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Public Act 101-0187 |
HB2591 Enrolled | LRB101 07708 SLF 52756 b |
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AN ACT concerning local government.
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Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
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represented in the General Assembly:
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Section 5. The Illinois Police Training Act is amended by |
changing Sections 6, 6.1, 8.1, and 10.2 as follows:
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(50 ILCS 705/6) (from Ch. 85, par. 506)
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Sec. 6. Powers and duties of the Board; selection and |
certification of schools. The Board shall select
and certify |
schools within the State of
Illinois for the purpose of |
providing basic training for probationary
police officers, |
probationary county corrections officers, and
court security |
officers and
of providing advanced or in-service training for |
permanent police officers
or permanent
county corrections |
officers, which schools may be either publicly or
privately |
owned and operated. In addition, the Board has the following
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power and duties:
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a. To require local governmental units to furnish such |
reports and
information as the Board deems necessary to |
fully implement this Act.
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b. To establish appropriate mandatory minimum |
standards
relating to the training of probationary local |
law enforcement officers
or probationary county |
corrections officers, and in-service training of permanent |
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police officers.
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c. To provide appropriate certification to those |
probationary
officers who successfully complete the |
prescribed minimum standard basic
training course.
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d. To review and approve annual training curriculum for |
county sheriffs.
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e. To review and approve applicants to ensure that no |
applicant is admitted
to a certified academy unless the |
applicant is a person of good character
and has not been |
convicted of , or entered a plea of guilty to, a felony |
offense, any of the
misdemeanors in Sections 11-1.50, 11-6, |
11-9.1, 11-14, 11-17, 11-19, 12-2, 12-15, 16-1,
17-1, 17-2, |
28-3, 29-1, 31-1, 31-6, 31-7, 32-4a, or 32-7 of the |
Criminal Code
of
1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012, |
subdivision (a)(1) or (a)(2)(C) of Section 11-14.3 of the |
Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012, or |
subsection (a) of Section 17-32 of the Criminal Code of |
1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012, or Section 5 or 5.2 of |
the Cannabis Control Act, or a crime involving
moral
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turpitude under the laws of this State or any other state |
which if
committed in this State would be punishable as a |
felony or a crime of
moral turpitude. The Board may appoint |
investigators who shall enforce
the duties conferred upon |
the Board by this Act.
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(Source: P.A. 99-352, eff. 1-1-16 .)
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(50 ILCS 705/6.1)
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Sec. 6.1. Decertification of full-time and part-time |
police officers.
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(a) The Board must review police officer conduct and |
records to ensure that
no
police officer is certified
or |
provided a valid waiver if that police officer has been |
convicted of , or entered a plea of guilty to, a
felony offense |
under the laws of this
State or any other state which if |
committed in this State would be punishable
as a felony. The |
Board must also
ensure that no police officer is certified or |
provided a valid waiver if that
police officer has been |
convicted of, or entered a plea of guilty to, on or
after the |
effective date of this amendatory Act of 1999 of any |
misdemeanor
specified in this Section or if
committed in any |
other state would be an offense similar to Section 11-1.50, |
11-6,
11-9.1, 11-14, 11-17, 11-19, 12-2, 12-15, 16-1, 17-1, |
17-2, 28-3, 29-1, 31-1,
31-6, 31-7, 32-4a, or 32-7 of the
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Criminal
Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012, to |
subdivision (a)(1) or (a)(2)(C) of Section 11-14.3 of the |
Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012, or |
subsection (a) of Section 17-32 of the Criminal Code of 1961 or |
the Criminal Code of 2012, or to Section 5 or
5.2 of the |
Cannabis Control Act. The Board must appoint investigators to
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enforce the duties conferred upon the
Board by this Act.
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(b) It is the responsibility of the sheriff or the chief |
executive officer
of every local law enforcement
agency or |
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department within this State to report to the Board any arrest , |
or
conviction , or plea of guilty of any officer for an
offense |
identified in this Section.
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(c) It is the duty and responsibility of every full-time |
and part-time
police officer in this State to report to
the |
Board within 30 days, and the officer's sheriff or chief |
executive officer,
of his or her arrest , or conviction , or plea |
of guilty for
an offense identified in this Section. Any |
full-time or part-time police
officer who knowingly makes, |
submits,
causes to be submitted, or files a false or untruthful |
report to the Board must
have his or her certificate or waiver
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immediately decertified or revoked.
