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Public Act 099-0797 |
SB2870 Enrolled | LRB099 19901 RLC 44300 b |
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AN ACT concerning criminal law.
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Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
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represented in the General Assembly:
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Section 5. The Code of Criminal Procedure of 1963 is |
amended by changing Section 110-10 as follows:
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(725 ILCS 5/110-10) (from Ch. 38, par. 110-10)
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Sec. 110-10. Conditions of bail bond.
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(a) If a person is released prior to conviction, either |
upon payment of
bail security or on his or her own |
recognizance, the conditions of the bail
bond shall be that he |
or she will:
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(1) Appear to answer the charge in the court having |
jurisdiction on
a day certain and thereafter as ordered by |
the court until discharged or
final order of the court;
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(2) Submit himself or herself to the orders and process |
of the court;
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(3) Not depart this State without leave of the court;
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(4) Not violate any criminal statute of any |
jurisdiction;
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(5) At a time and place designated by the court, |
surrender all firearms
in his or her possession to a law |
enforcement officer designated by the court
to take custody |
of and impound the firearms
and physically
surrender his or |
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her Firearm Owner's Identification Card to the clerk of the
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circuit court
when the offense the person has
been charged |
with is a forcible felony, stalking, aggravated stalking, |
domestic
battery, any violation of the Illinois Controlled |
Substances Act, the Methamphetamine Control and Community |
Protection Act, or the
Cannabis Control Act that is |
classified as a Class 2 or greater felony, or any
felony |
violation of Article 24 of the Criminal Code of 1961 or the |
Criminal Code of 2012; the court
may,
however, forgo the |
imposition of this condition when the
circumstances of the
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case clearly do not warrant it or when its imposition would |
be
impractical;
if the Firearm Owner's Identification Card |
is confiscated, the clerk of the circuit court shall mail |
the confiscated card to the Illinois State Police; all |
legally possessed firearms shall be returned to the person |
upon
the charges being dismissed, or if the person is found |
not guilty, unless the
finding of not guilty is by reason |
of insanity; and
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(6) At a time and place designated by the court, submit |
to a
psychological
evaluation when the person has been |
charged with a violation of item (4) of
subsection
(a) of |
Section 24-1 of the Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal |
Code of 2012 and that violation occurred in
a school
or in |
any conveyance owned, leased, or contracted by a school to |
transport
students to or
from school or a school-related |
activity, or on any public way within 1,000
feet of real
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property comprising any school.
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Psychological evaluations ordered pursuant to this Section |
shall be completed
promptly
and made available to the State, |
the defendant, and the court. As a further
condition of bail |
under
these circumstances, the court shall order the defendant |
to refrain from
entering upon the
property of the school, |
including any conveyance owned, leased, or contracted
by a |
school to
transport students to or from school or a |
school-related activity, or on any public way within
1,000 feet |
of real property comprising any school. Upon receipt of the |
psychological evaluation,
either the State or the defendant may |
request a change in the conditions of bail, pursuant to
Section |
110-6 of this Code. The court may change the conditions of bail |
to include a
requirement that the defendant follow the |
recommendations of the psychological evaluation,
including |
undergoing psychiatric treatment. The conclusions of the
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psychological evaluation and
any statements elicited from the |
defendant during its administration are not
admissible as |
evidence
of guilt during the course of any trial on the charged |
offense, unless the
defendant places his or her
mental |
competency in issue.
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(b) The court may impose other conditions, such as the |
following, if the
court finds that such conditions are |
reasonably necessary to assure the
defendant's appearance in |
court, protect the public from the defendant, or
prevent the |
defendant's unlawful interference with the orderly |
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administration
of justice:
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(1) Report to or appear in person before such person or |
agency as the
court may direct;
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(2) Refrain from possessing a firearm or other |
dangerous weapon;
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(3) Refrain from approaching or communicating with |
particular persons or
classes of persons;
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(4) Refrain from going to certain described |
geographical areas or
premises;
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(5) Refrain from engaging in certain activities or |
indulging in
intoxicating liquors or in certain drugs;
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(6) Undergo treatment for drug addiction or |
alcoholism;
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(7) Undergo medical or psychiatric treatment;
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(8) Work or pursue a course of study or vocational |
training;
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(9) Attend or reside in a facility designated by the |
court;
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(10) Support his or her dependents;
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(11) If a minor resides with his or her parents or in a |
foster home,
attend school, attend a non-residential |
program for youths, and contribute
to his or her own |
support at home or in a foster home;
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(12) Observe any curfew ordered by the court;
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(13) Remain in the custody of such designated person or |
organization
agreeing to supervise his release. Such third |
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party custodian shall be
responsible for notifying the |
court if the defendant fails to observe the
conditions of |
release which the custodian has agreed to monitor, and |
shall
be subject to contempt of court for failure so to |
notify the court;
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(14) Be placed under direct supervision of the Pretrial |
Services
Agency, Probation Department or Court Services |
Department in a pretrial
bond home supervision capacity |
with or without the use of an approved
electronic |
monitoring device subject to Article 8A of Chapter V of the
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Unified Code of Corrections;
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(14.1) The court shall impose upon a defendant who is |
charged with any
alcohol, cannabis, methamphetamine, or |
controlled substance violation and is placed under
direct |
supervision of the Pretrial Services Agency, Probation |
Department or
Court Services Department in a pretrial bond |
home supervision capacity with
the use of an approved |
monitoring device, as a condition of such bail bond,
a fee |
that represents costs incidental to the electronic |
monitoring for each
day of such bail supervision ordered by |
the
court, unless after determining the inability of the |
defendant to pay the
fee, the court assesses a lesser fee |
or no fee as the case may be. The fee
shall be collected by |
the clerk of the circuit court , except as provided in an |
administrative order of the Chief Judge of the circuit |
court . The clerk of the
circuit court shall pay all monies |
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collected from this fee to the county
treasurer for deposit |
in the substance abuse services fund under Section
5-1086.1 |
of the Counties Code , except as provided in an |
administrative order of the Chief Judge of the circuit |
court. |
The Chief Judge of the circuit court of the county may |
by administrative order establish a program for electronic |
monitoring of offenders with regard to drug-related and |
alcohol-related offenses, in which a vendor supplies and |
monitors the operation of the electronic monitoring |
device, and collects the fees on behalf of the county. The |
program shall include provisions for indigent offenders |
and the collection of unpaid fees. The program shall not |
unduly burden the offender and shall be subject to review |
by the Chief Judge. |
The Chief Judge of the circuit court may suspend any |
additional charges or fees for late payment, interest, or |
damage to any device ;
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(14.2) The court shall impose upon all defendants, |
including those
defendants subject to paragraph (14.1) |
above, placed under direct supervision
of the Pretrial |
Services Agency, Probation Department or Court Services
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Department in a pretrial bond home supervision capacity |
with the use of an
approved monitoring device, as a |
condition of such bail bond, a fee
which shall represent |
costs incidental to such
electronic monitoring for each day |
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of such bail supervision ordered by the
court, unless after |
determining the inability of the defendant to pay the fee,
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the court assesses a lesser fee or no fee as the case may |
be. The fee shall be
collected by the clerk of the circuit |
court , except as provided in an administrative order of the |
Chief Judge of the circuit court . The clerk of the circuit |
court
shall pay all monies collected from this fee to the |
county treasurer who shall
use the monies collected to |
defray the costs of corrections. The county
treasurer shall |
deposit the fee collected in the county working cash fund |
under
Section 6-27001 or Section 6-29002 of the Counties |
Code, as the case may
be , except as provided in an |
administrative order of the Chief Judge of the circuit |
court. |
The Chief Judge of the circuit court of the county may |
by administrative order establish a program for electronic |
monitoring of offenders with regard to drug-related and |
alcohol-related offenses, in which a vendor supplies and |
monitors the operation of the electronic monitoring |
device, and collects the fees on behalf of the county. The |
program shall include provisions for indigent offenders |
and the collection of unpaid fees. The program shall not |
unduly burden the offender and shall be subject to review |
by the Chief Judge. |
The Chief Judge of the circuit court may suspend any |
additional charges or fees for late payment, interest, or |
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damage to any device ;
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(14.3) The Chief Judge of the Judicial Circuit may |
establish reasonable
fees to be paid by a person receiving |
pretrial services while under supervision
of a pretrial |
services agency, probation department, or court services
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department. Reasonable fees may be charged for pretrial |
services
including, but not limited to, pretrial |
supervision, diversion programs,
electronic monitoring, |
victim impact services, drug and alcohol testing, DNA |
testing, GPS electronic monitoring, assessments and |
evaluations related to domestic violence and other |
victims, and
victim mediation services. The person |
receiving pretrial services may be
ordered to pay all costs |
incidental to pretrial services in accordance with his
or |
her ability to pay those costs;
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(14.4) For persons charged with violating Section |
11-501 of the Illinois
Vehicle Code, refrain from operating |
a motor vehicle not equipped with an
ignition interlock |
device, as defined in Section 1-129.1 of the Illinois
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Vehicle Code,
pursuant to the rules promulgated by the |
Secretary of State for the
installation of ignition
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interlock devices. Under this condition the court may allow |
a defendant who is
not
self-employed to operate a vehicle |
owned by the defendant's employer that is
not equipped with |
an ignition interlock device in the course and scope of the
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defendant's employment;
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(15) Comply with the terms and conditions of an order |
of protection
issued by the court under the Illinois |
Domestic Violence Act of 1986 or an
order of protection |
issued by the court of another state, tribe, or United
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States territory;
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(16) Under Section 110-6.5 comply with the conditions |
of the drug testing
program; and
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(17) Such other reasonable conditions as the court may |
impose.
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(c) When a person is charged with an offense under Section |
11-1.20, 11-1.30, 11-1.40, 11-1.50, 11-1.60, 12-13, 12-14,
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12-14.1,
12-15 or 12-16 of the Criminal Code of 1961 or the |
Criminal Code of 2012, involving a victim who is a
minor under |
18 years of age living in the same household with the defendant
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at the time of the offense, in granting bail or releasing the |
defendant on
his own recognizance, the judge shall impose |
conditions to restrict the
defendant's access to the victim |
which may include, but are not limited to
conditions that he |
will:
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1. Vacate the Household.
