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Public Act 099-0628 |
SB2777 Enrolled | LRB099 20630 RLC 45213 b |
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AN ACT concerning criminal law.
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Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois, |
represented in the General Assembly:
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Section 5. The Sex Offender Management Board Act is amended |
by changing Section 17 as follows: |
(20 ILCS 4026/17)
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Sec. 17. Sentencing of sex offenders; treatment based upon |
evaluation required.
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(a) Each felony sex offender sentenced by the court for a |
sex offense shall
be
required as a part of any sentence to |
probation, conditional release, or
periodic imprisonment to |
undergo treatment based upon the recommendations of
the |
evaluation made pursuant to Section 16 or based upon any |
subsequent
recommendations by the Administrative Office of the |
Illinois Courts or the
county probation department, whichever |
is appropriate. Beginning on January 1, 2014, the treatment |
shall be with a sex offender treatment provider or associate |
sex offender provider as defined in Section 10 of this Act and |
at
the offender's own expense based upon the offender's ability |
to pay for such
treatment.
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(b) Beginning on January 1, 2004, each sex offender placed |
on parole, aftercare release, or mandatory supervised
release |
by the Prisoner Review Board shall be required as a condition |
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of parole or aftercare release
to undergo treatment based upon |
any evaluation or subsequent reevaluation
regarding such |
offender during the offender's incarceration or any period of
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parole or aftercare release. Beginning on January 1, 2014, the |
treatment shall be by a sex offender treatment provider or |
associate sex offender provider as defined in Section 10 of |
this Act and
at the offender's expense based upon the |
offender's ability to pay for such
treatment.
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(Source: P.A. 97-1098, eff. 1-1-13; 98-558, eff. 1-1-14.) |
Section 10. The Juvenile Court Act of 1987 is amended by |
changing Sections 5-710, 5-740, and 5-745 as follows:
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(705 ILCS 405/5-710)
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Sec. 5-710. Kinds of sentencing orders.
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(1) The following kinds of sentencing orders may be made in |
respect of
wards of the court:
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(a) Except as provided in Sections 5-805, 5-810, 5-815, |
a minor who is
found
guilty under Section 5-620 may be:
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(i) put on probation or conditional discharge and |
released to his or her
parents, guardian or legal |
custodian, provided, however, that any such minor
who |
is not committed to the Department of Juvenile Justice |
under
this subsection and who is found to be a |
delinquent for an offense which is
first degree murder, |
a Class X felony, or a forcible felony shall be placed |
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on
probation;
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(ii) placed in accordance with Section 5-740, with |
or without also being
put on probation or conditional |
discharge;
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(iii) required to undergo a substance abuse |
assessment conducted by a
licensed provider and |
participate in the indicated clinical level of care;
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(iv) on and after the effective date of this |
amendatory Act of the 98th General Assembly and before |
January 1, 2017, placed in the guardianship of the |
Department of Children and Family
Services, but only if |
the delinquent minor is under 16 years of age or, |
pursuant to Article II of this Act, a minor for whom an |
independent basis of abuse, neglect, or dependency |
exists. On and after January 1, 2017, placed in the |
guardianship of the Department of Children and Family
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Services, but only if the delinquent minor is under 15 |
years of age or, pursuant to Article II of this Act, a |
minor for whom an independent basis of abuse, neglect, |
or dependency exists. An independent basis exists when |
the allegations or adjudication of abuse, neglect, or |
dependency do not arise from the same facts, incident, |
or circumstances which give rise to a charge or |
adjudication of delinquency;
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(v) placed in detention for a period not to exceed |
30 days, either as
the
exclusive order of disposition |
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or, where appropriate, in conjunction with any
other |
order of disposition issued under this paragraph, |
provided that any such
detention shall be in a juvenile |
detention home and the minor so detained shall
be 10 |
years of age or older. However, the 30-day limitation |
may be extended by
further order of the court for a |
minor under age 15 committed to the Department
of |
Children and Family Services if the court finds that |
the minor is a danger
to himself or others. The minor |
shall be given credit on the sentencing order
of |
detention for time spent in detention under Sections |
5-501, 5-601, 5-710, or
5-720 of this
Article as a |
result of the offense for which the sentencing order |
was imposed.
The court may grant credit on a sentencing |
order of detention entered under a
violation of |
probation or violation of conditional discharge under |
Section
5-720 of this Article for time spent in |
detention before the filing of the
petition
alleging |
the violation. A minor shall not be deprived of credit |
for time spent
in detention before the filing of a |
violation of probation or conditional
discharge |
alleging the same or related act or acts. The |
limitation that the minor shall only be placed in a |
juvenile detention home does not apply as follows: |
Persons 18 years of age and older who have a |
petition of delinquency filed against them may be |
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confined in an adult detention facility. In making a |
determination whether to confine a person 18 years of |
age or older who has a petition of delinquency filed |
against the person, these factors, among other |
matters, shall be considered: |
(A) the age of the person; |
(B) any previous delinquent or criminal |
history of the person; |
(C) any previous abuse or neglect history of |
the person; |
(D) any mental health history of the person; |
and |
(E) any educational history of the person;
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(vi) ordered partially or completely emancipated |
in accordance with the
provisions of the Emancipation |
of Minors Act;
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(vii) subject to having his or her driver's license |
or driving
privileges
suspended for such time as |
determined by the court but only until he or she
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attains 18 years of age;
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(viii) put on probation or conditional discharge |
and placed in detention
under Section 3-6039 of the |
Counties Code for a period not to exceed the period
of |
incarceration permitted by law for adults found guilty |
of the same offense
or offenses for which the minor was |
adjudicated delinquent, and in any event no
longer than |
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upon attainment of age 21; this subdivision (viii) |
notwithstanding
any contrary provision of the law;
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(ix) ordered to undergo a medical or other |
procedure to have a tattoo
symbolizing allegiance to a |
street gang removed from his or her body; or |
(x) placed in electronic home detention under Part |
7A of this Article.
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(b) A minor found to be guilty may be committed to the |
Department of
Juvenile Justice under Section 5-750 if the |
minor is at least 13 years and under 20 years of age,
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provided that the commitment to the Department of Juvenile |
Justice shall be made only if the minor was found guilty of |
a felony offense or first degree murder a term of |
imprisonment in the penitentiary system of the Department |
of Corrections is permitted by law for
adults found guilty |
of the offense for which the minor was adjudicated
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delinquent . The court shall include in the sentencing order |
any pre-custody credits the minor is entitled to under |
Section 5-4.5-100 of the Unified Code of Corrections. The |
time during which a minor is in custody before being |
released
upon the request of a parent, guardian or legal |
custodian shall also be considered
as time spent in |
custody.
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(c) When a minor is found to be guilty for an offense |
which is a violation
of the Illinois Controlled Substances |
Act, the Cannabis Control Act, or the Methamphetamine |
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Control and Community Protection Act and made
a ward of the |
court, the court may enter a disposition order requiring |
the
minor to undergo assessment,
counseling or treatment in |
a substance abuse program approved by the Department
of |
Human Services.
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(2) Any sentencing order other than commitment to the |
Department of
Juvenile Justice may provide for protective |
supervision under
Section 5-725 and may include an order of |
protection under Section 5-730.
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(3) Unless the sentencing order expressly so provides, it |
does not operate
to close proceedings on the pending petition, |
but is subject to modification
until final closing and |
discharge of the proceedings under Section 5-750.
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(4) In addition to any other sentence, the court may order |
any
minor
found to be delinquent to make restitution, in |
monetary or non-monetary form,
under the terms and conditions |
of Section 5-5-6 of the Unified Code of
Corrections, except |
that the "presentencing hearing" referred to in that
Section
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shall be
the sentencing hearing for purposes of this Section. |
The parent, guardian or
legal custodian of the minor may be |
ordered by the court to pay some or all of
the restitution on |
the minor's behalf, pursuant to the Parental Responsibility
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Law. The State's Attorney is authorized to act
on behalf of any |
victim in seeking restitution in proceedings under this
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Section, up to the maximum amount allowed in Section 5 of the |
Parental
Responsibility Law.
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(5) Any sentencing order where the minor is committed or |
placed in
accordance
with Section 5-740 shall provide for the |
parents or guardian of the estate of
the minor to pay to the |
legal custodian or guardian of the person of the minor
such |
sums as are determined by the custodian or guardian of the |
person of the
minor as necessary for the minor's needs. The |
payments may not exceed the
maximum amounts provided for by |
Section 9.1 of the Children and Family Services
Act.
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(6) Whenever the sentencing order requires the minor to |
attend school or
participate in a program of training, the |
truant officer or designated school
official shall regularly |
report to the court if the minor is a chronic or
habitual |
truant under Section 26-2a of the School Code. Notwithstanding |
any other provision of this Act, in instances in which |
educational services are to be provided to a minor in a |
residential facility where the minor has been placed by the |
court, costs incurred in the provision of those educational |
services must be allocated based on the requirements of the |
School Code.
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(7) In no event shall a guilty minor be committed to the |
Department of
Juvenile Justice for a period of time in
excess |
of
that period for which an adult could be committed for the |
same act. The court shall include in the sentencing order a |
limitation on the period of confinement not to exceed the |
maximum period of imprisonment the court could impose under |
Article V of the Unified Code of Corrections.
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(7.5) In no event shall a guilty minor be committed to the |
Department of Juvenile Justice or placed in detention when the |
act for which the minor was adjudicated delinquent would not be |
illegal if committed by an adult. |
(7.6) In no event shall a guilty minor be committed to the |
Department of Juvenile Justice for an offense which is a Class |
4 felony under Section 19-4 (criminal trespass to a residence), |
21-1 (criminal damage to property), 21-1.01 (criminal damage to |
government supported property), 21-1.3 (criminal defacement of |
property), 26-1 (disorderly conduct), or 31-4 (obstructing |
justice), of the Criminal Code of 2012. |
(8) A minor found to be guilty for reasons that include a |
violation of
Section 21-1.3 of the Criminal Code of 1961 or the |
Criminal Code of 2012 shall be ordered to perform
community |
service for not less than 30 and not more than 120 hours, if
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community service is available in the jurisdiction. The |
community service
shall include, but need not be limited to, |
the cleanup and repair of the damage
that was caused by the |
violation or similar damage to property located in the
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municipality or county in which the violation occurred. The |
order may be in
addition to any other order authorized by this |
Section.
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(8.5) A minor found to be guilty for reasons that include a |
violation of
Section
3.02 or Section 3.03 of the Humane Care |
for Animals Act or paragraph (d) of
subsection (1) of
Section |
21-1 of
the Criminal Code
of
1961 or paragraph (4) of |
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subsection (a) of Section 21-1 of the Criminal Code of 2012 |
shall be ordered to undergo medical or psychiatric treatment |
rendered by
a
psychiatrist or psychological treatment rendered |
by a clinical psychologist.
The order
may be in addition to any |
other order authorized by this Section.
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(9) In addition to any other sentencing order, the court |
shall order any
minor found
to be guilty for an act which would |
constitute, predatory criminal sexual
assault of a child, |
aggravated criminal sexual assault, criminal sexual
assault, |
aggravated criminal sexual abuse, or criminal sexual abuse if
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committed by an
adult to undergo medical testing to determine |
whether the defendant has any
sexually transmissible disease |
including a test for infection with human
immunodeficiency |
virus (HIV) or any other identified causative agency of
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acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS). Any medical test |
shall be performed
only by appropriately licensed medical |
practitioners and may include an
analysis of any bodily fluids |
as well as an examination of the minor's person.
Except as |
otherwise provided by law, the results of the test shall be |
kept
strictly confidential by all medical personnel involved in |
the testing and must
be personally delivered in a sealed |
envelope to the judge of the court in which
the sentencing |
order was entered for the judge's inspection in camera. Acting
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in accordance with the best interests of the victim and the |
public, the judge
shall have the discretion to determine to |
whom the results of the testing may
be revealed. The court |
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shall notify the minor of the results of the test for
infection |
with the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). The court shall |
also
notify the victim if requested by the victim, and if the |
victim is under the
age of 15 and if requested by the victim's |
parents or legal guardian, the court
shall notify the victim's |
parents or the legal guardian, of the results of the
test for |
infection with the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). The |
court
shall provide information on the availability of HIV |
testing and counseling at
the Department of Public Health |
facilities to all parties to whom the
results of the testing |
are revealed. The court shall order that the cost of
any test |
shall be paid by the county and may be taxed as costs against |
the
minor.
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(10) When a court finds a minor to be guilty the court |
shall, before
entering a sentencing order under this Section, |
make a finding whether the
offense committed either: (a) was |
related to or in furtherance of the criminal
activities of an |
organized gang or was motivated by the minor's membership in
or |
allegiance to an organized gang, or (b) involved a violation of
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subsection (a) of Section 12-7.1 of the Criminal Code of 1961 |
or the Criminal Code of 2012, a violation of
any
Section of |
Article 24 of the Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of |
2012, or a violation of any
statute that involved the wrongful |
use of a firearm. If the court determines
the question in the |
affirmative,
and the court does not commit the minor to the |
Department of Juvenile Justice, the court shall order the minor |
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to perform community service
for not less than 30 hours nor |
more than 120 hours, provided that community
service is |
available in the jurisdiction and is funded and approved by the
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county board of the county where the offense was committed. The |
community
service shall include, but need not be limited to, |
the cleanup and repair of
any damage caused by a violation of |
Section 21-1.3 of the Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal |
Code of 2012
and similar damage to property located in the |
municipality or county in which
the violation occurred. When |
possible and reasonable, the community service
shall be |
performed in the minor's neighborhood. This order shall be in
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addition to any other order authorized by this Section
except |
for an order to place the minor in the custody of the |
Department of
Juvenile Justice. For the purposes of this |
Section, "organized
gang" has the meaning ascribed to it in |
Section 10 of the Illinois Streetgang
Terrorism Omnibus |
Prevention Act.
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(11) If the court determines that the offense was committed |
in furtherance of the criminal activities of an organized gang, |
as provided in subsection (10), and that the offense involved |
the operation or use of a motor vehicle or the use of a |
driver's license or permit, the court shall notify the |
Secretary of State of that determination and of the period for |
which the minor shall be denied driving privileges. If, at the |
time of the determination, the minor does not hold a driver's |
license or permit, the court shall provide that the minor shall |
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not be issued a driver's license or permit until his or her |
18th birthday. If the minor holds a driver's license or permit |
at the time of the determination, the court shall provide that |
the minor's driver's license or permit shall be revoked until |
his or her 21st birthday, or until a later date or occurrence |
determined by the court. If the minor holds a driver's license |
at the time of the determination, the court may direct the |
Secretary of State to issue the minor a judicial driving |
permit, also known as a JDP. The JDP shall be subject to the |
same terms as a JDP issued under Section 6-206.1 of the |
Illinois Vehicle Code, except that the court may direct that |
the JDP be effective immediately.
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(12) If a minor is found to be guilty of a violation of
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subsection (a-7) of Section 1 of the Prevention of Tobacco Use |
by Minors Act, the
court may, in its discretion, and upon
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recommendation by the State's Attorney, order that minor and |
his or her parents
or legal
guardian to attend a smoker's |
education or youth diversion program as defined
in that Act if |
that
program is available in the jurisdiction where the |
offender resides.
Attendance at a smoker's education or youth |
diversion program
shall be time-credited against any community |
service time imposed for any
first violation of subsection |
(a-7) of Section 1 of that Act. In addition to any
other
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penalty
that the court may impose for a violation of subsection |
(a-7) of Section 1 of
that Act, the
court, upon request by the |
State's Attorney, may in its discretion
require
the offender to |
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remit a fee for his or her attendance at a smoker's
education |
or
youth diversion program.
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For purposes of this Section, "smoker's education program" |
or "youth
diversion program" includes, but is not limited to, a |
seminar designed to
educate a person on the physical and |
psychological effects of smoking tobacco
products and the |
health consequences of smoking tobacco products that can be
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conducted with a locality's youth diversion program.
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In addition to any other penalty that the court may impose |
under this
subsection
(12):
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(a) If a minor violates subsection (a-7) of Section 1 |
of the Prevention of
Tobacco Use by Minors Act, the court |
may
impose a sentence of 15 hours of
community service or a |
fine of $25 for a first violation.
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(b) A second violation by a minor of subsection (a-7) |
of Section 1 of that Act
that occurs
within 12 months after |
the first violation is punishable by a fine of $50 and
25
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hours of community service.
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(c) A third or subsequent violation by a minor of |
subsection (a-7) of Section
1 of that Act
that
occurs |
within 12 months after the first violation is punishable by |
a $100
fine
and 30 hours of community service.
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(d) Any second or subsequent violation not within the |
12-month time period
after the first violation is |
punishable as provided for a first violation.
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(Source: P.A. 98-536, eff. 8-23-13; 98-803, eff. 1-1-15; |
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99-268, eff. 1-1-16 .)
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(705 ILCS 405/5-740)
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Sec. 5-740. Placement; legal custody or guardianship.
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(1) If the court finds that the parents, guardian, or legal |
custodian of a
minor adjudged a ward of the court are unfit or |
are unable, for some reason
other than financial
circumstances |
alone, to care for, protect, train or discipline the minor or |
are
unwilling to do so, and that appropriate services aimed at |
family preservation
and family reunification have been |
unsuccessful in rectifying the conditions
which have led to a |
finding of unfitness or inability to care for, protect,
train |
or discipline the minor, and that it is in the best interest of |
the minor
to take him or her from the custody of his or her |
parents, guardian or
custodian, the
court
may:
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(a) place him or her in the custody of a suitable |
relative or other
person;
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(b) place him or her under the guardianship of a |
probation officer;
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(c) commit him or her to an agency for care or |
placement, except an
institution
under the authority of the |
Department of Juvenile Justice Corrections or of the |
Department of
Children and
Family Services;
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(d) commit him or her to some licensed training school |
or industrial
school; or
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(e) commit him or her to any appropriate institution |
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having among its
purposes the
care of delinquent children, |
including a child protective facility maintained
by a child |
protection district serving the county from which |
commitment is
made, but not including any institution under |
the authority of the Department
of Juvenile Justice |
Corrections or of the Department of Children and Family |
Services.
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(2) When making such placement, the court, wherever |
possible, shall select
a person holding the same religious |
belief as that of the minor or a private
agency controlled by |
persons of like religious faith of the minor and shall
require |
the Department of Children and
Family Services to otherwise |
comply with Section 7 of the Children and Family
Services Act |
in placing the child. In addition, whenever alternative plans |
for
placement are available, the court shall ascertain and |
consider, to the extent
appropriate in the particular case, the |
views and preferences of the minor.
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(3) When a minor is placed with a suitable relative or |
other person, the
court shall appoint him or her the legal |
custodian or guardian of the person of
the
minor. When a minor |
is committed to any agency, the court shall appoint the
proper |
officer or representative of the proper officer as legal |
custodian or
guardian of the
person of the minor. Legal |
custodians and guardians of the person of the minor
have the |
respective rights and duties set forth in subsection (9) of
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Section 5-105 except as otherwise provided by order of court; |
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but no guardian
of the person may consent to adoption of the |
minor. An agency whose
representative is appointed guardian of |
the person or legal custodian of the
minor may place him or her |
in any child care facility, but the facility must be
licensed |
under the Child Care Act of 1969 or have been approved by the
|
Department of Children and Family Services as meeting the |
standards established
for such licensing. Like authority and |
restrictions shall be conferred by the
court upon any probation |
officer who has been appointed guardian of the person
of a |
minor.
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(4) No placement by any probation officer or agency whose |
representative
is
appointed guardian of the person or legal |
custodian of a minor may be made in
any out of State
child care |
facility unless it complies with the Interstate Compact on the
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Placement of Children.
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(5) The clerk of the court shall issue to the guardian or |
legal custodian
of the person a certified copy of the order of |
court, as proof of his or her
authority. No other process is |
necessary as authority for the keeping of the
minor.
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(6) Legal custody or guardianship granted under this |
Section continues
until the court otherwise directs, but not |
after the minor reaches the age of
21 years except as set forth |
in Section 5-750.
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(Source: P.A. 90-590, eff. 1-1-99.)
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(705 ILCS 405/5-745)
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Sec. 5-745. Court review.