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(d) Any person, or a local or State agency, or the Board is |
immune from
liability for submitting,
disclosing, or releasing |
information of arrests , or convictions , or pleas of guilty in |
this Section
as long as the information is
submitted, |
disclosed, or released in good faith and without malice. The |
Board
has qualified immunity for the
release of the |
information.
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(e) Any full-time or part-time police officer with a |
certificate or waiver
issued by the Board who is
convicted of , |
or entered a plea of guilty to, any offense described in this |
Section immediately becomes
decertified or no longer has a |
valid
waiver. The decertification and invalidity of waivers |
occurs as a matter of
law. Failure of a convicted person to
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report to the Board his or her conviction as described in this |
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Section or any
continued law enforcement practice
after |
receiving a conviction is a Class 4 felony.
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(f) The Board's investigators are peace officers and have |
all the powers
possessed by policemen in cities
and by |
sheriff's, and these provided that the investigators may |
exercise those powers
anywhere in the State , only after
contact |
and cooperation with the appropriate local law enforcement |
authorities .
An investigator shall not have peace officer |
status or exercise police powers unless he or she successfully |
completes the basic police training course mandated and |
approved by the Board or the Board waives the training |
requirement by reason of the investigator's prior law |
enforcement experience, training, or both. The Board shall not |
waive the training requirement unless the investigator has had |
a minimum of 5 years experience as a sworn officer of a local, |
State, or federal law enforcement agency.
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(g) The Board must request and receive information and |
assistance from any
federal, state, or local
governmental |
agency as part of the authorized criminal background
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investigation. The Department of State Police must process, |
retain, and
additionally
provide
and disseminate information |
to the Board concerning criminal charges, arrests,
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convictions, and their disposition, that have
been filed |
before, on, or after the effective date of this amendatory Act |
of
the 91st General Assembly against a basic academy applicant, |
law enforcement
applicant, or law enforcement officer whose |
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fingerprint identification cards
are on file or maintained by |
the Department of State Police. The Federal
Bureau
of
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Investigation must provide the Board any criminal history |
record information
contained in its files pertaining to law
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enforcement officers or any applicant to a Board certified |
basic law
enforcement academy as described in this Act
based on |
fingerprint identification. The Board must make payment of fees |
to the
Department of State Police for each
fingerprint card |
submission in conformance with the requirements of paragraph
22 |
of Section 55a of the Civil
Administrative Code of Illinois.
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(h) A police officer who has been certified or granted a |
valid waiver
shall
also be decertified or have his or her |
waiver revoked upon a determination by
the Illinois Labor |
Relations
Board State Panel
that
he or she, while under oath, |
has knowingly and willfully made false statements
as
to a |
material fact going to an element of the offense of murder. If |
an appeal
is filed, the determination shall be stayed.
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(1) In the case of an acquittal on a charge of murder, |
a verified
complaint may be filed:
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(A) by the defendant; or
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(B) by a police officer with personal knowledge of |
perjured
testimony.
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The complaint must allege that a police officer, while |
under oath, knowingly
and
willfully made false statements |
as to a material fact going to an element of
the
offense of |
murder. The verified complaint must be filed with the |
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Executive
Director of the Illinois Law Enforcement |
Training Standards Board within 2
years of the judgment of |
acquittal.
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(2) Within 30 days, the Executive Director of the |
Illinois Law Enforcement
Training
Standards Board shall |
review the verified complaint and determine whether the
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verified complaint is frivolous and without merit, or |
whether further
investigation is
warranted. The Illinois |
Law Enforcement Training Standards Board shall notify
the |
officer and the Executive Director of the Illinois Labor |
Relations Board
State Panel of the filing of the complaint |
and any action taken thereon. If the
Executive Director of |
the Illinois Law Enforcement Training
Standards Board |
determines that the verified complaint is frivolous and |
without
merit, it shall be dismissed. The Executive |
Director of the Illinois Law
Enforcement Training |
Standards Board has sole discretion to make this
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determination and this decision is not subject to appeal.