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2. Make payment of temporary support to his dependents.
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3. Refrain from contact or communication with the child |
victim, except
as ordered by the court.
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(d) When a person is charged with a criminal offense and |
the victim is
a family or household member as defined in |
Article 112A, conditions shall
be imposed at the time of the |
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defendant's release on bond that restrict the
defendant's |
access to the victim.
Unless provided otherwise by the court, |
the
restrictions shall include
requirements that the defendant |
do the following:
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(1) refrain from contact or communication with the |
victim for a
minimum period of 72 hours following the |
defendant's release; and
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(2) refrain from entering or remaining at the victim's |
residence for a
minimum period of 72 hours following the |
defendant's release.
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(e) Local law enforcement agencies shall develop |
standardized bond forms
for use in cases involving family or |
household members as defined in
Article 112A, including |
specific conditions of bond as provided in
subsection (d). |
Failure of any law enforcement department to develop or use
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those forms shall in no way limit the applicability and |
enforcement of
subsections (d) and (f).
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(f) If the defendant is admitted to bail after conviction |
the
conditions of the bail bond shall be that he will, in |
addition to the
conditions set forth in subsections (a) and (b) |
hereof:
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(1) Duly prosecute his appeal;
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(2) Appear at such time and place as the court may |
direct;
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(3) Not depart this State without leave of the court;
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(4) Comply with such other reasonable conditions as the |
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court may
impose; and
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(5) If the judgment is affirmed or the cause reversed |
and remanded
for a new trial, forthwith surrender to the |
officer from whose custody
he was bailed.
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(g) Upon a finding of guilty for any felony offense, the |
defendant shall
physically surrender, at a time and place |
designated by the court,
any and all firearms in his or her |
possession and his or her Firearm Owner's
Identification Card |
as a condition of remaining on bond pending sentencing.
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(Source: P.A. 96-340, eff. 8-11-09; 96-1551, eff. 7-1-11; |
97-401, eff. 1-1-12; 97-1109, eff. 1-1-13; 97-1150, eff. |
1-25-13.)
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Section 10. The Unified Code of Corrections is amended by |
changing the heading of Article 8A of Chapter V and Sections |
5-6-3, 5-6-3.1, 5-7-1, 5-8A-1, 5-8A-2, 5-8A-3, 5-8A-4, |
5-8A-4.1, 5-8A-5, 5-8A-5.1, 5-8A-6, 5-8A-7, and 5-8A-8 and by |
adding Section 5-8A-9 as follows: |
(730 ILCS 5/5-6-3) (from Ch. 38, par. 1005-6-3) |
Sec. 5-6-3. Conditions of Probation and of Conditional |
Discharge.
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(a) The conditions of probation and of conditional |
discharge shall be
that the person:
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(1) not violate any criminal statute of any |
jurisdiction;
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(2) report to or appear in person before such person or |
agency as
directed by the court;
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(3) refrain from possessing a firearm or other |
dangerous weapon where the offense is a felony or, if a |
misdemeanor, the offense involved the intentional or |
knowing infliction of bodily harm or threat of bodily harm;
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(4) not leave the State without the consent of the |
court or, in
circumstances in which the reason for the |
absence is of such an emergency
nature that prior consent |
by the court is not possible, without the prior
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notification and approval of the person's probation
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officer. Transfer of a person's probation or conditional |
discharge
supervision to another state is subject to |
acceptance by the other state
pursuant to the Interstate |
Compact for Adult Offender Supervision;
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(5) permit the probation officer to visit
him at his |
home or elsewhere
to the extent necessary to discharge his |
duties;
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(6) perform no less than 30 hours of community service |
and not more than
120 hours of community service, if |
community service is available in the
jurisdiction and is |
funded and approved by the county board where the offense
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was committed, where the offense was related to or in |
furtherance of the
criminal activities of an organized gang |
and was motivated by the offender's
membership in or |
allegiance to an organized gang. The community service |
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shall
include, but not be limited to, the cleanup and |
repair of any damage caused by
a violation of Section |
21-1.3 of the Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of |
2012 and similar damage
to property located within the |
municipality or county in which the violation
occurred. |
When possible and reasonable, the community service should |
be
performed in the offender's neighborhood. For purposes |
of this Section,
"organized gang" has the meaning ascribed |
to it in Section 10 of the Illinois
Streetgang Terrorism |
Omnibus Prevention Act;
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(7) if he or she is at least 17 years of age and has |
been sentenced to
probation or conditional discharge for a |
misdemeanor or felony in a county of
3,000,000 or more |
inhabitants and has not been previously convicted of a
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misdemeanor or felony, may be required by the sentencing |
court to attend
educational courses designed to prepare the |
defendant for a high school diploma
and to work toward a |
high school diploma or to work toward passing high school |
equivalency testing or to work toward
completing a |
vocational training program approved by the court. The |
person on
probation or conditional discharge must attend a |
public institution of
education to obtain the educational |
or vocational training required by this
clause (7). The |
court shall revoke the probation or conditional discharge |
of a
person who wilfully fails to comply with this clause |
(7). The person on
probation or conditional discharge shall |
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be required to pay for the cost of the
educational courses |
or high school equivalency testing if a fee is charged for |
those courses or testing. The court shall resentence the |
offender whose probation or conditional
discharge has been |
revoked as provided in Section 5-6-4. This clause (7) does
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not apply to a person who has a high school diploma or has |
successfully passed high school equivalency testing. This |
clause (7) does not apply to a person who is determined by
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the court to be a person with a developmental disability or |
otherwise mentally incapable of
completing the educational |
or vocational program;
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(8) if convicted of possession of a substance |
prohibited
by the Cannabis Control Act, the Illinois |
Controlled Substances Act, or the Methamphetamine Control |
and Community Protection Act
after a previous conviction or |
disposition of supervision for possession of a
substance |
prohibited by the Cannabis Control Act or Illinois |
Controlled
Substances Act or after a sentence of probation |
under Section 10 of the
Cannabis
Control Act, Section 410 |
of the Illinois Controlled Substances Act, or Section 70 of |
the Methamphetamine Control and Community Protection Act |
and upon a
finding by the court that the person is |
addicted, undergo treatment at a
substance abuse program |
approved by the court;
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(8.5) if convicted of a felony sex offense as defined |
in the Sex
Offender
Management Board Act, the person shall |
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undergo and successfully complete sex
offender treatment |
by a treatment provider approved by the Board and conducted
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in conformance with the standards developed under the Sex
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Offender Management Board Act;
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(8.6) if convicted of a sex offense as defined in the |
Sex Offender Management Board Act, refrain from residing at |
the same address or in the same condominium unit or |
apartment unit or in the same condominium complex or |
apartment complex with another person he or she knows or |
reasonably should know is a convicted sex offender or has |
been placed on supervision for a sex offense; the |
provisions of this paragraph do not apply to a person |
convicted of a sex offense who is placed in a Department of |
Corrections licensed transitional housing facility for sex |
offenders; |
(8.7) if convicted for an offense committed on or after |
June 1, 2008 (the effective date of Public Act 95-464) that |
would qualify the accused as a child sex offender as |
defined in Section 11-9.3 or 11-9.4 of the Criminal Code of |
1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012, refrain from |
communicating with or contacting, by means of the Internet, |
a person who is not related to the accused and whom the |
accused reasonably believes to be under 18 years of age; |
for purposes of this paragraph (8.7), "Internet" has the |
meaning ascribed to it in Section 16-0.1 of the Criminal |
Code of 2012; and a person is not related to the accused if |
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the person is not: (i) the spouse, brother, or sister of |
the accused; (ii) a descendant of the accused; (iii) a |
first or second cousin of the accused; or (iv) a step-child |
or adopted child of the accused; |
(8.8) if convicted for an offense under Section 11-6, |
11-9.1, 11-14.4 that involves soliciting for a juvenile |
prostitute, 11-15.1, 11-20.1, 11-20.1B, 11-20.3, or 11-21 |
of the Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012, |
or any attempt to commit any of these offenses, committed |
on or after June 1, 2009 (the effective date of Public Act |
95-983): |
(i) not access or use a computer or any other |
device with Internet capability without the prior |
written approval of the offender's probation officer, |
except in connection with the offender's employment or |
search for employment with the prior approval of the |
offender's probation officer; |
(ii) submit to periodic unannounced examinations |
of the offender's computer or any other device with |
Internet capability by the offender's probation |
officer, a law enforcement officer, or assigned |
computer or information technology specialist, |
including the retrieval and copying of all data from |
the computer or device and any internal or external |
peripherals and removal of such information, |
equipment, or device to conduct a more thorough |
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inspection; |
(iii) submit to the installation on the offender's |
computer or device with Internet capability, at the |
offender's expense, of one or more hardware or software |
systems to monitor the Internet use; and |
(iv) submit to any other appropriate restrictions |
concerning the offender's use of or access to a |
computer or any other device with Internet capability |
imposed by the offender's probation officer; |
(8.9) if convicted of a sex offense as defined in the |
Sex Offender
Registration Act committed on or after January |
1, 2010 (the effective date of Public Act 96-262), refrain |
from accessing or using a social networking website as |
defined in Section 17-0.5 of the Criminal Code of 2012;
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(9) if convicted of a felony or of any misdemeanor |
violation of Section 12-1, 12-2, 12-3, 12-3.2, 12-3.4, or |
12-3.5 of the Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of |
2012 that was determined, pursuant to Section 112A-11.1 of |
the Code of Criminal Procedure of 1963, to trigger the |
prohibitions of 18 U.S.C. 922(g)(9), physically surrender |
at a time and place
designated by the court, his or her |
Firearm
Owner's Identification Card and
any and all |
firearms in
his or her possession. The Court shall return |
to the Department of State Police Firearm Owner's |
Identification Card Office the person's Firearm Owner's |
Identification Card;
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(10) if convicted of a sex offense as defined in |
subsection (a-5) of Section 3-1-2 of this Code, unless the |
offender is a parent or guardian of the person under 18 |
years of age present in the home and no non-familial minors |