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(1) The court may require any legal custodian or guardian |
of the person
appointed under this Act, including the |
Department of Juvenile Justice for youth committed under |
Section 5-750 of this Act, to report periodically to the court |
or may cite him
or her into court and require him or her, or his |
or her agency, to make a full
and accurate report of
his or her |
or its doings in behalf of the minor, including efforts to |
secure post-release placement of the youth after release from |
the Department's facilities. The legal custodian or
guardian,
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within 10 days after the citation, shall make the report, |
either in writing
verified by affidavit or orally under oath in |
open court, or otherwise as the
court directs. Upon the hearing |
of the report the court may remove the legal
custodian or |
guardian and appoint another in his or her stead or restore the
|
minor to
the custody of his or her parents or former guardian |
or legal custodian.
|
(2) A guardian or legal custodian appointed by the court |
under Section 5-740 of this
Act shall file updated case plans |
with the court every 6 months. Every agency
which has |
guardianship of a child shall file a supplemental petition for |
court
review, or review by an administrative body appointed or |
approved by the court
and further order within 18 months of the |
sentencing order and each 18 months
thereafter. The petition |
shall state facts relative to the child's present
condition of |
physical, mental and emotional health as well as facts relative |
|
to
his or her present custodial or foster care. The petition |
shall be set for
hearing
and the clerk shall mail 10 days |
notice of the hearing by certified mail,
return receipt |
requested, to the person or agency having the physical custody
|
of the child, the minor and other interested parties unless a
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written waiver of notice is filed with the petition.
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If the minor is in the custody of the Illinois Department |
of Children and Family Services, pursuant to an order entered |
under this Article, the court shall conduct permanency hearings |
as set out in subsections (1), (2), and (3) of Section 2-28 of |
Article II of this Act. |
Rights of wards of the court under this Act are enforceable |
against any
public agency by complaints for relief by mandamus |
filed in any proceedings
brought under this Act.
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(3) The minor or any person interested in the minor may |
apply to the court
for a change in custody of the minor and the |
appointment of a new custodian or
guardian of the person or for |
the restoration of the minor to the custody of
his or her |
parents or former guardian or custodian. In the event that the
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minor has
attained 18 years of age and the guardian or |
custodian petitions the court for
an order terminating his or |
her guardianship or custody, guardianship or legal
custody
|
shall terminate automatically 30 days after the receipt of the |
petition unless
the
court orders otherwise. No legal custodian |
or guardian of the person may be
removed without his or her |
consent until given notice and an opportunity to be
heard by |
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the court.
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(Source: P.A. 96-178, eff. 1-1-10; 97-518, eff. 1-1-12.)
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Section 15. The Illinois Controlled Substances Act is |
amended by changing Section 509 as follows:
|
(720 ILCS 570/509) (from Ch. 56 1/2, par. 1509)
|
Sec. 509.
Whenever any court in this State grants probation |
to any person that the
court has reason to believe is or has |
been an addict or unlawful possessor
of controlled substances, |
the court shall require, as a condition of
probation, that the |
probationer submit to periodic tests by the Department
of |
Corrections to determine by means of appropriate chemical |
detection
tests whether the probationer is using controlled |
substances. The court may
require as a condition of probation |
that the probationer enter an approved
treatment program, if |
the court determines that the probationer is addicted
to a |
controlled substance. Whenever the Prisoner Review Parole and |
Pardon Board grants
parole or the Department of Juvenile |
Justice grants aftercare release to a person believed to have |
whom the Board has reason to believe has been an
unlawful |
possessor or addict of controlled substances, the Board or |
Department shall
require as a condition of parole or aftercare |
release that the parolee or aftercare releasee submit to |
appropriate
periodic chemical tests by the Department of |
Corrections or the Department of Juvenile Justice to determine
|
|
whether the parolee or aftercare releasee is using controlled |
substances.
|
(Source: P.A. 98-558, eff. 1-1-14.)
|
Section 20. The Rights of Crime Victims and Witnesses Act |
is amended by changing Sections 4.5 and 5 as follows:
|
(725 ILCS 120/4.5)
|
Sec. 4.5. Procedures to implement the rights of crime |
victims. To afford
crime victims their rights, law enforcement, |
prosecutors, judges and
corrections will provide information, |
as appropriate of the following
procedures:
|
(a) At the request of the crime victim, law enforcement |
authorities
investigating the case shall provide notice of the |
status of the investigation,
except where the State's Attorney |
determines that disclosure of such
information would |
unreasonably interfere with the investigation, until such
time |
as the alleged assailant is apprehended or the investigation is |
closed.
|
(a-5) When law enforcement authorities re-open a closed |
case to resume investigating, they shall provide notice of the |
re-opening of the case, except where the State's Attorney |
determines that disclosure of such information would |
unreasonably interfere with the investigation. |
(b) The office of the State's Attorney:
|
(1) shall provide notice of the filing of an |
|
information, the return of an
indictment, or the
filing of |
a petition to adjudicate a minor as a delinquent for a |
violent
crime;
|
(2) shall provide timely notice of the date, time, and |
place of court proceedings; of any change in the date, |
time, and place of court proceedings; and of any |
cancellation of court proceedings. Notice shall be |
provided in sufficient time, wherever possible, for the |
victim to
make arrangements to attend or to prevent an |
unnecessary appearance at court proceedings;
|
(3) or victim advocate personnel shall provide |
information of social
services and financial assistance |
available for victims of crime, including
information of |
how to apply for these services and assistance;
|
(3.5) or victim advocate personnel shall provide |
information about available victim services, including |
referrals to programs, counselors, and agencies that |
assist a victim to deal with trauma, loss, and grief; |
(4) shall assist in having any stolen or other personal |
property held by
law enforcement authorities for |
evidentiary or other purposes returned as
expeditiously as |
possible, pursuant to the procedures set out in Section |
115-9
of the Code of Criminal Procedure of 1963;
|
(5) or victim advocate personnel shall provide |
appropriate employer
intercession services to ensure that |
employers of victims will cooperate with
the criminal |
|
justice system in order to minimize an employee's loss of |
pay and
other benefits resulting from court appearances;
|
(6) shall provide, whenever possible, a secure waiting
|
area during court proceedings that does not require victims |
to be in close
proximity to defendants or juveniles accused |
of a violent crime, and their
families and friends;
|
(7) shall provide notice to the crime victim of the |
right to have a
translator present at all court proceedings |
and, in compliance with the federal Americans
with |
Disabilities Act of 1990, the right to communications |
access through a
sign language interpreter or by other |
means;
|
(8) (blank);
|
(8.5) shall inform the victim of the right to be |
present at all court proceedings, unless the victim is to |
testify and the court determines that the victim's |
testimony would be materially affected if the victim hears |
other testimony at trial; |
(9) shall inform the victim of the right to have |
present at all court
proceedings, subject to the rules of |
evidence and confidentiality, an advocate and other |
support
person of the victim's choice; |
(9.3) shall inform the victim of the right to retain an |
attorney, at the
victim's own expense, who, upon written |
notice filed with the clerk of the
court and State's |
Attorney, is to receive copies of all notices, motions and
|
|
court orders filed thereafter in the case, in the same |
manner as if the victim
were a named party in the case;
|
(9.5) shall inform the victim of (A) the victim's right |
under Section 6 of this Act to make a victim impact |
statement at the sentencing hearing; (B) the right of the |
victim's spouse, guardian, parent, grandparent and other |
immediate family and household members under Section 6 of |
this Act to present an impact statement at sentencing; and |
(C) if a presentence report is to be prepared, the right of |
the victim's spouse, guardian, parent, grandparent and |
other immediate family and household members to submit |
information to the preparer of the presentence report about |
the effect the offense has had on the victim and the |
person; |
(10) at the sentencing shall make a good faith attempt |
to explain
the minimum amount of time during which the |
defendant may actually be
physically imprisoned. The |
Office of the State's Attorney shall further notify
the |
crime victim of the right to request from the Prisoner |
Review Board
or Department of Juvenile Justice information |
concerning the release of the defendant under subparagraph |
(d)(1)
of this Section ;
|
(11) shall request restitution at sentencing and as |
part of a plea agreement if the victim requests |
restitution;
|
(12) shall, upon the court entering a verdict of not |
|
guilty by reason of insanity, inform the victim of the |
notification services available from the Department of |
Human Services, including the statewide telephone number, |
under subparagraph (d)(2) of this Section;
|
(13) shall provide notice within a reasonable time |
after receipt of notice from
the custodian, of the release |
of the defendant on bail or personal recognizance
or the |
release from detention of a minor who has been detained;
|
(14) shall explain in nontechnical language the |
details of any plea or verdict of
a defendant, or any |
adjudication of a juvenile as a delinquent;
|
(15) shall make all reasonable efforts to consult with |
the crime victim before the Office of
the State's Attorney |
makes an offer of a plea bargain to the defendant or
enters |
into negotiations with the defendant concerning a possible |
plea
agreement, and shall consider the written victim |
impact statement, if prepared
prior to entering into a plea |
agreement. The right to consult with the prosecutor does |
not include the right to veto a plea agreement or to insist |
the case go to trial. If the State's Attorney has not |
consulted with the victim prior to making an offer or |
entering into plea negotiations with the defendant, the |
Office of the State's Attorney shall notify the victim of |
the offer or the negotiations within 2 business days and |
confer with the victim;
|
(16) shall provide notice of the ultimate disposition |
|
of the cases arising from
an indictment or an information, |
or a petition to have a juvenile adjudicated
as a |
delinquent for a violent crime;
|
(17) shall provide notice of any appeal taken by the |
defendant and information
on how to contact the appropriate |
agency handling the appeal, and how to request notice of |
any hearing, oral argument, or decision of an appellate |
court;
|
(18) shall provide timely notice of any request for |
post-conviction review filed by the
defendant under |
Article 122 of the Code of Criminal Procedure of 1963, and |
of
the date, time and place of any hearing concerning the |
petition. Whenever
possible, notice of the hearing shall be |
given within 48 hours of the court's scheduling of the |
hearing; and
|
(19) shall forward a copy of any statement presented |
under Section 6 to the
Prisoner Review Board or Department |
of Juvenile Justice to be considered by the Board in making |
a its determination
under Section 3-2.5-85 or subsection |
(b) of Section 3-3-8 of the Unified Code of Corrections.
|
(c) The court shall ensure that the rights of the victim |
are afforded. |
(c-5) The following procedures shall be followed to afford |
victims the rights guaranteed by Article I, Section 8.1 of the |
Illinois Constitution: |
(1) Written notice. A victim may complete a written |
|
notice of intent to assert rights on a form prepared by the |
Office of the Attorney General and provided to the victim |
by the State's Attorney. The victim may at any time provide |
a revised written notice to the State's Attorney. The |
State's Attorney shall file the written notice with the |
court. At the beginning of any court proceeding in which |
the right of a victim may be at issue, the court and |
prosecutor shall review the written notice to determine |
whether the victim has asserted the right that may be at |
issue. |
(2) Victim's retained attorney. A victim's attorney |
shall file an entry of appearance limited to assertion of |
the victim's rights. Upon the filing of the entry of |
appearance and service on the State's Attorney and the |
defendant, the attorney is to receive copies of all |
notices, motions and court orders filed thereafter in the |
case. |
(3) Standing. The victim has standing to assert the |
rights enumerated in subsection (a) of Article I, Section |
8.1 of the Illinois Constitution and the statutory rights |
under Section 4 of this Act in any court exercising |
jurisdiction over the criminal case. The prosecuting |
attorney, a victim, or the victim's retained attorney may |
assert the victim's rights. The defendant in the criminal |
case has no standing to assert a right of the victim in any |
court proceeding, including on appeal. |
|
(4) Assertion of and enforcement of rights. |
(A) The prosecuting attorney shall assert a |
victim's right or request enforcement of a right by |
filing a motion or by orally asserting the right or |
requesting enforcement in open court in the criminal |
case outside the presence of the jury. The prosecuting |
attorney shall consult with the victim and the victim's |
attorney regarding the assertion or enforcement of a |
right. If the prosecuting attorney decides not to |
assert or enforce a victim's right, the prosecuting |
attorney shall notify the victim or the victim's |
attorney in sufficient time to allow the victim or the |
victim's attorney to assert the right or to seek |
enforcement of a right. |
(B) If the prosecuting attorney elects not to |
assert a victim's right or to seek enforcement of a |
right, the victim or the victim's attorney may assert |
the victim's right or request enforcement of a right by |
filing a motion or by orally asserting the right or |
requesting enforcement in open court in the criminal |
case outside the presence of the jury. |
(C) If the prosecuting attorney asserts a victim's |
right or seeks enforcement of a right, and the court |
denies the assertion of the right or denies the request |
for enforcement of a right, the victim or victim's |
attorney may file a motion to assert the victim's right |
|
or to request enforcement of the right within 10 days |
of the court's ruling. The motion need not demonstrate |
the grounds for a motion for reconsideration. The court |
shall rule on the merits of the motion. |
(D) The court shall take up and decide any motion |
or request asserting or seeking enforcement of a |
victim's right without delay, unless a specific time |
period is specified by law or court rule. The reasons |
for any decision denying the motion or request shall be |
clearly stated on the record. |
(5) Violation of rights and remedies. |
(A) If the court determines that a victim's right |
has been violated, the court shall determine the |
appropriate remedy for the violation of the victim's |
right by hearing from the victim and the parties, |
considering all factors relevant to the issue, and then |
awarding appropriate relief to the victim. |
(B) The appropriate remedy shall include only |
actions necessary to provide the victim the right to |
which the victim was entitled and may include reopening |
previously held proceedings; however, in no event |
shall the court vacate a conviction. Any remedy shall |
be tailored to provide the victim an appropriate remedy |
without violating any constitutional right of the |
defendant. In no event shall the appropriate remedy be |
a new trial, damages, or costs. |
|
(6) Right to be heard. Whenever a victim has the right |
to be heard, the court shall allow the victim to exercise |
the right in any reasonable manner the victim chooses. |
(7) Right to attend trial. A party must file a written |
motion to exclude a victim from trial at least 60 days |
prior to the date set for trial. The motion must state with |
specificity the reason exclusion is necessary to protect a |
constitutional right of the party, and must contain an |
offer of proof. The court shall rule on the motion within |
30 days. If the motion is granted, the court shall set |
forth on the record the facts that support its finding that |
the victim's testimony will be materially affected if the |
victim hears other testimony at trial. |
(8) Right to have advocate present. A party who intends |
to call an advocate as a witness must seek permission of |
the court before the subpoena is issued. The party must |
file a written motion and offer of proof regarding the |
anticipated testimony of the advocate in sufficient time to |
allow the court to rule and the victim to seek appellate |
review. The court shall rule on the motion without delay. |
(9) Right to notice and hearing before disclosure of |
confidential or privileged information or records. A |
defendant who seeks to subpoena records of or concerning |
the victim that are confidential or privileged by law must |
seek permission of the court before the subpoena is issued. |
The defendant must file a written motion and an offer of |
|
proof regarding the relevance, admissibility and |
materiality of the records. If the court finds by a |
preponderance of the evidence that: (A) the records are not |
protected by an absolute privilege and (B) the records |
contain relevant, admissible, and material evidence that |
is not available through other witnesses or evidence, the |
court shall issue a subpoena requiring a sealed copy of the |
records be delivered to the court to be reviewed in camera. |
If, after conducting an in camera review of the records, |
the court determines that due process requires disclosure |
of any portion of the records, the court shall provide |
copies of what it intends to disclose to the prosecuting |
attorney and the victim. The prosecuting attorney and the |
victim shall have 30 days to seek appellate review before |
the records are disclosed to the defendant. The disclosure |
of copies of any portion of the records to the prosecuting |
attorney does not make the records subject to discovery. |
(10) Right to notice of court proceedings. If the |
victim is not present at a court proceeding in which a |
right of the victim is at issue, the court shall ask the |
prosecuting attorney whether the victim was notified of the |
time, place, and purpose of the court proceeding and that |
the victim had a right to be heard at the court proceeding. |
If the court determines that timely notice was not given or |
that the victim was not adequately informed of the nature |
of the court proceeding, the court shall not rule on any |
|
substantive issues, accept a plea, or impose a sentence and |
shall continue the hearing for the time necessary to notify |
the victim of the time, place and nature of the court |
proceeding. The time between court proceedings shall not be |
attributable to the State under Section 103-5 of the Code |
of Criminal Procedure of 1963. |
(11) Right to timely disposition of the case. A victim |
has the right to timely disposition of the case so as to |
minimize the stress, cost, and inconvenience resulting |
from the victim's involvement in the case. Before ruling on |
a motion to continue trial or other court proceeding, the |
court shall inquire into the circumstances for the request |
for the delay and, if the victim has provided written |
notice of the assertion of the right to a timely |
disposition, and whether the victim objects to the delay. |
If the victim objects, the prosecutor shall inform the |
court of the victim's objections. If the prosecutor has not |
conferred with the victim about the continuance, the |
prosecutor shall inform the court of the attempts to |
confer. If the court finds the attempts of the prosecutor |
to confer with the victim were inadequate to protect the |
victim's right to be heard, the court shall give the |
prosecutor at least 3 but not more than 5 business days to |
confer with the victim. In ruling on a motion to continue, |
the court shall consider the reasons for the requested |
continuance, the number and length of continuances that |
|
have been granted, the victim's objections and procedures |
to avoid further delays. If a continuance is granted over |
the victim's objection, the court shall specify on the |
record the reasons for the continuance and the procedures |
that have been or will be taken to avoid further delays. |
(12) Right to Restitution. |
(A) If the victim has asserted the right to |
restitution and the amount of restitution is known at |
the time of sentencing, the court shall enter the |
judgment of restitution at the time of sentencing. |
(B) If the victim has asserted the right to |
restitution and the amount of restitution is not known |
at the time of sentencing, the prosecutor shall, within |
5 days after sentencing, notify the victim what |
information and documentation related to restitution |
is needed and that the information and documentation |
must be provided to the prosecutor within 45 days after |
sentencing. Failure to timely provide information and |
documentation related to restitution shall be deemed a |
waiver of the right to restitution. The prosecutor |
shall file and serve within 60 days after sentencing a |
proposed judgment for restitution and a notice that |
includes information concerning the identity of any |
victims or other persons seeking restitution, whether |
any victim or other person expressly declines |
restitution, the nature and amount of any damages |
|
together with any supporting documentation, a |
restitution amount recommendation, and the names of |
any co-defendants and their case numbers. Within 30 |
days after receipt of the proposed judgment for |
restitution, the defendant shall file any objection to |
the proposed judgment, a statement of grounds for the |
objection, and a financial statement. If the defendant |
does not file an objection, the court may enter the |
judgment for restitution without further proceedings. |
If the defendant files an objection and either party |
requests a hearing, the court shall schedule a hearing. |
(13) Access to presentence reports. |
(A) The victim may request a copy of the |
presentence report prepared under the Unified Code of |
Corrections from the State's Attorney. The State's |
Attorney shall redact the following information before |
providing a copy of the report: |
(i) the defendant's mental history and |
condition; |
(ii) any evaluation prepared under subsection |
(b) or (b-5) of Section 5-3-2; and |
(iii) the name, address, phone number, and |
other personal information about any other victim. |
(B) The State's Attorney or the defendant may |
request the court redact other information in the |
report that may endanger the safety of any person. |
|
(C) The State's Attorney may orally disclose to the |
victim any of the information that has been redacted if |
there is a reasonable likelihood that the information |
will be stated in court at the sentencing. |
(D) The State's Attorney must advise the victim |
that the victim must maintain the confidentiality of |
the report and other information. Any dissemination of |
the report or information that was not stated at a |
court proceeding constitutes indirect criminal |
contempt of court. |
(14) Appellate relief. If the trial court denies the |
relief requested, the victim, the victim's attorney or the |
prosecuting attorney may file an appeal within 30 days of |
the trial court's ruling. The trial or appellate court may |
stay the court proceedings if the court finds that a stay |
would not violate a constitutional right of the defendant. |
If the appellate court denies the relief sought, the |
reasons for the denial shall be clearly stated in a written |
opinion. In any appeal in a criminal case, the State may |
assert as error the court's denial of any crime victim's |
right in the proceeding to which the appeal relates. |
(15) Limitation on appellate relief. In no case shall |
an appellate court provide a new trial to remedy the |
violation of a victim's right. |
(d)(1) The Prisoner Review Board shall inform a victim or |
any other
concerned citizen, upon written request, of the |
|
prisoner's release on parole, aftercare release,
mandatory |
supervised release, electronic detention, work release, |
international transfer or exchange, or by the
custodian , other |
than the Department of Juvenile Justice, of the discharge of |
any individual who was adjudicated a delinquent
for a crime |
from State custody and by the sheriff of the appropriate
county |
of any such person's final discharge from county custody.
The |
Prisoner Review Board, upon written request, shall provide to a |
victim or
any other concerned citizen a recent photograph of |
any person convicted of a
felony, upon his or her release from |
custody.
