102ND GENERAL ASSEMBLY
State of Illinois
2021 and 2022
HB2774

 

Introduced 2/19/2021, by Rep. Jonathan Carroll

 

SYNOPSIS AS INTRODUCED:
 
5 ILCS 430/25-20
5 ILCS 430/25-52

    Amends the State Officials and Employees Ethics Act. Provides that the Legislative Inspector General shall not initiate any investigation without giving notice of the allegations involved to each member of the Legislative Ethics Commission. Provides that the Legislative Inspector General shall not require the advance approval of the Commission to initiate an investigation, but the Legislative Inspector General shall not investigate matters that are beyond the scope of, or are unrelated to, the initial complaint upon which the investigation was founded, without the advance approval of the Commission. Allows the Legislative Inspector General to issue subpoenas without the advance approval of the Legislative Ethics Commission. Provides that if the Legislative Inspector General makes a finding that wrongdoing has occurred, he or she may make available to the public any other summary report and response of the ultimate jurisdictional authority or agency head or a redacted version of the report and response. Allows the Legislative Inspector General (currently, Legislative Ethics Commission) to redact specified information in the investigation summary report, and make the documents available for review prior to publication.


LRB102 13907 RJF 19258 b

 

 

A BILL FOR

 

HB2774LRB102 13907 RJF 19258 b

1    AN ACT concerning government.
 
2    Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
3represented in the General Assembly:
 
4    Section 5. The State Officials and Employees Ethics Act is
5amended by changing Sections 25-20 and 25-52 as follows:
 
6    (5 ILCS 430/25-20)
7    Sec. 25-20. Duties of the Legislative Inspector General.
8In addition to duties otherwise assigned by law, the
9Legislative Inspector General shall have the following duties:
10        (1) To receive and investigate allegations of
11    violations of this Act. Except as otherwise provided in
12    paragraph (1.5), an investigation may not be initiated
13    more than one year after the most recent act of the alleged
14    violation or of a series of alleged violations except
15    where there is reasonable cause to believe that fraudulent
16    concealment has occurred. To constitute fraudulent
17    concealment sufficient to toll this limitations period,
18    there must be an affirmative act or representation
19    calculated to prevent discovery of the fact that a
20    violation has occurred. The Legislative Inspector General
21    shall have the discretion to determine the appropriate
22    means of investigation as permitted by law.
23        The Legislative Inspector General shall not initiate

 

 

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1    any investigation without giving notice of the allegations
2    involved to each member of the Legislative Ethics
3    Commission. The Legislative Inspector General shall not
4    require the advance approval of the Commission to initiate
5    an investigation, but the Legislative Inspector General
6    shall not investigate matters that are beyond the scope
7    of, or are unrelated to, the initial complaint upon which
8    the investigation was founded, without the advance
9    approval of the Commission.
10        (1.5) Notwithstanding any provision of law to the
11    contrary, the Legislative Inspector General, whether
12    appointed by the Legislative Ethics Commission or the
13    General Assembly, may initiate an investigation based on
14    information provided to the Office of the Legislative
15    Inspector General or the Legislative Ethics Commission
16    during the period from December 1, 2014 through November
17    3, 2017. Any investigation initiated under this paragraph
18    (1.5) must be initiated within one year after the
19    effective date of this amendatory Act of the 100th General
20    Assembly.
21        Notwithstanding any provision of law to the contrary,
22    the Legislative Inspector General, through the Attorney
23    General, shall have the authority to file a complaint
24    related to any founded violations that occurred during the
25    period December 1, 2014 through November 3, 2017 to the
26    Legislative Ethics Commission, and the Commission shall

 

 

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1    have jurisdiction to conduct administrative hearings
2    related to any pleadings filed by the Legislative
3    Inspector General, provided the complaint is filed with
4    the Commission no later than 6 months after the summary
5    report is provided to the Attorney General in accordance
6    with subsection (c) of Section 25-50.
7        (2) To request information relating to an
8    investigation from any person when the Legislative
9    Inspector General deems that information necessary in
10    conducting an investigation.
11        (3) To issue subpoenas, with the advance approval of
12    the Commission, to compel the attendance of witnesses for
13    the purposes of testimony and production of documents and
14    other items for inspection and copying and to make service
15    of those subpoenas and subpoenas issued under item (7) of
16    Section 25-15.
17        (4) To submit reports as required by this Act.
18        (5) To file pleadings in the name of the Legislative
19    Inspector General with the Legislative Ethics Commission,
20    through the Attorney General, as provided in this Article
21    if the Attorney General finds that reasonable cause exists
22    to believe that a violation has occurred.
23        (6) To assist and coordinate the ethics officers for
24    State agencies under the jurisdiction of the Legislative
25    Inspector General and to work with those ethics officers.
26        (7) To participate in or conduct, when appropriate,

 

 

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1    multi-jurisdictional investigations.
2        (8) To request, as the Legislative Inspector General
3    deems appropriate, from ethics officers of State agencies
4    under his or her jurisdiction, reports or information on
5    (i) the content of a State agency's ethics training
6    program and (ii) the percentage of new officers and
7    employees who have completed ethics training.
8        (9) To establish a policy that ensures the appropriate
9    handling and correct recording of all investigations of
10    allegations and to ensure that the policy is accessible
11    via the Internet in order that those seeking to report
12    those allegations are familiar with the process and that
13    the subjects of those allegations are treated fairly.
14        (10) To post information to the Legislative Inspector
15    General's website explaining to complainants and subjects
16    of an investigation the legal limitations on the
17    Legislative Inspector General's ability to provide
18    information to them and a general overview of the
19    investigation process.
20(Source: P.A. 100-553, eff. 11-16-17; 100-588, eff. 6-8-18.)
 
21    (5 ILCS 430/25-52)
22    Sec. 25-52. Release of summary reports.
23    (a) Within 60 days after receipt of a summary report and
24response from the ultimate jurisdictional authority or agency
25head that resulted in a suspension of at least 3 days or

 

 

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1termination of employment, the Legislative Ethics Commission
2shall make available to the public the report and response or a
3redacted version of the report and response. If the
4Legislative Inspector General makes a finding that wrongdoing
5has occurred, he or she The Legislative Ethics Commission may
6make available to the public any other summary report and
7response of the ultimate jurisdictional authority or agency
8head or a redacted version of the report and response.
9    (b) The Legislative Inspector General Ethics Commission
10shall redact information in the summary report that may reveal
11the identity of witnesses, complainants, or informants or if
12the Legislative Inspector General Commission determines it is
13appropriate to protect the identity of a person before
14publication. The Legislative Inspector General Commission may
15also redact any information it believes should not be made
16public. Prior to publication, the Legislative Inspector
17General Commission shall permit the respondents, Legislative
18Ethics Commission Inspector General, and Attorney General to
19review documents to be made public and offer suggestions for
20redaction or provide a response that shall be made public with
21the summary report.
22    (c) The Legislative Ethics Commission may withhold
23publication of the report or response if the Legislative
24Inspector General or Attorney General certifies that
25publication will interfere with an ongoing investigation.
26(Source: P.A. 96-555, eff. 8-18-09.)