State of Illinois
92nd General Assembly
Legislation

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[ Introduced ][ Engrossed ][ Governor's Message ]
[ Senate Amendment 002 ]


92_HB2058enr

 
HB2058 Enrolled                                LRB9201006ARsb

 1        AN ACT in relation to terrorism.

 2        Be it enacted by the People of  the  State  of  Illinois,
 3    represented in the General Assembly:

 4        Section 5. The Solicitation for Charity Act is amended by
 5    adding Section 16.5 as follows:

 6        (225 ILCS 460/16.5 new)
 7        Sec. 16.5. Terrorist acts.
 8        (a)  Any  person  or organization subject to registration
 9    under this Act, who knowingly acts to  further,  directly  or
10    indirectly, or knowingly uses charitable assets to conduct or
11    further,  directly  or  indirectly,  an act or actions as set
12    forth in Article 29D of the Criminal Code of 1961, is thereby
13    engaged in an act or actions contrary to  public  policy  and
14    antithetical  to  charity,  and all of the funds, assets, and
15    records of the person or organization  shall  be  subject  to
16    temporary  and  permanent  injunction from use or expenditure
17    and the appointment of a temporary and permanent receiver  to
18    take possession of all of the assets and related records.
19        (b)  An  ex parte action may be commenced by the Attorney
20    General, and, upon a showing of probable cause of a violation
21    of this Section or Article 29D of the Criminal Code of  1961,
22    an  immediate  seizure  of  books and records by the Attorney
23    General by and through his or her assistants or investigators
24    or the Department of State Police and freezing of all  assets
25    shall  be  made  by  order  of a court to protect the public,
26    protect the assets, and allow a full review of the records.
27        (c)  Upon a finding by a court after  a  hearing  that  a
28    person  or  organization has acted or is in violation of this
29    Section, the person  or  organization  shall  be  permanently
30    enjoined  from  soliciting   funds  from  the public, holding
31    charitable funds, or acting as a trustee or fiduciary  within
 
HB2058 Enrolled            -2-                 LRB9201006ARsb
 1    Illinois.  Upon  a  finding of violation all assets and funds
 2    held by the person or organization shall be forfeited to  the
 3    People  of  the State of Illinois or otherwise ordered by the
 4    court to be accounted for and marshaled and then delivered to
 5    charitable causes and uses within the State  of  Illinois  by
 6    court order.
 7        (d)  A  determination  under  this Section may be made by
 8    any court separate and apart from  any  criminal  proceedings
 9    and   the   standard   of  proof  shall  be  that  for  civil
10    proceedings.
11        (e)  Any knowing use of charitable assets to  conduct  or
12    further,  directly or indirectly, an act or actions set forth
13    in Article 29D of the Criminal Code of 1961 shall be a misuse
14    of charitable assets and breach of fiduciary duty relative to
15    all other Sections of this Act.

16        Section 10.  The Firearm Owners Identification  Card  Act
17    is amended by changing Sections 4 and 8 as follows:

18        (430 ILCS 65/4) (from Ch. 38, par. 83-4)
19        Sec.   4.  (a)  Each  applicant  for  a  Firearm  Owner's
20    Identification Card must:
21             (1)  Make application on blank  forms  prepared  and
22        furnished at convenient locations throughout the State by
23        the  Department  of State Police, or by electronic means,
24        if and when made available by  the  Department  of  State
25        Police; and
26             (2)  Submit  evidence  to  the  Department  of State
27        Police that:
28                  (i)  He or she is 21 years of age or  over,  or
29             if he or she is under 21 years of age that he or she
30             has  the  written  consent  of  his or her parent or
31             legal guardian to possess and acquire  firearms  and
32             firearm ammunition and that he or she has never been
 
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 1             convicted  of  a  misdemeanor  other  than a traffic
 2             offense or adjudged delinquent,  provided,  however,
 3             that  such  parent  or  legal  guardian  is  not  an
 4             individual  prohibited from having a Firearm Owner's
 5             Identification Card and files an affidavit with  the
 6             Department  as  prescribed by the Department stating
 7             that he or she is not an individual prohibited  from
 8             having a Card;
 9                  (ii)  He  or  she  has  not been convicted of a
10             felony  under  the  laws  of  this  or   any   other
11             jurisdiction;
12                  (iii)  He or she is not addicted to narcotics;
13                  (iv)  He  or  she  has  not been a patient in a
14             mental institution within the past 5 years;
15                  (v)  He or she is not mentally retarded;
16                  (vi)  He  or  she  is  not  an  alien  who   is
17             unlawfully  present  in  the United States under the
18             laws of the United States;
19                  (vii)  He or she is not subject to an  existing
20             order  of  protection  prohibiting  him  or her from
21             possessing a firearm;
22                  (viii)  He or she has not been convicted within
23             the past 5 years  of  battery,  assault,  aggravated
24             assault,  violation  of an order of protection, or a
25             substantially    similar    offense    in    another
26             jurisdiction,  in  which  a  firearm  was  used   or
27             possessed;
28                  (ix)  He  or  she  has  not  been  convicted of
29             domestic battery or a substantially similar  offense
30             in  another  jurisdiction  committed on or after the
31             effective date of this amendatory Act of 1997; and
32                  (x)  He or she has not  been  convicted  within
33             the   past   5   years  of  domestic  battery  or  a
34             substantially    similar    offense    in    another
 
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 1             jurisdiction committed before the effective date  of
 2             this amendatory Act of 1997; and
 3                  (xi)  He  or  she  is not an alien who has been
 4             admitted to the United States under a  non-immigrant
 5             visa  (as that term is defined in Section 101(a)(26)
 6             of the Immigration and  Nationality  Act  (8  U.S.C.
 7             1101(a)(26))), or that he or she is an alien who has
 8             been  lawfully admitted to the United States under a
 9             non-immigrant visa if that alien is:
10                       (1)  admitted to  the  United  States  for
11                  lawful hunting or sporting purposes;
12                       (2)  an   official   representative  of  a
13                  foreign government who is:
14                            (A) accredited to the  United  States
15                       Government  or the Government's mission to
16                       an international organization  having  its
17                       headquarters in the United States; or
18                            (B)  en  route  to  or  from  another
19                       country to which that alien is accredited;
20                       (3)  an  official  of a foreign government
21                  or distinguished foreign visitor who  has  been
22                  so designated by the Department of State;
23                       (4)  a  foreign law enforcement officer of
24                  a  friendly  foreign  government  entering  the
25                  United States on official business; or
26                       (5)  one who has received  a  waiver  from
27                  the  Attorney  General  of  the  United  States
28                  pursuant to 18 U.S.C. 922(y)(3); and
29             (3)  Upon request by the Department of State Police,
30        sign  a release on a form prescribed by the Department of
31        State Police waiving any  right  to  confidentiality  and
32        requesting  the  disclosure  to  the  Department of State
33        Police of limited  mental  health  institution  admission
34        information from another state, the District of Columbia,
 
HB2058 Enrolled            -5-                 LRB9201006ARsb
 1        any  other  territory  of the United States, or a foreign
 2        nation concerning the applicant for the sole  purpose  of
 3        determining  whether the applicant is or was a patient in
 4        a mental health institution and disqualified  because  of
 5        that    status   from   receiving   a   Firearm   Owner's
 6        Identification Card.  No mental health care or  treatment
 7        records may be requested.  The information received shall
 8        be destroyed within one year of receipt.
 9        (a-5)  Each    applicant    for    a    Firearm   Owner's
10    Identification Card who is over the age of 18  shall  furnish
11    to  the Department of State Police either his or her driver's
12    license number or Illinois Identification Card number.
13        (b)  Each application form shall  include  the  following
14    statement  printed  in  bold  type:  "Warning: Entering false
15    information  on  an  application  for   a   Firearm   Owner's
16    Identification  Card  is  punishable  as  a Class 2 felony in
17    accordance with subsection (d-5) of Section 14 of the Firearm
18    Owners Identification Card Act.".
19        (c)  Upon such written consent, pursuant  to  Section  4,
20    paragraph  (a)  (2)  (i), the parent or legal guardian giving
21    the consent shall be liable for any  damages  resulting  from
22    the applicant's use of firearms or firearm ammunition.
23    (Source:  P.A.  91-514,  eff.  1-1-00;  91-694, eff. 4-13-00;
24    92-442, eff. 8-17-01.)

25        (430 ILCS 65/8) (from Ch. 38, par. 83-8)
26        Sec. 8.  The Department of State Police has authority  to
27    deny  an  application  for  or  to revoke and seize a Firearm
28    Owner's Identification Card previously issued under this  Act
29    only if the Department finds that the applicant or the person
30    to  whom  such  card  was  issued  is  or  was at the time of
31    issuance:
32        (a)  A  person  under  21  years  of  age  who  has  been
33    convicted of a misdemeanor other than a  traffic  offense  or
 
HB2058 Enrolled            -6-                 LRB9201006ARsb
 1    adjudged delinquent;
 2        (b)  A person under 21 years of age who does not have the
 3    written  consent  of  his  parent  or guardian to acquire and
 4    possess firearms and firearm ammunition, or whose  parent  or
 5    guardian  has  revoked  such  written  consent, or where such
 6    parent or guardian does not qualify to have a Firearm Owner's
 7    Identification Card;
 8        (c)  A person convicted of a felony  under  the  laws  of
 9    this or any other jurisdiction;
10        (d)  A person addicted to narcotics;
11        (e)  A  person  who  has  been  a  patient  of  a  mental
12    institution within the past 5 years;
13        (f)  A  person whose mental condition is of such a nature
14    that it poses a clear and present danger  to  the  applicant,
15    any other person or persons or the community;
16        For  the  purposes  of  this  Section, "mental condition"
17    means a  state  of  mind  manifested  by  violent,  suicidal,
18    threatening or assaultive behavior.
19        (g)  A person who is mentally retarded;
20        (h)  A  person  who intentionally makes a false statement
21    in the Firearm Owner's Identification Card application;
22        (i)  An alien who is unlawfully  present  in  the  United
23    States under the laws of the United States;
24        (i-5)  An  alien  who  has  been  admitted  to the United
25    States under a non-immigrant visa (as that term is defined in
26    Section 101(a)(26) of the Immigration and Nationality Act  (8
27    U.S.C.  1101(a)(26))), except that this subsection (i-5) does
28    not apply to any alien who has been lawfully admitted to  the
29    United States under a non-immigrant visa if that alien is:
30             (1)  admitted   to  the  United  States  for  lawful
31        hunting or sporting purposes;
32             (2)  an  official  representative   of   a   foreign
33        government who is:
34                  (A)  accredited to the United States Government
 
HB2058 Enrolled            -7-                 LRB9201006ARsb
 1             or  the  Government's  mission  to  an international
 2             organization having its headquarters in  the  United
 3             States; or
 4                  (B)  en  route  to  or  from another country to
 5             which that alien is accredited;
 6             (3)  an  official  of  a   foreign   government   or
 7        distinguished  foreign visitor who has been so designated
 8        by the Department of State;
 9             (4)  a foreign law enforcement officer of a friendly
10        foreign government entering the United States on official
11        business; or
12             (5)  one who has received a waiver from the Attorney
13        General of  the  United  States  pursuant  to  18  U.S.C.
14        922(y)(3);
15        (j)  A  person  who  is  subject  to an existing order of
16    protection prohibiting him or her from possessing a firearm;
17        (k)  A person who has been convicted within  the  past  5
18    years  of  battery, assault, aggravated assault, violation of
19    an order of protection, or a substantially similar offense in
20    another  jurisdiction,  in  which  a  firearm  was  used   or
21    possessed;
22        (l)  A  person who has been convicted of domestic battery
23    or a substantially similar offense  in  another  jurisdiction
24    committed on or after January 1, 1998;
25        (m)  A  person  who  has been convicted within the past 5
26    years of domestic battery or a substantially similar  offense
27    in another jurisdiction committed before January 1, 1998; or
28        (n)   A  person  who  is  prohibited  from  acquiring  or
29    possessing  firearms  or  firearm  ammunition by any Illinois
30    State statute or by federal law.
31    (Source: P.A.  90-130,  eff.  1-1-98;  90-493,  eff.  1-1-98;
32    90-655, eff. 7-30-98; 91-694, eff. 4-13-00.)

33        Section  15.   The  Criminal  Code  of 1961 is amended by
 
HB2058 Enrolled            -8-                 LRB9201006ARsb
 1    changing Sections 9-1, 14-3, and 29B-1 and adding Article 29D
 2    as follows:

 3        (720 ILCS 5/9-1) (from Ch. 38, par. 9-1)
 4        Sec.  9-1.  First  degree  Murder  -  Death  penalties  -
 5    Exceptions - Separate Hearings - Proof - Findings - Appellate
 6    procedures - Reversals.
 7        (a)  A person who  kills  an  individual  without  lawful
 8    justification  commits  first degree murder if, in performing
 9    the acts which cause the death:
10             (1)  he either intends to kill or  do  great  bodily
11        harm  to  that  individual or another, or knows that such
12        acts will cause death to that individual or another; or
13             (2)  he  knows  that  such  acts  create  a   strong
14        probability  of  death  or  great  bodily  harm  to  that
15        individual or another; or
16             (3)  he  is  attempting  or  committing  a  forcible
17        felony other than second degree murder.
18        (b)  Aggravating Factors.  A defendant who at the time of
19    the  commission  of the offense has attained the age of 18 or
20    more and who has been found guilty of first degree murder may
21    be sentenced to death if:
22             (1)  the murdered individual was a peace officer  or
23        fireman  killed  in the course of performing his official
24        duties,  to  prevent  the  performance  of  his  official
25        duties, or in retaliation  for  performing  his  official
26        duties,  and the defendant knew or should have known that
27        the murdered individual was a peace officer  or  fireman;
28        or
29             (2)  the  murdered  individual was an employee of an
30        institution or facility of the Department of Corrections,
31        or any similar local correctional agency, killed  in  the
32        course  of performing his official duties, to prevent the
33        performance of his official duties, or in retaliation for
 
HB2058 Enrolled            -9-                 LRB9201006ARsb
 1        performing  his  official   duties,   or   the   murdered
 2        individual  was an inmate at such institution or facility
 3        and was killed on the grounds thereof,  or  the  murdered
 4        individual  was  otherwise present in such institution or
 5        facility with the knowledge and  approval  of  the  chief
 6        administrative officer thereof; or
 7             (3)  the  defendant  has been convicted of murdering
 8        two or more individuals  under  subsection  (a)  of  this
 9        Section  or  under any law of the United States or of any
10        state which is substantially similar to subsection (a) of
11        this Section regardless  of whether the  deaths  occurred
12        as  the  result  of the same act or of several related or
13        unrelated acts so long as the deaths were the  result  of
14        either  an  intent  to  kill  more  than one person or of
15        separate acts which the defendant knew would cause  death
16        or  create  a strong probability of death or great bodily
17        harm to the murdered individual or another; or
18             (4)  the murdered individual was killed as a  result
19        of  the  hijacking  of  an  airplane, train, ship, bus or
20        other public conveyance; or
21             (5)  the defendant committed the murder pursuant  to
22        a contract, agreement or understanding by which he was to
23        receive   money  or  anything  of  value  in  return  for
24        committing the murder or procured another to  commit  the
25        murder for money or anything of value; or
26             (6)  the  murdered  individual  was  killed  in  the
27        course of another felony if:
28                  (a)  the murdered individual:
29                       (i)  was actually killed by the defendant,
30                  or
31                       (ii)  received      physical      injuries
32                  personally    inflicted    by   the   defendant
33                  substantially contemporaneously  with  physical
34                  injuries  caused  by  one  or  more persons for
 
HB2058 Enrolled            -10-                LRB9201006ARsb
 1                  whose  conduct   the   defendant   is   legally
 2                  accountable under Section 5-2 of this Code, and
 3                  the  physical  injuries inflicted by either the
 4                  defendant or the other person  or  persons  for
 5                  whose  conduct he is legally accountable caused
 6                  the death of the murdered individual; and
 7                  (b)  in performing the acts  which  caused  the
 8             death  of  the murdered individual or which resulted
 9             in physical injuries  personally  inflicted  by  the
10             defendant  on  the  murdered  individual  under  the
11             circumstances  of  subdivision  (ii) of subparagraph
12             (a) of paragraph  (6)  of  subsection  (b)  of  this
13             Section, the defendant acted with the intent to kill
14             the  murdered  individual or with the knowledge that
15             his acts created a strong probability  of  death  or
16             great  bodily  harm  to  the  murdered individual or
17             another; and
18                  (c)  the other felony was one of the following:
19             armed robbery, armed  violence,  robbery,  predatory
20             criminal  sexual  assault  of  a  child,  aggravated
21             criminal   sexual  assault,  aggravated  kidnapping,
22             aggravated vehicular hijacking, forcible  detention,
23             arson,   aggravated   arson,   aggravated  stalking,
24             burglary,  residential  burglary,   home   invasion,
25             calculated  criminal  drug  conspiracy as defined in
26             Section 405 of the  Illinois  Controlled  Substances
27             Act,  streetgang criminal drug conspiracy as defined
28             in  Section  405.2  of   the   Illinois   Controlled
29             Substances  Act, or the attempt to commit any of the
30             felonies listed in this subsection (c); or
31             (7)  the murdered individual was under 12  years  of
32        age  and  the death resulted from exceptionally brutal or
33        heinous behavior indicative of wanton cruelty; or
34             (8)  the defendant committed the murder with  intent
 
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 1        to prevent the murdered individual from testifying in any
 2        criminal prosecution or giving material assistance to the
 3        State in any investigation or prosecution, either against
 4        the  defendant or another; or the defendant committed the
 5        murder because the murdered individual was a  witness  in
 6        any  prosecution or gave material assistance to the State
 7        in any investigation or prosecution, either  against  the
 8        defendant or another; or
 9             (9)  the  defendant,  while  committing  an  offense
10        punishable  under Sections 401, 401.1, 401.2, 405, 405.2,
11        407 or 407.1 or subsection (b)  of  Section  404  of  the
12        Illinois Controlled Substances Act, or while engaged in a
13        conspiracy   or  solicitation  to  commit  such  offense,
14        intentionally  killed   an   individual   or   counseled,
15        commanded,  induced,  procured  or caused the intentional
16        killing of the murdered individual; or
17             (10)  the   defendant   was   incarcerated   in   an
18        institution or facility of the Department of  Corrections
19        at  the  time  of  the  murder,  and  while committing an
20        offense punishable as a felony  under  Illinois  law,  or
21        while  engaged  in a conspiracy or solicitation to commit
22        such  offense,  intentionally  killed  an  individual  or
23        counseled, commanded, induced,  procured  or  caused  the
24        intentional killing of the murdered individual; or
25             (11)  the murder was committed in a cold, calculated
26        and  premeditated manner pursuant to a preconceived plan,
27        scheme or design to take a human life by unlawful  means,
28        and  the  conduct  of  the defendant created a reasonable
29        expectation that the death of a human being would  result
30        therefrom; or
31             (12)  the   murdered  individual  was  an  emergency
32        medical  technician  -   ambulance,   emergency   medical
33        technician - intermediate, emergency medical technician -
34        paramedic,  ambulance driver, or other medical assistance
 
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 1        or first aid personnel, employed  by  a  municipality  or
 2        other   governmental   unit,  killed  in  the  course  of
 3        performing  his   official   duties,   to   prevent   the
 4        performance of his official duties, or in retaliation for
 5        performing his official duties, and the defendant knew or
 6        should  have  known  that  the murdered individual was an
 7        emergency  medical  technician  -  ambulance,   emergency
 8        medical  technician  -  intermediate,  emergency  medical
 9        technician   -  paramedic,  ambulance  driver,  or  other
10        medical assistance or first aid personnel; or
11             (13)  the defendant was a  principal  administrator,
12        organizer,  or  leader  of  a  calculated  criminal  drug
13        conspiracy  consisting  of  a  hierarchical  position  of
14        authority  superior  to  that of all other members of the
15        conspiracy,  and  the  defendant  counseled,   commanded,
16        induced,  procured,  or caused the intentional killing of
17        the murdered person; or
18             (14)  the murder was intentional  and  involved  the
19        infliction  of  torture.  For the purpose of this Section
20        torture means the infliction of or subjection to  extreme
21        physical  pain,  motivated  by  an  intent to increase or
22        prolong the pain, suffering or agony of the victim; or
23             (15)  the murder was committed as a  result  of  the
24        intentional  discharge of a firearm by the defendant from
25        a motor vehicle and the victim was not present within the
26        motor vehicle; or
27             (16)  the murdered individual was 60 years of age or
28        older and the death resulted from exceptionally brutal or
29        heinous behavior indicative of wanton cruelty; or
30             (17)  the murdered individual was a disabled  person
31        and  the  defendant  knew  or  should have known that the
32        murdered individual was disabled.  For purposes  of  this
33        paragraph  (17),  "disabled  person"  means  a person who
34        suffers from a permanent physical  or  mental  impairment
 
