25half-way house is located of the identity of the person to be

 

 

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1placed in that program. Such identifying information shall
2include, but not be limited to, the name of the individual,
3age, physical description, photograph, the crime for which the
4person was originally sentenced to the Department of
5Corrections, and like information. The notice shall be given in
6all cases, except when placement of an emergency nature is
7necessary. In such emergency cases, oral notice shall be given
8to the appropriate parties within 24 hours with written notice
9to follow within 5 days.
10    (c) Persons on parole or mandatory supervised release
11status who have been previously released to the community, but
12who are not currently residing in a half-way house, may be
13placed in a half-way house upon the oral notification of the
14parties within 24 hours as indicated in subsection (b) of this
15Section. Such oral notification shall be followed with written
16notification within 5 days.
17(Source: P.A. 91-695, eff. 4-13-00.)
 
18    (730 ILCS 5/5-4-1)  (from Ch. 38, par. 1005-4-1)
19    Sec. 5-4-1. Sentencing hearing.
20    (a) Except when the death penalty is sought under hearing
21procedures otherwise specified, after a determination of
22guilt, a hearing shall be held to impose the sentence. However,
23prior to the imposition of sentence on an individual being
24sentenced for an offense based upon a charge for a violation of
25Section 11-501 of the Illinois Vehicle Code or a similar

 

 

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1provision of a local ordinance, the individual must undergo a
2professional evaluation to determine if an alcohol or other
3drug abuse problem exists and the extent of such a problem.
4Programs conducting these evaluations shall be licensed by the
5Department of Human Services. However, if the individual is not
6a resident of Illinois, the court may, in its discretion,
7accept an evaluation from a program in the state of such
8individual's residence. The court may in its sentencing order
9approve an eligible defendant for placement in a Department of
10Corrections impact incarceration program as provided in
11Section 5-8-1.1 or 5-8-1.3. The court may in its sentencing
12order recommend a defendant for placement in a Department of
13Corrections substance abuse treatment program as provided in
14paragraph (a) of subsection (1) of Section 3-2-2 conditioned
15upon the defendant being accepted in a program by the
16Department of Corrections. At the hearing the court shall:
17        (1) consider the evidence, if any, received upon the
18    trial;
19        (2) consider any presentence reports;
20        (3) consider the financial impact of incarceration
21    based on the financial impact statement filed with the
22    clerk of the court by the Department of Corrections;
23        (4) consider evidence and information offered by the
24    parties in aggravation and mitigation;
25        (4.5) consider substance abuse treatment, eligibility
26    screening, and an assessment, if any, of the defendant by

 

 

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1    an agent designated by the State of Illinois to provide
2    assessment services for the Illinois courts;
3        (5) hear arguments as to sentencing alternatives;
4        (6) afford the defendant the opportunity to make a
5    statement in his own behalf;
6        (7) afford the victim of a violent crime or a violation
7    of Section 11-501 of the Illinois Vehicle Code, or a
8    similar provision of a local ordinance, the opportunity to
9    present an oral or written statement, as guaranteed by
10    Article I, Section 8.1 of the Illinois Constitution and
11    provided in Section 6 of the Rights of Crime Victims and
12    Witnesses Act. The court shall allow a victim to make an
13    oral statement if the victim is present in the courtroom
14    and requests to make an oral or written statement. An oral
15    or written statement includes the victim or a
16    representative of the victim reading the written
17    statement. The court may allow persons impacted by the
18    crime who are not victims under subsection (a) of Section 3
19    of the Rights of Crime Victims and Witnesses Act to present
20    an oral or written statement. A victim and any person
21    making an oral statement shall not be put under oath or
22    subject to cross-examination. All statements offered under
23    this paragraph (7) shall become part of the record of the
24    court. In this paragraph (7), "victim of a violent crime"
25    means a person who is a victim of a violent crime for which
26    the defendant has been convicted after a bench or jury

 

 

