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Public Act 097-1098 |
SB3638 Enrolled | LRB097 20230 MRW 65671 b |
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AN ACT concerning State government.
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Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
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represented in the General Assembly:
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Section 1. Short title. This Act may be cited as the Sex |
Offender Evaluation and Treatment Provider Act. |
Section 5. Declaration of public policy. The practice of |
sex offender evaluation and treatment in Illinois is hereby |
declared to affect the public health, safety and welfare, and |
to be subject to regulations in the public interest. The |
purpose of this Act is to establish standards of qualifications |
for sex offender evaluators and sex offender treatment |
providers, thereby protecting the public from persons who are |
unauthorized or unqualified to represent themselves as |
licensed sex offender evaluators and sex offender treatment |
providers, and from unprofessional conduct by persons licensed |
to practice sex offender evaluation and treatment. |
Section 10. Definitions. As used in this Act: |
"Address of record" means the designated address recorded |
by the Department in the applicant's or licensee's application |
file or license file maintained by the Department's licensure |
maintenance unit. |
"Associate sex offender provider" means a person licensed |
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under this Act to conduct sex offender evaluations or provide |
sex offender treatment services under the supervision of a |
licensed sex offender evaluator or a licensed sex offender |
treatment provider. |
"Board" means the Sex Offender Evaluation and Treatment |
Licensing and Disciplinary Board. |
"Department" means the Department of Financial and |
Professional Regulation. |
"Licensee" means a person who has obtained a license under |
this Act. |
"Secretary" means the Secretary of Financial and |
Professional Regulation. |
"Sex offender evaluation" means a sex-offender specific |
evaluation that systematically uses a variety of standardized |
measurements, assessments and information gathered |
collaterally and through face-to-face interviews. Sex-offender |
specific evaluations assess risk to the community; identify and |
document treatment and developmental needs, including safe and |
appropriate placement settings; determine amenability to |
treatment; and are the foundation of treatment, supervision, |
and placement recommendations. |
"Sex offender evaluator" means a person licensed under this |
Act to conduct sex offender evaluations. |
"Sex offender treatment" means a comprehensive set of |
planned therapeutic interventions and experiences to reduce |
the risk of further sexual offending and abusive behaviors by |
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the offender. Treatment may include adjunct therapies to |
address the unique needs of the individual, but must include |
offense specific services by a treatment provider who meets the |
qualifications in Section 30 of this Act. Treatment focuses on |
the situations, thoughts, feelings, and behavior that have |
preceded and followed past offending (abuse cycles) and |
promotes change in each area relevant to the risk of continued |
abusive, offending, or deviant sexual behaviors. Due to the |
heterogeneity of the persons who commit sex offenses, treatment |
is provided based on the individualized evaluation and |
assessment. Treatment is designed to stop sex offending and |
abusive behavior, while increasing the offender's ability to |
function as a healthy, pro-social member of the community. |
Progress in treatment is measured by change rather than the |
passage of time. |
"Sex offender treatment provider" means a person licensed |
under this Act to provide sex offender treatment. |
Section 15. Duties of the Department. The Department shall |
exercise the powers and duties prescribed by the Civil |
Administrative Code of Illinois for administration of |
licensing acts and shall exercise other powers and duties |
necessary for effectuating the purpose of this Act. The |
Department shall adopt rules to implement, interpret, or make |
specific the provisions and purposes of this Act. |
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Section 20. Sex Offender Evaluation and Treatment Provider |
Licensing and Disciplinary Board.
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(a) There is established within the Department the Sex |
Offender Evaluation and Treatment Licensing and Disciplinary |
Board to be appointed by the Secretary. The Board shall be |
composed of 8 persons who shall serve in an advisory capacity |
to the Secretary. The Board shall elect a chairperson and a |
vice chairperson. |
(b) In appointing members of the Board, the Secretary shall |
give due consideration to recommendations by members of the |
profession of sex offender evaluation and treatment. |
(c) Three members of the Board shall be sex offender |
evaluation or treatment providers, or both, who have been in |
active practice for at least 5 years immediately preceding |
their appointment. The appointees shall be licensed under this |
Act. |
(d) One member shall represent the Department of |
Corrections. |
(e) One member shall represent the Department of Human |
Services. |
(f) One member shall represent the Administrative Office of |
the Illinois Courts representing the interests of probation |
services. |
(g) One member shall represent the Sex Offender Management |
Board. |
(h) One member shall be representative of the general |
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public who has no direct affiliation or work experience with |
the practice of sex offender evaluation and treatment and who |
clearly represent consumer interests. |
(i) Board members shall be appointed for a term of 4 years, |
except that any person chosen to fill a vacancy shall be |
appointed only for the unexpired term of the Board member whom |
he or she shall succeed. Upon the expiration of his or her term |
of office, a Board member shall continue to serve until a |
successor is appointed and qualified. No member shall be |
reappointed to the Board for a term that would cause continuous |
service on the Board to be longer than 8 years. |
(j) The membership of the Board shall reasonably reflect |
representation from the various geographic areas of the State. |
(k) A member of the Board shall be immune from suit in any |
action based upon any disciplinary proceedings or other |
activities performed in good faith as a member of the Board. |
(l) The Secretary may remove a member of the Board for any |
cause that, in the opinion of the Secretary, reasonably |
justifies termination. |
(m) The Secretary may consider the recommendations of the |
Board on questions of standards of professional conduct, |
discipline, and qualification of candidates or licensees under |
this Act. |
(n) The members of the Board shall be reimbursed for all |
legitimate, necessary, and authorized expenses. |
(o) A majority of the Board members currently appointed |
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shall constitute a quorum. A vacancy in the membership of the |
Board shall not impair the right of a quorum to exercise all |
the rights and perform all the duties of the Board.
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Section 25. Application. |
(a) Applications for original licensure shall be made to |
the Department in writing on forms prescribed by the Department |
and shall be accompanied by the appropriate documentation and |
the required fee, which fee is nonrefundable. An application |
shall require information as, in the judgment of the |
Department, will enable the Department to pass on the |
qualifications of the applicant for licensing. |
(b) A license shall not be denied to an applicant because |
of the applicant's race, religion, creed, national origin, |
political beliefs or activities, age, sex, sexual orientation, |
or physical disability that does not affect a person's ability |
to practice with reasonable judgment, skill, or safety.
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Section 30. Social Security Number on license application. |
In addition to any other information required to be contained |
in the application, every application for an original, renewal, |
reinstated, or restored license under this Act shall include |
the applicant's Social Security number. |
Section 35. Qualifications for licensure. |
(a)(1) A person is qualified for licensure as a sex |
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offender evaluator if that person: |
(A) has applied in writing on forms prepared and |
furnished by the Department; |
(B) has not engaged or is not engaged in any practice |
or conduct that would be grounds for disciplining a |
licensee under Section 75 of this Act; and |
(C) satisfies the licensure and experience |
requirements of paragraph (2) of this subsection (a). |
(2) A person who applies to the Department shall be issued |
a sex offender evaluator license by the Department if the |
person meets the qualifications set forth in paragraph (1) of |
this subsection (a) and provides evidence to the Department |
that the person: |
(A) is a physician licensed to practice medicine in all |
of its branches under the Medical Practice Act of 1987 or |
licensed under the laws of another state; an advanced |
practice nurse with psychiatric specialty licensed under |
the Nurse Practice Act or licensed under the laws of |
another state; a clinical psychologist licensed under the |
Clinical Psychologist Licensing Act or licensed under the |
laws of another state; a licensed clinical social worker |
licensed under the Clinical Social Work and Social Work |
Practice Act or licensed under the laws of another state; a |
licensed clinical professional counselor licensed under |
the Professional Counselor and Clinical Professional |
Counselor Licensing Act or licensed under the laws of |
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another state; or a licensed marriage and family therapist |
licensed under the Marriage and Family Therapist Licensing |
Act or licensed under the laws of another state; |
(B) has 400 hours of supervised experience in the |
treatment or evaluation of sex offenders in the last 4 |
years, at least 200 of which are face-to-face therapy or |
evaluation with sex offenders; |
(C) has completed at least 10 sex offender evaluations |
under supervision in the past 4 years; and |
(D) has at least 40 hours of documented training in the |
specialty of sex offender evaluation, treatment, or |
management. |
(b)(1) A person is qualified for licensure as a sex |
offender treatment provider if that person: |
(A) has applied in writing on forms prepared and |
furnished by the Department; |
(B) has not engaged or is not engaged in any practice |
or conduct that would be grounds for disciplining a |
licensee under Section 75 of this Act; and |
(C) satisfies the licensure and experience |
requirements of paragraph (2) of this subsection (b). |
(2) A person who applies to the Department shall be issued |
a sex offender treatment provider license by the Department if |
the person meets the qualifications set forth in paragraph (1) |
of this subsection (b) and provides evidence to the Department |
that the person: |
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(A) is a physician licensed to practice medicine in all |
of its branches under the Medical Practice Act of 1987 or |
licensed under the laws of another state; an advanced |
practice nurse with psychiatric specialty licensed under |
the Nurse Practice Act or licensed under the laws of |
another state; a clinical psychologist licensed under the |
Clinical Psychologist Licensing Act or licensed under the |
laws of another state; a licensed clinical social worker |
licensed under the Clinical Social Work and Social Work |
Practice Act or licensed under the laws of another state; a |
licensed clinical professional counselor licensed under |
the Professional Counselor and Clinical Professional |
Counselor Licensing Act or licensed under the laws of |
another state; or a licensed marriage and family therapist |
licensed under the Marriage and Family Therapist Licensing |
Act or licensed under the laws of another state; |
(B) has 400 hours of supervised experience in the |
treatment of sex offenders in the last 4 years, at least |
200 of which are face-to-face therapy with sex offenders; |
and |
(C) has at least 40 hours documented training in the |
specialty of sex offender evaluation, treatment, or |
management. |
(c)(1) A person is qualified for licensure as an associate |
sex offender provider if that person: |
(A) has applied in writing on forms prepared and |
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furnished by the Department; |
(B) has not engaged or is not engaged in any practice |
or conduct that would be grounds for disciplining a |
licensee under Section 75 of this Act; and |
(C) satisfies the education and experience |
requirements of paragraph (2) of this subsection (c).
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(2) A person who applies to the Department shall be issued |
an associate sex offender provider license by the Department if |
the person meets the qualifications set forth in paragraph (1) |
of this subsection (c) and provides evidence to the Department |
that the person holds a master's degree or higher in social |
work, psychology, marriage and family therapy, counseling or |
closely related behavioral science degree, or psychiatry. |
Section 40. Application; exemptions. |
(a) No person may act as a sex offender evaluator, sex |
offender treatment provider, or associate sex offender |
provider as defined in this Act for the provision of sex |
offender evaluations or sex offender treatment pursuant to the |
Sex Offender Management Board Act, the Sexually Dangerous |
Persons Act, or the Sexually Violent Persons Commitment Act |
unless the person is licensed to do so by the Department. Any |
evaluation or treatment services provided by a licensed health |
care professional not licensed under this Act shall not be |
valid under the Sex Offender Management Board Act, the Sexually |
Dangerous Persons Act, or the Sexually Violent Persons |
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Commitment Act. |
(b) Nothing in this Act shall be construed to require any |
licensed physician, advanced practice nurse, physician |
assistant, or other health care professional to be licensed |
under this Act for the provision of services for which the |
person is otherwise licensed. This Act does not prohibit a
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person licensed under any other Act in this State from engaging
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in the practice for which he or she is licensed. This Act only |
applies to the provision of sex offender evaluations or sex |
offender treatment provided for the purposes of complying with |
the Sex Offender Management Board Act, the Sexually Dangerous |
Persons Act, or the Sexually Violent Persons Commitment Act. |
Section 45. License renewal; restoration.
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(a) The expiration date and renewal period for a license |
issued under this Act shall be set by rule. The holder of a |
license under this Act may renew that license during the 90 day |
period immediately preceding the expiration date upon payment |
of the required renewal fees and demonstrating compliance with |
any continuing education requirements. The Department shall |
adopt rules establishing minimum requirements of continuing |
education and means for verification of the completion of the |
continuing education requirements. The Department may, by |
rule, specify circumstances under which the continuing |
education requirements may be waived. |
(b) A licensee who has permitted his or her license to |
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expire or who has had his or her license on inactive status may |
have his or her license restored by making application to the |
Department and filing proof acceptable to the Department, as |
defined by rule, of his or her fitness to have his or her |
license restored, including evidence certifying to active |
practice in another jurisdiction satisfactory to the |
Department and by paying the required restoration fee. |
(c) A licensee whose license expired while he or she was |
(1) in Federal Service on active duty with the Armed Forces of |
the United States, or the State Militia called into service or |
training, or (2) in training or education under the supervision |
of the United States preliminary to induction into the military |
service, may have his or her license renewed or restored |
without paying any lapsed renewal fees if within 2 years after |
honorable termination of service, training or education, he or |
she furnishes the Department with satisfactory evidence to the |
effect that he or she has been so engaged and that his or her |
service, training or education has been terminated.
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Section 50. Inactive status. |
(a) A licensee who notifies the Department in writing on |
forms prescribed by the Department may elect to place his or |
her license on an inactive status and shall, subject to rules |
of the Department, be excused from payment of renewal fees |
until he or she notifies the Department in writing of his or |
her intent to restore his or her license. |
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(b) A licensee requesting restoration from inactive status |
shall be required to pay the current renewal fee and shall be |
required to restore his or her license as provided in Section |
45 of this Act. |
(c) A licensee whose license is in an inactive status shall |
not practice in the State of Illinois. |
(d) A licensee who provides sex offender evaluation or |
treatment services while his or her license is lapsed or on |
inactive status shall be considered to be practicing without a |
license which shall be grounds for discipline under this Act. |
Section 55. Fees. The fees for the administration and |
enforcement of this Act, including but not limited to original |
licensure, renewal, and restoration, shall be set by rule of |
the Department. The fees shall be nonrefundable. |
Section 60. Deposit of fees and fines. All of the fees and |
fines collected under this Act shall be deposited into the |
General Professions Dedicated Fund. |
Section 65. Payments; penalty for insufficient funds. A |
person who delivers a check or other payment to the Department |
that is returned to the Department unpaid by the financial |
institution upon which it is drawn shall pay to the Department, |
in addition to the amount already owed to the Department, a |
fine of $50. The fines imposed by this Section are in addition |
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to any other discipline provided under this Act prohibiting |
unlicensed practice or practice on a nonrenewed license. The |
Department shall notify the person that payment of fees and |
fines shall be paid to the Department by certified check or |
money order within 30 calendar days after notification. If |
after the expiration of 30 days from the date of the |
notification the person has failed to submit the necessary |
remittance, the Department shall automatically terminate the |
license or deny the application without hearing. If after |
termination or denial the person seeks a license, he or she |
shall apply to the Department for restoration or issuance of |
the license and pay all fees and fines due to the Department. |
The Department may establish a fee for the processing of an |
application for restoration of a license to pay all expenses of |
processing the application. The Secretary may waive the fines |
due under this Section in individual cases where the Secretary |
finds that the fines would be unreasonable or unnecessarily |
burdensome. |
Section 70. Roster; address change. |
(a) The Department shall maintain a roster of names and |
addresses of all persons who hold valid licenses and all |
persons whose licenses have been suspended or revoked within |
the previous year. This roster shall be available upon request |
and payment of the required fee. |
(b) It is the duty of the applicant or licensee to inform |
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the Department of any change of address, and that change must |
be made either through the Department's website or by |
contacting the Department's licensure maintenance unit. |
Section 75. Refusal, revocation, or suspension.