HB2058 Enrolled            -13-                LRB9201006ARsb
 1        resulting from disease, an injury, a functional disorder,
 2        or   a  congenital  condition  that  renders  the  person
 3        incapable of adequately providing  for  his  or  her  own
 4        health or personal care; or
 5             (18)  the  murder  was  committed  by  reason of any
 6        person's activity as a community policing volunteer or to
 7        prevent  any  person  from  engaging  in  activity  as  a
 8        community policing volunteer; or
 9             (19)  the murdered  individual  was  subject  to  an
10        order  of  protection  and  the murder was committed by a
11        person against whom the  same  order  of  protection  was
12        issued  under the Illinois Domestic Violence Act of 1986;
13        or
14             (20)  the  murdered  individual  was  known  by  the
15        defendant to be a teacher or other person employed in any
16        school and the teacher or  other  employee  is  upon  the
17        grounds  of  a school or grounds adjacent to a school, or
18        is in any part of a building used  for  school  purposes;
19        or.
20             (21)  the  murder  was committed by the defendant in
21        connection  with  or  as  a  result  of  the  offense  of
22        terrorism as defined in Section 29D-30 of this Code.
23          (c)  Consideration  of  factors  in   Aggravation   and
24    Mitigation.
25        The  court  shall consider, or shall instruct the jury to
26    consider any aggravating and any mitigating factors which are
27    relevant to the imposition of the death penalty.  Aggravating
28    factors may include but need not be limited to those  factors
29    set  forth  in subsection (b). Mitigating factors may include
30    but need not be limited to the following:
31             (1)  the defendant has  no  significant  history  of
32        prior criminal activity;
33             (2)  the  murder  was  committed while the defendant
34        was under the influence of extreme  mental  or  emotional
 
HB2058 Enrolled            -14-                LRB9201006ARsb
 1        disturbance, although not such as to constitute a defense
 2        to prosecution;
 3             (3)  the  murdered  individual  was a participant in
 4        the defendant's homicidal conduct  or  consented  to  the
 5        homicidal act;
 6             (4)  the  defendant  acted  under  the compulsion of
 7        threat or menace of the imminent infliction of  death  or
 8        great bodily harm;
 9             (5)  the defendant was not personally present during
10        commission of the act or acts causing death.
11        (d)  Separate sentencing hearing.
12        Where  requested  by the State, the court shall conduct a
13    separate sentencing proceeding to determine the existence  of
14    factors  set  forth  in  subsection  (b)  and to consider any
15    aggravating or mitigating factors as indicated in  subsection
16    (c).  The proceeding shall be conducted:
17             (1)  before the jury that determined the defendant's
18        guilt; or
19             (2)  before a jury impanelled for the purpose of the
20        proceeding if:
21                  A.  the  defendant was convicted upon a plea of
22             guilty; or
23                  B.  the defendant was convicted after  a  trial
24             before the court sitting without a jury; or
25                  C.  the  court  for good cause shown discharges
26             the jury that determined the defendant's guilt; or
27             (3)  before the court alone if the defendant  waives
28        a jury for the separate proceeding.
29        (e)  Evidence and Argument.
30        During  the proceeding any information relevant to any of
31    the factors set forth in subsection (b) may be  presented  by
32    either  the  State or the defendant under the rules governing
33    the  admission  of  evidence   at   criminal   trials.    Any
34    information relevant to any additional aggravating factors or
 
HB2058 Enrolled            -15-                LRB9201006ARsb
 1    any  mitigating  factors  indicated  in subsection (c) may be
 2    presented  by  the  State  or  defendant  regardless  of  its
 3    admissibility under the  rules  governing  the  admission  of
 4    evidence  at  criminal  trials.  The  State and the defendant
 5    shall be given fair  opportunity  to  rebut  any  information
 6    received at the hearing.
 7        (f)  Proof.
 8        The  burden of proof of establishing the existence of any
 9    of the factors set forth in subsection (b) is  on  the  State
10    and  shall  not  be  satisfied  unless  established  beyond a
11    reasonable doubt.
12        (g)  Procedure - Jury.
13        If at the separate sentencing proceeding the  jury  finds
14    that  none of the factors set forth in subsection (b) exists,
15    the  court  shall  sentence  the  defendant  to  a  term   of
16    imprisonment   under   Chapter  V  of  the  Unified  Code  of
17    Corrections.  If there is a unanimous  finding  by  the  jury
18    that  one  or more of the factors set forth in subsection (b)
19    exist, the jury shall  consider  aggravating  and  mitigating
20    factors  as  instructed  by  the  court  and  shall determine
21    whether the sentence of death shall be imposed.  If the  jury
22    determines  unanimously  that there are no mitigating factors
23    sufficient to preclude the imposition of the death  sentence,
24    the court shall sentence the defendant to death.
25        Unless  the  jury  unanimously  finds  that  there are no
26    mitigating factors sufficient to preclude the  imposition  of
27    the  death sentence the court shall sentence the defendant to
28    a term of imprisonment under Chapter V of the Unified Code of
29    Corrections.
30        (h)  Procedure - No Jury.
31        In a proceeding before the  court  alone,  if  the  court
32    finds  that  none  of  the  factors  found  in subsection (b)
33    exists, the court shall sentence the defendant to a  term  of
34    imprisonment   under  Chapter  V  of   the  Unified  Code  of
 
HB2058 Enrolled            -16-                LRB9201006ARsb
 1    Corrections.
 2        If the Court determines that one or more of  the  factors
 3    set  forth in subsection (b) exists, the Court shall consider
 4    any  aggravating  and  mitigating  factors  as  indicated  in
 5    subsection (c).  If the Court determines that  there  are  no
 6    mitigating  factors  sufficient to preclude the imposition of
 7    the death sentence, the Court shall sentence the defendant to
 8    death.
 9        Unless the court  finds  that  there  are  no  mitigating
10    factors sufficient to preclude the imposition of the sentence
11    of death, the court shall sentence the defendant to a term of
12    imprisonment   under   Chapter  V  of  the  Unified  Code  of
13    Corrections.
14        (i)  Appellate Procedure.
15        The conviction and sentence of death shall be subject  to
16    automatic  review by the Supreme Court.  Such review shall be
17    in accordance with rules promulgated by the Supreme Court.
18        (j)  Disposition of reversed death sentence.
19        In the event that the death penalty in this Act  is  held
20    to  be  unconstitutional  by  the Supreme Court of the United
21    States or of the State of Illinois, any person  convicted  of
22    first degree murder shall be sentenced by the court to a term
23    of  imprisonment  under  Chapter  V  of  the  Unified Code of
24    Corrections.
25        In the event that any  death  sentence  pursuant  to  the
26    sentencing   provisions   of   this   Section   is   declared
27    unconstitutional by the Supreme Court of the United States or
28    of  the State of Illinois, the court having jurisdiction over
29    a person  previously  sentenced  to  death  shall  cause  the
30    defendant to be brought before the court, and the court shall
31    sentence the  defendant  to  a  term  of  imprisonment  under
32    Chapter V of the Unified Code of Corrections.
33    (Source: P.A.  90-213,  eff.  1-1-98;  90-651,  eff.  1-1-99;
34    90-668,  eff.  1-1-99;  91-357,  eff.  7-29-99;  91-434, eff.
 
HB2058 Enrolled            -17-                LRB9201006ARsb
 1    1-1-00.)

 2        (720 ILCS 5/14-3) (from Ch. 38, par. 14-3)
 3        Sec. 14-3.  Exemptions.  The following  activities  shall
 4    be exempt from the provisions of this Article:
 5        (a)  Listening   to   radio,   wireless   and  television
 6    communications of any sort where the same are publicly made;
 7        (b)  Hearing conversation when heard by employees of  any
 8    common  carrier  by  wire  incidental to the normal course of
 9    their employment in the operation, maintenance or  repair  of
10    the  equipment  of  such common carrier by wire so long as no
11    information obtained thereby  is  used  or  divulged  by  the
12    hearer;
13        (c)  Any  broadcast  by  radio,  television  or otherwise
14    whether it be a broadcast or  recorded  for  the  purpose  of
15    later  broadcasts  of  any  function  where  the public is in
16    attendance and the conversations are overheard incidental  to
17    the  main  purpose  for  which such broadcasts are then being
18    made;
19        (d)  Recording or listening with the aid of any device to
20    any emergency communication made  in  the  normal  course  of
21    operations  by  any  federal,  state or local law enforcement
22    agency  or  institutions  dealing  in   emergency   services,
23    including,  but not limited to, hospitals, clinics, ambulance
24    services,  fire  fighting  agencies,  any   public   utility,
25    emergency  repair facility, civilian defense establishment or
26    military installation;
27        (e)  Recording the proceedings of any meeting required to
28    be open by the Open Meetings Act, as amended;
29        (f)  Recording or listening with the aid of any device to
30    incoming telephone calls of phone lines  publicly  listed  or
31    advertised   as   consumer  "hotlines"  by  manufacturers  or
32    retailers of food and drug products.  Such recordings must be
33    destroyed, erased or turned over  to  local  law  enforcement
 
HB2058 Enrolled            -18-                LRB9201006ARsb
 1    authorities  within  24 hours from the time of such recording
 2    and shall not be otherwise disseminated.  Failure on the part
 3    of the individual or business operating any such recording or
 4    listening device to comply  with  the  requirements  of  this
 5    subsection  shall  eliminate  any  civil or criminal immunity
 6    conferred upon that individual or business by  the  operation
 7    of this Section;
 8        (g)  With  prior  notification to the State's Attorney of
 9    the county in which it is to occur,  recording  or  listening
10    with  the  aid  of any device to any conversation where a law
11    enforcement officer, or any person acting at the direction of
12    law enforcement, is a  party  to  the  conversation  and  has
13    consented   to   it   being  intercepted  or  recorded  under
14    circumstances where the use of the device  is  necessary  for
15    the  protection  of the law enforcement officer or any person
16    acting at the direction of law enforcement, in the course  of
17    an  investigation of a forcible felony, a felony violation of
18    the Illinois Controlled Substances Act, a felony violation of
19    the Cannabis Control Act,  or  any  "streetgang  related"  or
20    "gang-related"  felony  as  those  terms  are  defined in the
21    Illinois Streetgang Terrorism  Omnibus  Prevention  Act.  Any
22    recording or evidence derived as the result of this exemption
23    shall  be  inadmissible in any proceeding, criminal, civil or
24    administrative, except (i) where a party to the  conversation
25    suffers   great  bodily  injury  or  is  killed  during  such
26    conversation, or (ii) when used as direct  impeachment  of  a
27    witness  concerning  matters contained in the interception or
28    recording.  The Director of the Department  of  State  Police
29    shall  issue  regulations as are necessary concerning the use
30    of  devices,  retention  of  tape  recordings,  and   reports
31    regarding their use;
32        (g-5)  With  approval  of  the  State's  Attorney  of the
33    county in which it is to occur, recording or  listening  with
34    the  aid  of  any  device  to  any  conversation  where a law
 
HB2058 Enrolled            -19-                LRB9201006ARsb
 1    enforcement officer, or any person acting at the direction of
 2    law enforcement, is a  party  to  the  conversation  and  has
 3    consented  to  it being intercepted or recorded in the course
 4    of an investigation of any offense defined in Article 29D  of
 5    this  Code.  In  all  such cases, an application for an order
 6    approving the previous or continuing use of an  eavesdropping
 7    device  must  be  made within 48 hours of the commencement of
 8    such use.  In the absence of  such  an  order,  or  upon  its
 9    denial,  any  continuing use shall immediately terminate. The
10    Director of State Police shall issue rules as  are  necessary
11    concerning  the use of devices, retention of tape recordings,
12    and reports regarding their use.
13        Any recording or evidence  obtained  or  derived  in  the
14    course  of an investigation of any offense defined in Article
15    29D of this Code shall, upon motion of the  State's  Attorney
16    or Attorney General prosecuting any violation of Article 29D,
17    be  reviewed  in camera with notice to all parties present by
18    the court presiding over the criminal case, and, if ruled  by
19    the  court  to be relevant and otherwise admissible, it shall
20    be admissible at the trial of the criminal case.
21        This subsection (g-5) is inoperative on and after January
22    1, 2005. No conversations recorded or monitored  pursuant  to
23    this subsection (g-5) shall be inadmissable in a court of law
24    by  virtue  of the repeal of this subsection (g-5) on January
25    1, 2005.
26        (h)  Recordings  made   simultaneously   with   a   video
27    recording  of  an  oral conversation between a peace officer,
28    who has identified his or her office, and  a  person  stopped
29    for an investigation of an offense under the Illinois Vehicle
30    Code;
31        (i)  Recording  of  a  conversation  made  by  or  at the
32    request of a person, not a law enforcement officer  or  agent
33    of  a  law  enforcement  officer,  who  is  a  party  to  the
34    conversation,  under  reasonable suspicion that another party
 
HB2058 Enrolled            -20-                LRB9201006ARsb
 1    to the conversation is committing, is about to commit, or has
 2    committed a criminal offense against the person or  a  member
 3    of  his  or  her  immediate household, and there is reason to
 4    believe that evidence of the criminal offense may be obtained
 5    by the recording; and
 6        (j)  The use of a telephone monitoring device  by  either
 7    (1)  a  corporation  or  other  business  entity  engaged  in
 8    marketing  or  opinion research or (2) a corporation or other
 9    business entity engaged in telephone solicitation, as defined
10    in this subsection, to record or  listen  to  oral  telephone
11    solicitation  conversations  or marketing or opinion research
12    conversations by an employee  of  the  corporation  or  other
13    business entity when:
14             (i)  the  monitoring  is  used  for  the  purpose of
15        service quality control of marketing or opinion  research
16        or  telephone  solicitation, the education or training of
17        employees or contractors engaged in marketing or  opinion
18        research  or telephone solicitation, or internal research
19        related to marketing or  opinion  research  or  telephone
20        solicitation; and
21             (ii)  the  monitoring is used with the consent of at
22        least one person who is an active party to the  marketing
23        or    opinion    research   conversation   or   telephone
24        solicitation conversation being monitored.
25        No communication or conversation or any part, portion, or
26    aspect of the communication or conversation  made,  acquired,
27    or  obtained,  directly  or  indirectly, under this exemption
28    (j), may be, directly or indirectly,  furnished  to  any  law
29    enforcement  officer,  agency, or official for any purpose or
30    used in any inquiry or investigation, or  used,  directly  or
31    indirectly,   in   any  administrative,  judicial,  or  other
32    proceeding, or divulged to any third party.
33        When recording or listening authorized by this subsection
34    (j) on telephone lines used for marketing or opinion research
 
HB2058 Enrolled            -21-                LRB9201006ARsb
 1    or telephone solicitation purposes results  in  recording  or
 2    listening to a conversation that does not relate to marketing
 3    or  opinion  research  or  telephone solicitation; the person
 4    recording or listening shall,  immediately  upon  determining
 5    that the conversation does not relate to marketing or opinion
 6    research  or  telephone solicitation, terminate the recording
 7    or listening and destroy any such recording  as  soon  as  is
 8    practicable.
 9        Business  entities  that  use  a  telephone monitoring or
10    telephone recording system pursuant  to  this  exemption  (j)
11    shall  provide  current and prospective employees with notice
12    that the monitoring or recordings may occur during the course
13    of their employment.   The  notice  shall  include  prominent
14    signage notification within the workplace.
15        Business  entities  that  use  a  telephone monitoring or
16    telephone recording system pursuant  to  this  exemption  (j)
17    shall  provide  their  employees  or  agents  with  access to
18    personal-only telephone lines which may  be  pay  telephones,
19    that  are  not  subject  to telephone monitoring or telephone
20    recording.
21        For the  purposes  of  this  subsection  (j),  "telephone
22    solicitation"  means  a  communication  through  the use of a
23    telephone by live operators:
24             (i)  soliciting the sale of goods or services;
25             (ii)  receiving orders for  the  sale  of  goods  or
26        services;
27             (iii)  assisting in the use of goods or services; or
28             (iv)  engaging  in the solicitation, administration,
29        or collection of bank or retail credit accounts.
30        For the purposes of this subsection  (j),  "marketing  or
31    opinion  research"  means  a  marketing  or  opinion research
32    interview conducted by a live telephone  interviewer  engaged
33    by  a  corporation  or  other business entity whose principal
34    business is the design, conduct, and analysis  of  polls  and
 
HB2058 Enrolled            -22-                LRB9201006ARsb
 1    surveys  measuring  the opinions, attitudes, and responses of
 2    respondents  toward  products  and  services,  or  social  or
 3    political issues, or both.
 4    (Source: P.A. 91-357, eff. 7-29-99.)

 5        (720 ILCS 5/29B-1) (from Ch. 38, par. 29B-1)
 6        Sec. 29B-1.  (a) A person commits the  offense  of  money
 7    laundering:
 8             (1)  when he knowingly engages or attempts to engage
 9        in a financial transaction in criminally derived property
10        with  either the intent to promote the carrying on of the
11        unlawful  activity  from  which  the  criminally  derived
12        property was obtained or where  he  knows  or  reasonably
13        should know that the financial transaction is designed in
14        whole  or  in part to conceal or disguise the nature, the
15        location, the source, the ownership or the control of the
16        criminally derived property; or.
17             (2)  when, with the intent to:
18                  (A)  promote the carrying  on  of  a  specified
19             criminal activity as defined in this Article; or
20                  (B)  conceal  or disguise the nature, location,
21             source, ownership, or control of  property  believed
22             to  be the proceeds of a specified criminal activity
23             as defined by subdivision (b) (6),
24        he or she conducts or attempts  to  conduct  a  financial
25        transaction  involving  property he or she believes to be
26        the proceeds of specified criminal activity as defined by
27        subdivision (b)  (6)  or  property  used  to  conduct  or
28        facilitate  specified  criminal  activity  as  defined by
29        subdivision (b) (6).
30        (b)  As used in this Section:
31             (1)  "Financial transaction" means a purchase, sale,
32        loan,  pledge,  gift,   transfer,   delivery   or   other
33        disposition  utilizing  criminally  derived property, and
 
HB2058 Enrolled            -23-                LRB9201006ARsb
 1        with  respect  to  financial  institutions,  includes   a
 2        deposit,  withdrawal, transfer between accounts, exchange
 3        of currency, loan, extension of credit, purchase or  sale
 4        of  any  stock,  bond,  certificate  of  deposit or other
 5        monetary instrument or any  other  payment,  transfer  or
 6        delivery  by, through, or to a financial institution. For
 7        purposes of clause  (a)(2)  of  this  Section,  the  term
 8        "financial  transaction"  also  means a transaction which
 9        without   regard   to   whether   the   funds,   monetary
10        instruments, or real or personal property involved in the
11        transaction are criminally derived, any transaction which
12        in any way or degree: (1) involves the movement of  funds
13        by  wire  or  any  other  means; (2) involves one or more
14        monetary instruments; or (3) the transfer of title to any
15        real or personal property. The receipt by an attorney  of
16        bona fide fees for the purpose of legal representation is
17        not a financial transaction for purposes of this Section.
18             (2)  "Financial  institution" means any bank; saving
19        and loan association; trust company; agency or branch  of
20        a  foreign  bank in the United States; currency exchange;
21        credit union, mortgage banking  institution;  pawnbroker;
22        loan  or  finance  company;  operator  of  a  credit card
23        system; issuer, redeemer or cashier of travelers  checks,
24        checks or money orders; dealer in precious metals, stones
25        or jewels; broker or dealer in securities or commodities;
26        investment banker; or investment company.
27             (3)  "Monetary instrument" means United States coins
28        and  currency;  coins  and currency of a foreign country;
29        travelers checks; personal checks, bank checks, and money
30        orders;   investment   securities;   bearer    negotiable
31        instruments;  bearer  investment  securities;  or  bearer
32        securities  and  certificates  of stock in such form that
33        title thereto passes upon delivery.
34             (4)  "Criminally   derived   property"   means   any
 
HB2058 Enrolled            -24-                LRB9201006ARsb
 1        property constituting or derived from proceeds  obtained,
 2        directly  or  indirectly,  pursuant to a violation of the
 3        Criminal Code of 1961, the Illinois Controlled Substances
 4        Act or the Cannabis Control Act.
 5             (5)  "Conduct" or "conducts" includes,  in  addition
 6        to  its  ordinary  meaning,  initiating,  concluding,  or
 7        participating in initiating or concluding a transaction.
 8             (6)  "Specified   criminal   activity"   means   any
 9        violation  of  Section 20.5-5 (720 ILCS 5/20.5-5) and any
10        violation of Article 29D of this Code.
11        (c)  Sentence.
12             (1)  Laundering of criminally derived property of  a
13        value not exceeding $10,000 is a Class 3 felony;
14             (2)  Laundering  of criminally derived property of a
15        value exceeding $10,000 but not exceeding $100,000  is  a
16        Class 2 felony;
17             (3)  Laundering  of criminally derived property of a
18        value exceeding $100,000 is a Class 1 felony;.
19             (4)  Money laundering  in  violation  of  subsection
20        (a)(2) of this Section is a Class X felony.
21    (Source: P.A. 88-258.)

