Public Act 0056 102ND GENERAL ASSEMBLY |
Public Act 102-0056 |
HB0282 Enrolled | LRB102 09919 AWJ 15237 b |
|
|
AN ACT concerning local government.
|
Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
|
represented in the General Assembly:
|
Section 5. The Counties Code is amended by changing |
Sections 3-9001, 3-9002, 3-9004, 3-9005, 3-9006, 3-9008, |
3-9009, and 3-9012 as follows:
|
(55 ILCS 5/3-9001) (from Ch. 34, par. 3-9001)
|
Sec. 3-9001. Oath; bond. Before entering upon the |
respective
duties of their office, the state's attorneys shall |
each be commissioned by
the governor, and shall take the |
following oath or affirmation:
|
I do solemnly swear (or affirm, as the case may be), that I |
will support
the constitution of the United States and the |
constitution of the state of
Illinois, and that I will |
faithfully discharge the duties of the office
of state's |
attorney according to the best of my ability.
|
Each State's attorney shall also execute a bond, to the |
People of the
State of Illinois, (or, if the county is |
self-insured, the county through its
self-insurance program |
may provide bonding) with good and sufficient
securities in |
the penal sum of $5,000, to be approved by the circuit court |
for
the his respective county, which approval shall be |
indorsed upon the bond. The
bond, with the approval thereof |
|
indorsed, shall be entered of record in the
circuit court, and |
then forwarded by the county clerk to the secretary of
state, |
to be filed in the Secretary of State's his office. Each of the |
bonds shall be conditioned upon
the faithful discharge of the |
duties of the office, and the paying over all
moneys as |
provided by law, which bond shall run to and be for the benefit |
of
the state, county, corporation or person injured by a |
breach of any of the
conditions thereof.
|
(Source: P.A. 88-387.)
|
(55 ILCS 5/3-9002) (from Ch. 34, par. 3-9002)
|
Sec. 3-9002. Commencement of duties. The State's attorney |
shall
enter upon the duties of the his office on the first day |
in the month of
December following the his election of the |
State's Attorney on which the State's attorney's office is
|
required, by statute or by action of the county board, to be |
open.
|
(Source: P.A. 86-962.)
|
(55 ILCS 5/3-9004) (from Ch. 34, par. 3-9004)
|
Sec. 3-9004. Failure to give bond or take oath. If any |
person
elected to the office of State's attorney shall fail to |
give bond, or take
the oath required of the State's Attorney |
him , within twenty days after the person he is declared |
elected,
the office shall be deemed vacant, and if, being |
required to give
additional bond, as provided in Section |
|
3-9003 hereof, the person he fails to do so
within twenty days |
after notice of such requirements, the State's Attorney his |
office may, in the
discretion of the governor, be declared |
vacant and filled as provided by law.
|
(Source: P.A. 86-962.)
|
(55 ILCS 5/3-9005) (from Ch. 34, par. 3-9005)
|
Sec. 3-9005. Powers and duties of State's Attorney.
|
(a) The duty of each State's Attorney shall be:
|
(1) To commence and prosecute all actions, suits, |
indictments and
prosecutions, civil and criminal, in the |
circuit court for the his county,
in which the people of |
the State or county may be concerned.
|
(2) To prosecute all forfeited bonds and |
recognizances, and all
actions and proceedings for the |
recovery of debts, revenues, moneys,
fines, penalties and |
forfeitures accruing to the State or the his county, or
to |
any school district or road district in the his county; |
also, to
prosecute all suits in the his county against |
railroad or transportation
companies, which may be |
prosecuted in the name of the People of the
State of |
Illinois.
|
(3) To commence and prosecute all actions and |
proceedings brought by
any county officer in the county |
officer's his official capacity.
|
(4) To defend all actions and proceedings brought |
|
against the his
county, or against any county or State |
officer, in the county or State officer's his official
|
capacity, within the his county.
|
(5) To attend the examination of all persons brought |
before any judge
on habeas corpus, when the prosecution is |
in the his county.