The Prisoner
Review Board, upon written request, shall |
inform a victim or any other
concerned citizen when feasible at |
least 7 days prior to the prisoner's release
on furlough of the |
times and dates of such furlough. Upon written request by
the |
victim or any other concerned citizen, the State's Attorney |
shall notify
the person once of the times and dates of release |
of a prisoner sentenced to
periodic imprisonment. Notification |
shall be based on the most recent
information as to victim's or |
other concerned citizen's residence or other
location |
available to the notifying authority.
|
(2) When the defendant has been committed to the Department |
of
Human Services pursuant to Section 5-2-4 or any other
|
provision of the Unified Code of Corrections, the victim may |
request to be
notified by the releasing authority of the |
approval by the court of an on-grounds pass, a supervised |
off-grounds pass, an unsupervised off-grounds pass, or |
|
conditional release; the release on an off-grounds pass; the |
return from an off-grounds pass; transfer to another facility; |
conditional release; escape; death; or final discharge from |
State
custody. The Department of Human Services shall establish |
and maintain a statewide telephone number to be used by victims |
to make notification requests under these provisions and shall |
publicize this telephone number on its website and to the |
State's Attorney of each county.
|
(3) In the event of an escape from State custody, the |
Department of
Corrections or the Department of Juvenile Justice |
immediately shall notify the Prisoner Review Board of the |
escape
and the Prisoner Review Board shall notify the victim. |
The notification shall
be based upon the most recent |
information as to the victim's residence or other
location |
available to the Board. When no such information is available, |
the
Board shall make all reasonable efforts to obtain the |
information and make
the notification. When the escapee is |
apprehended, the Department of
Corrections or the Department of |
Juvenile Justice immediately shall notify the Prisoner Review |
Board and the Board
shall notify the victim.
|
(4) The victim of the crime for which the prisoner has been |
sentenced
shall receive reasonable written notice not less than |
30 days prior to the
parole or aftercare release hearing or |
target aftercare release date and may submit, in writing, on |
film, videotape or other
electronic means or in the form of a |
recording prior to the parole hearing or target aftercare |
|
release date or in person at the parole hearing or aftercare |
release protest hearing
or if a victim of a violent crime, by |
calling the
toll-free number established in subsection (f) of |
this Section, information
for
consideration by the Prisoner |
Review Board or Department of Juvenile Justice . The
victim |
shall be notified within 7 days after the prisoner has been |
granted
parole or aftercare release and shall be informed of |
the right to inspect the registry of parole or aftercare |
release
decisions, established under subsection (g) of Section |
3-3-5 of the Unified
Code of Corrections. The provisions of |
this paragraph (4) are subject to the
Open Parole Hearings Act.
|
(5) If a statement is presented under Section 6, the |
Prisoner Review Board or Department of Juvenile Justice
shall |
inform the victim of any order of discharge entered by the |
Board pursuant
to Section 3-2.5-85 or 3-3-8 of the Unified Code |
of Corrections.
|
(6) At the written or oral request of the victim of the |
crime for which the
prisoner was sentenced or the State's |
Attorney of the county where the person seeking parole or |
aftercare release was prosecuted, the Prisoner Review Board or |
Department of Juvenile Justice shall notify the victim and the |
State's Attorney of the county where the person seeking parole |
or aftercare release was prosecuted of
the death of the |
prisoner if the prisoner died while on parole or aftercare |
release or mandatory
supervised release.
|
(7) When a defendant who has been committed to the |
|
Department of
Corrections, the Department of Juvenile Justice, |
or the Department of Human Services is released or discharged |
and
subsequently committed to the Department of Human Services |
as a sexually
violent person and the victim had requested to be |
notified by the releasing
authority of the defendant's |
discharge, conditional release, death, or escape from State |
custody, the releasing
authority shall provide to the |
Department of Human Services such information
that would allow |
the Department of Human Services to contact the victim.
|
(8) When a defendant has been convicted of a sex offense as |
defined in Section 2 of the Sex Offender Registration Act and |
has been sentenced to the Department of Corrections or the |
Department of Juvenile Justice, the Prisoner Review Board or |
the Department of Juvenile Justice shall notify the victim of |
the sex offense of the prisoner's eligibility for release on |
parole, aftercare release,
mandatory supervised release, |
electronic detention, work release, international transfer or |
exchange, or by the
custodian of the discharge of any |
individual who was adjudicated a delinquent
for a sex offense |
from State custody and by the sheriff of the appropriate
county |
of any such person's final discharge from county custody. The |
notification shall be made to the victim at least 30 days, |
whenever possible, before release of the sex offender. |
(e) The officials named in this Section may satisfy some or |
all of their
obligations to provide notices and other |
information through participation in a
statewide victim and |
|
witness notification system established by the Attorney
|
General under Section 8.5 of this Act.
|
(f) To permit a crime victim of a violent crime to provide |
information to the
Prisoner Review Board or the Department of |
Juvenile Justice for consideration by the
Board or Department |
at a parole hearing or before an aftercare release decision |
hearing of a person who committed the crime against
the victim |
in accordance with clause (d)(4) of this Section or at a |
proceeding
to determine the conditions of mandatory supervised |
release of a person
sentenced to a determinate sentence or at a |
hearing on revocation of mandatory
supervised release of a |
person sentenced to a determinate sentence, the Board
shall |
establish a toll-free number that may be accessed by the victim |
of
a violent crime to present that information to the Board.
|
(Source: P.A. 98-372, eff. 1-1-14; 98-558, eff. 1-1-14; 98-756, |
eff. 7-16-14; 99-413, eff. 8-20-15.)
|
(725 ILCS 120/5) (from Ch. 38, par. 1405)
|
Sec. 5. Rights of Witnesses.
|
(a) Witnesses as defined in subsection (b) of
Section 3 of |
this Act shall have the following rights:
|
(1) to be notified by the Office of the State's |
Attorney of all court
proceedings at which the witness' |
presence is required in a reasonable
amount of time prior |
to the proceeding, and to be notified of the
cancellation |
of any scheduled court proceeding in sufficient time to
|
|
prevent an unnecessary appearance in court, where |
possible;
|
(2) to be provided with appropriate employer |
intercession services by
the Office of the State's Attorney |
or the victim advocate personnel to
ensure
that employers |
of witnesses will cooperate with the criminal justice |
system
in order to minimize an employee's loss of pay and |
other benefits resulting
from court appearances;
|
(3) to be provided, whenever possible, a secure waiting |
area during
court proceedings that does not require |
witnesses to be in close proximity
to defendants and their |
families and friends;
|
(4) to be provided with notice by the Office of the |
State's Attorney,
where necessary, of the right to have a |
translator
present whenever the witness' presence is |
required and, in compliance with the federal Americans
with |
Disabilities Act of 1990, to be provided with notice of the |
right to communications access through a
sign language |
interpreter or by other means.
|
(b) At the written request of the witness, the witness |
shall:
|
(1) receive notice from the office of the State's |
Attorney of any request
for post-conviction review filed by |
the defendant under Article 122 of the Code
of Criminal |
Procedure of 1963, and of the date, time, and place of any |
hearing
concerning the petition for post-conviction |
|
review; whenever possible, notice
of the hearing on the |
petition shall be given in advance;
|
(2) receive notice by the releasing authority of the |
defendant's discharge
from State custody if the defendant |
was committed to the Department of Human Services under |
Section 5-2-4 or any other
provision of the Unified Code of |
Corrections;
|
(3) receive notice from the Prisoner Review Board of |
the prisoner's escape
from State custody, after the Board |
has been notified of the escape by the
Department of |
Corrections or the Department of Juvenile Justice;
when the |
escapee is apprehended, the Department of Corrections or |
the Department of Juvenile Justice shall
immediately |
notify the Prisoner Review Board and the Board shall notify |
the
witness;
|
(4) receive notice from the Prisoner Review Board or |
the Department of Juvenile Justice of the prisoner's
|
release on parole, aftercare release, electronic |
detention, work release or mandatory supervised
release |
and of the prisoner's final
discharge from parole, |
aftercare release, electronic detention, work release, or |
mandatory
supervised release.
|
(Source: P.A. 98-558, eff. 1-1-14.)
|
Section 25. The Sexually Violent Persons Commitment Act is |
amended by changing Section 15 as follows:
|
|
(725 ILCS 207/15)
|
Sec. 15. Sexually violent person petition; contents; |
filing.
|
(a) A petition alleging that a person is a sexually violent
|
person must be filed before the release or discharge of the |
person or within 30 days of placement onto parole, aftercare |
release, or mandatory supervised release for an offense |
enumerated in paragraph (e) of Section 5 of this Act. A |
petition may be filed by the following:
|
(1) The Attorney General on his or her own motion, |
after consulting with and advising the State's Attorney of |
the county in which the person was convicted of a sexually |
violent offense, adjudicated delinquent for a sexually |
violent offense or found not guilty of or not responsible |
for a sexually violent offense by reason of insanity, |
mental disease, or mental defect; or
|
(2) The State's Attorney of the county referenced in |
paragraph (1)(a)(1) of this Section, on his or her own |
motion; or
|
(3) The Attorney General and the State's Attorney of |
the county referenced in paragraph (1)(a)(1) of this |
Section may jointly file a petition on their own motion; or |
(4) A petition may be filed at the request of the |
agency with jurisdiction over the person, as defined in |
subsection (a) of Section 10 of this Act, by: |
|
(a) the Attorney General; |
(b) the State's Attorney of the county referenced |
in paragraph (1)(a)(1) of this Section; or |
(c) the Attorney General and the State's Attorney |
jointly.
|
(b) A petition filed under this Section shall allege that |
all of the
following apply to the person alleged to be a |
sexually violent person:
|
(1) The person satisfies any of the following criteria:
|
(A) The person has been convicted of a sexually |
violent offense;
|
(B) The person has been found delinquent for a |
sexually
violent offense; or
|
(C) The person has been found not guilty of a |
sexually
violent offense by reason of insanity, mental |
disease, or mental
defect.
|
(2) (Blank).
|
(3) (Blank).
|
(4) The person has a mental disorder.
|
(5) The person is dangerous to others because the |
person's
mental disorder creates a substantial probability |
that he or she
will engage in acts of sexual violence.
|
(b-5) The petition must be filed no more than 90 days |
before discharge or entry into mandatory
supervised release |
from a Department of Corrections or aftercare release from the |
Department of Juvenile Justice correctional facility for
a |
|
sentence that was imposed upon a conviction for a sexually |
violent offense. For inmates sentenced under the law in effect |
prior to February 1, 1978, the petition shall be filed no more |
than 90 days after the Prisoner Review Board's order granting |
parole pursuant to Section 3-3-5 of the Unified Code of |
Corrections.
|
(b-6) The petition must be filed no more than 90 days |
before discharge or release:
|
(1) from a Department of Juvenile Justice juvenile |
correctional facility if
the person was placed in the |
facility for being adjudicated delinquent under
Section |
5-20 of the Juvenile Court Act of 1987 or found guilty
|
under Section 5-620 of that Act on the basis of a sexually |
violent offense; or
|
(2) from a commitment order that was entered as a |
result of a sexually
violent offense.
|
(b-7) A person convicted of a sexually violent offense |
remains eligible for commitment as a sexually violent person |
pursuant to this Act under the following circumstances:
(1) the |
person is in custody for a sentence that is being served |
concurrently or consecutively with a sexually violent offense;
|
(2) the person returns to the custody of the Illinois |
Department of Corrections or the Department of Juvenile Justice |
for any reason during the term of parole, aftercare release, or |
mandatory supervised release being served for a sexually |
violent offense;
or (3) the person is convicted or adjudicated |
|
delinquent for any offense committed during the term of parole, |
aftercare release, or mandatory supervised release being |
served for a sexually violent offense, regardless of whether |
that conviction or adjudication was for a sexually violent |
offense.
|
(c) A petition filed under this Section shall state with
|
particularity essential facts to establish probable cause to
|
believe the person is a sexually violent person. If the |
petition
alleges that a sexually violent offense or act that is |
a basis for
the allegation under paragraph (b)(1) of this |
Section was an act
that was sexually motivated as provided |
under paragraph (e)(2) of Section
5 of this Act, the petition |
shall state the grounds on which the
offense or act is alleged |
to be sexually motivated.
|
(d) A petition under this Section shall be filed in either |
of
the following:
|
(1) The circuit court for the county in which the |
person was
convicted of a sexually violent offense, |
adjudicated delinquent
for a sexually violent offense or |
found not guilty of a sexually
violent offense by reason of |
insanity, mental disease or mental
defect.
|
(2) The circuit court for the county in which the |
person is
in custody under a sentence, a placement to a |
Department of
Corrections correctional facility or a |
Department of Juvenile Justice juvenile correctional
|
facility, or a commitment order. |
|
(e) The filing of a petition under this Act shall toll the |
running of the term of parole or mandatory supervised release |
until: |
(1) dismissal of the petition filed under this Act; |
(2) a finding by a judge or jury that the respondent is |
not a sexually violent person; or |
(3) the sexually violent person is discharged under |
Section 65 of this Act.
|
(f) The State has the right to have the person evaluated by |
experts chosen by the State. The agency with jurisdiction as |
defined in Section 10 of this Act shall allow the expert |
reasonable access to the person for purposes of examination, to |
the person's records, and to past and present treatment |
providers and any other staff members relevant to the |
examination. |
(Source: P.A. 98-558, eff. 1-1-14.)
|
Section 30. The Unified Code of Corrections is amended by |
changing Sections 3-2-3.1, 3-2-5, 3-2.5-20, 3-2.5-70, |
3-2.5-80, 3-3-1, 3-3-2, 3-3-3, 3-3-4, 3-3-5, 3-3-7, 3-3-8, |
3-3-9, 3-3-10, 3-10-7, 5-8-6, 5-8A-3, and 5-8A-7 and by adding |
Sections 3-2.5-85, 3-2.5-90, 3-2.5-95, 3-2.5-100, and 3-3-9.5 |
as follows:
|
(730 ILCS 5/3-2-3.1) (from Ch. 38, par. 1003-2-3.1)
|
Sec. 3-2-3.1. Treaties. If a treaty in effect between the |
|
United States
and a foreign country provides for the transfer |
or exchange of convicted
offenders to the country of which they |
are citizens or nationals, the Governor
may, on behalf of the |
State and subject to the terms of the treaty, authorize the
|
Director of Corrections or the Director of Juvenile Justice to |
consent to the transfer or exchange of offenders
and take any |
other action necessary to initiate the participation of this
|
State in the treaty. Before any transfer or exchange may occur, |
the Director of Corrections shall notify in writing the |
Prisoner Review Board and the Office of the State's Attorney |
which obtained the defendant's conviction , or the Director of |
Juvenile Justice shall notify in writing the Office of the |
State's Attorney which obtained the youth's conviction .
|
(Source: P.A. 95-317, eff. 8-21-07.)
|
(730 ILCS 5/3-2-5) (from Ch. 38, par. 1003-2-5)
|
Sec. 3-2-5. Organization of the Department of Corrections |
and the Department of Juvenile Justice.
|
(a) There shall be a Department of Corrections which shall
|
be administered by a Director and an Assistant Director |
appointed by the Governor under
the Civil Administrative Code |
of Illinois. The Assistant Director shall be
under the |
direction of the Director. The Department of Corrections shall |
be
responsible for all persons committed or transferred to the |
Department
under Sections 3-10-7 or 5-8-6 of this Code.
|
(b)
There shall be a Department of Juvenile Justice which |
|
shall be administered by a Director appointed by the Governor |
under the Civil Administrative Code of Illinois. The Department |
of Juvenile Justice shall be responsible for all persons under |
18 17 years of age when sentenced to imprisonment and committed |
to the Department under subsection (c) of Section 5-8-6 of this |
Code, Section 5-10 of the Juvenile Court Act, or Section 5-750 |
of the Juvenile Court Act of 1987. Persons under 18 17 years of |
age committed to the Department of Juvenile Justice pursuant to |
this Code shall be sight and sound separate from adult |
offenders committed to the Department of Corrections.
|
(c) The Department shall create a gang intelligence unit |
under the
supervision of the Director. The unit shall be |
specifically designed to gather
information regarding the |
inmate gang population, monitor the activities of
gangs, and |
prevent the furtherance of gang activities through the |
development
and implementation of policies aimed at deterring |
gang activity. The Director
shall appoint a Corrections |
Intelligence Coordinator.
|
All information collected and maintained by the unit shall |
be highly
confidential, and access to that information shall be |
restricted by the
Department. The information
shall be used to |
control and limit the activities of gangs within correctional
|
institutions under the jurisdiction of the Illinois
Department |
of Corrections and may be shared with other law enforcement |
agencies
in order to curb gang activities outside of |
correctional institutions under the
jurisdiction of the |
|
Department and to assist in
the investigations and prosecutions |
of gang activity. The Department shall
establish and promulgate |
rules governing the release of information to outside
law |
enforcement agencies. Due to the highly sensitive nature of the
|
information, the information is exempt from requests for |
disclosure under the
Freedom
of Information Act as the |
information contained is highly confidential and may
be harmful |
if disclosed.
|
(Source: P.A. 97-800, eff. 7-13-12; 97-1083, eff. 8-24-12; |
98-463, eff. 8-16-13.)
|
(730 ILCS 5/3-2.5-20)
|
Sec. 3-2.5-20. General powers and duties. |
(a) In addition to the powers, duties, and responsibilities |
which are otherwise provided by law or transferred to the |
Department as a result of this Article, the Department, as |
determined by the Director, shall have, but are not limited to, |
the following rights, powers, functions and duties: |
(1) To accept juveniles committed to it by the courts |
of this State for care, custody, treatment, and |
rehabilitation. |
(2) To maintain and administer all State juvenile |
correctional institutions previously under the control of |
the Juvenile and Women's & Children Divisions of the |
Department of Corrections, and to establish and maintain |
institutions as needed to meet the needs of the youth |
|
committed to its care. |
(3) To identify the need for and recommend the funding |
and implementation of an appropriate mix of programs and |
services within the juvenile justice continuum, including |
but not limited to prevention, nonresidential and |
residential commitment programs, day treatment, and |
conditional release programs and services, with the |
support of educational, vocational, alcohol, drug abuse, |
and mental health services where appropriate. |
(3.5) To assist youth committed to the Department of |
Juvenile Justice under the Juvenile Court Act of 1987 with |
successful reintegration into society, the Department |
shall retain custody and control of all adjudicated |
delinquent juveniles released under Section 3-2.5-85 or |
3-3-10 of this Code, shall provide a continuum of |
post-release treatment and services to those youth, and |
shall supervise those youth during their release period in |
accordance with the conditions set by the Department or the |
Prisoner Review Board. |
(4) To establish and provide transitional and |
post-release treatment programs for juveniles committed to |
the Department. Services shall include but are not limited |
to: |
(i) family and individual counseling and treatment |
placement; |
(ii) referral services to any other State or local |
|
agencies; |
(iii) mental health services; |
(iv) educational services; |
(v) family counseling services; and |
(vi) substance abuse services. |
(5) To access vital records of juveniles for the |
purposes of providing necessary documentation for |
transitional services such as obtaining identification, |
educational enrollment, employment, and housing. |
(6) To develop staffing and workload standards and |
coordinate staff development and training appropriate for |
juvenile populations. |
(7) To develop, with the approval of the Office of the |
Governor and the Governor's Office of Management and |
Budget, annual budget requests.
|
(8) To administer the Interstate Compact for |
Juveniles, with respect to all juveniles under its |
jurisdiction, and to cooperate with the Department of Human |
Services with regard to all non-offender juveniles subject |
to the Interstate Compact for Juveniles. |
(9) To decide the date of release on aftercare for |
youth committed to the Department under Section 5-750 of |
the Juvenile Court Act of 1987. |
(10) To set conditions of aftercare release for all |
youth committed to the Department under the Juvenile Court |
Act of 1987.
|
|
(b) The Department may employ personnel in accordance with |
the Personnel Code and Section 3-2.5-15 of this Code, provide |
facilities, contract for goods and services, and adopt rules as |
necessary to carry out its functions and purposes, all in |
accordance with applicable State and federal law.
