State of Illinois
91st General Assembly
Legislation

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[ Engrossed ][ Enrolled ][ House Amendment 002 ]
[ Senate Amendment 002 ]

91_SB1112

 
                                              LRB9104147LDmbD

 1        AN  ACT in relation to criminal penalties, amending named
 2    Acts.

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

 5        Section  5.   The  Metropolitan  Transit Authority Act is
 6    amended by changing Section 28b as follows:

 7        (70 ILCS 3605/28b) (from Ch. 111 2/3, par. 328b)
 8        Sec. 28b.  Any person applying for a position as a driver
 9    of a  vehicle  owned  by  a  private  carrier  company  which
10    provides  public transportation pursuant to an agreement with
11    the Authority shall be required to authorize an investigation
12    by the private carrier company to determine if the  applicant
13    has  been  convicted  of  any of the following offenses:  (i)
14    those offenses defined in Sections 9-1,  9-1.2,  10-1,  10-2,
15    10-3.1,  10-4,  10-5,  10-6,  10-7, 11-6, 11-9, 11-14, 11-15,
16    11-15.1, 11-16, 11-17, 11-18, 11-19, 11-19.1, 11-19.2, 11-20,
17    11-20.1, 11-21, 11-22, 12-4.3, 12-4.4, 12-4.5, 12-6,  12-7.1,
18    12-11,  12-13,  12-14,  12-14.1, 12-15, 12-16, 12-16.1, 18-1,
19    18-2,  20-1,  20-1.1,  31A-1,  31A-1.1,  and  33A-2,  and  in
20    subsection (a) and subsection (b),  clause  (1),  of  Section
21    12-4  of  the  Criminal  Code  of  1961 or any felony with an
22    additional  and  consecutive  term  of  imprisonment  imposed
23    pursuant  to  Section  5-5-3.3  of  the   Unified   Code   of
24    Corrections;  (ii)  those  offenses  defined  in the Cannabis
25    Control Act except those offenses defined in subsections  (a)
26    and  (b) of Section 4, and subsection (a) of Section 5 of the
27    Cannabis Control Act (iii)  those  offenses  defined  in  the
28    Illinois  Controlled  Substances  Act;  and  (iv) any offense
29    committed or attempted in any other state or against the laws
30    of the United States, which if committed or attempted in this
31    State would be punishable as one or  more  of  the  foregoing
 
                            -2-               LRB9104147LDmbD
 1    offenses.   Upon  receipt  of this authorization, the private
 2    carrier company shall submit the applicant's name, sex, race,
 3    date of birth, fingerprints and social security number to the
 4    Department  of  State  Police  on  forms  prescribed  by  the
 5    Department.  The Department of State Police shall conduct  an
 6    investigation   to   ascertain  if  the  applicant  has  been
 7    convicted of any  of  the  above  enumerated  offenses.   The
 8    Department shall charge the private carrier company a fee for
 9    conducting the investigation, which fee shall be deposited in
10    the  State Police Services Fund and shall not exceed the cost
11    of the inquiry; and the applicant shall not be charged a  fee
12    for  such  investigation by the private carrier company.  The
13    Department  of  State  Police  shall  furnish,  pursuant   to
14    positive   identification,   records  of  convictions,  until
15    expunged, to the private carrier company which requested  the
16    investigation.   A copy of the record of convictions obtained
17    from the Department shall be provided to the applicant.   Any
18    record  of conviction received by the private carrier company
19    shall  be  confidential.   Any  person   who   releases   any
20    confidential  information concerning any criminal convictions
21    of an applicant shall be guilty of  a  Class  A  misdemeanor,
22    unless authorized by this Section.
23    (Source: P.A. 89-428, eff. 12-13-95; 89-462, eff. 5-29-96.)

24        Section  10.   The  Illinois  Vehicle  Code is amended by
25    changing Section 6-106.1 as follows:

26        (625 ILCS 5/6-106.1) (from Ch. 95 1/2, par. 6-106.1)
27        Sec. 6-106.1.  School bus driver permit.
28        (a)  The Secretary of State  shall  issue  a  school  bus
29    driver  permit  to  those  applicants  who  have  met all the
30    requirements of the application and screening  process  under
31    this Section to insure the welfare and safety of children who
32    are  transported  on  school  buses  throughout  the State of
 
                            -3-               LRB9104147LDmbD
 1    Illinois.  Applicants shall  obtain  the  proper  application
 2    required  by the Secretary of State from their prospective or
 3    current employer and submit the completed application to  the
 4    prospective  or  current  employer  along  with the necessary
 5    fingerprint submission as required by the Department of State
 6    Police  to  conduct  fingerprint  based  criminal  background
 7    checks on current and future  information  available  in  the
 8    state  system  and  current information available through the
 9    Federal Bureau of  Investigation's  system.   Applicants  who
10    have  completed  the fingerprinting requirements shall not be
11    subjected to the fingerprinting  process  when  applying  for
12    subsequent   permits   or   submitting  proof  of  successful
13    completion of the annual refresher course.   Individuals  who
14    on  the effective date of this Act possess a valid school bus
15    driver  permit  that  has  been  previously  issued  by   the
16    appropriate Regional School Superintendent are not subject to
17    the  fingerprinting provisions of this Section as long as the
18    permit remains valid and does not lapse.  The applicant shall
19    be required to pay all related application and fingerprinting
20    fees as established by rule including, but  not  limited  to,
21    the amounts established by the Department of State Police and
22    the  Federal  Bureau  of Investigation to process fingerprint
23    based criminal background investigations. All fees  paid  for
24    fingerprint  processing  services under this Section shall be
25    deposited into the State Police Services Fund  for  the  cost
26    incurred   in   processing  the  fingerprint  based  criminal
27    background investigations.  All other fees  paid  under  this
28    Section shall be deposited into the Road Fund for the purpose
29    of   defraying  the  costs  of  the  Secretary  of  State  in
30    administering this Section.  All applicants must:
31             1.  be 21 years of age or older;
32             2.  possess a valid and properly classified driver's
33        license issued by the Secretary of State;
34             3.  possess a valid driver's license, which has  not
 
                            -4-               LRB9104147LDmbD
 1        been  revoked or suspended, for 3 years immediately prior
 2        to the date of application;
 3             4.  successfully pass a written  test,  administered
 4        by  the  Secretary  of  State,  on  school bus operation,
 5        school bus safety, and special traffic laws  relating  to
 6        school  buses  and  submit to a review of the applicant's
 7        driving habits by the Secretary of State at the time  the
 8        written test is given;
 9             5.  demonstrate  ability to exercise reasonable care
10        in the operation of school buses in accordance with rules
11        promulgated by the Secretary of State;
12             6.  demonstrate physical fitness to  operate  school
13        buses by submitting the results of a medical examination,
14        including  tests  for  drug  use  for  each applicant not
15        subject  to  such  testing  pursuant  to   federal   law,
16        conducted  by  a licensed physician within 90 days of the
17        date of application according to standards promulgated by
18        the Secretary of State;
19             7.  affirm under penalties of perjury that he or she
20        has not made a false statement or knowingly  concealed  a
21        material fact in any application for permit;
22             8.  have  completed  an  initial  classroom  course,
23        including  first  aid  procedures,  in  school bus driver
24        safety as promulgated by  the  Secretary  of  State;  and
25        after  satisfactory  completion of said initial course an
26        annual refresher course; such courses and the  agency  or
27        organization conducting such courses shall be approved by
28        the  Secretary  of  State; failure to complete the annual
29        refresher course, shall result  in  cancellation  of  the
30        permit until such course is completed;
31             9.  not  have  been  convicted  of 2 or more serious
32        traffic offenses, as defined by  rule,  within  one  year
33        prior  to  the  date of application that may endanger the
34        life or safety of any of the driver's  passengers  within
 
                            -5-               LRB9104147LDmbD
 1        the duration of the permit period;
 2             10.  not  have  been  convicted of reckless driving,
 3        driving while intoxicated, or reckless homicide resulting
 4        from the operation of a motor vehicle within 3  years  of
 5        the date of application;
 6             11.  not   have  been  convicted  of  committing  or
 7        attempting to commit any one or  more  of  the  following
 8        offenses:   (i)  those  offenses defined in Sections 9-1,
 9        9-1.2, 10-1, 10-2, 10-3.1, 10-4, 10-5, 10-6, 10-7,  11-6,
10        11-9,  11-14, 11-15, 11-15.1, 11-16, 11-17, 11-18, 11-19,
11        11-19.1, 11-19.2, 11-20, 11-20.1, 11-21,  11-22,  12-4.3,
12        12-4.4,   12-4.5,  12-6,  12-7.1,  12-11,  12-13,  12-14,
13        12-14.1, 12-15,  12-16,  12-21.5,  12-21.6,  18-1,  18-2,
14        18-3,  18-4,  20-1,  20-1.1, 24-1, 24-1.1, 24-1.2, 31A-1,
15        31A-1.1, and 33A-2, and in subsection (a) and  subsection
16        (b),  clause (1), of Section 12-4 of the Criminal Code of
17        1961 or any felony with  an  additional  and  consecutive
18        term  of imprisonment imposed pursuant to Section 5-5-3.3
19        of the Unified Code of Corrections; (ii)  those  offenses
20        defined in the Cannabis Control Act except those offenses
21        defined  in  subsections  (a)  and  (b) of Section 4, and
22        subsection (a) of Section 5 of the Cannabis Control  Act;
23        (iii)  those  offenses defined in the Illinois Controlled
24        Substances Act; (iv) any offense committed  or  attempted
25        in  any  other  state  or  against the laws of the United
26        States, which if committed or  attempted  in  this  State
27        would  be  punishable  as  one  or  more of the foregoing
28        offenses; (v) the offenses defined in Section 4.1 and 5.1
29        of the Wrongs to Children Act  and  (vi)  those  offenses
30        defined  in  Section  6-16  of  the Liquor Control Act of
31        1934;
32             12.  not have been repeatedly involved as  a  driver
33        in  motor vehicle collisions or been repeatedly convicted
34        of offenses against laws and  ordinances  regulating  the
 
                            -6-               LRB9104147LDmbD
 1        movement  of traffic, to a degree which indicates lack of
 2        ability to exercise ordinary and reasonable care  in  the
 3        safe  operation  of a motor vehicle or disrespect for the
 4        traffic laws and the safety of  other  persons  upon  the
 5        highway;
 6             13.  not  have,  through the unlawful operation of a
 7        motor vehicle, caused an accident resulting in the  death
 8        of any person; and
 9             14.  not   have,  within  the  last  5  years,  been
10        adjudged to be  afflicted  with  or  suffering  from  any
11        mental disability or disease.
12        (b)  A  school  bus  driver  permit  shall be valid for a
13    period specified by the Secretary of State as  set  forth  by
14    rule.   It shall be renewable upon compliance with subsection
15    (a) of this Section.
16        (c)  A  school  bus  driver  permit  shall  contain   the
17    holder's  driver's  license  number, name, address, zip code,
18    social security number and date of birth, a brief description
19    of the holder and a space for signature.   The  Secretary  of
20    State may require a suitable photograph of the holder.
21        (d)  The  employer  shall be responsible for conducting a
22    pre-employment interview with prospective school  bus  driver
23    candidates,  distributing  school bus driver applications and
24    medical  forms  to  be  completed  by  the   applicant,   and
25    submitting   the   applicant's   fingerprint   cards  to  the
26    Department of State Police that are required for the criminal
27    background investigations.  The  employer  shall  certify  in
28    writing  to  the  Secretary  of State that all pre-employment
29    conditions have been  successfully  completed  including  the
30    successful   completion  of  an  Illinois  specific  criminal
31    background investigation  through  the  Department  of  State
32    Police  and  the  submission of necessary fingerprints to the
33    Federal  Bureau  of  Investigation   for   criminal   history
34    information   available   through   the   Federal  Bureau  of
 
                            -7-               LRB9104147LDmbD
 1    Investigation  system.   The  applicant  shall  present   the
 2    certification  to  the  Secretary  of  State  at  the time of
 3    submitting the school bus driver permit application.
 4        (e)  Permits  shall   initially   be   provisional   upon
 5    receiving   certification   from   the   employer   that  all
 6    pre-employment conditions have been  successfully  completed,
 7    and   upon   successful   completion   of  all  training  and
 8    examination  requirements  for  the  classification  of   the
 9    vehicle   to  be  operated,  the  Secretary  of  State  shall
10    provisionally issue a School Bus Driver Permit.   The  permit
11    shall  remain  in a provisional status pending the completion
12    of the Federal Bureau of Investigation's criminal  background
13    investigation  based  upon fingerprinting specimens submitted
14    to the Federal Bureau of Investigation by the  Department  of
15    State  Police.   The  Federal  Bureau  of Investigation shall
16    report the findings directly to the Secretary of State.   The
17    Secretary  of  State  shall remove the bus driver permit from
18    provisional status upon the applicant's successful completion
19    of the Federal Bureau of Investigation's criminal  background
20    investigation.
21        (f)  A  school  bus driver permit holder shall notify the
22    employer and the Secretary of State if he or she is convicted
23    in another state of an offense that would  make  him  or  her
24    ineligible for a permit under subsection (a) of this Section.
25    The  written  notification shall be made within 5 days of the
26    entry of the conviction.  Failure of  the  permit  holder  to
27    provide the notification is punishable as a petty offense for
28    a  first  violation and a Class B misdemeanor for a second or
29    subsequent violation.
30        (g)  Cancellation; suspension; notice and procedure.
31             (1)  The Secretary of State shall  cancel  a  school
32        bus   driver   permit  of  an  applicant  whose  criminal
33        background investigation discloses that he or she is  not
34        in  compliance  with  the provisions of subsection (a) of
 