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(a) The Department may refuse to issue or renew, or may |
revoke, suspend, place on probation, reprimand, or take other |
disciplinary or nondisciplinary action, as the Department |
considers appropriate, including the imposition of fines not to |
exceed $10,000 for each violation, with regard to any license |
or licensee for any one or more of the following:
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(1) violations of this Act or of the rules adopted |
under this Act; |
(2) discipline by the Department under other state law |
and rules which the licensee is subject to; |
(3) conviction by plea of guilty or nolo contendere, |
finding of guilt, jury verdict, or entry of judgment or by |
sentencing for any crime, including, but not limited to, |
convictions, preceding sentences of supervision, |
conditional discharge, or first offender probation, under |
the laws of any jurisdiction of the United States: (i) that |
is a felony; or (ii) that is a misdemeanor, an essential |
element of which is dishonesty, or that is directly related |
to the practice of the profession; |
(4) professional incompetence; |
(5) advertising in a false, deceptive, or misleading |
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manner; |
(6) aiding, abetting, assisting, procuring, advising, |
employing, or contracting with any unlicensed person to |
provide sex offender evaluation or treatment services |
contrary to any rules or provisions of this Act; |
(7) engaging in immoral conduct in the commission of |
any act, such as sexual abuse, sexual misconduct, or sexual |
exploitation, related to the licensee's practice; |
(8) engaging in dishonorable, unethical, or |
unprofessional conduct of a character likely to deceive, |
defraud, or harm the public; |
(9) practicing or offering to practice beyond the scope |
permitted by law or accepting and performing professional |
responsibilities which the licensee knows or has reason to |
know that he or she is not competent to perform; |
(10) knowingly delegating professional |
responsibilities to a person unqualified by training, |
experience, or licensure to perform; |
(11) failing to provide information in response to a |
written request made by the Department within 60 days; |
(12) having a habitual or excessive use of or addiction |
to alcohol, narcotics, stimulants, or any other chemical |
agent or drug which results in the inability to practice |
with reasonable judgment, skill, or safety; |
(13) having a pattern of practice or other behavior |
that demonstrates incapacity or incompetence to practice |
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under this Act; |
(14) discipline by another state, District of |
Columbia, territory, or foreign nation, if at least one of |
the grounds for the discipline is the same or substantially |
equivalent to those set forth in this Section; |
(15) a finding by the Department that the licensee, |
after having his or her license placed on probationary |
status, has violated the terms of probation; |
(16) willfully making or filing false records or |
reports in his or her practice, including, but not limited |
to, false records filed with State agencies or departments; |
(17) making a material misstatement in furnishing |
information to the Department or otherwise making |
misleading, deceptive, untrue, or fraudulent |
representations in violation of this Act or otherwise in |
the practice of the profession; |
(18) fraud or misrepresentation in applying for or |
procuring a license under this Act or in connection with |
applying for renewal of a license under this Act; |
(19) inability to practice the profession with |
reasonable judgment, skill, or safety as a result of |
physical illness, including, but not limited to, |
deterioration through the aging process, loss of motor |
skill, or a mental illness or disability; |
(20) charging for professional services not rendered, |
including filing false statements for the collection of |
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fees for which services are not rendered; or |
(21) practicing under a false or, except as provided by |
law, an assumed name. |
All fines shall be paid within 60 days of the effective |
date of the order imposing the fine.
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(b) The Department may refuse to issue or may suspend the |
license of any person who fails to file a tax return, to pay |
the tax, penalty, or interest shown in a filed tax return, or |
to pay any final assessment of tax, penalty, or interest, as |
required by any tax Act administered by the Illinois Department |
of Revenue, until such time as the requirements of the tax Act |
are satisfied in accordance with subsection (g) of Section |
2105-15 of the Civil Administrative Code of Illinois. |
(c) The Department shall deny a license or renewal |
authorized by this Act to a person who has defaulted on an |
educational loan or scholarship provided or guaranteed by the |
Illinois Student Assistance Commission or any governmental |
agency of this State in accordance with item (5) of subsection |
(g) of Section 2105-15 of the Civil Administrative Code of |
Illinois. |
(d) In cases where the Department of Healthcare and Family |
Services has previously determined that a licensee or a |
potential licensee is more than 30 days delinquent in the |
payment of child support and has subsequently certified the |
delinquency to the Department, the Department may refuse to |
issue or renew or may revoke or suspend that person's license |
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or may take other disciplinary action against that person based |
solely upon the certification of delinquency made by the |
Department of Healthcare and Family Services in accordance with |
item (5) of subsection (g) of Section 2105-15 of the Civil |
Administrative Code of Illinois. |
(e) The determination by a circuit court that a licensee is |
subject to involuntary admission or judicial admission, as |
provided in the Mental Health and Developmental Disabilities |
Code, operates as an automatic suspension. The suspension will |
end only upon a finding by a court that the patient is no |
longer subject to involuntary admission or judicial admission |
and the issuance of a court order so finding and discharging |
the patient. |
(f) In enforcing this Act, the Department or Board, upon a |
showing of a possible violation, may compel an individual |
licensed to practice under this Act, or who has applied for |
licensure under this Act, to submit to a mental or physical |
examination, or both, as required by and at the expense of the |
Department. The Department or Board may order the examining |
physician to present testimony concerning the mental or |
physical examination of the licensee or applicant. No |
information shall be excluded by reason of any common law or |
statutory privilege relating to communications between the |
licensee or applicant and the examining physician. The |
examining physician shall be specifically designated by the |
Board or Department. The individual to be examined may have, at |
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his or her own expense, another physician of his or her choice |
present during all aspects of this examination. The examination |
shall be performed by a physician licensed to practice medicine |
in all its branches. Failure of an individual to submit to a |
mental or physical examination, when directed, shall result in |
an automatic suspension without hearing.
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A person holding a license under this Act or who has |
applied for a license under this Act who, because of a physical |
or mental illness or disability, including, but not limited to, |
deterioration through the aging process or loss of motor skill, |
is unable to practice the profession with reasonable judgment, |
skill, or safety, may be required by the Department to submit |
to care, counseling, or treatment by physicians approved or |
designated by the Department as a condition, term, or |
restriction for continued, reinstated, or renewed licensure to |
practice. Submission to care, counseling, or treatment as |
required by the Department shall not be considered discipline |
of a license. If the licensee refuses to enter into a care, |
counseling, or treatment agreement or fails to abide by the |
terms of the agreement, the Department may file a complaint to |
revoke, suspend, or otherwise discipline the license of the |
individual. The Secretary may order the license suspended |
immediately, pending a hearing by the Department. Fines shall |
not be assessed in disciplinary actions involving physical or |
mental illness or impairment. |
In instances in which the Secretary immediately suspends a |
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person's license under this Section, a hearing on that person's |
license must be convened by the Department within 15 days after |
the suspension and completed without appreciable delay. The |
Department and Board shall have the authority to review the |
subject individual's record of treatment and counseling |
regarding the impairment to the extent permitted by applicable |
federal statutes and regulations safeguarding the |
confidentiality of medical records. |
An individual licensed under this Act and subject to action |
under this Section shall be afforded an opportunity to |
demonstrate to the Department or Board that he or she can |
resume practice in compliance with acceptable and prevailing |
standards under the provisions of his or her license. |
Section 80. Continuing education. The Department shall |
adopt rules for continuing education for persons licensed under |
this Act that require a completion of 20 hours of approved sex |
offender specific continuing education per license renewal |
period. The Department shall establish by rule a means for the |
verification of completion of the continuing education |
required by this Section. This verification may be accomplished |
through audits of records maintained by the licensee, by |
requiring the filing of continuing education certificates with |
the Department, or by other means established by the |
Department. |
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Section 85. Violations; injunctions; cease and desist |
order. |
(a) If a person violates a provision of this Act, the |
Secretary may, in the name of the People of the State of |
Illinois, through the Attorney General, petition for an order |
enjoining the violation or for an order enforcing compliance |
with this Act. Upon the filing of a verified petition in court, |
the court may issue a temporary restraining order, without |
notice or bond, and may preliminarily and permanently enjoin |
the violation. If it is established that the person has |
violated or is violating the injunction, the court may punish |
the offender for contempt of court. Proceedings under this |
Section are in addition to, and not in lieu of, all other |
remedies and penalties provided by this Act. |
(b) If a person engages in sex offender evaluation or |
treatment or holds himself or herself out as licensee without |
having a valid license under this Act, then any licensee, any |
interested party or any person injured thereby may, in addition |
to the Secretary, petition for relief as provided in subsection |
(a) of this Section. |
(c) Whenever in the opinion of the Department a person has |
violated any provision of this Act, the Department may issue a |
rule to show cause why an order to cease and desist should not |
be entered against him or her. The rule shall clearly set forth |
the grounds relied upon by the Department and shall provide a |
period of 7 days from the date of the rule to file an answer to |
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the satisfaction of the Department. Failure to answer to the |
satisfaction of the Department shall cause an order to cease |
and desist to be issued immediately. |
Section 90. Unlicensed practice; violation; civil penalty. |
(a) A person who holds himself or herself out to practice |
as a licensee without being licensed under this Act shall, in |
addition to any other penalty provided by law, pay a civil |
penalty to the Department in an amount not to exceed $10,000 |
for each offense, as determined by the Department. The civil |
penalty shall be assessed by the Department after a hearing is |
held in accordance with the provisions of this Act regarding a |
hearing for the discipline of a licensee. |
(b) The Department may investigate any and all unlicensed |
activity. |
(c) The civil penalty shall be paid within 60 days after |
the effective date of the order imposing the civil penalty. The |
order shall constitute a judgment and may be filed and |
execution had thereon in the same manner as any judgment from |
any court of record. |
Section 95. Investigation; notice and hearing. The |
Department may investigate the actions or qualifications of any |
person or persons holding or claiming to hold a license. Before |
suspending, revoking, placing on probationary status, or |
taking any other disciplinary action as the Department may deem |
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proper with regard to any license, at least 30 days before the |
date set for the hearing, the Department shall (i) notify the |
accused in writing of any charges made and the time and place |
for a hearing on the charges before the Board, (ii) direct him |
or her to file a written answer to the charges with the Board |
under oath within 20 days after the service on him or her of |
the notice, and (iii) inform him or her that if he or she fails |
to file an answer, default will be taken against him or her and |
his or her license may be suspended, revoked, placed on |
probationary status, or other disciplinary action taken with |
regard to the license, including limiting the scope, nature, or |
extent of his or her practice, as the Department may deem |
proper. In case the person, after receiving notice, fails to |
file an answer, his or her license may, in the discretion of |
the Department, be suspended, revoked, placed on probationary |
status, or the Department may take whatever disciplinary action |
is deemed proper, including limiting the scope, nature, or |
extent of the person's practice or the imposition of a fine, |
without a hearing, if the act or acts charged constitute |
sufficient grounds for that action under this Act. Written |
notice may be served by personal delivery or by registered or |
certified mail to the applicant or licensee at his or her last |
address of record with the Department. In case the person fails |
to file an answer after receiving notice, his or her license |
may, in the discretion of the Department, be suspended, |
revoked, or placed on probationary status, or the Department |
|
may take whatever disciplinary action is deemed proper, |
including limiting the scope, nature, or extent of the person's |
practice or the imposition of a fine, without a hearing, if the |
act or acts charged constitute sufficient grounds for that |
action under this Act. The written answer shall be served by |
personal delivery, certified delivery, or certified or |
registered mail to the Department. At the time and place fixed |
in the notice, the Department shall proceed to hear the charges |
and the parties or their counsel shall be accorded ample |
opportunity to present statements, testimony, evidence, and |
argument as may be pertinent to the charges or to the defense |
thereto. The Department may continue the hearing from time to |
time. At the discretion of the Secretary after having first |
received the recommendation of the Board, the accused person's |
license may be suspended or revoked, if the evidence |
constitutes sufficient grounds for that action under this Act. |
Section 100. Record of proceeding. The Department, at its |
expense, shall preserve a record of all proceedings at the |
formal hearing of any case. The notice of hearing, complaint |
and all other documents in the nature of pleadings and written |
motions filed in the proceedings, the transcript of testimony, |
the report of the Board and orders of the Department shall be |
in the record of the proceedings. The Department shall furnish |
a transcript of the record to any person interested in the |
hearing upon payment of the fee required under Section 2105-115 |
|
of the Department of Professional Regulation Law. |
Section 105. Subpoenas; oaths; attendance of witnesses. |
The Department has the power to subpoena and to bring before it |
any person and to take testimony either orally or by |
deposition, or both, with the same fees and mileage and in the |
same manner as prescribed in civil cases in the courts of this |
State. |
The Secretary, the designated hearing officer, and every |
