Public Act 90-0130
HB2178 Enrolled LRB9002364PTcw
AN ACT concerning government administration, amending
named Acts.
Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
represented in the General Assembly:
Section 5. The Civil Administrative Code of Illinois is
amended by changing Sections 55a, 55a-1, and 55a-4 as
follows:
(20 ILCS 2605/55a) (from Ch. 127, par. 55a)
Sec. 55a. Powers and duties.
(A) The Department of State Police shall have the
following powers and duties, and those set forth in Sections
55a-1 through 55c:
1. To exercise the rights, powers and duties which have
been vested in the Department of Public Safety by the State
Police Act.
2. To exercise the rights, powers and duties which have
been vested in the Department of Public Safety by the State
Police Radio Act.
3. To exercise the rights, powers and duties which have
been vested in the Department of Public Safety by the
Criminal Identification Act.
4. To (a) investigate the origins, activities, personnel
and incidents of crime and the ways and means to redress the
victims of crimes, and study the impact, if any, of
legislation relative to the effusion of crime and growing
crime rates, and enforce the criminal laws of this State
related thereto, (b) enforce all laws regulating the
production, sale, prescribing, manufacturing, administering,
transporting, having in possession, dispensing, delivering,
distributing, or use of controlled substances and cannabis,
(c) employ skilled experts, scientists, technicians,
investigators or otherwise specially qualified persons to aid
in preventing or detecting crime, apprehending criminals, or
preparing and presenting evidence of violations of the
criminal laws of the State, (d) cooperate with the police of
cities, villages and incorporated towns, and with the police
officers of any county, in enforcing the laws of the State
and in making arrests and recovering property, (e) apprehend
and deliver up any person charged in this State or any other
State of the United States with treason, felony, or other
crime, who has fled from justice and is found in this State,
and (f) conduct such other investigations as may be provided
by law. Persons exercising these powers within the Department
are conservators of the peace and as such have all the powers
possessed by policemen in cities and sheriffs, except that
they may exercise such powers anywhere in the State in
cooperation with and after contact with the local law
enforcement officials. Such persons may use false or
fictitious names in the performance of their duties under
this paragraph, upon approval of the Director, and shall not
be subject to prosecution under the criminal laws for such
use.
5. To: (a) be a central repository and custodian of
criminal statistics for the State, (b) be a central
repository for criminal history record information, (c)
procure and file for record such information as is necessary
and helpful to plan programs of crime prevention, law
enforcement and criminal justice, (d) procure and file for
record such copies of fingerprints, as may be required by
law, (e) establish general and field crime laboratories, (f)
register and file for record such information as may be
required by law for the issuance of firearm owner's
identification cards, (g) employ polygraph operators,
laboratory technicians and other specially qualified persons
to aid in the identification of criminal activity, and (h)
undertake such other identification, information, laboratory,
statistical or registration activities as may be required by
law.
6. To (a) acquire and operate one or more radio
broadcasting stations in the State to be used for police
purposes, (b) operate a statewide communications network to
gather and disseminate information for law enforcement
agencies, (c) operate an electronic data processing and
computer center for the storage and retrieval of data
pertaining to criminal activity, and (d) undertake such other
communication activities as may be required by law.
7. To provide, as may be required by law, assistance to
local law enforcement agencies through (a) training,
management and consultant services for local law enforcement
agencies, and (b) the pursuit of research and the publication
of studies pertaining to local law enforcement activities.
8. To exercise the rights, powers and duties which have
been vested in the Department of State Police and the
Director of the Department of State Police by the Narcotic
Control Division Abolition Act.
9. To exercise the rights, powers and duties which have
been vested in the Department of Public Safety by the
Illinois Vehicle Code.
10. To exercise the rights, powers and duties which have
been vested in the Department of Public Safety by the Firearm
Owners Identification Card Act.
11. To enforce and administer such other laws in
relation to law enforcement as may be vested in the
Department.
12. To transfer jurisdiction of any realty title to
which is held by the State of Illinois under the control of
the Department to any other department of the State
government or to the State Employees Housing Commission, or
to acquire or accept Federal land, when such transfer,
acquisition or acceptance is advantageous to the State and is
approved in writing by the Governor.
13. With the written approval of the Governor, to enter
into agreements with other departments created by this Act,
for the furlough of inmates of the penitentiary to such other
departments for their use in research programs being
conducted by them.
For the purpose of participating in such research
projects, the Department may extend the limits of any
inmate's place of confinement, when there is reasonable cause
to believe that the inmate will honor his or her trust by
authorizing the inmate, under prescribed conditions, to leave
the confines of the place unaccompanied by a custodial agent
of the Department. The Department shall make rules governing
the transfer of the inmate to the requesting other department
having the approved research project, and the return of such
inmate to the unextended confines of the penitentiary. Such
transfer shall be made only with the consent of the inmate.