                            -8-               LRB9104147LDmbD
 1        this Section.
 2             (2)  The Secretary of State shall  cancel  a  school
 3        bus driver permit when he or she receives notice that the
 4        permit  holder fails to comply with any provision of this
 5        Section or any rule promulgated for the administration of
 6        this Section.
 7             (3)  The Secretary of State shall  cancel  a  school
 8        bus  driver  permit  if  the  permit  holder's restricted
 9        commercial or commercial driving privileges are withdrawn
10        or otherwise invalidated.
11             (4)  The Secretary of State may not issue  a  school
12        bus driver permit for a period of 3 years to an applicant
13        who  fails  to obtain a negative result on a drug test as
14        required in item 6 of subsection (a) of this  Section  or
15        under federal law.
16             (5)  The  Secretary of State shall forthwith suspend
17        a school bus driver permit for a period of 3  years  upon
18        receiving  notice  that the holder has failed to obtain a
19        negative result on a drug test as required in item  6  of
20        subsection (a) of this Section or under federal law.
21        The   Secretary   of   State   shall   notify  the  State
22    Superintendent  of  Education   and   the   permit   holder's
23    prospective  or  current  employer that the applicant has (1)
24    has failed a criminal background investigation or (2)  is  no
25    longer  eligible  for  a school bus driver permit; and of the
26    related cancellation of the  applicant's  provisional  school
27    bus  driver  permit.  The cancellation shall remain in effect
28    pending the outcome of a hearing pursuant  to  Section  2-118
29    of  this  Code.  The scope of the hearing shall be limited to
30    the issuance criteria contained in  subsection  (a)  of  this
31    Section.   A petition requesting a hearing shall be submitted
32    to the Secretary of State and shall contain  the  reason  the
33    individual feels he or she is entitled to a school bus driver
34    permit.  The permit holder's employer shall notify in writing
 
                            -9-               LRB9104147LDmbD
 1    to the Secretary of State that the employer has certified the
 2    removal of the offending school bus driver from service prior
 3    to  the start of that school bus driver's next workshift.  An
 4    employing school board that fails  to  remove  the  offending
 5    school  bus  driver  from service is subject to the penalties
 6    defined in Section 3-14.23 of the School Code. A  school  bus
 7    contractor  who  violates  a  provision  of  this  Section is
 8    subject to the penalties defined in Section 6-106.11.
 9        All valid school bus driver  permits  issued  under  this
10    Section  prior  to  January  1,  1995, shall remain effective
11    until their expiration date unless otherwise invalidated.
12    (Source:  P.A.  89-71,  eff.  1-1-96;  89-120,  eff.  7-7-95;
13    89-375, eff. 8-18-95; 89-428,  eff.  12-13-95;  89-462,  eff.
14    5-29-96; 89-626, eff. 8-9-96; 90-191, eff. 1-1-98.)

15        Section 15.  The Juvenile Court Act of 1987 is amended by
16    changing Section 5-805 as follows:

17        (705 ILCS 405/5-805)
18        Sec. 5-805.  Transfer of jurisdiction.
19        (1)  Mandatory transfers.
20             (a)  If  a petition alleges commission by a minor 15
21        years of age or  older  of  an  act  that  constitutes  a
22        forcible  felony  under  the laws of this State, and if a
23        motion by the State's Attorney  to  prosecute  the  minor
24        under  the  criminal  laws  of  Illinois  for the alleged
25        forcible felony alleges that (i) the minor has previously
26        been  adjudicated  delinquent   or   found   guilty   for
27        commission  of an act that constitutes a felony under the
28        laws of this State or any other state and  (ii)  the  act
29        that constitutes the offense was committed in furtherance
30        of  criminal  activity by an organized gang, the Juvenile
31        Judge assigned to hear and determine those motions shall,
32        upon determining that there is probable cause  that  both
 
                            -10-              LRB9104147LDmbD
 1        allegations   are   true,   enter   an  order  permitting
 2        prosecution under the criminal laws of Illinois.
 3             (b)  If a petition alleges commission by a minor  15
 4        years of age or older of an act that constitutes a felony
 5        under  the  laws  of  this  State,  and  if a motion by a
 6        State's  Attorney  to  prosecute  the  minor  under   the
 7        criminal  laws of Illinois for the alleged felony alleges
 8        that  (i)  the  minor  has  previously  been  adjudicated
 9        delinquent or found guilty for commission of an act  that
10        constitutes  a  forcible  felony  under  the laws of this
11        State  or  any  other  state  and  (ii)  the   act   that
12        constitutes  the  offense was committed in furtherance of
13        criminal activities by an organized  gang,  the  Juvenile
14        Judge assigned to hear and determine those motions shall,
15        upon  determining  that there is probable cause that both
16        allegations  are  true,   enter   an   order   permitting
17        prosecution under the criminal laws of Illinois.
18             (c)  If  a petition alleges commission by a minor 15
19        years of age or older of: (i) an act that constitutes  an
20        offense enumerated in the presumptive transfer provisions
21        of subsection (2); and (ii) the minor has previously been
22        adjudicated  delinquent  or  found  guilty  of a forcible
23        felony,  the  Juvenile  Judge  designated  to  hear   and
24        determine  those  motions  shall,  upon  determining that
25        there is probable cause that both allegations  are  true,
26        enter  an order permitting prosecution under the criminal
27        laws of Illinois.
28        (2)  Presumptive transfer.
29             (a)  If the State's Attorney files  a  petition,  at
30        any  time  prior to commencement of the minor's trial, to
31        permit  prosecution  under  the  criminal  laws  and  the
32        petition alleges the commission by a minor  15  years  of
33        age  or  older  of: (i) a Class X felony other than armed
34        violence; (ii) aggravated discharge of a firearm;   (iii)
 
                            -11-              LRB9104147LDmbD
 1        armed  violence with a firearm when the predicate offense
 2        is a Class 1 or Class 2 felony, or a felony subject to an
 3        additional and consecutive term of  imprisonment  imposed
 4        pursuant  to  Section  5-5-3.3  of  the  Unified  Code of
 5        Corrections for armed violence with  a  firearm  and  the
 6        State's  Attorney's  motion  to transfer the case alleges
 7        that the offense  committed  is  in  furtherance  of  the
 8        criminal  activities  of  an  organized  gang; (iv) armed
 9        violence with a firearm when the predicate offense  is  a
10        violation  of the Illinois Controlled Substances Act or a
11        violation of the Cannabis Control Act, or a violation  of
12        the  Illinois  Controlled  Substances  Act  or  a  felony
13        violation  of  the  Cannabis  Control  Act  subject to an
14        additional and consecutive term of  imprisonment  imposed
15        pursuant  to  Section  5-5-3.3  of  the  Unified  Code of
16        Corrections for armed violence  with  a  firearm;  (v)  a
17        felony  subject  to an additional and consecutive term of
18        imprisonment imposed pursuant to Section 5-5-3.3  of  the
19        Unified  Code  of  Corrections  for armed violence with a
20        firearm or armed violence when the weapon involved was  a
21        machine  gun  or  other  weapon  described  in subsection
22        (a)(7) of Section 24-1 of the Criminal Code of 1961, and,
23        if the juvenile judge  assigned  to  hear  and  determine
24        motions  to  transfer  a  case  for  prosecution  in  the
25        criminal court determines that there is probable cause to
26        believe  that  the allegations in the petition and motion
27        are true, there is  a  rebuttable  presumption  that  the
28        minor  is  not  a fit and proper subject to be dealt with
29        under the Juvenile  Justice  Reform  Provisions  of  1998
30        (Public  Act  90-590),  and  that,  except as provided in
31        paragraph (b), the case  should  be  transferred  to  the
32        criminal court.
33             (b)  The  judge  shall  enter  an  order  permitting
34        prosecution  under  the  criminal laws of Illinois unless
 
                            -12-              LRB9104147LDmbD
 1        the judge makes a finding based on clear  and  convincing
 2        evidence  that  the  minor would be amenable to the care,
 3        treatment, and training programs  available  through  the
 4        facilities  of  the juvenile court based on an evaluation
 5        of the following:
 6             (i)  The seriousness of the alleged offense;
 7             (ii)  The minor's history of delinquency;
 8             (iii)  The age of the minor;
 9             (iv)   The culpability of the  minor  in  committing
10        the alleged offense;
11             (v)  Whether   the   offense  was  committed  in  an
12        aggressive or premeditated manner;
13             (vi)  Whether the minor used or possessed  a  deadly
14        weapon when committing the alleged offense;
15             (vii)  The  minor's  history  of services, including
16        the minor's willingness to  participate  meaningfully  in
17        available services;
18             (viii) Whether there is a reasonable likelihood that
19        the  minor  can be rehabilitated before the expiration of
20        the juvenile court's jurisdiction;
21             (ix)  The adequacy of  the  punishment  or  services
22        available in the juvenile justice system.
23        In  considering  these  factors,  the  court  shall  give
24    greater  weight to the seriousness of the alleged offense and
25    the minor's prior record of delinquency  than  to  the  other
26    factors listed in this subsection.
27        (3)  Discretionary transfer.
28             (a)  If  a petition alleges commission by a minor 13
29        years of age or over of an act that constitutes  a  crime
30        under  the  laws  of  this  State  and,  on motion of the
31        State's Attorney to permit prosecution of the minor under
32        the criminal laws, a Juvenile Judge assigned by the Chief
33        Judge of the Circuit to hear and determine those motions,
34        after hearing but before commencement of the trial, finds
 
                            -13-              LRB9104147LDmbD
 1        that  there  is  probable  cause  to  believe  that   the
 2        allegations  in the motion are true and that it is not in
 3        the best interests of the public to  proceed  under  this
 4        Act,  the court may enter an order permitting prosecution
 5        under the criminal laws.
 6             (b)  In making its determination on  the  motion  to
 7        permit  prosecution  under  the  criminal laws, the court
 8        shall consider among other matters:
 9             (i)  The seriousness of the alleged offense;
10             (ii)  The minor's history of delinquency;
11             (iii)  The age of the minor;
12             (iv)  The culpability of the minor in committing the
13        alleged offense;
14             (v)  Whether  the  offense  was  committed   in   an
15        aggressive or premeditated manner;
16             (vi)  Whether  the  minor used or possessed a deadly
17        weapon when committing the alleged offense;
18             (vii)  The minor's history  of  services,  including
19        the  minor's  willingness  to participate meaningfully in
20        available services;
21             (viii)  The adequacy of the punishment  or  services
22        available in the juvenile justice system.
23        In  considering  these  factors,  the  court  shall  give
24    greater  weight to the seriousness of the alleged offense and
25    the minor's prior record of delinquency  than  to  the  other
26    factors listed in this subsection.
27        (4)  The  rules of evidence for this hearing shall be the
28    same as under Section 5-705 of this Act.   A  minor  must  be
29    represented  in  court  by  counsel before the hearing may be
30    commenced.
31        (5)  If criminal proceedings are instituted, the petition
32    for adjudication of wardship shall be  dismissed  insofar  as
33    the act or acts involved in the criminal proceedings.  Taking
34    of  evidence  in  a  trial  on  petition  for adjudication of
 
                            -14-              LRB9104147LDmbD
 1    wardship is a bar to  criminal  proceedings  based  upon  the
 2    conduct alleged in the petition.
 3    (Source: P.A. 90-590, eff. 1-1-99; revised 10-28-98.)

 4        Section  20.   The Unified Code of Corrections is amended
 5    by changing Sections 3-2-2, 3-6-3, 5-4-1,  5-5-3,  and  5-8-4
 6    and adding Section 5-5-3.3 as follows:

 7        (730 ILCS 5/3-2-2) (from Ch. 38, par. 1003-2-2)
 8        Sec. 3-2-2.  Powers and Duties of the Department.
 9        (1)  In    addition    to    the   powers,   duties   and
10    responsibilities which are otherwise  provided  by  law,  the
11    Department shall have the following powers:
12             (a)  To accept persons committed to it by the courts
13        of   this   State   for   care,  custody,  treatment  and
14        rehabilitation.
15             (b)  To   develop   and   maintain   reception   and
16        evaluation units for purposes of  analyzing  the  custody
17        and  rehabilitation  needs of persons committed to it and
18        to assign such persons to institutions and programs under
19        its  control  or  transfer  them  to  other   appropriate
20        agencies.    In   consultation  with  the  Department  of
21        Alcoholism and Substance Abuse  (now  the  Department  of
22        Human  Services),  the  Department  of  Corrections shall
23        develop a master plan for the screening and evaluation of
24        persons committed to its custody who have alcohol or drug
25        abuse problems,  and  for  making  appropriate  treatment
26        available to such persons; the Department shall report to
27        the General Assembly on such plan not later than April 1,
28        1987.   The  maintenance  and implementation of such plan
29        shall be contingent upon the availability of funds.
30             (b-5)  To  develop,   in   consultation   with   the
31        Department  of  State  Police, a program for tracking and
32        evaluating each inmate from  commitment  through  release
 
                            -15-              LRB9104147LDmbD
 1        for  recording  his or her gang affiliations, activities,
 2        or ranks.
 3             (c)  To   maintain   and   administer   all    State
 4        correctional   institutions   and  facilities  under  its
 5        control and to establish new ones as needed.  Pursuant to
 6        its power to establish new institutions  and  facilities,
 7        the  Department  may,  with  the  written approval of the
 8        Governor, authorize the Department of Central  Management
 9        Services to enter into an agreement of the type described
10        in   subsection   (d)  of  Section  67.02  of  the  Civil
11        Administrative Code of Illinois.   The  Department  shall
12        designate  those  institutions which shall constitute the
13        State Penitentiary System.
14             Pursuant to its power to establish new  institutions
15        and   facilities,   the   Department  may  authorize  the
16        Department of Central Management Services to accept  bids
17        from  counties  and  municipalities for the construction,
18        remodeling or conversion of a structure to be  leased  to
19        the  Department  of  Corrections  for the purposes of its
20        serving as a correctional institution or facility.   Such
21        construction,  remodeling  or  conversion may be financed
22        with revenue bonds  issued  pursuant  to  the  Industrial
23        Building  Revenue Bond Act by the municipality or county.
24        The lease specified in a bid shall be for a term  of  not
25        less  than  the  time  needed to retire any revenue bonds
26        used to finance the project, but not to exceed 40  years.
27        The  lease  may grant to the State the option to purchase
28        the structure outright.
29             Upon receipt of the bids, the Department may certify
30        one or more of the bids and shall submit any such bids to
31        the General Assembly for approval.  Upon  approval  of  a
32        bid  by  a  constitutional majority of both houses of the
33        General  Assembly,  pursuant  to  joint  resolution,  the
34        Department of Central Management Services may enter  into
 
