SB0092 Enrolled LRB094 06238 RLC 36309 b

1     AN ACT concerning criminal law.
 
2     Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
3 represented in the General Assembly:
 
4     Section 5. The Civil Administrative Code of Illinois is
5 amended by changing Sections 5-15, 5-20, and 5-335 and adding
6 Section 5-362 as follows:
 
7     (20 ILCS 5/5-15)  (was 20 ILCS 5/3)
8     Sec. 5-15. Departments of State government. The
9 Departments of State government are created as follows:
10     The Department on Aging.
11     The Department of Agriculture.
12     The Department of Central Management Services.
13     The Department of Children and Family Services.
14     The Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity.
15     The Department of Corrections.
16     The Department of Employment Security.
17     The Emergency Management Agency.
18     The Department of Financial Institutions.
19     The Department of Human Rights.
20     The Department of Human Services.
21     The Department of Insurance.
22     The Department of Juvenile Justice.
23     The Department of Labor.
24     The Department of the Lottery.
25     The Department of Natural Resources.
26     The Department of Professional Regulation.
27     The Department of Public Aid.
28     The Department of Public Health.
29     The Department of Revenue.
30     The Department of State Police.
31     The Department of Transportation.
32     The Department of Veterans' Affairs.

 

 

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1 (Source: P.A. 93-25, eff. 6-20-03; 93-1029, eff. 8-25-04.)
 
2     (20 ILCS 5/5-20)  (was 20 ILCS 5/4)
3     Sec. 5-20. Heads of departments. Each department shall have
4 an officer as its head who shall be known as director or
5 secretary and who shall, subject to the provisions of the Civil
6 Administrative Code of Illinois, execute the powers and
7 discharge the duties vested by law in his or her respective
8 department.
9     The following officers are hereby created:
10     Director of Aging, for the Department on Aging.
11     Director of Agriculture, for the Department of
12 Agriculture.
13     Director of Central Management Services, for the
14 Department of Central Management Services.
15     Director of Children and Family Services, for the
16 Department of Children and Family Services.
17     Director of Commerce and Economic Opportunity, for the
18 Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity.
19     Director of Corrections, for the Department of
20 Corrections.
21     Director of Emergency Management Agency, for the Emergency
22 Management Agency.
23     Director of Employment Security, for the Department of
24 Employment Security.
25     Director of Financial Institutions, for the Department of
26 Financial Institutions.
27     Director of Human Rights, for the Department of Human
28 Rights.
29     Secretary of Human Services, for the Department of Human
30 Services.
31     Director of Insurance, for the Department of Insurance.
32     Director of Juvenile Justice, for the Department of
33 Juvenile Justice.
34     Director of Labor, for the Department of Labor.
35     Director of the Lottery, for the Department of the Lottery.

 

 

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1     Director of Natural Resources, for the Department of
2 Natural Resources.
3     Director of Professional Regulation, for the Department of
4 Professional Regulation.
5     Director of Public Aid, for the Department of Public Aid.
6     Director of Public Health, for the Department of Public
7 Health.
8     Director of Revenue, for the Department of Revenue.
9     Director of State Police, for the Department of State
10 Police.
11     Secretary of Transportation, for the Department of
12 Transportation.
13     Director of Veterans' Affairs, for the Department of
14 Veterans' Affairs.
15 (Source: P.A. 93-25, eff. 6-20-03; 93-1029, eff. 8-25-04.)
 
16     (20 ILCS 5/5-335)  (was 20 ILCS 5/9.11a)
17     Sec. 5-335. In the Department of Corrections. The Director
18 of Corrections shall receive an annual salary as set by the
19 Governor from time to time or as set by the Compensation Review
20 Board, whichever is greater.
21     The Assistant Director of Corrections - Juvenile Division
22 shall receive an annual salary as set by the Governor from time
23 to time or as set by the Compensation Review Board, whichever
24 is greater.
25     The Assistant Director of Corrections - Adult Division
26 shall receive an annual salary as set by the Governor from time
27 to time or as set by the Compensation Review Board, whichever
28 is greater.
29 (Source: P.A. 91-25, eff. 6-9-99; 91-239, eff. 1-1-00; 92-16,
30 eff. 6-28-01.)
 
31     (20 ILCS 5/5-362 new)
32     Sec. 5-362. In the Department of Juvenile Justice. The
33 Director of Juvenile Justice shall receive an annual salary as
34 set by the Governor from time to time or as set by the

 

 

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1 Compensation Review Board, whichever is greater.
 
2     Section 6. The Children and Family Services Act is amended
3 by changing Section 17a-11 as follows:
 
4     (20 ILCS 505/17a-11)  (from Ch. 23, par. 5017a-11)
5     Sec. 17a-11. Governor's Youth Services Initiative. In
6 cooperation with the Department of Juvenile Justice
7 Corrections, the Department of Human Services and the Illinois
8 State Board of Education, the Department of Children and Family
9 Services shall establish the Governor's Youth Services
10 Initiative. This program shall offer assistance to
11 multi-problem youth whose difficulties are not the clear
12 responsibility of any one state agency, and who are referred to
13 the program by the juvenile court. The decision to establish
14 and to maintain an initiative program shall be based upon the
15 availability of program funds and the overall needs of the
16 service area.
17     A Policy Board shall be established as the decision-making
18 body of the Governor's Youth Services Initiative. The Board
19 shall be composed of State agency liaisons appointed by the
20 Secretary of Human Services, the Directors of the Department of
21 Children and Family Services and the Department of Juvenile
22 Justice Corrections, and the State Superintendent of
23 Education. The Board shall meet at least quarterly.
24     The Department of Children and Family Services may
25 establish a system of regional interagency councils in the
26 various geographic regions of the State to address, at the
27 regional or local level, the delivery of services to
28 multi-problem youth.
29     The Department of Children and Family Services in
30 consultation with the aforementioned sponsors of the program
31 shall promulgate rules and regulations pursuant to the Illinois
32 Administrative Procedure Act, for the development of
33 initiative programs in densely populated areas of the State to
34 meet the needs of multi-problem youth.

 

 

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1 (Source: P.A. 88-487; 89-507, eff. 7-1-97.)
 
2     Section 7. The Illinois Pension Code is amended by
3 changing Section 14-110 as follows:
 
4     (40 ILCS 5/14-110)  (from Ch. 108 1/2, par. 14-110)
5     Sec. 14-110. Alternative retirement annuity.
6     (a) Any member who has withdrawn from service with not less
7 than 20 years of eligible creditable service and has attained
8 age 55, and any member who has withdrawn from service with not
9 less than 25 years of eligible creditable service and has
10 attained age 50, regardless of whether the attainment of either
11 of the specified ages occurs while the member is still in
12 service, shall be entitled to receive at the option of the
13 member, in lieu of the regular or minimum retirement annuity, a
14 retirement annuity computed as follows:
15         (i) for periods of service as a noncovered employee: if
16     retirement occurs on or after January 1, 2001, 3% of final
17     average compensation for each year of creditable service;
18     if retirement occurs before January 1, 2001, 2 1/4% of
19     final average compensation for each of the first 10 years
20     of creditable service, 2 1/2% for each year above 10 years
21     to and including 20 years of creditable service, and 2 3/4%
22     for each year of creditable service above 20 years; and
23         (ii) for periods of eligible creditable service as a
24     covered employee: if retirement occurs on or after January
25     1, 2001, 2.5% of final average compensation for each year
26     of creditable service; if retirement occurs before January
27     1, 2001, 1.67% of final average compensation for each of
28     the first 10 years of such service, 1.90% for each of the
29     next 10 years of such service, 2.10% for each year of such
30     service in excess of 20 but not exceeding 30, and 2.30% for
31     each year in excess of 30.
32     Such annuity shall be subject to a maximum of 75% of final
33 average compensation if retirement occurs before January 1,
34 2001 or to a maximum of 80% of final average compensation if

 

 

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1 retirement occurs on or after January 1, 2001.
2     These rates shall not be applicable to any service
3 performed by a member as a covered employee which is not
4 eligible creditable service. Service as a covered employee
5 which is not eligible creditable service shall be subject to
6 the rates and provisions of Section 14-108.
7     (b) For the purpose of this Section, "eligible creditable
8 service" means creditable service resulting from service in one
9 or more of the following positions:
10         (1) State policeman;
11         (2) fire fighter in the fire protection service of a
12     department;
13         (3) air pilot;
14         (4) special agent;
15         (5) investigator for the Secretary of State;
16         (6) conservation police officer;
17         (7) investigator for the Department of Revenue;
18         (8) security employee of the Department of Human
19     Services;
20         (9) Central Management Services security police
21     officer;
22         (10) security employee of the Department of
23     Corrections or the Department of Juvenile Justice;
24         (11) dangerous drugs investigator;
25         (12) investigator for the Department of State Police;
26         (13) investigator for the Office of the Attorney
27     General;
28         (14) controlled substance inspector;
29         (15) investigator for the Office of the State's
30     Attorneys Appellate Prosecutor;
31         (16) Commerce Commission police officer;
32         (17) arson investigator;
33         (18) State highway maintenance worker.
34     A person employed in one of the positions specified in this
35 subsection is entitled to eligible creditable service for
36 service credit earned under this Article while undergoing the

 

 

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1 basic police training course approved by the Illinois Law
2 Enforcement Training Standards Board, if completion of that
3 training is required of persons serving in that position. For
4 the purposes of this Code, service during the required basic
5 police training course shall be deemed performance of the
6 duties of the specified position, even though the person is not
7 a sworn peace officer at the time of the training.
8     (c) For the purposes of this Section:
9         (1) The term "state policeman" includes any title or
10     position in the Department of State Police that is held by
11     an individual employed under the State Police Act.
12         (2) The term "fire fighter in the fire protection
13     service of a department" includes all officers in such fire
14     protection service including fire chiefs and assistant
15     fire chiefs.
16         (3) The term "air pilot" includes any employee whose
17     official job description on file in the Department of
18     Central Management Services, or in the department by which
19     he is employed if that department is not covered by the
20     Personnel Code, states that his principal duty is the
21     operation of aircraft, and who possesses a pilot's license;
22     however, the change in this definition made by this
23     amendatory Act of 1983 shall not operate to exclude any
24     noncovered employee who was an "air pilot" for the purposes
25     of this Section on January 1, 1984.
26         (4) The term "special agent" means any person who by
27     reason of employment by the Division of Narcotic Control,
28     the Bureau of Investigation or, after July 1, 1977, the
29     Division of Criminal Investigation, the Division of
30     Internal Investigation, the Division of Operations, or any
31     other Division or organizational entity in the Department
32     of State Police is vested by law with duties to maintain
33     public order, investigate violations of the criminal law of
34     this State, enforce the laws of this State, make arrests
35     and recover property. The term "special agent" includes any
36     title or position in the Department of State Police that is

 

 

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1     held by an individual employed under the State Police Act.
2         (5) The term "investigator for the Secretary of State"
3     means any person employed by the Office of the Secretary of
4     State and vested with such investigative duties as render
5     him ineligible for coverage under the Social Security Act
6     by reason of Sections 218(d)(5)(A), 218(d)(8)(D) and
7     218(l)(1) of that Act.
8         A person who became employed as an investigator for the
9     Secretary of State between January 1, 1967 and December 31,
10     1975, and who has served as such until attainment of age
11     60, either continuously or with a single break in service
12     of not more than 3 years duration, which break terminated
13     before January 1, 1976, shall be entitled to have his
14     retirement annuity calculated in accordance with
15     subsection (a), notwithstanding that he has less than 20
16     years of credit for such service.
17         (6) The term "Conservation Police Officer" means any
18     person employed by the Division of Law Enforcement of the
19     Department of Natural Resources and vested with such law
20     enforcement duties as render him ineligible for coverage
21     under the Social Security Act by reason of Sections
22     218(d)(5)(A), 218(d)(8)(D), and 218(l)(1) of that Act. The
23     term "Conservation Police Officer" includes the positions
24     of Chief Conservation Police Administrator and Assistant
25     Conservation Police Administrator.
26         (7) The term "investigator for the Department of
27     Revenue" means any person employed by the Department of
28     Revenue and vested with such investigative duties as render
29     him ineligible for coverage under the Social Security Act
30     by reason of Sections 218(d)(5)(A), 218(d)(8)(D) and
31     218(l)(1) of that Act.
32         (8) The term "security employee of the Department of
33     Human Services" means any person employed by the Department
34     of Human Services who (i) is employed at the Chester Mental
35     Health Center and has daily contact with the residents
36     thereof, (ii) is employed within a security unit at a

 

 

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1     facility operated by the Department and has daily contact
2     with the residents of the security unit, (iii) is employed
3     at a facility operated by the Department that includes a
4     security unit and is regularly scheduled to work at least
5     50% of his or her working hours within that security unit,
6     or (iv) is a mental health police officer. "Mental health
7     police officer" means any person employed by the Department
8     of Human Services in a position pertaining to the
9     Department's mental health and developmental disabilities
10     functions who is vested with such law enforcement duties as
11     render the person ineligible for coverage under the Social
12     Security Act by reason of Sections 218(d)(5)(A),
13     218(d)(8)(D) and 218(l)(1) of that Act. "Security unit"
14     means that portion of a facility that is devoted to the
15     care, containment, and treatment of persons committed to
16     the Department of Human Services as sexually violent
17     persons, persons unfit to stand trial, or persons not
18     guilty by reason of insanity. With respect to past
19     employment, references to the Department of Human Services
20     include its predecessor, the Department of Mental Health
21     and Developmental Disabilities.
22         The changes made to this subdivision (c)(8) by Public
23     Act 92-14 apply to persons who retire on or after January
24     1, 2001, notwithstanding Section 1-103.1.
25         (9) "Central Management Services security police
26     officer" means any person employed by the Department of
27     Central Management Services who is vested with such law
28     enforcement duties as render him ineligible for coverage
29     under the Social Security Act by reason of Sections
30     218(d)(5)(A), 218(d)(8)(D) and 218(l)(1) of that Act.
31         (10) For a member who first became an employee under
32     this Article before July 1, 2005, the term "security
33     employee of the Department of Corrections or the Department
34     of Juvenile Justice" means any employee of the Department
35     of Corrections or the Department of Juvenile Justice or the
36     former Department of Personnel, and any member or employee

 

 

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1     of the Prisoner Review Board, who has daily contact with
2     inmates or youth by working within a correctional facility
3     or Juvenile facility operated by the Department of Juvenile
4     Justice or who is a parole officer or an employee who has
5     direct contact with committed persons in the performance of
6     his or her job duties. For a member who first becomes an
7     employee under this Article on or after July 1, 2005, the
8     term means an employee of the Department of Corrections or
9     the Department of Juvenile Justice who is any of the
10     following: (i) officially headquartered at a correctional
11     facility or Juvenile facility operated by the Department of
12     Juvenile Justice, (ii) a parole officer, (iii) a member of
13     the apprehension unit, (iv) a member of the intelligence
14     unit, (v) a member of the sort team, or (vi) an
15     investigator.
16         (11) The term "dangerous drugs investigator" means any
17     person who is employed as such by the Department of Human
18     Services.
19         (12) The term "investigator for the Department of State
20     Police" means a person employed by the Department of State
21     Police who is vested under Section 4 of the Narcotic
22     Control Division Abolition Act with such law enforcement
23     powers as render him ineligible for coverage under the
24     Social Security Act by reason of Sections 218(d)(5)(A),
25     218(d)(8)(D) and 218(l)(1) of that Act.
26         (13) "Investigator for the Office of the Attorney
27     General" means any person who is employed as such by the
28     Office of the Attorney General and is vested with such
29     investigative duties as render him ineligible for coverage
30     under the Social Security Act by reason of Sections
31     218(d)(5)(A), 218(d)(8)(D) and 218(l)(1) of that Act. For
32     the period before January 1, 1989, the term includes all
33     persons who were employed as investigators by the Office of
34     the Attorney General, without regard to social security
35     status.
36         (14) "Controlled substance inspector" means any person

 

 

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1     who is employed as such by the Department of Professional
2     Regulation and is vested with such law enforcement duties
3     as render him ineligible for coverage under the Social
4     Security Act by reason of Sections 218(d)(5)(A),
5     218(d)(8)(D) and 218(l)(1) of that Act. The term
6     "controlled substance inspector" includes the Program
7     Executive of Enforcement and the Assistant Program
8     Executive of Enforcement.
9         (15) The term "investigator for the Office of the
10     State's Attorneys Appellate Prosecutor" means a person
11     employed in that capacity on a full time basis under the
12     authority of Section 7.06 of the State's Attorneys
13     Appellate Prosecutor's Act.
14         (16) "Commerce Commission police officer" means any
15     person employed by the Illinois Commerce Commission who is
16     vested with such law enforcement duties as render him
17     ineligible for coverage under the Social Security Act by
18     reason of Sections 218(d)(5)(A), 218(d)(8)(D), and
19     218(l)(1) of that Act.
20         (17) "Arson investigator" means any person who is
21     employed as such by the Office of the State Fire Marshal
22     and is vested with such law enforcement duties as render
23     the person ineligible for coverage under the Social
24     Security Act by reason of Sections 218(d)(5)(A),
25     218(d)(8)(D), and 218(l)(1) of that Act. A person who was
26     employed as an arson investigator on January 1, 1995 and is
27     no longer in service but not yet receiving a retirement
28     annuity may convert his or her creditable service for
29     employment as an arson investigator into eligible
30     creditable service by paying to the System the difference
31     between the employee contributions actually paid for that
32     service and the amounts that would have been contributed if
33     the applicant were contributing at the rate applicable to
34     persons with the same social security status earning
35     eligible creditable service on the date of application.
36         (18) The term "State highway maintenance worker" means

