|
of 2012; |
(3) a short-barreled rifle or shotgun as defined in |
item (ii) of paragraph (7) of subsection (a) of Section |
24-1 of the Criminal Code of 2012; or |
(4) any pneumatic gun, spring gun, paint ball gun, or |
B-B gun which
expels a single globular projectile not |
exceeding .18 inch in
diameter, or which has a maximum |
muzzle velocity of less than 700 feet
per second, or which |
expels breakable paint balls containing washable marking |
colors. |
"Law enforcement agency" means any federal, State, or local |
law enforcement agency, including offices of State's Attorneys |
and the Office of the Attorney General. |
"License" means a license issued by the Department of State |
Police to carry a concealed handgun. |
"Licensee" means a person issued a license to carry a |
concealed handgun. |
"Municipality" has the meaning ascribed to it in Section 1 |
of Article VII of the Illinois Constitution. |
"Unit of local government" has the meaning ascribed to it |
in Section 1 of Article VII of the Illinois Constitution. |
Section 10. Issuance of licenses to carry a concealed |
firearm. |
(a) The Department shall issue a license to carry a |
concealed firearm under this Act to an applicant who: |
|
(1) meets the qualifications of Section 25 of this Act; |
(2) has provided the application and documentation |
required in Section 30 of this Act; |
(3) has submitted the requisite fees; and |
(4) does not pose a danger to himself, herself, or |
others, or a threat to public safety as determined by the |
Concealed Carry Licensing Review Board in accordance with |
Section 20. |
(b) The Department shall issue a renewal, corrected, or |
duplicate license as provided in this Act. |
(c) A license shall be valid throughout the State for a |
period of 5 years from the date of issuance. A license shall |
permit the licensee to: |
(1) carry a loaded or unloaded concealed firearm, fully |
concealed or partially concealed, on or about his or her |
person; and
|
(2) keep or carry a loaded or unloaded concealed |
firearm on or about his or her person within a vehicle. |
(d) The Department shall make applications for a license |
available no later than 180 days after the effective date of |
this Act. The Department shall establish rules for the |
availability and submission of applications in accordance with |
this Act. |
(e) An application for a license submitted to the |
Department that contains all the information and materials |
required by this Act, including the requisite fee, shall be |
|
deemed completed. Except as otherwise provided in this Act, no |
later than 90 days after receipt of a completed application, |
the Department shall issue or deny the applicant a license. |
(f) The Department shall deny the applicant a license if |
the applicant fails to meet the requirements under this Act or |
the Department receives a determination from the Board that the |
applicant is ineligible for a license. The Department must |
notify the applicant stating the grounds for the denial. The |
notice of denial must inform the applicant of his or her right |
to an appeal through administrative and judicial review. |
(g) A licensee shall possess a license at all times the |
licensee carries a concealed firearm except: |
(1) when the licensee is carrying or possessing a |
concealed firearm on his or her land or in his or her |
abode, legal dwelling, or fixed place of business, or on |
the land or in the legal dwelling of another person as an |
invitee with that person's permission; |
(2) when the person is authorized to carry a firearm |
under Section 24-2 of the Criminal Code of 2012, except |
subsection (a-5) of that Section; or |
(3) when the handgun is broken down in a |
non-functioning state, is not immediately accessible, or |
is unloaded and enclosed in a case. |
(h) If an officer of a law enforcement agency initiates an |
investigative stop, including but not limited to a traffic |
stop, of a licensee who is carrying a concealed firearm, upon |
|
the request of the officer the licensee shall disclose to the |
officer that he or she is in possession of a concealed firearm |
under this Act, present the license upon the request of the |
officer, and identify the location of the concealed firearm. |
(i) The Department shall maintain a database of license |
applicants and licensees. The database shall be available to |
all federal, State, and local law enforcement agencies, State's |
Attorneys, the Attorney General, and authorized court |
personnel. Within 180 days after the effective date of this |
Act, the database shall be searchable and provide all |
information included in the application, including the |
applicant's previous addresses within the 10 years prior to the |
license application and any information related to violations |
of this Act. No law enforcement agency, State's Attorney, |
Attorney General, or member or staff of the judiciary shall |
provide any information to a requester who is not entitled to |
it by law. |
(j) No later than 10 days after receipt of a completed |
application, the Department shall enter the relevant |
information about the applicant into the database under |
subsection (i) of this Section which is accessible by law |
enforcement agencies. |
Section 15. Objections by law enforcement agencies. |
(a) Any law enforcement agency may submit an objection to a |
license applicant based upon a reasonable suspicion that the |
|
applicant is a danger to himself or herself or others, or a |
threat to public safety. The objection shall be made by the |
chief law enforcement officer of the law enforcement agency, or |
his or her designee, and must include any information relevant |
to the objection. If a law enforcement agency submits an |
objection within 30 days after the entry of an applicant into |
the database, the Department shall submit the objection and all |
information related to the application to the Board within 10 |
days of completing all necessary background checks. |
(b) If an applicant has 5 or more arrests for any reason, |
that have been entered into the Criminal History Records |
Information (CHRI) System, within the 7 years preceding the |
date of application for a license, or has 3 or more arrests |
within the 7 years preceding the date of application for a |
license for any combination of gang-related offenses, the |
Department shall object and submit the applicant's arrest |
record, the application materials, and any additional |
information submitted by a law enforcement agency to the Board. |
For purposes of this subsection, "gang-related offense" is an |
offense described in Section 12-6.4, Section 24-1.8, Section |
25-5, Section 33-4, or Section 33G-4, or in paragraph (1) of |
subsection (a) of Section 12-6.2, paragraph (2) of subsection |
(b) of Section 16-30, paragraph (2) of subsection (b) of |
Section 31-4, or item (iii) of paragraph (1.5) of subsection |
(i) of Section 48-1 of the Criminal Code of 2012. |
(c) The referral of an objection under this Section to the |
|
Board shall toll the 90-day period for the Department to issue |
or deny the applicant a license under subsection (e) of Section |
10 of this Act, during the period of review and until the Board |
issues its decision. |
(d) If no objection is made by a law enforcement agency or |
the Department under this Section, the Department shall process |
the application in accordance with this Act. |
Section 20. Concealed Carry Licensing Review Board. |
(a) There is hereby created a Concealed Carry Licensing |
Review Board to consider any objection to an applicant's |
eligibility to obtain a license under this Act submitted by a |
law enforcement agency or the Department under Section 15 of |
this Act. The Board shall consist of 7 commissioners to be |
appointed by the Governor, with the advice and consent of the |
Senate, with 3 commissioners residing within the First Judicial |
District and one commissioner residing within each of the 4 |
remaining Judicial Districts. No more than 4 commissioners |
shall be members of the same political party. The Governor |
shall designate one commissioner as the Chairperson. The Board |
shall consist of: |
(1) one commissioner with at least 5 years of service |
as a federal judge; |
(2) 2 commissioners with at least 5 years of experience |
serving as an attorney with the United States Department of |
Justice; |
|
(3) 3 commissioners with at least 5 years of experience |
as a federal agent or employee with investigative |
experience or duties related to criminal justice under the |
United States Department of Justice, Drug Enforcement |
Administration, Department of Homeland Security, or |
Federal Bureau of Investigation; and |
(4) one member with at least 5 years of experience as a |
licensed physician or clinical psychologist with expertise |
in the diagnosis and treatment of mental illness. |
(b) The initial terms of the commissioners shall end on |
January 12, 2015. Thereafter, the commissioners shall hold |
office for 4 years, with terms expiring on the second Monday in |
January of the fourth year. Commissioners may be reappointed. |
Vacancies in the office of commissioner shall be filled in the |
same manner as the original appointment, for the remainder of |
the unexpired term. The Governor may remove a commissioner for |
incompetence, neglect of duty, malfeasance, or inability to |
serve. Commissioners shall receive compensation in an amount |
equal to the compensation of members of the Executive Ethics |
Commission and may be reimbursed for reasonable expenses |
actually incurred in the performance of their Board duties, |
from funds appropriated for that purpose. |
(c) The Board shall meet at the call of the chairperson as |
often as necessary to consider objections to applications for a |
license under this Act. If necessary to ensure the |
participation of a commissioner, the Board shall allow a |
|
commissioner to participate in a Board meeting by electronic |
communication. Any commissioner participating electronically |
shall be deemed present for purposes of establishing a quorum |
and voting. |
(d) The Board shall adopt rules for the conduct of |
hearings. The Board shall maintain a record of its decisions |
and all materials considered in making its decisions. All Board |
decisions and voting records shall be kept confidential and all |
materials considered by the Board shall be exempt from |
inspection except upon order of a court. |
(e) In considering an objection of a law enforcement agency |
or the Department, the Board shall review the materials |
received with the objection from the law enforcement agency or |
the Department. By a vote of at least 4 commissioners, the |
Board may request additional information from the law |
enforcement agency, Department, or the applicant, or the |
testimony of the law enforcement agency, Department, or the |
applicant. The Board may only consider information submitted by |
the Department, a law enforcement agency, or the applicant. The |
Board shall review each objection and determine by a majority |
of commissioners whether an applicant is eligible for a |
license. |
(f) The Board shall issue a decision within 30 days of |
receipt of the objection from the Department. However, the |
Board need not issue a decision within 30 days if: |
(1) the Board requests information from the applicant |
|
in accordance with subsection (e) of this Section, in which |
case the Board shall make a decision within 30 days of |
receipt of the required information from the applicant; |
(2) the applicant agrees, in writing, to allow the |
Board additional time to consider an objection; or |
(3) the Board notifies the applicant and the Department |
that the Board needs an additional 30 days to issue a |
decision. |
(g) If the Board determines by a preponderance of the |
evidence that the applicant poses a danger to himself or |
herself or others, or is a threat to public safety, then the |
Board shall affirm the objection of the law enforcement agency |
or the Department and shall notify the Department that the |
applicant is ineligible for a license. If the Board does not |
determine by a preponderance of the evidence that the applicant |
poses a danger to himself or herself or others, or is a threat |
to public safety, then the Board shall notify the Department |
that the applicant is eligible for a license. |
(h) Meetings of the Board shall not be subject to the Open |
Meetings Act and records of the Board shall not be subject to |
the Freedom of Information Act. |
(i) The Board shall report monthly to the Governor and the |
General Assembly on the number of objections received and |
provide details of the circumstances in which the Board has |
determined to deny licensure based on law enforcement or |
Department objections under Section 15 of this Act. The report |
|
shall not contain any identifying information about the |
applicants. |
Section 25. Qualifications for a license. |
The Department shall issue a license to an applicant |
completing an application in accordance with Section 30 of this |
Act if the person: |
(1) is at least 21 years of age; |
(2) has a currently valid Firearm Owner's |
Identification Card and at the time of application meets |
the requirements for the issuance of a Firearm Owner's |
Identification Card and is not prohibited under the Firearm |
Owners Identification Card Act or federal law from |
possessing or receiving a firearm; |
(3) has not been convicted or found guilty in this |
State or in any other state of: |
(A) a misdemeanor involving the use or threat of |
physical force or violence to any person within the 5 |
years preceding the date of the license application; or |
(B) 2 or more violations related to driving while |
under the influence of alcohol, other drug or drugs, |
intoxicating compound or compounds, or any combination |
thereof, within the 5 years preceding the date of the |
license application; and |
(4) is not the subject of a pending arrest warrant, |
prosecution, or proceeding for an offense or action that |
|
could lead to disqualification to own or possess a firearm; |
(5) has not been in residential or court-ordered |
treatment for alcoholism, alcohol detoxification, or drug |
treatment within the 5 years immediately preceding the date |
of the license application; and |
(6) has completed firearms training and any education |
component required under Section 75 of this Act. |
Section 30. Contents of license application. |
(a) The license application shall be in writing, under |
penalty of perjury, on a standard form adopted by the |
Department and shall be accompanied by the documentation |
required in this Section and the applicable fee. Each |
application form shall include the following statement printed |
in bold type: "Warning: Entering false information on this form |
is punishable as perjury under Section 32-2 of the Criminal |
Code of 2012." |
(b) The application shall contain the following: |
(1) the applicant's name, current address, date and |
year of birth, place of birth, height, weight, hair color, |
eye color, maiden name or any other name the applicant has |
used or identified with, and any address where the |
applicant resided for more than 30 days within the 10 years |
preceding the date of the license application; |
(2) the applicant's valid driver's license number or |
valid state identification card number; |
|
(3) a waiver of the applicant's privacy and |
confidentiality rights and privileges under all federal |
and state laws, including those limiting access to juvenile |
court, criminal justice, psychological, or psychiatric |
records or records relating to any institutionalization of |
the applicant, and an affirmative request that a person |
having custody of any of these records provide it or |
information concerning it to the Department; |
(4) an affirmation that the applicant possesses a |
currently valid Firearm Owner's Identification Card and |
card number if possessed or notice the applicant is |
applying for a Firearm Owner's Identification Card in |
conjunction with the license application; |
(5) an affirmation that the applicant has not been |
convicted or found guilty of: |
(A) a felony; |
(B) a misdemeanor involving the use or threat of |
physical force or violence to any person within the 5 |
years preceding the date of the application; or |
(C) 2 or more violations related to driving while |
under the influence of alcohol, other drug or drugs, |
intoxicating compound or compounds, or any combination |
thereof, within the 5 years preceding the date of the |
license application; and |
(6) whether the applicant has failed a drug test for a |
drug for which the applicant did not have a prescription, |
|
within the previous year, and if so, the provider of the |
test, the specific substance involved, and the date of the |
test; |
(7) written consent for the Department to review and |
use the applicant's Illinois digital driver's license or |
Illinois identification card photograph and signature; |
(8) a full set of fingerprints submitted to the |
Department in electronic format, provided the Department |
may accept an application submitted without a set of |
fingerprints in which case the Department shall be granted |
30 days in addition to the 90 days provided under |
subsection (e) of Section 10 of this Act to issue or deny a |
license; |
(9) a head and shoulder color photograph in a size |
specified by the Department taken within the 30 days |
preceding the date of the license application; and |
(10) a photocopy of any certificates or other evidence |
of compliance with the training requirements under this |
Act. |
Section 35. Investigation of the applicant. |
The Department shall conduct a background check of the |
applicant to ensure compliance with the requirements of this |
Act and all federal, State, and local laws. The background |
check shall include a search of the following: |
(1) the National Instant Criminal Background Check |
|
System of the Federal Bureau of Investigation; |
(2) all available state and local criminal history |
record information files, including records of juvenile |
adjudications; |
(3) all available federal, state, and local records |
regarding wanted persons; |
(4) all available federal, state, and local records of |
domestic violence restraining and protective orders; |
(5) the files of the Department of Human Services |
relating to mental health and developmental disabilities; |
and
|
(6) all other available records of a federal, state, or |
local agency or other public entity in any jurisdiction |
likely to contain information relevant to whether the |
applicant is prohibited from purchasing, possessing, or |
carrying a firearm under federal, state, or local law. |
(7) Fingerprints collected under Section 30 shall be |
checked against the Department of State Police and Federal |
Bureau of Investigation criminal history record databases |
now and hereafter filed. The Department shall charge |
applicants a fee for conducting the criminal history |
records check, which shall be deposited in the State Police |
Services Fund and shall not exceed the actual cost of the |
records check. |
Section 40. Non-resident license applications. |
|
(a) For the purposes of this Section, "non-resident" means |
a person who has not resided within this State for more than 30 |
days and resides in another state or territory. |
(b) The Department shall by rule allow for non-resident |
license applications from any state or territory of the United |
States with laws related to firearm ownership, possession, and |
carrying, that are substantially similar to the requirements to |
obtain a license under this Act. |
(c) A resident of a state or territory approved by the |
Department under subsection (b) of this Section may apply for a |
non-resident license. The applicant shall apply to the |
Department and must meet all of the qualifications established |
in Section 25 of this Act, except for the Illinois residency |
requirement in item (xiv) of paragraph (2) of subsection (a) of |
Section 4 of the Firearm Owners Identification Card Act. The |
applicant shall submit: |
(1) the application and documentation required under |
Section 30 of this Act and the applicable fee; |
(2) a notarized document stating that the applicant: |
(A) is eligible under federal law and the laws of |
his or her state or territory of residence to own or |
possess a firearm; |
(B) if applicable, has a license or permit to carry |
a firearm or concealed firearm issued by his or her |
state or territory of residence and attach a copy of |
the license or permit to the application; |
|
(C) understands Illinois laws pertaining to the |
possession and transport of firearms, and |
(D) acknowledges that the applicant is subject to |
the jurisdiction of the Department and Illinois courts |
for any violation of this Act; and |
(3) a photocopy of any certificates or other evidence |
of compliance with the training requirements under Section |
75 of this Act; and |
(4) a head and shoulder color photograph in a size |
specified by the Department taken within the 30 days |
preceding the date of the application. |
(d) In lieu of an Illinois driver's license or Illinois |
identification card, a non-resident applicant shall provide |
similar documentation from his or her state or territory of |
residence. In lieu of a valid Firearm Owner's Identification |
Card, the applicant shall submit documentation and information |
required by the Department to obtain a Firearm Owner's |
Identification Card, including an affidavit that the |
non-resident meets the mental health standards to obtain a |
firearm under Illinois law, and the Department shall ensure |
that the applicant would meet the eligibility criteria to |
obtain a Firearm Owner's Identification card if he or she was a |
resident of this State. |
(e) Nothing in this Act shall prohibit a non-resident from |
transporting a concealed firearm within his or her vehicle in |
Illinois, if the concealed firearm remains within his or her |
|
vehicle and the non-resident: |
(1) is not prohibited from owning or possessing a |
firearm under federal law; |
(2) is eligible to carry a firearm in public under the |
laws of his or her state or territory of residence; and |
(3) is not in possession of a license under this Act. |
If the non-resident leaves his or her vehicle unattended, |
he or she shall store the firearm within a locked vehicle or |
locked container within the vehicle in accordance with |
subsection (b) of Section 65 of this Act. |
Section 45. Civil immunity; Board, employees, and agents. |
The Board, Department, local law enforcement agency, or the |
employees and agents of the Board, Department, or local law |
enforcement agency participating in the licensing process |
under this Act shall not be held liable for damages in any |
civil action arising from alleged wrongful or improper |
granting, denying, renewing, revoking, suspending, or failing |
to grant, deny, renew, revoke, or suspend a license under this |
Act, except for willful or wanton misconduct. |
Section 50. License renewal. |
Applications for renewal of a license shall be made to the |
Department. A license shall be renewed for a period of 5 years |
upon receipt of a completed renewal application, completion of |
3 hours of training required under Section 75 of this Section, |
|
payment of the applicable renewal fee, and completion of an |
investigation under Section 35 of this Act. The renewal |
application shall contain the information required in Section |
30 of this Act, except that the applicant need not resubmit a |
full set of fingerprints. |
Section 55. Change of address or name; lost, destroyed, or |
stolen licenses. |
(a) A licensee shall notify the Department within 30 days |
of moving or changing residence or any change of name. The |
licensee shall submit: |
(1) a notarized statement that the licensee has changed |
his or her residence or his or her name, including the |
prior and current address or name and the date the |
applicant moved or changed his or her name; and |
(2) the requisite fee. |
(b) A licensee shall notify the Department within 10 days |
of discovering that a license has been lost, destroyed, or |
stolen. A lost, destroyed, or stolen license is invalid. To |
request a replacement license, the licensee shall submit: |
(1) a notarized statement that the licensee no longer |
possesses the license, and that it was lost, destroyed, or |
stolen; |
(2) if applicable, a copy of a police report stating |
that the license was stolen; and |
(3) the requisite fee. |
|
(c) A violation of this Section is a petty offense with a |
fine of $150 which shall be deposited into the Mental Health |
Reporting Fund. |
Section 60. Fees. |
(a) All fees collected under this Act shall be deposited as |
provided in this Section. Application, renewal, and |
replacement fees shall be non-refundable. |
(b) An applicant for a new license or a renewal shall |
submit $150 with the application, of which $120 shall be |
apportioned to the State Police Firearm Services Fund, $20 |
shall be apportioned to the Mental Health Reporting Fund, and |
$10 shall be apportioned to the State Crime Laboratory Fund. |
(c) A non-resident applicant for a new license or renewal |
shall submit $300 with the application, of which $250 shall be |
apportioned to the State Police Firearm Services Fund, $40 |
shall be apportioned to the Mental Health Reporting Fund, and |
$10 shall be apportioned to the State Crime Laboratory Fund. |
(d) A licensee requesting a new license in accordance with |
Section 55 shall submit $75, of which $60 shall be apportioned |
to the State Police Firearm Services Fund, $5 shall be |
apportioned to the Mental Health Reporting Fund, and $10 shall |
be apportioned to the State Crime Laboratory Fund. |
Section 65. Prohibited areas. |
(a) A licensee under this Act shall not knowingly carry a |
|
firearm on or into: |
(1) Any building, real property, and parking area under |
the control of a public or private elementary or secondary |
school. |
(2) Any building, real property, and parking area under |
the control of a pre-school or child care facility, |
including any room or portion of a building under the |
control of a pre-school or child care facility. Nothing in |
this paragraph shall prevent the operator of a child care |
facility in a family home from owning or possessing a |
firearm in the home or license under this Act, if no child |
under child care at the home is present in the home or the |
firearm in the home is stored in a locked container when a |
child under child care at the home is present in the home. |
(3) Any building, parking area, or portion of a |
building under the control of an officer of the executive |
or legislative branch of government, provided that nothing |
in this paragraph shall prohibit a licensee from carrying a |
concealed firearm onto the real property, bikeway, or trail |
in a park regulated by the Department of Natural Resources |
or any other designated public hunting area or building |
where firearm possession is permitted as established by the |
Department of Natural Resources under Section 1.8 of the |
Wildlife Code. |
(4) Any building designated for matters before a |
circuit court, appellate court, or the Supreme Court, or |
|
any building or portion of a building under the control of |
the Supreme Court. |
(5) Any building or portion of a building under the |
control of a unit of local government. |
(6) Any building, real property, and parking area under |
the control of an adult or juvenile detention or |
correctional institution, prison, or jail. |
(7) Any building, real property, and parking area under |
the control of a public or private hospital or hospital |
affiliate, mental health facility, or nursing home. |
(8) Any bus, train, or form of transportation paid for |
in whole or in part with public funds, and any building, |
real property, and parking area under the control of a |
public transportation facility paid for in whole or in part |
with public funds. |
(9) Any building, real property, and parking area under |
the control of an establishment that serves alcohol on its |
premises, if more than 50% of the establishment's gross |
receipts within the prior 3 months is from the sale of |
alcohol. The owner of an establishment who knowingly fails |
to prohibit concealed firearms on its premises as provided |
in this paragraph or who knowingly makes a false statement |
or record to avoid the prohibition on concealed firearms |
under this paragraph is subject to the penalty under |
subsection (c-5) of Section 10-1 of the Liquor Control Act |
of 1934. |
|
(10) Any public gathering or special event conducted on |
property open to the public that requires the issuance of a |
permit from the unit of local government, provided this |
prohibition shall not apply to a licensee who must walk |
through a public gathering in order to access his or her |
residence, place of business, or vehicle. |
(11) Any building or real property that has been issued |
a Special Event Retailer's license as defined in Section |
1-3.17.1 of the Liquor Control Act during the time |
designated for the sale of alcohol by the Special Event |
Retailer's license, or a Special use permit license as |
defined in subsection (q) of Section 5-1 of the Liquor |
Control Act during the time designated for the sale of |
alcohol by the Special use permit license. |
(12) Any public playground. |
(13) Any public park, athletic area, or athletic |
facility under the control of a municipality or park |
district, provided nothing in this Section shall prohibit a |
licensee from carrying a concealed firearm while on a trail |
or bikeway if only a portion of the trail or bikeway |
includes a public park. |
(14) Any real property under the control of the Cook |
County Forest Preserve District. |
(15) Any building, classroom, laboratory, medical |
clinic, hospital, artistic venue, athletic venue, |
entertainment venue, officially recognized |
|
university-related organization property, whether owned or |
leased, and any real property, including parking areas, |
sidewalks, and common areas under the control of a public |
or private community college, college, or university. |