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1    trial or a person who is the victim of a violent crime with
2    which the defendant was charged and the defendant has been
3    convicted under a plea agreement of a crime that is not a
4    violent crime as defined in subsection (c) of 3 of the
5    Rights of Crime Victims and Witnesses Act;
6        (7.5) afford a qualified person affected by: (i) a
7    violation of Section 405, 405.1, 405.2, or 407 of the
8    Illinois Controlled Substances Act or a violation of
9    Section 55 or Section 65 of the Methamphetamine Control and
10    Community Protection Act; or (ii) a Class 4 felony
11    violation of Section 11-14, 11-14.3 except as described in
12    subdivisions (a)(2)(A) and (a)(2)(B), 11-15, 11-17, 11-18,
13    11-18.1, or 11-19 of the Criminal Code of 1961 or the
14    Criminal Code of 2012, committed by the defendant the
15    opportunity to make a statement concerning the impact on
16    the qualified person and to offer evidence in aggravation
17    or mitigation; provided that the statement and evidence
18    offered in aggravation or mitigation shall first be
19    prepared in writing in conjunction with the State's
20    Attorney before it may be presented orally at the hearing.
21    Sworn testimony offered by the qualified person is subject
22    to the defendant's right to cross-examine. All statements
23    and evidence offered under this paragraph (7.5) shall
24    become part of the record of the court. In this paragraph
25    (7.5), "qualified person" means any person who: (i) lived
26    or worked within the territorial jurisdiction where the

 

 

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1    offense took place when the offense took place; or (ii) is
2    familiar with various public places within the territorial
3    jurisdiction where the offense took place when the offense
4    took place. "Qualified person" includes any peace officer
5    or any member of any duly organized State, county, or
6    municipal peace officer unit assigned to the territorial
7    jurisdiction where the offense took place when the offense
8    took place;
9        (8) in cases of reckless homicide afford the victim's
10    spouse, guardians, parents or other immediate family
11    members an opportunity to make oral statements;
12        (9) in cases involving a felony sex offense as defined
13    under the Sex Offender Management Board Act, consider the
14    results of the sex offender evaluation conducted pursuant
15    to Section 5-3-2 of this Act; and
16        (10) make a finding of whether a motor vehicle was used
17    in the commission of the offense for which the defendant is
18    being sentenced.
19    (b) All sentences shall be imposed by the judge based upon
20his independent assessment of the elements specified above and
21any agreement as to sentence reached by the parties. The judge
22who presided at the trial or the judge who accepted the plea of
23guilty shall impose the sentence unless he is no longer sitting
24as a judge in that court. Where the judge does not impose
25sentence at the same time on all defendants who are convicted
26as a result of being involved in the same offense, the

 

 

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1defendant or the State's Attorney may advise the sentencing
2court of the disposition of any other defendants who have been
3sentenced.
4    (b-1) In imposing a sentence of imprisonment or periodic
5imprisonment for a Class 3 or Class 4 felony for which a
6sentence of probation or conditional discharge is an available
7sentence, if the defendant has no prior sentence of probation
8or conditional discharge and no prior conviction for a violent
9crime, the defendant shall not be sentenced to imprisonment
10before review and consideration of a presentence report and
11determination and explanation of why the particular evidence,
12information, factor in aggravation, factual finding, or other
13reasons support a sentencing determination that one or more of
14the factors under subsection (a) of Section 5-6-1 of this Code
15apply and that probation or conditional discharge is not an
16appropriate sentence.
17    (c) In imposing a sentence for a violent crime or for an
18offense of operating or being in physical control of a vehicle
19while under the influence of alcohol, any other drug or any
20combination thereof, or a similar provision of a local
21ordinance, when such offense resulted in the personal injury to
22someone other than the defendant, the trial judge shall specify
23on the record the particular evidence, information, factors in
24mitigation and aggravation or other reasons that led to his
25sentencing determination. The full verbatim record of the
26sentencing hearing shall be filed with the clerk of the court

 

 

