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Public Act 102-0694 |
HB3512 Enrolled | LRB102 14806 KMF 20159 b |
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AN ACT concerning criminal law.
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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 3. The Freedom of Information Act is amended by |
changing Section 7 as follows: |
(5 ILCS 140/7) (from Ch. 116, par. 207) |
Sec. 7. Exemptions.
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(1) When a request is made to inspect or copy a public |
record that contains information that is exempt from |
disclosure under this Section, but also contains information |
that is not exempt from disclosure, the public body may elect |
to redact the information that is exempt. The public body |
shall make the remaining information available for inspection |
and copying. Subject to this requirement, the following shall |
be exempt from inspection and copying:
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(a) Information specifically prohibited from |
disclosure by federal or
State law or rules and |
regulations implementing federal or State law.
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(b) Private information, unless disclosure is required |
by another provision of this Act, a State or federal law or |
a court order. |
(b-5) Files, documents, and other data or databases |
maintained by one or more law enforcement agencies and |
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specifically designed to provide information to one or |
more law enforcement agencies regarding the physical or |
mental status of one or more individual subjects. |
(c) Personal information contained within public |
records, the disclosure of which would constitute a |
clearly
unwarranted invasion of personal privacy, unless |
the disclosure is
consented to in writing by the |
individual subjects of the information. "Unwarranted |
invasion of personal privacy" means the disclosure of |
information that is highly personal or objectionable to a |
reasonable person and in which the subject's right to |
privacy outweighs any legitimate public interest in |
obtaining the information. The
disclosure of information |
that bears on the public duties of public
employees and |
officials shall not be considered an invasion of personal
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privacy.
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(d) Records in the possession of any public body |
created in the course of administrative enforcement
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proceedings, and any law enforcement or correctional |
agency for
law enforcement purposes,
but only to the |
extent that disclosure would:
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(i) interfere with pending or actually and |
reasonably contemplated
law enforcement proceedings |
conducted by any law enforcement or correctional
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agency that is the recipient of the request;
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(ii) interfere with active administrative |
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enforcement proceedings
conducted by the public body |
that is the recipient of the request;
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(iii) create a substantial likelihood that a |
person will be deprived of a fair trial or an impartial |
hearing;
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(iv) unavoidably disclose the identity of a |
confidential source, confidential information |
furnished only by the confidential source, or persons |
who file complaints with or provide information to |
administrative, investigative, law enforcement, or |
penal agencies; except that the identities of |
witnesses to traffic accidents, traffic accident |
reports, and rescue reports shall be provided by |
agencies of local government, except when disclosure |
would interfere with an active criminal investigation |
conducted by the agency that is the recipient of the |
request;
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(v) disclose unique or specialized investigative |
techniques other than
those generally used and known |
or disclose internal documents of
correctional |
agencies related to detection, observation or |
investigation of
incidents of crime or misconduct, and |
disclosure would result in demonstrable harm to the |
agency or public body that is the recipient of the |
request;
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(vi) endanger the life or physical safety of law |
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enforcement personnel
or any other person; or
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(vii) obstruct an ongoing criminal investigation |
by the agency that is the recipient of the request.
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(d-5) A law enforcement record created for law |
enforcement purposes and contained in a shared electronic |
record management system if the law enforcement agency |
that is the recipient of the request did not create the |
record, did not participate in or have a role in any of the |
events which are the subject of the record, and only has |
access to the record through the shared electronic record |
management system. |
(d-6) Records contained in the Officer Professional |
Conduct Database under Section 9.2 9.4 of the Illinois |
Police Training Act, except to the extent authorized under |
that Section. This includes the documents supplied to |
Illinois Law Enforcement Training Standards Board from the |
Illinois State Police and Illinois State Police Merit |
Board. |
(e) Records that relate to or affect the security of |
correctional
institutions and detention facilities.
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(e-5) Records requested by persons committed to the |
Department of Corrections, Department of Human Services |
Division of Mental Health, or a county jail if those |
materials are available in the library of the correctional |
institution or facility or jail where the inmate is |
confined. |
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(e-6) Records requested by persons committed to the |
Department of Corrections, Department of Human Services |
Division of Mental Health, or a county jail if those |
materials include records from staff members' personnel |
files, staff rosters, or other staffing assignment |
information. |
(e-7) Records requested by persons committed to the |
Department of Corrections or Department of Human Services |
Division of Mental Health if those materials are available |
through an administrative request to the Department of |
Corrections or Department of Human Services Division of |
Mental Health. |
(e-8) Records requested by a person committed to the |
Department of Corrections, Department of Human Services |
Division of Mental Health, or a county jail, the |
disclosure of which would result in the risk of harm to any |
person or the risk of an escape from a jail or correctional |
institution or facility. |
(e-9) Records requested by a person in a county jail |
or committed to the Department of Corrections or |
Department of Human Services Division of Mental Health, |
containing personal information pertaining to the person's |
victim or the victim's family, including, but not limited |
to, a victim's home address, home telephone number, work |
or school address, work telephone number, social security |
number, or any other identifying information, except as |
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may be relevant to a requester's current or potential case |
or claim. |
(e-10) Law enforcement records of other persons |
requested by a person committed to the Department of |
Corrections, Department of Human Services Division of |
Mental Health, or a county jail, including, but not |
limited to, arrest and booking records, mug shots, and |
crime scene photographs, except as these records may be |
relevant to the requester's current or potential case or |
claim. |
(f) Preliminary drafts, notes, recommendations, |
memoranda and other
records in which opinions are |
expressed, or policies or actions are
formulated, except |
that a specific record or relevant portion of a
record |
shall not be exempt when the record is publicly cited
and |
identified by the head of the public body. The exemption |
provided in
this paragraph (f) extends to all those |
records of officers and agencies
of the General Assembly |
that pertain to the preparation of legislative
documents.
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(g) Trade secrets and commercial or financial |
information obtained from
a person or business where the |
trade secrets or commercial or financial information are |
furnished under a claim that they are
proprietary, |
privileged, or confidential, and that disclosure of the |
trade
secrets or commercial or financial information would |
cause competitive harm to the person or business, and only |
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insofar as the claim directly applies to the records |
requested. |
The information included under this exemption includes |
all trade secrets and commercial or financial information |
obtained by a public body, including a public pension |
fund, from a private equity fund or a privately held |
company within the investment portfolio of a private |
equity fund as a result of either investing or evaluating |
a potential investment of public funds in a private equity |
fund. The exemption contained in this item does not apply |
to the aggregate financial performance information of a |
private equity fund, nor to the identity of the fund's |
managers or general partners. The exemption contained in |
this item does not apply to the identity of a privately |
held company within the investment portfolio of a private |
equity fund, unless the disclosure of the identity of a |
privately held company may cause competitive harm. |
Nothing contained in this
paragraph (g) shall be |
construed to prevent a person or business from
consenting |
to disclosure.
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(h) Proposals and bids for any contract, grant, or |
agreement, including
information which if it were |
disclosed would frustrate procurement or give
an advantage |
to any person proposing to enter into a contractor |
agreement
with the body, until an award or final selection |
is made. Information
prepared by or for the body in |
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preparation of a bid solicitation shall be
exempt until an |
award or final selection is made.
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(i) Valuable formulae,
computer geographic systems,
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designs, drawings and research data obtained or
produced |
by any public body when disclosure could reasonably be |
expected to
produce private gain or public loss.
The |
exemption for "computer geographic systems" provided in |
this paragraph
(i) does not extend to requests made by |
news media as defined in Section 2 of
this Act when the |
requested information is not otherwise exempt and the only
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purpose of the request is to access and disseminate |
information regarding the
health, safety, welfare, or |
legal rights of the general public.
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(j) The following information pertaining to |
educational matters: |
(i) test questions, scoring keys and other |
examination data used to
administer an academic |
examination;
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(ii) information received by a primary or |
secondary school, college, or university under its |
procedures for the evaluation of faculty members by |
their academic peers; |
(iii) information concerning a school or |
university's adjudication of student disciplinary |
cases, but only to the extent that disclosure would |
unavoidably reveal the identity of the student; and |
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(iv) course materials or research materials used |
by faculty members. |
(k) Architects' plans, engineers' technical |
submissions, and
other
construction related technical |
documents for
projects not constructed or developed in |
whole or in part with public funds
and the same for |
projects constructed or developed with public funds, |
including, but not limited to, power generating and |
distribution stations and other transmission and |
distribution facilities, water treatment facilities, |
airport facilities, sport stadiums, convention centers, |
and all government owned, operated, or occupied buildings, |
but
only to the extent
that disclosure would compromise |
security.
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(l) Minutes of meetings of public bodies closed to the
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public as provided in the Open Meetings Act until the |
public body
makes the minutes available to the public |
under Section 2.06 of the Open
Meetings Act.
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(m) Communications between a public body and an |
attorney or auditor
representing the public body that |
would not be subject to discovery in
litigation, and |
materials prepared or compiled by or for a public body in
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anticipation of a criminal, civil, or administrative |
proceeding upon the
request of an attorney advising the |
public body, and materials prepared or
compiled with |
respect to internal audits of public bodies.
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(n) Records relating to a public body's adjudication |
of employee grievances or disciplinary cases; however, |
this exemption shall not extend to the final outcome of |
cases in which discipline is imposed.
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(o) Administrative or technical information associated |
with automated
data processing operations, including, but |
not limited to, software,
operating protocols, computer |
program abstracts, file layouts, source
listings, object |
modules, load modules, user guides, documentation
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pertaining to all logical and physical design of |
computerized systems,
employee manuals, and any other |
information that, if disclosed, would
jeopardize the |
security of the system or its data or the security of
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materials exempt under this Section.
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(p) Records relating to collective negotiating matters
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between public bodies and their employees or |
representatives, except that
any final contract or |
agreement shall be subject to inspection and copying.
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(q) Test questions, scoring keys, and other |
examination data used to determine the qualifications of |
an applicant for a license or employment.
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(r) The records, documents, and information relating |
to real estate
purchase negotiations until those |
negotiations have been completed or
otherwise terminated. |
With regard to a parcel involved in a pending or
actually |
and reasonably contemplated eminent domain proceeding |
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under the Eminent Domain Act, records, documents, and
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information relating to that parcel shall be exempt except |
as may be
allowed under discovery rules adopted by the |
Illinois Supreme Court. The
records, documents, and |
information relating to a real estate sale shall be
exempt |
until a sale is consummated.
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(s) Any and all proprietary information and records |
related to the
operation of an intergovernmental risk |
management association or
self-insurance pool or jointly |
self-administered health and accident
cooperative or pool.
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Insurance or self insurance (including any |
intergovernmental risk management association or self |
insurance pool) claims, loss or risk management |
information, records, data, advice or communications.
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(t) Information contained in or related to |
examination, operating, or
condition reports prepared by, |
on behalf of, or for the use of a public
body responsible |
for the regulation or supervision of financial
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institutions, insurance companies, or pharmacy benefit |
managers, unless disclosure is otherwise
required by State |
law.
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(u) Information that would disclose
or might lead to |
the disclosure of
secret or confidential information, |
codes, algorithms, programs, or private
keys intended to |
be used to create electronic signatures under the Uniform |
Electronic Transactions Act.
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(v) Vulnerability assessments, security measures, and |
response policies
or plans that are designed to identify, |
prevent, or respond to potential
attacks upon a |
community's population or systems, facilities, or |
installations,
the destruction or contamination of which |
would constitute a clear and present
danger to the health |
or safety of the community, but only to the extent that
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disclosure could reasonably be expected to jeopardize the |
effectiveness of the
measures or the safety of the |
personnel who implement them or the public.
Information |
exempt under this item may include such things as details
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pertaining to the mobilization or deployment of personnel |
or equipment, to the
operation of communication systems or |
protocols, or to tactical operations.
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(w) (Blank). |
(x) Maps and other records regarding the location or |
security of generation, transmission, distribution, |
storage, gathering,
treatment, or switching facilities |
owned by a utility, by a power generator, or by the |
Illinois Power Agency.
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(y) Information contained in or related to proposals, |
bids, or negotiations related to electric power |
procurement under Section 1-75 of the Illinois Power |
Agency Act and Section 16-111.5 of the Public Utilities |
Act that is determined to be confidential and proprietary |
by the Illinois Power Agency or by the Illinois Commerce |
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Commission.
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(z) Information about students exempted from |
disclosure under Sections 10-20.38 or 34-18.29 of the |
School Code, and information about undergraduate students |
enrolled at an institution of higher education exempted |
from disclosure under Section 25 of the Illinois Credit |
Card Marketing Act of 2009. |
(aa) Information the disclosure of which is
exempted |
under the Viatical Settlements Act of 2009.
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(bb) Records and information provided to a mortality |
review team and records maintained by a mortality review |
team appointed under the Department of Juvenile Justice |
Mortality Review Team Act. |
(cc) Information regarding interments, entombments, or |
inurnments of human remains that are submitted to the |
Cemetery Oversight Database under the Cemetery Care Act or |
the Cemetery Oversight Act, whichever is applicable. |
(dd) Correspondence and records (i) that may not be |
disclosed under Section 11-9 of the Illinois Public Aid |
Code or (ii) that pertain to appeals under Section 11-8 of |
the Illinois Public Aid Code. |
(ee) The names, addresses, or other personal |
information of persons who are minors and are also |
participants and registrants in programs of park |
districts, forest preserve districts, conservation |
districts, recreation agencies, and special recreation |
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associations. |
(ff) The names, addresses, or other personal |
information of participants and registrants in programs of |
park districts, forest preserve districts, conservation |
districts, recreation agencies, and special recreation |
associations where such programs are targeted primarily to |
minors. |
(gg) Confidential information described in Section |
1-100 of the Illinois Independent Tax Tribunal Act of |
2012. |
(hh) The report submitted to the State Board of |
Education by the School Security and Standards Task Force |
under item (8) of subsection (d) of Section 2-3.160 of the |
School Code and any information contained in that report. |
(ii) Records requested by persons committed to or |
detained by the Department of Human Services under the |
Sexually Violent Persons Commitment Act or committed to |
the Department of Corrections under the Sexually Dangerous |
Persons Act if those materials: (i) are available in the |
library of the facility where the individual is confined; |
(ii) include records from staff members' personnel files, |
staff rosters, or other staffing assignment information; |
or (iii) are available through an administrative request |
to the Department of Human Services or the Department of |
Corrections. |
(jj) Confidential information described in Section |
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5-535 of the Civil Administrative Code of Illinois. |
(kk) The public body's credit card numbers, debit card |
numbers, bank account numbers, Federal Employer |
Identification Number, security code numbers, passwords, |
and similar account information, the disclosure of which |
could result in identity theft or impression or defrauding |
of a governmental entity or a person. |
(ll) Records concerning the work of the threat |
assessment team of a school district. |
(1.5) Any information exempt from disclosure under the |
Judicial Privacy Act shall be redacted from public records |
prior to disclosure under this Act. |
(2) A public record that is not in the possession of a |
public body but is in the possession of a party with whom the |
agency has contracted to perform a governmental function on |
behalf of the public body, and that directly relates to the |
governmental function and is not otherwise exempt under this |
Act, shall be considered a public record of the public body, |
for purposes of this Act. |
(3) This Section does not authorize withholding of |
information or limit the
availability of records to the |
public, except as stated in this Section or
otherwise provided |
in this Act.
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(Source: P.A. 101-434, eff. 1-1-20; 101-452, eff. 1-1-20; |
101-455, eff. 8-23-19; 101-652, eff. 1-1-22; 102-38, eff. |
6-25-21; 102-558, eff. 8-20-21; revised 10-4-21.) |
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Section 5. The Illinois State Police Act is amended by |
changing Sections 9, 12.6, and 46 as follows:
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(20 ILCS 2610/9) (from Ch. 121, par. 307.9)
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(Text of Section before amendment by P.A. 101-652 )
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Sec. 9. Appointment; qualifications.
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(a) Except as otherwise provided in this Section, the |
appointment of
Department of State Police officers shall be |
made from those applicants who
have been certified by the |
Board as being qualified for appointment. All
persons so |
appointed shall, at the time of their appointment, be not less |
than
21 years of age, or 20 years of age and have successfully |
completed an associate's degree or 60 credit hours at an |
accredited college or university. Any person
appointed |
subsequent to successful completion of an associate's degree |
or 60 credit hours at an accredited college or university |
shall not have power of arrest, nor shall he or she be |
permitted
to carry firearms, until he or she reaches 21 years |
of age. In addition,
all persons so certified for appointment |
shall be of sound mind and body, be of
good moral character, be |
citizens of the United States, have no criminal
records, |
possess such prerequisites of training, education, and |
experience as
the Board may from time to time prescribe so long |
as persons who have an associate's degree or 60 credit hours at |
an accredited college or university are not disqualified, and |
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shall be required to pass
successfully such mental and |
physical tests and examinations as may be
prescribed by the |
Board. All persons who meet one of the following requirements |
are deemed to have met the collegiate educational |
requirements: |
(i) have been honorably discharged and who have been |
awarded a Southwest Asia Service Medal, Kosovo Campaign |
Medal, Korean Defense Service Medal, Afghanistan Campaign |
Medal, Iraq Campaign Medal, or Global War on Terrorism |
Expeditionary Medal by the United States Armed Forces; |
(ii) are active members of the Illinois National Guard |
or a reserve component of the United States Armed Forces |
and who have been awarded a Southwest Asia Service Medal, |
Kosovo Campaign Medal, Korean Defense Service Medal, |
Afghanistan Campaign Medal, Iraq Campaign Medal, or Global |
War on Terrorism Expeditionary Medal as a result of |
honorable service during deployment on active duty; |
(iii) have been honorably discharged who served in a |
combat mission by proof of hostile fire pay or imminent |
danger pay during deployment on active duty; or |
(iv) have at least 3 years of full active and |
continuous military duty and received an honorable |
discharge before hiring. |
Preference shall be given in such appointments to
persons |
who have honorably served in the military or naval services of |
the
United States. All appointees shall serve a probationary |
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period of 12 months
from the date of appointment and during |
that period may be discharged at the
will of the Director. |
However, the Director may in his or her sole discretion
extend |
the probationary period of an officer up to an additional 6 |
months when
to do so is deemed in the best interest of the |
Department. Nothing in this subsection (a) limits the Board's |
ability to prescribe education prerequisites or requirements |
to certify Department of State Police officers for promotion |
as provided in Section 10 of this Act.
|
(b) Notwithstanding the other provisions of this Act, |
after July 1,
1977 and before July 1, 1980, the Director of |
State Police may appoint and
promote not more than 20 persons |
having special qualifications as special
agents as he or she |
deems necessary to carry out the Department's objectives. Any
|
such appointment or promotion shall be ratified by the Board.
|
(c) During the 90 days following the effective date of |
this amendatory Act
of 1995, the Director of State Police may |
appoint up to 25 persons as State
Police officers. These |
appointments shall be made in accordance with the
requirements |
of this subsection (c) and any additional criteria that may be
|
established by the Director, but are not subject to any other |
requirements of
this Act. The Director may specify the initial |
rank for each person appointed
under this subsection.
|
All appointments under this subsection (c) shall be made |
from personnel
certified by the Board. A person certified by |
the Board and appointed by the
Director under this subsection |
|
must have been employed by the Illinois Commerce
Commission on |
November 30, 1994 in a job title
subject to the Personnel Code |
and in a position for which the person was
eligible to earn |
"eligible creditable service" as a "noncovered employee", as
|
those terms are defined in Article 14 of the Illinois Pension |
Code.
|
Persons appointed under this subsection (c) shall |
thereafter be subject to
the same requirements and procedures |
as other State police officers. A person
appointed under this |
subsection must serve a probationary period of 12 months
from |
the date of appointment, during which he or she may be |
discharged at the
will of the Director.
|
This subsection (c) does not affect or limit the |
Director's authority to
appoint other State Police officers |
under subsection (a) of this Section.
|
(Source: P.A. 100-11, eff. 7-1-17; 101-374, eff. 1-1-20 .)
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(Text of Section after amendment by P.A. 101-652 )
|
Sec. 9. Appointment; qualifications.
|
(a) Except as otherwise provided in this Section, the |
appointment of
Department of State Police officers shall be |
made from those applicants who
have been certified by the |
Board as being qualified for appointment. All
persons so |
appointed shall, at the time of their appointment, be not less |
than
21 years of age, or 20 years of age and have successfully |
completed an associate's degree or 60 credit hours at an |
|
accredited college or university. Any person
appointed |
subsequent to successful completion of an associate's degree |
or 60 credit hours at an accredited college or university |
shall not have power of arrest, nor shall he or she be |
permitted
to carry firearms, until he or she reaches 21 years |
of age. In addition,
all persons so certified for appointment |
shall be of sound mind and body, be of
good moral character, be |
citizens of the United States, have no criminal
records, |
possess such prerequisites of training, education, and |
experience as
the Board may from time to time prescribe so long |
as persons who have an associate's degree or 60 credit hours at |
an accredited college or university are not disqualified, and |
shall be required to pass
successfully such mental and |
physical tests and examinations as may be
prescribed by the |
Board. All persons who meet one of the following requirements |
are deemed to have met the collegiate educational |
requirements: |
(i) have been honorably discharged and who have been |
awarded a Southwest Asia Service Medal, Kosovo Campaign |
Medal, Korean Defense Service Medal, Afghanistan Campaign |
Medal, Iraq Campaign Medal, or Global War on Terrorism |
Expeditionary Medal by the United States Armed Forces; |
(ii) are active members of the Illinois National Guard |
or a reserve component of the United States Armed Forces |
and who have been awarded a Southwest Asia Service Medal, |
Kosovo Campaign Medal, Korean Defense Service Medal, |
|
Afghanistan Campaign Medal, Iraq Campaign Medal, or Global |
War on Terrorism Expeditionary Medal as a result of |
honorable service during deployment on active duty; |
(iii) have been honorably discharged who served in a |
combat mission by proof of hostile fire pay or imminent |
danger pay during deployment on active duty; or |
(iv) have at least 3 years of full active and |
continuous military duty and received an honorable |
discharge before hiring. |
Preference shall be given in such appointments to
persons |
who have honorably served in the military or naval services of |
the
United States. All appointees shall serve a probationary |
period of 12 months
from the date of appointment and during |
that period may be discharged at the
will of the Director. |
However, the Director may in his or her sole discretion
extend |
the probationary period of an officer up to an additional 6 |
months when
to do so is deemed in the best interest of the |
Department. Nothing in this subsection (a) limits the Board's |
ability to prescribe education prerequisites or requirements |
to certify Department of State Police officers for promotion |
as provided in Section 10 of this Act.
|
(b) Notwithstanding the other provisions of this Act, |
after July 1,
1977 and before July 1, 1980, the Director of |
State Police may appoint and
promote not more than 20 persons |
having special qualifications as special
agents as he or she |
deems necessary to carry out the Department's objectives. Any
|
|
such appointment or promotion shall be ratified by the Board.
|
(c) During the 90 days following the effective date of |
this amendatory Act
of 1995, the Director of State Police may |
appoint up to 25 persons as State
Police officers. These |
appointments shall be made in accordance with the
requirements |
of this subsection (c) and any additional criteria that may be
|
established by the Director, but are not subject to any other |
requirements of
this Act. The Director may specify the initial |
rank for each person appointed
under this subsection.
|
All appointments under this subsection (c) shall be made |
from personnel
certified by the Board. A person certified by |
the Board and appointed by the
Director under this subsection |
must have been employed by the Illinois Commerce
Commission on |
November 30, 1994 in a job title
subject to the Personnel Code |
and in a position for which the person was
eligible to earn |
"eligible creditable service" as a "noncovered employee", as
|
those terms are defined in Article 14 of the Illinois Pension |
Code.
|
Persons appointed under this subsection (c) shall |
thereafter be subject to
the same requirements and procedures |
as other State police officers. A person
appointed under this |
subsection must serve a probationary period of 12 months
from |
the date of appointment, during which he or she may be |
discharged at the
will of the Director.
|
This subsection (c) does not affect or limit the |
Director's authority to
appoint other State Police officers |
|
under subsection (a) of this Section. |
(d) During the 180 days following the effective date of |
this amendatory Act of the 101st General Assembly, the |
Director of the Illinois State Police may appoint current |
Illinois State Police Employees serving in law enforcement |
officer positions previously within Central Management |
Services as State Police Officers. These appointments shall be |
made in accordance with the requirements of this subsection |
(d) and any institutional criteria that may be established by |
the Director, but are not subject to any other requirements of |
this Act.
