(35 ILCS 120/13) (from Ch. 120, par. 452)
Sec. 13. Criminal penalties. (a) When the amount due is under $300, any person engaged
in the business of selling tangible personal property at retail in this
State who fails to file a return, or who files a fraudulent return, or
any officer, employee or agent of a corporation, member, employee or
agent of a partnership, or manager, member, agent, or employee of a limited
liability company engaged in the business of selling tangible personal
property at retail in this State who, as such officer, employee, agent,
manager, or member is under a duty to file a return, or any officer, agent or
employee of a corporation, member, agent, or employee of a partnership, or
manager, member, agent, or employee of a limited liability company engaged in
the business of selling tangible personal property at retail in this State who
files or causes to be filed or signs or causes to be signed a fraudulent
return filed on behalf of such corporation or limited liability company, or
any accountant or other agent who knowingly enters false information on the
return of any taxpayer under this Act, is guilty of a Class 4 felony.
Any person who or any officer or director of any corporation, partner or
member of any partnership, or manager or member of a limited liability company
that: (a) violates Section 2a of this Act or (b) fails to keep books and
records, or fails to produce books and records as required by Section 7 or (c)
willfully violates a rule or regulation of the Department for the
administration and enforcement of this Act is guilty of a Class A misdemeanor.
Any person, manager or member of a limited liability company, or officer or
director of any corporation who engages in the business of selling tangible
personal property at retail after the certificate of registration of that
person, corporation, limited liability company, or partnership has been revoked
is guilty of a Class A misdemeanor. Each day such person, corporation, or
partnership is engaged in business without a certificate of registration or
after the certificate of registration of that person, corporation, or
partnership has been revoked constitutes a separate offense.
Any purchaser who obtains a registration number or resale number from
the Department through misrepresentation, or who represents to a seller
that such purchaser has a registration number or a resale number from the
Department when he knows that he does not, or who uses his registration
number or resale number to make a seller believe that he is buying tangible
personal property for resale when such purchaser in fact knows that this is
not the case is guilty of a Class 4 felony.
Any distributor, supplier or other reseller of motor fuel registered
pursuant to Section 2a or 2c of this Act who fails to collect the prepaid
tax on invoiced gallons of motor fuel sold or who fails to deliver a statement
of tax paid to the purchaser or to the Department as required by Sections
2d and 2e of this Act, respectively, shall be guilty of a Class A misdemeanor
if the amount due is under $300, and a Class 4 felony if the amount due
is $300 or more.
When the amount due is under $300, any person who accepts money
that is due to the Department under this Act from a taxpayer for the purpose of
acting as the taxpayer's agent to make the payment to the Department, but who
fails to remit such payment to the Department when due is guilty of a Class 4
felony.
Any seller who collects or attempts to collect an amount (however
designated) which purports to reimburse such seller for retailers'
occupation tax liability measured by receipts which such seller knows are
not subject to retailers' occupation tax, or any seller who knowingly
over-collects or attempts to over-collect an amount purporting to reimburse
such seller for retailers' occupation tax liability in a transaction which
is subject to the tax that is imposed by this Act, shall be guilty of a
Class 4 felony for each such offense. This paragraph does not apply to
an amount collected by the seller as reimbursement for the seller's
retailers' occupation tax liability on receipts which are subject to tax
under this Act as long as such collection is made in compliance with the
tax collection brackets prescribed by the Department in its Rules and
Regulations.
When the amount due is $300 or more, any person engaged in the business
of selling tangible personal property at retail in this State who fails
to file a return, or who files a fraudulent return, or any officer, employee
or agent of a corporation, member, employee or agent of a partnership, or
manager, member, agent, or employee of a limited liability company engaged in
the business of selling tangible personal property at retail in this State who,
as such officer, employee, agent, manager, or member is under a duty to file a
return and who fails to file such return or any officer, agent, or employee of
a corporation, member, agent or employee of a partnership, or manager, member,
agent, or employee of a limited liability company engaged in the business of
selling tangible personal property at retail in this State who files or causes
to be filed or signs or causes to be signed a fraudulent return filed on behalf
of such corporation or limited liability company, or any accountant or other
agent who knowingly enters false information on the return of any taxpayer
under this Act is guilty of a Class 3 felony.
When the amount due is $300 or more, any person engaged in the business
of selling tangible personal property at retail in this State who accepts
money that is due to the Department under this
Act from a taxpayer for the purpose of acting as the taxpayer's agent to
make payment to the Department but fails to remit such payment to the
Department when due, is guilty of a Class 3 felony.
Any person whose principal place of business is in this State and
who is charged with a violation under this Section shall be
tried in the county where his principal place of business is
located unless he asserts a right to be tried in another venue.
Any taxpayer or agent of a taxpayer who with the intent to defraud
purports to make a payment due to the Department by issuing or delivering a
check or other order upon a real or fictitious depository for the payment
of money, knowing that it will not be paid by the depository, shall be
guilty of a deceptive practice in violation of Section 17-1 of the Criminal
Code of 2012.
(b) A person commits the offense of sales tax evasion under this Act when he knowingly attempts in any manner to evade or defeat the tax imposed on him or on any other person, or the payment thereof, and he commits an affirmative act in furtherance of the evasion. For purposes of this Section, an "affirmative act in furtherance of the evasion" means an act designed in whole or in part to (i) conceal, misrepresent, falsify, or manipulate any material fact or (ii) tamper with or destroy documents or materials related to a person's tax liability under this Act. Two or more acts of sales tax evasion may be charged as a single count in any indictment, information, or complaint and the amount of tax deficiency may be aggregated for purposes of determining the amount of tax which is attempted to be or is evaded and the period between the first and last acts may be alleged as the date of the offense. (1) When the amount of tax, the assessment or |
Any person who knowingly sells, purchases, installs, transfers, possesses, uses, or accesses any automated sales suppression device, zapper, or phantom-ware in this State is guilty of a Class 3 felony.
For the purposes of this Section:
"Automated sales suppression device" or "zapper" means a software program that falsifies the electronic records of an electronic cash register or other point-of-sale system, including, but not limited to, transaction data and transaction reports. The term includes the software program, any device that carries the software program, or an Internet link to the software program.
"Phantom-ware" means a hidden programming option embedded in the operating system of an electronic cash register or hardwired into an electronic cash register that can be used to create a second set of records or that can eliminate or manipulate transaction records in an electronic cash register.
"Electronic cash register" means a device that keeps a register or supporting documents through the use of an electronic device or computer system designed to record transaction data for the purpose of computing, compiling, or processing retail sales transaction data in any manner.
"Transaction data" includes: items purchased by a customer; the price of each item; a taxability determination for each item; a segregated tax amount for each taxed item; the amount of cash or credit tendered; the net amount returned to the customer in change; the date and time of the purchase; the name, address, and identification number of the vendor; and the receipt or invoice number of the transaction.
"Transaction report" means a report that documents, without limitation, the sales, taxes, or fees collected, media totals, and discount voids at an electronic cash register and that is printed on a cash register tape at the end of a day or shift, or a report that documents every action at an electronic cash register and is stored electronically.
(c) A prosecution for any act in violation of this Section may be commenced
at any time within 5 years of the commission of that act.
(Source: P.A. 97-1074, eff. 1-1-13; 97-1150, eff. 1-25-13; 98-352, eff. 1-1-14.)
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