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1and shall be a public record.
2    (c-1) In imposing a sentence for the offense of aggravated
3kidnapping for ransom, home invasion, armed robbery,
4aggravated vehicular hijacking, aggravated discharge of a
5firearm, or armed violence with a category I weapon or category
6II weapon, the trial judge shall make a finding as to whether
7the conduct leading to conviction for the offense resulted in
8great bodily harm to a victim, and shall enter that finding and
9the basis for that finding in the record.
10    (c-1.5) Notwithstanding any other provision of law to the
11contrary, in imposing a sentence for an offense that requires a
12mandatory minimum sentence of imprisonment or probation or
13conditional discharge of one year or more, the court may
14sentence the offender to probation or conditional discharge or
15other non-imprisonment sentence it deems appropriate instead
16of to a sentence of imprisonment or to a lesser sentence of
17imprisonment, probation, or conditional discharge than the
18minimum sentence of imprisonment, probation, or conditional
19discharge provided for the offense if the court finds that the
20defendant does not pose a risk to public safety and the
21interest of justice requires the non-imposition of the
22mandatory sentence of imprisonment or a lesser sentence of
23imprisonment, probation, or conditional discharge. The court
24must state on the record its reasons for not imposing the
25minimum sentence of imprisonment or a lesser sentence of
26imprisonment, probation, or conditional discharge. If the

 

 

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1defendant has been charged with an offense involving the use,
2possession, or discharge of a firearm, the court may only
3deviate from a mandatory minimum sentence or probation or
4conditional discharge requirement if the defendant's conduct
5involves a violation of subsection (c) of Section 24-1 of the
6Criminal Code of 2012, subsection (a) of Section 24-1.1 of the
7Criminal Code of 2012, or sentencing under paragraph (1), (2),
8or (3) of subsection (d) of Section 24-1.6 of the Criminal Code
9of 2012, it is the express recommendation of a presentence
10investigation, and there is clear articulable evidence that the
11defendant is not a threat to the public safety. The court's
12reason for deviating in this way must be fully stated by the
13court into the record at the time of sentencing. An offender
14convicted of a forcible felony as defined in Section 2-8 of the
15Criminal Code of 2012, residential burglary under Section 19-3
16of the Criminal Code of 2012, a sex offense under Article 11 of
17the Criminal Code of 2012, or any offense resulting in the
18infliction of great bodily harm to another may not be sentenced
19to a lesser term of imprisonment, probation, or conditional
20discharge under this subsection (c-1.5).
21    (c-2) If the defendant is sentenced to prison, other than
22when a sentence of natural life imprisonment or a sentence of
23death is imposed, at the time the sentence is imposed the judge
24shall state on the record in open court the approximate period
25of time the defendant will serve in custody according to the
26then current statutory rules and regulations for sentence

 

 

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1credit found in Section 3-6-3 and other related provisions of
2this Code. This statement is intended solely to inform the
3public, has no legal effect on the defendant's actual release,
4and may not be relied on by the defendant on appeal.
5    The judge's statement, to be given after pronouncing the
6sentence, other than when the sentence is imposed for one of
7the offenses enumerated in paragraph (a)(4) of Section 3-6-3,
8shall include the following:
9    "The purpose of this statement is to inform the public of
10the actual period of time this defendant is likely to spend in
11prison as a result of this sentence. The actual period of
12prison time served is determined by the statutes of Illinois as
13applied to this sentence by the Illinois Department of
14Corrections and the Illinois Prisoner Review Board. In this
15case, assuming the defendant receives all of his or her
16sentence credit, the period of estimated actual custody is ...
17years and ... months, less up to 180 days additional earned
18sentence credit. If the defendant, because of his or her own
19misconduct or failure to comply with the institutional
20regulations, does not receive those credits, the actual time
21served in prison will be longer. The defendant may also receive
22an additional one-half day sentence credit for each day of
23participation in vocational, industry, substance abuse, and
24educational programs as provided for by Illinois statute."
25    When the sentence is imposed for one of the offenses
26enumerated in paragraph (a)(2) of Section 3-6-3, other than

 

 