member of the Board has power to administer oaths to witnesses |
at any hearing that the Department is authorized to conduct and |
any other oaths authorized in any Act administered by the |
Department. A circuit court may, upon application of the |
Department or its designee, or of the applicant or licensee |
against whom proceedings under this Act are pending, enter an |
order requiring the attendance of witnesses and their |
testimony, and the production of documents, papers, files, |
books and records in connection with any hearing or |
investigation. The court may compel obedience to its order by |
proceedings for contempt. |
Section 110. Recommendations for disciplinary action. At |
the conclusion of the hearing, the Board shall present to the |
Secretary a written report of its findings and recommendations. |
The report shall contain a finding whether or not the accused |
person violated this Act or failed to comply with the |
|
conditions required in this Act. The Board shall specify the |
nature of the violation or failure to comply, and shall make |
its recommendations to the Secretary. |
The report of findings and recommendations of the Board |
shall be the basis for the Department's order for refusal or |
for the granting of a license, or for any disciplinary action, |
unless the Secretary shall determine that the Board's report is |
contrary to the manifest weight of the evidence, in which case |
the Secretary may issue an order in contravention of the |
Board's report. The finding is not admissible in evidence |
against the person in a criminal prosecution brought for the |
violation of this Act, but the hearing and finding are not a |
bar to a criminal prosecution brought for the violation of this |
Act. |
Section 115. Rehearing. In a hearing involving |
disciplinary action against a licensee, a copy of the Board's |
report shall be served upon the respondent by the Department, |
either personally or as provided in this Act for the service of |
the notice of hearing. Within 20 calendar days after service, |
the respondent may present to the Department a motion in |
writing for a rehearing that shall specify the particular |
grounds for rehearing. If no motion for rehearing is filed, |
then upon the expiration of the time specified for filing a |
motion, or if a motion for rehearing is denied, then upon |
denial, the Secretary may enter an order in accordance with |
|
recommendations of the Board, except as provided in this Act. |
If the respondent orders from the reporting service, and pays |
for, a transcript of the record within the time for filing a |
motion for rehearing, the 20 calendar day period within which a |
motion may be filed shall commence upon the delivery of the |
transcript to the respondent. |
Section 120. Hearing by other hearing officer. Whenever |
the Secretary is not satisfied that substantial justice has |
been done in the revocation, suspension or refusal to issue or |
renew a license, the Secretary may order a rehearing by the |
same or other hearing officer. |
Section 125. Appointment of a hearing officer. The |
Secretary has the authority to appoint any attorney duly |
licensed to practice law in the State of Illinois to serve as |
the hearing officer in any action for refusal to issue or renew |
a license, or to discipline a licensee. The hearing officer has |
full authority to conduct the hearing. The hearing officer |
shall report his or her findings and recommendations to the |
Board and the Secretary. The Board has 60 calendar days from |
receipt of the report to review the report of the hearing |
officer and present its findings of fact, conclusions of law |
and recommendations to the Secretary. If the Board fails to |
present its report within the 60 calendar day period, the |
respondent may request in writing a direct appeal to the |
|
Secretary, in which case the Secretary shall, within 7 calendar |
days after receipt of the request, issue an order directing the |
Board to issue its findings of fact, conclusions of law, and |
recommendations to the Secretary within 30 calendar days after |
that order. If the Board fails to issue its findings of fact, |
conclusions of law, and recommendations within that time frame |
to the Secretary after the entry of the order, the Secretary |
shall, within 30 calendar days thereafter, issue an order based |
upon the report of the hearing officer and the record of the |
proceedings or issue an order remanding the matter back to the |
hearing officer for additional proceedings in accordance with |
the order. If (i) a direct appeal is requested, (ii) the Board |
fails to issue its findings of fact, conclusions of law, and |
recommendations within the 30 day mandate from the Secretary or |
the Secretary fails to order the Board to do so, and (iii) the |
Secretary fails to issue an order within 30 calendar days |
thereafter, then the hearing officer's report is deemed |
accepted and a final decision of the Secretary. Notwithstanding |
any other provision of this Section, if the Secretary, upon |
review, determines that substantial justice has not been done |
in the revocation, suspension, or refusal to issue or renew a |
license or other disciplinary action taken as the result of the |
entry of the hearing officer's report, the Secretary may order |
a rehearing by the same or other hearing officer. If the |
Secretary disagrees with the recommendation of the Board or the |
hearing officer, the Secretary may issue an order in |
|
contravention of the recommendation. |
Section 130. Order; certified copy. An order or a certified |
copy of the order, over the seal of the Department and |
purporting to be signed by the Secretary, shall be prima facie |
proof: |
(a) that the signature is the genuine signature of the |
Secretary; |
(b) that the Secretary is duly appointed and qualified; and |
(c) that the Board and its members are qualified to act. |
Section 135. Restoration. At any time after the suspension |
or revocation of a license, the Department may restore the |
license to the accused person, upon the written recommendation |
of the Board, unless after an investigation and a hearing the |
Board determines that restoration is not in the public |
interest. |
Section 140. License surrender. Upon the revocation or |
suspension of a license, the licensee shall immediately |
surrender the license to the Department. If the licensee fails |
to do so, the Department has the right to seize the license. |
Section 145. Summary suspension. The Secretary may |
summarily suspend the license of a licensee without a hearing, |
simultaneously with the institution of proceedings for a |
|
hearing provided for in this Act, if the Secretary finds that |
evidence in his or her possession indicates that a licensee's |
continuation in practice would constitute an imminent danger to |
the public. In the event that the Secretary summarily suspends |
the license of a licensee without a hearing, a hearing by the |
Board must be held within 30 calendar days after the suspension |
has occurred. |
Section 150. Judicial review. All final administrative |
decisions of the Department are subject to judicial review |
under the Administrative Review Law and its rules. The term |
"administrative decision" is defined as in Section 3-101 of the |
Code of Civil Procedure. |
Proceedings for judicial review shall be commenced in the |
circuit court of the county in which the party applying for |
review resides; but if the party is not a resident of this |
State, the venue shall be in Sangamon County. |
Section 155. Certification of records. The Department |
shall not be required to certify any record to the court or |
file any answer in court or otherwise appear in any court in a |
judicial review proceeding, unless there is filed in the court, |
with the complaint, a receipt from the Department acknowledging |
payment of the costs of furnishing and certifying the record. |
Failure on the part of the plaintiff to file the receipt in |
court shall be grounds for dismissal of the action. |
|
Section 160. Violations; penalties. A person who is found |
to have violated any provision of this Act is guilty of a Class |
A misdemeanor for the first offense, and a Class 4 felony for a |
second and subsequent offense. |
Section 165. Illinois Administrative Procedure Act. The |
Illinois Administrative Procedure Act is expressly adopted and |
incorporated in this Act as if all of the provisions of that |
Act were included in this Act, except that the provision of |
paragraph (d) of Section 10-65 of the Illinois Administrative |
Procedure Act, which provides that at hearings the license |
holder has the right to show compliance with all lawful |
requirements for retention, continuation or renewal of the |
certificate, is specifically excluded. For the purpose of this |
Act, the notice required under Section 10-25 of the Illinois |
Administrative Procedure Act is deemed sufficient when mailed |
to the last known address of a party. |
Section 170. Home rule. The regulation and licensing of |
sex offender evaluators and treatment providers are exclusive |
powers and functions of the State. A home rule unit may not |
regulate or license sex offender evaluators and treatment |
providers. This Section is a denial and limitation of home rule |
powers and functions under subsection (h) of Section 6 of |
Article VII of the Illinois Constitution.
|
|
Section 172. Confidentiality. All information collected by |
the Department in the course of an examination or investigation |
of a licensee or applicant, including, but not limited to, any |
complaint against a licensee filed with the Department and |
information collected to investigate the complaint, shall be |
maintained for the confidential use of the Department and shall |
not be disclosed. The Department may not disclose the |
information except to law enforcement officials, other |
regulatory agencies that have an appropriate regulatory |
interest as determined by the Secretary, or to a party |
presenting a lawful subpoena to the Department. Information and |
documents disclosed to a federal, State, county, or local law |
enforcement agency shall not be disclosed by the agency for any |
purpose to any other agency or person. A formal complaint filed |
against a licensee by the Department or any order issued by the |
Department against a licensee or applicant shall be a public |
record, except as otherwise prohibited by law. |
Section 174. Multiple licensure. When a licensee under this |
Act, who is also a licensee under another statute enforced by |
the Department, is subject to any disciplinary action including |
but not limited to the probation, suspension or revocation of |
any license issued by the Department, the disciplinary action |
is automatically applied to all licenses held by the licensee |
by operation of law. |
|
Section 175. The Sex Offender Management Board Act is |
amended by changing Sections 5, 10, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, and 20 |
as follows:
|
(20 ILCS 4026/5)
|
Sec. 5. Legislative declaration. The General Assembly |
hereby declares
that the comprehensive evaluation, treatment, |
identification, counseling, and management continued
|
monitoring of sex offenders who are subject to the supervision |
of the
criminal or juvenile justice systems or mental health |
systems is
necessary in
order to work toward the
elimination of |
recidivism by such offenders. Therefore, the General Assembly |
hereby creates a program which assists in the education and |
training of parole, probation, law enforcement, treatment |
providers and others involved in the management of sex |
offenders. This program will standardize Therefore, the |
General Assembly
hereby creates a program which standardizes |
the evaluation, treatment, identification,
counseling, and |
management continued monitoring of sex offenders at each stage |
of the
criminal or juvenile justice systems or mental health |
systems so
that
those offenders will curtail
recidivistic |
behavior and the protection of victims and potential victims |
will
be enhanced. The General Assembly recognizes that some sex |
offenders
cannot or will not respond to counseling and that, in |
creating the program
described in this Act, the General |
|
Assembly does not intend to imply that
all sex offenders can be |
successful in treatment counseling .
|
(Source: P.A. 90-133, eff. 7-22-97; 90-793, eff. 8-14-98.)
|
(20 ILCS 4026/10)
|
Sec. 10. Definitions. In this Act, unless the context |
otherwise
requires:
|
(a) "Board" means the Sex Offender Management Board created |
in Section 15.
|
(b) "Sex offender" means any person who is convicted or |
found delinquent in
the State of Illinois, or under any |
substantially similar federal law or
law of another state, of |
any sex offense or attempt of a sex offense as defined
in
|
subsection (c) of this Section, or any former statute of this |
State that
defined a felony sex offense, or who has been |
declared certified as a sexually dangerous
person under the |
Sexually Dangerous Persons Act or declared a sexually
violent |
person under the Sexually Violent Persons Commitment Act, or |
any
substantially similar
federal law or law of another state.
|
(c) "Sex offense" means any felony or misdemeanor offense |
described in this
subsection (c) as follows:
|
(1) Indecent solicitation of a child, in violation of |
Section 11-6 of the
Criminal Code of 1961;
|
(2) Indecent solicitation of an adult, in violation of |
Section 11-6.5 of
the Criminal Code of 1961;
|
(3) Public indecency, in violation of Section 11-9 or |
|
11-30 of the Criminal Code of
1961;
|
(4) Sexual exploitation of a child, in violation of |
Section 11-9.1 of the
Criminal Code of 1961;
|
(5) Sexual relations within families, in violation of |
Section 11-11 of the
Criminal Code of 1961;
|
(6) Promoting juvenile prostitution or soliciting for |
a juvenile prostitute, in violation of Section 11-14.4 or |
11-15.1
of
the Criminal Code of 1961;
|
(7) Promoting juvenile prostitution or keeping a place |
of juvenile prostitution, in violation of Section
11-14.4 |
or 11-17.1 of the Criminal Code of 1961;
|
(8) Patronizing a juvenile prostitute, in violation of |
Section 11-18.1 of
the Criminal Code of 1961;
|
(9) Promoting juvenile prostitution or juvenile |
pimping, in violation of Section 11-14.4 or 11-19.1 of the |
Criminal
Code
of 1961;
|
(10) promoting juvenile prostitution or exploitation |
of a child, in violation of Section 11-14.4 or 11-19.2 of |
the
Criminal Code of 1961;
|
(11) Child pornography, in violation of Section |
11-20.1 of the Criminal
Code
of 1961;
|
(11.5) Aggravated child pornography, in violation of |
Section 11-20.1B or 11-20.3 of the Criminal Code of 1961; |
(12) Harmful material, in violation of Section 11-21 of |
the Criminal Code
of
1961;
|
(13) Criminal sexual assault, in violation of Section |
|
11-1.20 or 12-13 of the
Criminal
Code of 1961;
|
(13.5) Grooming, in violation of Section 11-25 of the |
Criminal Code of 1961; |
(14) Aggravated criminal sexual assault, in violation |
of Section 11-1.30 or 12-14 of
the Criminal Code of 1961;
|
(14.5) Traveling to meet a minor, in violation of |
Section 11-26 of the Criminal Code of
1961; |
(15) Predatory criminal sexual assault of a child, in |
violation of Section
11-1.40 or 12-14.1 of the Criminal |
Code of 1961;
|
(16) Criminal sexual abuse, in violation of Section |
11-1.50 or 12-15 of the Criminal
Code of 1961;
|
(17) Aggravated criminal sexual abuse, in violation of |
Section 11-1.60 or 12-16 of
the
Criminal Code of 1961;
|
(18) Ritualized abuse of a child, in violation of |
Section 12-33 of the
Criminal Code of 1961;
|
(19) An attempt to commit any of the offenses |
enumerated in this
subsection
(c); or
|
(20) Any felony offense under Illinois law that is |
sexually motivated.
|
(d) "Management" means treatment, counseling, monitoring, |
and supervision of any sex
offender that conforms to the |
standards created by the Board under
Section 15.
|
(e) "Sexually motivated" means one or more of the facts of |
the underlying
offense indicates conduct that is of a sexual |
nature or that shows an intent to
engage in behavior of a |
|
sexual nature.
|
(f) "Sex offender evaluator" means a person licensed under |
the Sex Offender Evaluation and Treatment Provider Act to |
conduct sex offender evaluations. |
(g) "Sex offender treatment provider" means a person |
licensed under the Sex Offender Evaluation and Treatment |
Provider Act to provide sex offender treatment services. |
(h) "Associate sex offender provider" means a person |
licensed under the Sex Offender Evaluation and Treatment |
Provider Act to provide sex offender evaluations and to provide |
sex offender treatment under the supervision of a licensed sex |
offender evaluator or a licensed sex offender treatment |
provider. |
(Source: P.A. 96-1551, eff. 7-1-11 .)
|
(20 ILCS 4026/15)
|
Sec. 15. Sex Offender Management Board; creation; duties.
