|
| | 102ND GENERAL ASSEMBLY
State of Illinois
2021 and 2022 HB3850 Introduced 2/22/2021, by Rep. Lindsey LaPointe SYNOPSIS AS INTRODUCED: |
| 730 ILCS 166/5 | | 730 ILCS 166/10 | | 730 ILCS 166/25 | | 730 ILCS 166/30 | | 730 ILCS 166/35 | | 730 ILCS 167/10 | | 730 ILCS 167/20 | | 730 ILCS 167/25 | | 730 ILCS 167/35 | | 730 ILCS 167/40 new | | 730 ILCS 167/45 new | | 730 ILCS 167/50 new | | 730 ILCS 168/10 | | 730 ILCS 168/20 | | 730 ILCS 168/25 | | 730 ILCS 168/35 | | 730 ILCS 168/45 new | | 730 ILCS 168/50 new | |
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Amends the Drug Court Treatment Act. Defines "clinical treatment plan" and "peer recovery coach". Provides that the assessment of the defendant shall include a validated clinical assessment. The clinical assessment shall include, but not be limited to, assessments of substance use and mental and behavioral health needs. The clinical assessment shall be administered by a qualified clinician and used to inform any Clinical Treatment Plans. Provides that the court may establish a mentorship program that
provides access and support to program participants by peer recovery coaches.
Amends the Veterans and Servicemembers Court Treatment Act. Provides that peer recovery coaches shall work to help facilitate participants' independence
for continued success once the supports of the court are no longer
available to them. Provides for education seminars for Veterans and Servicemembers,
court prosecutors, judges, and public defenders. Amends the Mental Health Court Treatment Act. Provides that the court may establish a mentorship program that
provides access and support to program participants by peer recovery coaches. Makes other changes.
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| | A BILL FOR |
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1 | | AN ACT concerning criminal law.
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2 | | Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
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3 | | represented in the General Assembly:
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4 | | Section 5. The Drug Court Treatment Act is amended by |
5 | | changing Sections 5, 10, 25, 30, and 35 as follows:
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6 | | (730 ILCS 166/5)
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7 | | Sec. 5. Purposes. The General Assembly recognizes that |
8 | | individuals struggling with drug and alcohol dependency or
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9 | | addiction and substance abuse problems may come into contact
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10 | | with the criminal justice system and be charged with felony or
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11 | | misdemeanor offenses. The General Assembly also recognizes
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12 | | that substance abuse issues and mental illness co-occur in a
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13 | | substantial percentage of criminal defendants the use and
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14 | | abuse of drugs has a dramatic effect on the criminal justice |
15 | | system in the
State
of Illinois . There is a critical need for |
16 | | the criminal justice system to recognize individuals |
17 | | struggling
with these issues, provide alternatives to |
18 | | incarceration to
address incidences a criminal justice system |
19 | | program
that
will reduce the incidence of drug use, drug |
20 | | addiction, and provide appropriate
access to treatment and |
21 | | support to persons with substance abuse
issues crimes |
22 | | committed as
a
result of drug use and drug addiction . It is the |
23 | | intent of the General Assembly
to create specialized drug |
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1 | | courts , in accordance with national best practices,
for |
2 | | addressing addiction and co-occurring disorders with the |
3 | | necessary flexibility to meet the needs for an array of |
4 | | services and
supports among participants in
drug court |
5 | | programs problems in the State of Illinois.
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6 | | (Source: P.A. 92-58, eff. 1-1-02.)
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7 | | (730 ILCS 166/10)
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8 | | Sec. 10. Definitions. As used in this Act:
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9 | | "Drug court", "drug court program", or "program" means an |
10 | | immediate and
highly
structured judicial intervention process |
11 | | for substance abuse treatment of
eligible defendants that |
12 | | brings together substance abuse professionals, local
social |
13 | | programs, and intensive judicial monitoring in accordance with |
14 | | the
nationally recommended 10 key components of drug courts.
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15 | | "Drug court professional" means a member of the drug court |
16 | | team, including but not limited to
a judge, prosecutor, |
17 | | defense attorney,
probation officer, coordinator, licensed |
18 | | treatment provider, or peer recovery coach.
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19 | | "Pre-adjudicatory drug court program" means a program that |
20 | | allows
the defendant,
with the consent of the prosecution, to |
21 | | expedite the defendant's criminal case
before conviction or |
22 | | before filing of a criminal case and requires successful
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23 | | completion of the drug court program as part of the agreement.
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24 | | "Post-adjudicatory drug court program" means a program in |
25 | | which the
defendant has admitted
guilt
or has been found |
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1 | | guilty and agrees, along with the prosecution, to enter a
drug
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2 | | court program as part of the defendant's sentence.
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3 | | "Combination drug court program" means a drug court |
4 | | program that includes a
pre-adjudicatory drug court program |
5 | | and a post-adjudicatory drug court program.