(16) Any building, real property, or parking area under |
the control of a gaming facility licensed under the |
Riverboat Gambling Act or the Illinois Horse Racing Act of |
1975, including an inter-track wagering location licensee. |
(17) Any stadium, arena, or the real property or |
parking area under the control of a stadium, arena, or any |
collegiate or professional sporting event. |
(18) Any building, real property, or parking area under |
the control of a public library. |
(19) Any building, real property, or parking area under |
the control of an airport. |
(20) Any building, real property, or parking area under |
the control of an amusement park. |
(21) Any building, real property, or parking area under |
the control of a zoo or museum. |
(22) Any street, driveway, parking area, property, |
building, or facility, owned, leased, controlled, or used |
by a nuclear energy, storage, weapons, or development site |
or facility regulated by the federal Nuclear Regulatory |
Commission. The licensee shall not under any circumstance |
store a firearm or ammunition in his or her vehicle or in a |
compartment or container within a vehicle located anywhere |
|
in or on the street, driveway, parking area, property, |
building, or facility described in this paragraph. |
(23) Any area where firearms are prohibited under |
federal law. |
(a-5) Nothing in this Act shall prohibit a public or |
private community college, college, or university from: |
(1) prohibiting persons from carrying a firearm within |
a vehicle owned, leased, or controlled by the college or |
university; |
(2) developing resolutions, regulations, or policies |
regarding student, employee, or visitor misconduct and |
discipline, including suspension and expulsion; |
(3) developing resolutions, regulations, or policies |
regarding the storage or maintenance of firearms, which |
must include designated areas where persons can park |
vehicles that carry firearms; and |
(4) permitting the carrying or use of firearms for the |
purpose of instruction and curriculum of officially |
recognized programs, including but not limited to military |
science and law enforcement training programs, or in any |
designated area used for hunting purposes or target |
shooting. |
(a-10) The owner of private real property of any type may |
prohibit the carrying of concealed firearms on the property |
under his or her control. The owner must post a sign in |
accordance with subsection (d) of this Section indicating that |
|
firearms are prohibited on the property, unless the property is |
a private residence. |
(b) Notwithstanding subsections (a), (a-5), and (a-10) of |
this Section except under paragraph (22) or (23) of subsection |
(a), any licensee prohibited from carrying a concealed firearm |
into the parking area of a prohibited location specified in |
subsection (a), (a-5), or (a-10) of this Section shall be |
permitted to carry a concealed firearm on or about his or her |
person within a vehicle into the parking area and may store a |
firearm or ammunition concealed in a case within a locked |
vehicle or locked container out of plain view within the |
vehicle in the parking area. A licensee may carry a concealed |
firearm in the immediate area surrounding his or her vehicle |
within a prohibited parking lot area only for the limited |
purpose of storing or retrieving a firearm within the vehicle's |
trunk, provided the licensee ensures the concealed firearm is |
unloaded prior to exiting the vehicle. For purposes of this |
subsection, "case" includes a glove compartment or console that |
completely encloses the concealed firearm or ammunition, the |
trunk of the vehicle, or a firearm carrying box, shipping box, |
or other container. |
(c) A licensee shall not be in violation of this Section |
while he or she is traveling along a public right of way that |
touches or crosses any of the premises under subsection (a), |
(a-5), or (a-10) of this Section if the concealed firearm is |
carried on his or her person in accordance with the provisions |
|
of this Act or is being transported in a vehicle by the |
licensee in accordance with all other applicable provisions of |
law. |
(d) Signs stating that the carrying of firearms is |
prohibited shall be clearly and conspicuously posted at the |
entrance of a building, premises, or real property specified in |
this Section as a prohibited area, unless the building or |
premises is a private residence. Signs shall be of a uniform |
design as established by the Department and shall be 4 inches |
by 6 inches in size. The Department shall adopt rules for |
standardized signs to be used under this subsection. |
Section 70. Violations. |
(a) A license issued or renewed under this Act shall be |
revoked if, at any time, the licensee is found to be ineligible |
for a license under this Act or the licensee no longer meets |
the eligibility requirements of the Firearm Owners |
Identification Card Act. |
(b) A license shall be suspended if an order of protection, |
including an emergency order of protection, plenary order of |
protection, or interim order of protection under Article 112A |
of the Code of Criminal Procedure of 1963 or under the Illinois |
Domestic Violence Act of 1986, is issued against a licensee for |
the duration of the order, or if the Department is made aware |
of a similar order issued against the licensee in any other |
jurisdiction. If an order of protection is issued against a |
|
licensee, the licensee shall surrender the license, as |
applicable, to the court at the time the order is entered or to |
the law enforcement agency or entity serving process at the |
time the licensee is served the order. The court, law |
enforcement agency, or entity responsible for serving the order |
of protection shall notify the Department within 7 days and |
transmit the license to the Department. |
(c) A license is invalid upon expiration of the license, |
unless the licensee has submitted an application to renew the |
license, and the applicant is otherwise eligible to possess a |
license under this Act. |
(d) A licensee shall not carry a concealed firearm while |
under the influence of alcohol, other drug or drugs, |
intoxicating compound or combination of compounds, or any |
combination thereof, under the standards set forth in |
subsection (a) of Section 11-501 of the Illinois Vehicle Code. |
A licensee in violation of this subsection (d) shall be |
guilty of a Class A misdemeanor for a first or second violation |
and a Class 4 felony for a third violation. The Department may |
suspend a license for up to 6 months for a second violation and |
shall permanently revoke a license for a third violation. |
(e) Except as otherwise provided, a licensee in violation |
of this Act shall be guilty of a Class B misdemeanor. A second |
or subsequent violation is a Class A misdemeanor. The |
Department may suspend a license for up to 6 months for a |
second violation and shall permanently revoke a license for 3 |
|
or more violations of Section 65 of this Act. Any person |
convicted of a violation under this Section shall pay a $150 |
fee to be deposited into the Mental Health Reporting Fund, plus |
any applicable court costs or fees. |
(f) A licensee convicted or found guilty of a violation of |
this Act who has a valid license and is otherwise eligible to |
carry a concealed firearm shall only be subject to the |
penalties under this Section and shall not be subject to the |
penalties under Section 21-6, paragraph (4), (8), or (10) of |
subsection (a) of Section 24-1, or subparagraph (A-5) or (B-5) |
of paragraph (3) of subsection (a) of Section 24-1.6 of the |
Criminal Code of 2012. Except as otherwise provided in this |
subsection, nothing in this subsection prohibits the licensee |
from being subjected to penalties for violations other than |
those specified in this Act. |
(g) A licensee whose license is revoked, suspended, or |
denied shall, within 48 hours of receiving notice of the |
revocation, suspension, or denial surrender his or her |
concealed carry license to the local law enforcement agency |
where the person resides. The local law enforcement agency |
shall provide the licensee a receipt and transmit the concealed |
carry license to the Department of State Police. If the |
licensee whose concealed carry license has been revoked, |
suspended, or denied fails to comply with the requirements of |
this subsection, the law enforcement agency where the person |
resides may petition the circuit court to issue a warrant to |
|
search for and seize the concealed carry license in the |
possession and under the custody or control of the licensee |
whose concealed carry license has been revoked, suspended, or |
denied. The observation of a concealed carry license in the |
possession of a person whose license has been revoked, |
suspended, or denied constitutes a sufficient basis for the |
arrest of that person for violation of this subsection. A |
violation of this subsection is a Class A misdemeanor. |
(h) A license issued or renewed under this Act shall be |
revoked if, at any time, the licensee is found ineligible for a |
Firearm Owner's Identification Card, or the licensee no longer |
possesses a valid Firearm Owner's Identification Card. A |
licensee whose license is revoked under this subsection (h) |
shall surrender his or her concealed carry license as provided |
for in subsection (g) of this Section. |
This subsection shall not apply to a person who has filed |
an application with the State Police for renewal of a Firearm
|
Owner's Identification Card and who is not otherwise ineligible |
to obtain a Firearm Owner's Identification Card. |
Section 75. Applicant firearm training. |
(a) Within 60 days of the effective date of this Act, the |
Department shall begin approval of firearm training courses and |
shall make a list of approved courses available on the |
Department's website. |
(b) An applicant for a new license shall provide proof of |
|
completion of a firearms training course or combination of |
courses approved by the Department of at least 16 hours, which |
includes range qualification time under subsection (c) of this |
Section, that covers the following: |
(1) firearm safety; |
(2) the basic principles of marksmanship; |
(3) care, cleaning, loading, and unloading of a |
concealable firearm; |
(4) all applicable State and federal laws relating to |
the ownership, storage, carry, and transportation of a |
firearm; and |
(5) instruction on the appropriate and lawful |
interaction with law enforcement while transporting or |
carrying a concealed firearm. |
(c) An applicant for a new license shall provide proof of |
certification by a certified instructor that the applicant |
passed a live fire exercise with a concealable firearm |
consisting of: |
(1) a minimum of 30 rounds; and |
(2) 10 rounds from a distance of 5 yards; 10 rounds |
from a distance of 7 yards; and 10 rounds from a distance |
of 10 yards at a B-27 silhouette target approved by the |
Department. |
(d) An applicant for renewal of a license shall provide |
proof of completion of a firearms training course or |
combination of courses approved by the Department of at least 3 |
|
hours. |
(e) A certificate of completion for an applicant's firearm |
training course shall not be issued to a student who: |
(1) does not follow the orders of the certified |
firearms instructor;
|
(2) in the judgment of the certified instructor, |
handles a firearm in a manner that poses a danger to the |
student or to others; or
|
(3) during the range firing portion of testing fails to |
hit the target with 70% of the rounds fired. |
(f) An instructor shall maintain a record of each student's |
performance for at least 5 years, and shall make all records |
available upon demand of authorized personnel of the |
Department. |
(g) The Department and certified firearms instructor shall |
recognize up to 8 hours of training already completed toward |
the 16 hour training requirement under this Section if the |
training course is approved by the Department and recognized |
under the laws of another state. Any remaining hours that the |
applicant completes must at least cover the classroom subject |
matter of paragraph (4) of subsection (b) of this Section, and |
the range qualification in subsection (c) of this Section. |
(h) A person who has qualified to carry a firearm as an |
active law enforcement officer, a person certified as a |
firearms instructor by this Act or by the Illinois Law |
Enforcement Training Standards Board, or a person who has |
|
completed the required training and has been issued a firearm |
control card by the Department of Financial and Professional |
Regulation shall be exempt from the requirements of this |
Section. |
(i) The Department shall accept 8 hours of training as |
completed toward the 16 hour training requirement under this |
Section, if the applicant is an active, retired, or honorably |
discharged member of the United States Armed Forces. |
Section 80. Firearms instructor training. |
(a) Within 60 days of the effective date of this Act, the |
Department shall begin approval of certified firearms |
instructors and enter certified firearms instructors into an |
online registry on the Department's website. |
(b) A person who is not a certified firearms instructor |
shall not teach applicant training courses or advertise or |
otherwise represent courses they teach as qualifying their |
students to meet the requirements to receive a license under |
this Act. Each violation of this subsection is a business |
offense with a fine of at least $1,000 per violation. |
(c) A person seeking to become a certified firearms |
instructor shall: |
(1) be at least 21 years of age; |
(2) be a legal resident of the United States; and |
(3) meet the requirements of Section 25 of this Act, |
and any additional uniformly applied requirements |
|
established by the Department. |
(d) A person seeking to become a certified firearms |
instructor trainer, in addition to the requirements of |
subsection (c) of this Section, shall: |
(1) possess a high school diploma or GED certificate; |
and |
(2) have at least one of the following valid firearms |
instructor certifications: |
(A) certification from a law enforcement agency; |
(B) certification from a firearm instructor course |
offered by a State or federal governmental agency; |
(C) certification from a firearm instructor |
qualification course offered by the Illinois Law |
Enforcement Training Standards Board; or |
(D) certification from an entity approved by the |
Department that offers firearm instructor education |
and training in the use and safety of firearms. |
(e) A person may have his or her firearms instructor |
certification denied or revoked if he or she does not meet the |
requirements to obtain a license under this Act, provides false |
or misleading information to the Department, or has had a prior |
instructor certification revoked or denied by the Department. |
Section 85. Background Checks for Sales. |
A license to carry a concealed firearm issued by this |
State shall not exempt the licensee from the requirements of a |
|
background check, including a check of the National Instant |
Criminal Background Check System, upon purchase or transfer of |
a firearm. |
Section 87. Administrative and judicial review. |
(a) Whenever an application for a concealed carry license |
is denied, whenever the Department fails to act on an |
application
within 90 days of its receipt, or whenever a |
license is revoked or suspended as provided in this Act, the |
aggrieved party may
appeal
to the Director for a hearing upon
|
the denial, revocation, suspension, or failure to act on the |
application, unless the denial
was made by the Concealed Carry |
Licensing Review Board, in which case the
aggrieved party may |
petition the circuit court in writing in the county of
his or |
her residence for a hearing upon the denial. |
(b) All final administrative decisions of the Department or |
the Concealed Carry Licensing Review Board under this
Act shall |
be subject to judicial review under the provisions of the |
Administrative
Review Law. The term
"administrative decision" |
is defined as in Section 3-101 of the Code of
Civil Procedure.
|
Section 90. Preemption. |
The regulation, licensing, possession, registration, and |
transportation of handguns and ammunition for handguns by |
licensees are exclusive powers and functions of the State. Any |
ordinance or regulation, or portion thereof, enacted on or |
|
before the effective date of this Act that purports to impose |
regulations or restrictions on licensees or handguns and |
ammunition for handguns in a manner inconsistent with this Act |
shall be invalid in its application to licensees under this Act |
on the effective date of this Act. 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 92. Consolidation of concealed carry license and |
Firearm Owner's Identification Card. |
(a) The Director shall create a task force to develop a |
plan to incorporate and consolidate the concealed carry license |
under this Act and the Firearm Owner's Identification Card |
under the Firearm Owners Identification Card Act into a |
designation on the Illinois driver's license or Illinois |
identification card of a person with authority to possess a |
firearm under the Firearm Owners Identification Card Act, or |
authority to possess a firearm under the Firearm Owners |
Identification Card Act and authority to carry a concealed |
firearm under this Act. The plan must provide for an |
alternative card for: |
(1) a non-resident or a resident without an Illinois |
driver's license or Illinois identification card, who has |
been granted authority under this Act to carry a concealed |
firearm in this State; and |
(2) a resident without an Illinois driver's license or |
|
Illinois identification card, who has been granted |
authority to possess a firearm under the Firearm Owners |
Identification Card Act. |
The plan shall include statutory changes necessary to |
implement it. |
(b) The task force shall consist of the following members: |
(1) one member appointed by the Speaker of the House of |
Representatives; |
(2) one member appointed by the House of |
Representatives Minority Leader; |
(3) one member appointed by the President of the |
Senate; |
(4) one member appointed by the Senate Minority Leader; |
(5) one member appointed by the Secretary of State; |
(6) one member appointed by the Director of State |
Police; |
(7) one member appointed by the Secretary of State |
representing the National Rifle Association; |
(8) one member appointed by the Governor from the |
Department of Natural Resources; and |
(9) one member appointed by the Governor representing |
the Chicago Police Department. |
The task force shall elect a chairperson from its |
membership. Members shall serve without compensation. |
(c) The task force shall file the plan supported by a |
majority of its members with the General Assembly and the |
|
Secretary of State on or before March 1, 2014. |
(d) This Section is repealed on March 2, 2014. |
Section 95. Procurement; rulemaking. |
(a) The Department of State Police, in consultation with |
and subject to the approval of the Chief Procurement Officer, |
may procure a single contract or multiple contracts to |
implement the provisions of this Act. A contract or contracts |
under this paragraph are not subject to the provisions of the |
Illinois Procurement Code, except for Sections 20-60, 20-65, |
20-70, and 20-160 and Article 50 of that Code, provided that |
the Chief Procurement Officer may, in writing with |
justification, waive any certification required under Article |
50. This exemption shall be repealed one year from the |
effective date of this Act. |
(b) The Department shall adopt rules to implement the |
provisions of this Act. The Department may adopt rules |
necessary to implement the provisions of this Act through the |
use of emergency rulemaking in accordance with Section 5-45 of |
the Illinois Administrative Procedure Act for a period not to |
exceed 180 days after the effective date of this Act. |
Section 100. Short title. Sections 100 through 110 may be |
cited as the School Administrator Reporting of Mental Health |
Clear and Present Danger Determinations Law. |
|
Section 105. Duty of school administrator. It is the duty |
of the principal
of a public elementary or secondary school, or |
his or her designee, and the
chief administrative officer of a |
private elementary or secondary school or a
public or private |
community college, college, or university, or his or her
|
designee, to report to the Department of State Police when a |
student is determined to pose a clear and present danger to |
himself, herself, or to others, within 24 hours of
the |
determination as provided in Section 6-103.3 of the Mental |
Health and Developmental Disabilities Code. "Clear and present |
danger" has the meaning as provided in paragraph (2) of the |
definition of "clear and present danger" in Section 1.1 of the |
Firearm Owners Identification Card Act. |
Section 110. Immunity. A principal or chief administrative |
officer, or the designee of a principal or chief administrative |
officer, making the determination and reporting under Section |
105 of this Law shall not be held criminally, civilly, or |
professionally liable, except for willful or wanton |
misconduct. |
Section 115. The Open Meetings Act is amended by changing |
Section 2 as follows:
|
(5 ILCS 120/2) (from Ch. 102, par. 42)
|
Sec. 2. Open meetings.
|
|
(a) Openness required. All meetings of public
bodies shall |
be open to the public unless excepted in subsection (c)
and |
closed in accordance with Section 2a.
|
(b) Construction of exceptions. The exceptions contained |
in subsection
(c) are in derogation of the requirement that |
public bodies
meet in the open, and therefore, the exceptions |
are to be strictly
construed, extending only to subjects |
clearly within their scope.
The exceptions authorize but do not |
require the holding of
a closed meeting to discuss a subject |
included within an enumerated exception.
|
(c) Exceptions. A public body may hold closed meetings to |
consider the
following subjects:
|
(1) The appointment, employment, compensation, |
discipline, performance,
or dismissal of specific |
employees of the public body or legal counsel for
the |
public body, including hearing
testimony on a complaint |
lodged against an employee of the public body or
against |
legal counsel for the public body to determine its |
validity.
|
(2) Collective negotiating matters between the public |
body and its
employees or their representatives, or |
deliberations concerning salary
schedules for one or more |
classes of employees.
|
(3) The selection of a person to fill a public office,
|
as defined in this Act, including a vacancy in a public |
office, when the public
body is given power to appoint |
|
under law or ordinance, or the discipline,
performance or |
removal of the occupant of a public office, when the public |
body
is given power to remove the occupant under law or |
ordinance.
|
(4) Evidence or testimony presented in open hearing, or |
in closed
hearing where specifically authorized by law, to
|
a quasi-adjudicative body, as defined in this Act, provided |
that the body
prepares and makes available for public |
inspection a written decision
setting forth its |
determinative reasoning.
|
(5) The purchase or lease of real property for the use |
of
the public body, including meetings held for the purpose |
of discussing
whether a particular parcel should be |
acquired.
|
(6) The setting of a price for sale or lease of |
property owned
by the public body.
|
(7) The sale or purchase of securities, investments, or |
investment
contracts. This exception shall not apply to the |
investment of assets or income of funds deposited into the |
Illinois Prepaid Tuition Trust Fund.
|
(8) Security procedures and the use of personnel and
|
equipment to respond to an actual, a threatened, or a |
reasonably
potential danger to the safety of employees, |
students, staff, the public, or
public
property.
|
(9) Student disciplinary cases.
|
(10) The placement of individual students in special |
|
education
programs and other matters relating to |
individual students.
|
(11) Litigation, when an action against, affecting or |
on behalf of the
particular public body has been filed and |
is pending before a court or
administrative tribunal, or |
when the public body finds that an action is
probable or |
imminent, in which case the basis for the finding shall be
|
recorded and entered into the minutes of the closed |
meeting.
|
(12) The establishment of reserves or settlement of |
claims as provided
in the Local Governmental and |
Governmental Employees Tort Immunity Act, if
otherwise the |
disposition of a claim or potential claim might be
|
prejudiced, or the review or discussion of claims, loss or |
risk management
information, records, data, advice or |
communications from or with respect
to any insurer of the |
public body or any intergovernmental risk management
|
association or self insurance pool of which the public body |
is a member.
|
(13) Conciliation of complaints of discrimination in |
the sale or rental
of housing, when closed meetings are |
authorized by the law or ordinance
prescribing fair housing |
practices and creating a commission or
administrative |
agency for their enforcement.
|
(14) Informant sources, the hiring or assignment of |
undercover personnel
or equipment, or ongoing, prior or |
|
future criminal investigations, when
discussed by a public |
body with criminal investigatory responsibilities.
|
(15) Professional ethics or performance when |
considered by an advisory
body appointed to advise a |
licensing or regulatory agency on matters
germane to the |
advisory body's field of competence.
|
(16) Self evaluation, practices and procedures or |
professional ethics,
when meeting with a representative of |
a statewide association of which the
public body is a |
member.
|
(17) The recruitment, credentialing, discipline or |
formal peer review
of physicians or other
health care |
professionals for a hospital, or
other institution |
providing medical care, that is operated by the public |
body.
|
(18) Deliberations for decisions of the Prisoner |
Review Board.
|
(19) Review or discussion of applications received |
under the
Experimental Organ Transplantation Procedures |
Act.
|
(20) The classification and discussion of matters |
classified as
confidential or continued confidential by |
the State Government Suggestion Award
Board.
|
(21) Discussion of minutes of meetings lawfully closed |
under this Act,
whether for purposes of approval by the |
body of the minutes or semi-annual
review of the minutes as |
|
mandated by Section 2.06.
|
(22) Deliberations for decisions of the State
|
Emergency Medical Services Disciplinary
Review Board.
|
(23) The operation by a municipality of a municipal |
utility or the
operation of a
municipal power agency or |
municipal natural gas agency when the
discussion involves |
(i) contracts relating to the
purchase, sale, or delivery |
of electricity or natural gas or (ii) the results
or |
conclusions of load forecast studies.
|
(24) Meetings of a residential health care facility |
resident sexual
assault and death review
team or
the |
Executive
Council under the Abuse Prevention Review
Team |
Act.
|
(25) Meetings of an independent team of experts under |
Brian's Law. |
(26) Meetings of a mortality review team appointed |
under the Department of Juvenile Justice Mortality Review |
Team Act. |
(27) Confidential information, when discussed by one |
or more members of an elder abuse fatality review team, |
designated under Section 15 of the Elder Abuse and Neglect |
Act, while participating in a review conducted by that team |
of the death of an elderly person in which abuse or neglect |
is suspected, alleged, or substantiated; provided that |
before the review team holds a closed meeting, or closes an |
open meeting, to discuss the confidential information, |
|
each participating review team member seeking to disclose |
the confidential information in the closed meeting or |
closed portion of the meeting must state on the record |
during an open meeting or the open portion of a meeting the |
nature of the information to be disclosed and the legal |
basis for otherwise holding that information confidential. |
(28) Correspondence and records (i) that may not be |
disclosed under Section 11-9 of the Public Aid Code or (ii) |
that pertain to appeals under Section 11-8 of the Public |
Aid Code. |
(29) Meetings between internal or external auditors |
and governmental audit committees, finance committees, and |
their equivalents, when the discussion involves internal |
control weaknesses, identification of potential fraud risk |
areas, known or suspected frauds, and fraud interviews |
conducted in accordance with generally accepted auditing |
standards of the United States of America. |
(30) Meetings and deliberations for decisions of the |
Concealed Carry Licensing Review Board under the Firearm |
Concealed Carry Act. |
(d) Definitions. For purposes of this Section:
|
"Employee" means a person employed by a public body whose |
relationship
with the public body constitutes an |
employer-employee relationship under
the usual common law |
rules, and who is not an independent contractor.
|
"Public office" means a position created by or under the
|
|
Constitution or laws of this State, the occupant of which is |
charged with
the exercise of some portion of the sovereign |
power of this State. The term
"public office" shall include |
members of the public body, but it shall not
include |
organizational positions filled by members thereof, whether
|
established by law or by a public body itself, that exist to |
assist the
body in the conduct of its business.
|
"Quasi-adjudicative body" means an administrative body |
charged by law or
ordinance with the responsibility to conduct |
hearings, receive evidence or
testimony and make |
determinations based
thereon, but does not include
local |
electoral boards when such bodies are considering petition |
challenges.
|
(e) Final action. No final action may be taken at a closed |
meeting.