All appointments under this subsection (d) shall be |
made from personnel certified by the Board. A person certified |
by the Board and appointed by the Director under this |
subsection must have been employed by the a state agency, |
board, or commission on January 1, 2021, in a job title subject |
to the Personnel Code and in a position for which the person |
was eligible to earn "eligible creditable service" as a |
"noncovered employee", as those terms are defined in Article |
14 of the Illinois Pension Code.
Persons appointed under this |
subsection (d) shall thereafter be subject to the same |
requirements, and subject to the same contractual benefits and |
obligations, as other State police officers.
This subsection |
(d) does not affect or limit the Director's authority to |
appoint other State Police officers under subsection (a) of |
this Section. |
(e) The Merit Board shall review Illinois State Police |
|
Cadet applicants. The Illinois State Police may provide |
background check and investigation material to the Board for |
their review
10
pursuant to this section. The Board shall |
approve and ensure that no cadet applicant is certified 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 Section or if committed in any other |
state would be an offense similar to 11-1.50, 11-6, 11-6.5, |
11-6.6, 11-9.1, 11-9.1B, 11-14, 11-14.1, 11-30, 12-2, 12- 3.2, |
12-3.4, 12-3.5, 16-1, 17-1, 17-2, 26.5-1, 26.5-2, 26.5-3, |
28-3, 29-1, any misdemeanor in violation of any section of |
Part E of Title III of the Criminal Code of 1961 or the |
Criminal Code of 2012, 32-4a, or 32-7 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, to Section 5 or 5.2 of the Cannabis Control Act, or any |
felony or misdemeanor in violation of federal law or the law of |
any state that is the equivalent of any of the offenses |
specified therein. The Officer Misconduct Database, provided |
in Section 9.2 of the Illinois Police Training Act, shall be |
searched as part of this process. For purposes of this Section |
"convicted of, or entered a plea of guilty" regardless of |
whether the adjudication of guilt or sentence is withheld or |
not entered thereon. This includes sentences of supervision, |
conditional discharge, or first offender probation, or any |
similar disposition provided for by law. |
|
(f) The Board shall by rule establish an application fee |
waiver program for any person who meets one or more of the |
following criteria: |
(1) his or her available personal income is 200% or |
less of the current poverty level; or |
(2) he or she is, in the discretion of the Board, |
unable to proceed in an action with payment of application |
fee and payment of that fee would result in substantial |
hardship to the person or the person's family.
|
(Source: P.A. 100-11, eff. 7-1-17; 101-374, eff. 1-1-20; |
101-652, eff. 1-1-22.)
|
(20 ILCS 2610/12.6) |
(This Section may contain text from a Public Act with a |
delayed effective date ) |
Sec. 12.6. Automatic termination of Illinois State Police |
officers. The Board shall terminate a state police officer |
convicted of 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 terminate Illinois |
State Police officers who were convicted of, or entered a plea |
of guilty to, on or after the effective date of this amendatory |
Act of the 101st General Assembly, 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, 11-6.5, 11-6.6, |
11-9.1, 11-9.1B, 11-14, 11-14.1, 11-30, 12-2, 12-3.2, 12-3.4, |
|
12-3.5, 16-1, 17-1, 17-2, 26.5-1, 26.5-2, 26.5-3, 28-3, 29-1, |
any misdemeanor in violation of any section of Part E of Title |
III of the Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012, |
32-4a, or 32-7 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, to Section |
5 or 5.2 of the Cannabis Control Act, or any felony or |
misdemeanor in violation of federal law or the law of any state |
that is the equivalent of any of the offenses specified |
therein. The Illinois State Police Merit Board shall report |
terminations under this Section to the Officer Misconduct |
Database, provided in Section 9.2 of the Illinois Police |
Training Act. For purposes of this section "convicted of, or |
entered a plea of guilty" regardless of whether the |
adjudication of guilt or sentence is withheld or not entered |
thereon. This includes sentences of supervision, conditional |
discharge, or first offender probation, or any similar |
disposition provided for by law.
|
(Source: P.A. 101-652, eff. 1-1-22.) |
(20 ILCS 2610/46) |
(This Section may contain text from a Public Act with a |
delayed effective date ) |
Sec. 46. Officer Professional Conduct Database; reporting, |
transparency. |
(a) The Illinois State Police Merit Board shall be |
|
responsible for reporting all required information contained |
in the Officer Misconduct Database, provided in Section 9.2 of |
the Illinois Police Training Act. |
(b) Before the Illinois State Police Merit Board certifies |
any Illinois State Police Cadet the Board shall conduct a |
search of all Illinois State Police Cadet applicants in the |
Officer Professional Conduct Database. |
(c) The database, documents, materials, or other |
information in the possession or control of the Board that are |
obtained by or disclosed to the Board pursuant to this |
subsection shall be confidential by law and privileged, shall |
not be subject to subpoena, and shall not be subject to |
discovery or admissible in evidence in any private civil |
action. However, the Board is authorized to use such |
documents, materials, or other information in furtherance of |
any regulatory or legal action brought as part of the Board's |
official duties. Unless otherwise required by law, the Board |
shall not disclose the database or make such documents, |
materials, or other information public without the prior |
written consent of the law enforcement governmental agency and |
the law enforcement officer. The Board nor any person who |
received documents, materials or other information shared |
pursuant to this subsection shall be required to testify in |
any private civil action concerning the database or any |
confidential documents, materials, or information subject to |
this subsection. |
|
Nothing in this Section shall exempt a law enforcement |
agency from which the Board has obtained data, documents, |
materials, or other information or that has disclosed data, |
documents, materials, or other information to the Board from |
disclosing public records in accordance with the Freedom of |
Information Act. |
Nothing in this Section shall exempt a governmental agency |
from disclosing public records in accordance with the Freedom |
of Information Act.
|
(Source: P.A. 101-652, eff. 1-1-22.) |
Section 10. The Illinois Police Training Act is amended by |
changing Sections 1, 2, 3, 3.1, 6, 6.1, 6.3, 6.7, 7, 8.1, 8.2, |
8.3, 8.4, 9.2, 10.1, 10.2, 10.6, 10.11, 10.12, 10.13, 10.16, |
10.19, 10.20, and 10.22 and by reenacting Section 6.2 as |
follows:
|
(50 ILCS 705/1) (from Ch. 85, par. 501)
|
Sec. 1.
It is hereby declared as a matter of legislative |
determination that
in order to promote and protect citizen |
health, safety and welfare, it is
necessary and in the public |
interest to provide for the creation of the
Illinois Law |
Enforcement Training Standards Board for the purpose of
|
encouraging and aiding municipalities, counties, park |
districts, State
controlled universities, colleges, and public |
community colleges, and other
local governmental agencies of |
|
this State , and participating State agencies in
their efforts |
to raise the level of law enforcement by upgrading and
|
maintaining a high level of training and standards for law |
enforcement
executives and officers, county corrections |
officers, sheriffs, and law enforcement support personnel |
under this Act. It is
declared to be the responsibility of the |
board to ensure the required
participation of the pertinent |
local governmental units in the programs
established under |
this Act, to encourage the voluntary participation of other
|
local governmental units and participating State agencies, to |
set standards,
develop and provide quality training and |
education, and to aid in the
establishment of adequate |
training facilities.
|
(Source: P.A. 99-408, eff. 1-1-16 .)
|
(50 ILCS 705/2) (from Ch. 85, par. 502)
|
(Text of Section before amendment by P.A. 101-652 )
|
Sec. 2. Definitions. As used in this Act, unless the |
context otherwise
requires:
|
"Board" means the Illinois Law Enforcement Training |
Standards Board.
|
"Local governmental agency" means any local governmental |
unit or
municipal corporation in this State. It does not |
include the State of
Illinois or any office, officer, |
department, division, bureau, board,
commission, or agency of |
the State, except that it does include a
State-controlled |
|
university, college or public community college.
|
"Police training school" means any school located within |
the State of
Illinois whether privately or publicly owned |
which offers a course in
police or county corrections training |
and has been approved by the Board.
|
"Probationary police officer" means a recruit law |
enforcement officer
required to successfully complete initial |
minimum basic training requirements
at a police training |
school to be eligible for permanent full-time
employment as a |
local law enforcement officer.
|
"Probationary part-time police officer" means a recruit |
part-time law
enforcement officer required to successfully |
complete initial minimum part-time
training requirements to be |
eligible for employment on a part-time basis as a
local law |
enforcement officer.
|
"Permanent police officer" means a law enforcement officer |
who has
completed his or her probationary period and is |
permanently employed on a
full-time basis as a local law |
enforcement officer by a participating local
governmental unit |
or as a security officer or campus policeman permanently
|
employed by a participating State-controlled university, |
college, or public
community college.
|
"Part-time police officer" means a law enforcement officer |
who has
completed his or her probationary period and is |
employed on a part-time basis
as a law enforcement officer by a |
participating unit of local government or as
a campus |
|
policeman by a participating State-controlled university, |
college, or
public community college.
|
"Law enforcement officer" means (i) any police officer of |
a local governmental
agency who is primarily responsible for
|
prevention or detection of crime and the enforcement of the |
criminal code,
traffic, or highway laws of this State or any |
political subdivision
of this State or (ii) any member of a |
police force appointed and maintained as provided in Section 2 |
of the Railroad Police Act.
|
"Recruit" means any full-time or part-time law
enforcement |
officer or
full-time
county corrections officer who is |
enrolled in an
approved training course.
|
"Probationary county corrections officer" means a recruit |
county
corrections officer required to successfully complete |
initial minimum basic
training requirements at a police |
training school to be eligible for permanent
employment on a |
full-time basis as a county corrections officer.
|
"Permanent county corrections officer" means a county |
corrections
officer who has completed his probationary period |
and is permanently employed
on a full-time basis as a county |
corrections officer by a participating
local governmental |
unit.
|
"County corrections officer" means any sworn
officer of |
the sheriff who is primarily responsible for the control and |
custody
of offenders, detainees or inmates.
|
"Probationary court security officer" means a recruit |
|
court security
officer required to successfully complete |
initial minimum basic training
requirements at a designated |
training school to be eligible for employment as a
court |
security officer.
|
"Permanent court security officer" means a court security |
officer who has
completed his or her probationary period and |
is employed as a court
security officer by a participating |
local governmental unit.
|
"Court security officer" has the meaning ascribed to it in |
Section 3-6012.1
of the Counties Code.
|
(Source: P.A. 94-846, eff. 1-1-07.)
|
(Text of Section after amendment by P.A. 101-652 )
|
Sec. 2. Definitions. As used in this Act, unless the |
context otherwise
requires:
|
"Board" means the Illinois Law Enforcement Training |
Standards Board.
|
"Full-time law enforcement officer" means a law |
enforcement officer who has completed the officer's |
probationary period and is employed on a full-time basis as a |
law enforcement officer by a local government agency, State |
government agency, or as a campus police officer by a |
participating State-controlled university, college, or public |
community college. |
"Law Enforcement agency" means any entity with statutory |
police powers and the ability to employ individuals authorized |
|
to make arrests. It does not include the Illinois State Police |
as defined in the State Police Act. A law enforcement agency |
may include any university, college, or community college. |
"Governmental agency" means any local governmental agency |
and any State governmental agency. |
"Local law enforcement governmental agency" means any law |
enforcement local governmental unit of government or
municipal |
corporation in this State. It does not include the State of
|
Illinois or any office, officer, department, division, bureau, |
board,
commission, or agency of the State, except that it does |
include a
State-controlled university, college or public |
community college.
|
"State law enforcement governmental agency" means any law |
enforcement agency governmental unit of this State. This |
includes any office, officer, department, division, bureau, |
board, commission, or agency of the State. It does not include |
the Illinois State Police as defined in the State Police Act. |
"Panel" means the Certification Review Panel. |
" Basic Police training school" means any school located |
within the State of
Illinois whether privately or publicly |
owned which offers a course in basic law enforcement
police or |
county corrections training and has been approved by the |
Board.
|
"Probationary police officer" means a recruit law |
enforcement officer
required to successfully complete initial |
minimum basic training requirements
at a basic police training |
|
school to be eligible for permanent full-time
employment as a |
local law enforcement officer.
|
"Probationary part-time police officer" means a recruit |
part-time law
enforcement officer required to successfully |
complete initial minimum part-time
training requirements to be |
eligible for employment on a part-time basis as a
local law |
enforcement officer.
|
"Permanent law enforcement officer" means a law |
enforcement officer who has
completed the officer's |
probationary period and is permanently employed on a
full-time |
basis as a local law enforcement officer , by a participating |
local
governmental unit or as a security officer , or campus |
police officer permanently
employed by a law enforcement |
agency participating State-controlled university, college, or |
public
community college .
|
"Part-time law enforcement officer" means a law |
enforcement officer who has
completed the officer's |
probationary period and is employed on a part-time basis
as a |
law enforcement officer by a participating unit of local |
government or as
a campus police officer by a law enforcement |
agency participating State-controlled university, college, or
|
public community college .
|
"Law enforcement officer" means (i) any police officer of |
a law enforcement local governmental
agency who is primarily |
responsible for
prevention or detection of crime and the |
enforcement of the criminal code,
traffic, or highway laws of |
|
this State or any political subdivision
of this State or (ii) |
any member of a police force appointed and maintained as |
provided in Section 2 of the Railroad Police Act.
|
"Recruit" means any full-time or part-time law
enforcement |
officer or
full-time
county corrections officer who is |
enrolled in an
approved training course.
|
"Review Committee" means the committee at the Board for |
certification disciplinary cases in which the Panel, a law |
enforcement officer, or a law enforcement agency may file for |
reconsideration of a decertification decision made by the |
Board. |
"Probationary county corrections officer" means a recruit |
county
corrections officer required to successfully complete |
initial minimum basic
training requirements at a basic police |
training school to be eligible for permanent
employment on a |
full-time basis as a county corrections officer.
|
"Permanent county corrections officer" means a county |
corrections
officer who has completed the officer's |
probationary period and is permanently employed
on a full-time |
basis as a county corrections officer by a participating law |
enforcement agency
local governmental unit .
|
"County corrections officer" means any sworn
officer of |
the sheriff who is primarily responsible for the control and |
custody
of offenders, detainees or inmates.
|
"Probationary court security officer" means a recruit |
court security
officer required to successfully complete |
|
initial minimum basic training
requirements at a designated |
training school to be eligible for employment as a
court |
security officer.
|
"Permanent court security officer" means a court security |
officer who has
completed the officer's probationary period |
and is employed as a court
security officer by a participating |
law enforcement agency local governmental unit .
|
"Court security officer" has the meaning ascribed to it in |
Section 3-6012.1
of the Counties Code.
|
(Source: P.A. 101-652, eff. 1-1-22.)
|
(50 ILCS 705/3) (from Ch. 85, par. 503)
|
Sec. 3. Board; composition; appointments; tenure; |
vacancies. Board - composition - appointments - tenure - |
vacancies. |
(a) The Board
shall be composed of 18 members selected as |
follows: The Attorney
General of
the State of Illinois, the |
Director of the Illinois State Police, the Director of
|
Corrections, the Superintendent of the
Chicago Police |
Department, the Sheriff of Cook County, the Clerk of the |
Circuit Court of Cook County, who shall serve as ex officio |
members, and the following
to be appointed by the Governor: 2 |
mayors or village presidents of Illinois
municipalities, 2 |
Illinois county sheriffs from counties other than Cook
County, |
2 managers of Illinois municipalities, 2 chiefs of municipal |
police
departments in Illinois having no Superintendent of the |
|
Police Department on
the Board, 2 citizens of Illinois who |
shall be members of
an organized enforcement officers' |
association, one active member of a statewide association |
representing sheriffs, and one active member of a statewide |
association representing municipal police chiefs. The |
appointments of the Governor
shall be made on the first Monday |
of August in 1965 with 3 of the appointments
to be for a period |
of one year, 3 for 2 years, and 3 for 3 years. Their
successors |
shall be appointed in like manner for terms to expire the first
|
Monday of August each 3 years thereafter. All members shall |
serve until their
respective successors are appointed and |
qualify. Vacancies shall be filled by
the Governor for the |
unexpired terms. Any ex officio member may appoint a designee |
to the Board who shall have the same powers and immunities |
otherwise conferred to the member of the Board, including the |
power to vote and be counted toward quorum, so long as the |
member is not in attendance. |
(a-5) Within the Board is created a Review Committee. The |
Review Committee shall review disciplinary cases in which the |
Panel, the law enforcement officer, or the law enforcement |
agency file for reconsideration of a decertification decision |
made by the Board. The Review Committee shall be composed of 9 |
annually rotating members from the Board appointed by the |
Board Chairman. One member of the Review Committee shall be |
designated by the Board Chairman as the Chair. The Review |
Committee shall sit in 3 member panels composed of one member |
|
representing law enforcement management, one member |
representing members of law enforcement, and one member who is |
not a current or former member of law enforcement. |
(b) When a Board member may have an actual, perceived, or |
potential conflict of interest or appearance of bias that |
could prevent the Board member from making a fair and |
impartial decision regarding decertification: |
(1) The Board member shall recuse himself or herself. |
(2) If the Board member fails to recuse himself or |
herself, then the Board may, by a simple majority of the |
remaining members, vote to recuse the Board member. Board |
members who are found to have voted on a matter in which |
they should have recused themselves may be removed from |
the Board by the Governor. |
A conflict of interest or appearance of bias may include, |
but is not limited to, matters where one of the following is a |
party to a decision on a decertification or formal complaint: |
someone with whom the member has an employment relationship; |
any of the following relatives: spouse, parents, children, |
adopted children, legal wards, stepchildren, step parents, |
step siblings, half siblings, siblings, parents-in-law, |
siblings-in-law, children-in-law, aunts, uncles, nieces, and |
nephews; a friend; or a member of a professional organization, |
association, or a union in which the member now actively |
serves. |
(c) A vacancy in members does not prevent a quorum of the |
|
remaining sitting members from exercising all rights and |
performing all duties of the Board. |
(d) An individual serving on the Board shall not also |
serve on the Panel.
|
(Source: P.A. 101-652, eff. 1-1-22; 102-538, eff. 8-20-21; |
revised 10-13-21.)
|
(50 ILCS 705/3.1) |
(This Section may contain text from a Public Act with a |
delayed effective date ) |
Sec. 3.1. Illinois Law Enforcement Certification Review |
Panel. |
(a) There is hereby created the Illinois Law Enforcement |
Certification Review Panel. The Panel shall be composed of the |
following members, to be appointed in accordance with this |
Section no later than 30 days after the effective date of this |
amendatory Act of the 101st General Assembly. An individual |
serving on the Panel shall not also serve on the Board. |
(1) The Governor shall appoint 4 3 members as |
prescribed in this paragraph (1): one person who shall be |
an active member from a statewide association representing |
State's Attorneys; and 3 2 persons who shall be Illinois |
residents who are from communities with disproportionately |
high instances of interaction with law enforcement, as |
indicated by a high need, underserved community with high |
rates of gun violence, unemployment, child poverty, and |
|
commitments to Illinois Department of Corrections, but who |
are not themselves law enforcement officers. The initial |
appointments of the Governor shall be for a period of 3 |
years. Their successors shall be appointed in like manner |
for terms to expire the first Monday of June each 3 years |
thereafter. All members shall serve until their respective |
successors are appointed and qualify. Vacancies shall be |
filled by the Governor for the unexpired terms. Terms |
shall run regardless of whether the position is vacant. |
(2) The Attorney General shall appoint 9 8 members as |
prescribed in this paragraph (2) . The membership shall |
have racial, ethnic, gender, and geographic diversity and |
include the following : two persons who shall be active |
members of statewide organization representing more than |
20,000 active and retired law enforcement officers; one |
person who shall be an active member of a statewide |
organization representing more than 3,000 active and |
retired law enforcement officials; one person who shall be |
an active member of a statewide association representing a |
minimum of 75 sheriffs; one person who shall be an active |
member of a statewide association representing at least |
200 municipal police chiefs; two persons who shall be |
active members of a minority law enforcement association; |
one person who shall be a representative of the victims' |
advocacy community but shall not be a member of law |
enforcement; and one person who shall be a resident of |
|
Illinois and shall not be an employee of the Office of the |
Illinois Attorney General. The members shall serve for a |
3-year term and until their respective successors are |
appointed and qualify. The members' successors shall be |
appointed in like manner for terms to expire the first |
Monday of June each 3 years thereafter. Any vacancy of |
these positions shall be filled by the Attorney General |
for the unexpired term. The term shall run regardless of |
whether the position is vacant. |
(b) The Panel shall annually elect by a simple majority |
vote one of its members as chairperson and one of its members |
as vice-chairperson. The vice-chairperson shall serve in the |
place of the chairperson at any meeting of the Panel in which |
the chairperson is not present. If both the chairperson and |
the vice-chairperson are absent at any meeting, the members |
present shall elect by a simple majority vote another member |
to serve as a temporary chairperson for the limited purpose of |
that meeting. No member shall be elected more than twice in |
succession to the same office. Each member shall serve until |
that member's successor has been elected and qualified. |
(c) The Board shall provide administrative assistance to |
the Panel. |
(d) The members of the Panel shall serve without |
compensation but shall be entitled to reimbursement for their |
actual and necessary expenses in attending meetings and in the |
performance of their duties hereunder. |
|
(e) Members of the Panel will receive initial and annual |
training that is adequate in quality, quantity, scope, and |
type, and will cover, at minimum the following topics: |
(1) constitutional and other relevant law on |
police-community encounters, including the law on the use |
of force and stops, searches, and arrests; |
(2) police tactics; |
(3) investigations of police conduct; |
(4) impartial policing; |
(5) policing individuals in crisis; |
(6) Illinois police policies, procedures, and |
disciplinary rules; |
(7) procedural justice; and |
(8) community outreach. |
The Board shall determine the content and extent of the |
training within the scope provided for by this subsection. |
(f) The State shall indemnify and hold harmless members of |
the Panel for all of their acts, omissions, decisions, or |
other conduct
arising out of the scope of their service on the |
Panel, except those involving willful or wanton misconduct. |
The method of providing indemnification shall be as provided |
in the State Employee Indemnification Act. |
(g) When a Panel member may have an actual, perceived, or |
potential conflict of interest or appearance of bias that |
could prevent the Panel member from making a fair and |
impartial decision on a complaint or formal complaint: |
|
(1) The Panel member shall self- recuse himself or |
herself . |
(2) If the Panel member fails to self- recuse himself |
or herself , then the remaining members of the Panel may, |
by a simple majority, vote to recuse the Panel member. Any |
Panel member who is found to have voted on a matter in |
which they should have self- recused themselves may be |
removed from the Panel by the State official who initially |
appointed the Panel member. A conflict of interest or |
appearance of bias may include, but is not limited to, |
matters where one of the following is a party to a |
certification decision for formal complaint: someone with |
whom the member has an employment relationship; any of the |
following relatives: spouse, parents, children, adopted |
children, legal wards, stepchildren, stepparents, step |
siblings, half siblings, siblings, parents-in-law, |
siblings-in-law, children-in-law, aunts, uncles, nieces, |
and nephews; a friend; or a member of a professional |
organization or , association , or a union in which the |
member now actively serves. |
(h) A vacancy in membership does not impair the ability of |
a quorum to exercise all rights and perform all duties of the |
Panel.