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6 | | "Clinical Treatment Plan" means an evidence-based,
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7 | | comprehensive, and individualized plan that defines the scope |
8 | | of
treatment services to be delivered by a PSC treatment |
9 | | provider. |
10 | | "Peer recovery coach" means a mentor assigned to a |
11 | | defendant
during participation in a drug treatment court |
12 | | program who has been
trained and certified by the court to |
13 | | guide and mentor the participant
to successfully complete the |
14 | | assigned requirements. Peer recovery
coaches should be |
15 | | individuals with lived experience and work to
help facilitate |
16 | | participants' independence for continued success
once the |
17 | | supports of the court are no longer available to them. |
18 | | (Source: P.A. 97-946, eff. 8-13-12.)
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19 | | (730 ILCS 166/25)
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20 | | Sec. 25. Procedure.
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21 | | (a) The court shall order an eligibility screening and an |
22 | | assessment of the
defendant by an agent designated by the |
23 | | State of Illinois to provide assessment
services for the |
24 | | Illinois Courts. The assessment shall include a validated |
25 | | clinical assessment.
The clinical assessment shall include, |
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1 | | but not be limited to,
assessments of substance use, mental |
2 | | and behavioral health needs.
The clinical assessment shall be |
3 | | administered by a qualified clinician
and used to inform any |
4 | | Clinical Treatment Plans. Clinical Treatment
Plans shall be |
5 | | developed, in part, upon the known availability of
treatment |
6 | | resources available. An assessment need not be ordered if the
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7 | | court finds a valid assessment related to the present charge |
8 | | pending against
the defendant has been completed within the |
9 | | previous 60 days.
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10 | | (b) The judge shall inform the defendant that if the |
11 | | defendant fails to
meet the conditions of the drug court |
12 | | program, eligibility to participate in
the
program may be |
13 | | revoked and the defendant may be sentenced or the prosecution
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14 | | continued as provided in
the
Unified Code of Corrections for |
15 | | the crime charged.
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16 | | (c) The defendant shall execute a written agreement as to |
17 | | his or her
participation in the program and shall agree to all |
18 | | of the terms and conditions
of the program, including but not |
19 | | limited to the possibility of sanctions or
incarceration for |
20 | | failing to abide or comply with the terms of the program.
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21 | | (d) In addition to any conditions authorized under the |
22 | | Pretrial Services
Act and Section 5-6-3 of the Unified Code of |
23 | | Corrections, the court may order
the defendant to complete |
24 | | substance abuse treatment in an outpatient,
inpatient,
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25 | | residential, or jail-based custodial treatment program. |
26 | | Substance abuse treatment
programs must be licensed by the |
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1 | | State of Illinois as a Substance Use
Prevention and Recovery |
2 | | (SUPR) provider. The court may also order the
defendant to |
3 | | complete mental health counseling in an inpatient or |
4 | | outpatient
basis, in accordance with a physician's |
5 | | recommendation and comply with
physicians' recommendations |
6 | | regarding medications and all follow up
treatment. This |
7 | | treatment may be for conditions including but not limited to |
8 | | trauma, port-traumatic stress disorder, traumatic brain injury |
9 | | and depression. Any period of time a
defendant shall serve in a |
10 | | jail-based treatment program may not be reduced by
the |
11 | | accumulation of good time or other credits and may be for a |
12 | | period of up to
120 days.
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13 | | (e) The drug court program shall include a regimen of |
14 | | graduated
requirements and rewards and sanctions, including |
15 | | but not limited to: fines,
fees, costs, restitution, |
16 | | incarceration of up to 180 days, individual and group
therapy, |
17 | | drug
analysis testing, close monitoring by the court at a |
18 | | minimum of once every 30
days
and supervision of progress, |
19 | | educational or vocational counseling as
appropriate, and other
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20 | | requirements necessary to fulfill the drug court program. If |
21 | | the defendant needs treatment for opioid abuse or dependence, |
22 | | the court may not prohibit the defendant from participating in |
23 | | and
receiving medication assisted treatment under the care of
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24 | | a physician licensed in this State to practice medicine in all
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25 | | of its branches. Drug court participants may not be required |
26 | | to refrain from using medication assisted treatment as a term |
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1 | | or condition of successful completion of the drug court |
2 | | program. |
3 | | (f) Recognizing that individuals struggling with mental
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4 | | health, addiction, and related co-occurring disorders have |
5 | | often
experienced trauma, drug court programs may include |
6 | | specialized
service programs specifically designed to address |
7 | | trauma. These
specialized services may be offered to |
8 | | defendants admitted to the
drug court program. Judicial |
9 | | circuits establishing these specialized
programs shall partner |
10 | | with advocates, survivors, and service providers
in the |
11 | | development of the programs. Trauma-informed services and
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12 | | programming should be operated in accordance with best |
13 | | practices
outlined by the Substance Abuse and Mental Health |
14 | | Service
Administration's National Center for Trauma Informed |
15 | | Care (SAMHSA). |
16 | | (g) The court may establish a mentorship program that
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17 | | provides access and support to program participants by peer
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18 | | recovery coaches. Courts shall be responsible to administer |
19 | | the
mentorship program with the support of mentors and local |
20 | | mental
health and substance abuse treatment organizations, |
21 | | recovery coaches
shall be trained and licensed by the court |
22 | | prior to being assigned to
participants in the program.
