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Public Act 103-0293 Public Act 0293 103RD GENERAL ASSEMBLY |
Public Act 103-0293 | HB2100 Enrolled | LRB103 25103 RLC 51438 b |
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| AN ACT concerning criminal law.
| Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
| represented in the General Assembly:
| Section 5. The Criminal Code of 2012 is amended by | changing Sections 12-4.4a and 17-56 as follows: | (720 ILCS 5/12-4.4a)
| Sec. 12-4.4a. Abuse or criminal neglect of a long term | care facility resident; criminal abuse or neglect of an | elderly person or person with a disability. | (a) Abuse or criminal neglect of a long term care facility | resident. | (1) A person or an owner or licensee commits abuse of a | long term care facility resident when he or she knowingly | causes any physical or mental injury to, or commits any | sexual offense in this Code against, a resident. | (2) A person or an owner or licensee commits criminal | neglect of a long term care facility resident when he or | she recklessly: | (A) performs acts that cause a resident's life to | be endangered, health to be injured, or pre-existing | physical or mental condition to deteriorate, or that | create the substantial likelihood
that a resident's an | elderly person's or person with a disability's life
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| will be endangered, health will be injured, or | pre-existing
physical or mental condition will | deteriorate; | (B) fails to perform acts that he or she knows or | reasonably should know are necessary to maintain or | preserve the life or health of a resident, and that | failure causes the resident's life to be endangered, | health to be injured, or pre-existing physical or | mental condition to deteriorate, or that create the | substantial likelihood
that a resident's an elderly | person's or person with a disability's life
will be | endangered, health will be injured, or pre-existing
| physical or mental condition will deteriorate; or | (C) abandons a resident. | (3) A person or an owner or licensee commits neglect | of a long term care facility resident when he or she | negligently fails to provide adequate medical care, | personal care, or maintenance to the resident which | results in physical or mental injury or deterioration of | the resident's physical or mental condition. An owner or | licensee is guilty under this subdivision (a)(3), however, | only if the owner or licensee failed to exercise | reasonable care in the hiring, training, supervising, or | providing of staff or other related routine administrative | responsibilities. | (b) Criminal abuse or neglect of an elderly person or |
| person with a disability. | (1) A caregiver commits criminal abuse or neglect of | an elderly person or person with a disability when he or | she knowingly does any of the following: | (A) performs acts that cause the person's life to | be endangered, health to be injured, or pre-existing | physical or mental condition to deteriorate; | (B) fails to perform acts that he or she knows or | reasonably should know are necessary to maintain or | preserve the life or health of the person, and that | failure causes the person's life to be endangered, | health to be injured, or pre-existing physical or | mental condition to deteriorate; | (C) abandons the person; | (D) physically abuses, harasses, intimidates, or | interferes with the personal liberty of the person; or | (E) exposes the person to willful deprivation. | (2) It is not a defense to criminal abuse or neglect of | an elderly person or person with a disability that the | caregiver reasonably believed that the victim was not an | elderly person or person with a disability. | (c) Offense not applicable. | (1) Nothing in this Section applies to a physician | licensed to practice medicine in all its branches or a | duly licensed nurse providing care within the scope of his | or her professional judgment and within the accepted |
| standards of care within the community. | (2) Nothing in this Section imposes criminal liability | on a caregiver who made a good faith effort to provide for | the health and personal care of an elderly person or | person with a disability, but through no fault of his or | her own was unable to provide such care. | (3) Nothing in this Section applies to the medical | supervision, regulation, or control of the remedial care | or treatment of residents in a long term care facility | conducted for those who rely upon treatment by prayer or | spiritual means in accordance with the creed or tenets of | any well-recognized church or religious denomination as | described in Section 3-803 of the Nursing Home Care Act, | Section 1-102 of the Specialized Mental Health | Rehabilitation Act of 2013, Section 3-803 of the ID/DD | Community Care Act, or Section 3-803 of the MC/DD Act. | (4) Nothing in this Section prohibits a caregiver from | providing treatment to an elderly person or person with a | disability by spiritual means through prayer alone and | care consistent therewith in lieu of medical care and | treatment in accordance with the tenets and practices of | any church or religious denomination of which the elderly | person or person with a disability is a member. | (5) Nothing in this Section limits the remedies | available to the victim under the Illinois Domestic | Violence Act of 1986. |