The willful failure of a prisoner to remain within the
extended limits of his or her confinement or to return within
the time or manner prescribed to the place of confinement
designated by the Department in granting such extension shall
be deemed an escape from custody of the Department and
punishable as provided in Section 3-6-4 of the Unified Code
of Corrections.
14. To provide investigative services, with all of the
powers possessed by policemen in cities and sheriffs, in and
around all race tracks subject to the Horse Racing Act of
1975.
15. To expend such sums as the Director deems necessary
from Contractual Services appropriations for the Division of
Criminal Investigation for the purchase of evidence and for
the employment of persons to obtain evidence. Such sums shall
be advanced to agents authorized by the Director to expend
funds, on vouchers signed by the Director.
16. To assist victims and witnesses in gang crime
prosecutions through the administration of funds appropriated
from the Gang Violence Victims and Witnesses Fund to the
Department. Such funds shall be appropriated to the
Department and shall only be used to assist victims and
witnesses in gang crime prosecutions and such assistance may
include any of the following:
(a) temporary living costs;
(b) moving expenses;
(c) closing costs on the sale of private residence;
(d) first month's rent;
(e) security deposits;
(f) apartment location assistance;
(g) other expenses which the Department considers
appropriate; and
(h) compensation for any loss of or injury to real
or personal property resulting from a gang crime to a
maximum of $5,000, subject to the following provisions:
(1) in the case of loss of property, the
amount of compensation shall be measured by the
replacement cost of similar or like property which
has been incurred by and which is substantiated by
the property owner,
(2) in the case of injury to property, the
amount of compensation shall be measured by the cost
of repair incurred and which can be substantiated by
the property owner,
(3) compensation under this provision is a
secondary source of compensation and shall be
reduced by any amount the property owner receives
from any other source as compensation for the loss
or injury, including, but not limited to, personal
insurance coverage,
(4) no compensation may be awarded if the
property owner was an offender or an accomplice of
the offender, or if the award would unjustly benefit
the offender or offenders, or an accomplice of the
offender or offenders.
No victim or witness may receive such assistance if he or
she is not a part of or fails to fully cooperate in the
prosecution of gang crime members by law enforcement
authorities.
The Department shall promulgate any rules necessary for
the implementation of this amendatory Act of 1985.
17. To conduct arson investigations.
18. To develop a separate statewide statistical police
contact record keeping system for the study of juvenile
delinquency. The records of this police contact system shall
be limited to statistical information. No individually
identifiable information shall be maintained in the police
contact statistical record system.
19. To develop a separate statewide central adjudicatory
and dispositional records system for persons under 19 years
of age who have been adjudicated delinquent minors and to
make information available to local registered participating
police youth officers so that police youth officers will be
able to obtain rapid access to the juvenile's background from
other jurisdictions to the end that the police youth officers
can make appropriate dispositions which will best serve the
interest of the child and the community. Information
maintained in the adjudicatory and dispositional record
system shall be limited to the incidents or offenses for
which the minor was adjudicated delinquent by a court, and a
copy of the court's dispositional order. All individually
identifiable records in the adjudicatory and dispositional
records system shall be destroyed when the person reaches 19
years of age.
20. To develop rules which guarantee the confidentiality
of such individually identifiable adjudicatory and
dispositional records except when used for the following:
(a) by authorized juvenile court personnel or the
State's Attorney in connection with proceedings under the
Juvenile Court Act of 1987; or
(b) inquiries from registered police youth
officers.
For the purposes of this Act "police youth officer" means
a member of a duly organized State, county or municipal
police force who is assigned by his or her Superintendent,
Sheriff or chief of police, as the case may be, to specialize
in youth problems.
21. To develop administrative rules and administrative
hearing procedures which allow a minor, his or her attorney,
and his or her parents or guardian access to individually
identifiable adjudicatory and dispositional records for the
purpose of determining or challenging the accuracy of the
records. Final administrative decisions shall be subject to
the provisions of the Administrative Review Law.
22. To charge, collect, and receive fees or moneys
equivalent to the cost of providing Department of State
Police personnel, equipment, and services to local
governmental agencies when explicitly requested by a local
governmental agency and pursuant to an intergovernmental
agreement as provided by this Section, other State agencies,
and federal agencies, including but not limited to fees or
moneys equivalent to the cost of providing dispatching
services, radio and radar repair, and training to local
governmental agencies on such terms and conditions as in the
judgment of the Director are in the best interest of the
State; and to establish, charge, collect and receive fees or
moneys based on the cost of providing responses to requests
for criminal history record information pursuant to positive
identification and any Illinois or federal law authorizing
access to some aspect of such information and to prescribe
the form and manner for requesting and furnishing such
information to the requestor on such terms and conditions as
in the judgment of the Director are in the best interest of
the State, provided fees for requesting and furnishing
criminal history record information may be waived for
requests in the due administration of the criminal laws. The
Department may also charge, collect and receive fees or
moneys equivalent to the cost of providing electronic data
processing lines or related telecommunication services to
local governments, but only when such services can be
provided by the Department at a cost less than that
experienced by said local governments through other means.