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1first degree murder, and the offense was committed on or after
2June 19, 1998, and when the sentence is imposed for reckless
3homicide as defined in subsection (e) of Section 9-3 of the
4Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012 if the
5offense was committed on or after January 1, 1999, and when the
6sentence is imposed for aggravated driving under the influence
7of alcohol, other drug or drugs, or intoxicating compound or
8compounds, or any combination thereof as defined in
9subparagraph (F) of paragraph (1) of subsection (d) of Section
1011-501 of the Illinois Vehicle Code, and when the sentence is
11imposed for aggravated arson if the offense was committed on or
12after July 27, 2001 (the effective date of Public Act 92-176),
13and when the sentence is imposed for aggravated driving under
14the influence of alcohol, other drug or drugs, or intoxicating
15compound or compounds, or any combination thereof as defined in
16subparagraph (C) of paragraph (1) of subsection (d) of Section
1711-501 of the Illinois Vehicle Code committed on or after
18January 1, 2011 (the effective date of Public Act 96-1230), the
19judge's statement, to be given after pronouncing the sentence,
20shall include the following:
21    "The purpose of this statement is to inform the public of
22the actual period of time this defendant is likely to spend in
23prison as a result of this sentence. The actual period of
24prison time served is determined by the statutes of Illinois as
25applied to this sentence by the Illinois Department of
26Corrections and the Illinois Prisoner Review Board. In this

 

 

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1case, the defendant is entitled to no more than 4 1/2 days of
2sentence credit for each month of his or her sentence of
3imprisonment. Therefore, this defendant will serve at least 85%
4of his or her sentence. Assuming the defendant receives 4 1/2
5days credit for each month of his or her sentence, the period
6of estimated actual custody is ... years and ... months. If the
7defendant, because of his or her own misconduct or failure to
8comply with the institutional regulations receives lesser
9credit, the actual time served in prison will be longer."
10    When a sentence of imprisonment is imposed for first degree
11murder and the offense was committed on or after June 19, 1998,
12the judge's statement, to be given after pronouncing the
13sentence, shall include the following:
14    "The purpose of this statement is to inform the public of
15the actual period of time this defendant is likely to spend in
16prison as a result of this sentence. The actual period of
17prison time served is determined by the statutes of Illinois as
18applied to this sentence by the Illinois Department of
19Corrections and the Illinois Prisoner Review Board. In this
20case, the defendant is not entitled to sentence credit.
21Therefore, this defendant will serve 100% of his or her
22sentence."
23    When the sentencing order recommends placement in a
24substance abuse program for any offense that results in
25incarceration in a Department of Corrections facility and the
26crime was committed on or after September 1, 2003 (the

 

 

HB3212- 107 -LRB101 07501 RLC 56420 b

1effective date of Public Act 93-354), the judge's statement, in
2addition to any other judge's statement required under this
3Section, to be given after pronouncing the sentence, shall
4include the following:
5    "The purpose of this statement is to inform the public of
6the actual period of time this defendant is likely to spend in
7prison as a result of this sentence. The actual period of
8prison time served is determined by the statutes of Illinois as
9applied to this sentence by the Illinois Department of
10Corrections and the Illinois Prisoner Review Board. In this
11case, the defendant shall receive no earned sentence credit
12under clause (3) of subsection (a) of Section 3-6-3 until he or
13she participates in and completes a substance abuse treatment
14program or receives a waiver from the Director of Corrections
15pursuant to clause (4.5) of subsection (a) of Section 3-6-3."
16    (c-4) Before the sentencing hearing and as part of the
17presentence investigation under Section 5-3-1, the court shall
18inquire of the defendant whether the defendant is currently
19serving in or is a veteran of the Armed Forces of the United
20States. If the defendant is currently serving in the Armed
21Forces of the United States or is a veteran of the Armed Forces
22of the United States and has been diagnosed as having a mental
23illness by a qualified psychiatrist or clinical psychologist or
24physician, the court may:
25        (1) order that the officer preparing the presentence
26    report consult with the United States Department of

 

 

HB3212- 108 -LRB101 07501 RLC 56420 b

1    Veterans Affairs, Illinois Department of Veterans'
2    Affairs, or another agency or person with suitable
3    knowledge or experience for the purpose of providing the
4    court with information regarding treatment options
5    available to the defendant, including federal, State, and
6    local programming; and
7        (2) consider the treatment recommendations of any
8    diagnosing or treating mental health professionals
9    together with the treatment options available to the
10    defendant in imposing sentence.
11    For the purposes of this subsection (c-4), "qualified
12psychiatrist" means a reputable physician licensed in Illinois
13to practice medicine in all its branches, who has specialized
14in the diagnosis and treatment of mental and nervous disorders
15for a period of not less than 5 years.
16    (c-6) In imposing a sentence, the trial judge shall
17specify, on the record, the particular evidence and other
18reasons which led to his or her determination that a motor
19vehicle was used in the commission of the offense.
20    (d) When the defendant is committed to the Department of
21Corrections, the State's Attorney shall and counsel for the
22defendant may file a statement with the clerk of the court to
23be transmitted to the department, agency or institution to
24which the defendant is committed to furnish such department,
25agency or institution with the facts and circumstances of the
26offense for which the person was committed together with all