22        (720 ILCS 5/Article 29D heading new)
23                       ARTICLE 29D. TERRORISM

24        (720 ILCS 5/29D-5 new)
25        Sec.   29D-5.   Legislative   findings.  The  devastating
26    consequences of the  barbaric  attacks  on  the  World  Trade
27    Center  and the Pentagon on September 11, 2001 underscore the
28    compelling need for legislation that is specifically designed
29    to combat the evils of terrorism.  Terrorism is  inconsistent
30    with civilized society and cannot be tolerated.
31        A   comprehensive   State   law  is  urgently  needed  to
32    complement federal laws in the fight against terrorism and to
 
HB2058 Enrolled            -25-                LRB9201006ARsb
 1    better  protect  all   citizens   against   terrorist   acts.
 2    Accordingly,  the  legislature  finds  that  our laws must be
 3    strengthened to ensure that terrorists, as well as those  who
 4    solicit or provide financial and other support to terrorists,
 5    are  prosecuted and punished in State courts with appropriate
 6    severity. The legislature further finds that due to the grave
 7    nature and global reach of terrorism that a comprehensive law
 8    encompassing  State  criminal  statutes  and   strong   civil
 9    remedies is needed.
10        An  investigation  may  not be initiated or continued for
11    activities protected by the First  Amendment  to  the  United
12    States  Constitution, including expressions of support or the
13    provision of financial support for the nonviolent  political,
14    religious,  philosophical, or ideological goals or beliefs of
15    any person or group.

16        (720 ILCS 5/29D-10 new)
17        Sec. 29D-10. Definitions. As used in this Article,  where
18    not otherwise distinctly expressed or manifestly incompatible
19    with the intent of this Article:
20        (a)  "Computer  network" means a set of related, remotely
21    connected devices and any communications facilities including
22    more than one computer with the capability to  transmit  data
23    among them through communication facilities.
24        (b)  "Computer"  means  a device that accepts, processes,
25    stores, retrieves, or outputs data, and includes, but is  not
26    limited to, auxiliary storage and telecommunications devices.
27        (c)  "Computer   program"   means   a   series  of  coded
28    instruction or statements in a form acceptable to a  computer
29    which  causes  the  computer  to  process data and supply the
30    results of data processing.
31        (d)  "Data"   means   representations   of   information,
32    knowledge, facts, concepts or instructions, including program
33    documentation, that are prepared in a formalized  manner  and
 
HB2058 Enrolled            -26-                LRB9201006ARsb
 1    are stored or processed in or transmitted by a computer. Data
 2    may  be in any form, including but not limited to magnetic or
 3    optical storage media, punch cards, or data stored internally
 4    in the memory of a computer.
 5        (e)  "Biological products used in or in  connection  with
 6    agricultural  production"  includes,  but  is not limited to,
 7    seeds, plants, and DNA of plants or animals altered  for  use
 8    in  crop  or  livestock  breeding  or production or which are
 9    sold,  intended,  designed,  or  produced  for  use  in  crop
10    production or livestock breeding or production.
11        (f)  "Agricultural products" means crops and livestock.
12        (g)  "Agricultural production"  means  the  breeding  and
13    growing of livestock and crops.
14        (h)  "Livestock"  means  animals bred or raised for human
15    consumption.
16        (i)  "Crops"  means  plants   raised   for:   (1)   human
17    consumption,   (2)   fruits   that  are  intended  for  human
18    consumption, (3) consumption by  livestock,  and  (4)  fruits
19    that are intended for consumption by livestock.
20        (j)  "Communications  systems" means any works, property,
21    or material of any radio, telegraph, telephone, microwave, or
22    cable line, station, or system.
23        (k)  "Substantial damage" means monetary  damage  greater
24    than $100,000.
25        (l)  "Terrorist act" or "act of terrorism" means: (1) any
26    act that is intended to cause or create a risk and does cause
27    or create a risk of death or great bodily harm to one or more
28    persons; (2) any act that disables or destroys the usefulness
29    or operation of any communications system; (3) any act or any
30    series of 2 or more acts committed in furtherance of a single
31    intention,  scheme,  or  design that disables or destroys the
32    usefulness or operation of  a  computer  network,  computers,
33    computer programs, or data used by any industry, by any class
34    of  business,  or  by  5 or more businesses or by the federal
 
HB2058 Enrolled            -27-                LRB9201006ARsb
 1    government, State government, any unit of local government, a
 2    public utility, a manufacturer of pharmaceuticals, a national
 3    defense  contractor,  or  a  manufacturer  of   chemical   or
 4    biological   products   used   in   or   in  connection  with
 5    agricultural production; (4) any act that disables or  causes
 6    substantial  damage  to  or  destruction  of any structure or
 7    facility used in or used in connection with ground,  air,  or
 8    water  transportation;  the  production  or  distribution  of
 9    electricity, gas, oil, or other fuel; the treatment of sewage
10    or the treatment or distribution of water; or controlling the
11    flow   of  any  body  of  water;  (5)  any  act  that  causes
12    substantial damage to or destruction of livestock or to crops
13    or a series of 2 or more acts committed in furtherance  of  a
14    single  intention, scheme, or design which, in the aggregate,
15    causes substantial damage to or destruction of  livestock  or
16    crops;  (6)  any  act  that  causes  substantial damage to or
17    destruction of any hospital or any building or facility  used
18    by  the  federal  government,  State  government, any unit of
19    local government or by a national defense contractor or by  a
20    public   utility,   a   manufacturer  of  pharmaceuticals,  a
21    manufacturer of chemical or biological products used in or in
22    connection with agricultural production  or  the  storage  or
23    processing  of  agricultural  products  or the preparation of
24    agricultural products for food or food products intended  for
25    resale  or for feed for livestock; or (7) any act that causes
26    substantial damage to  any  building  containing  5  or  more
27    businesses of any type or to any building in which 10 or more
28    people reside.
29        (m)  "Terrorist"  and  "terrorist organization" means any
30    person who engages or is about to engage in a  terrorist  act
31    with the intent to intimidate or coerce a significant portion
32    of a civilian population.
33        (n)  "Material  support  or  resources" means currency or
34    other  financial  securities,  financial  services,  lodging,
 
HB2058 Enrolled            -28-                LRB9201006ARsb
 1    training, safe houses, false documentation or identification,
 2    communications   equipment,   facilities,   weapons,   lethal
 3    substances, explosives, personnel, transportation, any  other
 4    kind  of  physical  assets or intangible property, and expert
 5    services or expert assistance.
 6        (o)  "Person" has the meaning given in  Section  2-15  of
 7    this Code and, in addition to that meaning, includes, without
 8    limitation, any charitable organization, whether incorporated
 9    or unincorporated, any professional fund raiser, professional
10    solicitor,  limited  liability  company,  association,  joint
11    stock  company,  association, trust, trustee, or any group of
12    people formally or informally affiliated or associated for  a
13    common  purpose,  and any officer, director, partner, member,
14    or agent of any person.
15        (p)  "Render criminal assistance" means to do any of  the
16    following  with  the  intent to prevent, hinder, or delay the
17    discovery or apprehension of, or the lodging  of  a  criminal
18    charge  against, a person who he or she knows or believes has
19    committed an offense under this Article or is being sought by
20    law enforcement officials for the commission  of  an  offense
21    under  this Article, or with the intent to assist a person in
22    profiting or benefiting from the  commission  of  an  offense
23    under this Article:
24             (1)  harbor or conceal the person;
25             (2)  warn  the  person  of  impending  discovery  or
26        apprehension;
27             (3)  provide  the person with money, transportation,
28        a weapon, a disguise, false identification documents,  or
29        any other means of avoiding discovery or apprehension;
30             (4)  prevent   or   obstruct,  by  means  of  force,
31        intimidation, or deception, anyone from performing an act
32        that might aid in the discovery or  apprehension  of  the
33        person or in the lodging of a criminal charge against the
34        person;
 
HB2058 Enrolled            -29-                LRB9201006ARsb
 1             (5)  suppress,    by   any   act   of   concealment,
 2        alteration, or destruction, any  physical  evidence  that
 3        might  aid in the discovery or apprehension of the person
 4        or in the  lodging  of  a  criminal  charge  against  the
 5        person;
 6             (6)  aid  the  person  to  protect  or expeditiously
 7        profit from an advantage derived from the crime; or
 8             (7)  provide expert services or expert assistance to
 9        the  person.  Providing   expert   services   or   expert
10        assistance  shall  not  be  construed  to apply to: (1) a
11        licensed attorney who discusses with a client  the  legal
12        consequences of a proposed course of conduct or advises a
13        client  of  legal  or  constitutional  rights  and  (2) a
14        licensed medical doctor who  provides  emergency  medical
15        treatment  to  a  person  whom  he  or  she  believes has
16        committed an offense under this Article if,  as  soon  as
17        reasonably  practicable  either before or after providing
18        such treatment, he or  she  notifies  a  law  enforcement
19        agency.

20        (720 ILCS 5/29D-15 new)
21        Sec.  29D-15.  Soliciting material support for terrorism;
22    providing material support for a terrorist act.
23        (a)  A person is guilty of  soliciting  material  support
24    for  terrorism  if  he  or she knowingly raises, solicits, or
25    collects material  support  or  resources  knowing  that  the
26    material  support  or  resources will be used, in whole or in
27    part, to plan, prepare, carry out, or avoid apprehension  for
28    committing  terrorism as defined in Section 29D-30 or causing
29    a  catastrophe  as  defined  in  Section  20.5-5  (720   ILCS
30    5/20.5-5)  of  this  Code,  or who knows and intends that the
31    material  support  or  resources  so  raised,  solicited,  or
32    collected will be used in the commission of a  terrorist  act
33    as   defined   in  Section  29D-10(1)  of  this  Code  by  an
 
HB2058 Enrolled            -30-                LRB9201006ARsb
 1    organization designated under 8 U.S.C. 1189, as  amended.  It
 2    is  not an element of the offense that the defendant actually
 3    knows that an organization has been designated under 8 U.S.C.
 4    1189, as amended.
 5        (b)  A person is guilty of providing material support for
 6    terrorism if he or she knowingly provides material support or
 7    resources to a person knowing that the person will  use  that
 8    support  or  those  resources  in  whole  or in part to plan,
 9    prepare, carry out, facilitate, or to avoid apprehension  for
10    committing terrorism as defined in Section 29D-30 or to cause
11    a   catastrophe  as  defined  in  Section  20.5-5  (720  ILCS
12    5/20.5-5) of this Code.
13        (c)  Sentence. Soliciting material support for  terrorism
14    is a Class X felony for which the sentence shall be a term of
15    imprisonment  of  no  less  than  9 years and no more than 40
16    years.  Providing material support for a terrorist act  is  a
17    Class  X  felony  for  which  the sentence shall be a term of
18    imprisonment of no less than 9 years  and  no  more  than  40
19    years.

20        (720 ILCS 5/29D-20 new)
21        Sec. 29D-20. Making a terrorist threat.
22        (a)  A  person  is  guilty  of  making a terrorist threat
23    when, with the intent to intimidate or coerce  a  significant
24    portion  of  a  civilian  population, he or she in any manner
25    knowingly threatens to  commit  or  threatens  to  cause  the
26    commission of a terrorist act as defined in Section 29D-10(1)
27    and  thereby  causes  a reasonable expectation or fear of the
28    imminent commission of a terrorist act as defined in  Section
29    29D-10(1)  or  of another terrorist act as defined in Section
30    29D-10(1).
31        (b)  It is not a defense  to  a  prosecution  under  this
32    Section  that  at  the  time the defendant made the terrorist
33    threat, unknown to the defendant, it was impossible to  carry
 
HB2058 Enrolled            -31-                LRB9201006ARsb
 1    out  the  threat, nor is it a defense that the threat was not
 2    made to a person who was a subject or intended victim of  the
 3    threatened act.
 4        (c)  Sentence.  Making  a  terrorist  threat is a Class X
 5    felony.

 6        (720 ILCS 5/29D-25 new)
 7        Sec. 29D-25. Falsely making a terrorist threat.
 8        (a)  A person is guilty of  falsely  making  a  terrorist
 9    threat  when in any manner he or she knowingly makes a threat
10    to commit or cause to be committed a terrorist act as defined
11    in Section  29D-10(1)  or  otherwise  knowingly  creates  the
12    impression  or  belief that a terrorist act is about to be or
13    has been committed, or in any manner knowingly makes a threat
14    to commit or cause to be committed a catastrophe  as  defined
15    in  Section  20.5-5 (720 ILCS 5/20.5-5) of this Code which he
16    or she knows is false.
17        (b)  Sentence. Falsely making a  terrorist  threat  is  a
18    Class 1 felony.

19        (720 ILCS 5/29D-30 new)
20        Sec. 29D-30. Terrorism.
21        (a)  A  person  is  guilty  of  terrorism  when, with the
22    intent to intimidate or coerce a  significant  portion  of  a
23    civilian population:
24             (1)  he  or she knowingly commits a terrorist act as
25        defined in Section 29D-10(1) of  this  Code  within  this
26        State; or
27             (2)  he  or she, while outside this State, knowingly
28        commits a terrorist act as defined in  Section  29D-10(1)
29        of  this  Code  that  takes  effect  within this State or
30        produces  substantial  detrimental  effects  within  this
31        State.
32        (b)  Sentence. Terrorism is  a  Class  X  felony.  If  no
 
HB2058 Enrolled            -32-                LRB9201006ARsb
 1    deaths are caused by the terrorist act, the sentence shall be
 2    a  term of 20 years to natural life imprisonment; however, if
 3    the terrorist act caused the death of one or more persons,  a
 4    mandatory  term  of  natural  life  imprisonment shall be the
 5    sentence in the event the death penalty is not imposed.

 6        (720 ILCS 5/29D-35 new)
 7        Sec. 29D-35. Hindering prosecution of terrorism.
 8        (a)  A person  is  guilty  of  hindering  prosecution  of
 9    terrorism  when  he  or  she renders criminal assistance to a
10    person who has committed  terrorism  as  defined  in  Section
11    29D-30  or caused a catastrophe, as defined in Section 20.5-5
12    of this Code when he or she knows that the person to whom  he
13    or  she  rendered  criminal  assistance  engaged in an act of
14    terrorism or caused a catastrophe.
15        (b)  Hindering prosecution of  terrorism  is  a  Class  X
16    felony, the sentence for which shall be a term of 20 years to
17    natural  life  imprisonment if no death was caused by the act
18    of terrorism committed by the person to  whom  the  defendant
19    rendered  criminal assistance and a mandatory term of natural
20    life imprisonment if death was caused by the act of terrorism
21    committed by  the  person  to  whom  the  defendant  rendered
22    criminal assistance.

23        (720 ILCS 5/29D-40 new)
24        Sec.  29D-40.  Restitution.  In  addition  to  any  other
25    penalty  that  may  be  imposed,  a  court shall sentence any
26    person convicted of any violation of this Article to pay  all
27    expenses   incurred   by   the   federal   government,  State
28    government, or any unit of local government in responding  to
29    any violation and cleaning up following any violation.

30        (720 ILCS 5/29D-45 new)
31        Sec.  29D-45.  Limitations. A prosecution for any offense
 
HB2058 Enrolled            -33-                LRB9201006ARsb
 1    in this Article may be commenced at any time.

 2        (720 ILCS 5/29D-60 new)
 3        Sec. 29D-60. Injunctive relief. Whenever  it  appears  to
 4    the  Attorney General or any State's Attorney that any person
 5    is engaged in, or  is  about  to  engage  in,  any  act  that
 6    constitutes  or would constitute a violation of this Article,
 7    the Attorney General or any State's Attorney may  initiate  a
 8    civil action in the circuit court to enjoin the violation.

 9        (720 ILCS 5/29D-65 new)
10        Sec. 29D-65. Asset freeze, seizure, and forfeiture.
11        (a)  Asset  freeze, seizure, and forfeiture in connection
12    with a violation of this Article.
13             (1)  Whenever it  appears  that  there  is  probable
14        cause to believe that any person used, is using, is about
15        to  use,  or is intending to use property in any way that
16        constitutes or  would  constitute  a  violation  of  this
17        Article, the Attorney General or any State's Attorney may
18        make  an  ex  parte  application  to the circuit court to
19        freeze or seize all the assets of that person and, upon a
20        showing of probable cause in the ex  parte  hearing,  the
21        circuit court shall issue an order to freeze or seize all
22        assets  of  that  person.  A  copy of the freeze or seize
23        order shall be served upon the person whose  assets  have
24        been  frozen  or  seized  and  that  person or any person
25        claiming an interest in the property  may,  at  any  time
26        within  30  days of service, file a motion to release his
27        or her assets. Within 10 days that person is entitled  to
28        a  hearing.  In  any  proceeding  to  release assets, the
29        burden of proof shall be by a preponderance  of  evidence
30        and  shall  be on the State to show that the person used,
31        was using, is about to use, or is intending  to  use  any
32        property  in any way that constitutes or would constitute
 
HB2058 Enrolled            -34-                LRB9201006ARsb
 1        a violation of this Article. If the court finds that  any
 2        property  was  being  used,  is  about  to be used, or is
 3        intended to be used in violation of or in  any  way  that
 4        would  constitute  a violation of this Article, the court
 5        shall order such property frozen or  held  until  further
 6        order  of  the  court.  Any  property  so ordered held or
 7        frozen shall be subject to forfeiture under the following
 8        procedure.  Upon the request of the defendant, the  court
 9        may  release  frozen  or  seized assets sufficient to pay
10        attorney's fees for representation of the defendant at  a
11        hearing conducted under this Section.
12             (2)  If,  within  60 days after any seizure or asset
13        freeze under subparagraph (1) of this Section,  a  person
14        having  any  property  interest  in  the seized or frozen
15        property is charged with  an  offense,  the  court  which
16        renders  judgment  upon  the charge shall, within 30 days
17        after the  judgment,  conduct  a  forfeiture  hearing  to
18        determine  whether  the  property  was  used, about to be
19        used, or intended to be used in violation of this Article
20        or in connection with any violation of this  Article,  or
21        was  integrally  related  to  any  violation  or intended
22        violation of this Article. The hearing shall be commenced
23        by a written petition by the  State,  including  material
24        allegations of fact, the name and address of every person
25        determined  by the State to have any property interest in
26        the seized or  frozen  property,  a  representation  that
27        written  notice  of  the  date,  time,  and  place of the
28        hearing has been mailed to every such person by certified
29        mail at least 10 days before the date, and a request  for
30        forfeiture.  Every  such person may appear as a party and
31        present evidence at the hearing.  The  quantum  of  proof
32        required  shall be preponderance of the evidence, and the
33        burden of proof shall be  on  the  State.  If  the  court
34        determines  that  the seized or frozen property was used,
 
HB2058 Enrolled            -35-                LRB9201006ARsb
 1        about to be used, or intended to be used in violation  of
 2        this  Article or in connection with any violation of this
 3        Article, or was integrally related to  any  violation  or
 4        intended   violation   of   this  Article,  an  order  of
 5        forfeiture and disposition of the seized or frozen  money
 6        and property shall be entered. All property forfeited may
 7        be  liquidated  and the resultant money together with any
 8        money   forfeited   shall   be   allocated   among    the
 9        participating    law   enforcement   agencies   in   such
10        proportions as may be determined to be equitable  by  the
11        court entering the forfeiture order, any such property so
12        forfeited  shall  be  received by the State's Attorney or
13        Attorney General and upon liquidation shall be  allocated
14        among  the participating law enforcement agencies in such
15        proportions as may be determined equitable by  the  court
16        entering the forfeiture order.
17             (3)  If a seizure or asset freeze under subparagraph
18        (1)  of  this  subsection (a) is not followed by a charge
19        under this Article within 60 days, or if the  prosecution
20        of  the  charge is permanently terminated or indefinitely
21        discontinued without any  judgment  of  conviction  or  a
22        judgment of acquittal is entered, the State's Attorney or
23        Attorney  General  shall  immediately  commence an in rem
24        proceeding for the forfeiture  of  any  seized  money  or
25        other  things of value, or both, in the circuit court and
26        any person having any property interest in the  money  or
27        property  may  commence separate civil proceedings in the
28        manner provided by law. Any property so  forfeited  shall
29        be  allocated  among  the  participating  law enforcement
30        agencies in such proportions as may be determined  to  be
31        equitable by the court entering the forfeiture order.
32        (b)  Forfeiture of property acquired in connection with a
33    violation of this Article.
34             (1)  Any  person  who commits any offense under this
 
