State of Illinois
92nd General Assembly
Legislation

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[ Senate Amendment 002 ]


92_HB2058gms

                            STATE OF ILLINOIS
                         OFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR
                           SPRINGFIELD, 62706
      GEORGE H. RYAN
      GOVERNOR
                             August 23, 2002
      To the Honorable Members of the
          Illinois House of Representatives
          92nd General Assembly
          Pursuant to the  authority  vested  in  the  Governor  by
      Article  IV,  Section  9(e)  of  the Illinois Constitution of
      1970, and re-affirmed by the People of the State of  Illinois
      by popular referendum in 1974, and conforming to the standard
      articulated  by  the Illinois Supreme Court in People ex Rel.
      Klinger v.  Howlett,  50  Ill.  2d  242  (1972),  Continental
      Illinois National Bank and Trust Co. v. Zagel, 78 Ill. 2d 387
      (1979),  People  ex Rel. City of Canton v. Crouch, 79 Ill. 2d
      356 (1980), and County of Kane v. Carlson, 116  Ill.  2d  186
      (1987),  that  gubernatorial  action  be  consistent with the
      fundamental purposes and the intent of  the  bill,  I  hereby
      return  House  Bill  2058,  entitled  "AN  ACT in relation to
      terrorism", with my specific recommendations for change.
          House Bill 2058 amends the Criminal  Code  of  1961,  the
      Solicitation    for   Charity   Act,   the   Firearm   Owners
      Identification Card Act, the Code of  Criminal  Procedure  of
      1963,  the  Boarding  Aircraft with Weapon Act, the Statewide
      Grand  Jury  Act,  the  Unified  Code  of  Corrections,   the
      Charitable   Trust   Act  and  other  Acts  with  respect  to
      investigating, prosecuting and punishing acts  of  terrorism.
      Specifically,  the  bill  amends the Criminal Code of 1961 to
      allow the death penalty to be considered for  a  first-degree
      murder  committed  as  a  result  of  or in connection with a
      terrorism offense.
          House Bill 2058 is the second terrorism bill to pass  the
      General   Assembly.   On   February   8th  of  this  year,  I
      amendatorily vetoed the  first  terrorism  bill  (House  Bill
      2299)   due   to,  among  others,  concerns  surrounding  the
      over-expansive eavesdropping &  wiretapping  provisions,  the
      expansion  of  our  death  eligibility  factors, the need for
      additional  due  process  protections  before   seizing   and
      freezing  of  assets of charitable organizations and persons,
      and other technical  flaws.   The  proposed  amendments  were
      important  to  protecting  the  constitutional  rights of our
      citizens from some of the overly  broad  provisions  of  this
      legislation.   I  am pleased to see that the General Assembly
      has passed a much-improved anti-terrorism bill  by  including
      all  but  one  of  my  suggested  changes in House Bill 2058.
      However, the one suggested amendatory veto  change  that  the
      General  Assembly did not incorporate into House Bill 2058 is
      removing the addition of  an  unnecessary  death  eligibility
      factor  for  a  first-degree  murder  committed  as part of a
      terrorist offense. Our  current  death  penalty  statute  has
      numerous  provisions  that cover just about every conceivable
      murder circumstance that would be committed by  a  terrorist.
      Illinois'  legislative  response  to  the  tragic  events  of
      September  11th  should not compromise our state government's
      integrity by succumbing to the urge to enact largely symbolic
      legislative changes.
          House Bill 2058 passed the General Assembly  on  May  29,
      2002.  This  was  a  month  and a half after my Commission on
      Capital Punishment delivered its  report   with  85  proposed
      reforms  to  the death penalty system and more than two weeks
      after I  introduced reform legislation that would codify many
      of the Commission's recommendations.  The  General  Assembly,
      however, did not address the important issue of comprehensive
      death  penalty  reform during the spring legislative session,
      but rather sent me  yet  another  bill  expanding  the  death
      penalty.  This  occurred  despite what I believe is a growing
      consensus to limit eligibility factors in some  fashion.  The
      General  Assembly  has  convened  committees to look into the
      issue of death penalty reform, which have been  meeting  over
 