|
(a) There is created the Sex Offender Management Board, |
which shall consist
of 22 20
members. The membership of the |
Board shall consist of the
following
persons:
|
(1) Two members appointed by the Governor representing |
the judiciary, one
representing juvenile court matters and |
one
representing adult criminal court matters;
|
(1) (2) One member appointed by the Governor |
representing Probation
Services based on the |
recommendation of the Illinois Probation and Court |
|
Services Association;
|
(2) (3) One member appointed by the Governor |
representing the Department of
Corrections;
|
(3) One member appointed by the Governor representing |
the Department of Juvenile Justice; |
(4) One member appointed by the Governor representing |
the Department of
Human Services;
|
(5) One member appointed by the Governor representing |
the Illinois State
Police;
|
(6) One member appointed by the Governor representing |
the Department of
Children and Family Services;
|
(7) One member appointed by the Attorney General |
representing the Office
of the Attorney General;
|
(8) One member appointed by the Attorney General who is |
a licensed mental
health professional with documented |
expertise in the treatment of sex
offenders;
|
(9) Two members appointed by the Attorney General who |
are State's
Attorneys or assistant State's Attorneys, one |
representing juvenile court
matters and one representing |
felony court matters;
|
(10) One member being the Director of the |
Administrative Office of the Illinois Courts or his or her |
designee; |
(11) One member being the Cook County State's Attorney |
or his or her
designee;
|
(12) (11) One member being the Director of the State's |
|
Attorneys Appellate
Prosecutor or his or her designee;
|
(13) (12) One member being the Cook County Public |
Defender or his or her
designee;
|
(14) (13) Two members appointed by the Governor who are |
representatives
of law enforcement, at least one juvenile |
officer with juvenile sex offender experience and one sex |
crime investigator ;
|
(15) (14) Two members appointed by the Attorney General |
who are recognized
experts in the field of sexual assault |
and who can represent sexual assault
victims and victims' |
rights organizations;
|
(16) (15) One member being the State Appellate Defender |
or his or her
designee;
and
|
(17) One member appointed by the Governor being the |
President of the Illinois Polygraph Society of his or her |
designee; |
(18) (16) One member being the Executive Director of |
the Criminal Justice
Information Authority or his or her |
designee ; and |
(19) One member appointed by the Governor being the |
President of the Illinois Chapter of the Association for |
the Treatment of Sexual Abusers or his or her designee .
|
(b) The Governor and the Attorney General shall appoint a |
presiding officer
for the Board
from among the board members |
appointed under subsection (a) of this
Section, which presiding |
officer shall serve at the pleasure of the Governor
and the |
|
Attorney
General.
|
(c) Each member of the Board shall demonstrate substantial |
expertise and
experience in the field of sexual assault.
|
(d) (1) Any member of the Board created in subsection (a) |
of this Section
who is appointed under paragraphs (1) through |
(7) of subsection (a) of
this
Section shall serve at the |
pleasure of the official who appointed that member,
for a term |
of 5 years and may be reappointed. The members shall serve
|
without additional compensation.
|
(2) Any member of the Board created in subsection (a) of |
this Section who
is appointed under paragraphs (8) through (19) |
(14) of subsection (a) of this
Section shall serve for a term |
of 5 years and may be reappointed. However, the term terms of |
the member members appointed under paragraph paragraphs (8) of |
subsection (a) of this Section shall end on January 1, 2012 the |
effective date of this amendatory Act of the 97th General |
Assembly . Within 30 days after January 1, 2012 the effective |
date of this amendatory Act of the 97th General Assembly , the |
Attorney General shall appoint a member under paragraph (8) of |
subsection (a) of this Section to fill the vacancy created by |
this amendatory Act of the 97th General Assembly. A person who |
has previously served as a member of the Board may be |
reappointed. The term terms of the President of the Illinois |
Polygraph Society or
his or her designee, the President of the |
Illinois Chapter of the
Association for the Treatment of Sexual |
Abusers or his or her designee, and the member representing the |
|
Illinois Principal Association ends end on January 1, 2012 the |
effective date of this amendatory Act of the 97th General |
Assembly . The members
shall serve without
compensation.
|
(3) The travel costs associated with membership on the |
Board created in
subsection (a) of this Section may will be |
reimbursed subject to availability of
funds.
|
(e) (Blank). The first meeting of this Board shall be held |
within 45 days of the
effective date of this Act.
|
(f) The Board shall carry out the following duties:
|
(1) The Not later than December 31, 2001,
the
Board |
shall develop and prescribe separate standardized |
procedures for the
evaluation and management |
identification of the offender and recommend behavior
|
management,
monitoring, and treatment
based upon the |
knowledge that sex
offenders are
extremely habituated and |
that there is no known cure for the propensity to
commit |
sex abuse . Periodically, the Board shall review and modify |
as necessary the standardized procedures based upon |
current best practices. The Board shall develop and |
implement measures of success
based upon a no-cure policy |
for intervention. The Board shall develop and
implement |
methods of intervention for sex offenders which have as a |
priority
the physical and psychological safety of victims |
and potential
victims and which are appropriate to the |
needs of the particular offender, so
long as there is no |
reduction of the safety of victims and potential victims.
|
|
(2) These standardized procedures that are based on |
current best practices Not later than December 31, 2001, |
the Board
shall develop separate guidelines and standards |
for a system of programs for
the evaluation and treatment
|
of both juvenile and adult sex
offenders which shall
be |
utilized with
by offenders who are placed on probation, |
committed to the Department of
Corrections , Department of |
Juvenile Justice, or Department of Human Services, or |
placed on mandatory
supervised release or parole. The |
programs
developed under this paragraph (f) shall be as |
flexible as possible so
that the programs may be utilized |
by each offender to prevent the offender
from harming |
victims and potential victims. The programs shall be |
structured
in such a manner that the programs provide a |
continuing monitoring process as
well as a continuum of |
evaluation and treatment counseling programs for each |
offender as that offender
proceeds through the justice |
system. Also, the programs shall
be developed in such a |
manner that, to the extent possible, the programs may be
|
accessed by all offenders in the justice system.
|
(2.5) Not later than July 1, 2013 and annually |
thereafter, the Board shall provide trainings for agencies |
that provide supervision and management to sex offenders on |
best practices for the treatment, evaluation, and |
supervision of sex offenders. The training program may |
include other matters relevant to the supervision and |
|
management of sex offenders, including, but not limited to, |
legislative developments and national best practices |
models. The Board shall hold not less than 2 trainings per |
year. The Board may develop other training and education |
programs to promote the utilization of best practices for |
the effective management of sex offenders as it deems |
necessary. |
(3) There is established the Sex Offender Management |
Board Fund in the
State Treasury into which funds received |
under any provision of law or from
public or private |
sources
shall be deposited, and from which funds
shall be |
appropriated for the purposes set forth in Section 19 of |
this Act ,
Section 5-6-3 of the Unified Code of Corrections, |
and Section 3 of the Sex
Offender Registration Act, and the |
remainder shall be
appropriated to the Sex Offender |
Management Board to carry out its duties and comply with |
the provisions of this Act for planning and
research .
|
(4) (Blank). The Board shall develop and prescribe a |
plan to research and analyze
the effectiveness of the |
evaluation, identification, and counseling procedures
and |
programs developed under this Act. The Board shall also |
develop and
prescribe a system for implementation of the |
guidelines and standards developed
under paragraph (2) of |
this subsection (f) and for tracking offenders who
have |
been subjected to evaluation, identification, and |
treatment
under
this Act. In addition, the Board shall |
|
develop a system for monitoring
offender behaviors and |
offender adherence to prescribed behavioral changes.
The |
results of the tracking and behavioral monitoring shall be |
a part of any
analysis made under this paragraph (4).
|
(g) The Board may promulgate rules as are necessary to |
carry
out the duties of the Board.
|
(h) The Board and the individual members of the Board shall |
be immune from
any liability, whether civil or criminal, for |
the good faith performance of
the duties of the Board as |
specified in this Section.
|
(Source: P.A. 97-257, eff. 1-1-12.)
|
(20 ILCS 4026/16)
|
Sec. 16. Sex offender evaluation and identification |
required.
|
(a) Beginning on January 1, 2004 the effective date of this |
amendatory Act of the 93rd
General Assembly , each felony sex |
offender who is to be considered for
probation shall
be |
required as part of the pre-sentence or social investigation to |
submit to
an evaluation for treatment, an evaluation for risk, |
and procedures for
monitoring of behavior to protect victims |
and potential victims developed
pursuant to item (1) of |
subsection (f) of Section 15 of this Act.
|
(b) Beginning on January 1, 2014, the The evaluation |
required by subsection (a) of this Section shall be by a sex |
offender evaluator or associate sex offender provider as |
|
defined in Section 10 of this Act an
evaluator approved by the |
Sex Offender Management Board and shall be at the
expense of |
the person evaluated, based upon that person's ability to pay |
for
such treatment.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-616, eff. 1-1-04.) |
(20 ILCS 4026/17)
|
Sec. 17. Sentencing of sex offenders; treatment based upon |
evaluation and
identification required.
|
(a) Each felony sex offender sentenced by the court for a |
sex offense shall
be
required as a part of any sentence to |
probation, conditional release, or
periodic imprisonment to |
undergo treatment based upon the recommendations of
the |
evaluation made pursuant to Section 16 or based upon any |
subsequent
recommendations by the Administrative Office of the |
Illinois Courts or the
county probation department, whichever |
is appropriate. Beginning on January 1, 2014, the Any such |
treatment and
monitoring shall be at a facility or with a sex |
offender treatment provider or associate sex offender provider |
as defined in Section 10 of this Act person approved by the |
Board and at
the such offender's own expense based upon the |
offender's ability to pay for such
treatment.
|
(b) Beginning on January 1, 2004 the effective date of this |
amendatory Act of the 93rd
General Assembly , each sex offender |
placed on parole or mandatory supervised
release by the |
Prisoner Review Board shall be required as a condition of |
|
parole
to undergo treatment based upon any evaluation or |
subsequent reevaluation
regarding such offender during the |
offender's incarceration or any period of
parole. Beginning on |
January 1, 2014, the Any such treatment shall be by a sex |
offender treatment provider or associate sex offender provider |
as defined in Section 10 of this Act an individual approved by |
the Board and
at the offender's expense based upon the |
offender's ability to pay for such
treatment.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-616, eff. 1-1-04.) |
(20 ILCS 4026/18)
|
Sec. 18. Sex offender treatment contracts with providers. |
The county
probation department or the Department of Human |
Services shall not employ or
contract with and shall not allow |
a sex offender to employ or contract with any
individual or |
entity to provide sex offender evaluation or treatment services
|
pursuant to this Act unless the sex offender evaluation or |
treatment services
provided are by a person licensed under the |
Sex Offender Evaluation and Treatment Provider Act an |
individual approved by the Board pursuant to item (2) of
|
subsection (f) of Section 15 of this Act.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-616, eff. 1-1-04.) |
(20 ILCS 4026/19)
|
Sec. 19. Sex Offender Management Board Fund.
All |
unobligated and unexpended moneys remaining in the Sex Offender |
|
Management Board Fund on the effective date of this amendatory |
Act of the 97th General Assembly shall be transferred into the |
General Professions Dedicated Fund, a special fund in the State |
treasury, to be expended for use by the Department of Financial |
and Professional Regulation for the purpose of implementing the |
provisions of the Sex Offender Evaluation and Treatment |
Provider Act with the exception of $5,000 which shall remain in |
the Fund for use by the Board. |
(a) Any and all practices endorsed or required under this |
Act, including
but
not limited
to evaluation, treatment, or |
monitoring of programs that are or may be
developed by the |
agency
providing supervision
or the Department of Corrections
|
shall be at the expense of the person evaluated or treated, |
based upon the
person's ability to pay.
If it is determined by |
the agency providing supervision
or the Department of
|
Corrections that the person does not have the ability to pay
|
for practices
endorsed or required by this Act, the agency |
providing supervision of the sex
offender shall
request |
reimbursement for services required under this Act for which |
the agency has provided funding. The
agency providing |
supervision
or the Department of Corrections
shall develop |
factors to be considered and criteria to determine a person's
|
ability to pay. The
Sex Offender Management Board shall |
coordinate the expenditures of moneys from
the Sex Offender |
Management Board Fund. The Board shall allocate moneys
|
deposited in this
Fund among the agency providing supervision
|
|
or the Department of Corrections.
|
(b) (Blank). Up to 20% of this Fund shall be retained by |
the Sex Offender
Management Board for administrative costs, |
including staff, incurred pursuant
to this Act.
|
(c) Monies expended for this Fund shall be used to comply |
with the provisions of this Act supplement, not
replace |
offenders' self-pay, or county appropriations for probation |
and court
services .
|
(d) Interest earned on monies deposited in this Fund may be |
used by
the Board for its administrative costs and expenses.
|
(e) In addition to the funds provided by the sex offender, |
counties,
or Departments providing treatment, the Board shall |
explore funding sources
including but not limited to State, |
federal, and private funds.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-616, eff. 1-1-04; 94-706, eff. 6-1-06 .)
|
(20 ILCS 4026/20)
|
Sec. 20. Report to the General Assembly. The Board shall |
submit an annual report to the General Assembly regarding the |
training and educational programs developed and presented Upon |
completion of the duties
prescribed in paragraphs (1) and (2) |
of subsection (f) of Section 15, the Board
shall make a report |
to the General
Assembly regarding the standardized procedures |
developed under this
Act, the standardized programs developed |
under this Act, the
plans for implementation developed under |
this Act, and the plans for
research and analysis developed |
|
under this Act.
|
(Source: P.A. 90-133, eff. 7-22-97.)
|
Section 180. The State Finance Act is amended by changing |
Section 6z-38 as follows:
|
(30 ILCS 105/6z-38)
|
Sec. 6z-38. General Professions Dedicated Fund. The |
General Professions
Dedicated Fund is created in the State |
treasury. Moneys in the Fund shall be
invested and earnings on |
the investments shall be retained in the Fund. Moneys
in the |
Fund shall be appropriated to the Department of Professional |
Regulation
for the ordinary and contingent expenses of the |
Department , except for moneys transferred under Section 19 of |
the Sex Offender Management Board Act which shall be |
appropriated for the purpose of implementing the provisions of |
the Sex Offender Evaluation and Treatment Provider Act . Moneys |
in the Fund
may be transferred to the Professions Indirect Cost |
Fund as authorized by
Section 2105-300 of the Department of |
Professional Regulation Law
(20 ILCS 2105/2105-300).
|
(Source: P.A. 91-239, eff. 1-1-00.)
|
Section 185. The Sexually Dangerous Persons Act is amended |
by changing Section 8 as follows: |
(725 ILCS 205/8) (from Ch. 38, par. 105-8)
|
|
Sec. 8. If the respondent is found to be a sexually |
dangerous person then
the court shall appoint the Director of |
Corrections guardian of the person
found to be sexually |
dangerous and such person shall stand committed to the
custody |
of such guardian. The Director of Corrections as guardian shall
|
keep safely the person so committed until the person has |
recovered and is
released as hereinafter provided. The Director |
of Corrections as guardian
shall provide care and treatment for |
the person committed to him designed
to effect recovery.