HB2058 Enrolled            -36-                LRB9201006ARsb
 1        Article shall forfeit, according  to  the  provisions  of
 2        this  Section,  any moneys, profits, or proceeds, and any
 3        interest  or  property  in  which  the  sentencing  court
 4        determines he or she has acquired or maintained, directly
 5        or indirectly, in whole or in part, as a  result  of,  or
 6        used, was about to be used, or was intended to be used in
 7        connection  with  the  offense.  The  person  shall  also
 8        forfeit  any  interest  in,  security,  claim against, or
 9        contractual right of any kind which affords the person  a
10        source  of  influence over any enterprise which he or she
11        has  established,  operated,  controlled,  conducted,  or
12        participated in conducting, where his or her relationship
13        to or connection with any such thing or activity directly
14        or indirectly, in whole or in part, is traceable  to  any
15        item  or benefit which he or she has obtained or acquired
16        through an offense under this Article or which he or  she
17        used, about to use, or intended to use in connection with
18        any  offense  under  this Article.  Forfeiture under this
19        Section may be pursued in  addition  to  or  in  lieu  of
20        proceeding under subsection (a) of this Section.
21             (2)  Proceedings  instituted  under  this subsection
22        shall be subject to and conducted in accordance with  the
23        following procedures:
24                  (A)  The  sentencing court shall, upon petition
25             by  the  prosecuting  agency,  whether  it  is   the
26             Attorney  General  or  the  State's Attorney, at any
27             time following  sentencing,  conduct  a  hearing  to
28             determine  whether any property or property interest
29             is subject to forfeiture under this  subsection.  At
30             the  forfeiture  hearing  the People of the State of
31             Illinois shall have the burden of establishing, by a
32             preponderance of the evidence, that the property  or
33             property interests are subject to forfeiture.
34                  (B)  In any action brought by the People of the
 
HB2058 Enrolled            -37-                LRB9201006ARsb
 1             State  of  Illinois  under  this  Section, the court
 2             shall have jurisdiction to  enter  such  restraining
 3             orders,  injunctions,  or  prohibitions,  or to take
 4             such other  action  in  connection  with  any  real,
 5             personal,  or  mixed  property,  or  other interest,
 6             subject to forfeiture, as it shall consider proper.
 7                  (C)  In any action brought by the People of the
 8             State of Illinois under this subsection in which any
 9             restraining order, injunction, or prohibition or any
10             other action in  connection  with  any  property  or
11             interest subject to forfeiture under this subsection
12             is  sought,  the  circuit  court  presiding over the
13             trial of  the  person  or  persons  charged  with  a
14             violation  under  this Article shall first determine
15             whether there is probable cause to believe that  the
16             person  or  persons  so  charged  have  committed an
17             offense under this Article and whether the  property
18             or  interest  is  subject  to  forfeiture under this
19             subsection. In order  to  make  this  determination,
20             prior  to  entering  any such order, the court shall
21             conduct a hearing without a jury in which the People
22             shall establish: (i) probable cause that the  person
23             or  persons  so  charged  have  committed an offense
24             under this Article; and (ii) probable cause that any
25             property or interest may be  subject  to  forfeiture
26             under  this subsection. The hearing may be conducted
27             simultaneously with a  preliminary  hearing  if  the
28             prosecution  is  commenced  by  information,  or  by
29             motion   of   the   People   at  any  stage  in  the
30             proceedings.  The  court  may  enter  a  finding  of
31             probable cause at a  preliminary  hearing  following
32             the  filing  of  information charging a violation of
33             this Article or the return of  an  indictment  by  a
34             grand jury charging an offense under this Article as
 
HB2058 Enrolled            -38-                LRB9201006ARsb
 1             sufficient  probable  cause  for  purposes  of  this
 2             subsection.  Upon  such a finding, the circuit court
 3             shall enter such restraining order,  injunction,  or
 4             prohibition  or  shall  take  such  other  action in
 5             connection with any such property or other  interest
 6             subject  to  forfeiture  under this subsection as is
 7             necessary to ensure that the property is not removed
 8             from  the  jurisdiction  of  the  court,  concealed,
 9             destroyed, or otherwise disposed of by the owner  or
10             holder  of  that  property  or  interest  prior to a
11             forfeiture  hearing  under  this   subsection.   The
12             Attorney  General  or  State's Attorney shall file a
13             certified copy of the restraining order, injunction,
14             or other prohibition with the recorder of  deeds  or
15             registrar  of  titles  of each county where any such
16             property of the defendant may be  located.  No  such
17             injunction,  restraining order, or other prohibition
18             shall affect the rights of any bona fide  purchaser,
19             mortgagee,  judgment  creditor, or other lien holder
20             arising prior to the date of such filing.  The court
21             may, at any time,  upon  verified  petition  by  the
22             defendant,  conduct  a  hearing  to  release  all or
23             portions of any such property or interest which  the
24             court   previously   determined  to  be  subject  to
25             forfeiture or  subject  to  any  restraining  order,
26             injunction,  prohibition, or other action. The court
27             may release the property to the defendant  for  good
28             cause  shown  and within the sound discretion of the
29             court.
30                  (D)  Upon a conviction of a person  under  this
31             Article,  the  court  shall  authorize  the Attorney
32             General or State's Attorney to seize  and  sell  all
33             property  or other interest declared forfeited under
34             this Article, unless the property is required by law
 
HB2058 Enrolled            -39-                LRB9201006ARsb
 1             to be destroyed or is harmful  to  the  public.  The
 2             court  may  order  the  Attorney  General or State's
 3             Attorney to segregate funds from the proceeds of the
 4             sale  sufficient:  (1)  to  satisfy  any  order   of
 5             restitution,  as the court may deem appropriate; (2)
 6             to satisfy any legal right, title, or interest which
 7             the court deems superior to  any  right,  title,  or
 8             interest  of  the  defendant  at  the  time  of  the
 9             commission of the acts which gave rise to forfeiture
10             under   this  subsection;  or  (3)  to  satisfy  any
11             bona-fide purchaser for value of the  right,  title,
12             or   interest   in  the  property  who  was  without
13             reasonable notice that the property was  subject  to
14             forfeiture.  Following  the  entry  of  an  order of
15             forfeiture, the Attorney General or State's Attorney
16             shall publish notice of the order  and  his  or  her
17             intent  to  dispose  of the property. Within 30 days
18             following the publication, any person  may  petition
19             the  court  to adjudicate the validity of his or her
20             alleged  interest  in  the   property.   After   the
21             deduction    of    all    requisite    expenses   of
22             administration and sale,  the  Attorney  General  or
23             State's  Attorney  shall  distribute the proceeds of
24             the sale, along with any moneys forfeited or seized,
25             among participating law enforcement agencies in such
26             equitable portions as the court shall determine.
27                  (E)  No judge shall  release  any  property  or
28             money  seized  under  subdivision (A) or (B) for the
29             payment of attorney's fees of any person claiming an
30             interest in such money or property.
31        (c)  Exemptions from forfeiture. A property  interest  is
32    exempt  from  forfeiture  under  this Section if its owner or
33    interest holder establishes by a  preponderance  of  evidence
34    that the owner or interest holder:
 
HB2058 Enrolled            -40-                LRB9201006ARsb
 1             (A)(i)  in  the  case  of  personal property, is not
 2        legally accountable for the conduct giving  rise  to  the
 3        forfeiture, did not acquiesce in it, and did not know and
 4        could  not  reasonably  have known of the conduct or that
 5        the conduct was likely to occur, or
 6             (ii)  in the case of real property, is  not  legally
 7        accountable   for   the   conduct   giving  rise  to  the
 8        forfeiture, or did not solicit, conspire, or  attempt  to
 9        commit the conduct giving rise to the forfeiture; and
10             (B)  had  not  acquired and did not stand to acquire
11        substantial proceeds from the conduct giving rise to  its
12        forfeiture  other  than  as an interest holder in an arms
13        length commercial transaction; and
14             (C)  with respect to conveyances, did not  hold  the
15        property jointly or in common with a person whose conduct
16        gave rise to the forfeiture; and
17             (D)  does  not  hold the property for the benefit of
18        or as nominee for any person whose conduct gave  rise  to
19        its  forfeiture,  and,  if  the  owner or interest holder
20        acquired the interest through any such person, the  owner
21        or  interest  holder acquired it as a bona fide purchaser
22        for value without knowingly taking part  in  the  conduct
23        giving rise to the forfeiture; and
24             (E)  that  the owner or interest holder acquired the
25        interest:
26                  (i)  before the  commencement  of  the  conduct
27             giving  rise  to its forfeiture and the person whose
28             conduct gave rise to its forfeiture did not have the
29             authority to convey the  interest  to  a  bona  fide
30             purchaser for value at the time of the conduct; or
31                  (ii)  after  the  commencement  of  the conduct
32             giving rise to its  forfeiture,  and  the  owner  or
33             interest   holder   acquired   the   interest  as  a
34             mortgagee, secured creditor, lien  holder,  or  bona
 
HB2058 Enrolled            -41-                LRB9201006ARsb
 1             fide  purchaser  for  value without knowledge of the
 2             conduct which gave rise to the forfeiture; and
 3                       (a)  in the  case  of  personal  property,
 4                  without   knowledge   of  the  seizure  of  the
 5                  property for forfeiture; or
 6                       (b)  in the case of  real  estate,  before
 7                  the  filing  in  the  office of the Recorder of
 8                  Deeds of the county in which the real estate is
 9                  located of a notice of seizure  for  forfeiture
10                  or a lis pendens notice.

11        (720 ILCS 5/29D-70 new)
12        Sec.  29D-70.  Severability.  If  any  clause,  sentence,
13    Section,   provision,   or   part  of  this  Article  or  the
14    application thereof to any person or  circumstance  shall  be
15    adjudged  to  be  unconstitutional,  the  remainder  of  this
16    Article  or its application to persons or circumstances other
17    than those to which it is held invalid, shall not be affected
18    thereby.

19        Section 17.  The Boarding Aircraft  With  Weapon  Act  is
20    amended by changing Section 7 as follows:

21        (720 ILCS 545/7) (from Ch. 38, par. 84-7)
22        Sec.  7.  Sentence.  Violation  of  this Act is a Class 4
23    felony A misdemeanor.
24    (Source: P.A. 82-662.)

25        Section 20.  The Code of Criminal Procedure  of  1963  is
26    amended  by  changing Sections 108-4, 108A-6, 108B-1, 108B-2,
27    108B-3, 108B-4,  108B-5,  108B-7,  108B-8,  108B-9,  108B-10,
28    108B-11,  108B-12, and 108B-14 and adding Section 108B-7.5 as
29    follows:
 
HB2058 Enrolled            -42-                LRB9201006ARsb
 1        (725 ILCS 5/108-4) (from Ch. 38, par. 108-4)
 2        Sec. 108-4. Issuance of search warrant.
 3        (a)  All warrants upon written complaint shall state  the
 4    time  and  date  of issuance and be the warrants of the judge
 5    issuing the same and not the warrants of the court  in  which
 6    he  is  then sitting and such warrants need not bear the seal
 7    of the court or clerk thereof. The  complaint  on  which  the
 8    warrant  is  issued  need  not be filed with the clerk of the
 9    court nor with the court if  there  is  no  clerk  until  the
10    warrant   has   been  executed  or  has  been  returned  "not
11    executed".
12        The search warrant upon written complaint may  be  issued
13    electronically  or  electromagnetically by use of a facsimile
14    transmission machine and any such warrant shall have the same
15    validity as a written search warrant.
16        (b)  Warrant upon oral testimony.
17             (1)  General rule. When the  offense  in  connection
18        with   which  a  search  warrant  is  sought  constitutes
19        terrorism or any related offense as  defined  in  Article
20        29D   of   the   Criminal   Code  of  1961,  and  if  the
21        circumstances make it reasonable to dispense, in whole or
22        in part, with a written affidavit, a judge  may  issue  a
23        warrant   based  upon  sworn  testimony  communicated  by
24        telephone or other appropriate means, including facsimile
25        transmission.
26             (2)  Application. The person who is  requesting  the
27        warrant  shall  prepare  a  document  to  be  known  as a
28        duplicate original warrant and shall read such  duplicate
29        original warrant, verbatim, to the judge. The judge shall
30        enter,  verbatim,  what  is  so  read  to  the judge on a
31        document to be known as the original warrant.  The  judge
32        may direct that the warrant be modified.
33             (3)  Issuance.  If  the  judge is satisfied that the
34        offense in connection with which the  search  warrant  is
 
HB2058 Enrolled            -43-                LRB9201006ARsb
 1        sought  constitutes  terrorism  or any related offense as
 2        defined in Article 29D of the Criminal Code of 1961, that
 3        the circumstances are such as to make  it  reasonable  to
 4        dispense  with  a written affidavit, and that grounds for
 5        the application exist or that there is probable cause  to
 6        believe  that  they  exist,  the  judge  shall  order the
 7        issuance of a warrant by directing the person  requesting
 8        the  warrant  to  sign  the judge's name on the duplicate
 9        original warrant. The judge shall  immediately  sign  the
10        original  warrant  and  enter on the face of the original
11        warrant the exact time when the warrant was ordered to be
12        issued. The finding of probable cause for a warrant  upon
13        oral  testimony may be based on the same kind of evidence
14        as is sufficient for a warrant upon affidavit.
15             (4)  Recording and certification of testimony.  When
16        a  caller  informs the judge that the purpose of the call
17        is to request a  warrant,  the  judge  shall  immediately
18        place  under  oath  each  person  whose testimony forms a
19        basis of the application and  each  person  applying  for
20        that  warrant.  If a voice recording device is available,
21        the judge shall record by means of the device all of  the
22        call  after the caller informs the judge that the purpose
23        of  the  call  is  to  request  a  warrant,  otherwise  a
24        stenographic or longhand verbatim record shall  be  made.
25        If  a  voice  recording  device is used or a stenographic
26        record made, the judge shall have the record transcribed,
27        shall certify the  accuracy  of  the  transcription,  and
28        shall  file  a  copy  of  the  original  record  and  the
29        transcription  with  the  court.  If  a longhand verbatim
30        record is made, the judge shall file a signed  copy  with
31        the court.
32             (5)  Contents.  The  contents of a warrant upon oral
33        testimony shall be the same as the contents of a  warrant
34        upon affidavit.
 
HB2058 Enrolled            -44-                LRB9201006ARsb
 1             (6)  Additional  rule  for execution. The person who
 2        executes the  warrant  shall  enter  the  exact  time  of
 3        execution on the face of the duplicate original warrant.
 4             (7)  Motion to suppress based on failure to obtain a
 5        written  affidavit.    Evidence  obtained  pursuant  to a
 6        warrant issued under this subsection (b) is  not  subject
 7        to   a   motion  to  suppress  on  the  ground  that  the
 8        circumstances were not such as to make it  reasonable  to
 9        dispense  with  a  written affidavit, absent a finding of
10        bad faith. All other grounds  to  move  to  suppress  are
11        preserved.
12             (8)  This subsection (b) is inoperative on and after
13        January 1, 2005.
14             (9) No evidence obtained pursuant to this subsection
15        (b) shall be inadmissable in a court of law  by virtue of
16        subdivision (8).

17    (Source: P.A. 87-523.)

18        (725 ILCS 5/108A-6) (from Ch. 38, par. 108A-6)
19        Sec.  108A-6.  Emergency  Exception  to  Procedures.  (a)
20    Notwithstanding  any  other  provisions  of this Article, any
21    investigative or law enforcement officer, upon approval of  a
22    State's  Attorney,  or  without it if a reasonable effort has
23    been made to contact the appropriate  State's  Attorney,  may
24    use  an  eavesdropping  device  in  an emergency situation as
25    defined in this Section.  Such use must be in accordance with
26    the provisions of this Section and may be allowed only  where
27    the  officer reasonably believes that an order permitting the
28    use of the device would issue were there a prior hearing.
29        An emergency  situation  exists  when,  without  previous
30    notice  to  the  law enforcement officer sufficient to obtain
31    prior judicial approval, the conversation to be overheard  or
32    recorded will occur within a short period of time, the use of
33    the  device  is  necessary  for  the  protection  of  the law
 
HB2058 Enrolled            -45-                LRB9201006ARsb
 1    enforcement officer or it will occur in a situation involving
 2    a clear and present danger of imminent death or great  bodily
 3    harm  to  persons  resulting  from:  (1)  a kidnapping or the
 4    holding of a hostage by force or the threat of  the  imminent
 5    use of force; or (2) the occupation by force or the threat of
 6    the  imminent  use  of force of any premises, place, vehicle,
 7    vessel or aircraft; or (3) any violation of Article 29D.
 8        (b)  In all such  cases,  an  application  for  an  order
 9    approving  the previous or continuing use of an eavesdropping
10    device must be made within 48 hours of  the  commencement  of
11    such  use.   In  the  absence  of  such an order, or upon its
12    denial, any continuing use shall immediately terminate.
13        In order to approve such emergency use,  the  judge  must
14    make  a determination (1) that he would have granted an order
15    had the information been before the court prior to the use of
16    the device and (2) that there was an emergency  situation  as
17    defined in this Section.
18        (c)  In  the event that an application for approval under
19    this Section is denied  the  contents  of  the  conversations
20    overheard  or  recorded  shall  be  treated  as  having  been
21    obtained in violation of this Article.
22    (Source: P.A. 86-763.)