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23 | | (Source: P.A. 99-554, eff. 1-1-17 .)
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24 | | (730 ILCS 166/30)
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25 | | Sec. 30. Mental health and substance Substance abuse |
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1 | | treatment.
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2 | | (a) The drug court program shall maintain a network of |
3 | | substance abuse
treatment programs representing a continuum of |
4 | | graduated substance abuse
treatment options commensurate with |
5 | | the needs of defendants ; these shall include programs with the
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6 | | State of Illinois and community-based programs supported,
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7 | | sanctioned, and licensed as SUPR providers by the State of |
8 | | Illinois .
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9 | | (b) Any substance abuse treatment program to which |
10 | | defendants are referred
must be licensed by the State of |
11 | | Illinois
as SUPR providers, meet all of the rules and |
12 | | governing programs in
Parts 2030 and 2060 of Title 77 of the |
13 | | Illinois Administrative Code.
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14 | | (c) The drug court program may, at its discretion, employ |
15 | | additional
services or
interventions, as it deems necessary on |
16 | | a case by case basis. |
17 | | (d) The Drug Court program may maintain or collaborate |
18 | | with
a network of mental health treatment programs |
19 | | representing a
continuum of treatment options commensurate |
20 | | with the needs of the
defendant and available resources |
21 | | including programs with the State
of Illinois and |
22 | | community-based programs supported and sanctioned by
the State |
23 | | of Illinois.
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24 | | (Source: P.A. 92-58, eff. 1-1-02.)
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25 | | (730 ILCS 166/35)
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1 | | Sec. 35. Violation; termination; discharge.
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2 | | (a) If the court finds from the evidence presented |
3 | | including but not limited
to the reports or
proffers of proof |
4 | | from the drug court professionals that:
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5 | | (1) the defendant is not performing
satisfactorily
in |
6 | | the assigned program;
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7 | | (2) the defendant is not benefitting from education,
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8 | | treatment, or rehabilitation;
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9 | | (3) the defendant has engaged in criminal
conduct
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10 | | rendering him or her unsuitable for the program; or
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11 | | (4) the defendant has
otherwise
violated the terms and |
12 | | conditions of the program or his or her sentence or is
for |
13 | | any reason unable to participate;
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14 | | the court may impose reasonable sanctions
under prior written |
15 | | agreement of the defendant, including but not limited to
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16 | | imprisonment or dismissal of the defendant from the program |
17 | | and the court may
reinstate
criminal proceedings against him |
18 | | or her or proceed under Section 5-6-4 of the
Unified Code of |
19 | | Corrections for a violation of probation,
conditional |
20 | | discharge,
or supervision hearing. |
21 | | (a-5) A defendant who is assigned to a substance abuse |
22 | | treatment program under this Act for opioid abuse or |
23 | | dependence is not in violation of the terms or conditions of |
24 | | the program on the basis of his or her participation in |
25 | | medication assisted treatment under the care of a physician |
26 | | licensed in this State to practice medicine in all of its |
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1 | | branches.
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2 | | (b) Upon successful completion of the terms and conditions |
3 | | of the program,
the
court may dismiss the original charges |
4 | | against the defendant or successfully
terminate the |
5 | | defendant's sentence or otherwise discharge him or her from |
6 | | any
further proceedings against him or her in the original |
7 | | prosecution.
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8 | | (c) Upon successful completion of the terms and conditions |
9 | | of
the program, any State's Attorney may move to vacate any |
10 | | convictions
eligible for sealing under the Criminal |
11 | | Identification Act. Defendants may immediately file petitions |
12 | | to expunge vacated
convictions and the associated underlying |
13 | | records per the Criminal
Identification Act. In cases where |
14 | | the State's Attorney moves to vacate
a conviction, they may |
15 | | not object to expungement of that conviction
or the underlying |
16 | | record. |
17 | | (d) The drug court program may maintain or collaborate |
18 | | with
a network of legal aid organizations that specialize in |
19 | | conviction
relief to support participants navigating the |
20 | | expungement and sealing
process. |
21 | | (Source: P.A. 99-554, eff. 1-1-17 .)
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22 | | Section 10. The Veterans and Servicemembers Court
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23 | | Treatment Act is amended by changing Section 10, 20, 25, and 35 |
24 | | and by adding Sections 40, 45, and 50 as follows: |
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1 | | (730 ILCS 167/10)
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2 | | Sec. 10. Definitions. In this Act: |
3 | | "Combination Veterans and Servicemembers Court program" |
4 | | means a court program that
includes a pre-adjudicatory and a |
5 | | post-adjudicatory Veterans and Servicemembers court
program.
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6 | | "Court" means Veterans and Servicemembers Court. |
7 | | "IDVA" means the Illinois Department of Veterans' Affairs. |
8 | | "Peer recovery coach" means a volunteer veteran mentor |
9 | | assigned to a veteran or servicemember during participation in |
10 | | a veteran treatment court program who has been trained and |
11 | | certified by the court to guide and mentor the participant to |
12 | | successfully complete the assigned requirements. Peer recovery
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13 | | coaches shall work to help facilitate participants' |
14 | | independence
for continued success once the supports of the |
15 | | court are no longer
available to them. |
16 | | "Post-adjudicatory Veterans and Servicemembers Court |
17 | | Program" means a program in
which the defendant has admitted |
18 | | guilt or has been found guilty and agrees, along with the
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19 | | prosecution, to enter a Veterans and Servicemembers Court |
20 | | program as part of the defendant's
sentence.