|
(i) Notwithstanding any provision of law to the contrary, |
the changes made to this Section by this amendatory Act of the |
102nd General Assembly and Public Act 101-652 take effect July |
|
1, 2022. |
(Source: P.A. 101-652, eff. 1-1-22.)
|
(50 ILCS 705/6) (from Ch. 85, par. 506)
|
(Text of Section before amendment by P.A. 101-652 ) |
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
|
power and duties:
|
a. To require local governmental units to furnish such |
reports and
information as the Board deems necessary to |
fully implement this Act.
|
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 |
police officers.
|
c. To provide appropriate certification to those |
probationary
officers who successfully complete the |
prescribed minimum standard basic
training course.
|
|
d. To review and approve annual training curriculum |
for county sheriffs.
|
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
|
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.
|
(Source: P.A. 101-187, eff. 1-1-20 .) |
(Text of Section after amendment by P.A. 101-652, Article |
10, Section 10-143 but before amendment by P.A. 101-652, |
Article 25, Section 25-40 ) |
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
|
power and duties:
|
a. To require local governmental units to furnish such |
reports and
information as the Board deems necessary to |
fully implement this Act.
|
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 |
police officers.
|
c. To provide appropriate certification to those |
probationary
officers who successfully complete the |
prescribed minimum standard basic
training course.
|
d. To review and approve annual training curriculum |
for county sheriffs.
|
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
|
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.
|
f. To establish statewide standards for minimum |
standards regarding regular mental health screenings for |
probationary and permanent police officers, ensuring that |
counseling sessions and screenings remain confidential. |
(Source: P.A. 101-187, eff. 1-1-20; 101-652, Article 10, |
Section 10-143, eff. 7-1-21.) |
(Text of Section after amendment by P.A. 101-652, Article |
25, Section 25-40 )
|
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 law enforcement
|
officers, probationary county corrections officers, and
court |
security officers and
of providing advanced or in-service |
training for permanent law enforcement officers
or permanent
|
county corrections officers, which schools may be either |
publicly or
privately owned and operated. In addition, the |
Board has the following
power and duties:
|
a. To require law enforcement agencies local |
governmental units, to furnish such reports and
|
information as the Board deems necessary to fully |
implement this Act.
|
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 |
law enforcement officers.
|
c. To provide appropriate certification to those |
probationary
officers who successfully complete the |
prescribed minimum standard basic
training course.
|
d. To review and approve annual training curriculum |
for county sheriffs.
|
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, found guilty of, or entered a plea of guilty |
to, or entered a plea of nolo contendere to a felony |
|
offense, any of the
misdemeanors in Sections 11-1.50, |
11-6, 11-6.5, 11-6.6, 11-9.1, 11-9.1B, 11-14, 11-14.1, |
11-30, 12-2, 12-3.2, 12-3.4, 12-3.5, 16-1,
17-1, 17-2, |
26.5-1, 26.5-2, 26.5-3, 28-3, 29-1, any misdemeanor in |
violation of any Section of Part E of Title III 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
|
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, or any felony or |
misdemeanor in violation of federal law or the law of any |
state that is the equivalent of any of the offenses |
specified therein. The Board may appoint investigators who |
shall enforce
the duties conferred upon the Board by this |
Act.
|
For purposes of this paragraph e, a person is |
considered to have been convicted of, found guilty of, or |
entered a plea of guilty to, plea of nolo contendere to |
regardless of whether the adjudication of guilt or |
sentence is withheld or not entered thereon. This includes |
sentences of supervision, conditional discharge, or first |
offender probation, or any similar disposition provided |
for by law. |
f. To establish statewide standards for minimum |
|
standards regarding regular mental health screenings for |
probationary and permanent police officers, ensuring that |
counseling sessions and screenings remain confidential. |
f. For purposes of this paragraph (e), a person is |
considered to have been "convicted of, found guilty of, or |
entered a plea of guilty to, plea of nolo contendere to" |
regardless of whether the adjudication of guilt or |
sentence is withheld or not entered thereon. This includes |
sentences of supervision, conditional discharge, or first |
offender probation, or any similar disposition provided |
for by law. |
g. To review and ensure all law enforcement officers |
remain in compliance with this Act, and any administrative |
rules adopted under this Act. |
h. To suspend any certificate for a definite period, |
limit or restrict any certificate, or revoke any |
certificate. |
i. The Board and the Panel shall have power to secure |
by its subpoena and bring before it any person or entity in |
this State and to take testimony either orally or by |
deposition or both with the same fees and mileage and in |
the same manner as prescribed by law in judicial |
proceedings in civil cases in circuit courts of this |
State. The Board and the Panel shall also have the power to |
subpoena the production of documents, papers, files, |
books, documents, and records, whether in physical or |
|
electronic form, in support of the charges and for |
defense, and in connection with a hearing or |
investigation. |
j. The Executive Director, the administrative law |
judge designated by the Executive Director, and each |
member of the Board and the Panel shall have the power to |
administer oaths to witnesses at any hearing that the |
Board is authorized to conduct under this Act and any |
other oaths required or authorized to be administered by |
the Board under this Act. |
k. In case of the neglect or refusal of any person to |
obey a subpoena issued by the Board and the Panel, any |
circuit court, upon application of the Board and the |
Panel, through the Illinois Attorney General, may order |
such person to appear before the Board and the Panel give |
testimony or produce evidence, and any failure to obey |
such order is punishable by the court as a contempt |
thereof. This order may be served by personal delivery, by |
email, or by mail to the address of record or email address |
of record. |
l. The Board shall have the power to administer state |
certification examinations. Any and all records related to |
these examinations, including , but not limited to , test |
questions, test formats, digital files, answer responses, |
answer keys, and scoring information shall be exempt from |
disclosure. |
|
(Source: P.A. 101-187, eff. 1-1-20; 101-652, Article 10, |
Section 10-143, eff. 7-1-21; 101-652, Article 25, Section |
25-40, eff. 1-1-22; revised 4-26-21.) |
(50 ILCS 705/6.1)
|
Sec. 6.1. Automatic decertification of full-time and |
part-time law enforcement officers.
|
(a) The Board must review law enforcement officer conduct |
and records to ensure that
no law enforcement
officer is |
certified
or provided a valid waiver if that law enforcement |
officer has been convicted of, found guilty of, entered a plea |
of guilty to, or entered a plea of nolo contendere 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 law enforcement officer is |
certified or provided a valid waiver if that law enforcement
|
officer has been convicted of, found guilty of, or entered a |
plea of guilty to, on or
after January 1, 2022 ( the effective |
date of Public Act 101-652) this amendatory Act of the 101st |
General Assembly 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, 11-6.5, 11-6.6,
11-9.1, 11-9.1B, |
11-14, 11-14.1, 11-30, 12-2, 12-3.2, 12-3.4, 12-3.5, 16-1, |
17-1, 17-2, 26.5-1, 26.5-2, 26.5-3, 28-3, 29-1, any |
misdemeanor in violation of any Section of Part E of Title III |
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, or any felony or misdemeanor in |
violation of federal law or the law of any state that is the |
equivalent of any of the offenses specified therein. The Board |
must appoint investigators to
enforce the duties conferred |
upon the
Board by this Act.
|
(a-1) For purposes of this Section, a person is "convicted |
of, or entered a plea of guilty to, plea of nolo contendere to, |
found guilty of" regardless of whether the adjudication of |
guilt or sentence is withheld or not entered thereon. This |
includes sentences of supervision, conditional discharge, or |
first offender probation, or any similar disposition provided |
for by law. |
(b) It is the responsibility of the sheriff or the chief |
executive officer
of every law enforcement governmental
agency |
or department within this State to report to the Board any |
arrest,
conviction, finding of guilt, plea of guilty, or plea |
of nolo contendere to, of any officer for an
offense |
identified in this Section, regardless of whether the |
adjudication of guilt or sentence is withheld or not entered |
thereon, this includes sentences of supervision, conditional |
discharge, or first offender probation.
|
(c) It is the duty and responsibility of every full-time |
and part-time law enforcement
officer in this State to report |
to
the Board within 14 days, and the officer's sheriff or chief |
|
executive officer,
of the officer's arrest, conviction, found |
guilty of, or plea of guilty for
an offense identified in this |
Section. Any full-time or part-time law enforcement
officer |
who knowingly makes, submits,
causes to be submitted, or files |
a false or untruthful report to the Board must
have the |
officer's certificate or waiver
immediately decertified or |
revoked.
|
(d) Any person, or a local or State agency, or the Board is |
immune from
liability for submitting,
disclosing, or releasing |
information of arrests, 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.
|
(e) Any full-time or part-time law enforcement officer |
with a certificate or waiver
issued by the Board who is
|
convicted of, found guilty of, or entered a plea of guilty to, |
or entered a plea of nolo contendere 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
report to the Board the officer's conviction as |
described in this Section or any
continued law enforcement |
practice
after receiving a conviction is a Class 4 felony.
|
For purposes of this Section, a person is considered to |
have been "convicted of, found guilty of, or entered a plea of |
|
guilty to, plea of nolo contendere to" regardless of whether |
the adjudication of guilt or sentence is withheld or not |
entered thereon, including sentences of supervision, |
conditional discharge, first offender probation, or any |
similar disposition as provided for by law. |
(f) The Board's investigators shall be law enforcement |
officers as defined in Section 2 of this Act. 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. An |
investigator shall not have been terminated for good cause, |
decertified, had his or her law enforcement license or |
certificate revoked in this or any other jurisdiction, or been |
convicted of any of the conduct listed in subsection (a). Any |
complaint filed against the Board's investigators shall be |
investigated by the Illinois State Police.
|
(g) The Board must request and receive information and |
assistance from any
federal, state, or local , or private |
enforcement
governmental agency as part of the authorized |
criminal background
investigation. The Illinois State Police |
must process, retain, and
additionally
provide
and disseminate |
information to the Board concerning criminal charges, arrests,
|
convictions, and their disposition, that have
been filed |
against a basic academy applicant, law enforcement
applicant, |
or law enforcement officer whose fingerprint identification |
cards
are on file or maintained by the Illinois State Police. |
|
The Federal
Bureau
of
Investigation must provide the Board any |
criminal history record information
contained in its files |
pertaining to law
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
Illinois 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.
|
(g-5) Notwithstanding any provision of law to the |
contrary, the changes to this Section made by this amendatory
|
Act of the 102nd General Assembly and Public Act 101-652 shall
|
apply prospectively only from July 1, 2022. |
(h) (Blank).
|
(i) (Blank).
|
(j) (Blank).
|
(k) (Blank).
|
(l) (Blank).
|
(m) (Blank).
|
(n) (Blank).
|
(o) (Blank).
|
(p) (Blank).
|
(q) (Blank).
|
(r) (Blank).
|
(Source: P.A. 101-187, eff. 1-1-20; 101-652, eff. 1-1-22; |
102-538, eff. 8-20-21; revised 10-13-21.)
|
|
(50 ILCS 705/6.2)
|
(Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2022) |
Sec. 6.2. Officer professional conduct database. In order |
to ensure the continuing effectiveness of this
Section, it is |
set forth in full and reenacted by this amendatory
Act of the |
102nd General Assembly. This
reenactment is intended as a |
continuation of this Section. This
reenactment is
not intended |
to supersede any amendment to this Section that may be
made by |
any other Public Act of the 102nd General Assembly.
|
(a) All law enforcement agencies shall notify the Board of |
any final determination of willful violation of department or |
agency policy, official misconduct, or violation of law when:
|
(1) the officer is discharged or dismissed as a result |
of the violation; or
|
(2) the officer resigns during the course of an |
investigation and after the officer has been served notice |
that he or she is under investigation that is based on the |
commission of any felony or sex offense.
|
The agency shall report to the Board within 30 days of a |
final decision of discharge or dismissal and final exhaustion |
of any appeal, or resignation, and shall provide information |
regarding the nature of the violation.
|
(b) Upon receiving notification from a law enforcement |
agency, the Board must notify the law enforcement officer of |
the report and his or her right to provide a statement |
|
regarding the reported violation. |
(c) The Board shall maintain a database readily available |
to any chief administrative officer, or his or her designee, |
of a law enforcement agency or any State's Attorney that shall |
show each reported instance, including the name of the |
officer, the nature of the violation, reason for the final |
decision of discharge or dismissal, and any statement provided |
by the officer.
|
(Source: P.A. 101-652, eff. 7-1-21. Repealed by P.A. 101-652, |
Article 25, Section 25-45, eff. 1-1-22.) |
(50 ILCS 705/6.3) |
(This Section may contain text from a Public Act with a |
delayed effective date ) |
Sec. 6.3. Discretionary decertification of full-time and |
part-time law enforcement officers. |
(a) Definitions. For purposes of this Section 6.3: |
"Duty to intervene" means an obligation to intervene to |
prevent harm from occurring that arises when: an officer is |
present, and has reason to know (1) that excessive force is |
being used or that any constitutional violation has been |
committed by a law enforcement official; and (2) the officer |
has a realistic opportunity to intervene. This duty applies |
equally to supervisory and nonsupervisory officers. If aid is |
required, the officer shall not, when reasonable to administer |
aid, knowingly and willingly refuse to render aid as defined |
|
by State or federal law. An officer does not violate this duty |
if the failure to render aid is due to circumstances such as |
lack of appropriate specialized training, lack of resources or |
equipment, or if it is unsafe or impracticable to render aid. |
"Excessive use of force" means using force in violation of |
State or federal law. |
"False statement" means (1) any knowingly false statement |
provided on a form or report, (2) that the writer does not |
believe to be true, and (3) that the writer includes to mislead |
a public servant in performing the public servant's official |
functions. |
"Perjury" means that as defined under Sections 32-2 and |
32-3 of the Criminal Code of 2012. |
"Tampers with or fabricates evidence" means if a law |
enforcement officer (1) has reason to believe that an official |
proceeding is pending or may be instituted, and (2) alters, |
destroys, conceals, or removes any record, document, data, |
video or thing to impair its validity or availability in the |
proceeding. |
(b) Decertification conduct.
The Board has the authority |
to decertify a full-time or a part-time law enforcement |
officer upon a determination by the Board that the law |
enforcement officer has: |
(1) committed an act that would constitute a felony or |
misdemeanor which could serve as basis for automatic |
decertification, whether or not the law enforcement |
|
officer was criminally prosecuted, and whether or not the |
law enforcement officer's employment was terminated; |
(2) exercised excessive use of force; |
(3) failed to comply with the officer's duty to |
intervene, including through acts or omissions; |
(4) tampered with a dash camera or body-worn camera or |
data recorded by a dash camera or body-worn camera or |
directed another to tamper with or turn off a dash camera |
or body-worn camera or data recorded by a dash camera or |
body-worn camera for the purpose of concealing, destroying |
or altering potential evidence; |
(5) engaged in the following conduct relating to the |
reporting, investigation, or prosecution of a crime: |
committed perjury, made a false statement, or knowingly |
tampered with or fabricated evidence; and |
(6) engaged in any unprofessional, unethical, |
deceptive, or deleterious conduct or practice harmful to |
the public; such conduct or practice need not have |
resulted in actual injury to any person. As used in this |
paragraph, the term "unprofessional conduct" shall include |
any departure from, or failure to conform to, the minimal |
standards of acceptable and prevailing practice of an |
officer. |
(b-5) The Board has the authority to decertify a full-time |
or part-time law enforcement officer notwithstanding whether a |
law enforcement agency takes disciplinary action against a law |
|
enforcement officer for the same underlying conduct as |
outlined in subsection (b). |
(c) Notice of Alleged Violation. |
(1) The following individuals and agencies shall |
notify the Board within 7 days of becoming aware of any |
violation described in subsection (b): |
(A) A law enforcement governmental agency as |
defined in Section 2
or any law enforcement officer of |
this State. For this subsection (c), law enforcement |
governmental agency includes, but is not limited to, a |
civilian review board,
an inspector general, and legal |
counsel for a law enforcement
government agency. |
(B) The Executive Director of the Board; |
(C) A State's Attorney's Office of this State. |
"Becoming aware" does not include confidential |
communications between agency lawyers and agencies |
regarding legal advice. For purposes of this subsection, |
" law enforcement governmental agency" does not include the |
Illinois
Attorney General when providing legal |
representation to a law enforcement officer under the |
State Employee Indemnification Act. |
(2) Any person may also notify the Board of any |
conduct the person believes a law enforcement officer has |
committed as described in subsection (b). Such |
notifications may be made confidentially. Notwithstanding |
any other provision in state law or any collective |
|
bargaining agreement, the Board shall accept notice and |
investigate any allegations from individuals who remain |
confidential. |
(3) Upon written request, the Board shall disclose to |
the individual or entity who filed a notice of violation |
the status of the Board's review. |
(d) Form. The notice of violation reported under |
subsection (c) shall be on a form prescribed by the Board in |
its rules. The form shall be publicly available by paper and |
electronic means. The form shall include fields for the |
following information, at a minimum: |
(1) the full name, address, and telephone number of |
the
person submitting the notice; |
(2) if submitted under subsection (c)(1), the agency |
name
and title of the person submitting the notice; |
(3) the full name, badge number, employing |
governmental agency, and physical description of the |
officer, if known; |
(4) the full name or names, address or addresses, |
telephone number or numbers, and physical description or |
descriptions of any witnesses, if known; |
(5) a concise statement of facts that describe the |
alleged violation and any copies of supporting evidence |
including but not limited to any photographic, video, or |
audio recordings of the incident; |
(6) whether the person submitting the notice has |
|
notified any other agency; and |
(7) an option for an individual, who submits directly |
to the Board, to consent to have the individual's identity |
disclosed. The identity of any individual providing |
information or reporting any possible or alleged violation |
to the Board shall be kept confidential and may not be |
disclosed without the consent of that individual, unless |
the individual consents to disclosure of the individual's |
name or disclosure of the individual's identity is |
otherwise required by law. The confidentiality granted by |
this subsection does not preclude the disclosure of the |
identity of a person in any capacity other than as the |
source of an allegation. |
(a) The identity of any individual providing |
information or reporting any possible or alleged |
violation to the Board shall be kept confidential and |
may not be disclosed without the consent of that |
individual, unless the individual consents to |
disclosure of the individual's name or disclosure of |
the individual's identity is otherwise required by |
law. The confidentiality granted by this subsection |
does not preclude the disclosure of the identity of a |
person in any capacity other than as the source of an |
allegation. |
Nothing in this subsection (d) shall preclude the Board |
from receiving, investigating, or acting upon allegations made |
|
confidentially or in a format different from the form provided |
for in this subsection. |
(e) Preliminary review. |
(1) The Board shall complete a preliminary review of |
the allegations to determine whether there is sufficient |
information to warrant a further investigation of any |
violations of the Act. Upon initiating a preliminary |
review of the allegations, the Board shall notify the head |
of the law enforcement governmental agency that employs |
the law enforcement officer who is the subject of the |
allegations. At the request of the Board, the law |
enforcement governmental agency must submit any copies of |
investigative findings, evidence, or documentation to the |
Board in accordance with rules adopted by the Board to |
facilitate the Board's preliminary review. The Board may |
correspond with the law enforcement governmental agency, |
official records clerks or any investigative agencies in |
conducting its preliminary review. |
(2) During the preliminary review, the Board will take |
all reasonable steps to discover any and all objective |
verifiable evidence relevant to the alleged violation |
through the identification, retention, review, and |
analysis of all currently available evidence, including, |
but not limited to: all time-sensitive evidence, audio and |
video evidence, physical evidence, arrest reports, |
photographic evidence, GPS records, computer data, lab |
|
reports, medical documents, and witness interviews. All |
reasonable steps will be taken to preserve relevant |
evidence identified during the preliminary investigation. |
(3) If after a preliminary review of the alleged |
violation or violations, the Board believes there is |
sufficient information to warrant further investigation of |
any violations of this Act, the alleged violation or |
violations shall be assigned for investigation in |
accordance with subsection (f). |
(4) If after a review of the allegations, the Board |
believes there is insufficient information supporting the |
allegations to warrant further investigation, it may close |
a notice. Notification of the Board's decision to close a |
notice shall be sent to all relevant individuals, |
agencies, and any entities that received notice of the |
violation under subsection (c) within 30 days of the |
notice being closed, except in cases where the notice is |
submitted anonymously if the complainant is unknown. |
(5) Except when the Board has received notice under |
subparagraph (A) of paragraph (1) of subsection (c), no |
later than 30 days after receiving notice, the Board shall |
report any notice of violation it
receives to the relevant |
law enforcement governmental agency, unless reporting the |
notice would jeopardize any subsequent investigation. The |
Board shall also record any notice of violation it |
receives to the Officer Professional Conduct Database in |
|
accordance with Section 9.2. The Board shall report to the |
appropriate State's Attorney any alleged violations that |
contain allegations, claims, or factual assertions that, |
if true, would constitute a violation of Illinois law. The |
Board shall inform the law enforcement officer via |
certified mail that it has received a notice of violation |
against the law enforcement officer. |
If the Board determines that due to the circumstances |
and the nature of the allegation that it would not be |
prudent to notify the law enforcement officer and the |
officer's law enforcement governmental agency unless and |
until the filing of a Formal Complaint, the Board shall |
document in the file the reason or reasons a notification |
was not made. |
(6) If the law enforcement officer is involved in a |
criminal proceeding on the same subject as the notice of |
violation has been initiated against the law enforcement |
officer , the Board is responsible for maintaining a |
current status report including court dates, hearings, |
pleas, adjudication status and sentencing. A State's |
Attorney's Office must notify is responsible for notifying |
the Board of any criminal charges filed against a law |
enforcement officer , and must provide updates of |
significant developments to the Board in a timely manner |
but no later than 30 days after such developments . |
(f) Investigations; requirements. Investigations are to be |
|
assigned after a preliminary review, unless the investigations |
were closed under paragraph (4) of subsection (e), as follows |
in paragraphs (1), (2), and (3) of this subsection (f). |
(1) A law enforcement governmental agency that submits |
a notice of violation to the Board under subparagraph (A) |
of paragraph (1) of subsection (c) shall be responsible |
for conducting an investigation of the underlying |
allegations except when: (i) the law enforcement |
