Public Act 93-0605

SB472 Enrolled                       LRB093 08615 RLC 08843 b

    AN ACT in relation to criminal law.

    Be it  enacted  by  the  People  of  the  State  of  Illinois,
represented in the General Assembly:

    Section 1. Short title. This Act  may  be  cited  as  the
Capital Punishment Reform Study Committee Act.

    Section 2. Capital Punishment Reform Study Committee.
    (a)  There is created the Capital Punishment Reform Study
Committee,   hereinafter   referred   to  as  the  Committee,
consisting of 15 members appointed as follows:
         (1)  Three members appointed by the President of the
    Senate;
         (2)  Two members appointed by the Minority Leader of
    the Senate;
         (3)  Three members appointed by the Speaker  of  the
    House of  Representatives;
         (4)  Two members appointed by the Minority Leader of
    the House of Representatives;
         (5)  One member appointed by the Attorney General;
         (6)  One member appointed by the Governor;
         (7)  One member appointed by the Cook County State's
    Attorney;
         (8)  One  member appointed by the Office of the Cook
    County Public  Defender;
         (9)  One member appointed by the Office of the State
    Appellate Defender; and
         (10)  One member appointed  by  the  office  of  the
    State's Attorneys Appellate Prosecutor.
    (b)  The  Committee shall study the impact of the various
reforms to the capital punishment system enacted by the  93rd
General  Assembly and annually report to the General Assembly
on the effects of these reforms. Each report shall include:
         (1)  The impact of  the  reforms  on  the  issue  of
    uniformity  and proportionality in the application of the
    death penalty including, but not limited to, the tracking
    of data related to whether the  reforms  have  eliminated
    the  statistically  significant differences in sentencing
    related to the geographic location of  the  homicide  and
    the race of the victim found by the Governor's Commission
    on  Capital  Punishment in its report issued on April 15,
    2002.
         (2)  The  implementation  of  training  for  police,
    prosecutors, defense attorneys, and judges as recommended
    by the Governor's Commission on Capital Punishment.
         (3)  The  impact  of  the  various  reforms  on  the
    quality of evidence used during capital prosecutions.
         (4)  The  quality  of  representation  provided   by
    defense counsel to defendants in capital prosecutions.
         (5)  The  impact of the various reforms on the costs
    associated  with  the  administration  of  the   Illinois
    capital punishment system.
    (c)  The  Committee  shall  hold  hearings  on a periodic
basis to receive testimony  from  the  public  regarding  the
manner  in which reforms have impacted the capital punishment
system.
    (d)  The Committee shall submit its final report  to  the
General  Assembly  no  later than 5 years after the effective
date of this Act.

    Section 5. The Illinois Criminal Justice Information  Act
is amended by adding Section 7.2 as follows:

    (20 ILCS 3930/7.2 new)
    Sec. 7.2. Custodial Interview Pilot Program.
    (a)  Legislative   findings   and   intent.  The  General
Assembly finds  that  technology  has  made  it  possible  to
electronically record custodial interviews of suspects during
first  degree  murder  investigations.  This  technology will
protect law enforcement agencies against claims of abuse  and
coercion  by  suspects while providing a memorialized account
of interviews at police stations. The  technology  will  also
provide  a  better  means for courts to review confessions of
suspects with direct evidence of demeanor, tone, manner,  and
content of statements. The General Assembly intends to create
a  Custodial  Interview  Pilot  Program  to establish 4 pilot
programs at police stations in the  State  of  Illinois.  For
each program, video and audio experts shall install equipment
and   train   participating   law   enforcement  agencies  to
electronically   record   custodial   interviews   at   their
respective police  stations.  Participating  law  enforcement
agencies shall choose how to use the equipment in cooperation
with  the  local State's Attorney's office. The participating
law enforcement agencies may choose to electronically  record
interviews  of  suspects for offenses other than first degree
murder if they adopt local protocols in cooperation with  the
local State's Attorney's office.
    (b)  Definitions. In this Section:
         (1)  "Electronically record" means to memorialize by
    video and audio electronic equipment.
         (2)  "Custodial   interviews"  means  interviews  of
    suspects during first  degree  murder  investigations  or
    other investigations established by local protocol by law
    enforcement  authorities  that  take  place at the police
    station.
    (c)  Custodial Interview  Pilot  Program.  The  Authority
shall,   subject  to  appropriation,  establish  a  Custodial
Interview Pilot Program  to  operate  4  custodial  interview
pilot programs. The programs shall be established in a police
station  in the County of Cook and in 3 other police stations
geographically  distributed  throughout   the   State.   Each
participating law enforcement agency must:
         (1)  Promulgate  procedures  for recording custodial
    interviews  of  suspects  during  first   degree   murder
    investigations by video and audio means.
         (2)  Promulgate   procedures   for  maintaining  and
    storing video and audio recordings.
    (d)  Each of the 4  pilot  programs  established  by  the
Authority  shall  be  in  existence  for a minimum of 2 years
after its establishment under this Act.
    (e)  Report.  No  later   than   one   year   after   the
establishment  of  pilot  programs  under  this  Section, the
Authority must report to the General Assembly on the efficacy
of the Custodial Interview Pilot Program.
    (f)  The Authority shall adopt rules in cooperation  with
the  Illinois  Department  of  State Police to implement this
Section.

    Section 6. The Illinois Police Training Act is amended by
changing Section 6.1 as follows:

    (50 ILCS 705/6.1)
    Sec. 6.1.  Decertification  of  full-time  and  part-time
police officers.
    (a)  The  Board  must  review  police officer conduct and
records to ensure that no  police  officer  is  certified  or
provided  a  valid  waiver  if  that  police officer has been
convicted of a felony offense under the laws of this State or
any other state which if committed in  this  State  would  be
punishable  as  a  felony. The Board must also ensure that no
police officer is certified or provided  a  valid  waiver  if
that  police  officer  has  been  convicted  on  or after the
effective  date  of  this  amendatory  Act  of  1999  of  any
misdemeanor specified in this Section or if committed in  any
other  state  would  be  an  offense similar to Section 11-6,
11-9.1, 11-14, 11-17, 11-19, 12-2, 12-15, 16-1,  17-1,  17-2,
28-3,  29-1, 31-1, 31-6, 31-7, 32-4a, or 32-7 of the Criminal
Code of 1961 or to Section 5 or 5.2 of the  Cannabis  Control
Act.  The  Board  must  appoint  investigators to enforce the
duties conferred upon the Board by this Act.
    (b)  It is the responsibility of the sheriff or the chief
executive officer of every local law  enforcement  agency  or
department  within  this  State  to  report  to the Board any
arrest or conviction of any officer for an offense identified
in this Section.
    (c)  It is the duty and responsibility of every full-time
and part-time police officer in this State to report  to  the
Board  within  30  days,  and  the officer's sheriff or chief
executive officer, of his or her arrest or conviction for  an
offense   identified   in  this  Section.  Any  full-time  or
part-time police officer who knowingly makes, submits, causes
to be submitted, or files a false or untruthful report to the
Board must have his or her certificate or waiver  immediately
decertified or revoked.
    (d)  Any person, or a local or State agency, or the Board
is  immune  from  liability  for  submitting,  disclosing, or
releasing information  of  arrests  or  convictions  in  this
Section  as  long as the information is submitted, disclosed,
or released in good faith and without malice. The  Board  has
qualified immunity for the release of the information.
    (e)  Any  full-time  or  part-time  police officer with a
certificate or waiver issued by the Board who is convicted of
any offense described in this  Section  immediately   becomes
decertified   or   no   longer   has   a  valid  waiver.  The
decertification and invalidity of waivers occurs as a  matter
of  law. Failure of a convicted person to report to the Board
his or her conviction as described in  this  Section  or  any
continued   law   enforcement   practice  after  receiving  a
conviction  is a Class 4 felony.
    (f)   The Board's investigators are  peace  officers  and
have  all  the powers possessed by policemen in cities and by
sheriff's, provided that the investigators may exercise those
powers  anywhere  in  the  State,  only  after  contact   and
cooperation   with  the  appropriate  local  law  enforcement
authorities.
    (g)  The Board must request and receive  information  and
assistance  from  any  federal,  state, or local governmental
agency  as  part  of  the  authorized   criminal   background
investigation.   The Department of State Police must process,
retain, and additionally provide and disseminate  information
to   the   Board   concerning   criminal   charges,  arrests,
convictions, and their  disposition,  that  have  been  filed
before,  on,  or  after the effective date of this amendatory
Act of the 91st General  Assembly  against  a  basic  academy
applicant,  law  enforcement  applicant,  or  law enforcement
officer whose fingerprint identification cards are on file or
maintained by the Department of State  Police.   The  Federal
Bureau  of  Investigation must provide the Board any criminal
history record information contained in its files  pertaining
to  law  enforcement  officers  or  any  applicant to a Board
certified basic law enforcement academy as described in  this
Act  based on fingerprint identification. The Board must make
payment of fees to the Department of State  Police  for  each
fingerprint   card   submission   in   conformance  with  the
requirements of paragraph 22 of  Section  55a  of  the  Civil
Administrative Code of Illinois.
    (h)  A police officer who has been certified or granted a
valid  waiver  may  also  be  decertified  or have his or her
waiver revoked upon a determination by the Board that  he  or
she, while under oath, has knowingly and willfully made false
statements   as   to   a  material  fact  during  a  homicide
proceeding.  A  determination  may  be  made  only  after  an
investigation and hearing upon  a  verified  complaint  filed
with  the  Illinois Law Enforcement Training Standards Board.
No action may be taken by the  Board  regarding  a  complaint
unless  a majority of the members of the Board are present at
the meeting at which the action is taken.
         (1)  The  Board  shall  adopt  rules  governing  the
    investigation and hearing  of  a  verified  complaint  to
    assure  the  police  officer due process and to eliminate
    conflicts of interest within the Board itself.
         (2)  Upon receipt of the initial verified complaint,
    the Board must make a finding within 30 days  of  receipt
    of the complaint as to whether sufficient evidence exists
    to  support  the  complaint.   The  Board is empowered to
    investigate and dismiss the complaint if it finds,  by  a
    vote  of a majority of the members present, that there is
    insufficient evidence to support  it.  Upon  the  initial
    filing,  the  sheriff or police chief, or other employing
    agency, of the  accused  officer  may  suspend,  with  or
    without  pay,  the  accused officer pending a decision of
    the Board. Upon a Board finding of insufficient evidence,
    the police officer shall be  reinstated  with  back  pay,
    benefits,   and  seniority  status  as  appropriate.  The
    sheriff or police chief, or employing agency, shall  take
    such necessary action as is ordered by the Board.
         (3)  If  the Board finds, by a vote of a majority of
    the members present, that sufficient evidence  exists  to
    support  the  complaint,  it  shall  authorize  a hearing
    before an administrative law judge within 45 days of  the
    Board's  finding,  unless,  based upon the complexity and
    extent of the allegations and charges, additional time is
    needed.  In  no   event   may   a   hearing   before   an
    administrative  law  judge  take place later than 60 days
    after the Board's finding.
    (i)  The Board shall have  the  power  and  authority  to
appoint  administrative  law  judges  on a contractual basis.
The Administrative law judges must be attorneys  licensed  to
practice  law in the State of Illinois.  The Board shall also
adopt rules governing the appointment of  administrative  law
judges  and  the  conduct  of  hearings  consistent  with the
requirements of this Section. The  administrative  law  judge
shall  hear all evidence and prepare a written recommendation
of his or her findings to  the  Board.  At  the  hearing  the
accused police officer shall be afforded the opportunity to:
         (1)  Be represented by counsel;
         (2)  Be heard in his or her own defense;
         (3)  Produce evidence in his or her defense;
         (4)  Request that the Board compel the attendance of
    witnesses and production of court records and documents.
    (j)  Once a case has been set for hearing, the person who
filed  the  verified  complaint shall have the opportunity to
produce evidence to  support  any  charge  against  a  police
officer  that  he or she, while under oath, has knowingly and
willfully made false statements as to a material fact  during
a homicide proceeding.
         (1)  The  person  who  filed  the verified complaint
    shall have the opportunity to be represented  by  counsel
    and shall produce evidence to support his or her charges;
         (2)  The person who filed the verified complaint may
    request  the  Board to compel the attendance of witnesses
    and production of court records and documents.
    (k)  The Board shall have the power  to  issue  subpoenas
requiring  the  attendance and testimony of witnesses and the
production of court records and documents and shall have  the
power to administer oaths.
    (l)  The   administrative   law   judge  shall  have  the
responsibility of receiving into evidence relevant  testimony
and   documents,  including  court  records,  to  support  or
disprove the  allegations  made  by  the  person  filing  the
verified  complaint,  and,  at  the  close  of the case, hear
arguments. If the administrative law judge finds  that  there
is  not clear and convincing evidence to support the verified
complaint that the police  officer  has,  while  under  oath,
knowingly  and  willfully  made  false  statements  as  to  a
material    fact    during   a   homicide   proceeding,   the
administrative law judge shall make a written  recommendation
of  dismissal  to  the Board. If the administrative law judge
finds that there is clear and convincing evidence to  support
the  verified  complaint  that  the police officer has, while
under oath, knowingly and willfully made false statements  as
to   a  material  fact  during  a  homicide  proceeding,  the
administrative law judge shall make a written  recommendation
of decertification to the Board.
    (m)  Any person, with the exception of the police officer
who is the subject of the hearing, who is served by the Board
with  a  subpoena  to appear, testify or produce evidence and
refuses to comply with the subpoena is guilty of  a  Class  B
misdemeanor.  Any circuit court or judge, upon application by
the Board, may compel compliance with a  subpoena  issued  by
the Board.
    (n)  Within  15 days of receiving the recommendation, the
Board shall consider the recommendation of the administrative
law judge and the record of the hearing at a  Board  meeting.
If,  by a two-thirds vote of the members present at the Board
meeting, the Board finds that there is clear  and  convincing
evidence  that  the  police  officer  has,  while under oath,
knowingly  and  willfully  made  false  statements  as  to  a
material fact during a homicide proceeding, the  Board  shall
order  that  the police officer be decertified as a full-time
or part-time police officer. If less than two-thirds  of  the
members  present  vote  to  decertify the police officer, the
Board shall dismiss the complaint.
    (o)  The provisions  of  the  Administrative  Review  Law
shall  govern  all proceedings for the judicial review of any
order rendered by the Board. The moving party shall  pay  the
reasonable  costs  of preparing and certifying the record for
review. If the moving party is the police officer and  he  or
she  prevails,  the court may award the police officer actual
costs  incurred  in  all  proceedings,  including  reasonable
attorney fees. If the court awards  the  police  officer  the
actual  costs  incurred in a proceeding, including reasonable
attorney fees, the costs and attorney  fees  shall  be  paid,
subject  to  appropriation, from the Illinois Law Enforcement
Training Standards Board Costs  and  Attorney  Fees  Fund,  a
special  fund that is created in the State Treasury. The Fund
shall consist of moneys appropriated or transferred into  the
Fund for the purpose of making payments of costs and attorney
fees in accordance with this subsection (o). The Illinois Law
Enforcement  Training  Standards  Board  shall administer the
Fund and adopt rules for the administration of the  Fund  and
for  the  submission  and disposition of claims for costs and
attorney fees in accordance with this subsection (o).
    (p)  If  the  police   officer   is   decertified   under
subsection  (h), the Board shall notify the defendant who was
a party  to  the  proceeding  that  resulted  in  the  police
officer's  decertification  and  his  or  her attorney of the
Board's decision. Notification shall be  by  certified  mail,
return  receipt  requested,  sent  to  the party's last known
address and to the party's attorney if any.
    (q)  Limitation of action.
         (1)  No complaint may  be  filed  pursuant  to  this
    Section  until  after  a  verdict or other disposition is
    rendered in the underlying case or the underlying case is
    dismissed in the trial court.
         (2)  A complaint pursuant to this Section may not be
    filed more than 2 years after the final resolution of the
    case. For purposes of this Section, final  resolution  is
    defined   as  the  trial  court's  ruling  on  the  State
    post-conviction proceeding in the case  in  which  it  is
    alleged  the  police officer, while under oath, knowingly
    and willfully made false statements as to a material fact
    during  a   homicide   proceeding.   In   the   event   a
    post-conviction petition is not filed, an action pursuant
    to  this  Section  may not be commenced more than 2 years
    after the denial of a  petition  for  certiorari  to  the
    United  States  Supreme  Court,  or  if  no  petition for
    certiorari is filed,  2  years  after  the  date  such  a
    petition  should  have  been  filed.  In  the event of an
    acquittal, no proceeding may  be  commenced  pursuant  to
    this  Section more than 6 years after the date upon which
    judgment on the verdict of acquittal was entered.
    (r)  Interested parties. Only interested parties  to  the
criminal  prosecution  in which the police officer allegedly,
while  under  oath,  knowingly  and  willfully   made   false
statements as to a material fact during a homicide proceeding
may  file  a verified complaint pursuant to this Section. For
purposes of this Section, "interested  parties"  include  the
defendant  and  any police officer who has personal knowledge
that the police officer who is the subject of  the  complaint
has,  while  under  oath,  knowingly and willfully made false
statements  as  to  a  material  fact   during   a   homicide
proceeding.
(Source: P.A. 91-495, eff. 1-1-00.)

