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Public Act 102-0220 Public Act 0220 102ND GENERAL ASSEMBLY |
Public Act 102-0220 | SB1677 Enrolled | LRB102 13187 LNS 18531 b |
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| AN ACT concerning civil law.
| Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
| represented in the General Assembly:
| Section 5. The Stalking No Contact Order Act is amended by | changing Section 10 as follows: | (740 ILCS 21/10) | Sec. 10. Definitions. For the purposes of this Act: | "Course of conduct" means 2 or more acts, including but | not limited to acts in which a respondent directly, | indirectly, or through third parties, by any action, method, | device, or means follows, monitors, observes, surveils, or | threatens a person, workplace, school, or place of worship, | engages in other contact, or interferes with or damages a | person's property or pet. A course of conduct may include | contact via electronic communications. The incarceration of a | person in a penal institution who commits the course of | conduct is not a bar to prosecution under this Section. | "Emotional distress" means significant mental suffering, | anxiety or alarm. | "Contact" includes any contact with the victim, that is | initiated or continued without the victim's consent, or that | is in disregard of the victim's expressed desire that the | contact be avoided or discontinued, including but not limited |
| to being in the physical presence of the victim; appearing | within the sight of the victim; approaching or confronting the | victim in a public place or on private property; appearing at | the workplace or residence of the victim; entering onto or | remaining on property owned, leased, or occupied by the | victim; placing an object on, or delivering an object to, | property owned, leased, or occupied by the victim; electronic | communication as defined in Section 26.5-0.1 of the Criminal | Code of 2012; and appearing at the prohibited workplace, | school, or place of worship. | "Petitioner" means any named petitioner for the stalking | no contact order or any named victim of stalking on whose | behalf the petition is brought. "Petitioner" includes an | authorized agent of a place of employment, an authorized agent | of a place of worship, or an authorized agent of a school. | "Reasonable person" means a person in the petitioner's | circumstances with the petitioner's knowledge of the | respondent and the respondent's prior acts. | "Stalking" means engaging in a course of conduct directed | at a specific person, and he or she knows or should know that | this course of conduct would cause a reasonable person to fear | for his or her safety, the safety of a workplace, school, or | place of worship, or the safety of a third person or suffer | emotional distress. Stalking does not include an exercise of | the right to free speech or assembly that is otherwise lawful | or picketing occurring at the workplace that is otherwise |
| lawful and arises out of a bona fide labor dispute, including | any controversy concerning wages, salaries, hours, working | conditions or benefits, including health and welfare, sick | leave, insurance, and pension or retirement provisions, the | making or maintaining of collective bargaining agreements, and | the terms to be included in those agreements. | "Stalking no contact order" means an emergency order or | plenary order granted under this Act, which includes a remedy | authorized by Section 80 of this Act.
| (Source: P.A. 100-1000, eff. 1-1-19 .) | Section 10. The Civil No Contact Order Act is amended by | changing Section 213 as follows:
| (740 ILCS 22/213)
| Sec. 213. Civil no contact order; remedies.
| (a) If the court finds that the petitioner has been a | victim of
non-consensual sexual conduct or non-consensual | sexual penetration, a civil no
contact order shall issue; | provided that the petitioner must also satisfy the
| requirements of Section
214 on emergency orders or Section 215 | on plenary orders. The petitioner
shall not be denied a civil | no contact order because the petitioner or the
respondent is a | minor. The court, when
determining whether or not to issue a | civil no contact order, may not
require physical injury on the | person of the victim.
Modification and extension of prior |
| civil no contact orders shall be in
accordance with this Act.
| (a-5) When a petition for a civil no contact order is | granted, the order shall not be publicly available until the | order is served on the respondent. | (b) (Blank).
| (b-5) The court may provide relief as follows: | (1) prohibit the respondent from knowingly coming | within, or knowingly remaining within, a specified | distance from the petitioner; | (2) restrain the respondent from having any contact, | including nonphysical contact and electronic communication | as defined in Section 26.5-0.1 of the Criminal Code of | 2012 , with the petitioner directly, indirectly, or through | third parties, regardless of whether those third parties | know of the order; | (3) prohibit the respondent from knowingly coming | within, or knowingly remaining within, a specified | distance from the petitioner's residence, school, day care | or other specified location; | (4) order the respondent to stay away from any | property or animal owned, possessed, leased, kept, or held | by the petitioner and forbid the respondent from taking, | transferring, encumbering, concealing, harming, or | otherwise disposing of the property or animal; and | (5) order any other injunctive relief as necessary or | appropriate for the protection of the petitioner. |
| (b-6) When the petitioner and the respondent attend the | same public or private elementary, middle, or high school, the | court when issuing a civil no contact order and providing | relief shall consider the severity of the act, any continuing | physical danger or emotional distress to the petitioner, the | educational rights guaranteed to the petitioner and respondent | under federal and State law, the availability of a transfer of | the respondent to another school, a change of placement or a | change of program of the respondent, the expense, difficulty, | and educational disruption that would be caused by a transfer | of the respondent to another school, and any other relevant | facts of the case. The court may order that the respondent not | attend the public, private, or non-public elementary, middle, | or high school attended by the petitioner, order that the | respondent accept a change of placement or program, as | determined by the school district or private or non-public | school, or place restrictions on the respondent's movements | within the school attended by the petitioner.