      the  summer  months.  And  while I applaud both the House and
      Senate for convening these committees to look into the  issue
      of  death penalty reform, I am  troubled by the relative ease
      with which a death penalty expansion bill was  able  to  pass
      before  any  real  legislative  attention  had  been given to
      carrying out much needed reforms. Given our  State's  capital
      punishment  track  record,  there  can  be  little doubt that
      reform should take precedence over  expanding  death  penalty
      eligibility  in  what  most  believe  to  be a flawed system.
      Failure to do so can only serve to demonstrate that  Illinois
      is  more  concerned  with making a symbolic statement with an
      unnecessary death penalty provision than with  ensuring  that
      additional  innocent  persons  do not end up on death row and
      executed at the hands of the state.
          While it is true that  the  General  Assembly  previously
      passed  the  Capital    Crimes  Litigation Act to better fund
      defense and prosecution  of  capital  cases  and  legislation
      requiring  stricter  controls  over  retaining evidence, this
      year  I  did  not  receive  a  single  death  penalty  reform
      proposal.  For the third time in barely over  a  year,  I  am
      receiving  legislation  aimed  at expanding the death penalty
      statute,  despite  my  two   previous  vetoes  of  the  prior
      attempts to  expand  the  statute.   Instead  of  sending  me
      comprehensive   death  penalty  reform  legislation,  I  have
      received only  death  penalty  expansion  legislation.  This,
      despite the fact that my Commission comprised of intelligent,
      insightful,    experienced,   passionate   and   well-rounded
      individuals has come up with 85 recommendations for change to
      our flawed capital punishment system.  The Illinois State Bar
      Association, the Illinois State's Attorney?s Association, the
      Illinois Chiefs of Police,  the  Illinois  Public  Defender's
      Association  and  many others have gone on record as agreeing
      with the vast majority of the Commission's recommendations.
          Since the reinstatement of the death penalty on June  27,
      1977,  the  number  of innocent persons exonerated from death
      row has outnumbered the  number  of  those    who  have  been
      executed.   There  may  still  be  innocent  persons on death
      row-sentenced to die by a badly flawed system. If that system
      is allowed to continue unchanged and unreformed,  then  there
      undoubtedly  will  be  more  innocent  men and women who find
      themselves awaiting their death at the hands of the people of
      the State of Illinois for a crime that they did not commit.
          Now is the time for reform  of  Illinois'  death  penalty
      system.   To  do  anything  otherwise  is  unjust, unfair and
      unprincipled.
          Therefore, if the General Assembly wants  to  expand  the
      death penalty with House Bill 2058, then justice demands that
      the General Assembly be prepared to adopt some needed reforms
      to make sure the death penalty is considered and imposed in a
      fair  and  just  manner.  To  that  end,  I  am  proposing an
      amendatory veto of House Bill 2058 to include changes in  the
      death  penalty system that I believe will help keep Illinois'
      death  penalty  statutes  constitutional,  address  technical
      flaws in the system and begin restoring public confidence  in
      our  system  of  justice.   There  are additional reforms the
      General Assembly must consider in November,  but  the  reform
      proposals   contained   in  this  amendatory  veto  are  both
      applicable and necessary to the death  penalty  provision  in
      this bill.
          For  these  reasons, I hereby return House Bill 2058 with
      the following recommendations for change:
      on page 1, by inserting between lines 3 and 4 the following:
          "Section  2. The Counties Code  is  amended  by  changing
      Section 3-4006 as follows:
          (55 ILCS 5/3-4006) (from Ch. 34, par. 3-4006)
          Sec.  3-4006.   Duties  of  public  defender.  The Public
      Defender, as directed  by the court, shall act  as  attorney,
      without  fee,  before  any  court  within any county  for all
      persons who are held in custody or who are charged  with  the
      commission  of any criminal  offense, and who the court finds
 
      are unable to employ counsel.
          The Public Defender shall be the attorney,  without  fee,
      when  so  appointed   by the  court under Section 1-20 of the
      Juvenile Court Act or Section 1-5 of the  Juvenile Court  Act
      of 1987 or by any court under Section 5(b)  of  the  Parental
      Notice  of  Abortion Act of  1983 for any party who the court
      finds is financially unable to employ counsel.
          The Public Defender may act as attorney, without fee  and
      appointment by  the court, for a person in custody during the
      person's  interrogation  regarding  first  degree  murder for
      which the death penalty may be imposed,  if  the  person  has
      requested  the  advice  of  counsel and there is a reasonable
      belief  that   the   person   is   indigent.    Any   further
      representation  of the person by the Public Defender shall be
      pursuant to Section 109-1 of the Code of  Criminal  Procedure
      of 1963.
          Every  court shall, with the consent of the defendant and
      where the court finds that  the rights of the defendant would
      be prejudiced by the  appointment  of  the  public  defender,
      appoint  counsel  other  than  the public defender, except as
      otherwise provided in Section 113-3 of the "Code of  Criminal
      Procedure  of  1963". That counsel shall be compensated as is
      provided by law. He shall also, in the case of the conviction
      of any such person, prosecute any proceeding in review  which
      in  his  judgment the interests of justice require.  (Source:
      P.A. 86-962.)"; and
      on page  8,  by  replacing  lines  18  through  21  with  the
      following:
          "(b)  Aggravating Factors.  A defendant:
          (i)  who at the time of the commission of the offense has
          attained  the age of 18 or more;
          (ii)  and  who  has  been  found  guilty  of first degree
          murder; and
          (iii) whose guilt was not, in the  determination  of  the
          court,  based solely upon the uncorroborated testimony of
          one eyewitness, of one accomplice, or of one incarcerated
          informant;
      may be sentenced to death if:";
      and on  page  11,  by  replacing  lines  1  and  2  with  the
      following:
      "to  prevent  the  murdered  individual  from  testifying  or
      participating in any criminal investigation or prosecution or
      giving material assistance to the"; and
      on page 11, by replacing line 5 with the following:
      "murder  because  the  murdered  individual  was a witness or
      participated in"; and
      on page 13,  by  replacing  lines  23  through  27  with  the
      following:
          "For the purpose of this Section:
          Torture" means the intentional and depraved infliction of
      extreme physical pain for a prolonged period of time prior to
      the victim's death.
          "Depraved" means the defendant relished the infliction of
      extreme  physical  pain upon the victim evidencing debasement
      or perversion or that the  defendant  evidenced  a  sense  of
      pleasure in the infliction of extreme physical pain.
          "Participating   in   any   criminal   investigation   or
      prosecution"  is  intended  to include those appearing in the
      proceedings  in  any  capacity,   such   as   trial   judges,
      prosecutors,  defense attorneys, investigators, witnesses, or
      jurors.
          (c)  Consideration of accomplice or  informant  testimony
      and factors in aggravation and mitigation.
          When  the sentence of death is being sought by the State,
      the court shall consider,  or  shall  instruct  the  jury  to
      consider  that the testimony of an accomplice or incarcerated
      informant who may provide evidence against  a  defendant  for
      pay,  immunity from punishment, or personal advantage must be
      examined and weighed with greater care than the testimony  of
 