                            -16-              LRB9104147LDmbD
 1        an  agreement with the county or municipality pursuant to
 2        such bid.
 3             (c-5)  To  build  and  maintain  regional   juvenile
 4        detention  centers  and  to  charge  a  per  diem  to the
 5        counties as established by the Department to  defray  the
 6        costs  of  housing  each  minor  in  a  center.   In this
 7        subsection (c-5), "juvenile  detention  center"  means  a
 8        facility  to  house  minors  during pendency of trial who
 9        have been transferred from proceedings under the Juvenile
10        Court Act of 1987 to prosecutions under the criminal laws
11        of this State in accordance with  Section  5-805  of  the
12        Juvenile  Court  Act of 1987, whether the transfer was by
13        operation of law or permissive under that  Section.   The
14        Department  shall  designate the counties to be served by
15        each regional juvenile detention center.
16             (d)  To develop and maintain  programs  of  control,
17        rehabilitation and employment of committed persons within
18        its institutions.
19             (e)  To   establish  a  system  of  supervision  and
20        guidance of committed persons in the community.
21             (f)  To establish in cooperation with the Department
22        of  Transportation  to  supply  a  sufficient  number  of
23        prisoners for use by the Department of Transportation  to
24        clean  up  the  trash  and  garbage  along State, county,
25        township, or municipal  highways  as  designated  by  the
26        Department   of   Transportation.    The   Department  of
27        Corrections,  at  the  request  of  the   Department   of
28        Transportation,  shall  furnish  such  prisoners at least
29        annually for a period  to  be  agreed  upon  between  the
30        Director    of    Corrections   and   the   Director   of
31        Transportation.  The prisoners used on this program shall
32        be selected by the Director of  Corrections  on  whatever
33        basis  he  deems  proper  in consideration of their term,
34        behavior and earned eligibility to  participate  in  such
 
                            -17-              LRB9104147LDmbD
 1        program  -  where  they  will  be  outside  of the prison
 2        facility but still in the custody of  the  Department  of
 3        Corrections.  Prisoners convicted of first degree murder,
 4        or  a  Class  X  felony, or armed violence, or an offense
 5        with an additional and consecutive term  of  imprisonment
 6        imposed  pursuant  to Section 5-5-3.3 of the Unified Code
 7        of Corrections, or aggravated  kidnapping,   or  criminal
 8        sexual  assault,  aggravated  criminal  sexual abuse or a
 9        subsequent  conviction  for  criminal  sexual  abuse,  or
10        forcible detention, or arson, or a  prisoner  adjudged  a
11        Habitual  Criminal shall not be eligible for selection to
12        participate in such program.  The prisoners shall  remain
13        as   prisoners  in  the  custody  of  the  Department  of
14        Corrections and such Department  shall  furnish  whatever
15        security  is  necessary. The Department of Transportation
16        shall  furnish  trucks  and  equipment  for  the  highway
17        cleanup program and personnel to supervise and direct the
18        program. Neither the Department of  Corrections  nor  the
19        Department  of  Transportation  shall replace any regular
20        employee with a prisoner.
21             (g)  To maintain records of persons committed to  it
22        and  to  establish  programs  of research, statistics and
23        planning.
24             (h)  To investigate the  grievances  of  any  person
25        committed  to the Department, to inquire into any alleged
26        misconduct by employees  or  committed  persons,  and  to
27        investigate  the assets of committed persons to implement
28        Section 3-7-6 of this Code; and for these purposes it may
29        issue subpoenas and compel the  attendance  of  witnesses
30        and  the  production  of  writings  and  papers,  and may
31        examine under oath any witnesses who  may  appear  before
32        it; to also investigate alleged violations of a parolee's
33        or  releasee's  conditions  of parole or release; and for
34        this purpose  it  may  issue  subpoenas  and  compel  the
 
                            -18-              LRB9104147LDmbD
 1        attendance  of  witnesses and the production of documents
 2        only if there is reason to believe that  such  procedures
 3        would   provide   evidence   that  such  violations  have
 4        occurred.
 5             If any person fails to obey a subpoena issued  under
 6        this  subsection,  the  Director may apply to any circuit
 7        court  to  secure  compliance  with  the  subpoena.   The
 8        failure to comply with the order of the court  issued  in
 9        response  thereto  shall  be  punishable  as  contempt of
10        court.
11             (i)  To appoint and remove the chief  administrative
12        officers,   and   administer  programs  of  training  and
13        development of personnel  of  the  Department.  Personnel
14        assigned  by  the  Department  to  be responsible for the
15        custody  and  control  of   committed   persons   or   to
16        investigate  the  alleged misconduct of committed persons
17        or employees or alleged  violations  of  a  parolee's  or
18        releasee's  conditions of parole shall be conservators of
19        the peace for those purposes, and  shall  have  the  full
20        power  of peace officers outside of the facilities of the
21        Department  in  the  protection,  arrest,  retaking   and
22        reconfining of committed persons or where the exercise of
23        such  power  is  necessary  to  the investigation of such
24        misconduct or violations.
25             (j)  To  cooperate  with   other   departments   and
26        agencies  and  with local communities for the development
27        of  standards  and  programs  for   better   correctional
28        services in this State.
29             (k)  To  administer all moneys and properties of the
30        Department.
31             (l)  To report  annually  to  the  Governor  on  the
32        committed  persons,  institutions  and  programs  of  the
33        Department.
34             (l-5)  In   a  confidential  annual  report  to  the
 
                            -19-              LRB9104147LDmbD
 1        Governor, the Department shall identify all inmate  gangs
 2        by  specifying  each  current gang's name, population and
 3        allied gangs.  The Department shall further  specify  the
 4        number  of  top  leaders identified by the Department for
 5        each gang during the past year, and the measures taken by
 6        the Department to segregate each leader from his  or  her
 7        gang  and  allied  gangs.   The  Department shall further
 8        report the  current  status  of  leaders  identified  and
 9        segregated  in  previous years.  All leaders described in
10        the report shall be identified by inmate number or  other
11        designation    to    enable   tracking,   auditing,   and
12        verification without revealing the names of the  leaders.
13        Because this report contains law enforcement intelligence
14        information  collected  by  the Department, the report is
15        confidential and not subject to public disclosure.
16             (m)  To make all rules and regulations and  exercise
17        all powers and duties vested by law in the Department.
18             (n)  To   establish   rules   and   regulations  for
19        administering  a  system   of   good   conduct   credits,
20        established  in accordance with Section 3-6-3, subject to
21        review by the Prisoner Review Board.
22             (o)  To administer the distribution  of  funds  from
23        the  State  Treasury  to  reimburse  counties where State
24        penal  institutions  are  located  for  the  payment   of
25        assistant   state's  attorneys'  salaries  under  Section
26        4-2001 of the Counties Code.
27             (p)  To exchange information with the Department  of
28        Human  Services and the Illinois Department of Public Aid
29        for the purpose of verifying living arrangements and  for
30        other purposes directly connected with the administration
31        of this Code and the Illinois Public Aid Code.
32             (q)  To establish a diversion program.
33             The  program  shall provide a structured environment
34        for selected technical  parole  or  mandatory  supervised
 
                            -20-              LRB9104147LDmbD
 1        release violators and committed persons who have violated
 2        the  rules governing their conduct while in work release.
 3        This program shall not apply to those  persons  who  have
 4        committed  a  new  offense  while  serving  on  parole or
 5        mandatory supervised release or while committed  to  work
 6        release.
 7             Elements of the program shall include, but shall not
 8        be limited to, the following:
 9                  (1)  The  staff  of  a diversion facility shall
10             provide  supervision  in  accordance  with  required
11             objectives set by the facility.
12                  (2)  Participants shall be required to maintain
13             employment.
14                  (3)  Each participant shall pay  for  room  and
15             board  at  the  facility  on  a  sliding-scale basis
16             according to the participant's income.
17                  (4)  Each participant shall:
18                       (A)  provide  restitution  to  victims  in
19                  accordance with any court order;
20                       (B)  provide  financial  support  to   his
21                  dependents; and
22                       (C)  make  appropriate payments toward any
23                  other court-ordered obligations.
24                  (5)  Each participant shall complete  community
25             service in addition to employment.
26                  (6)  Participants   shall  take  part  in  such
27             counseling, educational and other  programs  as  the
28             Department may deem appropriate.
29                  (7)  Participants  shall  submit  to  drug  and
30             alcohol screening.
31                  (8)  The   Department  shall  promulgate  rules
32             governing the administration of the program.
33             (r)  To  enter  into  intergovernmental  cooperation
34        agreements under which persons  in  the  custody  of  the
 
                            -21-              LRB9104147LDmbD
 1        Department   may   participate   in   a   county   impact
 2        incarceration program established under Section 3-6038 or
 3        3-15003.5 of the Counties Code.
 4             (r-5)  To  enter  into intergovernmental cooperation
 5        agreements under which minors adjudicated delinquent  and
 6        committed  to  the  Department  of  Corrections, Juvenile
 7        Division, may participate in  a  county  juvenile  impact
 8        incarceration program established under Section 3-6039 of
 9        the Counties Code.
10             (r-10)  To  systematically  and  routinely  identify
11        with   respect  to  each  streetgang  active  within  the
12        correctional system: (1)  each  active  gang;  (2)  every
13        existing  inter-gang affiliation or alliance; and (3) the
14        current leaders  in  each  gang.   The  Department  shall
15        promptly  segregate  leaders  from  inmates who belong to
16        their gangs  and  allied  gangs.   "Segregate"  means  no
17        physical  contact  and,  to the extent possible under the
18        conditions  and  space  available  at  the   correctional
19        facility,  prohibition of visual and sound communication.
20        For the purposes  of  this  paragraph  (r-10),  "leaders"
21        means persons who:
22                  (i)  are members of a criminal streetgang;
23                  (ii)  with  respect to other individuals within
24             the streetgang,  occupy  a  position  of  organizer,
25             supervisor,  or  other  position  of  management  or
26             leadership; and
27                  (iii)  are  actively  and personally engaged in
28             directing,  ordering,  authorizing,  or   requesting
29             commission  of  criminal  acts  by others, which are
30             punishable as a felony, in furtherance of streetgang
31             related activity both  within  and  outside  of  the
32             Department of Corrections.
33        "Streetgang",  "gang",  and "streetgang related" have the
34        meanings ascribed to them in Section 10 of  the  Illinois
 
                            -22-              LRB9104147LDmbD
 1        Streetgang Terrorism Omnibus Prevention Act.
 2             (s)  To    operate    a    super-maximum    security
 3        institution, in order to manage and supervise inmates who
 4        are  disruptive  or  dangerous and provide for the safety
 5        and security of the staff and the other inmates.
 6             (t)  To monitor any unprivileged conversation or any
 7        unprivileged communication,  whether  in  person  or   by
 8        mail,  telephone,  or other means, between an inmate who,
 9        before commitment to the Department, was a member  of  an
10        organized  gang  and any other person without the need to
11        show cause or satisfy any other requirement of law before
12        beginning  the  monitoring,  except  as  constitutionally
13        required. The monitoring may be by video, voice, or other
14        method of recording or by any other means.   As  used  in
15        this subdivision (1)(t), "organized gang" has the meaning
16        ascribed  to  it in Section 10 of the Illinois Streetgang
17        Terrorism Omnibus Prevention Act.
18             As used in this  subdivision  (1)(t),  "unprivileged
19        conversation"  or  "unprivileged  communication"  means a
20        conversation or communication that is  not  protected  by
21        any  privilege recognized by law or by decision, rule, or
22        order of the Illinois Supreme Court.
23             (u)  To   establish   a   Women's   and   Children's
24        Pre-release Community Supervision Program for the purpose
25        of providing housing  and  services  to  eligible  female
26        inmates,  as  determined  by  the  Department,  and their
27        newborn and young children.
28             (v)  To do all other acts necessary to carry out the
29        provisions of this Chapter.
30        (2)  The Department of Corrections shall  by  January  1,
31    1998, consider building and operating a correctional facility
32    within  100  miles of a county of over 2,000,000 inhabitants,
33    especially a facility designed to house juvenile participants
34    in the impact incarceration program.
 
                            -23-              LRB9104147LDmbD
 1    (Source: P.A. 89-110,  eff.  1-1-96;  89-302,  eff.  8-11-95;
 2    89-312,  eff.  8-11-95;  89-390,  eff.  8-20-95; 89-507, eff.
 3    7-1-97; 89-626, eff. 8-9-96;  89-688,  eff.  6-1-97;  89-689,
 4    eff.  12-31-96;  90-14,  eff.  7-1-97;  90-590,  eff. 1-1-99;
 5    90-658, eff. 1-1-99; revised 9-16-98.)