are present, not participate in a holiday event involving |
children under 18 years of age, such as distributing candy |
or other items to children on Halloween, wearing a Santa |
Claus costume on or preceding Christmas, being employed as |
a department store Santa Claus, or wearing an Easter Bunny |
costume on or preceding Easter; |
(11) if convicted of a sex offense as defined in |
Section 2 of the Sex Offender Registration Act committed on |
or after January 1, 2010 (the effective date of Public Act |
96-362) that requires the person to register as a sex |
offender under that Act, may not knowingly use any computer |
scrub software on any computer that the sex offender uses; |
and |
(12) if convicted of a violation of the Methamphetamine |
Control and Community Protection Act, the Methamphetamine
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Precursor Control Act, or a methamphetamine related |
offense: |
(A) prohibited from purchasing, possessing, or |
having under his or her control any product containing |
pseudoephedrine unless prescribed by a physician; and |
(B) prohibited from purchasing, possessing, or |
having under his or her control any product containing |
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ammonium nitrate. |
(b) The Court may in addition to other reasonable |
conditions relating to the
nature of the offense or the |
rehabilitation of the defendant as determined for
each |
defendant in the proper discretion of the Court require that |
the person:
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(1) serve a term of periodic imprisonment under Article |
7 for a
period not to exceed that specified in paragraph |
(d) of Section 5-7-1;
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(2) pay a fine and costs;
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(3) work or pursue a course of study or vocational |
training;
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(4) undergo medical, psychological or psychiatric |
treatment; or treatment
for drug addiction or alcoholism;
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(5) attend or reside in a facility established for the |
instruction
or residence of defendants on probation;
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(6) support his dependents;
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(7) and in addition, if a minor:
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(i) reside with his parents or in a foster home;
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(ii) attend school;
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(iii) attend a non-residential program for youth;
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(iv) contribute to his own support at home or in a |
foster home;
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(v) with the consent of the superintendent of the
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facility, attend an educational program at a facility |
other than the school
in which the
offense was |
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committed if he
or she is convicted of a crime of |
violence as
defined in
Section 2 of the Crime Victims |
Compensation Act committed in a school, on the
real
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property
comprising a school, or within 1,000 feet of |
the real property comprising a
school;
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(8) make restitution as provided in Section 5-5-6 of |
this Code;
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(9) perform some reasonable public or community |
service;
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(10) serve a term of home confinement. In addition to |
any other
applicable condition of probation or conditional |
discharge, the
conditions of home confinement shall be that |
the offender:
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(i) remain within the interior premises of the |
place designated for
his confinement during the hours |
designated by the court;
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(ii) admit any person or agent designated by the |
court into the
offender's place of confinement at any |
time for purposes of verifying
the offender's |
compliance with the conditions of his confinement; and
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(iii) if further deemed necessary by the court or |
the
Probation or
Court Services Department, be placed |
on an approved
electronic monitoring device, subject |
to Article 8A of Chapter V;
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(iv) for persons convicted of any alcohol, |
cannabis or controlled
substance violation who are |
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placed on an approved monitoring device as a
condition |
of probation or conditional discharge, the court shall |
impose a
reasonable fee for each day of the use of the |
device, as established by the
county board in |
subsection (g) of this Section, unless after |
determining the
inability of the offender to pay the |
fee, the court assesses a lesser fee or no
fee as the |
case may be. This fee shall be imposed in addition to |
the fees
imposed under subsections (g) and (i) of this |
Section. The fee shall be
collected by the clerk of the |
circuit court , except as provided in an administrative |
order of the Chief Judge of the circuit court . The |
clerk of the circuit
court shall pay all monies |
collected from this fee to the county treasurer
for |
deposit in the substance abuse services fund under |
Section 5-1086.1 of
the Counties Code , except as |
provided in an administrative order of the Chief Judge |
of the circuit court. |
The Chief Judge of the circuit court of the county |
may by administrative order establish a program for |
electronic monitoring of offenders, in which a vendor |
supplies and monitors the operation of the electronic |
monitoring device, and collects the fees on behalf of |
the county. The program shall include provisions for |
indigent offenders and the collection of unpaid fees. |
The program shall not unduly burden the offender and |
|
shall be subject to review by the Chief Judge. |
The Chief Judge of the circuit court may suspend |
any additional charges or fees for late payment, |
interest, or damage to any device ; and
|
(v) for persons convicted of offenses other than |
those referenced in
clause (iv) above and who are |
placed on an approved monitoring device as a
condition |
of probation or conditional discharge, the court shall |
impose
a reasonable fee for each day of the use of the |
device, as established by the
county board in |
subsection (g) of this Section, unless after |
determining the
inability of the defendant to pay the |
fee, the court assesses a lesser fee or
no fee as the |
case may be. This fee shall be imposed in addition to |
the fees
imposed under subsections (g) and (i) of this |
Section. The fee
shall be collected by the clerk of the |
circuit court , except as provided in an administrative |
order of the Chief Judge of the circuit court . The |
clerk of the circuit
court shall pay all monies |
collected from this fee
to the county treasurer who |
shall use the monies collected to defray the
costs of |
corrections. The county treasurer shall deposit the |
fee
collected in the probation and court services fund.
|
The Chief Judge of the circuit court of the county may |
by administrative order establish a program for |
electronic monitoring of offenders, in which a vendor |
|
supplies and monitors the operation of the electronic |
monitoring device, and collects the fees on behalf of |
the county. The program shall include provisions for |
indigent offenders and the collection of unpaid fees. |
The program shall not unduly burden the offender and |
shall be subject to review by the Chief Judge.
|
The Chief Judge of the circuit court may suspend |
any additional charges or fees for late payment, |
interest, or damage to any device. |
(11) comply with the terms and conditions of an order |
of protection issued
by the court pursuant to the Illinois |
Domestic Violence Act of 1986,
as now or hereafter amended, |
or an order of protection issued by the court of
another |
state, tribe, or United States territory. A copy of the |
order of
protection shall be
transmitted to the probation |
officer or agency
having responsibility for the case;
|
(12) reimburse any "local anti-crime program" as |
defined in Section 7
of the Anti-Crime Advisory Council Act |
for any reasonable expenses incurred
by the program on the |
offender's case, not to exceed the maximum amount of
the |
fine authorized for the offense for which the defendant was |
sentenced;
|
(13) contribute a reasonable sum of money, not to |
exceed the maximum
amount of the fine authorized for the
|
offense for which the defendant was sentenced, (i) to a |
"local anti-crime
program", as defined in Section 7 of the |
|
Anti-Crime Advisory Council Act, or (ii) for offenses under |
the jurisdiction of the Department of Natural Resources, to |
the fund established by the Department of Natural Resources |
for the purchase of evidence for investigation purposes and |
to conduct investigations as outlined in Section 805-105 of |
the Department of Natural Resources (Conservation) Law;
|
(14) refrain from entering into a designated |
geographic area except upon
such terms as the court finds |
appropriate. Such terms may include
consideration of the |
purpose of the entry, the time of day, other persons
|
accompanying the defendant, and advance approval by a
|
probation officer, if
the defendant has been placed on |
probation or advance approval by the
court, if the |
defendant was placed on conditional discharge;
|
(15) refrain from having any contact, directly or |
indirectly, with
certain specified persons or particular |
types of persons, including but not
limited to members of |
street gangs and drug users or dealers;
|
(16) refrain from having in his or her body the |
presence of any illicit
drug prohibited by the Cannabis |
Control Act, the Illinois Controlled
Substances Act, or the |
Methamphetamine Control and Community Protection Act, |
unless prescribed by a physician, and submit samples of
his |
or her blood or urine or both for tests to determine the |
presence of any
illicit drug;
|
(17) if convicted for an offense committed on or after |
|
June 1, 2008 (the effective date of Public Act 95-464) that |
would qualify the accused as a child sex offender as |
defined in Section 11-9.3 or 11-9.4 of the Criminal Code of |
1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012, refrain from |
communicating with or contacting, by means of the Internet, |
a person who is related to the accused and whom the accused |
reasonably believes to be under 18 years of age; for |
purposes of this paragraph (17), "Internet" has the meaning |
ascribed to it in Section 16-0.1 of the Criminal Code of |
2012; and a person is related to the accused if the person |
is: (i) the spouse, brother, or sister of the accused; (ii) |
a descendant of the accused; (iii) a first or second cousin |
of the accused; or (iv) a step-child or adopted child of |
the accused; |
(18) if convicted for an offense committed on or after |
June 1, 2009 (the effective date of Public Act 95-983) that |
would qualify as a sex offense as defined in the Sex |
Offender Registration Act: |
(i) not access or use a computer or any other |
device with Internet capability without the prior |
written approval of the offender's probation officer, |
except in connection with the offender's employment or |
search for employment with the prior approval of the |
offender's probation officer; |
(ii) submit to periodic unannounced examinations |
of the offender's computer or any other device with |
|
Internet capability by the offender's probation |
officer, a law enforcement officer, or assigned |
computer or information technology specialist, |
including the retrieval and copying of all data from |
the computer or device and any internal or external |
peripherals and removal of such information, |
equipment, or device to conduct a more thorough |
inspection; |
(iii) submit to the installation on the offender's |
computer or device with Internet capability, at the |
subject's expense, of one or more hardware or software |
systems to monitor the Internet use; and |
(iv) submit to any other appropriate restrictions |
concerning the offender's use of or access to a |
computer or any other device with Internet capability |
imposed by the offender's probation officer; and |
(19) refrain from possessing a firearm or other |
dangerous weapon where the offense is a misdemeanor that |
did not involve the intentional or knowing infliction of |
bodily harm or threat of bodily harm. |
(c) The court may as a condition of probation or of |
conditional
discharge require that a person under 18 years of |
age found guilty of any
alcohol, cannabis or controlled |
substance violation, refrain from acquiring
a driver's license |
during
the period of probation or conditional discharge. If |
such person
is in possession of a permit or license, the court |
|
may require that
the minor refrain from driving or operating |
any motor vehicle during the
period of probation or conditional |
discharge, except as may be necessary in
the course of the |
minor's lawful employment.
|
(d) An offender sentenced to probation or to conditional |
discharge
shall be given a certificate setting forth the |
conditions thereof.
|
(e) Except where the offender has committed a fourth or |
subsequent
violation of subsection (c) of Section 6-303 of the |
Illinois Vehicle Code,
the court shall not require as a |
condition of the sentence of
probation or conditional discharge |
that the offender be committed to a
period of imprisonment in |
excess of 6 months.