 

 

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1     a person who is either of the following:
2             (i) A person employed on a full-time basis by the
3         Illinois Department of Transportation in the position
4         of highway maintainer, highway maintenance lead
5         worker, highway maintenance lead/lead worker, heavy
6         construction equipment operator, power shovel
7         operator, or bridge mechanic; and whose principal
8         responsibility is to perform, on the roadway, the
9         actual maintenance necessary to keep the highways that
10         form a part of the State highway system in serviceable
11         condition for vehicular traffic.
12             (ii) A person employed on a full-time basis by the
13         Illinois State Toll Highway Authority in the position
14         of equipment operator/laborer H-4, equipment
15         operator/laborer H-6, welder H-4, welder H-6,
16         mechanical/electrical H-4, mechanical/electrical H-6,
17         water/sewer H-4, water/sewer H-6, sign maker/hanger
18         H-4, sign maker/hanger H-6, roadway lighting H-4,
19         roadway lighting H-6, structural H-4, structural H-6,
20         painter H-4, or painter H-6; and whose principal
21         responsibility is to perform, on the roadway, the
22         actual maintenance necessary to keep the Authority's
23         tollways in serviceable condition for vehicular
24         traffic.
25     (d) A security employee of the Department of Corrections or
26 the Department of Juvenile Justice, and a security employee of
27 the Department of Human Services who is not a mental health
28 police officer, shall not be eligible for the alternative
29 retirement annuity provided by this Section unless he or she
30 meets the following minimum age and service requirements at the
31 time of retirement:
32         (i) 25 years of eligible creditable service and age 55;
33     or
34         (ii) beginning January 1, 1987, 25 years of eligible
35     creditable service and age 54, or 24 years of eligible
36     creditable service and age 55; or

 

 

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1         (iii) beginning January 1, 1988, 25 years of eligible
2     creditable service and age 53, or 23 years of eligible
3     creditable service and age 55; or
4         (iv) beginning January 1, 1989, 25 years of eligible
5     creditable service and age 52, or 22 years of eligible
6     creditable service and age 55; or
7         (v) beginning January 1, 1990, 25 years of eligible
8     creditable service and age 51, or 21 years of eligible
9     creditable service and age 55; or
10         (vi) beginning January 1, 1991, 25 years of eligible
11     creditable service and age 50, or 20 years of eligible
12     creditable service and age 55.
13     Persons who have service credit under Article 16 of this
14 Code for service as a security employee of the Department of
15 Corrections or the Department of Juvenile Justice, or the
16 Department of Human Services in a position requiring
17 certification as a teacher may count such service toward
18 establishing their eligibility under the service requirements
19 of this Section; but such service may be used only for
20 establishing such eligibility, and not for the purpose of
21 increasing or calculating any benefit.
22     (e) If a member enters military service while working in a
23 position in which eligible creditable service may be earned,
24 and returns to State service in the same or another such
25 position, and fulfills in all other respects the conditions
26 prescribed in this Article for credit for military service,
27 such military service shall be credited as eligible creditable
28 service for the purposes of the retirement annuity prescribed
29 in this Section.
30     (f) For purposes of calculating retirement annuities under
31 this Section, periods of service rendered after December 31,
32 1968 and before October 1, 1975 as a covered employee in the
33 position of special agent, conservation police officer, mental
34 health police officer, or investigator for the Secretary of
35 State, shall be deemed to have been service as a noncovered
36 employee, provided that the employee pays to the System prior

 

 

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1 to retirement an amount equal to (1) the difference between the
2 employee contributions that would have been required for such
3 service as a noncovered employee, and the amount of employee
4 contributions actually paid, plus (2) if payment is made after
5 July 31, 1987, regular interest on the amount specified in item
6 (1) from the date of service to the date of payment.
7     For purposes of calculating retirement annuities under
8 this Section, periods of service rendered after December 31,
9 1968 and before January 1, 1982 as a covered employee in the
10 position of investigator for the Department of Revenue shall be
11 deemed to have been service as a noncovered employee, provided
12 that the employee pays to the System prior to retirement an
13 amount equal to (1) the difference between the employee
14 contributions that would have been required for such service as
15 a noncovered employee, and the amount of employee contributions
16 actually paid, plus (2) if payment is made after January 1,
17 1990, regular interest on the amount specified in item (1) from
18 the date of service to the date of payment.
19     (g) A State policeman may elect, not later than January 1,
20 1990, to establish eligible creditable service for up to 10
21 years of his service as a policeman under Article 3, by filing
22 a written election with the Board, accompanied by payment of an
23 amount to be determined by the Board, equal to (i) the
24 difference between the amount of employee and employer
25 contributions transferred to the System under Section 3-110.5,
26 and the amounts that would have been contributed had such
27 contributions been made at the rates applicable to State
28 policemen, plus (ii) interest thereon at the effective rate for
29 each year, compounded annually, from the date of service to the
30 date of payment.
31     Subject to the limitation in subsection (i), a State
32 policeman may elect, not later than July 1, 1993, to establish
33 eligible creditable service for up to 10 years of his service
34 as a member of the County Police Department under Article 9, by
35 filing a written election with the Board, accompanied by
36 payment of an amount to be determined by the Board, equal to

 

 

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1 (i) the difference between the amount of employee and employer
2 contributions transferred to the System under Section 9-121.10
3 and the amounts that would have been contributed had those
4 contributions been made at the rates applicable to State
5 policemen, plus (ii) interest thereon at the effective rate for
6 each year, compounded annually, from the date of service to the
7 date of payment.
8     (h) Subject to the limitation in subsection (i), a State
9 policeman or investigator for the Secretary of State may elect
10 to establish eligible creditable service for up to 12 years of
11 his service as a policeman under Article 5, by filing a written
12 election with the Board on or before January 31, 1992, and
13 paying to the System by January 31, 1994 an amount to be
14 determined by the Board, equal to (i) the difference between
15 the amount of employee and employer contributions transferred
16 to the System under Section 5-236, and the amounts that would
17 have been contributed had such contributions been made at the
18 rates applicable to State policemen, plus (ii) interest thereon
19 at the effective rate for each year, compounded annually, from
20 the date of service to the date of payment.
21     Subject to the limitation in subsection (i), a State
22 policeman, conservation police officer, or investigator for
23 the Secretary of State may elect to establish eligible
24 creditable service for up to 10 years of service as a sheriff's
25 law enforcement employee under Article 7, by filing a written
26 election with the Board on or before January 31, 1993, and
27 paying to the System by January 31, 1994 an amount to be
28 determined by the Board, equal to (i) the difference between
29 the amount of employee and employer contributions transferred
30 to the System under Section 7-139.7, and the amounts that would
31 have been contributed had such contributions been made at the
32 rates applicable to State policemen, plus (ii) interest thereon
33 at the effective rate for each year, compounded annually, from
34 the date of service to the date of payment.
35     (i) The total amount of eligible creditable service
36 established by any person under subsections (g), (h), (j), (k),

 

 

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1 and (l) of this Section shall not exceed 12 years.
2     (j) Subject to the limitation in subsection (i), an
3 investigator for the Office of the State's Attorneys Appellate
4 Prosecutor or a controlled substance inspector may elect to
5 establish eligible creditable service for up to 10 years of his
6 service as a policeman under Article 3 or a sheriff's law
7 enforcement employee under Article 7, by filing a written
8 election with the Board, accompanied by payment of an amount to
9 be determined by the Board, equal to (1) the difference between
10 the amount of employee and employer contributions transferred
11 to the System under Section 3-110.6 or 7-139.8, and the amounts
12 that would have been contributed had such contributions been
13 made at the rates applicable to State policemen, plus (2)
14 interest thereon at the effective rate for each year,
15 compounded annually, from the date of service to the date of
16 payment.
17     (k) Subject to the limitation in subsection (i) of this
18 Section, an alternative formula employee may elect to establish
19 eligible creditable service for periods spent as a full-time
20 law enforcement officer or full-time corrections officer
21 employed by the federal government or by a state or local
22 government located outside of Illinois, for which credit is not
23 held in any other public employee pension fund or retirement
24 system. To obtain this credit, the applicant must file a
25 written application with the Board by March 31, 1998,
26 accompanied by evidence of eligibility acceptable to the Board
27 and payment of an amount to be determined by the Board, equal
28 to (1) employee contributions for the credit being established,
29 based upon the applicant's salary on the first day as an
30 alternative formula employee after the employment for which
31 credit is being established and the rates then applicable to
32 alternative formula employees, plus (2) an amount determined by
33 the Board to be the employer's normal cost of the benefits
34 accrued for the credit being established, plus (3) regular
35 interest on the amounts in items (1) and (2) from the first day
36 as an alternative formula employee after the employment for

 

 

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1 which credit is being established to the date of payment.
2     (l) Subject to the limitation in subsection (i), a security
3 employee of the Department of Corrections may elect, not later
4 than July 1, 1998, to establish eligible creditable service for
5 up to 10 years of his or her service as a policeman under
6 Article 3, by filing a written election with the Board,
7 accompanied by payment of an amount to be determined by the
8 Board, equal to (i) the difference between the amount of
9 employee and employer contributions transferred to the System
10 under Section 3-110.5, and the amounts that would have been
11 contributed had such contributions been made at the rates
12 applicable to security employees of the Department of
13 Corrections, plus (ii) interest thereon at the effective rate
14 for each year, compounded annually, from the date of service to
15 the date of payment.
16     (m) The amendatory changes to this Section made by this
17 amendatory Act of the 94th General Assembly apply only to: (1)
18 security employees of the Department of Juvenile Justice
19 employed by the Department of Corrections before the effective
20 date of this amendatory Act of the 94th General Assembly and
21 transferred to the Department of Juvenile Justice by this
22 amendatory Act of the 94th General Assembly; and (2) persons
23 employed by the Department of Juvenile Justice on or after the
24 effective date of this amendatory Act of the 94th General
25 Assembly who are required by subsection (b) of Section 3-2.5-15
26 of the Unified Code of Corrections to have a bachelor's or
27 advanced degree from an accredited college or university with a
28 specialization in criminal justice, education, psychology,
29 social work, or a closely related social science or, in the
30 case of persons who provide vocational training, who are
31 required to have adequate knowledge in the skill for which they
32 are providing the vocational training.
33 (Source: P.A. 94-4, eff. 6-1-05.)
 
34     Section 10. The Counties Code is amended by changing
35 Section 3-6039 as follows:
 

 

 

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1     (55 ILCS 5/3-6039)
2     Sec. 3-6039. County juvenile impact incarceration program.
3     (a) With the approval of the county board, the Department
4 of Probation and Court Services in any county shall have the
5 power to operate a county juvenile impact incarceration program
6 for eligible delinquent minors. If the court finds that a minor
7 adjudicated a delinquent meets the eligibility requirements of
8 this Section, the court may in its dispositional order approve
9 the delinquent minor for placement in the county juvenile
10 impact incarceration program conditioned upon his or her
11 acceptance in the program by the Department of Probation and
12 Court Services. The dispositional order also shall provide that
13 if the Department of Probation and Court Services accepts the
14 delinquent minor in the program and determines that the
15 delinquent minor has successfully completed the county
16 juvenile impact incarceration program, the delinquent minor's
17 detention shall be reduced to time considered served upon
18 certification to the court by the Department of Probation and
19 Court Services that the delinquent minor has successfully
20 completed the program. If the delinquent minor is not accepted
21 for placement in the county juvenile impact incarceration
22 program or the delinquent minor does not successfully complete
23 the program, his or her term of commitment shall be as set
24 forth by the court in its dispositional order. If the
25 delinquent minor does not successfully complete the program,
26 time spent in the program does not count as time served against
27 the time limits as set forth in subsection (f) of this Section.
28     (b) In order to be eligible to participate in the county
29 juvenile impact incarceration program, the delinquent minor
30 must meet all of the following requirements:
31         (1) The delinquent minor is at least 13 years of age.
32         (2) The act for which the minor is adjudicated
33     delinquent does not constitute a Class X felony, criminal
34     sexual assault, first degree murder, aggravated
35     kidnapping, second degree murder, armed violence, arson,

 

 

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1     forcible detention, aggravated criminal sexual abuse or a
2     subsequent conviction for criminal sexual abuse.
3         (3) The delinquent minor has not previously
4     participated in a county juvenile impact incarceration
5     program and has not previously served a prior commitment
6     for an act constituting a felony in a Department of
7     Juvenile Justice Corrections juvenile correctional
8     facility. This provision shall not exclude a delinquent
9     minor who is committed to the Illinois Department of
10     Juvenile Justice Corrections and is participating in the
11     county juvenile impact incarceration program under an
12     intergovernmental cooperation agreement with the Illinois
13     Department of Juvenile Justice Corrections, Juvenile
14     Division.
15         (4) The delinquent minor is physically able to
16     participate in strenuous physical activities or labor.
17         (5) The delinquent minor does not have a mental
18     disorder or disability that would prevent participation in
19     the county juvenile impact incarceration program.
20         (6) The delinquent minor is recommended and approved
21     for placement in the county juvenile impact incarceration
22     program in the court's dispositional order.
23     The court and the Department of Probation and Court
24 Services may also consider, among other matters, whether the
25 delinquent minor has a history of escaping or absconding,
26 whether participation in the county juvenile impact
27 incarceration program may pose a risk to the safety or security
28 of any person, and whether space is available.
29     (c) The county juvenile impact incarceration program shall
30 include, among other matters, mandatory physical training and
31 labor, military formation and drills, regimented activities,
32 uniformity of dress and appearance, education and counseling,
33 including drug counseling if appropriate, and must impart to
34 the delinquent minor principles of honor, integrity,
35 self-sufficiency, self-discipline, self-respect, and respect
36 for others.

 

 

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1     (d) Privileges of delinquent minors participating in the
2 county juvenile impact incarceration program, including
3 visitation, commissary, receipt and retention of property and
4 publications, and access to television, radio, and a library,
5 may be suspended or restricted, at the discretion of the
6 Department of Probation and Court Services.
7     (e) Delinquent minors participating in the county juvenile
8 impact incarceration program shall adhere to all rules
9 promulgated by the Department of Probation and Court Services
10 and all requirements of the program. Delinquent minors shall be
11 informed of rules of behavior and conduct. Disciplinary
12 procedures required by any other law or county ordinance are
13 not applicable.
14     (f) Participation in the county juvenile impact
15 incarceration program by a minor adjudicated delinquent for an
16 act constituting a misdemeanor shall be for a period of at
17 least 7 days but less than 120 days as determined by the
18 Department of Probation and Court Services. Participation in
19 the county juvenile impact incarceration program by a minor
20 adjudicated delinquent for an act constituting a felony shall
21 be for a period of 120 to 180 days as determined by the
22 Department of Probation and Court Services.
23     (g) A delinquent minor may be removed from the program for
24 a violation of the terms or conditions of the program or if he
25 or she is for any reason unable to participate. The Department
26 of Probation and Court Services shall promulgate rules
27 governing conduct that could result in removal from the program
28 or in a determination that the delinquent minor has not
29 successfully completed the program. Delinquent minors shall
30 have access to these rules. The rules shall provide that the
31 delinquent minor shall receive notice and have the opportunity
32 to appear before and address the Department of Probation and
33 Court Services or a person appointed by the Department of
34 Probation and Court Services for this purpose. A delinquent
35 minor may be transferred to any juvenile facilities prior to
36 the hearing.

