98TH GENERAL ASSEMBLY
State of Illinois
2013 and 2014
SB2384

 

Introduced 2/15/2013, by Sen. Antonio Muņoz

 

SYNOPSIS AS INTRODUCED:
 
See Index

    Referred to as the Illinois Public Safety Act. Creates the Gun Safety and Responsibility Act. Allows State Police to issue a concealed carry license to a resident at least 21 who: (1) is eligible to possess firearms; (2) meets qualifications and training; and (3) has particularized need. $100 fee. License valid throughout the State subject to prohibitions for 4 years. Creates the State Police Firearm Services Fund for duties under the Firearm Owners Identification Card Act (FOID), concealed carry licensing, and assault weapon registration. Amends the State Police Act to authorize emergency procurement necessary to implement these gun measures. Amends the FOID Act to require background checks for the transfer of firearms, except to family member, by operation of law, or gun show. Amends the Criminal Code of 2012. Bans possession, delivery, sale, and purchase of assault weapons, attachments, and .50 caliber rifles and cartridges, except possession of weapons registered in time provided. Provides exemptions. Prohibits delivery, sale, or purchase of large capacity ammunition feeding devices. Provides exemptions. Prohibits sale, delivery, or possession of a firearm to or by a person prohibited from possessing a firearm. Raises minimum imprisonment for gunrunning. Creates failure to report a lost or stolen firearm offense. Requires safe firearm storage where a minor (now under 14) or person prohibited from possessing a firearm may gain access. Requires firearm owners to keep records. Amends various Acts regarding suspension and revocation of FOID cards and concealed carry licenses. Makes conforming changes. Effective immediately.


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CORRECTIONAL BUDGET AND IMPACT NOTE ACT MAY APPLY
FISCAL NOTE ACT MAY APPLY

 

 

A BILL FOR

 

SB2384LRB098 09455 MRW 41105 b

1    AN ACT concerning firearms, which may be referred to as the
2Illinois Public Safety Act.
 
3    Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
4represented in the General Assembly:
 
5    Section 1. Legislative findings; purpose and intent. The
6General Assembly finds and declares:
7    (1) Gun violence takes an extraordinary toll on families
8and communities in Illinois. In 2007, over 1,000 individuals
9died from firearm-related injuries in this State. In that same
10year, incidents of gun murders, gun suicides, and unintentional
11shootings in Illinois killed 150 children and adolescents ages
1219 and younger.
13    (2) Existing federal firearm laws have proven insufficient
14to prevent dangerous individuals from obtaining, carrying, and
15using firearms in public places.
16    (3) The federal Brady Handgun Violence Prevention Act
17allows unlicensed private sellers of firearms, who account for
1840% of firearms sold in the U.S., to sell firearms without
19performing a background check on the prospective purchaser.
20Federal law does not require sellers to report sales of
21firearms to law enforcement. In fact, federal law does not even
22allow the Federal Bureau of Investigation to maintain records
23of approved gun purchasers for more than 24 hours. Federal law
24also provides no comprehensive system of firearm registration,

 

 

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1and does not require firearm owners to report to law
2enforcement if their firearms are lost or stolen.
3    (4) Background checks performed by licensed dealers have
4proven to be extremely effective at keeping guns out of the
5hands of prohibited persons. Since the federal background check
6requirement was adopted in 1994, over 1.9 million criminals and
7other prohibited persons across the United States have been
8prohibited from buying guns. In 2010 alone, 70,972 gun
9transfers were denied using the federal background check
10system. Nevertheless, individuals prohibited by law from
11possessing guns can easily obtain them from private sellers.
12Universal background checks will help ensure that all persons
13buying guns are legally eligible to do so.
14    (5) Firearm registration laws, which require individuals
15to record their ownership or possession of a firearm with a
16designated law enforcement agency, and laws requiring sellers
17to report firearm sales to a centralized database help law
18enforcement quickly and reliably trace the source of firearms
19recovered from crime scenes, and retrieve firearms from persons
20who have become legally prohibited from possessing the firearms
21through criminal convictions or other prohibitions. These laws
22also discourage illegal firearm sales by creating
23accountability for gun owners, and help law enforcement return
24lost or stolen firearms to their rightful owners. Furthermore,
25information generated by firearm sales reporting and
26registration systems help protect law enforcement officers

 

 

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1responding to an incident by providing them with information
2about firearms that may be present at the scene.
3    (6) States with some form of registration and licensing
4systems have greater success keeping firearms from being used
5in crimes than states without these systems. Illinois currently
6has a licensing system through the Firearm Owners
7Identification Card Act, but no system of firearm registration.
8    (7) Laws requiring the reporting of lost or stolen firearms
9make gun owners more accountable for their firearms and are
10beneficial to law enforcement because these laws:
11        (A) help deter and prosecute gun traffickers and
12    criminals who often falsely claim that a gun used in a
13    crime that has been traced to them was lost or stolen in
14    order to hide his or her involvement in the crime;
15        (B) help disarm persons ineligible to possess firearms
16    by deterring a person in a prohibited category from falsely
17    claiming that his or her firearm was lost or stolen; and
18        (C) help return lost or stolen firearms to their
19    owners.
20    (8) Firearms carried or possessed in public places increase
21the risk of deaths and injuries by increasing the chances that
22firearms will be used to settle disputes, and increase the risk
23of accidental shootings in places where large numbers of people
24are gathered. The carrying or possession of firearms in public
25places also increase the risk that those firearms will be lost
26or stolen, and end up in the hands of criminals or other

 

 

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1persons ineligible to possess firearms.
2    (9) Flawed application processes in existing state systems
3for licensing individuals to carry concealed weapons (CCW) have
4allowed numerous persons prohibited from possessing firearms
5to receive CCW permits. Analyses have found that numerous
6criminals including rapists, armed robbers, and individuals
7who had pleaded guilty or no contest to felonies, individuals
8with outstanding warrants, persons with active domestic
9violence injunctions against them, and 6 registered sex
10offenders had been issued CCW licenses under other state's
11permissive CCW laws.
12    (10) Research has shown that individuals issued CCW permits
13include not only persons who have committed violent crimes in
14the past, but also those who subsequently commit violent
15crimes. One study found that Texas CCW permit holders were
16arrested for weapons-related crimes at a rate 81% higher than
17that of the state's general adult population. According to the
18Violence Policy Center (VPC), between May 2007 and March 2012,
19individuals licensed to carry concealed weapons killed at least
2011 law enforcement officers and 391 private citizens, including
2131 shooters who killed themselves after an attack.
22    (11) It is the purpose and intent of the General Assembly
23to strengthen State firearm laws by:
24        (A) requiring all firearm purchasers to be subject to a
25    background check;
26        (B) requiring all firearm dealers and ammunition

 

 

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1    sellers to obtain a state license and report gun sales;
2        (C) enact a comprehensive system of firearm
3    registration;
4        (D) requiring the State Police to maintain records of
5    gun sales;
6        (E) requiring gun owners to report all lost or stolen
7    firearms; and
8        (F) licensing and restricting the carrying of firearms
9    in public places.
10    (12) The General Assembly believes that these restrictions
11will:
12        (A) help keep guns out of the hands of felons, domestic
13    abusers, the mentally ill, and other prohibited persons;
14        (B) discourage illegal gun sales and gun trafficking;
15        (C) help law enforcement solve gun crimes; and
16        (D) reduce gun deaths and injuries and increase public
17    safety.
18    (13) The General Assembly further believes it is necessary
19to restrict the carrying of firearms in public places to
20individuals who have demonstrated a particularized need to
21carry a firearm in public, because they are exposed to unusual
22personal danger which is distinct from other members of the
23community.
 
24    Section 5. Short title. This Act may be referred to as the
25Gun Safety and Responsibility Act.
 

 

 

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1    Section 10. Definitions. As used in this Act:
2    "Concealed firearm" means a loaded or unloaded handgun
3carried on or about a person completely or mostly concealed
4from view of the public, or carried in a vehicle in such a way
5as it is concealed from view of the public.
6    "Department" means the Department of State Police.
7    "Director" means the Director of State Police.
8    "Fund" means the State Police Firearm Services Fund.
9    "Handgun" means any device which is designed to expel a
10projectile or projectiles by the action of an explosion,
11expansion of gas, or escape of gas that is designed to be held
12and fired by the use of a single hand, and includes a
13combination of parts from which this type of firearm can be
14assembled. "Handgun" does not include a stun gun or taser.
15    "License", "permit", "concealed carry license", or
16"concealed carry permit" means a license issued by the
17Department of State Police to carry a loaded or unloaded
18concealed firearm.
19    "Licensee" means a person issued a license to carry a
20concealed firearm.
21    "Peace officer" has the same meaning as provided in Section
222-13 of the Criminal Code of 2012.
 
23    Section 15. Issuance of license to carry a concealed
24firearm.

 

 

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1    (a) The Department may issue a license to an applicant who:
2        (1) meets the qualifications of Section 20;
3        (2) has provided the application and documentation
4    required in Section 25; and
5        (3) has submitted the required fees.
6    (b) The Department may issue a renewal, corrected, or
7duplicate license in accordance with this Act.
8    (c) A licensee shall possess his or her license at all
9times the licensee is carrying a concealed firearm unless:
10        (1) the person is carrying or possessing a concealed
11    firearm and the person is on his or her land or in his or
12    her abode or legal dwelling or in the abode or legal
13    dwelling of another person as an invitee with that person's
14    permission;
15        (2) the person is authorized to carry a concealed
16    firearm under Section 24-2 of the Criminal Code of 2012; or
17        (3) the handgun is broken down in a non-functioning
18    state, is not immediately accessible, or is enclosed in a
19    firearm case, carrying box, shipping box, or other similar
20    portable container designed for the safe transportation of
21    firearms.
22    (d) A licensee shall display the license upon the request
23of a peace officer or person designated to enforce the
24provisions of Section 55.
25    (e) An applicant shall sufficiently demonstrate, in the
26judgment of the Department that:

 

 

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1        (1) he or she has a particularized need for the
2    license;
3        (2) he or she is a responsible person; and
4        (3) the issuance of the license is in the public's
5    interest.
6    (f) The Department shall make applications for a license
7available no later than 180 days after the effective date of
8this Act. Applications shall be available at Department
9locations, sheriff offices, on the Department's official
10website, and any other location designated by the Department.
11    (g) A completed application for a license shall be
12submitted to the Department with all accompanying materials and
13fees. The Department shall review the application and all
14accompanying materials, within 90 days of receipt. The
15Department shall promptly return an incomplete application to
16the applicant. An applicant for a license or renewal shall
17submit a $100 application or renewal fee for expenses related
18to receiving and reviewing applications, of which $75 shall be
19deposited into the State Police Firearm Services Fund. The
20remaining $25 shall be deposited into the LEADS Maintenance
21Fund.
22    (h) The Department shall by rule develop a method of
23notifying the sheriff and municipal police department in the
24county and municipality where an applicant resides of the name,
25address, and date of birth of any person submitting an
26application for a license. The sheriff and municipal police

 

 

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1department may submit to the Department an objection to an
2application, provided the objection is in writing and includes
3specific reasons for the objection. Any objection submitted by
4a sheriff or municipal police department, including reports,
5must be disclosed to the applicant unless disclosure would
6interfere with a criminal investigation, or as determined by
7the Department, disclosure may threaten the safety or welfare
8of the sheriff, municipal police department, or employees of
9the sheriff or municipal police department.
10    (i) Notwithstanding subsection (a), the Department may
11consider any objection or recommendation made by the sheriff or
12municipal police department and may determine the applicant is
13ineligible based solely on those objections. If the applicant
14is found by the Department to be ineligible, the Department
15shall deny the application and notify the applicant and the
16sheriff or municipal police department in writing, stating the
17grounds for denial. The notice of denial must inform the
18applicant that he or she may, within 90 days, appeal the denial
19and submit additional materials relevant to the grounds for
20denial. Upon receiving the additional documentation, the
21Department shall reconsider its decision and inform the
22applicant within 90 days of the result of the reconsideration.
23If upon reconsideration the Department denies the application,
24the applicant must be informed of the right to administrative
25review.
26    (j) A license shall be valid throughout the State for a

 

 

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1period of 4 years.
2    (k) The Department shall adopt rules to implement the
3provisions of this Section.
 
4    Section 20. Qualifications for a concealed carry
5applicant.
6    The Department shall not issue a license to an applicant
7completing an application in accordance with Section 25 of this
8Act unless the person has demonstrated by affidavit that he or
9she:
10        (1) is at least 21 years of age;
11        (2) has a valid Firearm Owner's Identification Card;
12        (3) resides within the State of Illinois;
13        (4) has not been convicted in this State or any other
14    state of:
15            (A) a felony;
16            (B) a misdemeanor involving the use or threat of
17        physical force or violence to any person;
18            (C) a misdemeanor crime of domestic violence;
19            (D) a misdemeanor or any similar law in another
20        jurisdiction involving the use, possession, or
21        distribution of a controlled substance or cannabis
22        within the 10 years preceding the date of the
23        application; or
24            (E) a misdemeanor involving the manufacture, sale,
25        carrying, possession, or use of a firearm, dangerous

 

 

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1        weapon, deadly weapon, or ammunition;
2        (5) does not chronically and habitually use or is
3    addicted to cannabis or a controlled substance;
4        (6) has not been a patient in a mental institution
5    within the past 5 years;
6        (7) has not been adjudicated as a mental defective;
7        (8) is not intellectually disabled;
8        (9) does not suffer from a mental condition that is of
9    a nature that poses a clear and present danger to himself,
10    herself, others, or the community;
11        (10) is not free on any form of bond or pretrial
12    release, other than a traffic offense or other
13    non-disqualifying act, and has no outstanding warrants in
14    this State or any other state;
15        (11) does not chronically and habitually abuse
16    alcoholic beverages as evidenced by the applicant having 2
17    or more convictions for violating Section 11-501 of the
18    Illinois Vehicle Code or similar provision of a local
19    ordinance within 5 years preceding the date of the
20    application, or if the applicant has elected treatment
21    under the supervision of a licensed program in accordance
22    with the Alcoholism and Other Drug Abuse and Dependency Act
23    or similar laws of any other state, within 5 years
24    preceding the date of the application;
25        (12) has completed firearms training and any
26    educational component required in Section 70 of this Act;

 

 

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1        (13) possesses the same powers of eyesight as required
2    for a driver's license under Section 6-109 of the Illinois
3    Vehicle Code;
4        (14) has not been adjudicated a delinquent minor under
5    the Juvenile Court Act of 1987 or similar law in another
6    jurisdiction, for an offense which, if committed by an
7    adult would disqualify the adult for a license under this
8    Section; and
9        (15) has not within the proceeding 5 years, been the
10    respondent to an order of protection or civil stalking no
11    contact order, or 2 or more emergency orders of protection,
12    or any similar law in another jurisdiction.
 
13    Section 25. Contents of the application.
14    (a) The application shall be in writing, under oath or
15affirmation and in the form and manner prescribed by the
16Department. Each application form shall include the following
17statement printed in bold type: "Warning: Entering false
18information on this form is punishable as perjury under Section
1932-2 of the Criminal Code of 2012.". The application shall be
20accompanied by the documentation required in this Section and
21all applicable fees.
22    (b) The application shall contain the following:
23        (1) the applicant's name, current address, home and
24    business telephone numbers, cell phone numbers, gender,
25    date and year of birth, place of birth, height, weight,

 

 

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1    hair color, eye color, maiden name or any other name the
2    applicant has used or identified with, and any address at
3    which the applicant resided for more than 30 days within
4    the 5 years preceding the date of the application;
5        (2) the present business or occupation and any business
6    or occupation in which the applicant has engaged during the
7    5-year period immediately preceding the application and
8    the addresses of the business or place of employment;
9        (3) the applicant's driver's license or state
10    identification card number and the last 4 digits of the
11    applicant's social security number;
12        (4) proof that the applicant has completed firearms
13    training and any educational component required in Section
14    70 of this Act;
15        (5) proof that the applicant is a resident of this
16    State and has been a resident for at least the previous 30
17    days;
18        (6) whether the federal government or a governmental
19    entity in any state or subdivision of any state has denied
20    or revoked the applicant's license, permit, registration,
21    or certificate pertaining to any firearm, and if so, the
22    jurisdiction, the identifying number of the license,
23    permit, registration, or certificate, the reason for
24    denial or revocation, and the date of denial or revocation;
25        (7) whether the applicant has failed a drug test within
26    the preceding 5 years, and if so, the provider of the test,

 

 

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1    the specific substance involved, and date of the test;
2        (8) whether the applicant has ever been prohibited by
3    law from purchasing, possessing, or carrying a firearm, and
4    if so, the jurisdiction, the date, and the reason for the
5    prohibition;
6        (9) whether the applicant has been suspended or
7    expelled from a post-secondary educational institution,
8    such as a college or university, because of suspected
9    mental illness or violent behavior, and if so, the name of
10    the school, the date, and the reason for the suspension or
11    expulsion;
12        (10) a description of any incident in which the
13    applicant threatened, injured, or killed any person, if a
14    firearm was involved or the incident occurred during the
15    preceding 5 years and the police were involved, including,
16    for each incident, the date, place, time, circumstances,
17    and the names of any persons and police agencies involved;
18        (11) a waiver of privacy and confidentiality rights and
19    privileges of the applicant under all federal and State
20    laws, including those governing access to juvenile court,
21    criminal justice, psychological or psychiatric records, or
22    records relating to the applicant's history of
23    institutionalization, and an affirmative request that any
24    person having custody of this record provide it or
25    information concerning it to the Department;
26        (12) an affirmation that the applicant possesses a

 

 

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1    currently valid Illinois Firearm Owner's Identification
2    Card;
3        (13) an affirmation that the applicant has never been
4    convicted in this State or any other state of:
5            (A) a felony;
6            (B) a misdemeanor involving the use or threat of
7        physical force or violence to any person;
8            (C) a misdemeanor involving the use, possession,
9        or distribution of a controlled substance or cannabis
10        within the 10 years preceding the date of the
11        application; or
12            (D) a misdemeanor involving the manufacture, sale,
13        carrying, possession, or use of a firearm, dangerous
14        weapon, deadly weapon, or ammunition;
15        (14) an explanation of the applicant's particularized
16    need for and intended use of the firearm, including
17    descriptions of any incident in which the applicant has
18    been threatened or injured, or copies of police reports or
19    restraining orders;
20        (15) the make, model, manufacturer's name, caliber or
21    gauge, and serial number of each handgun to be carried
22    under the license;
23        (16) written agreement that, if the person is
24    approached by a peace officer while carrying a concealed
25    firearm under the license, the person will immediately
26    inform the officer that he or she is in possession of a

 

 

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1    firearm and a license to carry a concealed firearm, and
2    will submit to a pat down search and allow the officer to
3    take possession of the firearm for the duration of the
4    encounter;
5        (17) written consent to submit to one or more field
6    sobriety or chemical tests to determine the presence of
7    alcohol or drugs, at any point when the person is carrying
8    a concealed firearm and the person is approached by a peace
9    officer who has a reasonable suspicion that the person is
10    under the influence of alcohol or a controlled substance;
11        (18) proof that the applicant possesses the same powers
12    of eyesight as required for a driver's license under
13    Section 6-109 of the Illinois Vehicle Code; and if the
14    applicant does not possess a current Illinois driver's
15    license, the applicant may present a current optometrist's
16    or ophthalmologist's statement certifying the vision
17    reading obtained from the applicant; and
18        (19) any other information that the Department finds
19    necessary to process an application.
20    (c) A person applying for a license shall provide a clean
21head and shoulder color photograph in a size specified by the
22Department that was taken within the 30 days preceding the date
23of the application. The applicant shall consent to the
24Department reviewing and using the applicant's digital
25driver's license or Illinois Identification card photograph
26and signature, if available. The Secretary of State shall allow

 

 

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1the Department access to the photograph and signature for the
2purpose of identifying the applicant and issuing the applicant
3a license.
4    (d) A person applying for a license shall submit with the
5application a full set of legible fingerprints. Fingerprinting
6may be administered by the Department or any other federal,
7State, county, or municipal law enforcement agency. The
8Department of State Police and Federal Bureau of Investigation
9shall furnish, through a fingerprint-based criminal history
10records check, any record of convictions, forever and
11hereafter, until expunged. The Department shall charge the
12applicant a fee for conducting the check, which fee shall be
13deposited into the State Police Firearm Services Fund and must
14not exceed the cost of the inquiry. The Department shall accept
15a hard copy or electronic version of fingerprints.
16    (e) A person applying for a license shall submit a
17photocopy of a certificate or other evidence of completion of a
18course to show compliance with Section 70 of this Act.
19    (f) The Department is authorized to establish a system for
20electronically submitting applications, including applications
21for renewal or a replacement license.
22    (g) Each application shall contain the following
23statement: "NOTICE: A person who has been issued a concealed
24carry license by the Department of State Police and who is in
25possession of a concealed and loaded firearm shall be deemed to
26have given consent to a chemical test or tests of blood,

 

 

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1breath, or urine for the purpose of determining the alcohol or
2drug content of the person's blood, if a police officer has
3reasonable suspicion to believe that the licensee has consumed
4any amount of an alcoholic beverage or drugs based upon
5evidence of the licensee's physical condition or other first
6hand knowledge of the police officer. The test or tests shall
7be administered at the direction of the arresting officer.".
8The law enforcement agency employing the officer shall
9designate which tests shall be administered. A urine test may
10be administered even after a blood or breath test or both has
11been administered.
 
12    Section 30. Investigation of an applicant.
13    (a) The Department shall complete a background check on an
14applicant for a license to carry a concealed firearm to ensure
15compliance with the requirements of this Act and all federal,
16state, and local laws. The background check shall include a
17search of each of the following:
18        (1) The National Instant Criminal Background Check
19    System of the Federal Bureau of Investigation.
20        (2) All available state and local criminal history
21    record information files, including records of juvenile
22    adjudications.
23        (3) All available federal, state, and local records
24    regarding wanted persons.
25        (4) All available federal, state, and local records of

 

 

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1    domestic violence restraining and protective orders.
2        (5) All available federal, state, and local records
3    identifying persons who are unlawful users of or addicted
4    to any controlled substance as defined in Section 802 of
5    Title 21 of the United States Code.
6        (6) The files of the Department of Human Services
7    relating to mental health and developmental disabilities.
8        (7) All other available files of any federal, state,
9    and local agency and other private or public entity in any
10    jurisdiction likely to contain information relevant to
11    whether the applicant is prohibited from purchasing or
12    possessing a firearm under federal, state, or local law.
13    (b) As part of its investigation, the Department may, at
14its discretion, conduct interviews of the applicant, any of the
15applicant's current or former family or household members,
16co-workers, employers, neighbors, and any other member of the
17public who may have information relevant to the application.
18    (c) In addition to the information in subsections (a) and
19(b), the Department may, at its discretion, require the
20applicant, at the applicant's expense, to undergo a mental
21health examination by a licensed psychiatrist or psychologist
22or any other tests, interviews, or examinations that it
23determines to be appropriate.
 
24    Section 35. Database of applicants and licenses.
25    (a) Within 2 years of the effective date of this Act, the

 

 

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1Department shall make available and maintain a database of
2applicants for a concealed carry license. The database shall be
3available to all law enforcement agencies, State's Attorneys,
4and the Attorney General. Members and staff of the judiciary
5may access the database for the purpose of determining whether
6to confiscate a license or to ensure compliance with this Act
7or any other law. The database shall be searchable and provide
8all information included in the application, a photo of the
9applicant or licensee, and any information related to
10violations of this Act. Individual law enforcement agencies
11shall not maintain a separate, searchable database of
12applicants and licensees containing information included in
13the Department's database.
14    (b) The Department may provide on its website and upon
15request under the Freedom of Information Act statistical
16information about the number of licenses issued by county, age,
17race, or gender. These statistics shall be updated quarterly.
18    (c) Except as provided in subsection (b), applications and
19information in the database shall be confidential and exempt
20from disclosure under the Freedom of Information Act.
21    (d) The Department may answer requests to confirm or deny
22whether a person has been issued a license as part of inquiries
23dealing with a criminal investigation. Individual law
24enforcement agencies, State's Attorneys, and judicial staff
25shall sign a confidentiality agreement, prepared by the
26Department, prior to receiving access to this information. No

 

 

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1law enforcement agency, State's Attorney, or member or staff of
2the judiciary, other than the Department, shall provide any
3information to a requester not entitled to it by law, except as
4required or necessary for the conduct of a criminal
5investigation.
 
6    Section 40. Suspension or revocation of license.
7    (a) A license issued or renewed under this Act shall be
8revoked if, at any time, the licensee is found ineligible for a
9license based on the criteria in Section 20 of this Act or the
10licensee no longer possesses a Firearm Owner's Identification
11Card. This subsection shall not apply to a person who has filed
12an application with the State Police for renewal of a Firearm
13Owner's Identification Card and who is not otherwise ineligible
14to obtain a Firearm Owner's Identification Card.
15    (b) A license shall be suspended if an order of protection
16under Section 112A-14 of the Code of Criminal Procedure of 1963
17or under Section 214 of the Illinois Domestic Violence Act of
181986 is issued against a licensee. The license shall be
19suspended for the duration of the order or until the order is
20terminated by a court and the Department shall not reissue or
21renew a license for the duration of the order or until the
22order is terminated. If an order of protection is issued
23against a licensee, the licensee shall surrender the license to
24the court at the time the order is entered or to the law
25enforcement agency or to the entity designated to serve process

 

 

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1at the time the licensee is served the order. The court, law
2enforcement agency, or entity responsible for serving the order
3shall transmit the license to the Department.
4    (c) The Department may temporarily or permanently suspend a
5license for a violation of Section 55 of this Act in accordance
6with subsection (j) of Section 55.
7    (d) A license shall be invalid upon expiration of the
8license, unless the licensee has submitted an application to
9renew the license. A person who fails to renew his or her
10application within 6 months after its expiration must reapply
11for a new license and pay the fee for a new application.
12    (e) The Department may suspend a license if a licensee
13fails to submit a change of address or name or fails to report
14a lost, destroyed, or stolen license to the Department within
1530 days.
16    (f) Every person whose concealed carry license is suspended
17or revoked shall immediately return their concealed carry
18license to the Department of State Police. Failure to return
19the license is a business offense with a minimum fine of $100.
20Any person found carrying a concealed firearm after suspension
21or revocation of his or her license shall be subject to
22prosecution under Article 24 of the Criminal Code of 2012 for
23unlawful use of weapons.
 