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21 | | "Pre-adjudicatory Veterans and Servicemembers Court |
22 | | Program" means a program that
allows the defendant with the |
23 | | consent of the prosecution, to expedite the defendant's |
24 | | criminal
case before conviction or before filing of a criminal |
25 | | case and requires successful completion of
the Veterans and |
26 | | Servicemembers Court programs as part of the agreement.
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1 | | "Servicemember" means a person who is currently serving in |
2 | | the Army, Air Force,
Marines, Navy, or Coast Guard on active |
3 | | duty, reserve status or in the National Guard.
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4 | | "VA" means the United States Department of Veterans' |
5 | | Affairs. |
6 | | "VAC" means a veterans assistance commission. |
7 | | "Veteran" means a person who served in the active |
8 | | military, naval, or air service and who
was discharged or |
9 | | released therefrom under conditions other than dishonorable.
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10 | | "Veterans and Servicemembers Court professional" means a |
11 | | member of the Veterans and
Servicemembers Court team, |
12 | | including but not limited to a judge, prosecutor, defense
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13 | | attorney, probation officer, coordinator, treatment provider, |
14 | | or peer recovery coach.
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15 | | "Veterans and Servicemembers Court" means a court or |
16 | | program with an immediate and
highly structured judicial |
17 | | intervention process for substance abuse treatment, mental |
18 | | health, or
other assessed treatment needs of eligible veteran |
19 | | and servicemember defendants that brings
together substance |
20 | | abuse professionals, mental health professionals, VA |
21 | | professionals, local
social programs and intensive judicial |
22 | | monitoring in accordance with the nationally
recommended 10 |
23 | | key components of drug courts.
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24 | | "Clinical Treatment Plan" means an evidence-based,
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25 | | comprehensive, and individualized plan that defines the scope |
26 | | of
treatment services to be delivered by a PSC treatment |
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1 | | provider. |
2 | | (Source: P.A. 99-314, eff. 8-7-15; 99-819, eff. 8-15-16.) |
3 | | (730 ILCS 167/20) |
4 | | Sec. 20. Eligibility. Veterans and Servicemembers are |
5 | | eligible for Veterans and
Servicemembers Courts, provided the |
6 | | following:
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7 | | (a) A defendant, who is eligible for probation based on |
8 | | the nature of the crime convicted of and in consideration of |
9 | | his or her criminal background, if any, may be admitted into a |
10 | | Veterans and Servicemembers Court program
before adjudication |
11 | | only upon the agreement of the defendant and with the approval |
12 | | of the Court.
A defendant may be admitted into a Veterans and |
13 | | Servicemembers Court program post-adjudication only with the |
14 | | approval of the court. |
15 | | (b) A defendant shall be excluded from Veterans and |
16 | | Servicemembers Court program if
any of one of the following |
17 | | applies:
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18 | | (1) The crime is a crime of violence as set forth in |
19 | | clause (3) of this subsection (b). |
20 | | (2) The defendant does not demonstrate a willingness |
21 | | to participate in a treatment
program.
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22 | | (3) The defendant has been convicted of a crime of |
23 | | violence within the past 10
years excluding incarceration |
24 | | time, including first degree murder,
second degree murder, |
25 | | predatory criminal sexual assault of a child, aggravated |
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1 | | criminal
sexual assault, criminal sexual assault, armed |
2 | | robbery, aggravated arson, arson,
aggravated kidnapping |
3 | | and kidnapping, aggravated battery resulting in great |
4 | | bodily harm
or permanent disability, stalking, aggravated |
5 | | stalking, or any offense involving the
discharge of a |
6 | | firearm. |
7 | | (4) (Blank).
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8 | | (5) The crime for which the defendant has been |
9 | | convicted is non-probationable. |
10 | | (6) The sentence imposed on the defendant, whether the |
11 | | result of a plea or a finding of guilt, renders the |
12 | | defendant ineligible for probation.
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13 | | (c) Recognizing that individuals struggling with
mental |
14 | | health, addiction and related co-occurring disorders have
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15 | | often experienced trauma, veterans and servicemembers court |
16 | | programs
may include specialized service programs specifically |
17 | | designed to
address trauma. These specialized services may be |
18 | | offered to defendants
admitted to the mental health court |
19 | | program. Judicial circuits
establishing these specialized |
20 | | programs shall partner with advocates,
survivors, and service |
21 | | providers in the development of the programs.