 

 

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1     (h) If the Department of Probation and Court Services
2 accepts the delinquent minor in the program and determines that
3 the delinquent minor has successfully completed the county
4 juvenile impact incarceration program, the court shall
5 discharge the minor from custody upon certification to the
6 court by the Department of Probation and Court Services that
7 the delinquent minor has successfully completed the program. In
8 the event the delinquent minor is not accepted for placement in
9 the county juvenile impact incarceration program or the
10 delinquent minor does not successfully complete the program,
11 his or her commitment to the Department of Juvenile Justice
12 Corrections, Juvenile Division, or juvenile detention shall be
13 as set forth by the court in its dispositional order.
14     (i) The Department of Probation and Court Services, with
15 the approval of the county board, shall have the power to enter
16 into intergovernmental cooperation agreements with the
17 Illinois Department of Juvenile Justice Corrections, Juvenile
18 Division, under which delinquent minors committed to the
19 Illinois Department of Juvenile Justice Corrections, Juvenile
20 Division, may participate in the county juvenile impact
21 incarceration program. A delinquent minor who successfully
22 completes the county juvenile impact incarceration program
23 shall be discharged from custody upon certification to the
24 court by the Illinois Department of Juvenile Justice
25 Corrections, Juvenile Division, that the delinquent minor has
26 successfully completed the program.
27 (Source: P.A. 89-302, eff. 8-11-95; 89-626, eff. 8-9-96;
28 89-689, eff. 12-31-96; 90-256, eff. 1-1-98.)
 
29     Section 11. The County Shelter Care and Detention Home Act
30 is amended by changing Sections 2 and 9.1 as follows:
 
31     (55 ILCS 75/2)  (from Ch. 23, par. 2682)
32     Sec. 2. Each county shelter care home and detention home
33 authorized and established by this Act shall comply with
34 minimum standards established by the Department of Juvenile

 

 

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1 Justice Corrections. No neglected or abused minor, addicted
2 minor, dependent minor or minor requiring authoritative
3 intervention, as defined in the Juvenile Court Act of 1987, or
4 minor alleged to be such, may be detained in any county
5 detention home.
6 (Source: P.A. 85-1209.)
 
7     (55 ILCS 75/9.1)  (from Ch. 23, par. 2689.1)
8     Sec. 9.1. (a) Within 6 months after the effective date of
9 this amendatory Act of 1979, all county detention homes or
10 independent sections thereof established prior to such
11 effective date shall be designated as either shelter care or
12 detention homes or both, provided physical arrangements are
13 created clearly separating the two, in accordance with their
14 basic physical features, programs and functions, by the
15 Department of Juvenile Justice Corrections in cooperation with
16 the Chief Judge of the Circuit Court and the county board.
17 Within one year after receiving notification of such
18 designation by the Department of Juvenile Justice Corrections,
19 all county shelter care homes and detention homes shall be in
20 compliance with this Act.
21     (b) Compliance with this amendatory Act of 1979 shall not
22 affect the validity of any prior referendum or the levy or
23 collection of any tax authorized under this Act. All county
24 shelter care homes and detention homes established and in
25 operation on the effective date of this amendatory Act of 1979
26 may continue to operate, subject to the provisions of this
27 amendatory Act of 1979, without further referendum.
28     (c) Compliance with this amendatory Act of 1987 shall not
29 affect the validity of any prior referendum or the levy or
30 collection of any tax authorized under this Act. All county
31 shelter care homes and detention homes established and in
32 operation on the effective date of this amendatory Act of 1987
33 may continue to operate, subject to the provisions of this
34 amendatory Act of 1987, without further referendum.
35 (Source: P.A. 85-637.)
 

 

 

SB0092 Enrolled - 23 - LRB094 06238 RLC 36309 b

1     Section 15. The School Code is amended by changing Sections
2 2-3.13a, 13-40, 13-41, 13-42, 13-43.8, 13-43.11, 13-43.18,
3 13-43.19, 13-43.20, 13-44, 13-44.3, 13-44.5, 13-45, 13B-20.15,
4 13B-35.5, and 13B-35.10 and the heading preceding Section 13-40
5 as follows:
 
6     (105 ILCS 5/2-3.13a)  (from Ch. 122, par. 2-3.13a)
7     Sec. 2-3.13a. School records; transferring students.
8     (a) The State Board of Education shall establish and
9 implement rules requiring all of the public schools and all
10 private or nonpublic elementary and secondary schools located
11 in this State, whenever any such school has a student who is
12 transferring to any other public elementary or secondary school
13 located in this or in any other state, to forward within 10
14 days of notice of the student's transfer an unofficial record
15 of that student's grades to the school to which such student is
16 transferring. Each public school at the same time also shall
17 forward to the school to which the student is transferring the
18 remainder of the student's school student records as required
19 by the Illinois School Student Records Act. In addition, if a
20 student is transferring from a public school, whether located
21 in this or any other state, from which the student has been
22 suspended or expelled for knowingly possessing in a school
23 building or on school grounds a weapon as defined in the Gun
24 Free Schools Act (20 U.S.C. 8921 et seq.), for knowingly
25 possessing, selling, or delivering in a school building or on
26 school grounds a controlled substance or cannabis, or for
27 battering a staff member of the school, and if the period of
28 suspension or expulsion has not expired at the time the student
29 attempts to transfer into another public school in the same or
30 any other school district: (i) any school student records
31 required to be transferred shall include the date and duration
32 of the period of suspension or expulsion; and (ii) with the
33 exception of transfers into the Department of Juvenile Justice
34 Corrections school district, the student shall not be permitted

 

 

SB0092 Enrolled - 24 - LRB094 06238 RLC 36309 b

1 to attend class in the public school into which he or she is
2 transferring until the student has served the entire period of
3 the suspension or expulsion imposed by the school from which
4 the student is transferring, provided that the school board may
5 approve the placement of the student in an alternative school
6 program established under Article 13A of this Code. A school
7 district may adopt a policy providing that if a student is
8 suspended or expelled for any reason from any public or private
9 school in this or any other state, the student must complete
10 the entire term of the suspension or expulsion before being
11 admitted into the school district. This policy may allow
12 placement of the student in an alternative school program
13 established under Article 13A of this Code, if available, for
14 the remainder of the suspension or expulsion. Each public
15 school and each private or nonpublic elementary or secondary
16 school in this State shall within 10 days after the student has
17 paid all of his or her outstanding fines and fees and at its
18 own expense forward an official transcript of the scholastic
19 records of each student transferring from that school in strict
20 accordance with the provisions of this Section and the rules
21 established by the State Board of Education as herein provided.
22     (b) The State Board of Education shall develop a one-page
23 standard form that Illinois school districts are required to
24 provide to any student who is moving out of the school district
25 and that contains the information about whether or not the
26 student is "in good standing" and whether or not his or her
27 medical records are up-to-date and complete. As used in this
28 Section, "in good standing" means that the student is not being
29 disciplined by a suspension or expulsion, but is entitled to
30 attend classes. No school district is required to admit a new
31 student who is transferring from another Illinois school
32 district unless he or she can produce the standard form from
33 the student's previous school district enrollment. No school
34 district is required to admit a new student who is transferring
35 from an out-of-state public school unless the parent or
36 guardian of the student certifies in writing that the student

 

 

SB0092 Enrolled - 25 - LRB094 06238 RLC 36309 b

1 is not currently serving a suspension or expulsion imposed by
2 the school from which the student is transferring.
3     (c) The State Board of Education shall, by rule, establish
4 a system to provide for the accurate tracking of transfer
5 students. This system shall, at a minimum, require that a
6 student be counted as a dropout in the calculation of a
7 school's or school district's annual student dropout rate
8 unless the school or school district to which the student
9 transferred (known hereafter in this subsection (c) as the
10 transferee school or school district) sends notification to the
11 school or school district from which the student transferred
12 (known hereafter in this subsection (c) as the transferor
13 school or school district) documenting that the student has
14 enrolled in the transferee school or school district. This
15 notification must occur within 150 days after the date the
16 student withdraws from the transferor school or school district
17 or the student shall be counted in the calculation of the
18 transferor school's or school district's annual student
19 dropout rate. A request by the transferee school or school
20 district to the transferor school or school district seeking
21 the student's academic transcripts or medical records shall be
22 considered without limitation adequate documentation of
23 enrollment. Each transferor school or school district shall
24 keep documentation of such transfer students for the minimum
25 period provided in the Illinois School Student Records Act. All
26 records indicating the school or school district to which a
27 student transferred are subject to the Illinois School Student
28 Records Act.
29 (Source: P.A. 92-64, eff. 7-12-01; 93-859, eff. 1-1-05.)
 
30     (105 ILCS 5/prec. Sec. 13-40 heading)
31
DEPARTMENT OF JUVENILE JUSTICE CORRECTIONS SCHOOL DISTRICT
32
DISTRICTS

 
33     (105 ILCS 5/13-40)  (from Ch. 122, par. 13-40)
34     Sec. 13-40. To increase the effectiveness of the Department

 

 

SB0092 Enrolled - 26 - LRB094 06238 RLC 36309 b

1 of Juvenile Justice Corrections and thereby to better serve the
2 interests of the people of Illinois the following bill is
3 presented.
4     Its purpose is to enhance the quality and scope of
5 education for inmates and wards within the Department of
6 Juvenile Justice Corrections so that they will be better
7 motivated and better equipped to restore themselves to
8 constructive and law abiding lives in the community. The
9 specific measure sought is the creation of a school district
10 within the Department so that its educational programs can meet
11 the needs of persons committed and so the resources of public
12 education at the state and federal levels are best used, all of
13 the same being contemplated within the provisions of the
14 Illinois State Constitution of 1970 which provides that "A
15 fundamental goal of the People of the State is the educational
16 development of all persons to the limits of their capacities."
17 Therefore, on July 1, 2006 July 1, 1972, the a Department of
18 Corrections school district shall be transferred to the
19 Department of Juvenile Justice. It shall be responsible is
20 established for the education of youth inmates and wards within
21 the Department of Juvenile Justice and inmates age 21 or under
22 within the Department of Corrections who have not yet earned a
23 high school diploma or a General Educational Development (GED)
24 certificate Corrections and the said district may establish
25 primary, secondary, vocational, adult, special and advanced
26 educational schools as provided in this Act. The Department of
27 Corrections retains authority as provided for in subsection (d)
28 of Section 3-6-2 of the Unified Code of Corrections. The Board
29 of Education for this district shall with the aid and advice of
30 professional educational personnel of the Department of
31 Juvenile Justice Corrections and the State Board of Education
32 determine the needs and type of schools and the curriculum for
33 each school within the school district and may proceed to
34 establish the same through existing means within present and
35 future appropriations, federal and state school funds,
36 vocational rehabilitation grants and funds and all other funds,

 

 

SB0092 Enrolled - 27 - LRB094 06238 RLC 36309 b

1 gifts and grants, private or public, including federal funds,
2 but not exclusive to the said sources but inclusive of all
3 funds which might be available for school purposes. The school
4 district shall first organize a school system for the Adult
5 Division of the Department of Corrections to go into effect
6 July 1, 1972. A school system for the Juvenile Division shall
7 subsequently be organized and put into effect under this school
8 district at such time as the school board shall determine
9 necessary.
10 (Source: P.A. 81-1508.)
 
11     (105 ILCS 5/13-41)  (from Ch. 122, par. 13-41)
12     Sec. 13-41. The Board of Education for this school district
13 shall be composed of the Director of the Department of Juvenile
14 Justice Corrections, the Assistant Director of the Juvenile
15 Division and the Assistant Director of the Adult Division of
16 said Department. Of the remaining members, 2 members shall be
17 appointed by the Director of the Department of Juvenile Justice
18 Corrections and 4 members shall be appointed by the State Board
19 of Education, at least one of whom shall have knowledge of, or
20 experience in, vocational education and one of whom shall have
21 knowledge of, or experience in, higher and continuing
22 education. All Subsequent to the initial appointments all
23 members of the Board shall hold office for a period of 3 years,
24 except that members shall continue to serve until their
25 replacements are appointed. One of the initial appointees of
26 the Director of the Department of Corrections and the State
27 Board of Education shall be for a one-year term. One of the
28 initial appointees of the State Board of Education shall be for
29 a two-year term. The remaining initial appointees shall serve
30 for a three-year term. Vacancies shall be filled in like manner
31 for the unexpired balance of the term. The members appointed
32 shall be selected so far as is practicable on the basis of
33 their knowledge of, or experience in, problems of education in
34 correctional, vocational and general educational institutions.
35 Members shall serve without compensation, but shall be

 

 

SB0092 Enrolled - 28 - LRB094 06238 RLC 36309 b

1 reimbursed for reasonable expenses incurred in the performance
2 of their duties.
3 (Source: P.A. 81-1508.)
 
4     (105 ILCS 5/13-42)  (from Ch. 122, par. 13-42)
5     Sec. 13-42. The President of the Board of Education shall
6 be the Director of the Department of Juvenile Justice shall be
7 the President of the Board of Education Corrections and the
8 Secretary of said Board of Education shall be designated at the
9 first regular meeting of said Board of Education. The Board
10 shall hold regular meetings upon the call of the Chairman or
11 any 3 members at such times as they may designate so long as
12 they meet at least 6 times a year. Public notice of meetings
13 must be given as prescribed in Sections 2.02 and 2.03 of "An
14 Act in relation to meetings", approved July 11, 1957, as
15 heretofore or hereafter amended. No official business shall be
16 transacted by the Board except at a regular or special meeting.
17 A majority of said Board shall constitute a quorum.
18     The Board shall keep a record of the official acts of the
19 Board and shall make reports as required by the State Board of
20 Education and any reports required which shall be applicable to
21 this type of school district and specifically shall maintain
22 records to substantiate all district claims for State aid in
23 accordance with regulations prescribed by the State Board of
24 Education and to retain such records for a period of three
25 years.
26     The Board of Education may have its organizational meeting
27 at any time after July 1, 1972, then fixing a time and place
28 for regular meetings. It shall then enter upon the discharge of
29 its duties. However, for the purpose of planning, and
30 organizing said District, the Department of Corrections shall
31 have authority to act after passage and approval of this Act.
32     The Board shall be supplied such clerical employee or
33 employees as are necessary for the efficient operation by the
34 Department of Juvenile Justice Corrections.
35 (Source: P.A. 81-1508.)
 

 

 

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1     (105 ILCS 5/13-43.8)  (from Ch. 122, par. 13-43.8)
2     Sec. 13-43.8. To enter agreements with school districts,
3 private junior colleges and public community colleges, and
4 public and private colleges and universities for the purpose of
5 providing advanced vocational training of students who desire
6 preparation for a trade. Such program would utilize private
7 junior college and public community college facilities with
8 transportation to and from those facilities provided by the
9 participating school district, or by the participating school
10 district in conjunction with other school districts. The
11 duration of the advanced vocational training program shall be
12 such period as the school district may approve, but it may not
13 exceed 2 years. Participation in the program is accorded the
14 same credit toward a high school diploma as time spent in other
15 courses. If a student of this school district, because of his
16 educational needs, attends a class or school in another school
17 district or educational facility, the Department of Juvenile
18 Justice School District Corrections school district where he
19 resides shall be granted the proper permit, provide any
20 necessary transportation, and pay to the school district or
21 educational facility maintaining the educational facility the
22 proportional per capita cost of educating such student.
23 (Source: P.A. 82-622.)
 
24     (105 ILCS 5/13-43.11)  (from Ch. 122, par. 13-43.11)
25     Sec. 13-43.11.
26     Subject to the rules and regulations of the Department of
27 Juvenile Justice Corrections and the laws and statutes
28 applicable, the Board shall have the power and the authority to
29 assign to schools within the district and to expel or suspend
30 pupils for disciplinary purposes or to assign or reassign them
31 as the needs of the district or the pupil shall be determined
32 best. Once a student commences a course of training he shall
33 attend all sessions unless restricted by illness, a reasonable
34 excuse or by direction of the Department of Juvenile Justice

 

 

SB0092 Enrolled - 30 - LRB094 06238 RLC 36309 b

1 Corrections or the facility at which he is located. Conferences
2 shall be held at regular periodic intervals with the ward or
3 the inmate and the school district authorities and facility
4 officials shall determine the extent the ward or inmate is
5 benefiting from the particular program, and shall further
6 determine whether the said ward or inmate shall continue in the
7 program to which he is assigned or be dropped from the same or
8 be transferred to another program more suited to his needs or
9 the school district's needs.
10 (Source: P.A. 77-1779.)
 
11     (105 ILCS 5/13-43.18)  (from Ch. 122, par. 13-43.18)
12     Sec. 13-43.18. To develop through consultation with the
13 staff of the Department of Juvenile Justice Corrections and the
14 staff of the State Board of Education educational goals and
15 objectives for the correctional education programs planned for
16 or conducted by the district, along with the methods for
17 evaluating the extent to which the goals and objectives are or
18 have been achieved and to develop by July 1, 1973, a complete
19 financial control system for all educational funds and programs
20 operated by the school district.
21 (Source: P.A. 81-1508.)
 
22     (105 ILCS 5/13-43.19)  (from Ch. 122, par. 13-43.19)
23     Sec. 13-43.19.
24     To develop and annually revise an educational plan for
25 achieving the goals and objectives called for in Section Sec.
26 13-43.18 for both the Adult and Juvenile Divisions of the
27 Department of Juvenile Justice Corrections with specific
28 recommendations for inmate educational assessment, curriculum,
29 staffing and other necessary considerations.
30 (Source: P.A. 77-1779.)
 