The respondent | bears the burden of proving by a preponderance of the evidence | that a transfer, change of placement, or change of program of | the respondent is not available. The respondent also bears the | burden of production with respect to the expense, difficulty, | and educational disruption that would be caused by a transfer | of the respondent to another school. A transfer, change of | placement, or change of program is not unavailable to the | respondent solely on the ground that the respondent does not |
| agree with the school district's or private or non-public | school's transfer, change of placement, or change of program | or solely on the ground that the respondent fails or refuses to | consent to or otherwise does not take an action required to | effectuate a transfer, change of placement, or change of | program.
When a court orders a respondent to stay away from the | public, private, or non-public school attended by the | petitioner and the respondent requests a transfer to another | attendance center within the respondent's school district or | private or non-public school, the school district or private | or non-public school shall have sole discretion to determine | the attendance center to which the respondent is transferred.
| In the event the court order results in a transfer of the minor | respondent to another attendance center, a change in the | respondent's placement, or a change of the respondent's | program, the parents, guardian, or legal custodian of the | respondent is responsible for transportation and other costs | associated with the transfer or change. | (b-7) The court may order the parents, guardian, or legal | custodian of a minor respondent to take certain actions or to | refrain from taking certain actions to ensure that the | respondent complies with the order. In the event the court | orders a transfer of the respondent to another school, the | parents or legal guardians of the respondent are responsible | for transportation and other costs associated with the change | of school by the respondent. |
| (c) Denial of a remedy may not be based, in whole or in | part, on
evidence that:
| (1) the respondent has cause for any use of force, | unless that
cause satisfies the standards for justifiable | use of force provided
by Article 7 of the Criminal Code of | 2012;
| (2) the respondent was voluntarily intoxicated;
| (3) the petitioner acted in self-defense or defense of | another,
provided that, if the petitioner utilized force, | such force was
justifiable under Article 7 of the Criminal | Code of 2012;
| (4) the petitioner did not act in self-defense or | defense of
another;
| (5) the petitioner left the residence or household to | avoid
further non-consensual sexual conduct or | non-consensual sexual penetration
by the respondent; or
| (6) the petitioner did not leave the residence or | household to
avoid further non-consensual sexual conduct | or non-consensual sexual
penetration by the respondent.
| (d) Monetary damages are not recoverable as a remedy.
| (Source: P.A. 101-255, eff. 1-1-20 .)
| Section 15. The Internet Dating, Internet Child Care, | Internet Senior Care, and Internet Home Care Safety Act is | amended by changing Section 5 as follows: |
| (815 ILCS 518/5)
| Sec. 5. Definitions. As used in this Act: | "Criminal background screening" means a name search for a | person's criminal convictions initiated by an Internet dating | service provider, an Internet child care service provider, an | Internet senior care service provider, or an Internet home | care provider and conducted by:
| (1) searching available and regularly updated | government public record databases for criminal | convictions so long as such databases, in the aggregate, | provide substantial national coverage; or
| (2) searching a database maintained by a private | vendor that is regularly updated and is maintained in the | United States with substantial national coverage of | criminal history records and sexual offender registries.
| "Internet dating service" means a person or entity in the | business , for a fee, of providing dating, romantic | relationship, or matrimonial services principally on or | through the Internet.
| "Internet child care service" means a person or entity, in | the business, for a fee, of providing access to a database, | principally on or through the Internet, of seekers and | providers of child care services. | "Internet senior care service" means a person or entity in | the business, for a fee, of providing access to a database, | principally on or through the Internet, of seekers and |
| providers of senior care services. | "Internet home care service" means a person or entity in | the business, for a fee, of providing access to a database, | principally on or through the Internet, of seekers and | providers of domestic home care services including, dog | walkers, pet sitters, housekeepers, house cleaners, house | sitters, and tutors. | "Member" means a customer, client, or participant who | submits to an Internet dating service, Internet child care
| service, Internet senior care service, or Internet home care | service information required to access the service for the | purpose of engaging in dating, relationship, compatibility, | matrimonial, or social, child care, senior care, or home care | referral.
| "Illinois member" means a member who provides an Illinois | billing address or zip code when registering with the service.
| "Criminal conviction" means a conviction for any crime | including but not limited to any sex offense that would | qualify the offender for registration pursuant to the Sex | Offender Registration Act or under another jurisdiction's | equivalent statute.
| (Source: P.A. 97-1056, eff. 8-24-12; 98-458, eff. 8-16-13.)
| Section 20. The Dating Referral Services Act is amended by | changing Section 15 as follows:
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| (815 ILCS 615/15) (from Ch. 29, par. 1051-15)
| Sec. 15. Written contract required. Every contract for
| dating referral services shall be in writing and shall be
| subject to this Act. All provisions, requirements, and | prohibitions
that are mandated by this Act and the Internet | Dating, Internet Child Care, Internet Senior Care, and | Internet Home Care Safety Act shall be contained in the | written
contract before it is signed by the customer. A copy of | the
written contract shall be given to the customer at the time | the
customer signs the contract. Dating referral enterprises | shall
maintain original copies of all contracts for services | for as
long as the contracts are in effect and for a period of | 3 years
thereafter.
| (Source: P.A. 87-450.)
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Effective Date: 1/1/2022
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