Trauma-informed |
22 | | services and programming should be operated in
accordance with |
23 | | best practices outlined by the Substance Abuse
and Mental |
24 | | Health Service Administration's National Center for Trauma
|
25 | | Informed Care (SAMHSA). |
26 | | (Source: P.A. 99-480, eff. 9-9-15; 100-426, eff. 1-1-18 .) |
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1 | | (730 ILCS 167/25)
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2 | | Sec. 25. Procedure. |
3 | | (a) The Court shall order the defendant to submit to an |
4 | | eligibility screening and an
assessment through the VA, VAC, |
5 | | and/or the IDVA to provide information on the defendant's |
6 | | veteran
or servicemember status.
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7 | | (b) The Court shall order the defendant to submit to an |
8 | | eligibility screening and mental
health and drug/alcohol |
9 | | screening and assessment of the defendant by the VA, VAC, or by |
10 | | the IDVA to
provide assessment services for Illinois Courts. |
11 | | The assessment shall include a validated clinical assessment.
|
12 | | The clinical assessment shall include, but not be limited to,
|
13 | | assessments of substance use, mental and behavioral health |
14 | | needs.
The clinical assessment shall be administered by a |
15 | | qualified clinician
and used to inform any Clinical Treatment |
16 | | Plans. Clinical Treatment
Plans shall be developed, risks
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17 | | assessment and be based, in part, upon the known availability |
18 | | of treatment resources available to
the Veterans and |
19 | | Servicemembers Court. The assessment shall also include |
20 | | recommendations
for treatment of the conditions which are |
21 | | indicating a need for treatment under the monitoring
of the |
22 | | Court and be reflective of a level of risk assessed for the |
23 | | individual seeking admission. An
assessment need not be |
24 | | ordered if the Court finds a valid screening and/or assessment |
25 | | related to
the present charge pending against the defendant |
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1 | | has been completed within the previous 60
days.
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2 | | (c) The judge shall inform the defendant that if the |
3 | | defendant fails to meet the conditions
of the Veterans and |
4 | | Servicemembers Court program, eligibility to participate in |
5 | | the program may
be revoked and the defendant may be sentenced |
6 | | or the prosecution continued as provided in the
Unified Code |
7 | | of Corrections for the crime charged.
|
8 | | (d) The defendant shall execute a written agreement with |
9 | | the Court as to his or her
participation in the program and |
10 | | shall agree to all of the terms and conditions of the program,
|
11 | | including but not limited to the possibility of sanctions or |
12 | | incarceration for failing to abide or
comply with the terms of |
13 | | the program.
|
14 | | (e) In addition to any conditions authorized under the |
15 | | Pretrial Services Act and Section 5-6-3 of the Unified Code of |
16 | | Corrections, the Court may order the defendant to complete |
17 | | substance
abuse treatment in an outpatient, inpatient, |
18 | | residential, or jail-based custodial treatment program,
order |
19 | | the defendant to complete mental health counseling in an |
20 | | inpatient or outpatient basis,
comply with physicians' |
21 | | recommendation regarding medications and all follow up |
22 | | treatment.
This treatment may include but is not limited to |
23 | | post-traumatic stress disorder, traumatic brain
injury and |
24 | | depression.
|
25 | | (f) The Court may establish a mentorship program that |
26 | | provides access and support to program participants by peer |
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1 | | recovery coaches. Courts shall be responsible to administer |
2 | | the mentorship program with the support of volunteer veterans |
3 | | and local veteran service organizations, including a VAC. Peer |
4 | | recovery coaches shall be trained and certified by the Court |
5 | | prior to being assigned to participants in the program. |
6 | | (Source: P.A. 99-314, eff. 8-7-15; 99-819, eff. 8-15-16.) |
7 | | (730 ILCS 167/35)
|
8 | | Sec. 35. Violation; termination; discharge. |
9 | | (a) If the Court finds from the evidence presented |
10 | | including but not limited to the reports
or proffers of proof |
11 | | from the Veterans and Servicemembers Court professionals that:
|
12 | | (1) the defendant is not performing satisfactorily in |
13 | | the assigned program; |
14 | | (2) the defendant is not benefitting from education, |
15 | | treatment, or rehabilitation; |
16 | | (3) the defendant has engaged in criminal conduct |
17 | | rendering him or her
unsuitable for the program; or
|
18 | | (4) the defendant has otherwise violated the terms and |
19 | | conditions of the program
or his or her sentence or is for |
20 | | any reason unable to participate; the Court may impose |
21 | | reasonable sanctions under prior written agreement of the
|
22 | | defendant, including but not limited to imprisonment or |
23 | | dismissal of the defendant from the
program and the Court |
24 | | may reinstate criminal proceedings against him or her or |
25 | | proceed under
Section 5-6-4 of the Unified Code of |
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1 | | Corrections for a violation of probation, conditional
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2 | | discharge, or supervision hearing. |
3 | | (b) Upon successful completion of the terms and conditions |
4 | | of the program, the Court
may dismiss the original charges |
5 | | against the defendant or successfully terminate the |
6 | | defendant's
sentence or otherwise discharge him or her from |
7 | | any further proceedings against him or her in
the original |
8 | | prosecution.