|
(6) To attend before judges and prosecute charges of |
felony or
misdemeanor, for which the offender is required |
to be recognized to appear
before the circuit court, when |
in the State's Attorney's his power so to do.
|
(7) To give the State's Attorney's his opinion, |
without fee or reward, to any county officer
in the his |
county, upon any question or law relating to any criminal |
or other
matter, in which the people or the county may be |
concerned.
|
(8) To assist the Attorney General whenever it may be |
necessary, and in
cases of appeal from the his county to |
the Supreme Court, to which it is the
duty of the Attorney |
General to attend, the State's Attorney he shall furnish |
the Attorney General
at least 10 days before such is due to |
be filed, a manuscript of a proposed
statement, brief and |
argument to be printed and filed on behalf of the people,
|
prepared in accordance with the rules of the Supreme |
Court. However, if
such brief, argument or other document |
is due to be filed by law or order
of court within this |
10-day period, then the State's Attorney shall furnish
|
|
such as soon as may be reasonable.
|
(9) To pay all moneys received by the State's Attorney |
him in trust, without delay, to the
officer who by law is |
entitled to the custody thereof.
|
(10) To notify, by first class mail, complaining |
witnesses of the ultimate
disposition of the cases arising |
from an indictment or an information.
|
(11) To perform such other and further duties as may, |
from time to time,
be enjoined on the State's Attorney him |
by law.
|
(12) To appear in all proceedings by collectors of |
taxes against
delinquent taxpayers for judgments to sell |
real estate, and see that all the
necessary preliminary |
steps have been legally taken to make the judgment legal
|
and binding.
|
(13) To notify, by first-class mail, the State |
Superintendent of Education, the applicable regional |
superintendent of schools, and the superintendent of the |
employing school district or the chief school |
administrator of the employing nonpublic school, if any, |
upon the conviction of any individual known to possess a |
certificate or license issued pursuant to Article 21 or |
21B, respectively, of the School Code of any offense set |
forth in Section 21B-80 of the School Code or any other |
felony conviction, providing the name of the certificate |
holder, the fact of the conviction, and the name and |
|
location of the court where the conviction occurred. The |
certificate holder must also be contemporaneously sent a |
copy of the notice. |
(b) The State's Attorney of each county shall have |
authority to
appoint one or more special investigators to |
serve subpoenas and summonses, make return
of process, and |
conduct investigations which assist the State's Attorney in
|
the performance of the State's Attorney his duties. In |
counties of the first and second class, the fees for service of |
subpoenas and summonses are allowed by this Section and shall |
be consistent with those set forth in Section 4-5001 of this |
Act, except when increased by county ordinance as provided for |
in Section 4-5001. In counties of the third class, the fees for |
service of subpoenas and summonses are allowed by this Section |
and shall be consistent with those set forth in Section |
4-12001 of this Act. A special investigator shall not carry
|
firearms except with permission of the State's Attorney and |
only while
carrying appropriate identification indicating the |
special investigator's his employment and in the
performance |
of the special investigator's his assigned duties.
|
Subject to the qualifications set forth in this |
subsection, special
investigators shall be peace officers and |
shall have all the powers possessed
by investigators under the |
State's Attorneys Appellate Prosecutor's Act.
|
No special investigator employed by the State's Attorney |
shall have peace
officer status or exercise police powers |
|
unless the special investigator he or she successfully
|
completes the basic police training course mandated and |
approved by the
Illinois Law Enforcement Training Standards |
Board or such
board waives the training requirement by reason |
of the special
investigator's prior law enforcement experience |
or training or both. Any
State's Attorney appointing a special |
investigator shall consult with all
affected local police |
agencies, to the extent consistent with the public
interest, |
if the special investigator is assigned to areas within that
|
agency's jurisdiction.
|
Before a person is appointed as a special investigator, |
the person's his
fingerprints shall be taken and transmitted |
to the Department of State
Police. The Department shall |
examine its records and submit to the State's
Attorney of the |
county in which the investigator seeks appointment any
|
conviction information concerning the person on file with the |
Department.