This 6 month limit shall not include |
periods of confinement given pursuant to
a sentence of county |
impact incarceration under Section 5-8-1.2.
|
Persons committed to imprisonment as a condition of |
probation or
conditional discharge shall not be committed to |
the Department of
Corrections.
|
(f) The court may combine a sentence of periodic |
imprisonment under
Article 7 or a sentence to a county impact |
incarceration program under
Article 8 with a sentence of |
probation or conditional discharge.
|
(g) An offender sentenced to probation or to conditional |
discharge and
who during the term of either undergoes mandatory |
drug or alcohol testing,
or both, or is assigned to be placed |
on an approved electronic monitoring
device, shall be ordered |
|
to pay all costs incidental to such mandatory drug
or alcohol |
testing, or both, and all costs
incidental to such approved |
electronic monitoring in accordance with the
defendant's |
ability to pay those costs. The county board with
the |
concurrence of the Chief Judge of the judicial
circuit in which |
the county is located shall establish reasonable fees for
the |
cost of maintenance, testing, and incidental expenses related |
to the
mandatory drug or alcohol testing, or both, and all |
costs incidental to
approved electronic monitoring, involved |
in a successful probation program
for the county. The |
concurrence of the Chief Judge shall be in the form of
an |
administrative order.
The fees shall be collected by the clerk |
of the circuit court , except as provided in an administrative |
order of the Chief Judge of the circuit court . The clerk of
the |
circuit court shall pay all moneys collected from these fees to |
the county
treasurer who shall use the moneys collected to |
defray the costs of
drug testing, alcohol testing, and |
electronic monitoring.
The county treasurer shall deposit the |
fees collected in the
county working cash fund under Section |
6-27001 or Section 6-29002 of the
Counties Code, as the case |
may be.
The Chief Judge of the circuit court of the county may |
by administrative order establish a program for electronic |
monitoring of offenders, in which a vendor supplies and |
monitors the operation of the electronic monitoring device, and |
collects the fees on behalf of the county. The program shall |
include provisions for indigent offenders and the collection of |
|
unpaid fees. The program shall not unduly burden the offender |
and shall be subject to review by the Chief Judge.
|
The Chief Judge of the circuit court may suspend any |
additional charges or fees for late payment, interest, or |
damage to any device. |
(h) Jurisdiction over an offender may be transferred from |
the
sentencing court to the court of another circuit with the |
concurrence of
both courts. Further transfers or retransfers of
|
jurisdiction are also
authorized in the same manner. The court |
to which jurisdiction has been
transferred shall have the same |
powers as the sentencing court.
The probation department within |
the circuit to which jurisdiction has been transferred, or |
which has agreed to provide supervision, may impose probation |
fees upon receiving the transferred offender, as provided in |
subsection (i). For all transfer cases, as defined in Section |
9b of the Probation and Probation Officers Act, the probation |
department from the original sentencing court shall retain all |
probation fees collected prior to the transfer. After the |
transfer
all probation fees shall be paid to the probation |
department within the
circuit to which jurisdiction has been |
transferred.
|
(i) The court shall impose upon an offender
sentenced to |
probation after January 1, 1989 or to conditional discharge
|
after January 1, 1992 or to community service under the |
supervision of a
probation or court services department after |
January 1, 2004, as a condition of such probation or |
|
conditional
discharge or supervised community service, a fee of |
$50
for each month of probation or
conditional
discharge |
supervision or supervised community service ordered by the |
court, unless after
determining the inability of the person |
sentenced to probation or conditional
discharge or supervised |
community service to pay the
fee, the court assesses a lesser |
fee. The court may not impose the fee on a
minor who is made a |
ward of the State under the Juvenile Court Act of 1987
while |
the minor is in placement.
The fee shall be imposed only upon
|
an offender who is actively supervised by the
probation and |
court services
department. The fee shall be collected by the |
clerk
of the circuit court. The clerk of the circuit court |
shall pay all monies
collected from this fee to the county |
treasurer for deposit in the
probation and court services fund |
under Section 15.1 of the
Probation and Probation Officers Act.
|
A circuit court may not impose a probation fee under this |
subsection (i) in excess of $25
per month unless the circuit |
court has adopted, by administrative
order issued by the chief |
judge, a standard probation fee guide
determining an offender's |
ability to pay Of the
amount collected as a probation fee, up |
to $5 of that fee
collected per month may be used to provide |
services to crime victims
and their families. |
The Court may only waive probation fees based on an |
offender's ability to pay. The probation department may |
re-evaluate an offender's ability to pay every 6 months, and, |
with the approval of the Director of Court Services or the |
|
Chief Probation Officer, adjust the monthly fee amount. An |
offender may elect to pay probation fees due in a lump sum.
Any |
offender that has been assigned to the supervision of a |
probation department, or has been transferred either under |
subsection (h) of this Section or under any interstate compact, |
shall be required to pay probation fees to the department |
supervising the offender, based on the offender's ability to |
pay.
|
This amendatory Act of the 93rd General Assembly deletes |
the $10 increase in the fee under this subsection that was |
imposed by Public Act 93-616. This deletion is intended to |
control over any other Act of the 93rd General Assembly that |
retains or incorporates that fee increase. |
(i-5) In addition to the fees imposed under subsection (i) |
of this Section, in the case of an offender convicted of a |
felony sex offense (as defined in the Sex Offender Management |
Board Act) or an offense that the court or probation department |
has determined to be sexually motivated (as defined in the Sex |
Offender Management Board Act), the court or the probation |
department shall assess additional fees to pay for all costs of |
treatment, assessment, evaluation for risk and treatment, and |
monitoring the offender, based on that offender's ability to |
pay those costs either as they occur or under a payment plan. |
(j) All fines and costs imposed under this Section for any |
violation of
Chapters 3, 4, 6, and 11 of the Illinois Vehicle |
Code, or a similar
provision of a local ordinance, and any |
|
violation of the Child Passenger
Protection Act, or a similar |
provision of a local ordinance, shall be
collected and |
disbursed by the circuit clerk as provided under Section 27.5
|
of the Clerks of Courts Act.
|
(k) Any offender who is sentenced to probation or |
conditional discharge for a felony sex offense as defined in |
the Sex Offender Management Board Act or any offense that the |
court or probation department has determined to be sexually |
motivated as defined in the Sex Offender Management Board Act |
shall be required to refrain from any contact, directly or |
indirectly, with any persons specified by the court and shall |
be available for all evaluations and treatment programs |
required by the court or the probation department.
|
(l) The court may order an offender who is sentenced to |
probation or conditional
discharge for a violation of an order |
of protection be placed under electronic surveillance as |
provided in Section 5-8A-7 of this Code. |
(Source: P.A. 98-575, eff. 1-1-14; 98-718, eff. 1-1-15; 99-143, |
eff. 7-27-15.)
|
(730 ILCS 5/5-6-3.1) (from Ch. 38, par. 1005-6-3.1)
|
Sec. 5-6-3.1. Incidents and Conditions of Supervision.
|
(a) When a defendant is placed on supervision, the court |
shall enter
an order for supervision specifying the period of |
such supervision, and
shall defer further proceedings in the |
case until the conclusion of the
period.
|
|
(b) The period of supervision shall be reasonable under all |
of the
circumstances of the case, but may not be longer than 2 |
years, unless the
defendant has failed to pay the assessment |
required by Section 10.3 of the
Cannabis Control Act,
Section |
411.2 of the Illinois Controlled
Substances Act, or Section 80 |
of the Methamphetamine Control and Community Protection Act, in |
which case the court may extend supervision beyond 2 years.
|
Additionally, the court shall order the defendant to perform no |
less than 30
hours of community service and not more than 120 |
hours of community service, if
community service is available |
in the
jurisdiction and is funded and approved by the county |
board where the offense
was committed,
when the offense (1) was
|
related to or in furtherance of the criminal activities of an |
organized gang or
was motivated by the defendant's membership |
in or allegiance to an organized
gang; or (2) is a violation of |
any Section of Article 24 of the Criminal
Code of 1961 or the |
Criminal Code of 2012 where a disposition of supervision is not |
prohibited by Section
5-6-1 of this Code.