    Section  10.   The  Criminal  Code  of 1961 is amended by
changing Sections 9-1 and 14-3 as follows:

    (720 ILCS 5/9-1) (from Ch. 38, par. 9-1)
    Sec.  9-1.  First  degree  Murder  -  Death  penalties  -
Exceptions - Separate Hearings - Proof - Findings - Appellate
procedures - Reversals.
    (a)  A person who  kills  an  individual  without  lawful
justification  commits  first degree murder if, in performing
the acts which cause the death:
         (1)  he either intends to kill or  do  great  bodily
    harm  to  that  individual or another, or knows that such
    acts will cause death to that individual or another; or
         (2)  he  knows  that  such  acts  create  a   strong
    probability  of  death  or  great  bodily  harm  to  that
    individual or another; or
         (3)  he  is  attempting  or  committing  a  forcible
    felony other than second degree murder.
    (b)  Aggravating Factors.  A defendant who at the time of
the  commission  of the offense has attained the age of 18 or
more and who has been found guilty of first degree murder may
be sentenced to death if:
         (1)  the murdered individual was a peace officer  or
    fireman  killed  in the course of performing his official
    duties,  to  prevent  the  performance  of  his  official
    duties, or in retaliation  for  performing  his  official
    duties,  and the defendant knew or should have known that
    the murdered individual was a peace officer  or  fireman;
    or
         (2)  the  murdered  individual was an employee of an
    institution or facility of the Department of Corrections,
    or any similar local correctional agency, killed  in  the
    course  of performing his official duties, to prevent the
    performance of his official duties, or in retaliation for
    performing  his  official   duties,   or   the   murdered
    individual  was an inmate at such institution or facility
    and was killed on the grounds thereof,  or  the  murdered
    individual  was  otherwise present in such institution or
    facility with the knowledge and  approval  of  the  chief
    administrative officer thereof; or
         (3)  the  defendant  has been convicted of murdering
    two or more individuals  under  subsection  (a)  of  this
    Section  or  under any law of the United States or of any
    state which is substantially similar to subsection (a) of
    this Section regardless  of whether the  deaths  occurred
    as  the  result  of the same act or of several related or
    unrelated acts so long as the deaths were the  result  of
    either  an  intent  to  kill  more  than one person or of
    separate acts which the defendant knew would cause  death
    or  create  a strong probability of death or great bodily
    harm to the murdered individual or another; or
         (4)  the murdered individual was killed as a  result
    of  the  hijacking  of  an  airplane, train, ship, bus or
    other public conveyance; or
         (5)  the defendant committed the murder pursuant  to
    a contract, agreement or understanding by which he was to
    receive   money  or  anything  of  value  in  return  for
    committing the murder or procured another to  commit  the
    murder for money or anything of value; or
         (6)  the  murdered  individual  was  killed  in  the
    course of another felony if:
              (a)  the murdered individual:
                   (i)  was actually killed by the defendant,
              or
                   (ii)  received      physical      injuries
              personally    inflicted    by   the   defendant
              substantially contemporaneously  with  physical
              injuries  caused  by  one  or  more persons for
              whose  conduct   the   defendant   is   legally
              accountable under Section 5-2 of this Code, and
              the  physical  injuries inflicted by either the
              defendant or the other person  or  persons  for
              whose  conduct he is legally accountable caused
              the death of the murdered individual; and
              (b)  in performing the acts  which  caused  the
         death  of  the murdered individual or which resulted
         in physical injuries  personally  inflicted  by  the
         defendant  on  the  murdered  individual  under  the
         circumstances  of  subdivision  (ii) of subparagraph
         (a) of paragraph  (6)  of  subsection  (b)  of  this
         Section, the defendant acted with the intent to kill
         the  murdered  individual or with the knowledge that
         his acts created a strong probability  of  death  or
         great  bodily  harm  to  the  murdered individual or
         another; and
              (c)  the other felony was an inherently violent
         crime one of the  following:  armed  robbery,  armed
         violence, robbery, predatory criminal sexual assault
         of  a  child,  aggravated  criminal  sexual assault,
         aggravated    kidnapping,    aggravated    vehicular
         hijacking,  forcible  detention,  arson,  aggravated
         arson, aggravated  stalking,  burglary,  residential
         burglary,  home  invasion,  calculated criminal drug
         conspiracy as defined in Section 405 of the Illinois
         Controlled Substances Act, streetgang criminal  drug
         conspiracy  as  defined  in  Section  405.2  of  the
         Illinois  Controlled  Substances Act, or the attempt
         to commit  an  inherently  violent  crime.  In  this
         subparagraph   (c),   "inherently   violent   crime"
         includes,  but  is  not  limited  to, armed robbery,
         robbery, predatory  criminal  sexual  assault  of  a
         child,    aggravated    criminal   sexual   assault,
         aggravated    kidnapping,    aggravated    vehicular
         hijacking, aggravated  arson,  aggravated  stalking,
         residential  burglary,  and home invasion any of the
         felonies listed in this subsection (c); or
         (7)  the murdered individual was under 12  years  of
    age  and  the death resulted from exceptionally brutal or
    heinous behavior indicative of wanton cruelty; or
         (8)  the defendant committed the murder with  intent
    to  prevent  the  murdered  individual from testifying or
    participating   in   any   criminal   investigation    or
    prosecution or giving material assistance to the State in
    any  investigation  or  prosecution,  either  against the
    defendant or another;  or  the  defendant  committed  the
    murder  because  the murdered individual was a witness in
    any prosecution or gave material assistance to the  State
    in  any  investigation or prosecution, either against the
    defendant or another; for purposes of this paragraph (8),
    "participating   in   any   criminal   investigation   or
    prosecution" is intended to include  those  appearing  in
    the  proceedings  in  any  capacity such as trial judges,
    prosecutors, defense attorneys, investigators, witnesses,
    or jurors; or
         (9)  the  defendant,  while  committing  an  offense
    punishable under Sections 401, 401.1, 401.2, 405,  405.2,
    407  or  407.1  or  subsection  (b) of Section 404 of the
    Illinois Controlled Substances Act, or while engaged in a
    conspiracy  or  solicitation  to  commit  such   offense,
    intentionally   killed   an   individual   or  counseled,
    commanded, induced, procured or  caused  the  intentional
    killing of the murdered individual; or
         (10)  the   defendant   was   incarcerated   in   an
    institution  or facility of the Department of Corrections
    at the time  of  the  murder,  and  while  committing  an
    offense  punishable  as  a  felony under Illinois law, or
    while engaged in a conspiracy or solicitation  to  commit
    such  offense,  intentionally  killed  an  individual  or
    counseled,  commanded,  induced,  procured  or caused the
    intentional killing of the murdered individual; or
         (11)  the murder was committed in a cold, calculated
    and premeditated manner pursuant to a preconceived  plan,
    scheme  or design to take a human life by unlawful means,
    and the conduct of the  defendant  created  a  reasonable
    expectation  that the death of a human being would result
    therefrom; or
         (12)  the  murdered  individual  was  an   emergency
    medical   technician   -   ambulance,  emergency  medical
    technician - intermediate, emergency medical technician -
    paramedic, ambulance driver, or other medical  assistance
    or  first  aid  personnel,  employed by a municipality or
    other  governmental  unit,  killed  in  the   course   of
    performing   his   official   duties,   to   prevent  the
    performance of his official duties, or in retaliation for
    performing his official duties, and the defendant knew or
    should have known that the  murdered  individual  was  an
    emergency   medical  technician  -  ambulance,  emergency
    medical  technician  -  intermediate,  emergency  medical
    technician  -  paramedic,  ambulance  driver,  or   other
    medical assistance or first aid personnel; or
         (13)  the  defendant  was a principal administrator,
    organizer,  or  leader  of  a  calculated  criminal  drug
    conspiracy  consisting  of  a  hierarchical  position  of
    authority superior to that of all other  members  of  the
    conspiracy,   and  the  defendant  counseled,  commanded,
    induced, procured, or caused the intentional  killing  of
    the murdered person; or
         (14)  the  murder  was  intentional and involved the
    infliction of torture.  For the purpose of  this  Section
    torture  means 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; or
         (15)  the  murder  was  committed as a result of the
    intentional discharge of a firearm by the defendant  from
    a motor vehicle and the victim was not present within the
    motor vehicle; or
         (16)  the murdered individual was 60 years of age or
    older and the death resulted from exceptionally brutal or
    heinous behavior indicative of wanton cruelty; or
         (17)  the  murdered individual was a disabled person
    and the defendant knew or  should  have  known  that  the
    murdered  individual  was disabled.  For purposes of this