Any |
treatment provided under this Section shall be in conformance |
with the
standards promulgated by the Sex Offender Management |
Board Act and conducted by
a
treatment provider licensed under |
the Sex Offender Evaluation and Treatment Provider Act approved |
by the Board .
The Director may place that ward in any facility |
in the
Department of Corrections or portion thereof set aside |
for the care and
treatment of sexually dangerous persons. The |
Department of Corrections may
also request another state |
Department or Agency to examine such person and
upon such |
request, such Department or Agency shall make such examination
|
and the Department of Corrections may, with the consent of the |
chief
executive officer of such other Department or Agency, |
thereupon place such
person in the care and treatment of such |
other Department or
Agency.
|
(Source: P.A. 92-786, eff. 8-6-02; 93-616, eff. 1-1-04.)
|
Section 190. The Sexually Violent Persons Commitment Act is |
|
amended by changing Sections 10, 40, 55, 60, and 65 as follows: |
(725 ILCS 207/10)
|
Sec. 10. Notice to the Attorney General and State's |
Attorney.
|
(a) In this Act, "agency with jurisdiction" means the |
agency
with the authority or duty to release or discharge the |
person.
|
(b) If an agency with jurisdiction has control or custody |
over
a person who may meet the criteria for commitment as a |
sexually
violent person, the agency with jurisdiction shall |
inform the
Attorney General and the State's Attorney in a |
position to file a
petition under paragraph (a)(2) of Section |
15 of this Act regarding the
person as soon as possible |
beginning 3 months prior to the applicable
date of the |
following:
|
(1) The anticipated release from imprisonment or the
|
anticipated entry into mandatory supervised release of a |
person
who has been convicted of a sexually violent |
offense.
|
(2) The anticipated release from a Department of |
Corrections
correctional facility or juvenile correctional |
facility of a
person adjudicated delinquent under Section |
5-20 of the Juvenile
Court Act of 1987 (now repealed) or |
found guilty under Section 5-620 of that
Act, on the basis |
of a sexually violent offense.
|
|
(3) The discharge or conditional release of a person |
who has
been found not guilty of a sexually violent offense |
by reason of
insanity under Section 5-2-4 of
the Unified |
Code of Corrections.
|
(c) The agency with jurisdiction shall provide the Attorney
|
General and the State's Attorney with all of the following:
|
(1) The person's name, identifying factors, |
anticipated
future residence and offense history;
|
(2) A comprehensive evaluation of the person's mental
|
condition, the basis upon which a determination has been |
made that
the person is subject to commitment under |
subsection (b) of Section 15 of this
Act and a |
recommendation for action in furtherance of the purposes
of |
this Act. The evaluation shall be conducted in conformance |
with the
standards developed under the Sex Offender |
Management Board Act and by an
evaluator licensed under the |
Sex Offender Evaluation and Treatment Provider Act |
approved by the Board ; and
|
(3) If applicable, documentation of any treatment and |
the
person's adjustment to any institutional placement.
|
(d) Any agency or officer, employee or agent of an agency |
is
immune from criminal or civil liability for any acts or |
omissions
as the result of a good faith effort to comply with |
this Section.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-616, eff. 1-1-04.)
|
|
(725 ILCS 207/40)
|
Sec. 40. Commitment.
|
(a) If a court or jury determines that the person who is |
the
subject of a petition under Section 15 of this Act is a |
sexually
violent person, the court shall order the person to be |
committed
to the custody of the Department for control, care |
and treatment
until such time as the person is no longer a |
sexually violent
person.
|
(b) (1) The court shall enter an initial commitment order |
under
this Section pursuant to a hearing held as soon as |
practicable
after the judgment is entered that the person |
who is the subject of a
petition under Section 15 is a |
sexually violent person.
If the court lacks sufficient |
information to make the
determination required by |
paragraph (b)(2) of this Section
immediately after trial, |
it may adjourn the hearing and order the
Department to |
conduct a predisposition investigation or a
supplementary |
mental examination, or both, to assist the court in
framing |
the commitment order. If the Department's examining |
evaluator previously rendered an opinion that the person |
who is the subject of a petition under Section 15 does not |
meet the criteria to be found a sexually violent person, |
then another evaluator shall conduct the predisposition |
investigation and/or supplementary mental examination. A |
supplementary mental examination
under this Section shall |
be conducted in accordance with Section
3-804 of the Mental |
|
Health and Developmental Disabilities Code.
The State has |
the right to have the person evaluated by experts chosen by |
the State.
|
(2) An order for commitment under this Section shall |
specify
either institutional care in a secure facility, as |
provided under
Section 50 of this Act, or conditional |
release. In determining
whether commitment shall be for |
institutional care in a secure
facility or for conditional |
release, the court shall consider the
nature and |
circumstances of the behavior that was the basis of the
|
allegation in the petition under paragraph (b)(1) of |
Section 15, the person's
mental history and present mental |
condition, and what
arrangements are available to ensure |
that the person has access to
and will participate in |
necessary treatment.
All treatment, whether in |
institutional care, in a secure facility, or while
on
|
conditional release, shall be conducted in conformance
|
with the standards developed under the Sex Offender |
Management Board
Act and conducted by a treatment provider |
licensed under the Sex Offender Evaluation and Treatment |
Provider Act approved by the Board .
The Department shall
|
arrange for control, care and treatment of the person in |
the least
restrictive manner consistent with the |
requirements of the person
and in accordance with the |
court's commitment order.
|
(3) If the court finds that the person is appropriate |
|
for
conditional release, the court shall notify the |
Department. The
Department shall prepare a plan that |
identifies the treatment and
services, if any, that the |
person will receive in the community.
The plan shall |
address the person's need, if any, for
supervision, |
counseling, medication, community support services,
|
residential services, vocational services, and alcohol or |
other
drug abuse treatment. The Department may contract |
with a county
health department, with another public agency |
or with a private
agency to provide the treatment and |
services identified in the
plan. The plan shall specify who |
will be responsible for
providing the treatment and |
services identified in the plan. The
plan shall be |
presented to the court for its approval within 60
days |
after the court finding that the person is appropriate for
|
conditional release, unless the Department and the person |
to be
released request additional time to develop the plan.
|
The conditional release program operated under this |
Section is not
subject to the provisions of the Mental |
Health and Developmental Disabilities
Confidentiality Act.
|
(4) An order for conditional release places the person |
in
the custody and control of the Department. A person on
|
conditional release is subject to the conditions set by the |
court
and to the rules of the Department. Before a person |
is placed on
conditional release by the court under this |
Section, the court
shall so notify the municipal police |
|
department and county sheriff
for the municipality and |
county in which the person will be
residing. The |
notification requirement under this Section does
not apply |
if a municipal police department or county sheriff
submits |
to the court a written statement waiving the right to be
|
notified. Notwithstanding any other provision in the Act, |
the person being supervised on conditional release shall |
not reside at the same street address as another sex |
offender being supervised on conditional release under |
this Act, mandatory supervised release, parole, probation, |
or any other manner of supervision. If the Department |
alleges that a released person has
violated any condition |
or rule, or that the safety of others
requires that |
conditional release be revoked, he or she may be
taken into |
custody under the rules of the Department.
|
At any time during which the person is on conditional |
release, if the
Department determines that the person has |
violated any condition or rule, or
that the safety of |
others requires that conditional release be revoked, the
|
Department may request the Attorney General or State's |
Attorney to request the
court to issue an emergency ex |
parte order directing any law enforcement
officer
to take |
the person into custody and transport the person to the |
county jail.
The Department may request, or the Attorney |
General or State's Attorney may
request independently of |
the Department, that a petition to revoke conditional
|
|
release be filed. When a petition is filed, the court may |
order the Department
to issue a notice to the person to be |
present at the Department or other
agency designated by the |
court, order a summons to the person to be present, or
|
order a body attachment for all law enforcement officers to |
take the person
into custody and transport him or her to |
the county jail, hospital, or
treatment
facility.
The
|
Department shall submit a statement showing probable cause |
of the
detention and a petition to revoke the order for |
conditional
release to the committing court within 48 hours |
after the
detention. The court shall hear the petition |
within 30 days,
unless the hearing or time deadline is |
waived by the detained
person. Pending the revocation |
hearing, the Department may detain
the person in a jail, in |
a hospital or treatment facility. The
State has the burden |
of proving by clear and convincing evidence
that any rule |
or condition of release has been violated, or that
the |
safety of others requires that the conditional release be
|
revoked. If the court determines after hearing that any |
rule or
condition of release has been violated, or that the |
safety of
others requires that conditional release be |
revoked, it may revoke
the order for conditional release |
and order that the released
person be placed in an |
appropriate institution until the person is
discharged |
from the commitment under Section 65 of this Act or
until |
again placed on conditional release under Section 60 of |
|
this
Act.
|
(5) An order for conditional release places the person |
in the custody,
care, and control of the Department. The |
court shall order the person be
subject to the following |
rules of conditional release, in addition to any other
|
conditions ordered, and the person shall be given a |
certificate setting forth
the
conditions of conditional |
release. These conditions shall be that the person:
|
(A) not violate any criminal statute of any |
jurisdiction;
|
(B) report to or appear in person before such |
person or agency as
directed by the court and the |
Department;
|
(C) refrain from possession of a firearm or other |
dangerous weapon;
|
(D) not leave the State without the consent of the |
court or, in
circumstances in which the reason for the |
absence is of such an emergency
nature, that prior |
consent by the court is not possible without the prior
|
notification and approval of the Department;
|
(E) at the direction of the Department, notify |
third parties of the
risks that may be occasioned by |
his or her criminal record or sexual offending
history |
or characteristics, and permit the supervising officer |
or agent to make
the
notification requirement;
|
(F) attend and fully participate in assessment, |
|
treatment, and behavior
monitoring including, but not |
limited to, medical, psychological or psychiatric
|
treatment specific to sexual offending, drug |
addiction, or alcoholism, to the
extent appropriate to |
the person based upon the recommendation and findings
|
made in the Department evaluation or based upon any |
subsequent recommendations
by the Department;
|
(G) waive confidentiality allowing the court and |
Department access to
assessment or treatment results |
or both;
|
(H) work regularly at a Department approved |
occupation or pursue a
course of study or vocational |
training and notify the Department within
72 hours of |
any change in employment, study, or training;
|
(I) not be employed or participate in any volunteer |
activity that
involves contact with children, except |
under circumstances approved in advance
and in writing |
by the Department officer;
|
(J) submit to the search of his or her person, |
residence, vehicle, or
any personal or
real property |
under his or her control at any time by the Department;
|
(K) financially support his or her dependents and |
provide the Department
access
to any requested |
financial information;
|
(L) serve a term of home confinement, the |
conditions of which shall be
that the person:
|
|
(i) remain within the interior premises of the |
place designated for
his or her confinement during |
the hours designated by the Department;
|
(ii) admit any person or agent designated by |
the Department into the
offender's place of |
confinement at any time for purposes of verifying |
the
person's compliance with the condition of his |
or her confinement;
|
(iii) if deemed necessary by the Department, |
be placed on an
electronic monitoring device;
|
(M) comply with the terms and conditions of an |
order of protection
issued by the court pursuant to the |
Illinois Domestic Violence Act of 1986. A
copy of the |
order of protection shall be
transmitted to the |
Department by the clerk of the court;
|
(N) refrain from entering into a designated |
geographic area except upon
terms the Department finds |
appropriate. The terms may include
consideration of |
the purpose of the entry, the time of day, others |
accompanying
the person, and advance approval by the |
Department;
|
(O) refrain from having any contact, including |
written or oral
communications, directly or |
indirectly, with certain specified persons
including, |
but not limited to, the victim or the victim's family, |
and
report any incidental contact with the victim or |
|
the victim's family to
the Department within 72 hours; |
refrain from entering onto the premises of,
traveling
|
past,
or loitering near the victim's residence, place |
of employment, or other places
frequented by the |
victim;
|
(P) refrain from having any contact, including |
written or oral
communications, directly or |
indirectly, with particular types of persons,
|
including but not limited to members of street gangs, |
drug users, drug dealers,
or prostitutes;
|
(Q) refrain from all contact, direct or indirect, |
personally, by
telephone, letter, or through another |
person, with minor children without prior
|
identification and approval of the Department;
|
(R) refrain from having in his or her body the |
presence of alcohol
or any illicit drug prohibited by |
the Cannabis Control Act, the
Illinois
Controlled |
Substances Act, or the Methamphetamine Control and |
Community Protection Act, unless prescribed by a |
physician, and submit samples
of his or her breath, |
saliva, blood, or urine
for tests to determine the
|
presence of alcohol or any illicit drug;
|
(S) not establish a dating, intimate, or sexual |
relationship with a
person without prior written |
notification to the Department;
|
(T) neither possess or have under his or her |
|
control any material that
is
pornographic, sexually |
oriented, or sexually stimulating, or that depicts or
|
alludes to sexual activity or depicts minors under the |
age of 18, including but
not limited to visual, |
auditory, telephonic, electronic media, or any matter
|
obtained through access to any computer or material |
linked to computer access
use;
|
(U) not patronize any business providing sexually |
stimulating or
sexually oriented entertainment nor |
utilize "900" or
adult telephone numbers or any other |
sex-related telephone numbers;
|
(V) not reside near, visit, or be in or about |
parks, schools, day care
centers, swimming pools, |
beaches, theaters, or any other places where minor
|
children congregate without advance approval of the |
Department and report any
incidental contact with |
minor children to the Department within 72 hours;
|
(W) not establish any living arrangement or |
residence without prior
approval of the Department;
|
(X) not publish any materials or print any |
advertisements without
providing a copy of the |
proposed publications to the Department officer and
|
obtaining
permission prior to publication;
|
(Y) not leave the county except with prior |
permission of the Department
and provide the |
Department officer or agent with written travel routes |
|
to and
from work and any other designated destinations;
|
(Z) not possess or have under his or her control |
certain specified items
of
contraband related to the |
incidence of sexually offending items including video
|
or
still camera items or children's toys;
|
(AA) provide a written daily log of activities as |
directed by the
Department;
|
(BB) comply with all other special conditions that |
the Department may
impose that restrict the person from |
high-risk situations and limit access or
potential |
victims.
|
(6) A person placed on conditional release and who |
during the term
undergoes mandatory drug or alcohol testing |
or is assigned to be
placed on an approved electronic |
monitoring device may be ordered to pay all
costs |
incidental to the mandatory drug or alcohol testing and all
|
costs incidental to the approved electronic monitoring in |
accordance with the
person's ability to pay those costs. |
The Department may establish reasonable
fees for the cost |
of maintenance, testing, and incidental expenses related |
to
the mandatory drug or alcohol testing and all costs |
incidental to
approved electronic monitoring.
|
(Source: P.A. 96-1128, eff. 1-1-11.)
|
(725 ILCS 207/55)
|
Sec. 55. Periodic reexamination; report.
|
|
(a) If a person has been committed under Section 40 of this |
Act
and has not been discharged under Section 65 of this Act, |
the
Department shall submit a written report to the court on |
his or her mental
condition within 6 months after an initial |
commitment under
Section 40 and then at least once every 12 |
months thereafter for
the purpose of determining whether the |
person has made sufficient
progress to be conditionally |
released or discharged. At the time of
a reexamination under |
this Section, the person who has been
committed may retain or, |
if he or she is indigent and so requests,
the court may appoint |
a qualified expert or a professional person
to examine him or |
her.
|
(b) Any examiner conducting an examination under this |
Section
shall prepare a written report of the examination no |
later than 30
days after the date of the examination. The |
examiner shall place
a copy of the report in the person's |
health care records and shall
provide a copy of the report to |
the court that committed the
person under Section 40.