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9 | | (c) Upon successful completion of the terms and conditions |
10 | | of
the program, any State's Attorney may move to vacate any |
11 | | convictions
eligible for sealing under the Criminal |
12 | | Identification Act. Defendants may immediately file petitions |
13 | | to expunge vacated
convictions and the associated underlying |
14 | | records per the Criminal
Identification Act. In cases where |
15 | | the State's Attorney moves to vacate
a conviction, they may |
16 | | not object to expungement of that conviction
or the underlying |
17 | | record. |
18 | | (d) Veterans and servicemembers court programs may |
19 | | maintain or
collaborate with a network of legal aid |
20 | | organizations that specialize in conviction relief to support |
21 | | participants navigating the expungement
and sealing process. |
22 | | (Source: P.A. 96-924, eff. 6-14-10.) |
23 | | (730 ILCS 167/40 new) |
24 | | Sec. 40. Education seminars for judges. The Administrative
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25 | | Office of the Illinois Courts shall conduct education seminars
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1 | | for judges throughout the State on how to operate Veterans and
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2 | | Servicemembers Court Programs. |
3 | | (730 ILCS 167/45 new) |
4 | | Sec. 45. Education seminars for Veterans and |
5 | | Servicemembers
Court prosecutors. Subject to appropriation, |
6 | | the Office of the
State's Attorneys Appellate Prosecutor shall |
7 | | conduct mandatory
education seminars on the subjects of |
8 | | substance abuse, addiction,
and mental health, for all |
9 | | Veterans and Servicemembers Court
prosecutors throughout the |
10 | | State. |
11 | | (730 ILCS 167/50 new) |
12 | | Sec. 50. Education seminars for public defenders. Subject |
13 | | to
appropriation, the Office of the State Appellate Defender |
14 | | shall
conduct mandatory education seminars on the subjects of
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15 | | substance abuse, addiction, and mental health, for all public
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16 | | defenders and assistant public defenders practicing in |
17 | | Veterans
and Servicemembers Courts throughout the State. |
18 | | Section 15. The Mental Health Court Treatment Act is |
19 | | amended by changing Sections 10, 20, 25, and 35 and by adding |
20 | | Sections 45 and 50 as follows: |
21 | | (730 ILCS 168/10)
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22 | | Sec. 10. Definitions. As used in this Act: |
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1 | | "Mental health court", "mental health court program", or |
2 | | "program" means a structured judicial intervention process for |
3 | | mental health treatment of eligible defendants that brings |
4 | | together mental health professionals, local social programs, |
5 | | and intensive judicial monitoring. |
6 | | "Mental health court professional" means a member of the |
7 | | mental health court team, including
but not limited to a |
8 | | judge, prosecutor, defense attorney, probation officer, |
9 | | coordinator, treatment provider, or peer recovery coach. |
10 | | "Pre-adjudicatory mental health court program" means a |
11 | | program that allows the defendant, with the consent of the |
12 | | prosecution, to expedite the defendant's criminal case before |
13 | | conviction or before filing of a criminal case and requires |
14 | | successful completion of the mental health court program as |
15 | | part of the agreement. |
16 | | "Post-adjudicatory mental health court program" means a |
17 | | program in which the defendant has admitted guilt or has been |
18 | | found guilty and agrees, along with the prosecution, to enter |
19 | | a mental health court program as part of the defendant's |
20 | | sentence. |
21 | | "Combination mental health court program" means a mental |
22 | | health court program that
includes a pre-adjudicatory mental |
23 | | health court program and a post-adjudicatory mental health |
24 | | court program. |
25 | | "Co-occurring mental health and substance abuse court |
26 | | program" means a program that includes persons with |
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1 | | co-occurring mental illness and substance abuse problems. Such |
2 | | programs
shall include professionals with training and |
3 | | experience in treating persons with substance abuse problems |
4 | | and mental illness.
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5 | | "Clinical Treatment Plan" means an evidence-based,
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6 | | comprehensive, and individualized plan that defines the scope |
7 | | of
treatment services to be delivered by a PSC treatment |
8 | | provider. |
9 | | "Peer recovery coach" means a mentor assigned to a |
10 | | defendant
during participation in a drug treatment court |
11 | | program who has been
trained and certified by the court to |
12 | | guide and mentor the participant
to successfully complete the |
13 | | assigned requirements. Peer recovery
coaches should be |
14 | | individuals with lived experience and work to
help facilitate |
15 | | participants' independence for continued success
once the |
16 | | supports of the court are no longer available to them. |
17 | | (Source: P.A. 97-946, eff. 8-13-12.) |
18 | | (730 ILCS 168/20) |
19 | | Sec. 20. Eligibility. |
20 | | (a) A defendant, who is eligible for probation based on |
21 | | the nature of the crime convicted of and in consideration of |
22 | | his or her criminal background, if any, may be admitted into a |
23 | | mental health court program only upon the agreement of the |
24 | | defendant and with the approval of the court. |
25 | | (b) A defendant shall be excluded from a mental health |
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1 | | court program if any one of the following applies: |
2 | | (1) The crime is a crime of violence as set forth in |
3 | | clause (3) of this subsection (b). |
4 | | (2) The defendant does not demonstrate a willingness |
5 | | to participate in a treatment program. |
6 | | (3) The defendant has been convicted of a crime of |
7 | | violence within the past 10 years excluding incarceration |
8 | | time. As used in this paragraph (3), "crime of violence" |
9 | | means: first degree murder, second degree murder, |
10 | | predatory criminal sexual assault of a child, aggravated |
11 | | criminal sexual assault, criminal sexual assault, armed |
12 | | robbery, aggravated arson, arson, aggravated kidnapping, |
13 | | kidnapping, aggravated battery resulting in great bodily |
14 | | harm or permanent disability, stalking, aggravated |
15 | | stalking, or any offense involving the discharge of a |
16 | | firearm. |
17 | | (4) (Blank). |
18 | | (5) The crime for which the defendant has been |
19 | | convicted is non-probationable. |
20 | | (6) The sentence imposed on the defendant, whether the |
21 | | result of a plea or a finding of guilt, renders the |
22 | | defendant ineligible for probation.