24    Section 45. Renewal of license.
25    (a) Not later than 120 days before the expiration of any

 

 

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1license issued under this Act, the Department shall notify the
2licensee in writing of the expiration and furnish an
3application for renewal of the license or make the application
4available on-line.
5    (b) Applications for renewal of a license shall be made to
6the Department. A license shall be renewed for a period of 5
7years upon receipt of a completed renewal application. The
8renewal application shall contain the information required in
9Section 25, except that the applicant need not resubmit a full
10set of fingerprints. Each applicant for a renewal shall submit,
11on a form prescribed by the Department, proof that the
12applicant has:
13        (1) successfully completed an equivalent range
14    exercise as prescribed in Section 70 and certified to by an
15    instructor qualified under this Act or a certified law
16    enforcement instructor, or
17        (2) successfully completed firearm instructor training
18    under Section 75.
19    (c) The Department shall make the range recertification
20form available on its website or as part of a renewal
21application.
 
22    Section 50. Change of address; change of name; lost,
23destroyed, or stolen licenses.
24    (a) A licensee shall notify the Department within 30 days
25of moving or changing a residence or any change of name, and

 

 

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1upon the discovery of the loss or destruction of a license.
2    (b) If a licensee changes residence within this State or
3changes his or her name, the licensee shall request a new
4license. The licensee shall submit a $50 fee, a notarized
5statement that the licensee has changed residence or his or her
6name, and a photograph as required in Section 25 of this Act.
7The statement must include the prior and current address or
8name and the date the applicant moved or changed his or her
9name.
10    (c) A lost, destroyed, or stolen license shall be invalid.
11To request a new license, the licensee shall submit:
12        (1) a $50 fee;
13        (2) a notarized statement that the licensee no longer
14    possesses the license and that it was lost, destroyed, or
15    stolen;
16        (3) a copy of a police report stating that the license
17    was lost, destroyed, or stolen; and
18        (4) a photograph as required in Section 25 of this Act.
 
19    Section 55. Carry restrictions.
20    (a) A license issued under this Act shall not authorize the
21licensee to knowingly carry a concealed firearm into:
22        (1) Any building or office under the control of the
23    Governor, Lieutenant Governor, Attorney General, Secretary
24    of State, Comptroller, or Treasurer.
25        (2) Any building or office under the control of the

 

 

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1    General Assembly or any of its support service agencies,
2    including the portion of a building in which a committee of
3    the General Assembly convenes for the purpose of conducting
4    meetings of committees, joint committees, or legislative
5    commissions.
6        (3) Any courthouse or building occupied in whole or in
7    part by the circuit court, appellate court, or Supreme
8    Court or a room designated as a courtroom for court
9    proceedings by any of these courts.
10        (4) Any meeting of the governing body of a unit of
11    local government or special district.
12        (5) Any establishment licensed to dispense alcoholic
13    beverages for consumption on the premises.
14        (6) Any area of an airport to which access is
15    controlled by the inspection of persons and property.
16        (7) Any place where the carrying of a firearm is
17    prohibited by federal law.
18        (8) Any elementary or secondary school.
19        (9) Any portion of a building used as a child care
20    facility without the consent of the manager. Nothing in
21    this Section shall prevent the operator of a child care
22    facility in a family home from owning or possessing a
23    firearm or license, so long as the firearm is stored as
24    provided in Section 24-9 of the Criminal Code of 2012.
25        (10) Any gaming facility licensed under the Riverboat
26    Gambling Act or the Illinois Horse Racing Act of 1975.

 

 

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1        (11) Any gated area of an amusement park.
2        (12) Any stadium, arena, or any elementary or secondary
3    school, collegiate, or professional sporting event.
4        (13) Any hospital or mental health facility.
5        (14) Any community college, college, or university
6    campus without consent of the school authorities. School
7    authorities shall inform the appropriate law enforcement
8    agency and any law enforcement personnel on site of this
9    consent.
10        (15) Any library or museum.
11        (16) Any police, sheriff, or State Police office or
12    station without the consent of the chief law enforcement
13    officer in charge of that office or station.
14        (17) Any adult or juvenile detention or correctional
15    institution, prison, or jail.
16        (18) Any polling place on any election day.
17        (19) Any street fair or festival, farmer's market,
18    carnival, concert, protest, parade, or other temporary
19    special event, that is conducted primarily outdoors on
20    property open to the public, and that requires the issuance
21    of a permit from the city or county where it occurs, unless
22    the city or county specifically authorizes licensees to
23    carry concealed firearms at the event.
24        (20) Any private property without the express
25    permission of the owner, manager, operator, or individual
26    with the authority to control activities in that place, as

 

 

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1    evidenced by signage. This provision shall apply to private
2    property of any kind, including private residences and
3    places of business, regardless of whether they are open or
4    closed to members of the public.
5        (21) Any building owned, leased, or controlled by a
6    municipality or any building or property owned, leased or
7    controlled by a school district unless authorized by a
8    majority vote of members of its governing board. Nothing in
9    this paragraph shall prohibit a licensee from carrying a
10    concealed firearm on any sidewalk, on any highway or
11    roadway, in any public restroom, or in the licensee's own
12    residence.
13        (22) Any shopping mall or strip mall property, which
14    includes all enclosed public walkways or hall areas that
15    serve to connect retail or professional establishments and
16    its attached common areas, excluding the parking lot.
17    (b) Any person licensed under this Act who is prohibited
18from carrying a concealed firearm into a building or on the
19premises as specified in subsection (a) shall be permitted to
20store that handgun or ammunition out of plain sight in a locked
21trunk, or if it is not in a trunk, in a locked vehicle, so long
22as the firearm is unloaded and enclosed in a firearm case,
23carrying box, shipping box, or other similar portable container
24designed for the safe transportation of firearms. A licensee
25shall not be in violation of this Section while he or she is
26traveling along a public right of way that touches or crosses

 

 

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1any of the premises specified in subsection (a) if the handgun
2is carried on his or her person in accordance with the
3provisions of this Act or is being transported in a vehicle by
4the licensee in accordance with all other applicable provisions
5of law.
6    (c) A license to carry a concealed firearm issued or
7renewed under this Act may include any additional reasonable
8restrictions or conditions which the Department deems
9warranted, including restrictions as to the time, place,
10manner, and circumstances under which the person may carry a
11firearm.
12    (d) If a law enforcement officer initiates an investigative
13stop, including but not limited to a traffic stop, of a
14licensee who is carrying a concealed firearm, the licensee
15shall immediately disclose to the officer that he or she is in
16possession of a concealed firearm under this Act. The licensee
17shall comply with all lawful orders and directions from the
18officer. For the safety of the officer and the public, the
19officer may conduct a pat down of the licensee and take
20possession of the firearm for the duration of the encounter.
21    (e) A licensee shall not carry a concealed firearm while
22under the influence of any illegal drug, controlled substance,
23or hallucinogenic substance. The licensee shall not be under
24the influence of any prescription medication that causes
25impairment. The licensee shall not consume alcoholic beverages
26to the extent that it results in impairment or intoxication.

 

 

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1    (f) Signs stating that the carrying of a concealed firearm
2is prohibited shall be clearly and conspicuously posted at
3every entrance of a building or premises specified in
4subsection (a) or designated in accordance with subsection (b)
5or (c). The Department shall adopt rules for standardized signs
6to be used under this subsection.
7    (g) A licensee shall only carry a concealed firearm similar
8to what they were trained with under Section 70.
9    (h) A licensee shall not engage in acts in an unreasonable
10manner so as to alarm or disturb another and to provoke a
11breach of the peace; as evidenced by a signed complaint and
12arrest for disorderly conduct under Section 26-1 of the
13Criminal Code of 2012.
14    (i) A negligent or reckless violation of subsection (a),
15(b), (c), (d), or (e) is a Class B misdemeanor. A violation of
16subsection (a), (b), (c), (d), or (e) committed knowingly is a
17Class A misdemeanor. In addition to any other fees or court
18costs for a violation of subsection (d), the court may require
19a licensee to pay a $150 fee. For the purposes of this
20subsection, "negligent", "reckless", and "knowingly" has the
21meaning as provided in Article 4 of the Criminal Code of 2012.
22    (j) The Department may suspend a license for up to 180 days
23for a first violation of subsection (a), (b), (c), (d), or (e).
24The Department may suspend a license for up to one year for a
25second violation of subsection (a), (b), (c), (d), or (e). The
26Department shall permanently revoke a license for a third

 

 

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1violation of subsection (a), (b), (c), (d), or (e).
 
2    Section 60. Immunity for employees and agents.
3    The Department of State Police shall not be liable for
4damages in any civil action arising from alleged wrongful or
5improper granting, renewing, suspending, revoking, or failure
6to suspend or revoke licenses issued under this Act, except for
7willful or wanton misconduct. The office of the county sheriff,
8a municipal police department, and any employees or agents of
9the sheriff or municipal police department shall not be liable
10for submitting specific or articulable reasons why an applicant
11should be denied a license, unless the objection contains
12false, malicious, or inaccurate information and the objection
13constituted willful and wanton misconduct.
 
14    Section 65. Fees; report.
15    (a) Fees collected under this Act by the Department and
16deposited into the State Police Firearm Services Fund and LEADS
17Maintenance Fund shall be appropriated for administration of
18this Act.
19    (b) Fees shall be:
20        (1) New license: $100.
21        (2) Renewal of license: $100.
22        (3) Duplicate license for lost, destroyed, or stolen:
23    $50.
24        (4) Corrected license for address or name change: $50.

 

 

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1    (c) By March 1 of each year, the Department shall submit a
2statistical report to the Governor, the President of the
3Senate, and the Speaker of the House of Representatives
4indicating the number of licenses issued, revoked, suspended,
5denied, and issued after appeal since the last report and in
6total and also the number of licenses currently valid.
7    (d) The Secretary of State shall conduct a study to
8determine the cost and feasibility of creating a method of
9adding an identifiable code, background, or other means to show
10that an individual has been issued a concealed carry license by
11the Department on the person's driver's license.
 
12    Section 70. Applicant training.
13    (a) The Department shall, by rule, approve or disapprove
14training programs for the firearm training course, which shall
15be taught by a qualified instructor. Qualifications for
16qualified firearm instructors shall be set by rule. The firearm
17training course shall be conducted by entities, by a qualified
18instructor, or by an agency licensed under this Act, provided
19the course is approved by the Department.
20    (b) Applicant training courses shall not be open to anyone
21under the age of 18 and no certificate of completion shall be
22issued to persons under 21 years of age.
23    (c) Instructors shall maintain all records of student
24performance for not less than 5 years.
25    (d) The Department shall make materials for applicant

 

 

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1training available to qualified instructors online through the
2Department's website or Internet.
3    (e) For purposes of this Section, successful completion of
4qualified firearm instructors training under Section 75 shall
5meet the training requirements of this Section.
6    (f) Applicants shall be trained and qualify on any firearm
7they seek to carry concealed.
8    (g) The Department shall adopt rules to implement the
9provisions of this Section.
 
10    Section 75. Firearm instructor training.
11    (a) The Department shall, by rule, approve or disapprove
12qualified firearm instructors for the firearm training course.
13Qualifications for qualified firearm instructors shall be set
14by rule. The firearm training course shall be conducted by
15entities, by a licensee, or by an agency licensed by this Act,
16provided the course is approved by the Department.
17    (b) Persons who are not qualified firearm instructors shall
18not teach applicant training courses.
19    (c) Persons who are not qualified firearm instructors shall
20not advertise or otherwise represent courses they teach as
21qualifying their students to meet the requirements to receive a
22license under this Act.
23    (d) Persons who are not certified instructor trainers shall
24not teach instructor qualification courses.
25    (e) Persons wishing to become qualified firearm

 

 

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1instructors shall:
2        (1) be at least 21 years of age;
3        (2) be a citizen of the United States; and
4        (3) be a resident of Illinois.
5    (f) Persons wishing to become instructor trainers, in
6addition to the requirements of subsection (e) of this Section,
7shall:
8        (1) possess a high school diploma or GED certificate;
9    and
10        (2) have at least one of the following valid firearm
11    instructor certifications:
12            (A) certification from a firearm instructor's
13        course offered by a State or federal governmental
14        agency; or
15            (B) a similar firearm instructor qualifying
16        course, approved by the Director or his or her
17        designee.
18    (g) An applicant:
19        (1) shall agree to background checks; and
20        (2) may be disqualified from taking firearm instructor
21    training, or have his or her instructor qualification
22    revoked, if the applicant:
23            (A) does not meet the requirements of this Act to
24        possess a license;
25            (B) provides false or misleading information on
26        the application; or

 

 

SB2384- 34 -LRB098 09455 MRW 41105 b

1            (C) has had a prior instructor qualification
2        revoked by the Department or other issuing body.
3    (h) The Department shall post on its website a list of all
4qualified firearm instructors by county.
5    (i) The Department shall adopt rules to implement the
6provisions of this Section.
 
7    Section 80. The Freedom of Information Act is amended by
8changing Section 7.5 as follows:
 
9    (5 ILCS 140/7.5)
10    Sec. 7.5. Statutory Exemptions. To the extent provided for
11by the statutes referenced below, the following shall be exempt
12from inspection and copying:
13    (a) All information determined to be confidential under
14Section 4002 of the Technology Advancement and Development Act.
15    (b) Library circulation and order records identifying
16library users with specific materials under the Library Records
17Confidentiality Act.
18    (c) Applications, related documents, and medical records
19received by the Experimental Organ Transplantation Procedures
20Board and any and all documents or other records prepared by
21the Experimental Organ Transplantation Procedures Board or its
22staff relating to applications it has received.
23    (d) Information and records held by the Department of
24Public Health and its authorized representatives relating to

 

 

SB2384- 35 -LRB098 09455 MRW 41105 b

1known or suspected cases of sexually transmissible disease or
2any information the disclosure of which is restricted under the
3Illinois Sexually Transmissible Disease Control Act.
4    (e) Information the disclosure of which is exempted under
5Section 30 of the Radon Industry Licensing Act.
6    (f) Firm performance evaluations under Section 55 of the
7Architectural, Engineering, and Land Surveying Qualifications
8Based Selection Act.
9    (g) Information the disclosure of which is restricted and
10exempted under Section 50 of the Illinois Prepaid Tuition Act.
11    (h) Information the disclosure of which is exempted under
12the State Officials and Employees Ethics Act, and records of
13any lawfully created State or local inspector general's office
14that would be exempt if created or obtained by an Executive
15Inspector General's office under that Act.
16    (i) Information contained in a local emergency energy plan
17submitted to a municipality in accordance with a local
18emergency energy plan ordinance that is adopted under Section
1911-21.5-5 of the Illinois Municipal Code.
20    (j) Information and data concerning the distribution of
21surcharge moneys collected and remitted by wireless carriers
22under the Wireless Emergency Telephone Safety Act.
23    (k) Law enforcement officer identification information or
24driver identification information compiled by a law
25enforcement agency or the Department of Transportation under
26Section 11-212 of the Illinois Vehicle Code.

 

 

SB2384- 36 -LRB098 09455 MRW 41105 b

1    (l) Records and information provided to a residential
2health care facility resident sexual assault and death review
3team or the Executive Council under the Abuse Prevention Review
4Team Act.
5    (m) Information provided to the predatory lending database
6created pursuant to Article 3 of the Residential Real Property
7Disclosure Act, except to the extent authorized under that
8Article.
9    (n) Defense budgets and petitions for certification of
10compensation and expenses for court appointed trial counsel as
11provided under Sections 10 and 15 of the Capital Crimes
12Litigation Act. This subsection (n) shall apply until the
13conclusion of the trial of the case, even if the prosecution
14chooses not to pursue the death penalty prior to trial or
15sentencing.
16    (o) Information that is prohibited from being disclosed
17under Section 4 of the Illinois Health and Hazardous Substances
18Registry Act.
19    (p) Security portions of system safety program plans,
20investigation reports, surveys, schedules, lists, data, or
21information compiled, collected, or prepared by or for the
22Regional Transportation Authority under Section 2.11 of the
23Regional Transportation Authority Act or the St. Clair County
24Transit District under the Bi-State Transit Safety Act.
25    (q) Information prohibited from being disclosed by the
26Personnel Records Review Act.

 

 

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1    (r) Information prohibited from being disclosed by the
2Illinois School Student Records Act.
3    (s) Information the disclosure of which is restricted under
4Section 5-108 of the Public Utilities Act.
5    (t) All identified or deidentified health information in
6the form of health data or medical records contained in, stored
7in, submitted to, transferred by, or released from the Illinois
8Health Information Exchange, and identified or deidentified
9health information in the form of health data and medical
10records of the Illinois Health Information Exchange in the
11possession of the Illinois Health Information Exchange
12Authority due to its administration of the Illinois Health
13Information Exchange. The terms "identified" and
14"deidentified" shall be given the same meaning as in the Health
15Insurance Accountability and Portability Act of 1996, Public
16Law 104-191, or any subsequent amendments thereto, and any
17regulations promulgated thereunder.
18    (u) Records and information provided to an independent team
19of experts under Brian's Law.
20    (v) Names, affidavit, records, and information of people
21who have:
22        (1) applied for or received Firearm Owner's
23    Identification Cards under the Firearm Owners
24    Identification Card Act; .
25        (2) provided a registration affidavit to the
26    Department of State Police for a weapon, attachment, or

 

 

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1    device under Section 24-1.9 of the Criminal Code of 2012;
2    or
3        (3) been issued a concealed carry license by the
4    Department of State Police under the Gun Safety and
5    Responsibility Act, unless otherwise authorized by that
6    Act.
7    (w) Personally identifiable information which is exempted
8from disclosure under subsection (g) of Section 19.1 of the
9Toll Highway Act.
10    (x) Information which is exempted from disclosure under
11Section 5-1014.3 of the Counties Code or Section 8-11-21 of the
12Illinois Municipal Code.
13(Source: P.A. 96-542, eff. 1-1-10; 96-1235, eff. 1-1-11;
1496-1331, eff. 7-27-10; 97-80, eff. 7-5-11; 97-333, eff.
158-12-11; 97-342, eff. 8-12-11; 97-813, eff. 7-13-12; 97-976,
16eff. 1-1-13.)
 
17    Section 85. The Department of State Police Law of the Civil
18Administrative Code of Illinois is amended by changing Section
192605-300 and by adding Section 2605-595 as follows:
 
20    (20 ILCS 2605/2605-300)  (was 20 ILCS 2605/55a in part)
21    Sec. 2605-300. Records; crime laboratories; personnel. To
22do the following:
23        (1) Be a central repository and custodian of criminal
24    statistics for the State.

 

 

SB2384- 39 -LRB098 09455 MRW 41105 b

1        (2) Be a central repository for criminal history record
2    information.
3        (3) Procure and file for record information that is
4    necessary and helpful to plan programs of crime prevention,
5    law enforcement, and criminal justice.
6        (4) Procure and file for record copies of fingerprints
7    that may be required by law.
8        (5) Establish general and field crime laboratories.
9        (6) Register and file for record information that may
10    be required by law for the issuance of firearm owner's
11    identification cards under the Firearm Owners
12    Identification Card Act and concealed carry licenses under
13    the Gun Safety and Responsibility Act.
14        (7) Employ polygraph operators, laboratory
15    technicians, and other specially qualified persons to aid
16    in the identification of criminal activity.
17        (8) Undertake other identification, information,
18    laboratory, statistical, or registration activities that
19    may be required by law.
20(Source: P.A. 90-18, eff. 7-1-97; 90-130, eff. 1-1-98; 90-372,
21eff. 7-1-98; 90-590, eff. 1-1-00; 90-655, eff. 7-30-98; 90-793,
22eff. 8-14-98; 91-239, eff. 1-1-00.)
 
23    (20 ILCS 2605/2605-595 new)
24    Sec. 2605-595. State Police Firearm Services Fund.
25    (a) There is created in the State treasury a special fund

 

 

SB2384- 40 -LRB098 09455 MRW 41105 b

1known as the State Police Firearm Services Fund. The Fund shall
2receive revenue under Section 5 of the Firearm Owners
3Identification Card Act, the Gun Safety and Responsibility Act
4and Section 24-1.9 of the Criminal Code of 2012. The Fund may
5also receive revenue from grants, pass-through grants,
6donations, appropriations, and any other legal source.
7    (b) The Department of State Police may use moneys in the
8Fund to finance any of its lawful purposes, mandates,
9functions, and duties under the Firearm Owners Identification
10Card Act, the Gun Safety and Responsibility Act, and Section
1124-1.9 of the Criminal Code of 2012, including the cost of
12sending notices of expiration of Firearm Owner's
13Identification Cards, concealed carry licenses, the prompt and
14efficient processing of applications under the Firearm Owners
15Identification Card Act and the Gun Safety and Responsibility
16Act, and support for investigations required under these Acts
17and law.
18    (c) Investment income that is attributable to the
19investment of moneys in the Fund shall be retained in the Fund
20for the uses specified in this Section.
21    (d) The State Police Firearm Services Fund shall not be
22subject to administrative chargebacks.
 
23    Section 90. The State Police Act is amended by adding
24Section 25 as follows:
 

 

 

SB2384- 41 -LRB098 09455 MRW 41105 b

1    (20 ILCS 2610/25 new)
2    Sec. 25. Emergency procurement authorized.
3    In order to comply with recent court rulings regarding
4concealed carry in Illinois and the assault weapons ban and
5consumer protection provisions of this amendatory Act of the
698th General Assembly, any procurements necessary for the
7implementation of this amendatory Act of the 98th General
8Assembly, shall be eligible for emergency procurement.
 
9    Section 95. The State Finance Act is amended by adding
10Section 5.826 as follows:
 
11    (30 ILCS 105/5.826 new)
12    Sec. 5.826. The State Police Firearm Services Fund.
 
13    (30 ILCS 105/5.206 rep.)
14    Section 97. The State Finance Act is amended by repealing
15Section 5.206.
 
16    Section 100. The Firearm Owners Identification Card Act is
17amended by changing Sections 1.1, 2, 3, 5, 9, 12, and 13.2 and
18by adding Section 5.1 as follows:
 
19    (430 ILCS 65/1.1)  (from Ch. 38, par. 83-1.1)
20    Sec. 1.1. For purposes of this Act:
21    "Has been adjudicated as a mental defective" means the

 

 

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1person is the subject of a determination by a court, board,
2commission or other lawful authority that a person, as a result
3of marked subnormal intelligence, or mental illness, mental
4impairment, incompetency, condition, or disease:
5        (1) is a danger to himself, herself, or to others;
6        (2) lacks the mental capacity to manage his or her own
7    affairs;
8        (3) is not guilty in a criminal case by reason of
9    insanity, mental disease or defect;
10        (4) is incompetent to stand trial in a criminal case;
11        (5) is not guilty by reason of lack of mental
12    responsibility pursuant to Articles 50a and 72b of the
13    Uniform Code of Military Justice, 10 U.S.C. 850a, 876b.
14    "Counterfeit" means to copy or imitate, without legal
15authority, with intent to deceive.
16    "Federally licensed firearm dealer" means a person who is
17licensed as a federal firearms dealer under Section 923 of the
18federal Gun Control Act of 1968 (18 U.S.C. 923).
19    "Firearm" means any device, by whatever name known, which
20is designed to expel a projectile or projectiles by the action
21of an explosion, expansion of gas or escape of gas; excluding,
22however:
23        (1) any pneumatic gun, spring gun, paint ball gun, or
24    B-B gun which expels a single globular projectile not
25    exceeding .18 inch in diameter or which has a maximum
26    muzzle velocity of less than 700 feet per second;

 

 

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1        (1.1) any pneumatic gun, spring gun, paint ball gun, or
2    B-B gun which expels breakable paint balls containing
3    washable marking colors;
4        (2) any device used exclusively for signalling or
5    safety and required or recommended by the United States
6    Coast Guard or the Interstate Commerce Commission;
7        (3) any device used exclusively for the firing of stud
8    cartridges, explosive rivets or similar industrial
9    ammunition; and
10        (4) an antique firearm (other than a machine-gun)
11    which, although designed as a weapon, the Department of
12    State Police finds by reason of the date of its
13    manufacture, value, design, and other characteristics is
14    primarily a collector's item and is not likely to be used
15    as a weapon.
16    "Firearm ammunition" means any self-contained cartridge or
17shotgun shell, by whatever name known, which is designed to be
18used or adaptable to use in a firearm; excluding, however:
19        (1) any ammunition exclusively designed for use with a
20    device used exclusively for signalling or safety and
21    required or recommended by the United States Coast Guard or
22    the Interstate Commerce Commission; and
23        (2) any ammunition designed exclusively for use with a
24    stud or rivet driver or other similar industrial
25    ammunition.
26    "Firearm ammunition feeding device" means a magazine,

 

 

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1clip, belt, drum, feed strip, or similar device, manufactured
2with a capacity to accept firearm ammunition.
3    "Gun show" means an event or function:
4        (1) at which the sale and transfer of firearms is the
5    regular and normal course of business and where 50 or more
6    firearms are displayed, offered, or exhibited for sale,
7    transfer, or exchange; or
8        (2) at which not less than 10 gun show vendors display,
9    offer, or exhibit for sale, sell, transfer, or exchange
10    firearms.
11    "Gun show" includes the entire premises provided for an
12event or function, including parking areas for the event or
13function, that is sponsored to facilitate the purchase, sale,
14transfer, or exchange of firearms as described in this Section.
15    "Gun show" does not include training or safety classes,
16competitive shooting events, such as rifle, shotgun, or handgun
17matches, trap, skeet, or sporting clays shoots, dinners,
18banquets, raffles, or any other event where the sale or
19transfer of firearms is not the primary course of business.
20    "Gun show promoter" means a person who organizes or
21operates a gun show.
22    "Gun show vendor" means a person who exhibits, sells,
23offers for sale, transfers, or exchanges any firearms at a gun
24show, regardless of whether the person arranges with a gun show
25promoter for a fixed location from which to exhibit, sell,
26offer for sale, transfer, or exchange any firearm.