All services provided by the Department shall be conducted
pursuant to contracts in accordance with the
Intergovernmental Cooperation Act, and all telecommunication
services shall be provided pursuant to the provisions of
Section 67.18 of this Code.
All fees received by the Department of State Police under
this Act or the Illinois Uniform Conviction Information Act
shall be deposited in a special fund in the State Treasury to
be known as the State Police Services Fund. The money
deposited in the State Police Services Fund shall be
appropriated to the Department of State Police for expenses
of the Department of State Police.
In addition to any other permitted use of moneys in the
Fund, and notwithstanding any restriction on the use of the
Fund, moneys in the State Police Services Fund may be
transferred to the General Revenue Fund as authorized by this
amendatory Act of 1992. The General Assembly finds that an
excess of moneys exists in the Fund. On February 1, 1992,
the Comptroller shall order transferred and the Treasurer
shall transfer $500,000 (or such lesser amount as may be on
deposit in the Fund and unexpended and unobligated on that
date) from the Fund to the General Revenue Fund.
Upon the completion of any audit of the Department of
State Police as prescribed by the Illinois State Auditing
Act, which audit includes an audit of the State Police
Services Fund, the Department of State Police shall make the
audit open to inspection by any interested person.
23. To exercise the powers and perform the duties which
have been vested in the Department of State Police by the
Intergovernmental Missing Child Recovery Act of 1984, and to
establish reasonable rules and regulations necessitated
thereby.
24. (a) To establish and maintain a statewide Law
Enforcement Agencies Data System (LEADS) for the purpose of
providing electronic access by authorized entities to
criminal justice data repositories and effecting an immediate
law enforcement response to reports of missing persons,
including lost, missing or runaway minors. The Department
shall implement an automatic data exchange system to compile,
to maintain and to make available to other law enforcement
agencies for immediate dissemination data which can assist
appropriate agencies in recovering missing persons and
provide access by authorized entities to various data
repositories available through LEADS for criminal justice and
related purposes. To help assist the Department in this
effort, funds may be appropriated from the LEADS Maintenance
Fund.
(b) In exercising its duties under this subsection, the
Department shall:
(1) provide a uniform reporting format for the
entry of pertinent information regarding the report of a
missing person into LEADS;
(2) develop and implement a policy whereby a
statewide or regional alert would be used in situations
relating to the disappearances of individuals, based on
criteria and in a format established by the Department.
Such a format shall include, but not be limited to, the
age of the missing person and the suspected circumstance
of the disappearance;
(3) notify all law enforcement agencies that
reports of missing persons shall be entered as soon as
the minimum level of data specified by the Department is
available to the reporting agency, and that no waiting
period for the entry of such data exists;
(4) compile and retain information regarding lost,
abducted, missing or runaway minors in a separate data
file, in a manner that allows such information to be used
by law enforcement and other agencies deemed appropriate
by the Director, for investigative purposes. Such
information shall include the disposition of all reported
lost, abducted, missing or runaway minor cases;
(5) compile and maintain an historic data
repository relating to lost, abducted, missing or runaway
minors and other missing persons in order to develop and
improve techniques utilized by law enforcement agencies
when responding to reports of missing persons; and
(6) create a quality control program regarding
confirmation of missing person data, timeliness of
entries of missing person reports into LEADS and
performance audits of all entering agencies.
25. On request of a school board or regional
superintendent of schools, to conduct an inquiry pursuant to
Section 10-21.9 or 34-18.5 of the School Code to ascertain if
an applicant for employment in a school district has been
convicted of any criminal or drug offenses enumerated in
Section 10-21.9 or 34-18.5 of the School Code. The
Department shall furnish such conviction information to the
President of the school board of the school district which
has requested the information, or if the information was
requested by the regional superintendent to that regional
superintendent.
26. To promulgate rules and regulations necessary for
the administration and enforcement of its powers and duties,
wherever granted and imposed, pursuant to the Illinois
Administrative Procedure Act.
27. To (a) promulgate rules pertaining to the
certification, revocation of certification and training of
law enforcement officers as electronic criminal surveillance
officers, (b) provide training and technical assistance to
State's Attorneys and local law enforcement agencies
pertaining to the interception of private oral
communications, (c) promulgate rules necessary for the
administration of Article 108B of the Code of Criminal
Procedure of 1963, including but not limited to standards for
recording and minimization of electronic criminal
surveillance intercepts, documentation required to be
maintained during an intercept, procedures in relation to
evidence developed by an intercept, and (d) charge a
reasonable fee to each law enforcement agency that sends
officers to receive training as electronic criminal
surveillance officers.
