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Public Act 101-0651 |
SB0471 Enrolled | LRB101 04232 JLS 49240 b |
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AN ACT concerning employment.
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Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
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represented in the General Assembly:
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Section 5. The Public Employee Disability Act is amended by |
changing Section 1 as follows:
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(5 ILCS 345/1) (from Ch. 70, par. 91)
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Sec. 1. Disability benefit.
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(a) For the purposes of this Section, "eligible employee" |
means any
part-time or full-time State correctional officer or |
any other full or
part-time employee of the Department of |
Corrections, any full or part-time
employee of the Prisoner |
Review Board, any full or part-time employee of the
Department |
of Human Services working within a
penal institution or a State |
mental health or developmental
disabilities facility operated |
by the Department of Human Services, and any
full-time law |
enforcement officer or
full-time firefighter, including a |
full-time paramedic or a firefighter who performs paramedic |
duties, who is employed by the State of Illinois, any unit of
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local government (including any home rule unit), any State |
supported college or
university, or any other public entity |
granted the power to employ persons for
such purposes by law.
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(b) Whenever an eligible employee suffers any injury in the |
line of duty
which causes him to be unable to perform his |
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duties, he shall continue to be
paid by the employing public |
entity on the same basis as he was paid before the
injury, with |
no deduction from his sick leave credits, compensatory time for
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overtime accumulations or vacation, or service credits in a |
public employee
pension fund during the time he is unable to |
perform his duties due to the
result of the injury, but not |
longer than one year in relation to the same
injury , except as |
otherwise provided under subsection (b-5) . However, no injury |
to an employee of the Department
of Corrections or
the Prisoner |
Review Board working within a penal institution or an employee |
of
the Department of Human Services working within a
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departmental mental health or developmental disabilities |
facility shall
qualify the employee for benefits under this |
Section unless the
injury is the
direct or indirect result of |
violence by inmates of the penal institution or
residents of |
the mental health or developmental
disabilities facility.
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(b-5) Upon the occurrence of circumstances, directly or |
indirectly attributable to COVID-19, occurring on or after |
March 9, 2020 and on or before December 31, 2020 which would |
hinder the physical recovery from an injury of an eligible |
employee within the one-year period as required under |
subsection (b), the eligible employee shall be entitled to an |
extension of no longer than 60 days by which he or she shall |
continue to be paid by the employing public entity on the same |
basis as he or she was paid before the injury. The employing |
public entity may require proof of the circumstances hindering |
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an eligible employee's physical recovery before granting the |
extension provided under this subsection (b-5). |
(c) At any time during the period for which continuing |
compensation
is required by this Act, the employing public |
entity may order at the
expense of that entity physical or |
medical examinations of the injured
person to determine the |
degree of disability.
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(d) During this period of disability, the injured person |
shall not
be employed in any other manner, with or without |
monetary compensation.
Any person who is employed in violation |
of this paragraph forfeits the
continuing compensation |
provided by this Act from the time such
employment begins. Any |
salary compensation due the injured person from
workers' |
compensation or any salary due him from any type of insurance
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which may be carried by the employing public entity shall |
revert to that
entity during the time for which continuing |
compensation is paid to him
under this Act. Any person with a |
disability receiving compensation under the
provisions of this |
Act shall not be entitled to any benefits for which
he would |
qualify because of his disability under the provisions of the
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Illinois Pension Code.
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(e) Any employee of the State of Illinois, as defined in |
Section 14-103.05
of the Illinois Pension Code, who becomes |
permanently unable to perform the
duties of such employment due |
to an injury received in the active performance
of his duties |
as a State employee as a result of a willful act of violence by
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another employee of the State of Illinois, as so defined, |
committed during such
other employee's course of employment and |
after January 1, 1988, shall be
eligible for benefits pursuant |
to the provisions of this Section. For purposes
of this |
Section, permanent disability is defined as a diagnosis or |
prognosis of
an inability to return to current job duties by a |
physician licensed to
practice medicine in all of its branches.
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(f) The compensation and other benefits provided to |
part-time employees
covered by this Section shall be calculated |
based on the percentage of time
the part-time employee was |
scheduled to work pursuant to his or her status as
a part-time |
employee.
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(g) Pursuant to paragraphs (h) and (i) of Section 6 of |
Article VII of
the Illinois Constitution, this Act specifically |
denies and limits the exercise
by home rule units of any power |
which is inconsistent herewith, and all
existing laws and |
ordinances which are inconsistent herewith are hereby
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superseded. This Act does not preempt the concurrent exercise |
by home rule
units of powers consistent herewith.