 

 

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1    "Sanctioned competitive shooting event" means a shooting
2contest officially recognized by a national or state shooting
3sport association, and includes any sight-in or practice
4conducted in conjunction with the event.
5    "Stun gun or taser" has the meaning ascribed to it in
6Section 24-1 of the Criminal Code of 2012.
7(Source: P.A. 97-776, eff. 7-13-12; 97-1150, eff. 1-25-13.)
 
8    (430 ILCS 65/2)  (from Ch. 38, par. 83-2)
9    Sec. 2. Firearm Owner's Identification Card required;
10exceptions.
11    (a) (1) No person may acquire or possess any firearm, stun
12    gun, or taser within this State without having in his or
13    her possession a valid Firearm Owner's Identification Card
14    previously issued in his or her name by the Department of
15    State Police under the provisions of this Act.
16        (2) No person may acquire or possess firearm ammunition
17    or a firearm ammunition feeding device within this State
18    without having in his or her possession a valid Firearm
19    Owner's Identification Card previously issued in his or her
20    name by the Department of State Police under the provisions
21    of this Act.
22    (b) The provisions of this Section regarding the possession
23of firearms, firearm ammunition, stun guns, and tasers do not
24apply to:
25        (1) United States Marshals, while engaged in the

 

 

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1    operation of their official duties;
2        (2) Members of the Armed Forces of the United States or
3    the National Guard, while engaged in the operation of their
4    official duties;
5        (3) Federal officials required to carry firearms,
6    while engaged in the operation of their official duties;
7        (4) Members of bona fide veterans organizations which
8    receive firearms directly from the armed forces of the
9    United States, while using the firearms for ceremonial
10    purposes with blank ammunition;
11        (5) Nonresident hunters during hunting season, with
12    valid nonresident hunting licenses and while in an area
13    where hunting is permitted; however, at all other times and
14    in all other places these persons must have their firearms
15    unloaded and enclosed in a case;
16        (6) Those hunters exempt from obtaining a hunting
17    license who are required to submit their Firearm Owner's
18    Identification Card when hunting on Department of Natural
19    Resources owned or managed sites;
20        (7) Nonresidents while on a firing or shooting range
21    recognized by the Department of State Police; however,
22    these persons must at all other times and in all other
23    places have their firearms unloaded and enclosed in a case;
24        (8) Nonresidents while at a firearm showing or display
25    recognized by the Department of State Police; however, at
26    all other times and in all other places these persons must

 

 

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1    have their firearms unloaded and enclosed in a case;
2        (9) Nonresidents whose firearms are unloaded and
3    enclosed in a case;
4        (10) Nonresidents who are currently licensed or
5    registered to possess a firearm in their resident state;
6        (11) Unemancipated minors while in the custody and
7    immediate control of their parent or legal guardian or
8    other person in loco parentis to the minor if the parent or
9    legal guardian or other person in loco parentis to the
10    minor has a currently valid Firearm Owner's Identification
11    Card;
12        (12) Color guards of bona fide veterans organizations
13    or members of bona fide American Legion bands while using
14    firearms for ceremonial purposes with blank ammunition;
15        (13) Nonresident hunters whose state of residence does
16    not require them to be licensed or registered to possess a
17    firearm and only during hunting season, with valid hunting
18    licenses, while accompanied by, and using a firearm owned
19    by, a person who possesses a valid Firearm Owner's
20    Identification Card and while in an area within a
21    commercial club licensed under the Wildlife Code where
22    hunting is permitted and controlled, but in no instance
23    upon sites owned or managed by the Department of Natural
24    Resources;
25        (14) Resident hunters who are properly authorized to
26    hunt and, while accompanied by a person who possesses a

 

 

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1    valid Firearm Owner's Identification Card, hunt in an area
2    within a commercial club licensed under the Wildlife Code
3    where hunting is permitted and controlled;
4        (15) A person who is otherwise eligible to obtain a
5    Firearm Owner's Identification Card under this Act and is
6    under the direct supervision of a holder of a Firearm
7    Owner's Identification Card who is 21 years of age or older
8    while the person is on a firing or shooting range or is a
9    participant in a firearms safety and training course
10    recognized by a law enforcement agency or a national,
11    statewide shooting sports organization; and
12        (16) Competitive shooting athletes whose competition
13    firearms are sanctioned by the International Olympic
14    Committee, the International Paralympic Committee, the
15    International Shooting Sport Federation, or USA Shooting
16    in connection with such athletes' training for and
17    participation in shooting competitions at the 2016 Olympic
18    and Paralympic Games and sanctioned test events leading up
19    to the 2016 Olympic and Paralympic Games.
20    (c) The provisions of this Section regarding the
21acquisition and possession of firearms, firearm ammunition,
22stun guns, and tasers do not apply to law enforcement officials
23of this or any other jurisdiction, while engaged in the
24operation of their official duties.
25    (d) Any person who becomes a resident of this State, who is
26not otherwise prohibited from obtaining, possessing, or using a

 

 

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1firearm or firearm ammunition, shall not be required to have a
2Firearm Owner's Identification Card to possess firearms or
3firearms ammunition until 60 calendar days after he or she
4obtains an Illinois driver's license or Illinois
5Identification Card.
6(Source: P.A. 96-7, eff. 4-3-09; 97-1131, eff. 1-1-13.)
 
7    (430 ILCS 65/3)  (from Ch. 38, par. 83-3)
8    Sec. 3. (a) Except as provided in Section 3a, no person may
9knowingly transfer, or cause to be transferred, any firearm,
10firearm ammunition, stun gun, or taser to any person within
11this State unless the transferee with whom he deals displays a
12currently valid Firearm Owner's Identification Card which has
13previously been issued in his name by the Department of State
14Police under the provisions of this Act. In addition, all
15firearm, stun gun, and taser transfers by federally licensed
16firearm dealers are subject to Section 3.1.
17    (a-5) Any person who is not a federally licensed firearm
18dealer and who desires to transfer or sell a firearm while that
19person is on the grounds of a gun show must, before selling or
20transferring the firearm, request the Department of State
21Police to conduct a background check on the prospective
22recipient of the firearm in accordance with Section 3.1.
23    (a-10) Any person who is not a federally licensed importer,
24manufacturer, or dealer and who desires to sell or transfer a
25firearm to another person, who is not a federally licensed

 

 

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1importer, manufacturer, or dealer, shall do so only at the
2place of business of a federally licensed firearm dealer. The
3federally licensed firearm dealer shall conduct a background
4check on the prospective recipient of the firearm in accordance
5with Section 3.1 of this Act and follow all other applicable
6federal, State, and local laws as if he or she were the seller
7of the firearm. The purchaser or transferee may be required by
8the federally licensed firearm dealer to pay a fee not to
9exceed $10 per firearm, which the dealer may retain as
10compensation for performing the functions required under this
11subsection, plus the applicable fees authorized by Section 3.1.
12    The provisions of this subsection (a-10) do not apply to:
13        (1) transfers to the transferor's husband, wife, son,
14    daughter, stepson, stepdaughter, father, mother,
15    stepfather, stepmother, brother, sister, nephew, niece,
16    uncle, aunt, grandfather, grandmother, grandson,
17    granddaughter, father-in-law, mother-in-law, son-in-law,
18    or daughter-in-law;
19        (2) transfers by persons acting pursuant to operation
20    of law or a court order; or
21        (3) transfers on the grounds of a gun show.
22    (b) Any person within this State who transfers or causes to
23be transferred any firearm, stun gun, or taser shall keep a
24record of such transfer for a period of 10 years from the date
25of transfer. Such record shall contain the date of the
26transfer; the description, serial number or other information

 

 

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1identifying the firearm, stun gun, or taser if no serial number
2is available; and, if the transfer was completed within this
3State, the transferee's Firearm Owner's Identification Card
4number. On or after January 1, 2006, the record shall contain
5the date of application for transfer of the firearm. On demand
6of a peace officer such transferor shall produce for inspection
7such record of transfer. If the transfer or sale took place at
8a gun show, the record shall include the unique identification
9number. Failure to record the unique identification number is a
10petty offense.
11    (b-5) Any resident may purchase ammunition from a person
12within or outside of Illinois if shipment is by United States
13mail or by a private express carrier authorized by federal law
14to ship ammunition. Any resident purchasing ammunition within
15or outside the State of Illinois must provide the seller with a
16copy of his or her valid Firearm Owner's Identification Card
17and either his or her Illinois driver's license or Illinois
18State Identification Card prior to the shipment of the
19ammunition. The ammunition may be shipped only to an address on
20either of those 2 documents.
21    (c) The provisions of this Section regarding the transfer
22of firearm ammunition shall not apply to those persons
23specified in paragraph (b) of Section 2 of this Act.
24(Source: P.A. 97-1135, eff. 12-4-12.)
 
25    (430 ILCS 65/5)  (from Ch. 38, par. 83-5)

 

 

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1    Sec. 5. The Department of State Police shall either approve
2or deny all applications within 30 days from the date they are
3received, and every applicant found qualified under pursuant to
4Section 8 of this Act by the Department shall be entitled to a
5Firearm Owner's Identification Card upon the payment of a $18
6$10 fee. Any applicant who is an active duty member of the
7Armed Forces of the United States, a member of the Illinois
8National Guard, or a member of the Reserve Forces of the United
9States is exempt from the application fee. $6 of each fee
10derived from the issuance of Firearm Owner's Identification
11Cards, or renewals thereof, shall be deposited in the Wildlife
12and Fish Fund in the State Treasury; $1 of the such fee shall
13be deposited in the State Police Services Fund and $11 $3 of
14the such fee shall be deposited in the State Police Firearm
15Services Fund. Firearm Owner's Notification Fund. Monies in the
16Firearm Owner's Notification Fund shall be used exclusively to
17pay for the cost of sending notices of expiration of Firearm
18Owner's Identification Cards under Section 13.2 of this Act.
19Excess monies in the Firearm Owner's Notification Fund shall be
20used to ensure the prompt and efficient processing of
21applications received under Section 4 of this Act.
22(Source: P.A. 95-581, eff. 6-1-08; 96-91, eff. 7-27-09.)
 
23    (430 ILCS 65/5.1 new)
24    Sec. 5.1. State Police Firearm Services Fund. All moneys
25remaining in the Firearm Owner's Notification Fund on the

 

 

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1effective date of this amendatory Act of the 98th General
2Assembly shall be transferred into the State Police Firearm
3Services Fund, a special fund created in the State treasury, to
4be expended by the Department of State Police, for the purposes
5specified in this Act and Section 2605-595 of the Department of
6State Police Law of the Civil Administrative Code of Illinois.
 
7    (430 ILCS 65/9)  (from Ch. 38, par. 83-9)
8    Sec. 9.
9    (a) Every person whose application for a Firearm Owner's
10Identification Card is denied, and every holder of such a Card
11whose Card is revoked or seized, shall receive a written notice
12from the Department of State Police stating specifically the
13grounds upon which his application has been denied or upon
14which his Identification Card has been revoked.
15    (b) Any person who has received notice from the Department
16of State Police stating his or her card is revoked shall
17immediately return the card to the Department of State Police.
18Failure to return his or her card shall be a business offense
19with a minimum fine of $100. After being served notice, persons
20who use their revoked card to purchase any firearm, firearm
21ammunition, or firearm ammunition feeding device shall be
22guilty of a Class 4 felony.
23(Source: P.A. 97-1131, eff. 1-1-13.)
 
24    (430 ILCS 65/12)  (from Ch. 38, par. 83-12)

 

 

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1    Sec. 12. The provisions of this Act shall not apply to the
2passing or transfer of any firearm or firearm ammunition upon
3the death of the owner thereof to his or her heir or legatee or
4to the passing or transfer of any firearm or firearm ammunition
5to a person incident to any legal proceeding or action until 60
6days after the such passing or transfer, if the heir, legatee,
7or person is eligible for a Firearm Owner's Identification Card
8or not otherwise prohibited from the possession of firearms or
9firearm ammunition. If the heir, legatee, or person is
10ineligible or prohibited from the possession of firearms or
11firearm ammunition, he or she must immediately transfer the
12firearm or firearm ammunition to a person with a valid Firearm
13Owner's Identification Card.
14(Source: Laws 1967, p. 2600.)
 
15    (430 ILCS 65/13.2)  (from Ch. 38, par. 83-13.2)
16    Sec. 13.2. The Department of State Police shall, 60 days
17prior to the expiration of a Firearm Owner's Identification
18Card, forward by first class mail to each person whose card is
19to expire a notification of the expiration of the card and an
20application which may be used to apply for renewal of the card.
21It is the obligation of the holder of a Firearm Owner's
22Identification Card to notify the Department of State Police of
23any address change since the issuance of the Firearm Owner's
24Identification Card. Whenever any person moves from the
25residence address named on his or her card, the person shall

 

 

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1within 21 calendar days thereafter notify in a form and manner
2prescribed by the Department of his or her old and new
3residence addresses and the card number held by him or her. Any
4person whose legal name has changed from the name on the card
5that he or she has been previously issued must apply for a
6corrected card within 30 calendar days after the change. The
7cost for a corrected card shall be $5 which shall be deposited
8into the State Police Firearm Services Fund Firearm Owner's
9Notification Fund.
10(Source: P.A. 97-1131, eff. 1-1-13.)
 
11    Section 105. The Criminal Code of 2012 is amended by
12changing Sections 21-6, 24-1, 24-1.6, 24-2, 24-3, 24-3.1,
1324-3A, and 24-9 and by adding Sections 24-1.9, 24-1.10, and
1424-4.1 as follows:
 
15    (720 ILCS 5/21-6)  (from Ch. 38, par. 21-6)
16    Sec. 21-6. Unauthorized Possession or Storage of Weapons.
17    (a) Whoever possesses or stores any weapon enumerated in
18Section 33A-1 in any building or on land supported in whole or
19in part with public funds or in any building on such land
20without prior written permission from the chief security
21officer for such land or building commits a Class A
22misdemeanor.
23    (b) The chief security officer must grant any reasonable
24request for permission under paragraph (a).

 

 

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1    (c) This Section shall not apply to a person who has been
2issued a concealed carry license and is acting lawfully under
3the Gun Safety and Responsibility Act.
4(Source: P.A. 89-685, eff. 6-1-97.)
 
5    (720 ILCS 5/24-1)  (from Ch. 38, par. 24-1)
6    Sec. 24-1. Unlawful Use of Weapons.
7    (a) A person commits the offense of unlawful use of weapons
8when he knowingly:
9        (1) Sells, manufactures, purchases, possesses or
10    carries any bludgeon, black-jack, slung-shot, sand-club,
11    sand-bag, metal knuckles or other knuckle weapon
12    regardless of its composition, throwing star, or any knife,
13    commonly referred to as a switchblade knife, which has a
14    blade that opens automatically by hand pressure applied to
15    a button, spring or other device in the handle of the
16    knife, or a ballistic knife, which is a device that propels
17    a knifelike blade as a projectile by means of a coil
18    spring, elastic material or compressed gas; or
19        (2) Carries or possesses with intent to use the same
20    unlawfully against another, a dagger, dirk, billy,
21    dangerous knife, razor, stiletto, broken bottle or other
22    piece of glass, stun gun or taser or any other dangerous or
23    deadly weapon or instrument of like character; or
24        (3) Carries on or about his person or in any vehicle, a
25    tear gas gun projector or bomb or any object containing

 

 

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1    noxious liquid gas or substance, other than an object
2    containing a non-lethal noxious liquid gas or substance
3    designed solely for personal defense carried by a person 18
4    years of age or older; or
5        (4) Carries or possesses in any vehicle or concealed on
6    or about his person except when on his land or in his own
7    abode, legal dwelling, or fixed place of business, or on
8    the land or in the legal dwelling of another person as an
9    invitee with that person's permission, any pistol,
10    revolver, stun gun or taser or other firearm, except that
11    this subsection (a) (4) does not apply to or affect
12    transportation of weapons that meet one of the following
13    conditions:
14            (i) are broken down in a non-functioning state; or
15            (ii) are not immediately accessible; or
16            (iii) are unloaded and enclosed in a firearm case,
17        firearm carrying box, shipping box, or other similar
18        portable container designed for the safe
19        transportation of firearms by a person who has been
20        issued a currently valid Firearm Owner's
21        Identification Card; or
22        (5) Sets a spring gun; or
23        (6) Possesses any device or attachment of any kind
24    designed, used or intended for use in silencing the report
25    of any firearm; or
26        (7) Sells, manufactures, purchases, possesses or

 

 

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1    carries:
2            (i) a machine gun, which shall be defined for the
3        purposes of this subsection as any weapon, which
4        shoots, is designed to shoot, or can be readily
5        restored to shoot, automatically more than one shot
6        without manually reloading by a single function of the
7        trigger, including the frame or receiver of any such
8        weapon, or sells, manufactures, purchases, possesses,
9        or carries any combination of parts designed or
10        intended for use in converting any weapon into a
11        machine gun, or any combination or parts from which a
12        machine gun can be assembled if such parts are in the
13        possession or under the control of a person;
14            (ii) any rifle having one or more barrels less than
15        16 inches in length or a shotgun having one or more
16        barrels less than 18 inches in length or any weapon
17        made from a rifle or shotgun, whether by alteration,
18        modification, or otherwise, if such a weapon as
19        modified has an overall length of less than 26 inches;
20        or
21            (iii) any bomb, bomb-shell, grenade, bottle or
22        other container containing an explosive substance of
23        over one-quarter ounce for like purposes, such as, but
24        not limited to, black powder bombs and Molotov
25        cocktails or artillery projectiles; or
26        (8) Carries or possesses any firearm, stun gun or taser

 

 

SB2384- 59 -LRB098 09455 MRW 41105 b

1    or other deadly weapon in any place which is licensed to
2    sell intoxicating beverages, or at any public gathering
3    held pursuant to a license issued by any governmental body
4    or any public gathering at which an admission is charged,
5    excluding a place where a showing, demonstration or lecture
6    involving the exhibition of unloaded firearms is
7    conducted.
8        This subsection (a)(8) does not apply to any auction or
9    raffle of a firearm held pursuant to a license or permit
10    issued by a governmental body, nor does it apply to persons
11    engaged in firearm safety training courses; or
12        (9) Carries or possesses in a vehicle or on or about
13    his person any pistol, revolver, stun gun or taser or
14    firearm or ballistic knife, when he is hooded, robed or
15    masked in such manner as to conceal his identity; or
16        (10) Carries or possesses on or about his person, upon
17    any public street, alley, or other public lands within the
18    corporate limits of a city, village or incorporated town,
19    except when an invitee thereon or therein, for the purpose
20    of the display of such weapon or the lawful commerce in
21    weapons, or except when on his land or in his own abode,
22    legal dwelling, or fixed place of business, or on the land
23    or in the legal dwelling of another person as an invitee
24    with that person's permission, any pistol, revolver, stun
25    gun or taser or other firearm, except that this subsection
26    (a) (10) does not apply to or affect transportation of

 

 

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1    weapons that meet one of the following conditions:
2            (i) are broken down in a non-functioning state; or
3            (ii) are not immediately accessible; or
4            (iii) are unloaded and enclosed in a firearm case,
5        firearm carrying box, shipping box, or other similar
6        portable container designed for the safe
7        transportation of firearms by a person who has been
8        issued a currently valid Firearm Owner's
9        Identification Card.
10        A "stun gun or taser", as used in this paragraph (a)
11    means (i) any device which is powered by electrical
12    charging units, such as, batteries, and which fires one or
13    several barbs attached to a length of wire and which, upon
14    hitting a human, can send out a current capable of
15    disrupting the person's nervous system in such a manner as
16    to render him incapable of normal functioning or (ii) any
17    device which is powered by electrical charging units, such
18    as batteries, and which, upon contact with a human or
19    clothing worn by a human, can send out current capable of
20    disrupting the person's nervous system in such a manner as
21    to render him incapable of normal functioning; or
22        (11) Sells, manufactures or purchases any explosive
23    bullet. For purposes of this paragraph (a) "explosive
24    bullet" means the projectile portion of an ammunition
25    cartridge which contains or carries an explosive charge
26    which will explode upon contact with the flesh of a human

 

 

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1    or an animal. "Cartridge" means a tubular metal case having
2    a projectile affixed at the front thereof and a cap or
3    primer at the rear end thereof, with the propellant
4    contained in such tube between the projectile and the cap;
5    or
6        (12) (Blank); or
7        (13) Carries or possesses on or about his or her person
8    while in a building occupied by a unit of government, a
9    billy club, other weapon of like character, or other
10    instrument of like character intended for use as a weapon.
11    For the purposes of this Section, "billy club" means a
12    short stick or club commonly carried by police officers
13    which is either telescopic or constructed of a solid piece
14    of wood or other man-made material.
15    (b) Sentence. A person convicted of a violation of
16subsection 24-1(a)(1) through (5), subsection 24-1(a)(10),
17subsection 24-1(a)(11), or subsection 24-1(a)(13) commits a
18Class A misdemeanor. A person convicted of a violation of
19subsection 24-1(a)(8) or 24-1(a)(9) commits a Class 4 felony; a
20person convicted of a violation of subsection 24-1(a)(6) or
2124-1(a)(7)(ii) or (iii) commits a Class 3 felony. A person
22convicted of a violation of subsection 24-1(a)(7)(i) commits a
23Class 2 felony and shall be sentenced to a term of imprisonment
24of not less than 3 years and not more than 7 years, unless the
25weapon is possessed in the passenger compartment of a motor
26vehicle as defined in Section 1-146 of the Illinois Vehicle

 

 

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1Code, or on the person, while the weapon is loaded, in which
2case it shall be a Class X felony. A person convicted of a
3second or subsequent violation of subsection 24-1(a)(4),
424-1(a)(8), 24-1(a)(9), or 24-1(a)(10) commits a Class 3
5felony. The possession of each weapon in violation of this
6Section constitutes a single and separate violation.
7    (c) Violations in specific places.
8        (1) A person who violates subsection 24-1(a)(6) or
9    24-1(a)(7) in any school, regardless of the time of day or
10    the time of year, in residential property owned, operated
11    or managed by a public housing agency or leased by a public
12    housing agency as part of a scattered site or mixed-income
13    development, in a public park, in a courthouse, on the real
14    property comprising any school, regardless of the time of
15    day or the time of year, on residential property owned,
16    operated or managed by a public housing agency or leased by
17    a public housing agency as part of a scattered site or
18    mixed-income development, on the real property comprising
19    any public park, on the real property comprising any
20    courthouse, in any conveyance owned, leased or contracted
21    by a school to transport students to or from school or a
22    school related activity, in any conveyance owned, leased,
23    or contracted by a public transportation agency, or on any
24    public way within 1,000 feet of the real property
25    comprising any school, public park, courthouse, public
26    transportation facility, or residential property owned,

 

 

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1    operated, or managed by a public housing agency or leased
2    by a public housing agency as part of a scattered site or
3    mixed-income development commits a Class 2 felony and shall
4    be sentenced to a term of imprisonment of not less than 3
5    years and not more than 7 years.
6        (1.5) A person who violates subsection 24-1(a)(4),
7    24-1(a)(9), or 24-1(a)(10) in any school, regardless of the
8    time of day or the time of year, in residential property
9    owned, operated, or managed by a public housing agency or
10    leased by a public housing agency as part of a scattered
11    site or mixed-income development, in a public park, in a
12    courthouse, on the real property comprising any school,
13    regardless of the time of day or the time of year, on
14    residential property owned, operated, or managed by a
15    public housing agency or leased by a public housing agency
16    as part of a scattered site or mixed-income development, on
17    the real property comprising any public park, on the real
18    property comprising any courthouse, in any conveyance
19    owned, leased, or contracted by a school to transport
20    students to or from school or a school related activity, in
21    any conveyance owned, leased, or contracted by a public
22    transportation agency, or on any public way within 1,000
23    feet of the real property comprising any school, public
24    park, courthouse, public transportation facility, or
25    residential property owned, operated, or managed by a
26    public housing agency or leased by a public housing agency

 

 

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1    as part of a scattered site or mixed-income development
2    commits a Class 3 felony.
3        (2) A person who violates subsection 24-1(a)(1),
4    24-1(a)(2), or 24-1(a)(3) in any school, regardless of the
5    time of day or the time of year, in residential property
6    owned, operated or managed by a public housing agency or
7    leased by a public housing agency as part of a scattered
8    site or mixed-income development, in a public park, in a
9    courthouse, on the real property comprising any school,
10    regardless of the time of day or the time of year, on
11    residential property owned, operated or managed by a public
12    housing agency or leased by a public housing agency as part
13    of a scattered site or mixed-income development, on the
14    real property comprising any public park, on the real
15    property comprising any courthouse, in any conveyance
16    owned, leased or contracted by a school to transport
17    students to or from school or a school related activity, in
18    any conveyance owned, leased, or contracted by a public
19    transportation agency, or on any public way within 1,000
20    feet of the real property comprising any school, public
21    park, courthouse, public transportation facility, or
22    residential property owned, operated, or managed by a
23    public housing agency or leased by a public housing agency
24    as part of a scattered site or mixed-income development
25    commits a Class 4 felony. "Courthouse" means any building
26    that is used by the Circuit, Appellate, or Supreme Court of

 

 

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1    this State for the conduct of official business.
2        (3) Paragraphs (1), (1.5), and (2) of this subsection
3    (c) shall not apply to law enforcement officers or security
4    officers of such school, college, or university or to
5    students carrying or possessing firearms for use in
6    training courses, parades, hunting, target shooting on
7    school ranges, or otherwise with the consent of school
8    authorities and which firearms are transported unloaded
9    enclosed in a suitable case, box, or transportation
10    package.
11        (4) For the purposes of this subsection (c), "school"
12    means any public or private elementary or secondary school,
13    community college, college, or university.
14        (5) For the purposes of this subsection (c), "public
15    transportation agency" means a public or private agency
16    that provides for the transportation or conveyance of
17    persons by means available to the general public, except
18    for transportation by automobiles not used for conveyance
19    of the general public as passengers; and "public
20    transportation facility" means a terminal or other place
21    where one may obtain public transportation.
22    (d) The presence in an automobile other than a public
23omnibus of any weapon, instrument or substance referred to in
24subsection (a)(7) is prima facie evidence that it is in the
25possession of, and is being carried by, all persons occupying
26such automobile at the time such weapon, instrument or

 

 

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1substance is found, except under the following circumstances:
2(i) if such weapon, instrument or instrumentality is found upon
3the person of one of the occupants therein; or (ii) if such
4weapon, instrument or substance is found in an automobile
5operated for hire by a duly licensed driver in the due, lawful
6and proper pursuit of his trade, then such presumption shall
7not apply to the driver.
8    (e) Exemptions. Crossbows, Common or Compound bows and
9Underwater Spearguns are exempted from the definition of
10ballistic knife as defined in paragraph (1) of subsection (a)
11of this Section.
12(Source: P.A. 95-331, eff. 8-21-07; 95-809, eff. 1-1-09;
1395-885, eff. 1-1-09; 96-41, eff. 1-1-10; 96-328, eff. 8-11-09;
1496-742, eff. 8-25-09; 96-1000, eff. 7-2-10.)
 