Final action shall be preceded by a public recital of |
the nature of the
matter being considered and other information |
that will inform the
public of the business being conducted.
|
(Source: P.A. 96-1235, eff. 1-1-11; 96-1378, eff. 7-29-10; |
96-1428, eff. 8-11-10; 97-318, eff. 1-1-12; 97-333, eff. |
8-12-11; 97-452, eff. 8-19-11; 97-813, eff. 7-13-12; 97-876, |
eff. 8-1-12.)
|
Section 120. The Freedom of Information Act is amended by |
changing Section 7.5 as follows: |
(5 ILCS 140/7.5) |
|
Sec. 7.5. Statutory Exemptions. To the extent provided for |
by the statutes referenced below, the following shall be exempt |
from inspection and copying: |
(a) All information determined to be confidential under |
Section 4002 of the Technology Advancement and Development Act. |
(b) Library circulation and order records identifying |
library users with specific materials under the Library Records |
Confidentiality Act. |
(c) Applications, related documents, and medical records |
received by the Experimental Organ Transplantation Procedures |
Board and any and all documents or other records prepared by |
the Experimental Organ Transplantation Procedures Board or its |
staff relating to applications it has received. |
(d) Information and records held by the Department of |
Public Health and its authorized representatives relating to |
known or suspected cases of sexually transmissible disease or |
any information the disclosure of which is restricted under the |
Illinois Sexually Transmissible Disease Control Act. |
(e) Information the disclosure of which is exempted under |
Section 30 of the Radon Industry Licensing Act. |
(f) Firm performance evaluations under Section 55 of the |
Architectural, Engineering, and Land Surveying Qualifications |
Based Selection Act. |
(g) Information the disclosure of which is restricted and |
exempted under Section 50 of the Illinois Prepaid Tuition Act. |
(h) Information the disclosure of which is exempted under |
|
the State Officials and Employees Ethics Act, and records of |
any lawfully created State or local inspector general's office |
that would be exempt if created or obtained by an Executive |
Inspector General's office under that Act. |
(i) Information contained in a local emergency energy plan |
submitted to a municipality in accordance with a local |
emergency energy plan ordinance that is adopted under Section |
11-21.5-5 of the Illinois Municipal Code. |
(j) Information and data concerning the distribution of |
surcharge moneys collected and remitted by wireless carriers |
under the Wireless Emergency Telephone Safety Act. |
(k) Law enforcement officer identification information or |
driver identification information compiled by a law |
enforcement agency or the Department of Transportation under |
Section 11-212 of the Illinois Vehicle Code. |
(l) Records and information provided to a residential |
health care facility resident sexual assault and death review |
team or the Executive Council under the Abuse Prevention Review |
Team Act. |
(m) Information provided to the predatory lending database |
created pursuant to Article 3 of the Residential Real Property |
Disclosure Act, except to the extent authorized under that |
Article. |
(n) Defense budgets and petitions for certification of |
compensation and expenses for court appointed trial counsel as |
provided under Sections 10 and 15 of the Capital Crimes |
|
Litigation Act. This subsection (n) shall apply until the |
conclusion of the trial of the case, even if the prosecution |
chooses not to pursue the death penalty prior to trial or |
sentencing. |
(o) Information that is prohibited from being disclosed |
under Section 4 of the Illinois Health and Hazardous Substances |
Registry Act. |
(p) Security portions of system safety program plans, |
investigation reports, surveys, schedules, lists, data, or |
information compiled, collected, or prepared by or for the |
Regional Transportation Authority under Section 2.11 of the |
Regional Transportation Authority Act or the St. Clair County |
Transit District under the Bi-State Transit Safety Act. |
(q) Information prohibited from being disclosed by the |
Personnel Records Review Act. |
(r) Information prohibited from being disclosed by the |
Illinois School Student Records Act. |
(s) Information the disclosure of which is restricted under |
Section 5-108 of the Public Utilities Act.
|
(t) All identified or deidentified health information in |
the form of health data or medical records contained in, stored |
in, submitted to, transferred by, or released from the Illinois |
Health Information Exchange, and identified or deidentified |
health information in the form of health data and medical |
records of the Illinois Health Information Exchange in the |
possession of the Illinois Health Information Exchange |
|
Authority due to its administration of the Illinois Health |
Information Exchange. The terms "identified" and |
"deidentified" shall be given the same meaning as in the Health |
Insurance Accountability and Portability Act of 1996, Public |
Law 104-191, or any subsequent amendments thereto, and any |
regulations promulgated thereunder. |
(u) Records and information provided to an independent team |
of experts under Brian's Law. |
(v) Names and information of people who have applied for or |
received Firearm Owner's Identification Cards under the |
Firearm Owners Identification Card Act or applied for or |
received a concealed carry license under the Firearm Concealed |
Carry Act, unless otherwise authorized by the Firearm Concealed |
Carry Act; and databases under the Firearm Concealed Carry Act, |
records of the Concealed Carry Licensing Review Board under the |
Firearm Concealed Carry Act, and law enforcement agency |
objections under the Firearm Concealed Carry Act . |
(w) Personally identifiable information which is exempted |
from disclosure under subsection (g) of Section 19.1 of the |
Toll Highway Act. |
(x) Information which is exempted from disclosure under |
Section 5-1014.3 of the Counties Code or Section 8-11-21 of the |
Illinois Municipal Code. |
(Source: P.A. 96-542, eff. 1-1-10; 96-1235, eff. 1-1-11; |
96-1331, eff. 7-27-10; 97-80, eff. 7-5-11; 97-333, eff. |
8-12-11; 97-342, eff. 8-12-11; 97-813, eff. 7-13-12; 97-976, |
|
eff. 1-1-13.) |
Section 122. The Secretary of State Act is amended by |
adding Section 13.5 as follows: |
(15 ILCS 305/13.5 new) |
Sec. 13.5. Department of State Police access to driver's |
license and identification card photographs. |
The Secretary of State shall allow the Department of State |
Police to access the driver's license or Illinois |
Identification card photograph, if available, of an applicant |
for a firearm concealed carry license under the Firearm |
Concealed Carry Act for the purpose of identifying the firearm |
concealed carry license applicant and issuing a license to the |
applicant. |
Section 125. The Department of State Police Law of the
|
Civil Administrative Code of Illinois is amended by changing |
Section 2605-300 and by adding Section 2605-595 as follows:
|
(20 ILCS 2605/2605-300) (was 20 ILCS 2605/55a in part)
|
Sec. 2605-300. Records; crime laboratories; personnel. To |
do
the
following:
|
(1) Be a central repository and custodian of criminal
|
statistics for the State.
|
(2) Be a central repository for criminal history
record |
|
information.
|
(3) Procure and file for record information that is
|
necessary and helpful to plan programs of crime prevention, |
law
enforcement,
and criminal justice.
|
(4) Procure and file for record copies of
fingerprints |
that may be required by law.
|
(5) Establish general and field
crime laboratories.
|
(6) Register and file for record information that
may |
be required by law for the issuance of firearm owner's |
identification
cards under the Firearm Owners |
Identification Card Act and concealed carry licenses under |
the Firearm Concealed Carry Act .
|
(7) Employ polygraph operators, laboratory |
technicians,
and
other
specially qualified persons to aid |
in the identification of criminal
activity.
|
(8) Undertake other identification, information,
|
laboratory, statistical, or registration activities that |
may be
required by law.
|
(Source: P.A. 90-18, eff. 7-1-97; 90-130, eff. 1-1-98;
90-372, |
eff. 7-1-98;
90-590, eff. 1-1-00; 90-655, eff. 7-30-98; 90-793, |
eff. 8-14-98;
91-239, eff. 1-1-00.)
|
(20 ILCS 2605/2605-595 new) |
Sec. 2605-595. State Police Firearm Services Fund. |
(a) There is created in the State treasury a special fund |
known as the State Police Firearm Services Fund. The Fund shall |
|
receive revenue under the Firearm Concealed Carry Act and |
Section 5 of the Firearm Owners Identification Card Act. The |
Fund may also receive revenue from grants, pass-through grants, |
donations, appropriations, and any other legal source. |
(b) The Department of State Police may use moneys in the |
Fund to finance any of its lawful purposes, mandates, |
functions, and duties under the Firearm Owners Identification |
Card Act and the Firearm Concealed Carry Act, including the |
cost of sending notices of expiration of Firearm Owner's |
Identification Cards, concealed carry licenses, the prompt and |
efficient processing of applications under the Firearm Owners |
Identification Card Act and the Firearm Concealed Carry Act, |
the improved efficiency and reporting of the LEADS and federal |
NICS law enforcement data systems, and support for |
investigations required under these Acts and law. Any surplus |
funds beyond what is needed to comply with the aforementioned |
purposes shall be used by the Department to improve the Law |
Enforcement Agencies Data System (LEADS) and criminal history |
background check system. |
(c) Investment income that is attributable to the |
investment of moneys in the Fund shall be retained in the Fund |
for the uses specified in this Section. |
Section 130. The State Finance Act is amended by adding |
Sections 5.826, 5.827, and 6z-98 as follows: |
|
(30 ILCS 105/5.826 new) |
Sec. 5.826. The Mental Health Reporting Fund. |
(30 ILCS 105/5.827 new) |
Sec. 5.827. The State Police Firearm Services Fund. |
(30 ILCS 105/6z-98 new) |
Sec. 6z-98. The Mental Health Reporting Fund. |
(a) There is created in the State treasury a special fund |
known as the Mental Health Reporting Fund. The Fund shall |
receive revenue under the Firearm Concealed Carry Act. The Fund |
may also receive revenue from grants, pass-through grants, |
donations, appropriations, and any other legal source. |
(b) The Department of State Police and Department of Human |
Services shall coordinate to use moneys in the Fund to finance |
their respective duties of collecting and reporting data on |
mental health records and ensuring that mental health firearm |
possession prohibitors are enforced as set forth under the |
Firearm Concealed Carry Act and the Firearm Owners |
Identification Card Act. Any surplus in the Fund beyond what is |
necessary to ensure compliance with mental health reporting |
under these Acts shall be used by the Department of Human |
Services for mental health treatment programs. |
(c) Investment income that is attributable to the |
investment of moneys in the Fund shall be retained in the Fund |
for the uses specified in this Section. |
|
(30 ILCS 105/5.206 rep.) |
Section 135. The State Finance Act is amended by repealing |
Section 5.206. |
Section 140. The Illinois Explosives Act is amended by |
changing Section 2005 as follows:
|
(225 ILCS 210/2005) (from Ch. 96 1/2, par. 1-2005)
|
Sec. 2005. Qualifications for licensure. |
(a) No person shall qualify to hold a license who: |
(1) is under 21 years of age; |
(2) has been convicted in any court of a crime |
punishable by imprisonment for a term exceeding one year; |
(3) is under indictment for a crime punishable by |
imprisonment for a term exceeding one year; |
(4) is a fugitive from justice; |
(5) is an unlawful user of or addicted to any |
controlled substance as defined in Section 102 of the |
federal Controlled Substances Act (21 U.S.C. Sec. 802 et |
seq.); |
(6) has been adjudicated a mentally disabled person as |
defined in Section 1.1 of the Firearm Owners Identification |
Card Act mental defective ; or |
(7) is not a legal citizen of the United States. |
(b) A person who has been granted a "relief from |
|
disabilities" regarding criminal convictions and indictments, |
pursuant to the federal Safe Explosives Act (18 U.S.C. Sec. |
845) may receive a license provided all other qualifications |
under this Act are met.
|
(Source: P.A. 96-1194, eff. 1-1-11.)
|
Section 142. The Liquor Control Act of 1934 is amended by |
changing Section 10-1 as follows:
|
(235 ILCS 5/10-1) (from Ch. 43, par. 183)
|
Sec. 10-1. Violations; penalties. Whereas a substantial |
threat
to the sound and careful control, regulation, and |
taxation of the
manufacture, sale, and distribution of |
alcoholic liquors exists by virtue
of individuals who |
manufacture,
import, distribute, or sell alcoholic liquors |
within the State without
having first obtained a valid license |
to do so, and whereas such threat is
especially serious along |
the borders of this State, and whereas such threat
requires |
immediate correction by this Act, by active investigation and
|
prosecution by law enforcement officials and prosecutors, and |
by prompt and
strict enforcement through the courts of this |
State to punish violators and
to deter such conduct in the |
future:
|
(a) Any person who manufactures, imports
for distribution |
or use, or distributes or sells alcoholic liquor at any
place |
within the State without having first obtained a valid license |
|
to do
so under the provisions of this Act shall be guilty of a |
business offense
and fined not more than $1,000 for the first |
such offense and shall be
guilty of a Class 4 felony for each |
subsequent offense.
|
(b) (1) Any retailer, licensed in this State, who knowingly |
causes to
furnish,
give, sell, or otherwise being within the |
State, any alcoholic liquor destined
to be used, distributed, |
consumed or sold in another state, unless such
alcoholic liquor |
was received in this State by a duly licensed distributor,
or |
importing distributors shall have his license suspended for 7 |
days for
the first offense and for the second offense, shall |
have his license
revoked by the Commission.
|
(2) In the event the Commission receives a certified copy |
of a final order
from a foreign jurisdiction that an Illinois |
retail licensee has been found to
have violated that foreign |
jurisdiction's laws, rules, or regulations
concerning the |
importation of alcoholic liquor into that foreign |
jurisdiction,
the violation may be grounds for the Commission |
to revoke, suspend, or refuse
to
issue or renew a license, to |
impose a fine, or to take any additional action
provided by |
this Act with respect to the Illinois retail license or |
licensee.
Any such action on the part of the Commission shall |
be in accordance with this
Act and implementing rules.
|
For the purposes of paragraph (2): (i) "foreign |
jurisdiction" means a
state, territory, or possession of the |
United States, the District of Columbia,
or the Commonwealth of |
|
Puerto Rico, and (ii) "final order" means an order or
judgment |
of a court or administrative body that determines the rights of |
the
parties respecting the subject matter of the proceeding, |
that remains in full
force and effect, and from which no appeal |
can be taken.
|
(c) Any person who shall make any false statement or |
otherwise
violates any of the provisions of this Act in |
obtaining any license
hereunder, or who having obtained a |
license hereunder shall violate any
of the provisions of this |
Act with respect to the manufacture,
possession, distribution |
or sale of alcoholic liquor, or with respect to
the maintenance |
of the licensed premises, or shall violate any other
provision |
of this Act, shall for a first offense be guilty of a petty
|
offense and fined not more than $500, and for a second or |
subsequent
offense shall be guilty of a Class B misdemeanor.
|
(c-5) Any owner of an establishment that serves alcohol on |
its premises, if more than 50% of the establishment's gross |
receipts within the prior 3 months is from the sale of alcohol, |
who knowingly fails to prohibit concealed firearms on its |
premises or who knowingly makes a false statement or record to |
avoid the prohibition of concealed firearms on its premises |
under the Firearm Concealed Carry Act shall be guilty of a |
business offense with a fine up to $5,000. |
(d) Each day any person engages in business as a |
manufacturer,
foreign importer, importing distributor, |
distributor or retailer in
violation of the provisions of this |
|
Act shall constitute a separate offense.
|
(e) Any person, under the age of 21 years who, for the |
purpose
of buying, accepting or receiving alcoholic liquor from |
a
licensee, represents that he is 21 years of age or over shall |
be guilty
of a Class A misdemeanor.
|
(f) In addition to the penalties herein provided, any |
person
licensed as a wine-maker in either class who |
manufactures more wine than
authorized by his license shall be |
guilty of a business offense and shall be
fined $1 for each |
gallon so manufactured.
|
(g) A person shall be exempt from prosecution for a |
violation of this
Act if he is a peace officer in the |
enforcement of the criminal laws and
such activity is approved |
in writing by one of the following:
|
(1) In all counties, the respective State's Attorney;
|
(2) The Director of State Police under
Section 2605-10, |
2605-15, 2605-75, 2605-100, 2605-105, 2605-110,
2605-115, |
2605-120, 2605-130, 2605-140, 2605-190, 2605-200, |
2605-205, 2605-210,
2605-215, 2605-250, 2605-275, |
2605-300, 2605-305, 2605-315, 2605-325, 2605-335,
|
2605-340,
2605-350, 2605-355, 2605-360, 2605-365, |
2605-375, 2605-390, 2605-400, 2605-405,
2605-420,
|
2605-430, 2605-435, 2605-500, 2605-525, or 2605-550 of the |
Department of State
Police Law (20 ILCS 2605/2605-10, |
2605/2605-15, 2605/2605-75,
2605/2605-100, 2605/2605-105, |
2605/2605-110, 2605/2605-115,
2605/2605-120, |
|
2605/2605-130, 2605/2605-140, 2605/2605-190, |
2605/2605-200,
2605/2605-205, 2605/2605-210, |
2605/2605-215, 2605/2605-250, 2605/2605-275,
|
2605/2605-300,
2605/2605-305, 2605/2605-315, |
2605/2605-325, 2605/2605-335, 2605/2605-340,
|
2605/2605-350, 2605/2605-355, 2605/2605-360,
|
2605/2605-365, 2605/2605-375, 2605/2605-390,
|
2605/2605-400, 2605/2605-405, 2605/2605-420, |
2605/2605-430, 2605/2605-435,
2605/2605-500, |
2605/2605-525, or 2605/2605-550); or
|
(3) In cities over 1,000,000, the Superintendent of |
Police.
|
(Source: P.A. 90-739, eff. 8-13-98; 91-239, eff. 1-1-00.)
|
Section 145. The Mental Health and Developmental |
Disabilities Code is amended by changing Section 6-103.1 and by |
adding Sections 6-103.2 and 6-103.3 as follows: |
(405 ILCS 5/6-103.1) |
Sec. 6-103.1. Adjudication as a mentally disabled person |
mental defective . |
When a person has been adjudicated as a mentally disabled |
person mental defective as defined in Section 1.1 of the |
Firearm Owners Identification Card Act, including, but not |
limited to, an adjudication as a disabled person as defined in |
Section 11a-2 of the Probate Act of 1975, the court shall |
|
direct
the circuit court clerk to immediately notify the
|
Department of State Police, Firearm Owner's Identification
|
(FOID) Office, in a form and manner prescribed by the |
Department of State Police, and shall forward a copy of the |
court order to the Department no later than 7 days after the |
entry of the order. Upon receipt of the order, the Department |
of State Police shall provide notification to the National |
Instant Criminal Background Check System .
|
(Source: P.A. 97-1131, eff. 1-1-13.) |
(405 ILCS 5/6-103.2 new) |
Sec. 6-103.2. Developmental disability; notice. |
For purposes of this Section, if a person is determined to |
be developmentally disabled as defined in Section 1.1 of the |
Firearm Owners Identification Card Act by a physician, clinical |
psychologist, or qualified examiner, whether practicing at a |
public or by a private mental health facility or developmental |
disability facility, the physician, clinical psychologist, or |
qualified examiner shall notify the Department of Human |
Services within 24 hours of making the determination that the |
person has a developmental disability. The Department of Human |
Services shall immediately update its records and information |
relating to mental health and developmental disabilities, and |
if appropriate, shall notify the Department of State Police in |
a form and manner prescribed by the Department of State Police. |
Information disclosed under this Section shall remain |
|
privileged and confidential, and shall not be redisclosed, |
except as required under subsection (e) of Section 3.1 of the |
Firearm Owners Identification Card Act, nor used for any other |
purpose. The method of providing this information shall |
guarantee that the information is not released beyond that |
which is necessary for the purpose of this Section and shall be |
provided by rule by the Department of Human Services. The |
identity of the person reporting under this Section shall not |
be disclosed to the subject of the report. |
The physician, clinical psychologist, or qualified |
examiner making the determination and his or her employer may |
not be held criminally, civilly, or professionally liable for |
making or not making the notification required under this |
Section, except for willful or wanton misconduct. |
(405 ILCS 5/6-103.3 new) |
Sec. 6-103.3. Clear and present danger; notice. |
If a person is determined to pose a clear and present |
danger to himself, herself, or to others by a physician, |
clinical psychologist, or qualified examiner, whether employed |
by the State, by any public or private mental health facility |
or part thereof, or by a law enforcement official or a school |
administrator, then the physician, clinical psychologist, |
qualified examiner shall notify the Department of Human |
Services and a law enforcement official or school administrator |
shall notify the Department of State Police, within 24 hours of |
|
making the determination that the person poses a clear and |
present danger. The Department of Human Services shall |
immediately update its records and information relating to |
mental health and developmental disabilities, and if |
appropriate, shall notify the Department of State Police in a |
form and manner prescribed by the Department of State Police. |
Information disclosed under this Section shall remain |
privileged and confidential, and shall not be redisclosed, |
except as required under subsection (e) of Section 3.1 of the |
Firearm Owners Identification Card Act, nor used for any other |
purpose. The method of providing this information shall |
guarantee that the information is not released beyond that |
which is necessary for the purpose of this Section and shall be |
provided by rule by the Department of Human Services. The |
identity of the person reporting under this Section shall not |
be disclosed to the subject of the report. The physician, |
clinical psychologist, qualified examiner, law enforcement |
official, or school administrator making the determination and |
his or her employer shall not be held criminally, civilly, or |
professionally liable for making or not making the notification |
required under this Section, except for willful or wanton |
misconduct. This Section does not apply to a law enforcement |
official, if making the notification under this Section will |
interfere with an ongoing or pending criminal investigation. |
For the purposes of this Section: |
"Clear and present danger" has the meaning ascribed to |
|
it in Section 1.1 of the Firearm Owners Identification Card |
Act. |
"School administrator" means the person required to |
report under the School Administrator Reporting of Mental |
Health Clear and Present Danger Determinations Law. |
Section 150. The Firearm Owners Identification Card Act is |
amended by changing Sections 1.1, 3.1, 4, 5, 8, 8.1, 9, 10, |
13.1, and 13.2 and by adding Sections 5.1 and 9.5 as follows:
|
(430 ILCS 65/1.1) (from Ch. 38, par. 83-1.1)
|
(Text of Section before amendment by P.A. 97-1167 ) |
Sec. 1.1. For purposes of this Act:
|
"Addicted to narcotics" means a person who has been: |
(1) convicted of an offense involving the use or |
possession of cannabis, a controlled substance, or |
methamphetamine within the past year; or |
(2) determined by the Department of State Police to be |
addicted to narcotics based upon federal law or federal |
guidelines. |
"Addicted to narcotics" does not include possession or use |
of a prescribed controlled substance under the direction and |
authority of a physician or other person authorized to |
prescribe the controlled substance when the controlled |
substance is used in the prescribed manner. |
" Adjudicated Has been adjudicated as a mentally disabled |
|
person mental defective " means the person is the subject of a |
determination by a court, board, commission or other lawful |
authority that the a person, as a result of marked subnormal |
intelligence, or mental illness, mental impairment, |
incompetency, condition, or disease: |
(1) presents a clear and present is a danger to |
himself, herself, or to others; |
(2) lacks the mental capacity to manage his or her own |
affairs or is adjudicated a disabled person as defined in |
Section 11a-2 of the Probate Act of 1975 ; |
(3) is not guilty in a criminal case by reason of |
insanity, mental disease or defect; |
(3.5) is guilty but mentally ill, as provided in |
Section 5-2-6 of the Unified Code of Corrections; |
(4) is incompetent to stand trial in a criminal case; |
(5) is not guilty by reason of lack of mental |
responsibility under pursuant to Articles 50a and 72b of |
the Uniform Code of Military Justice, 10 U.S.C. 850a, |
876b ; . |
(6) is a sexually violent person under subsection (f) |
of Section 5 of the Sexually Violent Persons Commitment |
Act; |
(7) has been found to be a sexually dangerous person |
under the Sexually Dangerous Persons Act; |
(8) is unfit to stand trial under the Juvenile Court |
Act of 1987; |
|
(9) is not guilty by reason of insanity under the |
Juvenile Court Act of 1987; |
(10) is subject to involuntary admission as an |
inpatient as defined in Section 1-119 of the Mental Health |
and Development Disabilities Code; |
(11) is subject to involuntary admission as an |
outpatient as defined in Section 1-119.1 of the Mental |
Health and Developmental Disabilities Code; |
(12) is subject to judicial admission as set forth in |
Section 4-500 of the Mental Health and Developmental |
Disabilities Code; or |
(13) is subject to the provisions of the Interstate |
Agreements on Sexually Dangerous Persons Act. |
"Clear and present danger" means a person who: |
(1) communicates a serious threat of physical violence |
against a reasonably identifiable victim or poses a clear |
and imminent risk of serious physical injury to himself, |
herself, or another person as determined by a physician, |
clinical psychologist, or qualified examiner; or |
(2) demonstrates threatening physical or verbal |
behavior, such as violent, suicidal, or assaultive |
threats, actions, or other behavior, as determined by a |
physician, clinical psychologist, qualified examiner, |
school administrator, or law enforcement official. |
"Clinical psychologist" has the meaning provided in |
Section 1-103 of the Mental Health and Developmental |
|
Disabilities Code. |
"Controlled substance" means a controlled substance or |
controlled substance analog as defined in the Illinois |
Controlled Substances Act. |
"Counterfeit" means to copy or imitate, without legal |
authority, with
intent
to deceive. |
"Developmentally disabled" means a disability which is |
attributable to any other condition which results in impairment |
similar to that caused by an intellectual disability and which |
requires services similar to those required by intellectually |
disabled persons. The disability must originate before the age |
of 18
years, be expected to continue indefinitely, and |
constitute a substantial handicap. |
"Federally licensed firearm dealer" means a person who is |
licensed as a federal firearms dealer under Section 923 of the |
federal Gun Control Act of 1968 (18 U.S.C. 923).