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This Act does not apply to any home rule unit with a |
population of over
1,000,000.
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(h) In those cases where the injury to a State employee for |
which
a benefit is payable under this Act was caused
under |
circumstances creating a legal liability for damages on the |
part
of some person other than the State employer, all of the |
rights
and privileges, including the right to notice of suit |
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brought against
such other person and the right to commence or |
join in such suit, as
given the employer, together with the |
conditions or obligations imposed
under paragraph (b) of |
Section 5 of the Workers' Compensation Act,
are also given and |
granted to the State, to the end that, with respect to State |
employees only, the State
may be paid or reimbursed for the |
amount of
benefit paid or
to be paid by the
State to the |
injured employee or his or her personal representative out of |
any
judgment, settlement, or payment
for such injury obtained |
by such injured employee or his
or her personal representative |
from such other person by virtue of the injury. |
(Source: P.A. 99-143, eff. 7-27-15; 100-1143, eff. 1-1-19.)
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Section 10. The Illinois Horse Racing Act of 1975 is |
amended by adding Section 15.5 as follows: |
(230 ILCS 5/15.5 new) |
Sec. 15.5. Labor agreements. |
(a) This Section applies to each entity subject to this Act |
that has at least 10 employees on average over the 12 months |
preceding application for an organization gaming license. |
(b) Before an organization gaming license may be granted or |
renewed, the applicant or licensee seeking an organization |
gaming license or renewal shall: |
(1) Enter into, and observe, the terms of a collective |
bargaining agreement with any labor organization seeking |
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to represent a majority of the licensee's employees in a |
bargaining unit consisting of all non-supervisory and |
non-management employees in the classifications identified |
by the labor organization. Any new employees hired by the |
licensee who perform work substantially similar to current |
employees in an existing bargaining unit already |
represented by a labor organization at the facility shall |
be incorporated into that existing bargaining unit. |
(2) Upon written notice by a labor organization of its |
desire to represent employees in a designated bargaining |
unit, the licensee shall: |
(A) provide the names, classifications, and home |
addresses of each and every employee in the identified |
bargaining unit; |
(B) refrain from expressing any views on the |
question whether its employees should be represented |
by a labor organization; |
(C) refrain from restraining or coercing its |
employees in choosing to be represented or not |
represented by a labor organization; and |
(D) allow designated representatives of the labor |
organization access to its non-work areas for the |
purpose of meeting privately with its employees during |
non-working times. |
(3) Upon a showing of majority interest, to be |
certified through card check by the Federal Mediation and |
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Conciliation Service or from a designated arbitrator from a |
permanent panel of arbitrators appointed by the Illinois |
Racing Board, the licensee and the labor organization shall |
immediately enter into negotiations for a collective |
bargaining agreement. |
(4) If the parties are unable to conclude a labor |
agreement within 60 days following the date of |
certification, the terms of the agreement shall be set by |
an arbitrator jointly selected by the parties from a panel |
of arbitrators designated by the Illinois Racing Board, who |
shall issue a final and binding award within 120 days after |
the date of certification, if the parties fail to conclude |
an agreement by that date. Except with regard to the |
minimum requirements in paragraph (5), the arbitrator |
shall be guided by the terms of labor agreements covering |
the same or similar classifications of employees within 100 |
miles of the facility or facilities for which the agreement |
is negotiated. The arbitrator shall also resolve all |
disputes regarding the scope and composition of the |
bargaining unit covered under the labor agreement. The |
licensee and the labor organization shall share equally the |
expenses of the arbitrator. No labor agreement shall cover |
employees in a bargaining unit for which another labor |
organization has been certified as a bargaining |
representative under this Act and that continues to |
actively represent such employees. |
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(5) All labor agreements required under this Section |
shall, at a minimum, include a: |
(A) term of at least 3 years; |
(B) prohibition on strikes or other work stoppages |
by the labor organization and the represented |
employees during the term of the labor agreement; and |
(C) restriction on subcontracting any work |
performed on or about the licensee's premises as part |
of its normal operations except by mutual agreement |
with the labor organization, and then only to a person |
or firm that is signatory to a labor agreement with a |
labor organization that has indicated its interest in |
representing the employees of the subcontractor, |
provided, the subcontractor's employees are not |
lawfully represented by another labor organization. |
(6) A copy of the fully executed labor agreement shall |
be submitted to the Illinois Racing Board prior to the |
issuance or renewal of any organization gaming license |
required under this Act. |
(c) Upon the expiration of a labor agreement required under |
this Section, the parties shall negotiate a successor agreement |
under the procedures set forth in paragraphs (4) and (5) of |
subsection (b), except that the negotiation and arbitration |
procedures shall commence upon the last effective day of the |
expiring labor agreement. |
(d) The provisions of this Section, except for paragraph |
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(2) of subsection (b), do not apply to any entity that is |
covered, or subsequently becomes covered, under the National |
Labor Relations Act, 29 U.S.C. 151 et seq. However, nothing in |
this Act shall affect or diminish the validity and |
enforceability of any collective bargaining agreement entered |
into during the period that this Act applies. |
Section 15. The Criminal Code of 2012 is amended by |
changing Section 12-3.05 as follows:
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(720 ILCS 5/12-3.05) (was 720 ILCS 5/12-4)
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Sec. 12-3.05. Aggravated battery.