28. Upon the request of any private organization which
devotes a major portion of its time to the provision of
recreational, social, educational or child safety services to
children, to conduct, pursuant to positive identification,
criminal background investigations of all of that
organization's current employees, current volunteers,
prospective employees or prospective volunteers charged with
the care and custody of children during the provision of the
organization's services, and to report to the requesting
organization any record of convictions maintained in the
Department's files about such persons. The Department shall
charge an application fee, based on actual costs, for the
dissemination of conviction information pursuant to this
subsection. The Department is empowered to establish this
fee and shall prescribe the form and manner for requesting
and furnishing conviction information pursuant to this
subsection. Information received by the organization from the
Department concerning an individual shall be provided to such
individual. Any such information obtained by the
organization shall be confidential and may not be transmitted
outside the organization and may not be transmitted to anyone
within the organization except as needed for the purpose of
evaluating the individual. Only information and standards
which bear a reasonable and rational relation to the
performance of child care shall be used by the organization.
Any employee of the Department or any member, employee or
volunteer of the organization receiving confidential
information under this subsection who gives or causes to be
given any confidential information concerning any criminal
convictions of an individual shall be guilty of a Class A
misdemeanor unless release of such information is authorized
by this subsection.
29. Upon the request of the Department of Children and
Family Services, to investigate reports of child abuse or
neglect.
30. To obtain registration of a fictitious vital record
pursuant to Section 15.1 of the Vital Records Act.
31. To collect and disseminate information relating to
"hate crimes" as defined under Section 12-7.1 of the Criminal
Code of 1961 contingent upon the availability of State or
Federal funds to revise and upgrade the Illinois Uniform
Crime Reporting System. All law enforcement agencies shall
report monthly to the Department of State Police concerning
such offenses in such form and in such manner as may be
prescribed by rules and regulations adopted by the Department
of State Police. Such information shall be compiled by the
Department and be disseminated upon request to any local law
enforcement agency, unit of local government, or state
agency. Dissemination of such information shall be subject
to all confidentiality requirements otherwise imposed by law.
The Department of State Police shall provide training for
State Police officers in identifying, responding to, and
reporting all hate crimes. The Illinois Local Governmental
Law Enforcement Officer's Training Board shall develop and
certify a course of such training to be made available to
local law enforcement officers.
32. Upon the request of a private carrier company that
provides transportation under Section 28b of the Metropolitan
Transit Authority Act, to ascertain if an applicant for a
driver position has been convicted of any criminal or drug
offense enumerated in Section 28b of the Metropolitan Transit
Authority Act. The Department shall furnish the conviction
information to the private carrier company that requested the
information.
33. To apply for grants or contracts, receive, expend,
allocate, or disburse funds and moneys made available by
public or private entities, including, but not limited to,
contracts, bequests, grants, or receiving equipment from
corporations, foundations, or public or private institutions
of higher learning. All funds received by the Department
from these sources shall be deposited into the appropriate
fund in the State Treasury to be appropriated to the
Department for purposes as indicated by the grantor or
contractor or, in the case of funds or moneys bequeathed or
granted for no specific purpose, for any purpose as deemed
appropriate by the Director in administering the
responsibilities of the Department.
34. Upon the request of the Department of Children and
Family Services, the Department of State Police shall provide
properly designated employees of the Department of Children
and Family Services with criminal history record information
as defined in the Illinois Uniform Conviction Information Act
and information maintained in the adjudicatory and
dispositional record system as defined in subdivision (A)19
of this Section if the Department of Children and Family
Services determines the information is necessary to perform
its duties under the Abused and Neglected Child Reporting
Act, the Child Care Act of 1969, and the Children and Family
Services Act. The request shall be in the form and manner
specified by the Department of State Police.
(B) The Department of State Police may establish and
maintain, within the Department of State Police, a Statewide
Organized Criminal Gang Database (SWORD) for the purpose of
tracking organized criminal gangs and their memberships.
Information in the database may include, but not be limited
to, the name, last known address, birth date, physical
descriptions (such as scars, marks, or tattoos), officer
safety information, organized gang affiliation, and entering
agency identifier. The Department may develop, in
consultation with the Criminal Justice Information Authority,
and in a form and manner prescribed by the Department, an
automated data exchange system to compile, to maintain, and
to make this information electronically available to
prosecutors and to other law enforcement agencies. The
information may be used by authorized agencies to combat the
operations of organized criminal gangs statewide.