The
community service |
shall include, but not be limited to, the cleanup and repair
of |
any damage caused by violation of Section 21-1.3 of the |
Criminal Code of
1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012 and similar |
damages to property located within the municipality or county
|
in which the violation occurred. Where possible and reasonable, |
the community
service should be performed in the offender's |
neighborhood.
|
For the purposes of this
Section, "organized gang" has the |
|
meaning ascribed to it in Section 10 of the
Illinois Streetgang |
Terrorism Omnibus Prevention Act.
|
(c) The court may in addition to other reasonable |
conditions
relating to the nature of the offense or the |
rehabilitation of the
defendant as determined for each |
defendant in the proper discretion of
the court require that |
the person:
|
(1) make a report to and appear in person before or |
participate with
the court or such courts, person, or |
social service agency as directed
by the court in the order |
of supervision;
|
(2) pay a fine and costs;
|
(3) work or pursue a course of study or vocational |
training;
|
(4) undergo medical, psychological or psychiatric |
treatment; or
treatment for drug addiction or alcoholism;
|
(5) attend or reside in a facility established for the |
instruction
or residence of defendants on probation;
|
(6) support his dependents;
|
(7) refrain from possessing a firearm or other |
dangerous weapon;
|
(8) and in addition, if a minor:
|
(i) reside with his parents or in a foster home;
|
(ii) attend school;
|
(iii) attend a non-residential program for youth;
|
(iv) contribute to his own support at home or in a |
|
foster home; or
|
(v) with the consent of the superintendent of the
|
facility, attend an educational program at a facility |
other than the school
in which the
offense was |
committed if he
or she is placed on supervision for a |
crime of violence as
defined in
Section 2 of the Crime |
Victims Compensation Act committed in a school, on the
|
real
property
comprising a school, or within 1,000 feet |
of the real property comprising a
school;
|
(9) make restitution or reparation in an amount not to |
exceed actual
loss or damage to property and pecuniary loss |
or make restitution under Section
5-5-6 to a domestic |
violence shelter. The court shall
determine the amount and |
conditions of payment;
|
(10) perform some reasonable public or community |
service;
|
(11) comply with the terms and conditions of an order |
of protection
issued by the court pursuant to the Illinois |
Domestic Violence Act of 1986 or
an order of protection |
issued by the court of another state, tribe, or United
|
States territory.
If the court has ordered the defendant to |
make a report and appear in
person under paragraph (1) of |
this subsection, a copy of the order of
protection shall be |
transmitted to the person or agency so designated
by the |
court;
|
(12) reimburse any "local anti-crime program" as |
|
defined in Section 7 of
the Anti-Crime Advisory Council Act |
for any reasonable expenses incurred by the
program on the |
offender's case, not to exceed the maximum amount of the
|
fine authorized for the offense for which the defendant was |
sentenced;
|
(13) contribute a reasonable sum of money, not to
|
exceed the maximum amount of the fine authorized for the |
offense for which
the defendant was sentenced, (i) to a |
"local anti-crime program", as defined
in Section 7 of the |
Anti-Crime Advisory Council Act, or (ii) for offenses under |
the jurisdiction of the Department of Natural Resources, to |
the fund established by the Department of Natural Resources |
for the purchase of evidence for investigation purposes and |
to conduct investigations as outlined in Section 805-105 of |
the Department of Natural Resources (Conservation) Law;
|
(14) refrain from entering into a designated |
geographic area except
upon such terms as the court finds |
appropriate. Such terms may include
consideration of the |
purpose of the entry, the time of day, other persons
|
accompanying the defendant, and advance approval by a |
probation officer;
|
(15) refrain from having any contact, directly or |
indirectly, with
certain specified persons or particular |
types of person, including but not
limited to members of |
street gangs and drug users or dealers;
|
(16) refrain from having in his or her body the |
|
presence of any illicit
drug prohibited by the Cannabis |
Control Act, the Illinois Controlled
Substances Act, or the |
Methamphetamine Control and Community Protection Act, |
unless prescribed by a physician, and submit samples of
his |
or her blood or urine or both for tests to determine the |
presence of any
illicit drug;
|
(17) refrain from operating any motor vehicle not |
equipped with an
ignition interlock device as defined in |
Section 1-129.1 of the Illinois
Vehicle Code; under this |
condition the court may allow a defendant who is not
|
self-employed to operate a vehicle owned by the defendant's |
employer that is
not equipped with an ignition interlock |
device in the course and scope of the
defendant's |
employment; and
|
(18) if placed on supervision for a sex offense as |
defined in subsection (a-5) of Section 3-1-2 of this Code, |
unless the offender is a parent or guardian of the person |
under 18 years of age present in the home and no |
non-familial minors are present, not participate in a |
holiday event involving
children
under 18 years of age, |
such as distributing candy or other items to children on
|
Halloween,
wearing a Santa Claus costume on or preceding |
Christmas, being employed as a
department store Santa |
Claus, or wearing an Easter Bunny costume on or
preceding
|
Easter. |
(c-5) If payment of restitution as ordered has not been |
|
made, the victim shall file a
petition notifying the sentencing |
court, any other person to whom restitution is owed, and
the |
State's Attorney of the status of the ordered restitution |
payments unpaid at least 90
days before the supervision |
expiration date. If payment as ordered has not been made, the
|
court shall hold a review hearing prior to the expiration date, |
unless the hearing
is voluntarily waived by the defendant with |
the knowledge that waiver may result in an
extension of the |
supervision period or in a revocation of supervision. If the |
court does not
extend supervision, it shall issue a judgment |
for the unpaid restitution and direct the clerk
of the circuit |
court to file and enter the judgment in the judgment and lien |
docket, without
fee, unless it finds that the victim has |
recovered a judgment against the
defendant for the amount |
covered by the restitution order. If the court issues a
|
judgment for the unpaid restitution, the court shall send to |
the defendant at his or her last known
address written |
notification that a civil judgment has been issued for the |
unpaid
restitution. |
(d) The court shall defer entering any judgment on the |
charges
until the conclusion of the supervision.
|
(e) At the conclusion of the period of supervision, if the |
court
determines that the defendant has successfully complied |
with all of the
conditions of supervision, the court shall |
discharge the defendant and
enter a judgment dismissing the |
charges.
|
|
(f) Discharge and dismissal upon a successful conclusion of |
a
disposition of supervision shall be deemed without |
adjudication of guilt
and shall not be termed a conviction for |
purposes of disqualification or
disabilities imposed by law |
upon conviction of a crime. Two years after the
discharge and |
dismissal under this Section, unless the disposition of
|
supervision was for a violation of Sections 3-707, 3-708, |
3-710, 5-401.3, or 11-503 of the Illinois Vehicle Code or a |
similar
provision of a local ordinance, or for a violation of |
Sections 12-3.2, 16-25,
or 16A-3 of the Criminal Code of 1961 |
or the Criminal Code of 2012, in which case it shall be 5
years |
after discharge and dismissal, a person may have his record
of |
arrest sealed or expunged as may be provided by law. However, |
any
defendant placed on supervision before January 1, 1980, may |
move for
sealing or expungement of his arrest record, as |
provided by law, at any
time after discharge and dismissal |
under this Section.
A person placed on supervision for a sexual |
offense committed against a minor
as defined in clause |
(a)(1)(L) of Section 5.2 of the Criminal Identification Act
or |
for a violation of Section 11-501 of the Illinois Vehicle Code |
or a
similar provision of a local ordinance
shall not have his |
or her record of arrest sealed or expunged.
|
(g) A defendant placed on supervision and who during the |
period of
supervision undergoes mandatory drug or alcohol |
testing, or both, or is
assigned to be placed on an approved |
electronic monitoring device, shall be
ordered to pay the costs |
|
incidental to such mandatory drug or alcohol
testing, or both, |
and costs incidental to such approved electronic
monitoring in |
accordance with the defendant's ability to pay those costs.
The |
county board with the concurrence of the Chief Judge of the |
judicial
circuit in which the county is located shall establish |
reasonable fees for
the cost of maintenance, testing, and |
incidental expenses related to the
mandatory drug or alcohol |
testing, or both, and all costs incidental to
approved |
electronic monitoring, of all defendants placed on |
supervision.
The concurrence of the Chief Judge shall be in the |
form of an
administrative order.
The fees shall be collected by |
the clerk of the circuit court , except as provided in an |
administrative order of the Chief Judge of the circuit court . |
The clerk of
the circuit court shall pay all moneys collected |
from these fees to the county
treasurer who shall use the |
moneys collected to defray the costs of
drug testing, alcohol |
testing, and electronic monitoring.
The county treasurer shall |
deposit the fees collected in the
county working cash fund |
under Section 6-27001 or Section 6-29002 of the
Counties Code, |
as the case may be.
|
The Chief Judge of the circuit court of the county may by |
administrative order establish a program for electronic |
monitoring of offenders, in which a vendor supplies and |
monitors the operation of the electronic monitoring device, and |
collects the fees on behalf of the county. The program shall |
include provisions for indigent offenders and the collection of |
|
unpaid fees. The program shall not unduly burden the offender |
and shall be subject to review by the Chief Judge. |
The Chief Judge of the circuit court may suspend any |
additional charges or fees for late payment, interest, or |
damage to any device. |
(h) A disposition of supervision is a final order for the |
purposes
of appeal.
|
(i) The court shall impose upon a defendant placed on |
supervision
after January 1, 1992 or to community service under |
the supervision of a
probation or court services department |
after January 1, 2004, as a condition
of supervision or |
supervised community service, a fee of $50 for
each month of |
supervision or supervised community service ordered by the
|
court, unless after
determining the inability of the person |
placed on supervision or supervised
community service to pay |
the
fee, the court assesses a lesser fee. The court may not |
impose the fee on a
minor who is made a ward of the State under |
the Juvenile Court Act of 1987
while the minor is in placement.
|
The fee shall be imposed only upon a
defendant who is actively |
supervised by the
probation and court services
department. The |
fee shall be collected by the clerk of the circuit court.
The |
clerk of the circuit court shall pay all monies collected from |
this fee
to the county treasurer for deposit in the probation |
and court services
fund pursuant to Section 15.1 of the |
Probation and
Probation Officers Act.
|
A circuit court may not impose a probation fee in excess of |
|
$25
per month unless the circuit court has adopted, by |
administrative
order issued by the chief judge, a standard |
probation fee guide
determining an offender's ability to pay. |
Of the
amount collected as a probation fee, not to exceed $5 of |
that fee
collected per month may be used to provide services to |
crime victims
and their families. |
The Court may only waive probation fees based on an |
offender's ability to pay. The probation department may |
re-evaluate an offender's ability to pay every 6 months, and, |
with the approval of the Director of Court Services or the |
Chief Probation Officer, adjust the monthly fee amount. An |
offender may elect to pay probation fees due in a lump sum.