|
"Firearm" means any device, by
whatever name known, which |
is designed to expel a projectile or projectiles
by the action |
of an explosion, expansion of gas or escape of gas; excluding,
|
however:
|
(1) any pneumatic gun, spring gun, paint ball gun, or |
B-B gun which
expels a single globular projectile not |
exceeding .18 inch in
diameter or which has a maximum |
muzzle velocity of less than 700 feet
per second;
|
(1.1) any pneumatic gun, spring gun, paint ball gun, or |
B-B gun which expels breakable paint balls containing |
|
washable marking colors;
|
(2) any device used exclusively for signalling or |
safety and required or
recommended by the United States |
Coast Guard or the Interstate Commerce
Commission;
|
(3) any device used exclusively for the firing of stud |
cartridges,
explosive rivets or similar industrial |
ammunition; and
|
(4) an antique firearm (other than a machine-gun) |
which, although
designed as a weapon, the Department of |
State Police finds by reason of
the date of its |
manufacture, value, design, and other characteristics is
|
primarily a collector's item and is not likely to be used |
as a weapon.
|
"Firearm ammunition" means any self-contained cartridge or |
shotgun
shell, by whatever name known, which is designed to be |
used or adaptable to
use in a firearm; excluding, however:
|
(1) any ammunition exclusively designed for use with a |
device used
exclusively for signalling or safety and |
required or recommended by the
United States Coast Guard or |
the Interstate Commerce Commission; and
|
(2) any ammunition designed exclusively for use with a |
stud or rivet
driver or other similar industrial |
ammunition. |
"Gun show" means an event or function: |
(1) at which the sale and transfer of firearms is the |
regular and normal course of business and where 50 or more |
|
firearms are displayed, offered, or exhibited for sale, |
transfer, or exchange; or |
(2) at which not less than 10 gun show vendors display, |
offer, or exhibit for sale, sell, transfer, or exchange |
firearms.
|
"Gun show" includes the entire premises provided for an |
event or function, including parking areas for the event or |
function, that is sponsored to facilitate the purchase, sale, |
transfer, or exchange of firearms as described in this Section.
|
"Gun show" does not include training or safety classes, |
competitive shooting events, such as rifle, shotgun, or handgun |
matches, trap, skeet, or sporting clays shoots, dinners, |
banquets, raffles, or
any other event where the sale or |
transfer of firearms is not the primary course of business. |
"Gun show promoter" means a person who organizes or |
operates a gun show. |
"Gun show vendor" means a person who exhibits, sells, |
offers for sale, transfers, or exchanges any firearms at a gun |
show, regardless of whether the person arranges with a gun show |
promoter for a fixed location from which to exhibit, sell, |
offer for sale, transfer, or exchange any firearm. |
"Intellectually disabled" means significantly subaverage |
general intellectual functioning which exists concurrently |
with impairment in adaptive behavior and which originates |
before the age of 18 years. |
"Involuntarily admitted" has the meaning as prescribed in |
|
Sections 1-119 and 1-119.1 of the Mental Health and |
Developmental Disabilities Code. |
"Mental health facility" means any licensed private |
hospital or hospital affiliate, institution, or facility, or |
part thereof, and any facility, or part thereof, operated by |
the State or a political subdivision thereof which provide |
treatment of persons with mental illness and includes all |
hospitals, institutions, clinics, evaluation facilities, |
mental health centers, colleges, universities, long-term care |
facilities, and nursing homes, or parts thereof, which provide |
treatment of persons with mental illness whether or not the |
primary purpose is to provide treatment of persons with mental |
illness. |
"Patient" means: |
(1) a person who voluntarily receives mental health |
treatment as an in-patient or resident of any public or |
private mental health facility, unless the treatment was |
solely for an alcohol abuse disorder and no other secondary |
substance abuse disorder or mental illness; or |
(2) a person who voluntarily receives mental health |
treatment as an out-patient or is provided services by a |
public or private mental health facility, and who poses a |
clear and present danger to himself, herself, or to others. |
"Physician" has the meaning as defined in Section 1-120 of |
the Mental Health and Developmental Disabilities Code. |
"Qualified examiner" has the meaning provided in Section |
|
1-122 of the Mental Health and Developmental Disabilities Code. |
"Sanctioned competitive shooting event" means a shooting |
contest officially recognized by a national or state shooting |
sport association, and includes any sight-in or practice |
conducted in conjunction with the event.
|
"School administrator" means the person required to report |
under the School Administrator Reporting of Mental Health Clear |
and Present Danger Determinations Law. |
"Stun gun or taser" has the meaning ascribed to it in |
Section 24-1 of the Criminal Code of 2012. |
(Source: P.A. 97-776, eff. 7-13-12; 97-1150, eff. 1-25-13.) |
(Text of Section after amendment by P.A. 97-1167 ) |
Sec. 1.1. For purposes of this Act:
|
"Addicted to narcotics" means a person who has been: |
(1) convicted of an offense involving the use or |
possession of cannabis, a controlled substance, or |
methamphetamine within the past year; or |
(2) determined by the Department of State Police to be |
addicted to narcotics based upon federal law or federal |
guidelines. |
"Addicted to narcotics" does not include possession or use |
of a prescribed controlled substance under the direction and |
authority of a physician or other person authorized to |
prescribe the controlled substance when the controlled |
substance is used in the prescribed manner. |
|
" Adjudicated Has been adjudicated as a mentally disabled |
person mental defective " means the person is the subject of a |
determination by a court, board, commission or other lawful |
authority that the a person, as a result of marked subnormal |
intelligence, or mental illness, mental impairment, |
incompetency, condition, or disease: |
(1) presents a clear and present is a danger to |
himself, herself, or to others; |
(2) lacks the mental capacity to manage his or her own |
affairs or is adjudicated a disabled person as defined in |
Section 11a-2 of the Probate Act of 1975 ; |
(3) is not guilty in a criminal case by reason of |
insanity, mental disease or defect; |
(3.5) is guilty but mentally ill, as provided in |
Section 5-2-6 of the Unified Code of Corrections; |
(4) is incompetent to stand trial in a criminal case; |
(5) is not guilty by reason of lack of mental |
responsibility under pursuant to Articles 50a and 72b of |
the Uniform Code of Military Justice, 10 U.S.C. 850a, |
876b ; .
|
(6) is a sexually violent person under subsection (f) |
of Section 5 of the Sexually Violent Persons Commitment |
Act; |
(7) is a sexually dangerous person under the Sexually |
Dangerous Persons Act; |
(8) is unfit to stand trial under the Juvenile Court |
|
Act of 1987; |
(9) is not guilty by reason of insanity under the |
Juvenile Court Act of 1987; |
(10) is subject to involuntary admission as an |
inpatient as defined in Section 1-119 of the Mental Health |
and Developmental Disabilities Code; |
(11) is subject to involuntary admission as an |
outpatient as defined in Section 1-119.1 of the Mental |
Health and Developmental Disabilities Code; |
(12) is subject to judicial admission as set forth in |
Section 4-500 of the Mental Health and Developmental |
Disabilities Code; or |
(13) is subject to the provisions of the Interstate |
Agreements on Sexually Dangerous Persons Act. |
"Clear and present danger" means a person who: |
(1) communicates a serious threat of physical violence |
against a reasonably identifiable victim or poses a clear |
and imminent risk of serious physical injury to himself, |
herself, or another person as determined by a physician, |
clinical psychologist, or qualified examiner; or |
(2) demonstrates threatening physical or verbal |
behavior, such as violent, suicidal, or assaultive |
threats, actions, or other behavior, as determined by a |
physician, clinical psychologist, qualified examiner, |
school administrator, or law enforcement official. |
"Clinical psychologist" has the meaning provided in |
|
Section 1-103 of the Mental Health and Developmental |
Disabilities Code. |
"Controlled substance" means a controlled substance or |
controlled substance analog as defined in the Illinois |
Controlled Substances Act. |
"Counterfeit" means to copy or imitate, without legal |
authority, with
intent
to deceive. |
"Developmentally disabled" means a disability which is |
attributable to any other condition which results in impairment |
similar to that caused by an intellectual disability and which |
requires services similar to those required by intellectually |
disabled persons. The disability must originate before the age |
of 18
years, be expected to continue indefinitely, and |
constitute a substantial handicap. |
"Federally licensed firearm dealer" means a person who is |
licensed as a federal firearms dealer under Section 923 of the |
federal Gun Control Act of 1968 (18 U.S.C. 923).
|
"Firearm" means any device, by
whatever name known, which |
is designed to expel a projectile or projectiles
by the action |
of an explosion, expansion of gas or escape of gas; excluding,
|
however:
|
(1) any pneumatic gun, spring gun, paint ball gun, or |
B-B gun which
expels a single globular projectile not |
exceeding .18 inch in
diameter or which has a maximum |
muzzle velocity of less than 700 feet
per second;
|
(1.1) any pneumatic gun, spring gun, paint ball gun, or |
|
B-B gun which expels breakable paint balls containing |
washable marking colors;
|
(2) any device used exclusively for signalling or |
safety and required or
recommended by the United States |
Coast Guard or the Interstate Commerce
Commission;
|
(3) any device used exclusively for the firing of stud |
cartridges,
explosive rivets or similar industrial |
ammunition; and
|
(4) an antique firearm (other than a machine-gun) |
which, although
designed as a weapon, the Department of |
State Police finds by reason of
the date of its |
manufacture, value, design, and other characteristics is
|
primarily a collector's item and is not likely to be used |
as a weapon.
|
"Firearm ammunition" means any self-contained cartridge or |
shotgun
shell, by whatever name known, which is designed to be |
used or adaptable to
use in a firearm; excluding, however:
|
(1) any ammunition exclusively designed for use with a |
device used
exclusively for signalling or safety and |
required or recommended by the
United States Coast Guard or |
the Interstate Commerce Commission; and
|
(2) any ammunition designed exclusively for use with a |
stud or rivet
driver or other similar industrial |
ammunition. |
"Gun show" means an event or function: |
(1) at which the sale and transfer of firearms is the |
|
regular and normal course of business and where 50 or more |
firearms are displayed, offered, or exhibited for sale, |
transfer, or exchange; or |
(2) at which not less than 10 gun show vendors display, |
offer, or exhibit for sale, sell, transfer, or exchange |
firearms.
|
"Gun show" includes the entire premises provided for an |
event or function, including parking areas for the event or |
function, that is sponsored to facilitate the purchase, sale, |
transfer, or exchange of firearms as described in this Section.
|
"Gun show" does not include training or safety classes, |
competitive shooting events, such as rifle, shotgun, or handgun |
matches, trap, skeet, or sporting clays shoots, dinners, |
banquets, raffles, or
any other event where the sale or |
transfer of firearms is not the primary course of business. |
"Gun show promoter" means a person who organizes or |
operates a gun show. |
"Gun show vendor" means a person who exhibits, sells, |
offers for sale, transfers, or exchanges any firearms at a gun |
show, regardless of whether the person arranges with a gun show |
promoter for a fixed location from which to exhibit, sell, |
offer for sale, transfer, or exchange any firearm. |
"Intellectually disabled" means significantly subaverage |
general intellectual functioning which exists concurrently |
with impairment in adaptive behavior and which originates |
before the age of 18 years. |
|
"Involuntarily admitted" has the meaning as prescribed in |
Sections 1-119 and 1-119.1 of the Mental Health and |
Developmental Disabilities Code. |
"Mental health facility institution " means any licensed |
private hospital or hospital affiliate , institution, or |
facility, or part thereof, and any facility, or part thereof, |
operated by the State or a political subdivision thereof which |
provide clinic, evaluation facility, mental health center, or |
part thereof, which is used primarily for the care or treatment |
of persons with mental illness and includes all hospitals, |
institutions, clinics, evaluation facilities, mental health |
centers, colleges, universities, long-term care facilities, |
and nursing homes, or parts thereof, which provide treatment of |
persons with mental illness whether or not the primary purpose |
is to provide treatment of persons with mental illness . |
"Patient" means: |
(1) a person who voluntarily receives mental health |
treatment as an in-patient or resident of any public or |
private mental health facility, unless the treatment was |
solely for an alcohol abuse disorder and no other secondary |
substance abuse disorder or mental illness; or |
(2) a person who voluntarily receives mental health |
treatment as an out-patient or is provided services by a |
public or private mental health facility, and who poses a |
clear and present danger to himself, herself, or to others. |
"Physician" has the meaning as defined in Section 1-120 of |
|
the Mental Health and Developmental Disabilities Code. |
"Qualified examiner" has the meaning provided in Section |
1-122 of the Mental Health and Developmental Disabilities Code. |
"Patient in a mental institution" means the person was |
admitted, either voluntarily or involuntarily, to a mental |
institution for mental health treatment, unless the treatment |
was voluntary and solely for an alcohol abuse disorder and no |
other secondary substance abuse disorder or mental illness. |
"Sanctioned competitive shooting event" means a shooting |
contest officially recognized by a national or state shooting |
sport association, and includes any sight-in or practice |
conducted in conjunction with the event.
|
"School administrator" means the person required to report |
under the School Administrator Reporting of Mental Health Clear |
and Present Danger Determinations Law. |
"Stun gun or taser" has the meaning ascribed to it in |
Section 24-1 of the Criminal Code of 2012. |
(Source: P.A. 97-776, eff. 7-13-12; 97-1150, eff. 1-25-13; |
97-1167, eff. 6-1-13.)
|
(430 ILCS 65/3.1) (from Ch. 38, par. 83-3.1)
|
Sec. 3.1. Dial up system. |
(a) The Department of State Police shall provide
a dial up |
telephone system or utilize other existing technology which |
shall be used by any federally licensed
firearm dealer, gun |
show promoter, or gun show vendor who is to transfer a firearm, |
|
stun gun, or taser under the provisions of this
Act. The |
Department of State Police may utilize existing technology |
which
allows the caller to be charged a fee not to exceed $2. |
Fees collected by the Department of
State Police shall be |
deposited in the State Police Services Fund and used
to provide |
the service.
|
(b) Upon receiving a request from a federally licensed |
firearm dealer, gun show promoter, or gun show vendor, the
|
Department of State Police shall immediately approve, or within |
the time
period established by Section 24-3 of the Criminal |
Code of 2012 regarding
the delivery of firearms, stun guns, and |
tasers notify the inquiring dealer, gun show promoter, or gun |
show vendor of any objection that
would disqualify the |
transferee from acquiring or possessing a firearm, stun gun, or |
taser. In
conducting the inquiry, the Department of State |
Police shall initiate and
complete an automated search of its |
criminal history record information
files and those of the |
Federal Bureau of Investigation, including the
National |
Instant Criminal Background Check System, and of the files of
|
the Department of Human Services relating to mental health and
|
developmental disabilities to obtain
any felony conviction or |
patient hospitalization information which would
disqualify a |
person from obtaining or require revocation of a currently
|
valid Firearm Owner's Identification Card. |
(c) If receipt of a firearm would not violate Section 24-3 |
of the Criminal Code of 2012, federal law, or this Act the |
|
Department of State Police shall: |
(1) assign a unique identification number to the |
transfer; and |
(2) provide the licensee, gun show promoter, or gun |
show vendor with the number. |
(d) Approvals issued by the Department of State Police for |
the purchase of a firearm are valid for 30 days from the date |
of issue.
|
(e) (1) The Department of State Police must act as the |
Illinois Point of Contact
for the National Instant Criminal |
Background Check System. |
(2) The Department of State Police and the Department of |
Human Services shall, in accordance with State and federal law |
regarding confidentiality, enter into a memorandum of |
understanding with the Federal Bureau of Investigation for the |
purpose of implementing the National Instant Criminal |
Background Check System in the State. The Department of State |
Police shall report the name, date of birth, and physical |
description of any person prohibited from possessing a firearm |
pursuant to the Firearm Owners Identification Card Act or 18 |
U.S.C. 922(g) and (n) to the National Instant Criminal |
Background Check System Index, Denied Persons Files.
|
(3) The Department of State Police shall provide notice of |
the disqualification of a person under subsection (b) of this |
Section or the revocation of a person's Firearm Owner's |
Identification Card under Section 8 of this Act, and the reason |
|
for the disqualification or revocation, to all law enforcement |
agencies with jurisdiction to assist with the seizure of the |
person's Firearm Owner's Identification Card. |
(f) The Department of State Police shall adopt promulgate |
rules not inconsistent with this Section to implement this
|
system.
|
(Source: P.A. 97-1150, eff. 1-25-13.)
|
(430 ILCS 65/4) (from Ch. 38, par. 83-4)
|
(Text of Section before amendment by P.A. 97-1167 )
|
Sec. 4. (a) Each applicant for a Firearm Owner's |
Identification Card must:
|
(1) Make application on blank forms prepared and |
furnished at convenient
locations throughout the State by |
the Department of State Police, or by
electronic means, if |
and when made available by the Department of State
Police; |
and
|
(2) Submit evidence to the Department of State Police |
that:
|
(i) He or she is 21 years of age or over, or if he |
or she is under 21
years of age that he or she has the |
written consent of his or her parent or
legal guardian |
to possess and acquire firearms and firearm ammunition |
and that
he or she has never been convicted of a |
misdemeanor other than a traffic
offense or adjudged
|
delinquent, provided, however, that such parent or |
|
legal guardian is not an
individual prohibited from |
having a Firearm Owner's Identification Card and
files |
an affidavit with the Department as prescribed by the |
Department
stating that he or she is not an individual |
prohibited from having a Card;
|
(ii) He or she has not been convicted of a felony |
under the laws of
this or any other jurisdiction;
|
(iii) He or she is not addicted to narcotics;
|
(iv) He or she has not been a patient in a mental |
health facility institution within
the past 5 years or, |
if he or she has been a patient in a mental health |
facility more than 5 years ago submit the certification |
required under subsection (u) of Section 8 of this Act |
and he or she has not been adjudicated as a mental |
defective ;
|
(v) He or she is not intellectually disabled;
|
(vi) He or she is not an alien who is unlawfully |
present in the
United States under the laws of the |
United States;
|
(vii) He or she is not subject to an existing order |
of protection
prohibiting him or her from possessing a |
firearm;
|
(viii) He or she has not been convicted within the |
past 5 years of
battery, assault, aggravated assault, |
violation of an order of
protection, or a substantially |
similar offense in another jurisdiction, in
which a |
|
firearm was used or possessed;
|
(ix) He or she has not been convicted of domestic |
battery, aggravated domestic battery, or a
|
substantially similar offense in another
jurisdiction |
committed before, on or after January 1, 2012 (the |
effective date of Public Act 97-158). If the applicant |
knowingly and intelligently waives the right to have an |
offense described in this clause (ix) tried by a jury, |
and by guilty plea or otherwise, results in a |
conviction for an offense in which a domestic |
relationship is not a required element of the offense |
but in which a determination of the applicability of 18 |
U.S.C. 922(g)(9) is made under Section 112A-11.1 of the |
Code of Criminal Procedure of 1963, an entry by the |
court of a judgment of conviction for that offense |
shall be grounds for denying the issuance of a Firearm |
Owner's Identification Card under this Section;
|
(x) (Blank);
|
(xi) He or she is not an alien who has been |
admitted to the United
States under a non-immigrant |
visa (as that term is defined in Section
101(a)(26) of |
the Immigration and Nationality Act (8 U.S.C. |
1101(a)(26))),
or that he or she is an alien who has |
been lawfully admitted to the United
States under a |
non-immigrant visa if that alien is:
|
(1) admitted to the United States for lawful |
|
hunting or sporting
purposes;
|
(2) an official representative of a foreign |
government who is:
|
(A) accredited to the United States |
Government or the Government's
mission to an |
international organization having its |
headquarters in the United
States; or
|
(B) en route to or from another country to |
which that alien is
accredited;
|
(3) an official of a foreign government or |
distinguished foreign
visitor who has been so |
designated by the Department of State;
|
(4) a foreign law enforcement officer of a |
friendly foreign
government entering the United |
States on official business; or
|
(5) one who has received a waiver from the |
Attorney General of the
United States pursuant to |
18 U.S.C. 922(y)(3);
|
(xii) He or she is not a minor subject to a |
petition filed
under Section 5-520 of the Juvenile |
Court Act of 1987 alleging that the
minor is a |
delinquent minor for the commission of an offense that |
if
committed by an adult would be a felony;
|
(xiii) He or she is not an adult who had been |
adjudicated a delinquent
minor under the Juvenile |
Court Act of 1987 for the commission of an offense
that |
|
if committed by an adult would be a felony; and
|
(xiv) He or she is a resident of the State of |
Illinois; and |
(xv) He or she has not been adjudicated as a |
mentally disabled person; |
(xvi) He or she has not been involuntarily admitted |
into a mental health facility; and |
(xvii) He or she is not developmentally disabled; |
and
|
(3) Upon request by the Department of State Police, |
sign a release on a
form prescribed by the Department of |
State Police waiving any right to
confidentiality and |
requesting the disclosure to the Department of State Police
|
of limited mental health institution admission information |
from another state,
the District of Columbia, any other |
territory of the United States, or a
foreign nation |
concerning the applicant for the sole purpose of |
determining
whether the applicant is or was a patient in a |
mental health institution and
disqualified because of that |
status from receiving a Firearm Owner's
Identification |
Card. No mental health care or treatment records may be
|
requested. The information received shall be destroyed |
within one year of
receipt.
|
(a-5) Each applicant for a Firearm Owner's Identification |
Card who is over
the age of 18 shall furnish to the Department |
of State Police either his or
her Illinois driver's license |
|
number or Illinois Identification Card number, except as
|
provided in subsection (a-10).
|
(a-10) Each applicant for a Firearm Owner's Identification |
Card,
who is employed as a law enforcement officer, an armed |
security officer in Illinois, or by the United States Military
|
permanently assigned in Illinois and who is not an Illinois |
resident, shall furnish to
the Department of State Police his |
or her driver's license number or state
identification card |
number from his or her state of residence. The Department
of |
State Police may adopt promulgate rules to enforce the |
provisions of this
subsection (a-10).