(C) The Department of State Police may ascertain the
number of bilingual police officers and other personnel
needed to provide services in a language other than English
and may establish, under applicable personnel rules and
Department guidelines or through a collective bargaining
agreement, a bilingual pay supplement program.
(Source: P.A. 88-45; 88-427; 88-614; 89-54, eff. 6-30-95.)
(20 ILCS 2605/55a-1) (from Ch. 127, par. 55a-1)
Sec. 55a-1. The Department of State Police is divided
into the Illinois State Police Academy and 5 divisions: the
Division of State Troopers, the Division of Criminal
Investigation, the Division of Forensic Services and
Identification, the Division of Administration, and the
Division of Internal Investigation.
(Source: P.A. 85-1042.)
(20 ILCS 2605/55a-4) (from Ch. 127, par. 55a-4)
Sec. 55a-4. The Division of Forensic Services and
Identification shall exercise the following functions:
1. to exercise the rights, powers and duties vested by
law in the Department by "An Act in relation to criminal
identification and investigation", approved July 2, 1931, as
amended;
2. to exercise the rights, powers and duties vested by
law in the Department by subsection (5) of Section 55a of
this Act;
3. to provide assistance to local law enforcement
agencies through training, management and consultant
services;
4. to exercise the rights, powers and duties vested by
law in the Department by "An Act relating to the
acquisition, possession and transfer of firearms and firearm
ammunition and to provide a penalty for the violation thereof
and to make an appropriation in connection therewith",
approved August 3, 1967, as amended;
5. to exercise other duties which may be assigned by the
Director in order to fulfill the responsibilities and achieve
the purposes of the Department; and
6. to establish and operate a forensic science
laboratory system, including a forensic toxicological
laboratory service, for the purpose of testing specimens
submitted by coroners and other law enforcement officers in
their efforts to determine whether alcohol, drugs or
poisonous or other toxic substances have been involved in
deaths, accidents or illness. Forensic toxicological
laboratories shall be established in Springfield, Chicago and
elsewhere in the State as needed.
(Source: P.A. 85-1209.)
Section 10. The State Finance Act is amended by adding
Sections 5.449 and 5.450 as follows:
(30 ILCS 105/5.449 new)
Sec. 5.449. The LEADS Maintenance Fund.
(30 ILCS 105/5.450 new)
Sec. 5.450. The State Offender DNA Identification System
Fund.
Section 15. The Illinois Purchasing Act is amended by
changing Section 10.3 as follows:
(30 ILCS 505/10.3) (from Ch. 127, par. 132.10-3)
Sec. 10.3. Unless otherwise provided, no person or
business entity convicted of a felony shall do business with
the State of Illinois or any State agency from the date of
conviction until 5 years 1 year after the date of completion
of the sentence for such felony, unless no person held
responsible by a prosecutional office for the facts upon
which the conviction was based continues to have any
involvement with the business entity.
(Source: P.A. 86-975; 86-1028; 87-766.)
Section 20. The Firearm Owners Identification Card Act is
amended by changing Section 8 as follows:
(430 ILCS 65/8) (from Ch. 38, par. 83-8)
Sec. 8. The Department of State Police has authority to
deny an application for or to revoke and seize a Firearm
Owner's Identification Card previously issued under this Act
only if the Department finds that the applicant or the person
to whom such card was issued is or was at the time of
issuance:
(a) A person under 21 years of age who has been
convicted of a misdemeanor other than a traffic offense or
adjudged delinquent;
(b) A person under 21 years of age who does not have the
written consent of his parent or guardian to acquire and
possess firearms and firearm ammunition, or whose parent or
guardian has revoked such written consent, or where such
parent or guardian does not qualify to have a Firearm Owner's
Identification Card;
(c) A person convicted of a felony under the laws of
this or any other jurisdiction;
(d) A person addicted to narcotics;
(e) A person who has been a patient of a mental
institution within the past 5 years;
(f) A person whose mental condition is of such a nature
that it poses a clear and present danger to the applicant,
any other person or persons or the community;
For the purposes of this Section, "mental condition"
means a state of mind manifested by violent, suicidal,
threatening or assaultive behavior.
(g) A person who is mentally retarded;
(h) A person who intentionally makes a false statement
in the Firearm Owner's Identification Card application;
(i) An alien who is unlawfully present in the United
States under the laws of the United States;
(j) A person who is subject to an existing order of
protection prohibiting him or her from possessing a firearm;
or
(k) A person who has been convicted within the past 5
years of domestic battery, battery, assault, aggravated
assault, violation of an order of protection, or a
substantially similar offense in another jurisdiction, in
which a firearm was used or possessed; or
(1) A person who is prohibited from acquiring or
possessing firearms or firearm ammunition by any Illinois
State statute or by federal law.