    paragraph (17), "disabled  person"  means  a  person  who
    suffers  from  a  permanent physical or mental impairment
    resulting from disease, an injury, a functional disorder,
    or  a  congenital  condition  that  renders  the   person
    incapable  of  adequately  providing  for  his or her own
    health or personal care; or
         (18)  the murder was  committed  by  reason  of  any
    person's activity as a community policing volunteer or to
    prevent  any  person  from  engaging  in  activity  as  a
    community policing volunteer; or
         (19)  the  murdered  individual  was  subject  to an
    order of protection and the murder  was  committed  by  a
    person  against  whom  the  same  order of protection was
    issued under the Illinois Domestic Violence Act of  1986;
    or
         (20)  the  murdered  individual  was  known  by  the
    defendant to be a teacher or other person employed in any
    school  and  the  teacher  or  other employee is upon the
    grounds of a school or grounds adjacent to a  school,  or
    is in any part of a building used for school purposes; or
         (21)  the  murder  was committed by the defendant in
    connection  with  or  as  a  result  of  the  offense  of
    terrorism as defined in Section 29D-30 of this Code.
      (c)  Consideration  of  factors  in   Aggravation   and
Mitigation.
    The  court  shall consider, or shall instruct the jury to
consider any aggravating and any mitigating factors which are
relevant to the imposition of the death penalty.  Aggravating
factors may include but need not be limited to those  factors
set  forth  in subsection (b). Mitigating factors may include
but need not be limited to the following:
         (1)  the defendant has  no  significant  history  of
    prior criminal activity;
         (2)  the  murder  was  committed while the defendant
    was under the influence of extreme  mental  or  emotional
    disturbance, although not such as to constitute a defense
    to prosecution;
         (3)  the  murdered  individual  was a participant in
    the defendant's homicidal conduct  or  consented  to  the
    homicidal act;
         (4)  the  defendant  acted  under  the compulsion of
    threat or menace of the imminent infliction of  death  or
    great bodily harm;
         (5)  the defendant was not personally present during
    commission of the act or acts causing death;.
         (6)  the  defendant's  background includes a history
    of extreme emotional or physical abuse;
         (7)  the defendant suffers  from  a  reduced  mental
    capacity.
    (d)  Separate sentencing hearing.
    Where  requested  by the State, the court shall conduct a
separate sentencing proceeding to determine the existence  of
factors  set  forth  in  subsection  (b)  and to consider any
aggravating or mitigating factors as indicated in  subsection
(c).  The proceeding shall be conducted:
         (1)  before the jury that determined the defendant's
    guilt; or
         (2)  before a jury impanelled for the purpose of the
    proceeding if:
              A.  the  defendant was convicted upon a plea of
         guilty; or
              B.  the defendant was convicted after  a  trial
         before the court sitting without a jury; or
              C.  the  court  for good cause shown discharges
         the jury that determined the defendant's guilt; or
         (3)  before the court alone if the defendant  waives
    a jury for the separate proceeding.
    (e)  Evidence and Argument.
    During  the proceeding any information relevant to any of
the factors set forth in subsection (b) may be  presented  by
either  the  State or the defendant under the rules governing
the  admission  of  evidence   at   criminal   trials.    Any
information relevant to any additional aggravating factors or
any  mitigating  factors  indicated  in subsection (c) may be
presented  by  the  State  or  defendant  regardless  of  its
admissibility under the  rules  governing  the  admission  of
evidence  at  criminal  trials.  The  State and the defendant
shall be given fair  opportunity  to  rebut  any  information
received at the hearing.
    (f)  Proof.
    The  burden of proof of establishing the existence of any
of the factors set forth in subsection (b) is  on  the  State
and  shall  not  be  satisfied  unless  established  beyond a
reasonable doubt.
    (g)  Procedure - Jury.
    If at the separate sentencing proceeding the  jury  finds
that  none of the factors set forth in subsection (b) exists,
the  court  shall  sentence  the  defendant  to  a  term   of
imprisonment   under   Chapter  V  of  the  Unified  Code  of
Corrections.  If there is a unanimous  finding  by  the  jury
that  one  or more of the factors set forth in subsection (b)
exist, the jury shall  consider  aggravating  and  mitigating
factors  as  instructed  by  the  court  and  shall determine
whether the sentence of death shall be imposed.  If the  jury
determines   unanimously,   after  weighing  the  factors  in
aggravation and mitigation, that  death  is  the  appropriate
sentence  that  there are no mitigating factors sufficient to
preclude the imposition of  the  death  sentence,  the  court
shall sentence the defendant to death.  If the court does not
concur   with  the  jury  determination  that  death  is  the
appropriate sentence, the court shall set  forth  reasons  in
writing  including  what  facts  or  circumstances  the court
relied  upon,  along  with  any  relevant   documents,   that
compelled  the  court  to  non-concur with the sentence. This
document and any attachments shall be part of the record  for
appellate  review.  The  court  shall  be bound by the jury's
sentencing determination.
    If  after  weighing  the  factors  in   aggravation   and
mitigation,  one  or more jurors determines that death is not
the appropriate sentence, Unless the jury  unanimously  finds
that  there  are no mitigating factors sufficient to preclude
the imposition of the death sentence the court shall sentence
the defendant to a term of imprisonment under  Chapter  V  of
the Unified Code of Corrections.
    (h)  Procedure - No Jury.
    In  a  proceeding  before  the  court alone, if the court
finds that none  of  the  factors  found  in  subsection  (b)
exists,  the  court shall sentence the defendant to a term of
imprisonment  under  Chapter  V  of   the  Unified  Code   of
Corrections.
    If  the  Court determines that one or more of the factors
set forth in subsection (b) exists, the Court shall  consider
any  aggravating  and  mitigating  factors  as  indicated  in
subsection  (c).  If the Court determines, after weighing the
factors in aggravation and  mitigation,  that  death  is  the
appropriate  sentence  that  there  are no mitigating factors
sufficient to preclude the imposition of the death  sentence,
the Court shall sentence the defendant to death.
    If  Unless  the  court finds that there are no mitigating
factors sufficient to preclude the imposition of the sentence
of death is not the appropriate  sentence,  the  court  shall
sentence  the  defendant  to  a  term  of  imprisonment under
Chapter V of the Unified Code of Corrections.
    (h-5)  Decertification as a capital case.
    In a case in which the defendant has been found guilty of
first degree murder by a judge or jury, or a case  on  remand
for resentencing, and the State seeks the death penalty as an
appropriate  sentence,  on  the  court's  own  motion  or the
written motion of the defendant, the court may decertify  the
case as a death penalty case if the court finds that the only
evidence   supporting   the  defendant's  conviction  is  the
uncorroborated testimony of an informant witness, as  defined
in  Section 115-21 of the Code of Criminal Procedure of 1963,
concerning the confession or admission of  the  defendant  or
that  the  sole  evidence  against  the defendant is a single
eyewitness   or   single   accomplice   without   any   other
corroborating evidence. If the court decertifies the case  as
a  capital  case under either of the grounds set forth above,
the court shall issue  a  written  finding.   The  State  may
pursue  its  right  to appeal the decertification pursuant to
Supreme  Court  Rule  604(a)(1).   If  the  court  does   not
decertify  the  case  as  a  capital  case,  the matter shall
proceed to the eligibility phase of the sentencing hearing.
    (i)  Appellate Procedure.
    The conviction and sentence of death shall be subject  to
automatic  review by the Supreme Court.  Such review shall be
in accordance with rules promulgated by  the  Supreme  Court.
The  Illinois  Supreme Court may overturn the death sentence,
and order the imposition of imprisonment under Chapter  V  of
the  Unified  Code of Corrections if the court finds that the
death sentence is fundamentally  unjust  as  applied  to  the
particular case. If the Illinois Supreme Court finds that the
death  sentence  is  fundamentally  unjust  as applied to the
particular case, independent of any  procedural  grounds  for
relief,  the  Illinois  Supreme  Court  shall issue a written
opinion explaining this finding.
    (j)  Disposition of reversed death sentence.
    In the event that the death penalty in this Act  is  held
to  be  unconstitutional  by  the Supreme Court of the United
States or of the State of Illinois, any person  convicted  of
first degree murder shall be sentenced by the court to a term
of  imprisonment  under  Chapter  V  of  the  Unified Code of
Corrections.
    In the event that any  death  sentence  pursuant  to  the
sentencing   provisions   of   this   Section   is   declared
unconstitutional by the Supreme Court of the United States or
of  the State of Illinois, the court having jurisdiction over
a person  previously  sentenced  to  death  shall  cause  the
defendant to be brought before the court, and the court shall
sentence the  defendant  to  a  term  of  imprisonment  under
Chapter V of the Unified Code of Corrections.
    (k)  Guidelines for seeking the death penalty.
    The  Attorney  General  and State's Attorneys Association
shall  consult  on  voluntary   guidelines   for   procedures
governing  whether  or  not  to  seek the death penalty.  The
guidelines do not have the force of law and are only advisory
in nature.
(Source: P.A. 91-357,  eff.  7-29-99;  91-434,  eff.  1-1-00;
92-854, eff. 12-5-02.)