15    (720 ILCS 5/24-1.6)
16    Sec. 24-1.6. Aggravated unlawful use of a weapon.
17    (a) A person commits the offense of aggravated unlawful use
18of a weapon when he or she knowingly:
19        (1) Carries on or about his or her person or in any
20    vehicle or concealed on or about his or her person except
21    when on his or her land or in his or her abode, legal
22    dwelling, or fixed place of business, or on the land or in
23    the legal dwelling of another person as an invitee with
24    that person's permission, any pistol, revolver, stun gun or
25    taser or other firearm; or

 

 

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1        (2) Carries or possesses on or about his or her person,
2    upon any public street, alley, or other public lands within
3    the corporate limits of a city, village or incorporated
4    town, except when an invitee thereon or therein, for the
5    purpose of the display of such weapon or the lawful
6    commerce in weapons, or except when on his or her own land
7    or in his or her own abode, legal dwelling, or fixed place
8    of business, or on the land or in the legal dwelling of
9    another person as an invitee with that person's permission,
10    any pistol, revolver, stun gun or taser or other firearm;
11    and
12        (3) One of the following factors is present:
13            (A) the firearm possessed was uncased, loaded and
14        immediately accessible at the time of the offense; or
15            (B) the firearm possessed was uncased, unloaded
16        and the ammunition for the weapon was immediately
17        accessible at the time of the offense; or
18            (C) the person possessing the firearm has not been
19        issued a currently valid Firearm Owner's
20        Identification Card; or
21            (D) the person possessing the weapon was
22        previously adjudicated a delinquent minor under the
23        Juvenile Court Act of 1987 for an act that if committed
24        by an adult would be a felony; or
25            (E) the person possessing the weapon was engaged in
26        a misdemeanor violation of the Cannabis Control Act, in

 

 

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1        a misdemeanor violation of the Illinois Controlled
2        Substances Act, or in a misdemeanor violation of the
3        Methamphetamine Control and Community Protection Act;
4        or
5            (F) (blank); or
6            (G) the person possessing the weapon had a order of
7        protection issued against him or her within the
8        previous 2 years; or
9            (H) the person possessing the weapon was engaged in
10        the commission or attempted commission of a
11        misdemeanor involving the use or threat of violence
12        against the person or property of another; or
13            (I) the person possessing the weapon was under 21
14        years of age and in possession of a handgun as defined
15        in Section 24-3, unless the person under 21 is engaged
16        in lawful activities under the Wildlife Code or
17        described in subsection 24-2(b)(1), (b)(3), or
18        24-2(f).
19    (b) "Stun gun or taser" as used in this Section has the
20same definition given to it in Section 24-1 of this Code.
21    (c) This Section does not apply to or affect the
22transportation or possession of weapons that:
23            (i) are broken down in a non-functioning state; or
24            (ii) are not immediately accessible; or
25            (iii) are unloaded and enclosed in a firearm case,
26        firearm carrying box, shipping box, or other similar

 

 

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1        portable container designed for the safe
2        transportation of firearms by a person who has been
3        issued a currently valid Firearm Owner's
4        Identification Card.
5    (d) Sentence.
6         (1) Aggravated unlawful use of a weapon is a Class 4
7    felony; a second or subsequent offense is a Class 2 felony
8    for which the person shall be sentenced to a term of
9    imprisonment of not less than 3 years and not more than 7
10    years.
11        (2) Except as otherwise provided in paragraphs (3) and
12    (4) of this subsection (d), a first offense of aggravated
13    unlawful use of a weapon committed with a firearm by a
14    person 18 years of age or older where the factors listed in
15    both items (A) and (C) of paragraph (3) of subsection (a)
16    are present is a Class 4 felony, for which the person shall
17    be sentenced to a term of imprisonment of not less than one
18    year and not more than 3 years.
19        (3) Aggravated unlawful use of a weapon by a person who
20    has been previously convicted of a felony in this State or
21    another jurisdiction is a Class 2 felony for which the
22    person shall be sentenced to a term of imprisonment of not
23    less than 3 years and not more than 7 years.
24        (4) Aggravated unlawful use of a weapon while wearing
25    or in possession of body armor as defined in Section 33F-1
26    by a person who has not been issued a valid Firearms

 

 

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1    Owner's Identification Card in accordance with Section 5 of
2    the Firearm Owners Identification Card Act is a Class X
3    felony.
4    (e) The possession of each firearm in violation of this
5Section constitutes a single and separate violation.
6(Source: P.A. 95-331, eff. 8-21-07; 96-742, eff. 8-25-09;
796-829, eff. 12-3-09; 96-1107, eff. 1-1-11.)
 
8    (720 ILCS 5/24-1.9 new)
9    Sec. 24-1.9. Possession, delivery, sale, and purchase of
10assault weapons, .50 caliber rifles, and .50 caliber
11cartridges.
12    (a) Definitions. As used in this Section:
13        (1) "Assault weapon" means:
14            (A) any rifle which has a belt fed ammunition
15        system or which has a detachable magazine capable of
16        holding more than 10 rounds of ammunition;
17            (B) a semi-automatic rifle that has the ability to
18        accept a detachable magazine and has any of the
19        following:
20                (i) a folding or telescoping stock; or
21                (ii) a shroud that is attached to, or partially
22            or completely encircles the barrel, and that
23            permits the shooter to hold the firearm with the
24            non-trigger hand without being burned;
25            (C) a semi-automatic pistol that has the ability to

 

 

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1        accept a detachable magazine and has any of the
2        following:
3                (i) a folding or telescoping stock;
4                (ii) a shroud that is attached to, or partially
5            or completely encircles the barrel, and that
6            permits the shooter to hold the firearm with the
7            non-trigger hand without being burned; or
8                (iii) a manufactured weight of 50 ounces or
9            more when the pistol is unloaded.
10            (D) a semi-automatic rifle with a fixed magazine
11        that has the capacity to accept more than 10 rounds of
12        ammunition;
13            (E) a semi-automatic shotgun that has:
14                (i) a folding or telescoping stock; and
15                (ii) contains its ammunition in a revolving
16            cylinder; or
17                (iii) a fixed magazine capacity in excess of 5
18            rounds of ammunition, except as may be authorized
19            under the Wildlife Code and excluding magazine
20            extensions during the snow geese conservation
21            order season; or
22                (iv) an ability to accept a detachable
23            magazine of more than 5 rounds of ammunition.
24            "Assault weapon" does not include:
25            (A) any firearm that:
26                (i) is manually operated by bolt, pump, lever,

 

 

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1            or slide action;
2                (ii) is an unserviceable firearm or has been
3            made permanently inoperable;
4                (iii) is an antique firearm;
5                (iv) uses rimfire ammunition or cartridges; or
6                (iv) has been excluded as an assault weapon in
7            a Department of Natural Resources rule. The
8            Department of Natural Resources shall have the
9            authority to adopt rules to further define
10            exclusions of assault weapon types under this
11            Section, provided the make, model, and caliber of
12            the firearm excluded has a viable application to
13            hunting game and conforms to accepted hunting
14            principles of fair chase.
15            (B) any air rifle as defined in Section 24.8-0.1 of
16        this Code.
17    For the purposes of this Section, a firearm is considered
18to have the ability to accept a detachable magazine unless the
19magazine or ammunition feeding device can only be removed
20through disassembly of the firearm action.
21        (2) "Assault weapon attachment" means any device
22    capable of being attached to a firearm that is specifically
23    designed for making or converting a firearm into any of the
24    firearms listed in paragraph (1) of this subsection (a).
25        (3) "Antique firearm" has the meaning ascribed to it in
26    18 U.S.C. 921 (a)(16).

 

 

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1        (4) ".50 caliber rifle" means a centerfire rifle
2    capable of firing a .50 caliber cartridge. The term does
3    not include any antique firearm, any shotgun including a
4    shotgun that has a rifle barrel, or any muzzle-loader which
5    uses black powder for hunting or historical re-enactments.
6        (5) ".50 caliber cartridge" means a cartridge in .50
7    BMG caliber, either by designation or actual measurement,
8    that is capable of being fired from a centerfire rifle. The
9    term ".50 caliber cartridge" does not include any
10    memorabilia or display item that is filled with a permanent
11    inert substance or that is otherwise permanently altered in
12    a manner that prevents ready modification for use as live
13    ammunition or shotgun ammunition with a caliber
14    measurement that is equal to or greater than .50 caliber.
15        (6) "Locking mechanism" means secured by a device or
16    mechanism, other than the firearm safety, designed to
17    render a firearm temporarily inoperable; or a box or
18    container capable of containing the firearm and that can be
19    securely locked.
20    (b) The Department of State Police shall take all steps
21necessary to carry out the requirements of this Section within
22180 days after the effective date of this amendatory Act of the
2398th General Assembly.
24    (c) Except as provided in subsections (d), (e), (f), and
25(h) of this Section, on or after the effective date of this
26amendatory Act of the 98th General Assembly, it is unlawful for

 

 

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1any person within this State to knowingly deliver, sell, or
2purchase or cause to be delivered, sold, or purchased or cause
3to be possessed by another, an assault weapon, assault weapon
4attachment, .50 caliber rifle, or .50 caliber cartridge.
5    (d) Except as otherwise provided in subsections (e), (f),
6and (h) of this Section, 300 days after the effective date of
7this amendatory Act of the 98th General Assembly, it is
8unlawful for any person within this State to knowingly possess
9an assault weapon, .50 caliber rifle, or .50 caliber cartridge.
10    (e) This Section does not apply to a person who possessed
11an assault weapon or .50 caliber rifle prohibited by subsection
12(d) of this Section before the effective date of this
13amendatory Act of the 98th General Assembly, provided the
14person has provided in a registration affidavit, under oath or
15affirmation and in the form and manner prescribed by the
16Department of State Police on or after 180 days after the
17effective date of this amendatory Act of the 98th General
18Assembly but within 300 days after the effective date of this
19amendatory Act of the 98th General Assembly:
20        (1) his or her name;
21        (2) date of birth;
22        (3) Firearm Owner's Identification Card number;
23        (4) the make, model, caliber, and serial number of the
24    weapon; and
25        (5) proof of a locking mechanism that properly fits the
26    weapon. The affidavit shall include a statement that the

 

 

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1    weapon is owned by the person submitting the affidavit and
2    that he or she owns a locking mechanism for the weapon.
3    The affidavit form shall include the following statement
4printed in bold type: "Warning: Entering false information on
5this form is punishable as perjury under Section 32-2 of the
6Criminal Code of 2012."
7    Beginning 300 days after the effective date of this
8amendatory Act of the 98th General Assembly, the person may
9transfer the assault weapon or .50 caliber rifle only to an
10heir, an individual residing in another state maintaining it in
11another state, or a dealer licensed as a federal firearms
12dealer under Section 923 of the federal Gun Control Act of
131968. Within 10 days after transfer of the weapon except to an
14heir, the person shall notify the Department of State Police of
15the name and address of the transferee and comply with the
16requirements of subsection (b) of Section 3 of the Firearm
17Owners Identification Card Act. The person to whom the weapon
18is transferred shall, within 60 days of the transfer, complete
19an affidavit and pay the required registration fee under this
20Section. A person to whom the weapon is transferred may
21transfer it only as provided in this subsection.
22    (f) This Section does not apply to a peace officer who has
23retired in good standing from a law enforcement agency of this
24State and who possesses an assault weapon or .50 caliber rifle
25prohibited by subsection (d) of this Section, if the weapon was
26lawfully possessed and acquired by the peace officer prior to

 

 

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1retirement and the retired peace officer within 30 days of
2retirement registers the weapon with the Department of State
3Police and pays the required registration fee under this
4Section. The retired peace officer shall comply with the
5transfer and notification requirements in subsection (e) of
6this Section.
7    (g) For the purpose of registration required under
8subsections (e) and (f) of this Section, the Department of
9State Police shall assess a registration fee of $25 per person
10to the owner of an assault weapon and $25 per person to the
11owner of a .50 caliber rifle. The fees shall be deposited into
12the State Police Firearm Services Fund.
13    (h) This Section does not apply to or affect any of the
14following:
15        (1) Peace officers as defined in Section 2-13 of this
16    Code.
17        (2) Acquisition and possession by a local law
18    enforcement agency for the purpose of equipping the
19    agency's peace officers as defined in paragraph (1) of this
20    subsection.
21        (3) Wardens, superintendents, and keepers of prisons,
22    penitentiaries, jails, and other institutions for the
23    detention of persons accused or convicted of an offense.
24        (4) Members of the Armed Services or Reserve Forces of
25    the United States or the Illinois National Guard, while in
26    the performance of their official duties or while traveling

 

 

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1    to or from their place of duty.
2        (5) Any company that employs armed security officers in
3    this State at a nuclear energy, storage, weapons, or
4    development site or facility regulated by the federal
5    Nuclear Regulatory Commission and persons employed as an
6    armed security force member at a nuclear energy, storage,
7    weapons, or development site or facility regulated by the
8    federal Nuclear Regulatory Commission who have completed
9    the background screening and training mandated by the rules
10    and regulations of the federal Nuclear Regulatory
11    Commission and while in the performance of their official
12    duties.
13        (6) Manufacture, transportation, or sale of weapons,
14    attachments, or ammunition to persons authorized under
15    subdivisions (1) through (5) of this subsection (h) to
16    possess those items.
17        (7) Manufacture, transportation, or sale of weapons,
18    attachments, or ammunition for sale or transfer in another
19    state.
20        (8) Possession of any firearm if that firearm is
21    sanctioned by the International Olympic Committee and by
22    USA Shooting, the national governing body for
23    international shooting competition in the United States,
24    but only when the firearm is in the actual possession of an
25    Olympic target shooting competitor or target shooting
26    coach for the purpose of storage, transporting to and from

 

 

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1    Olympic target shooting practice or events if the firearm
2    is broken down in a non-functioning state, is not
3    immediately accessible, or is unloaded and enclosed in a
4    firearm case, carrying box, shipping box, or other similar
5    portable container designed for the safe transportation of
6    firearms, and when the Olympic target shooting competitor
7    or target shooting coach is engaging in those practices or
8    events. For the purposes of this paragraph (8), "firearm"
9    is as defined in Section 1.1 of the Firearm Owners
10    Identification Card Act.
11        (9) Any non-resident who transports, within 24 hours, a
12    weapon for any lawful purpose from any place where he or
13    she may lawfully possess and carry that weapon to any other
14    place where he or she may lawfully possess and carry that
15    weapon if, during the transportation the weapon is
16    unloaded, and neither the weapon nor any ammunition being
17    transported is readily accessible or is directly
18    accessible from the passenger compartment of the
19    transporting vehicle. Provided that, in the case of a
20    vehicle without a compartment separate from the driver's
21    compartment the weapon or ammunition shall be contained in
22    a locked container other than the glove compartment or
23    console.
24        (10) Possession of a weapon at events taking place at
25    the World Shooting and Recreational Complex at Sparta, only
26    while engaged in the legal use of this weapon, or while

 

 

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1    traveling to or from this location if the weapon is broken
2    down in a non-functioning state, or is not immediately
3    accessible, or is unloaded and enclosed in a firearm case,
4    carrying box, shipping box, or other similar portable
5    container designed for the safe transportation of
6    firearms.
7        (11) Possession of a weapon only for hunting use
8    expressly permitted under the Wildlife Code, or while
9    traveling to or from a location authorized for this hunting
10    use under the Wildlife Code if the weapon is broken down in
11    a non-functioning state, or is not immediately accessible,
12    or is unloaded and enclosed in a firearm case, carrying
13    box, shipping box, or other similar portable container
14    designed for the safe transportation of firearms.
15        (12) The manufacture, transportation, possession,
16    sale, or rental of blank-firing assault weapons and .50
17    caliber rifles, or the weapon's respective attachments, to
18    persons authorized or permitted, or both authorized and
19    permitted to acquire and possess these weapons or
20    attachments for the purpose of rental for use solely as
21    props for a motion picture, television, or video production
22    or entertainment event.
23    (i) Sentence.
24        (1) A person who knowingly delivers, sells, purchases,
25    or possesses or causes to be delivered, sold, purchased, or
26    possessed an assault weapon in violation of this Section

 

 

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1    commits a Class 3 felony for a first violation and a Class
2    2 felony for a second or subsequent violation or for the
3    possession or delivery of 2 or more of these weapons at the
4    same time.
5        (2) A person who knowingly delivers, sells, purchases,
6    or possesses or causes to be delivered, sold, purchased, or
7    possessed in violation of this Section an assault weapon
8    attachment commits a Class 4 felony for a first violation
9    and a Class 3 felony for a second or subsequent violation.
10        (3) A person who knowingly delivers, sells, purchases,
11    or possesses or causes to be delivered, sold, purchased, or
12    possessed in violation of this Section a .50 caliber rifle
13    commits a Class 3 felony for a first violation and a Class
14    2 felony for a second or subsequent violation or for the
15    possession or delivery of 2 or more of these weapons at the
16    same time.
17        (4) A person who knowingly delivers, sells, purchases,
18    or possesses or causes to be delivered, sold, purchased, or
19    possessed in violation of this Section a .50 caliber
20    cartridge commits a Class A misdemeanor.
21        (5) Any other violation of this Section is a Class A
22    misdemeanor.
 
23    (720 ILCS 5/24-1.10 new)
24    Sec. 24-1.10. Delivery or sale of large capacity ammunition
25feeding devices.

 

 

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1    (a) As used in this Section:
2    "Large capacity ammunition feeding device" means:
3        (1) a magazine, belt, drum, feed strip, or similar
4    device that has a capacity of, or that can be readily
5    restored or converted to accept, more than 10 rounds of
6    ammunition; or
7        (2) any combination of parts from which a device
8    described in paragraph (1) can be assembled.
9    "Large capacity ammunition feeding device" does not
10include an attached tubular device designed to accept, and
11capable of operating only with, .22 caliber rimfire ammunition.
12"Large capacity ammunition feeding device" does not include a
13tubular magazine that is contained in a lever-action firearm or
14any device that has been made permanently inoperable.
15    (b) Except as provided in subsection (c), it is unlawful
16for any person within this State to knowingly deliver, sell,
17purchase, or cause to be delivered, sold, or purchased a large
18capacity ammunition feeding device.
19    (c) This Section does not apply to or affect any of the
20following:
21        (1) Peace officers as defined in Section 2-13 of this
22    Code.
23        (2) A local law enforcement agency for the purpose of
24    equipping the agency's peace officers as defined in
25    paragraph (1) of this subsection.
26        (3) Wardens, superintendents, and keepers of prisons,

 

 

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1    penitentiaries, jails, and other institutions for the
2    detention of persons accused or convicted of an offense.
3        (4) Members of the Armed Services or Reserve Forces of
4    the United States or the Illinois National Guard, for the
5    performance of their official duties.
6        (5) Any company that employs armed security officers in
7    this State at a nuclear energy, storage, weapons, or
8    development site or facility regulated by the federal
9    Nuclear Regulatory Commission and persons employed as an
10    armed security force member at a nuclear energy, storage,
11    weapons, or development site or facility regulated by the
12    federal Nuclear Regulatory Commission who have completed
13    the background screening and training mandated by the rules
14    and regulations of the federal Nuclear Regulatory
15    Commission for the performance of their official duties.
16        (6) Sale of large capacity ammunition feeding devices
17    to persons authorized under subdivisions (1) through (5) of
18    this subsection (c) to possess those devices.
19        (7) Sale of large capacity ammunition feeding devices
20    for sale or transfer in another state.
21        (8) Sale or rental of large capacity ammunition feeding
22    devices for blank-firing assault weapons and .50 caliber
23    rifles, to persons authorized or permitted, or both
24    authorized and permitted to acquire these devices for the
25    purpose of rental for use solely as props for a motion
26    picture, television, or video production or entertainment

 

 

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1    event.
2    (d) Sentence. A person who knowingly delivers, sells,
3purchases, or causes to be delivered, sold, or purchased in
4violation of this Section a large capacity ammunition feeding
5device capable of holding more than 15 rounds of ammunition
6commits a Class 3 felony for a first violation and a Class 2
7felony for a second or subsequent violation or for delivery or
8possession of 2 or more of these devices at the same time. Any
9other violation of this Section is a Class A misdemeanor.
 