31     (105 ILCS 5/13-43.20)  (from Ch. 122, par. 13-43.20)
32     Sec. 13-43.20. To develop a method or methods for
33 allocating state funds to the Board for expenditure within the

 

 

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1 various divisions and/or for programs conducted by the Board,
2 and to annually determine the average per capita cost of
3 students in the Department of Juvenile Justice Juvenile
4 Division and the average per capita cost of students in the
5 Department of Corrections Adult Division for education classes
6 and/or programs required to accomplish the educational goals
7 and objectives and programs specified in Sections 13-43.18 and
8 13-43.19 and recommend to the State Board of Education by July
9 15 of each year the per capita amount necessary to operate the
10 Department of Juvenile Justice School District's correction
11 school district's educational program for the following fiscal
12 year.
13 (Source: P.A. 81-1508.)
 
14     (105 ILCS 5/13-44)  (from Ch. 122, par. 13-44)
15     Sec. 13-44.
16     Other provisions, duties and conditions of the Department
17 of Juvenile Justice Corrections School District are set out in
18 Sections 13-44.1 through 13-44.5.
19 (Source: P.A. 77-1779.)
 
20     (105 ILCS 5/13-44.3)  (from Ch. 122, par. 13-44.3)
21     Sec. 13-44.3. In order to fully carry out the purpose of
22 this Act, the School District through its Board or designated
23 supervisory personnel, with the approval of the Director of the
24 Department of Juvenile Justice Corrections, may authorize
25 field trips outside of the particular institution or facility
26 where a school is established and may remove students therefrom
27 or may with the approval of the Director of the Department of
28 Juvenile Justice Corrections transfer inmates and wards to
29 other schools and other facilities where particular subject
30 matter or facilities are more suited to or are needed to
31 complete the inmates' or wards' education. The Assistant
32 Director of the Adult Division of the Department of Juvenile
33 Justice Corrections or the Assistant Director of the Juvenile
34 Division may authorize an educational furlough for an inmate or

 

 

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1 ward to attend institutions of higher education, other schools,
2 vocational or technical schools or enroll and attend classes in
3 subjects not available within the School District, to be
4 financed by the inmate or ward or any grant or scholarship
5 which may be available, including school aid funds of any kind
6 when approved by the Board and the Director of the Department.
7     The Department of Juvenile Justice Corrections may extend
8 the limits of the place of confinement of an inmate or ward
9 under the above conditions and for the above purposes, to leave
10 for the aforesaid reasons, the confines of such place,
11 accompanied or unaccompanied, in the discretion of the Director
12 of such Department by a custodial agent or educational
13 personnel.
14     The willful failure of an inmate or ward to remain within
15 the extended limits of his or her confinement or to return
16 within the time prescribed to the place of confinement
17 designated by the Department of Corrections or the Department
18 of Juvenile Justice in granting such extension or when ordered
19 to return by the custodial personnel or the educational
20 personnel or other departmental order shall be deemed an escape
21 from the custody of such Department and punishable as provided
22 in the Unified Code of Corrections as to the Department of
23 Corrections Adult Division inmates, and the applicable
24 provision of the Juvenile Court Act of 1987 shall apply to
25 wards of the Department of Juvenile Justice Division who might
26 abscond.
27 (Source: P.A. 85-1209; 86-1475.)
 
28     (105 ILCS 5/13-44.5)  (from Ch. 122, par. 13-44.5)
29     Sec. 13-44.5.
30     In all cases where an inmate or ward is to leave the
31 institution or facility where he or she is confined for
32 educational furloughs, vocational training, for field trips or
33 for any other reason herein stated, authority must first be
34 granted by the Department of Juvenile Justice Corrections and
35 the said authority shall be discretionary with the Department

 

 

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1 of Juvenile Justice Corrections. The question of whether or not
2 the said inmate or ward or group of inmates or wards shall be
3 accompanied or not accompanied by security personnel,
4 custodial agent or agents or only educational personnel shall
5 be in the discretion of the Department of Juvenile Justice
6 Corrections. All transfers must be approved by the Department
7 of Juvenile Justice Corrections.
8 (Source: P.A. 77-1779.)
 
9     (105 ILCS 5/13-45)  (from Ch. 122, par. 13-45)
10     Sec. 13-45.
11     Other provisions of this Code shall not apply to the
12 Department of Juvenile Justice Corrections School District
13 being all of the following Articles and Sections: Articles 7,
14 8, 9, those sections of Article 10 in conflict with any
15 provisions of Sections 13-40 through 13-45, and Articles 11,
16 12, 15, 17, 18, 19, 19A, 20, 22, 24, 26, 31, 32, 33, 34, 35.
17 Also Article 28 shall not apply except that this School
18 District may use any funds available from State, Federal and
19 other funds for the purchase of textbooks, apparatus and
20 equipment.
21 (Source: P.A. 77-1779.)
 
22     (105 ILCS 5/13B-20.15)
23     Sec. 13B-20.15. Other eligible providers of alternative
24 learning opportunities. School districts may contract with
25 health, mental health, or human service organizations,
26 workforce development boards or agencies, juvenile court
27 services, juvenile justice agencies, juvenile detention
28 programs, programs operated by the Department of Juvenile
29 Justice Corrections, or other appropriate agencies or
30 organizations to serve students whose needs are not being met
31 in the regular school program by providing alternative learning
32 opportunities.
33 (Source: P.A. 92-42, eff. 1-1-02.)
 

 

 

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1     (105 ILCS 5/13B-35.5)
2     Sec. 13B-35.5. Local governance; cooperative agreements.
3 For an alternative learning opportunities program operated
4 jointly or offered under contract, the local governance of the
5 program shall be established by each local school board through
6 a cooperative or intergovernmental agreement with other school
7 districts. Cooperative agreements may be established among
8 regional offices of education, public community colleges,
9 community-based organizations, health and human service
10 agencies, youth service agencies, juvenile court services, the
11 Department of Juvenile Justice Corrections, and other
12 non-profit or for-profit education or support service
13 providers as appropriate. Nothing contained in this Section
14 shall prevent a school district, regional office of education,
15 or intermediate service center from forming a cooperative for
16 the purpose of delivering an alternative learning
17 opportunities program.
18 (Source: P.A. 92-42, eff. 1-1-02.)
 
19     (105 ILCS 5/13B-35.10)
20     Sec. 13B-35.10. Committee of Cooperative Services. The
21 State Superintendent of Education shall convene a State-level
22 Committee of Cooperative Services. The Committee shall include
23 representatives of the following agencies and organizations,
24 selected by their respective heads: the Office of the Governor,
25 the State Board of Education, the Illinois Association of
26 Regional Superintendents of Schools, the Chicago Public
27 Schools, the Intermediate Service Centers, the State Teacher
28 Certification Board, the Illinois Community College Board, the
29 Department of Human Services, the Department of Children and
30 Family Services, the Illinois Principals Association, the
31 Illinois Education Association, the Illinois Federation of
32 Teachers, the Illinois Juvenile Justice Commission, the Office
33 of the Attorney General, the Illinois Association of School
34 Administrators, the Administrative Office of the Illinois
35 Courts, the Department of Juvenile Justice Corrections,

 

 

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1 special education advocacy organizations, and non-profit and
2 community-based organizations, as well as parent
3 representatives and child advocates designated by the State
4 Superintendent of Education.
5 (Source: P.A. 92-42, eff. 1-1-02.)
 
6     Section 16. The Child Care Act of 1969 is amended by
7 changing Section 2.22 as follows:
 
8     (225 ILCS 10/2.22)
9     Sec. 2.22. "Secure child care facility" means any child
10 care facility licensed by the Department to provide secure
11 living arrangements for children under 18 years of age who are
12 subject to placement in facilities under the Children and
13 Family Services Act and who are not subject to placement in
14 facilities for whom standards are established by the Department
15 of Juvenile Justice Corrections under Section 3-15-2 of the
16 Unified Code of Corrections and which comply with the
17 requirements of this Act and applicable rules of the Department
18 and which shall be consistent with requirements established for
19 child residents of mental health facilities under the Juvenile
20 Court Act of 1987 and the Mental Health and Developmental
21 Disabilities Code. "Secure child care facility" also means a
22 facility that is designed and operated to ensure that all
23 entrances and exists from the facility, a building, or a
24 distinct part of the building are under the exclusive control
25 of the staff of the facility, whether or not the child has the
26 freedom of movement within the perimeter of the facility,
27 building, or distinct part of the building.
28 (Source: P.A. 90-608, eff. 6-30-98.)
 
29     Section 17. The Illinois Public Aid Code is amended by
30 changing Section 12-10.4 as follows:
 
31     (305 ILCS 5/12-10.4)
32     Sec. 12-10.4. Juvenile Rehabilitation Services Medicaid

 

 

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1 Matching Fund. There is created in the State Treasury the
2 Juvenile Rehabilitation Services Medicaid Matching Fund.
3 Deposits to this Fund shall consist of all moneys received from
4 the federal government for behavioral health services secured
5 by counties under the Medicaid Rehabilitation Option pursuant
6 to Title XIX of the Social Security Act or under the Children's
7 Health Insurance Program pursuant to the Children's Health
8 Insurance Program Act and Title XXI of the Social Security Act
9 for minors who are committed to mental health facilities by the
10 Illinois court system and for residential placements secured by
11 the Department of Juvenile Justice Corrections for minors as a
12 condition of their parole.
13     Disbursements from the Fund shall be made, subject to
14 appropriation, by the Illinois Department of Public Aid for
15 grants to the Department of Juvenile Justice Corrections and
16 those counties which secure behavioral health services ordered
17 by the courts and which have an interagency agreement with the
18 Department and submit detailed bills according to standards
19 determined by the Department.
20 (Source: P.A. 90-587, eff. 7-1-98; 91-266, eff. 7-23-99;
21 91-712, eff. 7-1-00.)
 
22     Section 18. The Children's Mental Health Act of 2003 is
23 amended by changing Section 5 as follows:
 
24     (405 ILCS 49/5)
25     Sec. 5. Children's Mental Health Plan.
26     (a) The State of Illinois shall develop a Children's Mental
27 Health Plan containing short-term and long-term
28 recommendations to provide comprehensive, coordinated mental
29 health prevention, early intervention, and treatment services
30 for children from birth through age 18. This Plan shall include
31 but not be limited to:
32         (1) Coordinated provider services and interagency
33     referral networks for children from birth through age 18 to
34     maximize resources and minimize duplication of services.

 

 

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1         (2) Guidelines for incorporating social and emotional
2     development into school learning standards and educational
3     programs, pursuant to Section 15 of this Act.
4         (3) Protocols for implementing screening and
5     assessment of children prior to any admission to an
6     inpatient hospital for psychiatric services, pursuant to
7     subsection (a) of Section 5-5.23 of the Illinois Public Aid
8     Code.
9         (4) Recommendations regarding a State budget for
10     children's mental health prevention, early intervention,
11     and treatment across all State agencies.
12         (5) Recommendations for State and local mechanisms for
13     integrating federal, State, and local funding sources for
14     children's mental health.
15         (6) Recommendations for building a qualified and
16     adequately trained workforce prepared to provide mental
17     health services for children from birth through age 18 and
18     their families.
19         (7) Recommendations for facilitating research on best
20     practices and model programs, and dissemination of this
21     information to Illinois policymakers, practitioners, and
22     the general public through training, technical assistance,
23     and educational materials.
24         (8) Recommendations for a comprehensive, multi-faceted
25     public awareness campaign to reduce the stigma of mental
26     illness and educate families, the general public, and other
27     key audiences about the benefits of children's social and
28     emotional development, and how to access services.
29         (9) Recommendations for creating a quality-driven
30     children's mental health system with shared accountability
31     among key State agencies and programs that conducts ongoing
32     needs assessments, uses outcome indicators and benchmarks
33     to measure progress, and implements quality data tracking
34     and reporting systems.
35     (b) The Children's Mental Health Partnership (hereafter
36 referred to as "the Partnership") is created. The Partnership

 

 

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1 shall have the responsibility of developing and monitoring the
2 implementation of the Children's Mental Health Plan as approved
3 by the Governor. The Children's Mental Health Partnership shall
4 be comprised of: the Secretary of Human Services or his or her
5 designee; the State Superintendent of Education or his or her
6 designee; the directors of the departments of Children and
7 Family Services, Public Aid, Public Health, and Juvenile
8 Justice Corrections, or their designees; the head of the
9 Illinois Violence Prevention Authority, or his or her designee;
10 the Attorney General or his or her designee; up to 25
11 representatives of community mental health authorities and
12 statewide mental health, children and family advocacy, early
13 childhood, education, health, substance abuse, violence
14 prevention, and juvenile justice organizations or
15 associations, to be appointed by the Governor; and 2 members of
16 each caucus of the House of Representatives and Senate
17 appointed by the Speaker of the House of Representatives and
18 the President of the Senate, respectively. The Governor shall
19 appoint the Partnership Chair and shall designate a Governor's
20 staff liaison to work with the Partnership.
21     (c) The Partnership shall submit a Preliminary Plan to the
22 Governor on September 30, 2004 and shall submit the Final Plan
23 on June 30, 2005. Thereafter, on September 30 of each year, the
24 Partnership shall submit an annual report to the Governor on
25 the progress of Plan implementation and recommendations for
26 revisions in the Plan. The Final Plan and annual reports
27 submitted in subsequent years shall include estimates of
28 savings achieved in prior fiscal years under subsection (a) of
29 Section 5-5.23 of the Illinois Public Aid Code and federal
30 financial participation received under subsection (b) of
31 Section 5-5.23 of that Code. The Department of Public Aid shall
32 provide technical assistance in developing these estimates and
33 reports.
34 (Source: P.A. 93-495, eff. 8-8-03.)
 
35     Section 19. The Circuit Courts Act is amended by changing

 

 

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1 Section 2b as follows:
 
2     (705 ILCS 35/2b)  (from Ch. 37, par. 72.2b)
3     Sec. 2b.
4     In addition to the number of circuit judges authorized
5 under Section 2 or Section 2a, whichever number is greater, one
6 additional circuit judge shall be elected in each circuit,
7 other than Cook County, having a population of 230,000 or more
8 inhabitants in which there is included a county containing a
9 population of 200,000 or more inhabitants and in which circuit
10 there is situated one or more State colleges or universities
11 and one or more State Mental Health Institutions and two or
12 more State Institutions for Juvenile Offenders under the
13 authority of the Illinois Department of Juvenile Justice
14 Corrections, each of which institutions has been in existence
15 for more than 20 years on the effective date of this amendatory
16 Act of 1970.
17 (Source: P.A. 76-2022.)
 
