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HJ0123 |
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LRB094 20300 RLC 58325 r |
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| HOUSE JOINT RESOLUTION
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| WHEREAS, From 1990 to 2000, the number of African Americans |
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| admitted to Illinois prisons for drug offenses grew six fold |
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| from 1,421 to 9,088; in contrast, the number of Whites and |
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| Hispanics admitted to prison for drug offenses remained |
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| relatively stable; and
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| WHEREAS, In 2000, half of all African Americans admitted to |
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| Illinois prisons were sentenced for drug offenses, compared |
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| with 30% of Hispanics and 15% of Whites; and
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| WHEREAS, National studies found that Whites, African |
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| Americans, and Hispanics use illegal drugs at similar rates, |
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| and also that most users obtain drugs from people within their |
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| own racial or ethnic background; and
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| WHEREAS, Human Rights Watch (HRW), a New York City based |
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| organization that investigates human rights violations around |
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| the world, reported that in 2000 that Illinois ranked first in |
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| the country with respect to Black White disparities in prison |
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| sentences for drug crimes and African American men in Illinois |
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| were 57 times more likely than White men in Illinois to be |
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| sentenced to prison for drug crimes; and
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| WHEREAS, This unexpected and disturbing finding prompted |
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| TASC and Loyola University Chicago to seek and obtain a |
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| research grant from the Illinois Criminal Justice Information |
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| Authority (ICJIA) for funding an investigation of the State's |
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| apparent problem with disproportionate sentencing practices; |
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| and
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| WHEREAS, In November, 2005, TASC and Loyola University |
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| issued the report, The Disproportionate Incarceration of |
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| African Americans for Drug Crimes: The Illinois Perspective, |
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| which confirmed the disproportionate application of this |
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HJ0123 |
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LRB094 20300 RLC 58325 r |
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| State's criminal drug laws, and cited Section 407 of the |
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| Illinois Controlled Substances Act (720 ILCS 570/407), as |
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| amended during the first half of the 1990s, to be a significant |
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| factor for the disparate impact which these laws have on |
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| African American communities; and
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| WHEREAS, Section 407 of the Illinois Controlled Substances |
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| Act (720 ILCS 570/407) prescribes a number of sentencing |
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| enhancements that result in mandatory prison terms for any |
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| possession or delivery of any controlled substance within a |
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| 1,000 foot boundary of schools or school bus stops; public |
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| housing properties or property leased by public housing |
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| agencies, such as scattered site public housing; hospitals; |
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| storefront churches and other places of worship; nursing homes |
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| and other facilities for the care of the elderly; and elevates |
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| to a felony, offenses that would be misdemeanors absent the |
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| 1,000 foot or safe zone enhancements; and |
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| WHEREAS, The TASC and Loyola University researchers |
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| concluded that these restrictions are most common in poor, |
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| African American neighborhoods, which, per capita have more |
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| public housing units and storefront churches than any other |
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| communities in the city; and |
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| WHEREAS, This statute which requires mandatory minimum |
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| prison terms, denies judges the discretion to determine the |
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| appropriate penalty on a case-by-case basis; and
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| WHEREAS, The Justice Policy Institute (JPI) recently |
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| issued a report, Disparity by Design: How Drug-free Zone Laws |
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| Impact Racial Disparity - and Fail to Protect Youth, which |
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| found that from the laws that heighten penalties for drug |
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| activity near schools, public housing and other designated |
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| locations fail to protect youth; and |
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| WHEREAS, JPI found that drug-free zone laws erode the |
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HJ0123 |
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LRB094 20300 RLC 58325 r |
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| constitutional right to trial by forcing defendants to plead |
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| guilty or risk long prison terms; and |
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| WHEREAS, JPI also found that communities of color are |
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| disproportionately impacted by drug-free school zone laws |
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| because densely populated urban neighborhoods, where people of |
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| color are more likely to live, are blanketed by prohibited |
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| zones, while rural and suburban neighborhoods are less |
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| affected; and |
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| WHEREAS, JPI found that in New Jersey, three-quarters of |
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| Newark, and over half of Jersey City and Camden, fall within a |
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| zone compared to just 6% of rural Mansfield Township and the |
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| result of this "urban effect" is what New Jersey's sentencing |
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| commission terms "a devastatingly disproportionate impact on |
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| New Jersey's minority community"; and |
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| WHEREAS, JPI found that in New Jersey, Blacks and Hispanics |