23        (725 ILCS 5/108B-1) (from Ch. 38, par. 108B-1)
24        Sec.  108B-1.  Definitions.   For  the  purpose  of  this
25    Article:
26        (a)  "Aggrieved person" means a person who was a party to
27    any  intercepted  private  wire  or oral communication or any
28    person against whom the intercept was directed.
29        (b)  "Chief Judge"  means,  when  referring  to  a  judge
30    authorized  to  receive  application for, and to enter orders
31    authorizing, interceptions of  private  oral  communications,
32    the  Chief Judge of the Circuit Court wherein the application
33    for order of  interception  is  filed,  or  a  Circuit  Judge
 
HB2058 Enrolled            -46-                LRB9201006ARsb
 1    designated  by  the  Chief  Judge  to  enter these orders. In
 2    circuits other than the Cook County  Circuit,  "Chief  Judge"
 3    also  means,  when referring to a judge authorized to receive
 4    application   for,   and   to   enter   orders   authorizing,
 5    interceptions of private oral  communications,  an  Associate
 6    Judge  authorized  by  Supreme Court Rule to try felony cases
 7    who is assigned by the Chief Judge  to  enter  these  orders.
 8    After assignment by the Chief Judge, an Associate Judge shall
 9    have  plenary  authority  to  issue orders without additional
10    authorization for each specific application made  to  him  by
11    the  State's  Attorney  until  the time the Associate Judge's
12    power is rescinded by the Chief Judge.
13        (c)  "Communications common  carrier"  means  any  person
14    engaged  as  a common carrier for hire in the transmission of
15    communications  by  wire  or  radio,  not   including   radio
16    broadcasting.
17        (d)  "Contents"  includes  information  obtained  from  a
18    private   oral   communication   concerning   the  existence,
19    substance, purport or meaning of the  communication,  or  the
20    identity of a party of the communication.
21        (e)  "Court  of competent jurisdiction" means any circuit
22    court.
23        (f)  "Department"  means  Illinois  Department  of  State
24    Police.
25        (g)  "Director" means Director of the Illinois Department
26    of State Police.
27        (g-1)  "Electronic communication" means any  transfer  of
28    signs,   signals,   writing,   images,   sounds,   data,   or
29    intelligence  of any nature transmitted in whole or part by a
30    wire,  radio,  pager,  computer,  or  electromagnetic,  photo
31    electronic, or photo optical system  where  the  sending  and
32    receiving  parties  intend the electronic communication to be
33    private and the interception, recording, or transcription  of
34    the electronic communication is accomplished by a device in a
 
HB2058 Enrolled            -47-                LRB9201006ARsb
 1    surreptitious  manner  contrary  to  the  provisions  of this
 2    Article.  "Electronic communication" does not include:
 3             (1)  any wire or oral communication; or
 4             (2)  any communication from a tracking device.
 5        (h)  "Electronic   criminal   surveillance   device"   or
 6    "eavesdropping device" means  any  device  or  apparatus,  or
 7    computer  program  including  an  induction coil, that can be
 8    used to intercept private communication  human  speech  other
 9    than:
10             (1)  Any  telephone,  telegraph or telecommunication
11        instrument, equipment or facility, or  any  component  of
12        it,   furnished   to   the   subscriber   or  user  by  a
13        communication common carrier in the  ordinary  course  of
14        its  business,  or purchased by any person and being used
15        by the subscriber, user or person in the ordinary  course
16        of his business, or being used by a communications common
17        carrier  in the ordinary course of its business, or by an
18        investigative or law enforcement officer in the  ordinary
19        course of his duties; or
20             (2)  A  hearing  aid or similar device being used to
21        correct subnormal hearing to not better than normal.
22        (i)  "Electronic criminal surveillance officer" means any
23    law enforcement officer of the United States or of the  State
24    or  political subdivision of it, or of another State, or of a
25    political subdivision of it, who is certified by the Illinois
26    Department  of  State  Police  to  intercept   private   oral
27    communications.
28        (j)  "In-progress trace" means to determine the origin of
29    a  wire communication to a telephone or telegraph instrument,
30    equipment or facility during the course of the communication.
31        (k)  "Intercept" means the aural or other acquisition  of
32    the  contents  of  any private oral communication through the
33    use of any electronic criminal surveillance device.
34        (l)  "Journalist" means a person  engaged  in,  connected
 
HB2058 Enrolled            -48-                LRB9201006ARsb
 1    with,  or  employed  by  news  media,  including  newspapers,
 2    magazines,  press associations, news agencies, wire services,
 3    radio, television or other similar media, for the purpose  of
 4    gathering,  processing,  transmitting,  compiling, editing or
 5    disseminating news for the general public.
 6        (m)  "Law enforcement agency" means any  law  enforcement
 7    agency  of  the  United  States,  or the State or a political
 8    subdivision of it.
 9        (n)  "Oral communication"  means  human  speech  used  to
10    communicate  by  one  party  to  another,  in person, by wire
11    communication or by any other means.
12        (o)  "Private oral communication" means a wire, or  oral,
13    or  electronic  communication  uttered  or  transmitted  by a
14    person exhibiting an expectation that  the  communication  is
15    not  subject  to interception, under circumstances reasonably
16    justifying the expectation.   Circumstances  that  reasonably
17    justify  the  expectation that a communication is not subject
18    to interception include the use of a  cordless  telephone  or
19    cellular communication device.
20        (p)  "Wire  communication" means any human speech used to
21    communicate by one party to  another  in  whole  or  in  part
22    through  the  use  of  facilities  for  the  transmission  of
23    communications  by  wire,  cable  or  other  like  connection
24    between  the  point  of  origin  and  the  point of reception
25    furnished or operated by a communications common carrier.
26        (q)  "Privileged communications"  means  a  private  oral
27    communication between:
28             (1)  a  licensed  and  practicing  physician  and  a
29        patient  within  the  scope  of  the  profession  of  the
30        physician;
31             (2)  a  licensed  and  practicing  psychologist to a
32        patient  within  the  scope  of  the  profession  of  the
33        psychologist;
34             (3)  a licensed and practicing attorney-at-law and a
 
HB2058 Enrolled            -49-                LRB9201006ARsb
 1        client within the scope of the profession of the lawyer;
 2             (4)  a practicing clergyman and a  confidant  within
 3        the scope of the profession of the clergyman;
 4             (5)  a practicing journalist within the scope of his
 5        profession;
 6             (6)  spouses  within  the  scope  of  their  marital
 7        relationship; or
 8             (7)  a  licensed  and  practicing social worker to a
 9        client within the scope of the profession of  the  social
10        worker.
11    (Source: P.A. 86-391; 86-763; 86-1028; 86-1206; 87-530.)

12        (725 ILCS 5/108B-2) (from Ch. 38, par. 108B-2)
13        Sec.  108B-2.  Request  for application for interception.
14    (a) A State's Attorney may apply  for  an  order  authorizing
15    interception  of  private  oral  communications in accordance
16    with the provisions of this Article.
17        (b)  The head of a law enforcement agency, including, for
18    purposes of this subsection, the  acting  head  of  such  law
19    enforcement  agency  if  the head of such agency is absent or
20    unable to serve, may request that a  State's  Attorney  apply
21    for   an  order  authorizing  interception  of  private  oral
22    communications in accordance  with  the  provisions  of  this
23    Article.
24        Upon  request of a law enforcement agency, the Department
25    may provide technical assistance to such an agency  which  is
26    authorized to conduct an interception.
27    (Source: P.A. 85-1203.)

28        (725 ILCS 5/108B-3) (from Ch. 38, par. 108B-3)
29        Sec.   108B-3.  Authorization  for  the  interception  of
30    private oral communication.
31        (a)  The State's Attorney,  or  a  person  designated  in
32    writing  or  by  law to act for him and to perform his duties
 
HB2058 Enrolled            -50-                LRB9201006ARsb
 1    during his absence or disability, may authorize, in  writing,
 2    an  ex  parte  application  to  the chief judge of a court of
 3    competent  jurisdiction  for   an   order   authorizing   the
 4    interception  of  a  private oral communication when no party
 5    has consented to the interception and  (i)  the  interception
 6    may provide evidence of, or may assist in the apprehension of
 7    a  person  who  has  committed,  is committing or is about to
 8    commit,  a  violation  of  Section  8-1.1  (solicitation   of
 9    murder),  8-1.2 (solicitation of murder for hire), 9-1 (first
10    degree murder), or 29B-1 (money laundering) of  the  Criminal
11    Code  of  1961,  Section  401,  401.1  (controlled  substance
12    trafficking), 405, 405.1 (criminal drug conspiracy) or 407 of
13    the  Illinois  Controlled  Substances  Act,  a  violation  of
14    Section  24-2.1,  24-2.2, 24-3, 24-3.1, 24-3.3, 24-3.4, 24-4,
15    or 24-5 or  subsection  24-1(a)(4),  24-1(a)(6),  24-1(a)(7),
16    24-1(a)(9),  24-1(a)(10),  or 24-1(c) of the Criminal Code of
17    1961 or conspiracy to commit money laundering  or  conspiracy
18    to  commit  first  degree murder; (ii) in response to a clear
19    and present danger of imminent death or great bodily harm  to
20    persons  resulting from: (1) a kidnapping or the holding of a
21    hostage by force or the threat of the imminent use of  force;
22    or  (2) the occupation by force or the threat of the imminent
23    use of force of  any  premises,  place,  vehicle,  vessel  or
24    aircraft;  (iii)  to aid an investigation or prosecution of a
25    civil action brought under the Illinois Streetgang  Terrorism
26    Omnibus  Prevention  Act  when  there  is  probable  cause to
27    believe the interception of the  private  oral  communication
28    will  provide  evidence  that a streetgang is committing, has
29    committed, or will commit a second or subsequent gang-related
30    offense  or  that  the  interception  of  the  private   oral
31    communication  will  aid  in  the  collection  of  a judgment
32    entered under that Act; or (iv) upon information  and  belief
33    that  a  streetgang has committed, is committing, or is about
34    to commit a felony.
 
HB2058 Enrolled            -51-                LRB9201006ARsb
 1        (b)  The State's  Attorney  or  a  person  designated  in
 2    writing  or  by  law  to  act for the State's Attorney and to
 3    perform his or her  duties  during  his  or  her  absence  or
 4    disability,   may   authorize,   in   writing,  an  ex  parte
 5    application to the chief judge of  a  circuit  court  for  an
 6    order authorizing the interception of a private communication
 7    when  no  party  has  consented  to  the interception and the
 8    interception may provide evidence of, or may  assist  in  the
 9    apprehension  of a person who has committed, is committing or
10    is about to commit, a violation of an offense  under  Article
11    29D of the Criminal Code of 1961.
12        (b-1)  Subsection (b) is inoperative on and after January
13    1, 2005.
14        (b-2)  No conversations recorded or monitored pursuant to
15    subsection  (b)  shall be made inadmissable in a court of law
16    by virtue of subsection (b-1).
17        (c)  As  used   in   this   Section,   "streetgang"   and
18    "gang-related"  have the meanings ascribed to them in Section
19    10 of the Illinois Streetgang  Terrorism  Omnibus  Prevention
20    Act.
21    (Source: P.A. 88-249; 88-677, eff. 12-15-94.)

22        (725 ILCS 5/108B-4) (from Ch. 38, par. 108B-4)
23        Sec.  108B-4.  Application for order of interception. (a)
24    Each application for an order of authorization to intercept a
25    private oral communication shall be made in writing upon oath
26    or affirmation and shall include:
27        (1)  The  authority  of  the  applicant   to   make   the
28    application;
29        (2)  The identity of the electronic criminal surveillance
30    officer  for  whom  the authority to intercept a private oral
31    communication is sought;
32        (3)  The facts relied upon by the applicant including:
33        (i)  The identity of the particular person, if known, who
 
HB2058 Enrolled            -52-                LRB9201006ARsb
 1    is committing, is about  to  commit,  or  has  committed  the
 2    offense and whose private communication is to be intercepted;
 3        (ii)  The  details  as to the particular offense that has
 4    been, is being, or is about to be committed;
 5        (iii)  The particular type of private communication to be
 6    intercepted;
 7        (iv)  Except as provided in Section 108B-7.5,  a  showing
 8    that  there  is  probable  cause  to believe that the private
 9    communication will be communicated on the particular wire  or
10    electronic   communication   facility   involved  or  at  the
11    particular place  where  the  oral  communication  is  to  be
12    intercepted;
13        (v)  Except   as   provided   in  Section  108B-7.5,  the
14    character and location of the particular wire  or  electronic
15    communication  facilities  involved  or  the particular place
16    where the oral communication is to be intercepted;
17        (vi)  The objective of the investigation;
18        (vii)  A statement of the period of time  for  which  the
19    interception  is  required  to  be  maintained,  and,  if the
20    objective of the investigation is such that the authorization
21    for interception should not automatically terminate when  the
22    described  type  of  communication has been first obtained, a
23    particular statement of facts establishing probable cause  to
24    believe  that additional communications of the same type will
25    continue to occur;
26        (viii)  A particular  statement  of  facts  showing  that
27    other  normal  investigative  procedures  with respect to the
28    offense have been tried and have failed, or reasonably appear
29    to be unlikely to succeed if tried, or are too  dangerous  to
30    employ;
31        (4)  Where  the  application  is  for the extension of an
32    order, a statement of facts showing the results obtained from
33    the interception, or a reasonable explanation of the  failure
34    to obtain results;
 
HB2058 Enrolled            -53-                LRB9201006ARsb
 1        (5)  A  statement  of  the  facts concerning all previous
 2    applications known to the applicant made  to  any  court  for
 3    authorization  to intercept a private an oral, electronic, or
 4    wire communication involving any of the  same  facilities  or
 5    places  specified  in the application or involving any person
 6    whose communication is to  be  intercepted,  and  the  action
 7    taken by the court on each application;
 8        (6)  A  proposed order of authorization for consideration
 9    by the judge; and
10        (7)  Such additional statements of facts  in  support  of
11    the  application  on  which  the applicant may rely or as the
12    chief judge may require.
13        (b)  As part of the consideration  of  that  part  of  an
14    application  for  which  there  is  no corroborative evidence
15    offered, the chief judge may inquire  in  camera  as  to  the
16    identity  of  any  informant  or request any other additional
17    information concerning  the  basis  upon  which  the  State's
18    Attorney,  or  the  head  of  the  law enforcement agency has
19    relied in making an application or a request for  application
20    for  the  order  of authorization which the chief judge finds
21    relevant to the determination of probable  cause  under  this
22    Article.
23    (Source: P.A. 85-1203.)

24        (725 ILCS 5/108B-5) (from Ch. 38, par. 108B-5)
25        Sec.  108B-5.   Requirements  for  order of interception.
26    Upon consideration of an application,  the  chief  judge  may
27    enter  an  ex  parte  order,  as  requested  or  as modified,
28    authorizing the interception of a private oral communication,
29    if the chief judge determines on the basis of the application
30    submitted by the applicant, that:
31        (1)  There is probable cause  for  belief  that  (a)  the
32    person  whose  private  communication is to be intercepted is
33    committing, has committed, or is about to commit  an  offense
 
HB2058 Enrolled            -54-                LRB9201006ARsb
 1    enumerated  in  Section  108B-3,  or  (b) the facilities from
 2    which, or the place where, the private oral communication  is
 3    to  be  intercepted,  is, has been, or is about to be used in
 4    connection with the commission of the offense, or  is  leased
 5    to,  listed  in the name of, or commonly used by, the person;
 6    and
 7        (2)  There is probable cause for belief that a particular
 8    private communication concerning such offense may be obtained
 9    through the interception; and
10        (3)  Normal investigative procedures with respect to  the
11    offense  have been tried and have failed or reasonably appear
12    to be unlikely to  succeed  if  tried  or  too  dangerous  to
13    employ; and
14        (4)  The  electronic criminal surveillance officers to be
15    authorized to supervise the interception of the private  oral
16    communication have been certified by the Department.
17        (b)  In  the  case  of  an application, other than for an
18    extension, for an order to intercept  a  communication  of  a
19    person  or  on  a  wire  communication  facility that was the
20    subject of a previous  order  authorizing  interception,  the
21    application  shall  be based upon new evidence or information
22    different from and in addition to the evidence or information
23    offered to support the prior order, regardless of whether the
24    evidence was derived from prior interceptions or  from  other
25    sources.
26        (c)  The  chief  judge  may  authorize  interception of a
27    private oral communication anywhere in the judicial  circuit.
28    If  the  court  authorizes the use of an eavesdropping device
29    with respect to a vehicle, watercraft, or  aircraft  that  is
30    within  the judicial circuit at the time the order is issued,
31    the order may provide  that  the  interception  may  continue
32    anywhere  within  the  State  if  the vehicle, watercraft, or
33    aircraft leaves the judicial circuit.
34    (Source: P.A. 85-1203.)
 
HB2058 Enrolled            -55-                LRB9201006ARsb
 1        (725 ILCS 5/108B-7) (from Ch. 38, par. 108B-7)
 2        Sec. 108B-7.  Contents of order for use of  eavesdropping
 3    device.   (a)    Each order authorizing the interception of a
 4    private oral communication shall state:
 5        (1)  The chief judge is authorized to issue the order;
 6        (2)  The identity of, or a particular description of, the
 7    person, if known, whose  private  communications  are  to  be
 8    intercepted;
 9        (3)  The  character  and  location of the particular wire
10    communication facilities as to which, or the particular place
11    of the communications as to which, authority to intercept  is
12    granted;
13        (4)  A  particular  description  of  the  type of private
14    communication to  be  intercepted  and  a  statement  of  the
15    particular offense to which it relates;
16        (5)  The  identity  and  certification  of the electronic
17    criminal surveillance  officers  to  whom  the  authority  to
18    intercept  a  private  oral  communication  is  given and the
19    identity of the person who authorized the application; and
20        (6)  The period of time during which the interception  is
21    authorized,  including  a  statement as to whether or not the
22    interception shall automatically terminate when the described
23    communication has been first obtained.
24        (b)  No order entered under this Section shall  authorize
25    the  interception of private oral communications for a period
26    of time in excess of that necessary to achieve the  objective
27    of the authorization.  Every order entered under this Section
28    shall  require  that  the interception begin and terminate as
29    soon as practicable and be conducted in such a manner  as  to
30    minimize  the  interception  of  communications not otherwise
31    subject  to  interception.   No  order,  other  than  for  an
32    extension, entered  under  this  Section  may  authorize  the
33    interception  of  private  oral communications for any period
34    exceeding 30 days.  Extensions of an order may be granted for
 
HB2058 Enrolled            -56-                LRB9201006ARsb
 1    periods of not more than  30  days.  No  extension  shall  be
 2    granted  unless  an  application for it is made in accordance
 3    with Section 108B-4 and the judge makes the findings required
 4    by Section 108B-5 and, where necessary, Section 108B-6.
 5        (c)  Whenever an order  authorizing  an  interception  is
 6    entered,  the  order  shall require reports to be made to the
 7    chief judge who issued the order showing  what  progress  has
 8    been  made toward achievement of the authorized objective and
 9    the need for continued interception.  The  reports  shall  be
10    made at such intervals as the judge may require.
11        (d)  An  order  authorizing the interception of a private
12    oral communication shall,  upon  request  of  the  applicant,
13    direct that a communications common carrier, landlord, owner,
14    building  operator,  custodian,  or  other person furnish the
15    applicant forthwith all information, facilities and technical
16    assistance   necessary   to   accomplish   the   interception
17    unobtrusively and with a minimum  of  interference  with  the
18    services   that   the   carrier,  owner,  building  operator,
19    landlord, custodian, or person is affording the person  whose
20    communication  is  to  be  intercepted.   The obligation of a
21    communications common carrier under  the  order  may  include
22    conducting  an in-progress trace during an interception.  Any
23    communications  common  carrier,  landlord,  owner,  building
24    operator, custodian, or person furnishing the  facilities  or
25    technical assistance shall be compensated by the applicant at
26    the prevailing rates.
27        (e)  A  communications  common  carrier, landlord, owner,
28    building operator, custodian, or other person  who  has  been
29    provided  with  an  order issued under this Article shall not
30    disclose the existence of the order of interception, or of  a
31    device used to accomplish the interception unless:
32        (1)  He is required to do so by legal process; and
33        (2)  He  has  given  prior  notification  to  the State's
34    Attorney, who has authorized the application for the order.
 
HB2058 Enrolled            -57-                LRB9201006ARsb
 1        (f)  An order authorizing the interception of  a  private
 2    oral  communication shall, upon the request of the applicant,
 3    authorize  the  entry  into  the  place  or   facilities   by
 4    electronic   criminal   surveillance  officers  as  often  as
 5    necessary for  the  purpose  of  installing,  maintaining  or
 6    removing  an intercepting device where the entry is necessary
 7    to conduct or complete the interception.  The chief judge who
 8    issues the order shall be notified of the fact of each  entry
 9    prior  to  entry, if practicable, and, in any case, within 48
10    hours of entry.
11        (g)  (1)  Notwithstanding any provision of this  Article,
12    any chief judge of a court of competent jurisdiction to which
13    any  application  is  made  under  this  Article may take any
14    evidence, make any finding, or issue any order to conform the
15    proceedings or the issuance of any order to the  Constitution
16    of  the  United States, or of any law of the United States or
17    to the Constitution of the State of Illinois or to  the  laws
18    of Illinois.
19        (2)  When  the  language  of  this Article is the same or
20    similar to the language of Title III of P.L. 90-351 (82 Stat.
21    211 et seq., codified at, 18 U.S.C. 2510 et seq.), the courts
22    of this State in construing this  Article  shall  follow  the
23    construction  given  to  Federal  law  by  the  United States
24    Supreme Court or United  States  Court  of  Appeals  for  the
25    Seventh Circuit.
26    (Source: P.A. 85-1203.)

