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Public Act 097-1079 Public Act 1079 97TH GENERAL ASSEMBLY |
Public Act 097-1079 | SB2537 Enrolled | LRB097 14538 RLC 59393 b |
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| AN ACT concerning criminal law, which may be referred to as | Caylee's law.
| Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
| represented in the General Assembly:
| Section 5. The Criminal Code of 1961 is amended by changing | Sections 12-9 and 31-4 and adding Section 10-10 as follows: | (720 ILCS 5/10-10 new) | Sec. 10-10. Failure to report the death or disappearance of | a child under 13 years of age. | (a) A parent, legal guardian, or caretaker
of a child under | 13 years of age commits failure to report the death or | disappearance of a child under 13 years of age when he or she | knows or should know and fails to report the child as missing | or deceased to a law enforcement agency within 24 hours if the | parent, legal guardian, or caretaker reasonably believes that | the child is missing or deceased. In the case of a child under | the age of 2 years, the reporting requirement is reduced to no | more than one hour. | (b) A parent, legal guardian, or caretaker
of a child under | 13 years of age must report the death of the child to the law | enforcement agency of the county where the child's corpse was | found if the parent, legal guardian, or caretaker reasonably | believes that the death of the child was caused by a homicide, |
| accident, or other suspicious circumstance. | (c) The Department of Children and Family Services
| Guardianship Administrator shall not personally be subject to | the reporting requirements in subsection (a) or (b) of this | Section. | (d) A parent, legal guardian, or caretaker does not commit | the offense of failure to report the death or disappearance of | a child under 13 years of age when: | (1) the failure to report is due to an act of God, act | of war, or inability of a law enforcement agency to receive | a report of the disappearance of a child; | (2) the parent, legal guardian, or caretaker calls 911 | to report the disappearance of the child; | (3) the parent, legal guardian, or caretaker knows that | the child is under the care of another parent, family | member, relative, friend, or baby sitter; or | (4) the parent, legal guardian, or caretaker is | hospitalized, in a coma, or is otherwise seriously | physically or mentally impaired as to prevent the person | from reporting the death or disappearance. | (e) Sentence. A violation of this Section is a Class 4 | felony.
| (720 ILCS 5/12-9) (from Ch. 38, par. 12-9)
| Sec. 12-9. Threatening public officials.
| (a) A person commits threatening a public official when:
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| (1) that person knowingly delivers or conveys, | directly
or indirectly, to a public official by any means a | communication:
| (i) containing a threat that would place
the public | official or a member of his or her immediate family in | reasonable
apprehension of immediate or future bodily | harm, sexual assault, confinement,
or restraint; or
| (ii) containing a threat that would place the | public official
or a member of his or her immediate | family in reasonable apprehension that
damage will | occur to property in the custody, care, or control of | the public
official or his or her immediate family; and
| (2) the threat was conveyed because of the performance | or nonperformance
of some public duty, because of hostility | of the person making the threat
toward the status or | position of the public official, or because of any
other | factor related to the official's public existence.
| (a-5) For purposes of a threat to a sworn law enforcement | officer, the threat must contain specific facts indicative of a | unique threat to the person, family or property of the officer | and not a generalized threat of harm.
| (a-6) For purposes of a threat to a social worker, | caseworker, or investigator, the threat must contain specific | facts indicative of a unique threat to the person, family or | property of the individual and not a generalized threat of | harm. |
| (b) For purposes of this Section:
| (1) "Public official"
means a person who is elected to | office in accordance with a statute or
who is appointed to | an office which is established, and the qualifications
and | duties of which are prescribed, by statute, to discharge a | public duty
for the State or any of its political | subdivisions or in the case of
an elective office any | person who has filed the required documents for
nomination | or election to such office. "Public official" includes a
| duly
appointed assistant State's Attorney, assistant | Attorney General, or Appellate Prosecutor ; , and a sworn | law enforcement or peace officer ; a social worker, | caseworker, or investigator employed by the Department of | Healthcare and Family Services, the Department of Human | Services, or the Department of Children and Family | Services .
| (2) "Immediate family" means a
public official's | spouse or child or children.
| (c) Threatening a public official is a Class 3 felony for a
| first offense and a Class 2 felony for a second or subsequent | offense.
| (Source: P.A. 95-466, eff. 6-1-08; 96-1551, eff. 7-1-11 .)
| (720 ILCS 5/31-4) (from Ch. 38, par. 31-4)
| Sec. 31-4. Obstructing justice.
| (a) A person obstructs justice when, with intent to prevent |
| the apprehension
or obstruct the prosecution or defense of any | person, he or she knowingly commits
any of the following acts:
| (1) (a) Destroys, alters, conceals or disguises | physical evidence, plants
false evidence, furnishes false | information; or
| (2) (b) Induces a witness having knowledge material to | the subject at issue
to leave the State or conceal himself | or herself ; or
| (3) (c) Possessing knowledge material to the subject at | issue, he or she leaves the
State or conceals himself ; or | (4) If a parent, legal guardian, or caretaker
of a | child under 13 years of age reports materially false | information to a law enforcement agency, medical examiner, | coroner, State's Attorney, or other governmental agency | during an investigation of the disappearance or death of a | child under circumstances described in subsection (a) or | (b) of Section 10-10 of this Code .
| (b) (d) Sentence.
| (1) Obstructing justice is a Class 4 felony, except as | provided in
paragraph (2) of this subsection (b) (d) .
| (2) Obstructing justice in furtherance of streetgang | related or
gang-related activity, as defined in Section 10 | of the Illinois Streetgang
Terrorism Omnibus Prevention | Act, is a Class 3 felony.
| (Source: P.A. 90-363, eff. 1-1-98.)
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Effective Date: 1/1/2013
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