Public Act 101-0460 Public Act 0460 101ST GENERAL ASSEMBLY |
Public Act 101-0460 | HB2134 Enrolled | LRB101 09879 SLF 54981 b |
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| AN ACT concerning criminal law.
| Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
| represented in the General Assembly:
| Section 5. The Freedom From Location Surveillance Act is | amended by changing Sections 10, 15, 20, and 25 as follows: | (725 ILCS 168/10) | Sec. 10. Court authorization. Except as provided in | Section 15, a law enforcement agency shall not obtain current | or future location information pertaining to a person or his or | her effects without first obtaining a court order under Section | 108-4 of the Code of Criminal Procedure of 1963 based on | probable cause to believe that the person whose location | information is sought has committed, is committing, or is about | to commit a crime or the effect is evidence of a crime, or if | the location information is authorized under an arrest warrant | issued under Section 107-9 of the Code of Criminal Procedure of | 1963 to aid in the apprehension or the arrest of the person | named in the arrest warrant. An order issued under a finding of | probable cause under this Section must be limited to a period | of 60 days, renewable by the judge upon a showing of good cause | for subsequent periods of 60 days. A court may grant a law | enforcement entity's request to obtain current or future | location information under this Section through testimony made |
| by electronic means using a simultaneous video and audio | transmission between the requestor and a judge, based on sworn | testimony communicated in the transmission. The entity making | the request, and the court authorizing the request shall follow | the procedure under subsection (c) of Section 108-4 of the Code | of Criminal Procedure of 1963 which authorizes the electronic | issuance of search warrants.
| (Source: P.A. 98-1104, eff. 8-26-14; 99-798, eff. 1-1-17 .) | (725 ILCS 168/15) | Sec. 15. Exceptions. This Act does not prohibit a law | enforcement agency from seeking to obtain current or future | location information: | (1) to respond to a call for emergency services | concerning the user or possessor of an electronic device; | (2) with the lawful consent of the owner of the | electronic device or person in actual or constructive | possession of the item being tracked by the electronic | device; | (3) to lawfully obtain location information broadly | available to the general public without a court order when | the location information is posted on a social networking | website, or is metadata attached to images and video, or to | determine the location of an Internet Protocol (IP) address | through a publicly available service; | (4) to obtain location information generated by an |
| electronic device used as a condition of release from a | penal institution, as a condition of pre-trial release, | probation, conditional discharge, parole, mandatory | supervised release, or other sentencing order, or to | monitor an individual released under the Sexually Violent | Persons Commitment Act or the Sexually Dangerous Persons | Act; | (5) to aid in the location of a missing person;
| (6) in emergencies as follows: | (A) Notwithstanding any other provisions of this | Act, any investigative or law enforcement officer may | seek to obtain location information in an emergency | situation as defined in this paragraph (6). This | paragraph (6) applies only when there was no previous | notice of the emergency to the investigative or law | enforcement officer sufficient to obtain prior | judicial approval, and the officer reasonably believes | that an order permitting the obtaining of location | information would issue were there prior judicial | review. An emergency situation exists when: | (i) the use of the electronic device is | necessary for the protection of the investigative | or law enforcement officer or a person acting at | the direction of law enforcement; or | (ii) the situation involves: | (aa) a clear and present danger of |
| imminent death or great bodily harm to persons | resulting from: | (I) the use of force or the threat of | the imminent use of force, | (II) a kidnapping or the holding of a | hostage by force or the threat of the | imminent use of force, or | (III) the occupation by force or the | threat of the imminent use of force of any | premises, place, vehicle, vessel, or | aircraft; | (bb) an abduction investigation; | (cc) conspiratorial activities | characteristic of organized crime; | (dd) an immediate threat to national | security interest; | (ee) an ongoing attack on a computer | comprising a felony; or | (ff) escape under Section 31-6 of the | Criminal Code of 2012. | (B) In all emergency cases, an application for an | order approving the previous or continuing obtaining | of location information must be made within 72 hours of | its commencement. In the absence of the order, or upon | its denial, any continuing obtaining of location | information gathering shall immediately terminate. In |
| order to approve obtaining location information, the | judge must make a determination (i) that he or she | would have granted an order had the information been | before the court prior to the obtaining of the location | information and (ii) there was an emergency situation | as defined in this paragraph (6). | (C) In the event that an application for approval | under this paragraph (6) is denied, the location | information obtained under this exception shall be | inadmissible in accordance with Section 20 of this Act; | or
| (7) to obtain location information relating to an | electronic device used to track a vehicle or an effect | which is owned or leased by that law enforcement agency.
| (Source: P.A. 98-1104, eff. 8-26-14; 99-798, eff. 1-1-17 .) | (725 ILCS 168/20)
| Sec. 20. Admissibility. If the court finds by a | preponderance of the evidence that a law enforcement agency | obtained current or future location information pertaining to a | person or his or her effects in violation of Section 10 or 15 | of this Act, then the information shall be presumed to be | inadmissible in any judicial or administrative proceeding. The | State may overcome this presumption by proving the | applicability of a judicially recognized exception to the | exclusionary rule of the Fourth Amendment to the United States |
| Constitution or Article I, Section 6 of the Illinois | Constitution, or by a preponderance of the evidence that the | law enforcement officer was acting in good faith and reasonably | believed that one or more of the exceptions identified in | Section 15 existed at the time the location information was | obtained.
| (Source: P.A. 98-1104, eff. 8-26-14.) | (725 ILCS 168/25)
| Sec. 25. Providing location information to a law | enforcement agency not required. Nothing in this Act shall be | construed to require a person to provide current or future | location information to a law enforcement agency under Section | 15.
| (Source: P.A. 98-1104, eff. 8-26-14.)
| Section 99. Effective date. This Act takes effect upon | becoming law.
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Effective Date: 8/23/2019
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