 6        (730 ILCS 5/3-6-3) (from Ch. 38, par. 1003-6-3)
 7        Sec. 3-6-3.  Rules and Regulations for Early Release.
 8             (a)(1)  The   Department   of   Corrections    shall
 9        prescribe  rules and regulations for the early release on
10        account of good  conduct  of  persons  committed  to  the
11        Department  which  shall  be  subject  to  review  by the
12        Prisoner Review Board.
13             (2)  The rules  and  regulations  on  early  release
14        shall  provide,  with respect to offenses committed on or
15        after June 19, 1998 the effective date of this amendatory
16        Act of 1998, the following:
17                  (i)  that a prisoner who is serving a  term  of
18             imprisonment  for  first degree murder shall receive
19             no good conduct credit and shall  serve  the  entire
20             sentence imposed by the court;
21                  (ii)  that  a  prisoner  serving a sentence for
22             attempt to commit first degree murder,  solicitation
23             of   murder,   solicitation   of  murder  for  hire,
24             intentional homicide of an unborn  child,  predatory
25             criminal  sexual  assault  of  a  child,  aggravated
26             criminal  sexual  assault,  criminal sexual assault,
27             aggravated kidnapping,  aggravated  battery  with  a
28             firearm,  heinous  battery,  aggravated battery of a
29             senior citizen, or aggravated  battery  of  a  child
30             shall  receive no more than 4.5 days of good conduct
31             credit for each month of  his  or  her  sentence  of
32             imprisonment; and
33                  (iii)  that  a  prisoner serving a sentence for
 
                            -24-              LRB9104147LDmbD
 1             home invasion, armed robbery,  aggravated  vehicular
 2             hijacking,  aggravated  discharge  of  a firearm, or
 3             armed violence with a category I weapon or  category
 4             II  weapon,  when  the  court has made and entered a
 5             finding, pursuant to  subsection  (c-1)  of  Section
 6             5-4-1  of  this  Code,  that  the conduct leading to
 7             conviction for the enumerated  offense  resulted  in
 8             great bodily harm to a victim, shall receive no more
 9             than  4.5 days of good conduct credit for each month
10             of his or her sentence of imprisonment.
11             (2.1)  For all offenses, other than those enumerated
12        in subdivision (a)(2) committed on or after June 19, 1998
13         the effective date of this amendatory Act of  1998,  and
14        other than the offense of reckless homicide as defined in
15        subsection  (e)  of  Section  9-3 of the Criminal Code of
16        1961 committed on or after January 1, 1999, the rules and
17        regulations shall provide that a prisoner who is  serving
18        a  term  of  imprisonment  shall  receive one day of good
19        conduct credit for each day of his  or  her  sentence  of
20        imprisonment  or  recommitment under Section 3-3-9.  Each
21        day of good conduct credit shall reduce by  one  day  the
22        prisoner's  period  of imprisonment or recommitment under
23        Section 3-3-9.
24             (2.2)  A prisoner serving a  term  of  natural  life
25        imprisonment  or  a  prisoner  who  has been sentenced to
26        death shall receive no good conduct credit.
27             (2.3)  The rules and regulations  on  early  release
28        shall  provide  that a prisoner who is serving a sentence
29        for reckless homicide as defined  in  subsection  (e)  of
30        Section  9-3 of the Criminal Code of 1961 committed on or
31        after January 1, 1999 shall receive no more than 4.5 days
32        of good conduct credit for  each  month  of  his  or  her
33        sentence of imprisonment.
34             (2.4)  The  rules  and  regulations on early release
 
                            -25-              LRB9104147LDmbD
 1        shall provide that:
 2                  (i)  for an offense enumerated  in  subdivision
 3             (a)(2)(i),   (a)(2)(ii),   or  (a)(2)(iii)  of  this
 4             Section that was committed on or  after  January  1,
 5             2000,   a   prisoner   serving   an  additional  and
 6             consecutive term of imprisonment imposed pursuant to
 7             subsection (c) of Section  5-5-3.3  of  the  Unified
 8             Code  of  Corrections shall receive no more than the
 9             good conduct credit set  forth  for  the  enumerated
10             offense;
11                  (ii)  for   an   offense   not   enumerated  in
12             subdivision (a)(2)(i),  (a)(2)(ii),  or  (a)(2)(iii)
13             that  was  committed  on or after January 1, 2000, a
14             prisoner serving an additional and consecutive  term
15             of imprisonment imposed pursuant to paragraph (4) of
16             subsection  (c)  of  Section  5-5-3.3 of the Unified
17             Code of Corrections shall receive no more  than  4.5
18             days  of  good conduct credit for each month of that
19             additional and consecutive sentence of imprisonment;
20             and
21                  (iii)  for  an  offense   not   enumerated   in
22             subdivision  (a)(2)(i),  (a)(2)(ii),  or (a)(2)(iii)
23             that was committed on or after January  1,  2000,  a
24             prisoner  serving an additional and consecutive term
25             of imprisonment imposed pursuant to a  provision  of
26             subsection  (c)  of  Section  5-5-3.3 of the Unified
27             Code of Corrections other than paragraph  (4)  shall
28             receive  good conduct credit for that additional and
29             consecutive sentence of  imprisonment  at  the  rate
30             provided under subdivision (a)(2.1) of this Section.
31             
32             (3)  The  rules  and  regulations shall also provide
33        that the Director may award up  to  180  days  additional
34        good  conduct  credit for meritorious service in specific
 
                            -26-              LRB9104147LDmbD
 1        instances as the Director deems proper;  except  that  no
 2        more  than 90 days of good conduct credit for meritorious
 3        service shall be awarded to any prisoner who is serving a
 4        sentence for conviction of first degree murder,  reckless
 5        homicide  while  under  the  influence  of alcohol or any
 6        other drug, aggravated kidnapping, kidnapping,  predatory
 7        criminal  sexual  assault of a child, aggravated criminal
 8        sexual assault, criminal sexual assault,  deviate  sexual
 9        assault,  aggravated  criminal  sexual  abuse, aggravated
10        indecent liberties with a child, indecent liberties  with
11        a  child,  child pornography, heinous battery, aggravated
12        battery of a spouse, aggravated battery of a spouse  with
13        a  firearm,  stalking,  aggravated  stalking,  aggravated
14        battery  of  a child, endangering the life or health of a
15        child, cruelty to  a  child,  or  narcotic  racketeering.
16        Notwithstanding  the  foregoing,  good conduct credit for
17        meritorious service shall not be awarded on a sentence of
18        imprisonment imposed for conviction of: (i)  one  of  the
19        offenses   enumerated  in  subdivision  (a)(2)  when  the
20        offense is committed on or after June 19,  1998  or  (ii)
21        reckless homicide as defined in subsection (e) of Section
22        9-3  of  the  Criminal  Code  of 1961 when the offense is
23        committed on or after January 1, 1999 the effective  date
24        of this amendatory Act of 1998.
25             (4)  The  rules  and  regulations shall also provide
26        that the good conduct  credit  accumulated  and  retained
27        under  paragraph  (2.1) of subsection (a) of this Section
28        by any inmate during specific periods of  time  in  which
29        such  inmate  is  engaged  full-time  in  substance abuse
30        programs,   correctional   industry    assignments,    or
31        educational  programs  provided  by  the Department under
32        this  paragraph  (4)  and  satisfactorily  completes  the
33        assigned program as determined by the  standards  of  the
34        Department,  shall  be multiplied by a factor of 1.25 for
 
                            -27-              LRB9104147LDmbD
 1        program participation before August 11, 1993 and 1.50 for
 2        program participation on or after that date.  However, no
 3        inmate shall be eligible for the additional good  conduct
 4        credit  under this paragraph (4) while assigned to a boot
 5        camp, mental health unit, or electronic detention, or  if
 6        convicted of an offense enumerated in paragraph (a)(2) of
 7        this Section that is committed on or after June 19, 1998
 8        the  effective date of this amendatory Act of 1998, or if
 9        convicted of reckless homicide as defined  in  subsection
10        (e)  of  Section  9-3 of the Criminal Code of 1961 if the
11        offense is committed on or  after  January  1,  1999,  or
12        first  degree  murder,  a Class X felony, criminal sexual
13        assault,  felony  criminal   sexual   abuse,   aggravated
14        criminal sexual abuse, aggravated battery with a firearm,
15        or any predecessor or successor offenses with the same or
16        substantially the same elements, or any inchoate offenses
17        relating  to  the foregoing offenses.  No inmate shall be
18        eligible for the additional  good  conduct  credit  under
19        this  paragraph  (4)  who  (i)  has  previously  received
20        increased  good  conduct  credit under this paragraph (4)
21        and has subsequently been convicted of a felony, or  (ii)
22        has  previously  served  more  than one prior sentence of
23        imprisonment  for  a  felony  in  an  adult  correctional
24        facility.
25             Educational,   vocational,   substance   abuse   and
26        correctional industry programs under which  good  conduct
27        credit may be increased under this paragraph (4) shall be
28        evaluated  by  the  Department on the basis of documented
29        standards.  The Department shall report  the  results  of
30        these   evaluations  to  the  Governor  and  the  General
31        Assembly by September 30th of  each  year.   The  reports
32        shall  include data relating to the recidivism rate among
33        program participants.
34             Availability of these programs shall be  subject  to
 
                            -28-              LRB9104147LDmbD
 1        the  limits  of  fiscal  resources  appropriated  by  the
 2        General  Assembly  for  these purposes.  Eligible inmates
 3        who are denied immediate admission shall be placed  on  a
 4        waiting   list   under   criteria   established   by  the
 5        Department. The inability of any inmate to become engaged
 6        in any such programs by reason  of  insufficient  program
 7        resources  or  for any other reason established under the
 8        rules and regulations of  the  Department  shall  not  be
 9        deemed  a  cause  of action under which the Department or
10        any employee or agent of the Department shall  be  liable
11        for damages to the inmate.
12             (5)  Whenever  the  Department  is  to  release  any
13        inmate earlier than it otherwise would because of a grant
14        of  good  conduct credit for meritorious service given at
15        any time during  the  term,  the  Department  shall  give
16        reasonable advance notice of the impending release to the
17        State's  Attorney  of the county where the prosecution of
18        the inmate took place.
19        (b)  Whenever a person is or  has  been  committed  under
20    several  convictions,  with separate sentences, the sentences
21    shall be  construed  under  Section  5-8-4  in  granting  and
22    forfeiting of good time.
23        (c)  The Department shall prescribe rules and regulations
24    for  revoking  good conduct credit, or suspending or reducing
25    the rate of accumulation of good conduct credit for  specific
26    rule   violations,  during  imprisonment.   These  rules  and
27    regulations shall provide that no  inmate  may  be  penalized
28    more  than  one  year  of  good  conduct  credit  for any one
29    infraction.
30        When the Department seeks to revoke,  suspend  or  reduce
31    the  rate  of accumulation of any good conduct credits for an
32    alleged infraction of  its  rules,  it  shall  bring  charges
33    therefor  against  the  prisoner  sought to be so deprived of
34    good conduct credits before  the  Prisoner  Review  Board  as
 
                            -29-              LRB9104147LDmbD
 1    provided  in  subparagraph  (a)(4)  of  Section 3-3-2 of this
 2    Code, if the amount of credit at issue  exceeds  30  days  or
 3    when  during  any  12  month period, the cumulative amount of
 4    credit revoked exceeds 30 days except where the infraction is
 5    committed or discovered within 60 days of scheduled  release.
 6    In  those  cases, the Department of Corrections may revoke up
 7    to 30 days of good conduct credit. The Board may subsequently
 8    approve the revocation of additional good conduct credit,  if
 9    the  Department seeks to revoke good conduct credit in excess
10    of 30 days.  However, the Board shall  not  be  empowered  to
11    review  the Department's decision with respect to the loss of
12    30 days of good conduct credit within any calendar  year  for
13    any  prisoner  or  to  increase any penalty beyond the length
14    requested by the Department.
15        The  Director  of  the  Department  of  Corrections,   in
16    appropriate  cases,  may  restore  up to 30 days good conduct
17    credits which have been revoked, suspended  or  reduced.  Any
18    restoration  of  good  conduct  credits  in excess of 30 days
19    shall be subject to review  by  the  Prisoner  Review  Board.
20    However,  the  Board  may  not restore good conduct credit in
21    excess of the amount requested by the Director.
22        Nothing contained in  this  Section  shall  prohibit  the
23    Prisoner  Review  Board  from  ordering,  pursuant to Section
24    3-3-9(a)(3)(i)(B), that a prisoner serve up to  one  year  of
25    the  sentence imposed by the court that was not served due to
26    the accumulation of good conduct credit.
27        (d)  If a lawsuit is filed by a prisoner in  an  Illinois
28    or  federal  court  against  the  State,  the  Department  of
29    Corrections,  or the Prisoner Review Board, or against any of
30    their officers or employees, and the court makes  a  specific
31    finding  that a pleading, motion, or other paper filed by the
32    prisoner is frivolous, the Department  of  Corrections  shall
33    conduct  a  hearing  to revoke up to 180 days of good conduct
34    credit by bringing charges against the prisoner sought to  be
 
                            -30-              LRB9104147LDmbD
 1    deprived  of  the  good  conduct  credits before the Prisoner
 2    Review Board as provided in subparagraph  (a)(8)  of  Section
 3    3-3-2  of  this Code. If the prisoner has not accumulated 180
 4    days of good conduct credit at the time of the finding,  then
 5    the  Prisoner Review Board may revoke all good conduct credit
 6    accumulated by the prisoner.
 7        For purposes of this subsection (d):
 8             (1)  "Frivolous" means that a pleading,  motion,  or
 9        other  filing which purports to be a legal document filed
10        by a prisoner in his or her lawsuit meets any or  all  of
11        the following criteria:
12                  (A)  it  lacks  an arguable basis either in law
13             or in fact;
14                  (B)  it is being  presented  for  any  improper
15             purpose,  such  as to harass or to cause unnecessary
16             delay  or  needless  increase   in   the   cost   of
17             litigation;
18                  (C)  the  claims,  defenses,  and  other  legal
19             contentions  therein  are  not warranted by existing
20             law or by a nonfrivolous argument for the extension,
21             modification, or reversal of  existing  law  or  the
22             establishment of new law;
23                  (D)  the    allegations   and   other   factual
24             contentions do not have evidentiary support  or,  if
25             specifically  so  identified, are not likely to have
26             evidentiary support after a  reasonable  opportunity
27             for further investigation or discovery; or
28                  (E)  the denials of factual contentions are not
29             warranted  on  the  evidence,  or if specifically so
30             identified, are not reasonably based on  a  lack  of
31             information or belief.
32             (2)  "Lawsuit"  means a petition for post-conviction
33        relief  under  Article  122  of  the  Code  of   Criminal
34        Procedure  of 1963, a motion pursuant to Section 116-3 of
 