(Source: P.A. 88-680, eff. 1-1-95; 89-367, eff. 1-1-96.)
Section 25. The Code of Criminal Procedure of 1963 is
amended by changing Section 115-15 as follows:
(725 ILCS 5/115-15)
Sec. 115-15. Laboratory reports.
(a) In any criminal prosecution for a violation of
either the Cannabis Control Act or the Illinois Controlled
Substances Act, a laboratory report from the Department of
State Police, Division of Forensic Services and
Identification, that is signed and sworn to by the person
performing an analysis and that states (1) that the substance
that is the basis of the alleged violation has been weighed
and analyzed, and (2) the person's findings as to the
contents, weight and identity of the substance, and (3) that
it contains any amount of a controlled substance or cannabis
is prima facie evidence of the contents, identity and weight
of the substance. Attached to the report shall be a copy of
a notarized statement by the signer of the report giving the
name of the signer and stating (i) that he or she is an
employee of the Department of State Police, Division of
Forensic Services and Identification, (ii) the name and
location of the laboratory where the analysis was performed,
(iii) that performing the analysis is a part of his or her
regular duties, and (iv) that the signer is qualified by
education, training and experience to perform the analysis.
The signer shall also allege that scientifically accepted
tests were performed with due caution and that the evidence
was handled in accordance with established and accepted
procedures while in the custody of the laboratory.
(b) The State's Attorney shall serve a copy of the
report on the attorney of record for the accused, or on the
accused if he or she has no attorney, before any proceeding
in which the report is to be used against the accused other
than at a preliminary hearing or grand jury hearing when the
report may be used without having been previously served upon
the accused.
(c) The report shall not be prima facie evidence of the
contents, identity, and weight of the substance if the
accused or his or her attorney demands the testimony of the
person signing the report by serving the demand upon the
State's Attorney within 7 days from the accused or his or her
attorney's receipt of the report.
(Source: P.A. 88-137.)
Section 30. The Unified Code of Corrections is amended
by changing Sections 5-4-3 and 5-9-1 as follows:
(730 ILCS 5/5-4-3) (from Ch. 38, par. 1005-4-3)
Sec. 5-4-3. Persons convicted of, or found delinquent
for, sexual offenses or institutionalized as found sexually
dangerous; blood specimens; genetic marker groups tests
required.
(a) Any person convicted of, found delinquent for, or
who received a disposition of court supervision for, a sexual
offense or attempt of a sexual offense or institutionalized
as a sexually dangerous person under the Sexually Dangerous
Persons Act shall, regardless of the sentence or disposition
imposed, be required to submit specimens of blood to the
Illinois Department of State Police in accordance with the
provisions of this Section, provided such person is:
(1) convicted of a sexual offense or attempt of a
sexual offense on or after the effective date of this
amendatory Act of 1989, and sentenced to a term of
imprisonment, periodic imprisonment, fine, probation,
conditional discharge or any other form of sentence, or
given a disposition of court supervision for the offense,
or
(1.5) found delinquent under the Juvenile Court Act
of 1987 for a sexual offense or attempt of a sexual
offense on or after the effective date of this amendatory
Act of 1996, or
(2) ordered institutionalized as a sexually
dangerous person on or after the effective date of this
amendatory Act of 1989, or
(3) convicted of a sexual offense or attempt of a
sexual offense before the effective date of this
amendatory Act of 1989 and is presently confined as a
result of such conviction in any State correctional
facility or county jail or is presently serving a
sentence of probation, conditional discharge or periodic
imprisonment as a result of such conviction, or
(4) presently institutionalized as a sexually
dangerous person or presently institutionalized as a
person found guilty but mentally ill of a sexual offense
or attempt to commit a sexual offense; or
(5) seeking transfer to or residency in Illinois
under Sections 3-3-11 through 3-3-11.5 of the Unified
Code of Corrections (Interstate Compact for the
Supervision of Parolees and Probationers) or the
Interstate Agreements on Sexually Dangerous Persons Act.
(b) Any person required by paragraphs (a)(1), (a)(1.5),
and (a)(2) to provide specimens of blood shall be ordered by
the court to have specimens of blood collected within 45 days
after sentencing or disposition at a collection site
designated by the Illinois Department of State Police.
(c) Any person required by paragraphs (a)(3) and (a)(4)
to provide specimens of blood shall be required to provide
such samples prior to final discharge, parole, or release at
a collection site designated by the Illinois Department of
State Police.
(c-5) Any person required by paragraph (a)(5) to provide
specimens of blood shall, where feasible, be required to
provide the specimens before being accepted for conditioned
residency in Illinois under the interstate compact or
agreement, but no later than 45 days after arrival in this
State.