      an  ordinary  witness.  Whether the accomplice or informant's
      testimony has been affected by interest or prejudice  against
      the   defendant   must   be   determined.   In   making   the
      determination,   the  jury  must  consider  (i)  whether  the
      accomplice or incarcerated informant has  received  anything,
      including   pay,   immunity  from  prosecution,  leniency  in
      prosecution,  or  personal   advantage,   in   exchange   for
      testimony,  (ii)  any  other  case in which the accomplice or
      informant  testified  or  offered   statements   against   an
      individual  but  was  not  called, and whether the statements
      were admitted in the case,  and  whether  the  accomplice  or
      informant  received any deal, promise, inducement, or benefit
      in exchange for that testimony or  statement,  (iii)  whether
      the  accomplice  or  informant  has  ever  changed his or her
      testimony, (iv) the criminal history  of  the  accomplice  or
      informant,  and  (v)  any  other  evidence  relevant  to  the
      credibility of the accomplice or informant.
          The court shall also consider, or shall also instruct the
      jury  to consider, any aggravating and any mitigating factors
      which are relevant to the imposition of  the  death  penalty.
      Before  the  jury  makes  a determination with respect to the
      imposition  of  the  death  penalty,  the  court  shall  also
      instruct the jury of  the  applicable  alternative  sentences
      under  Chapter  V of the Unified Code of Corrections that the
      court  may  impose  for  first  degree  murder  if   a   jury
      determination  precludes  the  death sentence.  Aggravating";
      and
      on page 14, line 10, by replacing the period with ";.-
          (6)  the defendant's background  includes  a  history  of
      extreme emotional or  physical abuse;
          (7)    the   defendant  suffers  from  a  reduced  mental
      capacity."; and
      on page 15,  line  4,  by  inserting  after  the  period  the
      following:
      "The  defendant shall be given the opportunity, personally or
      through counsel, to make a statement that is not  subject  to
      cross-examination.   If  the proceeding is before a jury, the
      defendant's statement shall be reduced to writing in  advance
      and  submitted  to the court and the State, so that the court
      may rule upon  any  evidentiary  objection  with  respect  to
      admissibility of the statement."; and
      on  page  15,  by  replacing  lines  22  through  29 with the
      following:
      "determines  unanimously,  after  weighing  the  factors   in
      aggravation  and  mitigation,  that  death is the appropriate
      sentence and the court concurs with  the  jury  determination
      that  there  are no mitigating factors sufficient to preclude
      the  imposition  of  the  death  sentence,  the  court  shall
      sentence the defendant to death. If the court does not concur
      with the jury determination that  death  is  the  appropriate
      sentence,  the  court  shall set forth reasons in writing and
      shall then sentence the defendant to a term of  natural  life
      imprisonment   under   Chapter  V  of  the  Unified  Code  of
      Corrections.
          If Unless the jury determines unanimously, after weighing
      the factors in aggravation and mitigation, that death is  not
      the  appropriate sentence, finds that there are no mitigating
      factors sufficient to preclude the imposition  of  the  death
      sentence  the court shall sentence the defendant to a term of
      imprisonment  under  Chapter  V  of  the  Unified   Code   of
      Corrections."; and
      on  page  16,  by  replacing  lines  5  through  13  with the
      following:
      "subsection (c).  If the Court determines, after weighing the
      factors in aggravation and  mitigation,  that  death  is  the
      appropriate  sentence  that  there  are no mitigating factors
      sufficient to preclude the imposition of the death  sentence,
      the Court shall sentence the defendant to death.
          If  Unless  the  court finds that there are no mitigating
      factors sufficient to preclude the imposition of the sentence
 
