(720 ILCS 5/14-3A)
Sec. 14-3A.
Recordings, records, and custody.
(a) Any private oral communication intercepted in accordance with subsection
(g) of Section 14-3 shall, if practicable, be recorded by tape or other
comparable method. The recording shall, if practicable, be done in such a way
as will protect it from editing or other alteration. During an interception,
the interception shall be carried out by a law enforcement officer, and the
officer shall keep a signed, written record, including:
(1) The day and hours of interception or recording;
(2) The time and duration of each intercepted | ||
| ||
(3) The parties, if known, to each intercepted | ||
| ||
(4) A summary of the contents of each intercepted | ||
| ||
(b) Both the written record of the interception or recording and any and all
recordings of the interception or recording shall immediately be inventoried
and shall be maintained where the chief law enforcement officer of the county
in which the interception or recording occurred directs. The written records
of the interception or recording conducted under subsection (g)
of Section 14-3 shall not be destroyed except upon an order of a court of
competent jurisdiction and in any event shall be kept for 10 years.
(Source: P.A. 88-677, eff. 12-15-94.)
|