18     Section 20. The Juvenile Court Act of 1987 is amended by
19 changing Sections 5-130, 5-705, 5-710, 5-750, 5-815, 5-820,
20 5-901, 5-905, and 5-915 as follows:
 
21     (705 ILCS 405/5-130)
22     Sec. 5-130. Excluded jurisdiction.
23     (1) (a) The definition of delinquent minor under Section
24 5-120 of this Article shall not apply to any minor who at the
25 time of an offense was at least 15 years of age and who is
26 charged with: (i) first degree murder, (ii) aggravated criminal
27 sexual assault, (iii) aggravated battery with a firearm where
28 the minor personally discharged a firearm as defined in Section
29 2-15.5 of the Criminal Code of 1961, (iv) armed robbery when
30 the armed robbery was committed with a firearm, or (v)
31 aggravated vehicular hijacking when the hijacking was
32 committed with a firearm.
33     These charges and all other charges arising out of the same

 

 

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1 incident shall be prosecuted under the criminal laws of this
2 State.
3     (b) (i) If before trial or plea an information or
4 indictment is filed that does not charge an offense specified
5 in paragraph (a) of this subsection (1) the State's Attorney
6 may proceed on any lesser charge or charges, but only in
7 Juvenile Court under the provisions of this Article. The
8 State's Attorney may proceed under the Criminal Code of 1961 on
9 a lesser charge if before trial the minor defendant knowingly
10 and with advice of counsel waives, in writing, his or her right
11 to have the matter proceed in Juvenile Court.
12     (ii) If before trial or plea an information or indictment
13 is filed that includes one or more charges specified in
14 paragraph (a) of this subsection (1) and additional charges
15 that are not specified in that paragraph, all of the charges
16 arising out of the same incident shall be prosecuted under the
17 Criminal Code of 1961.
18     (c) (i) If after trial or plea the minor is convicted of
19 any offense covered by paragraph (a) of this subsection (1),
20 then, in sentencing the minor, the court shall have available
21 any or all dispositions prescribed for that offense under
22 Chapter V of the Unified Code of Corrections.
23     (ii) If after trial or plea the court finds that the minor
24 committed an offense not covered by paragraph (a) of this
25 subsection (1), that finding shall not invalidate the verdict
26 or the prosecution of the minor under the criminal laws of the
27 State; however, unless the State requests a hearing for the
28 purpose of sentencing the minor under Chapter V of the Unified
29 Code of Corrections, the Court must proceed under Sections
30 5-705 and 5-710 of this Article. To request a hearing, the
31 State must file a written motion within 10 days following the
32 entry of a finding or the return of a verdict. Reasonable
33 notice of the motion shall be given to the minor or his or her
34 counsel. If the motion is made by the State, the court shall
35 conduct a hearing to determine if the minor should be sentenced
36 under Chapter V of the Unified Code of Corrections. In making

 

 

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1 its determination, the court shall consider among other
2 matters: (a) whether there is evidence that the offense was
3 committed in an aggressive and premeditated manner; (b) the age
4 of the minor; (c) the previous history of the minor; (d)
5 whether there are facilities particularly available to the
6 Juvenile Court or the Department of Juvenile Justice
7 Corrections, Juvenile Division, for the treatment and
8 rehabilitation of the minor; (e) whether the security of the
9 public requires sentencing under Chapter V of the Unified Code
10 of Corrections; and (f) whether the minor possessed a deadly
11 weapon when committing the offense. The rules of evidence shall
12 be the same as if at trial. If after the hearing the court
13 finds that the minor should be sentenced under Chapter V of the
14 Unified Code of Corrections, then the court shall sentence the
15 minor accordingly having available to it any or all
16 dispositions so prescribed.
17     (2) (Blank). or an offense under the Methamphetamine
18 Control and Community Protection Act
19     (3) (a) The definition of delinquent minor under Section
20 5-120 of this Article shall not apply to any minor who at the
21 time of the offense was at least 15 years of age and who is
22 charged with a violation of the provisions of paragraph (1),
23 (3), (4), or (10) of subsection (a) of Section 24-1 of the
24 Criminal Code of 1961 while in school, regardless of the time
25 of day or the time of year, or on the real property comprising
26 any school, regardless of the time of day or the time of year.
27 School is defined, for purposes of this Section as any public
28 or private elementary or secondary school, community college,
29 college, or university. These charges and all other charges
30 arising out of the same incident shall be prosecuted under the
31 criminal laws of this State.
32     (b) (i) If before trial or plea an information or
33 indictment is filed that does not charge an offense specified
34 in paragraph (a) of this subsection (3) the State's Attorney
35 may proceed on any lesser charge or charges, but only in
36 Juvenile Court under the provisions of this Article. The

 

 

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1 State's Attorney may proceed under the criminal laws of this
2 State on a lesser charge if before trial the minor defendant
3 knowingly and with advice of counsel waives, in writing, his or
4 her right to have the matter proceed in Juvenile Court.
5     (ii) If before trial or plea an information or indictment
6 is filed that includes one or more charges specified in
7 paragraph (a) of this subsection (3) and additional charges
8 that are not specified in that paragraph, all of the charges
9 arising out of the same incident shall be prosecuted under the
10 criminal laws of this State.
11     (c) (i) If after trial or plea the minor is convicted of
12 any offense covered by paragraph (a) of this subsection (3),
13 then, in sentencing the minor, the court shall have available
14 any or all dispositions prescribed for that offense under
15 Chapter V of the Unified Code of Corrections.
16     (ii) If after trial or plea the court finds that the minor
17 committed an offense not covered by paragraph (a) of this
18 subsection (3), that finding shall not invalidate the verdict
19 or the prosecution of the minor under the criminal laws of the
20 State; however, unless the State requests a hearing for the
21 purpose of sentencing the minor under Chapter V of the Unified
22 Code of Corrections, the Court must proceed under Sections
23 5-705 and 5-710 of this Article. To request a hearing, the
24 State must file a written motion within 10 days following the
25 entry of a finding or the return of a verdict. Reasonable
26 notice of the motion shall be given to the minor or his or her
27 counsel. If the motion is made by the State, the court shall
28 conduct a hearing to determine if the minor should be sentenced
29 under Chapter V of the Unified Code of Corrections. In making
30 its determination, the court shall consider among other
31 matters: (a) whether there is evidence that the offense was
32 committed in an aggressive and premeditated manner; (b) the age
33 of the minor; (c) the previous history of the minor; (d)
34 whether there are facilities particularly available to the
35 Juvenile Court or the Department of Juvenile Justice
36 Corrections, Juvenile Division, for the treatment and

 

 

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1 rehabilitation of the minor; (e) whether the security of the
2 public requires sentencing under Chapter V of the Unified Code
3 of Corrections; and (f) whether the minor possessed a deadly
4 weapon when committing the offense. The rules of evidence shall
5 be the same as if at trial. If after the hearing the court
6 finds that the minor should be sentenced under Chapter V of the
7 Unified Code of Corrections, then the court shall sentence the
8 minor accordingly having available to it any or all
9 dispositions so prescribed.
10     (4) (a) The definition of delinquent minor under Section
11 5-120 of this Article shall not apply to any minor who at the
12 time of an offense was at least 13 years of age and who is
13 charged with first degree murder committed during the course of
14 either aggravated criminal sexual assault, criminal sexual
15 assault, or aggravated kidnaping. However, this subsection (4)
16 does not include a minor charged with first degree murder based
17 exclusively upon the accountability provisions of the Criminal
18 Code of 1961.
19     (b) (i) If before trial or plea an information or
20 indictment is filed that does not charge first degree murder
21 committed during the course of aggravated criminal sexual
22 assault, criminal sexual assault, or aggravated kidnaping, the
23 State's Attorney may proceed on any lesser charge or charges,
24 but only in Juvenile Court under the provisions of this
25 Article. The State's Attorney may proceed under the criminal
26 laws of this State on a lesser charge if before trial the minor
27 defendant knowingly and with advice of counsel waives, in
28 writing, his or her right to have the matter proceed in
29 Juvenile Court.
30     (ii) If before trial or plea an information or indictment
31 is filed that includes first degree murder committed during the
32 course of aggravated criminal sexual assault, criminal sexual
33 assault, or aggravated kidnaping, and additional charges that
34 are not specified in paragraph (a) of this subsection, all of
35 the charges arising out of the same incident shall be
36 prosecuted under the criminal laws of this State.

 

 

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1     (c) (i) If after trial or plea the minor is convicted of
2 first degree murder committed during the course of aggravated
3 criminal sexual assault, criminal sexual assault, or
4 aggravated kidnaping, in sentencing the minor, the court shall
5 have available any or all dispositions prescribed for that
6 offense under Chapter V of the Unified Code of Corrections.
7     (ii) If the minor was not yet 15 years of age at the time of
8 the offense, and if after trial or plea the court finds that
9 the minor committed an offense other than first degree murder
10 committed during the course of either aggravated criminal
11 sexual assault, criminal sexual assault, or aggravated
12 kidnapping, the finding shall not invalidate the verdict or the
13 prosecution of the minor under the criminal laws of the State;
14 however, unless the State requests a hearing for the purpose of
15 sentencing the minor under Chapter V of the Unified Code of
16 Corrections, the Court must proceed under Sections 5-705 and
17 5-710 of this Article. To request a hearing, the State must
18 file a written motion within 10 days following the entry of a
19 finding or the return of a verdict. Reasonable notice of the
20 motion shall be given to the minor or his or her counsel. If
21 the motion is made by the State, the court shall conduct a
22 hearing to determine whether the minor should be sentenced
23 under Chapter V of the Unified Code of Corrections. In making
24 its determination, the court shall consider among other
25 matters: (a) whether there is evidence that the offense was
26 committed in an aggressive and premeditated manner; (b) the age
27 of the minor; (c) the previous delinquent history of the minor;
28 (d) whether there are facilities particularly available to the
29 Juvenile Court or the Department of Juvenile Justice
30 Corrections, Juvenile Division, for the treatment and
31 rehabilitation of the minor; (e) whether the best interest of
32 the minor and the security of the public require sentencing
33 under Chapter V of the Unified Code of Corrections; and (f)
34 whether the minor possessed a deadly weapon when committing the
35 offense. The rules of evidence shall be the same as if at
36 trial. If after the hearing the court finds that the minor

 

 

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1 should be sentenced under Chapter V of the Unified Code of
2 Corrections, then the court shall sentence the minor
3 accordingly having available to it any or all dispositions so
4 prescribed.
5     (5) (a) The definition of delinquent minor under Section
6 5-120 of this Article shall not apply to any minor who is
7 charged with a violation of subsection (a) of Section 31-6 or
8 Section 32-10 of the Criminal Code of 1961 when the minor is
9 subject to prosecution under the criminal laws of this State as
10 a result of the application of the provisions of Section 5-125,
11 or subsection (1) or (2) of this Section. These charges and all
12 other charges arising out of the same incident shall be
13 prosecuted under the criminal laws of this State.
14     (b) (i) If before trial or plea an information or
15 indictment is filed that does not charge an offense specified
16 in paragraph (a) of this subsection (5), the State's Attorney
17 may proceed on any lesser charge or charges, but only in
18 Juvenile Court under the provisions of this Article. The
19 State's Attorney may proceed under the criminal laws of this
20 State on a lesser charge if before trial the minor defendant
21 knowingly and with advice of counsel waives, in writing, his or
22 her right to have the matter proceed in Juvenile Court.
23     (ii) If before trial or plea an information or indictment
24 is filed that includes one or more charges specified in
25 paragraph (a) of this subsection (5) and additional charges
26 that are not specified in that paragraph, all of the charges
27 arising out of the same incident shall be prosecuted under the
28 criminal laws of this State.
29     (c) (i) If after trial or plea the minor is convicted of
30 any offense covered by paragraph (a) of this subsection (5),
31 then, in sentencing the minor, the court shall have available
32 any or all dispositions prescribed for that offense under
33 Chapter V of the Unified Code of Corrections.
34     (ii) If after trial or plea the court finds that the minor
35 committed an offense not covered by paragraph (a) of this
36 subsection (5), the conviction shall not invalidate the verdict

 

 

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1 or the prosecution of the minor under the criminal laws of this
2 State; however, unless the State requests a hearing for the
3 purpose of sentencing the minor under Chapter V of the Unified
4 Code of Corrections, the Court must proceed under Sections
5 5-705 and 5-710 of this Article. To request a hearing, the
6 State must file a written motion within 10 days following the
7 entry of a finding or the return of a verdict. Reasonable
8 notice of the motion shall be given to the minor or his or her
9 counsel. If the motion is made by the State, the court shall
10 conduct a hearing to determine if whether the minor should be
11 sentenced under Chapter V of the Unified Code of Corrections.
12 In making its determination, the court shall consider among
13 other matters: (a) whether there is evidence that the offense
14 was committed in an aggressive and premeditated manner; (b) the
15 age of the minor; (c) the previous delinquent history of the
16 minor; (d) whether there are facilities particularly available
17 to the Juvenile Court or the Department of Juvenile Justice
18 Corrections, Juvenile Division, for the treatment and
19 rehabilitation of the minor; (e) whether the security of the
20 public requires sentencing under Chapter V of the Unified Code
21 of Corrections; and (f) whether the minor possessed a deadly
22 weapon when committing the offense. The rules of evidence shall
23 be the same as if at trial. If after the hearing the court
24 finds that the minor should be sentenced under Chapter V of the
25 Unified Code of Corrections, then the court shall sentence the
26 minor accordingly having available to it any or all
27 dispositions so prescribed.
28     (6) The definition of delinquent minor under Section 5-120
29 of this Article shall not apply to any minor who, pursuant to
30 subsection (1), or (3) or Section 5-805, or 5-810, has
31 previously been placed under the jurisdiction of the criminal
32 court and has been convicted of a crime under an adult criminal
33 or penal statute. Such a minor shall be subject to prosecution
34 under the criminal laws of this State.
35     (7) The procedures set out in this Article for the
36 investigation, arrest and prosecution of juvenile offenders

 

 

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1 shall not apply to minors who are excluded from jurisdiction of
2 the Juvenile Court, except that minors under 17 years of age
3 shall be kept separate from confined adults.
4     (8) Nothing in this Act prohibits or limits the prosecution
5 of any minor for an offense committed on or after his or her
6 17th birthday even though he or she is at the time of the
7 offense a ward of the court.
8     (9) If an original petition for adjudication of wardship
9 alleges the commission by a minor 13 years of age or over of an
10 act that constitutes a crime under the laws of this State, the
11 minor, with the consent of his or her counsel, may, at any time
12 before commencement of the adjudicatory hearing, file with the
13 court a motion that criminal prosecution be ordered and that
14 the petition be dismissed insofar as the act or acts involved
15 in the criminal proceedings are concerned. If such a motion is
16 filed as herein provided, the court shall enter its order
17 accordingly.
18     (10) If, prior to August 12, 2005 (the effective date of
19 Public Act 94-574) this amendatory Act of the 94th General
20 Assembly, a minor is charged with a violation of Section 401 of
21 the Illinois Controlled Substances Act under the criminal laws
22 of this State, other than a minor charged with a Class X felony
23 violation of the Illinois Controlled Substances Act or the
24 Methamphetamine Control and Community Protection Act, any
25 party including the minor or the court sua sponte may, before
26 trial, move for a hearing for the purpose of trying and
27 sentencing the minor as a delinquent minor. To request a
28 hearing, the party must file a motion prior to trial.
29 Reasonable notice of the motion shall be given to all parties.
30 On its own motion or upon the filing of a motion by one of the
31 parties including the minor, the court shall conduct a hearing
32 to determine whether the minor should be tried and sentenced as
33 a delinquent minor under this Article. In making its
34 determination, the court shall consider among other matters:
35     (a) The age of the minor;
36     (b) Any previous delinquent or criminal history of the

 

 

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1 minor;
2     (c) Any previous abuse or neglect history of the minor;
3     (d) Any mental health or educational history of the minor,
4 or both; and
5     (e) Whether there is probable cause to support the charge,
6 whether the minor is charged through accountability, and
7 whether there is evidence the minor possessed a deadly weapon
8 or caused serious bodily harm during the offense.
9     Any material that is relevant and reliable shall be
10 admissible at the hearing. In all cases, the judge shall enter
11 an order permitting prosecution under the criminal laws of
12 Illinois unless the judge makes a finding based on a
13 preponderance of the evidence that the minor would be amenable
14 to the care, treatment, and training programs available through
15 the facilities of the juvenile court based on an evaluation of
16 the factors listed in this subsection (10).
17 (Source: P.A. 94-556, eff. 9-11-05; 94-574, eff. 8-12-05;
18 revised 8-19-05.)
 
19     (705 ILCS 405/5-705)
20     Sec. 5-705. Sentencing hearing; evidence; continuance.
21     (1) At the sentencing hearing, the court shall determine
22 whether it is in the best interests of the minor or the public
23 that he or she be made a ward of the court, and, if he or she is
24 to be made a ward of the court, the court shall determine the
25 proper disposition best serving the interests of the minor and
26 the public. All evidence helpful in determining these
27 questions, including oral and written reports, may be admitted
28 and may be relied upon to the extent of its probative value,
29 even though not competent for the purposes of the trial. A
30 record of a prior continuance under supervision under Section
31 5-615, whether successfully completed or not, is admissible at
32 the sentencing hearing. No order of commitment to the
33 Department of Juvenile Justice Corrections, Juvenile Division,
34 shall be entered against a minor before a written report of
35 social investigation, which has been completed within the

 

 

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1 previous 60 days, is presented to and considered by the court.
2     (2) Once a party has been served in compliance with Section
3 5-525, no further service or notice must be given to that party
4 prior to proceeding to a sentencing hearing. Before imposing
5 sentence the court shall advise the State's Attorney and the
6 parties who are present or their counsel of the factual
7 contents and the conclusions of the reports prepared for the
8 use of the court and considered by it, and afford fair
9 opportunity, if requested, to controvert them. Factual
10 contents, conclusions, documents and sources disclosed by the
11 court under this paragraph shall not be further disclosed
12 without the express approval of the court.
13     (3) On its own motion or that of the State's Attorney, a
14 parent, guardian, legal custodian, or counsel, the court may
15 adjourn the hearing for a reasonable period to receive reports
16 or other evidence and, in such event, shall make an appropriate
17 order for detention of the minor or his or her release from
18 detention subject to supervision by the court during the period
19 of the continuance. In the event the court shall order
20 detention hereunder, the period of the continuance shall not
21 exceed 30 court days. At the end of such time, the court shall
22 release the minor from detention unless notice is served at
23 least 3 days prior to the hearing on the continued date that
24 the State will be seeking an extension of the period of
25 detention, which notice shall state the reason for the request
26 for the extension. The extension of detention may be for a
27 maximum period of an additional 15 court days or a lesser
28 number of days at the discretion of the court. However, at the
29 expiration of the period of extension, the court shall release
30 the minor from detention if a further continuance is granted.
31 In scheduling investigations and hearings, the court shall give
32 priority to proceedings in which a minor is in detention or has
33 otherwise been removed from his or her home before a sentencing
34 order has been made.
35     (4) When commitment to the Department of Juvenile Justice
36 Corrections, Juvenile Division, is ordered, the court shall

 

 

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1 state the basis for selecting the particular disposition, and
2 the court shall prepare such a statement for inclusion in the
3 record.
4 (Source: P.A. 90-590, eff. 1-1-99.)
 