|
(a-15) If an applicant applying for a Firearm Owner's |
Identification Card moves from the residence address named in |
the application, he or she shall immediately notify in a form |
and manner prescribed by the Department of State Police of that |
change of address. |
(a-20) Each applicant for a Firearm Owner's Identification |
Card shall furnish to the Department of State Police his or her |
photograph. An applicant who is 21 years of age or older |
seeking a religious exemption to the photograph requirement |
must furnish with the application an approved copy of United |
States Department of the Treasury Internal Revenue Service Form |
4029. In lieu of a photograph, an applicant regardless of age |
seeking a religious exemption to the photograph requirement |
shall submit fingerprints on a form and manner prescribed by |
the Department with his or her application. |
|
(b) Each application form shall include the following |
statement printed in
bold type: "Warning: Entering false |
information on an application for a Firearm
Owner's |
Identification Card is punishable as a Class 2 felony in |
accordance
with subsection (d-5) of Section 14 of the Firearm |
Owners Identification Card
Act.".
|
(c) Upon such written consent, pursuant to Section 4, |
paragraph (a)(2)(i),
the parent or legal guardian giving the |
consent shall be liable for any
damages resulting from the |
applicant's use of firearms or firearm ammunition.
|
(Source: P.A. 97-158, eff. 1-1-12; 97-227, eff. 1-1-12; 97-813, |
eff. 7-13-12; 97-1131, eff. 1-1-13.)
|
(Text of Section after amendment by P.A. 97-1167 ) |
Sec. 4. (a) Each applicant for a Firearm Owner's |
Identification Card must:
|
(1) Make application on blank forms prepared and |
furnished at convenient
locations throughout the State by |
the Department of State Police, or by
electronic means, if |
and when made available by the Department of State
Police; |
and
|
(2) Submit evidence to the Department of State Police |
that:
|
(i) He or she is 21 years of age or over, or if he |
or she is under 21
years of age that he or she has the |
written consent of his or her parent or
legal guardian |
|
to possess and acquire firearms and firearm ammunition |
and that
he or she has never been convicted of a |
misdemeanor other than a traffic
offense or adjudged
|
delinquent, provided, however, that such parent or |
legal guardian is not an
individual prohibited from |
having a Firearm Owner's Identification Card and
files |
an affidavit with the Department as prescribed by the |
Department
stating that he or she is not an individual |
prohibited from having a Card;
|
(ii) He or she has not been convicted of a felony |
under the laws of
this or any other jurisdiction;
|
(iii) He or she is not addicted to narcotics;
|
(iv) He or she has not been a patient in a mental |
health facility institution within
the past 5 years or, |
if he or she has been a patient in a mental health |
facility more than 5 years ago submit the certification |
required under subsection (u) of Section 8 of this Act ;
|
(v) He or she is not intellectually disabled;
|
(vi) He or she is not an alien who is unlawfully |
present in the
United States under the laws of the |
United States;
|
(vii) He or she is not subject to an existing order |
of protection
prohibiting him or her from possessing a |
firearm;
|
(viii) He or she has not been convicted within the |
past 5 years of
battery, assault, aggravated assault, |
|
violation of an order of
protection, or a substantially |
similar offense in another jurisdiction, in
which a |
firearm was used or possessed;
|
(ix) He or she has not been convicted of domestic |
battery, aggravated domestic battery, or a
|
substantially similar offense in another
jurisdiction |
committed before, on or after January 1, 2012 (the |
effective date of Public Act 97-158). If the applicant |
knowingly and intelligently waives the right to have an |
offense described in this clause (ix) tried by a jury, |
and by guilty plea or otherwise, results in a |
conviction for an offense in which a domestic |
relationship is not a required element of the offense |
but in which a determination of the applicability of 18 |
U.S.C. 922(g)(9) is made under Section 112A-11.1 of the |
Code of Criminal Procedure of 1963, an entry by the |
court of a judgment of conviction for that offense |
shall be grounds for denying the issuance of a Firearm |
Owner's Identification Card under this Section;
|
(x) (Blank);
|
(xi) He or she is not an alien who has been |
admitted to the United
States under a non-immigrant |
visa (as that term is defined in Section
101(a)(26) of |
the Immigration and Nationality Act (8 U.S.C. |
1101(a)(26))),
or that he or she is an alien who has |
been lawfully admitted to the United
States under a |
|
non-immigrant visa if that alien is:
|
(1) admitted to the United States for lawful |
hunting or sporting
purposes;
|
(2) an official representative of a foreign |
government who is:
|
(A) accredited to the United States |
Government or the Government's
mission to an |
international organization having its |
headquarters in the United
States; or
|
(B) en route to or from another country to |
which that alien is
accredited;
|
(3) an official of a foreign government or |
distinguished foreign
visitor who has been so |
designated by the Department of State;
|
(4) a foreign law enforcement officer of a |
friendly foreign
government entering the United |
States on official business; or
|
(5) one who has received a waiver from the |
Attorney General of the
United States pursuant to |
18 U.S.C. 922(y)(3);
|
(xii) He or she is not a minor subject to a |
petition filed
under Section 5-520 of the Juvenile |
Court Act of 1987 alleging that the
minor is a |
delinquent minor for the commission of an offense that |
if
committed by an adult would be a felony;
|
(xiii) He or she is not an adult who had been |
|
adjudicated a delinquent
minor under the Juvenile |
Court Act of 1987 for the commission of an offense
that |
if committed by an adult would be a felony;
|
(xiv) He or she is a resident of the State of |
Illinois; and |
(xv) He or she has not been adjudicated as a |
mentally disabled person mental defective ; and |
(xvi) He or she has not been involuntarily admitted |
into a mental health facility; and |
(xvii) He or she is not developmentally disabled; |
and
|
(3) Upon request by the Department of State Police, |
sign a release on a
form prescribed by the Department of |
State Police waiving any right to
confidentiality and |
requesting the disclosure to the Department of State Police
|
of limited mental health institution admission information |
from another state,
the District of Columbia, any other |
territory of the United States, or a
foreign nation |
concerning the applicant for the sole purpose of |
determining
whether the applicant is or was a patient in a |
mental health institution and
disqualified because of that |
status from receiving a Firearm Owner's
Identification |
Card. No mental health care or treatment records may be
|
requested. The information received shall be destroyed |
within one year of
receipt.
|
(a-5) Each applicant for a Firearm Owner's Identification |
|
Card who is over
the age of 18 shall furnish to the Department |
of State Police either his or
her Illinois driver's license |
number or Illinois Identification Card number, except as
|
provided in subsection (a-10).
|
(a-10) Each applicant for a Firearm Owner's Identification |
Card,
who is employed as a law enforcement officer, an armed |
security officer in Illinois, or by the United States Military
|
permanently assigned in Illinois and who is not an Illinois |
resident, shall furnish to
the Department of State Police his |
or her driver's license number or state
identification card |
number from his or her state of residence. The Department
of |
State Police may adopt promulgate rules to enforce the |
provisions of this
subsection (a-10).
|
(a-15) If an applicant applying for a Firearm Owner's |
Identification Card moves from the residence address named in |
the application, he or she shall immediately notify in a form |
and manner prescribed by the Department of State Police of that |
change of address. |
(a-20) Each applicant for a Firearm Owner's Identification |
Card shall furnish to the Department of State Police his or her |
photograph. An applicant who is 21 years of age or older |
seeking a religious exemption to the photograph requirement |
must furnish with the application an approved copy of United |
States Department of the Treasury Internal Revenue Service Form |
4029. In lieu of a photograph, an applicant regardless of age |
seeking a religious exemption to the photograph requirement |
|
shall submit fingerprints on a form and manner prescribed by |
the Department with his or her application. |
(b) Each application form shall include the following |
statement printed in
bold type: "Warning: Entering false |
information on an application for a Firearm
Owner's |
Identification Card is punishable as a Class 2 felony in |
accordance
with subsection (d-5) of Section 14 of the Firearm |
Owners Identification Card
Act.".
|
(c) Upon such written consent, pursuant to Section 4, |
paragraph (a)(2)(i),
the parent or legal guardian giving the |
consent shall be liable for any
damages resulting from the |
applicant's use of firearms or firearm ammunition.
|
(Source: P.A. 97-158, eff. 1-1-12; 97-227, eff. 1-1-12; 97-813, |
eff. 7-13-12; 97-1131, eff. 1-1-13; 97-1167, eff. 6-1-13.)
|
(430 ILCS 65/5) (from Ch. 38, par. 83-5)
|
Sec. 5. The Department of State Police shall either approve |
or
deny all applications within 30 days from the date they are |
received,
and every applicant found qualified under pursuant to |
Section 8 of this Act by
the Department shall be entitled to a |
Firearm Owner's Identification
Card upon the payment of a $10 |
fee. Any applicant who is an active duty member of the Armed |
Forces of the United States, a member of the Illinois National |
Guard, or a member of the Reserve Forces of the United States |
is exempt from the application fee. $6 of each fee derived from |
the
issuance of Firearm Owner's Identification Cards, or |
|
renewals thereof,
shall be deposited in the Wildlife and Fish |
Fund in the State Treasury;
$1 of the such fee shall be |
deposited in the State Police Services Fund and $3 of the such |
fee shall be deposited in the
State Police Firearm Services |
Fund. Firearm Owner's Notification Fund. Monies in the Firearm |
Owner's
Notification Fund shall be used exclusively to pay for |
the cost of sending
notices of expiration of Firearm Owner's |
Identification Cards under Section
13.2 of this Act.
Excess |
monies in the Firearm Owner's Notification Fund shall be used |
to
ensure the prompt and efficient processing of applications |
received under
Section 4 of this Act.
|
(Source: P.A. 95-581, eff. 6-1-08; 96-91, eff. 7-27-09.)
|
(430 ILCS 65/5.1 new) |
Sec. 5.1. State Police Firearm Services Fund. All moneys |
remaining in the Firearm Owner's Notification Fund on the |
effective date of this
amendatory Act of the 98th General |
Assembly shall be
transferred into the State Police Firearm |
Services Fund, a special
fund created in the State treasury, to |
be expended by the Department
of State Police, for the purposes |
specified in this Act and Section 2605-595 of the Department of |
State Police Law of the
Civil Administrative Code of Illinois.
|
(430 ILCS 65/8) (from Ch. 38, par. 83-8)
|
(Text of Section before amendment by P.A. 97-1167 )
|
Sec. 8. The Department of State Police has authority to |
|
deny an
application for or to revoke and seize a Firearm |
Owner's Identification
Card previously issued under this Act |
only if the Department finds that the
applicant or the person |
to whom such card was issued is or was at the time
of issuance:
|
(a) A person under 21 years of age who has been convicted |
of a
misdemeanor other than a traffic offense or adjudged |
delinquent;
|
(b) A person under 21 years of age who does not have the |
written consent
of his parent or guardian to acquire and |
possess firearms and firearm
ammunition, or whose parent or |
guardian has revoked such written consent,
or where such parent |
or guardian does not qualify to have a Firearm Owner's
|
Identification Card;
|
(c) A person convicted of a felony under the laws of this |
or any other
jurisdiction;
|
(d) A person addicted to narcotics;
|
(e) A person who has been a patient of a mental health |
facility institution within the
past 5 years or a person who |
has been a patient in a mental health facility more than 5 |
years ago who has not received the certification required under |
subsection (u) of this Section. An active law enforcement |
officer employed by a unit of government who is denied, |
revoked, or has his or her Firearm Owner's Identification Card |
seized under this subsection (e) may obtain relief as described |
in subsection (c-5) of Section 10 of this Act if the officer |
did not act in a manner threatening to the officer, another |
|
person, or the public as determined by the treating clinical |
psychologist or physician, and the officer seeks mental health |
treatment or has been adjudicated as a mental defective ;
|
(f) A person whose mental condition is of such a nature |
that it poses
a clear and present danger to the applicant, any |
other person or persons or
the community;
|
For the purposes of this Section, "mental condition" means |
a state of
mind manifested by violent, suicidal, threatening or |
assaultive behavior.
|
(g) A person who is intellectually disabled;
|
(h) A person who intentionally makes a false statement in |
the Firearm
Owner's Identification Card application;
|
(i) An alien who is unlawfully present in
the United States |
under the laws of the United States;
|
(i-5) An alien who has been admitted to the United States |
under a
non-immigrant visa (as that term is defined in Section |
101(a)(26) of the
Immigration and Nationality Act (8 U.S.C. |
1101(a)(26))), except that this
subsection (i-5) does not apply |
to any alien who has been lawfully admitted to
the United |
States under a non-immigrant visa if that alien is:
|
(1) admitted to the United States for lawful hunting or |
sporting purposes;
|
(2) an official representative of a foreign government |
who is:
|
(A) accredited to the United States Government or |
the Government's
mission to an international |
|
organization having its headquarters in the United
|
States; or
|
(B) en route to or from another country to which |
that alien is
accredited;
|
(3) an official of a foreign government or |
distinguished foreign visitor
who has been so designated by |
the Department of State;
|
(4) a foreign law enforcement officer of a friendly |
foreign government
entering the United States on official |
business; or
|
(5) one who has received a waiver from the Attorney |
General of the United
States pursuant to 18 U.S.C. |
922(y)(3);
|
(j) (Blank);
|
(k) A person who has been convicted within the past 5 years |
of battery,
assault, aggravated assault, violation of an order |
of protection, or a
substantially similar offense in another |
jurisdiction, in which a firearm was
used or possessed;
|
(l) A person who has been convicted of domestic battery, |
aggravated domestic battery, or a substantially
similar |
offense in another jurisdiction committed before, on or after |
January 1, 2012 (the effective date of Public Act 97-158). If |
the applicant or person who has been previously issued a |
Firearm Owner's Identification Card under this Act knowingly |
and intelligently waives the right to have an offense described |
in this paragraph (l) tried by a jury, and by guilty plea or |
|
otherwise, results in a conviction for an offense in which a |
domestic relationship is not a required element of the offense |
but in which a determination of the applicability of 18 U.S.C. |
922(g)(9) is made under Section 112A-11.1 of the Code of |
Criminal Procedure of 1963, an entry by the court of a judgment |
of conviction for that offense shall be grounds for denying an |
application for and for revoking and seizing a Firearm Owner's |
Identification Card previously issued to the person under this |
Act;
|
(m) (Blank);
|
(n) A person who is prohibited from acquiring or possessing
|
firearms or firearm ammunition by any Illinois State statute or |
by federal
law;
|
(o) A minor subject to a petition filed under Section 5-520 |
of the
Juvenile Court Act of 1987 alleging that the minor is a |
delinquent minor for
the commission of an offense that if |
committed by an adult would be a felony;
|
(p) An adult who had been adjudicated a delinquent minor |
under the Juvenile
Court Act of 1987 for the commission of an |
offense that if committed by an
adult would be a felony; or
|
(q) A person who is not a resident of the State of |
Illinois, except as provided in subsection (a-10) of Section |
4 ; . |
(r) A person who has been adjudicated as a mentally |
disabled person; |
(s) A person who has been found to be developmentally |
|
disabled; |
(t) A person involuntarily admitted into a mental health |
facility; |
(u) A person who has had his or her Firearm Owner's |
Identification Card revoked or denied under subsection (e) of |
this Section or item (iv) of Section 4 of this Act because he |
or she was a patient in a mental health facility as provided in |
item (2) of subsection (e) of this Section, shall not be |
permitted to obtain a Firearm Owner's Identification Card, |
after the 5 year period has lapsed, unless he or she has |
received a mental health evaluation by a physician, clinical |
psychologist, or qualified examiner as those terms are defined |
in the Mental Health and Developmental Disabilities Code, and |
has received a certification that he or she is not a clear and |
present danger to himself, herself, or others. The physician, |
clinical psychologist, or qualified examiner making the |
certification and his or her employer shall not be held |
criminally, civilly, or professionally liable for making or not |
making the certification required under this subsection, |
except for willful or wanton misconduct. This subsection does |
not apply to a person whose firearm possession rights have been |
restored through administrative or judicial action under |
Section 10 or 11 of this Act; or |
(v) Upon revocation of a person's Firearm Owner's |
Identification Card, the Department of State Police shall |
provide notice to the person and the person shall comply with |
|
Section 9.5 of this Act. |
(Source: P.A. 96-701, eff. 1-1-10; 97-158, eff. 1-1-12; 97-227, |
eff. 1-1-12; 97-813, eff. 7-13-12; 97-1131, eff. 1-1-13.)
|
(Text of Section after amendment by P.A. 97-1167 ) |
Sec. 8. The Department of State Police has authority to |
deny an
application for or to revoke and seize a Firearm |
Owner's Identification
Card previously issued under this Act |
only if the Department finds that the
applicant or the person |
to whom such card was issued is or was at the time
of issuance:
|
(a) A person under 21 years of age who has been convicted |
of a
misdemeanor other than a traffic offense or adjudged |
delinquent;
|
(b) A person under 21 years of age who does not have the |
written consent
of his parent or guardian to acquire and |
possess firearms and firearm
ammunition, or whose parent or |
guardian has revoked such written consent,
or where such parent |
or guardian does not qualify to have a Firearm Owner's
|
Identification Card;
|
(c) A person convicted of a felony under the laws of this |
or any other
jurisdiction;
|
(d) A person addicted to narcotics;
|
(e) A person who has been a patient of a mental health |
facility institution within the
past 5 years or a person who |
has been a patient in a mental health facility more than 5 |
years ago who has not received the certification required under |
|
subsection (u) of this Section . An active law enforcement |
officer employed by a unit of government who is denied, |
revoked, or has his or her Firearm Owner's Identification Card |
seized under this subsection (e) may obtain relief as described |
in subsection (c-5) of Section 10 of this Act if the officer |
did not act in a manner threatening to the officer, another |
person, or the public as determined by the treating clinical |
psychologist or physician, and the officer seeks mental health |
treatment;
|
(f) A person whose mental condition is of such a nature |
that it poses
a clear and present danger to the applicant, any |
other person or persons or
the community;
|
For the purposes of this Section, "mental condition" means |
a state of
mind manifested by violent, suicidal, threatening or |
assaultive behavior.
|
(g) A person who is intellectually disabled;
|
(h) A person who intentionally makes a false statement in |
the Firearm
Owner's Identification Card application;
|
(i) An alien who is unlawfully present in
the United States |
under the laws of the United States;
|
(i-5) An alien who has been admitted to the United States |
under a
non-immigrant visa (as that term is defined in Section |
101(a)(26) of the
Immigration and Nationality Act (8 U.S.C. |
1101(a)(26))), except that this
subsection (i-5) does not apply |
to any alien who has been lawfully admitted to
the United |
States under a non-immigrant visa if that alien is:
|
|
(1) admitted to the United States for lawful hunting or |
sporting purposes;
|
(2) an official representative of a foreign government |
who is:
|
(A) accredited to the United States Government or |
the Government's
mission to an international |
organization having its headquarters in the United
|
States; or
|
(B) en route to or from another country to which |
that alien is
accredited;
|
(3) an official of a foreign government or |
distinguished foreign visitor
who has been so designated by |
the Department of State;
|
(4) a foreign law enforcement officer of a friendly |
foreign government
entering the United States on official |
business; or
|
(5) one who has received a waiver from the Attorney |
General of the United
States pursuant to 18 U.S.C. |
922(y)(3);
|
(j) (Blank);
|
(k) A person who has been convicted within the past 5 years |
of battery,
assault, aggravated assault, violation of an order |
of protection, or a
substantially similar offense in another |
jurisdiction, in which a firearm was
used or possessed;
|
(l) A person who has been convicted of domestic battery, |
aggravated domestic battery, or a substantially
similar |
|
offense in another jurisdiction committed before, on or after |
January 1, 2012 (the effective date of Public Act 97-158). If |
the applicant or person who has been previously issued a |
Firearm Owner's Identification Card under this Act knowingly |
and intelligently waives the right to have an offense described |
in this paragraph (l) tried by a jury, and by guilty plea or |
otherwise, results in a conviction for an offense in which a |
domestic relationship is not a required element of the offense |
but in which a determination of the applicability of 18 U.S.C. |
922(g)(9) is made under Section 112A-11.1 of the Code of |
Criminal Procedure of 1963, an entry by the court of a judgment |
of conviction for that offense shall be grounds for denying an |
application for and for revoking and seizing a Firearm Owner's |
Identification Card previously issued to the person under this |
Act;
|
(m) (Blank);
|
(n) A person who is prohibited from acquiring or possessing
|
firearms or firearm ammunition by any Illinois State statute or |
by federal
law;
|
(o) A minor subject to a petition filed under Section 5-520 |
of the
Juvenile Court Act of 1987 alleging that the minor is a |
delinquent minor for
the commission of an offense that if |
committed by an adult would be a felony;
|
(p) An adult who had been adjudicated a delinquent minor |
under the Juvenile
Court Act of 1987 for the commission of an |
offense that if committed by an
adult would be a felony;
|
|
(q) A person who is not a resident of the State of |
Illinois, except as provided in subsection (a-10) of Section 4; |
or |
(r) A person who has been adjudicated as a mentally |
disabled person; mental defective. |
(s) A person who has been found to be developmentally |
disabled; |
(t) A person involuntarily admitted into a mental health |
facility; |
(u) A person who has had his or her Firearm Owner's |
Identification Card revoked or denied under subsection (e) of |
this Section or item (iv) of Section 4 of this Act because he |
or she was a patient in a mental health facility as provided in |
item (2) of subsection (e) of this Section, shall not be |
permitted to obtain a Firearm Owner's Identification Card, |
after the 5 year period has lapsed, unless he or she has |
received a mental health evaluation by a physician, clinical |
psychologist, or qualified examiner as those terms are defined |
in the Mental Health and Developmental Disabilities Code, and |
has received a certification that he or she is not a clear and |
present danger to himself, herself, or others. The physician, |
clinical psychologist, or qualified examiner making the |
certification and his or her employer shall not be held |
criminally, civilly, or professionally liable for making or not |
making the certification required under this subsection, |
except for willful or wanton misconduct. This subsection does |
|
not apply to a person whose firearm possession rights have been |
restored through administrative or judicial action under |
Section 10 or 11 of this Act; or |
(v) Upon revocation of a person's Firearm Owner's |
Identification Card, the Department of State Police shall |
provide notice to the person and the person shall comply with |
Section 9.5 of this Act. |
(Source: P.A. 96-701, eff. 1-1-10; 97-158, eff. 1-1-12; 97-227, |
eff. 1-1-12; 97-813, eff. 7-13-12; 97-1131, eff. 1-1-13; |
97-1167, eff. 6-1-13.)
|
(430 ILCS 65/8.1) (from Ch. 38, par. 83-8.1)
|
Sec. 8.1. Notifications to the Circuit Clerk to notify |
Department of State Police.
|
(a) The Circuit Clerk shall, in the form and manner |
required by the
Supreme Court, notify the Department of State |
Police of all final dispositions
of cases for which the |
Department has received information reported to it under
|
Sections 2.1 and 2.2 of the Criminal Identification Act.
|
(b) Upon adjudication of any individual as a mentally |
disabled person mental defective, as defined in Section 1.1 of |
this Act or a finding that a person has been involuntarily |
admitted or as provided in paragraph (3.5) of subsection (c) of |
Section 104-26 of the Code of Criminal Procedure of 1963 , the |
court shall direct the circuit court clerk to immediately |
notify the Department of State Police, Firearm Owner's |
|
Identification (FOID) department, and shall forward a copy of |
the court order to the Department. |
(c) The Department of Human Services shall, in the form and |
manner prescribed by the Department of State Police, report all |
information collected under subsection (b) of Section 12 of the |
Mental Health and Developmental Disabilities Confidentiality |
Act for the purpose of determining whether a person who may be |
or may have been a patient in a mental health facility is |
disqualified under State or federal law from receiving or |
retaining a Firearm Owner's Identification Card, or purchasing |
a weapon. |
(d) If a person is determined to pose a clear and present |
danger to himself, herself, or to others by a physician, |
clinical psychologist, qualified examiner, law enforcement |
official, or school administrator, or is determined to be |
developmentally disabled by a physician, clinical |
psychologist, or qualified examiner, whether employed by the |
State or by a private mental health facility, then the |
physician, clinical psychologist, or qualified examiner shall, |
within 24 hours of making the determination, notify the |
Department of Human Services that the person poses a clear and |
present danger. The Department of Human Services shall |
immediately update its records and information relating to |
mental health and developmental disabilities, and if |
appropriate, shall notify the Department of State Police in a |
form and manner prescribed by the Department of State Police. |
|
The Department of State Police shall determine whether to |
revoke the person's Firearm Owner's Identification Card under |
Section 8 of this Act. Any information disclosed under this |
subsection shall remain privileged and confidential, and shall |
not be redisclosed, except as required under subsection (e) of |
Section 3.1 of this Act, nor used for any other purpose. The |
method of providing this information shall guarantee that the |
information is not released beyond what is necessary for the |
purpose of this Section and shall be provided by rule by the |
Department of Human Services. The identity of the person |
reporting under this Section shall not be disclosed to the |
subject of the report. The physician, clinical psychologist, |
qualified examiner, law enforcement official, or school |
administrator making the determination and his or her employer |
shall not be held criminally, civilly, or professionally liable |
for making or not making the notification required under this |
subsection, except for willful or wanton misconduct. |
(e) The Department of State Police shall adopt rules to |
implement this Section. |
(Source: P.A. 97-1131, eff. 1-1-13.)
|
(430 ILCS 65/9) (from Ch. 38, par. 83-9)
|
Sec. 9.