governmental agency refers the notice to another law |
enforcement governmental agency or the Board for |
investigation and such other agency or the Board agrees to |
conduct the investigation; (ii) an external, independent, |
or civilian oversight agency conducts the investigation in |
accordance with local ordinance or other applicable law; |
or (iii) the Board has determined that it will conduct the |
investigation based upon the facts and circumstances of |
the alleged violation, including but not limited to, |
investigations regarding the Chief or Sheriff of a law |
enforcement governmental agency, familial conflict of |
interests, complaints involving a substantial portion of a |
law enforcement governmental agency, or complaints |
involving a policy of a law enforcement governmental |
agency. Any agency or entity conducting an investigation |
under this paragraph (1) shall submit quarterly reports to |
the Board regarding the progress of the investigation. The |
quarterly report shall be reviewed by the individual or |
|
individuals at the Board who conducted the preliminary |
review, if available. |
Any agency or entity conducting an investigation under |
this paragraph (1) shall, within 7 days of completing an |
investigation, deliver an Investigative Summary Report and |
copies of any administrative evidence to the Board. If the |
Board finds an investigation conducted under this |
paragraph (1) is incomplete, unsatisfactory, or deficient |
in any way, the Board may direct the investigating entity |
or agency to take any additional investigative steps |
deemed necessary to thoroughly and satisfactorily complete |
the investigation, or the Board may take any steps |
necessary to complete the investigation. The investigating |
entity or agency or, when necessary, the Board will then |
amend and re-submit the Investigative Summary Report to |
the Board for approval. |
The Board shall submit a report to the investigating |
entity disclosing the name, address, and telephone numbers |
of persons who have knowledge of facts which are the |
subject of the investigation and identifying the subject |
matter of their knowledge. |
(2) The Board shall investigate and complete an
|
Investigative Summary Report when a State's Attorney's |
Office
submits a notice of violation to the Board under
|
(c)(1)(C). |
(3) When a person submits a notice to the Board under |
|
paragraph (2) of subsection (c), The Board shall assign |
the investigation to the law enforcement governmental |
agency that employs the law enforcement officer, except |
when: (i) the law enforcement governmental agency requests |
to refer the notice to another law enforcement |
governmental agency or the Board for investigation and |
such other agency or the Board agrees to conduct the |
investigation; (ii) an external, independent, or civilian |
oversight agency conducts the investigation in accordance |
with local ordinance or other applicable law; or (iii) the |
Board has determined that it will conduct the |
investigation based upon the facts and circumstances of |
the alleged violation, including but not limited to, |
investigations regarding the Chief or Sheriff of a law |
enforcement governmental agency, familial conflict of |
interests, complaints involving a substantial portion of a |
law enforcement governmental agency, or complaints |
involving a policy of a law enforcement governmental |
agency. |
The investigating entity or agency shall submit |
quarterly reports to the Board regarding the progress of |
the investigation in a form to be determined by the Board. |
The quarterly report shall be reviewed by the individual |
at the Board who conducted the preliminary review, if |
available. |
The investigating entity or agency shall, within 7 days of |
|
completing an investigation, deliver an Investigative |
Summary Report and copies of any evidence to the Board. If |
the Board finds an investigation conducted under this |
subsection (f)(3) is incomplete, unsatisfactory, or |
deficient in any way, the Board may direct the |
investigating entity to take any additional investigative |
steps deemed necessary to thoroughly and satisfactorily |
complete the investigation, or the Board may take any |
steps necessary to complete the investigation. The |
investigating entity or agency or, when necessary, the |
Board will then amend and re-submit the The Investigative |
Summary Report to the Board for approval. The |
investigating entity shall cooperate with and assist the |
Board, as necessary, in any subsequent investigation. |
(4) Concurrent Investigations. The Board may, at any |
point, initiate a concurrent investigation under this |
section. The original investigating entity shall timely |
communicate, coordinate, and cooperate with the Board to |
the fullest extent. The Board shall promulgate rules that |
shall address, at a minimum, the sharing of information |
and investigative means such as subpoenas and interviewing |
witnesses. |
(5) Investigative Summary Report. An Investigative |
Summary Report shall contain, at a minimum, the |
allegations and elements within each allegation followed |
by the testimonial, documentary, or physical evidence that |
|
is relevant to each such allegation or element listed and |
discussed in association with it. All persons who have |
been interviewed and listed in the Investigative
Summary |
Report will be identified as a complainant, witness, |
person with specialized knowledge, or law enforcement |
employee. |
(6) Each law enforcement governmental agency shall |
adopt a written policy regarding the investigation of |
conduct under subsection (a) that involves a law |
enforcement officer employed by that law enforcement |
governmental agency. The written policy adopted must |
include the following, at a minimum: |
(a) Each law enforcement officer shall immediately |
report
any conduct under subsection (b) to the |
appropriate
supervising officer. |
(b) The written policy under this Section shall be
|
available for inspection and copying under the Freedom |
of
Information Act, and not subject to any exemption |
of that
Act. |
(7) Nothing in this Act shall prohibit a law |
enforcement governmental agency from conducting an |
investigation for the purpose of internal discipline. |
However, any such investigation shall be conducted in a |
manner that avoids interference with, and preserves the |
integrity of, any separate investigation by the Board |
being conducted. |
|
(g) Formal complaints. Upon receipt of an Investigative |
Summary Report, the Board shall review the Report and any |
relevant evidence obtained and determine whether there is |
reasonable basis to believe that the law enforcement officer |
committed any conduct that would be deemed a violation of this |
Act. If after reviewing the Report and any other relevant |
evidence obtained, the Board determines that a reasonable |
basis does exist, the Board shall file a formal complaint with |
the Certification Review Panel. |
(h) Formal Complaint Hearing. |
(1) Upon issuance of a formal complaint, the Panel |
shall set the matter for an initial hearing in front of an |
administrative law judge. At least 30 days before the date |
set for an initial hearing, the Panel must, in writing, |
notify the law enforcement officer subject to the |
complaint of the following: |
(i) the allegations against the law enforcement |
officer, the time and place for the hearing, and |
whether the law enforcement officer's
certification |
has been temporarily suspended under Section 8.3; |
(ii) the right to file a written answer to the |
complaint with the Panel within 30 days after service |
of the notice; |
(iii) if the law enforcement officer fails to |
comply with the notice of the default order in |
paragraph (2), the Panel shall enter a default order |
|
against the law enforcement officer along with a |
finding that the allegations in the complaint are |
deemed admitted, and that the law enforcement |
officer's certification may be revoked as a result; |
and |
(iv) the law enforcement officer may request an |
informal conference to surrender the officer's |
certification. |
(2) The Board shall send the law enforcement officer |
notice of the default order. The notice shall state that |
the officer has 30 days to notify the Board in writing of |
their desire to have the order vacated and to appear |
before the Board. If the law enforcement officer does not |
notify the Board within 30 days, the Board may set the |
matter for hearing. If the matter is set for hearing, the |
Board shall send the law enforcement officer the notice of |
the date, time and location of the hearing. If the law |
enforcement officer or counsel for the officer does |
appear, at the Board's discretion, the hearing may proceed |
or may be continued to a date and time agreed upon by all |
parties. If on the date of the hearing, neither the law |
enforcement officer nor counsel for the officer appears, |
the Board may proceed with the hearing for default in |
their absence. |
(3) If the law enforcement officer fails to comply |
with paragraph (2), all of the allegations contained in |
|
the complaint shall be deemed admitted and the law |
enforcement officer shall be decertified if, by a majority |
vote of the panel, the conduct charged in the complaint is |
found to constitute sufficient grounds for decertification |
under this Act. Notice of the decertification decision may |
be served by personal delivery, by mail, or, at the |
discretion of the Board, by electronic means as adopted by |
rule to the address or email address specified by the law |
enforcement officer in the officer's last communication |
with the Board. Notice shall also be provided to the law |
enforcement officer's employing law enforcement |
governmental agency. |
(4) The Board, at the request of the law enforcement |
officer subject to the Formal Complaint, may suspend a |
hearing on a Formal Complaint for no more than one year if |
a concurrent criminal matter is pending. If the law |
enforcement officer requests to have the hearing |
suspended, the law enforcement officer's certification |
shall be deemed inactive until the law enforcement |
officer's Formal Complaint hearing concludes. The Board or |
the law enforcement officer may request to have the |
hearing suspended for up to 6 additional months for good |
cause. This request may be renewed. For purposes of this |
paragraph (4), "good cause" means an incident or |
occurrence that is beyond the control of the requester and |
that prevents the hearing from occurring, or holding the |
|
hearing would impose an undue hardship or prejudice on the |
requester. |
(5) Surrender of certification or waiver. Upon the |
Board's issuance of a complaint, and prior to hearing on |
the matter, a law enforcement officer may choose to |
surrender the officer's certification or waiver by |
notifying the Board in writing of the officer's decision |
to do so. Upon receipt of such notification from the law |
enforcement officer, the Board shall immediately decertify |
the officer, or revoke any waiver previously granted. In |
the case of a surrender of certification or waiver, the |
Board's proceeding shall terminate. |
(6) Appointment of administrative law judges. The |
Board shall retain any attorney licensed to practice law |
in the State of Illinois to serve as an administrative law |
judge in any action involving initiated against a law |
enforcement officer under this Act. The administrative law |
judge shall be retained to a term of no greater than 4 |
years. If more than one judge is retained, the terms shall |
be staggered. The administrative law judge has full |
authority to conduct the hearings. |
Administrative law judges will receive initial and |
annual training that is adequate in quality, quantity, |
scope, and type, and will cover, at minimum the following |
topics: |
(i) constitutional and other relevant law on |
|
police-community encounters, including the law on the |
use of force and stops, searches, and arrests; |
(ii) police tactics; |
(iii) investigations of police conduct; |
(iv) impartial policing; |
(v) policing individuals in crisis; |
(vi) Illinois police policies, procedures, and |
disciplinary rules; |
(vii) procedural justice; and |
(viii) community outreach. |
The Board shall determine the content and extent of |
the training within the scope provided for by this |
subsection. |
(7) Hearing. At the hearing, the administrative law |
judge will hear the allegations alleged in the complaint. |
The law enforcement officer, the counsel of the officer's |
choosing, and the Board, or the officer's counsel, shall |
be afforded the opportunity to present any pertinent |
statements, testimony, evidence, and arguments. The law |
enforcement officer shall be afforded the opportunity to |
request that the Board compel the attendance of witnesses |
and production of related documents. After the conclusion |
of the hearing, the administrative law judge shall report |
any his or her findings of fact, conclusions of law, and |
recommended disposition to the Panel. If the law |
enforcement officer objects to any procedural or |
|
substantive legal portion of the report, the officer may |
do so by written brief filed with the Panel within 14 days |
after receipt of the report. The Panel may grant |
reasonable extensions for good cause shown or when |
mutually agreed upon by the parties. |
No later than 28 days before the hearing, a party |
shall disclose the following: |
(i) The name and, if known, the address and |
telephone number of each individual likely to have |
information relevant to the hearing that the |
disclosing party may use to support its claims or |
defenses. This includes, but is not limited to, any |
name that has previously been held as confidential by |
the Board. |
(ii) A copy of any documents and videos that are in |
the possession, custody, or control of the party, and |
that the disclosing party may use to support its |
claims or defenses. |
(8) Certification Review Meeting. Upon receipt of the |
administrative law judge's findings of fact, conclusions |
of law, and recommended disposition, and any submitted |
objections from the law enforcement officer, the Panel |
shall call for a certification review meeting. |
In such a meeting, the Panel may adjourn into a closed |
conference for the purposes of deliberating on the |
evidence presented during the hearing. In closed |
|
conference, the Panel shall consider the hearing officer's |
findings of fact, conclusions of law, and recommended |
disposition and may deliberate on all evidence and |
testimony received and may consider the weight and |
credibility to be given to the evidence received. No new |
or additional evidence may be presented to the Panel. |
After concluding its deliberations, the Panel shall |
convene in open session for its consideration of the |
matter. If a simple majority of the Panel finds that no |
allegations in the complaint supporting one or more |
charges of misconduct are proven by clear and convincing |
evidence, then the Panel shall recommend to the Board that |
the complaint be dismissed. If a simple majority of the |
Panel finds that the allegations in the complaint |
supporting one or more charges of misconduct are proven by |
clear and convincing evidence, then the Panel shall |
recommend to the Board to decertify the officer. The Panel |
shall prepare a summary report as soon as practicable |
after the completion of the meeting including the |
following: In doing so, the Panel may adopt, in whole or in |
part, the hearing officer's findings of fact, conclusions |
of law, and recommended disposition , and the Panel's |
order . |
(9) Final action by the Board. After receiving the |
Panel's recommendations and any objections by the law |
enforcement officer , and after due consideration of the |
|
Panel's recommendations, the Board, by majority vote, |
shall issue a final decision to decertify the law |
enforcement officer or take no action in regard to the law |
enforcement officer. No new or additional evidence may be |
presented to the Board. If the Board makes a final |
decision contrary to the recommendations of the Panel, the |
Board shall set forth in its final written decision the |
specific written reasons for not following the Panel's |
recommendations. A copy of the Board's final decision |
shall be served upon the law enforcement officer by the |
Board, either personally or as provided in this Act for |
the service of a notice of hearing. A copy of the Board's |
final decision also shall be delivered to the last |
employing law enforcement governmental agency, the |
complainant, and the Panel. |
(10) Reconsideration of the Board's Decision. Within |
30 days after service of the Board's final decision, the |
Panel or the law enforcement officer may file a written |
motion for reconsideration with the Review Committee |
Board . The motion for reconsideration shall specify the |
particular grounds for reconsideration. The non-moving |
party may respond to the motion for reconsideration. The |
Review Committee shall only address the issues raised by |
the parties. |
The Review Committee Board may deny the motion for |
reconsideration, or it may grant the motion in whole or in |
|
part and issue a new final decision in the matter. The |
Review Committee Board must notify the law enforcement |
officer and their last employing law enforcement agency |
within 14 days of a denial and state the reasons for |
denial.
|
(i) This Section applies to conduct by a full-time or |
part-time law enforcement officer in violation of subsection |
(b) that occurred before, on, or after the effective date of |
this amendatory Act of the 102nd General Assembly. |
(j) Notwithstanding any provision of law to the contrary, |
the changes made to this Section by this amendatory Act of the |
102nd General Assembly and Public Act 101-652 take effect July |
1, 2022. |
(Source: P.A. 101-652, eff. 1-1-22.) |
(50 ILCS 705/6.7) |
(This Section may contain text from a Public Act with a |
delayed effective date ) |
Sec. 6.7. Certification and decertification procedures |
under Act exclusive. Notwithstanding any other law, the |
certification and decertification procedures, including the |
conduct of any investigation or hearing, under this Act are |
the sole and exclusive procedures for certification as law |
enforcement officers in Illinois and are not subject to |
collective bargaining under the Illinois Public Labor |
Relations Act or appealable except as set forth herein. The |
|
provisions of any collective bargaining agreement adopted by a |
law enforcement governmental agency and covering the law |
enforcement officer or officers under investigation shall be |
inapplicable to any investigation or hearing conducted under |
this Act. |
An individual has no property interest in law enforcement |
certification employment or otherwise resulting from law |
enforcement officer certification at the time of initial |
certification or at any time thereafter, including, but not |
limited to, after decertification or after the officer's |
certification has been deemed inactive. Nothing in this Act |
shall be construed to create a requirement that a law |
enforcement governmental agency shall continue to employ a law |
enforcement officer who has been decertified.
|
(Source: P.A. 101-652, eff. 1-1-22.)
|
(50 ILCS 705/7) (from Ch. 85, par. 507)
|
(Text of Section before amendment by P.A. 101-652 )
|
Sec. 7. Rules and standards for schools. The Board shall |
adopt rules and
minimum standards for such schools which shall |
include, but not be limited to,
the following:
|
a. The curriculum for probationary police officers |
which shall be
offered by all certified schools shall |
include, but not be limited to,
courses of procedural |
justice, arrest and use and control tactics, search and |
seizure, including temporary questioning, civil rights, |
|
human rights, human relations,
cultural competency, |
including implicit bias and racial and ethnic sensitivity,
|
criminal law, law of criminal procedure, constitutional |
and proper use of law enforcement authority, vehicle and |
traffic law including
uniform and non-discriminatory |
enforcement of the Illinois Vehicle Code,
traffic control |
and accident investigation, techniques of obtaining
|
physical evidence, court testimonies, statements, reports, |
firearms
training, training in the use of electronic |
control devices, including the psychological and |
physiological effects of the use of those devices on |
humans, first-aid (including cardiopulmonary |
resuscitation), training in the administration of opioid |
antagonists as defined in paragraph (1) of subsection (e) |
of Section 5-23 of the Substance Use Disorder Act, |
handling of
juvenile offenders, recognition of
mental |
conditions and crises, including, but not limited to, the |
disease of addiction, which require immediate assistance |
and response and methods to
safeguard and provide |
assistance to a person in need of mental
treatment, |
recognition of abuse, neglect, financial exploitation, and |
self-neglect of adults with disabilities and older adults, |
as defined in Section 2 of the Adult Protective Services |
Act, crimes against the elderly, law of evidence, the |
hazards of high-speed police vehicle
chases with an |
emphasis on alternatives to the high-speed chase, and
|
|
physical training. The curriculum shall include specific |
training in
techniques for immediate response to and |
investigation of cases of domestic
violence and of sexual |
assault of adults and children, including cultural |
perceptions and common myths of sexual assault and sexual |
abuse as well as interview techniques that are age |
sensitive and are trauma informed, victim centered, and |
victim sensitive. The curriculum shall include
training in |
techniques designed to promote effective
communication at |
the initial contact with crime victims and ways to |
comprehensively
explain to victims and witnesses their |
rights under the Rights
of Crime Victims and Witnesses Act |
and the Crime
Victims Compensation Act. The curriculum |
shall also include training in effective recognition of |
and responses to stress, trauma, and post-traumatic stress |
experienced by police officers that is consistent with |
Section 25 of the Illinois Mental Health First Aid |
Training Act in a peer setting, including recognizing |
signs and symptoms of work-related cumulative stress, |
issues that may lead to suicide, and solutions for |
intervention with peer support resources. The curriculum |
shall include a block of instruction addressing the |
mandatory reporting requirements under the Abused and |
Neglected Child Reporting Act. The curriculum shall also |
include a block of instruction aimed at identifying and |
interacting with persons with autism and other |
|
developmental or physical disabilities, reducing barriers |
to reporting crimes against persons with autism, and |
addressing the unique challenges presented by cases |
involving victims or witnesses with autism and other |
developmental disabilities. The curriculum shall include |
training in the detection and investigation of all forms |
of human trafficking. The curriculum shall also include |
instruction in trauma-informed responses designed to |
ensure the physical safety and well-being of a child of an |
arrested parent or immediate family member; this |
instruction must include, but is not limited to: (1) |
understanding the trauma experienced by the child while |
maintaining the integrity of the arrest and safety of |
officers, suspects, and other involved individuals; (2) |
de-escalation tactics that would include the use of force |
when reasonably necessary; and (3) inquiring whether a |
child will require supervision and care. The curriculum |
for
permanent police officers shall include, but not be |
limited to: (1) refresher
and in-service training in any |
of the courses listed above in this
subparagraph, (2) |
advanced courses in any of the subjects listed above in
|
this subparagraph, (3) training for supervisory personnel, |
and (4)
specialized training in subjects and fields to be |
selected by the board. The training in the use of |
electronic control devices shall be conducted for |
probationary police officers, including University police |
|
officers.
|
b. Minimum courses of study, attendance requirements |
and equipment
requirements.
|
c. Minimum requirements for instructors.
|
d. Minimum basic training requirements, which a |
probationary police
officer must satisfactorily complete |
before being eligible for permanent
employment as a local |
law enforcement officer for a participating local
|
governmental agency. Those requirements shall include |
training in first aid
(including cardiopulmonary |
resuscitation).
|
e. Minimum basic training requirements, which a |
probationary county
corrections officer must |
satisfactorily complete before being eligible for
|
permanent employment as a county corrections officer for a |
participating
local governmental agency.
|
f. Minimum basic training requirements which a |
probationary court
security officer must satisfactorily |
complete before being eligible for
permanent employment as |
a court security officer for a participating local
|
governmental agency. The Board shall
establish those |
training requirements which it considers appropriate for |
court
security officers and shall certify schools to |
conduct that training.
|
A person hired to serve as a court security officer |
must obtain from the
Board a certificate (i) attesting to |
|
his or her successful completion of the
training course; |
(ii) attesting to his or her satisfactory
completion of a |
training program of similar content and number of hours |
that
has been found acceptable by the Board under the |
provisions of this Act; or
(iii) attesting to the Board's |
determination that the training
course is unnecessary |
because of the person's extensive prior law enforcement
|
experience.
|
Individuals who currently serve as court security |
officers shall be deemed
qualified to continue to serve in |
that capacity so long as they are certified
as provided by |
this Act within 24 months of June 1, 1997 (the effective |
date of Public Act 89-685). Failure to be so certified, |
absent a waiver from the
Board, shall cause the officer to |
forfeit his or her position.
|
All individuals hired as court security officers on or |
after June 1, 1997 (the effective
date of Public Act |
89-685) shall be certified within 12 months of the
date of |
their hire, unless a waiver has been obtained by the |
Board, or they
shall forfeit their positions.
|
The Sheriff's Merit Commission, if one exists, or the |
Sheriff's Office if
there is no Sheriff's Merit |
Commission, shall maintain a list of all
individuals who |
have filed applications to become court security officers |
and
who meet the eligibility requirements established |
under this Act. Either
the Sheriff's Merit Commission, or |
|
the Sheriff's Office if no Sheriff's Merit
Commission |
exists, shall establish a schedule of reasonable intervals |
for
verification of the applicants' qualifications under
|
this Act and as established by the Board.