The |
examination shall be conducted in conformance with the |
standards
developed under the Sex Offender Management Board Act |
and by an evaluator licensed under the Sex Offender Evaluation |
and Treatment Provider Act
approved by the Board .
|
(c) Notwithstanding subsection (a) of this Section, the |
court
that committed a person under Section 40 may order a |
reexamination
of the person at any time during the period in |
which the person is
subject to the commitment order.
Any |
|
examiner conducting an examination under this Section shall |
prepare a written report of the examination no later than 30 |
days after the date of the examination.
|
(d) Petitions for discharge after reexamination must |
follow the
procedure
outlined in
Section 65 of this Act.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-616, eff. 1-1-04; 93-885, eff. 8-6-04.)
|
(725 ILCS 207/60)
|
Sec. 60. Petition for conditional release.
|
(a) Any person who is committed for institutional care in a
|
secure facility or other facility under Section 40 of this Act |
may
petition the committing court to modify its order by |
authorizing
conditional release if at least 6 months have |
elapsed since the
initial commitment order was entered, an |
order continuing commitment was entered pursuant to Section 65, |
the most recent release
petition was denied or the most recent |
order for conditional
release was revoked. The director of the |
facility at which the
person is placed may file a petition |
under this Section on the
person's behalf at any time.
If the |
evaluator on behalf of the Department recommends that the |
committed person is appropriate for conditional release, then |
the director or designee shall, within 30 days of receipt of |
the evaluator's report, file with the committing court notice |
of his or her intention whether or not to petition for |
conditional release on the committed person's behalf.
|
(b) If the person files a timely petition without counsel, |
|
the
court shall serve a copy of the petition on the Attorney |
General
or State's Attorney, whichever is applicable and, |
subject to
paragraph (c)(1) of Section 25 of this Act, appoint |
counsel. If the person
petitions through counsel, his or her |
attorney shall serve the
Attorney General or State's Attorney, |
whichever is applicable.
|
(c) Within 20 days after receipt of the petition, upon the |
request of the committed person or on the court's own motion, |
the court may
appoint an examiner having the specialized
|
knowledge determined by the court to be appropriate, who shall
|
examine the mental condition of the person and furnish a |
written report of
the
examination
to the court within 30 days |
after appointment. The examiners
shall have reasonable access |
to the person for purposes of
examination and to the person's |
past and present treatment records
and patient health care |
records. If any such examiner believes
that the person is |
appropriate for conditional release, the
examiner shall report |
on the type of treatment and services that
the person may need |
while in the community on conditional release. The State
has |
the right to have the person evaluated by experts chosen by the |
State.
Any examination or evaluation conducted under this |
Section shall be in
conformance with the standards developed |
under the Sex Offender
Management Board Act and conducted by an |
evaluator licensed under the Sex Offender Evaluation and |
Treatment Provider Act approved by the Board .
The
court shall |
set a probable cause hearing as soon as practical after the
|
|
examiners' reports are filed. The probable cause hearing shall |
consist of a review of the examining evaluators' reports and |
arguments on behalf of the parties. If the court determines at |
the probable cause
hearing that cause exists to believe that it |
is not substantially probable that
the person will engage in |
acts of sexual violence if on release or conditional
release, |
the court shall set a hearing on the issue.
|
(d) The court, without a jury, shall hear the petition as |
soon as practical after the reports of all examiners are filed
|
with the court. The
court shall grant the petition unless the |
State proves by clear
and convincing evidence that the person |
has not made sufficient progress to
be conditionally released. |
In making a decision under
this subsection, the court must |
consider the nature and
circumstances of the behavior that was |
the basis of the allegation
in the petition under paragraph |
(b)(1) of Section 15 of this Act, the person's
mental history |
and present mental condition, and what
arrangements are |
available to ensure that the person has access to
and will |
participate in necessary treatment.
|
(e) Before the court may enter an order directing |
conditional release to
a less restrictive alternative it must |
find the following: (1) the person will
be treated by a |
Department approved treatment provider, (2) the treatment
|
provider has presented a specific course of treatment and has |
agreed to assume
responsibility for the treatment and will |
report progress to the Department on
a regular basis, and will |
|
report violations immediately to the Department,
consistent |
with treatment and supervision needs of the respondent, (3) |
housing
exists that is sufficiently secure to protect the |
community, and the person or
agency providing housing to the |
conditionally released person has agreed in
writing to accept |
the person, to provide the level of security required by the
|
court, and
immediately to report to the Department if the |
person leaves the housing to
which he or she has been assigned |
without authorization, (4) the person is
willing to or has |
agreed to comply with the treatment provider, the Department,
|
and
the court, and (5) the person has agreed or is willing to |
agree to comply
with the behavioral monitoring requirements |
imposed by the court and the
Department.
|
(f) If the court finds that the person is appropriate for
|
conditional release, the court shall notify the Department. The
|
Department shall prepare a plan that identifies the treatment |
and
services, if any, that the person will receive in the |
community.
The plan shall address the person's need, if any, |
for supervision,
counseling, medication, community support |
services, residential
services, vocational services, and |
alcohol or other drug abuse
treatment. The Department may |
contract with a county health
department, with another public |
agency or with a private agency to
provide the treatment and |
services identified in the plan. The
plan shall specify who |
will be responsible for providing the
treatment and services |
identified in the plan. The plan shall be
presented to the |
|
court for its approval within 60 days after the
court finding |
that the person is appropriate for conditional
release, unless |
the Department and the person to be released
request additional |
time to develop the plan.
|
(g) The provisions of paragraphs (b)(4), (b)(5), and (b)(6) |
of Section 40 of this Act
apply to an
order for conditional |
release issued under this Section.
|
(Source: P.A. 96-1128, eff. 1-1-11.)
|
(725 ILCS 207/65)
|
Sec. 65. Petition for discharge; procedure.
|
(a)(1) If the Secretary determines at any time that a |
person
committed under this Act is no longer a sexually violent |
person,
the Secretary shall authorize the person to petition |
the
committing court for discharge. If the evaluator on behalf |
of the Department recommends that the committed person is no |
longer a sexually violent person, then the Secretary or |
designee shall, within 30 days of receipt of the evaluator's |
report, file with the committing court notice of his or her |
determination whether or not to authorize the committed person |
to petition the committing court for discharge. The person |
shall file the
petition with the court and serve a copy upon |
the Attorney General
or the State's Attorney's office that |
filed the petition under
subsection (a) of Section 15 of this |
Act, whichever is applicable. The court,
upon receipt of the |
petition for discharge, shall order a hearing
to be held as |
|
soon as practical after the date of receipt of the
petition.
|
(2) At a hearing under this subsection, the Attorney |
General
or State's Attorney, whichever filed the original |
petition, shall
represent the State and shall have the right to |
have the
petitioner examined by an expert or professional |
person of his or
her choice. The examination shall be conducted |
in conformance with the
standards developed under the Sex |
Offender Management Board Act and by an
evaluator licensed |
under the Sex Offender Evaluation and Treatment Provider Act |
approved by the Board . The
committed person or the State may |
elect to have the hearing
before a jury.
The State has the |
burden of proving by clear and convincing
evidence that the |
petitioner is still a sexually violent person.
|
(3) If the court or jury is satisfied that the State has |
not met its
burden of proof under paragraph (a)(2) of this |
Section, the
petitioner shall be discharged from the custody or |
supervision of
the Department. If the court is satisfied that |
the State has met
its burden of proof under paragraph (a)(2), |
the court may proceed
under Section 40 of this Act to determine |
whether to modify the
petitioner's existing commitment order.
|
(b)(1) A person may petition the committing court for |
discharge
from custody or supervision without the Secretary's |
approval. At
the time of an examination under subsection (a) of |
Section 55 of this Act, the
Secretary shall provide the |
committed person with a written notice
of the person's right to |
petition the court for discharge over the
Secretary's |
|
objection. The notice shall contain a waiver of
rights. The |
Secretary shall forward the notice and waiver form to
the court |
with the report of the Department's examination under
Section |
55 of this Act. If the person does not affirmatively
waive the |
right to petition, the court shall set a probable cause
hearing |
to determine whether facts exist that warrant a hearing on
|
whether the person is still a sexually violent person.
If a
|
person does not file a petition for discharge, yet fails to |
waive the right to
petition under
this Section, then the |
probable cause hearing consists only of a review of
the
|
reexamination reports and arguments on behalf of the parties.
|
The
committed person has a right to have an attorney represent |
him or
her at the probable cause hearing, but the person is not |
entitled
to be present at the probable cause hearing.
The
|
probable cause hearing under this Section must be held as soon |
as practical after the
filing of the
reexamination report under |
Section 55 of this Act.
|
(2) If the court determines at the probable cause hearing
|
under paragraph (b)(1) of this Section that probable cause |
exists
to believe that the committed person is no longer a |
sexually
violent person, then the court shall set a hearing on |
the issue.
At a hearing under this Section, the committed |
person is entitled
to be present and to the benefit of the |
protections afforded to
the person under Section 25 of this |
Act.
The
committed person or the State may elect to have a |
hearing under this Section
before a
jury. A verdict of a jury |
|
under this Section is not valid unless it is
unanimous.
The |
Attorney General or
State's Attorney, whichever filed the |
original petition, shall
represent the State at a hearing under |
this Section. The State has the right
to have the committed |
person evaluated by experts chosen by the
State.
The |
examination shall be conducted in conformance with the |
standards
developed under the Sex Offender Management Board Act |
and by an evaluator licensed under the Sex Offender Evaluation |
and Treatment Provider Act
approved by the Board . At the |
hearing, the State has the burden of proving by
clear and |
convincing evidence that the committed person is still a
|
sexually violent person.
|
(3) If the court or jury is satisfied that the State has |
not met its
burden of proof under paragraph (b)(2) of this |
Section, the
person shall be discharged from the custody or |
supervision of the
Department. If the court or jury is |
satisfied that the State has met its
burden of proof under |
paragraph (b)(2) of this Section, the court
may proceed under |
Section 40 of this Act to determine whether to
modify the |
person's existing commitment order.
|
(Source: P.A. 96-1128, eff. 1-1-11.)
|
Section 195. The Sex Offender Registration Act is amended |
by changing Sections 2, 3, and 3-5 as follows:
|
(730 ILCS 150/2) (from Ch. 38, par. 222)
|
|
Sec. 2. Definitions.
|
(A) As used in this Article, "sex offender" means any |
person who is:
|
(1) charged pursuant to Illinois law, or any |
substantially similar
federal, Uniform Code of Military |
Justice, sister state, or foreign country
law,
with a sex |
offense set forth
in subsection (B) of this Section or the |
attempt to commit an included sex
offense, and:
|
(a) is convicted of such offense or an attempt to |
commit such offense;
or
|
(b) is found not guilty by reason of insanity of |
such offense or an
attempt to commit such offense; or
|
(c) is found not guilty by reason of insanity |
pursuant to Section
104-25(c) of the Code of Criminal |
Procedure of 1963 of such offense or an
attempt to |
commit such offense; or
|
(d) is the subject of a finding not resulting in an |
acquittal at a
hearing conducted pursuant to Section |
104-25(a) of the Code of Criminal
Procedure of 1963 for |
the alleged commission or attempted commission of such
|
offense; or
|
(e) is found not guilty by reason of insanity |
following a hearing
conducted pursuant to a federal, |
Uniform Code of Military Justice, sister
state, or |
foreign country law
substantially similar to Section |
104-25(c) of the Code of Criminal Procedure
of 1963 of |
|
such offense or of the attempted commission of such |
offense; or
|
(f) is the subject of a finding not resulting in an |
acquittal at a
hearing conducted pursuant to a federal, |
Uniform Code of Military Justice,
sister state, or |
foreign country law
substantially similar to Section |
104-25(a) of the Code of Criminal Procedure
of 1963 for |
the alleged violation or attempted commission of such |
offense;
or
|
(2) declared certified as a sexually dangerous person |
pursuant to the Illinois
Sexually Dangerous Persons Act, or |
any substantially similar federal, Uniform
Code of |
Military Justice, sister
state, or foreign country law; or
|
(3) subject to the provisions of Section 2 of the |
Interstate
Agreements on Sexually Dangerous Persons Act; |
or
|
(4) found to be a sexually violent person pursuant to |
the Sexually
Violent Persons Commitment Act or any |
substantially similar federal, Uniform
Code of Military |
Justice, sister
state, or foreign country law; or
|
(5) adjudicated a juvenile delinquent as the result of |
committing or
attempting to commit an act which, if |
committed by an adult, would constitute
any of the offenses |
specified in item (B), (C), or (C-5) of this Section or a
|
violation of any substantially similar federal, Uniform |
Code of Military
Justice, sister state, or foreign
country |
|
law, or found guilty under Article V of the Juvenile Court |
Act of 1987
of committing or attempting to commit an act |
which, if committed by an adult,
would constitute any of |
the offenses specified in item (B), (C), or (C-5) of
this |
Section or a violation of any substantially similar |
federal, Uniform Code
of Military Justice, sister state,
or |
foreign country law.
|
Convictions that result from or are connected with the same |
act, or result
from offenses committed at the same time, shall |
be counted for the purpose of
this Article as one conviction. |
Any conviction set aside pursuant to law is
not a conviction |
for purposes of this Article.
|
For purposes of this Section, "convicted" shall have the |
same meaning as
"adjudicated".