Every person whose application for a Firearm |
Owner's Identification
Card is denied, and every holder of such |
a Card whose Card is revoked
or seized, shall receive a written |
notice from the Department of State
Police stating specifically |
|
the grounds upon which
his application has
been denied or upon |
which his Identification Card has been revoked. The written |
notice shall include the requirements of Section 9.5 of this |
Act and the persons's right to administrative or judicial |
review under Section 10 and 11 of this Act. A copy of the |
written notice shall be provided to the sheriff and law |
enforcement agency where the person resides.
|
(Source: P.A. 97-1131, eff. 1-1-13.)
|
(430 ILCS 65/9.5 new) |
Sec. 9.5. Revocation of Firearm Owner's Identification
|
Card. |
(a) A person who receives a revocation notice under Section |
9 of this Act shall, within 48 hours of receiving notice of the |
revocation: |
(1) surrender his or her Firearm Owner's |
Identification Card to the local law enforcement agency |
where the person resides. The local law enforcement agency |
shall provide the person a receipt and transmit the Firearm |
Owner's Identification Card to the Department of State |
Police; and |
(2) complete a Firearm Disposition Record on a form |
prescribed by the Department of State Police and place his |
or her firearms in the location or with the person reported |
in the Firearm Disposition Record. The form shall require |
the person to disclose: |
|
(A) the make, model, and serial number of each |
firearm owned by or under the custody and control of |
the revoked person; |
(B) the location where each firearm will be |
maintained during the prohibited term; and |
(C) if any firearm will be transferred to the |
custody of another person, the name, address and |
Firearm Owner's Identification Card number of the |
transferee. |
(b) The local law enforcement agency shall provide a copy |
of the Firearm Disposition Record to the person whose Firearm |
Owner's Identification Card has been revoked and to the |
Department of State Police. |
(c) If the person whose Firearm Owner's Identification Card |
has been revoked fails to comply with the requirements of this |
Section, the sheriff or law enforcement agency where the person |
resides may petition the circuit court to issue a warrant to |
search for and seize the Firearm Owner's Identification Card |
and firearms in the possession or under the custody or control |
of the person whose Firearm Owner's Identification Card has |
been revoked. |
(d) A violation of subsection (a) of this Section is a |
Class A misdemeanor. |
(e) The observation of a Firearm Owner's Identification |
Card in the possession of a person whose Firearm Owner's |
Identification Card has been revoked constitutes a sufficient |
|
basis for the arrest of that person for violation of this |
Section. |
(f) Within 30 days after the effective date of this |
amendatory Act of the 98th General Assembly, the Department of |
State Police shall provide written notice of the requirements |
of this Section to persons whose Firearm Owner's Identification |
Cards have been revoked, suspended, or expired and who have |
failed to surrender their cards to the Department. |
(g) A person whose Firearm Owner's Identification Card has |
been revoked and who received notice under subsection (f) shall |
comply with the requirements of this Section within 48 hours of |
receiving notice.
|
(430 ILCS 65/10) (from Ch. 38, par. 83-10)
|
(Text of Section before amendment by P.A. 97-1167 )
|
Sec. 10. Appeal to director; hearing; relief from firearm |
prohibitions. |
(a) Whenever an application for a Firearm Owner's |
Identification
Card is denied, whenever the Department fails to |
act on an application
within 30 days of its receipt, or |
whenever such a Card is revoked or seized
as provided for in |
Section 8 of this Act, the aggrieved party may
appeal
to the |
Director of State Police for a hearing upon
such denial, |
revocation or seizure, unless the denial, revocation, or |
seizure
was based upon a forcible felony, stalking, aggravated |
stalking, domestic
battery, any violation of the Illinois |
|
Controlled Substances Act, the Methamphetamine Control and |
Community Protection Act, or the
Cannabis Control Act that is |
classified as a Class 2 or greater felony,
any
felony violation |
of Article 24 of the Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code |
of 2012, or any
adjudication as a delinquent minor for the |
commission of an
offense that if committed by an adult would be |
a felony, in which case the
aggrieved party may petition the |
circuit court in writing in the county of
his or her residence |
for a hearing upon such denial, revocation, or seizure.
|
(b) At least 30 days before any hearing in the circuit |
court, the
petitioner shall serve the
relevant State's Attorney |
with a copy of the petition. The State's Attorney
may object to |
the petition and present evidence. At the hearing the court
|
shall
determine whether substantial justice has been done. |
Should the court
determine that substantial justice has not |
been done, the court shall issue an
order directing the |
Department of State Police to issue a Card. However, the court |
shall not issue the order if the petitioner is otherwise |
prohibited from obtaining, possessing, or using a firearm under
|
federal law.
|
(c) Any person prohibited from possessing a firearm under |
Sections 24-1.1
or 24-3.1 of the Criminal Code of 2012 or |
acquiring a Firearm Owner's
Identification Card under Section 8 |
of this Act may apply to
the Director
of State Police
or |
petition the circuit court in the county where the petitioner |
resides,
whichever is applicable in accordance with subsection |
|
(a) of this Section,
requesting relief
from such prohibition |
and the Director or court may grant such relief if it
is
|
established by the applicant to the court's or Director's |
satisfaction
that:
|
(0.05) when in the circuit court, the State's Attorney |
has been served
with a written
copy of the
petition at |
least 30 days before any such hearing in the circuit court |
and at
the hearing the
State's Attorney was afforded an |
opportunity to present evidence and object to
the petition;
|
(1) the applicant has not been convicted of a forcible |
felony under the
laws of this State or any other |
jurisdiction within 20 years of the
applicant's |
application for a Firearm Owner's Identification Card, or |
at
least 20 years have passed since the end of any period |
of imprisonment
imposed in relation to that conviction;
|
(2) the circumstances regarding a criminal conviction, |
where applicable,
the applicant's criminal history and his |
reputation are such that the applicant
will not be likely |
to act in a manner dangerous to public safety;
|
(3) granting relief would not be contrary to the public |
interest; and |
(4) granting relief would not be contrary to federal |
law.
|
(c-5) (1) An active law enforcement officer employed by |
a unit of government, who is denied, revoked, or has his or |
her Firearm Owner's Identification Card seized under |
|
subsection (e) of Section 8 of this Act may apply to the |
Director of State Police requesting relief if the officer |
did not act in a manner threatening to the officer, another |
person, or the public as determined by the treating |
clinical psychologist or physician, and as a result of his |
or her work is referred by the employer for or voluntarily |
seeks mental health evaluation or treatment by a licensed |
clinical psychologist, psychiatrist, or qualified |
examiner, and: |
(A) the officer has not received treatment |
involuntarily at a mental health facility, regardless |
of the length of admission; or has not been voluntarily |
admitted to a mental health facility for more than 30 |
days and not for more than one incident within the past |
5 years; and |
(B) the officer has not left the mental institution |
against medical advice. |
(2) The Director of State Police shall grant expedited |
relief to active law enforcement officers described in |
paragraph (1) of this subsection (c-5) upon a determination |
by the Director that the officer's possession of a firearm |
does not present a threat to themselves, others, or public |
safety. The Director shall act on the request for relief |
within 30 business days of receipt of: |
(A) a notarized statement from the officer in the |
form prescribed by the Director detailing the |
|
circumstances that led to the hospitalization; |
(B) all documentation regarding the admission, |
evaluation, treatment and discharge from the treating |
licensed clinical psychologist or psychiatrist of the |
officer; |
(C) a psychological fitness for duty evaluation of |
the person completed after the time of discharge; and |
(D) written confirmation in the form prescribed by |
the Director from the treating licensed clinical |
psychologist or psychiatrist that the provisions set |
forth in paragraph (1) of this subsection (c-5) have |
been met, the person successfully completed treatment, |
and their professional opinion regarding the person's |
ability to possess firearms. |
(3) Officers eligible for the expedited relief in |
paragraph (2) of this subsection (c-5) have the burden of |
proof on eligibility and must provide all information |
required. The Director may not consider granting expedited |
relief until the proof and information is received. |
(4) "Clinical psychologist", "psychiatrist", and |
"qualified examiner" shall have the same meaning as |
provided in Chapter 1 of the Mental Health and |
Developmental Disabilities Code. |
(d) When a minor is adjudicated delinquent for an offense |
which if
committed by an adult would be a felony, the court |
shall notify the Department
of State Police.
|
|
(e) The court shall review the denial of an application or |
the revocation of
a Firearm Owner's Identification Card of a |
person who has been adjudicated
delinquent for an offense that |
if
committed by an adult would be a felony if an
application |
for relief has been filed at least 10 years after the |
adjudication
of delinquency and the court determines that the |
applicant should be
granted relief from disability to obtain a |
Firearm Owner's Identification Card.
If the court grants |
relief, the court shall notify the Department of State
Police |
that the disability has
been removed and that the applicant is |
eligible to obtain a Firearm Owner's
Identification Card.
|
(f) Any person who is subject to the disabilities of 18 |
U.S.C. 922(d)(4) and 922(g)(4) of the federal Gun Control Act |
of 1968 because of an adjudication or commitment that occurred |
under the laws of this State or who was determined to be |
subject to the provisions of subsections (e), (f), or (g) of |
Section 8 of this Act may apply to the Department of State |
Police requesting relief from that prohibition. The Director |
shall grant the relief if it is established by a preponderance |
of the evidence that the person will not be likely to act in a |
manner dangerous to public safety and that granting relief |
would not be contrary to the public interest. In making this |
determination, the Director shall receive evidence concerning |
(i) the circumstances regarding the firearms disabilities from |
which relief is sought; (ii) the petitioner's mental health and |
criminal history records, if any; (iii) the petitioner's |
|
reputation, developed at a minimum through character witness |
statements, testimony, or other character evidence; and (iv) |
changes in the petitioner's condition or circumstances since |
the disqualifying events relevant to the relief sought. If |
relief is granted under this subsection or by order of a court |
under this Section, the Director shall as soon as practicable |
but in no case later than 15 business days, update, correct, |
modify, or remove the person's record in any database that the |
Department of State Police makes available to the National |
Instant Criminal Background Check System and notify the United |
States Attorney General that the basis for the record being |
made available no longer applies. The Department of State |
Police shall adopt rules for the administration of this Section |
subsection (f) . |
(Source: P.A. 96-1368, eff. 7-28-10; 97-1131, eff. 1-1-13; |
97-1150, eff. 1-25-13.)
|
(Text of Section after amendment by P.A. 97-1167 )
|
Sec. 10. Appeal to director; hearing; relief from firearm |
prohibitions. |
(a) Whenever an application for a Firearm Owner's |
Identification
Card is denied, whenever the Department fails to |
act on an application
within 30 days of its receipt, or |
whenever such a Card is revoked or seized
as provided for in |
Section 8 of this Act, the aggrieved party may
appeal
to the |
Director of State Police for a hearing upon
such denial, |
|
revocation or seizure, unless the denial, revocation, or |
seizure
was based upon a forcible felony, stalking, aggravated |
stalking, domestic
battery, any violation of the Illinois |
Controlled Substances Act, the Methamphetamine Control and |
Community Protection Act, or the
Cannabis Control Act that is |
classified as a Class 2 or greater felony,
any
felony violation |
of Article 24 of the Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code |
of 2012, or any
adjudication as a delinquent minor for the |
commission of an
offense that if committed by an adult would be |
a felony, in which case the
aggrieved party may petition the |
circuit court in writing in the county of
his or her residence |
for a hearing upon such denial, revocation, or seizure.
|
(b) At least 30 days before any hearing in the circuit |
court, the
petitioner shall serve the
relevant State's Attorney |
with a copy of the petition. The State's Attorney
may object to |
the petition and present evidence. At the hearing the court
|
shall
determine whether substantial justice has been done. |
Should the court
determine that substantial justice has not |
been done, the court shall issue an
order directing the |
Department of State Police to issue a Card. However, the court |
shall not issue the order if the petitioner is otherwise |
prohibited from obtaining, possessing, or using a firearm under
|
federal law.
|
(c) Any person prohibited from possessing a firearm under |
Sections 24-1.1
or 24-3.1 of the Criminal Code of 2012 or |
acquiring a Firearm Owner's
Identification Card under Section 8 |
|
of this Act may apply to
the Director
of State Police
or |
petition the circuit court in the county where the petitioner |
resides,
whichever is applicable in accordance with subsection |
(a) of this Section,
requesting relief
from such prohibition |
and the Director or court may grant such relief if it
is
|
established by the applicant to the court's or Director's |
satisfaction
that:
|
(0.05) when in the circuit court, the State's Attorney |
has been served
with a written
copy of the
petition at |
least 30 days before any such hearing in the circuit court |
and at
the hearing the
State's Attorney was afforded an |
opportunity to present evidence and object to
the petition;
|
(1) the applicant has not been convicted of a forcible |
felony under the
laws of this State or any other |
jurisdiction within 20 years of the
applicant's |
application for a Firearm Owner's Identification Card, or |
at
least 20 years have passed since the end of any period |
of imprisonment
imposed in relation to that conviction;
|
(2) the circumstances regarding a criminal conviction, |
where applicable,
the applicant's criminal history and his |
reputation are such that the applicant
will not be likely |
to act in a manner dangerous to public safety;
|
(3) granting relief would not be contrary to the public |
interest; and |
(4) granting relief would not be contrary to federal |
law.
|
|
(c-5) (1) An active law enforcement officer employed by |
a unit of government, who is denied, revoked, or has his or |
her Firearm Owner's Identification Card seized under |
subsection (e) of Section 8 of this Act may apply to the |
Director of State Police requesting relief if the officer |
did not act in a manner threatening to the officer, another |
person, or the public as determined by the treating |
clinical psychologist or physician, and as a result of his |
or her work is referred by the employer for or voluntarily |
seeks mental health evaluation or treatment by a licensed |
clinical psychologist, psychiatrist, or qualified |
examiner, and: |
(A) the officer has not received treatment |
involuntarily at a mental health facility institution , |
regardless of the length of admission; or has not been |
voluntarily admitted to a mental health facility |
institution for more than 30 days and not for more than |
one incident within the past 5 years; and |
(B) the officer has not left the mental institution |
against medical advice. |
(2) The Director of State Police shall grant expedited |
relief to active law enforcement officers described in |
paragraph (1) of this subsection (c-5) upon a determination |
by the Director that the officer's possession of a firearm |
does not present a threat to themselves, others, or public |
safety. The Director shall act on the request for relief |
|
within 30 business days of receipt of: |
(A) a notarized statement from the officer in the |
form prescribed by the Director detailing the |
circumstances that led to the hospitalization; |
(B) all documentation regarding the admission, |
evaluation, treatment and discharge from the treating |
licensed clinical psychologist or psychiatrist of the |
officer; |
(C) a psychological fitness for duty evaluation of |
the person completed after the time of discharge; and |
(D) written confirmation in the form prescribed by |
the Director from the treating licensed clinical |
psychologist or psychiatrist that the provisions set |
forth in paragraph (1) of this subsection (c-5) have |
been met, the person successfully completed treatment, |
and their professional opinion regarding the person's |
ability to possess firearms. |
(3) Officers eligible for the expedited relief in |
paragraph (2) of this subsection (c-5) have the burden of |
proof on eligibility and must provide all information |
required. The Director may not consider granting expedited |
relief until the proof and information is received. |
(4) "Clinical psychologist", "psychiatrist", and |
"qualified examiner" shall have the same meaning as |
provided in Chapter 1 of the Mental Health and |
Developmental Disabilities Code. |
|
(d) When a minor is adjudicated delinquent for an offense |
which if
committed by an adult would be a felony, the court |
shall notify the Department
of State Police.
|
(e) The court shall review the denial of an application or |
the revocation of
a Firearm Owner's Identification Card of a |
person who has been adjudicated
delinquent for an offense that |
if
committed by an adult would be a felony if an
application |
for relief has been filed at least 10 years after the |
adjudication
of delinquency and the court determines that the |
applicant should be
granted relief from disability to obtain a |
Firearm Owner's Identification Card.
If the court grants |
relief, the court shall notify the Department of State
Police |
that the disability has
been removed and that the applicant is |
eligible to obtain a Firearm Owner's
Identification Card.
|
(f) Any person who is subject to the disabilities of 18 |
U.S.C. 922(d)(4) and 922(g)(4) of the federal Gun Control Act |
of 1968 because of an adjudication or commitment that occurred |
under the laws of this State or who was determined to be |
subject to the provisions of subsections (e), (f), or (g) of |
Section 8 of this Act may apply to the Department of State |
Police requesting relief from that prohibition. The Director |
shall grant the relief if it is established by a preponderance |
of the evidence that the person will not be likely to act in a |
manner dangerous to public safety and that granting relief |
would not be contrary to the public interest. In making this |
determination, the Director shall receive evidence concerning |
|
(i) the circumstances regarding the firearms disabilities from |
which relief is sought; (ii) the petitioner's mental health and |
criminal history records, if any; (iii) the petitioner's |
reputation, developed at a minimum through character witness |
statements, testimony, or other character evidence; and (iv) |
changes in the petitioner's condition or circumstances since |
the disqualifying events relevant to the relief sought. If |
relief is granted under this subsection or by order of a court |
under this Section, the Director shall as soon as practicable |
but in no case later than 15 business days, update, correct, |
modify, or remove the person's record in any database that the |
Department of State Police makes available to the National |
Instant Criminal Background Check System and notify the United |
States Attorney General that the basis for the record being |
made available no longer applies. The Department of State |
Police shall adopt rules for the administration of this Section |
subsection (f) . |
(Source: P.A. 96-1368, eff. 7-28-10; 97-1131, eff. 1-1-13; |
97-1150, eff. 1-25-13; 97-1167, eff. 6-1-13.)
|
(430 ILCS 65/13.1) (from Ch. 38, par. 83-13.1)
|
Sec. 13.1. Preemption.
|
(a) Except as otherwise provided in the Firearm Concealed |
Carry Act and subsections (b) and (c) of this Section, the The |
provisions of any ordinance enacted by any municipality which
|
requires registration or imposes greater restrictions or |
|
limitations on the
acquisition, possession and transfer of |
firearms than are imposed by this
Act, are not invalidated or |
affected by this Act.
|
(b) Notwithstanding subsection (a) of this Section, the |
regulation, licensing, possession, and registration of |
handguns and ammunition for a handgun, and the transportation |
of any firearm and ammunition by a holder of a valid Firearm |
Owner's Identification Card issued by the Department of State |
Police under this Act are exclusive powers and functions of |
this State. Any ordinance or regulation, or portion of that |
ordinance or regulation, enacted on or before the effective |
date of this amendatory Act of the 98th General Assembly that |
purports to impose regulations or restrictions on a holder of a |
valid Firearm Owner's Identification Card issued by the |
Department of State Police under this Act in a manner that is |
inconsistent with this Act, on the effective date of this |
amendatory Act of the 98th General Assembly, shall be invalid |
in its application to a holder of a valid Firearm Owner's |
Identification Card issued by the Department of State Police |
under this Act. |
(c) Notwithstanding subsection (a) of this Section, the |
regulation of the possession or ownership of assault weapons |
are exclusive powers and functions of this State. Any ordinance |
or regulation, or portion of that ordinance or regulation, that |
purports to regulate the possession or ownership of assault |
weapons in a manner that is inconsistent with this Act, shall |
|
be invalid unless the ordinance or regulation is enacted on, |
before, or within 10 days after the effective date of this |
amendatory Act of the 98th General Assembly. Any ordinance or |
regulation described in this subsection (c) enacted more than |
10 days after the effective date of this amendatory Act of the |
98th General Assembly is invalid. An ordinance enacted on, |
before, or within 10 days after the effective date of this |
amendatory Act of the 98th General Assembly may be amended. The |
enactment or amendment of ordinances under this subsection (c) |
are subject to the submission requirements of Section 13.3. For |
the purposes of this subsection, "assault weapons" means |
firearms designated by either make or model or by a test or |
list of cosmetic features that cumulatively would place the |
firearm into a definition of "assault weapon" under the |
ordinance. |
(d) For the purposes of this Section, "handgun" has the |
meaning ascribed to it in Section 5 of the Firearm Concealed |
Carry Act. |
(e) 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. |
(Source: P.A. 76-1939.)
|
(430 ILCS 65/13.2) (from Ch. 38, par. 83-13.2)
|
Sec. 13.2.