10    (720 ILCS 5/24-2)
11    Sec. 24-2. Exemptions.
12    (a) Subsections 24-1(a)(3), 24-1(a)(4), 24-1(a)(10), and
1324-1(a)(13) and Section 24-1.6 do not apply to or affect any of
14the following:
15        (1) Peace officers, and any person summoned by a peace
16    officer to assist in making arrests or preserving the
17    peace, while actually engaged in assisting such officer.
18        (2) Wardens, superintendents and keepers of prisons,
19    penitentiaries, jails and other institutions for the
20    detention of persons accused or convicted of an offense,
21    while in the performance of their official duty, or while
22    commuting between their homes and places of employment.
23        (3) Members of the Armed Services or Reserve Forces of
24    the United States or the Illinois National Guard or the
25    Reserve Officers Training Corps, while in the performance

 

 

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1    of their official duty.
2        (4) Special agents employed by a railroad or a public
3    utility to perform police functions, and guards of armored
4    car companies, while actually engaged in the performance of
5    the duties of their employment or commuting between their
6    homes and places of employment; and watchmen while actually
7    engaged in the performance of the duties of their
8    employment.
9        (5) Persons licensed as private security contractors,
10    private detectives, or private alarm contractors, or
11    employed by an agency certified by the Department of
12    Financial and Professional Regulation, if their duties
13    include the carrying of a weapon under the provisions of
14    the Private Detective, Private Alarm, Private Security,
15    Fingerprint Vendor, and Locksmith Act of 2004, while
16    actually engaged in the performance of the duties of their
17    employment or commuting between their homes and places of
18    employment, provided that such commuting is accomplished
19    within one hour from departure from home or place of
20    employment, as the case may be. A person shall be
21    considered eligible for this exemption if he or she has
22    completed the required 20 hours of training for a private
23    security contractor, private detective, or private alarm
24    contractor, or employee of a licensed agency and 20 hours
25    of required firearm training, and has been issued a firearm
26    control card by the Department of Financial and

 

 

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1    Professional Regulation. Conditions for the renewal of
2    firearm control cards issued under the provisions of this
3    Section shall be the same as for those cards issued under
4    the provisions of the Private Detective, Private Alarm,
5    Private Security, Fingerprint Vendor, and Locksmith Act of
6    2004. The firearm control card shall be carried by the
7    private security contractor, private detective, or private
8    alarm contractor, or employee of the licensed agency at all
9    times when he or she is in possession of a concealable
10    weapon.
11        (6) Any person regularly employed in a commercial or
12    industrial operation as a security guard for the protection
13    of persons employed and private property related to such
14    commercial or industrial operation, while actually engaged
15    in the performance of his or her duty or traveling between
16    sites or properties belonging to the employer, and who, as
17    a security guard, is a member of a security force of at
18    least 5 persons registered with the Department of Financial
19    and Professional Regulation; provided that such security
20    guard has successfully completed a course of study,
21    approved by and supervised by the Department of Financial
22    and Professional Regulation, consisting of not less than 40
23    hours of training that includes the theory of law
24    enforcement, liability for acts, and the handling of
25    weapons. A person shall be considered eligible for this
26    exemption if he or she has completed the required 20 hours

 

 

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1    of training for a security officer and 20 hours of required
2    firearm training, and has been issued a firearm control
3    card by the Department of Financial and Professional
4    Regulation. Conditions for the renewal of firearm control
5    cards issued under the provisions of this Section shall be
6    the same as for those cards issued under the provisions of
7    the Private Detective, Private Alarm, Private Security,
8    Fingerprint Vendor, and Locksmith Act of 2004. The firearm
9    control card shall be carried by the security guard at all
10    times when he or she is in possession of a concealable
11    weapon.
12        (7) Agents and investigators of the Illinois
13    Legislative Investigating Commission authorized by the
14    Commission to carry the weapons specified in subsections
15    24-1(a)(3) and 24-1(a)(4), while on duty in the course of
16    any investigation for the Commission.
17        (8) Persons employed by a financial institution for the
18    protection of other employees and property related to such
19    financial institution, while actually engaged in the
20    performance of their duties, commuting between their homes
21    and places of employment, or traveling between sites or
22    properties owned or operated by such financial
23    institution, provided that any person so employed has
24    successfully completed a course of study, approved by and
25    supervised by the Department of Financial and Professional
26    Regulation, consisting of not less than 40 hours of

 

 

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1    training which includes theory of law enforcement,
2    liability for acts, and the handling of weapons. A person
3    shall be considered to be eligible for this exemption if he
4    or she has completed the required 20 hours of training for
5    a security officer and 20 hours of required firearm
6    training, and has been issued a firearm control card by the
7    Department of Financial and Professional Regulation.
8    Conditions for renewal of firearm control cards issued
9    under the provisions of this Section shall be the same as
10    for those issued under the provisions of the Private
11    Detective, Private Alarm, Private Security, Fingerprint
12    Vendor, and Locksmith Act of 2004. Such firearm control
13    card shall be carried by the person so trained at all times
14    when such person is in possession of a concealable weapon.
15    For purposes of this subsection, "financial institution"
16    means a bank, savings and loan association, credit union or
17    company providing armored car services.
18        (9) Any person employed by an armored car company to
19    drive an armored car, while actually engaged in the
20    performance of his duties.
21        (10) Persons who have been classified as peace officers
22    pursuant to the Peace Officer Fire Investigation Act.
23        (11) Investigators of the Office of the State's
24    Attorneys Appellate Prosecutor authorized by the board of
25    governors of the Office of the State's Attorneys Appellate
26    Prosecutor to carry weapons pursuant to Section 7.06 of the

 

 

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1    State's Attorneys Appellate Prosecutor's Act.
2        (12) Special investigators appointed by a State's
3    Attorney under Section 3-9005 of the Counties Code.
4        (12.5) Probation officers while in the performance of
5    their duties, or while commuting between their homes,
6    places of employment or specific locations that are part of
7    their assigned duties, with the consent of the chief judge
8    of the circuit for which they are employed.
9        (13) Court Security Officers while in the performance
10    of their official duties, or while commuting between their
11    homes and places of employment, with the consent of the
12    Sheriff.
13        (13.5) A person employed as an armed security guard at
14    a nuclear energy, storage, weapons or development site or
15    facility regulated by the Nuclear Regulatory Commission
16    who has completed the background screening and training
17    mandated by the rules and regulations of the Nuclear
18    Regulatory Commission.
19        (14) Manufacture, transportation, or sale of weapons
20    to persons authorized under subdivisions (1) through
21    (13.5) of this subsection to possess those weapons.
22    (b) Subsections 24-1(a)(4) and 24-1(a)(10) and Section
2324-1.6 do not apply to or affect any of the following:
24        (1) Members of any club or organization organized for
25    the purpose of practicing shooting at targets upon
26    established target ranges, whether public or private, and

 

 

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1    patrons of such ranges, while such members or patrons are
2    using their firearms on those target ranges.
3        (2) Duly authorized military or civil organizations
4    while parading, with the special permission of the
5    Governor.
6        (3) Hunters, trappers or fishermen with a license or
7    permit while engaged in hunting, trapping or fishing.
8        (4) Transportation of weapons that are broken down in a
9    non-functioning state or are not immediately accessible.
10        (5) Carrying or possessing any pistol, revolver, stun
11    gun or taser or other firearm on the land or in the legal
12    dwelling of another person as an invitee with that person's
13    permission.
14        (6) A person who has been issued a concealed carry
15    license and is acting lawfully under the Gun Safety and
16    Responsibility Act.
17    (c) Subsection 24-1(a)(7) does not apply to or affect any
18of the following:
19        (1) Peace officers while in performance of their
20    official duties.
21        (2) Wardens, superintendents and keepers of prisons,
22    penitentiaries, jails and other institutions for the
23    detention of persons accused or convicted of an offense.
24        (3) Members of the Armed Services or Reserve Forces of
25    the United States or the Illinois National Guard, while in
26    the performance of their official duty.

 

 

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1        (4) Manufacture, transportation, or sale of machine
2    guns to persons authorized under subdivisions (1) through
3    (3) of this subsection to possess machine guns, if the
4    machine guns are broken down in a non-functioning state or
5    are not immediately accessible.
6        (5) Persons licensed under federal law to manufacture
7    any weapon from which 8 or more shots or bullets can be
8    discharged by a single function of the firing device, or
9    ammunition for such weapons, and actually engaged in the
10    business of manufacturing such weapons or ammunition, but
11    only with respect to activities which are within the lawful
12    scope of such business, such as the manufacture,
13    transportation, or testing of such weapons or ammunition.
14    This exemption does not authorize the general private
15    possession of any weapon from which 8 or more shots or
16    bullets can be discharged by a single function of the
17    firing device, but only such possession and activities as
18    are within the lawful scope of a licensed manufacturing
19    business described in this paragraph.
20        During transportation, such weapons shall be broken
21    down in a non-functioning state or not immediately
22    accessible.
23        (6) The manufacture, transport, testing, delivery,
24    transfer or sale, and all lawful commercial or experimental
25    activities necessary thereto, of rifles, shotguns, and
26    weapons made from rifles or shotguns, or ammunition for

 

 

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1    such rifles, shotguns or weapons, where engaged in by a
2    person operating as a contractor or subcontractor pursuant
3    to a contract or subcontract for the development and supply
4    of such rifles, shotguns, weapons or ammunition to the
5    United States government or any branch of the Armed Forces
6    of the United States, when such activities are necessary
7    and incident to fulfilling the terms of such contract.
8        The exemption granted under this subdivision (c)(6)
9    shall also apply to any authorized agent of any such
10    contractor or subcontractor who is operating within the
11    scope of his employment, where such activities involving
12    such weapon, weapons or ammunition are necessary and
13    incident to fulfilling the terms of such contract.
14        During transportation, any such weapon shall be broken
15    down in a non-functioning state, or not immediately
16    accessible.
17        (7) A person possessing a rifle with a barrel or
18    barrels less than 16 inches in length if: (A) the person
19    has been issued a Curios and Relics license from the U.S.
20    Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives; or (B)
21    the person is an active member of a bona fide, nationally
22    recognized military re-enacting group and the modification
23    is required and necessary to accurately portray the weapon
24    for historical re-enactment purposes; the re-enactor is in
25    possession of a valid and current re-enacting group
26    membership credential; and the overall length of the weapon

 

 

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1    as modified is not less than 26 inches.
2        During transportation, any such weapon shall be broken
3    down in a non-functioning state, or not immediately
4    accessible.
5    (d) Subsection 24-1(a)(1) does not apply to the purchase,
6possession or carrying of a black-jack or slung-shot by a peace
7officer.
8    (e) Subsection 24-1(a)(8) does not apply to any owner,
9manager or authorized employee of any place specified in that
10subsection nor to any law enforcement officer or to a person
11who has been issued a concealed carry license and is acting
12lawfully under the Gun Safety and Responsibility Act.
13    (f) Subsection 24-1(a)(4) and subsection 24-1(a)(10) and
14Section 24-1.6 do not apply to members of any club or
15organization organized for the purpose of practicing shooting
16at targets upon established target ranges, whether public or
17private, while using their firearms on those target ranges.
18    (g) Subsections 24-1(a)(11) and 24-3.1(a)(6) do not apply
19to:
20        (1) Members of the Armed Services or Reserve Forces of
21    the United States or the Illinois National Guard, while in
22    the performance of their official duty.
23        (2) Bonafide collectors of antique or surplus military
24    ordinance.
25        (3) Laboratories having a department of forensic
26    ballistics, or specializing in the development of

 

 

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1    ammunition or explosive ordinance.
2        (4) Commerce, preparation, assembly or possession of
3    explosive bullets by manufacturers of ammunition licensed
4    by the federal government, in connection with the supply of
5    those organizations and persons exempted by subdivision
6    (g)(1) of this Section, or like organizations and persons
7    outside this State, or the transportation of explosive
8    bullets to any organization or person exempted in this
9    Section by a common carrier or by a vehicle owned or leased
10    by an exempted manufacturer.
11    (g-5) Subsection 24-1(a)(6) does not apply to or affect
12persons licensed under federal law to manufacture any device or
13attachment of any kind designed, used, or intended for use in
14silencing the report of any firearm, firearms, or ammunition
15for those firearms equipped with those devices, and actually
16engaged in the business of manufacturing those devices,
17firearms, or ammunition, but only with respect to activities
18that are within the lawful scope of that business, such as the
19manufacture, transportation, or testing of those devices,
20firearms, or ammunition. This exemption does not authorize the
21general private possession of any device or attachment of any
22kind designed, used, or intended for use in silencing the
23report of any firearm, but only such possession and activities
24as are within the lawful scope of a licensed manufacturing
25business described in this subsection (g-5). During
26transportation, these devices shall be detached from any weapon

 

 

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1or not immediately accessible.
2    (g-6) Subsections 24-1(a)(4) and 24-1(a)(10) and Section
324-1.6 do not apply to or affect any parole agent or parole
4supervisor who meets the qualifications and conditions
5prescribed in Section 3-14-1.5 of the Unified Code of
6Corrections.
7    (g-7) Subsection 24-1(a)(6) does not apply to a peace
8officer while serving as a member of a tactical response team
9or special operations team. A peace officer may not personally
10own or apply for ownership of a device or attachment of any
11kind designed, used, or intended for use in silencing the
12report of any firearm. These devices shall be owned and
13maintained by lawfully recognized units of government whose
14duties include the investigation of criminal acts.
15    (g-10) Subsections 24-1(a)(4), 24-1(a)(8), and
1624-1(a)(10), and Sections 24-1.6 and 24-3.1 do not apply to an
17athlete's possession, transport on official Olympic and
18Paralympic transit systems established for athletes, or use of
19competition firearms sanctioned by the International Olympic
20Committee, the International Paralympic Committee, the
21International Shooting Sport Federation, or USA Shooting in
22connection with such athlete's training for and participation
23in shooting competitions at the 2016 Olympic and Paralympic
24Games and sanctioned test events leading up to the 2016 Olympic
25and Paralympic Games.
26    (h) An information or indictment based upon a violation of

 

 

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1any subsection of this Article need not negative any exemptions
2contained in this Article. The defendant shall have the burden
3of proving such an exemption.
4    (i) Nothing in this Article shall prohibit, apply to, or
5affect the transportation, carrying, or possession, of any
6pistol or revolver, stun gun, taser, or other firearm consigned
7to a common carrier operating under license of the State of
8Illinois or the federal government, where such transportation,
9carrying, or possession is incident to the lawful
10transportation in which such common carrier is engaged; and
11nothing in this Article shall prohibit, apply to, or affect the
12transportation, carrying, or possession of any pistol,
13revolver, stun gun, taser, or other firearm, not the subject of
14and regulated by subsection 24-1(a)(7) or subsection 24-2(c) of
15this Article, which is unloaded and enclosed in a firearm case,
16firearm carrying box, shipping box, or other similar portable
17container designed for the safe transportation of firearms, by
18the possessor of a valid Firearm Owners Identification Card.
19(Source: P.A. 96-7, eff. 4-3-09; 96-230, eff. 1-1-10; 96-742,
20eff. 8-25-09; 96-1000, eff. 7-2-10; 97-465, eff. 8-22-11;
2197-676, eff. 6-1-12; 97-936, eff. 1-1-13; 97-1010, eff. 1-1-13;
22revised 8-23-12.)
 
23    (720 ILCS 5/24-3)  (from Ch. 38, par. 24-3)
24    Sec. 24-3. Unlawful sale or delivery of firearms.
25    (A) A person commits the offense of unlawful sale or

 

 

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1delivery of firearms when he or she knowingly does any of the
2following:
3        (a) Sells or gives any firearm of a size which may be
4    concealed upon the person to any person under 18 years of
5    age.
6        (b) Sells or gives any firearm to a person under 21
7    years of age who has been convicted of a misdemeanor other
8    than a traffic offense or adjudged delinquent.
9        (b-5) Sells or gives any firearm to a person prohibited
10    from possessing a firearm or Firearm Owner's
11    Identification Card under Section 8 of the Firearm Owners
12    Identification Card Act.
13        (c) (Blank) Sells or gives any firearm to any narcotic
14    addict.
15        (d) (Blank) Sells or gives any firearm to any person
16    who has been convicted of a felony under the laws of this
17    or any other jurisdiction.
18        (e) (Blank) Sells or gives any firearm to any person
19    who has been a patient in a mental hospital within the past
20    5 years.
21        (f) (Blank) Sells or gives any firearms to any person
22    who is intellectually disabled.
23        (g) Delivers any firearm of a size which may be
24    concealed upon the person, incidental to a sale, without
25    withholding delivery of such firearm for at least 72 hours
26    after application and complete payment for its purchase has

 

 

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1    been made, or delivers any rifle, shotgun or other long
2    gun, or a stun gun or taser, incidental to a sale, without
3    withholding delivery of such rifle, shotgun or other long
4    gun, or a stun gun or taser for at least 24 hours after
5    application and complete payment for its purchase has been
6    made. However, this paragraph (g) does not apply to: (1)
7    the sale of a firearm to a law enforcement officer if the
8    seller of the firearm knows that the person to whom he or
9    she is selling the firearm is a law enforcement officer or
10    the sale of a firearm to a person who desires to purchase a
11    firearm for use in promoting the public interest incident
12    to his or her employment as a bank guard, armed truck
13    guard, or other similar employment; (2) a mail order sale
14    of a firearm to a nonresident of Illinois under which the
15    firearm is mailed to a point outside the boundaries of
16    Illinois; (3) the sale of a firearm to a nonresident of
17    Illinois while at a firearm showing or display recognized
18    by the Illinois Department of State Police; or (4) the sale
19    of a firearm to a dealer licensed as a federal firearms
20    dealer under Section 923 of the federal Gun Control Act of
21    1968 (18 U.S.C. 923). For purposes of this paragraph (g),
22    "application" means when the buyer and seller reach an
23    agreement to purchase a firearm.
24        (h) While holding any license as a dealer, importer,
25    manufacturer or pawnbroker under the federal Gun Control
26    Act of 1968, manufactures, sells or delivers to any

 

 

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1    unlicensed person a handgun having a barrel, slide, frame
2    or receiver which is a die casting of zinc alloy or any
3    other nonhomogeneous metal which will melt or deform at a
4    temperature of less than 800 degrees Fahrenheit. For
5    purposes of this paragraph, (1) "firearm" is defined as in
6    the Firearm Owners Identification Card Act; and (2)
7    "handgun" is defined as a firearm designed to be held and
8    fired by the use of a single hand, and includes a
9    combination of parts from which such a firearm can be
10    assembled.
11        (i) Sells or gives a firearm of any size to any person
12    under 18 years of age who does not possess a valid Firearm
13    Owner's Identification Card.
14        (j) Sells or gives a firearm while engaged in the
15    business of selling firearms at wholesale or retail without
16    being licensed as a federal firearms dealer under Section
17    923 of the federal Gun Control Act of 1968 (18 U.S.C. 923).
18    In this paragraph (j):
19        A person "engaged in the business" means a person who
20    devotes time, attention, and labor to engaging in the
21    activity as a regular course of trade or business with the
22    principal objective of livelihood and profit, but does not
23    include a person who makes occasional repairs of firearms
24    or who occasionally fits special barrels, stocks, or
25    trigger mechanisms to firearms.
26        "With the principal objective of livelihood and

 

 

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1    profit" means that the intent underlying the sale or
2    disposition of firearms is predominantly one of obtaining
3    livelihood and pecuniary gain, as opposed to other intents,
4    such as improving or liquidating a personal firearms
5    collection; however, proof of profit shall not be required
6    as to a person who engages in the regular and repetitive
7    purchase and disposition of firearms for criminal purposes
8    or terrorism.
9        (k) Sells or transfers ownership of a firearm to a
10    person who does not display to the seller or transferor of
11    the firearm a currently valid Firearm Owner's
12    Identification Card that has previously been issued in the
13    transferee's name by the Department of State Police under
14    the provisions of the Firearm Owners Identification Card
15    Act. This paragraph (k) does not apply to the transfer of a
16    firearm to a person who is exempt from the requirement of
17    possessing a Firearm Owner's Identification Card under
18    Section 2 of the Firearm Owners Identification Card Act.
19    For the purposes of this Section, a currently valid Firearm
20    Owner's Identification Card means (i) a Firearm Owner's
21    Identification Card that has not expired or (ii) if the
22    transferor is licensed as a federal firearms dealer under
23    Section 923 of the federal Gun Control Act of 1968 (18
24    U.S.C. 923), an approval number issued in accordance with
25    Section 3.1 of the Firearm Owners Identification Card Act
26    shall be proof that the Firearm Owner's Identification Card

 

 

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1    was valid.
2        (l) Not being entitled to the possession of a firearm,
3    delivers the firearm, knowing it to have been stolen or
4    converted. It may be inferred that a person who possesses a
5    firearm with knowledge that its serial number has been
6    removed or altered has knowledge that the firearm is stolen
7    or converted.
8    (B) Paragraph (h) of subsection (A) does not include
9firearms sold within 6 months after enactment of Public Act
1078-355 (approved August 21, 1973, effective October 1, 1973),
11nor is any firearm legally owned or possessed by any citizen or
12purchased by any citizen within 6 months after the enactment of
13Public Act 78-355 subject to confiscation or seizure under the
14provisions of that Public Act. Nothing in Public Act 78-355
15shall be construed to prohibit the gift or trade of any firearm
16if that firearm was legally held or acquired within 6 months
17after the enactment of that Public Act.
18    (C) Sentence.
19        (1) Any person convicted of unlawful sale or delivery
20    of firearms in violation of paragraph (c), (e), (f), (g),
21    or (h) of subsection (A) commits a Class 4 felony.
22        (2) Any person convicted of unlawful sale or delivery
23    of firearms in violation of paragraph (b) or (i) of
24    subsection (A) commits a Class 3 felony.
25        (3) Any person convicted of unlawful sale or delivery
26    of firearms in violation of paragraph (a) of subsection (A)

 

 

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1    commits a Class 2 felony.
2        (4) Any person convicted of unlawful sale or delivery
3    of firearms in violation of paragraph (a), (b), or (i) of
4    subsection (A) in any school, on the real property
5    comprising a school, within 1,000 feet of the real property
6    comprising a school, at a school related activity, or on or
7    within 1,000 feet of any conveyance owned, leased, or
8    contracted by a school or school district to transport
9    students to or from school or a school related activity,
10    regardless of the time of day or time of year at which the
11    offense was committed, commits a Class 1 felony. Any person
12    convicted of a second or subsequent violation of unlawful
13    sale or delivery of firearms in violation of paragraph (a),
14    (b), or (i) of subsection (A) in any school, on the real
15    property comprising a school, within 1,000 feet of the real
16    property comprising a school, at a school related activity,
17    or on or within 1,000 feet of any conveyance owned, leased,
18    or contracted by a school or school district to transport
19    students to or from school or a school related activity,
20    regardless of the time of day or time of year at which the
21    offense was committed, commits a Class 1 felony for which
22    the sentence shall be a term of imprisonment of no less
23    than 5 years and no more than 15 years.
24        (5) Any person convicted of unlawful sale or delivery
25    of firearms in violation of paragraph (a) or (i) of
26    subsection (A) in residential property owned, operated, or

 

 

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1    managed by a public housing agency or leased by a public
2    housing agency as part of a scattered site or mixed-income
3    development, in a public park, in a courthouse, on
4    residential property owned, operated, or managed by a
5    public housing agency or leased by a public housing agency
6    as part of a scattered site or mixed-income development, on
7    the real property comprising any public park, on the real
8    property comprising any courthouse, or on any public way
9    within 1,000 feet of the real property comprising any
10    public park, courthouse, or residential property owned,
11    operated, or managed by a public housing agency or leased
12    by a public housing agency as part of a scattered site or
13    mixed-income development commits a Class 2 felony.
14        (6) Any person convicted of unlawful sale or delivery
15    of firearms in violation of paragraph (j) of subsection (A)
16    commits a Class A misdemeanor. A second or subsequent
17    violation is a Class 4 felony.
18        (7) Any person convicted of unlawful sale or delivery
19    of firearms in violation of paragraph (k) of subsection (A)
20    commits a Class 4 felony. A third or subsequent conviction
21    for a violation of paragraph (k) of subsection (A) is a
22    Class 1 felony.
23        (8) A person 18 years of age or older convicted of
24    unlawful sale or delivery of firearms in violation of
25    paragraph (a) or (i) of subsection (A), when the firearm
26    that was sold or given to another person under 18 years of

 

 

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1    age was used in the commission of or attempt to commit a
2    forcible felony, shall be fined or imprisoned, or both, not
3    to exceed the maximum provided for the most serious
4    forcible felony so committed or attempted by the person
5    under 18 years of age who was sold or given the firearm.
6        (9) Any person convicted of unlawful sale or delivery
7    of firearms in violation of paragraph (b-5) (d) of
8    subsection (A) commits a Class 3 felony.
9        (10) Any person convicted of unlawful sale or delivery
10    of firearms in violation of paragraph (l) of subsection (A)
11    commits a Class 2 felony if the delivery is of one firearm.
12    Any person convicted of unlawful sale or delivery of
13    firearms in violation of paragraph (l) of subsection (A)
14    commits a Class 1 felony if the delivery is of not less
15    than 2 and not more than 5 firearms at the same time or
16    within a one year period. Any person convicted of unlawful
17    sale or delivery of firearms in violation of paragraph (l)
18    of subsection (A) commits a Class X felony for which he or
19    she shall be sentenced to a term of imprisonment of not
20    less than 6 years and not more than 30 years if the
21    delivery is of not less than 6 and not more than 10
22    firearms at the same time or within a 2 year period. Any
23    person convicted of unlawful sale or delivery of firearms
24    in violation of paragraph (l) of subsection (A) commits a
25    Class X felony for which he or she shall be sentenced to a
26    term of imprisonment of not less than 6 years and not more

 

 

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1    than 40 years if the delivery is of not less than 11 and
2    not more than 20 firearms at the same time or within a 3
3    year period. Any person convicted of unlawful sale or
4    delivery of firearms in violation of paragraph (l) of
5    subsection (A) commits a Class X felony for which he or she
6    shall be sentenced to a term of imprisonment of not less
7    than 6 years and not more than 50 years if the delivery is
8    of not less than 21 and not more than 30 firearms at the
9    same time or within a 4 year period. Any person convicted
10    of unlawful sale or delivery of firearms in violation of
11    paragraph (l) of subsection (A) commits a Class X felony
12    for which he or she shall be sentenced to a term of
13    imprisonment of not less than 6 years and not more than 60
14    years if the delivery is of 31 or more firearms at the same
15    time or within a 5 year period.
16    (D) For purposes of this Section:
17    "School" means a public or private elementary or secondary
18school, community college, college, or university.
19    "School related activity" means any sporting, social,
20academic, or other activity for which students' attendance or
21participation is sponsored, organized, or funded in whole or in
22part by a school or school district.
23    (E) A prosecution for a violation of paragraph (k) of
24subsection (A) of this Section may be commenced within 6 years
25after the commission of the offense. A prosecution for a
26violation of this Section other than paragraph (g) of

 

 

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1subsection (A) of this Section may be commenced within 5 years
2after the commission of the offense defined in the particular
3paragraph.
4(Source: P.A. 96-190, eff. 1-1-10; 97-227, eff. 1-1-12; 97-347,
5eff. 1-1-12; 97-813, eff. 7-13-12.)
 
6    (720 ILCS 5/24-3.1)  (from Ch. 38, par. 24-3.1)
7    Sec. 24-3.1. Unlawful possession of firearms and firearm
8ammunition.
9    (a) A person commits the offense of unlawful possession of
10firearms or firearm ammunition when:
11        (1) He or she is under 18 years of age and has in his or
12    her possession any firearm of a size which may be concealed
13    upon the person; or
14        (2) He or she is under 21 years of age, has been
15    convicted of a misdemeanor other than a traffic offense or
16    adjudged delinquent and has any firearms or firearm
17    ammunition in his or her possession; or
18        (2.5) He or she is prohibited from possessing a firearm
19    or Firearm Owner's Identification Card under Section 8 of
20    the Firearm Owners Identification Card Act; or
21        (3) (Blank) He is a narcotic addict and has any
22    firearms or firearm ammunition in his possession; or
23        (4) (Blank) He has been a patient in a mental hospital
24    within the past 5 years and has any firearms or firearm
25    ammunition in his possession; or

 

 

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1        (5) (Blank) He is intellectually disabled and has any
2    firearms or firearm ammunition in his possession; or
3        (6) He or she has in his possession any explosive
4    bullet.
5    For purposes of this paragraph "explosive bullet" means the
6projectile portion of an ammunition cartridge which contains or
7carries an explosive charge which will explode upon contact
8with the flesh of a human or an animal. "Cartridge" means a
9tubular metal case having a projectile affixed at the front
10thereof and a cap or primer at the rear end thereof, with the
11propellant contained in such tube between the projectile and
12the cap.
13    (b) Sentence.
14    Unlawful possession of firearms, other than handguns, and
15firearm ammunition is a Class A misdemeanor. Unlawful
16possession of handguns is a Class 4 felony. The possession of
17each firearm or firearm ammunition in violation of this Section
18constitutes a single and separate violation.
19    (c) Nothing in paragraph (1) of subsection (a) of this
20Section prohibits a person under 18 years of age from
21participating in any lawful recreational activity with a
22firearm such as, but not limited to, practice shooting at
23targets upon established public or private target ranges or
24hunting, trapping, or fishing in accordance with the Wildlife
25Code or the Fish and Aquatic Life Code.
26(Source: P.A. 97-227, eff. 1-1-12.)
 