|
(B) As used in this Article, "sex offense" means:
|
(1) A violation of any of the following Sections of the |
Criminal Code of
1961:
|
11-20.1 (child pornography),
|
11-20.1B or 11-20.3 (aggravated child |
pornography),
|
11-6 (indecent solicitation of a child),
|
11-9.1 (sexual exploitation of a child),
|
11-9.2 (custodial sexual misconduct),
|
11-9.5 (sexual misconduct with a person with a |
disability), |
11-14.4 (promoting juvenile prostitution),
|
|
11-15.1 (soliciting for a juvenile prostitute),
|
11-18.1 (patronizing a juvenile prostitute),
|
11-17.1 (keeping a place of juvenile |
prostitution),
|
11-19.1 (juvenile pimping),
|
11-19.2 (exploitation of a child),
|
11-25 (grooming), |
11-26 (traveling to meet a minor),
|
11-1.20 or 12-13 (criminal sexual assault),
|
11-1.30 or 12-14 (aggravated criminal sexual |
assault),
|
11-1.40 or 12-14.1 (predatory criminal sexual |
assault of a child),
|
11-1.50 or 12-15 (criminal sexual abuse),
|
11-1.60 or 12-16 (aggravated criminal sexual |
abuse),
|
12-33 (ritualized abuse of a child).
|
An attempt to commit any of these offenses.
|
(1.5)
A violation of any of the following Sections of |
the
Criminal Code of 1961, when the victim is a person |
under 18 years of age, the
defendant is not a parent of the |
victim, the offense was sexually motivated as defined in |
Section 10 of the Sex Offender Evaluation and Treatment Act |
Sex Offender Management Board Act , and the offense was |
committed on or
after January 1, 1996:
|
10-1 (kidnapping),
|
|
10-2 (aggravated kidnapping),
|
10-3 (unlawful restraint),
|
10-3.1 (aggravated unlawful restraint).
|
If the offense was committed before January 1, 1996, it |
is a sex offense requiring registration only when the |
person is convicted of any felony after July 1, 2011, and |
paragraph (2.1) of subsection (c) of Section 3 of this Act |
applies.
|
(1.6)
First degree murder under Section 9-1 of the |
Criminal Code of 1961,
provided the offense was sexually |
motivated as defined in Section 10 of the Sex Offender |
Management Board Act.
|
(1.7) (Blank).
|
(1.8) A violation or attempted violation of Section |
11-11 (sexual
relations within families) of the Criminal |
Code of 1961, and the offense was committed on or after
|
June 1, 1997. If the offense was committed before June 1, |
1997, it is a sex offense requiring registration only when |
the person is convicted of any felony after July 1, 2011, |
and paragraph (2.1) of subsection (c) of Section 3 of this |
Act applies.
|
(1.9) Child abduction under paragraph (10) of |
subsection
(b) of Section 10-5 of the Criminal Code of 1961 |
committed by luring or
attempting to lure a child under the |
age of 16 into a motor vehicle, building,
house trailer, or |
dwelling place without the consent of the parent or lawful
|
|
custodian of the child for other than a lawful purpose and |
the offense was
committed on or after January 1, 1998, |
provided the offense was sexually motivated as defined in |
Section 10 of the Sex Offender Management Board Act. If the |
offense was committed before January 1, 1998, it is a sex |
offense requiring registration only when the person is |
convicted of any felony after July 1, 2011, and paragraph |
(2.1) of subsection (c) of Section 3 of this Act applies.
|
(1.10) A violation or attempted violation of any of the |
following Sections
of the Criminal Code of 1961 when the |
offense was committed on or after July
1, 1999:
|
10-4 (forcible detention, if the victim is under 18 |
years of age), provided the offense was sexually |
motivated as defined in Section 10 of the Sex Offender |
Management Board Act,
|
11-6.5 (indecent solicitation of an adult),
|
11-14.3 that involves soliciting for a prostitute, |
or 11-15 (soliciting for a prostitute, if the victim is |
under 18 years
of age),
|
subdivision (a)(2)(A) or (a)(2)(B) of Section |
11-14.3, or Section 11-16 (pandering, if the victim is |
under 18 years of age),
|
11-18 (patronizing a prostitute, if the victim is |
under 18 years
of age),
|
subdivision (a)(2)(C) of Section 11-14.3, or |
Section 11-19 (pimping, if the victim is under 18 years |
|
of age).
|
If the offense was committed before July 1, 1999, it is |
a sex offense requiring registration only when the person |
is convicted of any felony after July 1, 2011, and |
paragraph (2.1) of subsection (c) of Section 3 of this Act |
applies.
|
(1.11) A violation or attempted violation of any of the |
following
Sections of the Criminal Code of 1961 when the |
offense was committed on or
after August 22, 2002:
|
11-9 or 11-30 (public indecency for a third or |
subsequent conviction). |
If the third or subsequent conviction was imposed |
before August 22, 2002, it is a sex offense requiring |
registration only when the person is convicted of any |
felony after July 1, 2011, and paragraph (2.1) of |
subsection (c) of Section 3 of this Act applies.
|
(1.12) A violation or attempted violation of Section
|
5.1 of the Wrongs to Children Act or Section 11-9.1A of the |
Criminal Code of 1961 (permitting sexual abuse) when the
|
offense was committed on or after August 22, 2002. If the |
offense was committed before August 22, 2002, it is a sex |
offense requiring registration only when the person is |
convicted of any felony after July 1, 2011, and paragraph |
(2.1) of subsection (c) of Section 3 of this Act applies.
|
(2) A violation of any former law of this State |
substantially equivalent
to any offense listed in |
|
subsection (B) of this Section.
|
(C) A conviction for an offense of federal law, Uniform |
Code of Military
Justice, or the law of another state
or a |
foreign country that is substantially equivalent to any offense |
listed
in subsections (B), (C), (E), and (E-5) of this Section |
shall
constitute a
conviction for the purpose
of this Article. |
A finding or adjudication as a sexually dangerous person
or a |
sexually violent person under any federal law, Uniform Code of |
Military
Justice, or the law of another state or
foreign |
country that is substantially equivalent to the Sexually |
Dangerous
Persons Act or the Sexually Violent Persons |
Commitment Act shall constitute an
adjudication for the |
purposes of this Article.
|
(C-5) A person at least 17 years of age at the time of the |
commission of
the offense who is convicted of first degree |
murder under Section 9-1 of the
Criminal Code of 1961, against |
a person
under 18 years of age, shall be required to register
|
for natural life.
A conviction for an offense of federal, |
Uniform Code of Military Justice,
sister state, or foreign |
country law that is substantially equivalent to any
offense |
listed in subsection (C-5) of this Section shall constitute a
|
conviction for the purpose of this Article. This subsection |
(C-5) applies to a person who committed the offense before June |
1, 1996 if: (i) the person is incarcerated in an Illinois |
Department of Corrections facility on August 20, 2004 (the |
effective date of Public Act 93-977), or (ii) subparagraph (i) |
|
does not apply and the person is convicted of any felony after |
July 1, 2011, and paragraph (2.1) of subsection (c) of Section |
3 of this Act applies.
|
(C-6) A person who is convicted or adjudicated delinquent |
of first degree murder as defined in Section 9-1 of the |
Criminal Code of 1961, against a person 18 years of age or |
over, shall be required to register for his or her natural |
life. A conviction for an offense of federal, Uniform Code of |
Military Justice, sister state, or foreign country law that is |
substantially equivalent to any offense listed in subsection |
(C-6) of this Section shall constitute a conviction for the |
purpose of this Article. This subsection (C-6) does not apply |
to those individuals released from incarceration more than 10 |
years prior to January 1, 2012 ( the effective date of Public |
Act 97-154) this amendatory Act of the 97th General Assembly . |
(D) As used in this Article, "law enforcement agency having |
jurisdiction"
means the Chief of Police in each of the |
municipalities in which the sex offender
expects to reside, |
work, or attend school (1) upon his or her discharge,
parole or |
release or
(2) during the service of his or her sentence of |
probation or conditional
discharge, or the Sheriff of the |
county, in the event no Police Chief exists
or if the offender |
intends to reside, work, or attend school in an
unincorporated |
area.
"Law enforcement agency having jurisdiction" includes |
the location where
out-of-state students attend school and |
where out-of-state employees are
employed or are otherwise |
|
required to register.
|
(D-1) As used in this Article, "supervising officer" means |
the assigned Illinois Department of Corrections parole agent or |
county probation officer. |
(E) As used in this Article, "sexual predator" means any |
person who,
after July 1, 1999, is:
|
(1) Convicted for an offense of federal, Uniform Code |
of Military
Justice, sister state, or foreign country law |
that is substantially equivalent
to any offense listed in |
subsection (E) or (E-5) of this Section shall constitute a
|
conviction for the purpose of this Article.
Convicted of a |
violation or attempted violation of any of the following
|
Sections of the
Criminal Code of 1961:
|
11-14.4 that involves keeping a place of juvenile |
prostitution, or 11-17.1 (keeping a place of juvenile |
prostitution),
|
subdivision (a)(2) or (a)(3) of Section 11-14.4, |
or Section 11-19.1 (juvenile pimping),
|
subdivision (a)(4) of Section 11-14.4, or Section |
11-19.2 (exploitation of a child),
|
11-20.1 (child pornography),
|
11-20.1B or 11-20.3 (aggravated child |
pornography),
|
11-1.20 or 12-13 (criminal sexual assault),
|
11-1.30 or 12-14 (aggravated criminal sexual |
assault),
|
|
11-1.40 or 12-14.1 (predatory criminal sexual |
assault of a child),
|
11-1.60 or 12-16 (aggravated criminal sexual |
abuse),
|
12-33 (ritualized abuse of a child);
|
(2) (blank);
|
(3) declared certified as a sexually dangerous person |
pursuant to the Sexually
Dangerous Persons Act or any |
substantially similar federal, Uniform Code of
Military |
Justice, sister state, or
foreign country law;
|
(4) found to be a sexually violent person pursuant to |
the Sexually Violent
Persons Commitment Act or any |
substantially similar federal, Uniform Code of
Military |
Justice, sister state, or
foreign country law;
|
(5) convicted of a second or subsequent offense which |
requires
registration pursuant to this Act. For purposes of |
this paragraph
(5), "convicted" shall include a conviction |
under any
substantially similar
Illinois, federal, Uniform |
Code of Military Justice, sister state, or
foreign country |
law;
|
(6) convicted of a second or subsequent offense of |
luring a minor under Section 10-5.1 of the Criminal Code of |
1961; or |
(7) if the person was convicted of an offense set forth |
in this subsection (E) on or before July 1, 1999, the |
person is a sexual predator for whom registration is |
|
required only when the person is convicted of a felony |
offense after July 1, 2011, and paragraph (2.1) of |
subsection (c) of Section 3 of this Act applies. |
(E-5) As used in this Article, "sexual predator" also means |
a person convicted of a violation or attempted violation of any |
of the following
Sections of the
Criminal Code of 1961: |
(1) Section 9-1 (first degree murder,
when the victim |
was a person under 18 years of age and the defendant was at |
least
17 years of age at the time of the commission of the |
offense, provided the offense was sexually motivated as |
defined in Section 10 of the Sex Offender Management Board |
Act); |
(2) Section 11-9.5 (sexual misconduct with a person |
with a disability); |
(3) when the victim is a person under 18 years of age, |
the
defendant is not a parent of the victim, the offense |
was sexually motivated as defined in Section 10 of the Sex |
Offender Management Board Act, and the offense was |
committed on or
after January 1, 1996: (A) Section 10-1 |
(kidnapping), (B) Section 10-2 (aggravated kidnapping), |
(C) Section 10-3 (unlawful restraint), and (D) Section |
10-3.1 (aggravated unlawful restraint); and |
(4) Section 10-5(b)(10) (child abduction committed by |
luring or
attempting to lure a child under the age of 16 |
into a motor vehicle, building,
house trailer, or dwelling |
place without the consent of the parent or lawful
custodian |
|
of the child for other than a lawful purpose and the |
offense was
committed on or after January 1, 1998, provided |
the offense was sexually motivated as defined in Section 10 |
of the Sex Offender Management Board Act). |
(E-10) As used in this Article, "sexual predator" also |
means a person required to register in another State due to a |
conviction, adjudication or other action of any court |
triggering an obligation to register as a sex offender, sexual |
predator, or substantially similar status under the laws of |
that State. |
(F) As used in this Article, "out-of-state student" means |
any sex
offender, as defined in this Section,
or sexual |
predator who is enrolled in Illinois, on a full-time or |
part-time
basis, in any public or private educational |
institution, including, but not
limited to, any secondary |
school, trade or professional institution, or
institution of |
higher learning.
|
(G) As used in this Article, "out-of-state employee" means |
any sex
offender, as defined in this Section,
or sexual |
predator who works in Illinois, regardless of whether the |
individual
receives payment for services performed, for a |
period of time of 10 or more days
or for an aggregate period of |
time of 30 or more days
during any calendar year.