Any |
offender that has been assigned to the supervision of a |
probation department, or has been transferred either under |
subsection (h) of this Section or under any interstate compact, |
shall be required to pay probation fees to the department |
supervising the offender, based on the offender's ability to |
pay.
|
(j) All fines and costs imposed under this Section for any
|
violation of Chapters 3, 4, 6, and 11 of the Illinois Vehicle |
Code, or a
similar provision of a local ordinance, and any |
violation of the Child
Passenger Protection Act, or a similar |
provision of a local ordinance, shall
be collected and |
disbursed by the circuit clerk as provided under Section
27.5 |
of the Clerks of Courts Act.
|
(k) A defendant at least 17 years of age who is placed on |
|
supervision
for a misdemeanor in a county of 3,000,000 or more |
inhabitants
and who has not been previously convicted of a |
misdemeanor or felony
may as a condition of his or her |
supervision be required by the court to
attend educational |
courses designed to prepare the defendant for a high school
|
diploma and to work toward a high school diploma or to work |
toward passing high school equivalency testing or to work
|
toward completing a vocational training program approved by the |
court. The
defendant placed on supervision must attend a public |
institution of education
to obtain the educational or |
vocational training required by this subsection
(k). The |
defendant placed on supervision shall be required to pay for |
the cost
of the educational courses or high school equivalency |
testing if a fee is charged for those courses
or testing. The |
court shall revoke the supervision of a person who wilfully |
fails
to comply with this subsection (k). The court shall |
resentence the defendant
upon revocation of supervision as |
provided in Section 5-6-4. This subsection
(k) does not apply |
to a defendant who has a high school diploma or has
|
successfully passed high school equivalency testing. This |
subsection (k) does not apply to a
defendant who is determined |
by the court to be developmentally disabled or
otherwise |
mentally incapable of completing the
educational or vocational |
program.
|
(l) The court shall require a defendant placed on |
supervision for
possession of a substance
prohibited by the |
|
Cannabis Control Act, the Illinois Controlled Substances Act, |
or the Methamphetamine Control and Community Protection Act
|
after a previous conviction or disposition of supervision for |
possession of a
substance prohibited by the Cannabis Control |
Act, the Illinois Controlled
Substances Act, or the |
Methamphetamine Control and Community Protection Act or a |
sentence of probation under Section 10 of the Cannabis
Control |
Act or Section 410 of the Illinois Controlled Substances Act
|
and after a finding by the court that the person is addicted, |
to undergo
treatment at a substance abuse program approved by |
the court.
|
(m) The Secretary of State shall require anyone placed on |
court supervision
for a
violation of Section 3-707 of the |
Illinois Vehicle Code or a similar provision
of a local |
ordinance
to give proof of his or her financial
responsibility |
as
defined in Section 7-315 of the Illinois Vehicle Code. The |
proof shall be
maintained by the individual in a manner |
satisfactory to the Secretary of State
for
a
minimum period of |
3 years after the date the proof is first filed.
The proof |
shall be limited to a single action per arrest and may not be
|
affected by any post-sentence disposition. The Secretary of |
State shall
suspend the driver's license of any person
|
determined by the Secretary to be in violation of this |
subsection. |
(n) Any offender placed on supervision for any offense that |
the court or probation department has determined to be sexually |
|
motivated as defined in the Sex Offender Management Board Act |
shall be required to refrain from any contact, directly or |
indirectly, with any persons specified by the court and shall |
be available for all evaluations and treatment programs |
required by the court or the probation department.
|
(o) An offender placed on supervision for a sex offense as |
defined in the Sex Offender
Management Board Act shall refrain |
from residing at the same address or in the same condominium |
unit or apartment unit or in the same condominium complex or |
apartment complex with another person he or she knows or |
reasonably should know is a convicted sex offender or has been |
placed on supervision for a sex offense. The provisions of this |
subsection (o) do not apply to a person convicted of a sex |
offense who is placed in a Department of Corrections licensed |
transitional housing facility for sex offenders. |
(p) An offender placed on supervision for an offense |
committed on or after June 1, 2008
(the effective date of |
Public Act 95-464)
that would qualify the accused as a child |
sex offender as defined in Section 11-9.3 or 11-9.4 of the |
Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012 shall |
refrain from communicating with or contacting, by means of the |
Internet, a person who is not related to the accused and whom |
the accused reasonably believes to be under 18 years of age. |
For purposes of this subsection (p), "Internet" has the meaning |
ascribed to it in Section 16-0.1 of the Criminal Code of 2012; |
and a person is not related to the accused if the person is |
|
not: (i) the spouse, brother, or sister of the accused; (ii) a |
descendant of the accused; (iii) a first or second cousin of |
the accused; or (iv) a step-child or adopted child of the |
accused.
|
(q) An offender placed on supervision for an offense |
committed on or after June 1, 2008
(the effective date of |
Public Act 95-464)
that would qualify the accused as a child |
sex offender as defined in Section 11-9.3 or 11-9.4 of the |
Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012 shall, if so |
ordered by the court, refrain from communicating with or |
contacting, by means of the Internet, a person who is related |
to the accused and whom the accused reasonably believes to be |
under 18 years of age. For purposes of this subsection (q), |
"Internet" has the meaning ascribed to it in Section 16-0.1 of |
the Criminal Code of 2012; and a person is related to the |
accused if the person is: (i) the spouse, brother, or sister of |
the accused; (ii) a descendant of the accused; (iii) a first or |
second cousin of the accused; or (iv) a step-child or adopted |
child of the accused.
|
(r) An offender placed on supervision for an offense under |
Section 11-6, 11-9.1, 11-14.4 that involves soliciting for a |
juvenile prostitute, 11-15.1, 11-20.1, 11-20.1B, 11-20.3, or |
11-21 of the Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of |
2012, or any attempt to commit any of these offenses, committed |
on or after the effective date of this amendatory Act of the |
95th General Assembly shall: |
|
(i) not access or use a computer or any other device |
with Internet capability without the prior written |
approval of the court, except in connection with the |
offender's employment or search for employment with the |
prior approval of the court; |
(ii) submit to periodic unannounced examinations of |
the offender's computer or any other device with Internet |
capability by the offender's probation officer, a law |
enforcement officer, or assigned computer or information |
technology specialist, including the retrieval and copying |
of all data from the computer or device and any internal or |
external peripherals and removal of such information, |
equipment, or device to conduct a more thorough inspection; |
(iii) submit to the installation on the offender's |
computer or device with Internet capability, at the |
offender's expense, of one or more hardware or software |
systems to monitor the Internet use; and |
(iv) submit to any other appropriate restrictions |
concerning the offender's use of or access to a computer or |
any other device with Internet capability imposed by the |
court. |
(s) An offender placed on supervision for an offense that |
is a sex offense as defined in Section 2 of the Sex Offender |
Registration Act that is committed on or after January 1, 2010 |
(the effective date of Public Act 96-362) that requires the |
person to register as a sex offender under that Act, may not |
|
knowingly use any computer scrub software on any computer that |
the sex offender uses. |
(t) An offender placed on supervision for a sex offense as |
defined in the Sex Offender
Registration Act committed on or |
after January 1, 2010 (the effective date of Public Act 96-262) |
shall refrain from accessing or using a social networking |
website as defined in Section 17-0.5 of the Criminal Code of |
2012. |
(u) Jurisdiction over an offender may be transferred from |
the sentencing court to the court of another circuit with the |
concurrence of both courts. Further transfers or retransfers of |
jurisdiction are also authorized in the same manner. The court |
to which jurisdiction has been transferred shall have the same |
powers as the sentencing court. The probation department within |
the circuit to which jurisdiction has been transferred may |
impose probation fees upon receiving the transferred offender, |
as provided in subsection (i). The probation department from |
the original sentencing court shall retain all probation fees |
collected prior to the transfer. |
(Source: P.A. 97-454, eff. 1-1-12; 97-597, eff. 1-1-12; |
97-1109, eff. 1-1-13; 97-1150, eff. 1-25-13; 98-718, eff. |
1-1-15; 98-940, eff. 1-1-15; revised 10-1-14.) |
(730 ILCS 5/5-7-1) (from Ch. 38, par. 1005-7-1)
|
Sec. 5-7-1. Sentence of Periodic Imprisonment.
|
(a) A sentence of periodic imprisonment is a sentence of
|
|
imprisonment during which the committed person may be released |
for
periods of time during the day or night or for periods of |
days, or both,
or if convicted of a felony, other than first |
degree murder, a Class X or
Class 1 felony, committed to any |
county, municipal, or regional
correctional or detention |
institution or facility in this State for such
periods of time |
as the court may direct. Unless the court orders otherwise,
the |
particular times and conditions of release shall be determined |
by
the Department of Corrections, the sheriff, or the |
Superintendent of the
house of corrections, who is |
administering the program.
|
(b) A sentence of periodic imprisonment may be imposed to |
permit the
defendant to:
|
(1) seek employment;
|
(2) work;
|
(3) conduct a business or other self-employed |
occupation including
housekeeping;
|
(4) attend to family needs;
|
(5) attend an educational institution, including |
vocational
education;
|
(6) obtain medical or psychological treatment;
|
(7) perform work duties at a county, municipal, or |
regional correctional
or detention institution or |
facility;
|
(8) continue to reside at home with or without |
supervision involving
the use of an approved electronic |
|
monitoring device, subject to
Article 8A of Chapter V; or
|
(9) for any other purpose determined by the court.
|
(c) Except where prohibited by other provisions of this |
Code,
the court may impose a sentence of periodic imprisonment |
for a
felony or misdemeanor on a person who is 17 years of age |
or older. The
court shall not impose a sentence of periodic |
imprisonment if it imposes
a sentence of imprisonment upon the |
defendant in excess of 90 days.
|
(d) A sentence of periodic imprisonment shall be for a |
definite
term of from 3 to 4 years for a Class 1 felony, 18 to |
30 months
for a Class 2 felony, and up to 18 months, or the |
longest sentence of
imprisonment that could be imposed for the |
offense, whichever is less, for
all other offenses; however, no |
person shall be sentenced to a term of
periodic imprisonment |
longer than one year if he is committed to a county
|
correctional institution or facility, and in conjunction with |
that sentence
participate in a county work release program |
comparable to the work and day
release program provided for in |
Article 13 of the Unified Code of
Corrections in State |
facilities. The term of the sentence shall be
calculated upon |
the basis of the duration of its term rather than upon
the |
basis of the actual days spent in confinement. No sentence
of |
periodic imprisonment shall be subject to the good time
credit |
provisions of Section 3-6-3 of this Code.