    (720 ILCS 5/14-3) (from Ch. 38, par. 14-3)
    Sec.  14-3.   Exemptions.  The following activities shall
be exempt from the provisions of this Article:
    (a)  Listening  to   radio,   wireless   and   television
communications of any sort where the same are publicly made;
    (b)  Hearing  conversation when heard by employees of any
common carrier by wire incidental to  the  normal  course  of
their  employment  in the operation, maintenance or repair of
the equipment of such common carrier by wire so  long  as  no
information  obtained  thereby  is  used  or  divulged by the
hearer;
    (c)  Any broadcast  by  radio,  television  or  otherwise
whether  it  be  a  broadcast  or recorded for the purpose of
later broadcasts of any  function  where  the  public  is  in
attendance  and the conversations are overheard incidental to
the main purpose for which such  broadcasts  are  then  being
made;
    (d)  Recording or listening with the aid of any device to
any  emergency  communication  made  in  the normal course of
operations by any federal, state  or  local  law  enforcement
agency   or   institutions  dealing  in  emergency  services,
including, but not limited to, hospitals, clinics,  ambulance
services,   fire   fighting  agencies,  any  public  utility,
emergency repair facility, civilian defense establishment  or
military installation;
    (e)  Recording the proceedings of any meeting required to
be open by the Open Meetings Act, as amended;
    (f)  Recording or listening with the aid of any device to
incoming  telephone  calls  of phone lines publicly listed or
advertised  as  consumer  "hotlines"  by   manufacturers   or
retailers of food and drug products.  Such recordings must be
destroyed,  erased  or  turned  over to local law enforcement
authorities within 24 hours from the time of  such  recording
and shall not be otherwise disseminated.  Failure on the part
of the individual or business operating any such recording or
listening  device  to  comply  with  the requirements of this
subsection shall eliminate any  civil  or  criminal  immunity
conferred  upon  that individual or business by the operation
of this Section;
    (g)  With prior notification to the State's  Attorney  of
the  county  in  which it is to occur, recording or listening
with the aid of any device to any conversation  where  a  law
enforcement officer, or any person acting at the direction of
law  enforcement,  is  a  party  to  the conversation and has
consented  to  it  being  intercepted   or   recorded   under
circumstances  where  the  use of the device is necessary for
the protection of the law enforcement officer or  any  person
acting  at the direction of law enforcement, in the course of
an investigation of a forcible felony, a felony violation  of
the Illinois Controlled Substances Act, a felony violation of
the  Cannabis  Control  Act,  or  any "streetgang related" or
"gang-related" felony as  those  terms  are  defined  in  the
Illinois  Streetgang  Terrorism  Omnibus  Prevention Act. Any
recording or evidence derived as the result of this exemption
shall be inadmissible in any proceeding, criminal,  civil  or
administrative,  except (i) where a party to the conversation
suffers  great  bodily  injury  or  is  killed  during   such
conversation,  or  (ii)  when used as direct impeachment of a
witness concerning matters contained in the  interception  or
recording.   The  Director  of the Department of State Police
shall issue regulations as are necessary concerning  the  use
of   devices,  retention  of  tape  recordings,  and  reports
regarding their use;
    (g-5)  With approval  of  the  State's  Attorney  of  the
county  in  which it is to occur, recording or listening with
the aid of  any  device  to  any  conversation  where  a  law
enforcement officer, or any person acting at the direction of
law  enforcement,  is  a  party  to  the conversation and has
consented to it being intercepted or recorded in  the  course
of  an investigation of any offense defined in Article 29D of
this Code. In all such cases, an  application  for  an  order
approving  the previous or continuing use of an eavesdropping
device must be made within 48 hours of  the  commencement  of
such  use.   In  the  absence  of  such an order, or upon its
denial, any continuing use shall immediately  terminate.  The
Director  of  State Police shall issue rules as are necessary
concerning the use of devices, retention of tape  recordings,
and reports regarding their use.
    Any  recording  or  evidence  obtained  or derived in the
course of an investigation of any offense defined in  Article
29D  of  this Code shall, upon motion of the State's Attorney
or Attorney General prosecuting any violation of Article 29D,
be reviewed in camera with notice to all parties  present  by
the  court presiding over the criminal case, and, if ruled by
the court to be relevant and otherwise admissible,  it  shall
be admissible at the trial of the criminal case.
    This subsection (g-5) is inoperative on and after January
1,  2005.  No conversations recorded or monitored pursuant to
this subsection (g-5) shall be inadmissable in a court of law
by virtue of the repeal of this subsection (g-5)  on  January
1, 2005;.
    (h)  Recordings   made   simultaneously   with   a  video
recording of an oral conversation between  a  peace  officer,
who  has  identified  his or her office, and a person stopped
for an investigation of an offense under the Illinois Vehicle
Code;
    (i)  Recording of  a  conversation  made  by  or  at  the
request  of  a person, not a law enforcement officer or agent
of  a  law  enforcement  officer,  who  is  a  party  to  the
conversation, under reasonable suspicion that  another  party
to the conversation is committing, is about to commit, or has
committed  a  criminal offense against the person or a member
of his or her immediate household, and  there  is  reason  to
believe that evidence of the criminal offense may be obtained
by the recording; and
    (j)  The  use  of a telephone monitoring device by either
(1)  a  corporation  or  other  business  entity  engaged  in
marketing or opinion research or (2) a corporation  or  other
business entity engaged in telephone solicitation, as defined
in  this  subsection,  to  record or listen to oral telephone
solicitation conversations or marketing or  opinion  research
conversations  by  an  employee  of  the corporation or other
business entity when:
         (i)  the monitoring  is  used  for  the  purpose  of
    service  quality control of marketing or opinion research
    or telephone solicitation, the education or  training  of
    employees  or contractors engaged in marketing or opinion
    research or telephone solicitation, or internal  research
    related  to  marketing  or  opinion research or telephone
    solicitation; and
         (ii)  the monitoring is used with the consent of  at
    least  one person who is an active party to the marketing
    or   opinion   research   conversation    or    telephone
    solicitation conversation being monitored.
    No communication or conversation or any part, portion, or
aspect  of  the communication or conversation made, acquired,
or obtained, directly or  indirectly,  under  this  exemption
(j),  may  be,  directly  or indirectly, furnished to any law
enforcement officer, agency, or official for any  purpose  or
used  in  any  inquiry or investigation, or used, directly or
indirectly,  in  any  administrative,  judicial,   or   other
proceeding, or divulged to any third party.
    When recording or listening authorized by this subsection
(j) on telephone lines used for marketing or opinion research
or  telephone  solicitation  purposes results in recording or
listening to a conversation that does not relate to marketing
or opinion research or  telephone  solicitation;  the  person
recording  or  listening  shall, immediately upon determining
that the conversation does not relate to marketing or opinion
research or telephone solicitation, terminate  the  recording
or  listening  and  destroy  any such recording as soon as is
practicable.
    Business entities that  use  a  telephone  monitoring  or
telephone  recording  system  pursuant  to this exemption (j)
shall provide current and prospective employees  with  notice
that the monitoring or recordings may occur during the course
of  their  employment.   The  notice  shall include prominent
signage notification within the workplace.
    Business entities that  use  a  telephone  monitoring  or
telephone  recording  system  pursuant  to this exemption (j)
shall provide  their  employees  or  agents  with  access  to
personal-only  telephone  lines  which may be pay telephones,
that are not subject to  telephone  monitoring  or  telephone
recording.
    For  the  purposes  of  this  subsection  (j), "telephone
solicitation" means a communication  through  the  use  of  a
telephone by live operators:
         (i)  soliciting the sale of goods or services;
         (ii)  receiving  orders  for  the  sale  of goods or
    services;
         (iii)  assisting in the use of goods or services; or
         (iv)  engaging in the solicitation,  administration,
    or collection of bank or retail credit accounts.
    For  the  purposes  of this subsection (j), "marketing or
opinion research"  means  a  marketing  or  opinion  research
interview  conducted  by a live telephone interviewer engaged
by a corporation or other  business  entity  whose  principal
business  is  the  design, conduct, and analysis of polls and
surveys measuring the opinions, attitudes, and  responses  of
respondents  toward  products  and  services,  or  social  or
political issues, or both; and
    (k)  Recording  the  interview or statement of any person
when the person knows that the interview is  being  conducted
by  a law enforcement officer or prosecutor and the interview
takes  place  at  a  police   station   that   is   currently
participating   in  the  Custodial  Interview  Pilot  Program
established under the Illinois Criminal  Justice  Information
Act.
(Source: P.A. 91-357, eff. 7-29-99; 92-854, eff. 12-5-02.)
    Section  15.  The  Code  of Criminal Procedure of 1963 is
amended  by  changing  Sections  114-13,  116-3,  122-1,  and
122-2.1 and adding Article 107A and Sections 114-15,  115-21,
115-22, 116-5, and 122-2.2 as follows:

    (725 ILCS 5/107A Art. heading new)
      ARTICLE 107A.  LINEUP AND PHOTO SPREAD PROCEDURE

    (725 ILCS 5/107A-5 new)
    Sec. 107A-5.  Lineup and photo spread procedure.
    (a)  All  lineups  shall  be  photographed  or  otherwise
recorded. These photographs shall be disclosed to the accused
and  his  or her defense counsel during discovery proceedings
as provided in Illinois Supreme Court Rules. All  photographs
of  suspects  shown  to an eyewitness during the photo spread
shall be disclosed to the accused  and  his  or  her  defense
counsel  during discovery proceedings as provided in Illinois
Supreme Court Rules.
    (b)  Each eyewitness who views a lineup or  photo  spread
shall sign a form containing the following information:
         (1)  The suspect might not be in the lineup or photo
    spread  and  the  eyewitness  is not obligated to make an
    identification.
         (2)  The  eyewitness  should  not  assume  that  the
    person administering the lineup  or  photo  spread  knows
    which person is the suspect in the case.
    (c)  Suspects  in  a  lineup  or  photo spread should not
appear  to  be  substantially  different  from  "fillers"  or
"distracters" in the lineup or photo  spread,  based  on  the
eyewitness' previous description of the perpetrator, or based
on other factors that would draw attention to the suspect.

    (725 ILCS 5/107A-10 new)
    Sec.   107A-10.  Pilot   study   on   sequential   lineup
procedures.
    (a)  Legislative  intent.  Because  the  goal of a police
investigation  is  to  apprehend  the   person   or   persons
responsible for committing a crime, it is useful to conduct a
pilot  study  in  the  field  on  the  effectiveness  of  the
sequential method for lineup procedures.
    (b)  Establishment of pilot jurisdictions. The Department
of   State  Police  shall  select  3  police  departments  to
participate in a one-year pilot study on the effectiveness of
the sequential  lineup  method  for  photo  and  live  lineup
procedures.  One  such  pilot  jurisdiction shall be a police
district within a police department in a  municipality  whose
population  is  at  least  500,000  residents; one such pilot
jurisdiction shall be a police department in  a  municipality
whose  population  is at least 100,000 but less than 500,000;
and one such pilot jurisdiction shall be a police  department
in  a municipality whose population is less than 100,000. All
such pilot jurisdictions shall  be  selected  no  later  than
January 1, 2004.
    (c)  Sequential lineup procedures in pilot jurisdictions.
For  any  offense  alleged  to have been committed in a pilot
jurisdiction on or after January  1,  2004,  selected  lineup
identification procedure shall be presented in the sequential
method in which a witness is shown lineup participants one at
a time, using the following procedures:
         (1)  The witness shall be requested to state whether
    the  individual  shown  is  the  perpetrator of the crime
    prior to viewing the next lineup  participant.  Only  one
    member of the lineup shall be a suspect and the remainder
    shall  be  "fillers"  who  are  not  suspects but fit the
    general description of the offender without  the  suspect
    unduly standing out;
         (2)  The  lineup  administrator shall be someone who
    is not aware of which member of the lineup is the suspect
    in the case; and
         (3)  Prior  to  presenting  the  lineup  using   the
    sequential method the lineup administrator shall:
              (A)  Inform  the  witness  that the perpetrator
         may or may not be among those shown, and the witness
         should not feel compelled to make an identification;
              (B)  Inform the witness that  he  or  she  will
         view individuals one at a time and will be requested
         to   state  whether  the  individual  shown  is  the
         perpetrator of the crime, prior to viewing the  next
         lineup participant; and
              (C)  Ask the witness to state in his or her own
         words  how  sure  he  or  she  is  that  the  person
         identified  is  the  actual  offender.   During  the
         statement,  or  as  soon  thereafter  as  reasonably
         possible,   the  witness's  actual  words  shall  be
         documented.
    (d)  Application.  This Section applies to selected  live
lineups  that  are composed and presented at a police station
and to selected photo lineups regardless of where  presented;
provided   that   this  Section  does  not  apply  in  police
investigations  in  which  a  spontaneous  identification  is
possible and no lineup procedure is being used. This  Section
does  not affect the right to counsel afforded by the U.S. or
Illinois Constitutions  or  State  law  at  any  stage  of  a
criminal proceeding.
    (e)  Selection     of    lineups.    The    participating
jurisdictions shall develop a protocol for the selection  and
administration  of  lineups  which  is practical, designed to
elicit information for comparative evaluation  purposes,  and
is consistent with objective scientific research methodology.
    (f)  Training and administrators. The Department of State
Police  shall offer training to police officers and any other
appropriate personnel on the sequential method of  conducting
lineup   procedures   in  the  pilot  jurisdictions  and  the
requirements of this Section. The Department of State  Police
may  seek  funding  for  training and administration from the
Illinois  Criminal  Justice  Information  Authority  and  the
Illinois  Law  Enforcement  Training   Standards   Board   if
necessary.
    (g)  Report  on the pilot study.  The Department of State
Police  shall   gather   information   from   each   of   the
participating   police   departments   selected  as  a  pilot
jurisdiction  with  respect  to  the  effectiveness  of   the
sequential  method  for  lineup  procedures  and shall file a
report of its findings with  the  Governor  and  the  General
Assembly no later than April 1, 2005.