| (d) Sentence. | (1) Long term care facility. Abuse of a long term care | facility resident is a Class 3 felony. Criminal neglect of | a long term care facility resident is a Class 4 felony, | unless it results in the resident's death in which case it | is a Class 3 felony. Neglect of a long term care facility | resident is a petty offense. | (2) Caregiver. Criminal abuse or neglect of an elderly | person or person with a disability is a Class 3 felony, | unless it results in the person's death in which case it is | a Class 2 felony, and if imprisonment is imposed it shall | be for a minimum term of 3 years and a maximum term of 14 | years. | (e) Definitions. For the purposes of this Section: | "Abandon" means to desert or knowingly forsake a resident | or an
elderly person or person with a disability under
| circumstances in which a reasonable person
would continue to | provide care and custody. | "Caregiver" means a person who has a duty to provide for an | elderly person or person with a
disability's health and | personal care, at the elderly person or person with a | disability's place of residence, including, but not limited | to, food and nutrition, shelter, hygiene, prescribed | medication, and medical care and treatment, and
includes any | of the following: | (1) A parent, spouse, adult child, or other relative |
| by blood or marriage
who resides with or resides in the | same building with or regularly
visits
the elderly person | or person with a disability, knows
or reasonably should | know of such person's physical or mental impairment,
and | knows or reasonably should know that such person is unable | to
adequately provide for his or her own health and | personal care. | (2) A person who is employed by the elderly person or
| person with a disability or by
another to reside with or | regularly visit the elderly person or person with a | disability
and provide for such person's health and | personal care. | (3) A person who has agreed for consideration to | reside with or
regularly visit the elderly person or | person with a
disability and provide for such
person's | health and personal care. | (4) A person who has been appointed by a private or | public agency or by
a court of competent jurisdiction to | provide for the elderly person or
person with a | disability's health and personal care. | "Caregiver" does not include a long-term care facility | licensed or
certified under the Nursing Home Care Act or a | facility licensed or certified under the ID/DD Community Care | Act, the MC/DD Act, or the Specialized Mental Health | Rehabilitation Act of 2013, or any administrative, medical, or
| other personnel of such a facility, or a health care provider |
| who is licensed
under the Medical Practice Act of 1987 and | renders care in the ordinary
course of his or her profession. | "Elderly person" means a person 60
years of age or older | who is incapable of
adequately providing for his or her own | health and personal care. | "Licensee" means the individual or entity licensed to | operate a
facility under the Nursing Home Care Act, the | Specialized Mental Health Rehabilitation Act of 2013, the | ID/DD Community Care Act, the MC/DD Act, or the Assisted | Living and Shared
Housing Act. | "Long term care facility" means a private home,
| institution, building, residence, or other place, whether | operated for
profit or not, or a county home for the infirm and | chronically ill operated
pursuant to Division 5-21 or 5-22 of | the Counties Code, or any similar
institution operated by
the | State of Illinois or a political subdivision thereof, which | provides,
through its ownership or management, personal care, | sheltered care, or
nursing for 3 or more persons not related to | the owner by blood or
marriage. The term also includes skilled | nursing facilities and
intermediate care facilities as defined | in Titles XVIII and XIX of the
federal Social Security Act and | assisted living establishments and shared
housing | establishments licensed under the Assisted Living and Shared | Housing
Act. | "Owner" means the owner of a long term care facility as
| provided in the Nursing Home Care Act, the owner of a facility |
| as provided under the Specialized Mental Health Rehabilitation | Act of 2013, the owner of a facility as provided in the ID/DD | Community Care Act, the owner of a facility as provided in the | MC/DD Act, or the owner of an assisted living or shared
housing | establishment as provided in the Assisted Living and Shared | Housing Act. | "Person with a disability" means a person who
suffers from | a permanent physical or mental impairment, resulting from
| disease, injury, functional disorder, or congenital condition, | which renders
the person incapable of adequately providing for | his or her own health and personal
care. | "Resident" means a person residing in a long term care | facility. | "Willful deprivation" has the meaning ascribed to it in | paragraph
(15) of Section 103 of the Illinois Domestic | Violence Act of 1986.
| (Source: P.A. 98-104, eff. 7-22-13; 99-180, eff. 7-29-15; | 99-642, eff. 7-28-16.)
| (720 ILCS 5/17-56) (was 720 ILCS 5/16-1.3)
| Sec. 17-56. Financial exploitation of an elderly person or | a
person with a disability.
| (a) A person commits financial exploitation of an elderly
| person or a person with a disability when he or she stands in a
| position of trust
or confidence with the
elderly person or a | person with a disability
and he
or she knowingly: |
| (1) by
deception or
intimidation obtains control over | the property of an elderly person or
a person
with a | disability;
or | (2) illegally uses the assets or resources of an | elderly person or a
person with a disability.