(d) The Illinois Department of State Police shall
provide all equipment and instructions necessary for the
collection of blood samples. The collection of samples shall
be performed in a medically approved manner. Only a
physician authorized to practice medicine, a registered nurse
or other qualified person approved by the Illinois Department
of Public Health may withdraw blood for the purposes of this
Act. The samples shall thereafter be forwarded to the
Illinois Department of State Police, Division of Forensic
Services and Identification, for analysis and categorizing
into genetic marker groupings.
(e) The genetic marker groupings shall be maintained by
the Illinois Department of State Police, Division of Forensic
Services and Identification.
(f) The genetic marker grouping analysis information
obtained pursuant to this Act shall be confidential and shall
be released only to peace officers of the United States, of
other states or territories, of the insular possessions of
the United States, of foreign countries duly authorized to
receive the same, to all peace officers of the State of
Illinois and to all prosecutorial agencies. Notwithstanding
any other statutory provision to the contrary, all
information obtained under this Section shall be maintained
in a single data base and may not be subject to expungement.
(g) For the purposes of this Section, "sexual offense"
means any violation of Sections 11-11, 12-13, 12-14, 12-14.1,
12-15 or 12-16 of the Criminal Code of 1961, or any former
statute of this State which defined a felony sexual offense.
(h) The Illinois Department of State Police shall be the
State central repository for all genetic marker grouping
analysis information obtained pursuant to this Act. The
Illinois Department of State Police may promulgate rules for
the form and manner of the collection of blood samples and
other procedures for the operation of this Act. The
provisions of the Administrative Review Law shall apply to
all actions taken under the rules so promulgated.
(i) A person ordered by the court to provide a blood
specimen shall cooperate with the collection of the specimen
and any deliberate act by that person intended to impede,
delay or stop the collection of the blood specimen shall be
punishable as contempt of court.
(j) Any person required by subsection (a) to submit
specimens of blood to the Illinois Department of State Police
for analysis and categorization into genetic marker grouping,
in addition to any other disposition, penalty, or fine
imposed, shall pay an analysis fee of $500. Upon verified
petition of the person, the court may suspend payment of all
or part of the fee if it finds that the person does not have
the ability to pay the fee.
(k) All analysis and categorization fees provided for by
subsection (j) shall be regulated as follows:
(1) The State Offender DNA Identification System
Fund is hereby created as a special fund in the State
Treasury.
(2) All fees shall be collected by the clerk of the
court and forwarded to the State Offender DNA
Identification System Fund for deposit. The clerk of the
circuit court may retain the amount of $10 from each
collected analysis fee to offset administrative costs
incurred in carrying out the clerk's responsibilities
under this Section.
(3) Fees deposited into the State Offender DNA
Identification System Fund shall be used by Illinois
State Police crime laboratories as designated by the
Director of State Police. These funds shall be in
addition to any allocations made pursuant to existing
laws and shall be designated for the exclusive use of
State crime laboratories. These uses may include, but
are not limited to, the following:
(A) Costs incurred in providing analysis and
genetic marker categorization as required by
subsection (d).
(B) Costs incurred in maintaining genetic
marker groupings as required by subsection (e).
(C) Costs incurred in the purchase and
maintenance of equipment for use in performing
analyses.
(D) Costs incurred in continuing research and
development of new techniques for analysis and
genetic marker categorization.
(E) Costs incurred in continuing education,
training, and professional development of forensic
scientists regularly employed by these laboratories.
(Source: P.A. 89-8, eff. 1-1-96; 89-428, eff. 12-13-95;
89-462, eff. 5-29-96; 89-550, eff. 1-1-97.)
(730 ILCS 5/5-9-1) (from Ch. 38, par. 1005-9-1)
Sec. 5-9-1. Authorized fines.
(a) An offender may be sentenced to pay a fine which
shall not exceed for each offense:
(1) for a felony, $10,000 or the amount specified
in the offense, whichever is greater, or where the
offender is a corporation, $50,000 or the amount
specified in the offense, whichever is greater;
(2) for a Class A misdemeanor, $1,000 or the amount
specified in the offense, whichever is greater;
(3) for a Class B or Class C misdemeanor, $500;
(4) for a petty offense, $500 or the amount
specified in the offense, whichever is less;
(5) for a business offense, the amount specified in
the statute defining that offense.
(b) A fine may be imposed in addition to a sentence of
conditional discharge, probation, periodic imprisonment, or
imprisonment.