    (725 ILCS 5/114-13) (from Ch. 38, par. 114-13)
    Sec. 114-13.  Discovery in criminal cases.
    (a)  Discovery  procedures  in criminal cases shall be in
accordance with Supreme Court Rules.
    (b)  Any public investigative, law enforcement, or  other
public  agency  responsible  for  investigating  any homicide
offense or participating in an investigation of any  homicide
offense,  other  than defense investigators, shall provide to
the  authority  prosecuting  the  offense  all  investigative
material, including but not limited  to  reports,  memoranda,
and  field  notes,  that  have been generated by or have come
into the possession of the  investigating  agency  concerning
the  homicide  offense  being  investigated. In addition, the
investigating  agency  shall  provide  to   the   prosecuting
authority  any  material  or  information,  including but not
limited to reports, memoranda, and field  notes,  within  its
possession  or control that would tend to negate the guilt of
the accused of the offense  charged  or  reduce  his  or  her
punishment  for the homicide offense. Every investigative and
law enforcement agency in this State shall adopt policies  to
ensure  compliance  with  these standards. Any investigative,
law enforcement,  or  other  public  agency  responsible  for
investigating    any   "non-homicide   felony"   offense   or
participating  in  an  investigation  of  any   "non-homicide
felony"  offense,  other  than  defense  investigators, shall
provide  to  the  authority  prosecuting  the   offense   all
investigative  material, including but not limited to reports
and memoranda that have been generated by or have  come  into
the  possession  of  the  investigating agency concerning the
"non-homicide  felony"  offense   being   investigated.    In
addition,  the  investigating  agency  shall  provide  to the
prosecuting authority any material or information,  including
but   not  limited  to  reports  and  memoranda,  within  its
possession or control that would tend to negate the guilt  of
the  accused  of the "non-homicide felony" offense charged or
reduce his or her punishment for  the  "non-homicide  felony"
offense.    This  obligation  to furnish exculpatory evidence
exists whether the information was recorded or documented  in
any  form.  Every investigative and law enforcement agency in
this State shall adopt policies  to  ensure  compliance  with
these standards.
(Source: Laws 1963, p. 2836.)

    (725 ILCS 5/114-15 new)
    Sec. 114-15.  Mental retardation.
    (a)  In  a  first  degree  murder case in which the State
seeks the death penalty as an appropriate sentence, any party
may raise the issue of the defendant's mental retardation  by
motion.  A defendant wishing to raise the issue of his or her
mental retardation shall provide written notice to the  State
and  the  court  as soon as the defendant reasonably believes
such issue will be raised.
    (b)  The issue  of  the  defendant's  mental  retardation
shall be determined in a pretrial hearing. The court shall be
the  fact  finder  on  the  issue  of  the defendant's mental
retardation and shall determine the issue by a  preponderance
of  evidence  in  which  the  moving  party has the burden of
proof. The court may appoint an expert in the field of mental
retardation. The defendant and the State  may  offer  experts
from  the  field  of  mental  retardation.  The  court  shall
determine  admissibility  of evidence and qualification as an
expert.
    (c)  If after a plea of guilty to first degree murder, or
a finding of guilty of first degree murder in a bench  trial,
or  a  verdict  of  guilty  for first degree murder in a jury
trial, or on a matter remanded from  the  Supreme  Court  for
sentencing  for  first degree murder, and the State seeks the
death penalty as an appropriate sentence, the  defendant  may
raise  the  issue  of  defendant's  mental retardation not at
eligibility but at aggravation and mitigation.  The defendant
and the State may offer experts  from  the  field  of  mental
retardation.   The  court  shall  determine  admissibility of
evidence and qualification as an expert.
    (d)  In determining whether  the  defendant  is  mentally
retarded,  the mental retardation must have manifested itself
by  the  age  of  18.    IQ  tests  and  psychometric   tests
administered  to  the  defendant  must  be  the kind and type
recognized by experts in the field of mental retardation.  In
order for the defendant to be considered mentally retarded, a
low  IQ  must  be  accompanied  by  significant  deficits  in
adaptive behavior in at least 2 of the following skill areas:
communication,  self-care,  social  or  interpersonal skills,
home living, self-direction, academics,  health  and  safety,
use  of  community  resources,  and  work.    An intelligence
quotient (IQ) of 75  or  below  is  presumptive  evidence  of
mental retardation.
    (e)  Evidence  of  mental retardation that did not result
in  disqualifying  the  case  as  a  capital  case,  may   be
introduced   as  evidence  in  mitigation  during  a  capital
sentencing hearing. A failure of the court to determine  that
the  defendant  is  mentally  retarded  does not preclude the
court during trial from allowing evidence relating to  mental
disability should the court deem it appropriate.
    (f)  If  the  court  determines  at a pretrial hearing or
after remand that a capital defendant is  mentally  retarded,
and  the State does not appeal pursuant to Supreme Court Rule
604, the case shall no longer be considered  a  capital  case
and  the  procedural guidelines established for capital cases
shall no longer be applicable  to  the  defendant.   In  that
case,  the  defendant shall be sentenced under the sentencing
provisions of Chapter V of the Unified Code of Corrections.

    (725 ILCS 5/115-21 new)
    Sec. 115-21.  Informant testimony.
    (a)  For the purposes of this Section, "informant"  means
someone who is purporting to testify about admissions made to
him  or  her  by  the  accused  while incarcerated in a penal
institution contemporaneously.
    (b)  This Section applies to any capital  case  in  which
the   prosecution   attempts   to   introduce   evidence   of
incriminating  statements made by the accused to or overheard
by an informant.
    (c)  In any case  under  this  Section,  the  prosecution
shall timely disclose in discovery:
         (1)  the complete criminal history of the informant;
         (2)  any  deal, promise, inducement, or benefit that
    the offering party has made or will make in the future to
    the informant;
         (3)  the statements made by the accused;
         (4)  the time and place of the statements, the  time
    and   place   of  their  disclosure  to  law  enforcement
    officials, and the names of all persons who were  present
    when the statements were made;
         (5)  whether at any time the informant recanted that
    testimony  or statement and, if so, the time and place of
    the recantation, the nature of the recantation,  and  the
    names of the persons who were present at the recantation;
         (6)  other  cases  in which the informant testified,
    provided that the existence  of  such  testimony  can  be
    ascertained  through  reasonable  inquiry and whether the
    informant received any promise, inducement, or benefit in
    exchange  for  or  subsequent  to   that   testimony   or
    statement; and
         (7)  any   other   information   relevant   to   the
    informant's credibility.
    (d)  In any case under this Section, the prosecution must
timely  disclose  its intent to introduce the testimony of an
informant.  The court shall conduct a  hearing  to  determine
whether  the  testimony  of the informant is reliable, unless
the defendant waives such  a  hearing.   If  the  prosecution
fails  to  show  by  a preponderance of the evidence that the
informant's testimony is reliable, the court shall not  allow
the  testimony  to  be  heard at trial.  At this hearing, the
court shall consider the factors enumerated in subsection (c)
as well as any other factors relating to reliability.
    (e)  A hearing required under  subsection  (d)  does  not
apply  to  statements  covered  under subsection (b) that are
lawfully recorded.
    (f)  This  Section   applies   to   all   death   penalty
prosecutions initiated on or after the effective date of this
amendatory Act of the 93rd General Assembly.

    (725 ILCS 5/115-22 new)
    Sec.   115-22.  Witness   inducements.   When  the  State
intends to introduce the testimony of a witness in a  capital
case,   the  State  shall,  before  trial,  disclose  to  the
defendant and to his or her  defense  counsel  the  following
information, which shall be reduced to writing:
         (1)  whether   the  witness  has  received  or  been
    promised   anything,   including   pay,   immunity   from
    prosecution,  leniency  in   prosecution,   or   personal
    advantage, in exchange for testimony;
         (2)  any  other  case in which the witness testified
    or offered statements against an individual but  was  not
    called,  and  whether the statements were admitted in the
    case, and whether the witness received any deal, promise,
    inducement, or benefit in exchange for that testimony  or
    statement;  provided that the existence of such testimony
    can be ascertained through reasonable inquiry;
         (3)  whether the witness has ever changed his or her
    testimony;
         (4)  the criminal history of the witness; and
         (5)  any other evidence relevant to the  credibility
    of the witness.

    (725 ILCS 5/116-3)
    Sec.  116-3.  Motion  for fingerprint or forensic testing
not available at trial regarding actual innocence.
    (a)  A defendant may make a motion before the trial court
that entered the judgment of conviction in his  or  her  case
for  the  performance of fingerprint or forensic DNA testing,
including comparison analysis of genetic marker groupings  of
the  evidence collected by criminal justice agencies pursuant
to the alleged offense, to those of the defendant,  to  those
of  other  forensic  evidence,  and to those maintained under
subsection (f) of  Section  5-4-3  of  the  Unified  Code  of
Corrections,  on evidence that was secured in relation to the
trial which resulted in his or her conviction, but which  was
not subject to the testing which is now requested because the
technology  for  the testing was not available at the time of
trial.  Reasonable notice of the motion shall be served  upon
the State.
    (b)  The defendant must present a prima facie case that:
         (1)  identity  was  the  issue  in  the  trial which
    resulted in his or her conviction; and
         (2)  the evidence to be tested has been subject to a
    chain of custody sufficient to establish that it has  not
    been  substituted, tampered with, replaced, or altered in
    any material aspect.
    (c)  The  trial  court  shall  allow  the  testing  under
reasonable  conditions  designed  to  protect   the   State's
interests  in  the  integrity of the evidence and the testing
process upon a determination that:
         (1)  the result of the testing  has  the  scientific
    potential   to   produce   new,   noncumulative  evidence
    materially  relevant  to  the  defendant's  assertion  of
    actual  innocence  even  though  the  results   may   not
    completely exonerate the defendant;
         (2)  the  testing  requested  employs  a  scientific
    method  generally accepted within the relevant scientific
    community.
(Source: P.A. 90-141, eff. 1-1-98.)