No person shall be appointed as a special |
investigator if the person he has been
convicted of a felony or |
other offense involving moral turpitude. A
special |
investigator shall be paid a salary and be reimbursed for |
actual
expenses incurred in performing the special |
investigator's his assigned duties. The county board
shall |
approve the salary and actual expenses and appropriate the |
salary
and expenses in the manner prescribed by law or |
ordinance.
|
(c) The State's
Attorney may request and receive from |
|
employers, labor unions, telephone
companies, and utility |
companies
location information concerning putative fathers and |
noncustodial parents for
the purpose of establishing a child's |
paternity or establishing, enforcing, or
modifying a child |
support obligation. In this subsection, "location
information"
|
means information about (i) the physical whereabouts of a |
putative father or
noncustodial parent, (ii) the putative |
father or noncustodial parent's
employer, or
(iii) the salary, |
wages, and other
compensation paid and the health insurance |
coverage provided to the putative
father or noncustodial |
parent by the employer of the putative father or
noncustodial |
parent
or by a labor union of which the putative father or |
noncustodial parent is a
member.
|
(d) (Blank).
|
(e) The State's Attorney shall have the authority to enter |
into a written
agreement with the Department of Revenue for |
pursuit of civil
liability under subsection (E) of Section |
17-1 of the Criminal Code of 2012 against persons who
have |
issued to the Department checks or other orders in violation |
of the
provisions of paragraph (1) of subsection (B) of |
Section 17-1 of the Criminal
Code of 2012, with the Department |
to retain the amount owing upon the
dishonored check or order |
along with the dishonored check fee imposed under the
Uniform |
Penalty and Interest Act, with the balance of damages, fees, |
and costs
collected under subsection (E) of Section 17-1 of |
the Criminal Code of 2012 or under Section 17-1a of that Code |
|
to be retained by
the State's Attorney. The agreement shall |
not affect the allocation of fines
and costs imposed in any |
criminal prosecution.
|
(f) In a county with less than 2,000,000 inhabitants, and |
only upon receipt of a written request by the superintendent |
of the county Veterans Assistance Commission for the county in |
which the State's Attorney is located, the State's Attorney |
shall have the discretionary authority to render an opinion, |
without fee or reward, upon any question of law relating to a |
matter in which the county Veterans Assistance Commission may |
be concerned. The State's Attorney shall have the discretion |
to grant or decline such a request. |
(Source: P.A. 101-275, eff. 8-9-19.)
|
(55 ILCS 5/3-9006) (from Ch. 34, par. 3-9006)
|
Sec. 3-9006. Internal operations of office; simultaneous |
county board tenure. |
(a) Internal operations of the office. The State's |
Attorney
shall control the internal operations of the State's |
Attorney's his or her office and procure the
necessary |
equipment, materials, and services to perform the duties of |
that
office. |
(b) Simultaneous county board tenure. A duly appointed |
Assistant State's Attorney may serve as an Assistant State's |
Attorney and, simultaneously, serve as a county board member |
for a county located outside of the jurisdiction of the |
|
State's Attorney Office that the Assistant State's Attorney he |
or she serves. An Assistant State's Attorney serving as a |
county board member is subject to any internal mechanisms |
established by the State's Attorney to avoid conflicts of |
interest in the performance of the individual's his or her |
duties as an Assistant State's Attorney.
|
(Source: P.A. 95-1014, eff. 12-15-08.)