|
g. Minimum in-service training requirements, which a |
police officer must satisfactorily complete every 3 years. |
Those requirements shall include constitutional and proper |
use of law enforcement authority, procedural justice, |
civil rights, human rights, mental health awareness and |
response, officer wellness, reporting child abuse and |
neglect, and cultural competency. |
h. Minimum in-service training requirements, which a |
police officer must satisfactorily complete at least |
annually. Those requirements shall include law updates and |
use of force training which shall include scenario based |
training, or similar training approved by the Board. |
(Source: P.A. 100-121, eff. 1-1-18; 100-247, eff. 1-1-18; |
100-759, eff. 1-1-19; 100-863, eff. 8-14-18; 100-910, eff. |
1-1-19; 101-18, eff. 1-1-20; 101-81, eff. 7-12-19; 101-215, |
eff. 1-1-20; 101-224, eff. 8-9-19; 101-375, eff. 8-16-19; |
101-564, eff. 1-1-20; revised 9-10-19.) |
(Text of Section after amendment by P.A. 101-652, Article |
10, Section 10-143 but before amendment by P.A. 101-652, |
Article 25, Section 25-40 )
|
Sec. 7. Rules and standards for schools. The Board shall |
|
adopt rules and
minimum standards for such schools which shall |
include, but not be limited to,
the following:
|
a. The curriculum for probationary police officers |
which shall be
offered by all certified schools shall |
include, but not be limited to,
courses of procedural |
justice, arrest and use and control tactics, search and |
seizure, including temporary questioning, civil rights, |
human rights, human relations,
cultural competency, |
including implicit bias and racial and ethnic sensitivity,
|
criminal law, law of criminal procedure, constitutional |
and proper use of law enforcement authority, crisis |
intervention training, vehicle and traffic law including
|
uniform and non-discriminatory enforcement of the Illinois |
Vehicle Code,
traffic control and accident investigation, |
techniques of obtaining
physical evidence, court |
testimonies, statements, reports, firearms
training, |
training in the use of electronic control devices, |
including the psychological and physiological effects of |
the use of those devices on humans, first-aid (including |
cardiopulmonary resuscitation), training in the |
administration of opioid antagonists as defined in |
paragraph (1) of subsection (e) of Section 5-23 of the |
Substance Use Disorder Act, handling of
juvenile |
offenders, recognition of
mental conditions and crises, |
including, but not limited to, the disease of addiction, |
which require immediate assistance and response and |
|
methods to
safeguard and provide assistance to a person in |
need of mental
treatment, recognition of abuse, neglect, |
financial exploitation, and self-neglect of adults with |
disabilities and older adults, as defined in Section 2 of |
the Adult Protective Services Act, crimes against the |
elderly, law of evidence, the hazards of high-speed police |
vehicle
chases with an emphasis on alternatives to the |
high-speed chase, and
physical training. The curriculum |
shall include specific training in
techniques for |
immediate response to and investigation of cases of |
domestic
violence and of sexual assault of adults and |
children, including cultural perceptions and common myths |
of sexual assault and sexual abuse as well as interview |
techniques that are age sensitive and are trauma informed, |
victim centered, and victim sensitive. The curriculum |
shall include
training in techniques designed to promote |
effective
communication at the initial contact with crime |
victims and ways to comprehensively
explain to victims and |
witnesses their rights under the Rights
of Crime Victims |
and Witnesses Act and the Crime
Victims Compensation Act. |
The curriculum shall also include training in effective |
recognition of and responses to stress, trauma, and |
post-traumatic stress experienced by police officers that |
is consistent with Section 25 of the Illinois Mental |
Health First Aid Training Act in a peer setting, including |
recognizing signs and symptoms of work-related cumulative |
|
stress, issues that may lead to suicide, and solutions for |
intervention with peer support resources. The curriculum |
shall include a block of instruction addressing the |
mandatory reporting requirements under the Abused and |
Neglected Child Reporting Act. The curriculum shall also |
include a block of instruction aimed at identifying and |
interacting with persons with autism and other |
developmental or physical disabilities, reducing barriers |
to reporting crimes against persons with autism, and |
addressing the unique challenges presented by cases |
involving victims or witnesses with autism and other |
developmental disabilities. The curriculum shall include |
training in the detection and investigation of all forms |
of human trafficking. The curriculum shall also include |
instruction in trauma-informed responses designed to |
ensure the physical safety and well-being of a child of an |
arrested parent or immediate family member; this |
instruction must include, but is not limited to: (1) |
understanding the trauma experienced by the child while |
maintaining the integrity of the arrest and safety of |
officers, suspects, and other involved individuals; (2) |
de-escalation tactics that would include the use of force |
when reasonably necessary; and (3) inquiring whether a |
child will require supervision and care. The curriculum |
for probationary police officers shall include: (1) at |
least 12 hours of hands-on, scenario-based role-playing; |
|
(2) at least 6 hours of instruction on use of force |
techniques, including the use of de-escalation techniques |
to prevent or reduce the need for force whenever safe and |
feasible; (3) specific training on officer safety |
techniques, including cover, concealment, and time; and |
(4) at least 6 hours of training focused on high-risk |
traffic stops. The curriculum for
permanent police |
officers shall include, but not be limited to: (1) |
refresher
and in-service training in any of the courses |
listed above in this
subparagraph, (2) advanced courses in |
any of the subjects listed above in
this subparagraph, (3) |
training for supervisory personnel, and (4)
specialized |
training in subjects and fields to be selected by the |
board. The training in the use of electronic control |
devices shall be conducted for probationary police |
officers, including University police officers.
|
b. Minimum courses of study, attendance requirements |
and equipment
requirements.
|
c. Minimum requirements for instructors.
|
d. Minimum basic training requirements, which a |
probationary police
officer must satisfactorily complete |
before being eligible for permanent
employment as a local |
law enforcement officer for a participating local
|
governmental agency. Those requirements shall include |
training in first aid
(including cardiopulmonary |
resuscitation).
|
|
e. Minimum basic training requirements, which a |
probationary county
corrections officer must |
satisfactorily complete before being eligible for
|
permanent employment as a county corrections officer for a |
participating
local governmental agency.
|
f. Minimum basic training requirements which a |
probationary court
security officer must satisfactorily |
complete before being eligible for
permanent employment as |
a court security officer for a participating local
|
governmental agency. The Board shall
establish those |
training requirements which it considers appropriate for |
court
security officers and shall certify schools to |
conduct that training.
|
A person hired to serve as a court security officer |
must obtain from the
Board a certificate (i) attesting to |
his or her successful completion of the
training course; |
(ii) attesting to his or her satisfactory
completion of a |
training program of similar content and number of hours |
that
has been found acceptable by the Board under the |
provisions of this Act; or
(iii) attesting to the Board's |
determination that the training
course is unnecessary |
because of the person's extensive prior law enforcement
|
experience.
|
Individuals who currently serve as court security |
officers shall be deemed
qualified to continue to serve in |
that capacity so long as they are certified
as provided by |
|
this Act within 24 months of June 1, 1997 (the effective |
date of Public Act 89-685). Failure to be so certified, |
absent a waiver from the
Board, shall cause the officer to |
forfeit his or her position.
|
All individuals hired as court security officers on or |
after June 1, 1997 (the effective
date of Public Act |
89-685) shall be certified within 12 months of the
date of |
their hire, unless a waiver has been obtained by the |
Board, or they
shall forfeit their positions.
|
The Sheriff's Merit Commission, if one exists, or the |
Sheriff's Office if
there is no Sheriff's Merit |
Commission, shall maintain a list of all
individuals who |
have filed applications to become court security officers |
and
who meet the eligibility requirements established |
under this Act. Either
the Sheriff's Merit Commission, or |
the Sheriff's Office if no Sheriff's Merit
Commission |
exists, shall establish a schedule of reasonable intervals |
for
verification of the applicants' qualifications under
|
this Act and as established by the Board.
|
g. Minimum in-service training requirements, which a |
police officer must satisfactorily complete every 3 years. |
Those requirements shall include constitutional and proper |
use of law enforcement authority, procedural justice, |
civil rights, human rights, reporting child abuse and |
neglect, and cultural competency, including implicit bias |
and racial and ethnic sensitivity. |
|
h. Minimum in-service training requirements, which a |
police officer must satisfactorily complete at least |
annually. Those requirements shall include law updates, |
emergency medical response training and certification, |
crisis intervention training, and officer wellness and |
mental health. |
i. Minimum in-service training requirements as set |
forth in Section 10.6. |
(Source: P.A. 100-121, eff. 1-1-18; 100-247, eff. 1-1-18; |
100-759, eff. 1-1-19; 100-863, eff. 8-14-18; 100-910, eff. |
1-1-19; 101-18, eff. 1-1-20; 101-81, eff. 7-12-19; 101-215, |
eff. 1-1-20; 101-224, eff. 8-9-19; 101-375, eff. 8-16-19; |
101-564, eff. 1-1-20; P.A. 101-652, Article 10, Section |
10-143, eff. 7-1-21.) |
(Text of Section after amendment by P.A. 101-652, Article |
25, Section 25-40 ) |
Sec. 7. Rules and standards for schools. The Board shall |
adopt rules and
minimum standards for such schools which shall |
include, but not be limited to,
the following:
|
a. The curriculum for probationary law enforcement |
officers which shall be
offered by all certified schools |
shall include, but not be limited to,
courses of |
procedural justice, arrest and use and control tactics, |
search and seizure, including temporary questioning, civil |
rights, human rights, human relations,
cultural |
|
competency, including implicit bias and racial and ethnic |
sensitivity,
criminal law, law of criminal procedure, |
constitutional and proper use of law enforcement |
authority, crisis intervention training, vehicle and |
traffic law including
uniform and non-discriminatory |
enforcement of the Illinois Vehicle Code,
traffic control |
and accident investigation, techniques of obtaining
|
physical evidence, court testimonies, statements, reports, |
firearms
training, training in the use of electronic |
control devices, including the psychological and |
physiological effects of the use of those devices on |
humans, first-aid (including cardiopulmonary |
resuscitation), training in the administration of opioid |
antagonists as defined in paragraph (1) of subsection (e) |
of Section 5-23 of the Substance Use Disorder Act, |
handling of
juvenile offenders, recognition of
mental |
conditions and crises, including, but not limited to, the |
disease of addiction, which require immediate assistance |
and response and methods to
safeguard and provide |
assistance to a person in need of mental
treatment, |
recognition of abuse, neglect, financial exploitation, and |
self-neglect of adults with disabilities and older adults, |
as defined in Section 2 of the Adult Protective Services |
Act, crimes against the elderly, law of evidence, the |
hazards of high-speed police vehicle
chases with an |
emphasis on alternatives to the high-speed chase, and
|
|
physical training. The curriculum shall include specific |
training in
techniques for immediate response to and |
investigation of cases of domestic
violence and of sexual |
assault of adults and children, including cultural |
perceptions and common myths of sexual assault and sexual |
abuse as well as interview techniques that are age |
sensitive and are trauma informed, victim centered, and |
victim sensitive. The curriculum shall include
training in |
techniques designed to promote effective
communication at |
the initial contact with crime victims and ways to |
comprehensively
explain to victims and witnesses their |
rights under the Rights
of Crime Victims and Witnesses Act |
and the Crime
Victims Compensation Act. The curriculum |
shall also include training in effective recognition of |
and responses to stress, trauma, and post-traumatic stress |
experienced by law enforcement officers that is consistent |
with Section 25 of the Illinois Mental Health First Aid |
Training Act in a peer setting, including recognizing |
signs and symptoms of work-related cumulative stress, |
issues that may lead to suicide, and solutions for |
intervention with peer support resources. The curriculum |
shall include a block of instruction addressing the |
mandatory reporting requirements under the Abused and |
Neglected Child Reporting Act. The curriculum shall also |
include a block of instruction aimed at identifying and |
interacting with persons with autism and other |
|
developmental or physical disabilities, reducing barriers |
to reporting crimes against persons with autism, and |
addressing the unique challenges presented by cases |
involving victims or witnesses with autism and other |
developmental disabilities. The curriculum shall include |
training in the detection and investigation of all forms |
of human trafficking. The curriculum shall also include |
instruction in trauma-informed responses designed to |
ensure the physical safety and well-being of a child of an |
arrested parent or immediate family member; this |
instruction must include, but is not limited to: (1) |
understanding the trauma experienced by the child while |
maintaining the integrity of the arrest and safety of |
officers, suspects, and other involved individuals; (2) |
de-escalation tactics that would include the use of force |
when reasonably necessary; and (3) inquiring whether a |
child will require supervision and care. The curriculum |
for probationary law enforcement police officers shall |
include: (1) at least 12 hours of hands-on, scenario-based |
role-playing; (2) at least 6 hours of instruction on use |
of force techniques, including the use of de-escalation |
techniques to prevent or reduce the need for force |
whenever safe and feasible; (3) specific training on |
officer safety techniques, including cover, concealment, |
and time; and (4) at least 6 hours of training focused on |
high-risk traffic stops. The curriculum for
permanent law |
|
enforcement officers shall include, but not be limited to: |
(1) refresher
and in-service training in any of the |
courses listed above in this
subparagraph, (2) advanced |
courses in any of the subjects listed above in
this |
subparagraph, (3) training for supervisory personnel, and |
(4)
specialized training in subjects and fields to be |
selected by the board. The training in the use of |
electronic control devices shall be conducted for |
probationary law enforcement officers, including |
University police officers.
|
b. Minimum courses of study, attendance requirements |
and equipment
requirements.
|
c. Minimum requirements for instructors.
|
d. Minimum basic training requirements, which a |
probationary law enforcement
officer must satisfactorily |
complete before being eligible for permanent
employment as |
a local law enforcement officer for a participating local
|
governmental or State state governmental agency. Those |
requirements shall include training in first aid
|
(including cardiopulmonary resuscitation).
|
e. Minimum basic training requirements, which a |
probationary county
corrections officer must |
satisfactorily complete before being eligible for
|
permanent employment as a county corrections officer for a |
participating
local governmental agency.
|
f. Minimum basic training requirements which a |
|
probationary court
security officer must satisfactorily |
complete before being eligible for
permanent employment as |
a court security officer for a participating local
|
governmental agency. The Board shall
establish those |
training requirements which it considers appropriate for |
court
security officers and shall certify schools to |
conduct that training.
|
A person hired to serve as a court security officer |
must obtain from the
Board a certificate (i) attesting to |
the officer's successful completion of the
training |
course; (ii) attesting to the officer's satisfactory
|
completion of a training program of similar content and |
number of hours that
has been found acceptable by the |
Board under the provisions of this Act; or
(iii) attesting |
to the Board's determination that the training
course is |
unnecessary because of the person's extensive prior law |
enforcement
experience.
|
Individuals who currently serve as court security |
officers shall be deemed
qualified to continue to serve in |
that capacity so long as they are certified
as provided by |
this Act within 24 months of June 1, 1997 (the effective |
date of Public Act 89-685). Failure to be so certified, |
absent a waiver from the
Board, shall cause the officer to |
forfeit his or her position.
|
All individuals hired as court security officers on or |
after June 1, 1997 (the effective
date of Public Act |
|
89-685) shall be certified within 12 months of the
date of |
their hire, unless a waiver has been obtained by the |
Board, or they
shall forfeit their positions.
|
The Sheriff's Merit Commission, if one exists, or the |
Sheriff's Office if
there is no Sheriff's Merit |
Commission, shall maintain a list of all
individuals who |
have filed applications to become court security officers |
and
who meet the eligibility requirements established |
under this Act. Either
the Sheriff's Merit Commission, or |
the Sheriff's Office if no Sheriff's Merit
Commission |
exists, shall establish a schedule of reasonable intervals |
for
verification of the applicants' qualifications under
|
this Act and as established by the Board.
|
g. Minimum in-service training requirements, which a |
law enforcement officer must satisfactorily complete every |
3 years. Those requirements shall include constitutional |
and proper use of law enforcement authority, procedural |
justice, civil rights, human rights, reporting child abuse |
and neglect, and cultural competency, including implicit |
bias and racial and ethnic sensitivity. |
h. Minimum in-service training requirements, which a |
law enforcement officer must satisfactorily complete at |
least annually. Those requirements shall include law |
updates, emergency medical response training and |
certification, crisis intervention training, and officer |
wellness and mental health. |
|
i. Minimum in-service training requirements as set |
forth in Section 10.6. |
Notwithstanding any provision of law to the contrary, the |
changes made to this Section by this amendatory Act of the |
102nd General Assembly, Public Act 101-652, and Public Act |
102-28 take effect July 1, 2022. |
(Source: P.A. 100-121, eff. 1-1-18; 100-247, eff. 1-1-18; |
100-759, eff. 1-1-19; 100-863, eff. 8-14-18; 100-910, eff. |
1-1-19; 101-18, eff. 1-1-20; 101-81, eff. 7-12-19; 101-215, |
eff. 1-1-20; 101-224, eff. 8-9-19; 101-375, eff. 8-16-19; |
101-564, eff. 1-1-20; P.A. 101-652, Article 10, Section |
10-143, eff. 7-1-21; 101-652, Article 25, Section 25-40, eff. |
1-1-22; revised 4-26-21.)
|
(50 ILCS 705/8.1) (from Ch. 85, par. 508.1)
|
(Text of Section before amendment by P.A. 101-652 )
|
Sec. 8.1. Full-time police and county corrections |
officers.
|
(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 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.
|
If such training is required and not completed within the |
applicable 6
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 |
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.
|
(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
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.
|
(c) This Section does not apply to part-time police |
officers or
probationary part-time police officers.
|
(Source: P.A. 101-187, eff. 1-1-20 .)
|
(Text of Section after amendment by P.A. 101-652 )
|
Sec. 8.1. Full-time law enforcement and county corrections |
officers.
|
(a) No person shall receive a permanent
appointment as a |
law enforcement officer or a permanent appointment as a county |
corrections officer
unless that person has been awarded, |
within 6 months of the officer's
initial full-time employment, |
a certificate attesting to the officer's
successful completion |
of the Minimum Standards Basic Law Enforcement or County
|
Correctional Training Course as prescribed by the Board; or |
has been awarded a
certificate attesting to the officer's |
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 a |
training waiver 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.
|
If such training is required and not completed within the |
applicable 6
months, then the officer must forfeit the |
officer's 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 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.
|
An individual who is not certified by the Board or whose |
certified status is inactive shall not function as a law |
enforcement officer, be assigned the duties of a law |
enforcement officer by an employing agency, or be authorized |
to carry firearms under the authority of the employer, except |
as otherwise authorized to carry a firearm under State or |
federal law. Sheriffs who are elected as of the effective date |
of this Amendatory Act of the 101st General Assembly, are |
|
exempt from the requirement of certified status. Failure to be |
certified in accordance with this Act shall cause the officer |
to forfeit the officer's position. |
An employing agency may not grant a person status as a law |
enforcement officer unless the person has been granted an |
active law enforcement officer certification by the Board. |
(b) Inactive status. A person who has an inactive law |
enforcement officer certification has no law enforcement |
authority. |
(1) A law enforcement officer's certification becomes |
inactive upon termination, resignation, retirement, or |
separation from the officer's employing law enforcement |
governmental agency for any reason. The Board shall |
re-activate a certification upon written application from |
the law enforcement officer's law enforcement governmental |
agency that shows the law enforcement officer: (i) has |
accepted a full-time law enforcement position with that |
law enforcement governmental agency, (ii) is not the |
subject of a decertification proceeding, and (iii) meets |
all other criteria for re-activation required by the |
Board. The Board may also establish special training |
requirements to be completed as a condition for |
re-activation. |
The Board shall review a notice for reactivation from |
a law enforcement agency and provide a response within 30 |
days. The Board may extend this review. A law enforcement |
|
officer shall be allowed to be employed as a full-time law |
enforcement officer while the law enforcement officer |
reactivation waiver is under review. |
A law enforcement officer who is refused reactivation |
or an employing agency of a A law enforcement officer who |
is refused reactivation under this Section may request a |
hearing in accordance with the hearing procedures as |
outlined in subsection (h) of Section 6.3 of this Act. |
The Board may refuse to re-activate the certification |
of a law enforcement officer who was involuntarily |
terminated for good cause by an employing his or her |
governmental agency for conduct subject to decertification |
under this Act or resigned or retired after receiving |
notice of a law enforcement governmental agency's |
investigation. |
(2) A law enforcement agency may place an officer who |
is currently certified can place his or her certificate on |
inactive status by sending a written request to the Board. |
A law enforcement officer whose certificate has been |
placed on inactive status shall not function as a law |
enforcement officer until the officer has completed any |
requirements for reactivating the certificate as required |
by the Board. A request for inactive status in this |
subsection shall be in writing, accompanied by verifying |
documentation, and shall be submitted to the Board with a |
copy to the chief administrator of the law enforcement |
|
officer's current or new employing governmental agency. |
(3) Certification that has become inactive under |
paragraph (2) of this subsection (b), shall be reactivated |
by written notice from the law enforcement officer's |
agency upon a showing that the law enforcement officer is: |
(i) employed in a full-time law enforcement position with |
the same law enforcement governmental agency (ii) not the |
subject of a decertification proceeding, and (iii) meets |
all other criteria for re-activation required by the |
Board. |
(4) Notwithstanding paragraph (3) of this subsection |
(b), a law enforcement officer whose certification has |
become inactive under paragraph (2) may have the officer's |
employing governmental agency submit a request for a |
waiver of training requirements to the Board in writing |
and accompanied by any verifying documentation. . A grant |
of a waiver is within the discretion of the Board. Within 7 |
days of receiving a request for a waiver under this |
section, the Board shall notify the law enforcement |
officer and the chief administrator of the law enforcement |
officer's employing governmental agency, whether the |
request has been granted, denied, or if the Board will |
take additional time for information. A law enforcement |
agency, whose request for a waiver under this subsection |
is denied, is entitled to request a review of the denial by |
the Board. The law enforcement agency must request a |
|
review within 20 days of the waiver being denied. The |
burden of proof shall be on the law enforcement agency to |
show why the law enforcement officer is entitled to a |
waiver of the legislatively required training and |
eligibility requirements. A law enforcement officer whose |
request for a waiver under this subsection is denied is |
entitled to appeal the denial to the Board within 20 days |
of the waiver being denied. |
(c) No provision
of this Section shall be construed to |
mean that a county corrections
officer employed by a |
governmental agency at the time of the
effective date of this |
amendatory Act, either as a probationary
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.
|
(d) Within 14 days, a law enforcement officer shall report |
to the Board: (1) any name change; (2) any change in |
employment; or (3) the filing of any criminal indictment or |
charges against the officer alleging that the officer |
committed any offense as enumerated in Section 6.1 of this |
Act. |
(e) All law enforcement officers must report the |
completion of the training requirements required in this Act |
in compliance with Section 8.4 of this Act. |
(e-1) Each employing law enforcement governmental agency |
|
shall allow and provide an opportunity for a law enforcement |
officer to complete the mandated requirements in this Act. All |
mandated training shall be provided for at no cost to the |
employees. Employees shall be paid for all time spent |
attending mandated training. |
(e-2) Each agency, academy, or training provider shall |
maintain proof of a law enforcement officer's completion of |
legislatively required training in a format designated by the |
Board. The report of training shall be submitted to the Board |
within 30 days following completion of the training. A copy of |
the report shall be submitted to the law enforcement officer. |
Upon receipt of a properly completed report of training, the |
Board will make the appropriate entry into the training |
records of the law enforcement officer. |
(f) This Section does not apply to part-time law |
enforcement officers or
probationary part-time law enforcement |
officers.
|
(g) Notwithstanding any provision of law to the contrary, |
the changes made to this Section by this amendatory Act of the |
102nd General Assembly, Public Act 101-652, and Public Act |
102-28 take effect July 1, 2022. |
(Source: P.A. 101-187, eff. 1-1-20; 101-652, eff. 1-1-22.)
|
(50 ILCS 705/8.2)
|
(Text of Section before amendment by P.A. 101-652 )
|
Sec. 8.2. Part-time police officers.
|
|
(a) A person hired to serve as a part-time
police officer |
must obtain from the Board a certificate (i) attesting to his
|
or her successful completion of the part-time police training |
course; (ii)
attesting to his or her satisfactory completion |
of a training program of
similar content and number of hours |
that has been found acceptable by the
Board under the |
provisions of this Act; or (iii) attesting to the Board's
|
determination that the part-time police training course is |
unnecessary because
of the person's extensive prior law |
enforcement experience.
A person hired on or after the |
effective date of this amendatory Act of the
92nd General |
Assembly must obtain this certificate within 18 months after |
the
initial date of hire as a probationary part-time police |
officer in the State of
Illinois. The probationary part-time |
police officer must be enrolled and
accepted into a |
Board-approved course within 6 months after active employment
|
by any department in the State.
A person hired
on or after |
January 1, 1996 and before the effective date of this |
amendatory
Act of the 92nd General Assembly must obtain this |
certificate within 18
months
after the date of hire. A person |
hired before
January 1, 1996 must obtain this certificate |
within 24 months after the
effective date of this amendatory |
Act of 1995.
|
The employing agency may seek a waiver from the Board |
extending the period
for compliance. A waiver shall be issued |
only for good and justifiable
reasons, and the probationary |
|
part-time police officer may not practice as a
part-time
|
police officer during the waiver period. If training is
|
required and not completed within the applicable time period, |
as extended by
any waiver that may be granted, then the officer |
must forfeit his or her
position.
|
(b) (Blank).
|
(c) The part-time police training course referred to in |
this Section
shall be of similar content and the same number of |
hours as the courses for
full-time officers and
shall be |
provided by
Mobile Team In-Service Training Units under the |
Intergovernmental Law
Enforcement Officer's In-Service |
Training Act or by another approved program
or facility in a |
manner prescribed by the
Board.
|
(d) For the purposes of this Section, the Board shall |
adopt rules defining
what constitutes employment on a |
part-time basis.
|
(Source: P.A. 92-533, eff. 3-14-02.)
|
(Text of Section after amendment by P.A. 101-652 )
|
Sec. 8.2. Part-time law enforcement officers.
|
(a) A person hired to serve as a part-time law enforcement
|
officer must obtain from the Board a certificate (i) attesting |
to the officer's successful completion of the part-time police |
training course; (ii)
attesting to the officer's satisfactory |
completion of a training program of
similar content and number |
of hours that has been found acceptable by the
Board under the |
|
provisions of this Act; or (iii) a training waiver attesting |
to the Board's
determination that the part-time police |
training course is unnecessary because
of the person's |
extensive prior law enforcement experience.