|
(e) When the court imposes a sentence of periodic |
imprisonment, it
shall state:
|
|
(1) the term of such sentence;
|
(2) the days or parts of days which the defendant is to |
be confined;
|
(3) the conditions.
|
(f) The court may issue an order of protection pursuant to |
the
Illinois Domestic Violence Act of 1986 as a condition of a |
sentence of
periodic imprisonment. The Illinois Domestic |
Violence Act of 1986 shall
govern the issuance, enforcement and |
recording of orders of protection
issued under this Section. A |
copy of the order of protection shall be
transmitted to the |
person or agency having responsibility for the case.
|
(f-5) An offender sentenced to a term of periodic |
imprisonment for a
felony sex
offense as defined in the Sex |
Offender Management Board Act shall be required
to undergo and |
successfully complete sex offender treatment by a treatment
|
provider approved by the Board and conducted in conformance |
with the standards
developed under the Sex Offender Management |
Board Act.
|
(g) An offender sentenced to periodic imprisonment who |
undergoes mandatory
drug or alcohol testing, or both, or is
|
assigned to be placed on an approved electronic monitoring |
device, shall be
ordered to pay the costs incidental to such |
mandatory drug or alcohol
testing, or both, and costs |
incidental to such approved electronic
monitoring in |
accordance with the defendant's ability to pay those costs.
The |
county board with the concurrence of the Chief Judge of the |
|
judicial
circuit in which the county is located shall establish |
reasonable
fees for
the cost of maintenance, testing, and |
incidental expenses related to the
mandatory drug or alcohol |
testing, or both, and all costs incidental to
approved |
electronic monitoring, of all offenders with a sentence of
|
periodic imprisonment. The concurrence of the Chief Judge shall |
be in the
form of an administrative order.
The fees shall be |
collected by the clerk of the circuit court , except as provided |
in an administrative order of the Chief Judge of the circuit |
court . The clerk of
the circuit court shall pay all moneys |
collected from these fees to the county
treasurer who shall use |
the moneys collected to defray the costs of
drug testing,
|
alcohol testing, and electronic monitoring.
The county |
treasurer shall deposit the fees collected in the
county |
working cash fund under Section 6-27001 or Section 6-29002 of |
the
Counties Code, as the case may be.
|
(h) All fees and costs imposed under this Section for any |
violation of
Chapters 3, 4, 6, and 11 of the Illinois Vehicle |
Code, or a similar
provision of a local ordinance, and any |
violation of
the Child Passenger Protection Act, or a similar |
provision of a local
ordinance, shall be collected and |
disbursed by the
circuit clerk as provided under Section 27.5 |
of the Clerks of Courts Act.
|
The Chief Judge of the circuit court of the county may by |
administrative order establish a program for electronic |
monitoring of offenders, in which a vendor supplies and |
|
monitors the operation of the electronic monitoring device, and |
collects the fees on behalf of the county. The program shall |
include provisions for indigent offenders and the collection of |
unpaid fees. The program shall not unduly burden the offender |
and shall be subject to review by the Chief Judge. |
The Chief Judge of the circuit court may suspend any |
additional charges or fees for late payment, interest, or |
damage to any device. |
(i) A defendant at least 17 years of age who is
convicted |
of a misdemeanor or felony in a county of 3,000,000 or more
|
inhabitants and who has not been previously convicted
of a |
misdemeanor or a felony and who is sentenced to a term of |
periodic
imprisonment may as a condition of his or her sentence |
be required by the
court to attend educational courses designed |
to
prepare the defendant for a high school diploma and to work |
toward receiving a
high school
diploma or to work toward |
passing high school equivalency testing or to work toward |
completing a vocational training program
approved by the court. |
The defendant sentenced to periodic imprisonment must
attend a |
public institution of education to obtain the educational or
|
vocational training required by this subsection (i). The |
defendant sentenced
to a term of periodic imprisonment shall be |
required to pay for the cost of the
educational courses or high |
school equivalency testing if a fee is charged for those |
courses or testing.
The court shall
revoke the sentence of |
periodic imprisonment of the defendant who wilfully
fails
to |
|
comply with this subsection (i). The court shall resentence the |
defendant
whose sentence of periodic imprisonment has been
|
revoked as provided in Section 5-7-2. This
subsection (i) does |
not apply to a defendant who has a high school diploma or
has |
successfully passed high school equivalency testing. This |
subsection (i) does not apply to a
defendant who is determined |
by the court to be a person with a developmental disability or
|
otherwise mentally incapable of completing the
educational or |
vocational program.
|
(Source: P.A. 98-718, eff. 1-1-15; 99-143, eff. 7-27-15.)
|
(730 ILCS 5/Ch. V Art. 8A heading) |
ARTICLE 8A. ELECTRONIC MONITORING AND HOME DETENTION
|
(730 ILCS 5/5-8A-1) (from Ch. 38, par. 1005-8A-1)
|
Sec. 5-8A-1. Title. This Article shall be known and may be |
cited as
the Electronic Monitoring and Home Detention Law.
|
(Source: P.A. 86-1281.)
|
(730 ILCS 5/5-8A-2) (from Ch. 38, par. 1005-8A-2)
|
Sec. 5-8A-2. Definitions. As used in this Article:
|
(A) "Approved electronic monitoring device" means a device |
approved by
the supervising authority which is primarily |
intended to record or transmit
information as to the |
|
defendant's presence or nonpresence in the home , consumption of |
alcohol, consumption of drugs, location as determined through |
GPS, cellular triangulation, Wi-Fi, or other electronic means .
|
An approved electronic monitoring device may record or |
transmit: oral or
wire communications or an auditory sound; |
visual images; or information
regarding the offender's |
activities while inside the offender's home.
These devices are |
subject to the required consent as set forth in Section
5-8A-5 |
of this Article.
|
An approved electronic monitoring device may be used to |
record a
conversation between the participant and the |
monitoring device, or the
participant and the person |
supervising the participant solely for the
purpose of |
identification and not for the purpose of eavesdropping or
|
conducting any other illegally intrusive monitoring.
|
(A-10) "Department" means the Department of Corrections or |
the Department of Juvenile Justice. |
(A-20) "Electronic monitoring" means the monitoring of an |
inmate, person, or offender with an electronic device both |
within and outside of their home under the terms and conditions |
established by the supervising authority. |
(B) "Excluded offenses" means first degree murder, escape, |
predatory
criminal sexual assault of a child, aggravated |
criminal sexual assault,
criminal sexual assault, aggravated |
battery with a firearm as described in Section 12-4.2 or |
subdivision (e)(1), (e)(2), (e)(3), or (e)(4) of Section |
|
12-3.05, bringing or
possessing a firearm, ammunition or |
explosive in a penal institution, any
"Super-X" drug offense or |
calculated criminal drug conspiracy or streetgang
criminal |
drug conspiracy, or any predecessor or successor offenses with |
the
same or substantially the same elements, or any inchoate |
offenses relating to
the foregoing offenses.
|
(B-10) "GPS" means a device or system which utilizes the |
Global Positioning Satellite system for determining the |
location of a person, inmate or offender. |
(C) "Home detention" means the confinement of a person |
convicted or
charged with an offense to his or her place of |
residence under the terms
and conditions established by the |
supervising authority.
|
(D) "Participant" means an inmate or offender placed into |
an
electronic monitoring program.
|
(E) "Supervising authority" means the Department of |
Corrections, the Department of Juvenile Justice,
probation |
department supervisory authority , sheriff, superintendent of
|
municipal house of corrections or any other officer or agency |
charged with
authorizing and supervising electronic monitoring |
and home detention.
|
(F) "Super-X drug offense" means a violation of Section |
401(a)(1)(B), (C),
or (D); Section 401(a)(2)(B), (C), or (D); |
Section 401(a)(3)(B), (C), or (D);
or Section 401(a)(7)(B), |
(C), or (D) of the Illinois Controlled Substances
Act.
|
(G) "Wi-Fi" or "WiFi" means a device or system which |
|
utilizes a wireless local area network for determining the |
location of a person, inmate or offender. |
(Source: P.A. 96-1551, eff. 7-1-11 .)
|
(730 ILCS 5/5-8A-3) (from Ch. 38, par. 1005-8A-3)
|
Sec. 5-8A-3. Application.
|
(a) Except as provided in subsection (d), a person charged |
with
or convicted of an
excluded offense may not be placed in |
an electronic monitoring or home
detention program, except for |
bond pending trial or appeal or while on parole, aftercare |
release,
or mandatory supervised release.
|
(b) A person serving a sentence for a conviction of a Class |
1 felony,
other than an excluded offense, may be placed in an |
electronic monitoring or home detention
program for a period |
not to exceed the last 90 days of incarceration.
|
(c) A person serving a sentence for a conviction
of a Class |
X felony, other than an excluded offense, may be placed
in an |
electronic monitoring or home detention program for a period |
not to exceed the last 90
days of incarceration, provided that |
the person was sentenced on or after the
effective date of this |
amendatory Act of 1993 and provided that the court has
not |
prohibited the program for the person in the sentencing order.
|
(d) A person serving a sentence for conviction of an |
offense other than
for predatory criminal sexual assault of a |
child, aggravated criminal
sexual assault, criminal sexual |
assault, aggravated
criminal sexual abuse, or felony criminal |
|
sexual abuse, may be placed in an
electronic monitoring or home |
detention program for a period not to exceed the last 12 months
|
of incarceration, provided that (i) the person is 55 years of |
age or older;
(ii) the person is serving a determinate |
sentence; (iii) the person has served
at least 25% of the |
sentenced prison term; and (iv) placement in an electronic
home |
monitoring or detention program is approved by the Prisoner |
Review Board.