                            -31-              LRB9104147LDmbD
 1        the Code of Criminal Procedure of 1963, a  habeas  corpus
 2        action  under Article X of the Code of Civil Procedure or
 3        under federal law (28 U.S.C. 2254), a petition for  claim
 4        under  the  Court  of  Claims  Act or an action under the
 5        federal Civil Rights Act (42 U.S.C. 1983).
 6        (e)  Nothing in this amendatory Act of 1998  affects  the
 7    validity of Public Act 89-404.  and other than the offense of
 8    reckless homicide as defined in subsection (e) of Section 9-3
 9    of  the  Criminal  Code  of  1961  committed  on or after the
10    effective date of this amendatory Act  of  1998,  (2.3)   The
11    rules  and  regulations on early release shall provide that a
12    prisoner who is serving sentence  for  reckless  homicide  as
13    defined in subsection (e) of Section 9-3 of the Criminal Code
14    of  1961  committed  on  or  after the effective date of this
15    amendatory Act of 1998 shall receive no more than 4.5 days of
16    good conduct credit for each month of his or her sentence  of
17    imprisonment.:  (i)  or  (ii) reckless homicide as defined in
18    subsection (e) of Section 9-3 of the Criminal  Code  of  1961
19    when  the offense is committed on or after the effective date
20    of this amendatory Act of 1998 or if  convicted  of  reckless
21    homicide  as  defined in subsection (e) of Section 9-3 of the
22    Criminal Code of 1961 if the offense is committed on or after
23    the effective date of this amendatory Act of 1998,
24    (Source: P.A. 90-592, eff.  6-19-98;  90-593,  eff.  6-19-98;
25    90-655, eff. 7-30-98; 90-740, eff. 1-1-99; revised 11-25-98.)

26        (730 ILCS 5/5-4-1) (from Ch. 38, par. 1005-4-1)
27        Sec. 5-4-1.  Sentencing Hearing.
28        (a)  Except  when  the  death  penalty  is  sought  under
29    hearing procedures otherwise specified, after a determination
30    of  guilt,  a  hearing  shall be held to impose the sentence.
31    However, prior to the imposition of sentence on an individual
32    being sentenced for an offense based  upon  a  charge  for  a
33    violation of Section 11-501 of the Illinois Vehicle Code or a
 
                            -32-              LRB9104147LDmbD
 1    similar  provision  of a local ordinance, the individual must
 2    undergo a professional evaluation to determine if an  alcohol
 3    or  other  drug abuse problem exists and the extent of such a
 4    problem.  Programs  conducting  these  evaluations  shall  be
 5    licensed  by  the  Department of Human Services.  However, if
 6    the individual is not a resident of Illinois, the court  may,
 7    in its discretion, accept an evaluation from a program in the
 8    state  of  such  individual's residence. The court may in its
 9    sentencing order approve an eligible defendant for  placement
10    in  a  Department of Corrections impact incarceration program
11    as provided in Section 5-8-1.1.  At  the  hearing  the  court
12    shall:
13             (1)  consider  the  evidence,  if any, received upon
14        the trial;
15             (2)  consider any presentence reports;
16             (3)  consider the financial impact of  incarceration
17        based  on  the  financial impact statement filed with the
18        clerk of the court by the Department of Corrections;
19             (4)  consider evidence and  information  offered  by
20        the parties in aggravation and mitigation;
21             (5)  hear arguments as to sentencing alternatives;
22             (6)  afford  the defendant the opportunity to make a
23        statement in his own behalf;
24             (7)  afford the victim  of  a  violent  crime  or  a
25        violation of Section 11-501 of the Illinois Vehicle Code,
26        or a similar provision of a local ordinance, committed by
27        the   defendant  the  opportunity  to  make  a  statement
28        concerning the impact on the victim and to offer evidence
29        in aggravation or mitigation; provided that the statement
30        and evidence offered in aggravation  or  mitigation  must
31        first  be  prepared  in  writing  in conjunction with the
32        State's Attorney before it may be presented orally at the
33        hearing. Any sworn testimony offered  by  the  victim  is
34        subject  to  the  defendant's right to cross-examine. All
 
                            -33-              LRB9104147LDmbD
 1        statements and evidence offered under this paragraph  (7)
 2        shall become part of the record of the court; and
 3             (8)  in   cases  of  reckless  homicide  afford  the
 4        victim's spouse, guardians, parents  or  other  immediate
 5        family members an opportunity to make oral statements.
 6        (b)  All  sentences  shall  be imposed by the judge based
 7    upon his independent assessment  of  the  elements  specified
 8    above  and  any  agreement  as  to  sentence  reached  by the
 9    parties.  The judge who presided at the trial  or  the  judge
10    who  accepted  the  plea  of guilty shall impose the sentence
11    unless he is no longer sitting as  a  judge  in  that  court.
12    Where  the judge does not impose sentence at the same time on
13    all defendants  who  are  convicted  as  a  result  of  being
14    involved  in  the  same offense, the defendant or the State's
15    Attorney may advise the sentencing court of  the  disposition
16    of any other defendants who have been sentenced.
17        (c)  In imposing a sentence for a violent crime or for an
18    offense  of  operating  or  being  in  physical  control of a
19    vehicle while under the influence of alcohol, any other  drug
20    or any combination thereof, or a similar provision of a local
21    ordinance,  when such offense resulted in the personal injury
22    to someone other than the defendant, the  trial  judge  shall
23    specify  on  the record the particular evidence, information,
24    factors in mitigation and aggravation or other  reasons  that
25    led to his sentencing determination. The full verbatim record
26    of  the  sentencing  hearing shall be filed with the clerk of
27    the court and shall be a public record.
28        (c-1)  In  imposing  a  sentence  for  the   offense   of
29    aggravated   kidnapping  for  ransom,  home  invasion,  armed
30    robbery, aggravated vehicular hijacking, aggravated discharge
31    of a firearm, or armed violence with a category I  weapon  or
32    category  II  weapon, the trial judge shall make a finding as
33    to whether the conduct leading to conviction for the  offense
34    resulted  in  great  bodily harm to a victim, and shall enter
 
                            -34-              LRB9104147LDmbD
 1    that finding and the basis for that finding in the record.
 2        (c-2)  If the defendant is  sentenced  to  prison,  other
 3    than  when  a  sentence  of  natural  life  imprisonment or a
 4    sentence of death is imposed, at the  time  the  sentence  is
 5    imposed the judge shall state on the record in open court the
 6    approximate  period  of  time  the  defendant  will  serve in
 7    custody according to the then  current  statutory  rules  and
 8    regulations  for  early  release  found  in Section 3-6-3 and
 9    other related provisions of this  Code.   This  statement  is
10    intended  solely to inform the public, has no legal effect on
11    the defendant's actual release, and may not be relied  on  by
12    the defendant on appeal.
13        The  judge's statement, to be given after pronouncing the
14    sentence, other than when the sentence is imposed for one  of
15    the offenses enumerated in paragraph (a)(3) of Section 3-6-3,
16    shall include the following:
17        "The purpose of this statement is to inform the public of
18    the  actual  period of time this defendant is likely to spend
19    in prison as a result of this sentence.  The actual period of
20    prison time served is determined by the statutes of  Illinois
21    as  applied  to  this  sentence by the Illinois Department of
22    Corrections and the Illinois Prisoner Review Board.  In  this
23    case,  assuming the defendant receives all of his or her good
24    conduct credit, the period of estimated actual custody is ...
25    years and ... months, less up to  180  days  additional  good
26    conduct  credit  for  meritorious service.  If the defendant,
27    because of his or her own misconduct  or  failure  to  comply
28    with  the  institutional  regulations, does not receive those
29    credits, the actual time served in  prison  will  be  longer.
30    The  defendant  may  also  receive an additional one-half day
31    good  conduct  credit  for  each  day  of  participation   in
32    vocational,   industry,   substance  abuse,  and  educational
33    programs as provided for by Illinois statute."
34        When the sentence is imposed  for  one  of  the  offenses
 
                            -35-              LRB9104147LDmbD
 1    enumerated  in  paragraph (a)(3) of Section 3-6-3, other than
 2    when  the  sentence  is  imposed  for  one  of  the  offenses
 3    enumerated in paragraph (a)(2) of Section 3-6-3 committed  on
 4    or  after June 19, 1998 the effective date of this amendatory
 5    Act of 1998, and other than when the sentence is imposed  for
 6    reckless homicide as defined in subsection (e) of Section 9-3
 7    of  the Criminal Code of 1961 if the offense was committed on
 8    or after January 1, 1999, the judge's statement, to be  given
 9    after pronouncing the sentence, shall include the following:
10        "The purpose of this statement is to inform the public of
11    the  actual  period of time this defendant is likely to spend
12    in prison as a result of this sentence.  The actual period of
13    prison time served is determined by the statutes of  Illinois
14    as  applied  to  this  sentence by the Illinois Department of
15    Corrections and the Illinois Prisoner Review Board.  In  this
16    case,  assuming the defendant receives all of his or her good
17    conduct credit, the period of estimated actual custody is ...
18    years and ... months, less up  to  90  days  additional  good
19    conduct  credit  for  meritorious service.  If the defendant,
20    because of his or her own misconduct  or  failure  to  comply
21    with  the  institutional  regulations, does not receive those
22    credits, the actual time served in  prison  will  be  longer.
23    The  defendant  may  also  receive an additional one-half day
24    good  conduct  credit  for  each  day  of  participation   in
25    vocational,   industry,   substance  abuse,  and  educational
26    programs as provided for by Illinois statute."
27        When the sentence is imposed  for  one  of  the  offenses
28    enumerated  in  paragraph (a)(2) of Section 3-6-3, other than
29    first degree murder, and the  offense  was  committed  on  or
30    after June 19, 1998 the effective date of this amendatory Act
31    of  1998,  and  when  the  sentence  is  imposed for reckless
32    homicide as defined in subsection (e) of Section 9-3  of  the
33    Criminal  Code  of  1961  if  the offense was committed on or
34    after January 1, 1999, the judge's  statement,  to  be  given
 
                            -36-              LRB9104147LDmbD
 1    after pronouncing the sentence, shall include the following:
 2        "The purpose of this statement is to inform the public of
 3    the  actual  period of time this defendant is likely to spend
 4    in prison as a result of this sentence.  The actual period of
 5    prison time served is determined by the statutes of  Illinois
 6    as  applied  to  this  sentence by the Illinois Department of
 7    Corrections and the Illinois Prisoner Review Board.  In  this
 8    case, the defendant is entitled to no more than 4 1/2 days of
 9    good  conduct credit for each month of his or her sentence of
10    imprisonment.  Therefore, this defendant will serve at  least
11    85%  of his or her sentence.  Assuming the defendant receives
12    4 1/2 days credit for each month of his or her sentence,  the
13    period  of  estimated  actual  custody  is  ... years and ...
14    months.   If  the  defendant,  because  of  his  or  her  own
15    misconduct  or  failure  to  comply  with  the  institutional
16    regulations receives lesser credit, the actual time served in
17    prison will be longer."
18        When a sentence of  imprisonment  is  imposed  for  first
19    degree  murder and the offense was committed on or after June
20    19, 1998 the effective date of this amendatory Act  of  1998,
21    the  judge's  statement,  to  be  given after pronouncing the
22    sentence, shall include the following:
23        "The purpose of this statement is to inform the public of
24    the actual period of time this defendant is likely  to  spend
25    in prison as a result of this sentence.  The actual period of
26    prison  time served is determined by the statutes of Illinois
27    as applied to this sentence by  the  Illinois  Department  of
28    Corrections  and the Illinois Prisoner Review Board.  In this
29    case, the defendant is not entitled to good  conduct  credit.
30    Therefore,  this  defendant  will  serve  100%  of his or her
31    sentence."
32        (d)  When the defendant is committed to the Department of
33    Corrections, the State's Attorney shall and counsel  for  the
34    defendant may file a statement with the clerk of the court to
 
                            -37-              LRB9104147LDmbD
 1    be  transmitted  to  the department, agency or institution to
 2    which the defendant is committed to furnish such  department,
 3    agency or institution with the facts and circumstances of the
 4    offense  for which the person was committed together with all
 5    other factual information accessible to them in regard to the
 6    person prior  to  his  commitment  relative  to  his  habits,
 7    associates,  disposition  and  reputation and any other facts
 8    and circumstances which may aid such  department,  agency  or
 9    institution  during  its  custody  of such person.  The clerk
10    shall within 10 days  after  receiving  any  such  statements
11    transmit a copy to such department, agency or institution and
12    a copy to the other party, provided, however, that this shall
13    not  be  cause  for  delay  in  conveying  the  person to the
14    department, agency  or  institution  to  which  he  has  been
15    committed.
16        (e)  The  clerk  of  the  court  shall  transmit  to  the
17    department,  agency  or  institution,  if  any,  to which the
18    defendant is committed, the following:
19             (1)  the sentence imposed;
20             (2)  any statement by the court  of  the  basis  for
21        imposing the sentence;
22             (3)  any presentence reports;
23             (4)  the number of days, if any, which the defendant
24        has  been  in  custody  and  for  which he is entitled to
25        credit against the sentence, which information  shall  be
26        provided to the clerk by the sheriff;
27             (4.1)  any  finding of great bodily harm made by the
28        court with respect to an offense enumerated in subsection
29        (c-1);
30             (5)  all statements filed under  subsection  (d)  of
31        this Section;
32             (6)  any   medical   or  mental  health  records  or
33        summaries of the defendant;
34             (7)  the  municipality  where  the  arrest  of   the
 
                            -38-              LRB9104147LDmbD
 1        offender  or  the commission of the offense has occurred,
 2        where such municipality has a  population  of  more  than
 3        25,000 persons;
 4             (8)  all  statements made and evidence offered under
 5        paragraph (7) of subsection (a) of this Section; and
 6             (9)  all additional matters which the court  directs
 7        the  clerk  to transmit. and other than when the sentence
 8        is imposed for reckless homicide as defined in subsection
 9        (e) of Section 9-3 of the Criminal Code of  1961  if  the
10        offense  was  committed on or after the effective date of
11        this amendatory Act of 1998, and  when  the  sentence  is
12        imposed  for  reckless  homicide as defined in subsection
13        (e) of Section 9-3 of the Criminal Code of  1961  if  the
14        offense  was  committed on or after the effective date of
15        this amendatory Act of 1998,
16    (Source: P.A. 89-404,  eff.  8-20-95;  89-507,  eff.  7-1-97;
17    90-592,  eff.  6-19-98;  90-593,  eff.  6-19-98; 90-740, eff.
18    1-1-99; revised 9-16-98.)