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23 | | (c) Recognizing that individuals struggling with
mental |
24 | | health, addiction and related co-occurring disorders have
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25 | | often experienced trauma,
mental A defendant charged with |
26 | | prostitution under Section 11-14 of the Criminal Code of 2012 |
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1 | | may be admitted into a mental health court program, if |
2 | | available in the jurisdiction and provided that the |
3 | | requirements in subsections (a) and (b) are satisfied. Mental |
4 | | health court programs may include specialized service programs |
5 | | specifically designed to address the trauma . These specialized |
6 | | services may be offered to
defendants admitted to the mental |
7 | | health court program. Judicial circuits establishing these |
8 | | specialized programs shall partner with prostitution and
human |
9 | | trafficking advocates, survivors, and service providers in the
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10 | | development of the programs. Trauma-informed services and |
11 | | programming
should be operated in accordance with best |
12 | | practices outlined by the
Substance Abuse and Mental Health |
13 | | Service Administration's National
Center for Trauma Informed |
14 | | Care (SAMHSA). associated with prostitution and human |
15 | | trafficking, and may offer those specialized services to |
16 | | defendants admitted to the mental health court program. |
17 | | Judicial circuits establishing these specialized programs |
18 | | shall partner with prostitution and human trafficking |
19 | | advocates, survivors, and service providers in the development |
20 | | of the programs. |
21 | | (Source: P.A. 100-426, eff. 1-1-18 .) |
22 | | (730 ILCS 168/25)
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23 | | Sec. 25. Procedure. |
24 | | (a) The court shall require an eligibility screening and |
25 | | an assessment of the defendant. The assessment shall include a
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1 | | validated clinical assessment. The clinical assessment shall |
2 | | include,
but not be limited to, assessments of substance use, |
3 | | mental and
behavioral health needs. The clinical assessment |
4 | | shall be administered
by a qualified clinician and used to |
5 | | inform any Clinical Treatment Plans.
Clinical Treatment Plans |
6 | | shall be developed, in part, upon the known
availability of |
7 | | treatment resources available. An assessment need not be |
8 | | ordered if the court finds a valid assessment related to the |
9 | | present charge pending against the defendant has been |
10 | | completed within the previous 60 days. |
11 | | (b) The judge shall inform the defendant that if the |
12 | | defendant fails to meet the requirements of the mental health |
13 | | court program, eligibility to participate in the program may |
14 | | be revoked and the defendant may be sentenced or the |
15 | | prosecution continued, as provided in the Unified Code of |
16 | | Corrections, for the crime charged. |
17 | | (c) The defendant shall execute a written agreement as to |
18 | | his or her participation in the program and shall agree to all |
19 | | of the terms and conditions of the program, including but not |
20 | | limited to the possibility of sanctions or incarceration for |
21 | | failing to abide or comply with the terms of the program. |
22 | | (d) In addition to any conditions authorized under the |
23 | | Pretrial Services Act and Section 5-6-3 of the Unified Code of |
24 | | Corrections, the court may order the defendant to complete |
25 | | mental health or substance abuse treatment in an outpatient, |
26 | | inpatient, residential, or jail-based custodial treatment |
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1 | | program. Any period of time a defendant shall serve in a |
2 | | jail-based treatment program may not be reduced by the |
3 | | accumulation of good time or other credits and may be for a |
4 | | period of up to 120 days. |
5 | | (d-5) In addition to any conditions authorized under the
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6 | | Pretrial Services Act and Section 5-6-3 of the Unified Code of
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7 | | Corrections, the court may order the defendant to complete
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8 | | substance abuse treatment in an outpatient, inpatient, |
9 | | residential,
or jail-based custodial treatment program. |
10 | | Substance abuse treatment
programs must be licensed by the |
11 | | State of Illinois as a Substance Use
Prevention and Recovery |
12 | | (SUPR) provider. The court may also order the
defendant to |
13 | | complete mental health counseling in an inpatient or
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14 | | outpatient basis, in accordance with a physician's |
15 | | recommendation,
comply with physicians' recommendations |
16 | | regarding medications and all
follow up treatment. This |
17 | | treatment may include but is not limited to
trauma, |
18 | | post-traumatic stress disorder, traumatic brain injury
and |
19 | | depression. Any period of time a defendant shall serve in a
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20 | | jail-based treatment program may not be reduced by the |
21 | | accumulation
of good time or other credits and may be for a |
22 | | period of up to 120 days. |
23 | | (e) The mental health court program may include a regimen |
24 | | of graduated requirements and rewards and sanctions, including |
25 | | but not limited to: fines, fees, costs, restitution, |
26 | | incarceration of up to 180 days, individual and group therapy, |
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1 | | medication, drug analysis testing, close monitoring by the |
2 | | court and supervision of progress, educational or vocational |
3 | | counseling as appropriate and other requirements necessary to |
4 | | fulfill the mental health court program.