|
(55 ILCS 5/3-9008) (from Ch. 34, par. 3-9008)
|
Sec. 3-9008. Appointment of attorney to perform duties. |
(a) (Blank). |
(a-5) The court on its own motion, or an interested person |
in a cause or proceeding, civil or criminal, may file a |
petition alleging that the State's Attorney is sick, absent, |
or unable to fulfill the State's Attorney's his or her duties. |
The court shall consider the petition, any documents filed in |
response, and if necessary, grant a hearing to determine |
whether the State's Attorney is sick, absent, or otherwise |
unable to fulfill the State's Attorney's his or her duties. If |
the court finds that the State's Attorney is sick, absent, or |
otherwise unable to fulfill the State's Attorney's his or her |
duties, the court may appoint some competent attorney to |
prosecute or defend the cause or proceeding. |
(a-10) The court on its own motion, or an interested |
person in a cause or proceeding, civil or criminal, may file a |
petition alleging that the State's Attorney has an actual |
|
conflict of interest in the cause or proceeding. The court |
shall consider the petition, any documents filed in response, |
and if necessary, grant a hearing to determine whether the |
State's Attorney has an actual conflict of interest in the |
cause or proceeding. If the court finds that the petitioner |
has proven by sufficient facts and evidence that the State's |
Attorney has an actual conflict of interest in a specific |
case, the court may appoint some competent attorney to |
prosecute or defend the cause or proceeding. |
(a-15) Notwithstanding subsections (a-5) and (a-10) of |
this Section, the State's Attorney may file a petition to |
recuse the State's Attorney himself or herself from a cause or |
proceeding for any other reason the State's Attorney he or she |
deems appropriate and the court shall appoint a special |
prosecutor as provided in this Section. |
(a-20) Prior to appointing a private attorney under this |
Section, the court shall contact public agencies, including, |
but not limited to, the Office of Attorney General, Office of |
the State's Attorneys Appellate Prosecutor, or local State's |
Attorney's Offices throughout the State, to determine a public |
prosecutor's availability to serve as a special prosecutor at |
no cost to the county and shall appoint a public agency if they |
are able and willing to accept the appointment. An attorney so |
appointed shall have the same power and authority in relation |
to the cause or proceeding as the State's Attorney would have |
if present and attending to the cause or proceedings. |
|
(b) In case of a vacancy of more than one year
occurring in |
any county in the office of State's attorney, by death,
|
resignation or otherwise, and it becomes necessary for the |
transaction
of the public business, that some competent |
attorney act as State's
attorney in and for such county during |
the period between the time of
the occurrence of such vacancy |
and the election and qualification of a
State's attorney, as |
provided by law, the vacancy shall be filled upon
the written |
request of a majority of the circuit judges of the circuit
in |
which is located the county where such vacancy exists, by |
appointment
as provided in The Election Code of some competent |
attorney to perform
and discharge all the duties of a State's |
attorney in the said county,
such appointment and all |
authority thereunder to cease upon the election
and |
qualification of a State's attorney, as provided by law. Any
|
attorney appointed for any reason under this Section shall
|
possess all the powers and discharge all the
duties of a |
regularly elected State's attorney under the laws of the
State |
to the extent necessary to fulfill the purpose of such
|
appointment, and shall be paid by the county the State's |
Attorney he serves not to exceed in
any one period of 12 |
months, for the reasonable amount of time actually
expended in |
carrying out the purpose of such appointment, the same |
compensation
as provided by law for the State's attorney of |
the county, apportioned,
in the case of lesser amounts of |
compensation,
as to the time of service reasonably and |
|
actually expended. The county shall participate in all |
agreements on the rate of compensation of a special |
prosecutor.
|
(c) An order granting authority to a special prosecutor |
must be construed strictly and narrowly by the court. The |
power and authority of a special prosecutor shall not be |
expanded without prior notice to the county. In the case of the |
proposed expansion of a special prosecutor's power and |
authority, a county may provide the court with information on |
the financial impact of an expansion on the county. Prior to |
the signing of an order requiring a county to pay for |
attorney's fees or litigation expenses, the county shall be |
provided with a detailed copy of the invoice describing the |
fees, and the invoice shall include all activities performed |
in relation to the case and the amount of time spent on each |
activity. |
(Source: P.A. 99-352, eff. 1-1-16 .)
|
(55 ILCS 5/3-9009) (from Ch. 34, par. 3-9009)
|
Sec. 3-9009. Private fee and employment prohibited. The |
State's
attorney shall not receive any fee or reward from or in |
behalf of any
private person for any services within the |
State's Attorney's his official duties and shall not be
|
retained or employed, except for the public, in a civil case |
depending upon
the same state of facts on which a criminal |
prosecution shall depend.