5     (705 ILCS 405/5-710)
6     Sec. 5-710. Kinds of sentencing orders.
7     (1) The following kinds of sentencing orders may be made in
8 respect of wards of the court:
9         (a) Except as provided in Sections 5-805, 5-810, 5-815,
10     a minor who is found guilty under Section 5-620 may be:
11             (i) put on probation or conditional discharge and
12         released to his or her parents, guardian or legal
13         custodian, provided, however, that any such minor who
14         is not committed to the Department of Juvenile Justice
15         Corrections, Juvenile Division under this subsection
16         and who is found to be a delinquent for an offense
17         which is first degree murder, a Class X felony, or a
18         forcible felony shall be placed on probation;
19             (ii) placed in accordance with Section 5-740, with
20         or without also being put on probation or conditional
21         discharge;
22             (iii) required to undergo a substance abuse
23         assessment conducted by a licensed provider and
24         participate in the indicated clinical level of care;
25             (iv) placed in the guardianship of the Department
26         of Children and Family Services, but only if the
27         delinquent minor is under 13 years of age;
28             (v) placed in detention for a period not to exceed
29         30 days, either as the exclusive order of disposition
30         or, where appropriate, in conjunction with any other
31         order of disposition issued under this paragraph,
32         provided that any such detention shall be in a juvenile
33         detention home and the minor so detained shall be 10
34         years of age or older. However, the 30-day limitation
35         may be extended by further order of the court for a

 

 

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1         minor under age 13 committed to the Department of
2         Children and Family Services if the court finds that
3         the minor is a danger to himself or others. The minor
4         shall be given credit on the sentencing order of
5         detention for time spent in detention under Sections
6         5-501, 5-601, 5-710, or 5-720 of this Article as a
7         result of the offense for which the sentencing order
8         was imposed. The court may grant credit on a sentencing
9         order of detention entered under a violation of
10         probation or violation of conditional discharge under
11         Section 5-720 of this Article for time spent in
12         detention before the filing of the petition alleging
13         the violation. A minor shall not be deprived of credit
14         for time spent in detention before the filing of a
15         violation of probation or conditional discharge
16         alleging the same or related act or acts;
17             (vi) ordered partially or completely emancipated
18         in accordance with the provisions of the Emancipation
19         of Minors Act;
20             (vii) subject to having his or her driver's license
21         or driving privileges suspended for such time as
22         determined by the court but only until he or she
23         attains 18 years of age;
24             (viii) put on probation or conditional discharge
25         and placed in detention under Section 3-6039 of the
26         Counties Code for a period not to exceed the period of
27         incarceration permitted by law for adults found guilty
28         of the same offense or offenses for which the minor was
29         adjudicated delinquent, and in any event no longer than
30         upon attainment of age 21; this subdivision (viii)
31         notwithstanding any contrary provision of the law; or
32             (ix) ordered to undergo a medical or other
33         procedure to have a tattoo symbolizing allegiance to a
34         street gang removed from his or her body.
35         (b) A minor found to be guilty may be committed to the
36     Department of Juvenile Justice Corrections, Juvenile

 

 

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1     Division, under Section 5-750 if the minor is 13 years of
2     age or older, provided that the commitment to the
3     Department of Juvenile Justice Corrections, Juvenile
4     Division, shall be made only if a term of incarceration is
5     permitted by law for adults found guilty of the offense for
6     which the minor was adjudicated delinquent. The time during
7     which a minor is in custody before being released upon the
8     request of a parent, guardian or legal custodian shall be
9     considered as time spent in detention.
10         (c) When a minor is found to be guilty for an offense
11     which is a violation of the Illinois Controlled Substances
12     Act, the Cannabis Control Act, or the Methamphetamine
13     Control and Community Protection Act and made a ward of the
14     court, the court may enter a disposition order requiring
15     the minor to undergo assessment, counseling or treatment in
16     a substance abuse program approved by the Department of
17     Human Services.
18     (2) Any sentencing order other than commitment to the
19 Department of Juvenile Justice Corrections, Juvenile Division,
20 may provide for protective supervision under Section 5-725 and
21 may include an order of protection under Section 5-730.
22     (3) Unless the sentencing order expressly so provides, it
23 does not operate to close proceedings on the pending petition,
24 but is subject to modification until final closing and
25 discharge of the proceedings under Section 5-750.
26     (4) In addition to any other sentence, the court may order
27 any minor found to be delinquent to make restitution, in
28 monetary or non-monetary form, under the terms and conditions
29 of Section 5-5-6 of the Unified Code of Corrections, except
30 that the "presentencing hearing" referred to in that Section
31 shall be the sentencing hearing for purposes of this Section.
32 The parent, guardian or legal custodian of the minor may be
33 ordered by the court to pay some or all of the restitution on
34 the minor's behalf, pursuant to the Parental Responsibility
35 Law. The State's Attorney is authorized to act on behalf of any
36 victim in seeking restitution in proceedings under this

 

 

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1 Section, up to the maximum amount allowed in Section 5 of the
2 Parental Responsibility Law.
3     (5) Any sentencing order where the minor is committed or
4 placed in accordance with Section 5-740 shall provide for the
5 parents or guardian of the estate of the minor to pay to the
6 legal custodian or guardian of the person of the minor such
7 sums as are determined by the custodian or guardian of the
8 person of the minor as necessary for the minor's needs. The
9 payments may not exceed the maximum amounts provided for by
10 Section 9.1 of the Children and Family Services Act.
11     (6) Whenever the sentencing order requires the minor to
12 attend school or participate in a program of training, the
13 truant officer or designated school official shall regularly
14 report to the court if the minor is a chronic or habitual
15 truant under Section 26-2a of the School Code.
16     (7) In no event shall a guilty minor be committed to the
17 Department of Juvenile Justice Corrections, Juvenile Division
18 for a period of time in excess of that period for which an
19 adult could be committed for the same act.
20     (8) A minor found to be guilty for reasons that include a
21 violation of Section 21-1.3 of the Criminal Code of 1961 shall
22 be ordered to perform community service for not less than 30
23 and not more than 120 hours, if community service is available
24 in the jurisdiction. The community service shall include, but
25 need not be limited to, the cleanup and repair of the damage
26 that was caused by the violation or similar damage to property
27 located in the municipality or county in which the violation
28 occurred. The order may be in addition to any other order
29 authorized by this Section.
30     (8.5) A minor found to be guilty for reasons that include a
31 violation of Section 3.02 or Section 3.03 of the Humane Care
32 for Animals Act or paragraph (d) of subsection (1) of Section
33 21-1 of the Criminal Code of 1961 shall be ordered to undergo
34 medical or psychiatric treatment rendered by a psychiatrist or
35 psychological treatment rendered by a clinical psychologist.
36 The order may be in addition to any other order authorized by

 

 

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1 this Section.
2     (9) In addition to any other sentencing order, the court
3 shall order any minor found to be guilty for an act which would
4 constitute, predatory criminal sexual assault of a child,
5 aggravated criminal sexual assault, criminal sexual assault,
6 aggravated criminal sexual abuse, or criminal sexual abuse if
7 committed by an adult to undergo medical testing to determine
8 whether the defendant has any sexually transmissible disease
9 including a test for infection with human immunodeficiency
10 virus (HIV) or any other identified causative agency of
11 acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS). Any medical test
12 shall be performed only by appropriately licensed medical
13 practitioners and may include an analysis of any bodily fluids
14 as well as an examination of the minor's person. Except as
15 otherwise provided by law, the results of the test shall be
16 kept strictly confidential by all medical personnel involved in
17 the testing and must be personally delivered in a sealed
18 envelope to the judge of the court in which the sentencing
19 order was entered for the judge's inspection in camera. Acting
20 in accordance with the best interests of the victim and the
21 public, the judge shall have the discretion to determine to
22 whom the results of the testing may be revealed. The court
23 shall notify the minor of the results of the test for infection
24 with the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). The court shall
25 also notify the victim if requested by the victim, and if the
26 victim is under the age of 15 and if requested by the victim's
27 parents or legal guardian, the court shall notify the victim's
28 parents or the legal guardian, of the results of the test for
29 infection with the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). The
30 court shall provide information on the availability of HIV
31 testing and counseling at the Department of Public Health
32 facilities to all parties to whom the results of the testing
33 are revealed. The court shall order that the cost of any test
34 shall be paid by the county and may be taxed as costs against
35 the minor.
36     (10) When a court finds a minor to be guilty the court

 

 

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1 shall, before entering a sentencing order under this Section,
2 make a finding whether the offense committed either: (a) was
3 related to or in furtherance of the criminal activities of an
4 organized gang or was motivated by the minor's membership in or
5 allegiance to an organized gang, or (b) involved a violation of
6 subsection (a) of Section 12-7.1 of the Criminal Code of 1961,
7 a violation of any Section of Article 24 of the Criminal Code
8 of 1961, or a violation of any statute that involved the
9 wrongful use of a firearm. If the court determines the question
10 in the affirmative, and the court does not commit the minor to
11 the Department of Juvenile Justice Corrections, Juvenile
12 Division, the court shall order the minor to perform community
13 service for not less than 30 hours nor more than 120 hours,
14 provided that community service is available in the
15 jurisdiction and is funded and approved by the county board of
16 the county where the offense was committed. The community
17 service shall include, but need not be limited to, the cleanup
18 and repair of any damage caused by a violation of Section
19 21-1.3 of the Criminal Code of 1961 and similar damage to
20 property located in the municipality or county in which the
21 violation occurred. When possible and reasonable, the
22 community service shall be performed in the minor's
23 neighborhood. This order shall be in addition to any other
24 order authorized by this Section except for an order to place
25 the minor in the custody of the Department of Juvenile Justice
26 Corrections, Juvenile Division. For the purposes of this
27 Section, "organized gang" has the meaning ascribed to it in
28 Section 10 of the Illinois Streetgang Terrorism Omnibus
29 Prevention Act.
30 (Source: P.A. 94-556, eff. 9-11-05.)
 
31     (705 ILCS 405/5-750)
32     Sec. 5-750. Commitment to the Department of Juvenile
33 Justice Corrections, Juvenile Division.
34     (1) Except as provided in subsection (2) of this Section,
35 when any delinquent has been adjudged a ward of the court under

 

 

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1 this Act, the court may commit him or her to the Department of
2 Juvenile Justice Corrections, Juvenile Division, if it finds
3 that (a) his or her parents, guardian or legal custodian are
4 unfit or are unable, for some reason other than financial
5 circumstances alone, to care for, protect, train or discipline
6 the minor, or are unwilling to do so, and the best interests of
7 the minor and the public will not be served by placement under
8 Section 5-740 or; (b) it is necessary to ensure the protection
9 of the public from the consequences of criminal activity of the
10 delinquent.
11     (2) When a minor of the age of at least 13 years is
12 adjudged delinquent for the offense of first degree murder, the
13 court shall declare the minor a ward of the court and order the
14 minor committed to the Department of Juvenile Justice
15 Corrections, Juvenile Division, until the minor's 21st
16 birthday, without the possibility of parole, furlough, or
17 non-emergency authorized absence for a period of 5 years from
18 the date the minor was committed to the Department of Juvenile
19 Justice Corrections, except that the time that a minor spent in
20 custody for the instant offense before being committed to the
21 Department of Juvenile Justice shall be considered as time
22 credited towards that 5 year period. Nothing in this subsection
23 (2) shall preclude the State's Attorney from seeking to
24 prosecute a minor as an adult as an alternative to proceeding
25 under this Act.
26     (3) Except as provided in subsection (2), the commitment of
27 a delinquent to the Department of Juvenile Justice Corrections
28 shall be for an indeterminate term which shall automatically
29 terminate upon the delinquent attaining the age of 21 years
30 unless the delinquent is sooner discharged from parole or
31 custodianship is otherwise terminated in accordance with this
32 Act or as otherwise provided for by law.
33     (4) When the court commits a minor to the Department of
34 Juvenile Justice Corrections, it shall order him or her
35 conveyed forthwith to the appropriate reception station or
36 other place designated by the Department of Juvenile Justice

 

 

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1 Corrections, and shall appoint the Assistant Director of
2 Juvenile Justice Corrections, Juvenile Division, legal
3 custodian of the minor. The clerk of the court shall issue to
4 the Assistant Director of Juvenile Justice Corrections,
5 Juvenile Division, a certified copy of the order, which
6 constitutes proof of the Director's authority. No other process
7 need issue to warrant the keeping of the minor.
8     (5) If a minor is committed to the Department of Juvenile
9 Justice Corrections, Juvenile Division, the clerk of the court
10 shall forward to the Department:
11         (a) the disposition ordered;
12         (b) all reports;
13         (c) the court's statement of the basis for ordering the
14     disposition; and
15         (d) all additional matters which the court directs the
16     clerk to transmit.
17     (6) Whenever the Department of Juvenile Justice
18 Corrections lawfully discharges from its custody and control a
19 minor committed to it, the Assistant Director of Juvenile
20 Justice Corrections, Juvenile Division, shall petition the
21 court for an order terminating his or her custodianship. The
22 custodianship shall terminate automatically 30 days after
23 receipt of the petition unless the court orders otherwise.
24 (Source: P.A. 90-590, eff. 1-1-99.)
 
25     (705 ILCS 405/5-815)
26     Sec. 5-815. Habitual Juvenile Offender.
27     (a) Definition. Any minor having been twice adjudicated a
28 delinquent minor for offenses which, had he been prosecuted as
29 an adult, would have been felonies under the laws of this
30 State, and who is thereafter adjudicated a delinquent minor for
31 a third time shall be adjudged an Habitual Juvenile Offender
32 where:
33         1. the third adjudication is for an offense occurring
34     after adjudication on the second; and
35         2. the second adjudication was for an offense occurring

 

 

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1     after adjudication on the first; and
2         3. the third offense occurred after January 1, 1980;
3     and
4         4. the third offense was based upon the commission of
5     or attempted commission of the following offenses: first
6     degree murder, second degree murder or involuntary
7     manslaughter; criminal sexual assault or aggravated
8     criminal sexual assault; aggravated or heinous battery
9     involving permanent disability or disfigurement or great
10     bodily harm to the victim; burglary of a home or other
11     residence intended for use as a temporary or permanent
12     dwelling place for human beings; home invasion; robbery or
13     armed robbery; or aggravated arson.
14     Nothing in this Section shall preclude the State's Attorney
15 from seeking to prosecute a minor as an adult as an alternative
16 to prosecution as an habitual juvenile offender.
17     A continuance under supervision authorized by Section
18 5-615 of this Act shall not be permitted under this Section.
19     (b) Notice to minor. The State shall serve upon the minor
20 written notice of intention to prosecute under the provisions
21 of this Section within 5 judicial days of the filing of any
22 delinquency petition, adjudication upon which would mandate
23 the minor's disposition as an Habitual Juvenile Offender.
24     (c) Petition; service. A notice to seek adjudication as an
25 Habitual Juvenile Offender shall be filed only by the State's
26 Attorney.
27     The petition upon which such Habitual Juvenile Offender
28 notice is based shall contain the information and averments
29 required for all other delinquency petitions filed under this
30 Act and its service shall be according to the provisions of
31 this Act.
32     No prior adjudication shall be alleged in the petition.
33     (d)  Trial. Trial on such petition shall be by jury unless
34 the minor demands, in open court and with advice of counsel, a
35 trial by the court without jury.
36     Except as otherwise provided herein, the provisions of this

 

 

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1 Act concerning delinquency proceedings generally shall be
2 applicable to Habitual Juvenile Offender proceedings.
3     (e) Proof of prior adjudications. No evidence or other
4 disclosure of prior adjudications shall be presented to the
5 court or jury during any adjudicatory hearing provided for
6 under this Section unless otherwise permitted by the issues
7 properly raised in such hearing. In the event the minor who is
8 the subject of these proceedings elects to testify on his own
9 behalf, it shall be competent to introduce evidence, for
10 purposes of impeachment, that he has previously been
11 adjudicated a delinquent minor upon facts which, had he been
12 tried as an adult, would have resulted in his conviction of a
13 felony or of any offense that involved dishonesty or false
14 statement. Introduction of such evidence shall be according to
15 the rules and procedures applicable to the impeachment of an
16 adult defendant by prior conviction.
17     After an admission of the facts in the petition or
18 adjudication of delinquency, the State's Attorney may file with
19 the court a verified written statement signed by the State's
20 Attorney concerning any prior adjudication of an offense set
21 forth in subsection (a) of this Section which offense would
22 have been a felony or of any offense that involved dishonesty
23 or false statement had the minor been tried as an adult.
24     The court shall then cause the minor to be brought before
25 it; shall inform him of the allegations of the statement so
26 filed, and of his right to a hearing before the court on the
27 issue of such prior adjudication and of his right to counsel at
28 such hearing; and unless the minor admits such adjudication,
29 the court shall hear and determine such issue, and shall make a
30 written finding thereon.
31     A duly authenticated copy of the record of any such alleged
32 prior adjudication shall be prima facie evidence of such prior
33 adjudication or of any offense that involved dishonesty or
34 false statement.
35     Any claim that a previous adjudication offered by the
36 State's Attorney is not a former adjudication of an offense

 

 

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1 which, had the minor been prosecuted as an adult, would have
2 resulted in his conviction of a felony or of any offense that
3 involved dishonesty or false statement, is waived unless duly
4 raised at the hearing on such adjudication, or unless the
5 State's Attorney's proof shows that such prior adjudication was
6 not based upon proof of what would have been a felony.
7     (f) Disposition. If the court finds that the prerequisites
8 established in subsection (a) of this Section have been proven,
9 it shall adjudicate the minor an Habitual Juvenile Offender and
10 commit him to the Department of Juvenile Justice Corrections,
11 Juvenile Division, until his 21st birthday, without
12 possibility of parole, furlough, or non-emergency authorized
13 absence. However, the minor shall be entitled to earn one day
14 of good conduct credit for each day served as reductions
15 against the period of his confinement. Such good conduct
16 credits shall be earned or revoked according to the procedures
17 applicable to the allowance and revocation of good conduct
18 credit for adult prisoners serving determinate sentences for
19 felonies.
20     For purposes of determining good conduct credit,
21 commitment as an Habitual Juvenile Offender shall be considered
22 a determinate commitment, and the difference between the date
23 of the commitment and the minor's 21st birthday shall be
24 considered the determinate period of his confinement.
25 (Source: P.A. 90-590, eff. 1-1-99.)
 