A person hired on |
or after the effective date of this amendatory Act of the
92nd |
General Assembly must obtain this certificate within 18 months |
after the
initial date of hire as a probationary part-time law |
enforcement officer in the State of
Illinois. The probationary |
part-time law enforcement officer must be enrolled and
|
accepted into a Board-approved course within 6 months after |
active employment
by any department in the State.
A person |
hired
on or after January 1, 1996 and before the effective date |
of this amendatory
Act of the 92nd General Assembly must |
obtain this certificate within 18
months
after the date of |
hire. A person hired before
January 1, 1996 must obtain this |
certificate within 24 months after the
effective date of this |
amendatory Act of 1995.
|
The employing agency may seek an extension waiver from the |
Board extending the period
for compliance. An extension waiver |
shall be issued only for good and justifiable
reasons, and the |
probationary part-time law enforcement officer may not |
practice as a
part-time law enforcement
officer during the |
extension waiver period. If training is
required and not |
completed within the applicable time period, as extended by
|
any waiver that may be granted, then the officer must forfeit |
the officer's
position.
|
|
An individual who is not certified by the Board or whose |
certified status is inactive shall not function as a law |
enforcement officer, be assigned the duties of a law |
enforcement officer by an agency, or be authorized to carry |
firearms under the authority of the employer, except that |
sheriffs who are elected are exempt from the requirement of |
certified status. Failure to be in accordance with this Act |
shall cause the officer to forfeit the officer's position. |
(a-5) A part-time probationary law enforcement officer |
shall be allowed to complete six months of a part-time police |
training course and function as a law enforcement officer as |
permitted by this subsection with a waiver from the Board, |
provided the part-time law enforcement officer is still |
enrolled in the training course. If the part-time probationary |
law enforcement officer withdraws from the course for any |
reason or does not complete the course within the applicable |
time period, as extended by any waiver that may be granted, |
then the officer must forfeit the officer's position. A |
probationary law enforcement officer must function under the |
following rules: |
(1) A law enforcement governmental agency may not |
grant a person status as a law enforcement officer unless |
the person has been granted an active law enforcement |
officer certification by the Board. |
(2) A part-time probationary law enforcement officer |
shall not be used as a permanent replacement for a |
|
full-time law enforcement. |
(3) A part-time probationary law enforcement officer |
shall be directly supervised at all times by a Board |
certified law enforcement officer. Direct supervision |
requires oversight and control with the supervisor having |
final decision-making authority as to the actions of the |
recruit during duty hours. |
(b) Inactive status. A person who has an inactive law |
enforcement officer certification has no law enforcement |
authority. |
(1) A law enforcement officer's certification becomes |
inactive upon termination, resignation, retirement, or |
separation from the employing governmental agency for any |
reason. The Board shall re-activate a certification upon |
written application from the law enforcement officer's |
employing governmental agency that shows the law |
enforcement officer: (i) has accepted a part-time law |
enforcement position with that a law enforcement |
governmental agency, (ii) is not the subject of a |
decertification proceeding, and (iii) meets all other |
criteria for re-activation required by the Board. |
The Board may refuse to re-activate the certification |
of a law enforcement officer who was involuntarily |
terminated for good cause by the officer's employing |
governmental agency for conduct subject to decertification |
under this Act or resigned or retired after receiving |
|
notice of a law enforcement governmental agency's |
investigation. |
(2) A law enforcement agency may place an officer who |
is currently certified can place his or her certificate on |
inactive status by sending a written request to the Board. |
A law enforcement officer whose certificate has been |
placed on inactive status shall not function as a law |
enforcement officer until the officer has completed any |
requirements for reactivating the certificate as required |
by the Board. A request for inactive status in this |
subsection shall be in writing, accompanied by verifying |
documentation, and shall be submitted to the Board by the |
law enforcement officer's employing governmental agency. |
(3) Certification that has become inactive under |
paragraph (2) of this subsection (b), shall be reactivated |
by written notice from the law enforcement officer's law |
enforcement agency upon a showing that the law enforcement |
officer is: (i) employed in a part-time full-time law |
enforcement position with the same law enforcement |
governmental agency, (ii) not the subject of a |
decertification proceeding, and (iii) meets all other |
criteria for re-activation required by the Board. The |
Board may also establish special training requirements to |
be completed as a condition for re-activation. |
The Board shall review a notice for reactivation from |
a law enforcement agency and provide a response within 30 |
|
days. The Board may extend this review. A law enforcement |
officer shall be allowed to be employed as a part-time law |
enforcement officer while the law enforcement officer |
reactivation waiver is under review. |
A law enforcement officer who is refused reactivation |
or an employing agency of a A law enforcement officer who |
is refused reactivation under this Section may request a |
hearing in accordance with the hearing procedures as |
outlined in subsection (h) of Section 6.3 of this Act. |
(4) Notwithstanding paragraph (3) of this Section, a |
law enforcement officer whose certification has become |
inactive under paragraph (2) may have the officer's |
employing governmental agency submit a request for a |
waiver of training requirements to the Board in writing |
and accompanied by any verifying documentation . A grant of |
a waiver is within the discretion of the Board. Within 7 |
days of receiving a request for a waiver under this |
section, the Board shall notify the law enforcement |
officer and the chief administrator of the law enforcement |
officer's employing governmental agency, whether the |
request has been granted, denied, or if the Board will |
take additional time for information. A law enforcement |
agency or law enforcement officer, whose request for a |
waiver under this subsection is denied, is entitled to |
request a review of the denial by the Board. The law |
enforcement agency must request a review within 20 days |
|
after the waiver being denied. The burden of proof shall |
be on the law enforcement agency to show why the law |
enforcement officer is entitled to a waiver of the |
legislatively required training and eligibility |
requirements. A law enforcement officer whose request for |
a waiver under this subsection is denied is entitled to |
appeal the denial to the Board within 20 days of the waiver |
being denied.
|
(c) The part-time police training course referred to in |
this Section
shall be of similar content and the same number of |
hours as the courses for
full-time officers and
shall be |
provided by
Mobile Team In-Service Training Units under the |
Intergovernmental Law
Enforcement Officer's In-Service |
Training Act or by another approved program
or facility in a |
manner prescribed by the
Board.
|
(d) Within 14 days, a law enforcement officer shall report |
to the Board: (1) any name change; (2) any change in |
employment; or (3) the filing of any criminal indictment or |
charges against the officer alleging that the officer |
committed any offense as enumerated in Section 6.1 of this |
Act. |
(e) All law enforcement officers must report the |
completion of the training requirements required in this Act |
in compliance with Section 8.4 of this Act. |
(e-1) Each employing agency shall allow and provide an |
opportunity for a law enforcement officer to complete the |
|
requirements in this Act. All mandated training shall be |
provided for at no cost to the employees. Employees shall be |
paid for all time spent attending mandated training. |
(e-2) Each agency, academy, or training provider shall |
maintain proof of a law enforcement officer's completion of |
legislatively required training in a format designated by the |
Board. The report of training shall be submitted to the Board |
within 30 days following completion of the training. A copy of |
the report shall be submitted to the law enforcement officer. |
Upon receipt of a properly completed report of training, the |
Board will make the appropriate entry into the training |
records of the law enforcement officer. |
(f) For the purposes of this Section, the Board shall |
adopt rules defining
what constitutes employment on a |
part-time basis.
|
(g) Notwithstanding any provision of law to the contrary, |
the changes made to this Section by this amendatory Act of the |
102nd General Assembly and Public Act 101-652 take effect July |
1, 2022. |
(Source: P.A. 101-652, eff. 1-1-22.)
|
(50 ILCS 705/8.3) |
(This Section may contain text from a Public Act with a |
delayed effective date ) |
Sec. 8.3. Emergency order of suspension. |
(a) The Board, upon being notified that a law enforcement |
|
officer has been arrested or indicted on any felony charge or |
charges, may immediately suspend the law enforcement officer's |
certification for a term specified by the Board to begin no |
sooner than the date of the violation . The Board shall also |
notify the chief administrator of any law enforcement |
governmental agency currently employing the officer. The Board |
shall have authority to dissolve an emergency order of |
suspension at any time for any reason. |
(a-5) The Board may consider the following factors in |
determining the term of a suspension: |
(1) the seriousness of the conduct resulting in the |
arrest; |
(2) whether the offense contains an element of actual |
or threatened bodily injury or coerce against another |
person; |
(3) the law enforcement officer's previous arrests; |
(4) the law enforcement officer's previous |
certification suspensions; |
(5) actual or potential harm to public safety; and |
(6) rebuttal evidence regarding mitigating factors. |
(b) Notice of the immediate suspension shall be served on |
the law enforcement officer, the employing governmental |
agency, the chief executive of the employing agency |
municipality , and state the reason for suspension within seven |
days. |
(c) Upon service of the notice, the law enforcement |
|
officer's employing agency officer shall have 30 days to |
request to be heard by the Panel. The hearing, if requested by |
the officer licensee , shall follow the hearing procedures as |
outlined in subsection (h) of Section 6.3 of this Act. In the |
hearing, the written communication and any other evidence |
obtained therewith may be introduced as evidence against the |
law enforcement officer; provided however, the law enforcement |
officer, or their counsel, shall have the opportunity to |
discredit, impeach and submit evidence rebutting such evidence |
to explain why the officer's certification should not be |
suspended or why the suspension should be shortened. The law |
enforcement officer may also present any rebuttal evidence of |
mitigating factors. |
(d) At the meeting, the law enforcement officer may |
present evidence, witnesses and argument as to why the |
officer's certification should not be suspended. The Panel |
shall review the recommendation from the administrative law |
judge regarding the suspension, and if the Panel finds that |
the proof is evident or the presumption great that the officer |
has committed the offense charged, the Panel can sustain or |
reduce the length of the suspension. If the Panel does not find |
that the proof is evident or the presumption great that the |
officer has committed the offense charged, the Panel can |
reverse the suspension. |
If the law enforcement officer does not request to be |
heard or does not appear, the Panel may hold the hearing in the |
|
officer's absence. The law enforcement officer and the |
employing governmental agency shall be notified of the |
decision of the Panel within 7 days. The law enforcement |
officer may request to suspend the hearing until after the |
officer's criminal trial has occurred, however the suspension |
will remain intact until the hearing. |
(e) Findings and conclusions made in hearing for an |
emergency suspension shall not be binding on any party in any |
subsequent proceeding under this Act. |
(f) A Panel member acting in good faith, and not in a |
willful and wanton manner, in accordance with this Section, |
shall not, as a result of such actions, be subject to criminal |
prosecution or civil damages, including but not limited to |
lost wages.
|
(g) Notwithstanding any provision of law to the contrary, |
the changes made to this Section by this amendatory Act of the |
102nd General Assembly and Public Act 101-652 take effect July |
1, 2022. |
(Source: P.A. 101-652, eff. 1-1-22.) |
(50 ILCS 705/8.4) |
(This Section may contain text from a Public Act with a |
delayed effective date ) |
Sec. 8.4. Law enforcement compliance verification. |
(a)(1) Unless on inactive status under subsection (b) of |
Section 8.1 or subsection (b) of Section 8.2, every law |
|
enforcement officer subject to this Act shall submit a |
verification form that confirms compliance with this Act. The |
verification shall apply to the 3 calendar years preceding the |
date of verification. Law enforcement officers shall submit |
the officer's first report by January 30 during the initial |
three-year reporting period, as determined on the basis of the |
law enforcement officer's last name under paragraph (2) of |
this subsection then every third year of the officer's |
applicable three-year report period as determined by the |
Board. At the conclusion of each law enforcement officer's |
applicable reporting period, the chief administrative officer |
of the officer's law enforcement governmental agency is to |
determine the compliance of each officer under this Section. |
An officer may verify their successful completion of training |
requirements with their law enforcement governmental agency. |
Each law enforcement officer is responsible for reporting and |
demonstrating compliance to the officer's chief administrative |
officer. |
(2) The applicable three-year reporting period shall begin |
on January 30, 2023 for law enforcement officers whose last |
names being with the letters A through G, on January 30, 2024 |
for law enforcement officers whose last names being with the |
letters H through O, and January 30, 2025 for law enforcement |
officers whose last names being with the letters P through Z. |
(3) The compliance verification form shall be in a form |
and manner prescribed by the Board and, at a minimum, include |
|
the following: (i) verification that the law enforcement |
officer has completed the mandatory training programs in the |
preceding 3 years; (ii) the law enforcement officer's current |
employment information, including but not limited to, the |
termination of any previous law enforcement or security |
employment in the relevant time period; and (iii) a statement |
verifying that the officer has not committed misconduct under |
Section 6.1. |
(b) (1) On October 1 of each year, the Board shall send |
notice to all certified law enforcement officers, unless |
exempted in (a), of the upcoming deadline to submit the |
compliance verification form. No later than March 1 of each |
year, the Board shall send notice to all certified law |
enforcement officers who have failed to submit the compliance |
verification form, as well as the officer's law enforcement |
governmental agencies. The Board shall not send a notice of |
noncompliance to law enforcement officers whom the Board |
knows, based on the status of the law enforcement officer's |
certification status, are inactive or retired. The Board may |
accept compliance verification forms until April 1 of the year |
in which a law enforcement officer is required to submit the |
form. |
(2) No earlier than April 1 of the year in which a law |
enforcement officer is required to submit a verification form, |
the Board may determine a law enforcement officer's |
certification to be inactive if the law enforcement officer |
|
failed to either: (1) submit a compliance verification in |
accordance with this Section; or (2) report an exemption from |
the requirements of this Section. The Board shall then send |
notice, by mail or email, to any such law enforcement officer |
and the officer's law enforcement governmental agency that the |
officer's certificate will be deemed inactive on the date |
specified in the notice, which shall be no sooner than 21 days |
from the date of the notice, because of the officer's failure |
to comply or report compliance, or failure to report an |
exemption. The Board shall deem inactive the certificate of |
such law enforcement officers on the date specified in the |
notice unless the Board determines before that date that the |
law enforcement officer has complied. A determination that a |
certificate is inactive under this section is not a |
disciplinary sanction. |
(3) A law enforcement officer who was on voluntary |
inactive status shall, upon return to active status, be |
required to complete the deferred training programs within 1 |
year. |
(4) The Board may waive the reporting requirements, as |
required in this section, if the law enforcement officer or |
the officer's law enforcement governmental agency demonstrates |
the existence of mitigating circumstances justifying the law |
enforcement officer's failure to obtain the training |
requirements due to failure of the officer's law enforcement |
governmental agency or the Board to offer the training |
|
requirement during the officer's required compliance |
verification period. If the Board finds that the law |
enforcement officer can meet the training requirements with |
extended time, the Board may allow the law enforcement officer |
a maximum of six additional months to complete the |
requirements. |
(5) A request for a training waiver under this subsection |
due to the mitigating circumstance shall be in writing, |
accompanied by verifying documentation, and shall be submitted |
to the Board not less than 30 days before the end of the law |
enforcement officer's required compliance verification period. |
(6) A law enforcement officer whose request for waiver |
under this subsection is denied, is entitled to a request for a |
review by the Board. The law enforcement officer or the |
officer's law enforcement agency must request a review within |
20 days after the waiver being denied. The burden of proof |
shall be on the law enforcement officer to show why the officer |
is entitled to a waiver. A law enforcement officer whose |
request for waiver under this subsection is denied, is |
entitled to a request for a review by the Board. The law |
enforcement officer or the officer's governmental agency must |
request a review within 20 days of the waiver being denied. The |
burden of proof shall be on the law enforcement officer to show |
why the officer is entitled to a waiver. |
(c) Recordkeeping and audits. |
(1) For four years after the end of each reporting |
|
period, each certified law enforcement officer shall |
maintain sufficient documentation necessary to corroborate |
compliance with the mandatory training requirements under |
this Act. |
(2) Notwithstanding any other provision in state law, |
for four years after the end of each reporting period, |
each law enforcement governmental agency shall maintain |
sufficient documentation necessary to corroborate |
compliance with the mandatory training requirements under |
this Act of each officer it employs or employed within the |
relevant time period. |
(3) The Board may audit compliance verification forms |
submitted to determine the accuracy of the submissions. |
The audit may include but is not limited to, training |
verification and a law enforcement officer background |
check. |
(d) Audits that reveal an inaccurate verification. |
(1) If an audit conducted under paragraph (3) of |
subsection (c) of this Section reveals inaccurate |
information, the Board shall provide the law enforcement |
officer and employing law enforcement governmental agency |
with written notice containing: (i) the results of the |
audit, specifying each alleged inaccuracy; (ii) a summary |
of the basis of that determination; and (iii) a deadline, |
which shall be at least 30 days from the date of the |
notice, for the law enforcement officer to file a written |
|
response if the law enforcement officer objects to any of |
the contents of the notice. |
(2) After considering any response from the law |
enforcement officer, if the Board determines that the law |
enforcement officer filed an inaccurate verification, the |
law enforcement officer shall be given 60 days in which to |
file an amended verification form, together with all |
documentation specified in paragraph (e)(1), demonstrating |
full compliance with the applicable requirements. |
(3) If the results of the audit suggest that the law |
enforcement officer willfully filed a false verification |
form, the Board shall submit a formal complaint to the |
Panel for decertification. An officer who has been |
decertified for willfully filing a false verification form |
shall not be eligible for reactivation under subsection |
(e). |
(e) Reactivation. A law enforcement officer who has been |
deemed inactive due to noncompliance with the reporting |
requirements under paragraph (a)(1) may request to have the |
Board re-activate his or her certification upon submitting a |
compliance verification form that shows full compliance for |
the period in which the law enforcement officer was deemed |
inactive due to noncompliance. The Board shall make a |
determination regarding a submission under this subsection |
active no later than 7 days after the Board determines full |
compliance or continued noncompliance.
|
|
A law enforcement officer whose request for reactivation |
under this subsection (e) is denied is entitled to request a |
review by the Board. The law enforcement officer or the |
officer's law enforcement agency must request a review within |
20 days after reactivation being denied. The burden of proof |
shall be on the law enforcement officer or law enforcement |
agency to show that the officer is in full compliance. |
(f) Notwithstanding any provision of law to the contrary, |
the changes made to this Section by this amendatory Act of the |
102nd General Assembly and Public Act 101-652 take effect July |
1, 2022. |
(Source: P.A. 101-652, eff. 1-1-22.) |
(50 ILCS 705/9.2) |
(This Section may contain text from a Public Act with a |
delayed effective date ) |
Sec. 9.2. Officer professional conduct database; |
transparency. |
(a) All law enforcement governmental agencies and the |
Illinois State Police shall notify the Board of any final |
determination of a willful violation of department, agency, or |
the Illinois State Police policy, official misconduct, or |
violation of law within 10 days when: |
(1) the determination leads to a suspension of at |
least 10 days; |
(2) any infraction that would trigger an official or |
|
formal investigation under a law enforcement governmental |
agency or the Illinois State Police policy; |
(3) there is an allegation of misconduct or regarding |
truthfulness as to a material fact, bias, or integrity; or |
(4) the officer resigns or retires during the course |
of an investigation and the officer has been served notice |
that the officer is under investigation. |
Agencies and the Illinois State Police may report to the |
Board any conduct they deem appropriate to disseminate to |
another law enforcement governmental agency regarding a law |
enforcement officer. |
The agency or the Illinois State Police shall report to |
the Board within 10 days of a final determination and final |
exhaustion of any administrative appeal, or the law |
enforcement officer's resignation or retirement, and shall |
provide information regarding the nature of the violation. |
This notification shall not necessarily trigger certification |
review. |
A law enforcement governmental agency and the Illinois |
State Police shall be immune from liability for a disclosure |
made as described in this subsection, unless the disclosure |
would constitute intentional misrepresentation or gross |
negligence. |
(b) Within 14 days after receiving notification Upon |
receiving notification from a law enforcement governmental |
agency or the Illinois State Police, the Board must notify the |
|
law enforcement officer of the report and the officer's right |
to provide a statement regarding the reported violation. The |
law enforcement officer shall have 14 days from receiving |
notice to provide a written objection contesting information |
included in the agency's report. The objection must be filed |
with the Board on a form prescribed by the Board and a copy |
must be served on the law enforcement agency. The objection |
shall remain in the database with the reported violation. |
(c) The Board shall maintain a database readily available |
to any chief administrative officer, or the officer's |
designee, of a law enforcement governmental agency and the |
Illinois State Police that shall show for each law enforcement |
officer: (i) dates of certification, decertification, and |
inactive status; (ii) each sustained instance of departmental |
misconduct that lead to a suspension at least 10 days or any |
infraction that would trigger an official or formal |
investigation under the law enforcement governmental agency |
policy, any allegation of misconduct regarding truthfulness as |
to a material fact, bias, or integrity, or any other reported |
violation, the nature of the violation, the reason for the |
final decision of discharge or dismissal, and any statement |
provided by the officer; (iii) date of separation from |
employment from any local or state law enforcement |
governmental agency; (iv) the reason for separation from |
employment, including, but not limited to: whether the |
separation was based on misconduct or occurred while the law |
|
enforcement local or State governmental agency was conducting |
an investigation of the certified individual for a violation |
of an employing agency's rules, policy or procedure or other |
misconduct or improper action. |
(1) This database shall also be accessible to the |
State's Attorney of any county in this State and the |
Attorney General for the purpose of complying with |
obligations under Brady v. Maryland (373 U.S. 83) or |
Giglio v. United States (405 U.S. 150). This database |
shall also be accessible to the chief administrative |
officer of any law enforcement governmental agency for the |
purposes of hiring law enforcement officers. This database |
shall not be accessible to anyone not listed in this |
subsection. |
(2) Before a law enforcement governmental agency may |
appoint a law enforcement officer or a person seeking a |
certification as a law enforcement officer in this State, |
the chief administrative officer or designee must check |
the Officer Professional Conduct Database, contact each |
person's previous law enforcement employers, and document |
the contact. This documentation must be available for |
review by the Board for a minimum of five years after the |
law enforcement officer's termination, retirement, |
resignation or separation with that agency. |
(3) The database, documents, materials, or other |
information in the possession or control of the Board that |
|
are obtained by or disclosed to the Board under this |
subsection shall be confidential by law and privileged, |
shall not be subject to subpoena, and shall not be subject |
to discovery or admissible in evidence in any private |
civil action when sought from the Board . However, the |
Board is authorized to use such documents, materials, or |
other information in furtherance of any regulatory or |
legal action brought as part of the Board's official |
duties. The Unless otherwise required by law, the Board |
shall not disclose the database or make such documents, |
materials, or other information it has obtained or that |
has been disclosed to it to the public without the prior |
written consent of the governmental agency and the law |
enforcement officer . Neither the Board nor any person who |
received documents, materials or other information shared |
under this subsection shall be required to testify in any |
private civil action concerning the database or any |
confidential documents, materials, or information subject |
to this subsection. |
Nothing in this Section shall exempt a governmental agency |
from disclosing public records in accordance with the Freedom |
of Information Act. |
(d) The Board shall maintain a searchable database of law |
enforcement officers accessible to the public that shall |
include: (i) the law enforcement officer's employing local or |
state governmental agency; (ii) the date of the officer's |
|
initial certification and the officer's current certification |
status; and (iii) any sustained complaint of misconduct that |
resulted in decertification and the date thereof; provided, |
however, that information shall not be included in the |
database that would allow the public to ascertain the home |
address of an officer or another person; provided further, |
that information regarding an officer's or another person's |
family member shall not be included in the database. The Board |
shall make the database publicly available on its website. |
(e) The Board shall maintain a searchable database of all |
completed investigations against law enforcement officers |
related to decertification. The database shall identify each |
law enforcement officer by a confidential and anonymous number |
and include: (i) the law enforcement officer's employing local |
or state governmental agency; (ii) the date of the incident |
referenced in the complaint; (iii) the location of the |
incident; (iv) the race and ethnicity of each officer involved |
in the incident; (v) the age, gender, race and ethnicity of |
each person involved in the incident, if known; (vi) whether a |
person in the complaint, including a law enforcement officer, |
was injured, received emergency medical care, was hospitalized |
or died as a result of the incident; (vii) the law enforcement |
governmental agency or other entity assigned to conduct an |
investigation of the incident; (viii) when the investigation |
was completed; (ix) whether the complaint was sustained; and |
(x) the type of misconduct investigated; provided, however, |
|
that the Board shall redact or withhold such information as |
necessary to prevent the disclosure of the identity of an |
officer. The Board shall make the database publicly available |
on its website. |
(e-1) An investigation is complete when the investigation |
has either been terminated or the decertification action, |
including the administrative review process, has been |
completed, whichever is later. |
(e-2) At any time, a law enforcement officer shall have |
access to the law enforcement officer's own records on file |
with the Board, as it pertains to the databases in this |
Section. |
(f) Annual report. The Board shall submit an annual report |
to the Governor, Attorney General, President and Minority |
Leader of the Senate, and the Speaker and Minority Leader of |
the House of Representatives beginning on or before March 1, |
2023, and every year thereafter indicating: |
(1) the number of complaints received in the preceding |
calendar year, including but not limited to the race, |
gender, and type of discretionary decertification |
complaints received; |
(2) the number of investigations initiated in the |
preceding calendar year since the
date of the last report; |
(3) the number of investigations concluded in the |
preceding calendar year; |
(4) the number of investigations pending as of the |
|
last
reporting date of the preceding calendar year ; |
(5) the number of hearings held in the preceding |
calendar year; and |
(6) the number of officers decertified in the |
preceding calendar year.