 

 

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1    (720 ILCS 5/24-3A)
2    Sec. 24-3A. Gunrunning.
3    (a) A person commits gunrunning when he or she transfers 3
4or more firearms in violation of any of the paragraphs of
5Section 24-3 of this Code.
6    (b) Sentence. A person who commits gunrunning:
7        (1) is guilty of a Class 1 felony;
8        (2) is guilty of a Class X felony for which the
9    sentence shall be a term of imprisonment of not less than
10    10 8 years and not more than 40 years if the transfer is of
11    not less than 11 firearms and not more than 20 firearms;
12        (3) is guilty of a Class X felony for which the
13    sentence shall be a term of imprisonment of not less than
14    15 10 years and not more than 50 years if the transfer is
15    of more than 20 firearms.
16A person who commits gunrunning by transferring firearms to a
17person who, at the time of the commission of the offense, is
18under 18 years of age is guilty of a Class X felony for which
19the sentence shall be a term of imprisonment of not less than 8
20years.
21(Source: P.A. 93-906, eff. 8-11-04.)
 
22    (720 ILCS 5/24-4.1 new)
23    Sec. 24-4.1. Report of lost or stolen firearms.
24    (a) A person, who possesses a firearm and either loses or

 

 

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1misplaces the firearm or has the firearm stolen, must report
2the loss or theft to a law enforcement agency having
3jurisdiction within 24 hours after obtaining knowledge of the
4loss or theft.
5    (b) A law enforcement agency having jurisdiction shall take
6a written report and shall as soon as practical enter the
7firearm's serial number as stolen into the Law Enforcement
8Agencies Data System (LEADS).
9    (c) A person does not commit the offense if:
10        (1) the failure to report is due to an act of God, act
11    of war, or inability of a law enforcement agency to receive
12    the report;
13        (2) the person calls 911 to make the report;
14        (3) the person is hospitalized, in a coma, or is
15    otherwise seriously physically or mentally impaired as to
16    prevent the person from reporting; or
17        (4) the person's designee makes a report if the person
18    is unable to make the report.
19    (d) Sentence. A person who violates subsection (a) is
20guilty of a Class B misdemeanor for a first violation. A second
21or subsequent violation of subsection (a) is a Class A
22misdemeanor.
 
23    (720 ILCS 5/24-9)
24    Sec. 24-9. Firearms; Child Protection; Ownership
25Requirements.

 

 

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1    (a) Except as provided in subsection (c), it is unlawful
2for any person to store or leave, within premises under his or
3her control, a firearm if the person knows or has reason to
4believe that a minor under the age of 14 years who does not
5have a Firearm Owners Identification Card is likely to gain
6access to the firearm without the lawful permission of the
7minor's parent, guardian, or person having charge of the minor,
8and the minor causes death or great bodily harm with the
9firearm, unless the firearm is:
10        (1) secured by a device or mechanism, other than the
11    firearm safety, designed to render a firearm temporarily
12    inoperable; or
13        (2) placed in a securely locked box or container; or
14        (3) placed in some other location that a reasonable
15    person would believe to be secure from a minor under the
16    age of 14 years.
17    (a-5) A person who owns any firearm shall keep a record for
18each firearm owned that contains a description of the firearm
19and if available the firearm's serial number. If the firearm's
20serial number is not available, the record shall contain other
21information identifying the firearm.
22    (a-10) It is unlawful for any person to store or leave,
23within premises under his or her control, a firearm if the
24person knows or has reason to know that a person who is
25otherwise prohibited from obtaining a Firearm Owner's
26Identification Card is likely to gain access to the firearm,

 

 

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1unless the firearm is:
2        (1) secured by a device or mechanism, other than the
3    firearm safety, designed to render a firearm temporarily
4    inoperable;
5        (2) placed in a securely locked box or container; or
6        (3) placed in some other location that a reasonable
7    person would believe to be secure from a person.
8    (b) Sentence. A first violation of subsection (a-5) is a
9petty offense. A first violation of subsection (a) or (a-10) is
10person who violates this Section is guilty of a Class C
11misdemeanor and the person shall be fined not less than $1,000.
12A second or subsequent violation of this Section is a Class A
13misdemeanor.
14    (c) Subsection (a) and (a-10) do does not apply:
15        (1) if the minor or prohibited person under 14 years of
16    age gains access to a firearm and uses it in a lawful act
17    of self-defense or defense of another; or
18        (2) to any firearm obtained by a minor or prohibited
19    person under the age of 14 because of an unlawful entry of
20    the premises by the minor or another person.
21    (d) For the purposes of this Section, "firearm" has the
22meaning ascribed to it in Section 1.1 of the Firearm Owners
23Identification Card Act.
24(Source: P.A. 91-18, eff. 1-1-00.)
 
25    Section 110. The Code of Criminal Procedure of 1963 is

 

 

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1amended by changing Section 112A-14 as follows:
 
2    (725 ILCS 5/112A-14)  (from Ch. 38, par. 112A-14)
3    Sec. 112A-14. Order of protection; remedies.
4    (a) Issuance of order. If the court finds that petitioner
5has been abused by a family or household member, as defined in
6this Article, an order of protection prohibiting such abuse
7shall issue; provided that petitioner must also satisfy the
8requirements of one of the following Sections, as appropriate:
9Section 112A-17 on emergency orders, Section 112A-18 on interim
10orders, or Section 112A-19 on plenary orders. Petitioner shall
11not be denied an order of protection because petitioner or
12respondent is a minor. The court, when determining whether or
13not to issue an order of protection, shall not require physical
14manifestations of abuse on the person of the victim.
15Modification and extension of prior orders of protection shall
16be in accordance with this Article.
17    (b) Remedies and standards. The remedies to be included in
18an order of protection shall be determined in accordance with
19this Section and one of the following Sections, as appropriate:
20Section 112A-17 on emergency orders, Section 112A-18 on interim
21orders, and Section 112A-19 on plenary orders. The remedies
22listed in this subsection shall be in addition to other civil
23or criminal remedies available to petitioner.
24        (1) Prohibition of abuse. Prohibit respondent's
25    harassment, interference with personal liberty,

 

 

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1    intimidation of a dependent, physical abuse or willful
2    deprivation, as defined in this Article, if such abuse has
3    occurred or otherwise appears likely to occur if not
4    prohibited.
5        (2) Grant of exclusive possession of residence.
6    Prohibit respondent from entering or remaining in any
7    residence, household, or premises of the petitioner,
8    including one owned or leased by respondent, if petitioner
9    has a right to occupancy thereof. The grant of exclusive
10    possession of the residence, household, or premises shall
11    not affect title to real property, nor shall the court be
12    limited by the standard set forth in Section 701 of the
13    Illinois Marriage and Dissolution of Marriage Act.
14            (A) Right to occupancy. A party has a right to
15        occupancy of a residence or household if it is solely
16        or jointly owned or leased by that party, that party's
17        spouse, a person with a legal duty to support that
18        party or a minor child in that party's care, or by any
19        person or entity other than the opposing party that
20        authorizes that party's occupancy (e.g., a domestic
21        violence shelter). Standards set forth in subparagraph
22        (B) shall not preclude equitable relief.
23            (B) Presumption of hardships. If petitioner and
24        respondent each has the right to occupancy of a
25        residence or household, the court shall balance (i) the
26        hardships to respondent and any minor child or

 

 

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1        dependent adult in respondent's care resulting from
2        entry of this remedy with (ii) the hardships to
3        petitioner and any minor child or dependent adult in
4        petitioner's care resulting from continued exposure to
5        the risk of abuse (should petitioner remain at the
6        residence or household) or from loss of possession of
7        the residence or household (should petitioner leave to
8        avoid the risk of abuse). When determining the balance
9        of hardships, the court shall also take into account
10        the accessibility of the residence or household.
11        Hardships need not be balanced if respondent does not
12        have a right to occupancy.
13            The balance of hardships is presumed to favor
14        possession by petitioner unless the presumption is
15        rebutted by a preponderance of the evidence, showing
16        that the hardships to respondent substantially
17        outweigh the hardships to petitioner and any minor
18        child or dependent adult in petitioner's care. The
19        court, on the request of petitioner or on its own
20        motion, may order respondent to provide suitable,
21        accessible, alternate housing for petitioner instead
22        of excluding respondent from a mutual residence or
23        household.
24        (3) Stay away order and additional prohibitions. Order
25    respondent to stay away from petitioner or any other person
26    protected by the order of protection, or prohibit

 

 

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1    respondent from entering or remaining present at
2    petitioner's school, place of employment, or other
3    specified places at times when petitioner is present, or
4    both, if reasonable, given the balance of hardships.
5    Hardships need not be balanced for the court to enter a
6    stay away order or prohibit entry if respondent has no
7    right to enter the premises.
8        If an order of protection grants petitioner exclusive
9    possession of the residence, or prohibits respondent from
10    entering the residence, or orders respondent to stay away
11    from petitioner or other protected persons, then the court
12    may allow respondent access to the residence to remove
13    items of clothing and personal adornment used exclusively
14    by respondent, medications, and other items as the court
15    directs. The right to access shall be exercised on only one
16    occasion as the court directs and in the presence of an
17    agreed-upon adult third party or law enforcement officer.
18        (4) Counseling. Require or recommend the respondent to
19    undergo counseling for a specified duration with a social
20    worker, psychologist, clinical psychologist, psychiatrist,
21    family service agency, alcohol or substance abuse program,
22    mental health center guidance counselor, agency providing
23    services to elders, program designed for domestic violence
24    abusers or any other guidance service the court deems
25    appropriate. The court may order the respondent in any
26    intimate partner relationship to report to an Illinois

 

 

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1    Department of Human Services protocol approved partner
2    abuse intervention program for an assessment and to follow
3    all recommended treatment.
4        (5) Physical care and possession of the minor child. In
5    order to protect the minor child from abuse, neglect, or
6    unwarranted separation from the person who has been the
7    minor child's primary caretaker, or to otherwise protect
8    the well-being of the minor child, the court may do either
9    or both of the following: (i) grant petitioner physical
10    care or possession of the minor child, or both, or (ii)
11    order respondent to return a minor child to, or not remove
12    a minor child from, the physical care of a parent or person
13    in loco parentis.
14        If a court finds, after a hearing, that respondent has
15    committed abuse (as defined in Section 112A-3) of a minor
16    child, there shall be a rebuttable presumption that
17    awarding physical care to respondent would not be in the
18    minor child's best interest.
19        (6) Temporary legal custody. Award temporary legal
20    custody to petitioner in accordance with this Section, the
21    Illinois Marriage and Dissolution of Marriage Act, the
22    Illinois Parentage Act of 1984, and this State's Uniform
23    Child-Custody Jurisdiction and Enforcement Act.
24        If a court finds, after a hearing, that respondent has
25    committed abuse (as defined in Section 112A-3) of a minor
26    child, there shall be a rebuttable presumption that

 

 

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1    awarding temporary legal custody to respondent would not be
2    in the child's best interest.
3        (7) Visitation. Determine the visitation rights, if
4    any, of respondent in any case in which the court awards
5    physical care or temporary legal custody of a minor child
6    to petitioner. The court shall restrict or deny
7    respondent's visitation with a minor child if the court
8    finds that respondent has done or is likely to do any of
9    the following: (i) abuse or endanger the minor child during
10    visitation; (ii) use the visitation as an opportunity to
11    abuse or harass petitioner or petitioner's family or
12    household members; (iii) improperly conceal or detain the
13    minor child; or (iv) otherwise act in a manner that is not
14    in the best interests of the minor child. The court shall
15    not be limited by the standards set forth in Section 607.1
16    of the Illinois Marriage and Dissolution of Marriage Act.
17    If the court grants visitation, the order shall specify
18    dates and times for the visitation to take place or other
19    specific parameters or conditions that are appropriate. No
20    order for visitation shall refer merely to the term
21    "reasonable visitation".
22        Petitioner may deny respondent access to the minor
23    child if, when respondent arrives for visitation,
24    respondent is under the influence of drugs or alcohol and
25    constitutes a threat to the safety and well-being of
26    petitioner or petitioner's minor children or is behaving in

 

 

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1    a violent or abusive manner.
2        If necessary to protect any member of petitioner's
3    family or household from future abuse, respondent shall be
4    prohibited from coming to petitioner's residence to meet
5    the minor child for visitation, and the parties shall
6    submit to the court their recommendations for reasonable
7    alternative arrangements for visitation. A person may be
8    approved to supervise visitation only after filing an
9    affidavit accepting that responsibility and acknowledging
10    accountability to the court.
11        (8) Removal or concealment of minor child. Prohibit
12    respondent from removing a minor child from the State or
13    concealing the child within the State.
14        (9) Order to appear. Order the respondent to appear in
15    court, alone or with a minor child, to prevent abuse,
16    neglect, removal or concealment of the child, to return the
17    child to the custody or care of the petitioner or to permit
18    any court-ordered interview or examination of the child or
19    the respondent.
20        (10) Possession of personal property. Grant petitioner
21    exclusive possession of personal property and, if
22    respondent has possession or control, direct respondent to
23    promptly make it available to petitioner, if:
24            (i) petitioner, but not respondent, owns the
25        property; or
26            (ii) the parties own the property jointly; sharing

 

 

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1        it would risk abuse of petitioner by respondent or is
2        impracticable; and the balance of hardships favors
3        temporary possession by petitioner.
4        If petitioner's sole claim to ownership of the property
5    is that it is marital property, the court may award
6    petitioner temporary possession thereof under the
7    standards of subparagraph (ii) of this paragraph only if a
8    proper proceeding has been filed under the Illinois
9    Marriage and Dissolution of Marriage Act, as now or
10    hereafter amended.
11        No order under this provision shall affect title to
12    property.
13        (11) Protection of property. Forbid the respondent
14    from taking, transferring, encumbering, concealing,
15    damaging or otherwise disposing of any real or personal
16    property, except as explicitly authorized by the court, if:
17            (i) petitioner, but not respondent, owns the
18        property; or
19            (ii) the parties own the property jointly, and the
20        balance of hardships favors granting this remedy.
21        If petitioner's sole claim to ownership of the property
22    is that it is marital property, the court may grant
23    petitioner relief under subparagraph (ii) of this
24    paragraph only if a proper proceeding has been filed under
25    the Illinois Marriage and Dissolution of Marriage Act, as
26    now or hereafter amended.

 

 

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1        The court may further prohibit respondent from
2    improperly using the financial or other resources of an
3    aged member of the family or household for the profit or
4    advantage of respondent or of any other person.
5        (11.5) Protection of animals. Grant the petitioner the
6    exclusive care, custody, or control of any animal owned,
7    possessed, leased, kept, or held by either the petitioner
8    or the respondent or a minor child residing in the
9    residence or household of either the petitioner or the
10    respondent and order the respondent to stay away from the
11    animal and forbid the respondent from taking,
12    transferring, encumbering, concealing, harming, or
13    otherwise disposing of the animal.
14        (12) Order for payment of support. Order respondent to
15    pay temporary support for the petitioner or any child in
16    the petitioner's care or custody, when the respondent has a
17    legal obligation to support that person, in accordance with
18    the Illinois Marriage and Dissolution of Marriage Act,
19    which shall govern, among other matters, the amount of
20    support, payment through the clerk and withholding of
21    income to secure payment. An order for child support may be
22    granted to a petitioner with lawful physical care or
23    custody of a child, or an order or agreement for physical
24    care or custody, prior to entry of an order for legal
25    custody. Such a support order shall expire upon entry of a
26    valid order granting legal custody to another, unless

 

 

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1    otherwise provided in the custody order.
2        (13) Order for payment of losses. Order respondent to
3    pay petitioner for losses suffered as a direct result of
4    the abuse. Such losses shall include, but not be limited
5    to, medical expenses, lost earnings or other support,
6    repair or replacement of property damaged or taken,
7    reasonable attorney's fees, court costs and moving or other
8    travel expenses, including additional reasonable expenses
9    for temporary shelter and restaurant meals.
10            (i) Losses affecting family needs. If a party is
11        entitled to seek maintenance, child support or
12        property distribution from the other party under the
13        Illinois Marriage and Dissolution of Marriage Act, as
14        now or hereafter amended, the court may order
15        respondent to reimburse petitioner's actual losses, to
16        the extent that such reimbursement would be
17        "appropriate temporary relief", as authorized by
18        subsection (a)(3) of Section 501 of that Act.
19            (ii) Recovery of expenses. In the case of an
20        improper concealment or removal of a minor child, the
21        court may order respondent to pay the reasonable
22        expenses incurred or to be incurred in the search for
23        and recovery of the minor child, including but not
24        limited to legal fees, court costs, private
25        investigator fees, and travel costs.
26        (14) Prohibition of entry. Prohibit the respondent

 

 

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1    from entering or remaining in the residence or household
2    while the respondent is under the influence of alcohol or
3    drugs and constitutes a threat to the safety and well-being
4    of the petitioner or the petitioner's children.
5        (14.5) Prohibition of firearm possession.
6            (a) Prohibit a respondent against whom an order of
7        protection was issued from possessing any firearms
8        during the duration of the order if the order:
9                (1) was issued after a hearing of which such
10            person received actual notice, and at which such
11            person had an opportunity to participate;
12                (2) restrains such person from harassing,
13            stalking, or threatening an intimate partner of
14            such person or child of such intimate partner or
15            person, or engaging in other conduct that would
16            place an intimate partner in reasonable fear of
17            bodily injury to the partner or child; and
18                (3)(i) includes a finding that such person
19            represents a credible threat to the physical
20            safety of such intimate partner or child; or (ii)
21            by its terms explicitly prohibits the use,
22            attempted use, or threatened use of physical force
23            against such intimate partner or child that would
24            reasonably be expected to cause bodily injury.
25        Any firearms in the possession of the respondent,
26        except as provided in subsection (b), shall be ordered

 

 

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1        by the court to be turned over to the local law
2        enforcement agency for safekeeping. The local law
3        enforcement agency shall conduct a query with the
4        Department of State Police concerning registered
5        assault weapons under this amendatory Act of the 98th
6        General Assembly. The court shall issue an order that
7        the respondent's Firearm Owner's Identification Card
8        and, if applicable, a concealed carry license issued
9        under the Gun Safety and Responsibility Act be turned
10        over to the local law enforcement agency, which in turn
11        shall immediately mail the card, license, or both to
12        the Department of State Police Firearm Owner's
13        Identification Card Office for safekeeping. The period
14        of safekeeping shall be for the duration of the order
15        of protection. The firearm or firearms and Firearm
16        Owner's Identification Card and, if applicable, a
17        concealed carry license issued under the Gun Safety and
18        Responsibility Act, if unexpired, shall at the
19        respondent's request be returned to the respondent at
20        expiration of the order of protection.
21            (b) If the respondent is a peace officer as defined
22        in Section 2-13 of the Criminal Code of 2012, the court
23        shall order that any firearms used by the respondent in
24        the performance of his or her duties as a peace officer
25        be surrendered to the chief law enforcement executive
26        of the agency in which the respondent is employed, who

 

 

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1        shall retain the firearms for safekeeping for the
2        duration of the order of protection.
3            (c) Upon expiration of the period of safekeeping,
4        if the firearms, or Firearm Owner's Identification
5        Card, or concealed carry license cannot be returned to
6        respondent because respondent cannot be located, fails
7        to respond to requests to retrieve the firearms, or is
8        not lawfully eligible to possess a firearm, upon
9        petition from the local law enforcement agency, the
10        court may order the local law enforcement agency to
11        destroy the firearms, use the firearms for training
12        purposes, or for any other application as deemed
13        appropriate by the local law enforcement agency; or
14        that the firearms be turned over to a third party who
15        is lawfully eligible to possess firearms, and who does
16        not reside with respondent.
17        (15) Prohibition of access to records. If an order of
18    protection prohibits respondent from having contact with
19    the minor child, or if petitioner's address is omitted
20    under subsection (b) of Section 112A-5, or if necessary to
21    prevent abuse or wrongful removal or concealment of a minor
22    child, the order shall deny respondent access to, and
23    prohibit respondent from inspecting, obtaining, or
24    attempting to inspect or obtain, school or any other
25    records of the minor child who is in the care of
26    petitioner.

 

 

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1        (16) Order for payment of shelter services. Order
2    respondent to reimburse a shelter providing temporary
3    housing and counseling services to the petitioner for the
4    cost of the services, as certified by the shelter and
5    deemed reasonable by the court.
6        (17) Order for injunctive relief. Enter injunctive
7    relief necessary or appropriate to prevent further abuse of
8    a family or household member or to effectuate one of the
9    granted remedies, if supported by the balance of hardships.
10    If the harm to be prevented by the injunction is abuse or
11    any other harm that one of the remedies listed in
12    paragraphs (1) through (16) of this subsection is designed
13    to prevent, no further evidence is necessary to establish
14    that the harm is an irreparable injury.
15    (c) Relevant factors; findings.
16        (1) In determining whether to grant a specific remedy,
17    other than payment of support, the court shall consider
18    relevant factors, including but not limited to the
19    following:
20            (i) the nature, frequency, severity, pattern and
21        consequences of the respondent's past abuse of the
22        petitioner or any family or household member,
23        including the concealment of his or her location in
24        order to evade service of process or notice, and the
25        likelihood of danger of future abuse to petitioner or
26        any member of petitioner's or respondent's family or

 

 

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1        household; and
2            (ii) the danger that any minor child will be abused
3        or neglected or improperly removed from the
4        jurisdiction, improperly concealed within the State or
5        improperly separated from the child's primary
6        caretaker.
7        (2) In comparing relative hardships resulting to the
8    parties from loss of possession of the family home, the
9    court shall consider relevant factors, including but not
10    limited to the following:
11            (i) availability, accessibility, cost, safety,
12        adequacy, location and other characteristics of
13        alternate housing for each party and any minor child or
14        dependent adult in the party's care;
15            (ii) the effect on the party's employment; and
16            (iii) the effect on the relationship of the party,
17        and any minor child or dependent adult in the party's
18        care, to family, school, church and community.
19        (3) Subject to the exceptions set forth in paragraph
20    (4) of this subsection, the court shall make its findings
21    in an official record or in writing, and shall at a minimum
22    set forth the following:
23            (i) That the court has considered the applicable
24        relevant factors described in paragraphs (1) and (2) of
25        this subsection.
26            (ii) Whether the conduct or actions of respondent,

 

 

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1        unless prohibited, will likely cause irreparable harm
2        or continued abuse.
3            (iii) Whether it is necessary to grant the
4        requested relief in order to protect petitioner or
5        other alleged abused persons.
6        (4) For purposes of issuing an ex parte emergency order
7    of protection, the court, as an alternative to or as a
8    supplement to making the findings described in paragraphs
9    (c)(3)(i) through (c)(3)(iii) of this subsection, may use
10    the following procedure:
11        When a verified petition for an emergency order of
12    protection in accordance with the requirements of Sections
13    112A-5 and 112A-17 is presented to the court, the court
14    shall examine petitioner on oath or affirmation. An
15    emergency order of protection shall be issued by the court
16    if it appears from the contents of the petition and the
17    examination of petitioner that the averments are
18    sufficient to indicate abuse by respondent and to support
19    the granting of relief under the issuance of the emergency
20    order of protection.
21        (5) Never married parties. No rights or
22    responsibilities for a minor child born outside of marriage
23    attach to a putative father until a father and child
24    relationship has been established under the Illinois
25    Parentage Act of 1984. Absent such an adjudication, no
26    putative father shall be granted temporary custody of the

 

 

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1    minor child, visitation with the minor child, or physical
2    care and possession of the minor child, nor shall an order
3    of payment for support of the minor child be entered.
4    (d) Balance of hardships; findings. If the court finds that
5the balance of hardships does not support the granting of a
6remedy governed by paragraph (2), (3), (10), (11), or (16) of
7subsection (b) of this Section, which may require such
8balancing, the court's findings shall so indicate and shall
9include a finding as to whether granting the remedy will result
10in hardship to respondent that would substantially outweigh the
11hardship to petitioner from denial of the remedy. The findings
12shall be an official record or in writing.
13    (e) Denial of remedies. Denial of any remedy shall not be
14based, in whole or in part, on evidence that:
15        (1) Respondent has cause for any use of force, unless
16    that cause satisfies the standards for justifiable use of
17    force provided by Article 7 of the Criminal Code of 2012;
18        (2) Respondent was voluntarily intoxicated;
19        (3) Petitioner acted in self-defense or defense of
20    another, provided that, if petitioner utilized force, such
21    force was justifiable under Article 7 of the Criminal Code
22    of 2012;
23        (4) Petitioner did not act in self-defense or defense
24    of another;
25        (5) Petitioner left the residence or household to avoid
26    further abuse by respondent;

 

 

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1        (6) Petitioner did not leave the residence or household
2    to avoid further abuse by respondent;
3        (7) Conduct by any family or household member excused
4    the abuse by respondent, unless that same conduct would
5    have excused such abuse if the parties had not been family
6    or household members.
7(Source: P.A. 96-701, eff. 1-1-10; 96-1239, eff. 1-1-11;
897-158, eff. 1-1-12; 97-1131, eff. 1-1-13; 97-1150, eff.
91-25-13.)
 