27        (725 ILCS 5/108B-7.5 new)
28        Sec. 108B-7.5. Applicability.
29        (a)  The  requirements  of  subdivisions  (a)(3)(iv)  and
30    (a)(3)(v)  of  Section  108B-4, subdivision (1)(b) of Section
31    108B-5, and subdivision (a)(3)  of  Section  108B-7  of  this
32    Article  relating to the specification of the facilities from
33    which, or  the  place  where,  the  communication  is  to  be
 
HB2058 Enrolled            -58-                LRB9201006ARsb
 1    intercepted do not apply if:
 2             (1)  in  the  case of an application with respect to
 3        the interception of an oral communication:
 4                  (A)  the  application   is   by   the   State's
 5             Attorney,  or  a  person designated in writing or by
 6             law to act for the State's Attorney and  to  perform
 7             his  or  her  duties  during  his  or her absence or
 8             disability;
 9                  (B)  the  application  contains  a   full   and
10             complete  statement  as to why such specification is
11             not practical and identifies the  person  committing
12             the  offense  and  whose  communications  are  to be
13             intercepted;
14                  (C)  the judge finds that such specification is
15             not practical; and
16                  (D)  the order sought is in connection with  an
17             investigation  of  a violation of Article 29D of the
18             Criminal Code of 1961.
19             (2)  in the case of an application with respect to a
20        wire or electronic communication:
21                  (A)  the  application   is   by   the   State's
22             Attorney,  or  a  person designated in writing or by
23             law to act for the State's Attorney and  to  perform
24             his  or  her  duties  during  his  or her absence or
25             disability;
26                  (B)  the  application  identifies  the   person
27             believed  to  be  committing  the  offense and whose
28             communications  are  to  be  intercepted   and   the
29             applicant  makes  a  showing  that there is probable
30             cause to believe that  the  person's  actions  could
31             have  the  effect  of  thwarting interception from a
32             specified facility;
33                  (C)  the judge finds that such showing has been
34             adequately made;
 
HB2058 Enrolled            -59-                LRB9201006ARsb
 1                  (D)  the order  authorizing  or  approving  the
 2             interception  is  limited  to  interception only for
 3             such time as it is reasonable to  presume  that  the
 4             person  identified  in  the  application  is  or was
 5             reasonably proximate to the instrument through which
 6             such communication will be or was transmitted; and
 7                  (E)  the order sought is in connection with  an
 8             investigation  of  a violation of Article 29D of the
 9             Criminal Code of 1961.
10        (b)  An interception of a communication  under  an  order
11    with  respect  to  which  the  requirements  of  subdivisions
12    (a)(3)(iv)  and  (a)(3)(v)  of  Section  108B-4,  subdivision
13    (1)(b)  of  Section 108B-5, and subdivision (a)(3) of Section
14    108B-7 of this Article do not apply by reason of this Section
15    shall not begin until the place where the communication is to
16    be intercepted is ascertained by the person implementing  the
17    interception   order.   A  provider  of  wire  or  electronic
18    communications service that has received an order as provided
19    for in subdivision (a)(2) may upon notice to the People  move
20    the court to modify or quash the order on the ground that its
21    assistance   with  respect  to  the  interception  cannot  be
22    performed in a timely or reasonable fashion. The court  shall
23    decide such a motion expeditiously.

24        (725 ILCS 5/108B-8) (from Ch. 38, par. 108B-8)
25        Sec. 108B-8.  Emergency use of eavesdropping device.  (a)
26    Whenever,  upon informal application by the State's Attorney,
27    a chief judge of competent jurisdiction determines that:
28        (1)  There may be grounds upon which an  order  could  be
29    issued under this Article;
30        (2)  There is probable cause to believe that an emergency
31    situation  exists  with  respect  to  the investigation of an
32    offense enumerated in Section 108B-3; and
33        (3)  There  is  probable  cause   to   believe   that   a
 
HB2058 Enrolled            -60-                LRB9201006ARsb
 1    substantial  danger  to  life  or  limb exists justifying the
 2    authorization for immediate interception of  a  private  oral
 3    communication  before  formal  application for an order could
 4    with due diligence be submitted to him and  acted  upon;  the
 5    chief  judge  may  grant  oral  approval for an interception,
 6    without an order,  conditioned  upon  the  filing  with  him,
 7    within 48 hours, of an application for an order under Section
 8    108B-4  which  shall also recite the oral approval under this
 9    Section and be retroactive to the time of the oral approval.
10        (b)  Interception under oral approval under this  Section
11    shall  immediately terminate when the communication sought is
12    obtained or when the application  for  an  order  is  denied,
13    whichever is earlier.
14        (c)  In  the  event no formal application for an order is
15    subsequently made under this  Section,  the  content  of  any
16    private  oral  communication  intercepted under oral approval
17    under this Section shall be treated as having  been  obtained
18    in violation of this Article.
19        (d)  In  the  event  no  application for an order is made
20    under this Section or an application made under this  Section
21    is subsequently denied, the judge shall cause an inventory to
22    be  served  under  Section  108B-11 of this Article and shall
23    require the  tape  or  other  recording  of  the  intercepted
24    communication  to  be delivered to, and sealed by, the judge.
25    The evidence shall be retained by the court, and it shall not
26    be used or disclosed in any legal proceeding, except a  civil
27    action  brought  by an aggrieved person under Section 14-6 of
28    the Criminal Code of 1961, or as otherwise authorized by  the
29    order  of  a court of competent jurisdiction.  In addition to
30    other remedies or  penalties  provided  by  law,  failure  to
31    deliver  any tape or other recording to the chief judge shall
32    be  punishable  as  contempt  by  the  judge  directing   the
33    delivery.
34    (Source: P.A. 85-1203.)
 
HB2058 Enrolled            -61-                LRB9201006ARsb
 1        (725 ILCS 5/108B-9) (from Ch. 38, par. 108B-9)
 2        Sec. 108B-9.  Recordings, records and custody.
 3        (a)  Any   private   oral  communication  intercepted  in
 4    accordance  with  this  Article  shall,  if  practicable,  be
 5    recorded by tape or other comparable method.   The  recording
 6    shall,  if practicable, be done in such a way as will protect
 7    it from editing or other alteration.  During an interception,
 8    the interception  shall  be  carried  out  by  an  electronic
 9    criminal  surveillance  officer,  and,  if  practicable, such
10    officer shall keep a signed, written record, including:
11        (1)  The date and hours of surveillance;
12        (2)  The  time   and   duration   of   each   intercepted
13    communication;
14        (3)  The   parties,   if   known,   to  each  intercepted
15    conversation; and
16        (4)  A  summary  of  the  contents  of  each  intercepted
17    communication.
18        (b)  Immediately upon the expiration of the order or  its
19    extensions,   the   tapes   and  other  recordings  shall  be
20    transferred to the chief judge issuing the order  and  sealed
21    under   his  direction.   Custody  of  the  tapes,  or  other
22    recordings, shall be  maintained  wherever  the  chief  judge
23    directs.  They shall not be destroyed except upon an order of
24    a  court  of competent jurisdiction and in any event shall be
25    kept for 10 years.  Duplicate tapes or other  recordings  may
26    be  made for disclosure or use under paragraph (a) of Section
27    108B-2a of this Article.  The presence of the  seal  provided
28    by  this  Section,  or  a  satisfactory  explanation  for its
29    absence, shall be a prerequisite for the  disclosure  of  the
30    contents  of  any  private  oral  communication,  or evidence
31    derived from it, under paragraph (b) of  Section  108B-2a  of
32    this Article.
33    (Source: P.A. 86-763.)
 
HB2058 Enrolled            -62-                LRB9201006ARsb
 1        (725 ILCS 5/108B-10) (from Ch. 38, par. 108B-10)
 2        Sec. 108B-10.  Applications, orders, and custody.
 3        (a)  Applications  made  and  orders  granted  under this
 4    Article for the interception of private  oral  communications
 5    shall  be  sealed  by the chief judge issuing or denying them
 6    and  held  in  custody  as  the  judge  shall  direct.    The
 7    applications  and  orders  shall  be  kept for a period of 10
 8    years.  Destruction of the applications and orders  prior  to
 9    the  expiration  of that period of time may be made only upon
10    the order of a court of competent  jurisdiction.   Disclosure
11    of  the  applications and orders may be ordered by a court of
12    competent jurisdiction on a showing  of good cause.
13        (b)  The electronic criminal surveillance  officer  shall
14    retain a copy of applications and orders for the interception
15    of  private oral communications.  The applications and orders
16    shall be kept for a period of 10 years.  Destruction  of  the
17    applications  and  orders  prior  to  the  expiration of that
18    period of time may be made only upon an order of a  court  of
19    competent   jurisdiction.    Disclosure   and   use   of  the
20    applications and orders may be made by an electronic criminal
21    surveillance officer only in the proper  performance  of  his
22    official duties.
23        (c)  In  addition  to  any  other  remedies  or penalties
24    provided by law, any  violation  of  this  Section  shall  be
25    punishable as contempt of court.
26    (Source: P.A. 85-1203.)

27        (725 ILCS 5/108B-11) (from Ch. 38, par. 108B-11)
28        Sec. 108B-11. Inventory.
29        (a) Within a reasonable period of time but not later than
30    90  days after the termination of the period of the order, or
31    its extensions, or the date of the denial of  an  application
32    made under Section 108B-8, the chief judge issuing or denying
33    the  order or extension shall cause an inventory to be served
 
HB2058 Enrolled            -63-                LRB9201006ARsb
 1    on any person:
 2        (1)  Named in the order;
 3        (2)  Arrested as a result  of  the  interception  of  his
 4    private oral communication;
 5        (3)  Indicted  or  otherwise  charged  as a result of the
 6    interception of his private oral communication;
 7        (4)  Any person  whose  private  oral  communication  was
 8    intercepted and who the judge issuing or denying the order or
 9    application   may  in  his  discretion  determine  should  be
10    informed in the interest of justice.
11        (b)  The inventory under this Section shall include:
12        (1)  Notice of the entry of the order or the  application
13    for an order denied under Section 108B-8;
14        (2)  The  date of the entry of the order or the denial of
15    an order applied for under Section 108B-8;
16        (3)  The   period   of    authorized    or    disapproved
17    interception; and
18        (4)  The  fact  that  during  the  period  a private oral
19    communication was or was not intercepted.
20        (c)  A court of competent jurisdiction, upon filing of  a
21    motion, may in its discretion make available to those persons
22    or  their  attorneys  for  inspection  those  portions of the
23    intercepted communications, applications and  orders  as  the
24    court determines to be in the interest of justice.
25        (d)  On  an  ex parte showing of good cause to a court of
26    competent  jurisdiction,  the  serving  of  the   inventories
27    required by this Section may be postponed for a period not to
28    exceed 12 months.
29    (Source: P.A. 85-1203.)

30        (725 ILCS 5/108B-12) (from Ch. 38, par. 108B-12)
31        Sec. 108B-12.  Approval, notice, suppression.
32        (a)  If  an  electronic  criminal  surveillance  officer,
33    while intercepting a private oral communication in accordance
 
HB2058 Enrolled            -64-                LRB9201006ARsb
 1    with the provision of this Article, intercepts a private oral
 2    communication  that  relates  to  an  offense  other  than an
 3    offense enumerated in Section 108B-3 of the Act,  or  relates
 4    to  an offense enumerated in Section 108B-3 but not specified
 5    in the order of authorization, the  State's  Attorney,  or  a
 6    person  designated  in writing or by law to act for him, may,
 7    in order to permit the disclosure or use of  the  information
 8    under Section 108B-2a of this Act, make a motion for an order
 9    approving  the  interception.   The chief judge of a court of
10    competent jurisdiction shall enter  an  order  approving  the
11    interception if he finds that at the time of the application,
12    there  existed  probable cause to believe that a person whose
13    private oral communication was intercepted was committing  or
14    had committed an offense and the content of the communication
15    relates  to  that  offense,  and  that  the communication was
16    otherwise intercepted in accordance with  the  provisions  of
17    this Article.
18        (b)  An   intercepted   private  oral  communication,  or
19    evidence derived from it, may not be received in evidence  or
20    otherwise  disclosed  in  an  official proceeding unless each
21    aggrieved person who is a party in the  official  proceeding,
22    including  any  proceeding  before  a  legislative, judicial,
23    administrative  or  other  governmental  agency  or  official
24    authorized to hear evidence under oath or other person taking
25    testimony or depositions in any such proceeding, other than a
26    grand jury, has, not less than 10 days  before  the  official
27    proceeding,  been  furnished  with a copy of the court order,
28    and   the   accompanying   application,   under   which   the
29    interception was authorized or approved.  The 10  day  period
30    may  be  waived by the presiding official if he finds that it
31    was  not  practicable  to  furnish  the   person   with   the
32    information  10  days  before  the  proceeding,  and that the
33    person will not be or has not been  prejudiced  by  delay  in
34    receiving the information.
 
HB2058 Enrolled            -65-                LRB9201006ARsb
 1        (c)  An  aggrieved  person  in an official proceeding may
 2    make a motion under this Section to suppress the contents  of
 3    an   intercepted  private  oral  communication,  or  evidence
 4    derived from it, on the grounds that:
 5        (1)  The communication was unlawfully intercepted;
 6        (2)  The order of authorization or approval  under  which
 7    it was intercepted is insufficient on its face; or
 8        (3)  The interception was not made in conformity with the
 9    order  of  authorization  or  approval  or at the time of the
10    application there was not probable cause to believe that  the
11    aggrieved  person was committing or had committed the offense
12    to which the content of the private communication relates.
13        (d)  If a motion under this Section duly alleges that the
14    evidence sought to be suppressed in an  official  proceeding,
15    including  a  grand jury, has been derived from an unlawfully
16    intercepted private oral communication, and if the  aggrieved
17    person  who is a party has not been served with notice of the
18    interception  under  this  Section,  the  opponent   of   the
19    allegation  shall,  after conducting a thorough search of its
20    files, affirm or deny the occurrence of the alleged  unlawful
21    interception,  but  no  motion  shall  be  considered  if the
22    alleged unlawful interception took place more  than  5  years
23    before the event to which the evidence relates.
24        (e)  Where a motion is duly made under this Section prior
25    to  the  appearance  of  a  witness  before a grand jury, the
26    opponent of the motion may make such applications and  orders
27    as  it  has  available  to  the  chief  judge  of  a court of
28    competent jurisdiction in camera, and if the judge determines
29    that there is no defect in them sufficient  on  its  face  to
30    render  them invalid, the judge shall inform the witness that
31    he has not been the subject of an unlawful  interception.  If
32    the   judge  determines  that  there  is  a  defect  in  them
33    sufficient on its face to render them invalid, he shall enter
34    an order prohibiting any question being put  to  the  witness
 
HB2058 Enrolled            -66-                LRB9201006ARsb
 1    based on the unlawful interception.
 2        (f)  Motions  under  this  Section shall be made prior to
 3    the official proceeding unless there was  no  opportunity  to
 4    make the motion or unless the aggrieved person who is a party
 5    was  not  aware  of  the  grounds for the motion.  Motions by
 6    co-indictees shall, on motion of the People, be  heard  in  a
 7    single consolidated hearing.
 8        (g)  A  chief judge of a court of competent jurisdiction,
 9    upon the filing of a motion by an aggrieved person who  is  a
10    party  under  this  Section,  except before a grand jury, may
11    make available for inspection by the aggrieved person or  his
12    attorney   such   portions   of   the   intercepted   private
13    communications,  applications  and  orders  or  the  evidence
14    derived  from  them  as  the  judge  determines  to be in the
15    interest of justice.
16        (h)  If a motion  under  this  Section  is  granted,  the
17    intercepted  private oral communication, and evidence derived
18    from it, may not be  received  in  evidence  in  an  official
19    proceeding, including a grand jury.
20        (i)  In addition to any other right of appeal, the People
21    shall  have  the  right  to  appeal  from an order granting a
22    motion  to  suppress  if  the  official  to  whom  the  order
23    authorizing the interception was  granted  certifies  to  the
24    court  that  the  appeal  is not taken for purposes of delay.
25    The appeal shall otherwise be taken in  accordance  with  the
26    law.
27    (Source: P.A. 85-1203.)

28        (725 ILCS 5/108B-14) (from Ch. 38, par. 108B-14)
29        Sec. 108B-14.  Training.
30        (a)  The  Director  of  the  Illinois Department of State
31    Police shall:
32             (1)  Establish a course of training  in  the  legal,
33        practical,  and  technical aspects of the interception of
 
HB2058 Enrolled            -67-                LRB9201006ARsb
 1        private oral communications and related investigation and
 2        prosecution techniques;
 3             (2)  Issue regulations as he finds necessary for the
 4        training program;
 5             (3)  In   cooperation   with   the   Illinois    Law
 6        Enforcement   Training   Standards   Board,  set  minimum
 7        standards for certification and periodic  recertification
 8        of  electronic criminal surveillance officers as eligible
 9        to apply  for  orders  authorizing  the  interception  of
10        private    oral    communications,    to    conduct   the
11        interceptions, and to use the private  communications  or
12        evidence derived from them in official proceedings; and
13             (4)  In    cooperation   with   the   Illinois   Law
14        Enforcement Training Standards Board, revoke  or  suspend
15        the certification of any electronic criminal surveillance
16        officer  who  has violated any law relating to electronic
17        criminal  surveillance,  or   any   of   the   guidelines
18        established  by  the Department for conducting electronic
19        criminal surveillance.
20        (b)  The  Executive  Director   of   the   Illinois   Law
21    Enforcement Training Standards Board shall:
22             (1)  Pursuant  to  the Illinois Police Training Act,
23        review  the  course  of  training   prescribed   by   the
24        Department  for  the purpose of certification relating to
25        reimbursement  of  expenses   incurred   by   local   law
26        enforcement  agencies  participating  in  the  electronic
27        criminal surveillance officer training process, and
28             (2)  Assist  the  Department in establishing minimum
29        standards for certification and periodic  recertification
30        of  electronic  criminal  surveillance  officers as being
31        eligible to apply for orders authorizing the interception
32        of  private   oral   communications,   to   conduct   the
33        interpretations,   and   to  use  the  communications  or
34        evidence derived from them in official proceedings.
 
HB2058 Enrolled            -68-                LRB9201006ARsb
 1    (Source: P.A. 88-586, eff. 8-12-94.)

 2        Section 21.  The Statewide Grand Jury Act is  amended  by
 3    changing Sections 2, 3, 4, and 10 as follows:

 4        (725 ILCS 215/2) (from Ch. 38, par. 1702)
 5        Sec.  2.   (a)  County grand juries and State's Attorneys
 6    have  always  had  and  shall  continue   to   have   primary
 7    responsibility  for investigating, indicting, and prosecuting
 8    persons who  violate  the  criminal  laws  of  the  State  of
 9    Illinois.   However,  in  recent  years  organized  terrorist
10    activity  directed  against  innocent  civilians  and certain
11    criminal   enterprises   have    developed    that    require
12    investigation,  indictment, and prosecution on a statewide or
13    multicounty level.  The criminal These enterprises exist as a
14    result of the allure of  profitability  present  in  narcotic
15    activity,  the  unlawful  sale  and transfer of firearms, and
16    streetgang related felonies and organized terrorist  activity
17    is   supported  by  the  contribution  of  money  and  expert
18    assistance from geographically diverse sources. In  order  to
19    shut  off the life blood of terrorism and weaken or eliminate
20    the criminal these enterprises, assets, and property used  to
21    further  these  offenses  must  be frozen, and any the profit
22    must be removed. State statutes  exist  that  can  accomplish
23    that  goal.   Among them are the offense of money laundering,
24    the Cannabis and Controlled Substances Tax Act, violations of
25    Article 29D of the  Criminal  Code  of  1961,  the  Narcotics
26    Profit  Forfeiture  Act,  and  gunrunning.  Local prosecutors
27    need investigative  personnel  and  specialized  training  to
28    attack   and   eliminate  these  profits.  In  light  of  the
29    transitory and complex nature  of  conduct  that  constitutes
30    these   criminal   activities,   the  many  diverse  property
31    interests that may be used, acquired directly  or  indirectly
32    as a result of these criminal activities, and the many places
 
HB2058 Enrolled            -69-                LRB9201006ARsb
 1    that  illegally  obtained  property may be located, it is the
 2    purpose  of  this  Act  to  create  a  limited,   multicounty
 3    Statewide  Grand  Jury with authority to investigate, indict,
 4    and prosecute:  narcotic  activity,  including  cannabis  and
 5    controlled  substance  trafficking,  narcotics  racketeering,
 6    money   laundering,   and  violations  of  the  Cannabis  and
 7    Controlled Substances Tax Act, and violations of Article  29D
 8    of  the Criminal Code of 1961; the unlawful sale and transfer
 9    of firearms; gunrunning; and streetgang related felonies.
10        (b)  A Statewide Grand Jury may also investigate, indict,
11    and prosecute violations facilitated by the use of a computer
12    of any of  the following offenses: indecent solicitation of a
13    child, sexual exploitation  of  a  child,  soliciting  for  a
14    juvenile    prostitute,   keeping   a   place   of   juvenile
15    prostitution, juvenile pimping, or child pornography.
16    (Source: P.A. 91-225, eff. 1-1-00.)