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5 | | (f) The Mental Health Court program may maintain or |
6 | | collaborate
with a network of mental health treatment programs |
7 | | and, if it is
a co-occurring mental health and substance abuse |
8 | | court program,
a network of substance abuse treatment programs |
9 | | representing a
continuum of treatment options commensurate |
10 | | with the needs of the
defendant and available resources |
11 | | including programs with the State
of Illinois. |
12 | | (g) The Court may establish a mentorship program that
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13 | | provides access and support to program participants by peer
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14 | | recovery coaches. Courts shall be responsible to administer |
15 | | the
mentorship program with the support of mentors and local |
16 | | mental
health and SUPR licensed substance abuse treatment |
17 | | organizations.
Recovery coaches shall be trained and licensed |
18 | | by the Court prior
to being assigned to participants in the |
19 | | program. |
20 | | (Source: P.A. 95-606, eff. 6-1-08 .) |
21 | | (730 ILCS 168/35)
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22 | | Sec. 35. Violation; termination; discharge.
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23 | | (a) If the court finds from the evidence presented, |
24 | | including but not limited to the reports or proffers of proof |
25 | | from the mental health court professionals that: |
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1 | | (1) the defendant is not performing satisfactorily in |
2 | | the assigned program; |
3 | | (2) the defendant is not benefiting from education, |
4 | | treatment, or rehabilitation; |
5 | | (3) the defendant has engaged in criminal conduct |
6 | | rendering him or her unsuitable for the program; or |
7 | | (4) the defendant has otherwise violated the terms and |
8 | | conditions of the program or his or her sentence or is for |
9 | | any reason unable to participate;
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10 | | the court may impose reasonable sanctions under prior written |
11 | | agreement of the defendant, including but not limited to |
12 | | imprisonment or dismissal of the defendant from the program; |
13 | | and the court may reinstate criminal proceedings against him |
14 | | or her or proceed under Section 5-6-4 of the Unified Code of |
15 | | Corrections for a violation of probation, conditional |
16 | | discharge, or supervision hearing.
No defendant may be |
17 | | dismissed from the program unless, prior to such dismissal, |
18 | | the defendant is informed in writing: (i) of the reason or |
19 | | reasons for the dismissal; (ii) the evidentiary basis |
20 | | supporting the reason or reasons for the dismissal; (iii) that |
21 | | the defendant has a right to a hearing at
which he or she may |
22 | | present evidence supporting his or her continuation in the |
23 | | program. Based upon the evidence presented, the court shall |
24 | | determine whether the defendant has violated the conditions of |
25 | | the program and whether the defendant should be dismissed from |
26 | | the program or whether some other alternative may be |
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1 | | appropriate in the interests of the defendant and the public. |
2 | | (b) Upon successful completion of the terms and conditions |
3 | | of the program, the court may dismiss the original charges |
4 | | against the defendant or successfully terminate the |
5 | | defendant's sentence or otherwise discharge him or her from |
6 | | the program or from any further proceedings against him or her |
7 | | in the original prosecution.
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8 | | (c) Upon successful completion of the terms and conditions |
9 | | of
the program, any State's Attorney may move to vacate any |
10 | | convictions
eligible for sealing under the Criminal |
11 | | Identification Act. Defendants may immediately file petitions |
12 | | to expunge vacated
convictions and the associated underlying |
13 | | records per the Criminal
Identification Act. In cases where |
14 | | the State's Attorney moves to vacate
a conviction, they may |
15 | | not object to expungement of that conviction
or the underlying |
16 | | record. |
17 | | (d) The mental health court program may maintain or |
18 | | collaborate
with a network of legal aid organizations that |
19 | | specialize in conviction
relief to support participants |
20 | | navigating the expungement and sealing
process. |
21 | | (Source: P.A. 95-606, eff. 6-1-08 .) |
22 | | (730 ILCS 168/45 new) |
23 | | Sec. 45. Education seminars for judges. The Administrative
|
24 | | Office of the Illinois Courts shall conduct education seminars
|
25 | | for judges throughout the State on how to operate Mental |
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1 | | Health
Court programs. |
2 | | (730 ILCS 168/50 new) |
3 | | Sec. 50. Education seminars for public defenders. Subject |
4 | | to
appropriation, the Office of the State Appellate Defender |
5 | | shall
conduct mandatory education seminars on the subjects of |
6 | | substance abuse, addiction, and mental health, for all public |
7 | | defenders and assistant public defenders practicing in Mental |
8 | | Health courts throughout the State.
|