|
(c) On and after the date 6 months after August 16, 2013 |
(the effective date of Public Act 98-488), as provided in the |
Executive Order 1 (2012) Implementation Act, all of the powers, |
duties, rights, and responsibilities related to State |
healthcare purchasing under this Code that were transferred |
from the Department of Corrections to the Department of |
Healthcare and Family Services by Executive Order 3 (2005) are |
transferred back to the Department of Corrections; however, |
powers, duties, rights, and responsibilities related to State |
healthcare purchasing under this Code that were exercised by |
the Department of Corrections before the effective date of |
Executive Order 3 (2005) but that pertain to individuals |
resident in facilities operated by the Department of Juvenile |
Justice are transferred to the Department of Juvenile Justice. |
(Source: P.A. 98-488, eff. 8-16-13; 98-558, eff. 1-1-14; |
98-756, eff. 7-16-14.) |
(730 ILCS 5/3-2.5-70) |
Sec. 3-2.5-70. Aftercare. |
(a) The Department shall implement an aftercare program |
that includes, at a minimum, the following program elements: |
|
(1) A process for developing and implementing a case |
management plan for timely and successful reentry into the |
community beginning upon commitment. |
(2) A process for reviewing committed youth for |
recommendation for aftercare release. |
(3) Supervision in accordance with the conditions set |
by the Department or Prisoner Review Board and referral to |
and facilitation of community-based services including |
education, social and mental health services, substance |
abuse treatment, employment and vocational training, |
individual and family counseling, financial counseling, |
and other services as appropriate; and assistance in |
locating appropriate residential placement and obtaining |
suitable employment. The Department may purchase necessary |
services for a releasee if they are otherwise unavailable |
and the releasee is unable to pay for the services. It may |
assess all or part of the costs of these services to a |
releasee in accordance with his or her ability to pay for |
the services. |
(4) Standards for sanctioning violations of conditions |
of aftercare release that ensure that juvenile offenders |
face uniform and consistent consequences that hold them |
accountable taking into account aggravating and mitigating |
factors and prioritizing public safety. |
(5) A process for reviewing youth on aftercare release |
for discharge. |
|
(b) The Department of Juvenile Justice shall have the |
following rights, powers, functions, and duties: |
(1) To investigate alleged violations of an aftercare |
releasee's conditions of release; and for this purpose it |
may issue subpoenas and compel the attendance of witnesses |
and the production of documents only if there is reason to |
believe that the procedures would provide evidence that the |
violations have occurred. If any person fails to obey a |
subpoena issued under this subsection, the Director may |
apply to any circuit court to secure compliance with the |
subpoena. The failure to comply with the order of the court |
issued in response thereto shall be punishable as contempt |
of court. |
(2) To issue a violation warrant for the apprehension |
of an aftercare releasee for violations of the conditions |
of aftercare release. Aftercare specialists and |
supervisors have the full power of peace officers in the |
retaking of any youth alleged to have violated the |
conditions of aftercare release. |
(c) The Department of Juvenile Justice shall designate |
aftercare specialists qualified in juvenile matters to perform |
case management and post-release programming functions under |
this Section.
|
(Source: P.A. 98-558, eff. 1-1-14.) |
(730 ILCS 5/3-2.5-80) |
|
Sec. 3-2.5-80. Supervision on Aftercare Release. |
(a) The Department shall retain custody of all youth placed |
on aftercare release or released under Section 3-2.5-85 or |
3-3-10 of this Code. The Department shall supervise those youth |
during their aftercare release period in accordance with the |
conditions set by the Department or Prisoner Review Board. |
(b) A copy of youth's conditions of aftercare release shall |
be signed by the youth and given to the youth and to his or her |
aftercare specialist who shall report on the youth's progress |
under the rules of the Department Prisoner Review Board . |
Aftercare specialists and supervisors shall have the full power |
of peace officers in the retaking of any releasee who has |
allegedly violated his or her aftercare release conditions. The |
aftercare specialist may request the Department of Juvenile |
Justice to issue a warrant for the arrest of any releasee who |
has allegedly violated his or her aftercare release conditions. |
(c) The aftercare supervisor shall request the Department |
of Juvenile Justice to issue an aftercare release violation |
warrant, and the Department of Juvenile Justice shall issue an |
aftercare release violation warrant, under the following |
circumstances: |
(1) if the releasee has a subsequent delinquency |
petition filed against him or her alleging commission of an |
act that constitutes a felony using a firearm or knife; |
(2) if the releasee is required to and fails to comply |
with the requirements of the Sex Offender Registration Act; |
|
(3) (blank); or |
(4) if the releasee is on aftercare release for a |
murder, a Class X felony or a Class 1 felony violation of |
the Criminal Code of 2012, or any felony that requires |
registration as a sex offender under the Sex Offender |
Registration Act and a subsequent delinquency petition is |
filed against him or her alleging commission of an act that |
constitutes first degree murder, a Class X felony, a Class |
1 felony, a Class 2 felony, or a Class 3 felony. |
Personnel designated by the Department of Juvenile Justice |
or another peace officer may detain an alleged aftercare |
release violator until a warrant for his or her return to the |
Department of Juvenile Justice can be issued. The releasee may |
be delivered to any secure place until he or she can be |
transported to the Department of Juvenile Justice. The |
aftercare specialist or the Department of Juvenile Justice |
shall file a violation report with notice of charges with the |
Department Prisoner Review Board . |
(d) The aftercare specialist shall regularly advise and |
consult with the releasee and assist the youth in adjusting to |
community life in accord with this Section. |
(e) If the aftercare releasee has been convicted of a sex |
offense as defined in the Sex Offender Management Board Act, |
the aftercare specialist shall periodically, but not less than |
once a month, verify that the releasee is in compliance with |
paragraph (7.6) of subsection (a) of Section 3-3-7. |
|
(f) The aftercare specialist shall keep those records as |
the Prisoner Review Board or Department may require. All |
records shall be entered in the master file of the youth.
|
(Source: P.A. 98-558, eff. 1-1-14; 99-268, eff. 1-1-16 .) |
(730 ILCS 5/3-2.5-85 new) |
Sec. 3-2.5-85. Eligibility for release; determination. |
(a) Every youth committed to the Department of Juvenile |
Justice under Section 5-750 of the Juvenile Court Act of 1987, |
except those committed for first degree murder, shall be: |
(1) Eligible for aftercare release without regard to |
the length of time the youth has been confined or whether |
the youth has served any minimum term imposed. |
(2) Placed on aftercare release on or before his or her |
20th birthday or upon completion of the maximum term of |
confinement ordered by the court under Section 5-710 of the |
Juvenile Court Act of 1987, whichever is sooner. |
(3) Considered for aftercare release at least 30 days |
prior to the expiration of the first year of confinement |
and at least annually thereafter. |
(b) This Section does not apply to the initial release of |
youth committed to the Department under Section 5-815 or 5-820 |
of the Juvenile Court Act of 1987. Those youth shall be |
released by the Department upon completion of the determinate |
sentence established under this Code. Subsections (d) through |
(l) of this Section do not apply when a youth is released under |
|
paragraph (2) of subsection (a) of this Section or the youth's |
release is otherwise required by law or ordered by the court. |
Youth who have been tried as an adult and committed to the |
Department under Section 5-8-6 of this Code are only eligible |
for mandatory supervised release as an adult under Section |
3-3-3 of this Code. |
(c) The Department shall establish a process for deciding |
the date of release on aftercare for every youth committed to |
the Department of Juvenile Justice under Section 5-750 of the |
Juvenile Court Act of 1987. The process shall include |
establishing a target release date upon commitment to the |
Department, the regular review and appropriate adjustment of |
the target release date, and the final release consideration at |
least 30 days prior to the youth's target release date. The |
establishment, adjustment, and final consideration of the |
target release date shall include consideration of the |
following factors: |
(1) the nature and seriousness of the youth's offense; |
(2) the likelihood the youth will reoffend or will pose |
a danger to the community based on an assessment of the |
youth's risks, strengths, and behavior; and |
(3) the youth's progress since being committed to the |
Department. |
The target release date for youth committed to the |
Department for first degree murder shall not precede the |
minimum period of confinement provided in Section 5-750 of the |
|
Juvenile Court Act of 1987. These youth shall be considered for |
release upon completion of their minimum term of confinement |
and at least annually thereafter. |
(d) If the youth being considered for aftercare release has |
a petition or any written submissions prepared on his or her |
behalf by an attorney or other representative, the attorney or |
representative for the youth must serve by certified mail the |
State's Attorney of the county where the youth was prosecuted |
with the petition or any written submissions 15 days prior to |
the youth's target release date. |
(e) In making its determination of aftercare release, the |
Department shall consider: |
(1) material transmitted to the Department by the clerk |
of the committing court under Section 5-750 of the Juvenile |
Court Act of 1987; |
(2) the report under Section 3-10-2; |
(3) a report by the Department and any report by the |
chief administrative officer of the institution or |
facility; |
(4) an aftercare release progress report; |
(5) a medical and psychological report, if available; |
(6) material in writing, or on film, video tape or |
other electronic means in the form of a recording submitted |
by the youth whose aftercare release is being considered; |
(7) material in writing, or on film, video tape or |
other electronic means in the form of a recording or |
|
testimony submitted by the State's Attorney and the victim |
or a concerned citizen under the Rights of Crime Victims |
and Witnesses Act; and |
(8) the youth's eligibility for commitment under the |
Sexually Violent Persons Commitment Act. |
(f) The prosecuting State's Attorney's office shall |
receive from the Department reasonable written notice not less |
than 30 days prior to the target release date and may submit |
relevant information by oral argument or testimony of victims |
and concerned citizens, or both, in writing, or on film, video |
tape or other electronic means or in the form of a recording to |
the Department for its consideration. The State's Attorney may |
waive the written notice of the target release date at any |
time. Upon written request of the State's Attorney's office, |
provided the request is received within 15 days of receipt of |
the written notice of the target release date, the Department |
shall hear protests to aftercare release. If a State's Attorney |
requests a protest hearing, the committed youth's attorney or |
other representative shall also receive notice of the request |
and a copy of any information submitted by the State's |
Attorney. This hearing shall take place prior to the youth's |
aftercare release. The Department shall schedule the protest |
hearing date, providing at least 15 days' notice to the State's |
Attorney. If the protest hearing is rescheduled, the Department |
shall promptly notify the State's Attorney of the new date. |
(g) The victim of the violent crime for which the youth has |
|
been sentenced shall receive notice of the target release date |
as provided in paragraph (4) of subsection (d) of Section 4.5 |
of the Rights of Crime Victims and Witnesses Act. |
(h) The Department shall not release any material to the |
youth, the youth's attorney, any third party, or any other |
person containing any information from the victim or from a |
person related to the victim by blood, adoption, or marriage |
who has written objections, testified at any hearing, or |
submitted audio or visual objections to the youth's aftercare |
release, unless provided with a waiver from that objecting |
party. The Department shall not release the names or addresses |
of any person on its victim registry to any other person except |
the victim, a law enforcement agency, or other victim |
notification system. |
(i) Any recording considered under the provisions of |
paragraph (6) or (7) of subsection (e) or subsection (f) of |
this Section shall be in the form designated by the Department. |
The recording shall be both visual and aural. Every voice on |
the recording and person present shall be identified and the |
recording shall contain either a visual or aural statement of |
the person submitting the recording, the date of the recording, |
and the name of the youth whose aftercare release is being |
considered. The recordings shall be retained by the Department |
and shall be considered during any subsequent aftercare release |
decision if the victim or State's Attorney submits in writing a |
declaration clearly identifying the recording as representing |
|
the position of the victim or State's Attorney regarding the |
release of the youth. |
(j) The Department shall not release a youth eligible for |
aftercare release if it determines that: |
(1) there is a substantial risk that he or she will not |
conform to reasonable conditions of aftercare release; |
(2) his or her release at that time would deprecate the |
seriousness of his or her offense or promote disrespect for |
the law; or |
(3) his or her release would have a substantially |
adverse effect on institutional discipline. |
(k) The Department shall render its release decision and |
shall state the basis therefor both in the records of the |
Department and in written notice to the youth who was |
considered for aftercare release. In its decision, the |
Department shall set the youth's time for aftercare release, or |
if it denies aftercare release it shall provide for |
reconsideration of aftercare release not less frequently than |
once each year. |
(l) The Department shall ensure all evaluations and |
proceedings under the Sexually Violent Persons Commitment Act |
are completed prior to any youth's release, when applicable. |
(m) Any youth whose aftercare release has been revoked by |
the Prisoner Review Board under Section 3-3-9.5 of this Code |
may be rereleased to the full aftercare release term by the |
Department at any time in accordance with this Section. Youth |
|
rereleased under this subsection shall be subject to Sections |
3-2.5-70, 3-2.5-75, 3-2.5-80, 3-2.5-90, 3-2.5-95, and 3-3-9.5 |
of this Code. |
(n) The Department shall adopt rules regarding the exercise |
of its discretion under this Section. |
(730 ILCS 5/3-2.5-90 new) |
Sec. 3-2.5-90. Release to warrant or detainer. |
(a) If a warrant or detainer is placed against a youth by |
the court or other authority of this or any other jurisdiction, |
the Department of Juvenile Justice shall inquire before the |
youth is considered for aftercare release whether the authority |
concerned intends to execute or withdraw the process if the |
youth is released. |
(b) If the authority notifies the Department that it |
intends to execute the process when the youth is released, the |
Department shall advise the authority concerned of the sentence |
or disposition under which the youth is held, the time of |
eligibility for release, any decision of the Department |
relating to the youth and the nature of his or her adjustment |
during confinement, and shall give reasonable notice to the |
authority of the youth's release date. |
(c) The Department may release a youth to a warrant or |
detainer. The Department may provide, as a condition of |
aftercare release, that if the charge or charges on which the |
warrant or detainer is based are dismissed or satisfied, prior |
|
to the expiration of the youth's aftercare release term, the |
authority to whose warrant or detainer he or she was released |
shall return him or her to serve the remainder of his or her |
aftercare release term. |
(d) If a youth released to a warrant or detainer is |
thereafter sentenced to probation, or released on parole in |
another jurisdiction prior to the expiration of his or her |
aftercare release term in this State, the Department may permit |
the youth to serve the remainder of his or her term in either |
of the jurisdictions. |
(730 ILCS 5/3-2.5-95 new) |
Sec. 3-2.5-95. Conditions of aftercare release. |
(a) The conditions of aftercare release for all youth |
committed to the Department under the Juvenile Court Act of |
1987 shall be such as the Department of Juvenile Justice deems |
necessary to assist the youth in leading a law-abiding life. |
The conditions of every aftercare release are that the youth: |
(1) not violate any criminal statute of any |
jurisdiction during the aftercare release term; |
(2) refrain from possessing a firearm or other |
dangerous weapon; |
(3) report to an agent of the Department; |
(4) permit the agent or aftercare specialist to visit |
the youth at his or her home, employment, or elsewhere to |
the extent necessary for the agent or aftercare specialist |
|
to discharge his or her duties; |
(5) reside at a Department-approved host site; |
(6) secure permission before visiting or writing a |
committed person in an Illinois Department of Corrections |
or Illinois Department of Juvenile Justice facility; |
(7) report all arrests to an agent of the Department as |
soon as permitted by the arresting authority but in no |
event later than 24 hours after release from custody and |
immediately report service or notification of an order of |
protection, a civil no contact order, or a stalking no |
contact order to an agent of the Department; |
(8) obtain permission of an agent of the Department |
before leaving the State of Illinois; |
(9) obtain permission of an agent of the Department |
before changing his or her residence or employment; |
(10) consent to a search of his or her person, |
property, or residence under his or her control; |
(11) refrain from the use or possession of narcotics or |
other controlled substances in any form, or both, or any |
paraphernalia related to those substances and submit to a |
urinalysis test as instructed by an agent of the |
Department; |
(12) not frequent places where controlled substances |
are illegally sold, used, distributed, or administered; |
(13) not knowingly associate with other persons on |
parole, aftercare release, or mandatory supervised release |
|
without prior written permission of his or her aftercare |
specialist and not associate with persons who are members |
of an organized gang as that term is defined in the |
Illinois Streetgang Terrorism Omnibus Prevention Act; |
(14) provide true and accurate information, as it |
relates to his or her adjustment in the community while on |
aftercare release or to his or her conduct while |
incarcerated, in response to inquiries by an agent of the |
Department; |
(15) follow any specific instructions provided by the |
agent that are consistent with furthering conditions set |
and approved by the Department or by law to achieve the |
goals and objectives of his or her aftercare release or to |
protect the public; these instructions by the agent may be |
modified at any time, as the agent deems appropriate; |
(16) comply with the terms and conditions of an order |
of protection issued under the Illinois Domestic Violence |
Act of 1986; an order of protection issued by the court of |
another state, tribe, or United States territory; a no |
contact order issued under the Civil No Contact Order Act; |
or a no contact order issued under the Stalking No Contact |
Order Act; |
(17) if convicted of a sex offense as defined in the |
Sex Offender Management Board Act, and a sex offender |
treatment provider has evaluated and recommended further |
sex offender treatment while on aftercare release, the |
|
youth shall undergo treatment by a sex offender treatment |
provider or associate sex offender provider as defined in |
the Sex Offender Management Board Act at his or her expense |
based on his or her ability to pay for the treatment; |
(18) if convicted of a sex offense as defined in the |
Sex Offender Management Board Act, refrain from residing at |
the same address or in the same condominium unit or |
apartment unit or in the same condominium complex or |
apartment complex with another person he or she knows or |
reasonably should know is a convicted sex offender or has |
been placed on supervision for a sex offense; the |
provisions of this paragraph do not apply to a person |
convicted of a sex offense who is placed in a Department of |
Corrections licensed transitional housing facility for sex |
offenders, or is in any facility operated or licensed by |
the Department of Children and Family Services or by the |
Department of Human Services, or is in any licensed medical |
facility; |
(19) if convicted for an offense that would qualify the |
offender as a sexual predator under the Sex Offender |
Registration Act wear an approved electronic monitoring |
device as defined in Section 5-8A-2 for the duration of the |
youth's aftercare release term and if convicted for an |
offense of criminal sexual assault, aggravated criminal |
sexual assault, predatory criminal sexual assault of a |
child, criminal sexual abuse, aggravated criminal sexual |
|
abuse, or ritualized abuse of a child when the victim was |
under 18 years of age at the time of the commission of the |
offense and the offender used force or the threat of force |
in the commission of the offense wear an approved |
electronic monitoring device as defined in Section 5-8A-2 |
that has Global Positioning System (GPS) capability for the |
duration of the youth's aftercare release term; |
(20) if convicted for an offense that would qualify the |
offender as a child sex offender as defined in Section |
11-9.3 or 11-9.4 of the Criminal Code of 1961 or the |
Criminal Code of 2012, refrain from communicating with or |
contacting, by means of the Internet, a person who is not |
related to the offender and whom the offender reasonably |
believes to be under 18 years of age; for purposes of this |
paragraph (20), "Internet" has the meaning ascribed to it |
in Section 16-0.1 of the Criminal Code of 2012; and a |
person is not related to the offender if the person is not: |
(A) the spouse, brother, or sister of the offender; (B) a |
descendant of the offender; (C) a first or second cousin of |
the offender; or (D) a step-child or adopted child of the |
offender; |
(21) if convicted under Section 11-6, 11-20.1, |
11-20.1B, 11-20.3, or 11-21 of the Criminal Code of 1961 or |
the Criminal Code of 2012, consent to search of computers, |
PDAs, cellular phones, and other devices under his or her |
control that are capable of accessing the Internet or |
|
storing electronic files, in order to confirm Internet |
protocol addresses reported in accordance with the Sex |
Offender Registration Act and compliance with conditions |
in this Act; |
(22) if convicted for an offense that would qualify the |
offender as a sex offender or sexual predator under the Sex |
Offender Registration Act, not possess prescription drugs |
for erectile dysfunction; |
(23) if convicted for an offense under Section 11-6, |
11-9.1, 11-14.4 that involves soliciting for a juvenile |
prostitute, 11-15.1, 11-20.1, 11-20.1B, 11-20.3, or 11-21 |
of the Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012, |
or any attempt to commit any of these offenses: |
(A) not access or use a computer or any other |
device with Internet capability without the prior |
written approval of the Department; |
(B) submit to periodic unannounced examinations of |
the youth's computer or any other device with Internet |
capability by the youth's aftercare specialist, a law |
enforcement officer, or assigned computer or |
information technology specialist, including the |
retrieval and copying of all data from the computer or |
device and any internal or external peripherals and |
removal of the information, equipment, or device to |
conduct a more thorough inspection; |
(C) submit to the installation on the youth's |
|
computer or device with Internet capability, at the |
youth's expense, of one or more hardware or software |
systems to monitor the Internet use; and |
(D) submit to any other appropriate restrictions |
concerning the youth's use of or access to a computer |
