Bill Status of SB 3106   99th General Assembly


Short Description:  CRIM PRO-INTELLECT DISABILITY

Senate Sponsors
Sen. Julie A. Morrison-Pamela J. Althoff and William R. Haine

House Sponsors
(Rep. Elgie R. Sims, Jr., Deb Conroy and Jaime M. Andrade, Jr.)


Last Action  View All Actions

DateChamber Action
  8/5/2016SenatePublic Act . . . . . . . . . 99-0752

Statutes Amended In Order of Appearance
725 ILCS 5/115-10from Ch. 38, par. 115-10

Synopsis As Introduced
Amends the Code of Criminal Procedure of 1963. Provides a new definition for a moderately intellectually disabled person and a severely or profoundly intellectually disabled person in the Section pertaining to hearsay exceptions for the admission of evidence in a prosecution for a physical or sexual act perpetrated upon or against a severely or profoundly intellectually disabled person or a moderately intellectually disabled person. Defines a moderately intellectually disabled person as a person, who at the time of the commission of the offense, suffers from a mental illness in which the person's ability to exercise rational judgment is impaired. Defines a severely or profoundly intellectually disabled person, as a person, who at the time of the commission of the offense, suffers from a significant mental illness to the extent that the person's ability to exercise rational judgment is impaired.

Senate Committee Amendment No. 1
Replaces everything after the enacting clause. Reinserts the introduced bill with the following changes. Amends the Code of Criminal Procedure of 1963. Makes the hearsay exemption apply to a person with an intellectual disability, a person with a cognitive impairment, or a person with a developmental disability (rather than a moderately intellectually disabled person or severely or profoundly intellectually disabled person). Defines a person with an intellectual disability as a person with significantly subaverage general intellectual functioning which exists concurrently with an impairment in adaptive behavior. Defines a person with cognitive impairment as a person with a significant impairment of cognition or memory that represents a marked deterioration from a previous level of function. Cognitive impairment includes, but is not limited to, dementia, amnesia, delirium, or a traumatic brain injury. Defines a person with a developmental disability as a person with a disability that is attributable to (1) an intellectual disability, cerebral palsy, epilepsy, or autism, or (2) any other condition that results in an impairment similar to that caused by an intellectual disability and requires services similar to those required by a person with an intellectual disability.

Actions 
DateChamber Action
  2/19/2016SenateFiled with Secretary by Sen. Julie A. Morrison
  2/19/2016SenateFirst Reading
  2/19/2016SenateReferred to Assignments
  2/19/2016SenateAdded as Chief Co-Sponsor Sen. Pamela J. Althoff
  3/8/2016SenateAssigned to Criminal Law
  3/15/2016SenateSenate Committee Amendment No. 1 Filed with Secretary by Sen. Julie A. Morrison
  3/15/2016SenateSenate Committee Amendment No. 1 Referred to Assignments
  3/16/2016SenateSenate Committee Amendment No. 1 Assignments Refers to Criminal Law
  3/17/2016SenateSenate Committee Amendment No. 1 Adopted
  3/17/2016SenateDo Pass as Amended Criminal Law; 009-000-002
  3/17/2016SenatePlaced on Calendar Order of 2nd Reading April 5, 2016
  4/14/2016SenateSecond Reading
  4/14/2016SenatePlaced on Calendar Order of 3rd Reading April 18, 2016
  4/21/2016SenateAdded as Co-Sponsor Sen. William R. Haine
  4/21/2016SenateThird Reading - Passed; 054-000-000
  4/21/2016HouseArrived in House
  4/21/2016HouseChief House Sponsor Rep. Elgie R. Sims, Jr.
  4/21/2016HouseFirst Reading
  4/21/2016HouseReferred to Rules Committee
  5/2/2016HouseAssigned to Judiciary - Criminal Committee
  5/10/2016HouseDo Pass / Short Debate Judiciary - Criminal Committee; 015-000-000
  5/11/2016HousePlaced on Calendar 2nd Reading - Short Debate
  5/18/2016HouseAdded Alternate Co-Sponsor Rep. Deb Conroy
  5/20/2016HouseAdded Alternate Co-Sponsor Rep. Jaime M. Andrade, Jr.
  5/25/2016HouseSecond Reading - Short Debate
  5/25/2016HousePlaced on Calendar Order of 3rd Reading - Short Debate
  5/27/2016HouseThird Reading - Short Debate - Passed 107-000-000
  5/27/2016SenatePassed Both Houses
  6/27/2016SenateSent to the Governor
  8/5/2016SenateGovernor Approved
  8/5/2016SenateEffective Date January 1, 2017
  8/5/2016SenatePublic Act . . . . . . . . . 99-0752

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