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(i) If the Executive Director of the Illinois Law |
Enforcement Training
Standards Board determines that the |
verified complaint warrants further
investigation, he or she |
shall refer the matter to a task force of
investigators
created |
for this purpose. This task force shall consist of 8 sworn |
police
officers: 2
from the Illinois State Police, 2 from the |
City of Chicago Police Department, 2
from county police |
departments, and 2 from municipal police departments.
These |
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investigators shall have a minimum of 5 years of experience in |
conducting
criminal investigations. The investigators shall be |
appointed by the Executive
Director of the Illinois Law |
Enforcement Training Standards Board. Any officer
or officers |
acting in this capacity pursuant to this statutory provision |
will
have
statewide police authority while acting in this |
investigative capacity. Their
salaries
and expenses for the |
time spent conducting investigations under this paragraph
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shall be reimbursed by the Illinois Law Enforcement Training |
Standards Board.
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(j) Once the Executive Director of the Illinois Law |
Enforcement Training
Standards Board has determined that an |
investigation is warranted, the verified
complaint shall be |
assigned to an investigator or investigators. The
investigator
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or investigators shall conduct an investigation of the verified |
complaint and
shall
write a report of his or her findings. This |
report shall be submitted to the
Executive Director of the |
Illinois Labor Relations Board State Panel.
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Within 30 days, the Executive Director of the Illinois |
Labor Relations Board
State Panel
shall review the |
investigative report and determine whether sufficient evidence
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exists to
conduct an evidentiary hearing on the verified |
complaint. If the Executive
Director of the Illinois Labor |
Relations Board State Panel determines upon his
or
her review |
of the investigatory report that a hearing should not be |
conducted,
the
complaint shall be dismissed. This decision is |
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in the Executive Director's sole
discretion, and this dismissal |
may not be appealed.
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If the Executive Director of the Illinois Labor Relations |
Board
State Panel
determines that there is sufficient evidence |
to warrant a hearing, a hearing
shall
be ordered on the |
verified complaint, to be conducted by an administrative law
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judge employed by the Illinois Labor Relations Board State |
Panel. The Executive
Director of the Illinois Labor Relations |
Board State Panel shall inform the
Executive Director of the |
Illinois Law Enforcement Training Standards Board and
the |
person who filed the complaint of either the dismissal of the |
complaint or
the
issuance of the complaint for hearing.
The |
Executive Director shall assign the complaint to the
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administrative law judge within 30 days
of the
decision |
granting a hearing.
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(k) In the case of a finding of guilt on the offense of |
murder, if a new
trial
is
granted on direct appeal, or a state |
post-conviction evidentiary hearing is
ordered, based on a |
claim that a police officer, under oath, knowingly and
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willfully made false statements as to a material fact going to |
an element of
the
offense of murder, the Illinois Labor |
Relations Board State Panel shall hold a
hearing
to
determine |
whether the officer should be decertified if an interested |
party
requests such a hearing within 2 years of the court's |
decision. The complaint
shall be assigned to an administrative |
law judge within 30 days so that a
hearing can be scheduled.
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At the hearing, the accused officer shall be afforded the |
opportunity to:
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(1) Be represented by counsel of his or her own |
choosing;
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(2) Be heard in his or her own defense;
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(3) Produce evidence in his or her defense;
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(4) Request that the Illinois Labor Relations Board |
State Panel compel the
attendance of witnesses and |
production of related documents including but not
limited |
to court documents and records.
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Once a case has been set for hearing, the verified |
complaint shall be
referred to the Department of Professional |
Regulation. That office shall
prosecute the verified complaint |
at the hearing before the administrative law
judge. The |
Department of Professional Regulation shall have the |
opportunity to
produce evidence to support the verified |
complaint and to request the Illinois
Labor
Relations Board |
State Panel to compel the attendance of witnesses and the
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production of related documents, including, but not limited to, |
court documents
and records. The Illinois Labor Relations Board |
State Panel shall have the
power
to issue subpoenas requiring |
the attendance of and testimony of witnesses and
the production |
of related documents including, but not limited to, court
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documents and records and shall have the power to administer |
oaths.