or any other device with Internet capability imposed by |
the Department or the youth's aftercare specialist; |
(24) if convicted of a sex offense as defined in the |
Sex Offender Registration Act, refrain from accessing or |
using a social networking website as defined in Section |
17-0.5 of the Criminal Code of 2012; |
(25) if convicted of a sex offense as defined in |
Section 2 of the Sex Offender Registration Act that |
requires the youth to register as a sex offender under that |
Act, not knowingly use any computer scrub software on any |
computer that the youth uses; |
(26) if convicted of a sex offense as defined in |
subsection (a-5) of Section 3-1-2 of this Code, unless the |
youth is a parent or guardian of a person under 18 years of |
age present in the home and no non-familial minors are |
present, not participate in a holiday event involving |
children under 18 years of age, such as distributing candy |
or other items to children on Halloween, wearing a Santa |
Claus costume on or preceding Christmas, being employed as |
a department store Santa Claus, or wearing an Easter Bunny |
costume on or preceding Easter; |
|
(27) if convicted of a violation of an order of |
protection under Section 12-3.4 or Section 12-30 of the |
Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012, be |
placed under electronic surveillance as provided in |
Section 5-8A-7 of this Code; and |
(28) if convicted of a violation of the Methamphetamine |
Control and Community Protection Act, the Methamphetamine |
Precursor Control Act, or a methamphetamine related |
offense, be: |
(A) prohibited from purchasing, possessing, or |
having under his or her control any product containing |
pseudoephedrine unless prescribed by a physician; and |
(B) prohibited from purchasing, possessing, or |
having under his or her control any product containing |
ammonium nitrate. |
(b) The Department may in addition to other conditions |
require that the youth: |
(1) work or pursue a course of study or vocational |
training; |
(2) undergo medical or psychiatric treatment, or |
treatment for drug addiction or alcoholism; |
(3) attend or reside in a facility established for the |
instruction or residence of persons on probation or |
aftercare release; |
(4) support his or her dependents; |
(5) if convicted for an offense that would qualify the |
|
youth as a child sex offender as defined in Section 11-9.3 |
or 11-9.4 of the Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code |
of 2012, refrain from communicating with or contacting, by |
means of the Internet, a person who is related to the youth |
and whom the youth reasonably believes to be under 18 years |
of age; for purposes of this paragraph (5), "Internet" has |
the meaning ascribed to it in Section 16-0.1 of the |
Criminal Code of 2012; and a person is related to the youth |
if the person is: (A) the spouse, brother, or sister of the |
youth; (B) a descendant of the youth; (C) a first or second |
cousin of the youth; or (D) a step-child or adopted child |
of the youth; |
(6) if convicted for an offense that would qualify as a |
sex offense as defined in the Sex Offender Registration |
Act: |
(A) not access or use a computer or any other |
device with Internet capability without the prior |
written approval of the Department; |
(B) submit to periodic unannounced examinations of |
the youth's computer or any other device with Internet |
capability by the youth's aftercare specialist, a law |
enforcement officer, or assigned computer or |
information technology specialist, including the |
retrieval and copying of all data from the computer or |
device and any internal or external peripherals and |
removal of the information, equipment, or device to |
|
conduct a more thorough inspection; |
(C) submit to the installation on the youth's |
computer or device with Internet capability, at the |
youth's offender's expense, of one or more hardware or |
software systems to monitor the Internet use; and |
(D) submit to any other appropriate restrictions |
concerning the youth's use of or access to a computer |
or any other device with Internet capability imposed by |
the Department or the youth's aftercare specialist; |
and |
(7) in addition to other conditions: |
(A) reside with his or her parents or in a foster |
home; |
(B) attend school; |
(C) attend a non-residential program for youth; or |
(D) contribute to his or her own support at home or |
in a foster home. |
(c) In addition to the conditions under subsections (a) and |
(b) of this Section, youths required to register as sex |
offenders under the Sex Offender Registration Act, upon release |
from the custody of the Department of Juvenile Justice, may be |
required by the Department to comply with the following |
specific conditions of release: |
(1) reside only at a Department approved location; |
(2) comply with all requirements of the Sex Offender |
Registration Act; |
|
(3) notify third parties of the risks that may be |
occasioned by his or her criminal record; |
(4) obtain the approval of an agent of the Department |
prior to accepting employment or pursuing a course of study |
or vocational training and notify the Department prior to |
any change in employment, study, or training; |
(5) not be employed or participate in any volunteer |
activity that involves contact with children, except under |
circumstances approved in advance and in writing by an |
agent of the Department; |
(6) be electronically monitored for a specified period |
of time from the date of release as determined by the |
Department; |
(7) refrain from entering into a designated geographic |
area except upon terms approved in advance by an agent of |
the Department; these terms may include consideration of |
the purpose of the entry, the time of day, and others |
accompanying the youth; |
(8) refrain from having any contact, including written |
or oral communications, directly or indirectly, personally |
or by telephone, letter, or through a third party with |
certain specified persons including, but not limited to, |
the victim or the victim's family without the prior written |
approval of an agent of the Department; |
(9) refrain from all contact, directly or indirectly, |
personally, by telephone, letter, or through a third party, |
|
with minor children without prior identification and |
approval of an agent of the Department; |
(10) neither possess or have under his or her control |
any material that is sexually oriented, sexually |
stimulating, or that shows male or female sex organs or any |
pictures depicting children under 18 years of age nude or |
any written or audio material describing sexual |
intercourse or that depicts or alludes to sexual activity, |
including, but not limited to, visual, auditory, |
telephonic, or electronic media, or any matter obtained |
through access to any computer or material linked to |
computer access use; |
(11) not patronize any business providing sexually |
stimulating or sexually oriented entertainment nor utilize |
"900" or adult telephone numbers; |
(12) not reside near, visit, or be in or about parks, |
schools, day care centers, swimming pools, beaches, |
theaters, or any other places where minor children |
congregate without advance approval of an agent of the |
Department and immediately report any incidental contact |
with minor children to the Department; |
(13) not possess or have under his or her control |
certain specified items of contraband related to the |
incidence of sexually offending as determined by an agent |
of the Department; |
(14) may be required to provide a written daily log of |
|
activities if directed by an agent of the Department; |
(15) comply with all other special conditions that the |
Department may impose that restrict the youth from |
high-risk situations and limit access to potential |
victims; |
(16) take an annual polygraph exam; |
(17) maintain a log of his or her travel; or |
(18) obtain prior approval of an agent of the |
Department before driving alone in a motor vehicle. |
(d) The conditions under which the aftercare release is to |
be served shall be communicated to the youth in writing prior |
to his or her release, and he or she shall sign the same before |
release. A signed copy of these conditions, including a copy of |
an order of protection if one had been issued by the criminal |
court, shall be retained by the youth and another copy |
forwarded to the officer or aftercare specialist in charge of |
his or her supervision. |
(e) After a revocation hearing under Section 3-3-9.5, the |
Department of Juvenile Justice may modify or enlarge the |
conditions of aftercare release. |
(f) The Department shall inform all youth of the optional |
services available to them upon release and shall assist youth |
in availing themselves of the optional services upon their |
release on a voluntary basis. |
(730 ILCS 5/3-2.5-100 new) |
|
Sec. 3-2.5-100. Length of aftercare release; discharge. |
(a) The aftercare release term of a youth committed to the |
Department under the Juvenile Court Act of 1987 shall be as set |
out in Section 5-750 of the Juvenile Court Act of 1987, unless |
sooner terminated under subsection (b) of this Section, as |
otherwise provided by law, or as ordered by the court. The |
aftercare release term of youth committed to the Department as |
a habitual or violent juvenile offender under Section 5-815 or |
5-820 of the Juvenile Court Act of 1987 shall continue until |
the youth's 21st birthday unless sooner terminated under |
subsection (c) of this Section, as otherwise provided by law, |
or as ordered by the court. |
(b) Provided that the youth is in compliance with the terms |
and conditions of his or her aftercare release, the Department |
of Juvenile Justice may reduce the period of a releasee's |
aftercare release by 90 days upon the releasee receiving a high |
school diploma or upon passage of high school equivalency |
testing during the period of his or her aftercare release. This |
reduction in the period of a youth's term of aftercare release |
shall be available only to youth who have not previously earned |
a high school diploma or who have not previously passed high |
school equivalency testing. |
(c) The Department of Juvenile Justice may discharge a |
youth from aftercare release and his or her commitment to the |
Department in accordance with subsection (3) of Section 5-750 |
of the Juvenile Court Act of 1987, if it determines that he or |
|
she is likely to remain at liberty without committing another |
offense.
|
(730 ILCS 5/3-3-1) (from Ch. 38, par. 1003-3-1)
|
Sec. 3-3-1. Establishment and Appointment of Prisoner |
Review Board.
|
(a) There shall be a Prisoner Review Board independent of |
the Department
of Corrections which shall be:
|
(1) the paroling authority for persons sentenced under |
the
law in effect prior to the effective date of this |
amendatory
Act of 1977;
|
(1.5) (blank); the authority for hearing and deciding |
the time of aftercare release for persons adjudicated |
delinquent under the Juvenile Court Act of 1987;
|
(2) the board of review for cases involving the |
revocation
of sentence credits or a suspension or reduction |
in the
rate of accumulating the credit;
|
(3) the board of review and recommendation for the |
exercise
of executive clemency by the Governor;
|
(4) the authority for establishing release dates for
|
certain prisoners sentenced under the law in existence |
prior
to the effective date of this amendatory Act of 1977, |
in
accordance with Section 3-3-2.1 of this Code;
|
(5) the authority for setting conditions for parole |
and ,
mandatory supervised release under Section 5-8-1(a) |
of this
Code, and aftercare release, and determining |
|
whether a violation of those conditions
warrant revocation |
of parole , aftercare release, or mandatory supervised |
release
or the imposition of other sanctions ; and . |
(6) the authority for determining whether a violation |
of aftercare release conditions warrant revocation of |
aftercare release.
|
(b) The Board shall consist of 15 persons appointed by
the |
Governor by and with the advice and consent of the Senate.
One |
member of the Board shall be designated by the Governor
to be |
Chairman and shall serve as Chairman at the pleasure of
the |
Governor. The members of the Board shall have had at
least 5 |
years of actual experience in the fields of penology,
|
corrections work, law enforcement, sociology, law, education,
|
social work, medicine, psychology, other behavioral sciences,
|
or a combination thereof. At least 6 members so appointed
must |
have had at least 3 years experience in the field of
juvenile |
matters. No more than 8 Board members may be members
of the |
same political party.
|
Each member of the Board shall serve on a full-time basis
|
and shall not hold any other salaried public office, whether |
elective or
appointive, nor any other office or position of |
profit, nor engage in any
other business, employment, or |
vocation. The Chairman of the Board shall
receive $35,000 a |
year, or an amount set by the Compensation Review Board,
|
whichever is greater, and each other member $30,000, or an |
amount set by the
Compensation Review Board, whichever is |
|
greater.
|
(c) Notwithstanding any other provision of this Section,
|
the term of each member of the Board
who was appointed by the |
Governor and is in office on June 30, 2003 shall
terminate at |
the close of business on that date or when all of the successor
|
members to be appointed pursuant to this amendatory Act of the |
93rd General
Assembly have been appointed by the Governor, |
whichever occurs later. As soon
as possible, the Governor shall |
appoint persons to fill the vacancies created
by this |
amendatory Act.
|
Of the initial members appointed under this amendatory Act |
of the 93rd
General Assembly, the Governor shall appoint 5 |
members whose terms shall expire
on the third Monday
in January |
2005, 5 members whose terms shall expire on the
third Monday in |
January 2007, and 5 members whose terms
shall expire on the |
third Monday in January 2009. Their respective successors
shall |
be appointed for terms of 6 years from the third Monday
in |
January of the year of appointment. Each member shall
serve |
until his or her successor is appointed and qualified.
|
Any member may be removed by the Governor for incompetence, |
neglect of duty,
malfeasance or inability to serve.
|
(d) The Chairman of the Board shall be its chief executive |
and
administrative officer. The Board may have an Executive |
Director; if so,
the Executive Director shall be appointed by |
the Governor with the advice and
consent of the Senate. The |
salary and duties of the Executive Director shall
be fixed by |
|
the Board.
|
(Source: P.A. 97-697, eff. 6-22-12; 98-558, eff. 1-1-14.)
|
(730 ILCS 5/3-3-2) (from Ch. 38, par. 1003-3-2)
|
Sec. 3-3-2. Powers and Duties.
|
(a) The Parole and Pardon Board is abolished and the term |
"Parole and
Pardon Board" as used in any law of Illinois, shall |
read "Prisoner Review
Board." After the effective date of this |
amendatory Act of 1977, the
Prisoner Review Board shall provide |
by rule for the orderly transition of
all files, records, and |
documents of the Parole and Pardon Board and for
such other |
steps as may be necessary to effect an orderly transition and |
shall:
|
(1) hear by at least one member and through a panel of |
at least 3 members
decide, cases of prisoners
who were |
sentenced under the law in effect prior to the effective
|
date of this amendatory Act of 1977, and who are eligible |
for parole;
|
(2) hear by at least one member and through a panel of |
at least 3 members decide, the conditions of
parole and the |
time of discharge from parole, impose sanctions for
|
violations of parole, and revoke
parole for those sentenced |
under the law in effect prior to this amendatory
Act of |
1977; provided that the decision to parole and the |
conditions of
parole for all prisoners who were sentenced |
for first degree murder or who
received a minimum sentence |
|
of 20 years or more under the law in effect
prior to |
February 1, 1978 shall be determined by a majority vote of |
the
Prisoner Review Board. One representative supporting |
parole and one representative opposing parole will be |
allowed to speak. Their comments shall be limited to making |
corrections and filling in omissions to the Board's |
presentation and discussion;
|
(3) hear by at least one member and through a panel of |
at least 3 members decide, the conditions
of mandatory |
supervised release and the time of discharge from mandatory
|
supervised release, impose sanctions for violations of |
mandatory
supervised release, and revoke mandatory |
supervised release for those
sentenced under the law in |
effect after the effective date of this
amendatory Act of |
1977;
|
(3.5) hear by at least one member and through a panel |
of at least 3 members decide, the conditions of mandatory |
supervised release and the time of discharge from mandatory |
supervised release, to impose sanctions for violations of |
mandatory supervised release and revoke mandatory |
supervised release for those serving extended supervised |
release terms pursuant to paragraph (4) of subsection (d) |
of Section 5-8-1;
|
(3.6) hear by at least one member and through a panel |
of at least 3 members decide whether to , the time of |
aftercare release, the conditions of aftercare release and |
|
the time of discharge from aftercare release, impose |
sanctions for violations of aftercare release, and revoke |
aftercare release for those committed to the Department of |
Juvenile Justice adjudicated delinquent under the Juvenile |
Court Act of 1987;
|
(4) hear by at least one member and through a panel of |
at least 3
members,
decide cases brought by the Department |
of Corrections against a prisoner in
the custody of the |
Department for alleged violation of Department rules
with |
respect to sentence credits under Section 3-6-3 of this |
Code
in which the Department seeks to revoke sentence |
credits, if the amount
of time at issue exceeds 30 days or |
when, during any 12 month period, the
cumulative amount of |
credit revoked exceeds 30 days except where the
infraction |
is committed or discovered within 60 days of scheduled |
release.
In such cases, the Department of Corrections may |
revoke up to 30 days of
sentence credit. The Board may |
subsequently approve the revocation of
additional sentence |
credit, if the Department seeks to revoke sentence credit |
in excess of thirty days. However, the Board shall not be
|
empowered to review the Department's decision with respect |
to the loss of
30 days of sentence credit for any prisoner |
or to increase any penalty
beyond the length requested by |
the Department;
|
(5) hear by at least one member and through a panel of |
at least 3
members decide, the
release dates for certain |
|
prisoners sentenced under the law in existence
prior to the |
effective date of this amendatory Act of 1977, in
|
accordance with Section 3-3-2.1 of this Code;
|
(6) hear by at least one member and through a panel of |
at least 3 members
decide, all requests for pardon, |
reprieve or commutation, and make confidential
|
recommendations to the Governor;
|
(7) comply with the requirements of the Open Parole |
Hearings Act;
|
(8) hear by at least one member and, through a panel of |
at least 3
members, decide cases brought by the Department |
of Corrections against a
prisoner in the custody of the |
Department for court dismissal of a frivolous
lawsuit |
pursuant to Section 3-6-3(d) of this Code in which the |
Department seeks
to revoke up to 180 days of sentence |
credit, and if the prisoner has not
accumulated 180 days of |
sentence credit at the time of the dismissal, then
all |
sentence credit accumulated by the prisoner shall be |
revoked;
|
(9) hear by at least 3 members, and, through a panel of |
at least 3
members, decide whether to grant certificates of |
relief from
disabilities or certificates of good conduct as |
provided in Article 5.5 of
Chapter V; |
(10) upon a petition by a person who has been convicted |
of a Class 3 or Class 4 felony and who meets the |
requirements of this paragraph, hear by at least 3 members |
|
and, with the unanimous vote of a panel of 3 members, issue |
a certificate of eligibility for sealing recommending that |
the court order the sealing of all official
records of the |
arresting authority, the circuit court clerk, and the |
Department of State Police concerning the arrest and |
conviction for the Class 3 or 4 felony. A person may not |
apply to the Board for a certificate of eligibility for |
sealing: |
(A) until 5 years have elapsed since the expiration |
of his or her sentence; |
(B) until 5 years have elapsed since any arrests or |
detentions by a law enforcement officer for an alleged |
violation of law, other than a petty offense, traffic |
offense, conservation offense, or local ordinance |
offense; |
(C) if convicted of a violation of the Cannabis |
Control Act, Illinois Controlled Substances Act, the |
Methamphetamine Control and Community Protection Act, |
the Methamphetamine Precursor Control Act, or the |
Methamphetamine Precursor Tracking Act unless the |
petitioner has completed a drug abuse program for the |
offense on which sealing is sought and provides proof |
that he or she has completed the program successfully; |
(D) if convicted of: |
(i) a sex offense described in Article 11 or |
Sections 12-13, 12-14, 12-14.1, 12-15, or 12-16 of |
|
the Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of |
2012; |
(ii) aggravated assault; |
(iii) aggravated battery; |
(iv) domestic battery; |
(v) aggravated domestic battery; |
(vi) violation of an order of protection; |
(vii) an offense under the Criminal Code of |
1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012 involving a |
firearm; |
(viii) driving while under the influence of |
alcohol, other drug or drugs, intoxicating |
compound or compounds or any combination thereof; |
(ix) aggravated driving while under the |
influence of alcohol, other drug or drugs, |
intoxicating compound or compounds or any |
combination thereof; or |
(x) any crime defined as a crime of violence |
under Section 2 of the Crime Victims Compensation |
Act. |
If a person has applied to the Board for a certificate |
of eligibility for sealing and the Board denies the |
certificate, the person must wait at least 4 years before |
filing again or filing for pardon from the Governor unless |
the Chairman of the Prisoner Review Board grants a waiver. |
The decision to issue or refrain from issuing a |
|
certificate of eligibility for sealing shall be at the |
Board's sole discretion, and shall not give rise to any |
cause of action against either the Board or its members. |
The Board may only authorize the sealing of Class 3 and |
4 felony convictions of the petitioner from one information |
or indictment under this paragraph (10). A petitioner may |
only receive one certificate of eligibility for sealing |
under this provision for life; and
|
(11) upon a petition by a person who after having been |
convicted of a Class 3 or Class 4 felony thereafter served |
in the United States Armed Forces or National Guard of this |
or any other state and had received an honorable discharge |
from the United States Armed Forces or National Guard or |
who at the time of filing the petition is enlisted in the |
United States Armed Forces or National Guard of this or any |
other state and served one tour of duty and who meets the |
requirements of this paragraph, hear by at least 3 members |
and, with the unanimous vote of a panel of 3 members, issue |
a certificate of eligibility for expungement recommending |
that the court order the expungement of all official
|
records of the arresting authority, the circuit court |
clerk, and the Department of State Police concerning the |
arrest and conviction for the Class 3 or 4 felony. A person |
may not apply to the Board for a certificate of eligibility |
for expungement: |
(A) if convicted of: |
|
(i) a sex offense described in Article 11 or |
Sections 12-13, 12-14, 12-14.1, 12-15, or 12-16 of |
the Criminal Code of 1961 or Criminal Code of 2012; |
(ii) an offense under the Criminal Code of 1961 |
or Criminal Code of 2012 involving a firearm; or |
(iii) a crime of violence as defined in Section |
2 of the Crime Victims Compensation Act; or |
(B) if the person has not served in the United |
States Armed Forces or National Guard of this or any |
other state or has not received an honorable discharge |
from the United States Armed Forces or National Guard |
of this or any other state or who at the time of the |
filing of the petition is serving in the United States |
Armed Forces or National Guard of this or any other |
state and has not completed one tour of duty. |
If a person has applied to the Board for a certificate |
of eligibility for expungement and the Board denies the |
certificate, the person must wait at least 4 years before |
filing again or filing for a pardon with authorization for |
expungement from the Governor unless the Governor or |
Chairman of the Prisoner Review Board grants a waiver. |
(a-5) The Prisoner Review Board, with the cooperation of |
and in
coordination with the Department of Corrections and the |
Department of Central
Management Services, shall implement a |
pilot project in 3 correctional
institutions providing for the |
conduct of hearings under paragraphs (1) and
(4)
of subsection |
|
(a) of this Section through interactive video conferences.