 

 

HB3212- 109 -LRB101 07501 RLC 56420 b

1other factual information accessible to them in regard to the
2person prior to his commitment relative to his habits,
3associates, disposition and reputation and any other facts and
4circumstances which may aid such department, agency or
5institution during its custody of such person. The clerk shall
6within 10 days after receiving any such statements transmit a
7copy to such department, agency or institution and a copy to
8the other party, provided, however, that this shall not be
9cause for delay in conveying the person to the department,
10agency or institution to which he has been committed.
11    (e) The clerk of the court shall transmit to the
12department, agency or institution, if any, to which the
13defendant is committed, the following:
14        (1) the sentence imposed;
15        (2) any statement by the court of the basis for
16    imposing the sentence;
17        (3) any presentence reports;
18        (3.5) any sex offender evaluations;
19        (3.6) any substance abuse treatment eligibility
20    screening and assessment of the defendant by an agent
21    designated by the State of Illinois to provide assessment
22    services for the Illinois courts;
23        (4) the number of days, if any, which the defendant has
24    been in custody and for which he is entitled to credit
25    against the sentence, which information shall be provided
26    to the clerk by the sheriff;

 

 

HB3212- 110 -LRB101 07501 RLC 56420 b

1        (4.1) any finding of great bodily harm made by the
2    court with respect to an offense enumerated in subsection
3    (c-1);
4        (5) all statements filed under subsection (d) of this
5    Section;
6        (6) any medical or mental health records or summaries
7    of the defendant;
8        (7) the municipality where the arrest of the offender
9    or the commission of the offense has occurred, where such
10    municipality has a population of more than 25,000 persons;
11        (8) all statements made and evidence offered under
12    paragraph (7) of subsection (a) of this Section; and
13        (9) all additional matters which the court directs the
14    clerk to transmit.
15    (f) In cases in which the court finds that a motor vehicle
16was used in the commission of the offense for which the
17defendant is being sentenced, the clerk of the court shall,
18within 5 days thereafter, forward a report of such conviction
19to the Secretary of State.
20(Source: P.A. 99-861, eff. 1-1-17; 99-938, eff. 1-1-18;
21100-961, eff. 1-1-19; revised 10-3-18.)
 
22    (730 ILCS 5/Art. 5-8B heading new)
23
ARTICLE 8B. PRERELEASE CUSTODY

 
24    (730 ILCS 5/5-8B-1 new)

 

 

HB3212- 111 -LRB101 07501 RLC 56420 b

1    Sec. 5-8B-1. Prerelease Custody Law. This Article may be
2cited as the Prerelease Custody Law.
 
3    (730 ILCS 5/5-8B-5 new)
4    Sec. 5-8B-5. Prerelease custody for risk and needs
5assessment system participants.
6    (a) This Section applies in the case of a committed person
7who:
8        (1) has earned sentence credits under the risk and
9    needs assessment system developed under Section 3-2-2.6 in
10    an amount that is equal to the remainder of the committed
11    person's imposed term of imprisonment;
12        (2) has shown through the periodic risk reassessments a
13    demonstrated recidivism risk reduction or has maintained a
14    minimum or low recidivism risk, during the committed
15    person's term of imprisonment;
16        (3) has been classified by the chief administrative
17    officer of the correctional institution or facility as
18    otherwise qualified to be transferred into prerelease
19    custody; and
20        (4)(A) has been determined under the system to be a
21    minimum or low risk to recidivate; or
22        (B) has had a petition to be transferred to prerelease
23    custody approved by the chief administrative officer of the
24    correctional institution or facility, after the chief
25    administrative officer's determination that:

 

 

HB3212- 112 -LRB101 07501 RLC 56420 b

1            (i) the committed person would not be a danger to
2        society if transferred to prerelease custody;
3            (ii) the committed person has made a good faith
4        effort to lower their recidivism risk through
5        participation in recidivism reduction programs or
6        productive activities;
7            (iii) the committed person is unlikely to
8        recidivate; and
9            (iv) the transfer of the committed person to
10        prerelease custody is otherwise appropriate.
11    (b) A committed person shall be placed in prerelease
12custody as follows:
13        (1) A committed person placed in prerelease custody
14    under this Section who is placed in home confinement shall:
15            (A) be subject to 24-hour electronic monitoring
16        that enables the prompt identification of the
17        committed person, location, and time, in the case of
18        any violation of subparagraph (B);
19            (B) remain in the committed person's residence,
20        except that the committed person may leave the
21        committed person's home in order to, subject to the
22        approval of the Director of Corrections to:
23                (i) perform a job or job-related activities,
24            including an apprenticeship, or participate in
25            job-seeking activities;
26                (ii) participate in evidence-based recidivism

 

 

HB3212- 113 -LRB101 07501 RLC 56420 b

1            reduction programming or productive activities
2            assigned by the system, or similar activities;
3                (iii) perform community service;
4                (iv) participate in crime victim restoration
5            activities;
6                (v) receive medical treatment; or
7                (vi) attend religious activities; and
8            (C) comply with other conditions as the Director
9        determines appropriate.
10        (2) If the electronic monitoring of a committed person
11    described in paragraph (1) is infeasible for technical or
12    religious reasons, the Director of Corrections may use
13    alternative means of monitoring a committed person placed
14    in home confinement that the Director determines are as
15    effective or more effective than the electronic monitoring
16    described in subparagraph (A) of paragraph (1).
17        (3) The Director of Corrections may modify the
18    conditions described in paragraph (1) if the Director
19    determines that a compelling reason exists to do so, and
20    that the committed person has demonstrated exemplary
21    compliance with such conditions.
22        (4)(A) Except as provided in subsection (d), a
23    committed person who is placed in home confinement shall
24    remain in home confinement until the committed person has
25    served not less than 85% of the committed person's imposed
26    term of imprisonment.

 

 

HB3212- 114 -LRB101 07501 RLC 56420 b

1        (B) A committed person placed in prerelease custody
2    under this Section who is placed at a residential reentry
3    center shall be subject to the conditions as the Director
4    of Corrections determines appropriate.
5    (c) In determining appropriate conditions for committed
6persons placed in prerelease custody under this Section, the
7Director of Corrections shall, to the extent practicable,
8provide that increasingly less restrictive conditions shall be
9imposed on committed persons who demonstrate continued
10compliance with the conditions of such prerelease custody, so
11as to most effectively prepare such committed persons for
12reentry.
13    (d) If a committed person violates a condition of the
14committed person's prerelease custody, the Director of
15Corrections may impose any additional conditions on the
16committed person's prerelease custody as the Director of
17Corrections determines appropriate, or revoke the committed
18person's prerelease custody and require the committed person to
19serve the remainder of the term of imprisonment to which the
20committed person was sentenced, or any portion thereof, in a
21correctional institution or facility.
22    (e) The Director of Corrections, in consultation with the
23Director of Court Services, shall issue guidelines, for use by
24the Department of Corrections in determining:
25        (1) the appropriate type of prerelease custody and
26    level of supervision for a committed person placed on

 

 

HB3212- 115 -LRB101 07501 RLC 56420 b

1    prerelease custody under this Section; and
2        (2) consequences for a violation of a condition of the
3    prerelease custody by the committed person, including a
4    return to the correctional institution or facility and a
5    reassessment of evidence-based recidivism risk level under
6    the system.
7    (f) The Director of Corrections shall, to the greatest
8extent practicable, enter into agreements with the Division of
9Probation Services to supervise committed persons placed in
10home confinement or community supervision under this Section.
11The agreements shall:
12        (1) authorize county probation departments to exercise
13    the authority granted to the Director under subsections (c)
14    and (d); and
15        (2) take into account the resource requirements of
16    county probation departments as a result of the transfer of
17    Department of Corrections committed persons to prerelease
18    custody.
19    (g) The Department of Corrections shall, to the greatest
20extent practicable, offer assistance to any committed person
21not under its supervision during prerelease custody under this
22Section.
23    (h) Any prerelease custody into which a committed person is
24placed under this Section may not include a condition
25prohibiting the committed person from receiving mentoring
26services from a person who provided those services to the