|
The annual report shall be publicly available on the |
website of the Board. |
(g) Nothing in this Section shall exempt a law enforcement |
agency from which the Board has obtained data, documents, |
materials, or other information or that has disclosed data, |
documents, materials, or other information to the Board from |
disclosing public records in accordance with the Freedom of |
Information Act. |
(h) Notwithstanding any provision of law to the contrary, |
the changes made to this Section by this amendatory Act of the |
102nd General Assembly and Public Act 101-652 take effect July |
1, 2022. |
(Source: P.A. 101-652, eff. 1-1-22.)
|
(50 ILCS 705/10.1) (from Ch. 85, par. 510.1)
|
(Text of Section before amendment by P.A. 101-652 )
|
Sec. 10.1. Additional training programs. The Board shall |
initiate,
administer,
and conduct training programs for |
permanent police officers and permanent
county corrections |
officers in addition to the basic recruit training program.
|
The Board may initiate, administer, and conduct training |
|
programs for
part-time police officers in
addition
to the |
basic part-time police training course. The training for |
permanent and
part-time
police officers and permanent county |
corrections officers may
be given in any schools selected by |
the Board. Such training may include all
or any part of the |
subjects enumerated in Section 7 of this Act.
|
The corporate authorities of all participating local |
governmental agencies
may elect to participate in the advanced |
training for permanent and
part-time police officers and |
permanent county corrections
officers but nonparticipation in |
this program shall not in any way affect the
mandatory |
responsibility of governmental units to participate in the |
basic
recruit training programs for probationary full-time and |
part-time
police
and permanent county corrections officers. |
The failure of any permanent or
part-time
police officer or |
permanent county corrections officer to
successfully complete |
any course authorized under this Section
shall not affect the |
officer's status as a member of the police
department or |
county sheriff's office of any local governmental agency.
|
The Board may initiate, administer, and conduct training |
programs for
clerks of circuit courts. Those training |
programs, at the Board's discretion,
may be the same or |
variations of training programs for law enforcement
officers.
|
The Board shall initiate, administer, and conduct a |
training program
regarding the set
up and operation of
|
portable scales for all municipal and county police officers, |
|
technicians,
and employees who set up
and operate portable |
scales. This
training
program must include classroom and field |
training.
|
(Source: P.A. 90-271, eff. 7-30-97, 91-129, eff. 7-16-99.)
|
(Text of Section after amendment by P.A. 101-652 )
|
Sec. 10.1. Additional training programs. The Board shall |
initiate,
administer,
and conduct training programs for |
permanent law enforcement officers and permanent
county |
corrections officers in addition to the basic recruit training |
program.
The Board may initiate, administer, and conduct |
training programs for
part-time law enforcement officers in
|
addition
to the basic part-time law enforcement training |
course. The training for permanent and
part-time law |
enforcement
officers and permanent county corrections officers |
may
be given in any schools selected by the Board. Such |
training may include all
or any part of the subjects |
enumerated in Sections 7 and 7.4 Section 7 of this Act.
|
The corporate authorities of all participating local |
governmental agencies
may elect to participate in the advanced |
training for permanent and
part-time law enforcement officers |
and permanent county corrections
officers but nonparticipation |
in this program shall not in any way affect the
mandatory |
responsibility of governmental units to participate in the |
basic
recruit training programs for probationary full-time and |
part-time law enforcement
and permanent county corrections |
|
officers. The failure of any permanent or
part-time law |
enforcement
officer or permanent county corrections officer to
|
successfully complete any course authorized under this Section
|
shall not affect the officer's status as a member of the police
|
department or county sheriff's office of any local |
governmental agency.
|
The Board may initiate, administer, and conduct training |
programs for
clerks of circuit courts. Those training |
programs, at the Board's discretion,
may be the same or |
variations of training programs for law enforcement
officers.
|
The Board shall initiate, administer, and conduct a |
training program
regarding the set
up and operation of
|
portable scales for all municipal and county police officers, |
technicians,
and employees who set up
and operate portable |
scales. This
training
program must include classroom and field |
training.
|
(Source: P.A. 101-652, eff. 1-1-22.)
|
(50 ILCS 705/10.2)
|
(Text of Section before amendment by P.A. 101-652 )
|
Sec. 10.2. Criminal background investigations.
|
(a) On and after March 14, 2002 (the effective date of |
Public Act 92-533),
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
|
person as a peace
officer.
|
(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
|
criminal
background investigation of that person
has been |
completed and (ii) that investigation reveals no convictions |
of or pleas of guilty to
offenses specified in subsection (a) |
of Section 6.1 of this Act.
|
(Source: P.A. 101-187, eff. 1-1-20; 102-558, eff. 8-20-21.)
|
(Text of Section after amendment by P.A. 101-652 )
|
Sec. 10.2. Criminal background investigations.
|
(a) On and after March 14, 2002 (the effective date of |
Public Act 92-533),
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 any criminal |
offense that disqualifies the
person as a peace
officer.
|
(b) No law enforcement governmental 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
criminal
background investigation of that person
|
has been completed and (ii) that investigation reveals no |
|
convictions of or pleas of guilty to
offenses specified in |
subsection (a) of Section 6.1 of this Act.
|
(Source: P.A. 101-187, eff. 1-1-20; 101-652, eff. 1-1-22; |
102-558, eff. 8-20-21.)
|
(50 ILCS 705/10.6) |
(This Section may contain text from a Public Act with a |
delayed effective date ) |
Sec. 10.6. Mandatory training to be completed every 3 |
years. |
(a) The Board shall adopt rules and
minimum standards for |
in-service training requirements as set forth in this Section. |
The training shall provide officers with knowledge of policies |
and laws regulating the use of force; equip officers with |
tactics and skills, including de-escalation techniques, to |
prevent or reduce the need to use force or, when force must be |
used, to use force that is objectively reasonable, necessary, |
and proportional under the totality of the circumstances; and |
ensure appropriate supervision and accountability.
The |
training shall consist of at least 30 hours of training every 3 |
years and shall include: |
(1) At least 12 hours of hands-on, scenario-based |
role-playing. |
(2) At least 6 hours of instruction on use of force |
techniques, including the use of de-escalation techniques |
to prevent or reduce the need for force whenever safe and |
|
feasible. |
(3) Specific training on the law concerning stops, |
searches, and the use of force under the Fourth Amendment |
to the United States Constitution. |
(4) Specific training on officer safety techniques, |
including cover, concealment, and time. |
(5) At least 6 hours of training focused on high-risk |
traffic stops.
|
(b) Notwithstanding any provision of law to the contrary, |
the changes made to this Section by this amendatory Act of the |
102nd General Assembly, Public Act 101-652, and Public Act |
102-28 take effect July 1, 2022. |
(Source: P.A. 101-652, eff. 7-1-21.) |
(50 ILCS 705/10.11) |
(Text of Section before amendment by P.A. 101-652 ) |
Sec. 10.11. Training; death and homicide investigation. |
The Illinois Law Enforcement Training Standards Board shall |
conduct or approve a training program in death and homicide |
investigation for the training of law enforcement officers of |
local government agencies. Only law enforcement officers who |
successfully complete the training program may be assigned as |
lead investigators in death and homicide investigations. |
Satisfactory completion of the training program shall be |
evidenced by a certificate issued to the law enforcement |
officer by the Illinois Law Enforcement Training Standards |
|
Board.
|
The Illinois Law Enforcement Training Standards Board |
shall develop a process for waiver applications sent by a |
local law enforcement agency administrator for those officers |
whose prior training and experience as homicide investigators |
may qualify them for a waiver. The Board may issue a waiver at |
its discretion, based solely on the prior training and |
experience of an officer as a homicide investigator. This |
Section does not affect or impede the powers of the office of |
the coroner to investigate all deaths as provided in Division |
3-3 of the Counties Code and the Coroner Training Board Act. |
(Source: P.A. 102-558, eff. 8-20-21.) |
(Text of Section after amendment by P.A. 101-652 ) |
Sec. 10.11. Training; death and homicide investigation. |
The Illinois Law Enforcement Training Standards Board shall |
conduct or approve a training program in death and homicide |
investigation for the training of law enforcement officers of |
local law enforcement government agencies. Only law |
enforcement officers who successfully complete the training |
program may be assigned as lead investigators in death and |
homicide investigations. Satisfactory completion of the |
training program shall be evidenced by a certificate issued to |
the law enforcement officer by the Illinois Law Enforcement |
Training Standards Board.
|
The Illinois Law Enforcement Training Standards Board |
|
shall develop a process for waiver applications sent by a |
local governmental agency administrator for those officers |
whose prior training and experience as homicide investigators |
may qualify them for a waiver. The Board may issue a waiver at |
its discretion, based solely on the prior training and |
experience of an officer as a homicide investigator. This |
Section does not affect or impede the powers of the office of |
the coroner to investigate all deaths as provided in Division |
3-3 of the Counties Code and the Coroner Training Board Act. |
(Source: P.A. 101-652, eff. 1-1-22; 102-558, eff. 8-20-21.) |
(50 ILCS 705/10.12) |
(Text of Section before amendment by P.A. 101-652 ) |
Sec. 10.12. Police dog training standards. All police dogs |
used by State and local law enforcement agencies for drug |
enforcement purposes pursuant to the Cannabis Control Act, the |
Illinois Controlled Substances Act, or the Methamphetamine |
Control and Community Protection Act shall be trained by |
programs that meet the minimum certification requirements set |
by the Board.
|
(Source: P.A. 101-27, eff. 6-25-19.) |
(Text of Section after amendment by P.A. 101-652 ) |
Sec. 10.12. Police dog training standards. All police dogs |
used by State and local law enforcement governmental agencies |
for drug enforcement purposes pursuant to the Cannabis Control |
|
Act, the Illinois Controlled Substances Act, or the |
Methamphetamine Control and Community Protection Act shall be |
trained by programs that meet the minimum certification |
requirements set by the Board.
|
(Source: P.A. 101-27, eff. 6-25-19; 101-652, eff. 1-1-22.) |
(50 ILCS 705/10.13) |
(Text of Section before amendment by P.A. 101-652 ) |
Sec. 10.13. Training; Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder |
(PTSD). The Illinois Law Enforcement Training Standards Board |
shall conduct or approve a training program in Post-Traumatic |
Stress Disorder (PTSD) for law enforcement officers of local |
government agencies. The purpose of that training shall be to |
equip law enforcement officers of local government agencies to |
identify the symptoms of PTSD and to respond appropriately to |
individuals exhibiting those symptoms.
|
(Source: P.A. 97-1040, eff. 1-1-13.) |
(Text of Section after amendment by P.A. 101-652 ) |
Sec. 10.13. Training; Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder |
(PTSD). The Illinois Law Enforcement Training Standards Board |
shall conduct or approve a training program in Post-Traumatic |
Stress Disorder (PTSD) for law enforcement officers of local |
law enforcement governmental agencies. The purpose of that |
training shall be to equip law enforcement officers of local |
law enforcement governmental agencies to identify the symptoms |
|
of PTSD and to respond appropriately to individuals exhibiting |
those symptoms.
|
(Source: P.A. 101-652, eff. 1-1-22.) |
(50 ILCS 705/10.16) |
(Text of Section before amendment by P.A. 101-652 ) |
Sec. 10.16. Veterans' awareness. The Illinois Law |
Enforcement Training Standards Board may conduct or approve a |
training program in veterans' awareness for law enforcement |
officers of local government agencies. The program shall train |
law enforcement officers to identify issues relating to |
veterans and provide guidelines dictating how law enforcement |
officers should respond to and address such issues. Each local |
government agency is encouraged to designate an individual to |
respond to veterans' issues.
|
(Source: P.A. 98-960, eff. 1-1-15 .) |
(Text of Section after amendment by P.A. 101-652 ) |
Sec. 10.16. Veterans' awareness. The Illinois Law |
Enforcement Training Standards Board may conduct or approve a |
training program in veterans' awareness for law enforcement |
officers of local government agencies. The program shall train |
law enforcement officers to identify issues relating to |
veterans and provide guidelines dictating how law enforcement |
officers should respond to and address such issues. Each local |
law enforcement governmental agency is encouraged to designate |
|
an individual to respond to veterans' issues.
|
(Source: P.A. 101-652, eff. 1-1-22.) |
(50 ILCS 705/10.19) |
(Text of Section before amendment by P.A. 101-652 ) |
Sec. 10.19. Training; administration of epinephrine. |
(a) This Section, along with Section 40 of the State |
Police Act, may be referred to as the Annie LeGere Law. |
(b) For purposes of this Section, "epinephrine |
auto-injector" means a single-use device used for the |
automatic injection of a pre-measured dose of epinephrine into |
the human body prescribed in the name of a local governmental |
agency. |
(c) The Board shall conduct or approve an optional |
advanced training program for police officers to recognize and |
respond to anaphylaxis, including the administration of an |
epinephrine auto-injector. The training must include, but is |
not limited to: |
(1) how to recognize symptoms of an allergic reaction; |
(2) how to respond to an emergency involving an |
allergic reaction; |
(3) how to administer an epinephrine auto-injector; |
(4) how to respond to an individual with a known |
allergy as well as an individual with a previously unknown |
allergy; |
(5) a test demonstrating competency of the knowledge |
|
required to recognize anaphylaxis and administer an |
epinephrine auto-injector; and |
(6) other criteria as determined in rules adopted by |
the Board. |
(d) A local governmental agency may authorize a police |
officer who has completed an optional advanced training |
program under subsection (c) to carry, administer, or assist |
with the administration of epinephrine auto-injectors provided |
by the local governmental agency whenever he or she is |
performing official duties. |
(e) A local governmental agency that authorizes its |
officers to carry and administer epinephrine auto-injectors |
under subsection (d) must establish a policy to control the |
acquisition, storage, transportation, administration, and |
disposal of epinephrine auto-injectors and to provide |
continued training in the administration of epinephrine |
auto-injectors. |
(f) A physician, physician's assistant with prescriptive |
authority, or advanced practice registered nurse with |
prescriptive authority may provide a standing protocol or |
prescription for epinephrine auto-injectors in the name of a |
local governmental agency to be maintained for use when |
necessary. |
(g) When a police officer administers an epinephrine |
auto-injector in good faith, the police officer and local |
governmental agency, and its employees and agents, including a |
|
physician, physician's assistant with prescriptive authority, |
or advanced practice registered nurse with prescriptive |
authority who provides a standing order or prescription for an |
epinephrine auto-injector, incur no civil or professional |
liability, except for willful and wanton conduct, as a result |
of any injury or death arising from the use of an epinephrine |
auto-injector.
|
(Source: P.A. 99-711, eff. 1-1-17; 100-201, eff. 8-18-17; |
100-648, eff. 7-31-18.) |
(Text of Section after amendment by P.A. 101-652 ) |
Sec. 10.19. Training; administration of epinephrine. |
(a) This Section, along with Section 40 of the State |
Police Act, may be referred to as the Annie LeGere Law. |
(b) For purposes of this Section, "epinephrine |
auto-injector" means a single-use device used for the |
automatic injection of a pre-measured dose of epinephrine into |
the human body prescribed in the name of a local law |
enforcement governmental agency. |
(c) The Board shall conduct or approve an optional |
advanced training program for law enforcement officers to |
recognize and respond to anaphylaxis, including the |
administration of an epinephrine auto-injector. The training |
must include, but is not limited to: |
(1) how to recognize symptoms of an allergic reaction; |
(2) how to respond to an emergency involving an |
|
allergic reaction; |
(3) how to administer an epinephrine auto-injector; |
(4) how to respond to an individual with a known |
allergy as well as an individual with a previously unknown |
allergy; |
(5) a test demonstrating competency of the knowledge |
required to recognize anaphylaxis and administer an |
epinephrine auto-injector; and |
(6) other criteria as determined in rules adopted by |
the Board. |
(d) A local law enforcement governmental agency may |
authorize a law enforcement officer who has completed an |
optional advanced training program under subsection (c) to |
carry, administer, or assist with the administration of |
epinephrine auto-injectors provided by the local law |
enforcement governmental agency whenever the officer is |
performing official duties. |
(e) A local law enforcement governmental agency that |
authorizes its officers to carry and administer epinephrine |
auto-injectors under subsection (d) must establish a policy to |
control the acquisition, storage, transportation, |
administration, and disposal of epinephrine auto-injectors and |
to provide continued training in the administration of |
epinephrine auto-injectors. |
(f) A physician, physician's assistant with prescriptive |
authority, or advanced practice registered nurse with |
|
prescriptive authority may provide a standing protocol or |
prescription for epinephrine auto-injectors in the name of a |
local law enforcement governmental agency to be maintained for |
use when necessary. |
(g) When a law enforcement officer administers an |
epinephrine auto-injector in good faith, the law enforcement |
officer and local law enforcement governmental agency, and its |
employees and agents, including a physician, physician's |
assistant with prescriptive authority, or advanced practice |
registered nurse with prescriptive authority who provides a |
standing order or prescription for an epinephrine |
auto-injector, incur no civil or professional liability, |
except for willful and wanton conduct, or as a result of any |
injury or death arising from the use of an epinephrine |
auto-injector.
|
(Source: P.A. 100-201, eff. 8-18-17; 100-648, eff. 7-31-18; |
101-652, eff. 1-1-22.) |
(50 ILCS 705/10.20) |
(Text of Section before amendment by P.A. 101-652 ) |
Sec. 10.20. Disposal of medications. The Board shall |
develop rules and minimum standards for local governmental |
agencies that authorize police officers to dispose of unused |
medications under Section 18 of the Safe Pharmaceutical |
Disposal Act.
|
(Source: P.A. 99-648, eff. 1-1-17; 100-201, eff. 8-18-17.) |
|
(Text of Section after amendment by P.A. 101-652 ) |
Sec. 10.20. Disposal of medications. The Board shall |
develop rules and minimum standards for local law enforcement |
governmental agencies that authorize law enforcement officers |
to dispose of unused medications under Section 18 of the Safe |
Pharmaceutical Disposal Act.
|
(Source: P.A. 100-201, eff. 8-18-17; 101-652, eff. 1-1-22.) |
(50 ILCS 705/10.22) |
(Text of Section before amendment by P.A. 101-652 ) |
Sec. 10.22. School resource officers. |
(a) The Board shall develop or approve a course for school |
resource officers as defined in Section 10-20.68 of the School |
Code. |
(b) The school resource officer course shall be developed |
within one year after January 1, 2019 (the effective date of |
Public Act 100-984) and shall be created in consultation with |
organizations demonstrating expertise and or experience in the |
areas of youth and adolescent developmental issues, |
educational administrative issues, prevention of child abuse |
and exploitation, youth mental health treatment, and juvenile |
advocacy. |
(c) The Board shall develop a process allowing law |
enforcement agencies to request a waiver of this training |
requirement for any specific individual assigned as a school |
|
resource officer. Applications for these waivers may be |
submitted by a local law enforcement agency chief |
administrator for any officer whose prior training and |
experience may qualify for a waiver of the training |
requirement of this subsection (c). The Board may issue a |
waiver at its discretion, based solely on the prior training |
and experience of an officer. |
(d) Upon completion, the employing agency shall be issued |
a certificate attesting to a specific officer's completion of |
the school resource officer training. Additionally, a letter |
of approval shall be issued to the employing agency for any |
officer who is approved for a training waiver under this |
subsection (d).
|
(Source: P.A. 100-984, eff. 1-1-19; 101-81, eff. 7-12-19.) |
(Text of Section after amendment by P.A. 101-652 ) |
Sec. 10.22. School resource officers. |
(a) The Board shall develop or approve a course for school |
resource officers as defined in Section 10-20.68 of the School |
Code. |
(b) The school resource officer course shall be developed |
within one year after January 1, 2019 (the effective date of |
Public Act 100-984) and shall be created in consultation with |
organizations demonstrating expertise and or experience in the |
areas of youth and adolescent developmental issues, |
educational administrative issues, prevention of child abuse |
|
and exploitation, youth mental health treatment, and juvenile |
advocacy. |
(c) The Board shall develop a process allowing law |
enforcement agencies to request a waiver of this training |
requirement for any specific individual assigned as a school |
resource officer. Applications for these waivers may be |
submitted by a local law enforcement governmental agency chief |
administrator for any officer whose prior training and |
experience may qualify for a waiver of the training |
requirement of this subsection (c). The Board may issue a |
waiver at its discretion, based solely on the prior training |
and experience of an officer. |
(d) Upon completion, the employing agency shall be issued |
a certificate attesting to a specific officer's completion of |
the school resource officer training. Additionally, a letter |
of approval shall be issued to the employing agency for any |
officer who is approved for a training waiver under this |
subsection (d).
|
(Source: P.A. 100-984, eff. 1-1-19; 101-81, eff. 7-12-19; |
101-652, eff. 1-1-22.) |
Section 16. The Law Enforcement Officer-Worn Body Camera |
Act is amended by changing Section 10-20 as follows: |
(50 ILCS 706/10-20) |
Sec. 10-20. Requirements. |
|
(a) The Board shall develop basic guidelines for the use |
of officer-worn body cameras by law enforcement agencies. The |
guidelines developed by the Board shall be the basis for the |
written policy which must be adopted by each law enforcement |
agency which employs the use of officer-worn body cameras. The |
written policy adopted by the law enforcement agency must |
include, at a minimum, all of the following: |
(1) Cameras must be equipped with pre-event recording, |
capable of recording at least the 30 seconds prior to |
camera activation, unless the officer-worn body camera was |
purchased and acquired by the law enforcement agency prior |
to July 1, 2015. |
(2) Cameras must be capable of recording for a period |
of 10 hours or more, unless the officer-worn body camera |
was purchased and acquired by the law enforcement agency |
prior to July 1, 2015. |
(3) Cameras must be turned on at all times when the |
officer is in uniform and is responding to calls for |
service or engaged in any law enforcement-related |
encounter or activity , that occurs while the officer is on |
duty. |
(A) If exigent circumstances exist which prevent |
the camera from being turned on, the camera must be |
turned on as soon as practicable. |
(B) Officer-worn body cameras may be turned off |
when the officer is inside of a patrol car which is |
|
equipped with a functioning in-car camera; however, |
the officer must turn on the camera upon exiting the |
patrol vehicle for law enforcement-related encounters. |
(C) Officer-worn body cameras may be turned off |
when the officer is inside a correctional facility or |
courthouse which is equipped with a functioning camera |
system. |
(4) Cameras must be turned off when:
|
(A) the victim of a crime requests that the camera |
be turned off, and unless impractical or impossible, |
that request is made on the recording; |
(B) a witness of a crime or a community member who |
wishes to report a crime requests that the camera be |
turned off, and unless impractical or impossible that |
request is made on the recording;
|
(C) the officer is interacting with a confidential |
informant used by the law enforcement agency; or |
(D) an officer of the Department of Revenue enters |
a Department of Revenue facility or conducts an |
interview during which return information will be |
discussed or visible. |
However, an officer may continue to record or resume |
recording a victim or a witness, if exigent circumstances |
exist, or if the officer has reasonable articulable |
suspicion that a victim or witness, or confidential |
informant has committed or is in the process of committing |
|
a crime. Under these circumstances, and unless impractical |
or impossible, the officer must indicate on the recording |
the reason for continuing to record despite the request of |
the victim or witness. |
(4.5) Cameras may be turned off when the officer is |
engaged in community caretaking functions. However, the |
camera must be turned on when the officer has reason to |
believe that the person on whose behalf the officer is |
performing a community caretaking function has committed |
or is in the process of committing a crime. If exigent |
circumstances exist which prevent the camera from being |
turned on, the camera must be turned on as soon as |
practicable. |
(5) The officer must provide notice of recording to |
any person if the person has a reasonable expectation of |
privacy and proof of notice must be evident in the |
recording.