(c) There shall be added to every fine imposed in
sentencing for a criminal or traffic offense, except an
offense relating to parking or registration, or offense by a
pedestrian, an additional penalty of $5 $4 for each $40, or
fraction thereof, of fine imposed. The additional penalty of
$5 $4 for each $40, or fraction thereof, of fine imposed, if
not otherwise assessed, shall also be added to every fine
imposed upon a plea of guilty, stipulation of facts or
findings of guilty, resulting in a judgment of conviction, or
order of supervision in criminal, traffic, local ordinance,
county ordinance, and conservation cases (except parking,
registration, or pedestrian violations), or upon a sentence
of probation without entry of judgment under Section 10 of
the Cannabis Control Act or Section 410 of the Controlled
Substances Act.
Such additional amounts shall be assessed by the court
imposing the fine and shall be collected by the Circuit Clerk
in addition to the fine and costs in the case. Each such
additional penalty shall be remitted by the Circuit Clerk
within one month after receipt to the State Treasurer. The
State Treasurer shall deposit $1 for each $40, or fraction
thereof, of fine imposed into the LEADS Maintenance Fund.
The remaining surcharge amount shall be deposited for deposit
into the Traffic and Criminal Conviction Surcharge Fund,
unless the fine, costs or additional amounts are subject to
disbursement by the circuit clerk under Section 27.5 of the
Clerks of Courts Act. Such additional penalty shall not be
considered a part of the fine for purposes of any reduction
in the fine for time served either before or after
sentencing. Not later than March 1 of each year the Circuit
Clerk shall submit a report of the amount of funds remitted
to the State Treasurer under this subsection (c) during the
preceding calendar year. Except as otherwise provided by
Supreme Court Rules, if a court in imposing a fine against an
offender levies a gross amount for fine, costs, fees and
penalties, the amount of the additional penalty provided for
herein shall be computed on the amount remaining after
deducting from the gross amount levied all fees of the
Circuit Clerk, the State's Attorney and the Sheriff. After
deducting from the gross amount levied the fees and
additional penalty provided for herein, less any other
additional penalties provided by law, the clerk shall remit
the net balance remaining to the entity authorized by law to
receive the fine imposed in the case. For purposes of this
Section "fees of the Circuit Clerk" shall include, if
applicable, the fee provided for under Section 27.3a of the
Clerks of Courts Act and the fee, if applicable, payable to
the county in which the violation occurred pursuant to
Section 5-1101 of the Counties Code.
(c-5) In addition to the fines imposed by subsection
(c), any person convicted or receiving an order of
supervision for driving under the influence of alcohol or
drugs shall pay an additional $25 fee to the clerk. This
additional fee, less 2 1/2% that shall be used to defray
administrative costs incurred by the clerk, shall be remitted
by the clerk to the Treasurer within 60 days after receipt
for deposit into the Trauma Center Fund. This additional fee
of $25 shall not be considered a part of the fine for
purposes of any reduction in the fine for time served either
before or after sentencing. Not later than March 1 of each
year the Circuit Clerk shall submit a report of the amount of
funds remitted to the State Treasurer under this subsection
(c-5) during the preceding calendar year.
The Circuit Clerk may accept payment of fines and costs
by credit card from an offender who has been convicted of a
traffic offense, petty offense or misdemeanor and may charge
the service fee permitted where fines and costs are paid by
credit card provided for in Section 27.3b of the Clerks of
Courts Act.
(d) In determining the amount and method of payment of a
fine, except for those fines established for violations of
Chapter 15 of the Illinois Vehicle Code, the court shall
consider:
(1) the financial resources and future ability of
the offender to pay the fine; and
(2) whether the fine will prevent the offender from
making court ordered restitution or reparation to the
victim of the offense; and
(3) in a case where the accused is a dissolved
corporation and the court has appointed counsel to
represent the corporation, the costs incurred either by
the county or the State for such representation.
(e) The court may order the fine to be paid forthwith or
within a specified period of time or in installments.
(f) All fines, costs and additional amounts imposed
under this Section for any violation of Chapters 3, 4, 6, and
11 of the Illinois Vehicle Code, or a similar provision of a
local ordinance, and any violation of the Child Passenger
Protection Act, or a similar provision of a local ordinance,
shall be collected and disbursed by the circuit clerk as
provided under Section 27.5 of the Clerks of Courts Act.
(Source: P.A. 89-105, eff. 1-1-96.)
INDEX
Statutes amended in order of appearance
20 ILCS 2605/55a from Ch. 127, par. 55a
20 ILCS 2605/55a-1 from Ch. 127, par. 55a-1
20 ILCS 2605/55a-4 from Ch. 127, par. 55a-4
30 ILCS 105/5.449 new
30 ILCS 105/5.450 new
30 ILCS 505/10.3 from Ch. 127, par. 132.10-3
430 ILCS 65/8 from Ch. 38, par. 83-8
725 ILCS 5/115-15
730 ILCS 5/5-4-3 from Ch. 38, par. 1005-4-3
730 ILCS 5/5-9-1 from Ch. 38, par. 1005-9-1