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| make up just a quarter of the State's resident population, |
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| while they comprise 96% of prisoners serving time for drug-free |
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| zone offenses; and |
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| WHEREAS, JPI found that in Connecticut cities where the |
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| majority of residents are nonwhite have 10 times more zones per |
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| square mile than localities where less than 10% of residents |
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| are black or Hispanic; and |
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| WHEREAS, JPI found that Blacks and Hispanics account for |
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| just 20% of Massachusetts residents but 80% of drug-free zone |
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| cases; and |
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| WHEREAS, Utah's parole board recommended replacing the |
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| drug-free zone enhancement with an enhancement for only those |
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| convicted of selling or manufacturing drugs in the presence of |
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| children; and |
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HJ0123 |
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LRB094 20300 RLC 58325 r |
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| WHEREAS, The New Jersey Sentencing Commission could find no |
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| deterrent effect of the drug-free zone law; and |
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| WHEREAS, The New Jersey Sentencing Commission found that |
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| fewer than one in 10 arrests takes place just outside the |
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| zones, while the number of drug-free zone arrests has risen |
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| since the law was enacted, rather than falling - as would be |
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| expected if drug sellers had moved their activity to avoid |
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| prohibited zones; and |
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| WHEREAS, The New Jersey Sentencing Commission concluded |
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| that the size of the zones erodes their deterrent effect and |
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| recommended that zones be narrowed from 1,000 to 200 feet; and |
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| WHEREAS, The New Jersey Sentencing Commission concluded |
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| that reducing the size of prohibited zones will accomplish 2 |
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| objectives: more effectively deter drug activity that occurs |
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| within sight of schools and other protected locations; and |
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| lessen the impact of mandatory sentencing on urban communities, |
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| thereby reducing racial disparities; and |
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| WHEREAS, The Connecticut legislature is considering a bill |
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| that would reduce the scope of the zones from 1,500 to 200 |
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| feet, and would require postings to mark the boundaries; |
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| therefore, be it |
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| RESOLVED, BY THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES OF THE |
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| NINETY-FOURTH GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, THE |
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| SENATE CONCURRING HEREIN, that there is hereby established a |
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| Legislative Task Force on Drug Free Zones ("the Task Force"); |
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| and be it further
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| RESOLVED, That the Task Force shall have 8 members of the |
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| General Assembly, appointed 2 each by the President of the |
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| Senate, the Minority Leader of the Senate, the Speaker of the |
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| House of Representatives, and the Minority Leader of the House |
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HJ0123 |
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LRB094 20300 RLC 58325 r |
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| of Representatives; and be it further
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| RESOLVED, That the Task Force shall conduct hearings and |
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| complete a comprehensive examination of the State's laws which |
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| were intended to create drug free zones to determine: (a) the |
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| effectiveness of the laws, (b) whether these laws have a |
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| disparate impact on African American communities, and (c) |
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| whether these laws should be amended to (i) more effectively |
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| deter drug activity that occurs within sight of schools and |
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| other protected locations; and (ii) lessen the impact of |
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| mandatory sentencing on urban communities, thereby reducing |
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| racial disparities; and be it further |
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| RESOLVED, That the Task Force shall report its findings and |
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| recommendations to the Governor and the General Assembly in a |
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| final report which shall be filed on or before April 1, 2007; |
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| the requirement for reporting to the General Assembly shall be |
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| satisfied by filing copies of the report with the Speaker, the |
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| Minority Leader, and the Clerk of the House of Representatives |
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| and the President, the Minority Leader, and the Secretary of |
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| the Senate and the Legislative Research Unit, as required by |
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| Section 3.1 of the General Assembly Organization Act, and |
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| filing additional copies with the State Government Report |
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| Distribution Center for the General Assembly as required under |
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| paragraph (t) of Section 7 of the State Library Act; and be it |
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| further
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| RESOLVED, That the report shall include, but need not be |
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| limited to, the following:
(1) an assessment of the collateral |
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| consequences of the State's laws which were intended to create |
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| drug free zones;
(2) an assessment of the effectiveness of |
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| these laws;
(3) an assessment as to whether these laws have a |
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| disparate impact on African Americans;
(4) an assessment as to |
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| whether these laws tend to erode the constitutional right to |
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| trial by forcing defendants to plead guilty or risk long prison |
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| terms; and
(5) recommendations for legislative changes |