19        (730 ILCS 5/5-5-3) (from Ch. 38, par. 1005-5-3)
20        Sec. 5-5-3.  Disposition.
21        (a)  Every  person  convicted  of  an  offense  shall  be
22    sentenced as provided in this Section.
23        (b)  The   following   options   shall   be   appropriate
24    dispositions, alone or in combination, for all  felonies  and
25    misdemeanors other than those identified in subsection (c) of
26    this Section:
27             (1)  A period of probation.
28             (2)  A term of periodic imprisonment.
29             (3)  A term of conditional discharge.
30             (4)  A term of imprisonment.
31             (5)  An order directing the offender to clean up and
32        repair  the  damage,  if the offender was convicted under
33        paragraph (h) of Section 21-1 of  the  Criminal  Code  of
 
                            -39-              LRB9104147LDmbD
 1        1961.
 2             (6)  A fine.
 3             (7)  An   order   directing  the  offender  to  make
 4        restitution to the victim under  Section  5-5-6  of  this
 5        Code.
 6             (8)  A  sentence of participation in a county impact
 7        incarceration program under Section 5-8-1.2 of this Code.
 8        Whenever an individual is sentenced for an offense  based
 9    upon  an  arrest  for  a  violation  of Section 11-501 of the
10    Illinois Vehicle Code, or a  similar  provision  of  a  local
11    ordinance,   and   the   professional  evaluation  recommends
12    remedial or rehabilitative treatment  or  education,  neither
13    the treatment nor the education shall be the sole disposition
14    and  either  or  both may be imposed only in conjunction with
15    another disposition. The court shall monitor compliance  with
16    any remedial education or treatment recommendations contained
17    in  the professional evaluation.  Programs conducting alcohol
18    or other  drug  evaluation  or  remedial  education  must  be
19    licensed  by  the  Department of Human Services.  However, if
20    the individual is not a resident of Illinois, the  court  may
21    accept  an  alcohol  or  other  drug  evaluation  or remedial
22    education  program  in  the  state   of   such   individual's
23    residence.   Programs  providing  treatment  must be licensed
24    under  existing  applicable  alcoholism  and  drug  treatment
25    licensure standards.
26        In addition to any other fine or penalty required by law,
27    any individual convicted of a violation of Section 11-501  of
28    the  Illinois  Vehicle  Code  or a similar provision of local
29    ordinance, whose  operation  of  a  motor  vehicle  while  in
30    violation  of  Section  11-501  or such ordinance proximately
31    caused an incident  resulting  in  an  appropriate  emergency
32    response,  shall  be required to make restitution to a public
33    agency for  the  costs  of  that  emergency  response.   Such
34    restitution  shall not exceed $500 per public agency for each
 
                            -40-              LRB9104147LDmbD
 1    such emergency response.  For the purpose of this  paragraph,
 2    emergency  response  shall  mean  any  incident  requiring  a
 3    response  by: a police officer as defined under Section 1-162
 4    of the Illinois Vehicle Code; a fireman carried on the  rolls
 5    of  a regularly constituted fire department; and an ambulance
 6    as defined  under  Section  4.05  of  the  Emergency  Medical
 7    Services (EMS) Systems Act.
 8        Neither   a  fine  nor  restitution  shall  be  the  sole
 9    disposition for a felony and either or both  may  be  imposed
10    only in conjunction with another disposition.
11        (c) (1)  When a defendant is found guilty of first degree
12        murder   the   State   may  either  seek  a  sentence  of
13        imprisonment under Section 5-8-1 of this Code,  or  where
14        appropriate seek a sentence of death under Section 9-1 of
15        the Criminal Code of 1961.
16             (2)  A  period  of  probation,  a  term  of periodic
17        imprisonment  or  conditional  discharge  shall  not   be
18        imposed  for  the  following  offenses.  The  court shall
19        sentence the offender to not less than the  minimum  term
20        of  imprisonment set forth in this Code for the following
21        offenses, and may order a fine or restitution or both  in
22        conjunction with such term of imprisonment:
23                  (A)  First   degree   murder  where  the  death
24             penalty is not imposed.
25                  (B)  Attempted first degree murder.
26                  (C)  A Class X felony.
27                  (D)  A violation of Section 401.1 or 407 of the
28             Illinois Controlled Substances Act, or  a  violation
29             of  subdivision  (c)(2)  of  Section 401 of that Act
30             which relates to more than 5 grams  of  a  substance
31             containing cocaine or an analog thereof.
32                  (E)  A  violation  of  Section  5.1 or 9 of the
33             Cannabis Control Act.
34                  (F)  A  Class  2  or  greater  felony  if   the
 
                            -41-              LRB9104147LDmbD
 1             offender  had been convicted of a Class 2 or greater
 2             felony within 10 years  of  the  date  on  which  he
 3             committed   the   offense  for  which  he  is  being
 4             sentenced.
 5                  (G)  Residential burglary.
 6                  (H)  Criminal   sexual   assault,   except   as
 7             otherwise  provided  in  subsection  (e)   of   this
 8             Section.
 9                  (I)  Aggravated battery of a senior citizen.
10                  (J)  A  forcible  felony  if  the  offense  was
11             related to the activities of an organized gang.
12                  Before  July  1, 1994, for the purposes of this
13             paragraph, "organized gang" means an association  of
14             5  or  more  persons, with an established hierarchy,
15             that  encourages  members  of  the  association   to
16             perpetrate crimes or provides support to the members
17             of the association who do commit crimes.
18                  Beginning  July  1,  1994,  for the purposes of
19             this paragraph, "organized  gang"  has  the  meaning
20             ascribed  to  it  in  Section  10  of  the  Illinois
21             Streetgang Terrorism Omnibus Prevention Act.
22                  (K)  Vehicular hijacking.
23                  (L)  A  second or subsequent conviction for the
24             offense of hate crime when  the  underlying  offense
25             upon  which  the  hate  crime  is  based  is  felony
26             aggravated assault or felony mob action.
27                  (M)  A  second or subsequent conviction for the
28             offense of institutional vandalism if the damage  to
29             the property exceeds $300.
30                  (N)  A  Class  3  felony violation of paragraph
31             (1) of subsection (a) of Section 2  of  the  Firearm
32             Owners Identification Card Act.
33                  (O)  A  violation  of  Section  12-6.1  of  the
34             Criminal Code of 1961.
 
                            -42-              LRB9104147LDmbD
 1                  (P)  A  violation  of  paragraph (1), (2), (3),
 2             (4), (5),  or  (7)  of  subsection  (a)  of  Section
 3             11-20.1 of the Criminal Code of 1961.
 4                  (Q)  A  violation  of  Section  20-1.2  of  the
 5             Criminal Code of 1961.
 6                  (R)  (Q)  A  violation  of Section 24-3A of the
 7             Criminal Code of 1961.
 8                  (S)  An additional term of imprisonment imposed
 9             pursuant to subsection (c) of Section 5-5-3.3 of the
10             Unified Code of Corrections.
11             (3)  A minimum term of imprisonment of not less than
12        48 consecutive hours or 100 hours of community service as
13        may be determined by the court shall  be  imposed  for  a
14        second  or  subsequent violation committed within 5 years
15        of a previous violation of Section 11-501 of the Illinois
16        Vehicle Code or a similar provision of a local ordinance.
17             (4)  A minimum term of imprisonment of not less than
18        7 consecutive days or 30 days of community service  shall
19        be  imposed  for  a violation of paragraph (c) of Section
20        6-303 of the Illinois Vehicle Code.
21             (4.1)  A minimum term  of  30  consecutive  days  of
22        imprisonment, 40 days of 24 hour periodic imprisonment or
23        720  hours  of community service, as may be determined by
24        the court, shall be imposed for a  violation  of  Section
25        11-501  of  the  Illinois Vehicle Code during a period in
26        which the defendant's driving privileges are  revoked  or
27        suspended,  where  the revocation or suspension was for a
28        violation of Section 11-501 or Section 11-501.1  of  that
29        Code.
30             (5)  The court may sentence an offender convicted of
31        a business offense or a petty offense or a corporation or
32        unincorporated association convicted of any offense to:
33                  (A)  a period of conditional discharge;
34                  (B)  a fine;
 
                            -43-              LRB9104147LDmbD
 1                  (C)  make   restitution  to  the  victim  under
 2             Section 5-5-6 of this Code.
 3             (6)  In no case shall an offender be eligible for  a
 4        disposition  of  probation or conditional discharge for a
 5        Class 1 felony committed while he was serving a  term  of
 6        probation or conditional discharge for a felony.
 7             (7)  When   a   defendant  is  adjudged  a  habitual
 8        criminal under Article 33B of the Criminal Code of  1961,
 9        the  court  shall  sentence  the  defendant  to a term of
10        natural life imprisonment.
11             (8)  When a defendant, over the age of 21 years,  is
12        convicted  of  a  Class 1 or Class 2 felony, after having
13        twice been convicted of any  Class  2  or  greater  Class
14        felonies  in  Illinois,  and  such charges are separately
15        brought and tried and arise out of  different  series  of
16        acts,  such  defendant  shall  be  sentenced as a Class X
17        offender. This paragraph shall not apply unless  (1)  the
18        first  felony  was  committed after the effective date of
19        this amendatory Act of 1977; and (2)  the  second  felony
20        was  committed after conviction on the first; and (3) the
21        third  felony  was  committed  after  conviction  on  the
22        second.
23             (9)  A defendant convicted of a second or subsequent
24        offense of ritualized abuse of a child may  be  sentenced
25        to a term of natural life imprisonment.
26             (10)  Beginning  July  1,  1994,  unless  sentencing
27        under Section 33B-1 is applicable, a term of imprisonment
28        of not less than 15 years nor more than 50 years shall be
29        imposed  on a defendant who violates Section 33A-2 of the
30        Criminal Code of 1961 with a firearm,  when  that  person
31        has  been convicted in any state or federal court of 3 or
32        more of the following  offenses:  treason,  first  degree
33        murder,  second  degree murder, predatory criminal sexual
34        assault of a child, aggravated criminal  sexual  assault,
 
                            -44-              LRB9104147LDmbD
 1        criminal   sexual   assault,  robbery,  burglary,  arson,
 2        kidnaping, aggravated battery resulting in  great  bodily
 3        harm  or  permanent  disability  or  disfigurement,  or a
 4        violation of Section 401(a) of  the  Illinois  Controlled
 5        Substances  Act,  when  the  third  offense was committed
 6        after conviction on the second, the  second  offense  was
 7        committed   after   conviction  on  the  first,  and  the
 8        violation of Section 33A-2 of the Criminal Code  of  1961
 9        was committed after conviction on the third.
10             (11)  Beginning July 1, 1994, a term of imprisonment
11        of  not  less  than  10  years and not more than 30 years
12        shall be imposed on  a  defendant  who  violates  Section
13        33A-2  with  a  Category  I  weapon where the offense was
14        committed in any school, or any conveyance owned, leased,
15        or contracted by a school to  transport  students  to  or
16        from  school  or  a  school related activity, on the real
17        property comprising any school or public park, and  where
18        the offense was related to the activities of an organized
19        gang.    For   the   purposes  of  this  paragraph  (11),
20        "organized gang"  has  the  meaning  ascribed  to  it  in
21        Section  10  of the Illinois Streetgang Terrorism Omnibus
22        Prevention Act.
23        (d)  In any case in which a sentence  originally  imposed
24    is  vacated,  the  case shall be remanded to the trial court.
25    The trial court shall hold a hearing under Section  5-4-1  of
26    the Unified Code of Corrections which may include evidence of
27    the  defendant's  life, moral character and occupation during
28    the time since the original sentence was passed.   The  trial
29    court  shall  then  impose  sentence upon the defendant.  The
30    trial court may impose any sentence  which  could  have  been
31    imposed at the original trial subject to Section 5-5-4 of the
32    Unified Code of Corrections.
33        (e)  In  cases  where  prosecution  for  criminal  sexual
34    assault  or  aggravated  criminal  sexual abuse under Section
 