The
|
project shall be implemented within 6 months after the |
effective date of this
amendatory Act of 1996. Within 6 months |
after the implementation of the pilot
project, the Prisoner |
Review Board, with the cooperation of and in coordination
with |
the Department of Corrections and the Department of Central |
Management
Services, shall report to the Governor and the |
General Assembly regarding the
use, costs, effectiveness, and |
future viability of interactive video
conferences for Prisoner |
Review Board hearings.
|
(b) Upon recommendation of the Department the Board may |
restore sentence credit previously revoked.
|
(c) The Board shall cooperate with the Department in |
promoting an
effective system of parole , aftercare release, and |
mandatory supervised release.
|
(d) The Board shall promulgate rules for the conduct of its |
work,
and the Chairman shall file a copy of such rules and any |
amendments
thereto with the Director and with the Secretary of |
State.
|
(e) The Board shall keep records of all of its official |
actions and
shall make them accessible in accordance with law |
and the rules of the
Board.
|
(f) The Board or one who has allegedly violated the |
conditions of
his or her parole, aftercare release, or |
mandatory supervised release may require by subpoena the
|
attendance and testimony of witnesses and the production of |
|
documentary
evidence relating to any matter under |
investigation or hearing. The
Chairman of the Board may sign |
subpoenas which shall be served by any
agent or public official |
authorized by the Chairman of the Board, or by
any person |
lawfully authorized to serve a subpoena under the laws of the
|
State of Illinois. The attendance of witnesses, and the |
production of
documentary evidence, may be required from any |
place in the State to a
hearing location in the State before |
the Chairman of the Board or his or her
designated agent or |
agents or any duly constituted Committee or
Subcommittee of the |
Board. Witnesses so summoned shall be paid the same
fees and |
mileage that are paid witnesses in the circuit courts of the
|
State, and witnesses whose depositions are taken and the |
persons taking
those depositions are each entitled to the same |
fees as are paid for
like services in actions in the circuit |
courts of the State. Fees and
mileage shall be vouchered for |
payment when the witness is discharged
from further attendance.
|
In case of disobedience to a subpoena, the Board may |
petition any
circuit court of the State for an order requiring |
the attendance and
testimony of witnesses or the production of |
documentary evidence or
both. A copy of such petition shall be |
served by personal service or by
registered or certified mail |
upon the person who has failed to obey the
subpoena, and such |
person shall be advised in writing that a hearing
upon the |
petition will be requested in a court room to be designated in
|
such notice before the judge hearing motions or extraordinary |
|
remedies
at a specified time, on a specified date, not less |
than 10 nor more than
15 days after the deposit of the copy of |
the written notice and petition
in the U.S. mails addressed to |
the person at his last known address or
after the personal |
service of the copy of the notice and petition upon
such |
person. The court upon the filing of such a petition, may order |
the
person refusing to obey the subpoena to appear at an |
investigation or
hearing, or to there produce documentary |
evidence, if so ordered, or to
give evidence relative to the |
subject matter of that investigation or
hearing. Any failure to |
obey such order of the circuit court may be
punished by that |
court as a contempt of court.
|
Each member of the Board and any hearing officer designated |
by the
Board shall have the power to administer oaths and to |
take the testimony
of persons under oath.
|
(g) Except under subsection (a) of this Section, a majority |
of the
members then appointed to the Prisoner Review Board |
shall constitute a
quorum for the transaction of all business |
of the Board.
|
(h) The Prisoner Review Board shall annually transmit to |
the
Director a detailed report of its work for the preceding |
calendar year.
The annual report shall also be transmitted to |
the Governor for
submission to the Legislature.
|
(Source: P.A. 97-697, eff. 6-22-12; 97-1120, eff. 1-1-13; |
97-1150, eff. 1-25-13; 98-399, eff. 8-16-13; 98-558, eff. |
1-1-14; 98-756, eff. 7-16-14.)
|
|
(730 ILCS 5/3-3-3) (from Ch. 38, par. 1003-3-3)
|
Sec. 3-3-3. Eligibility for Parole or Release.
|
(a) Except for those offenders who accept the fixed release
|
date established by the Prisoner Review Board under Section
|
3-3-2.1, every person serving a term of imprisonment under
the |
law in effect prior to the effective date of this
amendatory |
Act of 1977 shall be eligible for parole when
he or she has |
served:
|
(1) the minimum term of an indeterminate sentence less
|
time credit for good behavior, or 20 years less time credit
|
for good behavior, whichever is less; or
|
(2) 20 years of a life sentence less time credit for |
good behavior; or
|
(3) 20 years or one-third of a determinate sentence,
|
whichever is less, less time credit for good behavior.
|
(b) No person sentenced under this amendatory Act of 1977 |
or who accepts
a release date under Section 3-3-2.1 shall be |
eligible for parole.
|
(c) Except for those sentenced to a term of natural
life |
imprisonment, every person sentenced to imprisonment
under |
this amendatory Act of 1977 or given a release date
under |
Section 3-3-2.1 of this Act shall serve the full term
of a |
determinate sentence less time credit for good behavior
and |
shall then be released under the mandatory supervised
release |
provisions of paragraph (d) of Section 5-8-1 of this Code.
|
|
(d) No person serving a term of natural life imprisonment |
may be paroled
or released except through executive clemency.
|
(e) Every person committed to the Department of Juvenile |
Justice under Section
5-10 of the Juvenile Court Act or Section |
5-750 of the Juvenile
Court Act
of 1987 or Section 5-8-6 of |
this Code and confined in the State correctional
institutions |
or facilities if such juvenile has not been
tried as an adult |
shall be eligible for aftercare release under Section 3-2.5-85 |
of this Code without
regard to the length of time the person |
has been confined
or whether the person has served any minimum |
term imposed .
However, if a juvenile has been tried as an adult |
he or she shall
only be eligible for parole or mandatory |
supervised release
as an adult under this Section.
|
(Source: P.A. 98-558, eff. 1-1-14.)
|
(730 ILCS 5/3-3-4) (from Ch. 38, par. 1003-3-4)
|
Sec. 3-3-4. Preparation for Parole Hearing.
|
(a) The Prisoner Review Board shall consider the parole
of |
each eligible person committed to the Department of Corrections |
at
least 30 days prior to the date he or she shall first become
|
eligible for parole , and shall consider the aftercare release |
of each
person committed to the Department of Juvenile Justice |
as a delinquent
at least 30 days prior to the expiration of the |
first year
of confinement .
|
(b) A person eligible for parole or aftercare release |
shall, no less than 15 days in advance of
his or her parole |
|
interview, prepare a parole or aftercare release plan in |
accordance
with the rules of the Prisoner Review Board. The |
person
shall be assisted in preparing his or her parole or |
aftercare release plan by personnel
of the Department of |
Corrections, or the Department of Juvenile Justice in the case |
of a person committed to that Department, and may, for this |
purpose, be released
on furlough under Article 11 or on |
authorized absence under
Section 3-9-4 . The appropriate |
Department shall also provide
assistance in obtaining |
information and records helpful to
the individual for his or |
her parole hearing. If the person eligible for parole or |
aftercare release has a petition or any written submissions |
prepared on his or her behalf by an attorney or other |
representative, the attorney or representative for the person |
eligible for parole or aftercare release must serve by |
certified mail the State's Attorney of the county where he or |
she was prosecuted with the petition or any written submissions |
15 days after his or her parole interview. The State's Attorney |
shall provide the attorney for the person eligible for parole |
or aftercare release with a copy of his or her letter in |
opposition to parole or aftercare release via certified mail |
within 5 business days of the en banc hearing.
|
(c) Any member of the Board shall have access at all
|
reasonable times to any committed person and to his or her |
master
record file within the Department, and the Department |
shall
furnish such a report to the Board
concerning the conduct |
|
and character of any such person prior to his or her parole |
interview.
|
(d) In making its determination of parole or aftercare |
release , the Board
shall consider:
|
(1) (blank); material transmitted to the Department of |
Juvenile Justice by the
clerk of the committing court under |
Section 5-4-1 or Section
5-10 of the Juvenile Court Act or |
Section 5-750 of the Juvenile
Court Act of 1987;
|
(2) the report under Section 3-8-2 or 3-10-2;
|
(3) a report by the Department and any report by the
|
chief administrative officer of the institution or |
facility;
|
(4) a parole or aftercare release progress report;
|
(5) a medical and psychological report, if requested
by |
the Board;
|
(6) material in writing, or on film, video tape or |
other electronic
means in the form of a recording submitted |
by the person whose parole or aftercare release
is being |
considered;
|
(7) material in writing, or on film, video tape or |
other electronic
means in the form of a recording or |
testimony submitted by the State's
Attorney and the victim |
or a concerned citizen pursuant to the Rights of Crime |
Victims and Witnesses Act; and
|
(8) the person's eligibility for commitment under the |
Sexually Violent Persons Commitment Act. |
|
(e) The prosecuting State's Attorney's office shall |
receive from the Board reasonable
written notice not less than |
30 days prior to the parole or aftercare release interview and |
may
submit relevant information by oral argument or testimony |
of victims and concerned citizens, or both, in writing, or on |
film, video tape or other
electronic means or in the form of a |
recording to the Board for its
consideration. Upon written |
request of the State's Attorney's office, the Prisoner Review |
Board shall hear protests to parole, or aftercare release, |
except in counties of 1,500,000 or more inhabitants where there |
shall be standing objections to all such petitions. If a |
State's Attorney who represents a county of less than 1,500,000 |
inhabitants requests a protest hearing, the inmate's counsel or |
other representative shall also receive notice of such request.
|
This hearing shall take place the month following the inmate's |
parole or aftercare release interview. If the inmate's parole |
or aftercare release interview is rescheduled then the Prisoner |
Review Board shall promptly notify the State's Attorney of the |
new date. The person eligible for parole or aftercare release |
shall be heard at the next scheduled en banc hearing date. If |
the case is to be continued, the State's Attorney's office and |
the attorney or representative for the person eligible for |
parole or aftercare release will be notified of any continuance |
within 5 business days. The State's Attorney may waive the |
written notice.
|
(f) The victim of the violent crime for which the prisoner |
|
has been
sentenced shall receive notice of a parole or |
aftercare release hearing as provided in paragraph
(4) of |
subsection (d) of Section 4.5 of the Rights of Crime Victims |
and Witnesses
Act.
|
(g) Any recording considered under the provisions of |
subsection (d)(6),
(d)(7) or (e) of this Section shall be in |
the form designated by the Board.
Such recording shall be both |
visual and aural. Every voice on the
recording and person |
present shall be identified and the recording shall
contain |
either a visual or aural statement of the person submitting |
such
recording, the date of the recording and the name of the |
person whose
parole or aftercare release eligibility is being |
considered. Such recordings shall be retained by
the Board and |
shall be deemed to be submitted at any subsequent parole or |
aftercare release hearing
if the victim or State's Attorney |
submits in writing a declaration clearly
identifying such |
recording as representing the present position of the
victim or |
State's Attorney regarding the issues to be considered at the |
parole or aftercare release
hearing.
|
(h) The Board shall not release any material to the inmate, |
the inmate's attorney, any third party, or any other person |
containing any information from the victim or from a person |
related to the victim by blood, adoption, or marriage who has |
written objections, testified at any hearing, or submitted |
audio or visual objections to the inmate's parole, or aftercare |
release, unless provided with a waiver from that objecting |
|
party. The Board shall not release the names or addresses of |
any person on its victim registry to any other person except |
the victim, a law enforcement agency, or other victim |
notification system. |
(Source: P.A. 97-523, eff. 1-1-12; 97-1075, eff. 8-24-12; |
97-1083, eff. 8-24-12; 98-463, eff. 8-16-13; 98-558, eff. |
1-1-14; 98-717, eff. 1-1-15 .)
|
(730 ILCS 5/3-3-5) (from Ch. 38, par. 1003-3-5)
|
Sec. 3-3-5. Hearing and Determination.
|
(a) The Prisoner
Review Board shall meet as often as need |
requires to consider
the cases of persons eligible for parole |
and aftercare release . Except as otherwise
provided in |
paragraph (2) of subsection (a) of Section 3-3-2
of this Act, |
the Prisoner Review Board may meet and
order its actions in |
panels of 3 or more members. The action
of a majority of the |
panel shall be the action of the Board.
In consideration of |
persons committed to the Department of Juvenile Justice,
the |
panel shall have at least a majority of members experienced
in |
juvenile matters.
|
(b) If the person under consideration for parole or |
aftercare release is in the
custody of the Department, at least |
one member of the Board
shall interview him or her, and a |
report of that interview shall be
available for the Board's |
consideration. However, in the
discretion of the Board, the |
interview need not be conducted
if a psychiatric examination |
|
determines that the person could
not meaningfully contribute to |
the Board's consideration. The
Board may in its discretion |
parole or release on aftercare a person who is then outside
the |
jurisdiction on his or her record without an interview. The |
Board
need not hold a hearing or interview a person who is |
paroled or released on aftercare
under paragraphs (d) or (e) of |
this Section or released on
Mandatory release under Section |
3-3-10.
|
(c) The Board shall not parole or release a person eligible |
for
parole or aftercare release if it determines that:
|
(1) there is a substantial risk that he or she will not
|
conform to reasonable conditions of parole or aftercare |
release; or
|
(2) his or her release at that time would deprecate the
|
seriousness of his or her offense or promote disrespect for |
the law; or
|
(3) his or her release would have a substantially |
adverse
effect on institutional discipline.
|
(d) (Blank). A person committed under the Juvenile Court |
Act
or the Juvenile Court Act of 1987
who has not been sooner |
released shall be released on aftercare on or before
his or her |
20th birthday or upon completion of the maximum term of |
confinement ordered by the court under Section 5-710 of the |
Juvenile Court Act of 1987, whichever is sooner, to begin |
serving a period of aftercare release under
Section 3-3-8.
|
(e) A person who has served the maximum term of
|
|
imprisonment imposed at the time of sentencing less time
credit |
for good behavior shall be released on parole to
serve a period |
of parole under Section 5-8-1.
|
(f) The Board shall render its decision within a
reasonable |
time after hearing and shall state the basis
therefor both in |
the records of the Board and in written
notice to the person on |
whose application it has acted.
In its decision, the Board |
shall set the person's time
for parole or aftercare release , or |
if it denies parole or aftercare release it shall provide for
a |
rehearing not less frequently than once every
year, except that |
the Board may,
after denying parole,
schedule a rehearing no |
later than 5 years from the date of the parole
denial, if the |
Board finds that it is not reasonable to expect that parole
|
would be granted at a hearing prior to the scheduled rehearing |
date. If the
Board shall parole or release a person, and, if he |
or she is not released within 90 days from
the effective date |
of the order granting parole or aftercare release , the matter |
shall be
returned to the Board for review.
|
(f-1) If the Board paroles or releases a person who is |
eligible for commitment as a sexually violent person, the |
effective date of the Board's order shall be stayed for 90 days |
for the purpose of evaluation and proceedings under the |
Sexually Violent Persons Commitment Act. |
(g) The Board shall maintain a registry of decisions in |
which parole
has been granted, which shall include the name and |
case number of the
prisoner, the highest charge for which the |
|
prisoner was sentenced, the
length of sentence imposed, the |
date of the sentence, the date of the
parole, and the basis for |
the decision of the Board to grant parole and the
vote of the |
Board on any such decisions. The registry shall be made |
available
for public inspection and copying during business |
hours and shall be a public
record pursuant to the provisions |
of the Freedom of Information Act.
|
(h) The Board shall promulgate rules regarding the exercise
|
of its discretion under this Section.
|
(Source: P.A. 98-558, eff. 1-1-14; 99-268, eff. 1-1-16 .)
|
(730 ILCS 5/3-3-7) (from Ch. 38, par. 1003-3-7) |
Sec. 3-3-7. Conditions of Parole or , Mandatory Supervised |
Release , or Aftercare Release .