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(a) Offense based on injury. A person commits aggravated |
battery when, in committing a battery, other than by the |
discharge of a firearm, he or she knowingly does any of the |
following: |
(1) Causes great bodily harm or permanent disability or |
disfigurement. |
(2) Causes severe and permanent disability, great |
bodily harm, or disfigurement by means of a caustic or |
flammable substance, a poisonous gas, a deadly biological |
or chemical contaminant or agent, a radioactive substance, |
or a bomb or explosive compound. |
(3) Causes great bodily harm or permanent disability or |
disfigurement to an individual whom the person knows to be |
a peace officer, community policing volunteer, fireman, |
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private security officer, correctional institution |
employee, or Department of Human Services employee |
supervising or controlling sexually dangerous persons or |
sexually violent persons: |
(i) performing his or her official duties; |
(ii) battered to prevent performance of his or her |
official duties; or |
(iii) battered in retaliation for performing his |
or her official duties. |
(4) Causes great bodily harm or permanent disability or |
disfigurement to an individual 60 years of age or older. |
(5) Strangles another individual. |
(b) Offense based on injury to a child or person with an |
intellectual disability. A person who is at least 18 years of |
age commits aggravated battery when, in committing a battery, |
he or she knowingly and without legal justification by any |
means: |
(1) causes great bodily harm or permanent disability or |
disfigurement to any child under the age of 13 years, or to |
any person with a severe or profound intellectual |
disability; or |
(2) causes bodily harm or disability or disfigurement |
to any child under the age of 13 years or to any person |
with a severe or profound intellectual disability. |
(c) Offense based on location of conduct. A person commits |
aggravated battery when, in committing a battery, other than by |
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the discharge of a firearm, he or she is or the person battered |
is on or about a public way, public property, a public place of |
accommodation or amusement, a sports venue, or a domestic |
violence shelter, or in a church, synagogue, mosque, or other |
building, structure, or place used for religious worship. |
(d) Offense based on status of victim. A person commits |
aggravated battery when, in committing a battery, other than by |
discharge of a firearm, he or she knows the individual battered |
to be any of the following: |
(1) A person 60 years of age or older. |
(2) A person who is pregnant or has a physical |
disability. |
(3) A teacher or school employee upon school grounds or |
grounds adjacent to a school or in any part of a building |
used for school purposes. |
(4) A peace officer, community policing volunteer, |
fireman, private security officer, correctional |
institution employee, or Department of Human Services |
employee supervising or controlling sexually dangerous |
persons or sexually violent persons: |
(i) performing his or her official duties; |
(ii) battered to prevent performance of his or her |
official duties; or |
(iii) battered in retaliation for performing his |
or her official duties. |
(5) A judge, emergency management worker, emergency |
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medical services personnel, or utility worker: |
(i) performing his or her official duties; |
(ii) battered to prevent performance of his or her |
official duties; or |
(iii) battered in retaliation for performing his |
or her official duties. |
(6) An officer or employee of the State of Illinois, a |
unit of local government, or a school district, while |
performing his or her official duties. |
(7) A transit employee performing his or her official |
duties, or a transit passenger. |
(8) A taxi driver on duty. |
(9) A merchant who detains the person for an alleged |
commission of retail theft under Section 16-26 of this Code |
and the person without legal justification by any means |
causes bodily harm to the merchant. |
(10) A person authorized to serve process under Section |
2-202 of the Code of Civil Procedure or a special process |
server appointed by the circuit court while that individual |
is in the performance of his or her duties as a process |
server. |
(11) A nurse while in the performance of his or her |
duties as a nurse. |
(12) A merchant: (i) while performing his or her |
duties, including, but not limited to, relaying directions |
for healthcare or safety from his or her supervisor or |
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employer or relaying health or safety guidelines, |
recommendations, regulations, or rules from a federal, |
State, or local public health agency; and (ii) during a |
disaster declared by the Governor, or a state of emergency |
declared by the mayor of the municipality in which the |
merchant is located, due to a public health emergency and |