                            -45-              LRB9104147LDmbD
 1    12-13 or 12-16 of  the  Criminal  Code  of  1961  results  in
 2    conviction  of  a  defendant  who  was a family member of the
 3    victim at the time of the  commission  of  the  offense,  the
 4    court shall consider the safety and welfare of the victim and
 5    may impose a sentence of probation only where:
 6             (1)  the   court  finds  (A)  or  (B)  or  both  are
 7        appropriate:
 8                  (A)  the defendant  is  willing  to  undergo  a
 9             court  approved  counseling  program  for  a minimum
10             duration of 2 years; or
11                  (B)  the defendant is willing to participate in
12             a court approved plan including but not  limited  to
13             the defendant's:
14                       (i)  removal from the household;
15                       (ii)  restricted contact with the victim;
16                       (iii)  continued  financial support of the
17                  family;
18                       (iv)  restitution for  harm  done  to  the
19                  victim; and
20                       (v)  compliance  with  any  other measures
21                  that the court may deem appropriate; and
22             (2)  the court orders the defendant to pay  for  the
23        victim's  counseling  services,  to  the  extent that the
24        court finds, after considering the defendant's income and
25        assets, that the  defendant  is  financially  capable  of
26        paying  for  such  services,  if  the victim was under 18
27        years of age at the time the offense  was  committed  and
28        requires counseling as a result of the offense.
29        Probation  may be revoked or modified pursuant to Section
30    5-6-4; except where the court determines at the hearing  that
31    the  defendant  violated  a condition of his or her probation
32    restricting contact with the victim or other  family  members
33    or  commits  another  offense with the victim or other family
34    members, the court shall revoke the defendant's probation and
 
                            -46-              LRB9104147LDmbD
 1    impose a term of imprisonment.
 2        For the purposes of this  Section,  "family  member"  and
 3    "victim"  shall have the meanings ascribed to them in Section
 4    12-12 of the Criminal Code of 1961.
 5        (f)  This Article shall not  deprive  a  court  in  other
 6    proceedings  to order a forfeiture of property, to suspend or
 7    cancel a license, to remove  a  person  from  office,  or  to
 8    impose any other civil penalty.
 9        (g)  Whenever  a  defendant  is  convicted  of an offense
10    under Sections 11-14, 11-15, 11-15.1,  11-16,  11-17,  11-18,
11    11-18.1,  11-19,  11-19.1,  11-19.2,  12-13,  12-14, 12-14.1,
12    12-15 or 12-16 of the Criminal Code of  1961,  the  defendant
13    shall  undergo  medical  testing  to  determine  whether  the
14    defendant has any sexually transmissible disease, including a
15    test for infection with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) or
16    any    other   identified   causative   agent   of   acquired
17    immunodeficiency syndrome  (AIDS).   Any  such  medical  test
18    shall  be  performed  only  by appropriately licensed medical
19    practitioners and may  include  an  analysis  of  any  bodily
20    fluids  as  well as an examination of the defendant's person.
21    Except as otherwise provided by law, the results of such test
22    shall be kept strictly confidential by all medical  personnel
23    involved in the testing and must be personally delivered in a
24    sealed  envelope  to  the  judge  of  the  court in which the
25    conviction was entered for the judge's inspection in  camera.
26    Acting  in  accordance  with the best interests of the victim
27    and the public,  the  judge  shall  have  the  discretion  to
28    determine  to whom, if anyone, the results of the testing may
29    be revealed. The court shall notify the defendant of the test
30    results.  The court shall also notify the victim if requested
31    by the victim, and if the victim is under the age of  15  and
32    if  requested  by the victim's parents or legal guardian, the
33    court shall notify the victim's parents or legal guardian  of
34    the test results.  The court shall provide information on the
 
                            -47-              LRB9104147LDmbD
 1    availability  of  HIV testing and counseling at Department of
 2    Public Health facilities to all parties to whom  the  results
 3    of  the  testing  are  revealed  and shall direct the State's
 4    Attorney to  provide  the  information  to  the  victim  when
 5    possible. A State's Attorney may petition the court to obtain
 6    the  results of any HIV test administered under this Section,
 7    and the court shall  grant  the  disclosure  if  the  State's
 8    Attorney  shows it is relevant in order to prosecute a charge
 9    of criminal transmission of HIV under Section 12-16.2 of  the
10    Criminal Code of 1961 against the defendant.  The court shall
11    order  that  the  cost  of any such test shall be paid by the
12    county and may  be  taxed  as  costs  against  the  convicted
13    defendant.
14        (g-5)  When   an   inmate   is  tested  for  an  airborne
15    communicable  disease,  as   determined   by   the   Illinois
16    Department  of  Public  Health  including  but not limited to
17    tuberculosis, the results of the  test  shall  be  personally
18    delivered  by  the  warden or his or her designee in a sealed
19    envelope to the judge of the court in which the  inmate  must
20    appear  for  the judge's inspection in camera if requested by
21    the judge.  Acting in accordance with the best  interests  of
22    those  in  the courtroom, the judge shall have the discretion
23    to determine what if any precautions  need  to  be  taken  to
24    prevent transmission of the disease in the courtroom.
25        (h)  Whenever  a  defendant  is  convicted  of an offense
26    under Section 1 or 2 of the Hypodermic Syringes  and  Needles
27    Act, the defendant shall undergo medical testing to determine
28    whether   the   defendant   has   been   exposed   to   human
29    immunodeficiency   virus   (HIV)   or  any  other  identified
30    causative agent of acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS).
31    Except as otherwise provided by law, the results of such test
32    shall be kept strictly confidential by all medical  personnel
33    involved in the testing and must be personally delivered in a
34    sealed  envelope  to  the  judge  of  the  court in which the
 
                            -48-              LRB9104147LDmbD
 1    conviction was entered for the judge's inspection in  camera.
 2    Acting  in  accordance with the best interests of the public,
 3    the judge shall have the discretion to determine to whom,  if
 4    anyone, the results of the testing may be revealed. The court
 5    shall  notify  the  defendant  of  a positive test showing an
 6    infection with the human immunodeficiency  virus  (HIV).  The
 7    court  shall  provide  information on the availability of HIV
 8    testing  and  counseling  at  Department  of  Public   Health
 9    facilities  to all parties to whom the results of the testing
10    are revealed and shall direct the State's Attorney to provide
11    the information  to  the  victim  when  possible.  A  State's
12    Attorney  may petition the court to obtain the results of any
13    HIV test administered under  this   Section,  and  the  court
14    shall  grant  the disclosure if the State's Attorney shows it
15    is relevant in  order  to  prosecute  a  charge  of  criminal
16    transmission  of  HIV  under  Section 12-16.2 of the Criminal
17    Code of 1961 against the defendant.  The  court  shall  order
18    that  the  cost  of any such test shall be paid by the county
19    and may be taxed as costs against the convicted defendant.
20        (i)  All fines and penalties imposed under  this  Section
21    for any violation of Chapters 3, 4, 6, and 11 of the Illinois
22    Vehicle  Code,  or  a similar provision of a local ordinance,
23    and any violation of the Child Passenger Protection Act, or a
24    similar provision of a local ordinance,  shall  be  collected
25    and  disbursed by the circuit clerk as provided under Section
26    27.5 of the Clerks of Courts Act.
27        (j)  In cases  when  prosecution  for  any  violation  of
28    Section  11-6,  11-8,  11-9,  11-11,  11-14,  11-15, 11-15.1,
29    11-16,  11-17,  11-17.1,  11-18,  11-18.1,  11-19,   11-19.1,
30    11-19.2,  11-20.1,  11-21,  12-13,  12-14, 12-14.1, 12-15, or
31    12-16 of the Criminal Code of  1961,  any  violation  of  the
32    Illinois  Controlled  Substances Act, or any violation of the
33    Cannabis Control Act results in conviction, a disposition  of
34    court  supervision,  or  an  order of probation granted under
 
                            -49-              LRB9104147LDmbD
 1    Section 10 of the Cannabis Control Act or Section 410 of  the
 2    Illinois  Controlled  Substance Act of a defendant, the court
 3    shall determine  whether  the  defendant  is  employed  by  a
 4    facility  or  center  as  defined under the Child Care Act of
 5    1969, a public or private elementary or secondary school,  or
 6    otherwise  works  with  children  under  18 years of age on a
 7    daily basis.  When a defendant  is  so  employed,  the  court
 8    shall  order  the  Clerk  of  the Court to send a copy of the
 9    judgment of conviction or order of supervision  or  probation
10    to  the  defendant's  employer  by  certified  mail.  If  the
11    employer of the defendant is a school, the Clerk of the Court
12    shall  direct  the  mailing  of  a  copy  of  the judgment of
13    conviction or  order  of  supervision  or  probation  to  the
14    appropriate regional superintendent of schools.  The regional
15    superintendent  of  schools  shall  notify the State Board of
16    Education of any notification under this subsection.
17        (j-5)  A defendant at  least  17  years  of  age  who  is
18    convicted  of  a  felony  and  who  has  not  been previously
19    convicted of a misdemeanor or felony and who is sentenced  to
20    a   term  of  imprisonment  in  the  Illinois  Department  of
21    Corrections shall as a condition of his or  her  sentence  be
22    required  by the court to attend educational courses designed
23    to prepare the defendant for a high  school  diploma  and  to
24    work  toward  a high school diploma or to work toward passing
25    the high school level Test of General Educational Development
26    (GED) or to work  toward  completing  a  vocational  training
27    program  offered  by  the  Department  of  Corrections.  If a
28    defendant fails to complete the educational training required
29    by his or her sentence during the term of incarceration,  the
30    Prisoner  Review  Board  shall,  as  a condition of mandatory
31    supervised release, require the defendant, at his or her  own
32    expense,  to  pursue  a  course of study toward a high school
33    diploma or passage of the  GED  test.   The  Prisoner  Review
34    Board  shall  revoke  the  mandatory  supervised release of a
 
                            -50-              LRB9104147LDmbD
 1    defendant who wilfully fails to comply with  this  subsection
 2    (j-5)  upon  his  or  her release from confinement in a penal
 3    institution while  serving  a  mandatory  supervised  release
 4    term;  however, the inability of the defendant after making a
 5    good faith effort to obtain financial  aid  or  pay  for  the
 6    educational  training shall not be deemed a wilful failure to
 7    comply.   The  Prisoner  Review  Board  shall  recommit   the
 8    defendant  whose  mandatory  supervised release term has been
 9    revoked under this subsection (j-5) as  provided  in  Section
10    3-3-9.   This  subsection (j-5) does not apply to a defendant
11    who has a high school diploma or has successfully passed  the
12    GED test. This subsection (j-5) does not apply to a defendant
13    who is determined by the court to be developmentally disabled
14    or otherwise mentally incapable of completing the educational
15    or vocational program.
16        (k)  A court may not impose a sentence or disposition for
17    a  felony  or  misdemeanor  that requires the defendant to be
18    implanted or injected with  or  to  use  any  form  of  birth
19    control.
20        (l) (A)  Except   as   provided   in   paragraph  (C)  of
21        subsection (l), whenever a defendant, who is an alien  as
22        defined  by  the  Immigration  and  Nationality  Act,  is
23        convicted of any felony or misdemeanor offense, the court
24        after  sentencing  the  defendant may, upon motion of the
25        State's Attorney, hold sentence in  abeyance  and  remand
26        the  defendant  to the custody of the Attorney General of
27        the United States or his or her designated  agent  to  be
28        deported when:
29                  (1)  a  final  order  of  deportation  has been
30             issued against the defendant pursuant to proceedings
31             under the Immigration and Nationality Act, and
32                  (2)  the deportation of the defendant would not
33             deprecate the seriousness of the defendant's conduct
34             and would not  be  inconsistent  with  the  ends  of
 
                            -51-              LRB9104147LDmbD
 1             justice.
 2             Otherwise,  the  defendant  shall  be  sentenced  as
 3        provided in this Chapter V.
 4             (B)  If the defendant has already been sentenced for
 5        a  felony  or  misdemeanor offense, or has been placed on
 6        probation under Section 10 of the Cannabis Control Act or
 7        Section 410 of the Illinois  Controlled  Substances  Act,
 8        the  court  may,  upon  motion of the State's Attorney to
 9        suspend the sentence imposed, commit the defendant to the
10        custody of the Attorney General of the United  States  or
11        his or her designated agent when:
12                  (1)  a  final  order  of  deportation  has been
13             issued against the defendant pursuant to proceedings
14             under the Immigration and Nationality Act, and
15                  (2)  the deportation of the defendant would not
16             deprecate the seriousness of the defendant's conduct
17             and would not  be  inconsistent  with  the  ends  of
18             justice.
19             (C)  This subsection (l) does not apply to offenders
20        who  are  subject  to  the provisions of paragraph (2) of
21        subsection (a) of Section 3-6-3.
22             (D)  Upon motion  of  the  State's  Attorney,  if  a
23        defendant  sentenced  under  this  Section returns to the
24        jurisdiction of the United States, the defendant shall be
25        recommitted to the custody of the county from which he or
26        she was sentenced. Thereafter,  the  defendant  shall  be
27        brought before the sentencing court, which may impose any
28        sentence  that  was  available under Section 5-5-3 at the
29        time of initial sentencing.  In addition,  the  defendant
30        shall  not be eligible for additional good conduct credit
31        for meritorious service as provided under Section 3-6-6.
32        (m)  A  person  convicted  of  criminal   defacement   of
33    property  under  Section 21-1.3 of the Criminal Code of 1961,
34    in which the property damage exceeds $300  and  the  property
 
                            -52-              LRB9104147LDmbD
 1    damaged  is  a  school  building, shall be ordered to perform
 2    community service  that  may  include  cleanup,  removal,  or
 3    painting over the defacement.
 4    (Source: P.A.   89-8,  eff.  3-21-95;  89-314,  eff.  1-1-96;
 5    89-428, eff. 12-13-95; 89-462,  eff.  5-29-96;  89-477,  eff.
 6    6-18-96;  89-507,  eff. 7-1-97; 89-545, eff. 7-25-96; 89-587,
 7    eff. 7-31-96;  89-627,  eff.  1-1-97;  89-688,  eff.  6-1-97;
 8    90-14,  eff. 7-1-97; 90-68, eff. 7-8-97; 90-680, eff. 1-1-99;
 9    90-685, eff. 1-1-99; 90-787, eff. 8-14-98; revised 9-16-98.)