      of death is not the appropriate  sentence,  the  court  shall
      sentence  the  defendant  to  a  term  of  imprisonment under
      Chapter V of the Unified Code of Corrections."; and
      on page 16, line  17,  by  inserting  after  the  period  the
      following:
      "Upon  the  request  of the defendant, the Supreme Court must
      determine whether  the  sentence  was  imposed  due  to  some
      arbitrary  factor;  whether  an  independent  weighing of the
      aggravating and mitigating circumstances indicate  death  was
      the  proper  sentence;  and whether the sentence of death was
      excessive or  disproportionate  to  the  penalty  imposed  in
      similar cases.  The Supreme Court may order the collection of
      data  and  information to support the review required by this
      subsection (i)."; and
      on page 20, line 5, by replacing "and" with "and"; and
      on page  22,  line  3,  by  replacing  the  period  with  the
      following:
      "; and
          (k)  Recording the interrogation or statement of a person
          in custody for first degree murder  or  a  witness  in  a
          first  degree  murder case, when the person in custody or
          witness knows the interrogation is being conducted  by  a
          law  enforcement  officer or prosecutor. For the purposes
          of this Section,  "interrogation of a person in  custody"
          means  any  interrogation  during which  the person being
          interrogated is not free to leave and the person is being
          asked questions  relevant  to  the  first  degree  murder
          investigation."; and
      on page 41, by replacing line 28 with the following:
      "108B-11, 108B-12, 108B-14, 114-11, 114-13, 116-3, 122-1, and
      122-2.1  and  by    adding  Sections 108B-7.5, 113-7, 114-15,
      114-16, 115-16.1, and 115-21 as"; and
      on page 68, by inserting between lines 1 and 2 the following:
          "(725 ILCS 5/113-7 new)
          Sec. 113-7. Notice of intention to seek  or  decline  the
      death penalty. The State's Attorney or Attorney General shall
      provide  notice  of  the State's intention to seek or decline
      the death penalty by filing a Notice of  Intent  to  Seek  or
      Decline the Death Penalty as soon as practicable. In no event
      shall  the  filing of the notice be later than 120 days after
      arraignment, unless, for good cause shown, the court  directs
      otherwise. A notice of intent to seek the death penalty shall
      also   include  all  of  the  statutory  aggravating  factors
      enumerated in subsection (b) of Section 9-1 of  the  Criminal
      Code  of 1961 which the State intends to introduce during the
      death penalty sentencing hearing.
          (725 ILCS 5/114-11) (from Ch. 38, par. 114-11)
          Sec. 114-11.  Motion to Suppress Confession.
          (a) Prior to the trial of any criminal case  a  defendant
      may  move to suppress as evidence any confession given by him
      on the ground that it was not voluntary.
          (b) The motion  shall  be  in  writing  and  state  facts
      showing wherein the confession is involuntary.
          (c)  If  the allegations of the motion state facts which,
      if true, show that the confession was  not  voluntarily  made
      the  court  shall  conduct  a  hearing into the merits of the
      motion.
          (d) The burden of going forward with the evidence and the
      burden of proving that a confession was voluntary shall be on
      the State. Objection to the failure of  the State to call all
      material witnesses on the issue of whether the confession was
      voluntary must be made in the trial court.
          (e) The motion shall be made only  before  a  court  with
      jurisdiction to try the offense.
          (f)  The  issue  of  the  admissibility of the confession
      shall  not  be  submitted  to  the  jury.  The  circumstances
      surrounding the making of the confession may be submitted  to
      the  jury as bearing upon the credibility or the weight to be
 
      given to the confession.
          (g)  The  motion  shall  be  made  before  trial   unless
      opportunity  therefor  did not exist or the defendant was not
      aware of the grounds for the motion. If the  motion  is  made
      during trial, and the court determines that the motion is not
      untimely,  and the court conducts a hearing on the merits and
      enters an order suppressing the confession, the  court  shall
      terminate  the trial with respect to every defendant  who was
      a party to the hearing and who was within the  scope  of  the
      order of suppression, without further proceedings, unless the
      State   files   a  written  notice  that  there  will  be  no
      interlocutory appeal from such order of suppression.  In  the
      event  of  such termination, the court shall proceed with the
      trial of other defendants not thus affected. Such termination
      of trial  shall  be  proper  and  shall  not  bar  subsequent
      prosecution of the identical charges and defendants; however,
      if  after  such  termination the State fails to prosecute the
      interlocutory appeal until a determination of the  merits  of
      the  appeal  by the reviewing court, the termination shall be
      improper within  the  meaning  of  subparagraph  (a)  (3)  of
      Section  3--4  of  the "Criminal Code of 1961", approved July
      28, 1961, as amended,  and  subsequent  prosecution  of  such
      defendants upon such charges shall be barred.
          (h)   In  capital  cases,  the  court  may also conduct a
      hearing pursuant to Section 115-21 on  the  admissibility  of
      the  statement  made by the defendant where the statement has
      not been recorded by electronic video or audio, regardless of
      whether the defense requests such a  hearing.  (Source:  P.A.
      76-1096.)
          (725 ILCS 5/114-13) (from Ch. 38, par. 114-13)
          Sec. 114-13.  Discovery in criminal cases.
          (a)  Discovery  procedures  in criminal cases shall be in
      accordance with Supreme Court Rules.
      (b)  Discovery deposition procedures applicable in cases  for
      which  the  death    penalty  may  be  imposed  shall  be  in
      accordance  with Supreme Court Rules and this subsection (b),
      unless the State has given notice of  its  intention  not  to
      seek the death penalty.
               (1)   The intent of this subsection is to (i) ensure
          that capital defendants receive fair and impartial trials
          and sentencing hearings within the courts of this   State
          and  (ii) minimize the occurrence of error to the maximum
          extent feasible by  identifying and correcting  with  due
          promptness any error that may occur.
               (2)  A party may, with leave of court upon a showing
          of  good  cause,  take the discovery deposition upon oral
          questions  of  any  person  disclosed  as  a  witness  as
          provided by law or Supreme  Court  Rule.  In  determining
          whether  to allow a deposition, the court should consider
          (i) the consequences to the party if  the  deposition  is
          not   allowed,   (ii)  the  complexities  of  the  issues
          involved, (iii) the complexity of the  testimony  of  the
          witness,  and  (iv)  the other opportunities available to
          the  party  to  discover  the   information   sought   by
          deposition.  Under  no   circumstances,  however, may the
          defendant be deposed.
               (3)   The  taking  of  depositions   shall   be   in
          accordance   with  rules  providing  for  the  taking  of
          depositions in civil  actions,  and  the  order  for  the
          taking  of  a  deposition may provide that any designated
          books,  papers,  documents,  or  tangible   objects,  not
          privileged, be produced at the same time and place.
               (4)   A  defendant  shall  have  no  right   to   be
          physically present at a discovery deposition. If there is
          any  concern  regarding  witness  safety,  the  court may
          require that the deposition be held in a place or  manner
          that  will ensure the  security of the witness. The court
          may also issue protective orders to restrict the  use and
          disclosure of information provided by a witness.
               (5)   Absent  good  cause  shown   to   the   court,
          depositions  shall be completed  within 90 days after the
          disclosure of witnesses. The parties shall have the right
          to  compel depositions under this subsection by subpoena.
          No witness may be  deposed  more  than  once,  except  by
          leave of the court upon a showing of good cause.
               (6)   If  the  defendant  is  indigent, the costs of
          taking depositions shall be  paid by the county where the
 