Persons who |
operate motor vehicles in the State accrue one day of |
employment
time for any portion of a day spent in Illinois.
|
(H) As used in this Article, "school" means any public or |
|
private educational institution, including, but not limited |
to, any elementary or secondary school, trade or professional |
institution, or institution of higher education. |
(I) As used in this Article, "fixed residence" means any |
and all places that a sex offender resides for an aggregate |
period of time of 5 or more days in a calendar year.
|
(J) As used in this Article, "Internet protocol address" |
means the string of numbers by which a location on the Internet |
is identified by routers or other computers connected to the |
Internet. |
(Source: P.A. 96-301, eff. 8-11-09; 96-1089, eff. 1-1-11; |
96-1551, eff. 7-1-11; 97-154, eff. 1-1-12; 97-578, eff. 1-1-12; |
revised 9-27-11.) |
(730 ILCS 150/3) |
Sec. 3. Duty to register.
|
(a) A sex offender, as defined in Section 2 of this Act, or |
sexual
predator shall, within the time period
prescribed in |
subsections (b) and (c), register in person
and provide |
accurate information as required by the Department of State
|
Police. Such information shall include a current photograph,
|
current address,
current place of employment, the sex |
offender's or sexual predator's telephone number, including |
cellular telephone number, the employer's telephone number, |
school attended, all e-mail addresses, instant messaging |
identities, chat room identities, and other Internet |
|
communications identities that the sex offender uses or plans |
to use, all Uniform Resource Locators (URLs) registered or used |
by the sex offender, all blogs and other Internet sites |
maintained by the sex offender or to which the sex offender has |
uploaded any content or posted any messages or information, |
extensions of the time period for registering as provided in |
this Article and, if an extension was granted, the reason why |
the extension was granted and the date the sex offender was |
notified of the extension. The information shall also include a |
copy of the terms and conditions of parole or release signed by |
the sex offender and given to the sex offender by his or her |
supervising officer, the county of conviction, license plate |
numbers for every vehicle registered in the name of the sex |
offender, the age of the sex offender at the time of the |
commission of the offense, the age of the victim at the time of |
the commission of the offense, and any distinguishing marks |
located on the body of the sex offender. A sex offender |
convicted under Section 11-6, 11-20.1, 11-20.1B, 11-20.3, or |
11-21 of the Criminal Code of 1961 shall provide all Internet |
protocol (IP) addresses in his or her residence, registered in |
his or her name, accessible at his or her place of employment, |
or otherwise under his or her control or custody. If the sex |
offender is a child sex offender as defined in Section 11-9.3 |
or 11-9.4 of the Criminal Code of 1961, the sex offender shall |
report to the registering agency whether he or she is living in |
a household with a child under 18 years of age who is not his or |
|
her own child, provided that his or her own child is not the |
victim of the sex offense. The sex offender or
sexual predator |
shall register:
|
(1) with the chief of police in the municipality in |
which he or she
resides or is temporarily domiciled for a |
period of time of 3 or more
days, unless the
municipality |
is the City of Chicago, in which case he or she shall |
register
at the Chicago Police Department Headquarters; or
|
(2) with the sheriff in the county in which
he or she |
resides or is
temporarily domiciled
for a period of time of |
3 or more days in an unincorporated
area or, if |
incorporated, no police chief exists.
|
If the sex offender or sexual predator is employed at or |
attends an institution of higher education, he or she shall |
also register:
|
(i) with: |
(A) the chief of police in the municipality in |
which he or she is employed at or attends an |
institution of higher education, unless the |
municipality is the City of Chicago, in which case he |
or she shall register at the Chicago Police Department |
Headquarters; or |
(B) the sheriff in the county in which he or she is |
employed or attends an institution of higher education |
located in an unincorporated area, or if incorporated, |
no police chief exists; and
|
|
(ii) with the public safety or security director of the |
institution of higher education which he or she is employed |
at or attends.
|
The registration fees shall only apply to the municipality |
or county of primary registration, and not to campus |
registration. |
For purposes of this Article, the place of residence or |
temporary
domicile is defined as any and all places where the |
sex offender resides
for an aggregate period of time of 3 or |
more days during any calendar year.
Any person required to |
register under this Article who lacks a fixed address or |
temporary domicile must notify, in person, the agency of |
jurisdiction of his or her last known address within 3 days |
after ceasing to have a fixed residence. |
A sex offender or sexual predator who is temporarily absent |
from his or her current address of registration for 3 or more |
days shall notify the law enforcement agency having |
jurisdiction of his or her current registration, including the |
itinerary for travel, in the manner provided in Section 6 of |
this Act for notification to the law enforcement agency having |
jurisdiction of change of address. |
Any person who lacks a fixed residence must report weekly, |
in person, with the sheriff's office of the county in which he |
or she is located in an unincorporated area, or with the chief |
of police in the municipality in which he or she is located. |
The agency of jurisdiction will document each weekly |
|
registration to include all the locations where the person has |
stayed during the past 7 days.
|
The sex offender or sexual predator shall provide accurate |
information
as required by the Department of State Police. That |
information shall include
the sex offender's or sexual |
predator's current place of employment.
|
(a-5) An out-of-state student or out-of-state employee |
shall,
within 3 days after beginning school or employment in |
this State,
register in person and provide accurate information |
as required by the
Department of State Police. Such information |
will include current place of
employment, school attended, and |
address in state of residence. A sex offender convicted under |
Section 11-6, 11-20.1, 11-20.1B, 11-20.3, or 11-21 of the |
Criminal Code of 1961 shall provide all Internet protocol (IP) |
addresses in his or her residence, registered in his or her |
name, accessible at his or her place of employment, or |
otherwise under his or her control or custody. The out-of-state |
student or out-of-state employee shall register:
|
(1) with: |
(A) the chief of police in the municipality in |
which he or she attends school or is employed for a |
period of time of 5
or more days or for an
aggregate |
period of time of more than 30 days during any
calendar |
year, unless the
municipality is the City of Chicago, |
in which case he or she shall register at
the Chicago |
Police Department Headquarters; or
|
|
(B) the sheriff in the county in which
he or she |
attends school or is
employed for a period of time of 5 |
or more days or
for an aggregate period of
time of more |
than 30 days during any calendar year in an
|
unincorporated area
or, if incorporated, no police |
chief exists; and |
(2) with the public safety or security director of the |
institution of higher education he or she is employed at or |
attends for a period of time of 5 or more days or for an |
aggregate period of time of more than 30 days during a |
calendar year. |
The registration fees shall only apply to the municipality |
or county of primary registration, and not to campus |
registration. |
The out-of-state student or out-of-state employee shall |
provide accurate
information as required by the Department of |
State Police. That information
shall include the out-of-state |
student's current place of school attendance or
the |
out-of-state employee's current place of employment.
|
(a-10) Any law enforcement agency registering sex |
offenders or sexual predators in accordance with subsections |
(a) or (a-5) of this Section shall forward to the Attorney |
General a copy of sex offender registration forms from persons |
convicted under Section 11-6, 11-20.1, 11-20.1B, 11-20.3, or |
11-21 of the Criminal Code of 1961, including periodic and |
annual registrations under Section 6 of this Act. |
|
(b) Any sex offender, as defined in Section 2 of this Act, |
or sexual
predator, regardless of any initial,
prior, or other |
registration, shall, within 3 days of beginning school,
or |
establishing a
residence, place of employment, or temporary |
domicile in
any county, register in person as set forth in |
subsection (a)
or (a-5).
|
(c) The registration for any person required to register |
under this
Article shall be as follows:
|
(1) Any person registered under the Habitual Child Sex |
Offender
Registration Act or the Child Sex Offender |
Registration Act prior to January
1, 1996, shall be deemed |
initially registered as of January 1, 1996; however,
this |
shall not be construed to extend the duration of |
registration set forth
in Section 7.
|
(2) Except as provided in subsection (c)(2.1) or |
(c)(4), any person convicted or
adjudicated prior to |
January 1, 1996, whose liability for registration under
|
Section 7 has not expired, shall register in person prior |
to January 31,
1996.
|
(2.1) A sex offender or sexual predator, who has never |
previously been required to register under this Act, has a |
duty to register if the person has been convicted of any |
felony offense after July 1, 2011. A person who previously |
was required to register under this Act for a period of 10 |
years and successfully completed that registration period |
has a duty to register if: (i) the person has been |
|
convicted of any felony offense after July 1, 2011, and |
(ii) the offense for which the 10 year registration was |
served currently requires a registration period of more |
than 10 years. Notification of an offender's duty to |
register under this subsection shall be pursuant to Section |
5-7 of this Act. |
(2.5) Except as provided in subsection (c)(4), any |
person who has not
been notified of his or her |
responsibility to register shall be notified by a
criminal |
justice entity of his or her responsibility to register. |
Upon
notification the person must then register within 3 |
days of notification of
his or her requirement to register. |
Except as provided in subsection (c)(2.1), if notification |
is not made within the
offender's 10 year registration |
requirement, and the Department of State
Police determines |
no evidence exists or indicates the offender attempted to
|
avoid registration, the offender will no longer be required |
to register under
this Act.
|
(3) Except as provided in subsection (c)(4), any person |
convicted on
or after January 1, 1996, shall register in |
person within 3 days after the
entry of the sentencing |
order based upon his or her conviction.
|
(4) Any person unable to comply with the registration |
requirements of
this Article because he or she is confined, |
institutionalized,
or imprisoned in Illinois on or after |
January 1, 1996, shall register in person
within 3 days of |
|
discharge, parole or release.
|
(5) The person shall provide positive identification |
and documentation
that substantiates proof of residence at |
the registering address.
|
(6) The person shall pay a $100
initial registration |
fee and
a $100
annual
renewal fee. The fees shall be used |
by the registering agency for official
purposes. The agency |
shall establish procedures to document receipt and use
of |
the funds.
The law enforcement agency having jurisdiction |
may waive the registration fee
if it determines that the |
person is indigent and unable to pay the registration
fee. |
Thirty-five
Thirty dollars for the initial registration |
fee and $35 $30 of the annual renewal fee
shall be used by |
the registering agency for official purposes. Five Ten |
dollars of
the initial registration fee and $5 $10 of the |
annual fee shall be deposited into
the Sex Offender |
Management Board Fund under Section 19 of the Sex Offender
|
Management Board Act. Money deposited into the Sex Offender |
Management Board
Fund shall be administered by the Sex |
Offender Management Board and shall be
used by the Board to |
comply with the provisions of the Sex Offender Management |
Board Act to
fund practices endorsed or required by the Sex |
Offender Management Board Act
including but not limited to |
sex offenders evaluation, treatment, or
monitoring |
programs that are or may be developed, as well as for
|
administrative costs, including staff, incurred by the |
|
Board .
Thirty dollars of the initial registration fee and |
$30 of the annual renewal fee shall be deposited into the |
Sex Offender Registration Fund and shall be used by the |
Department of State Police to maintain and update the |
Illinois State Police Sex Offender Registry. Thirty |
dollars of the initial registration fee and $30 of the |
annual renewal fee shall be deposited into the Attorney |
General Sex Offender Awareness, Training, and Education |
Fund. Moneys deposited into the Fund shall be used by the |
Attorney General to administer the I-SORT program and to |
alert and educate the public, victims, and witnesses of |
their rights under various victim notification laws and for |
training law enforcement agencies, State's Attorneys, and |
medical providers of their legal duties concerning the |
prosecution and investigation of sex offenses. |
(d) Within 3 days after obtaining or changing employment |
and, if employed
on January 1, 2000, within 5 days after that |
date, a person required to
register under this Section must |
report, in person to the law
enforcement agency having |
jurisdiction, the business name and address where he
or she is |
employed. If the person has multiple businesses or work |
locations,
every business and work location must be reported to |
the law enforcement agency
having jurisdiction.
|
(Source: P.A. 96-1094, eff. 1-1-11; 96-1096, eff. 1-1-11; |
96-1097, eff. 1-1-11; 96-1102, eff. 1-1-11; 96-1104, eff. |
1-1-11; 96-1551, eff. 7-1-11; 97-155, eff 1-1-12; 97-333, eff. |
|
8-12-11; 97-578, eff. 1-1-12; revised 9-15-11.) |
(730 ILCS 150/3-5) |
Sec. 3-5. Application of Act to adjudicated juvenile |
delinquents. |
(a) In all cases involving an adjudicated juvenile
|
delinquent who meets the definition of sex offender as set
|
forth in paragraph (5) of subsection (A) of Section 2 of this
|
Act, the court shall order the minor to register as a sex |
offender. |
(b) Once an adjudicated juvenile delinquent is ordered to
|
register as a sex offender, the adjudicated juvenile delinquent
|
shall be subject to the registration requirements set forth in
|
Sections 3, 6, 6-5, 8, 8-5, and 10 for the term of his or her
|
registration. |
(c) For a minor adjudicated delinquent for an offense |
which, if charged as an adult, would be a felony, no less than |
5 years after registration ordered pursuant to subsection (a) |
of this Section, the minor may petition for the termination of |
the term of registration. For a minor adjudicated delinquent |
for an offense which, if charged as an adult, would be a |
misdemeanor, no less than 2 years after registration ordered |
pursuant to subsection (a) of this Section, the minor may |
petition for termination of the term of registration. |
(d) The court may upon a hearing on the petition for |
termination of registration, terminate registration if the |
|
court finds that the registrant poses no risk to the community |
by a preponderance of the evidence based upon the factors set |
forth in subsection (e). |
Notwithstanding any other provisions of this Act to the |
contrary, no registrant whose registration has been terminated |
under this Section shall be required to register under the |
provisions of this Act for the offense or offenses which were |
the subject of the successful petition for termination of |
registration. This exemption shall apply only to those offenses |
which were the subject of the successful petition for |
termination of registration, and shall not apply to any other |
or subsequent offenses requiring registration under this Act. |
(e) To determine whether a registrant poses a risk
to the |
community as required by subsection (d), the court shall
|
consider the following factors: |
(1) a risk assessment performed by an evaluator |
licensed under the Sex Offender Evaluation and Treatment |
Provider Act
approved by the Sex Offender Management Board ; |
(2) the sex offender history of the adjudicated
|
juvenile delinquent; |
(3) evidence of the adjudicated juvenile delinquent's
|
rehabilitation; |
(4) the age of the adjudicated juvenile delinquent at
|
the time of the offense; |
(5) information related to the adjudicated juvenile
|
delinquent's mental, physical, educational, and social
|
|
history; |
(6) victim impact statements; and |
(7) any other factors deemed relevant by the court. |
(f) At the hearing set forth in subsections (c) and (d), a
|
registrant shall be represented by counsel and may present a
|
risk assessment conducted by an evaluator who is licensed under |
the Sex Offender Evaluation and Treatment Provider Act a |
licensed
psychiatrist, psychologist, or other mental health
|
professional, and who has demonstrated clinical experience in
|
juvenile sex offender treatment . |
(g) After a registrant completes the term of his or her
|
registration, his or her name, address, and all other
|
identifying information shall be removed from all State and
|
local registries. |
(h) This Section applies retroactively to cases in which
|
adjudicated juvenile delinquents who registered or were
|
required to register before the effective date of this
|
amendatory Act of the 95th General Assembly. On or after the
|
effective date of this amendatory Act of the 95th General
|
Assembly, a person adjudicated delinquent before the effective
|
date of this amendatory Act of the 95th General Assembly may
|
request a hearing regarding status of registration by filing a |
Petition Requesting Registration Status with the clerk of the |
court. Upon receipt of the Petition Requesting Registration
|
Status, the clerk of the court shall provide notice to the
|
parties and set the Petition for hearing pursuant to
|
|
subsections (c) through (e) of this Section. |
(i) This Section does not apply to minors prosecuted under
|
the criminal laws as adults.
|
(Source: P.A. 97-578, eff. 1-1-12.) |
Section 999. Effective date. This Act takes effect July 1, |
2013, except that this Section, Section 175, Section 180, and |
the amendatory changes to Sections 2 and 3 of the Sex Offender |
Registration Act take effect on January 1, 2013, the other |
amendatory changes to Section 3-5 of the Sex Offender |
Registration Act, the amendatory changes to the Sexually |
Dangerous Persons Act, and the amendatory changes to the |
Sexually Violent Persons Commitment Act take effect January 1, |
2014. |