17        (725 ILCS 215/3) (from Ch. 38, par. 1703)
18        Sec. 3.  Written application for  the  appointment  of  a
19    Circuit  Judge  to convene and preside over a Statewide Grand
20    Jury, with jurisdiction extending throughout the State, shall
21    be made to the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court.  Upon such
22    written application, the Chief Justice of the  Supreme  Court
23    shall  appoint  a  Circuit  Judge  from the circuit where the
24    Statewide Grand Jury is being  sought  to  be  convened,  who
25    shall  make a determination that the convening of a Statewide
26    Grand Jury is necessary.
27        In such application the Attorney General shall state that
28    the convening of a Statewide Grand Jury is necessary  because
29    of  an  alleged offense or offenses set forth in this Section
30    involving more than one county of the State  and  identifying
31    any such offense alleged; and
32             (a)  that  he  or  she  believes that the grand jury
33        function for the  investigation  and  indictment  of  the
 
HB2058 Enrolled            -70-                LRB9201006ARsb
 1        offense  or offenses cannot effectively be performed by a
 2        county grand jury together  with  the  reasons  for  such
 3        belief, and
 4               (b)(1)  that    each    State's    Attorney   with
 5             jurisdiction over  an  offense  or  offenses  to  be
 6             investigated  has consented to the impaneling of the
 7             Statewide Grand Jury, or
 8                  (2)  if one or more of  the  State's  Attorneys
 9             having  jurisdiction  over an offense or offenses to
10             be investigated fails to consent to  the  impaneling
11             of  the  Statewide  Grand Jury, the Attorney General
12             shall  set  forth  good  cause  for  impaneling  the
13             Statewide Grand Jury.
14        If the Circuit Judge determines that the convening  of  a
15    Statewide  Grand  Jury  is necessary, he or she shall convene
16    and  impanel  the  Statewide  Grand  Jury  with  jurisdiction
17    extending throughout the  State  to  investigate  and  return
18    indictments:
19             (a)  For  violations  of any of the following or for
20        any other criminal offense committed  in  the  course  of
21        violating  any  of  the  following:  Article  29D  of the
22        Criminal Code of 1961, the Illinois Controlled Substances
23        Act, the  Cannabis  Control  Act,  the  Narcotics  Profit
24        Forfeiture Act, or the Cannabis and Controlled Substances
25        Tax  Act;  a  streetgang  related felony offense; Section
26        24-2.1, 24-2.2,  24-3,  24-3A,  24-3.1,  24-3.3,  24-3.4,
27        24-4,  or  24-5  or  subsection  24-1(a)(4),  24-1(a)(6),
28        24-1(a)(7),  24-1(a)(9),  24-1(a)(10),  or 24-1(c) of the
29        Criminal Code of 1961; or  a  money  laundering  offense;
30        provided  that  the  violation  or  offense involves acts
31        occurring in more than one county of this State; and
32             (a-5)  For violations facilitated by the  use  of  a
33        computer,  including  the  use of the Internet, the World
34        Wide Web, electronic mail, message board,  newsgroup,  or
 
HB2058 Enrolled            -71-                LRB9201006ARsb
 1        any other commercial or noncommercial on-line service, of
 2        any  of the following offenses:  indecent solicitation of
 3        a child, sexual exploitation of a child, soliciting for a
 4        juvenile  prostitute,  keeping  a   place   of   juvenile
 5        prostitution, juvenile pimping, or child pornography; and
 6             (b)  For  the  offenses  of  perjury, subornation of
 7        perjury, communicating with  jurors  and  witnesses,  and
 8        harassment  of  jurors  and  witnesses, as they relate to
 9        matters before the Statewide Grand Jury.
10        "Streetgang related" has the meaning ascribed  to  it  in
11    Section  10  of  the  Illinois  Streetgang  Terrorism Omnibus
12    Prevention Act.
13        Upon written application by the Attorney General for  the
14    convening  of  an  additional Statewide Grand Jury, the Chief
15    Justice of the Supreme Court shall appoint  a  Circuit  Judge
16    from  the  circuit  for  which the additional Statewide Grand
17    Jury is  sought.   The  Circuit  Judge  shall  determine  the
18    necessity   for   an   additional  Statewide  Grand  Jury  in
19    accordance with the provisions of this Section.  No more than
20    2 Statewide Grand Juries may be empaneled at any time.
21    (Source: P.A. 91-225, eff. 1-1-00; 91-947, eff. 2-9-01.)

22        (725 ILCS 215/4) (from Ch. 38, par. 1704)
23        Sec. 4.  (a) The presiding judge of the  Statewide  Grand
24    Jury  will  receive recommendations from the Attorney General
25    as to the county in which the Grand Jury will sit.  Prior  to
26    making the recommendations, the Attorney General shall obtain
27    the  permission  of  the local State's Attorney to use his or
28    her county for the site of the Statewide  Grand  Jury.   Upon
29    receiving   the   Attorney   General's  recommendations,  the
30    presiding  judge  will  choose  one  of   those   recommended
31    locations as the site where the Grand Jury shall sit.
32        Any  indictment  by  a  Statewide  Grand  Jury  shall  be
33    returned  to  the  Circuit Judge presiding over the Statewide
 
HB2058 Enrolled            -72-                LRB9201006ARsb
 1    Grand Jury and shall include a finding as to  the  county  or
 2    counties   in   which  the  alleged  offense  was  committed.
 3    Thereupon, the judge shall, by order, designate the county of
 4    venue for the purpose of  trial.   The  judge  may  also,  by
 5    order,  direct the consolidation of an indictment returned by
 6    a county grand  jury  with  an  indictment  returned  by  the
 7    Statewide Grand Jury and set venue for trial.
 8        (b)  Venue  for  purposes  of  trial  for  the offense of
 9    narcotics racketeering shall be proper in any county where:
10             (1)  Cannabis or a controlled substance which is the
11        basis for the charge of narcotics racketeering was  used;
12        acquired; transferred or distributed to, from or through;
13        or  any county where any act was performed to further the
14        use;  acquisition,  transfer  or  distribution  of   said
15        cannabis or controlled substance; or
16             (2)  Any  money, property, property interest, or any
17        other  asset  generated  by  narcotics   activities   was
18        acquired, used, sold, transferred or distributed to, from
19        or through; or,
20             (3)  Any enterprise interest obtained as a result of
21        narcotics racketeering was acquired, used, transferred or
22        distributed  to,  from  or through, or where any activity
23        was conducted by the enterprise or any conduct to further
24        the interests of such an enterprise.
25        (c)  Venue for purposes of trial for the offense of money
26    laundering shall be proper in any county where any part of  a
27    financial  transaction  in  criminally  derived property took
28    place, or in any county where any money or monetary  interest
29    which is the basis for the offense, was acquired, used, sold,
30    transferred or distributed to, from, or through.
31        (d)  A   person  who  commits  the  offense  of  cannabis
32    trafficking or controlled substance trafficking may be  tried
33    in any county.
34        (e)  Venue  for  purposes  of  trial for any violation of
 
HB2058 Enrolled            -73-                LRB9201006ARsb
 1    Article 29D of the Criminal Code of 1961 may be in the county
 2    in which an act of terrorism  occurs,  the  county  in  which
 3    material  support or resources are provided or solicited, the
 4    county in which  criminal  assistance  is  rendered,  or  any
 5    county  in  which  any act in furtherance of any violation of
 6    Article 29D of the Criminal Code of 1961 occurs.
 7    (Source: P.A. 87-466.)

 8        (725 ILCS 215/10) (from Ch. 38, par. 1710)
 9        Sec. 10.  The Attorney General  shall,  at  the  earliest
10    opportunity,  upon  initiation  of Grand Jury action, consult
11    with and advise the State's Attorney of any  county  involved
12    in   a   Statewide   Grand   Jury   terrorist   or  narcotics
13    investigation.  Further, the State's Attorney may attend  the
14    Grand  Jury  proceedings  or  the  trial  of  any party being
15    investigated or indicted by the Statewide Grand Jury, and may
16    assist in the prosecution, which in his or her  judgment,  is
17    in the interest of the people of his or her county.  Prior to
18    granting  transactional  immunity  to  any witness before the
19    Statewide Grand Jury, any State's Attorney with  jurisdiction
20    over  the  offense  or  offenses  being  investigated  by the
21    Statewide Grand Jury must consent to the granting of immunity
22    to the witness.   Prior  to  granting  use  immunity  to  any
23    witness before the Statewide Grand Jury, the Attorney General
24    shall  consult  with  any  State's Attorney with jurisdiction
25    over the  offense  or  offenses  being  investigated  by  the
26    Statewide Grand Jury.
27    (Source: P.A. 87-466.)

28        Section  25.   The Unified Code of Corrections is amended
29    by changing Sections 3-6-3 and 5-4-3 as follows:

30        (730 ILCS 5/3-6-3) (from Ch. 38, par. 1003-6-3)
31        Sec. 3-6-3.  Rules and Regulations for Early Release.
 
HB2058 Enrolled            -74-                LRB9201006ARsb
 1             (a) (1)  The   Department   of   Corrections   shall
 2        prescribe rules and regulations for the early release  on
 3        account  of  good  conduct  of  persons  committed to the
 4        Department which  shall  be  subject  to  review  by  the
 5        Prisoner Review Board.
 6             (2)  The  rules  and  regulations  on  early release
 7        shall provide, with respect to offenses committed  on  or
 8        after June 19, 1998, the following:
 9                  (i)  that  a  prisoner who is serving a term of
10             imprisonment for first  degree  murder  or  for  the
11             offense  of  terrorism shall receive no good conduct
12             credit and shall serve the entire  sentence  imposed
13             by the court;
14                  (ii)  that  a  prisoner  serving a sentence for
15             attempt to commit first degree murder,  solicitation
16             of   murder,   solicitation   of  murder  for  hire,
17             intentional homicide of an unborn  child,  predatory
18             criminal  sexual  assault  of  a  child,  aggravated
19             criminal  sexual  assault,  criminal sexual assault,
20             aggravated kidnapping,  aggravated  battery  with  a
21             firearm,  heinous  battery,  aggravated battery of a
22             senior citizen, or aggravated  battery  of  a  child
23             shall  receive no more than 4.5 days of good conduct
24             credit for each month of  his  or  her  sentence  of
25             imprisonment; and
26                  (iii)  that  a  prisoner serving a sentence for
27             home invasion, armed robbery,  aggravated  vehicular
28             hijacking,  aggravated  discharge  of  a firearm, or
29             armed violence with a category I weapon or  category
30             II  weapon,  when  the  court has made and entered a
31             finding, pursuant to  subsection  (c-1)  of  Section
32             5-4-1  of  this  Code,  that  the conduct leading to
33             conviction for the enumerated  offense  resulted  in
34             great bodily harm to a victim, shall receive no more
 
HB2058 Enrolled            -75-                LRB9201006ARsb
 1             than  4.5 days of good conduct credit for each month
 2             of his or her sentence of imprisonment.
 3             (2.1)  For all offenses, other than those enumerated
 4        in subdivision (a)(2) committed  on  or  after  June  19,
 5        1998,  and other than the offense of reckless homicide as
 6        defined in subsection (e) of Section 9-3 of the  Criminal
 7        Code  of  1961 committed on or after January 1, 1999, the
 8        rules and regulations shall provide that a  prisoner  who
 9        is  serving  a term of imprisonment shall receive one day
10        of good conduct  credit  for  each  day  of  his  or  her
11        sentence  of  imprisonment  or recommitment under Section
12        3-3-9. Each day of good conduct credit  shall  reduce  by
13        one   day   the  prisoner's  period  of  imprisonment  or
14        recommitment under Section 3-3-9.
15             (2.2)  A prisoner serving a  term  of  natural  life
16        imprisonment  or  a  prisoner  who  has been sentenced to
17        death shall receive no good conduct credit.
18             (2.3)  The rules and regulations  on  early  release
19        shall  provide  that a prisoner who is serving a sentence
20        for reckless homicide as defined  in  subsection  (e)  of
21        Section  9-3 of the Criminal Code of 1961 committed on or
22        after January 1, 1999 shall receive no more than 4.5 days
23        of good conduct credit for  each  month  of  his  or  her
24        sentence of imprisonment.
25             (2.4)  The  rules  and  regulations on early release
26        shall provide with respect to the offenses of  aggravated
27        battery with a machine gun or a firearm equipped with any
28        device  or  attachment designed or used for silencing the
29        report of a firearm or aggravated discharge of a  machine
30        gun  or  a firearm equipped with any device or attachment
31        designed or used for silencing the report of  a  firearm,
32        committed   on  or  after  the  effective  date  of  this
33        amendatory  Act  of  1999,  that  a  prisoner  serving  a
34        sentence for any of these offenses shall receive no  more
 
HB2058 Enrolled            -76-                LRB9201006ARsb
 1        than  4.5  days  of good conduct credit for each month of
 2        his or her sentence of imprisonment.
 3             (2.5)  The rules and regulations  on  early  release
 4        shall  provide  that a prisoner who is serving a sentence
 5        for aggravated arson committed on or after the  effective
 6        date  of this amendatory Act of the 92nd General Assembly
 7        shall receive no more  than  4.5  days  of  good  conduct
 8        credit   for  each  month  of  his  or  her  sentence  of
 9        imprisonment.
10             (3)  The rules and regulations  shall  also  provide
11        that  the  Director  may  award up to 180 days additional
12        good conduct credit for meritorious service  in  specific
13        instances  as  the  Director deems proper; except that no
14        more than 90 days of good conduct credit for  meritorious
15        service shall be awarded to any prisoner who is serving a
16        sentence  for conviction of first degree murder, reckless
17        homicide while under the  influence  of  alcohol  or  any
18        other  drug, aggravated kidnapping, kidnapping, predatory
19        criminal sexual assault of a child,  aggravated  criminal
20        sexual  assault,  criminal sexual assault, deviate sexual
21        assault, aggravated  criminal  sexual  abuse,  aggravated
22        indecent  liberties with a child, indecent liberties with
23        a child, child pornography, heinous  battery,  aggravated
24        battery  of a spouse, aggravated battery of a spouse with
25        a  firearm,  stalking,  aggravated  stalking,  aggravated
26        battery of a child, endangering the life or health  of  a
27        child,  cruelty  to  a  child,  or narcotic racketeering.
28        Notwithstanding the foregoing, good  conduct  credit  for
29        meritorious service shall not be awarded on a sentence of
30        imprisonment  imposed  for  conviction of: (i) one of the
31        offenses  enumerated  in  subdivision  (a)(2)  when   the
32        offense  is  committed  on  or  after June 19, 1998, (ii)
33        reckless homicide as defined in subsection (e) of Section
34        9-3 of the Criminal Code of  1961  when  the  offense  is
 
HB2058 Enrolled            -77-                LRB9201006ARsb
 1        committed  on  or after January 1, 1999, (iii) one of the
 2        offenses enumerated  in  subdivision  (a)(2.4)  when  the
 3        offense  is  committed  on or after the effective date of
 4        this amendatory Act of 1999,  or  (iv)  aggravated  arson
 5        when  the  offense is committed on or after the effective
 6        date of this amendatory Act of the 92nd General Assembly.
 7             (4)  The rules and regulations  shall  also  provide
 8        that  the  good  conduct  credit accumulated and retained
 9        under paragraph (2.1) of subsection (a) of  this  Section
10        by  any  inmate  during specific periods of time in which
11        such inmate  is  engaged  full-time  in  substance  abuse
12        programs,    correctional    industry   assignments,   or
13        educational programs provided  by  the  Department  under
14        this  paragraph  (4)  and  satisfactorily  completes  the
15        assigned  program  as  determined by the standards of the
16        Department, shall be multiplied by a factor of  1.25  for
17        program participation before August 11, 1993 and 1.50 for
18        program  participation on or after that date. However, no
19        inmate shall be eligible for the additional good  conduct
20        credit  under this paragraph (4) while assigned to a boot
21        camp, mental health unit, or electronic detention, or  if
22        convicted of an offense enumerated in paragraph (a)(2) of
23        this Section that is committed on or after June 19, 1998,
24        or  if  convicted  of  reckless  homicide  as  defined in
25        subsection (e) of Section 9-3 of  the  Criminal  Code  of
26        1961  if  the offense is committed on or after January 1,
27        1999,  or  if  convicted  of  an  offense  enumerated  in
28        paragraph (a)(2.4) of this Section that is  committed  on
29        or  after  the  effective  date of this amendatory Act of
30        1999, or first degree murder, a Class X felony,  criminal
31        sexual  assault, felony criminal sexual abuse, aggravated
32        criminal sexual abuse, aggravated battery with a firearm,
33        or any predecessor or successor offenses with the same or
34        substantially the same elements, or any inchoate offenses
 
HB2058 Enrolled            -78-                LRB9201006ARsb
 1        relating to the foregoing offenses.  No inmate  shall  be
 2        eligible  for  the  additional  good conduct credit under
 3        this  paragraph  (4)  who  (i)  has  previously  received
 4        increased good conduct credit under  this  paragraph  (4)
 5        and  has subsequently been convicted of a felony, or (ii)
 6        has previously served more than  one  prior  sentence  of
 7        imprisonment  for  a  felony  in  an  adult  correctional
 8        facility.
 9             Educational,   vocational,   substance   abuse   and
10        correctional  industry  programs under which good conduct
11        credit may be increased under this paragraph (4) shall be
12        evaluated by the Department on the  basis  of  documented
13        standards.   The  Department  shall report the results of
14        these  evaluations  to  the  Governor  and  the   General
15        Assembly  by  September  30th  of each year.  The reports
16        shall include data relating to the recidivism rate  among
17        program participants.
18             Availability  of  these programs shall be subject to
19        the  limits  of  fiscal  resources  appropriated  by  the
20        General Assembly for these  purposes.   Eligible  inmates
21        who  are  denied immediate admission shall be placed on a
22        waiting  list   under   criteria   established   by   the
23        Department. The inability of any inmate to become engaged
24        in  any  such  programs by reason of insufficient program
25        resources or for any other reason established  under  the
26        rules  and  regulations  of  the  Department shall not be
27        deemed a cause of action under which  the  Department  or
28        any  employee  or agent of the Department shall be liable
29        for damages to the inmate.
30             (5)  Whenever  the  Department  is  to  release  any
31        inmate earlier than it otherwise would because of a grant
32        of good conduct credit for meritorious service  given  at
33        any  time  during  the  term,  the  Department shall give
34        reasonable advance notice of the impending release to the
 
HB2058 Enrolled            -79-                LRB9201006ARsb
 1        State's Attorney of the county where the  prosecution  of
 2        the inmate took place.
 3        (b)  Whenever  a  person  is  or has been committed under
 4    several convictions, with separate sentences,  the  sentences
 5    shall  be  construed  under  Section  5-8-4  in  granting and
 6    forfeiting of good time.
 7        (c)  The Department shall prescribe rules and regulations
 8    for revoking good conduct credit, or suspending  or  reducing
 9    the  rate of accumulation of good conduct credit for specific
10    rule  violations,  during  imprisonment.   These  rules   and
11    regulations  shall  provide  that  no inmate may be penalized
12    more than one  year  of  good  conduct  credit  for  any  one
13    infraction.
14        When  the  Department  seeks to revoke, suspend or reduce
15    the rate of accumulation of any good conduct credits  for  an
16    alleged  infraction  of  its  rules,  it  shall bring charges
17    therefor against the prisoner sought to  be  so  deprived  of
18    good  conduct  credits  before  the  Prisoner Review Board as
19    provided in subparagraph (a)(4)  of  Section  3-3-2  of  this
20    Code,  if  the  amount  of credit at issue exceeds 30 days or
21    when during any 12 month period,  the  cumulative  amount  of
22    credit revoked exceeds 30 days except where the infraction is
23    committed  or discovered within 60 days of scheduled release.
24    In those cases, the Department of Corrections may  revoke  up
25    to 30 days of good conduct credit. The Board may subsequently
26    approve  the revocation of additional good conduct credit, if
27    the Department seeks to revoke good conduct credit in  excess
28    of  30  days.   However,  the Board shall not be empowered to
29    review the Department's decision with respect to the loss  of
30    30  days  of good conduct credit within any calendar year for
31    any prisoner or to increase any  penalty  beyond  the  length
32    requested by the Department.
33        The   Director  of  the  Department  of  Corrections,  in
34    appropriate cases, may restore up to  30  days  good  conduct
 
HB2058 Enrolled            -80-                LRB9201006ARsb
 1    credits  which  have  been revoked, suspended or reduced. Any
 2    restoration of good conduct credits  in  excess  of  30  days
 3    shall  be  subject  to  review  by the Prisoner Review Board.
 4    However, the Board may not restore  good  conduct  credit  in
 5    excess of the amount requested by the Director.
 6        Nothing  contained  in  this  Section  shall prohibit the
 7    Prisoner Review Board  from  ordering,  pursuant  to  Section
 8    3-3-9(a)(3)(i)(B),  that  a  prisoner serve up to one year of
 9    the sentence imposed by the court that was not served due  to
10    the accumulation of good conduct credit.
11        (d)  If  a  lawsuit is filed by a prisoner in an Illinois
12    or  federal  court  against  the  State,  the  Department  of
13    Corrections, or the Prisoner Review Board, or against any  of
14    their  officers  or employees, and the court makes a specific
15    finding that a pleading, motion, or other paper filed by  the
16    prisoner  is  frivolous,  the Department of Corrections shall
17    conduct a hearing to revoke up to 180 days  of  good  conduct
18    credit  by bringing charges against the prisoner sought to be
19    deprived of the good  conduct  credits  before  the  Prisoner
20    Review  Board  as  provided in subparagraph (a)(8) of Section
21    3-3-2 of this Code. If the prisoner has not  accumulated  180
22    days  of good conduct credit at the time of the finding, then
23    the Prisoner Review Board may revoke all good conduct  credit
24    accumulated by the prisoner.
25        For purposes of this subsection (d):
26             (1)  "Frivolous"  means  that a pleading, motion, or
27        other filing which purports to be a legal document  filed
28        by  a  prisoner in his or her lawsuit meets any or all of
29        the following criteria:
30                  (A)  it lacks an arguable basis either  in  law
31             or in fact;
32                  (B)  it  is  being  presented  for any improper
33             purpose, such as to harass or to  cause  unnecessary
34             delay   or   needless   increase   in  the  cost  of
 
HB2058 Enrolled            -81-                LRB9201006ARsb
 1             litigation;
 2                  (C)  the  claims,  defenses,  and  other  legal
 3             contentions therein are not  warranted  by  existing
 4             law or by a nonfrivolous argument for the extension,
 5             modification,  or  reversal  of  existing law or the
 6             establishment of new law;
 7                  (D)  the   allegations   and   other    factual
 8             contentions  do  not have evidentiary support or, if
 9             specifically so identified, are not likely  to  have
10             evidentiary  support  after a reasonable opportunity
11             for further investigation or discovery; or
12                  (E)  the denials of factual contentions are not
13             warranted on the evidence,  or  if  specifically  so
14             identified,  are  not  reasonably based on a lack of
15             information or belief.
16             (2)  "Lawsuit" means a petition for  post-conviction
17        relief   under  Article  122  of  the  Code  of  Criminal
18        Procedure of 1963, a motion pursuant to Section 116-3  of
19        the  Code  of Criminal Procedure of 1963, a habeas corpus
20        action under Article X of the Code of Civil Procedure  or
21        under  federal law (28 U.S.C. 2254), a petition for claim
22        under the Court of Claims Act  or  an  action  under  the
23        federal Civil Rights Act (42 U.S.C. 1983).
24        (e)  Nothing  in  this amendatory Act of 1998 affects the
25    validity of Public Act 89-404.
26    (Source: P.A. 91-121, eff.  7-15-99;  91-357,  eff.  7-29-99;
27    92-176, eff. 7-27-01.)