10        (730 ILCS 5/5-5-3.3 new)
11        Sec. 5-5-3.3. Armed violence with a firearm;  factors  in
12    aggravation.
13        (a)  "Armed  with  a  firearm":   A  person is considered
14    armed with a firearm for purposes of this Section when he  or
15    she  carries  on  or  about his or her person or is otherwise
16    armed with a Category I or Category II firearm.
17        "Personally discharges a firearm": A person is considered
18    to have personally discharged a firearm for the  purposes  of
19    this Section when he or she, while armed with a Category I or
20    Category  II  firearm, knowingly and intentionally fires that
21    firearm causing the ammunition projectile  to  be  forcefully
22    expelled from the firearm.
23        "Qualified    offense"   means   first   degree   murder,
24    solicitation of murder,  solicitation  of  murder  for  hire,
25    intentional  homicide  of an unborn child, predatory criminal
26    sexual  assault  of  a  child,  aggravated  criminal   sexual
27    assault,  criminal  sexual  assault,  aggravated  kidnapping,
28    heinous  battery,  aggravated  battery  of  a senior citizen,
29    aggravated battery of  a  child,  armed  robbery,  aggravated
30    vehicular hijacking, a Class X or Class 1 felony violation of
31    the  Controlled  Substances  Act, a Class X or Class 1 felony
32    violation of the Cannabis Control  Act,  or  any  attempt  to
33    commit any of the foregoing crimes.
 
                            -53-              LRB9104147LDmbD
 1        (b)  "Category  I  firearm"  means  a  handgun, sawed-off
 2    shotgun, sawed-off rifle, any other firearm small  enough  to
 3    be  concealed  upon  the  person,  semiautomatic  firearm, or
 4    machine gun.  "Category II firearm" means  any  other  rifle,
 5    shotgun,  spring  gun,  or  other  firearm.   As used in this
 6    subsection (b), "semiautomatic  firearm"  means  a  repeating
 7    firearm  that  utilizes  a  portion of the energy of a firing
 8    cartridge to extract the fired cartridge case and chamber the
 9    next round and that requires a separate pull of  the  trigger
10    to fire each cartridge.
11        (c)(1)(A)  Except   as   otherwise   provided   in   this
12    subsection  (c),  a  person who commits any qualified offense
13    while armed with a Category I firearm shall, in addition  and
14    consecutive  to  the  penalty  imposed  for  that  felony, be
15    sentenced to a term of imprisonment of 15 years.
16        (B)  Except as otherwise provided in this subsection (c),
17    a person who commits any qualified offense while armed with a
18    Category II firearm shall, in addition and consecutive to the
19    penalty imposed for that felony, be sentenced to  a  term  of
20    imprisonment of 10 years.
21        (2)  Except  as otherwise provided in paragraph (3), (4),
22    or (5) of this  subsection  (c),  a  person  who  during  the
23    commission  of  any qualified offense personally discharges a
24    Category I or Category II  firearm  shall,  in  addition  and
25    consecutive  to  the  penalty  imposed  for  that  felony, be
26    sentenced to a term of imprisonment of 20 years.
27        (3)  Except as otherwise provided  in  paragraph  (4)  of
28    this  subsection  (c),  and  unless  sentencing under Section
29    33B-1 is  applicable,  a  person  described  in  subparagraph
30    (c)(1)(A)  or  (c)(1)(B)  or  paragraph  (c)(2)  who has been
31    convicted in any state or federal court of 3 or more  of  the
32    following  offenses:  treason,  first  degree  murder, second
33    degree murder, predatory criminal sexual assault of a  child,
34    aggravated  criminal sexual assault, criminal sexual assault,
 
                            -54-              LRB9104147LDmbD
 1    robbery,  burglary,  arson,  kidnaping,  aggravated   battery
 2    resulting  in  great  bodily  harm or permanent disability or
 3    disfigurement, or  a  violation  of  Section  401(a)  of  the
 4    Illinois  Controlled Substances Act, if the third offense was
 5    committed after conviction on the second, the second  offense
 6    was  committed  after conviction on the first, and the felony
 7    under subparagraph (c)(1)(A) or (c)(1)(B) or paragraph (c)(2)
 8    was  committed  after  conviction  on  the  third,  shall  in
 9    addition and consecutive  to  the  penalty  imposed  for  the
10    felony  be  sentenced  to  a term of imprisonment of not less
11    than 25 years nor more than 50 years.
12        (4)  A person who during the commission of any  qualified
13    offense  personally  discharges  a  Category I or Category II
14    firearm that proximately causes great bodily harm,  permanent
15    disability,  permanent  disfigurement, or death to any person
16    shall, in addition and consecutive to the penalty imposed for
17    that felony, be sentenced to a term  of  imprisonment  of  25
18    years to life.
19        (5)  Except as otherwise provided in paragraph (3) or (4)
20    of  this  subsection  (c), a person described in subparagraph
21    (c)(1)(A) or paragraph (c)(2), if the qualified  offense  (i)
22    was committed in any school, in any conveyance owned, leased,
23    or  contracted  by  a school to transport students to or from
24    school or a school related activity, or on the real  property
25    comprising  any school or public park and (ii) was related to
26    the activities of an organized gang, shall, in  addition  and
27    consecutive  to  the  penalty  imposed  for  the  felony,  be
28    sentenced to a term of imprisonment of not less than the term
29    set  forth  in  subparagraph  (c)(1)(A)  or paragraph (c)(2),
30    whichever is applicable, and not more than 30 years.  For the
31    purposes of this paragraph  (5),  "organized  gang"  has  the
32    meaning  ascribed  to  it  in  Section  10  of  the  Illinois
33    Streetgang Terrorism Omnibus Prevention Act.
34        (d)  Only  one  additional  term of imprisonment shall be
 
                            -55-              LRB9104147LDmbD
 1    imposed under this Section per person for each  separate  and
 2    unrelated felony.  If more than one enhancement per person is
 3    found  to  apply  under  this Section, the court shall impose
 4    upon that person the enhancement that  provides  the  longest
 5    term of imprisonment.
 6        (e)  For  the  penalties  in  this  Section to apply, the
 7    existence of any fact required under subsection (c) shall  be
 8    alleged  in the information or indictment and either admitted
 9    by the defendant in open court or found to  be  true  by  the
10    trier of fact.

11        (730 ILCS 5/5-8-4) (from Ch. 38, par. 1005-8-4)
12        Sec.   5-8-4.    Concurrent   and  Consecutive  Terms  of
13    Imprisonment.
14        (a)  When multiple sentences of imprisonment are  imposed
15    on  a  defendant  at  the  same  time,  or  when  a  term  of
16    imprisonment is imposed on a defendant who is already subject
17    to  sentence  in  this  State  or  in another state, or for a
18    sentence imposed by any district court of the United  States,
19    the  sentences  shall  run  concurrently  or consecutively as
20    determined by the court.  When  a  term  of  imprisonment  is
21    imposed  on  a defendant by an Illinois circuit court and the
22    defendant is subsequently sentenced to a term of imprisonment
23    by another state or by a district court of the United States,
24    the Illinois circuit court which  imposed  the  sentence  may
25    order  that the Illinois sentence be made concurrent with the
26    sentence imposed by the other state or district court of  the
27    United  States. The defendant must apply to the circuit court
28    within 30 days after the defendant's sentence imposed by  the
29    other  state  or  district of the United States is finalized.
30    The court shall not impose consecutive sentences for offenses
31    which were committed as part of a single  course  of  conduct
32    during which there was no substantial change in the nature of
33    the criminal objective, unless, one of the offenses for which
 
                            -56-              LRB9104147LDmbD
 1    defendant  was  convicted was a Class X or Class 1 felony and
 2    the defendant inflicted severe bodily injury, Section 5-5-3.3
 3    of the Unified Code of  Corrections  applies,  or  where  the
 4    defendant  was  convicted  of  a  violation of Section 12-13,
 5    12-14, or 12-14.1 of the Criminal  Code  of  1961,  in  which
 6    event  the  court shall enter sentences to run consecutively.
 7    Sentences shall run concurrently unless  otherwise  specified
 8    by the court.
 9        (b)  The  court  shall  not impose a consecutive sentence
10    except as provided  for  in  subsection  (a)  unless,  having
11    regard to the nature and circumstances of the offense and the
12    history  and character of the defendant, it is of the opinion
13    that such a term is  required  to  protect  the  public  from
14    further  criminal  conduct  by  the  defendant, the basis for
15    which the court shall set forth in the record; except that no
16    such finding or opinion is required when  multiple  sentences
17    of  imprisonment are imposed on a defendant for offenses that
18    were not committed as part of  a  single  course  of  conduct
19    during which there was no substantial change in the nature of
20    the criminal objective, and one of the offenses for which the
21    defendant  was  convicted was a Class X or Class 1 felony and
22    the defendant inflicted severe bodily  injury,  when  Section
23    5-5-3.3  of  the Unified Code of Corrections applies, or when
24    the defendant was convicted of a violation of Section  12-13,
25    12-14,  or  12-14.1  of  the  Criminal Code of 1961, in which
26    event the Court shall enter sentences to run consecutively.
27        (c) (1)  For sentences imposed under law in effect  prior
28        to  February 1, 1978 the aggregate maximum of consecutive
29        sentences shall not exceed the  maximum  term  authorized
30        under  Section  5-8-1  for  the  2  most serious felonies
31        involved.  The aggregate minimum  period  of  consecutive
32        sentences  shall  not  exceed  the  highest  minimum term
33        authorized under Section 5-8-1 for  the  2  most  serious
34        felonies  involved. When sentenced only for misdemeanors,
 
                            -57-              LRB9104147LDmbD
 1        a defendant shall not be consecutively sentenced to  more
 2        than the maximum for one Class A misdemeanor.
 3             (2)  For  sentences  imposed under the law in effect
 4        on  or  after  February  1,  1978,   the   aggregate   of
 5        consecutive sentences for offenses that were committed as
 6        part of a single course of conduct during which there was
 7        no  substantial  change  in  the  nature  of the criminal
 8        objective shall not exceed the sum of the  maximum  terms
 9        authorized  under  Section  5-8-2  for the 2 most serious
10        felonies involved, but no such limitation shall apply for
11        offenses that were not committed  as  part  of  a  single
12        course  of  conduct during which there was no substantial
13        change in the nature  of  the  criminal  objective.  When
14        sentenced only for misdemeanors, a defendant shall not be
15        consecutively  sentenced to more than the maximum for one
16        Class A misdemeanor.
17        (d)  An offender serving a sentence for a misdemeanor who
18    is convicted of a felony and sentenced to imprisonment  shall
19    be  transferred  to  the  Department  of Corrections, and the
20    misdemeanor sentence shall be merged in and run  concurrently
21    with the felony sentence.
22        (e)  In  determining  the  manner  in  which  consecutive
23    sentences  of  imprisonment,  one  or  more of which is for a
24    felony, will be served, the Department of  Corrections  shall
25    treat  the  offender  as  though  he had been committed for a
26    single term with the following incidents:
27             (1)  the maximum period of a  term  of  imprisonment
28        shall  consist  of  the  aggregate of the maximums of the
29        imposed indeterminate terms, if any, plus  the  aggregate
30        of  the  imposed  determinate sentences for felonies plus
31        the aggregate of the imposed  determinate  sentences  for
32        misdemeanors subject to paragraph (c) of this Section;
33             (2)  the parole or mandatory supervised release term
34        shall be as provided in paragraph (e) of Section 5-8-1 of
 
                            -58-              LRB9104147LDmbD
 1        this Code for the most serious of the offenses involved;
 2             (3)  the minimum period of imprisonment shall be the
 3        aggregate  of  the  minimum  and  determinate  periods of
 4        imprisonment imposed by the court, subject  to  paragraph
 5        (c) of this Section; and
 6             (4)  the  offender  shall  be awarded credit against
 7        the aggregate maximum term and the aggregate minimum term
 8        of imprisonment for all time  served  in  an  institution
 9        since  the commission of the offense or offenses and as a
10        consequence thereof at  the  rate  specified  in  Section
11        3-6-3 of this Code.
12        (f)  A   sentence   of   an  offender  committed  to  the
13    Department of Corrections at the time of  the  commission  of
14    the offense shall be served consecutive to the sentence under
15    which  he  is held by the Department of Corrections. However,
16    in case such offender shall be  sentenced  to  punishment  by
17    death,  the  sentence  shall  be executed at such time as the
18    court may fix without regard to the sentence under which such
19    offender may be held by the Department.
20        (g)  A  sentence  under  Section  3-6-4  for  escape   or
21    attempted  escape  shall  be  served consecutive to the terms
22    under which  the  offender  is  held  by  the  Department  of
23    Corrections.
24        (h)  If a person charged with a felony commits a separate
25    felony while on pre-trial release or in pretrial detention in
26    a  county  jail  facility  or  county detention facility, the
27    sentences imposed upon conviction of these felonies shall  be
28    served  consecutively  regardless  of  the order in which the
29    judgments of conviction are entered.
30        (i)  If a person admitted to bail following conviction of
31    a felony commits a separate felony while free on bond or if a
32    person detained in a county jail facility or county detention
33    facility following conviction of a felony commits a  separate
34    felony  while in detention, any sentence following conviction
 
                            -59-              LRB9104147LDmbD
 1    of the separate felony shall be consecutive to  that  of  the
 2    original  sentence  for  which  the  defendant was on bond or
 3    detained.
 4    (Source: P.A. 89-428, eff. 12-13-95;  89-462,  eff.  5-29-96;
 5    90-128, eff. 7-22-97.)

 6        Section  99.   Effective  date.   This  Act  takes effect
 7    January 1, 2000.

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