26     (705 ILCS 405/5-820)
27     Sec. 5-820. Violent Juvenile Offender.
28     (a) Definition. A minor having been previously adjudicated
29 a delinquent minor for an offense which, had he or she been
30 prosecuted as an adult, would have been a Class 2 or greater
31 felony involving the use or threat of physical force or
32 violence against an individual or a Class 2 or greater felony
33 for which an element of the offense is possession or use of a
34 firearm, and who is thereafter adjudicated a delinquent minor
35 for a second time for any of those offenses shall be

 

 

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1 adjudicated a Violent Juvenile Offender if:
2         (1) The second adjudication is for an offense occurring
3     after adjudication on the first; and
4         (2) The second offense occurred on or after January 1,
5     1995.
6     (b) Notice to minor. The State shall serve upon the minor
7 written notice of intention to prosecute under the provisions
8 of this Section within 5 judicial days of the filing of a
9 delinquency petition, adjudication upon which would mandate
10 the minor's disposition as a Violent Juvenile Offender.
11     (c) Petition; service. A notice to seek adjudication as a
12 Violent Juvenile Offender shall be filed only by the State's
13 Attorney.
14     The petition upon which the Violent Juvenile Offender
15 notice is based shall contain the information and averments
16 required for all other delinquency petitions filed under this
17 Act and its service shall be according to the provisions of
18 this Act.
19     No prior adjudication shall be alleged in the petition.
20     (d) Trial. Trial on the petition shall be by jury unless
21 the minor demands, in open court and with advice of counsel, a
22 trial by the court without a jury.
23     Except as otherwise provided in this Section, the
24 provisions of this Act concerning delinquency proceedings
25 generally shall be applicable to Violent Juvenile Offender
26 proceedings.
27     (e) Proof of prior adjudications. No evidence or other
28 disclosure of prior adjudications shall be presented to the
29 court or jury during an adjudicatory hearing provided for under
30 this Section unless otherwise permitted by the issues properly
31 raised in that hearing. In the event the minor who is the
32 subject of these proceedings elects to testify on his or her
33 own behalf, it shall be competent to introduce evidence, for
34 purposes of impeachment, that he or she has previously been
35 adjudicated a delinquent minor upon facts which, had the minor
36 been tried as an adult, would have resulted in the minor's

 

 

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1 conviction of a felony or of any offense that involved
2 dishonesty or false statement. Introduction of such evidence
3 shall be according to the rules and procedures applicable to
4 the impeachment of an adult defendant by prior conviction.
5     After an admission of the facts in the petition or
6 adjudication of delinquency, the State's Attorney may file with
7 the court a verified written statement signed by the State's
8 Attorney concerning any prior adjudication of an offense set
9 forth in subsection (a) of this Section that would have been a
10 felony or of any offense that involved dishonesty or false
11 statement had the minor been tried as an adult.
12     The court shall then cause the minor to be brought before
13 it; shall inform the minor of the allegations of the statement
14 so filed, of his or her right to a hearing before the court on
15 the issue of the prior adjudication and of his or her right to
16 counsel at the hearing; and unless the minor admits the
17 adjudication, the court shall hear and determine the issue, and
18 shall make a written finding of the issue.
19     A duly authenticated copy of the record of any alleged
20 prior adjudication shall be prima facie evidence of the prior
21 adjudication or of any offense that involved dishonesty or
22 false statement.
23     Any claim that a previous adjudication offered by the
24 State's Attorney is not a former adjudication of an offense
25 which, had the minor been prosecuted as an adult, would have
26 resulted in his or her conviction of a Class 2 or greater
27 felony involving the use or threat of force or violence, or a
28 firearm, a felony or of any offense that involved dishonesty or
29 false statement is waived unless duly raised at the hearing on
30 the adjudication, or unless the State's Attorney's proof shows
31 that the prior adjudication was not based upon proof of what
32 would have been a felony.
33     (f) Disposition. If the court finds that the prerequisites
34 established in subsection (a) of this Section have been proven,
35 it shall adjudicate the minor a Violent Juvenile Offender and
36 commit the minor to the Department of Juvenile Justice

 

 

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1 Corrections, Juvenile Division, until his or her 21st birthday,
2 without possibility of parole, furlough, or non-emergency
3 authorized absence. However, the minor shall be entitled to
4 earn one day of good conduct credit for each day served as
5 reductions against the period of his or her confinement. The
6 good conduct credits shall be earned or revoked according to
7 the procedures applicable to the allowance and revocation of
8 good conduct credit for adult prisoners serving determinate
9 sentences for felonies.
10     For purposes of determining good conduct credit,
11 commitment as a Violent Juvenile Offender shall be considered a
12 determinate commitment, and the difference between the date of
13 the commitment and the minor's 21st birthday shall be
14 considered the determinate period of his or her confinement.
15     (g) Nothing in this Section shall preclude the State's
16 Attorney from seeking to prosecute a minor as a habitual
17 juvenile offender or as an adult as an alternative to
18 prosecution as a Violent Juvenile Offender.
19     (h) A continuance under supervision authorized by Section
20 5-615 of this Act shall not be permitted under this Section.
21 (Source: P.A. 90-590, eff. 1-1-99.)
 
22     (705 ILCS 405/5-901)
23     Sec. 5-901. Court file.
24     (1) The Court file with respect to proceedings under this
25 Article shall consist of the petitions, pleadings, victim
26 impact statements, process, service of process, orders, writs
27 and docket entries reflecting hearings held and judgments and
28 decrees entered by the court. The court file shall be kept
29 separate from other records of the court.
30         (a) The file, including information identifying the
31     victim or alleged victim of any sex offense, shall be
32     disclosed only to the following parties when necessary for
33     discharge of their official duties:
34             (i) A judge of the circuit court and members of the
35         staff of the court designated by the judge;

 

 

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1             (ii) Parties to the proceedings and their
2         attorneys;
3             (iii) Victims and their attorneys, except in cases
4         of multiple victims of sex offenses in which case the
5         information identifying the nonrequesting victims
6         shall be redacted;
7             (iv) Probation officers, law enforcement officers
8         or prosecutors or their staff;
9             (v) Adult and juvenile Prisoner Review Boards.
10         (b) The Court file redacted to remove any information
11     identifying the victim or alleged victim of any sex offense
12     shall be disclosed only to the following parties when
13     necessary for discharge of their official duties:
14             (i) Authorized military personnel;
15             (ii) Persons engaged in bona fide research, with
16         the permission of the judge of the juvenile court and
17         the chief executive of the agency that prepared the
18         particular recording: provided that publication of
19         such research results in no disclosure of a minor's
20         identity and protects the confidentiality of the
21         record;
22             (iii) The Secretary of State to whom the Clerk of
23         the Court shall report the disposition of all cases, as
24         required in Section 6-204 or Section 6-205.1 of the
25         Illinois Vehicle Code. However, information reported
26         relative to these offenses shall be privileged and
27         available only to the Secretary of State, courts, and
28         police officers;
29             (iv) The administrator of a bonafide substance
30         abuse student assistance program with the permission
31         of the presiding judge of the juvenile court;
32             (v) Any individual, or any public or private agency
33         or institution, having custody of the juvenile under
34         court order or providing educational, medical or
35         mental health services to the juvenile or a
36         court-approved advocate for the juvenile or any

 

 

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1         placement provider or potential placement provider as
2         determined by the court.
3     (3) A minor who is the victim or alleged victim in a
4 juvenile proceeding shall be provided the same confidentiality
5 regarding disclosure of identity as the minor who is the
6 subject of record. Information identifying victims and alleged
7 victims of sex offenses, shall not be disclosed or open to
8 public inspection under any circumstances. Nothing in this
9 Section shall prohibit the victim or alleged victim of any sex
10 offense from voluntarily disclosing his or her identity.
11     (4) Relevant information, reports and records shall be made
12 available to the Department of Juvenile Justice Corrections
13 when a juvenile offender has been placed in the custody of the
14 Department of Juvenile Justice Corrections, Juvenile Division.
15     (5) Except as otherwise provided in this subsection (5),
16 juvenile court records shall not be made available to the
17 general public but may be inspected by representatives of
18 agencies, associations and news media or other properly
19 interested persons by general or special order of the court.
20 The State's Attorney, the minor, his or her parents, guardian
21 and counsel shall at all times have the right to examine court
22 files and records.
23         (a) The court shall allow the general public to have
24     access to the name, address, and offense of a minor who is
25     adjudicated a delinquent minor under this Act under either
26     of the following circumstances:
27             (i) The adjudication of delinquency was based upon
28         the minor's commission of first degree murder, attempt
29         to commit first degree murder, aggravated criminal
30         sexual assault, or criminal sexual assault; or
31             (ii) The court has made a finding that the minor
32         was at least 13 years of age at the time the act was
33         committed and the adjudication of delinquency was
34         based upon the minor's commission of: (A) an act in
35         furtherance of the commission of a felony as a member
36         of or on behalf of a criminal street gang, (B) an act

 

 

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1         involving the use of a firearm in the commission of a
2         felony, (C) an act that would be a Class X felony
3         offense under or the minor's second or subsequent Class
4         2 or greater felony offense under the Cannabis Control
5         Act if committed by an adult, (D) an act that would be
6         a second or subsequent offense under Section 402 of the
7         Illinois Controlled Substances Act if committed by an
8         adult, (E) an act that would be an offense under
9         Section 401 of the Illinois Controlled Substances Act
10         if committed by an adult, or (F) an act that would be
11         an offense under the Methamphetamine Control and
12         Community Protection Act if committed by an adult.
13         (b) The court shall allow the general public to have
14     access to the name, address, and offense of a minor who is
15     at least 13 years of age at the time the offense is
16     committed and who is convicted, in criminal proceedings
17     permitted or required under Section 5-805, under either of
18     the following circumstances:
19             (i) The minor has been convicted of first degree
20         murder, attempt to commit first degree murder,
21         aggravated criminal sexual assault, or criminal sexual
22         assault,
23             (ii) The court has made a finding that the minor
24         was at least 13 years of age at the time the offense
25         was committed and the conviction was based upon the
26         minor's commission of: (A) an offense in furtherance of
27         the commission of a felony as a member of or on behalf
28         of a criminal street gang, (B) an offense involving the
29         use of a firearm in the commission of a felony, (C) a
30         Class X felony offense under the Cannabis Control Act
31         or a second or subsequent Class 2 or greater felony
32         offense under the Cannabis Control Act, (D) a second or
33         subsequent offense under Section 402 of the Illinois
34         Controlled Substances Act, (E) an offense under
35         Section 401 of the Illinois Controlled Substances Act,
36         or (F) an offense under the Methamphetamine Control and

 

 

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1         Community Protection Act.
2     (6) Nothing in this Section shall be construed to limit the
3 use of a adjudication of delinquency as evidence in any
4 juvenile or criminal proceeding, where it would otherwise be
5 admissible under the rules of evidence, including but not
6 limited to, use as impeachment evidence against any witness,
7 including the minor if he or she testifies.
8     (7) Nothing in this Section shall affect the right of a
9 Civil Service Commission or appointing authority examining the
10 character and fitness of an applicant for a position as a law
11 enforcement officer to ascertain whether that applicant was
12 ever adjudicated to be a delinquent minor and, if so, to
13 examine the records or evidence which were made in proceedings
14 under this Act.
15     (8) Following any adjudication of delinquency for a crime
16 which would be a felony if committed by an adult, or following
17 any adjudication of delinquency for a violation of Section
18 24-1, 24-3, 24-3.1, or 24-5 of the Criminal Code of 1961, the
19 State's Attorney shall ascertain whether the minor respondent
20 is enrolled in school and, if so, shall provide a copy of the
21 sentencing order to the principal or chief administrative
22 officer of the school. Access to such juvenile records shall be
23 limited to the principal or chief administrative officer of the
24 school and any guidance counselor designated by him or her.
25     (9) Nothing contained in this Act prevents the sharing or
26 disclosure of information or records relating or pertaining to
27 juveniles subject to the provisions of the Serious Habitual
28 Offender Comprehensive Action Program when that information is
29 used to assist in the early identification and treatment of
30 habitual juvenile offenders.
31     (11) The Clerk of the Circuit Court shall report to the
32 Department of State Police, in the form and manner required by
33 the Department of State Police, the final disposition of each
34 minor who has been arrested or taken into custody before his or
35 her 17th birthday for those offenses required to be reported
36 under Section 5 of the Criminal Identification Act. Information

 

 

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1 reported to the Department under this Section may be maintained
2 with records that the Department files under Section 2.1 of the
3 Criminal Identification Act.
4     (12) Information or records may be disclosed to the general
5 public when the court is conducting hearings under Section
6 5-805 or 5-810.
7 (Source: P.A. 94-556, eff. 9-11-05.)
 
8     (705 ILCS 405/5-905)
9     Sec. 5-905. Law enforcement records.
10     (1) Law Enforcement Records. Inspection and copying of law
11 enforcement records maintained by law enforcement agencies
12 that relate to a minor who has been arrested or taken into
13 custody before his or her 17th birthday shall be restricted to
14 the following and when necessary for the discharge of their
15 official duties:
16         (a) A judge of the circuit court and members of the
17     staff of the court designated by the judge;
18         (b) Law enforcement officers, probation officers or
19     prosecutors or their staff;
20         (c) The minor, the minor's parents or legal guardian
21     and their attorneys, but only when the juvenile has been
22     charged with an offense;
23         (d) Adult and Juvenile Prisoner Review Boards;
24         (e) Authorized military personnel;
25         (f) Persons engaged in bona fide research, with the
26     permission of the judge of juvenile court and the chief
27     executive of the agency that prepared the particular
28     recording: provided that publication of such research
29     results in no disclosure of a minor's identity and protects
30     the confidentiality of the record;
31         (g) Individuals responsible for supervising or
32     providing temporary or permanent care and custody of minors
33     pursuant to orders of the juvenile court or directives from
34     officials of the Department of Children and Family Services
35     or the Department of Human Services who certify in writing

 

 

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1     that the information will not be disclosed to any other
2     party except as provided under law or order of court;
3         (h) The appropriate school official. Inspection and
4     copying shall be limited to law enforcement records
5     transmitted to the appropriate school official by a local
6     law enforcement agency under a reciprocal reporting system
7     established and maintained between the school district and
8     the local law enforcement agency under Section 10-20.14 of
9     the School Code concerning a minor enrolled in a school
10     within the school district who has been arrested for any
11     offense classified as a felony or a Class A or B
12     misdemeanor.
13     (2) Information identifying victims and alleged victims of
14 sex offenses, shall not be disclosed or open to public
15 inspection under any circumstances. Nothing in this Section
16 shall prohibit the victim or alleged victim of any sex offense
17 from voluntarily disclosing his or her identity.
18     (3) Relevant information, reports and records shall be made
19 available to the Department of Juvenile Justice Corrections
20 when a juvenile offender has been placed in the custody of the
21 Department of Juvenile Justice Corrections, Juvenile Division.
22     (4) Nothing in this Section shall prohibit the inspection
23 or disclosure to victims and witnesses of photographs contained
24 in the records of law enforcement agencies when the inspection
25 or disclosure is conducted in the presence of a law enforcement
26 officer for purposes of identification or apprehension of any
27 person in the course of any criminal investigation or
28 prosecution.
29     (5) The records of law enforcement officers concerning all
30 minors under 17 years of age must be maintained separate from
31 the records of adults and may not be open to public inspection
32 or their contents disclosed to the public except by order of
33 the court or when the institution of criminal proceedings has
34 been permitted under Section 5-130 or 5-805 or required under
35 Section 5-130 or 5-805 or such a person has been convicted of a
36 crime and is the subject of pre-sentence investigation or when

 

 

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1 provided by law.
2     (6) Except as otherwise provided in this subsection (6),
3 law enforcement officers may not disclose the identity of any
4 minor in releasing information to the general public as to the
5 arrest, investigation or disposition of any case involving a
6 minor. Any victim or parent or legal guardian of a victim may
7 petition the court to disclose the name and address of the
8 minor and the minor's parents or legal guardian, or both. Upon
9 a finding by clear and convincing evidence that the disclosure
10 is either necessary for the victim to pursue a civil remedy
11 against the minor or the minor's parents or legal guardian, or
12 both, or to protect the victim's person or property from the
13 minor, then the court may order the disclosure of the
14 information to the victim or to the parent or legal guardian of
15 the victim only for the purpose of the victim pursuing a civil
16 remedy against the minor or the minor's parents or legal
17 guardian, or both, or to protect the victim's person or
18 property from the minor.
19     (7) Nothing contained in this Section shall prohibit law
20 enforcement agencies when acting in their official capacity
21 from communicating with each other by letter, memorandum,
22 teletype or intelligence alert bulletin or other means the
23 identity or other relevant information pertaining to a person
24 under 17 years of age. The information provided under this
25 subsection (7) shall remain confidential and shall not be
26 publicly disclosed, except as otherwise allowed by law.
27     (8) No person shall disclose information under this Section
28 except when acting in his or her official capacity and as
29 provided by law or order of court.
30 (Source: P.A. 90-590, eff. 1-1-99; 91-479, eff. 1-1-00.)
 
