(20 ILCS 4119/10)
    Sec. 10. Task Force on Missing and Murdered Chicago Women.
    (a) The Executive Director of the Illinois Criminal Justice Information Authority or the Executive Director's designee, in consultation with the Director of the Illinois State Police and the Chicago Police Superintendent, shall appoint the non-legislative members to the Task Force on Missing and Murdered Chicago Women to advise the Director and the Chicago Police Superintendent and to report to the General Assembly on recommendations to reduce and end violence against Chicago women and girls. The Task Force may also serve as a liaison between the Director, the Chicago Police Superintendent, and agencies and nongovernmental organizations that provide services to victims, victims' families, and victims' communities. Task Force members shall serve without compensation but may, subject to appropriation, receive reimbursement for their expenses as members of the Task Force.
    (b) There is created the Task Force on Missing and Murdered Chicago Women, which shall consist of the following individuals, or their designees, who are knowledgeable in crime victims' rights or violence protection and, unless otherwise specified, members shall be appointed for 2-year terms as follows:
        (1) Two members of the Senate, one appointed by the
    
President of the Senate and one appointed by the Minority Leader of the Senate;
        (2) Two members of the House of Representatives, one
    
appointed by the Speaker of the House of Representatives and one appointed by the Minority Leader of the House of Representatives;
        (3) Two members from among the following appointed by
    
the Executive Director of the Illinois Criminal Justice Information Authority or the Executive Director's designee:
            (A) an association representing Illinois chiefs
        
of police;
            (B) an association representing Illinois sheriffs;
            (C) an officer who is employed by the Illinois
        
State Police; or
            (D) an Illinois peace officer's association;
        (4) One or more representatives from among the
    
following:
            (A) an association representing State's Attorneys;
            (B) an attorney representing the United States
        
Attorney's Office in Chicago;
            (C) a circuit judge, associate judge, or attorney
        
working in juvenile court; or
            (D) the Cook County Medical Examiner, or his or
        
her designee, or a representative from a statewide coroner's or medical examiner's association or a representative of the Department of Public Health;
        (5) Two representatives for victims, with a focus on
    
individuals who work with victims of violence or their families appointed by the Executive Director of the Illinois Criminal Justice Information Authority or the Executive Director's designee;
        (6) Four or more members from among the following
    
appointed by the Executive Director of the Illinois Criminal Justice Information Authority or the Executive Director's designee:
            (A) a statewide or local organization that
        
provides legal services to Chicago women and girls;
            (B) a statewide or local organization that
        
provides advocacy or counseling for Chicago women and girls who have been victims of violence;
            (C) a statewide or local organization that
        
provides healthcare services to Chicago women and girls;
            (D) a statewide organization that represents
        
women and girls who have been sexually assaulted;
            (E) a women's health organization or agency; or
            (F) a Chicago woman who is a survivor of
        
gender-related violence; and
        (7) Two officers who are employed by the Chicago
    
Police Department nominated by the Chicago Police Superintendent or the Chicago Police Superintendent's designee and appointed by the Executive Director of the Illinois Criminal Justice Information Authority or the Executive Director's designee.
    (c) Vacancies in positions appointed by the Executive Director of the Illinois Criminal Justice Information Authority or the Executive Director's designee shall be filled by the Executive Director of the Illinois Criminal Justice Information Authority or the Executive Director's designee consistent with the qualifications of the vacating member required by this Section.
    (d) Task Force members shall annually elect a chair and vice-chair from among the Task Force's members, and may elect other officers as necessary. The Task Force shall meet at least quarterly, or upon the call of its chair, and may hold meetings throughout the City of Chicago. The Task Force shall meet frequently enough to accomplish the tasks identified in this Section. Meetings of the Task Force are subject to the Open Meetings Act. The Task Force shall seek out and enlist the cooperation and assistance of nongovernmental organizations, community, and advocacy organizations working with the Chicago community, and academic researchers and experts, specifically those specializing in violence against Chicago women and girls, representing diverse communities disproportionately affected by violence against women and girls, or focusing on issues related to gender-related violence and violence against Chicago women and girls.
    (e) The Executive Director of the Illinois Criminal Justice Information Authority or the Executive Director's designee shall convene the first meeting of the Task Force no later than 30 days after the appointment of a majority of the members of the Task Force. The Illinois Criminal Justice Information Authority shall provide meeting space and administrative assistance as necessary for the Task Force to conduct its work. The chair of the Task Force may call electronic meetings of the Task Force. A member of the Task Force participating electronically shall be deemed present for purposes of establishing a quorum and voting.
    (f) The Task Force must examine and report on the following:
        (1) the systemic causes behind violence that Chicago
    
women and girls experience, including patterns and underlying factors that explain why disproportionately high levels of violence occur against Chicago women and girls, including underlying historical, social, economic, institutional, and cultural factors that may contribute to the violence;
        (2) appropriate methods for tracking and collecting
    
data on violence against Chicago women and girls, including data on missing and murdered Chicago women and girls;
        (3) policies and institutions such as policing, child
    
welfare, medical examiner practices, and other governmental practices that impact violence against Chicago women and girls and the investigation and prosecution of crimes of gender-related violence against Chicago residents;
        (4) measures necessary to address and reduce violence
    
against Chicago women and girls; and
        (5) measures to help victims, victims' families, and
    
victims' communities prevent and heal from violence that occurs against Chicago women and girls.
    (g) The Task Force shall report on or before December 31 of 2024, and on or before December 31 of each year thereafter, to the General Assembly and the Governor on the work of the Task Force, including, but not limited to, the issues to be examined in subsection (g), and shall include in the annual report recommendations regarding institutional policies and practices or proposed institutional policies and practices that are effective in reducing gender-related violence and increasing the safety of Chicago women and girls. The report shall include recommendations to reduce and end violence against Chicago women and girls and help victims and communities heal from gender-related violence and violence against Chicago women and girls.
(Source: P.A. 102-1057, eff. 1-1-23; 103-154, eff. 6-30-23; 103-811, eff. 8-9-24.)