Date | Chamber | Action |
4/14/2011 | House | Tabled By Sponsor Rep. Adam Brown |
720 ILCS 5/12-3.2 | from Ch. 38, par. 12-3.2 |
Correctional Note (Dept of Corrections) | |
There were 414 court admissions for Class 4 domestic battery in FY10, with an average sentence of 1.1 years. These inmates would have an estimated length of stay of 13 months. Inmates sentenced for a Class 3 felony are estimated to serve 18 months in prison. Specific data addressing the statutory criteria as proposed by HB 3422 are limited, but the Department estimates that 40% of the Class 4 domestic battery court admissions would have a prior felony conviction for domestic battery; which would discount prior misdemeanor convictions, but may include prior probation dispositions. Therefore, if 166 inmates per year would be admitted for domestic battery with a previous conviction for domestic battery, a Class 3 felony with an increase in length of stay of 5 months, there would be a corrections population impact of 69 inmates, with additional operating costs of $13,639,600 and construction costs of $5,533,300 over ten years. |
Fiscal Note (Dept of Corrections) | |
There were 414 court admissions for Class 4 domestic battery in FY10, with an average sentence of 1.1 years. These inmates would have an estimated length of stay of 13 months. Inmates sentenced for a Class 3 felony are estimated to serve 18 months in prison. Specific data addressing the statutory criteria as proposed by HB 3422 are limited, but the Department estimates that 40% of the Class 4 domestic battery court admissions would have a prior felony conviction for domestic battery; which would discount prior misdemeanor convictions, but may include prior probation dispositions. Therefore, if 166 inmates per year would be admitted for domestic battery with a previous conviction for domestic battery, a Class 3 felony with an increase in length of stay of 5 months, there would be a corrections population impact of 69 inmates, with additional operating costs of $13,639,600 and construction costs of $5,533,300 over ten years. |
Date | Chamber | Action | 2/24/2011 | House | Filed with the Clerk by Rep. Dennis M. Reboletti | 2/24/2011 | House | First Reading | 2/24/2011 | House | Referred to Rules Committee | 2/25/2011 | House | Chief Sponsor Changed to Rep. Adam Brown | 2/28/2011 | House | Assigned to Judiciary II - Criminal Law Committee | 3/17/2011 | House | Do Pass / Short Debate Judiciary II - Criminal Law Committee; 004-001-000 | 3/17/2011 | House | Placed on Calendar 2nd Reading - Short Debate | 3/28/2011 | House | Added Chief Co-Sponsor Rep. Dennis M. Reboletti | 3/28/2011 | House | Added Chief Co-Sponsor Rep. Dwight Kay | 3/28/2011 | House | Added Chief Co-Sponsor Rep. Richard Morthland | 3/28/2011 | House | Added Chief Co-Sponsor Rep. Pam Roth | 3/31/2011 | House | Fiscal Note Requested by Rep. Camille Y Lilly | 3/31/2011 | House | Correctional Note Requested by Rep. Camille Y Lilly | 4/5/2011 | House | Correctional Note Filed | 4/5/2011 | House | Second Reading - Short Debate | 4/5/2011 | House | Held on Calendar Order of Second Reading - Short Debate | 4/6/2011 | House | Second Reading - Short Debate | 4/6/2011 | House | Held on Calendar Order of Second Reading - Short Debate | 4/7/2011 | House | Fiscal Note Filed | 4/7/2011 | House | Placed on Calendar Order of 3rd Reading - Short Debate | 4/8/2011 | House | Motion Filed - Table Bill/Resolution Pursuant to Rule 60(b), Rep. Adam Brown | 4/8/2011 | House | Added Co-Sponsor Rep. Patricia R. Bellock | 4/14/2011 | House | Motion Prevailed | 4/14/2011 | House | Tabled By Sponsor Rep. Adam Brown |
Back To Top |