10    Section 115. The Unified Code of Corrections is amended by
11changing Section 5-6-3 as follows:
 
12    (730 ILCS 5/5-6-3)  (from Ch. 38, par. 1005-6-3)
13    Sec. 5-6-3. Conditions of Probation and of Conditional
14Discharge.
15    (a) The conditions of probation and of conditional
16discharge shall be that the person:
17        (1) not violate any criminal statute of any
18    jurisdiction;
19        (2) report to or appear in person before such person or
20    agency as directed by the court;
21        (3) refrain from possessing a firearm or other
22    dangerous weapon where the offense is a felony or, if a
23    misdemeanor, the offense involved the intentional or
24    knowing infliction of bodily harm or threat of bodily harm;

 

 

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1        (4) not leave the State without the consent of the
2    court or, in circumstances in which the reason for the
3    absence is of such an emergency nature that prior consent
4    by the court is not possible, without the prior
5    notification and approval of the person's probation
6    officer. Transfer of a person's probation or conditional
7    discharge supervision to another state is subject to
8    acceptance by the other state pursuant to the Interstate
9    Compact for Adult Offender Supervision;
10        (5) permit the probation officer to visit him at his
11    home or elsewhere to the extent necessary to discharge his
12    duties;
13        (6) perform no less than 30 hours of community service
14    and not more than 120 hours of community service, if
15    community service is available in the jurisdiction and is
16    funded and approved by the county board where the offense
17    was committed, where the offense was related to or in
18    furtherance of the criminal activities of an organized gang
19    and was motivated by the offender's membership in or
20    allegiance to an organized gang. The community service
21    shall include, but not be limited to, the cleanup and
22    repair of any damage caused by a violation of Section
23    21-1.3 of the Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of
24    2012 and similar damage to property located within the
25    municipality or county in which the violation occurred.
26    When possible and reasonable, the community service should

 

 

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1    be performed in the offender's neighborhood. For purposes
2    of this Section, "organized gang" has the meaning ascribed
3    to it in Section 10 of the Illinois Streetgang Terrorism
4    Omnibus Prevention Act;
5        (7) if he or she is at least 17 years of age and has
6    been sentenced to probation or conditional discharge for a
7    misdemeanor or felony in a county of 3,000,000 or more
8    inhabitants and has not been previously convicted of a
9    misdemeanor or felony, may be required by the sentencing
10    court to attend educational courses designed to prepare the
11    defendant for a high school diploma and to work toward a
12    high school diploma or to work toward passing the high
13    school level Test of General Educational Development (GED)
14    or to work toward completing a vocational training program
15    approved by the court. The person on probation or
16    conditional discharge must attend a public institution of
17    education to obtain the educational or vocational training
18    required by this clause (7). The court shall revoke the
19    probation or conditional discharge of a person who wilfully
20    fails to comply with this clause (7). The person on
21    probation or conditional discharge shall be required to pay
22    for the cost of the educational courses or GED test, if a
23    fee is charged for those courses or test. The court shall
24    resentence the offender whose probation or conditional
25    discharge has been revoked as provided in Section 5-6-4.
26    This clause (7) does not apply to a person who has a high

 

 

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1    school diploma or has successfully passed the GED test.
2    This clause (7) does not apply to a person who is
3    determined by the court to be developmentally disabled or
4    otherwise mentally incapable of completing the educational
5    or vocational program;
6        (8) if convicted of possession of a substance
7    prohibited by the Cannabis Control Act, the Illinois
8    Controlled Substances Act, or the Methamphetamine Control
9    and Community Protection Act after a previous conviction or
10    disposition of supervision for possession of a substance
11    prohibited by the Cannabis Control Act or Illinois
12    Controlled Substances Act or after a sentence of probation
13    under Section 10 of the Cannabis Control Act, Section 410
14    of the Illinois Controlled Substances Act, or Section 70 of
15    the Methamphetamine Control and Community Protection Act
16    and upon a finding by the court that the person is
17    addicted, undergo treatment at a substance abuse program
18    approved by the court;
19        (8.5) if convicted of a felony sex offense as defined
20    in the Sex Offender Management Board Act, the person shall
21    undergo and successfully complete sex offender treatment
22    by a treatment provider approved by the Board and conducted
23    in conformance with the standards developed under the Sex
24    Offender Management Board Act;
25        (8.6) if convicted of a sex offense as defined in the
26    Sex Offender Management Board Act, refrain from residing at

 

 

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1    the same address or in the same condominium unit or
2    apartment unit or in the same condominium complex or
3    apartment complex with another person he or she knows or
4    reasonably should know is a convicted sex offender or has
5    been placed on supervision for a sex offense; the
6    provisions of this paragraph do not apply to a person
7    convicted of a sex offense who is placed in a Department of
8    Corrections licensed transitional housing facility for sex
9    offenders;
10        (8.7) if convicted for an offense committed on or after
11    June 1, 2008 (the effective date of Public Act 95-464) that
12    would qualify the accused as a child sex offender as
13    defined in Section 11-9.3 or 11-9.4 of the Criminal Code of
14    1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012, refrain from
15    communicating with or contacting, by means of the Internet,
16    a person who is not related to the accused and whom the
17    accused reasonably believes to be under 18 years of age;
18    for purposes of this paragraph (8.7), "Internet" has the
19    meaning ascribed to it in Section 16-0.1 of the Criminal
20    Code of 2012; and a person is not related to the accused if
21    the person is not: (i) the spouse, brother, or sister of
22    the accused; (ii) a descendant of the accused; (iii) a
23    first or second cousin of the accused; or (iv) a step-child
24    or adopted child of the accused;
25        (8.8) if convicted for an offense under Section 11-6,
26    11-9.1, 11-14.4 that involves soliciting for a juvenile

 

 

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1    prostitute, 11-15.1, 11-20.1, 11-20.1B, 11-20.3, or 11-21
2    of the Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012,
3    or any attempt to commit any of these offenses, committed
4    on or after June 1, 2009 (the effective date of Public Act
5    95-983):
6            (i) not access or use a computer or any other
7        device with Internet capability without the prior
8        written approval of the offender's probation officer,
9        except in connection with the offender's employment or
10        search for employment with the prior approval of the
11        offender's probation officer;
12            (ii) submit to periodic unannounced examinations
13        of the offender's computer or any other device with
14        Internet capability by the offender's probation
15        officer, a law enforcement officer, or assigned
16        computer or information technology specialist,
17        including the retrieval and copying of all data from
18        the computer or device and any internal or external
19        peripherals and removal of such information,
20        equipment, or device to conduct a more thorough
21        inspection;
22            (iii) submit to the installation on the offender's
23        computer or device with Internet capability, at the
24        offender's expense, of one or more hardware or software
25        systems to monitor the Internet use; and
26            (iv) submit to any other appropriate restrictions

 

 

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1        concerning the offender's use of or access to a
2        computer or any other device with Internet capability
3        imposed by the offender's probation officer;
4        (8.9) if convicted of a sex offense as defined in the
5    Sex Offender Registration Act committed on or after January
6    1, 2010 (the effective date of Public Act 96-262), refrain
7    from accessing or using a social networking website as
8    defined in Section 17-0.5 of the Criminal Code of 2012;
9        (9) if convicted of a felony or of any misdemeanor
10    violation of Section 12-1, 12-2, 12-3, 12-3.2, 12-3.4, or
11    12-3.5 of the Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of
12    2012 that was determined, pursuant to Section 112A-11.1 of
13    the Code of Criminal Procedure of 1963, to trigger the
14    prohibitions of 18 U.S.C. 922(g)(9), physically surrender
15    at a time and place designated by the court, his or her
16    Firearm Owner's Identification Card and, if applicable, a
17    concealed carry license issued under the Gun Safety and
18    Responsibility Act and any and all firearms in his or her
19    possession. The local law enforcement agency shall conduct
20    a query with the Department of State Police concerning
21    registered assault weapons under this amendatory Act of the
22    98th General Assembly. The Court shall return to the
23    Department of State Police Firearm Owner's Identification
24    Card Office the person's Firearm Owner's Identification
25    Card and, if applicable, a concealed carry license issued
26    under the Gun Safety and Responsibility Act;

 

 

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1        (10) if convicted of a sex offense as defined in
2    subsection (a-5) of Section 3-1-2 of this Code, unless the
3    offender is a parent or guardian of the person under 18
4    years of age present in the home and no non-familial minors
5    are present, not participate in a holiday event involving
6    children under 18 years of age, such as distributing candy
7    or other items to children on Halloween, wearing a Santa
8    Claus costume on or preceding Christmas, being employed as
9    a department store Santa Claus, or wearing an Easter Bunny
10    costume on or preceding Easter;
11        (11) if convicted of a sex offense as defined in
12    Section 2 of the Sex Offender Registration Act committed on
13    or after January 1, 2010 (the effective date of Public Act
14    96-362) that requires the person to register as a sex
15    offender under that Act, may not knowingly use any computer
16    scrub software on any computer that the sex offender uses;
17    and
18        (12) if convicted of a violation of the Methamphetamine
19    Control and Community Protection Act, the Methamphetamine
20    Precursor Control Act, or a methamphetamine related
21    offense:
22            (A) prohibited from purchasing, possessing, or
23        having under his or her control any product containing
24        pseudoephedrine unless prescribed by a physician; and
25            (B) prohibited from purchasing, possessing, or
26        having under his or her control any product containing

 

 

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1        ammonium nitrate.
2    (b) The Court may in addition to other reasonable
3conditions relating to the nature of the offense or the
4rehabilitation of the defendant as determined for each
5defendant in the proper discretion of the Court require that
6the person:
7        (1) serve a term of periodic imprisonment under Article
8    7 for a period not to exceed that specified in paragraph
9    (d) of Section 5-7-1;
10        (2) pay a fine and costs;
11        (3) work or pursue a course of study or vocational
12    training;
13        (4) undergo medical, psychological or psychiatric
14    treatment; or treatment for drug addiction or alcoholism;
15        (5) attend or reside in a facility established for the
16    instruction or residence of defendants on probation;
17        (6) support his dependents;
18        (7) and in addition, if a minor:
19            (i) reside with his parents or in a foster home;
20            (ii) attend school;
21            (iii) attend a non-residential program for youth;
22            (iv) contribute to his own support at home or in a
23        foster home;
24            (v) with the consent of the superintendent of the
25        facility, attend an educational program at a facility
26        other than the school in which the offense was

 

 

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1        committed if he or she is convicted of a crime of
2        violence as defined in Section 2 of the Crime Victims
3        Compensation Act committed in a school, on the real
4        property comprising a school, or within 1,000 feet of
5        the real property comprising a school;
6        (8) make restitution as provided in Section 5-5-6 of
7    this Code;
8        (9) perform some reasonable public or community
9    service;
10        (10) serve a term of home confinement. In addition to
11    any other applicable condition of probation or conditional
12    discharge, the conditions of home confinement shall be that
13    the offender:
14            (i) remain within the interior premises of the
15        place designated for his confinement during the hours
16        designated by the court;
17            (ii) admit any person or agent designated by the
18        court into the offender's place of confinement at any
19        time for purposes of verifying the offender's
20        compliance with the conditions of his confinement; and
21            (iii) if further deemed necessary by the court or
22        the Probation or Court Services Department, be placed
23        on an approved electronic monitoring device, subject
24        to Article 8A of Chapter V;
25            (iv) for persons convicted of any alcohol,
26        cannabis or controlled substance violation who are

 

 

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1        placed on an approved monitoring device as a condition
2        of probation or conditional discharge, the court shall
3        impose a reasonable fee for each day of the use of the
4        device, as established by the county board in
5        subsection (g) of this Section, unless after
6        determining the inability of the offender to pay the
7        fee, the court assesses a lesser fee or no fee as the
8        case may be. This fee shall be imposed in addition to
9        the fees imposed under subsections (g) and (i) of this
10        Section. The fee shall be collected by the clerk of the
11        circuit court. The clerk of the circuit court shall pay
12        all monies collected from this fee to the county
13        treasurer for deposit in the substance abuse services
14        fund under Section 5-1086.1 of the Counties Code; and
15            (v) for persons convicted of offenses other than
16        those referenced in clause (iv) above and who are
17        placed on an approved monitoring device as a condition
18        of probation or conditional discharge, the court shall
19        impose a reasonable fee for each day of the use of the
20        device, as established by the county board in
21        subsection (g) of this Section, unless after
22        determining the inability of the defendant to pay the
23        fee, the court assesses a lesser fee or no fee as the
24        case may be. This fee shall be imposed in addition to
25        the fees imposed under subsections (g) and (i) of this
26        Section. The fee shall be collected by the clerk of the

 

 

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1        circuit court. The clerk of the circuit court shall pay
2        all monies collected from this fee to the county
3        treasurer who shall use the monies collected to defray
4        the costs of corrections. The county treasurer shall
5        deposit the fee collected in the probation and court
6        services fund.
7        (11) comply with the terms and conditions of an order
8    of protection issued by the court pursuant to the Illinois
9    Domestic Violence Act of 1986, as now or hereafter amended,
10    or an order of protection issued by the court of another
11    state, tribe, or United States territory. A copy of the
12    order of protection shall be transmitted to the probation
13    officer or agency having responsibility for the case;
14        (12) reimburse any "local anti-crime program" as
15    defined in Section 7 of the Anti-Crime Advisory Council Act
16    for any reasonable expenses incurred by the program on the
17    offender's case, not to exceed the maximum amount of the
18    fine authorized for the offense for which the defendant was
19    sentenced;
20        (13) contribute a reasonable sum of money, not to
21    exceed the maximum amount of the fine authorized for the
22    offense for which the defendant was sentenced, (i) to a
23    "local anti-crime program", as defined in Section 7 of the
24    Anti-Crime Advisory Council Act, or (ii) for offenses under
25    the jurisdiction of the Department of Natural Resources, to
26    the fund established by the Department of Natural Resources

 

 

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1    for the purchase of evidence for investigation purposes and
2    to conduct investigations as outlined in Section 805-105 of
3    the Department of Natural Resources (Conservation) Law;
4        (14) refrain from entering into a designated
5    geographic area except upon such terms as the court finds
6    appropriate. Such terms may include consideration of the
7    purpose of the entry, the time of day, other persons
8    accompanying the defendant, and advance approval by a
9    probation officer, if the defendant has been placed on
10    probation or advance approval by the court, if the
11    defendant was placed on conditional discharge;
12        (15) refrain from having any contact, directly or
13    indirectly, with certain specified persons or particular
14    types of persons, including but not limited to members of
15    street gangs and drug users or dealers;
16        (16) refrain from having in his or her body the
17    presence of any illicit drug prohibited by the Cannabis
18    Control Act, the Illinois Controlled Substances Act, or the
19    Methamphetamine Control and Community Protection Act,
20    unless prescribed by a physician, and submit samples of his
21    or her blood or urine or both for tests to determine the
22    presence of any illicit drug;
23        (17) if convicted for an offense committed on or after
24    June 1, 2008 (the effective date of Public Act 95-464) that
25    would qualify the accused as a child sex offender as
26    defined in Section 11-9.3 or 11-9.4 of the Criminal Code of

 

 

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1    1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012, refrain from
2    communicating with or contacting, by means of the Internet,
3    a person who is related to the accused and whom the accused
4    reasonably believes to be under 18 years of age; for
5    purposes of this paragraph (17), "Internet" has the meaning
6    ascribed to it in Section 16-0.1 of the Criminal Code of
7    2012; and a person is related to the accused if the person
8    is: (i) the spouse, brother, or sister of the accused; (ii)
9    a descendant of the accused; (iii) a first or second cousin
10    of the accused; or (iv) a step-child or adopted child of
11    the accused;
12        (18) if convicted for an offense committed on or after
13    June 1, 2009 (the effective date of Public Act 95-983) that
14    would qualify as a sex offense as defined in the Sex
15    Offender Registration Act:
16            (i) not access or use a computer or any other
17        device with Internet capability without the prior
18        written approval of the offender's probation officer,
19        except in connection with the offender's employment or
20        search for employment with the prior approval of the
21        offender's probation officer;
22            (ii) submit to periodic unannounced examinations
23        of the offender's computer or any other device with
24        Internet capability by the offender's probation
25        officer, a law enforcement officer, or assigned
26        computer or information technology specialist,

 

 

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1        including the retrieval and copying of all data from
2        the computer or device and any internal or external
3        peripherals and removal of such information,
4        equipment, or device to conduct a more thorough
5        inspection;
6            (iii) submit to the installation on the offender's
7        computer or device with Internet capability, at the
8        subject's expense, of one or more hardware or software
9        systems to monitor the Internet use; and
10            (iv) submit to any other appropriate restrictions
11        concerning the offender's use of or access to a
12        computer or any other device with Internet capability
13        imposed by the offender's probation officer; and
14        (19) refrain from possessing a firearm or other
15    dangerous weapon where the offense is a misdemeanor that
16    did not involve the intentional or knowing infliction of
17    bodily harm or threat of bodily harm.
18    (c) The court may as a condition of probation or of
19conditional discharge require that a person under 18 years of
20age found guilty of any alcohol, cannabis or controlled
21substance violation, refrain from acquiring a driver's license
22during the period of probation or conditional discharge. If
23such person is in possession of a permit or license, the court
24may require that the minor refrain from driving or operating
25any motor vehicle during the period of probation or conditional
26discharge, except as may be necessary in the course of the

 

 

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1minor's lawful employment.
2    (d) An offender sentenced to probation or to conditional
3discharge shall be given a certificate setting forth the
4conditions thereof.
5    (e) Except where the offender has committed a fourth or
6subsequent violation of subsection (c) of Section 6-303 of the
7Illinois Vehicle Code, the court shall not require as a
8condition of the sentence of probation or conditional discharge
9that the offender be committed to a period of imprisonment in
10excess of 6 months. This 6 month limit shall not include
11periods of confinement given pursuant to a sentence of county
12impact incarceration under Section 5-8-1.2.
13    Persons committed to imprisonment as a condition of
14probation or conditional discharge shall not be committed to
15the Department of Corrections.
16    (f) The court may combine a sentence of periodic
17imprisonment under Article 7 or a sentence to a county impact
18incarceration program under Article 8 with a sentence of
19probation or conditional discharge.
20    (g) An offender sentenced to probation or to conditional
21discharge and who during the term of either undergoes mandatory
22drug or alcohol testing, or both, or is assigned to be placed
23on an approved electronic monitoring device, shall be ordered
24to pay all costs incidental to such mandatory drug or alcohol
25testing, or both, and all costs incidental to such approved
26electronic monitoring in accordance with the defendant's

 

 

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1ability to pay those costs. The county board with the
2concurrence of the Chief Judge of the judicial circuit in which
3the county is located shall establish reasonable fees for the
4cost of maintenance, testing, and incidental expenses related
5to the mandatory drug or alcohol testing, or both, and all
6costs incidental to approved electronic monitoring, involved
7in a successful probation program for the county. The
8concurrence of the Chief Judge shall be in the form of an
9administrative order. The fees shall be collected by the clerk
10of the circuit court. The clerk of the circuit court shall pay
11all moneys collected from these fees to the county treasurer
12who shall use the moneys collected to defray the costs of drug
13testing, alcohol testing, and electronic monitoring. The
14county treasurer shall deposit the fees collected in the county
15working cash fund under Section 6-27001 or Section 6-29002 of
16the Counties Code, as the case may be.
17    (h) Jurisdiction over an offender may be transferred from
18the sentencing court to the court of another circuit with the
19concurrence of both courts. Further transfers or retransfers of
20jurisdiction are also authorized in the same manner. The court
21to which jurisdiction has been transferred shall have the same
22powers as the sentencing court. The probation department within
23the circuit to which jurisdiction has been transferred may
24impose probation fees upon receiving the transferred offender,
25as provided in subsection (i). The probation department from
26the original sentencing court shall retain all probation fees

 

 

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1collected prior to the transfer.
2    (i) The court shall impose upon an offender sentenced to
3probation after January 1, 1989 or to conditional discharge
4after January 1, 1992 or to community service under the
5supervision of a probation or court services department after
6January 1, 2004, as a condition of such probation or
7conditional discharge or supervised community service, a fee of
8$50 for each month of probation or conditional discharge
9supervision or supervised community service ordered by the
10court, unless after determining the inability of the person
11sentenced to probation or conditional discharge or supervised
12community service to pay the fee, the court assesses a lesser
13fee. The court may not impose the fee on a minor who is made a
14ward of the State under the Juvenile Court Act of 1987 while
15the minor is in placement. The fee shall be imposed only upon
16an offender who is actively supervised by the probation and
17court services department. The fee shall be collected by the
18clerk of the circuit court. The clerk of the circuit court
19shall pay all monies collected from this fee to the county
20treasurer for deposit in the probation and court services fund
21under Section 15.1 of the Probation and Probation Officers Act.
22    A circuit court may not impose a probation fee under this
23subsection (i) in excess of $25 per month unless the circuit
24court has adopted, by administrative order issued by the chief
25judge, a standard probation fee guide determining an offender's
26ability to pay Of the amount collected as a probation fee, up

 

 

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1to $5 of that fee collected per month may be used to provide
2services to crime victims and their families.
3    The Court may only waive probation fees based on an
4offender's ability to pay. The probation department may
5re-evaluate an offender's ability to pay every 6 months, and,
6with the approval of the Director of Court Services or the
7Chief Probation Officer, adjust the monthly fee amount. An
8offender may elect to pay probation fees due in a lump sum. Any
9offender that has been assigned to the supervision of a
10probation department, or has been transferred either under
11subsection (h) of this Section or under any interstate compact,
12shall be required to pay probation fees to the department
13supervising the offender, based on the offender's ability to
14pay.
15    This amendatory Act of the 93rd General Assembly deletes
16the $10 increase in the fee under this subsection that was
17imposed by Public Act 93-616. This deletion is intended to
18control over any other Act of the 93rd General Assembly that
19retains or incorporates that fee increase.
20    (i-5) In addition to the fees imposed under subsection (i)
21of this Section, in the case of an offender convicted of a
22felony sex offense (as defined in the Sex Offender Management
23Board Act) or an offense that the court or probation department
24has determined to be sexually motivated (as defined in the Sex
25Offender Management Board Act), the court or the probation
26department shall assess additional fees to pay for all costs of

 

 

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1treatment, assessment, evaluation for risk and treatment, and
2monitoring the offender, based on that offender's ability to
3pay those costs either as they occur or under a payment plan.
4    (j) All fines and costs imposed under this Section for any
5violation of Chapters 3, 4, 6, and 11 of the Illinois Vehicle
6Code, or a similar provision of a local ordinance, and any
7violation of the Child Passenger Protection Act, or a similar
8provision of a local ordinance, shall be collected and
9disbursed by the circuit clerk as provided under Section 27.5
10of the Clerks of Courts Act.
11    (k) Any offender who is sentenced to probation or
12conditional discharge for a felony sex offense as defined in
13the Sex Offender Management Board Act or any offense that the
14court or probation department has determined to be sexually
15motivated as defined in the Sex Offender Management Board Act
16shall be required to refrain from any contact, directly or
17indirectly, with any persons specified by the court and shall
18be available for all evaluations and treatment programs
19required by the court or the probation department.
20    (l) The court may order an offender who is sentenced to
21probation or conditional discharge for a violation of an order
22of protection be placed under electronic surveillance as
23provided in Section 5-8A-7 of this Code.
24(Source: P.A. 96-262, eff. 1-1-10; 96-328, eff. 8-11-09;
2596-362, eff. 1-1-10; 96-695, eff. 8-25-09; 96-1000, eff.
267-2-10; 96-1414, eff. 1-1-11; 96-1551, Article 2, Section 1065,

 

 

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1eff. 7-1-11; 96-1551, Article 10, Section 10-150, eff. 7-1-11;
297-454, eff. 1-1-12; 97-560, eff. 1-1-12; 97-597, eff. 1-1-12;
397-1109, eff. 1-1-13; 97-1131, eff. 1-1-13; 97-1150, eff.
41-25-13.)
 