If exigent circumstances exist which prevent |
the officer from providing notice, notice must be provided |
as soon as practicable. |
(6) (A) For the purposes of redaction, labeling, or |
duplicating recordings, access to camera recordings shall |
be restricted to only those personnel responsible for |
those purposes. The recording officer or his or her |
supervisor may not redact, label, duplicate or otherwise |
alter the recording officer's camera recordings. Except as |
otherwise provided in this Section, the recording officer |
|
and his or her supervisor may access and review recordings |
prior to completing incident reports or other |
documentation, provided that the supervisor discloses that |
fact in the report or documentation. |
(i) A law enforcement officer shall not have |
access to or review his or her body-worn
camera |
recordings or the body-worn camera recordings of |
another officer prior to completing incident reports |
or other documentation when the officer: |
(a) has been involved in or is a witness to an |
officer-involved shooting, use of deadly force |
incident, or use of force incidents resulting in |
great bodily harm; |
(b) is ordered to write a report in response |
to or during the investigation of a misconduct |
complaint against the officer. |
(ii) If the officer subject to subparagraph (i) |
prepares a report, any report shall be prepared |
without viewing body-worn camera recordings, and |
subject to supervisor's approval, officers may file |
amendatory reports after viewing body-worn camera |
recordings. Supplemental reports under this provision |
shall also contain documentation regarding access to |
the video footage. |
(B) The recording officer's assigned field |
training officer may access and review recordings for |
|
training purposes. Any detective or investigator |
directly involved in the investigation of a matter may |
access and review recordings which pertain to that |
investigation but may not have access to delete or |
alter such recordings. |
(7) Recordings made on officer-worn cameras must be |
retained by the law enforcement agency or by the camera |
vendor used by the agency, on a recording medium for a |
period of 90 days. |
(A) Under no circumstances shall any recording, |
except for a non-law enforcement related activity or |
encounter, made with an officer-worn body camera be |
altered, erased, or destroyed prior to the expiration |
of the 90-day storage period.
In the event any |
recording made with an officer-worn body camera is |
altered, erased, or destroyed prior to the expiration |
of the 90-day storage period, the law enforcement |
agency shall maintain, for a period of one year, a |
written record including (i) the name of the |
individual who made such alteration, erasure, or |
destruction, and (ii) the reason for any such |
alteration, erasure, or destruction. |
(B) Following the 90-day storage period, any and |
all recordings made with an officer-worn body camera |
must be destroyed, unless any encounter captured on |
the recording has been flagged. An encounter is deemed |
|
to be flagged when:
|
(i) a formal or informal complaint has been |
filed; |
(ii) the officer discharged his or her firearm |
or used force during the encounter;
|
(iii) death or great bodily harm occurred to |
any person in the recording;
|
(iv) the encounter resulted in a detention or |
an arrest, excluding traffic stops which resulted |
in only a minor traffic offense or business |
offense; |
(v) the officer is the subject of an internal |
investigation or otherwise being investigated for |
possible misconduct;
|
(vi) the supervisor of the officer, |
prosecutor, defendant, or court determines that |
the encounter has evidentiary value in a criminal |
prosecution; or |
(vii) the recording officer requests that the |
video be flagged for official purposes related to |
his or her official duties. |
(C) Under no circumstances shall any recording |
made with an officer-worn body camera relating to a |
flagged encounter be altered or destroyed prior to 2 |
years after the recording was flagged. If the flagged |
recording was used in a criminal, civil, or |
|
administrative proceeding, the recording shall not be |
destroyed except upon a final disposition and order |
from the court. |
(D) Nothing in this Act prohibits law enforcement |
agencies from labeling officer-worn body camera video |
within the recording medium; provided that the |
labeling does not alter the actual recording of the |
incident captured on the officer-worn body camera. The |
labels, titles, and tags shall not be construed as |
altering the officer-worn body camera video in any |
way. |
(8) Following the 90-day storage period, recordings |
may be retained if a supervisor at the law enforcement |
agency designates the recording for training purposes. If |
the recording is designated for training purposes, the |
recordings may be viewed by officers, in the presence of a |
supervisor or training instructor, for the purposes of |
instruction, training, or ensuring compliance with agency |
policies.
|
(9) Recordings shall not be used to discipline law |
enforcement officers unless: |
(A) a formal or informal complaint of misconduct |
has been made; |
(B) a use of force incident has occurred; |
(C) the encounter on the recording could result in |
a formal investigation under the Uniform Peace |
|
Officers' Disciplinary Act; or |
(D) as corroboration of other evidence of |
misconduct. |
Nothing in this paragraph (9) shall be construed to |
limit or prohibit a law enforcement officer from being |
subject to an action that does not amount to discipline. |
(10) The law enforcement agency shall ensure proper |
care and maintenance of officer-worn body cameras. Upon |
becoming aware, officers must as soon as practical |
document and notify the appropriate supervisor of any |
technical difficulties, failures, or problems with the |
officer-worn body camera or associated equipment. Upon |
receiving notice, the appropriate supervisor shall make |
every reasonable effort to correct and repair any of the |
officer-worn body camera equipment. |
(11) No officer may hinder or prohibit any person, not |
a law enforcement officer, from recording a law |
enforcement officer in the performance of his or her |
duties in a public place or when the officer has no |
reasonable expectation of privacy.
The law enforcement |
agency's written policy shall indicate the potential |
criminal penalties, as well as any departmental |
discipline, which may result from unlawful confiscation or |
destruction of the recording medium of a person who is not |
a law enforcement officer. However, an officer may take |
reasonable action to maintain safety and control, secure |
|
crime scenes and accident sites, protect the integrity and |
confidentiality of investigations, and protect the public |
safety and order. |
(b) Recordings made with the use of an officer-worn body |
camera are not subject to disclosure under the Freedom of |
Information Act, except that: |
(1) if the subject of the encounter has a reasonable |
expectation of privacy, at the time of the recording, any |
recording which is flagged, due to the filing of a |
complaint, discharge of a firearm, use of force, arrest or |
detention, or resulting death or bodily harm, shall be |
disclosed in accordance with the Freedom of Information |
Act if: |
(A) the subject of the encounter captured on the |
recording is a victim or witness; and |
(B) the law enforcement agency obtains written |
permission of the subject or the subject's legal |
representative; |
(2) except as provided in paragraph (1) of this |
subsection (b), any recording which is flagged due to the |
filing of a complaint, discharge of a firearm, use of |
force, arrest or detention, or resulting death or bodily |
harm shall be disclosed in accordance with the Freedom of |
Information Act; and |
(3) upon request, the law enforcement agency shall |
disclose, in accordance with the Freedom of Information |
|
Act, the recording to the subject of the encounter |
captured on the recording or to the subject's attorney, or |
the officer or his or her legal representative. |
For the purposes of paragraph (1) of this subsection (b), |
the subject of the encounter does not have a reasonable |
expectation of privacy if the subject was arrested as a result |
of the encounter. For purposes of subparagraph (A) of |
paragraph (1) of this subsection (b), "witness" does not |
include a person who is a victim or who was arrested as a |
result of the encounter.
|
Only recordings or portions of recordings responsive to |
the request shall be available for inspection or reproduction. |
Any recording disclosed under the Freedom of Information Act |
shall be redacted to remove identification of any person that |
appears on the recording and is not the officer, a subject of |
the encounter, or directly involved in the encounter. Nothing |
in this subsection (b) shall require the disclosure of any |
recording or portion of any recording which would be exempt |
from disclosure under the Freedom of Information Act. |
(c) Nothing in this Section shall limit access to a camera |
recording for the purposes of complying with Supreme Court |
rules or the rules of evidence.
|
(Source: P.A. 101-652, eff. 7-1-21; 102-28, eff. 6-25-21; |
revised 7-30-21.) |
Section 20. The Code of Criminal Procedure of 1963 is |
|
amended by adding Section 103-3.5 as follows: |
(725 ILCS 5/103-3.5 new) |
Sec. 103-3.5. Right to communicate with attorney and |
family; transfers; presumption of inadmissibility. |
(a) Persons who are in police custody shall have the right |
to communicate free of charge with an attorney of his or her |
choice and members of his or her family as soon as possible |
upon being taken into police custody, but no later than 3 hours |
of arrival at the first place of detention. Persons in police |
custody must be given access to use a telephone via a landline |
or cellular phone to make 3 telephone calls. |
(b) In accordance with Section 103-7, at every police |
facility where a person is in police custody, a sign |
containing at minimum, the following information in bold block |
type must be posted in a conspicuous place: |
(1) a short statement notifying persons who are in |
police custody of their right to have access to a phone |
within 3 hours of being taken into police custody; and |
(2) that persons who are in police custody have the |
right to make 3 phone calls within 3 hours of being taken |
into custody, at no charge. |
(c) In addition to the information listed in subsection |
(b), if the place of detention is located in a jurisdiction |
where the court has appointed the public defender or other |
attorney to represent persons who are in police custody, the |
|
telephone number to the public defender or other attorney's |
office must also be displayed. The telephone call to the |
public defender or other attorney must not be monitored, |
eavesdropped upon, or recorded. |
(d) If a person who is in police custody is transferred to |
a new place of detention, that person's right to make 3 |
telephone calls under this Section within 3 hours of arrival |
is renewed. |
(e) Statements made by a person who is detained in police |
custody in violation of this section are presumed inadmissible |
in court as evidence. The presumption of inadmissibility may |
be overcome by a preponderance of the evidence that the |
statement was voluntarily given and is reliable, based on the |
totality of the circumstances. As used in this subsection, |
"totality of the circumstances" includes, but is not limited |
to, evidence that law enforcement knowingly prevented or |
delayed a person's right to communicate or failed to comply |
with the requirements of this Section. |
(f) The 3-hour requirement under this Section shall not |
apply while the person in police custody is asleep, |
unconscious, or otherwise incapacitated or an exigent |
circumstance prevents the officers from timely complying with |
this Section. If this occurs, it must be documented within the |
police report detailing the exigent circumstance. Once the |
exigent circumstance ends, the right to make 3 phone calls |
within 3 hours resumes. |
|
(g) In accordance with this Section, the following records |
shall be maintained: (i) the number of phone calls the person |
made while in custody; (ii) the time or times the person made |
phone calls; and (iii) if the person did not make any phone |
calls, a statement of the reason or reasons why no calls were |
made. |
(h) For purposes of this Section, "place of detention" |
means a building or a police station that is a place of |
operation for a municipal police department or county sheriff |
department or other law enforcement agency, other than a |
courthouse, that is owned or operated by a law enforcement |
agency, or other building, such as a school or hospital, where |
persons are held in detention in connection with criminal |
charges against those persons.
|
(725 ILCS 5/103-3 rep.)
|
Section 25. The Code of Criminal Procedure of 1963 is |
amended by repealing Section 103-3. |
Section 30. The Pretrial Services Act is amended by adding |
Section 1.5 as follows: |
(725 ILCS 185/1.5 new) |
Sec. 1.5. Framework facilitating the hiring and training |
of new State-employed pretrial services personnel to serve |
circuit courts or counties without existing pretrial services |
|
agencies. Notwithstanding anything in this Act to the |
contrary, the Supreme Court is encouraged to establish a |
framework that facilitates the hiring and training of new |
State-employed pretrial services personnel to serve circuit |
courts or counties without existing pretrial services |
agencies, as required by Section 1. |
Section 35. The Unified Code of Corrections is amended by |
changing Section 5-8-1 as follows:
|
(730 ILCS 5/5-8-1) (from Ch. 38, par. 1005-8-1)
|
Sec. 5-8-1. Natural life imprisonment; enhancements for |
use of a firearm; mandatory supervised release terms.
|
(a) Except as otherwise provided in the statute defining |
the offense or in Article 4.5 of Chapter V, a
sentence of |
imprisonment for a felony shall be a determinate sentence set |
by
the court under this Section, subject to Section 5-4.5-115 |
of this Code, according to the following limitations:
|
(1) for first degree murder,
|
(a) (blank),
|
(b) if a trier of fact finds beyond a reasonable
|
doubt that the murder was accompanied by exceptionally
|
brutal or heinous behavior indicative of wanton |
cruelty or, except as set forth
in subsection |
(a)(1)(c) of this Section, that any of the aggravating |
factors
listed in subsection (b) or (b-5) of Section |
|
9-1 of the Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code |
of 2012 are
present, the court may sentence the |
defendant, subject to Section 5-4.5-105, to a term of |
natural life
imprisonment, or
|
(c) the court shall sentence the defendant to a |
term of natural life
imprisonment if the defendant, at |
the time of the commission of the murder, had attained |
the age of 18, and :
|
(i) has previously been convicted of first |
degree murder under
any state or federal law, or
|
(ii) is found guilty of murdering more
than |
one victim, or
|
(iii) is found guilty of murdering a peace |
officer, fireman, or emergency management worker |
when
the peace officer, fireman, or emergency |
management worker was killed in the course of |
performing his
official duties, or to prevent the |
peace officer or fireman from
performing his |
official duties, or in retaliation for the peace |
officer,
fireman, or emergency management worker |
from performing his official duties, and the |
defendant knew or should
have known that the |
murdered individual was a peace officer, fireman, |
or emergency management worker, or
|
(iv) is found guilty of murdering an employee |
of an institution or
facility of the Department of |
|
Corrections, or any similar local
correctional |
agency, when the employee was killed in the course |
of
performing his official duties, or to prevent |
the employee from performing
his official duties, |
or in retaliation for the employee performing his
|
official duties, or
|
(v) is found guilty of murdering an emergency |
medical
technician - ambulance, emergency medical |
technician - intermediate, emergency
medical |
technician - paramedic, ambulance driver or other |
medical assistance or
first aid person while |
employed by a municipality or other governmental |
unit
when the person was killed in the course of |
performing official duties or
to prevent the |
person from performing official duties or in |
retaliation
for performing official duties and the |
defendant knew or should have known
that the |
murdered individual was an emergency medical |
technician - ambulance,
emergency medical |
technician - intermediate, emergency medical
|
technician - paramedic, ambulance driver, or other |
medical
assistant or first aid personnel, or
|
(vi) (blank), or
|
(vii) is found guilty of first degree murder |
and the murder was
committed by reason of any |
person's activity as a community policing |
|
volunteer
or to prevent any person from engaging |
in activity as a community policing
volunteer. For |
the purpose of this Section, "community policing |
volunteer"
has the meaning ascribed to it in |
Section 2-3.5 of the Criminal Code of 2012.
|
For purposes of clause (v), "emergency medical |
technician - ambulance",
"emergency medical technician - |
intermediate", "emergency medical technician -
|
paramedic", have the meanings ascribed to them in the |
Emergency Medical
Services (EMS) Systems Act.
|
(d)(i) if the person committed the offense while |
armed with a
firearm, 15 years shall be added to |
the term of imprisonment imposed by the
court;
|
(ii) if, during the commission of the offense, the |
person
personally discharged a firearm, 20 years shall |
be added to the term of
imprisonment imposed by the |
court;
|
(iii) if, during the commission of the offense, |
the person
personally discharged a firearm that |
proximately caused great bodily harm,
permanent |
disability, permanent disfigurement, or death to |
another person, 25
years or up to a term of natural |
life shall be added to the term of
imprisonment |
imposed by the court.
|
(2) (blank);
|
(2.5) for a person who has attained the age of 18 years
|
|
at the time of the commission of the offense and
who is |
convicted under the circumstances described in subdivision |
(b)(1)(B) of Section 11-1.20 or
paragraph (3) of |
subsection (b) of Section 12-13, subdivision (d)(2) of |
Section 11-1.30 or paragraph (2) of subsection
(d) of |
Section 12-14, subdivision (b)(1.2) of Section 11-1.40 or |
paragraph (1.2) of subsection (b) of
Section 12-14.1, |
subdivision (b)(2) of Section 11-1.40 or paragraph (2) of |
subsection (b) of Section 12-14.1
of the Criminal Code of |
1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012, the sentence shall be a |
term of natural life
imprisonment.
|
(b) (Blank).
|
(c) (Blank).
|
(d) Subject to
earlier termination under Section 3-3-8, |
the parole or mandatory
supervised release term shall be |
written as part of the sentencing order and shall be as |
follows:
|
(1) for first degree murder or for the offenses of |
predatory criminal sexual assault of a child, aggravated |
criminal sexual assault, and criminal sexual assault if |
committed on or before December 12, 2005, 3 years;
|
(1.5) except as provided in paragraph (7) of this |
subsection (d), for a Class X felony except for the |
offenses of predatory criminal sexual assault of a child, |
aggravated criminal sexual assault, and criminal sexual |
assault if committed on or after December 13, 2005 (the |
|
effective date of Public Act 94-715) and except for the |
offense of aggravated child pornography under Section |
11-20.1B . , 11-20.3, or 11-20.1 with sentencing under |
subsection (c-5) of Section 11-20.1 of the Criminal Code |
of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012, if committed on or |
after January 1, 2009, 18 months; |
(2) except as provided in paragraph (7) of this |
subsection (d), for a Class 1 felony or a Class 2 felony |
except for the offense of criminal sexual assault if |
committed on or after December 13, 2005 (the effective |
date of Public Act 94-715) and except for the offenses of |
manufacture and dissemination of child pornography under |
clauses (a)(1) and (a)(2) of Section 11-20.1 of the |
Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012, if |
committed on or after January 1, 2009, 12 months;
|
(3) except as provided in paragraph (4), (6), or (7) |
of this subsection (d), a mandatory supervised release |
term shall not be imposed for a Class 3 felony or a Class 4 |
felony; unless: |
(A) the Prisoner Review Board, based on a |
validated risk and needs assessment, determines it is |
necessary for an offender to serve a mandatory |
supervised release term; |
(B) if the Prisoner Review Board determines a |
mandatory supervised release term is necessary |
pursuant to subparagraph (A) of this paragraph (3), |
|
the Prisoner Review Board shall specify the maximum |
number of months of mandatory supervised release the |
offender may serve, limited to a term of:
(i) 12 months |
for a Class 3 felony;
and (ii) 12 months for a Class 4 |
felony;
|
(4) for defendants who commit the offense of predatory |
criminal sexual assault of a child, aggravated criminal |
sexual assault, or criminal sexual assault, on or after |
December 13, 2005 ( the effective date of Public Act |
94-715) this amendatory Act of the 94th General Assembly , |
or who commit the offense of aggravated child pornography |
under Section 11-20.1B, 11-20.3, or 11-20.1 with |
sentencing under subsection (c-5) of Section 11-20.1 of |
the Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012, |
manufacture of child pornography, or dissemination of |
child pornography after January 1, 2009, the term of |
mandatory supervised release shall range from a minimum of |
3 years to a maximum of the natural life of the defendant;
|
(5) if the victim is under 18 years of age, for a |
second or subsequent
offense of aggravated criminal sexual |
abuse or felony criminal sexual abuse,
4 years, at least |
the first 2 years of which the defendant shall serve in an
|
electronic monitoring or home detention program under |
Article 8A of Chapter V of this Code;
|
(6) for a felony domestic battery, aggravated domestic |
battery, stalking, aggravated stalking, and a felony |
|
violation of an order of protection, 4 years; |
(7) for any felony described in paragraph (a)(2)(ii), |
(a)(2)(iii), (a)(2)(iv), (a)(2)(vi), (a)(2.1), (a)(2.3), |
(a)(2.4), (a)(2.5), or (a)(2.6) of Article 5, Section |
3-6-3 of the Unified Code of Corrections requiring an |
inmate to serve a minimum of 85% of their court-imposed |
sentence, except for the offenses of predatory criminal |
sexual assault of a child, aggravated criminal sexual |
assault, and criminal sexual assault if committed on or |
after December 13, 2005 (the effective date of Public Act |
94-715) and except for the offense of aggravated child |
pornography under Section 11-20.1B . , 11-20.3, or 11-20.1 |
with sentencing under subsection (c-5) of Section 11-20.1 |
of the Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012, |
if committed on or after January 1, 2009 and except as |
provided in paragraph (4) or paragraph (6) of this |
subsection (d), the term of mandatory supervised release |
shall be as follows: |
(A) Class X felony, 3 years; |
(B) Class 1 or Class 2 felonies, 2 years; |
(C) Class 3 or Class 4 felonies, 1 year. |
(e) (Blank).
|
(f) (Blank).
|
(g) Notwithstanding any other provisions of this Act and |
of Public Act 101-652: (i) the provisions of paragraph (3) of |
subsection (d) are effective on July 1 January 1 , 2022 and |
|
shall apply to all individuals convicted on or after the |
effective date of paragraph (3) of subsection (d); and (ii) |
the provisions of paragraphs (1.5) and (2) of subsection (d) |
are effective on July 1, 2021 and shall apply to all |
individuals convicted on or after the effective date of |
paragraphs (1.5) and (2) of subsection (d). |
(Source: P.A. 101-288, eff. 1-1-20; 101-652, eff. 7-1-21; |
102-28, eff. 6-25-21; revised 8-2-21.) |
Section 95. No acceleration or delay. Where this Act makes |
changes in a statute that is represented in this Act by text |
that is not yet or no longer in effect (for example, a Section |
represented by multiple versions), the use of that text does |
not accelerate or delay the taking effect of (i) the changes |
made by this Act or (ii) provisions derived from any other |
Public Act. |
Section 97. Severability. The provisions of this Act are |
severable under Section 1.31 of the Statute on Statutes.
|
Section 99. Effective date. This Act takes effect January |
1, 2022.
|