|
(a) The conditions of parole , aftercare release, or |
mandatory
supervised release shall be such as the Prisoner |
Review
Board deems necessary to assist the subject in leading a
|
law-abiding life. The conditions of every parole , aftercare |
release, and mandatory
supervised release are that the subject:
|
(1) not violate any criminal statute of any |
jurisdiction
during the parole , aftercare release, or |
release term;
|
(2) refrain from possessing a firearm or other |
dangerous
weapon;
|
(3) report to an agent of the Department of Corrections |
or to the Department of Juvenile Justice ;
|
|
(4) permit the agent or aftercare specialist to visit |
him or her at his or her home, employment,
or
elsewhere to |
the
extent necessary for the agent or aftercare specialist |
to discharge his or her duties;
|
(5) attend or reside in a facility established for the |
instruction or
residence
of persons on
parole , aftercare |
release, or mandatory supervised release;
|
(6) secure permission before visiting or writing a |
committed person in an
Illinois Department
of Corrections |
facility;
|
(7) report all arrests to an agent of the Department of |
Corrections or to the Department of Juvenile Justice as
|
soon as
permitted by the
arresting authority but in no |
event later than 24 hours after release from
custody and |
immediately report service or notification of an order of |
protection, a civil no contact order, or a stalking no |
contact order to an agent of the Department of Corrections;
|
(7.5) if convicted of a sex offense as defined in the |
Sex Offender
Management Board Act, the individual shall |
undergo and successfully complete
sex offender treatment |
conducted in conformance with the standards developed by
|
the Sex
Offender Management Board Act by a treatment |
provider approved by the Board;
|
(7.6) if convicted of a sex offense as defined in the |
Sex Offender
Management Board Act, refrain from residing at |
the same address or in the same condominium unit or |
|
apartment unit or in the same condominium complex or |
apartment complex with another person he or she knows or |
reasonably should know is a convicted sex offender or has |
been placed on supervision for a sex offense; the |
provisions of this paragraph do not apply to a person |
convicted of a sex offense who is placed in a Department of |
Corrections licensed transitional housing facility for sex |
offenders, or is in any facility operated or licensed by |
the Department of Children and Family Services or by the |
Department of Human Services, or is in any licensed medical |
facility;
|
(7.7) if convicted for an offense that would qualify |
the accused as a sexual predator under the Sex Offender |
Registration Act on or after January 1, 2007 (the effective |
date of Public Act 94-988), wear an approved electronic |
monitoring device as defined in Section 5-8A-2 for the |
duration of the person's parole, aftercare release, |
mandatory supervised release term, or extended mandatory |
supervised release term and if convicted for an offense of |
criminal sexual assault, aggravated criminal sexual |
assault, predatory criminal sexual assault of a child, |
criminal sexual abuse, aggravated criminal sexual abuse, |
or ritualized abuse of a child committed on or after August |
11, 2009 (the effective date of Public Act 96-236) when the |
victim was under 18 years of age at the time of the |
commission of the offense and the defendant used force or |
|
the threat of force in the commission of the offense wear |
an approved electronic monitoring device as defined in |
Section 5-8A-2 that has Global Positioning System (GPS) |
capability for the duration of the person's parole, |
aftercare release, mandatory supervised release term, or |
extended mandatory supervised release term;
|
(7.8) if convicted for an offense committed on or after |
June 1, 2008 (the effective date of Public Act 95-464) that |
would qualify the accused as a child sex offender as |
defined in Section 11-9.3 or 11-9.4 of the Criminal Code of |
1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012, refrain from |
communicating with or contacting, by means of the Internet, |
a person who is not related to the accused and whom the |
accused reasonably believes to be under 18 years of age; |
for purposes of this paragraph (7.8), "Internet" has the |
meaning ascribed to it in Section 16-0.1 of the Criminal |
Code of 2012; and a person is not related to the accused if |
the person is not: (i) the spouse, brother, or sister of |
the accused; (ii) a descendant of the accused; (iii) a |
first or second cousin of the accused; or (iv) a step-child |
or adopted child of the accused;
|
(7.9)
if convicted under Section 11-6, 11-20.1, |
11-20.1B, 11-20.3, or 11-21 of the Criminal Code of 1961 or |
the Criminal Code of 2012, consent to search of computers, |
PDAs, cellular phones, and other devices under his or her |
control that are capable of accessing the Internet or |
|
storing electronic files, in order to confirm Internet |
protocol addresses reported in accordance with the Sex |
Offender Registration Act and compliance with conditions |
in this Act;
|
(7.10)
if convicted for an offense that would qualify |
the accused as a sex offender or sexual predator under the |
Sex Offender Registration Act on or after June 1, 2008 (the |
effective date of Public Act 95-640), not possess |
prescription drugs for erectile dysfunction;
|
(7.11) if convicted for an offense under Section 11-6, |
11-9.1, 11-14.4 that involves soliciting for a juvenile |
prostitute, 11-15.1, 11-20.1, 11-20.1B, 11-20.3, or 11-21 |
of the Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012, |
or any attempt to commit any of these offenses, committed |
on or after June 1, 2009 (the effective date of Public Act |
95-983): |
(i) not access or use a computer or any other |
device with Internet capability without the prior |
written approval of the Department; |
(ii) submit to periodic unannounced examinations |
of the offender's computer or any other device with |
Internet capability by the offender's supervising |
agent, aftercare specialist, a law enforcement |
officer, or assigned computer or information |
technology specialist, including the retrieval and |
copying of all data from the computer or device and any |
|
internal or external peripherals and removal of such |
information, equipment, or device to conduct a more |
thorough inspection; |
(iii) submit to the installation on the offender's |
computer or device with Internet capability, at the |
offender's expense, of one or more hardware or software |
systems to monitor the Internet use; and |
(iv) submit to any other appropriate restrictions |
concerning the offender's use of or access to a |
computer or any other device with Internet capability |
imposed by the Board, the Department or the offender's |
supervising agent or aftercare specialist ; |
(7.12) if convicted of a sex offense as defined in the |
Sex Offender
Registration Act committed on or after January |
1, 2010 (the effective date of Public Act 96-262), refrain |
from accessing or using a social networking website as |
defined in Section 17-0.5 of the Criminal Code of 2012;
|
(7.13) if convicted of a sex offense as defined in |
Section 2 of the Sex Offender Registration Act committed on |
or after January 1, 2010 (the effective date of Public Act |
96-362) that requires the person to register as a sex |
offender under that Act, may not knowingly use any computer |
scrub software on any computer that the sex offender uses; |
(8) obtain permission of an agent of the Department of |
Corrections or the Department of Juvenile Justice before
|
leaving the
State of Illinois;
|
|
(9) obtain permission of an agent of the Department of |
Corrections or the Department of Juvenile Justice before
|
changing
his or her residence or employment;
|
(10) consent to a search of his or her person, |
property, or residence
under his or her
control;
|
(11) refrain from the use or possession of narcotics or |
other controlled
substances in
any form, or both, or any |
paraphernalia related to those substances and submit
to a
|
urinalysis test as instructed by a parole agent of the |
Department of
Corrections or an aftercare specialist of the |
Department of Juvenile Justice ;
|
(12) not frequent places where controlled substances |
are illegally sold,
used,
distributed, or administered;
|
(13) not knowingly associate with other persons on |
parole , aftercare release, or mandatory
supervised
release |
without prior written permission of his or her parole agent |
or aftercare specialist and not
associate with
persons who |
are members of an organized gang as that term is defined in |
the
Illinois
Streetgang Terrorism Omnibus Prevention Act;
|
(14) provide true and accurate information, as it |
relates to his or her
adjustment in the
community while on |
parole , aftercare release, or mandatory supervised release |
or to his or her
conduct
while incarcerated, in response to |
inquiries by his or her parole agent or of
the
Department |
of Corrections or by his or her aftercare specialist or of |
the Department of Juvenile Justice ;
|
|
(15) follow any specific instructions provided by the |
parole agent or aftercare specialist that
are consistent
|
with furthering conditions set and approved by the Prisoner |
Review Board or by
law,
exclusive of placement on |
electronic detention, to achieve the goals and
objectives |
of his
or her parole , aftercare release, or mandatory |
supervised release or to protect the public. These
|
instructions by the parole agent or aftercare specialist |
may be modified at any time, as the agent or aftercare |
specialist
deems
appropriate;
|
(16) if convicted of a sex offense as defined in |
subsection (a-5) of Section 3-1-2 of this Code, unless the |
offender is a parent or guardian of the person under 18 |
years of age present in the home and no non-familial minors |
are present, not participate in a holiday event involving |
children under 18 years of age, such as distributing candy |
or other items to children on Halloween, wearing a Santa |
Claus costume on or preceding Christmas, being employed as |
a department store Santa Claus, or wearing an Easter Bunny |
costume on or preceding Easter; |
(17) if convicted of a violation of an order of |
protection under Section 12-3.4 or Section 12-30 of the |
Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012, be |
placed under electronic surveillance as provided in |
Section 5-8A-7 of this Code; |
(18) comply with the terms and conditions of an order |
|
of protection issued pursuant to the Illinois Domestic |
Violence Act of 1986; an order of protection issued by the |
court of another state, tribe, or United States territory; |
a no contact order issued pursuant to the Civil No Contact |
Order Act; or a no contact order issued pursuant to the |
Stalking No Contact Order Act; and |
(19) if convicted of a violation of the Methamphetamine |
Control and Community Protection Act, the Methamphetamine
|
Precursor Control Act, or a methamphetamine related |
offense, be: |
(A) prohibited from purchasing, possessing, or |
having under his or her control any product containing |
pseudoephedrine unless prescribed by a physician; and |
(B) prohibited from purchasing, possessing, or |
having under his or her control any product containing |
ammonium nitrate. |
(b) The Board may in addition to other conditions
require |
that the subject:
|
(1) work or pursue a course of study or vocational |
training;
|
(2) undergo medical or psychiatric treatment, or |
treatment
for drug addiction or alcoholism;
|
(3) attend or reside in a facility established for the
|
instruction or residence of persons on probation or parole;
|
(4) support his or her dependents;
|
(5) (blank);
|
|
(6) (blank);
|
(7) (blank);
|
(7.5) if convicted for an offense committed on or after |
the effective date of this amendatory Act of the 95th |
General Assembly that would qualify the accused as a child |
sex offender as defined in Section 11-9.3 or 11-9.4 of the |
Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012, refrain |
from communicating with or contacting, by means of the |
Internet, a person who is related to the accused and whom |
the accused reasonably believes to be under 18 years of |
age; for purposes of this paragraph (7.5), "Internet" has |
the meaning ascribed to it in Section 16-0.1 of the |
Criminal Code of 2012; and a person is related to the |
accused if the person is: (i) the spouse, brother, or |
sister of the accused; (ii) a descendant of the accused; |
(iii) a first or second cousin of the accused; or (iv) a |
step-child or adopted child of the accused; |
(7.6) if convicted for an offense committed on or after |
June 1, 2009 (the effective date of Public Act 95-983) that |
would qualify as a sex offense as defined in the Sex |
Offender Registration Act: |
(i) not access or use a computer or any other |
device with Internet capability without the prior |
written approval of the Department; |
(ii) submit to periodic unannounced examinations |
of the offender's computer or any other device with |
|
Internet capability by the offender's supervising |
agent or aftercare specialist , a law enforcement |
officer, or assigned computer or information |
technology specialist, including the retrieval and |
copying of all data from the computer or device and any |
internal or external peripherals and removal of such |
information, equipment, or device to conduct a more |
thorough inspection; |
(iii) submit to the installation on the offender's |
computer or device with Internet capability, at the |
offender's expense, of one or more hardware or software |
systems to monitor the Internet use; and |
(iv) submit to any other appropriate restrictions |
concerning the offender's use of or access to a |
computer or any other device with Internet capability |
imposed by the Board, the Department or the offender's |
supervising agent or aftercare specialist ; and
|
(8) in addition, if a minor:
|
(i) reside with his or her parents or in a foster |
home;
|
(ii) attend school;
|
(iii) attend a non-residential program for youth; |
or
|
(iv) contribute to his or her own support at home |
or in a foster
home.
|
(b-1) In addition to the conditions set forth in |
|
subsections (a) and (b), persons required to register as sex |
offenders pursuant to the Sex Offender Registration Act, upon |
release from the custody of the Illinois Department of |
Corrections or Department of Juvenile Justice , may be required |
by the Board to comply with the following specific conditions |
of release: |
(1) reside only at a Department approved location; |
(2) comply with all requirements of the Sex Offender |
Registration Act;
|
(3) notify
third parties of the risks that may be |
occasioned by his or her criminal record; |
(4) obtain the approval of an agent of the Department |
of Corrections or the Department of Juvenile Justice prior |
to accepting employment or pursuing a course of study or |
vocational training and notify the Department prior to any |
change in employment, study, or training; |
(5) not be employed or participate in any
volunteer |
activity that involves contact with children, except under |
circumstances approved in advance and in writing by an |
agent of the Department of Corrections or the Department of |
Juvenile Justice ; |
(6) be electronically monitored for a minimum of 12 |
months from the date of release as determined by the Board;
|
(7) refrain from entering into a designated
geographic |
area except upon terms approved in advance by an agent of |
the Department of Corrections or the Department of Juvenile |
|
Justice . The terms may include consideration of the purpose |
of the entry, the time of day, and others accompanying the |
person; |
(8) refrain from having any contact, including
written |
or oral communications, directly or indirectly, personally |
or by telephone, letter, or through a third party with |
certain specified persons including, but not limited to, |
the victim or the victim's family without the prior written |
approval of an agent of the Department of Corrections or |
the Department of Juvenile Justice ; |
(9) refrain from all contact, directly or
indirectly, |
personally, by telephone, letter, or through a third party, |
with minor children without prior identification and |
approval of an agent of the Department of Corrections or |
the Department of Juvenile Justice ; |
(10) neither possess or have under his or her
control |
any material that is sexually oriented, sexually |
stimulating, or that shows male or female sex organs or any |
pictures depicting children under 18 years of age nude or |
any written or audio material describing sexual |
intercourse or that depicts or alludes to sexual activity, |
including but not limited to visual, auditory, telephonic, |
or electronic media, or any matter obtained through access |
to any computer or material linked to computer access use; |
(11) not patronize any business providing
sexually |
stimulating or sexually oriented entertainment nor utilize |
|
"900" or adult telephone numbers; |
(12) not reside near, visit, or be in or about
parks, |
schools, day care centers, swimming pools, beaches, |
theaters, or any other places where minor children |
congregate without advance approval of an agent of the |
Department of Corrections or the Department of Juvenile |
Justice and immediately report any incidental contact with |
minor children to the Department; |
(13) not possess or have under his or her control
|
certain specified items of contraband related to the |
incidence of sexually offending as determined by an agent |
of the Department of Corrections or the Department of |
Juvenile Justice ; |
(14) may be required to provide a written daily log of |
activities
if directed by an agent of the Department of |
Corrections or the Department of Juvenile Justice ; |
(15) comply with all other special conditions
that the |
Department may impose that restrict the person from |
high-risk situations and limit access to potential |
victims; |
(16) take an annual polygraph exam; |
(17) maintain a log of his or her travel; or |
(18) obtain prior approval of his or her parole officer |
or aftercare specialist before driving alone in a motor |
vehicle.
|
(c) The conditions under which the parole , aftercare |
|
release, or mandatory
supervised release is to be served shall |
be communicated to
the person in writing prior to his or her |
release, and he or she shall
sign the same before release. A |
signed copy of these conditions,
including a copy of an order |
of protection where one had been issued by the
criminal court, |
shall be retained by the person and another copy forwarded to
|
the officer or aftercare specialist in charge of his or her |
supervision.
|
(d) After a hearing under Section 3-3-9, the Prisoner
|
Review Board may modify or enlarge the conditions of parole , |
aftercare release,
or mandatory supervised release.
|
(e) The Department shall inform all offenders committed to
|
the Department of the optional services available to them
upon |
release and shall assist inmates in availing themselves
of such |
optional services upon their release on a voluntary
basis. |
(f) (Blank).
|
(Source: P.A. 97-50, eff. 6-28-11; 97-531, eff. 1-1-12; 97-560, |
eff. 1-1-12; 97-597, eff. 1-1-12; 97-1109, eff. 1-1-13; |
97-1150, eff. 1-25-13; 98-558, eff. 1-1-14.)
|
(730 ILCS 5/3-3-8) (from Ch. 38, par. 1003-3-8)
|
Sec. 3-3-8. Length of parole , aftercare release, and |
mandatory supervised
release; discharge. ) |
(a) The length of parole
for a person sentenced under the |
law in effect prior to
the effective date of this amendatory |
Act of 1977 and the
length of mandatory supervised release for |
|
those sentenced
under the law in effect on and after such |
effective date
shall be as set out in Section 5-8-1 unless |
sooner terminated
under paragraph (b) of this Section. The |
aftercare release period
of a juvenile committed to the |
Department under the Juvenile
Court Act or the Juvenile Court |
Act of 1987 shall be as set out in Section 5-750 of the |
Juvenile Court Act of 1987 unless sooner terminated under |
paragraph (b) of this Section or under the Juvenile Court Act |
of 1987.
|
(b) The Prisoner Review Board may enter an order
releasing |
and discharging one from parole , aftercare release, or |
mandatory
supervised release, and his or her commitment to the |
Department,
when it determines that he or she is likely to |
remain at liberty
without committing another offense.
|
(b-1) Provided that the subject is in compliance with the |
terms and conditions of his or her parole , aftercare release, |
or mandatory supervised release, the Prisoner Review Board may |
reduce the period of a parolee or releasee's parole , aftercare |
release, or mandatory supervised release by 90 days upon the |
parolee or releasee receiving a high school diploma or upon |
passage of high school equivalency testing during the period of |
his or her parole , aftercare release, or mandatory supervised |
release. This reduction in the period of a subject's term of |
parole , aftercare release, or mandatory supervised release |
shall be available only to subjects who have not previously |
earned a high school diploma or who have not previously passed |
|
high school equivalency testing. |
(c) The order of discharge shall become effective upon |
entry of the
order of the Board. The Board shall notify the |
clerk of the committing
court of the order. Upon receipt of |
such copy, the clerk shall make an
entry on the record judgment |
that the sentence or commitment has been
satisfied pursuant to |
the order.
|
(d) Rights of the person discharged under this
Section |
shall be restored under Section 5-5-5. This Section is subject |
to
Section 5-750 of the Juvenile Court Act of 1987.
|
(Source: P.A. 98-558, eff. 1-1-14; 98-718, eff. 1-1-15; 99-268, |
eff. 1-1-16 .)
|
(730 ILCS 5/3-3-9) (from Ch. 38, par. 1003-3-9)
|
Sec. 3-3-9. Violations; changes of conditions; preliminary
|
hearing; revocation of parole , aftercare release, or mandatory |
supervised release;
revocation hearing. |
(a) If prior to expiration or termination of the term of
|
parole , aftercare release, or mandatory supervised release, a |
person violates a
condition set by the Prisoner Review Board or |
a condition of parole , aftercare release, or
mandatory |
supervised release under Section 3-3-7 of this Code to govern |
that
term,
the Board may:
|
(1) continue the existing term, with or without |
modifying or
enlarging the conditions; or
|
(2) parole or release the person to a half-way house; |
|
or
|
(3) revoke the parole , aftercare release, or mandatory |
supervised release and
reconfine the person for a term |
computed in the following
manner:
|
(i) (A) For those sentenced under the law in effect |
prior to
this amendatory Act of 1977, the recommitment |
shall be for any
portion of the imposed maximum term of |
imprisonment or confinement
which had not been served |
at the time of parole and the parole
term, less the |
time elapsed between the parole of the person and
the |
commission of the violation for which parole was |
revoked;
|
(B) Except as set forth in paragraph (C), for
those |
subject to mandatory supervised release under
|
paragraph (d) of Section 5-8-1 of this Code, the |
recommitment
shall be for the total mandatory |
supervised release term, less
the time elapsed between |
the release of the person and the
commission of the |
violation for which mandatory supervised
release is |
revoked. The Board may also order that a prisoner
serve |
up to one year of the sentence imposed by the court |
which
was not served due to the accumulation of |
sentence credit;
|
(C) For those subject to sex offender supervision |
under clause (d)(4) of Section 5-8-1 of this Code, the |
reconfinement period for violations of clauses (a)(3) |
|
through (b-1)(15) of Section 3-3-7 shall not exceed 2 |
years from the date of reconfinement;
|
(ii) the person shall be given credit against |
the term of
reimprisonment or reconfinement for |
time spent in custody
since he or she was paroled |
or released which has not been credited
against |
another sentence or period of confinement;
|
(iii) (blank); persons committed under the |
Juvenile Court Act or the Juvenile
Court Act of |
1987 may be continued under the existing term of |
aftercare release with or without modifying the |
conditions of aftercare release, released on |
aftercare release to a group home or other |
residential facility, or recommitted until the age |
of 21 unless sooner terminated;
|
(iv) this Section is subject to the release |
under
supervision and the reparole and rerelease |
provisions of Section
3-3-10.
|
(b) The Board may revoke parole , aftercare release, or |
mandatory supervised
release for violation of a condition for |
the duration of the
term and for any further period which is |
reasonably necessary
for the adjudication of matters arising |
before its expiration.
The issuance of a warrant of arrest for |
an alleged violation
of the conditions of parole , aftercare |
release, or mandatory supervised release
shall toll the running |
of the term until the final determination of the
charge. When
|
|
parole , aftercare release, or mandatory supervised release is |
not revoked
that period shall be credited to the term, unless a |
community-based sanction is imposed as an alternative to |
revocation and reincarceration, including a diversion |
established by the Illinois Department of Corrections Parole |
Services Unit prior to the holding of a preliminary parole |
revocation hearing. Parolees who are diverted to a |
community-based sanction shall serve the entire term of parole |
or mandatory supervised release, if otherwise appropriate.
|
(b-5) The Board shall revoke parole , aftercare release, or |
mandatory supervised release for violation of the conditions |
prescribed in paragraph (7.6) of subsection (a) of Section |
3-3-7. |
(c) A person charged with violating a condition of parole , |
aftercare release, or
mandatory supervised release shall have a |
preliminary hearing
before a hearing officer designated by the |
Board to determine
if there is cause to hold the person for a |
revocation hearing.
However, no preliminary hearing need be |
held when revocation is based
upon new criminal charges and a |
court finds probable cause on the new
criminal charges or when |
the revocation
is based upon a new criminal conviction and a |
certified copy of
that conviction is available.
|
(d) Parole , aftercare release, or mandatory supervised |
release shall not be
revoked without written notice to the |
offender setting forth
the violation of parole , aftercare |
release, or mandatory supervised release charged
against him or |
|
her.
|
(e) A hearing on revocation shall be conducted before at
|
least one member of the Prisoner Review Board. The Board may
|
meet and order its actions in panels of 3 or more members.