|
|
(Source: P.A. 86-962.)
|
(55 ILCS 5/3-9012) (from Ch. 34, par. 3-9012)
|
Sec. 3-9012. Compensation. A State's attorney who serves 2 |
or more counties shall receive such
compensation from the |
State Treasury as is provided by law for the State's
attorney |
of a single county. The State's Attorney He shall be paid by |
the counties such
compensation as may be agreed upon by the |
county boards within the salary
range prescribed by law |
applicable to a single county with a population
equal to the |
combined population of the counties the State's Attorney he |
serves. Unless the
county boards agree upon a lesser amount, |
the State's Attorney he shall be paid the highest
permissible |
salary within such range. The amount to be paid by the counties
|
shall be apportioned among them on the basis of their |
population.
Seventy-five percent (75%) of the amount provided |
by law to be paid from
the State treasury for the services of |
the State's attorney in the case of
a single county is payable |
to each of the counties served by the same
State's attorney, |
except that the amounts paid to those counties under this
|
Section in any year may not exceed, in the aggregate, the |
annual salary
paid to that State's attorney from both county |
and State funds, in which
case reduction of the State's |
contribution to each county shall be reduced
proportionately |
according to population of each participating county.
|
(Source: P.A. 86-962.)
|
|
Section 10. The Military Veterans Assistance Act is |
amended by changing Section 10 as follows:
|
(330 ILCS 45/10) (from Ch. 23, par. 3090)
|
Sec. 10.
The executive powers of the commission shall be |
vested in a
superintendent elected by the commission from |
among those who served in
the armed forces of the United |
States. The superintendent,
designated Superintendent of |
Veterans Assistance of the county, shall,
under the direction |
of the commission, have charge of and maintain an
office in the |
county building or other central location, to be used solely
|
by the commission for carrying on its assistance work. The |
county shall
provide the office and furnish all necessary |
supplies, including telephone,
printing, stationery and |
postage therefor.
|
The county board shall, in any county where a Veterans |
Assistance
Commission is organized, in addition to sums |
appropriated for assistance and
emergency assistance purposes |
under this Act, appropriate such additional
sums, upon |
recommendation of the Veterans Assistance Commission and as
|
approved by the county board, to properly compensate the |
officers and
employees required to administer such assistance. |
Such county board
approval shall be based upon recognized and |
established salary guidelines
developed by the county and used |
by the county to compensate county
employees. If the county |
|
does not have established employee salary
guidelines, the |
county board shall provide funds to the commission to
|
compensate the superintendent and his employees in a just |
manner. The
county board shall also provide funds to the |
commission to reimburse the
superintendent, officers, |
delegates and employees for certain expenses
which are |
approved by the commission. The superintendent and other
|
employees shall be employees of the Veterans Assistance |
Commission, and no
provision in this Section or elsewhere in |
this Act shall be construed to
mean that they are employees of |
the county.
|
Superintendents, subject to rules formulated by the |
commission, shall select,
as far as possible, secretaries and |
other employees from among honorably
discharged military |
veterans as defined in Section 2, or their surviving
spouses.
|
In a county with less than 2,000,000 inhabitants, the |
superintendent may, in conformance with subsection (f) of |
Section 3-9005 of the Counties Code, request legal assistance |
from the State's Attorney serving the county in which the |
Veterans Assistance Commission is located. |
Superintendents of all counties subject to this Act, when |
required by the
commission, shall give bond in the sum of |
$2,000 for the faithful performance
of their duties.
|
All persons elected or selected to fill positions provided |
for in this
Section shall be exempt from the operation and |
provisions of any civil service
act or laws of this State, and |
|
the secretary of the commission shall be
appointed by the |
superintendent. However, if "The Illinois Public Aid Code",
as |
amended, becomes applicable in any county, the Department of
|
Human Services may exercise the powers therein designated in |
relation to
employees
engaged in the administration of |
assistance under this Act.
|
(Source: P.A. 89-507, eff. 7-1-97.)
|
Section 99. Effective date. This Act takes effect upon |
becoming law.
|