 

 

HB3212- 116 -LRB101 07501 RLC 56420 b

1committed person while the committed person was incarcerated,
2except that the chief administrative officer of the facility at
3which the committed person was incarcerated may waive the
4requirement under this paragraph if the chief administrative
5officer finds that the provision of such services would pose a
6significant security risk to the committed person, persons who
7provide such services, or any other person. The chief
8administrative officer shall provide written notice of any such
9waiver to the person providing mentoring services and to the
10committed person.
 
11    Section 20. The County Jail Act is amended by changing
12Section 17.5 as follows:
 
13    (730 ILCS 125/17.5)
14    Sec. 17.5. Pregnant female prisoners and new mothers.
15Notwithstanding any other statute, directive, or
16administrative regulation, when a pregnant female prisoner is
17brought to a hospital from a county jail for the purpose of
18delivering her baby, no handcuffs, shackles, or restraints of
19any kind may be used during her transport to a medical facility
20for the purpose of delivering her baby and for at least 3
21months after delivery. Under no circumstances may leg irons or
22shackles or waist shackles be used on any pregnant female
23prisoner who is in labor. In addition, restraint of a pregnant
24female prisoner in the custody of the Cook County shall comply

 

 

HB3212- 117 -LRB101 07501 RLC 56420 b

1with Section 3-15003.6 of the Counties Code. Upon the pregnant
2female prisoner's entry to the hospital delivery room, 2 county
3correctional officers must be posted immediately outside the
4delivery room. The Sheriff must provide for adequate personnel
5to monitor the pregnant female prisoner during her transport to
6and from the hospital and during her stay at the hospital.
7(Source: P.A. 100-1051, eff. 1-1-19.)
 
8    Section 95. No acceleration or delay. Where this Act makes
9changes in a statute that is represented in this Act by text
10that is not yet or no longer in effect (for example, a Section
11represented by multiple versions), the use of that text does
12not accelerate or delay the taking effect of (i) the changes
13made by this Act or (ii) provisions derived from any other
14Public Act.

 

 

HB3212- 118 -LRB101 07501 RLC 56420 b

1 INDEX
2 Statutes amended in order of appearance
3    15 ILCS 335/4from Ch. 124, par. 24
4    720 ILCS 5/16-1from Ch. 38, par. 16-1
5    720 ILCS 5/16-25
6    725 ILCS 5/116-2.2 new
7    730 ILCS 5/3-1-2from Ch. 38, par. 1003-1-2
8    730 ILCS 5/3-2-2.5 new
9    730 ILCS 5/3-2-2.6 new
10    730 ILCS 5/3-2-2.7 new
11    730 ILCS 5/3-2-2.8 new
12    730 ILCS 5/3-4-3from Ch. 38, par. 1003-4-3
13    730 ILCS 5/3-6-1from Ch. 38, par. 1003-6-1
14    730 ILCS 5/3-6-3from Ch. 38, par. 1003-6-3
15    730 ILCS 5/3-6-7
16    730 ILCS 5/3-7-2from Ch. 38, par. 1003-7-2
17    730 ILCS 5/3-7-2afrom Ch. 38, par. 1003-7-2a
18    730 ILCS 5/3-8-4from Ch. 38, par. 1003-8-4
19    730 ILCS 5/3-14-1.1 new
20    730 ILCS 5/3-14-4from Ch. 38, par. 1003-14-4
21    730 ILCS 5/5-4-1from Ch. 38, par. 1005-4-1
22    730 ILCS 5/Art. 5-8B
23    heading new
24    730 ILCS 5/5-8B-1 new
25    730 ILCS 5/5-8B-5 new

 

 

HB3212- 119 -LRB101 07501 RLC 56420 b

1    730 ILCS 125/17.5