The |
action of a majority of the panel shall be the action of
the |
Board. In consideration of persons committed to the Department |
of Juvenile Justice, the member hearing the matter and at least |
a majority
of the panel shall be experienced in juvenile |
matters. A record
of the hearing shall be made. At the hearing |
the offender shall
be permitted to:
|
(1) appear and answer the charge; and
|
(2) bring witnesses on his or her behalf.
|
(f) The Board shall either revoke parole , aftercare |
release, or mandatory
supervised release or order the person's |
term continued with
or without modification or enlargement of |
the conditions.
|
(g) Parole , aftercare release, or mandatory supervised |
release shall not be
revoked for failure to make payments under |
the conditions of
parole or release unless the Board determines |
that such failure is
due to the offender's willful refusal to |
pay.
|
(Source: P.A. 97-697, eff. 6-22-12; 98-463, eff. 8-16-13; |
98-558, eff. 1-1-14.)
|
(730 ILCS 5/3-3-9.5 new) |
Sec. 3-3-9.5. Revocation of aftercare release; revocation |
|
hearing. |
(a) If, prior to expiration or termination of the aftercare |
release term, a juvenile committed to the Department of |
Juvenile Justice under the Juvenile Court Act of 1987 violates |
a condition of release set by the Department under Section |
3-2.5-95 of this Code, the Department may initiate revocation |
proceedings by issuing a violation warrant under Section |
3-2.5-70 of this Code or by retaking of the releasee and |
returning him or her to a Department facility. |
(b) The Department shall provide the releasee and the |
Prisoner Review Board with written notice of the alleged |
violation of aftercare release charged against him or her. |
(c) The issuance of a warrant of arrest for an alleged |
violation of the conditions of aftercare release shall toll the |
running of the aftercare release term until the final |
determination of the alleged violation is made. If the Board |
finds that the youth has not violated a condition of aftercare |
release, that period shall be credited to the term. |
(d) A person charged with violating a condition of |
aftercare release shall have a preliminary hearing before a |
hearing officer designated by the Board to determine if there |
is probable cause to hold the person for a revocation hearing. |
However, no preliminary hearing need be held when revocation is |
based upon new criminal charges and a court finds probable |
cause on the new criminal charges or when the revocation is |
based upon a new criminal conviction or a finding of |
|
delinquency and a certified copy of that conviction is |
available. |
(e) At the preliminary hearing, the Board may order the |
releasee held in Department custody or released under |
supervision pending a final revocation decision of the Board. A |
youth who is held in Department custody, shall be released and |
discharged upon the expiration of the maximum term permitted |
under the Juvenile Court Act of 1987. |
(f) A hearing on revocation shall be conducted before at |
least one member of the Prisoner Review Board. The Board may |
meet and order its actions in panels of 3 or more members. The |
action of a majority of the panel shall be the action of the |
Board. The member hearing the matter and at least a majority of |
the panel shall be experienced in juvenile matters. A record of |
the hearing shall be made. At the hearing the releasee shall be |
permitted to: |
(1) appear and answer the charge; and |
(2) bring witnesses on his or her behalf. |
(g) If the Board finds that the juvenile has not violated a |
condition of aftercare release, the Board shall order the |
juvenile rereleased and aftercare release continued under the |
existing term and may make specific recommendations to the |
Department regarding appropriate conditions of release. |
(h) If the Board finds that the juvenile has violated a |
condition of aftercare release, the Board shall either: |
(1) revoke aftercare release and order the juvenile |
|
reconfined; or |
(2) order the juvenile rereleased to serve a specified |
aftercare release term not to exceed the full term |
permitted under the Juvenile Court Act of 1987 and may make |
specific recommendations to the Department regarding |
appropriate conditions of rerelease. |
(i) Aftercare release shall not be revoked for failure to |
make payments under the conditions of release unless the Board |
determines that the failure is due to the juvenile's willful |
refusal to pay.
|
(730 ILCS 5/3-3-10) (from Ch. 38, par. 1003-3-10)
|
Sec. 3-3-10. Eligibility after Revocation; Release under
|
Supervision.
|
(a) A person whose parole , aftercare release, or mandatory |
supervised release
has been revoked may be reparoled or |
rereleased by the
Board at any time to the full parole , |
aftercare release, or mandatory supervised
release term under |
Section 3-3-8, except that the time which
the person shall |
remain subject to the Board shall not exceed
(1) the imposed |
maximum term of imprisonment or confinement
and the parole term |
for those sentenced under the law in
effect prior to the |
effective date of this amendatory Act of
1977 or (2) the term |
of imprisonment imposed by the court and
the mandatory |
supervised release term for those sentenced
under the law in |
effect on and after such effective date.
|
|
(b) If the Board sets no earlier release date:
|
(1) A person sentenced for any violation of law which
|
occurred before January 1, 1973, shall be released under
|
supervision 6 months prior to the expiration of his or her |
maximum
sentence of imprisonment less good time credit |
under Section
3-6-3.
|
(2) Any person who has violated the conditions of his |
or her
parole and been reconfined under Section 3-3-9 shall |
be
released under supervision 6 months prior to the |
expiration
of the term of his or her reconfinement under |
paragraph (a) of
Section 3-3-9 less good time credit under |
Section 3-6-3.
This paragraph shall not apply to persons |
serving terms of
mandatory supervised release or aftercare |
release .
|
(3) Nothing herein shall require the release of a |
person
who has violated his or her parole within 6 months |
of the date when
his or her release under this Section |
would otherwise be mandatory.
|
(c) Persons released under this Section shall be subject
to |
Sections 3-3-6, 3-3-7, 3-3-9, 3-14-1, 3-14-2, 3-14-2.5,
|
3-14-3, and
3-14-4.
|
(d) This Section shall not apply to a juvenile committed to |
the Department of Juvenile Justice under the Juvenile Court Act |
of 1987 serving terms of aftercare release. |
(Source: P.A. 98-558, eff. 1-1-14; 99-268, eff. 1-1-16 .)
|
|
(730 ILCS 5/3-10-7) (from Ch. 38, par. 1003-10-7)
|
Sec. 3-10-7. Interdepartment Interdivisional Transfers. |
(a) (Blank). In any case where a minor
was originally |
prosecuted under the provisions of the Criminal Code of
1961 or |
the Criminal Code of 2012 and sentenced under the provisions of |
this Act pursuant
to Section 2-7 of the Juvenile Court Act or |
Section 5-805 of the
Juvenile
Court Act of 1987 and committed |
to the Department of Juvenile Justice under Section 5-8-6, the |
Department of Juvenile Justice shall, within
30 days of the |
date that the minor
reaches the age of 17, send formal |
notification to the sentencing court
and the State's Attorney |
of the county from which the minor was sentenced
indicating the |
day upon which the minor offender will achieve the age
of 17. |
Within 90 days of receipt of that notice, the sentencing court |
shall
conduct a hearing, pursuant to the provisions of |
subsection (c) of this
Section to determine whether or not the |
minor shall continue to remain
under the auspices of the |
Department of Juvenile Justice or be transferred to the |
Department of Corrections.
|
The minor shall be served with notice of the date of the |
hearing,
shall be present at the hearing, and has the right to |
counsel at the
hearing. The minor, with the consent of his or |
her counsel or guardian may
waive his presence at hearing.
|
(b) (Blank). Unless sooner paroled under Section 3-3-3, the |
confinement of a
minor person committed for an indeterminate |
sentence in a criminal
proceeding shall terminate at the |
|
expiration of the maximum term of
imprisonment, and he shall |
thereupon be released to serve a period of
parole under Section |
5-8-1, but if the maximum term of imprisonment does
not expire |
until after his 21st birthday, he shall continue to be
subject |
to the control and custody of the Department of Juvenile |
Justice, and on his 21st
birthday, he shall be transferred to |
the Department of Corrections. If such person
is on parole on |
his 21st birthday, his parole supervision may be
transferred to |
the Department of Corrections.
|
(c) (Blank). Any interdivisional transfer hearing |
conducted pursuant to subsection
(a) of this Section shall |
consider all available information which may bear
upon the |
issue of transfer. All evidence helpful to the court in |
determining
the question of transfer, including oral and |
written reports containing
hearsay, may be relied upon to the |
extent of its probative value, even though
not competent for |
the purposes of an adjudicatory hearing. The court shall
|
consider, along with any other relevant matter, the following:
|
1. The nature of the offense for which the minor was |
found guilty and
the length of the sentence the minor has |
to serve and the record and
previous history of the minor.
|
2. The record of the minor's adjustment within the |
Department of
Juvenile Justice, including, but not limited |
to, reports from
the minor's counselor, any escapes, |
attempted escapes or violent or
disruptive conduct on the |
part of the minor, any tickets received by the
minor, |
|
summaries of classes attended by the minor, and any record |
of work
performed by the minor while in the institution.
|
3. The relative maturity of the minor based upon the |
physical,
psychological and emotional development of the |
minor.
|
4. The record of the rehabilitative progress of the |
minor and an
assessment of the vocational potential of the |
minor.
|
5. An assessment of the necessity for transfer of the |
minor, including,
but not limited to, the availability of |
space within the Department of
Corrections, the |
disciplinary and security problem which the minor has
|
presented to the Department of Juvenile Justice and the |
practicability of maintaining
the minor in a juvenile |
facility, whether resources have been exhausted
within the |
Department of Juvenile Justice, the
availability of |
rehabilitative and vocational programs within the
|
Department of Corrections, and the anticipated ability of |
the minor to
adjust to confinement within an adult |
institution based upon the minor's
physical size and |
maturity.
|
All relevant factors considered under this subsection need |
not be resolved
against the juvenile in order to justify such |
transfer. Access to social
records, probation reports or any |
other reports which are considered by
the court for the purpose |
of transfer shall be made available to counsel
for the juvenile |
|
at least 30 days prior to the date of the transfer hearing.
The |
Sentencing Court, upon granting a transfer order, shall |
accompany such
order with a statement of reasons.
|
(d) (Blank). Whenever the Director of Juvenile Justice or |
his designee determines that the
interests of safety, security |
and discipline require the transfer to the
Department of |
Corrections of a person 17 years or older who was prosecuted |
under the
provisions of the Criminal Code of 1961 or the |
Criminal Code of 2012 and sentenced under
the provisions of |
this Act pursuant to Section 2-7 of the Juvenile Court Act
or |
Section 5-805 of the Juvenile Court Act of 1987
and committed |
to the Department of Juvenile Justice under Section 5-8-6, the |
Director or
his designee may authorize the emergency transfer |
of such person, unless
the transfer of the person is governed |
by subsection (e) of this Section.
The sentencing court shall |
be provided notice of any emergency transfer no
later than 3 |
days after the emergency transfer. Upon motion brought within
|
60 days of the emergency transfer by the sentencing court or |
any party, the
sentencing court may conduct a hearing pursuant |
to the provisions of
subsection (c) of this Section in order to |
determine whether the person
shall remain confined in the |
Department of Corrections.
|
(e) The Director of Juvenile Justice or his designee may |
authorize the permanent transfer to
the Department of |
Corrections of any person 18 years or older who was prosecuted |
under
the provisions of the Criminal Code of 1961 or the |
|
Criminal Code of 2012 and sentenced
under the provisions of |
this Act pursuant to Section 2-7 of the Juvenile
Court Act or |
Section 5-805 of the Juvenile Court Act of 1987
and committed |
to the Department of Juvenile Justice under Section 5-8-6 of |
this Act.
The Director of Juvenile Justice or his designee |
shall be governed by the following factors
in determining |
whether to authorize the permanent transfer of the person to
|
the Department of Corrections:
|
1. The nature of the offense for which the person was |
found guilty and
the length of the sentence the person has |
to serve and the record and
previous history of the person.
|
2. The record of the person's adjustment within the |
Department of Juvenile Justice, including, but not limited |
to, reports from
the person's counselor, any escapes, |
attempted escapes or violent or
disruptive conduct on the |
part of the person, any tickets received by the
person, |
summaries of classes attended by the person, and any record |
of work
performed by the person while in the institution.
|
3. The relative maturity of the person based upon the |
physical,
psychological and emotional development of the |
person.
|
4. The record of the rehabilitative progress of the |
person and an
assessment of the vocational potential of the |
person.
|
5. An assessment of the necessity for transfer of the |
person, including,
but not limited to, the availability of |
|
space within the Department of
Corrections, the |
disciplinary and security problem which the person has
|
presented to the Department of Juvenile Justice and the |
practicability of maintaining
the person in a juvenile |
facility, whether resources have been exhausted
within the |
Department of Juvenile Justice, the
availability of |
rehabilitative and vocational programs within the
|
Department of Corrections, and the anticipated ability of |
the person to
adjust to confinement within an adult |
institution based upon the person's
physical size and |
maturity.
|
(Source: P.A. 97-1083, eff. 8-24-12; 97-1150, eff. 1-25-13.)
|
(730 ILCS 5/5-8-6) (from Ch. 38, par. 1005-8-6)
|
Sec. 5-8-6. Place of Confinement. |
(a) Offenders sentenced to a term
of imprisonment for a |
felony shall be committed to the penitentiary
system of the |
Department of Corrections.
However, such sentence shall
not |
limit the powers of the Department of Children and Family |
Services
in relation to any child under the age of one year in |
the sole custody
of a person so sentenced, nor in relation to |
any child delivered by a
female so sentenced while she is so |
confined as a consequence of such
sentence. A person sentenced |
for a felony may be assigned by the
Department of Corrections |
to any of its institutions, facilities or
programs.
|
(b) Offenders sentenced to a term of imprisonment for less |
|
than one
year shall be committed to the custody of the sheriff. |
A person committed to the
Department of Corrections, prior to |
July 14, 1983, for less than one
year may be assigned by the
|
Department to any of its institutions, facilities or programs.
|
(c) All offenders under 18 17 years of age when sentenced |
to imprisonment
shall be committed to the Department of |
Juvenile Justice and the court in its order of commitment shall |
set a
definite term. Such order of commitment shall be the |
sentence of the
court which may be amended by the court while |
jurisdiction is retained;
and such sentence shall apply |
whenever the offender sentenced is in the
control and custody |
of the Department of
Corrections. The provisions of Section |
3-3-3 shall be a part of such
commitment as fully as though |
written in the order of commitment. The place of confinement |
for sentences imposed before the effective date of this |
amendatory Act of the 99th General Assembly are not affected or |
abated by this amendatory Act of the 99th General Assembly. The
|
committing court shall retain jurisdiction of the subject |
matter and the
person until he or she reaches the age of 21 |
unless earlier discharged.
However, the Department of Juvenile |
Justice shall, after a juvenile has reached 17 years of age, |
petition
the court to conduct a hearing pursuant to subsection |
(c) of Section 3-10-7
of this Code.
|
(d) No defendant shall be committed to the Department of |
Corrections
for the recovery of a fine or costs.
|
(e) When a court sentences a defendant to a term of |
|
imprisonment
concurrent with a previous and unexpired sentence |
of imprisonment
imposed by any district court of the United |
States, it may commit the
offender to the custody of the |
Attorney General of the United States.
The Attorney General of |
the United States, or the authorized
representative of the |
Attorney General of the United States, shall be
furnished with |
the warrant of commitment from the court imposing
sentence, |
which warrant of commitment shall provide that, when the
|
offender is released from federal confinement, whether by |
parole or by
termination of sentence, the offender shall be |
transferred by the
Sheriff of the committing county to the |
Department of
Corrections. The
court shall cause the Department |
to be notified of such sentence at the
time of commitment and |
to be provided with copies of all records
regarding the |
sentence.
|
(Source: P.A. 94-696, eff. 6-1-06 .)
|
(730 ILCS 5/5-8A-3) (from Ch. 38, par. 1005-8A-3)
|
Sec. 5-8A-3. Application.
|
(a) Except as provided in subsection (d), a person charged |
with
or convicted of an
excluded offense may not be placed in |
an electronic home
detention program, except for bond pending |
trial or appeal or while on parole, aftercare release,
or |
mandatory supervised release.
|
(b) A person serving a sentence for a conviction of a Class |
1 felony,
other than an excluded offense, may be placed in an |
|
electronic home detention
program for a period not to exceed |
the last 90 days of incarceration.
|
(c) A person serving a sentence for a conviction
of a Class |
X felony, other than an excluded offense, may be placed
in an |
electronic home detention program for a period not to exceed |
the last 90
days of incarceration, provided that the person was |
sentenced on or after the
effective date of this amendatory Act |
of 1993 and provided that the court has
not prohibited the |
program for the person in the sentencing order.
|
(d) A person serving a sentence for conviction of an |
offense other than
for predatory criminal sexual assault of a |
child, aggravated criminal
sexual assault, criminal sexual |
assault, aggravated
criminal sexual abuse, or felony criminal |
sexual abuse, may be placed in an
electronic home detention |
program for a period not to exceed the last 12 months
of |
incarceration, provided that (i) the person is 55 years of age |
or older;
(ii) the person is serving a determinate sentence; |
(iii) the person has served
at least 25% of the sentenced |
prison term; and (iv) placement in an electronic
home detention |
program is approved by the Prisoner Review Board or the |
Department of Juvenile Justice .
|
(e) A person serving a sentence for conviction
of a Class |
2, 3 or 4 felony offense which is not an excluded offense may |
be
placed in an
electronic home detention program pursuant to |
Department administrative
directives.
|
(f) Applications for electronic home detention
may include |
|
the following:
|
(1) pretrial or pre-adjudicatory detention;
|
(2) probation;
|
(3) conditional discharge;
|
(4) periodic imprisonment;
|
(5) parole, aftercare release, or mandatory supervised |
release;
|
(6) work release;
|
(7) furlough; or
|
(8) post-trial incarceration.
|
(g) A person convicted of an offense described in clause |
(4) or (5) of
subsection (d) of Section 5-8-1 of this Code |
shall be placed in an electronic
home detention program for at |
least the first 2 years of the person's mandatory
supervised |
release term.
|
(Source: P.A. 98-558, eff. 1-1-14; 98-756, eff. 7-16-14.)
|
(730 ILCS 5/5-8A-7)
|
Sec. 5-8A-7. Domestic violence surveillance program. If |
the Prisoner Review Board, Department of Corrections, |
Department of Juvenile Justice, or court (the supervising |
authority) orders electronic surveillance as a condition of |
parole, aftercare release, mandatory supervised release, early |
release, probation, or conditional discharge for a violation of |
an order of protection or as a condition of bail for a person |
charged with a violation of an order of protection, the |
|
supervising authority shall use the best available global |
positioning technology to track domestic violence offenders. |
Best available technology must have real-time and interactive |
capabilities that facilitate the following objectives: (1) |
immediate notification to the supervising authority of a breach |
of a court ordered exclusion zone; (2) notification of the |
breach to the offender; and (3) communication between the |
supervising authority, law enforcement, and the victim, |
regarding the breach.
|
(Source: P.A. 98-558, eff. 1-1-14.) |
Section 35. The Open Parole Hearings Act is amended by |
changing Sections 5, 10, 15, and 20 as follows:
|
(730 ILCS 105/5) (from Ch. 38, par. 1655)
|
Sec. 5. Definitions. As used in this Act:
|
(a) "Applicant" means an inmate who is being considered for |
parole or aftercare release by
the Prisoner Review Board.
|
(a-1) "Aftercare releasee" means a person released from the |
Department of Juvenile Justice on aftercare release subject to |
aftercare revocation proceedings. |
(b) "Board" means the Prisoner Review Board as established |
in Section
3-3-1 of the Unified Code of Corrections.
|
(c) "Parolee" means a person subject to parole revocation |
proceedings.
|
(d) "Parole or aftercare release hearing" means the formal |
|
hearing and determination of an
inmate being considered for |
release from incarceration on parole community
supervision .
|
(e) "Parole, aftercare release, or mandatory supervised |
release revocation hearing" means
the formal hearing and |
determination of allegations that a parolee, aftercare |
releasee, or
mandatory supervised releasee has violated the |
conditions of his or her
release agreement .
|
(f) "Victim" means a victim or witness of a violent crime |
as defined in
subsection (a) of Section 3 of the Bill of Rights |
for Victims and Witnesses
of Violent Crime Act, or any person |
legally related to the victim by blood, marriage, adoption, or |
guardianship, or any friend of the victim, or any concerned |
citizen.
|
(g) "Violent crime" means a crime defined in subsection (c) |
of
Section 3 of the Bill of Rights for Victims and Witnesses of |
Violent
Crime Act.
|
(Source: P.A. 97-299, eff. 8-11-11; 98-558, eff. 1-1-14.)
|
(730 ILCS 105/10) (from Ch. 38, par. 1660)
|
Sec. 10. Victim's statements.
|
(a) Upon request of the victim, the State's Attorney shall |
forward a
copy of any statement presented at the time of trial |
to the Prisoner Review
Board to be considered at the time of a |
parole or aftercare release hearing.
|
(b) The victim may enter a statement either oral, written, |
on video
tape, or other electronic means in the form and manner |
|
described by the
Prisoner Review Board to be considered at the |
time of a parole or aftercare release consideration
hearing.
|
(Source: P.A. 98-558, eff. 1-1-14.)
|
(730 ILCS 105/15) (from Ch. 38, par. 1665)
|
Sec. 15. Open hearings.
|
(a) The Board may restrict the number of individuals |
allowed to attend
parole or aftercare release , or parole or |
aftercare release revocation hearings in accordance with |
physical
limitations, security requirements of the hearing |
facilities or those
giving repetitive or cumulative testimony. |
The Board may also restrict attendance at an aftercare release |
or aftercare release revocation hearing in order to protect the |
confidentiality of the youth.
|
(b) The Board may deny admission or continued attendance at |
parole or aftercare release hearings, or
parole or aftercare |
release revocation hearings to individuals who:
|
(1) threaten or present danger to the security of the |
institution in
which the hearing is being held;
|
(2) threaten or present a danger to other attendees or |
participants; or
|
(3) disrupt the hearing.
|
(c) Upon formal action of a majority of the Board members |
present, the
Board may close parole or aftercare release |
hearings and parole or aftercare release revocation hearings in |
order to:
|
|
(1) deliberate upon the oral testimony and any other |
relevant
information received from applicants, parolees, |
releasees, victims, or others; or
|
(2) provide applicants, releasees, and parolees the |
opportunity to challenge
information other than that which |
if the person's identity were to be
exposed would possibly |
subject them to bodily harm or death, which they
believe |
detrimental to their parole or aftercare release |
determination hearing or revocation
proceedings.
|
(Source: P.A. 98-558, eff. 1-1-14.)
|
(730 ILCS 105/20) (from Ch. 38, par. 1670)
|
Sec. 20. Finality of Board decisions. A Board decision |
concerning
parole or aftercare release , or parole or aftercare |
release revocation shall be final at the time the decision is
|
delivered to the inmate, subject to any rehearing granted under |
Board rules.
|
(Source: P.A. 98-558, eff. 1-1-14.)
|