|
(e) A person serving a sentence for conviction
of a Class |
2, 3 or 4 felony offense which is not an excluded offense may |
be
placed in an
electronic monitoring or home detention program |
pursuant to Department administrative
directives.
|
(f) Applications for electronic monitoring or home |
detention
may include the following:
|
(1) pretrial or pre-adjudicatory detention;
|
(2) probation;
|
(3) conditional discharge;
|
(4) periodic imprisonment;
|
(5) parole, aftercare release, or mandatory supervised |
release;
|
(6) work release;
|
(7) furlough; or
|
(8) post-trial incarceration.
|
(g) A person convicted of an offense described in clause |
(4) or (5) of
subsection (d) of Section 5-8-1 of this Code |
shall be placed in an electronic monitoring or
home detention |
|
program for at least the first 2 years of the person's |
mandatory
supervised release term.
|
(Source: P.A. 98-558, eff. 1-1-14; 98-756, eff. 7-16-14.)
|
(730 ILCS 5/5-8A-4) (from Ch. 38, par. 1005-8A-4)
|
Sec. 5-8A-4. Program description. The supervising |
authority may
promulgate rules that prescribe reasonable |
guidelines under which an
electronic monitoring and home |
detention program shall operate. When using electronic |
monitoring for home detention these These rules shall include
|
but not be limited to the following:
|
(A) The participant shall remain within the interior |
premises or within
the property boundaries of his or her |
residence at all times during the
hours designated by the |
supervising authority. Such instances of approved
absences |
from the home may include but are not limited to the following:
|
(1) working or employment approved by the court or |
traveling to or from
approved employment;
|
(2) unemployed and seeking employment approved for the |
participant by
the court;
|
(3) undergoing medical, psychiatric, mental health |
treatment,
counseling, or other treatment programs |
approved for the participant by
the court;
|
(4) attending an educational institution or a program |
approved for the
participant by the court;
|
(5) attending a regularly scheduled religious service |
|
at a place of worship;
|
(6) participating in community work release or |
community service
programs approved for the participant by |
the supervising authority; or
|
(7) for another compelling reason consistent with the |
public interest,
as approved by the supervising authority.
|
(B) The participant shall admit any person or agent |
designated by the
supervising authority into his or her |
residence at any time for
purposes of verifying the |
participant's compliance with the conditions of
his or her |
detention.
|
(C) The participant shall make the necessary arrangements |
to allow for
any person or agent designated by the supervising |
authority to visit
the participant's place of education or |
employment at any time, based upon
the approval of the |
educational institution employer or both, for the
purpose of |
verifying the participant's compliance with the conditions of
|
his or her detention.
|
(D) The participant shall acknowledge and participate with |
the approved
electronic monitoring device as designated by the |
supervising authority
at any time for the purpose of verifying |
the
participant's compliance with the conditions of his or her |
detention.
|
(E) The participant shall maintain the following:
|
(1) a working telephone in the participant's home;
|
(2) a monitoring device in the participant's home, or |
|
on the
participant's person, or both; and
|
(3) a monitoring device in the participant's home and |
on the
participant's person in the absence of a telephone.
|
(F) The participant shall obtain approval from the |
supervising authority
before the participant changes residence |
or the schedule
described in subsection (A) of this Section.
|
(G) The participant shall not commit another crime during |
the period of
home detention ordered by the Court.
|
(H) Notice to the participant that violation of the order |
for home
detention may subject the participant to prosecution |
for the crime of escape
as described in Section 5-8A-4.1.
|
(I) The participant shall abide by other conditions as set |
by the
supervising authority.
|
(Source: P.A. 91-357, eff. 7-29-99.)
|
(730 ILCS 5/5-8A-4.1)
|
Sec. 5-8A-4.1. Escape; failure to comply with a condition |
of the
electronic home monitoring or home detention program. |
(a) A person charged with or convicted of a felony,
or |
charged with or adjudicated delinquent for an act which, if |
committed by an adult, would constitute a felony, conditionally |
released from the supervising authority through an electronic
|
home monitoring or home detention program, who knowingly |
violates a condition of the
electronic
home monitoring |
detention program is guilty of a Class 3 felony.
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(b) A person charged with or convicted of a misdemeanor,
or |
|
charged with or adjudicated delinquent for an act which, if |
committed by an adult, would constitute a misdemeanor, |
conditionally released from the supervising authority through |
an electronic
home monitoring or home detention program, who |
knowingly violates a condition of the
electronic
home |
monitoring or home detention program is guilty of a Class B |
misdemeanor.
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(c) A person who violates this Section while armed with a |
dangerous weapon
is guilty of a Class 1 felony.
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(Source: P.A. 95-921, eff. 1-1-09.)
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(730 ILCS 5/5-8A-5) (from Ch. 38, par. 1005-8A-5)
|
Sec. 5-8A-5. Consent of the participant. Before entering an |
order for
commitment for electronic monitoring home detention , |
the supervising authority shall
inform the participant and |
other persons residing in the home of the nature
and extent of |
the approved electronic monitoring devices by doing the
|
following:
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(A) Securing the written consent of the participant in the |
program to
comply with the rules and regulations of the program |
as stipulated in
subsections (A) through (I) of Section 5-8A-4.
|
(B) Where possible, securing the written consent of other |
persons
residing in the home
of the participant, including the |
person in whose name the telephone is
registered, at the time |
of the order or commitment for electronic
home detention is |
entered and acknowledge the nature and extent of approved
|
|
electronic monitoring devices.
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(C) Insure that the approved electronic devices be |
minimally
intrusive upon the privacy of the participant
and |
other persons residing in the home
while remaining in |
compliance with subsections (B) through (D)
of Section 5-8A-4.
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(D) This Section does not apply to persons subject to |
Electronic Home
Monitoring or home detention as a term or |
condition of parole, aftercare release, or mandatory |
supervised release
under subsection (d) of Section 5-8-1 of |
this Code.
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(Source: P.A. 98-558, eff. 1-1-14.)
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(730 ILCS 5/5-8A-5.1) |
Sec. 5-8A-5.1. Public notice of release on electronic home |
monitoring or home detention. The Department of Corrections |
must make identification information and a recent photo of an |
inmate being placed on electronic home monitoring or home |
detention under the provisions of this Article accessible on |
the Internet by means of a hyperlink labeled "Community |
Notification of Inmate Early Release" on the Department's World |
Wide Web homepage. The identification information shall |
include the inmate's: name, any known alias, date of birth, |
physical characteristics, residence address, commitment |
offense and county where conviction was imposed. The |
identification information shall be placed on the website |
within 3 days of the inmate's release on electronic home |
|
monitoring or home detention, and the information may not be |
removed until either: completion of the first year of mandatory |
supervised release or return of the inmate to custody of the |
Department.
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(Source: P.A. 96-1110, eff. 7-19-10.) |
(730 ILCS 5/5-8A-6)
|
Sec. 5-8A-6. Electronic monitoring of certain sex |
offenders. For a sexual predator subject to electronic home |
monitoring under paragraph (7.7) of subsection (a) of Section |
3-3-7, the Department of Corrections must use a system that |
actively monitors and identifies the offender's current |
location and timely reports or records the offender's presence |
and that alerts the Department of the offender's presence |
within a prohibited area described in Section 11-9.3 of the |
Criminal Code of 2012, in a court order, or as a condition of |
the offender's parole, mandatory supervised release, or |
extended mandatory supervised release and the offender's |
departure from specified geographic limitations. To the extent |
that he or she is able to do so, which the Department of |
Corrections by rule shall determine, the offender must pay for |
the cost of the electronic home monitoring.
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(Source: P.A. 97-1150, eff. 1-25-13.) |
(730 ILCS 5/5-8A-7)
|
Sec. 5-8A-7. Domestic violence surveillance program. If |
|
the Prisoner Review Board, Department of Corrections, or court |
(the supervising authority) orders electronic surveillance as |
a condition of parole, aftercare release, mandatory supervised |
release, early release, probation, or conditional discharge |
for a violation of an order of protection or as a condition of |
bail for a person charged with a violation of an order of |
protection, the supervising authority shall use the best |
available global positioning technology to track domestic |
violence offenders. Best available technology must have |
real-time and interactive capabilities that facilitate the |
following objectives: (1) immediate notification to the |
supervising authority of a breach of a court ordered exclusion |
zone; (2) notification of the breach to the offender; and (3) |
communication between the supervising authority, law |
enforcement, and the victim, regarding the breach. The |
supervising authority may also require that the electronic |
surveillance ordered under this Section monitor the |
consumption of alcohol or drugs.
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(Source: P.A. 98-558, eff. 1-1-14.) |
(730 ILCS 5/5-8A-8) |
Sec. 5-8A-8. Service of a minimum term of imprisonment. |
When an offender is sentenced under a provision of law that |
requires the sentence to include a minimum term of imprisonment |
and the offender is committed to the custody of the sheriff to |
serve the sentence, the sheriff may place the offender in an |
|
electronic monitoring or home detention program for service of |
that minimum term of imprisonment unless (i) the offender was |
convicted of an excluded offense or (ii) the court's sentencing |
order specifies that the minimum term of imprisonment shall be |
served in a county correctional facility.
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(Source: P.A. 98-161, eff. 1-1-14.) |
(730 ILCS 5/5-8A-9 new) |
Sec. 5-8A-9. Electronic monitoring by probation |
departments. If the supervising authority is a probation |
department, the Chief Judge of the circuit court may by |
administrative order establish a program for electronic |
monitoring of offenders, in which a vendor supplies and |
monitors the operation of the electronic monitoring device, and |
collects the fees on behalf of the county. The program shall |
include provisions for indigent offenders and the collection of |
unpaid fees and shall not unduly burden the offender and shall |
be subject to review by the Chief Judge of the circuit court. |
The Chief Judge of the circuit court may suspend any |
additional charges or fees for late payment, interest, or |
damage to any device.
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Section 99. Effective date. This Act takes effect upon |
becoming law.
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