| (b) Sentence. Financial exploitation of an elderly person | or a person
with a
disability is: (1) a Class 4
felony if the | value of the property is $300 or less, (2) a Class 3 felony if
| the value of the property is more than $300 but less than | $5,000, (3) a Class 2
felony if the value of the property is | $5,000 or more but less than
$50,000, and (4) a Class 1 felony | if the value of the property is $50,000 or more
or if the | elderly person is over 70 years of age or older and the value | of the
property is $15,000 or more or if the elderly person is | 80 years of age or
older and the value of the property is | $5,000 or more.
| (c) For purposes of this Section:
| (1) "Elderly person" means a person 60
years of age or | older.
| (2) "Person with a disability" means a person who
| suffers from a physical or mental impairment resulting | from
disease, injury, functional disorder or congenital | condition that impairs the
individual's mental or physical | ability to independently manage his or her
property or | financial resources, or both.
| (3) "Intimidation" means the communication to an |
| elderly person or a
person with a disability that he or she | shall be deprived of food and
nutrition,
shelter, | prescribed
medication or medical care and treatment or | conduct as provided in Section 12-6 of this Code.
| (4) "Deception" means, in addition to its meaning as | defined in Section
15-4 of this Code,
a misrepresentation | or concealment of material fact
relating to the terms of a | contract or agreement entered into with the
elderly person | or person with a disability or to the
existing or
| pre-existing condition of
any of the property involved in | such contract or agreement; or the use or
employment of | any misrepresentation, false pretense or false promise in
| order to induce, encourage or solicit the elderly person | or
person with
a disability to
enter into a contract or | agreement.
| The illegal use of the assets or resources of an
elderly | person or a person with a disability includes, but is not | limited
to, the misappropriation of those assets or resources | by undue influence,
breach of a fiduciary relationship, fraud, | deception, extortion, or
use of the assets or resources | contrary to law. | A person stands in a position of
trust and confidence with | an elderly person or person with a
disability when he (i) is a
| parent, spouse, adult child or other relative by blood or | marriage of the
elderly person or person with a disability, | (ii) is a joint
tenant or
tenant in common with
the elderly |
| person or person with a disability, (iii) has
a legal or
| fiduciary relationship
with the elderly person or person with | a disability, (iv) is a financial
planning or investment | professional, (v) is a paid or unpaid caregiver for the | elderly person or person with a disability, or (vi) is a friend | or acquaintance in a position of trust.
| (d) Limitations. Nothing in this Section shall be | construed to limit the remedies
available to the victim under | the Illinois Domestic Violence Act of 1986.
| (e) Good faith efforts. Nothing in this Section shall be | construed to impose criminal
liability on a person who has | made a good faith effort to assist the
elderly person or person | with a disability in the
management of his or her
property, but | through
no fault of his or her own has been unable to provide | such assistance.
| (f) Not a defense. It shall not be a defense to financial | exploitation of an elderly
person or person with a disability | that the accused reasonably believed
that the victim was
not | an elderly person or person with a disability. Consent is not a | defense to financial exploitation of an elderly person or a | person with a disability if the accused knew or had reason to | know that the elderly person or a person with a disability | lacked capacity to consent.
| (g) Civil Liability. A civil cause of action exists for | financial exploitation of an elderly person or a
person with a | disability as described in subsection (a) of this Section. A |
| person against whom a civil judgment has been entered for | financial exploitation of an elderly person
or person with a | disability shall be liable to the victim or to the estate of | the
victim in damages of treble the amount of the value of the | property
obtained, plus reasonable attorney fees and court | costs. In a civil action under this subsection, the burden of
| proof that the defendant committed financial exploitation of | an elderly person or a
person with a disability as described in | subsection (a) of this Section shall be
by a preponderance of | the evidence. This subsection shall be operative
whether or | not the defendant has been charged or convicted of the | criminal offense as described in subsection (a) of this | Section. This subsection (g) shall not limit or affect the | right of any person to bring any cause of action or seek any | remedy available under the common law, or other applicable | law, arising out of the financial exploitation of an elderly | person or a person with a disability.
| (h) If a person is charged with financial exploitation of | an elderly person or a person with a disability that involves | the taking or loss of property valued at more than $5,000, a | prosecuting attorney may file a petition with the circuit | court of the county in which the defendant has been charged to | freeze the assets of the defendant in an amount equal to but | not greater than the alleged value of lost or stolen property | in the defendant's pending criminal proceeding for purposes of | restitution to the victim. The burden of proof required to |
| freeze the defendant's assets shall be by a preponderance of | the evidence. | (Source: P.A. 101-394, eff. 1-1-20; 102-244, eff. 1-1-22 .)
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Effective Date: 1/1/2024
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