The Department of State Police shall, 60 days
|
prior to the expiration of a Firearm Owner's Identification |
|
Card,
forward by first class mail to each person whose card is |
to expire a
notification of the
expiration of the card and an |
application which may be used to
apply for renewal of the card.
|
It is the obligation of the holder of a Firearm Owner's |
Identification Card
to notify the Department of State Police of |
any address change since the
issuance of
the Firearm Owner's |
Identification Card. Whenever any person moves from the |
residence address named on his or her card, the person shall |
within 21 calendar days thereafter notify in a form and manner |
prescribed by the Department of his or her old and new |
residence addresses and the card number held by him or her. Any |
person whose legal name has changed from the name on the card |
that he or she has been previously issued must apply for a |
corrected card within 30 calendar days after the change. The |
cost for a corrected card shall be $5 which shall be deposited |
into the State Police Firearm Services Fund Firearm Owner's |
Notification Fund .
|
(Source: P.A. 97-1131, eff. 1-1-13.)
|
Section 155. The Criminal Code of 2012 is amended by |
changing Sections 24-1.6 and 24-2 as follows: |
(720 ILCS 5/24-1.6) |
Sec. 24-1.6. Aggravated unlawful use of a weapon. |
(a) A person commits the offense of aggravated unlawful use |
of a weapon when
he or she knowingly: |
|
(1) Carries on or about his or her person or in any |
vehicle or concealed
on or about his or her person except |
when on his or her land or in his or her
abode, legal |
dwelling, or fixed place of business, or on the land or in |
the legal dwelling of another person as an invitee with |
that person's permission, any pistol, revolver, stun gun or |
taser or
other firearm; or |
(2) Carries or possesses on or about his or her person, |
upon any public
street, alley, or other public lands within |
the corporate limits of a city,
village or incorporated |
town, except when an invitee thereon or therein, for
the |
purpose of the display of such weapon or the lawful |
commerce in weapons, or
except when on his or her own land |
or in his or her own abode, legal dwelling, or fixed place |
of
business, or on the land or in the legal dwelling of |
another person as an invitee with that person's permission, |
any pistol, revolver, stun gun or taser or other firearm; |
and |
(3) One of the following factors is present: |
(A) the firearm , other than a pistol, revolver, or |
handgun, possessed was uncased, loaded , and |
immediately accessible
at the time of the offense; or |
(A-5) the pistol, revolver, or handgun possessed |
was uncased, loaded, and immediately accessible
at the |
time of the offense and the person possessing the |
pistol, revolver, or handgun has not been issued a |
|
currently valid license under the Firearm Concealed |
Carry Act; or |
(B) the firearm , other than a pistol, revolver, or |
handgun, possessed was uncased, unloaded , and the |
ammunition for
the weapon was immediately accessible |
at the time of the offense; or |
(B-5) the pistol, revolver, or handgun possessed |
was uncased, unloaded, and the ammunition for
the |
weapon was immediately accessible at the time of the |
offense and the person possessing the pistol, |
revolver, or handgun has not been issued a currently |
valid license under the Firearm Concealed Carry Act; or |
(C) the person possessing the firearm has not been |
issued a currently
valid Firearm Owner's |
Identification Card; or |
(D) the person possessing the weapon was |
previously adjudicated
a delinquent minor under the |
Juvenile Court Act of 1987 for an act that if
committed |
by an adult would be a felony; or |
(E) the person possessing the weapon was engaged in |
a misdemeanor
violation of the Cannabis
Control Act, in |
a misdemeanor violation of the Illinois Controlled |
Substances
Act, or in a misdemeanor violation of the |
Methamphetamine Control and Community Protection Act; |
or |
(F) (blank); or |
|
(G) the person possessing the weapon had a order of |
protection issued
against him or her within the |
previous 2 years; or |
(H) the person possessing the weapon was engaged in |
the commission or
attempted commission of
a |
misdemeanor involving the use or threat of violence |
against
the person or property of another; or |
(I) the person possessing the weapon was under 21 |
years of age and in
possession of a handgun as defined |
in Section 24-3 , unless the person under 21
is engaged |
in lawful activities under the Wildlife Code or |
described in
subsection 24-2(b)(1), (b)(3), or |
24-2(f). |
(a-5) "Handgun" as used in this Section has the meaning |
given to it in Section 5 of the Firearm Concealed Carry Act. |
(b) "Stun gun or taser" as used in this Section has the |
same definition
given to it in Section 24-1 of this Code. |
(c) This Section does not apply to or affect the |
transportation or
possession
of weapons that: |
(i) are broken down in a non-functioning state; or |
(ii) are not immediately accessible; or |
(iii) are unloaded and enclosed in a case, firearm |
carrying box,
shipping box, or other container by a |
person who has been issued a currently
valid Firearm |
Owner's
Identification Card. |
(d) Sentence. |
|
(1) Aggravated unlawful use of a weapon is a Class 4 |
felony;
a second or subsequent offense is a Class 2 felony |
for which the person shall be sentenced to a term of |
imprisonment of not less than 3 years and not more than 7 |
years. |
(2) Except as otherwise provided in paragraphs (3) and |
(4) of this subsection (d), a first offense of aggravated |
unlawful use of a weapon committed with a firearm by a |
person 18 years of age or older where the factors listed in |
both items (A) and (C) or both items (A-5) and (C) of |
paragraph (3) of subsection (a) are present is a Class 4 |
felony, for which the person shall be sentenced to a term |
of imprisonment of not less than one year and not more than |
3 years. |
(3) Aggravated unlawful use of
a weapon by a person who |
has been previously
convicted of a felony in this State or |
another jurisdiction is a Class 2
felony for which the |
person shall be sentenced to a term of imprisonment of not |
less than 3 years and not more than 7 years. |
(4) Aggravated unlawful use of a weapon while wearing |
or in possession of body armor as defined in Section 33F-1 |
by a person who has not been issued a valid Firearms |
Owner's Identification Card in accordance with Section 5 of |
the Firearm Owners Identification Card Act is a Class X |
felony.
|
(e) The possession of each firearm in violation of this |
|
Section constitutes a single and separate violation. |
(Source: P.A. 95-331, eff. 8-21-07; 96-742, eff. 8-25-09; |
96-829, eff. 12-3-09; 96-1107, eff. 1-1-11.)
|
(720 ILCS 5/24-2)
|
Sec. 24-2. Exemptions.
|
(a) Subsections 24-1(a)(3), 24-1(a)(4), 24-1(a)(10), and |
24-1(a)(13) and Section
24-1.6 do not apply to
or affect any of |
the following:
|
(1) Peace officers, and any person summoned by a peace |
officer to
assist in making arrests or preserving the |
peace, while actually engaged in
assisting such officer.
|
(2) Wardens, superintendents and keepers of prisons,
|
penitentiaries, jails and other institutions for the |
detention of persons
accused or convicted of an offense, |
while in the performance of their
official duty, or while |
commuting between their homes and places of employment.
|
(3) Members of the Armed Services or Reserve Forces of |
the United States
or the Illinois National Guard or the |
Reserve Officers Training Corps,
while in the performance |
of their official duty.
|
(4) Special agents employed by a railroad or a public |
utility to
perform police functions, and guards of armored |
car companies, while
actually engaged in the performance of |
the duties of their employment or
commuting between their |
homes and places of employment; and watchmen
while actually |
|
engaged in the performance of the duties of their |
employment.
|
(5) Persons licensed as private security contractors, |
private
detectives, or private alarm contractors, or |
employed by an agency
certified by the Department of |
Financial and Professional Regulation, if their duties
|
include the carrying of a weapon under the provisions of |
the Private
Detective, Private Alarm,
Private Security, |
Fingerprint Vendor, and Locksmith Act of 2004,
while |
actually
engaged in the performance of the duties of their |
employment or commuting
between their homes and places of |
employment, provided that such commuting
is accomplished |
within one hour from departure from home or place of
|
employment, as the case may be. A person shall be |
considered eligible for this
exemption if he or she has |
completed the required 20
hours of training for a private |
security contractor, private
detective, or private alarm |
contractor, or employee of a licensed agency and 20 hours |
of required firearm
training, and has been issued a firearm |
control card by
the Department of Financial and |
Professional Regulation. Conditions for the renewal of
|
firearm control cards issued under the provisions of this |
Section
shall be the same as for those cards issued under |
the provisions of the
Private Detective, Private Alarm,
|
Private Security, Fingerprint Vendor, and Locksmith Act of |
2004. The
firearm control card shall be carried by the |
|
private security contractor, private
detective, or private |
alarm contractor, or employee of the licensed agency at all
|
times when he or she is in possession of a concealable |
weapon.
|
(6) Any person regularly employed in a commercial or |
industrial
operation as a security guard for the protection |
of persons employed
and private property related to such |
commercial or industrial
operation, while actually engaged |
in the performance of his or her
duty or traveling between |
sites or properties belonging to the
employer, and who, as |
a security guard, is a member of a security force of
at |
least 5 persons registered with the Department of Financial |
and Professional
Regulation; provided that such security |
guard has successfully completed a
course of study, |
approved by and supervised by the Department of
Financial |
and Professional Regulation, consisting of not less than 40 |
hours of training
that includes the theory of law |
enforcement, liability for acts, and the
handling of |
weapons. A person shall be considered eligible for this
|
exemption if he or she has completed the required 20
hours |
of training for a security officer and 20 hours of required |
firearm
training, and has been issued a firearm control |
card by
the Department of Financial and Professional |
Regulation. Conditions for the renewal of
firearm control |
cards issued under the provisions of this Section
shall be |
the same as for those cards issued under the provisions of |
|
the
Private Detective, Private Alarm,
Private Security, |
Fingerprint Vendor, and Locksmith Act of 2004. The
firearm |
control card shall be carried by the security guard at all
|
times when he or she is in possession of a concealable |
weapon.
|
(7) Agents and investigators of the Illinois |
Legislative Investigating
Commission authorized by the |
Commission to carry the weapons specified in
subsections |
24-1(a)(3) and 24-1(a)(4), while on duty in the course of
|
any investigation for the Commission.
|
(8) Persons employed by a financial institution for the |
protection of
other employees and property related to such |
financial institution, while
actually engaged in the |
performance of their duties, commuting between
their homes |
and places of employment, or traveling between sites or
|
properties owned or operated by such financial |
institution, provided that
any person so employed has |
successfully completed a course of study,
approved by and |
supervised by the Department of Financial and Professional |
Regulation,
consisting of not less than 40 hours of |
training which includes theory of
law enforcement, |
liability for acts, and the handling of weapons.
A person |
shall be considered to be eligible for this exemption if he |
or
she has completed the required 20 hours of training for |
a security officer
and 20 hours of required firearm |
training, and has been issued a
firearm control card by the |
|
Department of Financial and Professional Regulation.
|
Conditions for renewal of firearm control cards issued |
under the
provisions of this Section shall be the same as |
for those issued under the
provisions of the Private |
Detective, Private Alarm,
Private Security, Fingerprint |
Vendor, and Locksmith Act of 2004.
Such firearm control |
card shall be carried by the person so
trained at all times |
when such person is in possession of a concealable
weapon. |
For purposes of this subsection, "financial institution" |
means a
bank, savings and loan association, credit union or |
company providing
armored car services.
|
(9) Any person employed by an armored car company to |
drive an armored
car, while actually engaged in the |
performance of his duties.
|
(10) Persons who have been classified as peace officers |
pursuant
to the Peace Officer Fire Investigation Act.
|
(11) Investigators of the Office of the State's |
Attorneys Appellate
Prosecutor authorized by the board of |
governors of the Office of the
State's Attorneys Appellate |
Prosecutor to carry weapons pursuant to
Section 7.06 of the |
State's Attorneys Appellate Prosecutor's Act.
|
(12) Special investigators appointed by a State's |
Attorney under
Section 3-9005 of the Counties Code.
|
(12.5) Probation officers while in the performance of |
their duties, or
while commuting between their homes, |
places of employment or specific locations
that are part of |
|
their assigned duties, with the consent of the chief judge |
of
the circuit for which they are employed.
|
(13) Court Security Officers while in the performance |
of their official
duties, or while commuting between their |
homes and places of employment, with
the
consent of the |
Sheriff.
|
(13.5) A person employed as an armed security guard at |
a nuclear energy,
storage, weapons or development site or |
facility regulated by the Nuclear
Regulatory Commission |
who has completed the background screening and training
|
mandated by the rules and regulations of the Nuclear |
Regulatory Commission.
|
(14) Manufacture, transportation, or sale of weapons |
to
persons
authorized under subdivisions (1) through |
(13.5) of this
subsection
to
possess those weapons.
|
(a-5) Subsections 24-1(a)(4) and 24-1(a)(10) do not apply |
to
or affect any person carrying a concealed pistol, revolver, |
or handgun and the person has been issued a currently valid |
license under the Firearm Concealed Carry Act at the time of |
the commission of the offense. |
(b) Subsections 24-1(a)(4) and 24-1(a)(10) and Section |
24-1.6 do not
apply to or affect
any of the following:
|
(1) Members of any club or organization organized for |
the purpose of
practicing shooting at targets upon |
established target ranges, whether
public or private, and |
patrons of such ranges, while such members
or patrons are |
|
using their firearms on those target ranges.
|
(2) Duly authorized military or civil organizations |
while parading,
with the special permission of the |
Governor.
|
(3) Hunters, trappers or fishermen with a license or
|
permit while engaged in hunting,
trapping or fishing.
|
(4) Transportation of weapons that are broken down in a
|
non-functioning state or are not immediately accessible.
|
(5) Carrying or possessing any pistol, revolver, stun |
gun or taser or other firearm on the land or in the legal |
dwelling of another person as an invitee with that person's |
permission. |
(c) Subsection 24-1(a)(7) does not apply to or affect any |
of the
following:
|
(1) Peace officers while in performance of their |
official duties.
|
(2) Wardens, superintendents and keepers of prisons, |
penitentiaries,
jails and other institutions for the |
detention of persons accused or
convicted of an offense.
|
(3) Members of the Armed Services or Reserve Forces of |
the United States
or the Illinois National Guard, while in |
the performance of their official
duty.
|
(4) Manufacture, transportation, or sale of machine |
guns to persons
authorized under subdivisions (1) through |
(3) of this subsection to
possess machine guns, if the |
machine guns are broken down in a
non-functioning state or |
|
are not immediately accessible.
|
(5) Persons licensed under federal law to manufacture |
any weapon from
which 8 or more shots or bullets can be |
discharged by a
single function of the firing device, or |
ammunition for such weapons, and
actually engaged in the |
business of manufacturing such weapons or
ammunition, but |
only with respect to activities which are within the lawful
|
scope of such business, such as the manufacture, |
transportation, or testing
of such weapons or ammunition. |
This exemption does not authorize the
general private |
possession of any weapon from which 8 or more
shots or |
bullets can be discharged by a single function of the |
firing
device, but only such possession and activities as |
are within the lawful
scope of a licensed manufacturing |
business described in this paragraph.
|
During transportation, such weapons shall be broken |
down in a
non-functioning state or not immediately |
accessible.
|
(6) The manufacture, transport, testing, delivery, |
transfer or sale,
and all lawful commercial or experimental |
activities necessary thereto, of
rifles, shotguns, and |
weapons made from rifles or shotguns,
or ammunition for |
such rifles, shotguns or weapons, where engaged in
by a |
person operating as a contractor or subcontractor pursuant |
to a
contract or subcontract for the development and supply |
of such rifles,
shotguns, weapons or ammunition to the |
|
United States government or any
branch of the Armed Forces |
of the United States, when such activities are
necessary |
and incident to fulfilling the terms of such contract.
|
The exemption granted under this subdivision (c)(6)
|
shall also apply to any authorized agent of any such |
contractor or
subcontractor who is operating within the |
scope of his employment, where
such activities involving |
such weapon, weapons or ammunition are necessary
and |
incident to fulfilling the terms of such contract.
|
During transportation, any such weapon shall be broken |
down in a
non-functioning state, or not immediately |
accessible.
|
(7) A person possessing a rifle with a barrel or |
barrels less than 16 inches in length if: (A) the person |
has been issued a Curios and Relics license from the U.S. |
Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives; or (B) |
the person is an active member of a bona fide, nationally |
recognized military re-enacting group and the modification |
is required and necessary to accurately portray the weapon |
for historical re-enactment purposes; the re-enactor is in |
possession of a valid and current re-enacting group |
membership credential; and the overall length of the weapon |
as modified is not less than 26 inches. |
During transportation, any such weapon shall be broken |
down in a
non-functioning state, or not immediately |
accessible.
|
|
(d) Subsection 24-1(a)(1) does not apply to the purchase, |
possession
or carrying of a black-jack or slung-shot by a peace |
officer.
|
(e) Subsection 24-1(a)(8) does not apply to any owner, |
manager or
authorized employee of any place specified in that |
subsection nor to any
law enforcement officer.
|
(f) Subsection 24-1(a)(4) and subsection 24-1(a)(10) and |
Section 24-1.6
do not apply
to members of any club or |
organization organized for the purpose of practicing
shooting |
at targets upon established target ranges, whether public or |
private,
while using their firearms on those target ranges.
|
(g) Subsections 24-1(a)(11) and 24-3.1(a)(6) do not apply |
to:
|
(1) Members of the Armed Services or Reserve Forces of |
the United
States or the Illinois National Guard, while in |
the performance of their
official duty.
|
(2) Bonafide collectors of antique or surplus military |
ordinance.
|
(3) Laboratories having a department of forensic |
ballistics, or
specializing in the development of |
ammunition or explosive ordinance.
|
(4) Commerce, preparation, assembly or possession of |
explosive
bullets by manufacturers of ammunition licensed |
by the federal government,
in connection with the supply of |
those organizations and persons exempted
by subdivision |
(g)(1) of this Section, or like organizations and persons
|
|
outside this State, or the transportation of explosive |
bullets to any
organization or person exempted in this |
Section by a common carrier or by a
vehicle owned or leased |
by an exempted manufacturer.
|
(g-5) Subsection 24-1(a)(6) does not apply to or affect |
persons licensed
under federal law to manufacture any device or |
attachment of any kind designed,
used, or intended for use in |
silencing the report of any firearm, firearms, or
ammunition
|
for those firearms equipped with those devices, and actually |
engaged in the
business of manufacturing those devices, |
firearms, or ammunition, but only with
respect to
activities |
that are within the lawful scope of that business, such as the
|
manufacture, transportation, or testing of those devices, |
firearms, or
ammunition. This
exemption does not authorize the |
general private possession of any device or
attachment of any |
kind designed, used, or intended for use in silencing the
|
report of any firearm, but only such possession and activities |
as are within
the
lawful scope of a licensed manufacturing |
business described in this subsection
(g-5). During |
transportation, these devices shall be detached from any weapon
|
or
not immediately accessible.
|
(g-6) Subsections 24-1(a)(4) and 24-1(a)(10) and Section
|
24-1.6 do not apply to
or affect any parole agent or parole |
supervisor who meets the qualifications and conditions |
prescribed in Section 3-14-1.5 of the Unified Code of |
Corrections. |
|
(g-7) Subsection 24-1(a)(6) does not apply to a peace |
officer while serving as a member of a tactical response team |
or special operations team. A peace officer may not personally |
own or apply for ownership of a device or attachment of any |
kind designed, used, or intended for use in silencing the |
report of any firearm. These devices shall be owned and |
maintained by lawfully recognized units of government whose |
duties include the investigation of criminal acts. |
(g-10) Subsections 24-1(a)(4), 24-1(a)(8), and |
24-1(a)(10), and Sections 24-1.6 and 24-3.1 do not apply to an |
athlete's possession, transport on official Olympic and |
Paralympic transit systems established for athletes, or use of |
competition firearms sanctioned by the International Olympic |
Committee, the International Paralympic Committee, the |
International Shooting Sport Federation, or USA Shooting in |
connection with such athlete's training for and participation |
in shooting competitions at the 2016 Olympic and Paralympic |
Games and sanctioned test events leading up to the 2016 Olympic |
and Paralympic Games. |
(h) An information or indictment based upon a violation of |
any
subsection of this Article need not negative any exemptions |
contained in
this Article. The defendant shall have the burden |
of proving such an
exemption.
|
(i) Nothing in this Article shall prohibit, apply to, or |
affect
the transportation, carrying, or possession, of any |
pistol or revolver,
stun gun, taser, or other firearm consigned |
|
to a common carrier operating
under license of the State of |
Illinois or the federal government, where
such transportation, |
carrying, or possession is incident to the lawful
|
transportation in which such common carrier is engaged; and |
nothing in this
Article shall prohibit, apply to, or affect the |
transportation, carrying,
or possession of any pistol, |
revolver, stun gun, taser, or other firearm,
not the subject of |
and regulated by subsection 24-1(a)(7) or subsection
24-2(c) of |
this Article, which is unloaded and enclosed in a case, firearm
|
carrying box, shipping box, or other container, by the |
possessor of a valid
Firearm Owners Identification Card.
|
(Source: P.A. 96-7, eff. 4-3-09; 96-230, eff. 1-1-10; 96-742, |
eff. 8-25-09; 96-1000, eff. 7-2-10; 97-465, eff. 8-22-11; |
97-676, eff. 6-1-12; 97-936, eff. 1-1-13; 97-1010, eff. 1-1-13; |
revised 8-23-12.) |
Section 160. The Code of Criminal Procedure of 1963 is |
amended by changing Section 112A-14 as follows:
|
(725 ILCS 5/112A-14) (from Ch. 38, par. 112A-14)
|
Sec. 112A-14. Order of protection; remedies.
|
(a) Issuance of order. If the court finds that petitioner |
has been
abused by a family or household member, as defined in |
this Article, an
order of protection prohibiting such abuse |
shall issue; provided that
petitioner must also satisfy the |
requirements of one of the following
Sections, as appropriate: |
|
Section 112A-17 on emergency orders, Section
112A-18 on interim |
orders, or Section 112A-19 on
plenary orders.
Petitioner shall |
not be denied an order of protection because petitioner or
|
respondent is a minor. The court, when determining whether or |
not to issue
an order of protection, shall not require physical |
manifestations of abuse
on the person of the victim. |
Modification and extension of prior orders of
protection shall |
be in accordance with this Article.
|
(b) Remedies and standards. The remedies to be included in |
an order of
protection shall be determined in accordance with |
this Section and one of
the following Sections, as appropriate: |
Section 112A-17 on
emergency orders,
Section 112A-18 on interim |
orders, and Section 112A-19 on
plenary orders.
The remedies |
listed in this subsection shall be in addition to other civil
|
or criminal remedies available to petitioner.
|
(1) Prohibition of abuse. Prohibit respondent's |
harassment,
interference with personal liberty, |
intimidation of a dependent, physical
abuse or willful |
deprivation, as defined in this Article, if such abuse has
|
occurred or otherwise appears likely to occur if not |
prohibited.
|
(2) Grant of exclusive possession of residence. |
Prohibit respondent
from entering or remaining in any |
residence, household, or premises of the petitioner,
|
including one owned or leased by respondent, if petitioner |
has a right
to occupancy thereof. The grant of exclusive |
|
possession of the residence, household, or premises
shall |
not affect title to real property, nor shall the court be |
limited by
the standard set forth in Section 701 of the |
Illinois Marriage and
Dissolution of Marriage Act.
|
(A) Right to occupancy. A party has a right to |
occupancy of a
residence or household if it is
solely |
or jointly owned or leased by that party, that party's |
spouse, a
person with a legal duty to support that |
party or a minor child in that
party's care, or by any |
person or entity other than the opposing party that
|
authorizes that party's occupancy (e.g., a domestic |
violence shelter).
Standards set forth in subparagraph |
(B) shall not preclude equitable relief.
|
(B) Presumption of hardships. If petitioner and |
respondent
each has the right to occupancy of a |
residence or household, the court
shall balance (i) the |
hardships to respondent and any minor child or
|
dependent adult in respondent's care resulting from |
entry of this remedy with (ii)
the hardships to |
petitioner and any minor child or dependent adult in
|
petitioner's care resulting from continued exposure to |
the risk of abuse (should
petitioner remain at the |
residence or household) or from loss of possession
of |
the residence or household (should petitioner leave to |
avoid the risk
of abuse). When determining the balance |
of hardships, the court shall also
take into account |
|
the accessibility of the residence or household.
|
Hardships need not be balanced if respondent does not |
have a right to occupancy.
|
The balance of hardships is presumed to favor |
possession by
petitioner unless the presumption is |
rebutted by a preponderance of the
evidence, showing |
that the hardships to respondent substantially |
outweigh
the hardships to petitioner and any minor |
child or dependent adult in petitioner's
care. The |
court, on the request of petitioner or on its own |
motion,
may order respondent to provide suitable, |
accessible, alternate housing
for petitioner instead |
of
excluding respondent from a mutual residence or |
household.
|
(3) Stay away order and additional prohibitions.
Order |
respondent to stay away from petitioner or any other person
|
protected by the order of protection, or prohibit |
respondent from entering
or remaining present at |
petitioner's school, place of employment, or other
|
specified places at times when petitioner is present, or |
both, if
reasonable, given
the balance of hardships. |
Hardships need not be balanced for the court
to enter a |
stay away order or prohibit entry
if respondent has no |
right to enter the premises.
|
If an order of protection grants petitioner exclusive |
possession
of the residence, or prohibits respondent from |
|
entering the residence,
or orders respondent to stay away |
from petitioner or other
protected persons, then the court |
may allow respondent access to the
residence to remove |
items of clothing and personal adornment
used exclusively |
by respondent, medications, and other items as the court |
directs.
The right to access shall be exercised on only one |
occasion as the court directs
and in the presence of an |
agreed-upon adult third party or law enforcement officer.
|
(4) Counseling. Require or recommend the respondent to |
undergo
counseling for a specified duration with a social |
worker, psychologist,
clinical psychologist, psychiatrist, |
family service agency, alcohol or
substance abuse program, |
mental health center guidance counselor, agency
providing |
services to elders, program designed for domestic violence
|
abusers or any other guidance service the court deems |
appropriate. The court may order the respondent in any |
intimate partner relationship to report to an Illinois |
Department of Human Services protocol approved partner |
abuse intervention program for an assessment and to follow |
all recommended treatment.
|
(5) Physical care and possession of the minor child. In |
order to protect
the minor child from abuse, neglect, or |
unwarranted separation from the person
who has been the |
minor child's primary caretaker, or to otherwise protect |
the
well-being of the minor child, the court may do either |
or both of the following:
(i) grant petitioner physical |
|
care or possession of the minor child, or both, or
(ii) |
order respondent to return a minor child to, or not remove |
a minor child
from, the physical care of a parent or person |
in loco parentis.
|
If a court finds, after a hearing, that respondent has |
committed abuse
(as defined in Section 112A-3) of a minor |
child, there shall be a
rebuttable presumption that |
awarding physical care to respondent would not
be in the |
minor child's best interest.
|
(6) Temporary legal custody.