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The administrative law judge shall have the responsibility |
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of receiving into
evidence relevant testimony and documents, |
including court records, to support
or disprove the allegations |
made by the person filing the verified complaint
and,
at the |
close of the case, hear arguments. If the administrative law |
judge finds
that there is not clear and convincing evidence to |
support the verified
complaint
that the police officer has, |
while under oath, knowingly and willfully made
false
statements |
as to a material fact going to an element of the offense of |
murder,
the
administrative law judge shall make a written |
recommendation of dismissal to
the
Illinois Labor Relations |
Board State Panel. If the administrative law judge
finds
that |
there is clear and convincing evidence that the police officer |
has, while
under
oath, knowingly and willfully made false |
statements as to a material fact that
goes to an element of the |
offense of murder, the administrative law judge shall
make a |
written recommendation so concluding to the Illinois Labor |
Relations
Board State Panel. The hearings shall be transcribed.
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The Executive
Director of the Illinois Law Enforcement Training |
Standards Board shall be
informed of the
administrative law |
judge's recommended findings and decision and the Illinois
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Labor Relations Board State Panel's subsequent review of the |
recommendation.
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(l) An officer named in any complaint filed pursuant to |
this Act shall be
indemnified for his or her reasonable |
attorney's fees and costs by his or her
employer. These fees |
shall be paid in a regular and timely manner. The State,
upon |
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application by the public employer, shall reimburse the public |
employer
for
the accused officer's reasonable attorney's fees |
and costs. At no time and
under
no circumstances will the |
accused officer be required to pay his or her own
reasonable |
attorney's fees or costs.
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(m) The accused officer shall not be placed on unpaid |
status because of
the filing or processing of the verified |
complaint until there is a final
non-appealable order |
sustaining his or her guilt and his or her certification
is
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revoked.
Nothing in this Act, however, restricts the public |
employer from pursuing
discipline against the officer in the |
normal course and under procedures then
in
place.
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(n) The Illinois Labor Relations Board State Panel shall |
review the
administrative law judge's recommended decision and |
order and determine by a
majority vote whether or not there was |
clear and convincing evidence that the
accused officer, while |
under oath, knowingly and willfully made false
statements
as to |
a material fact going to the offense of murder. Within 30 days |
of service
of
the administrative law judge's recommended |
decision and order, the parties may
file exceptions to the |
recommended decision and order and briefs in support of
their |
exceptions with the Illinois Labor Relations Board State Panel. |
The
parties
may file responses to the exceptions and briefs in |
support of the responses no
later than 15 days after the |
service of the exceptions. If exceptions are filed
by
any of |
the parties, the Illinois Labor Relations Board State Panel |
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shall review
the
matter and make a finding to uphold, vacate, |
or modify the recommended
decision and order. If the Illinois |
Labor Relations Board State Panel concludes
that there is clear |
and convincing evidence that the accused officer, while
under
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oath, knowingly and willfully made false statements as to a |
material fact going
to
an element of the offense murder, the |
Illinois Labor Relations Board State
Panel
shall inform the |
Illinois Law Enforcement Training Standards Board and the
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Illinois Law Enforcement Training Standards Board shall revoke |
the accused
officer's certification. If the accused officer |
appeals that determination to
the
Appellate Court, as provided |
by this Act, he or she may petition the Appellate
Court to stay |
the revocation of his or her certification pending the court's
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review
of the matter.
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(o) None of the Illinois Labor Relations Board State |
Panel's findings or
determinations shall set any precedent in |
any of its decisions decided pursuant
to the Illinois Public |
Labor Relations Act by the Illinois Labor Relations
Board
State
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Panel or the courts.
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(p) A party aggrieved by the final order of the Illinois |
Labor Relations
Board State Panel may apply for and obtain |
judicial review of an order of the
Illinois Labor Relations |
Board State Panel, in accordance with the provisions
of
the |
Administrative Review Law, except that such judicial review |
shall be
afforded
directly in the Appellate Court for the |
district in which the accused officer
resides.
Any direct |
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appeal to the Appellate Court shall be filed within 35 days |
from the
date that a copy of the decision sought to be reviewed |
was served upon the
party
affected by the decision.
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(q) Interested parties. Only interested parties to the |
criminal prosecution
in
which the police officer allegedly, |
while under oath, knowingly and willfully
made
false statements |
as to a material fact going to an element of the offense of
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murder may file a verified complaint pursuant to this Section. |
For purposes of
this Section, "interested parties" shall be |
limited to the defendant and any
police
officer who has |
personal knowledge that the police officer who is the subject
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of
the complaint has, while under oath, knowingly and willfully |
made false
statements
as
to a material fact going to an element |
of the offense of murder.