for a period of 6 months after such declaration. |
(e) Offense based on use of a firearm. A person commits |
aggravated battery when, in committing a battery, he or she |
knowingly does any of the following: |
(1) Discharges a firearm, other than a machine gun or a |
firearm equipped with a silencer, and causes any injury to |
another person. |
(2) Discharges a firearm, other than a machine gun or a |
firearm equipped with a silencer, and causes any injury to |
a person he or she knows to be a peace officer, community |
policing volunteer, person summoned by a police officer, |
fireman, private security officer, correctional |
institution employee, or emergency management worker: |
(i) performing his or her official duties; |
(ii) battered to prevent performance of his or her |
official duties; or |
(iii) battered in retaliation for performing his |
or her official duties. |
(3) Discharges a firearm, other than a machine gun or a |
firearm equipped with a silencer, and causes any injury to |
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a person he or she knows to be emergency medical services |
personnel: |
(i) performing his or her official duties; |
(ii) battered to prevent performance of his or her |
official duties; or |
(iii) battered in retaliation for performing his |
or her official duties. |
(4) Discharges a firearm and causes any injury to a |
person he or she knows to be a teacher, a student in a |
school, or a school employee, and the teacher, student, or |
employee is upon school grounds or grounds adjacent to a |
school or in any part of a building used for school |
purposes. |
(5) Discharges a machine gun or a firearm equipped with |
a silencer, and causes any injury to another person. |
(6) Discharges a machine gun or a firearm equipped with |
a silencer, and causes any injury to a person he or she |
knows to be a peace officer, community policing volunteer, |
person summoned by a police officer, fireman, private |
security officer, correctional institution employee or |
emergency management worker: |
(i) performing his or her official duties; |
(ii) battered to prevent performance of his or her |
official duties; or |
(iii) battered in retaliation for performing his |
or her official duties. |
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(7) Discharges a machine gun or a firearm equipped with |
a silencer, and causes any injury to a person he or she |
knows to be emergency medical services personnel: |
(i) performing his or her official duties; |
(ii) battered to prevent performance of his or her |
official duties; or |
(iii) battered in retaliation for performing his |
or her official duties. |
(8) Discharges a machine gun or a firearm equipped with |
a silencer, and causes any injury to a person he or she |
knows to be a teacher, or a student in a school, or a |
school employee, and the teacher, student, or employee is |
upon school grounds or grounds adjacent to a school or in |
any part of a building used for school purposes. |
(f) Offense based on use of a weapon or device. A person |
commits aggravated battery when, in committing a battery, he or |
she does any of the following: |
(1) Uses a deadly weapon other than by discharge of a |
firearm, or uses an air rifle as defined in Section |
24.8-0.1 of this Code. |
(2) Wears a hood, robe, or mask to conceal his or her |
identity. |
(3) Knowingly and without lawful justification shines |
or flashes a laser gunsight or other laser device attached |
to a firearm, or used in concert with a firearm, so that |
the laser beam strikes upon or against the person of |
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another. |
(4) Knowingly video or audio records the offense with |
the intent to disseminate the recording. |
(g) Offense based on certain conduct. A person commits |
aggravated battery when, other than by discharge of a firearm, |
he or she does any of the following: |
(1) Violates Section 401 of the Illinois Controlled |
Substances Act by unlawfully delivering a controlled |
substance to another and any user experiences great bodily |
harm or permanent disability as a result of the injection, |
inhalation, or ingestion of any amount of the controlled |
substance. |
(2) Knowingly administers to an individual or causes |
him or her to take, without his or her consent or by threat |
or deception, and for other than medical purposes, any |
intoxicating, poisonous, stupefying, narcotic, anesthetic, |
or controlled substance, or gives to another person any |
food containing any substance or object intended to cause |
physical injury if eaten. |
(3) Knowingly causes or attempts to cause a |
correctional institution employee or Department of Human |
Services employee to come into contact with blood, seminal |
fluid, urine, or feces by throwing, tossing, or expelling |
the fluid or material, and the person is an inmate of a |
penal institution or is a sexually dangerous person or |
sexually violent person in the custody of the Department of |
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Human Services. |