Award temporary legal |
custody to petitioner in accordance with this Section,
the |
Illinois Marriage
and Dissolution of Marriage Act, the |
Illinois Parentage Act of 1984,
and this State's Uniform |
Child-Custody
Jurisdiction and Enforcement Act.
|
If a court finds, after a hearing, that respondent
has |
committed abuse (as defined in Section 112A-3) of a
minor |
child, there shall be a rebuttable presumption that |
awarding
temporary legal custody to respondent would not be |
in the
child's best interest.
|
(7) Visitation. Determine the
visitation rights, if |
any, of respondent in any case in which the court
awards |
physical care or temporary legal custody of a minor child |
to
petitioner. The court shall restrict or deny |
respondent's visitation with
a minor child if
the court |
finds that respondent has done or is likely to do any of |
the
following: (i) abuse or endanger the minor child during |
|
visitation; (ii) use the
visitation as an opportunity to |
abuse or harass petitioner or
petitioner's family or |
household members; (iii) improperly conceal or
detain the |
minor child; or (iv) otherwise act in a manner that is not |
in
the best interests of the minor child. The court shall |
not be limited by the
standards set forth in Section 607.1 |
of the Illinois Marriage and
Dissolution of Marriage Act. |
If the court grants visitation, the order
shall specify |
dates and times for the visitation to take place or other
|
specific parameters or conditions that are appropriate. No |
order for
visitation shall refer merely to the term |
"reasonable visitation".
|
Petitioner may deny respondent access to the minor |
child if, when
respondent arrives for visitation, |
respondent is under the influence of drugs
or alcohol and |
constitutes a threat to the safety and well-being of
|
petitioner or petitioner's minor children or is behaving in |
a violent or abusive manner.
|
If necessary to protect any member of petitioner's |
family or
household from future abuse, respondent shall be |
prohibited from coming to
petitioner's residence to meet |
the minor child for visitation, and the
parties shall |
submit to the court their recommendations for reasonable
|
alternative arrangements for visitation. A person may be |
approved to
supervise visitation only after filing an |
affidavit accepting
that responsibility and acknowledging |
|
accountability to the court.
|
(8) Removal or concealment of minor child.
Prohibit |
respondent from
removing a minor child from the State or |
concealing the child within the
State.
|
(9) Order to appear. Order the respondent to
appear in |
court, alone
or with a minor child, to prevent abuse, |
neglect, removal or concealment of
the child, to return the |
child to the custody or care of the petitioner or
to permit |
any court-ordered interview or examination of the child or |
the
respondent.
|
(10) Possession of personal property. Grant petitioner |
exclusive
possession of personal property and, if |
respondent has possession or
control, direct respondent to |
promptly make it available to petitioner, if:
|
(i) petitioner, but not respondent, owns the |
property; or
|
(ii) the parties own the property jointly; sharing |
it would risk
abuse of petitioner by respondent or is |
impracticable; and the balance of
hardships favors |
temporary possession by petitioner.
|
If petitioner's sole claim to ownership of the property |
is that it is
marital property, the court may award |
petitioner temporary possession
thereof under the |
standards of subparagraph (ii) of this paragraph only if
a |
proper proceeding has been filed under the Illinois |
Marriage and
Dissolution of Marriage Act, as now or |
|
hereafter amended.
|
No order under this provision shall affect title to |
property.
|
(11) Protection of property. Forbid the respondent |
from taking,
transferring, encumbering, concealing, |
damaging or otherwise disposing of
any real or personal |
property, except as explicitly authorized by the
court, if:
|
(i) petitioner, but not respondent, owns the |
property; or
|
(ii) the parties own the property jointly,
and the |
balance of hardships favors granting this remedy.
|
If petitioner's sole claim to ownership of the property |
is that it is
marital property, the court may grant |
petitioner relief under subparagraph
(ii) of this |
paragraph only if a proper proceeding has been filed under |
the
Illinois Marriage and Dissolution of Marriage Act, as |
now or hereafter amended.
|
The court may further prohibit respondent from |
improperly using the
financial or other resources of an |
aged member of the family or household
for the profit or |
advantage of respondent or of any other person.
|
(11.5) Protection of animals. Grant the petitioner the |
exclusive care, custody, or control of any animal owned, |
possessed, leased, kept, or held by either the petitioner |
or the respondent or a minor child residing in the |
residence or household of either the petitioner or the |
|
respondent and order the respondent to stay away from the |
animal and forbid the respondent from taking, |
transferring, encumbering, concealing, harming, or |
otherwise disposing of the animal.
|
(12) Order for payment of support. Order
respondent to |
pay temporary
support for the petitioner or any child in |
the petitioner's care or
custody, when the respondent has a |
legal obligation to support that person,
in accordance with |
the Illinois Marriage and Dissolution
of Marriage Act, |
which shall govern, among other matters, the amount of
|
support, payment through the clerk and withholding of |
income to secure
payment. An order for child support may be |
granted to a petitioner with
lawful physical care or |
custody of a child, or an order or agreement for
physical |
care or custody, prior to entry of an order for legal |
custody.
Such a support order shall expire upon entry of a |
valid order granting
legal custody to another, unless |
otherwise provided in the custody order.
|
(13) Order for payment of losses. Order
respondent to |
pay petitioner
for losses suffered as a direct result of |
the abuse. Such losses shall
include, but not be limited |
to, medical expenses, lost earnings or other
support, |
repair or replacement of property damaged or taken, |
reasonable
attorney's fees, court costs and moving or other |
travel expenses, including
additional reasonable expenses |
for temporary shelter and restaurant meals.
|
|
(i) Losses affecting family needs. If a party is |
entitled to seek
maintenance, child support or |
property distribution from the other party
under the |
Illinois Marriage and Dissolution of Marriage Act, as |
now or
hereafter amended, the court may order |
respondent to reimburse petitioner's
actual losses, to |
the extent that such reimbursement would be |
"appropriate
temporary relief", as authorized by |
subsection (a)(3) of
Section 501 of that Act.
|
(ii) Recovery of expenses. In the case of an |
improper concealment
or removal of a minor child, the |
court may order respondent to pay the reasonable
|
expenses incurred or to be incurred in the search for |
and recovery of the
minor child, including but not |
limited to legal fees, court costs, private
|
investigator fees, and travel costs.
|
(14) Prohibition of entry. Prohibit the respondent |
from entering or
remaining in the residence or household |
while the respondent is under the
influence of alcohol or |
drugs and constitutes a threat to the safety and
well-being |
of the petitioner or the petitioner's children.
|
(14.5) Prohibition of firearm possession. |
(A) A person who is subject to an existing order of |
protection, interim order of protection, emergency |
order of protection, or plenary order of protection, |
issued under this Code may not lawfully possess weapons |
|
under Section 8.2 of the Firearm Owners Identification |
Card Act. (a) Prohibit a respondent against whom an |
order of protection was issued from possessing any |
firearms during the duration of the order if the order: |
(1) was issued after a hearing of which such |
person received
actual notice, and at which such |
person had an opportunity to
participate; |
(2) restrains such person from harassing, |
stalking, or
threatening an intimate partner of |
such person or child of such
intimate partner or |
person, or engaging in other conduct that
would |
place an intimate partner in reasonable fear of |
bodily
injury to the partner or child; and |
(3)(i) includes a finding that such person |
represents a
credible threat to the physical |
safety of such intimate partner
or child; or
(ii) |
by its terms explicitly prohibits the use, |
attempted
use, or threatened use of physical force |
against such intimate
partner or child that would |
reasonably be expected to cause
bodily injury. |
(B) Any firearms in the
possession of the |
respondent, except as provided in subparagraph (C) of |
this paragraph (14.5) subsection (b) , shall be ordered |
by the court to be turned
over to a person with a valid |
Firearm Owner's Identification Card the local law |
enforcement agency for safekeeping. The court shall |
|
issue an order that the respondent's Firearm Owner's |
Identification Card be turned over to the local law |
enforcement agency, which in turn shall immediately |
mail the card to the Department of State Police Firearm |
Owner's Identification Card Office for safekeeping.
|
The period of safekeeping shall be for the duration of |
the order of protection. The firearm or firearms and |
Firearm Owner's Identification Card, if unexpired, |
shall at the respondent's request be returned to the |
respondent at expiration of the order of protection.
|
(C) (b) If the respondent is a peace officer as |
defined in Section 2-13 of
the
Criminal Code of 2012, |
the court shall order that any firearms used by the
|
respondent in the performance of his or her duties as a
|
peace officer be surrendered to
the chief law |
enforcement executive of the agency in which the |
respondent is
employed, who shall retain the firearms |
for safekeeping for the duration of the order of |
protection.
|
(D) (c) Upon expiration of the period of |
safekeeping, if the firearms or Firearm Owner's |
Identification Card cannot be returned to respondent |
because respondent cannot be located, fails to respond |
to requests to retrieve the firearms, or is not |
lawfully eligible to possess a firearm, upon petition |
from the local law enforcement agency, the court may |
|
order the local law enforcement agency to destroy the |
firearms, use the firearms for training purposes, or |
for any other application as deemed appropriate by the |
local law enforcement agency; or that the firearms be |
turned over to a third party who is lawfully eligible |
to possess firearms, and who does not reside with |
respondent.
|
(15) Prohibition of access to records. If an order of |
protection
prohibits respondent from having contact with |
the minor child,
or if petitioner's address is omitted |
under subsection (b) of
Section 112A-5, or if necessary to |
prevent abuse or wrongful removal or
concealment of a minor |
child, the order shall deny respondent access to, and
|
prohibit respondent from inspecting, obtaining, or |
attempting to
inspect or obtain, school or any other |
records of the minor child
who is in the care of |
petitioner.
|
(16) Order for payment of shelter services. Order |
respondent to
reimburse a shelter providing temporary |
housing and counseling services to
the petitioner for the |
cost of the services, as certified by the shelter
and |
deemed reasonable by the court.
|
(17) Order for injunctive relief. Enter injunctive |
relief necessary
or appropriate to prevent further abuse of |
a family or household member or
to effectuate one of the |
granted remedies, if supported by the balance of
hardships. |
|
If the harm to be prevented by the injunction is abuse or |
any
other harm that one of the remedies listed in |
paragraphs (1) through (16)
of this subsection is designed |
to prevent, no further evidence is necessary
to establish |
that the harm is an irreparable injury.
|
(c) Relevant factors; findings.
|
(1) In determining whether to grant a
specific remedy, |
other than payment of support, the
court shall consider |
relevant factors, including but not limited to the
|
following:
|
(i) the nature, frequency, severity, pattern and |
consequences of the
respondent's past abuse of the |
petitioner or any family or household
member, |
including the concealment of his or her location in |
order to evade
service of process or notice, and the |
likelihood of danger of future abuse to
petitioner or
|
any member of petitioner's or respondent's family or |
household; and
|
(ii) the danger that any minor child will be abused |
or neglected or
improperly removed from the |
jurisdiction, improperly concealed within the
State or |
improperly separated from the child's primary |
caretaker.
|
(2) In comparing relative hardships resulting to the |
parties from loss
of possession of the family home, the |
court shall consider relevant
factors, including but not |
|
limited to the following:
|
(i) availability, accessibility, cost, safety, |
adequacy, location and other
characteristics of |
alternate housing for each party and any minor child or
|
dependent adult in the party's care;
|
(ii) the effect on the party's employment; and
|
(iii) the effect on the relationship of the party, |
and any minor
child or dependent adult in the party's |
care, to family, school, church
and community.
|
(3) Subject to the exceptions set forth in paragraph |
(4) of this
subsection, the court shall make its findings |
in an official record or in
writing, and shall at a minimum |
set forth the following:
|
(i) That the court has considered the applicable |
relevant factors
described in paragraphs (1) and (2) of |
this subsection.
|
(ii) Whether the conduct or actions of respondent, |
unless
prohibited, will likely cause irreparable harm |
or continued abuse.
|
(iii) Whether it is necessary to grant the |
requested relief in order
to protect petitioner or |
other alleged abused persons.
|
(4) For purposes of issuing an ex parte emergency order |
of protection,
the court, as an alternative to or as a |
supplement to making the findings
described in paragraphs |
(c)(3)(i) through (c)(3)(iii) of this subsection, may use
|
|
the following procedure:
|
When a verified petition for an emergency order of |
protection in
accordance with the requirements of Sections |
112A-5 and 112A-17 is
presented to the court, the court |
shall examine petitioner on oath or
affirmation. An |
emergency order of protection shall be issued by the court
|
if it appears from the contents of the petition and the |
examination of
petitioner that the averments are |
sufficient to indicate abuse by
respondent and to support |
the granting of relief under the issuance of the
emergency |
order of protection.
|
(5) Never married parties. No rights or |
responsibilities for a minor
child born outside of marriage |
attach to a putative father until a father and
child |
relationship has been established under the Illinois |
Parentage Act of
1984. Absent such an adjudication, no |
putative father shall be granted
temporary custody of the |
minor child, visitation with the minor child, or
physical |
care
and possession of the minor child, nor shall
an order |
of payment for support of the minor child be entered.
|
(d) Balance of hardships; findings. If the court finds that |
the balance
of hardships does not support the granting of a |
remedy governed by
paragraph (2), (3), (10), (11), or (16) of
|
subsection (b) of this Section,
which may require such |
balancing, the court's findings shall so
indicate and shall |
include a finding as to whether granting the remedy will
result |
|
in hardship to respondent that would substantially outweigh the |
hardship
to petitioner
from denial of the remedy. The findings |
shall be an official record or in
writing.
|
(e) Denial of remedies. Denial of any remedy shall not be |
based, in
whole or in part, on evidence that:
|
(1) Respondent has cause for any use of force, unless |
that cause
satisfies the standards for justifiable use of |
force provided by Article
7 of the Criminal Code of 2012;
|
(2) Respondent was voluntarily intoxicated;
|
(3) Petitioner acted in self-defense or defense of |
another, provided
that, if petitioner utilized force, such |
force was justifiable under
Article 7 of the Criminal Code |
of 2012;
|
(4) Petitioner did not act in self-defense or defense |
of another;
|
(5) Petitioner left the residence or household to avoid |
further abuse
by respondent;
|
(6) Petitioner did not leave the residence or household |
to avoid further
abuse by respondent;
|
(7) Conduct by any family or household member excused |
the abuse by
respondent, unless that same conduct would |
have excused such abuse if the
parties had not been family |
or household members.
|
(Source: P.A. 96-701, eff. 1-1-10; 96-1239, eff. 1-1-11; |
97-158, eff. 1-1-12; 97-1131, eff. 1-1-13; 97-1150, eff. |
1-25-13.)
|
|
Section 165. The Mental Health and Developmental |
Disabilities Confidentiality Act is amended by changing |
Section 12 as follows:
|
(740 ILCS 110/12) (from Ch. 91 1/2, par. 812)
|
Sec. 12. (a) If the United States Secret Service or the |
Department of
State Police requests information from a mental |
health or developmental
disability facility, as defined in |
Section 1-107 and 1-114 of the Mental
Health and Developmental |
Disabilities Code, relating to a specific
recipient and the |
facility director determines that disclosure of such
|
information may be necessary to protect the life of, or to |
prevent
the infliction of great bodily harm to, a public |
official,
or a person under the protection of the United
States |
Secret Service, only the following information
may be |
disclosed: the recipient's name, address, and age and the date |
of
any admission to or discharge from a facility; and any |
information which
would indicate whether or not the recipient |
has a history of violence or
presents a danger of violence to |
the person under protection. Any information
so disclosed shall |
be used for investigative purposes only and shall not
be |
publicly disseminated.
Any person participating in good faith |
in the disclosure of such
information in accordance with this |
provision shall have immunity from any
liability, civil, |
criminal or otherwise, if such information is disclosed
relying |
|
upon the representation of an officer of the United States |
Secret
Service or the Department of State Police that a person |
is under the
protection of the United States Secret Service or |
is a public official.
|
For the purpose of this subsection (a), the term "public |
official" means
the Governor, Lieutenant Governor, Attorney |
General, Secretary of State,
State Comptroller, State |
Treasurer, member of the General Assembly, member of the United |
States Congress, Judge of the United States as defined in 28 |
U.S.C. 451, Justice of the United States as defined in 28 |
U.S.C. 451, United States Magistrate Judge as defined in 28 |
U.S.C. 639, Bankruptcy Judge appointed under 28 U.S.C. 152, or |
Supreme, Appellate, Circuit, or Associate Judge of the State of |
Illinois. The
term shall also include the spouse, child or |
children of a public official.
|
(b) The Department of Human Services (acting as successor |
to the
Department of Mental Health and Developmental |
Disabilities) and all
public or private hospitals and mental |
health facilities are required, as hereafter described in this |
subsection,
to furnish the Department of State Police only such |
information as may
be required for the sole purpose of |
determining whether an individual who
may be or may have been a |
patient is disqualified because of that status
from receiving |
or retaining a Firearm Owner's Identification Card or falls |
within the federal prohibitors under subsection (e), (f), (g), |
(r), (s), or (t) of Section 8 of the Firearm Owners |
|
Identification Card Act, or falls within the federal |
prohibitors in under
subsection (e) or (f) of Section 8 of the |
Firearm Owners Identification Card
Act or 18 U.S.C. 922(g) and |
(n). All physicians, clinical psychologists, or qualified |
examiners at public or private hospitals and mental health |
facilities or parts thereof as defined in this subsection |
shall, in the form and manner required
by the Department, |
provide notice directly to the Department of Human Services, or |
to his or her employer who shall then report to the Department, |
within 24 hours after determining that a patient as described |
in clause (2) of the definition of "patient" in Section 1.1 of |
the Firearm Owners Identification Card Act poses a clear and |
present danger to himself, herself, or others, or is determined |
to be developmentally disabled such information as shall be |
necessary for the
Department to comply with the reporting |
requirements to the Department of
State Police . This Such |
information shall be furnished within 24 hours after the |
physician, clinical psychologist, or qualified examiner has |
made a determination, or within 7 days after
admission to a |
public or private hospital or mental health facility or the |
provision of services to a patient described in clause (1) of |
the definition of "patient" in Section 1.1 of the Firearm |
Owners Identification Card Act clause (2) of this subsection |
(b) . Any such information disclosed under
this subsection shall
|
remain privileged and confidential, and shall not be |
redisclosed, except as required by subsection (e) clause (e)(2) |
|
of Section 3.1 of the Firearm Owners Identification Card Act, |
nor utilized
for any other purpose. The method of requiring the |
providing of such
information shall guarantee that no |
information is released beyond what
is necessary for this |
purpose. In addition, the information disclosed
shall be |
provided
by the Department within the time period established |
by Section 24-3 of the
Criminal Code of 2012 regarding the |
delivery of firearms. The method used
shall be sufficient to |
provide the necessary information within the
prescribed time |
period, which may include periodically providing
lists to the |
Department of Human Services
or any public or private hospital |
or mental health facility of Firearm Owner's Identification |
Card applicants
on which the Department or hospital shall |
indicate the identities of those
individuals who are to its |
knowledge disqualified from having a Firearm
Owner's |
Identification Card for reasons described herein. The |
Department
may provide for a centralized source
of information |
for the State on this subject under its jurisdiction. The |
identity of the person reporting under this subsection shall |
not be disclosed to the subject of the report. For the purposes |
of this subsection, the physician, clinical psychologist, or |
qualified examiner making the determination and his or her |
employer shall not be held criminally, civilly, or |
professionally liable for making or not making the notification |
required under this subsection, except for willful or wanton |
misconduct.
|
|
Any person, institution, or agency, under this Act, |
participating in
good faith in the reporting or disclosure of |
records and communications
otherwise in accordance with this |
provision or with rules, regulations or
guidelines issued by |
the Department shall have immunity from any
liability, civil, |
criminal or otherwise, that might result by reason of the
|
action. For the purpose of any proceeding, civil or criminal,
|
arising out of a report or disclosure in accordance with this |
provision,
the good faith of any person,
institution, or agency |
so reporting or disclosing shall be presumed. The
full extent |
of the immunity provided in this subsection (b) shall apply to
|
any person, institution or agency that fails to make a report |
or disclosure
in the good faith belief that the report or |
disclosure would violate
federal regulations governing the |
confidentiality of alcohol and drug abuse
patient records |
implementing 42 U.S.C. 290dd-3 and 290ee-3.
|
For purposes of this subsection (b) only, the following |
terms shall have
the meaning prescribed:
|
(1) (Blank). "Hospital" means only that type of |
institution which is providing
full-time residential |
facilities and treatment.
|
(1.3) "Clear and present danger" has the meaning as |
defined in Section 1.1 of the Firearm Owners Identification |
Card Act. |
(1.5) "Developmentally disabled" has the meaning as |
defined in Section 1.1 of the Firearm Owners Identification |
|
Card Act.
|
(2) "Patient" has the meaning as defined in Section 1.1 |
of the Firearm Owners Identification Card Act shall include |
only: (i) a person who is an in-patient or resident of any |
public or private hospital or mental health facility or |
(ii) a person who is an out-patient or provided services by |
a public or private hospital or mental health facility |
whose mental condition is of such a nature that it is |
manifested by violent, suicidal, threatening, or |
assaultive behavior or reported behavior, for which there |
is a reasonable belief by a physician, clinical |
psychologist, or qualified examiner that the condition |
poses a clear and present or imminent danger to the |
patient, any other person or the community meaning the |
patient's condition poses a clear and present danger in |
accordance with subsection
(f) of Section 8 of the Firearm |
Owners Identification Card Act. The terms physician, |
clinical psychologist, and qualified examiner are defined |
in Sections 1-120, 1-103, and 1-122 of the Mental Health |
and Developmental Disabilities Code .
|
(3) "Mental health facility" has the meaning as defined |
in Section 1.1 of the Firearm Owners Identification Card |
Act is defined by Section 1-114 of the Mental Health and |
Developmental Disabilities Code .
|
(c) Upon the request of a peace officer who takes a person |
into custody
and transports such person to a mental health or |
|
developmental disability
facility pursuant to Section 3-606 or |
4-404 of the Mental Health and
Developmental Disabilities Code |
or who transports a person from such facility,
a facility |
director shall furnish said peace officer the name, address, |
age
and name of the nearest relative of the person transported |
to or from the
mental health or developmental disability |
facility. In no case shall the
facility director disclose to |
the peace officer any information relating to the
diagnosis, |
treatment or evaluation of the person's mental or physical |
health.
|
For the purposes of this subsection (c), the terms "mental |
health or
developmental disability facility", "peace officer" |
and "facility director"
shall have the meanings ascribed to |
them in the Mental Health and
Developmental Disabilities Code.
|
(d) Upon the request of a peace officer or prosecuting |
authority who is
conducting a bona fide investigation of a |
criminal offense, or attempting to
apprehend a fugitive from |
justice,
a facility director may disclose whether a person is |
present at the facility.
Upon request of a peace officer or |
prosecuting authority who has a valid
forcible felony warrant |
issued, a facility director shall disclose: (1) whether
the |
person who is the subject of the warrant is present at the |
facility and (2)
the
date of that person's discharge or future |
discharge from the facility.
The requesting peace officer or |
prosecuting authority must furnish a case
number and the |
purpose of the investigation or an outstanding arrest warrant |
|
at
the time of the request. Any person, institution, or agency
|
participating in good faith in disclosing such information in |
accordance with
this subsection (d) is immune from any |
liability, civil, criminal or
otherwise, that might result by |
reason of the action.
|
(Source: P.A. 96-193, eff. 8-10-09; 97-1150, eff. 1-25-13.)
|
Section 170. The Probate Act of 1975 is amended by adding |
Section 11a-24 as follows: |
(755 ILCS 5/11a-24 new) |
Sec. 11a-24. Notification; Department of State Police. |
When a court adjudges a respondent to be a disabled person |
under this Article, the court shall direct
the circuit court |
clerk to notify the
Department of State Police, Firearm Owner's |
Identification
(FOID) Office, in a form and manner prescribed |
by the Department of State Police, and shall forward a copy of |
the court order to the Department no later than 7 days after |
the entry of the order. Upon receipt of the order, the |
Department of State Police shall provide notification to the |
National Instant Criminal Background Check System. |
Section 195. No acceleration or delay. Where this Act makes |
changes in a statute that is represented in this Act by text |
that is not yet or no longer in effect (for example, a Section |
represented by multiple versions), the use of that text does |