          criminal charge is initiated with  reimbursement  to  the
          county  from  the  Capital  Litigation Trust Fund. If the
          defendant is not indigent,  the costs shall be  allocated
          as in civil actions.
      (Source: Laws 1963, p. 2836.)
          (725 ILCS 5/114-15 new)
          Sec.   114-15.    Motion  for  genetic  marker  groupings
      comparison analysis.
          (a)  A defendant may make a  motion  for  a  court  order
      before  trial  for  comparison  analysis by the Department of
      State Police with those genetic marker groupings   maintained
      under subsection (f) of Section 5-4-3 of the Unified Code of
      Corrections  if  the    defendant  meets all of the following
      requirements:
               (1)  The defendant is charged with any offense.
               (2)  The defendant seeks for the Department of State
          Police to identify genetic marker groupings from evidence
          collected by criminal justice agencies  pursuant  to  the
          alleged offense.
               (3)   The  defendant  seeks  comparison  analysis of
          genetic  marker   groupings   of   the   evidence   under
          subdivision  (2)  to those of the defendant, to those  of
          other forensic evidence, and to  those  maintained  under
          subsection  (f)  of  Section 5-4-3 of the Unified Code of
          Corrections.
               (4)   Genetic  marker  grouping  analysis  must   be
          performed  by  a  laboratory   compliant with the quality
          assurance standards required by the Department of   State
          Police for genetic marker grouping analysis comparisons.
               (5)  Reasonable notice of the motion shall be served
          upon the State.
          (b)   The Department of State Police may promulgate rules
      for the  types  of  comparisons  performed  and  the  quality
      assurance standards required for submission of genetic marker
      groupings.   The  provisions of the Administrative Review Law
      shall  apply  to  all  actions  taken  under  the  rules   so
      promulgated.
          (725 ILCS 5/114-16 new)
          Sec. 114-16.  Motion to preclude death penalty based upon
      mental retardation.
          (a)   A  defendant  charged  with first degree murder may
      make a motion prior to trial to preclude  the  imposition  of
      the  death  penalty  based upon the mental retardation of the
      defendant.  The motion shall be in writing  and  shall  state
      facts to demonstrate the mental retardation of the defendant.
      As used in this Section, "mental retardation" means:
               (1)    having   significantly   subaverage   general
          intellectual  functioning  as  evidenced  by a functional
          intelligence quotient (I.Q.) of 70 or below; and
          (2) having deficits  in  adaptive  behavior.  The  mental
      retardation    must   have   been   manifested   during   the
      developmental  period, or  by 18 years of age.
          (b)   Notwithstanding  any  provision  of  law   to   the
      contrary,  a defendant with mental retardation at the time of
      committing first degree murder  shall  not  be  sentenced  to
      death.
          (c)   The  burden  of going forward with the evidence and
      the burden of proving the defendant's mental retardation by a
      preponderance of the evidence is  upon  the  defendant.   The
      determination  of whether the defendant was mentally retarded
      at the time of the offense of first degree  murder  shall  be
      made by the court after a hearing.
          (d)   If  the issue of mental retardation is raised prior
      to trial and the court determines that the defendant is not a
      person  with  mental  retardation,  the  defendant  shall  be
      entitled to offer evidence to the trier of fact of diminished
      intellectual capacity as a mitigating  circumstance  pursuant
      to clause (c)(7) of Section 9-1 of the Criminal Code of 1961.
          (e)   The  determination  by  the  trier  of  fact on the
      defendant's motion  shall not be appealable by  interlocutory
      appeal,  but  may be a basis of appeal by either the State or
      defendant following the sentencing stage of the trial.
          (725 ILCS 5/115-16.1 new)
               Sec.  115-16.1.   Witness  qualification  in   first
      degree murder trial.
 