    (725 ILCS 5/116-5 new)
    Sec. 116-5.  Motion  for  DNA  database  search  (genetic
marker groupings comparison analysis).
    (a)  Upon  motion by a defendant charged with any offense
where  DNA  evidence  may  be   material   to   the   defense
investigation  or  relevant at trial, a court may order a DNA
database search by  the  Department  of  State  Police.  Such
analysis may include comparing:
         (1)  the genetic profile from forensic evidence that
    was  secured in relation to the trial against the genetic
    profile of the defendant,
         (2)  the  genetic  profile  of  items  of   forensic
    evidence  secured  in  relation  to  trial to the genetic
    profile of other forensic evidence secured in relation to
    trial, or
         (3)  the   genetic   profiles   referred    to    in
    subdivisions (1) and (2) against:
              (i)  genetic  profiles  of offenders maintained
         under subsection (f) of Section 5-4-3 of the Unified
         Code of Corrections, or
              (ii)  genetic  profiles,  including   but   not
         limited to, profiles from unsolved crimes maintained
         in  state  or local DNA databases by law enforcement
         agencies.
    (b)  If appropriate federal criteria are met,  the  court
may  order  the  Department  of  State  Police to request the
National DNA index system to search its database  of  genetic
profiles.
    (c)  If    requested    by   the   defense,   a   defense
representative shall be allowed to view  any  genetic  marker
grouping  analysis  conducted  by  the  Department  of  State
Police.  The  defense  shall  be  provided with copies of all
documentation,     correspondence,     including      digital
correspondence,  notes,  memoranda,  and reports generated in
relation to the analysis.
    (d)  Reasonable notice of the motion shall be served upon
the State.

    (725 ILCS 5/122-1) (from Ch. 38, par. 122-1)
    Sec. 122-1. Petition in the trial court.
    (a)  Any  person  imprisoned  in  the  penitentiary   may
institute  a  proceeding under this Article if the person who
asserts that:
         (1)  in the proceedings which resulted in his or her
    conviction there was a substantial denial of his  or  her
    rights  under the Constitution of the United States or of
    the State  of  Illinois  or  both;  or  may  institute  a
    proceeding under this Article.
         (2)  the  death  penalty  was  imposed  and there is
    newly discovered evidence not available to the person  at
    the  time  of  the proceeding that resulted in his or her
    conviction  that  establishes  a  substantial  basis   to
    believe  that the defendant is actually innocent by clear
    and convincing evidence.
    (a-5)  A proceeding under paragraph (2) of subsection (a)
may be commenced within a reasonable period of time after the
person's conviction notwithstanding any other  provisions  of
this   Article.   In   such  a  proceeding  regarding  actual
innocence, if the court determines the petition is  frivolous
or  is  patently without merit, it shall dismiss the petition
in a written order,  specifying  the  findings  of  fact  and
conclusions  of  law  it  made in reaching its decision. Such
order of dismissal is a final judgment and  shall  be  served
upon  the  petitioner by certified mail within 10 days of its
entry.
    (b)  The proceeding shall be commenced by filing with the
clerk of the court in  which  the  conviction  took  place  a
petition   (together   with   a  copy  thereof)  verified  by
affidavit.  Petitioner shall also serve another copy upon the
State's Attorney by any of the methods provided in Rule 7  of
the  Supreme  Court.  The clerk shall docket the petition for
consideration by the court pursuant to Section  122-2.1  upon
his or her receipt thereof and bring the same promptly to the
attention of the court.
    (c)  Except as otherwise provided in subsection (a-5), if
the  petitioner  is  under  sentence of death, no proceedings
under this Article shall be  commenced  more  than  6  months
after  the  denial of a petition for certiorari to the United
States Supreme Court on direct appeal, or more than 6  months
from  the  date  for filing such a petition if none is filed,
unless the petitioner alleges facts showing  that  the  delay
was not due to his or her culpable negligence.
    When  a  defendant  has  a  sentence other than death, no
proceedings under this Article shall be commenced more than 6
months after the denial of the Petition for Leave  to  Appeal
to the Illinois Supreme Court, or more than 6 months from the
date  for filing such a petition if none is filed, unless the
petitioner alleges facts showing that the delay was  not  due
to his or her culpable negligence.
    This  limitation does not apply to a petition advancing a
claim of actual innocence. no proceedings under this  Article
shall  be  commenced more than 6 months after the denial of a
petition for leave  to appeal or the date for filing  such  a
petition  if  none  is  filed  or more than 45 days after the
defendant files his  or  her  brief  in  the  appeal  of  the
sentence  before  the Illinois Supreme Court (or more than 45
days after the deadline for the  filing  of  the  defendant's
brief  with  the Illinois Supreme Court if no brief is filed)
or 3 years from the date of conviction, whichever is  sooner,
unless  the  petitioner  alleges facts showing that the delay
was not due to his or her culpable negligence.
    (d)  A person seeking relief by filing a  petition  under
this Section must specify in the petition or its heading that
it  is  filed  under  this  Section.   A trial court that has
received a petition complaining of a conviction  or  sentence
that  fails to specify in the petition or its heading that it
is filed under this Section need not evaluate the petition to
determine whether it could otherwise have stated some grounds
for relief under this Article.
    (e)  A proceeding under this Article may not be commenced
on behalf of a defendant who  has  been  sentenced  to  death
without  the  written  consent  of  the defendant, unless the
defendant, because of a  mental  or  physical  condition,  is
incapable of asserting his or her own claim.
(Source:  P.A.  89-284,  eff.  1-1-96;  89-609,  eff. 1-1-97;
89-684, eff. 6-1-97; 90-14, eff. 7-1-97.)

    (725 ILCS 5/122-2.1) (from Ch. 38, par. 122-2.1)
    Sec. 122-2.1. (a) Within 90 days  after  the  filing  and
docketing  of  each  petition,  the  court shall examine such
petition and enter an order thereon pursuant to this Section.
         (1)  If the petitioner is under  sentence  of  death
    and  is  without  counsel  and alleges that he is without
    means to procure counsel, he shall state whether  or  not
    he  wishes  counsel to be appointed to represent him.  If
    appointment of counsel is so requested, the  court  shall
    appoint  counsel  if satisfied that the petitioner has no
    means to procure counsel.
         (2)  If the petitioner is sentenced to  imprisonment
    and  the court determines the petition is frivolous or is
    patently without merit, it shall dismiss the petition  in
    a  written  order,  specifying  the  findings of fact and
    conclusions of law it  made  in  reaching  its  decision.
    Such  order of dismissal is a final judgment and shall be
    served upon the petitioner by certified  mail  within  10
    days of its entry.
    (b)  If  the  petition  is not dismissed pursuant to this
Section, the court shall order the petition  to  be  docketed
for  further  consideration in accordance with Sections 122-4
through 122-6. If the petitioner is under sentence of  death,
the court shall order the petition to be docketed for further
consideration  and  hearing  within one year of the filing of
the petition. Continuances may be granted as the court  deems
appropriate.
    (c)  In  considering a petition pursuant to this Section,
the court may examine the court file  of  the  proceeding  in
which  the  petitioner  was convicted, any action taken by an
appellate court in such proceeding  and  any  transcripts  of
such proceeding.
(Source: P.A. 86-655; 87-904.)

    (725 ILCS 5/122-2.2 new)
    Sec.  122-2.2.  Mental  retardation  and  post-conviction
relief.
    (a)  In   cases   where   no   determination   of  mental
retardation was made and a defendant has  been  convicted  of
first-degree  murder,  sentenced  to death, and is in custody
pending execution of the sentence  of  death,  the  following
procedures shall apply:
         (1)  Notwithstanding  any  other provision of law or
    rule of court, a defendant may seek relief from the death
    sentence through a petition  for  post-conviction  relief
    under  this  Article  alleging  that  the  defendant  was
    mentally  retarded  as  defined  in Section 114-15 at the
    time the offense was alleged to have been committed.
         (2)  The petition must be filed within 180  days  of
    the  effective  date  of  this amendatory Act of the 93rd
    General Assembly or within 180 days of  the  issuance  of
    the  mandate  by  the  Illinois Supreme Court setting the
    date of execution, whichever is later.
    (3)  All  other  provisions  of  this  Article  governing
petitions  for  post-conviction  relief  shall  apply  to   a
petition   for   post-conviction   relief   alleging   mental
retardation.

    Section 20.  The Capital Crimes Litigation Act is amended
by changing Sections 15 and 19 as follows:

    (725 ILCS 124/15)
    (Section scheduled to be repealed on July 1, 2004)
    Sec. 15.  Capital Litigation Trust Fund.
    (a)  The  Capital  Litigation  Trust Fund is created as a
special fund in the State Treasury.  The Trust Fund shall  be
administered by the State Treasurer to provide moneys for the
appropriations   to  be  made,  grants  to  be  awarded,  and
compensation and expenses to be paid under  this  Act.    All
interest  earned  from  the  investment  or deposit of moneys
accumulated in the Trust Fund shall, under Section 4.1 of the
State Finance Act,  be deposited into the Trust Fund.
    (b)  Moneys deposited into the Trust Fund  shall  not  be
considered general revenue of the State of Illinois.
    (c)  Moneys  deposited  into the Trust Fund shall be used
exclusively for the purposes of  providing  funding  for  the
prosecution  and defense of capital cases as provided in this
Act and shall not be appropriated, loaned, or in  any  manner
transferred  to  the  General  Revenue  Fund  of the State of
Illinois.
    (d)  Every fiscal year the State Treasurer shall transfer
from the General Revenue Fund to the Capital Litigation Trust
Fund  an  amount  equal  to  the  full   amount   of   moneys
appropriated  by  the  General Assembly (both by original and
supplemental appropriation), less any unexpended balance from
the previous fiscal year, from the Capital  Litigation  Trust
Fund for the specific purpose of making funding available for
the  prosecution  and  defense  of capital cases.  The Public
Defender and State's  Attorney  in  Cook  County,  the  State
Appellate   Defender,   the   State's   Attorneys   Appellate
Prosecutor,  and  the  Attorney  General  shall  make  annual
requests for appropriations from the Trust Fund.
         (1)  The   Public  Defender  in  Cook  County  shall
    request  appropriations  to  the  State   Treasurer   for
    expenses  incurred by the Public Defender and for funding
    for private appointed defense counsel in Cook  County.
         (2)  The  State's  Attorney  in  Cook  County  shall
    request an  appropriation  to  the  State  Treasurer  for
    expenses incurred by the State's Attorney.
         (3)  The  State  Appellate  Defender shall request a
    direct appropriation from the  Trust  Fund  for  expenses
    incurred  by  the  State  Appellate Defender in providing
    assistance  to  trial  attorneys  under  item  (c)(5)  of
    Section 10 of the State Appellate  Defender  Act  and  an
    appropriation  to  the  State Treasurer for payments from
    the Trust Fund for the defense of cases in counties other
    than Cook County.
         (4)  The  State's  Attorneys  Appellate   Prosecutor
    shall  request a direct appropriation from the Trust Fund
    to  pay  expenses  incurred  by  the  State's   Attorneys
    Appellate  Prosecutor  and  an appropriation to the State
    Treasurer for payments from the Trust Fund  for  expenses
    incurred by State's Attorneys in counties other than Cook
    County.
         (5)  The  Attorney  General  shall  request a direct
    appropriation  from  the  Trust  Fund  to  pay   expenses
    incurred by the Attorney General in assisting the State's
    Attorneys in counties other than Cook County.
    The  Public Defender and State's Attorney in Cook County,
the State Appellate Defender, the State's Attorneys Appellate
Prosecutor,  and  the  Attorney  General  may  each   request
supplemental  appropriations  from  the Trust Fund during the
fiscal year.
    (e)  Moneys in the Trust Fund shall be expended  only  as
follows:
         (1)  To   pay   the   State   Treasurer's  costs  to
    administer the Trust Fund.  The amount for  this  purpose
    may  not  exceed  5% in any one fiscal year of the amount
    otherwise appropriated from the Trust Fund  in  the  same
    fiscal year.
         (2)  To pay the capital litigation expenses of trial
    defense  including,  but  not  limited  to,  DNA testing,
    including DNA testing under Section 116-3 of the Code  of
    Criminal   Procedure   of   1963,  analysis,  and  expert
    testimony, investigatory and  other  assistance,  expert,
    forensic,    and    other   witnesses,   and   mitigation
    specialists,  and  grants  and  aid  provided  to  public
    defenders  or  assistance  to  attorneys  who  have  been
    appointed by the court to represent  defendants  who  are
    charged with capital crimes.
         (3)  To  pay  the  compensation  of trial attorneys,
    other than public defenders, who have been  appointed  by
    the  court  to  represent defendants who are charged with
    capital crimes.
         (4)  To provide State's Attorneys with  funding  for
    capital  litigation  expenses  including, but not limited
    to,  investigatory  and  other  assistance  and   expert,
    forensic,  and  other  witnesses  necessary to  prosecute
    capital cases.  State's Attorneys  in  any  county  other
    than  Cook  County seeking funding for capital litigation
    expenses including, but not limited to, investigatory and
    other assistance and expert, forensic, or other witnesses
    under this Section may request that the State's Attorneys
    Appellate Prosecutor or the Attorney General, as the case
    may be, certify the expenses  as  reasonable,  necessary,
    and  appropriate  for  payment  from the Trust Fund, on a
    form created by the State Treasurer.  Upon  certification
    of  the expenses and delivery of the certification to the
    State Treasurer, the Treasurer  shall  pay  the  expenses
    directly  from the Capital Litigation Trust Fund if there
    are sufficient moneys  in  the  Trust  Fund  to  pay  the
    expenses.
         (5)  To   provide   financial  support  through  the
    Attorney General pursuant to the Attorney General Act for
    the several county  State's  Attorneys  outside  of  Cook
    County,  but  shall not be used to increase personnel for
    the Attorney General's Office.
         (6)  To  provide  financial  support   through   the
    State's  Attorneys  Appellate  Prosecutor pursuant to the
    State's Attorneys  Appellate  Prosecutor's  Act  for  the
    several  county State's Attorneys outside of Cook County,
    but shall not be  used  to  increase  personnel  for  the
    State's Attorneys Appellate Prosecutor.
         (7)  To  provide  financial  support  to  the  State
    Appellate   Defender  pursuant  to  the  State  Appellate
    Defender Act.
    Moneys expended from the Trust Fund shall be in  addition
to county funding for Public Defenders and State's Attorneys,
and  shall  not  be  used  to supplant or reduce ordinary and
customary county funding.
    (f)  Moneys in the Trust Fund shall  be  appropriated  to
the State Appellate Defender, the State's Attorneys Appellate
Prosecutor,  the  Attorney  General, and the State Treasurer.
The State Appellate Defender shall receive  an  appropriation
from  the  Trust  Fund  to enable it to provide assistance to
appointed defense counsel throughout the State and to  Public
Defenders in counties other than Cook.  The State's Attorneys
Appellate  Prosecutor  and the Attorney General shall receive
appropriations from the Trust Fund to enable them to  provide
assistance  to  State's Attorneys in counties other than Cook
County.  Moneys shall be appropriated to the State  Treasurer
to  enable  the  Treasurer (i) to make grants to Cook County,
(ii) to pay the expenses  of  Public  Defenders  and  State's
Attorneys  in  counties  other than Cook County, (iii) to pay
the expenses and compensation of appointed defense counsel in
counties other than Cook County, and (iv) to pay the costs of
administering the Trust Fund.  All  expenditures  and  grants
made  from  the  Trust  Fund shall be subject to audit by the
Auditor General.
    (g)  For Cook County, grants from the Trust Fund shall be
made and administered as follows:
         (1)  For  each  State  fiscal  year,   the   State's
    Attorney  and  Public  Defender must each make a separate
    application to the State Treasurer for capital litigation
    grants.
         (2)  The State Treasurer shall establish  rules  and
    procedures  for  grant  applications.   The  rules  shall
    require  the Cook County Treasurer as the grant recipient
    to report on a periodic basis to the State Treasurer  how
    much  of  the  grant  has  been expended, how much of the
    grant is remaining, and the purposes for which the  grant
    has  been  used.   The  rules  may  also require the Cook
    County Treasurer to certify  on  a  periodic  basis  that
    expenditures  of  the  funds  have been made for expenses
    that  are  reasonable,  necessary,  and  appropriate  for
    payment from the Trust Fund.
         (3)  The State Treasurer shall make  the  grants  to
    the  Cook  County Treasurer as soon as possible after the
    beginning of the State fiscal year.
         (4)  The State's Attorney  or  Public  Defender  may
    apply for supplemental grants during the fiscal year.
         (5)  Grant  moneys  shall be paid to the Cook County
    Treasurer in block grants and held in  separate  accounts
    for  the State's Attorney, the Public Defender, and court
    appointed defense counsel  other  than  the  Cook  County
    Public  Defender, respectively, for the designated fiscal
    year, and are not subject to county appropriation.
         (6)  Expenditure  of   grant   moneys   under   this
    subsection  (g)  is  subject  to  audit  by  the  Auditor
    General.
         (7)  The  Cook  County  Treasurer  shall immediately
    make payment from the appropriate separate account in the
    county treasury for capital litigation  expenses  to  the
    State's  Attorney,  Public  Defender,  or court appointed
    defense counsel other than the Public  Defender,  as  the
    case  may  be, upon order of the State's Attorney, Public
    Defender or the court, respectively.
    (h)  If a defendant in a capital case in Cook  County  is
represented  by  court  appointed counsel other than the Cook
County Public Defender, the appointed counsel shall  petition
the court for an order directing the Cook County Treasurer to
pay  the  court  appointed counsel's reasonable and necessary
compensation  and  capital  litigation  expenses  from  grant
moneys provided from the Trust Fund. These petitions shall be
considered  in  camera.    Orders   denying   petitions   for
compensation  or expenses are final. Counsel may not petition
for expenses that may have been provided  or  compensated  by
the  State Appellate Defender under item (c)(5) of Section 10
of the State Appellate Defender Act.
    (i)  In counties other than Cook  County,  and  excluding
capital  litigation  expenses  or services that may have been
provided by the State Appellate Defender under item (c)(5) of
Section 10 of the State Appellate Defender Act:
         (1)  Upon certification by the circuit court,  on  a
    form  created  by  the  State  Treasurer,  that  all or a
    portion of the expenses are  reasonable,  necessary,  and
    appropriate  for  payment  from  the  Trust  Fund and the
    court's delivery of the certification to  the  Treasurer,
    the  Treasurer shall pay the certified expenses of Public
    Defenders from the money appropriated  to  the  Treasurer
    for  capital  litigation  expenses of Public Defenders in
    any  county  other  than  Cook  County,  if   there   are
    sufficient moneys in the Trust Fund to pay the expenses.
         (2)  If a defendant in a capital case is represented
    by   court   appointed  counsel  other  than  the  Public
    Defender, the appointed counsel shall petition the  court
    to  certify  compensation and capital litigation expenses
    including, but not limited to,  investigatory  and  other
    assistance,  expert,  forensic,  and other witnesses, and
    mitigation  specialists  as  reasonable,  necessary,  and
    appropriate  for  payment  from  the  Trust  Fund.   Upon
    certification on a form created by the State Treasurer of
    all  or  a  portion  of  the  compensation  and  expenses
    certified as reasonable, necessary, and  appropriate  for
    payment  from  the Trust Fund and the court's delivery of
    the certification to the Treasurer, the  State  Treasurer
    shall  pay  the  certified compensation and expenses from
    the money appropriated to the Treasurer for that purpose,
    if there are sufficient moneys in the Trust Fund to  make
    those payments.
         (3)  A  petition  for  capital  litigation  expenses
    under  this  subsection  shall  be  considered in camera.
    Orders denying petitions for compensation or expenses are
    final.
    (j)  If the Trust Fund is discontinued or dissolved by an
Act of the General Assembly  or  by  operation  of  law,  any
balance  remaining in the Trust Fund shall be returned to the
General Revenue Fund after deduction of administrative costs,
any  other  provision   of   this   Act   to   the   contrary
notwithstanding.
(Source: P.A. 91-589, eff. 1-1-00.)

    (725 ILCS 124/19)
    (Section scheduled to be repealed on July 1, 2004)
    Sec. 19.  Report; repeal.
    (a)  The  Cook  County  Public  Defender, the Cook County
State's Attorney, the State Appellate Defender,  the  State's
Attorneys  Appellate  Prosecutor,  and  the  Attorney General
shall each report  separately  to  the  General  Assembly  by
January  1,  2004  detailing the amounts of money received by
them through this Act, the uses for which  those  funds  were
expended,  the  balances then in the Capital Litigation Trust
Fund  or county accounts, as the case may  be,  dedicated  to
them  for  the use and support of Public Defenders, appointed
trial defense counsel, and State's Attorneys, as the case may
be.  The report shall  describe  and  discuss  the  need  for
continued   funding   through   the   Fund  and  contain  any
suggestions for changes to this Act.
    (b)  (Blank).  Unless  the  General   Assembly   provides
otherwise, this Act is repealed on July 1, 2004.
(Source: P.A. 91-589, eff. 1-1-00.)

    Section  25.  The  Unified Code of Corrections is amended
by changing Section 5-4-3 as follows:

    (730 ILCS 5/5-4-3) (from Ch. 38, par. 1005-4-3)
    Sec. 5-4-3.  Persons convicted of,  or  found  delinquent
for,   certain  offenses  or  institutionalized  as  sexually
dangerous; specimens; genetic marker groups.
    (a)  Any person convicted  of,  found  guilty  under  the
Juvenile Court Act of 1987 for, or who received a disposition
of  court supervision for, a qualifying offense or attempt of
a qualifying  offense,  convicted  or  found  guilty  of  any
offense  classified  as  a  felony  under Illinois law, found
guilty or given supervision for any offense classified  as  a
felony   under   the   Juvenile   Court   Act   of  1987,  or
institutionalized as a sexually dangerous  person  under  the
Sexually  Dangerous  Persons  Act, or committed as a sexually
violent person under the Sexually Violent Persons  Commitment
Act shall, regardless of the sentence or disposition imposed,
be  required  to submit specimens of blood, saliva, or tissue
to the Illinois Department of State Police in accordance with
the provisions of this Section, provided such person is:
         (1)  convicted of a qualifying offense or attempt of
    a qualifying  offense  on  or  after  July  1,  1990  the
    effective  date  of  this  amendatory  Act  of  1989, and
    sentenced   to   a   term   of   imprisonment,   periodic
    imprisonment, fine, probation, conditional  discharge  or
    any  other  form  of  sentence, or given a disposition of
    court supervision for the offense;, or
         (1.5)  found guilty or given supervision  under  the
    Juvenile  Court  Act  of 1987 for a qualifying offense or
    attempt of a qualifying offense on or  after  January  1,
    1997;  the effective date of this amendatory Act of 1996,
    or
         (2)  ordered   institutionalized   as   a   sexually
    dangerous person on or after July 1, 1990; the  effective
    date of this amendatory Act of 1989, or
         (3)  convicted of a qualifying offense or attempt of
    a  qualifying  offense  before July 1, 1990 the effective
    date of this amendatory Act  of  1989  and  is  presently
    confined  as  a  result  of  such conviction in any State
    correctional facility or  county  jail  or  is  presently
    serving a sentence of probation, conditional discharge or
    periodic imprisonment as a result of such conviction;, or
         (3.5)  convicted  or  found  guilty  of  any offense
    classified as a felony under Illinois law or found guilty
    or given  supervision  for  such  an  offense  under  the
    Juvenile  Court  Act of 1987 on or after August 22, 2002;
    the effective date  of this amendatory Act  of  the  92nd
    General Assembly, or
         (4)  presently   institutionalized   as  a  sexually
    dangerous person  or  presently  institutionalized  as  a
    person  found guilty but mentally ill of a sexual offense
    or attempt to commit a sexual offense; or
         (4.5)  ordered  committed  as  a  sexually   violent
    person  on  or  after  the effective date of the Sexually
    Violent Persons Commitment Act; or
         (5)  seeking transfer to or  residency  in  Illinois
    under  Sections 3-3-11.05 through 3-3-11.5 of the Unified
    Code of Corrections and the Interstate Compact for  Adult
    Offender  Supervision  or  the  Interstate  Agreements on
    Sexually Dangerous Persons Act.
    Notwithstanding other provisions  of  this  Section,  any
person  incarcerated in a facility of the Illinois Department
of Corrections on or after August 22, 2002 the effective date
of this amendatory Act of the 92nd General Assembly shall  be
required  to  submit  a  specimen of blood, saliva, or tissue
prior to his or her release on parole or mandatory supervised
release, as a condition of his or  her  parole  or  mandatory
supervised release.
    (a-5)  Any  person  who  was  otherwise  convicted  of or
received a disposition of court  supervision  for  any  other
offense  under  the  Criminal  Code  of 1961 or who was found
guilty or given supervision for such a  violation  under  the
Juvenile  Court  Act of 1987, may, regardless of the sentence
imposed, be required by an  order  of  the  court  to  submit
specimens  of  blood,  saliva,  or  tissue  to  the  Illinois
Department  of State Police in accordance with the provisions
of this Section.
    (b)  Any person required by paragraphs (a)(1),  (a)(1.5),
(a)(2),  (a)(3.5),  and  (a-5) to provide specimens of blood,
saliva, or tissue shall provide specimens of  blood,  saliva,
or tissue within 45 days after sentencing or disposition at a
collection  site  designated  by  the  Illinois Department of
State Police.
    (c)  Any person required by  paragraphs  (a)(3),  (a)(4),
and (a)(4.5) to provide specimens of blood, saliva, or tissue
shall  be  required  to  provide  such samples prior to final
discharge, parole, or release at a collection site designated
by the Illinois Department of State Police.
    (c-5)  Any person required by paragraph (a)(5) to provide
specimens of blood, saliva, or tissue shall, where  feasible,
be  required  to  provide the specimens before being accepted
for conditioned residency in Illinois  under  the  interstate
compact or agreement, but no later than 45 days after arrival
in this State.
    (c-6)  The   Illinois  Department  of  State  Police  may
determine which type of specimen or specimens, blood, saliva,
or tissue, is acceptable for submission to  the  Division  of
Forensic Services for analysis.
    (d)  The   Illinois  Department  of  State  Police  shall
provide all equipment  and  instructions  necessary  for  the
collection of blood samples.  The collection of samples shall
be   performed  in  a  medically  approved  manner.   Only  a
physician authorized to practice medicine, a registered nurse
or  other  qualified  person  trained  in  venipuncture   may
withdraw  blood  for  the  purposes of this Act.  The samples
shall thereafter be forwarded to the Illinois  Department  of
State Police, Division of Forensic Services, for analysis and
categorizing into genetic marker groupings.
    (d-1)  The  Illinois  Department  of  State  Police shall
provide all equipment  and  instructions  necessary  for  the
collection  of  saliva  samples.   The  collection  of saliva
samples shall be performed in a  medically  approved  manner.
Only  a person trained in the instructions promulgated by the
Illinois State Police on collecting saliva may collect saliva
for  the  purposes  of  this  Section.   The  samples   shall
thereafter  be  forwarded to the Illinois Department of State
Police, Division  of  Forensic  Services,  for  analysis  and
categorizing into genetic marker groupings.
    (d-2)  The  Illinois  Department  of  State  Police shall
provide all equipment  and  instructions  necessary  for  the
collection  of  tissue  samples.   The  collection  of tissue
samples shall be performed in a  medically  approved  manner.
Only  a person trained in the instructions promulgated by the
Illinois State Police on collecting tissue may collect tissue
for  the  purposes  of  this  Section.   The  samples   shall
thereafter  be  forwarded to the Illinois Department of State
Police, Division  of  Forensic  Services,  for  analysis  and
categorizing into genetic marker groupings.
    (d-5)  To  the  extent  that  funds  are  available,  the
Illinois  Department  of  State  Police  shall  contract with
qualified  personnel  and  certified  laboratories  for   the
collection, analysis, and categorization of known samples.
    (e)  The  genetic marker groupings shall be maintained by
the Illinois Department of State Police, Division of Forensic
Services.
    (f)  The genetic  marker  grouping  analysis  information
obtained pursuant to this Act shall be confidential and shall
be  released  only to peace officers of the United States, of
other states or territories, of the  insular  possessions  of
the  United  States,  of foreign countries duly authorized to
receive the same, to all  peace  officers  of  the  State  of
Illinois  and  to  all prosecutorial agencies, and to defense
counsel as provided by Section 116-5 of the Code of  Criminal
Procedure  of  1963.    The  genetic marker grouping analysis
information obtained pursuant to this Act shall be used  only
for  (i) valid law enforcement identification purposes and as
required  by  the  Federal  Bureau   of   Investigation   for
participation in the National DNA database or (ii) technology
validation  purposes or (iii) assisting in the defense of the
criminally accused pursuant to Section 116-5 of the  Code  of
Criminal   Procedure  of  1963.   Notwithstanding  any  other
statutory provision to the contrary, all information obtained
under this Section shall be maintained in a single State data
base, which may be uploaded into  a  national  database,  and
which  information  may be subject to expungement only as set
forth in subsection (f-1).
    (f-1)  Upon receipt of notification of a  reversal  of  a
conviction based on actual innocence, or of the granting of a
pardon  pursuant  to  Section 12 of Article V of the Illinois
Constitution, if that  pardon  document  specifically  states
that  the reason for the pardon is the actual innocence of an
individual whose DNA record has been stored in the  State  or
national  DNA  identification  index  in accordance with this
Section by the Illinois Department of State Police,  the  DNA
record  shall  be expunged from the DNA identification index,
and the Department shall  by  rule  prescribe  procedures  to
ensure  that  the  record and any samples, analyses, or other
documents relating to such record, whether in the  possession
of the Department or any law enforcement or police agency, or
any  forensic  DNA  laboratory,  including  any duplicates or
copies thereof, are destroyed and a letter  is  sent  to  the
court verifying the expungement is completed.
    (f-5)  Any  person  who intentionally uses genetic marker
grouping  analysis  information,  or  any  other  information
derived from a DNA sample,  beyond  the  authorized  uses  as
provided  under  this  Section, or any other Illinois law, is
guilty of a Class 4 felony, and shall be subject to a fine of
not less than $5,000.
    (g)  For  the  purposes  of  this  Section,   "qualifying
offense" means any of the following:
         (1)  any  violation or inchoate violation of Section
    11-6, 11-9.1, 11-11, 11-18.1,  12-15,  or  12-16  of  the
    Criminal Code of 1961;, or
         (1.1)  any   violation   or  inchoate  violation  of
    Section 9-1, 9-2, 10-1, 10-2, 12-11, 12-11.1, 18-1, 18-2,
    18-3, 18-4, 19-1, or 19-2 of the Criminal  Code  of  1961
    for  which  persons  are  convicted  on  or after July 1,
    2001;, or
         (2)  any former statute of this State which  defined
    a felony sexual offense;, or
         (3)  (blank);, or
         (4)  any   inchoate   violation  of  Section  9-3.1,
    11-9.3, 12-7.3, or 12-7.4 of the Criminal Code of  1961;,
    or
         (5)  any  violation or inchoate violation of Article
    29D of the Criminal Code of 1961.
    (g-5)  (Blank).
    (h)  The Illinois Department of State Police shall be the
State central repository  for  all  genetic  marker  grouping
analysis  information  obtained  pursuant  to  this Act.  The
Illinois Department of State Police may promulgate rules  for
the  form  and  manner of the collection of blood, saliva, or
tissue samples and other procedures for the operation of this
Act.  The provisions of the Administrative Review  Law  shall
apply to all actions taken under the rules so promulgated.
    (i)  A  person  required  to  provide a blood, saliva, or
tissue specimen shall cooperate with the  collection  of  the
specimen  and  any  deliberate act by that person intended to
impede, delay or stop the collection of the blood, saliva, or
tissue specimen is a Class A misdemeanor.
    (j)  Any person required  by  subsection  (a)  to  submit
specimens  of  blood,  saliva,  or  tissue  to  the  Illinois
Department  of  State  Police for analysis and categorization
into genetic  marker  grouping,  in  addition  to  any  other
disposition,  penalty, or fine imposed, shall pay an analysis
fee of $200.  If the analysis fee is not paid at the time  of
sentencing, the court shall establish a fee schedule by which
the  entire amount of the analysis fee shall be paid in full,
such schedule not to  exceed  24  months  from  the  time  of
conviction.  The inability to pay this analysis fee shall not
be the sole ground to incarcerate the person.
    (k)  All analysis and categorization fees provided for by
subsection (j) shall be regulated as follows:
         (1)  The  State  Offender  DNA Identification System
    Fund is hereby created as a special  fund  in  the  State
    Treasury.
         (2)  All fees shall be collected by the clerk of the
    court   and   forwarded   to   the   State  Offender  DNA
    Identification System Fund for deposit.  The clerk of the
    circuit court may retain the  amount  of  $10  from  each
    collected  analysis  fee  to  offset administrative costs
    incurred in carrying  out  the  clerk's  responsibilities
    under this Section.
         (3)  Fees  deposited  into  the  State  Offender DNA
    Identification System Fund  shall  be  used  by  Illinois
    State  Police  crime  laboratories  as  designated by the
    Director of  State  Police.   These  funds  shall  be  in
    addition  to  any  allocations  made pursuant to existing
    laws and shall be designated for  the  exclusive  use  of
    State  crime  laboratories.   These uses may include, but
    are not limited to, the following:
              (A)  Costs incurred in providing  analysis  and
         genetic   marker   categorization   as  required  by
         subsection (d).
              (B)  Costs  incurred  in  maintaining   genetic
         marker groupings as required by subsection (e).
              (C)  Costs   incurred   in   the  purchase  and
         maintenance  of  equipment  for  use  in  performing
         analyses.
              (D)  Costs incurred in continuing research  and
         development  of  new  techniques  for  analysis  and
         genetic marker categorization.
              (E)  Costs  incurred  in  continuing education,
         training, and professional development  of  forensic
         scientists regularly employed by these laboratories.
    (l)  The failure of a person to provide a specimen, or of
any person or agency to collect a specimen, within the 45 day
period  shall in no way alter the obligation of the person to
submit such  specimen,  or  the  authority  of  the  Illinois
Department  of  State  Police  or  persons  designated by the
Department to collect the specimen, or the authority  of  the
Illinois  Department  of  State Police to accept, analyze and
maintain the specimen or to maintain  or  upload  results  of
genetic  marker grouping analysis information into a State or
national database.
(Source: P.A.  91-528,  eff.  1-1-00;  92-16,  eff.  6-28-01;
92-40, eff.  6-29-01;  92-571,  eff.  6-26-02;  92-600,  eff.
6-28-02;  92-829, eff. 8-22-02; 92-854, eff. 12-5-02; revised
1-20-03.)

    Section 90. The State Finance Act is  amended  by  adding
Section 5.595 as follows:

    (30 ILCS 105/5.595 new)
    Sec.   5.595.   The  Illinois  Law  Enforcement  Training
Standards Board Costs and Attorney Fees Fund.

    Section 95.  Severability.  The provisions  of  this  Act
are severable under Section 1.31 of the Statute on Statutes.

    Section  99.  Effective date.  This Act takes effect upon
becoming law.