(h) Sentence. Unless otherwise provided, aggravated |
battery is a Class 3 felony. |
Aggravated battery as defined in subdivision (a)(4), |
(d)(4), or (g)(3) is a Class 2 felony. |
Aggravated battery as defined in subdivision (a)(3) or |
(g)(1) is a Class 1 felony. |
Aggravated battery as defined in subdivision (a)(1) is a |
Class 1 felony when the aggravated battery was intentional and |
involved the infliction of torture, as defined in paragraph |
(14) of subsection (b) of Section 9-1 of this Code, as the |
infliction of or subjection to extreme physical pain, motivated |
by an intent to increase or prolong the pain, suffering, or |
agony of the victim. |
Aggravated battery as defined in subdivision (a)(1) is a |
Class 2 felony when the person causes great bodily harm or |
permanent disability to an individual whom the person knows to |
be a member of a congregation engaged in prayer or other |
religious activities at a church, synagogue, mosque, or other |
building, structure, or place used for religious worship. |
Aggravated battery under subdivision (a)(5) is a
Class 1 |
felony if: |
(A) the person used or attempted to use a dangerous
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instrument while committing the offense; or |
(B) the person caused great bodily harm or
permanent |
disability or disfigurement to the other
person while |
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committing the offense; or |
(C) the person has been previously convicted of a
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violation of subdivision (a)(5) under the laws of this
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State or laws similar to subdivision (a)(5) of any other
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state. |
Aggravated battery as defined in subdivision (e)(1) is a |
Class X felony. |
Aggravated battery as defined in subdivision (a)(2) is a |
Class X felony for which a person shall be sentenced to a term |
of imprisonment of a minimum of 6 years and a maximum of 45 |
years. |
Aggravated battery as defined in subdivision (e)(5) is a |
Class X felony for which a person shall be sentenced to a term |
of imprisonment of a minimum of 12 years and a maximum of 45 |
years. |
Aggravated battery as defined in subdivision (e)(2), |
(e)(3), or (e)(4) is a Class X felony for which a person shall |
be sentenced to a term of imprisonment of a minimum of 15 years |
and a maximum of 60 years. |
Aggravated battery as defined in subdivision (e)(6), |
(e)(7), or (e)(8) is a Class X felony for which a person shall |
be sentenced to a term of imprisonment of a minimum of 20 years |
and a maximum of 60 years. |
Aggravated battery as defined in subdivision (b)(1) is a |
Class X felony, except that: |
(1) if the person committed the offense while armed |
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with a firearm, 15 years shall be added to the term of |
imprisonment imposed by the court; |
(2) if, during the commission of the offense, the |
person personally discharged a firearm, 20 years shall be |
added to the term of imprisonment imposed by the court; |
(3) if, during the commission of the offense, the |
person personally discharged a firearm that proximately |
caused great bodily harm, permanent disability, permanent |
disfigurement, or death to another person, 25 years or up |
to a term of natural life shall be added to the term of |
imprisonment imposed by the court. |
(i) Definitions. In this Section: |
"Building or other structure used to provide shelter" has |
the meaning ascribed to "shelter" in Section 1 of the Domestic |
Violence Shelters Act. |
"Domestic violence" has the meaning ascribed to it in |
Section 103 of the Illinois Domestic Violence Act of 1986. |
"Domestic violence shelter" means any building or other |
structure used to provide shelter or other services to victims |
or to the dependent children of victims of domestic violence |
pursuant to the Illinois Domestic Violence Act of 1986 or the |
Domestic Violence Shelters Act, or any place within 500 feet of |
such a building or other structure in the case of a person who |
is going to or from such a building or other structure. |
"Firearm" has the meaning provided under Section 1.1
of the |
Firearm Owners Identification Card Act, and does
not include an |
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air rifle as defined by Section 24.8-0.1 of this Code. |
"Machine gun" has the meaning ascribed to it in Section |
24-1 of this Code. |
"Merchant" has the meaning ascribed to it in Section 16-0.1 |
of this Code. |
"Strangle" means
intentionally impeding the normal |
breathing or circulation of the blood of an individual by |
applying pressure on the throat
or neck of that individual or |
by blocking the nose or mouth of
that individual.
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(Source: P.A. 101-223, eff. 1-1-20; revised 9-24-19.)
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Section 99. Effective date. This Act takes effect upon |
becoming law.
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