          (a)   In  a prosecution for first degree murder where the
      State has given notice of its intention  to  seek  the  death
      penalty,  the  prosecution must promptly notify the court and
      the  defendant's  attorney  of  the  intention  to  introduce
      testimony at trial from a person who is in custody or who was
      in custody at the time of the factual matters  to  which  the
      person  will  testify. The notice to the defendant's attorney
      must  include  the  identification,  criminal  history,   and
      background of the witness. The prosecution must also promptly
      notify   the   defendant's   attorney   of   any  discussion,
      inducement, benefit, or agreement between that witness and  a
      law  enforcement  agency,  officer,  or  prosecutor  for that
      witness.
          (b)  After notice has been given to the court pursuant to
      subsection (a), the court must  prior  to  trial  conduct  an
      evidentiary   hearing   to   determine  the  reliability  and
      admissibility  of  the  testimony   of   the   witness.   The
      prosecution  has  the burden of proving by a preponderance of
      the evidence the reliability of the testimony of the witness.
      In making its determination, the court may consider:
               (1)  the specific statements or facts to  which  the
          witness will testify;
               (2)    the  time,  place,  and  other  circumstances
          regarding the statements or  facts to  which the  witness
          will testify;
               (3)    any   discussion,   inducement,  benefit,  or
          agreement between  the  witness  and  a  law  enforcement
          agency or officer for that witness;
               (4)  the criminal history of the witness;
               (5)   whether  the  witness has ever recanted his or
          her testimony;
               (6)  other criminal cases in which the  witness  has
          testified;
               (7)   the  presence  or  absence of any relationship
          between the accused and  the witness; and
               (8)  any other evidence relevant to the  credibility
          of the witness.
      (725 ILCS 5/115-21 new)
          Sec. 115-21.  Evidence of statement in capital case.
               (a)The  General  Assembly  believes that justice and
          fairness are best served if the  custodial  interrogation
          and  any  statement of the defendant that may result from
          the interrogation in a capital case are recorded by means
          of electronic video and audio. The General Assembly finds
          that the video and audio  recording of the  interrogation
          and  statement  produce  some  of  the best evidence with
          respect to  the  voluntariness  and  reliability  of  the
          statement  and  compliance with the constitutional rights
          of the defendant. The General Assembly  understands  that
          to  implement such recording practices will require time,
          training, and funding. Therefore,  the  General  Assembly
          believes  that  law  enforcement  officers, to the extent
          possible, should record any interrogations and statements
          of the suspect,  defendant,  or  significant  witness  in
          capital  cases  in  video  and audio format. However, the
          General Assembly also  recognizes  that  such  video  and
          audio  recording may not always be available or practical
          under the circumstances and  resources  of  a  particular
          case.  Further, an interrogation or statement that is not
          recorded by video or audio may be just  as  reliable  and
          voluntary  as  one  that  is  so recorded. Therefore, the
          purpose of this Section is not to mandate video and audio
          recording  of  interrogations  and  statements  in  first
          degree  murder  cases  and  compel   the   exclusion   of
          unrecorded  statements  or  interrogations, but rather to
          guarantee an admissibility hearing before the  court  for
          statements  made  without a video or audio recording. The
          State's Attorney for each county and the Attorney General
          shall each report separately to the General  Assembly  by
          August   1,  2003  as  to  the  implementation  of  these
          recording procedures in their respective jurisdictions.
               (b) When a statement of the defendant made during  a
          custodial  interrogation  without an electronic video and
          audio recording of the interrogation and statement is  to
          be  offered  as evidence at trial for first degree murder
          when the State has given notice of its intention to  seek
 
          the  death  penalty,  the court must conduct a hearing on
          the admissibility of the statement regardless of  whether
          an  admissibility  objection  has  been made. In making a
          determination regarding admissibility of  the  statement,
          the  court  must  review  the  facts  with respect to the
          voluntariness of the statement, whether the defendant was
          properly advised of law. The  hearing  required  by  this
          Section   may   be  combined  with  the  hearing  on  the
          defendant's motion to  suppress  his  or  her  confession
          pursuant to Section 114-11  of this Code.
               (c)   For  the  purposes of this Section, "custodial
          interrogation" means any interrogation during  which  the
          person  being  interrogated  is not free to leave and the
          person is being asked questions  relevant  to  the  first
          degree murder investigation.
          (725 ILCS 5/116-3)
          Sec.  116-3.   Motion for fingerprint or forensic testing
      not available at trial regarding actual innocence.
          (a)  A defendant may make a motion before the trial court
      that entered the judgment of conviction in his  or  her  case
      for  the  performance of fingerprint or forensic DNA testing,
      including comparison analysis of genetic marker groupings  of
      the  evidence collected by criminal justice agencies pursuant
      to the alleged offense, to those of the defendant,  to  those
      of  other  forensic  evidence,  and to those maintained under
      subsection (f) of  Section  5-4-3  of  the  Unified  Code  of
      Corrections,  on evidence that was secured in relation to the
      trial which resulted in his or her conviction, but which  was
      not subject to the testing which is now requested because the
      technology  for  the testing was not available at the time of
      trial.  Reasonable notice of the motion shall be served  upon
      the State.
          (b)  The defendant must present a prima facie case that:
               (1)   identity  was  the  issue  in  the trial which
      resulted in his or her conviction; and
               (2)  the evidence to be tested has been subject to a
          chain of custody  sufficient to establish that it has not
          been substituted, tampered with, replaced, or altered  in
          any material aspect.
          (c)   The  trial  court  shall  allow  the  testing under
      reasonable  conditions  designed  to  protect   the   State's
      interests  in  the  integrity of the evidence and the testing
      process upon a determination that:
               (1)  the result of the testing  has  the  scientific
          potential   to   produce   new,   noncumulative  evidence
          materially  relevant  to  the  defendant's  assertion  of
          actual   innocence  that   significantly   advances   the
          defendant's claim of innocence;
               (2)   the  testing  requested  employs  a scientific
          method generally accepted  within the relevant scientific
          community.
      (Source: P.A. 90-141, eff. 1-1-98.)
          (725 ILCS 5/122-1) (from Ch. 38, par. 122-1)
          Sec. 122-1. Petition in the trial court.
          (a)   Any  person  imprisoned  in  the  penitentiary  may
      institute a proceeding under this Article if the  person  who
      asserts that:
               1)   in the proceedings which resulted in his or her
          conviction there was a substantial denial of his  or  her
          rights  under the Constitution of the United States or of
          the State of Illinois or both; or
               (2)  the death penalty  was  imposed  and  there  is
          newly  discovered evidence not available to the person at
          the time of the proceeding that resulted in  his  or  her
          conviction that establishes the person's innocence.
          (a-5)  A proceeding under paragraph (2) of subsection (a)
      may  be  commenced at any time after the person's  conviction
      notwithstanding any  other  provisions  of  may  institute  a
      proceeding under this Article. In such a proceeding regarding
      actual  innocence,  if  the  court determines the petition is
      frivolous or is patently without merit, it shall dismiss  the
      petition  in a written order, specifying the findings of fact
      and  conclusions of law it made  in  reaching  its  decision.
      Such  order  of  dismissal  is  a final judgment and shall be
      served upon the petitioner by certified mail within  10  days
      of its entry.
 