31     (705 ILCS 405/5-915)
32     Sec. 5-915. Expungement of juvenile law enforcement and
33 court records.
34     (1) Whenever any person has attained the age of 17 or
35 whenever all juvenile court proceedings relating to that person

 

 

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1 have been terminated, whichever is later, the person may
2 petition the court to expunge law enforcement records relating
3 to incidents occurring before his or her 17th birthday or his
4 or her juvenile court records, or both, but only in the
5 following circumstances:
6         (a) the minor was arrested and no petition for
7     delinquency was filed with the clerk of the circuit court;
8     or
9         (b) the minor was charged with an offense and was found
10     not delinquent of that offense; or
11         (c) the minor was placed under supervision pursuant to
12     Section 5-615, and the order of supervision has since been
13     successfully terminated; or
14         (d) the minor was adjudicated for an offense which
15     would be a Class B misdemeanor, Class C misdemeanor, or a
16     petty or business offense if committed by an adult.
17     (2) Any person may petition the court to expunge all law
18 enforcement records relating to any incidents occurring before
19 his or her 17th birthday which did not result in proceedings in
20 criminal court and all juvenile court records with respect to
21 any adjudications except those based upon first degree murder
22 and sex offenses which would be felonies if committed by an
23 adult, if the person for whom expungement is sought has had no
24 convictions for any crime since his or her 17th birthday and:
25         (a) has attained the age of 21 years; or
26         (b) 5 years have elapsed since all juvenile court
27     proceedings relating to him or her have been terminated or
28     his or her commitment to the Department of Juvenile Justice
29     Corrections, Juvenile Division pursuant to this Act has
30     been terminated;
31 whichever is later of (a) or (b).
32     (2.5) If a minor is arrested and no petition for
33 delinquency is filed with the clerk of the circuit court as
34 provided in paragraph (a) of subsection (1) at the time the
35 minor is released from custody, the youth officer, if
36 applicable, or other designated person from the arresting

 

 

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1 agency, shall notify verbally and in writing to the minor or
2 the minor's parents or guardians that if the State's Attorney
3 does not file a petition for delinquency, the minor has a right
4 to petition to have his or her arrest record expunged when the
5 minor attains the age of 17 or when all juvenile court
6 proceedings relating to that minor have been terminated and
7 that unless a petition to expunge is filed, the minor shall
8 have an arrest record and shall provide the minor and the
9 minor's parents or guardians with an expungement information
10 packet, including a petition to expunge juvenile records
11 obtained from the clerk of the circuit court.
12     (2.6) If a minor is charged with an offense and is found
13 not delinquent of that offense; or if a minor is placed under
14 supervision under Section 5-615, and the order of supervision
15 is successfully terminated; or if a minor is adjudicated for an
16 offense that would be a Class B misdemeanor, a Class C
17 misdemeanor, or a business or petty offense if committed by an
18 adult; or if a minor has incidents occurring before his or her
19 17th birthday that have not resulted in proceedings in criminal
20 court, or resulted in proceedings in juvenile court, and the
21 adjudications were not based upon first degree murder or sex
22 offenses that would be felonies if committed by an adult; then
23 at the time of sentencing or dismissal of the case, the judge
24 shall inform the delinquent minor of his or her right to
25 petition for expungement as provided by law, and the clerk of
26 the circuit court shall provide an expungement information
27 packet to the delinquent minor, written in plain language,
28 including a petition for expungement, a sample of a completed
29 petition, expungement instructions that shall include
30 information informing the minor that (i) once the case is
31 expunged, it shall be treated as if it never occurred, (ii) he
32 or she may apply to have petition fees waived, (iii) once he or
33 she obtains an expungement, he or she may not be required to
34 disclose that he or she had a juvenile record, and (iv) he or
35 she may file the petition on his or her own or with the
36 assistance of an attorney. The failure of the judge to inform

 

 

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1 the delinquent minor of his or her right to petition for
2 expungement as provided by law does not create a substantive
3 right, nor is that failure grounds for: (i) a reversal of an
4 adjudication of delinquency, (ii) a new trial; or (iii) an
5 appeal.
6     (2.7) For counties with a population over 3,000,000, the
7 clerk of the circuit court shall send a "Notification of a
8 Possible Right to Expungement" post card to the minor at the
9 address last received by the clerk of the circuit court on the
10 date that the minor attains the age of 17 based on the
11 birthdate provided to the court by the minor or his or her
12 guardian in cases under paragraphs (b), (c), and (d) of
13 subsection (1); and when the minor attains the age of 21 based
14 on the birthdate provided to the court by the minor or his or
15 her guardian in cases under subsection (2).
16     (2.8) The petition for expungement for subsection (1) shall
17 be substantially in the following form:
18
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF ......, ILLINOIS
19
........ JUDICIAL CIRCUIT

 
20 IN THE INTEREST OF )    NO.
21                    )
22                    )
23 ...................)
24 (Name of Petitioner)
 
25
PETITION TO EXPUNGE JUVENILE RECORDS
26
(705 ILCS 405/5-915 (SUBSECTION 1))
27
(Please prepare a separate petition for each offense)
28 Now comes ............., petitioner, and respectfully requests
29 that this Honorable Court enter an order expunging all juvenile
30 law enforcement and court records of petitioner and in support
31 thereof states that: Petitioner has attained the age of 17,
32 his/her birth date being ......, or all Juvenile Court
33 proceedings terminated as of ......, whichever occurred later.
34 Petitioner was arrested on ..... by the ....... Police

 

 

SB0092 Enrolled - 74 - LRB094 06238 RLC 36309 b

1 Department for the offense of ......., and:
2 (Check One:)
3 ( ) a. no petition was filed with the Clerk of the Circuit
4 Court.
5 ( ) b. was charged with ...... and was found not delinquent of
6 the offense.
7 ( ) c. a petition was filed and the petition was dismissed
8 without a finding of delinquency on .....
9 ( ) d. on ....... placed under supervision pursuant to Section
10 5-615 of the Juvenile Court Act of 1987 and such order of
11 supervision successfully terminated on ........
12 ( ) e. was adjudicated for the offense, which would have been a
13 Class B misdemeanor, a Class C misdemeanor, or a petty offense
14 or business offense if committed by an adult.
15 Petitioner .... has .... has not been arrested on charges in
16 this or any county other than the charges listed above. If
17 petitioner has been arrested on additional charges, please list
18 the charges below:
19 Charge(s): ......
20 Arresting Agency or Agencies: ...........
21 Disposition/Result: (choose from a. through e., above): .....
22 WHEREFORE, the petitioner respectfully requests this Honorable
23 Court to (1) order all law enforcement agencies to expunge all
24 records of petitioner to this incident, and (2) to order the
25 Clerk of the Court to expunge all records concerning the
26 petitioner regarding this incident.
 
27
......................
28
Petitioner (Signature)

 
29
..........................
30
Petitioner's Street Address

 
31
.....................
32
City, State, Zip Code

 

 

 

SB0092 Enrolled - 75 - LRB094 06238 RLC 36309 b

1
.............................
2
Petitioner's Telephone Number

 
3 Pursuant to the penalties of perjury under the Code of Civil
4 Procedure, 735 ILCS 5/1-109, I hereby certify that the
5 statements in this petition are true and correct, or on
6 information and belief I believe the same to be true.
 
7
......................
8
Petitioner (Signature)
9 The Petition for Expungement for subsection (2) shall be
10 substantially in the following form:
 
11
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF ........, ILLINOIS
12
........ JUDICIAL CIRCUIT

 
13 IN THE INTEREST OF )    NO.
14                    )
15                    )
16 ...................)
17 (Name of Petitioner)
 
18
PETITION TO EXPUNGE JUVENILE RECORDS
19
(705 ILCS 405/5-915 (SUBSECTION 2))
20
(Please prepare a separate petition for each offense)
21 Now comes ............, petitioner, and respectfully requests
22 that this Honorable Court enter an order expunging all Juvenile
23 Law Enforcement and Court records of petitioner and in support
24 thereof states that:
25 The incident for which the Petitioner seeks expungement
26 occurred before the Petitioner's 17th birthday and did not
27 result in proceedings in criminal court and the Petitioner has
28 not had any convictions for any crime since his/her 17th
29 birthday; and
30 The incident for which the Petitioner seeks expungement
31 occurred before the Petitioner's 17th birthday and the

 

 

SB0092 Enrolled - 76 - LRB094 06238 RLC 36309 b

1 adjudication was not based upon first-degree murder or sex
2 offenses which would be felonies if committed by an adult, and
3 the Petitioner has not had any convictions for any crime since
4 his/her 17th birthday.
5 Petitioner was arrested on ...... by the ....... Police
6 Department for the offense of ........, and:
7 (Check whichever one occurred the latest:)
8 ( ) a. The Petitioner has attained the age of 21 years, his/her
9 birthday being .......; or
10 ( ) b. 5 years have elapsed since all juvenile court
11 proceedings relating to the Petitioner have been terminated; or
12 the Petitioner's commitment to the Department of Juvenile
13 Justice Corrections, Juvenile Division, pursuant to the
14 expungement of juvenile law enforcement and court records
15 provisions of the Juvenile Court Act of 1987 has been
16 terminated. Petitioner ...has ...has not been arrested on
17 charges in this or any other county other than the charge
18 listed above. If petitioner has been arrested on additional
19 charges, please list the charges below:
20 Charge(s): ..........
21 Arresting Agency or Agencies: .......
22 Disposition/Result: (choose from a or b, above): ..........
23 WHEREFORE, the petitioner respectfully requests this Honorable
24 Court to (1) order all law enforcement agencies to expunge all
25 records of petitioner related to this incident, and (2) to
26 order the Clerk of the Court to expunge all records concerning
27 the petitioner regarding this incident.
 
28
.......................
29
Petitioner (Signature)

 
30
......................
31
Petitioner's Street Address

 
32
.....................
33
City, State, Zip Code

 

 

SB0092 Enrolled - 77 - LRB094 06238 RLC 36309 b

1
.............................
2
Petitioner's Telephone Number

 
3 Pursuant to the penalties of perjury under the Code of Civil
4 Procedure, 735 ILCS 5/1-109, I hereby certify that the
5 statements in this petition are true and correct, or on
6 information and belief I believe the same to be true.
7
......................
8
Petitioner (Signature)
9     (3) The chief judge of the circuit in which an arrest was
10 made or a charge was brought or any judge of that circuit
11 designated by the chief judge may, upon verified petition of a
12 person who is the subject of an arrest or a juvenile court
13 proceeding under subsection (1) or (2) of this Section, order
14 the law enforcement records or official court file, or both, to
15 be expunged from the official records of the arresting
16 authority, the clerk of the circuit court and the Department of
17 State Police. The person whose records are to be expunged shall
18 petition the court using the appropriate form containing his or
19 her current address and shall promptly notify the clerk of the
20 circuit court of any change of address. Notice of the petition
21 shall be served upon the State's Attorney or prosecutor charged
22 with the duty of prosecuting the offense, the Department of
23 State Police, and the arresting agency or agencies by the clerk
24 of the circuit court. If an objection is filed within 90 days
25 of the notice of the petition, the clerk of the circuit court
26 shall set a date for hearing after the 90 day objection period.
27 At the hearing the court shall hear evidence on whether the
28 expungement should or should not be granted. Unless the State's
29 Attorney or prosecutor, the Department of State Police, or an
30 arresting agency objects to the expungement within 90 days of
31 the notice, the court may enter an order granting expungement.
32 The person whose records are to be expunged shall pay the clerk
33 of the circuit court a fee equivalent to the cost associated
34 with expungement of records by the clerk and the Department of
35 State Police. The clerk shall forward a certified copy of the

 

 

SB0092 Enrolled - 78 - LRB094 06238 RLC 36309 b

1 order to the Department of State Police, the appropriate
2 portion of the fee to the Department of State Police for
3 processing, and deliver a certified copy of the order to the
4 arresting agency. .
5     (3.1) The Notice of Expungement shall be in substantially
6 the following form:
7
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF ....., ILLINOIS
8
.... JUDICIAL CIRCUIT

 
9 IN THE INTEREST OF )    NO.
10                    )
11                    )
12 ...................)
13 (Name of Petitioner)
 
14
NOTICE
15 TO:  State's Attorney
16 TO:  Arresting Agency
17
18 ................
19 ................
20
21 ................
22 ................
23 TO:  Illinois State Police
24
25 .....................
26
27 .....................
28 ATTENTION: Expungement
29 You are hereby notified that on ....., at ....., in courtroom
30 ..., located at ..., before the Honorable ..., Judge, or any
31 judge sitting in his/her stead, I shall then and there present
32 a Petition to Expunge Juvenile records in the above-entitled
33 matter, at which time and place you may appear.
34
......................

 

 

SB0092 Enrolled - 79 - LRB094 06238 RLC 36309 b

1
Petitioner's Signature
2
...........................
3
Petitioner's Street Address
4
.....................
5
City, State, Zip Code
6
.............................
7
Petitioner's Telephone Number
8
PROOF OF SERVICE
9 On the ....... day of ......, 20..., I on oath state that I
10 served this notice and true and correct copies of the
11 above-checked documents by:
12 (Check One:)
13 delivering copies personally to each entity to whom they are
14 directed;
15 or
16 by mailing copies to each entity to whom they are directed by
17 depositing the same in the U.S. Mail, proper postage fully
18 prepaid, before the hour of 5:00 p.m., at the United States
19 Postal Depository located at .................
20
.........................................
21
22 Signature
23
Clerk of the Circuit Court or Deputy Clerk
24 Printed Name of Delinquent Minor/Petitioner: ....
25 Address: ........................................
26 Telephone Number: ...............................
27     (3.2) The Order of Expungement shall be in substantially
28 the following form:
29
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF ....., ILLINOIS
30
.... JUDICIAL CIRCUIT

 
31 IN THE INTEREST OF )    NO.
32                    )
33                    )
34 ...................)
35 (Name of Petitioner)
 

 

 

SB0092 Enrolled - 80 - LRB094 06238 RLC 36309 b

1 DOB ................
2 Arresting Agency/Agencies ......
3
ORDER OF EXPUNGEMENT
4
(705 ILCS 405/5-915 (SUBSECTION 3))
5 This matter having been heard on the petitioner's motion and
6 the court being fully advised in the premises does find that
7 the petitioner is indigent or has presented reasonable cause to
8 waive all costs in this matter, IT IS HEREBY ORDERED that:
9     ( ) 1. Clerk of Court and Department of State Police costs
10 are hereby waived in this matter.
11     ( ) 2. The Illinois State Police Bureau of Identification
12 and the following law enforcement agencies expunge all records
13 of petitioner relating to an arrest dated ...... for the
14 offense of ......
15
Law Enforcement Agencies:
16
.........................
17
.........................
18