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(r) Semi-annual reports. The Executive Director of the |
Illinois Labor
Relations Board shall submit semi-annual |
reports to the Governor, President,
and
Minority Leader of the |
Senate, and to the Speaker and Minority Leader of the
House
of |
Representatives beginning on June 30, 2004, indicating:
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(1) the number of verified complaints received since |
the date of the
last
report;
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(2) the number of investigations initiated since the |
date of the last
report;
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(3) the number of investigations concluded since the |
date of the last
report;
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(4) the number of investigations pending as of the |
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reporting date;
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(5) the number of hearings held since the date of the |
last report; and
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(6) the number of officers decertified since the date |
of the last
report.
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(Source: P.A. 96-1551, eff. 7-1-11; 97-1150, eff. 1-25-13.)
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(50 ILCS 705/8.1) (from Ch. 85, par. 508.1)
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Sec. 8.1. Full-time police and county corrections |
officers.
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(a) After January 1, 1976, no person shall receive a |
permanent
appointment as a law enforcement officer as defined |
in this
Act nor shall any person receive, after the effective |
date of this
amendatory Act of 1984, a permanent appointment as |
a county corrections officer
unless that person has been |
awarded, within 6 six months of his or her
initial full-time |
employment, a certificate attesting to his or her
successful |
completion of the Minimum Standards Basic Law Enforcement and |
County
Correctional Training Course as prescribed by the Board; |
or has been awarded a
certificate attesting to his or her |
satisfactory completion of a training program of
similar |
content and number of hours and which course has been found |
acceptable
by the Board under the provisions of this Act; or by |
reason of extensive prior
law enforcement or county corrections |
experience the basic training requirement
is determined by the |
Board to be illogical and unreasonable.
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If such training is required and not completed within the |
applicable 6 six
months, then the officer must forfeit his or |
her position, or the employing agency
must obtain a waiver from |
the Board extending the period for
compliance. Such waiver |
shall be issued only for good and justifiable
reasons, and in |
no case shall extend more than 90 days beyond the
initial 6 six |
months. Any hiring agency that fails to train a law enforcement |
officer within this period shall be prohibited from employing |
this individual in a law enforcement capacity for one year from |
the date training was to be completed. If an agency again fails |
to train the individual a second time, the agency shall be |
permanently barred from employing this individual in a law |
enforcement capacity.
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(b) No provision of this Section shall be construed to mean |
that a
law enforcement officer employed by a local governmental |
agency
at the time of the effective date of this amendatory |
Act, either as a
probationary police officer or as a permanent |
police officer, shall
require certification under the |
provisions of this Section. No provision
of this Section shall |
be construed to mean that a county corrections
officer employed |
by a local governmental agency at the time of the
effective |
date of this amendatory Act of 1984, either as a probationary
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county corrections or as a permanent county corrections |
officer, shall
require certification under the provisions of |
this Section. No provision of
this Section shall be construed |
to apply to certification of elected county
sheriffs.
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(c) This Section does not apply to part-time police |
officers or
probationary part-time police officers.
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(Source: P.A. 89-170, eff. 1-1-96; 90-271, eff. 7-30-97.)
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(50 ILCS 705/10.2)
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Sec. 10.2. Criminal background investigations.
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(a) On and after the effective date of this amendatory Act |
of the 92nd
General Assembly,
an applicant for employment as a |
peace officer, or for annual certification as a retired law |
enforcement officer qualified under federal law to carry a |
concealed weapon, shall authorize an
investigation to |
determine if
the applicant has been convicted of , or entered a |
plea of guilty to, any criminal offense that disqualifies the
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person as a peace
officer.
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(b) No law enforcement agency may knowingly employ a |
person, or certify a retired law enforcement officer qualified |
under federal law to carry a concealed weapon, unless (i) a
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criminal
background investigation of that person
has been |
completed and (ii) that investigation reveals no convictions or |
pleas of guilty of
offenses specified in subsection (a) of |
Section 6.1 of this Act.
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(Source: P.A. 94-103, eff. 7-1-05.)
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