          (b)  The proceeding shall be commenced by filing with the
      clerk  of  the    court in  which the conviction took place a
      petition  (together  with  a  copy  thereof)    verified   by
      affidavit.  Petitioner shall also serve another copy upon the
      State's  Attorney   by any of the  methods provided in Rule 7
      of the Supreme Court.  The clerk shall docket the    petition
      for    consideration by the court pursuant to Section 122-2.1
      upon his or her receipt  thereof and  bring the same promptly
      to the attention of the court.
          (c)  Except as otherwise provided in subsection (a-5), if
      the petitioner  is under  sentence of death,  no  proceedings
      under  this  Article  shall be commenced more  than 6  months
      after the issuance  of  the  mandate  by  the  Supreme  Court
      following    affirmance  of  the defendant's direct appeal of
      the trial court verdict.  In all other  cases,no  proceedings
      under  this  Article  shall  be  commenced more than 6 months
      after the denial of a  petition  for leave  to appeal or  the
      date for filing such a petition if none is filed or more than
      45    days  after the defendant files his or her brief in the
      appeal of the sentence  before the   Illinois  Supreme  Court
      (or  more  than 45 days after the deadline for the filing  of
      the  defendant's brief with the Illinois Supreme Court if  no
      brief  is  filed)  or  3  years from the  date of conviction,
      whichever is sooner,  unless  the  petitioner  alleges  facts
      showing  that    the delay was not due to his or her culpable
      negligence.
          (d)  A person seeking relief by filing a  petition  under
      this  Section  must   specify in  the petition or its heading
      that it is filed under this Section.  A trial court that  has
      received   a petition complaining of a conviction or sentence
      that fails to specify in the petition or its  heading that it
      is filed under this Section need not evaluate the petition to
      determine   whether  it  could  otherwise  have  stated  some
      grounds for relief under this  Article.
          (e)  A proceeding under this Article may not be commenced
          on behalf of a  defendant who has been sentenced to death
          without the written consent of the  defendant, unless the
          defendant, because of a mental or physical condition, is
          incapable of asserting his or her own claim.
      (Source: P.A.  89-284,  eff.  1-1-96;  89-609,  eff.  1-1-97;
      89-684, eff. 6-1-97; 90-14, eff. 7-1-97.)
          (725 ILCS 5/122-2.1) (from Ch. 38, par. 122-2.1)
          Sec.  122-2.1.  (a)  Within  90 days after the filing and
      docketing of each  petition,  the court  shall  examine  such
      petition  and  enter  an  order  thereon  pursuant  to   this
      Section.
               (1)  If the petitioner is under  sentence  of  death
          and  is  without  counsel and  alleges that he is without
          means to procure counsel, he shall state  whether or not
          he wishes counsel to be appointed to represent  him.   If
          appointment of  counsel is  so requested, the court shall
          appoint counsel if satisfied that the  petitioner has no
          means to procure counsel.
          (2)   If  the petitioner is sentenced to imprisonment and
      the court  determines    the  petition  is  frivolous  or  is
      patently  without merit, it shall dismiss  the petition in  a
      written  order,  specifying  the   findings   of   fact   and
      conclusions  of  law it  made in  reaching its decision. Such
      order of dismissal is a final judgment and  shall  be  served
      upon   the petitioner by certified mail within 10 days of its
      entry.
          (b)  If the petition is not dismissed  pursuant  to  this
      Section,  the court  shall order  the petition to be docketed
      for further consideration in accordance with  Sections 122-4
      through 122-6. If the petitioner is under sentence of  death,
      the  court  shall    order  the   petition to be docketed for
      further consideration and hearing within one  year  of    the
      filing  of the petition.
          (c)   In considering a petition pursuant to this Section,
      the court may  examine the  court file of the  proceeding  in
      which  the  petitioner was convicted, any action  taken by an
      appellate court in such proceeding  and  any  transcripts  of
      such proceeding.  (Source: P.A. 86-655; 87-904.)
          Section   20.5.   The  Capital  Crimes  Litigation Act is
      amended by changing  Sections 10 and 19 as follows:
 