28        (730 ILCS 5/5-4-3) (from Ch. 38, par. 1005-4-3)
29        Sec.  5-4-3.  Persons  convicted  of, or found delinquent
30    for, qualifying offenses  or  institutionalized  as  sexually
31    dangerous; blood specimens; genetic marker groups.
32        (a)  Any  person  convicted  of,  found  guilty under the
33    Juvenile Court Act of 1987 for, or who received a disposition
 
HB2058 Enrolled            -82-                LRB9201006ARsb
 1    of court supervision for, a qualifying offense or attempt  of
 2    a  qualifying  offense,  or  institutionalized  as a sexually
 3    dangerous person under the Sexually Dangerous Persons Act, or
 4    committed as a sexually violent  person  under  the  Sexually
 5    Violent  Persons  Commitment  Act  shall,  regardless  of the
 6    sentence  or  disposition  imposed,  be  required  to  submit
 7    specimens of blood to the Illinois Department of State Police
 8    in accordance with the provisions of this  Section,  provided
 9    such person is:
10             (1)  convicted of a qualifying offense or attempt of
11        a  qualifying  offense  on or after the effective date of
12        this amendatory Act of 1989, and sentenced to a  term  of
13        imprisonment,  periodic  imprisonment,  fine,  probation,
14        conditional  discharge  or any other form of sentence, or
15        given a disposition of court supervision for the offense,
16        or
17             (1.5)  found guilty or given supervision  under  the
18        Juvenile  Court  Act  of 1987 for a qualifying offense or
19        attempt of a qualifying offense on or after the effective
20        date of this amendatory Act of 1996, or
21             (2)  ordered   institutionalized   as   a   sexually
22        dangerous person on or after the effective date  of  this
23        amendatory Act of 1989, or
24             (3)  convicted of a qualifying offense or attempt of
25        a  qualifying  offense  before the effective date of this
26        amendatory Act of 1989 and is  presently  confined  as  a
27        result  of  such  conviction  in  any  State correctional
28        facility  or  county  jail  or  is  presently  serving  a
29        sentence of probation, conditional discharge or  periodic
30        imprisonment as a result of such conviction, or
31             (4)  presently   institutionalized   as  a  sexually
32        dangerous person  or  presently  institutionalized  as  a
33        person  found guilty but mentally ill of a sexual offense
34        or attempt to commit a sexual offense; or
 
HB2058 Enrolled            -83-                LRB9201006ARsb
 1             (4.5)  ordered  committed  as  a  sexually   violent
 2        person  on  or  after  the effective date of the Sexually
 3        Violent Persons Commitment Act; or
 4             (5)  seeking transfer to or  residency  in  Illinois
 5        under  Sections  3-3-11  through  3-3-11.5 of the Unified
 6        Code  of  Corrections   (Interstate   Compact   for   the
 7        Supervision   of   Parolees   and  Probationers)  or  the
 8        Interstate Agreements on Sexually Dangerous Persons Act.
 9        (a-5)  Any person  who  was  otherwise  convicted  of  or
10    received  a  disposition  of  court supervision for any other
11    offense under the  Criminal  Code  of  1961  or  any  offense
12    classified  as  a  felony under Illinois law or who was found
13    guilty or given supervision for such a  violation  under  the
14    Juvenile  Court  Act of 1987, may, regardless of the sentence
15    imposed, be required by an  order  of  the  court  to  submit
16    specimens of blood to the Illinois Department of State Police
17    in accordance with the provisions of this Section.
18        (b)  Any  person required by paragraphs (a)(1), (a)(1.5),
19    (a)(2), and (a-5) to provide specimens of blood shall provide
20    specimens  of  blood  within  45  days  after  sentencing  or
21    disposition at a collection site designated by  the  Illinois
22    Department of State Police.
23        (c)  Any  person  required  by paragraphs (a)(3), (a)(4),
24    and (a)(4.5) to provide specimens of blood shall be  required
25    to  provide such samples prior to final discharge, parole, or
26    release at a  collection  site  designated  by  the  Illinois
27    Department of State Police.
28        (c-5)  Any person required by paragraph (a)(5) to provide
29    specimens  of  blood  shall,  where  feasible, be required to
30    provide the specimens before being accepted  for  conditioned
31    residency   in  Illinois  under  the  interstate  compact  or
32    agreement, but no later than 45 days after  arrival  in  this
33    State.
34        (d)  The   Illinois  Department  of  State  Police  shall
 
HB2058 Enrolled            -84-                LRB9201006ARsb
 1    provide all equipment  and  instructions  necessary  for  the
 2    collection of blood samples.  The collection of samples shall
 3    be   performed  in  a  medically  approved  manner.   Only  a
 4    physician authorized to practice medicine, a registered nurse
 5    or  other  qualified  person  trained  in  venipuncture   may
 6    withdraw  blood  for  the  purposes of this Act.  The samples
 7    shall thereafter be forwarded to the Illinois  Department  of
 8    State Police, Division of Forensic Services, for analysis and
 9    categorizing into genetic marker groupings.
10        (e)  The  genetic marker groupings shall be maintained by
11    the Illinois Department of State Police, Division of Forensic
12    Services.
13        (f)  The genetic  marker  grouping  analysis  information
14    obtained pursuant to this Act shall be confidential and shall
15    be  released  only to peace officers of the United States, of
16    other states or territories, of the  insular  possessions  of
17    the  United  States,  of foreign countries duly authorized to
18    receive the same, to all  peace  officers  of  the  State  of
19    Illinois  and to all prosecutorial agencies.  Notwithstanding
20    any  other  statutory  provision   to   the   contrary,   all
21    information  obtained  under this Section shall be maintained
22    in a single State data base, which may  be  uploaded  into  a
23    national database, and may not be subject to expungement.
24        (g)  For   the  purposes  of  this  Section,  "qualifying
25    offense" means any of the following:
26             (1)  Any violation or inchoate violation of  Section
27        11-6,  11-9.1, 11-11, 11-15.1, 11-17.1, 11-18.1, 11-19.1,
28        11-19.2, 11-20.1, 12-13, 12-14, 12-14.1, 12-15, 12-16, or
29        12-33 of the Criminal Code of 1961, or
30             (1.1)  Any  violation  or  inchoate   violation   of
31        Section 9-1, 9-2, 10-1, 10-2, 12-11, 12-11.1, 18-1, 18-2,
32        18-3,  18-4,  19-1,  or 19-2 of the Criminal Code of 1961
33        for which persons are convicted on or after July 1, 2001,
34        or
 
HB2058 Enrolled            -85-                LRB9201006ARsb
 1             (2)  Any former statute of this State which  defined
 2        a felony sexual offense, or
 3             (3)  Any  violation  of paragraph (10) of subsection
 4        (b) of Section 10-5 of the Criminal Code of 1961 when the
 5        sentencing court, upon a motion by the  State's  Attorney
 6        or  Attorney  General,  makes  a  finding  that the child
 7        luring involved an intent to commit sexual penetration or
 8        sexual  conduct  as  defined  in  Section  12-12  of  the
 9        Criminal Code of 1961, or
10             (4)  Any violation or inchoate violation of  Section
11        9-3.1,  11-9.3,  12-3.3,  12-4.2, 12-4.3, 12-7.3, 12-7.4,
12        18-5, 19-3, 20-1.1, or 20.5-5 of  the  Criminal  Code  of
13        1961, or
14             (5)  Any  violation or inchoate violation of Article
15        29D of the Criminal Code of 1961.
16        (g-5)  The Department of State Police is not required  to
17    provide  equipment  to  collect or to accept or process blood
18    specimens from individuals convicted of any offense listed in
19    paragraph (1.1) or (4) of subsection (g),  until  acquisition
20    of  the  resources necessary to process such blood specimens,
21    or in the case of paragraph (1.1)  of  subsection  (g)  until
22    July 1, 2003, whichever is earlier.
23        Upon  acquisition  of  necessary  resources, including an
24    appropriation for the purpose of implementing this amendatory
25    Act of  the  91st  General  Assembly,  but  in  the  case  of
26    paragraph (1.1) of subsection (g) no later than July 1, 2003,
27    the Department of State Police shall notify the Department of
28    Corrections,   the  Administrative  Office  of  the  Illinois
29    Courts, and  any  other  entity  deemed  appropriate  by  the
30    Department   of   State   Police,  to  begin  blood  specimen
31    collection from individuals convicted of offenses  enumerated
32    in  paragraphs  (1.1)  and  (4)  of  subsection  (g) that the
33    Department is prepared to provide  collection  equipment  and
34    receive   and   process   blood  specimens  from  individuals
 
HB2058 Enrolled            -86-                LRB9201006ARsb
 1    convicted  of  offenses  enumerated  in  paragraph  (1.1)  of
 2    subsection (g).
 3        Until   the   Department   of   State   Police   provides
 4    notification, designated collection agencies are not required
 5    to collect  blood  specimen  from  individuals  convicted  of
 6    offenses enumerated in paragraphs (1.1) and (4) of subsection
 7    (g).
 8        (h)  The Illinois Department of State Police shall be the
 9    State  central  repository  for  all  genetic marker grouping
10    analysis information obtained  pursuant  to  this  Act.   The
11    Illinois  Department of State Police may promulgate rules for
12    the form and manner of the collection of  blood  samples  and
13    other   procedures  for  the  operation  of  this  Act.   The
14    provisions of the Administrative Review Law  shall  apply  to
15    all actions taken under the rules so promulgated.
16        (i)  A  person required to provide a blood specimen shall
17    cooperate  with  the  collection  of  the  specimen  and  any
18    deliberate act by that person intended to  impede,  delay  or
19    stop  the  collection  of  the  blood  specimen  is a Class A
20    misdemeanor.
21        (j)  Any person required  by  subsection  (a)  to  submit
22    specimens of blood to the Illinois Department of State Police
23    for analysis and categorization into genetic marker grouping,
24    in  addition  to  any  other  disposition,  penalty,  or fine
25    imposed, shall pay an analysis fee of  $500.   Upon  verified
26    petition  of the person, the court may suspend payment of all
27    or part of the fee if it finds that the person does not  have
28    the ability to pay the fee.
29        (k)  All analysis and categorization fees provided for by
30    subsection (j) shall be regulated as follows:
31             (1)  The  State  Offender  DNA Identification System
32        Fund is hereby created as a special  fund  in  the  State
33        Treasury.
34             (2)  All fees shall be collected by the clerk of the
 
HB2058 Enrolled            -87-                LRB9201006ARsb
 1        court   and   forwarded   to   the   State  Offender  DNA
 2        Identification System Fund for deposit.  The clerk of the
 3        circuit court may retain the  amount  of  $10  from  each
 4        collected  analysis  fee  to  offset administrative costs
 5        incurred in carrying  out  the  clerk's  responsibilities
 6        under this Section.
 7             (3)  Fees  deposited  into  the  State  Offender DNA
 8        Identification System Fund  shall  be  used  by  Illinois
 9        State  Police  crime  laboratories  as  designated by the
10        Director of  State  Police.   These  funds  shall  be  in
11        addition  to  any  allocations  made pursuant to existing
12        laws and shall be designated for  the  exclusive  use  of
13        State  crime  laboratories.   These uses may include, but
14        are not limited to, the following:
15                  (A)  Costs incurred in providing  analysis  and
16             genetic   marker   categorization   as  required  by
17             subsection (d).
18                  (B)  Costs  incurred  in  maintaining   genetic
19             marker groupings as required by subsection (e).
20                  (C)  Costs   incurred   in   the  purchase  and
21             maintenance  of  equipment  for  use  in  performing
22             analyses.
23                  (D)  Costs incurred in continuing research  and
24             development  of  new  techniques  for  analysis  and
25             genetic marker categorization.
26                  (E)  Costs  incurred  in  continuing education,
27             training, and professional development  of  forensic
28             scientists regularly employed by these laboratories.
29        (l)  The failure of a person to provide a specimen, or of
30    any person or agency to collect a specimen, within the 45 day
31    period  shall in no way alter the obligation of the person to
32    submit such  specimen,  or  the  authority  of  the  Illinois
33    Department  of  State  Police  or  persons  designated by the
34    Department to collect the specimen, or the authority  of  the
 
HB2058 Enrolled            -88-                LRB9201006ARsb
 1    Illinois  Department  of  State Police to accept, analyze and
 2    maintain the specimen or to maintain  or  upload  results  of
 3    genetic  marker grouping analysis information into a State or
 4    national database.
 5    (Source: P.A.  91-528,  eff.  1-1-00;  92-16,  eff.  6-28-01;
 6    92-40, eff. 6-29-01.)

 7        Section 30. The Charitable Trust Act is amended by adding
 8    Section 16.5 as follows:

 9        (760 ILCS 55/16.5 new)
10        Sec. 16.5.  Terrorist acts.
11        (a)  Any person or organization subject  to  registration
12    under  this  Act,  who knowingly acts to further, directly or
13    indirectly, or knowingly uses charitable assets to conduct or
14    further, directly or indirectly, an act  or  actions  as  set
15    forth in Article 29D of the Criminal Code of 1961, is thereby
16    engaged  in  an  act or actions contrary to public policy and
17    antithetical to charity, and all of the  funds,  assets,  and
18    records  of  the  person  or organization shall be subject to
19    temporary and permanent injunction from  use  or  expenditure
20    and  the appointment of a temporary and permanent receiver to
21    take possession of all of the assets and related records.
22        (b) An ex parte action may be commenced by  the  Attorney
23    General, and, upon a showing of probable cause of a violation
24    of  this Section or Article 29D of the Criminal Code of 1961,
25    an immediate seizure of books and  records  by  the  Attorney
26    General by and through his or her assistants or investigators
27    or  the Department of State Police and freezing of all assets
28    shall be made by order of a  court  to  protect  the  public,
29    protect the assets, and allow a full review of the records.
30        (c)  Upon  a  finding  by  a court after a hearing that a
31    person or organization has acted or is in violation  of  this
32    Section,  the  person    or organization shall be permanently
 
HB2058 Enrolled            -89-                LRB9201006ARsb
 1    enjoined from soliciting   funds  from  the  public,  holding
 2    charitable  funds, or acting as a trustee or fiduciary within
 3    Illinois. Upon a finding of violation all  assets  and  funds
 4    held  by the person or organization shall be forfeited to the
 5    People of the State of Illinois or otherwise ordered  by  the
 6    court to be accounted for and marshaled and then delivered to
 7    charitable  causes  and  uses within the State of Illinois by
 8    court order.
 9        (d)  A determination under this Section may  be  made  by
10    any  court  separate  and apart from any criminal proceedings
11    and  the  standard  of  proof  shall  be   that   for   civil
12    proceedings.
13        (e)  Any  knowing  use of charitable assets to conduct or
14    further, directly or indirectly, an act or actions set  forth
15    in Article 29D of the Criminal Code of 1961 shall be a misuse
16    of charitable assets and breach of fiduciary duty relative to
17    all other Sections of this Act.

18        Section  40.  The  Code  of Civil Procedure is amended by
19    changing Section 8-802 as follows:

20        (735 ILCS 5/8-802) (from Ch. 110, par. 8-802)
21        (Text of Section WITHOUT the changes made by  P.A.  89-7,
22    which has been held unconstitutional)
23        Sec.  8-802.   Physician  and  patient.  No  physician or
24    surgeon shall be permitted to disclose any information he  or
25    she   may  have  acquired  in  attending  any  patient  in  a
26    professional  character,  necessary  to  enable  him  or  her
27    professionally to serve  the  patient,  except  only  (1)  in
28    trials  for  homicide when the disclosure relates directly to
29    the fact or immediate circumstances of the homicide,  (2)  in
30    actions,   civil  or  criminal,  against  the  physician  for
31    malpractice, (3) with the expressed consent of  the  patient,
32    or  in  case of his or her death or disability, of his or her
 
HB2058 Enrolled            -90-                LRB9201006ARsb
 1    personal representative or other person authorized to sue for
 2    personal injury or of the beneficiary of an insurance  policy
 3    on his or her life, health, or physical condition, (4) in all
 4    actions  brought  by  or  against  the  patient,  his  or her
 5    personal representative, a  beneficiary  under  a  policy  of
 6    insurance,  or  the  executor  or administrator of his or her
 7    estate wherein the patient's physical or mental condition  is
 8    an  issue, (5) upon an issue as to the validity of a document
 9    as a will of the patient, (6) in any  criminal  action  where
10    the  charge  is  either  first  degree  murder  by  abortion,
11    attempted  abortion  or  abortion,  (7)  in actions, civil or
12    criminal, arising from the filing of a report  in  compliance
13    with the Abused and Neglected Child Reporting Act, (8) to any
14    department, agency, institution or facility which has custody
15    of  the  patient pursuant to State statute or any court order
16    of commitment, (9) in prosecutions where written  results  of
17    blood  alcohol  tests  are  admissible  pursuant  to  Section
18    11-501.4   of   the   Illinois   Vehicle  Code,  or  (10)  in
19    prosecutions where written results of blood alcohol tests are
20    admissible under Section 5-11a of the Boat  Registration  and
21    Safety  Act,  or  (11)  in  criminal actions arising from the
22    filing  of  a  report  of  suspected  terrorist  offense   in
23    compliance  with Section 29D-10(p)(7) of the Criminal Code of
24    1961.
25        In the event of a conflict  between  the  application  of
26    this   Section   and  the  Mental  Health  and  Developmental
27    Disabilities Confidentiality Act to a specific situation, the
28    provisions   of   the   Mental   Health   and   Developmental
29    Disabilities Confidentiality Act shall control.
30    (Source: P.A. 87-803.)

31        (720 ILCS 5/Article 29C rep.)
32        Section 95. The Criminal  Code  of  1961  is  amended  by
33    repealing Article 29C.
 
HB2058 Enrolled            -91-                LRB9201006ARsb
 1        Section  96.   The  provisions  of this Act are severable
 2    under Section 1.31 of the Statute on Statutes.

 3        Section 99. Effective date. This Act  takes  effect  upon
 4    becoming law.

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