          25 ILCS 124/10)
          (Section scheduled to be repealed on July 1, 2004)
          Sec. 10.  Court appointed trial counsel; compensation and
      expenses.
          (a)   This  Section  applies  only  to  compensation  and
      expenses of trial  counsel  appointed by  the  court  as  set
      forth  in  Section  5,  other than public defenders,  for the
      period  after arraignment and so long as the State's Attorney
      has not, at any time,  filed a  certificate indicating he  or
      she  will not seek the death penalty or stated on  the record
      in  open court that the death penalty will not be sought.
          (b)Appointed trial  counsel  shall  be  compensated  upon
      presentment  and    certification  by  the circuit court of a
      claim for services detailing the date,  activity, and    time
      duration  for  which compensation is sought. Compensation for
      appointed trial counsel may be paid at a reasonable rate  not
      to exceed $125 per hour.
          Beginning  in  2001, every January 20, the statutory rate
      prescribed  in  this    subsection  shall  be   automatically
      increased  or  decreased,  as  applicable,  by  a  percentage
      equal to the percentage change in the consumer price  index-u
      during  the    preceding  12-  month calendar year. "Consumer
      price index-u" means the index published by the  Bureau    of
      Labor  Statistics  of  the  United States Department of Labor
      that measures the  average  change in  prices  of  goods  and
      services  purchased  by  all  urban  consumers, United States
      city  average,  all  items,   1982-84=100.   The   new   rate
      resulting  from each annual adjustment shall be determined by
      the State Treasurer and made available to the chief  judge of
      each judicial circuit. Payment in excess of  the  limitations
      stated  in    this    subsection (b) may be made if the trial
      court certifies that such payment is  necessary to    provide
      fair  compensation  for  representation  based upon customary
      charges in the    relevant  legal  market  for  attorneys  of
      similar  skill,  background, and  experience.  A trial  court
      may entertain the filing of this  verified  statement  before
      the   termination of the  cause and may order the provisional
      payment of sums during the pendency of the  cause.
          (c)  Appointed trial counsel may also petition the  court
      for  certification  of  expenses for reasonable and necessary
      capital litigation expenses including, but  not  limited  to,
      investigatory  and  other  assistance,  expert, forensic, and
      other  witnesses, and  mitigation  specialists.  Counsel  may
      not  petition  for  certification of expenses  that may  have
      been provided or compensated by the State Appellate  Defender
      under  item    (c)(5)  of   Section 10 of the State Appellate
      Defender Act.
          (d)  Appointed trial counsel shall petition the court for
      certification  of    compensation  and  expenses  under  this
      Section  periodically  during  the  course  of      counsel's
      representation. If the court determines that the compensation
      and  expenses    should  be paid  from the Capital Litigation
      Trust Fund, the court shall certify, on a form    created  by
      the  State Treasurer, that all or a designated portion of the
      amount  requested is  reasonable,  necessary, and appropriate
      for  payment  from  the   Trust   Fund.    Certification   of
      compensation and expenses by a court in any county other than
      Cook  County  shall  be   delivered by the court to the State
      Treasurer and paid by the State Treasurer  directly from  the
      Capital Litigation Trust Fund if there are sufficient  moneys
      in  the  Trust    Fund to pay  the compensation and expenses.
      Certification of compensation and expenses by  a    court  in
      Cook  County  shall  be  delivered by the court to the county
      treasurer and paid by  the    county  treasurer  from  moneys
      granted  to  the  county  from  the Capital Litigation  Trust
      Fund.
      (Source: P.A. 91-589, eff. 1-1-00.)
          (725 ILCS 124/19)
          (Section scheduled to be repealed on July 1, 2004)
          Sec. 19.  Report; repeal.
          (a) The Cook County  Public  Defender,  the  Cook  County
          State's  Attorney,  the    State  Appellate Defender, the
          State's Attorneys Appellate Prosecutor, and the  Attorney
          General shall  each  report  separately  to  the  General
          Assembly  by  January    1, 2004 detailing the amounts of
          money received by them through this  Act,  the  uses  for
 
          which those funds were expended, the balances then in the
          Capital Litigation Trust Fund  or county accounts, as the
          case  may  be, dedicated  to them for the use and support
          of Public Defenders, appointed trial  defense    counsel,
          and  State's  Attorneys,  as the case may be.  The report
          shall describe  and    discuss  the  need  for  continued
          funding through the Fund and contain any  suggestions for
          changes to this Act.
          (b)    (Blank)   Unless  the  General  Assembly  provides
      otherwise, this Act is  repealed  on July 1, 2004.
      (Source: P.A. 91-589, eff. 1-1-00.)"; and
      on  page  73,  line  29,  by  inserting  after  "5-4-3"   the
      following:
      "and by adding Section 5-2-7"; and
      on  page  81,  by  inserting  between  lines  27  and  28 the
      following:
          "(730 ILCS 5/5-2-7 new)
          Sec. 5-2-7.  Fitness to be executed.
          (a) A person is unfit to be executed  if  the  person  is
      mentally  retarded.    For  the    purposes  of this Section,
      "mentally retarded" means:
               (1)   having   significantly   sub-average   general
          intellectual    functioning as  evidenced by a functional
          intelligence quotient (I.Q.) of 70 or below; and
               (2)  having deficits in adaptive behavior.
          The mental retardation must have been  manifested  during
      the developmental  period, or by 18 years of age.
          (b)  The question of fitness to be executed may be raised
      after    pronouncement  of  the death sentence. The procedure
      for raising and deciding the question shall be  the same   as
      that  provided  for  raising  and  deciding  the  question of
      fitness to stand trial  subject to   the  following  specific
      provisions:
               (1)  the question shall be raised by motion filed in
          the sentencing  court;
               (2)  the question shall be decided by the court;
               (3)   the  burden  of  proving  that the offender is
          unfit to be executed  is on   the offender;
               (4)   if  the  offender  is  found  to  be  mentally
          retarded, the court  must   resentence  the  offender  to
          natural  life  imprisonment  under  Chapter  V  of    the
          Unified Code of Corrections."; and
      on page 84, by replacing lines 19 and 20 with the following:
      "Illinois  and to all prosecutorial agencies. Notwithstanding
      the limits on  disclosure stated  by this subsection (f), the
      genetic marker grouping analysis information  obtained under
      this Act also may be released by court order  pursuant  to  a
      motion  under  Section  114-15    of  the  Code  of  Criminal
      Procedure  of  1963  to  a  defendant  who  meets  all of the
      requirements under that Section.
          Notwithstanding any  other  statutory  provision  to  the
      contrary, all".
          With  these  specific  recommendations  for change, House
      Bill 2058 will have  my  approval.   I  respectfully  request
      your concurrence.
                                             Sincerely,
                                             s/GEORGE H. RYAN
                                             Governor

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