5    Section 120. The Stalking No Contact Order Act is amended
6by changing Section 80 as follows:
 
7    (740 ILCS 21/80)
8    Sec. 80. Stalking no contact orders; remedies.
9    (a) If the court finds that the petitioner has been a
10victim of stalking, a stalking no contact order shall issue;
11provided that the petitioner must also satisfy the requirements
12of Section 95 on emergency orders or Section 100 on plenary
13orders. The petitioner shall not be denied a stalking no
14contact order because the petitioner or the respondent is a
15minor. The court, when determining whether or not to issue a
16stalking no contact order, may not require physical injury on
17the person of the petitioner. Modification and extension of
18prior stalking no contact orders shall be in accordance with
19this Act.
20    (b) A stalking no contact order shall order one or more of
21the following:
22        (1) prohibit the respondent from threatening to commit
23    or committing stalking;
24        (2) order the respondent not to have any contact with

 

 

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1    the petitioner or a third person specifically named by the
2    court;
3        (3) prohibit the respondent from knowingly coming
4    within, or knowingly remaining within a specified distance
5    of the petitioner or the petitioner's residence, school,
6    daycare, or place of employment, or any specified place
7    frequented by the petitioner; however, the court may order
8    the respondent to stay away from the respondent's own
9    residence, school, or place of employment only if the
10    respondent has been provided actual notice of the
11    opportunity to appear and be heard on the petition;
12        (4) prohibit the respondent from possessing a Firearm
13    Owners Identification Card, or possessing or buying
14    firearms; and
15        (5) order other injunctive relief the court determines
16    to be necessary to protect the petitioner or third party
17    specifically named by the court.
18    (b-5) When the petitioner and the respondent attend the
19same public, private, or non-public elementary, middle, or high
20school, the court when issuing a stalking no contact order and
21providing relief shall consider the severity of the act, any
22continuing physical danger or emotional distress to the
23petitioner, the educational rights guaranteed to the
24petitioner and respondent under federal and State law, the
25availability of a transfer of the respondent to another school,
26a change of placement or a change of program of the respondent,

 

 

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1the expense, difficulty, and educational disruption that would
2be caused by a transfer of the respondent to another school,
3and any other relevant facts of the case. The court may order
4that the respondent not attend the public, private, or
5non-public elementary, middle, or high school attended by the
6petitioner, order that the respondent accept a change of
7placement or program, as determined by the school district or
8private or non-public school, or place restrictions on the
9respondent's movements within the school attended by the
10petitioner. The respondent bears the burden of proving by a
11preponderance of the evidence that a transfer, change of
12placement, or change of program of the respondent is not
13available. The respondent also bears the burden of production
14with respect to the expense, difficulty, and educational
15disruption that would be caused by a transfer of the respondent
16to another school. A transfer, change of placement, or change
17of program is not unavailable to the respondent solely on the
18ground that the respondent does not agree with the school
19district's or private or non-public school's transfer, change
20of placement, or change of program or solely on the ground that
21the respondent fails or refuses to consent to or otherwise does
22not take an action required to effectuate a transfer, change of
23placement, or change of program. When a court orders a
24respondent to stay away from the public, private, or non-public
25school attended by the petitioner and the respondent requests a
26transfer to another attendance center within the respondent's

 

 

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1school district or private or non-public school, the school
2district or private or non-public school shall have sole
3discretion to determine the attendance center to which the
4respondent is transferred. In the event the court order results
5in a transfer of the minor respondent to another attendance
6center, a change in the respondent's placement, or a change of
7the respondent's program, the parents, guardian, or legal
8custodian of the respondent is responsible for transportation
9and other costs associated with the transfer or change.
10    (b-6) The court may order the parents, guardian, or legal
11custodian of a minor respondent to take certain actions or to
12refrain from taking certain actions to ensure that the
13respondent complies with the order. In the event the court
14orders a transfer of the respondent to another school, the
15parents, guardian, or legal custodian of the respondent are
16responsible for transportation and other costs associated with
17the change of school by the respondent.
18    (b-7) The court shall not hold a school district or private
19or non-public school or any of its employees in civil or
20criminal contempt unless the school district or private or
21non-public school has been allowed to intervene.
22    (b-8) The court may hold the parents, guardian, or legal
23custodian of a minor respondent in civil or criminal contempt
24for a violation of any provision of any order entered under
25this Act for conduct of the minor respondent in violation of
26this Act if the parents, guardian, or legal custodian directed,

 

 

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1encouraged, or assisted the respondent minor in such conduct.
2    (c) The court may award the petitioner costs and attorneys
3fees if a stalking no contact order is granted.
4    (d) Monetary damages are not recoverable as a remedy.
5    (e) If the stalking no contact order prohibits the
6respondent from possessing a Firearm Owner's Identification
7Card, or possessing or buying firearms; the court shall
8confiscate the respondent's Firearm Owner's Identification
9Card and, if applicable, a concealed carry license issued under
10the Gun Safety and Responsibility Act and immediately return
11the card, license, or both to the Department of State Police
12Firearm Owner's Identification Card Office. Any firearms in the
13possession of the respondent, except as authorized in
14subsection (f) shall be ordered by the court to be turned over
15to the local law enforcement agency for safekeeping. The local
16law enforcement agency shall conduct a query with the
17Department of State Police concerning registered assault
18weapons under this amendatory Act of the 98th General Assembly.
19    (f) If the respondent is a peace officer as defined in
20Section 2-13 of the Criminal Code of 2012, the court shall
21order that any firearms used by the respondent in the
22performance of his or her duties as a peace officer be
23surrendered to the chief law enforcement executive of the
24agency in which the respondent is employed, who shall retain
25the firearms for safekeeping for the duration of the stalking
26no contact order.

 

 

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1(Source: P.A. 96-246, eff. 1-1-10; 97-294, eff. 1-1-12;
297-1131, eff. 1-1-13.)
 
3    Section 125. The Illinois Domestic Violence Act of 1986 is
4amended by changing Section 214 as follows:
 
5    (750 ILCS 60/214)  (from Ch. 40, par. 2312-14)
6    Sec. 214. Order of protection; remedies.
7    (a) Issuance of order. If the court finds that petitioner
8has been abused by a family or household member or that
9petitioner is a high-risk adult who has been abused, neglected,
10or exploited, as defined in this Act, an order of protection
11prohibiting the abuse, neglect, or exploitation shall issue;
12provided that petitioner must also satisfy the requirements of
13one of the following Sections, as appropriate: Section 217 on
14emergency orders, Section 218 on interim orders, or Section 219
15on plenary orders. Petitioner shall not be denied an order of
16protection because petitioner or respondent is a minor. The
17court, when determining whether or not to issue an order of
18protection, shall not require physical manifestations of abuse
19on the person of the victim. Modification and extension of
20prior orders of protection shall be in accordance with this
21Act.
22    (b) Remedies and standards. The remedies to be included in
23an order of protection shall be determined in accordance with
24this Section and one of the following Sections, as appropriate:

 

 

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1Section 217 on emergency orders, Section 218 on interim orders,
2and Section 219 on plenary orders. The remedies listed in this
3subsection shall be in addition to other civil or criminal
4remedies available to petitioner.
5        (1) Prohibition of abuse, neglect, or exploitation.
6    Prohibit respondent's harassment, interference with
7    personal liberty, intimidation of a dependent, physical
8    abuse, or willful deprivation, neglect or exploitation, as
9    defined in this Act, or stalking of the petitioner, as
10    defined in Section 12-7.3 of the Criminal Code of 2012, if
11    such abuse, neglect, exploitation, or stalking has
12    occurred or otherwise appears likely to occur if not
13    prohibited.
14        (2) Grant of exclusive possession of residence.
15    Prohibit respondent from entering or remaining in any
16    residence, household, or premises of the petitioner,
17    including one owned or leased by respondent, if petitioner
18    has a right to occupancy thereof. The grant of exclusive
19    possession of the residence, household, or premises shall
20    not affect title to real property, nor shall the court be
21    limited by the standard set forth in Section 701 of the
22    Illinois Marriage and Dissolution of Marriage Act.
23            (A) Right to occupancy. A party has a right to
24        occupancy of a residence or household if it is solely
25        or jointly owned or leased by that party, that party's
26        spouse, a person with a legal duty to support that

 

 

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1        party or a minor child in that party's care, or by any
2        person or entity other than the opposing party that
3        authorizes that party's occupancy (e.g., a domestic
4        violence shelter). Standards set forth in subparagraph
5        (B) shall not preclude equitable relief.
6            (B) Presumption of hardships. If petitioner and
7        respondent each has the right to occupancy of a
8        residence or household, the court shall balance (i) the
9        hardships to respondent and any minor child or
10        dependent adult in respondent's care resulting from
11        entry of this remedy with (ii) the hardships to
12        petitioner and any minor child or dependent adult in
13        petitioner's care resulting from continued exposure to
14        the risk of abuse (should petitioner remain at the
15        residence or household) or from loss of possession of
16        the residence or household (should petitioner leave to
17        avoid the risk of abuse). When determining the balance
18        of hardships, the court shall also take into account
19        the accessibility of the residence or household.
20        Hardships need not be balanced if respondent does not
21        have a right to occupancy.
22            The balance of hardships is presumed to favor
23        possession by petitioner unless the presumption is
24        rebutted by a preponderance of the evidence, showing
25        that the hardships to respondent substantially
26        outweigh the hardships to petitioner and any minor

 

 

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1        child or dependent adult in petitioner's care. The
2        court, on the request of petitioner or on its own
3        motion, may order respondent to provide suitable,
4        accessible, alternate housing for petitioner instead
5        of excluding respondent from a mutual residence or
6        household.
7        (3) Stay away order and additional prohibitions. Order
8    respondent to stay away from petitioner or any other person
9    protected by the order of protection, or prohibit
10    respondent from entering or remaining present at
11    petitioner's school, place of employment, or other
12    specified places at times when petitioner is present, or
13    both, if reasonable, given the balance of hardships.
14    Hardships need not be balanced for the court to enter a
15    stay away order or prohibit entry if respondent has no
16    right to enter the premises.
17            (A) If an order of protection grants petitioner
18        exclusive possession of the residence, or prohibits
19        respondent from entering the residence, or orders
20        respondent to stay away from petitioner or other
21        protected persons, then the court may allow respondent
22        access to the residence to remove items of clothing and
23        personal adornment used exclusively by respondent,
24        medications, and other items as the court directs. The
25        right to access shall be exercised on only one occasion
26        as the court directs and in the presence of an

 

 

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1        agreed-upon adult third party or law enforcement
2        officer.
3            (B) When the petitioner and the respondent attend
4        the same public, private, or non-public elementary,
5        middle, or high school, the court when issuing an order
6        of protection and providing relief shall consider the
7        severity of the act, any continuing physical danger or
8        emotional distress to the petitioner, the educational
9        rights guaranteed to the petitioner and respondent
10        under federal and State law, the availability of a
11        transfer of the respondent to another school, a change
12        of placement or a change of program of the respondent,
13        the expense, difficulty, and educational disruption
14        that would be caused by a transfer of the respondent to
15        another school, and any other relevant facts of the
16        case. The court may order that the respondent not
17        attend the public, private, or non-public elementary,
18        middle, or high school attended by the petitioner,
19        order that the respondent accept a change of placement
20        or change of program, as determined by the school
21        district or private or non-public school, or place
22        restrictions on the respondent's movements within the
23        school attended by the petitioner. The respondent
24        bears the burden of proving by a preponderance of the
25        evidence that a transfer, change of placement, or
26        change of program of the respondent is not available.

 

 

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1        The respondent also bears the burden of production with
2        respect to the expense, difficulty, and educational
3        disruption that would be caused by a transfer of the
4        respondent to another school. A transfer, change of
5        placement, or change of program is not unavailable to
6        the respondent solely on the ground that the respondent
7        does not agree with the school district's or private or
8        non-public school's transfer, change of placement, or
9        change of program or solely on the ground that the
10        respondent fails or refuses to consent or otherwise
11        does not take an action required to effectuate a
12        transfer, change of placement, or change of program.
13        When a court orders a respondent to stay away from the
14        public, private, or non-public school attended by the
15        petitioner and the respondent requests a transfer to
16        another attendance center within the respondent's
17        school district or private or non-public school, the
18        school district or private or non-public school shall
19        have sole discretion to determine the attendance
20        center to which the respondent is transferred. In the
21        event the court order results in a transfer of the
22        minor respondent to another attendance center, a
23        change in the respondent's placement, or a change of
24        the respondent's program, the parents, guardian, or
25        legal custodian of the respondent is responsible for
26        transportation and other costs associated with the

 

 

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1        transfer or change.
2            (C) The court may order the parents, guardian, or
3        legal custodian of a minor respondent to take certain
4        actions or to refrain from taking certain actions to
5        ensure that the respondent complies with the order. In
6        the event the court orders a transfer of the respondent
7        to another school, the parents, guardian, or legal
8        custodian of the respondent is responsible for
9        transportation and other costs associated with the
10        change of school by the respondent.
11        (4) Counseling. Require or recommend the respondent to
12    undergo counseling for a specified duration with a social
13    worker, psychologist, clinical psychologist, psychiatrist,
14    family service agency, alcohol or substance abuse program,
15    mental health center guidance counselor, agency providing
16    services to elders, program designed for domestic violence
17    abusers or any other guidance service the court deems
18    appropriate. The Court may order the respondent in any
19    intimate partner relationship to report to an Illinois
20    Department of Human Services protocol approved partner
21    abuse intervention program for an assessment and to follow
22    all recommended treatment.
23        (5) Physical care and possession of the minor child. In
24    order to protect the minor child from abuse, neglect, or
25    unwarranted separation from the person who has been the
26    minor child's primary caretaker, or to otherwise protect

 

 

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1    the well-being of the minor child, the court may do either
2    or both of the following: (i) grant petitioner physical
3    care or possession of the minor child, or both, or (ii)
4    order respondent to return a minor child to, or not remove
5    a minor child from, the physical care of a parent or person
6    in loco parentis.
7        If a court finds, after a hearing, that respondent has
8    committed abuse (as defined in Section 103) of a minor
9    child, there shall be a rebuttable presumption that
10    awarding physical care to respondent would not be in the
11    minor child's best interest.
12        (6) Temporary legal custody. Award temporary legal
13    custody to petitioner in accordance with this Section, the
14    Illinois Marriage and Dissolution of Marriage Act, the
15    Illinois Parentage Act of 1984, and this State's Uniform
16    Child-Custody Jurisdiction and Enforcement Act.
17        If a court finds, after a hearing, that respondent has
18    committed abuse (as defined in Section 103) of a minor
19    child, there shall be a rebuttable presumption that
20    awarding temporary legal custody to respondent would not be
21    in the child's best interest.
22        (7) Visitation. Determine the visitation rights, if
23    any, of respondent in any case in which the court awards
24    physical care or temporary legal custody of a minor child
25    to petitioner. The court shall restrict or deny
26    respondent's visitation with a minor child if the court

 

 

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1    finds that respondent has done or is likely to do any of
2    the following: (i) abuse or endanger the minor child during
3    visitation; (ii) use the visitation as an opportunity to
4    abuse or harass petitioner or petitioner's family or
5    household members; (iii) improperly conceal or detain the
6    minor child; or (iv) otherwise act in a manner that is not
7    in the best interests of the minor child. The court shall
8    not be limited by the standards set forth in Section 607.1
9    of the Illinois Marriage and Dissolution of Marriage Act.
10    If the court grants visitation, the order shall specify
11    dates and times for the visitation to take place or other
12    specific parameters or conditions that are appropriate. No
13    order for visitation shall refer merely to the term
14    "reasonable visitation".
15        Petitioner may deny respondent access to the minor
16    child if, when respondent arrives for visitation,
17    respondent is under the influence of drugs or alcohol and
18    constitutes a threat to the safety and well-being of
19    petitioner or petitioner's minor children or is behaving in
20    a violent or abusive manner.
21        If necessary to protect any member of petitioner's
22    family or household from future abuse, respondent shall be
23    prohibited from coming to petitioner's residence to meet
24    the minor child for visitation, and the parties shall
25    submit to the court their recommendations for reasonable
26    alternative arrangements for visitation. A person may be

 

 

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1    approved to supervise visitation only after filing an
2    affidavit accepting that responsibility and acknowledging
3    accountability to the court.
4        (8) Removal or concealment of minor child. Prohibit
5    respondent from removing a minor child from the State or
6    concealing the child within the State.
7        (9) Order to appear. Order the respondent to appear in
8    court, alone or with a minor child, to prevent abuse,
9    neglect, removal or concealment of the child, to return the
10    child to the custody or care of the petitioner or to permit
11    any court-ordered interview or examination of the child or
12    the respondent.
13        (10) Possession of personal property. Grant petitioner
14    exclusive possession of personal property and, if
15    respondent has possession or control, direct respondent to
16    promptly make it available to petitioner, if:
17            (i) petitioner, but not respondent, owns the
18        property; or
19            (ii) the parties own the property jointly; sharing
20        it would risk abuse of petitioner by respondent or is
21        impracticable; and the balance of hardships favors
22        temporary possession by petitioner.
23        If petitioner's sole claim to ownership of the property
24    is that it is marital property, the court may award
25    petitioner temporary possession thereof under the
26    standards of subparagraph (ii) of this paragraph only if a

 

 

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1    proper proceeding has been filed under the Illinois
2    Marriage and Dissolution of Marriage Act, as now or
3    hereafter amended.
4        No order under this provision shall affect title to
5    property.
6        (11) Protection of property. Forbid the respondent
7    from taking, transferring, encumbering, concealing,
8    damaging or otherwise disposing of any real or personal
9    property, except as explicitly authorized by the court, if:
10            (i) petitioner, but not respondent, owns the
11        property; or
12            (ii) the parties own the property jointly, and the
13        balance of hardships favors granting this remedy.
14        If petitioner's sole claim to ownership of the property
15    is that it is marital property, the court may grant
16    petitioner relief under subparagraph (ii) of this
17    paragraph only if a proper proceeding has been filed under
18    the Illinois Marriage and Dissolution of Marriage Act, as
19    now or hereafter amended.
20        The court may further prohibit respondent from
21    improperly using the financial or other resources of an
22    aged member of the family or household for the profit or
23    advantage of respondent or of any other person.
24        (11.5) Protection of animals. Grant the petitioner the
25    exclusive care, custody, or control of any animal owned,
26    possessed, leased, kept, or held by either the petitioner

 

 

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1    or the respondent or a minor child residing in the
2    residence or household of either the petitioner or the
3    respondent and order the respondent to stay away from the
4    animal and forbid the respondent from taking,
5    transferring, encumbering, concealing, harming, or
6    otherwise disposing of the animal.
7        (12) Order for payment of support. Order respondent to
8    pay temporary support for the petitioner or any child in
9    the petitioner's care or custody, when the respondent has a
10    legal obligation to support that person, in accordance with
11    the Illinois Marriage and Dissolution of Marriage Act,
12    which shall govern, among other matters, the amount of
13    support, payment through the clerk and withholding of
14    income to secure payment. An order for child support may be
15    granted to a petitioner with lawful physical care or
16    custody of a child, or an order or agreement for physical
17    care or custody, prior to entry of an order for legal
18    custody. Such a support order shall expire upon entry of a
19    valid order granting legal custody to another, unless
20    otherwise provided in the custody order.
21        (13) Order for payment of losses. Order respondent to
22    pay petitioner for losses suffered as a direct result of
23    the abuse, neglect, or exploitation. Such losses shall
24    include, but not be limited to, medical expenses, lost
25    earnings or other support, repair or replacement of
26    property damaged or taken, reasonable attorney's fees,

 

 

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1    court costs and moving or other travel expenses, including
2    additional reasonable expenses for temporary shelter and
3    restaurant meals.
4            (i) Losses affecting family needs. If a party is
5        entitled to seek maintenance, child support or
6        property distribution from the other party under the
7        Illinois Marriage and Dissolution of Marriage Act, as
8        now or hereafter amended, the court may order
9        respondent to reimburse petitioner's actual losses, to
10        the extent that such reimbursement would be
11        "appropriate temporary relief", as authorized by
12        subsection (a)(3) of Section 501 of that Act.
13            (ii) Recovery of expenses. In the case of an
14        improper concealment or removal of a minor child, the
15        court may order respondent to pay the reasonable
16        expenses incurred or to be incurred in the search for
17        and recovery of the minor child, including but not
18        limited to legal fees, court costs, private
19        investigator fees, and travel costs.
20        (14) Prohibition of entry. Prohibit the respondent
21    from entering or remaining in the residence or household
22    while the respondent is under the influence of alcohol or
23    drugs and constitutes a threat to the safety and well-being
24    of the petitioner or the petitioner's children.
25        (14.5) Prohibition of firearm possession.
26            (a) Prohibit a respondent against whom an order of

 

 

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1        protection was issued from possessing any firearms
2        during the duration of the order if the order:
3                (1) was issued after a hearing of which such
4            person received actual notice, and at which such
5            person had an opportunity to participate;
6                (2) restrains such person from harassing,
7            stalking, or threatening an intimate partner of
8            such person or child of such intimate partner or
9            person, or engaging in other conduct that would
10            place an intimate partner in reasonable fear of
11            bodily injury to the partner or child; and
12                (3)(i) includes a finding that such person
13            represents a credible threat to the physical
14            safety of such intimate partner or child; or (ii)
15            by its terms explicitly prohibits the use,
16            attempted use, or threatened use of physical force
17            against such intimate partner or child that would
18            reasonably be expected to cause bodily injury.
19        Any Firearm Owner's Identification Card and, if
20        applicable, a concealed carry license issued under the
21        Gun Safety and Responsibility Act in the possession of
22        the respondent, except as provided in subsection (b),
23        shall be ordered by the court to be turned over to the
24        local law enforcement agency. The local law
25        enforcement agency shall immediately mail the card,
26        license, or both to the Department of State Police

 

 

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1        Firearm Owner's Identification Card Office for
2        safekeeping. The court shall issue a warrant for
3        seizure of any firearm in the possession of the
4        respondent, to be kept by the local law enforcement
5        agency for safekeeping, except as provided in
6        subsection (b). The local law enforcement agency shall
7        conduct a query with the Department of State Police
8        concerning registered assault weapons under this
9        amendatory Act of the 98th General Assembly. The period
10        of safekeeping shall be for the duration of the order
11        of protection. The firearm or firearms and Firearm
12        Owner's Identification Card, if unexpired, shall at
13        the respondent's request, be returned to the
14        respondent at the end of the order of protection. It is
15        the respondent's responsibility to notify the
16        Department of State Police Firearm Owner's
17        Identification Card Office.
18            (b) If the respondent is a peace officer as defined
19        in Section 2-13 of the Criminal Code of 2012, the court
20        shall order that any firearms used by the respondent in
21        the performance of his or her duties as a peace officer
22        be surrendered to the chief law enforcement executive
23        of the agency in which the respondent is employed, who
24        shall retain the firearms for safekeeping for the
25        duration of the order of protection.
26            (c) Upon expiration of the period of safekeeping,

 

 

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1        if the firearms or Firearm Owner's Identification Card
2        cannot be returned to respondent because respondent
3        cannot be located, fails to respond to requests to
4        retrieve the firearms, or is not lawfully eligible to
5        possess a firearm, upon petition from the local law
6        enforcement agency, the court may order the local law
7        enforcement agency to destroy the firearms, use the
8        firearms for training purposes, or for any other
9        application as deemed appropriate by the local law
10        enforcement agency; or that the firearms be turned over
11        to a third party who is lawfully eligible to possess
12        firearms, and who does not reside with respondent.
13        (15) Prohibition of access to records. If an order of
14    protection prohibits respondent from having contact with
15    the minor child, or if petitioner's address is omitted
16    under subsection (b) of Section 203, or if necessary to
17    prevent abuse or wrongful removal or concealment of a minor
18    child, the order shall deny respondent access to, and
19    prohibit respondent from inspecting, obtaining, or
20    attempting to inspect or obtain, school or any other
21    records of the minor child who is in the care of
22    petitioner.
23        (16) Order for payment of shelter services. Order
24    respondent to reimburse a shelter providing temporary
25    housing and counseling services to the petitioner for the
26    cost of the services, as certified by the shelter and

 

 

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1    deemed reasonable by the court.
2        (17) Order for injunctive relief. Enter injunctive
3    relief necessary or appropriate to prevent further abuse of
4    a family or household member or further abuse, neglect, or
5    exploitation of a high-risk adult with disabilities or to
6    effectuate one of the granted remedies, if supported by the
7    balance of hardships. If the harm to be prevented by the
8    injunction is abuse or any other harm that one of the
9    remedies listed in paragraphs (1) through (16) of this
10    subsection is designed to prevent, no further evidence is
11    necessary that the harm is an irreparable injury.
12    (c) Relevant factors; findings.
13        (1) In determining whether to grant a specific remedy,
14    other than payment of support, the court shall consider
15    relevant factors, including but not limited to the
16    following:
17            (i) the nature, frequency, severity, pattern and
18        consequences of the respondent's past abuse, neglect
19        or exploitation of the petitioner or any family or
20        household member, including the concealment of his or
21        her location in order to evade service of process or
22        notice, and the likelihood of danger of future abuse,
23        neglect, or exploitation to petitioner or any member of
24        petitioner's or respondent's family or household; and
25            (ii) the danger that any minor child will be abused
26        or neglected or improperly removed from the

 

 

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1        jurisdiction, improperly concealed within the State or
2        improperly separated from the child's primary
3        caretaker.
4        (2) In comparing relative hardships resulting to the
5    parties from loss of possession of the family home, the
6    court shall consider relevant factors, including but not
7    limited to the following:
8            (i) availability, accessibility, cost, safety,
9        adequacy, location and other characteristics of
10        alternate housing for each party and any minor child or
11        dependent adult in the party's care;
12            (ii) the effect on the party's employment; and
13            (iii) the effect on the relationship of the party,
14        and any minor child or dependent adult in the party's
15        care, to family, school, church and community.
16        (3) Subject to the exceptions set forth in paragraph
17    (4) of this subsection, the court shall make its findings
18    in an official record or in writing, and shall at a minimum
19    set forth the following:
20            (i) That the court has considered the applicable
21        relevant factors described in paragraphs (1) and (2) of
22        this subsection.
23            (ii) Whether the conduct or actions of respondent,
24        unless prohibited, will likely cause irreparable harm
25        or continued abuse.
26            (iii) Whether it is necessary to grant the

 

 

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1        requested relief in order to protect petitioner or
2        other alleged abused persons.
3        (4) For purposes of issuing an ex parte emergency order
4    of protection, the court, as an alternative to or as a
5    supplement to making the findings described in paragraphs
6    (c)(3)(i) through (c)(3)(iii) of this subsection, may use
7    the following procedure:
8        When a verified petition for an emergency order of
9    protection in accordance with the requirements of Sections
10    203 and 217 is presented to the court, the court shall
11    examine petitioner on oath or affirmation. An emergency
12    order of protection shall be issued by the court if it
13    appears from the contents of the petition and the
14    examination of petitioner that the averments are
15    sufficient to indicate abuse by respondent and to support
16    the granting of relief under the issuance of the emergency
17    order of protection.
18        (5) Never married parties. No rights or
19    responsibilities for a minor child born outside of marriage
20    attach to a putative father until a father and child
21    relationship has been established under the Illinois
22    Parentage Act of 1984, the Illinois Public Aid Code,
23    Section 12 of the Vital Records Act, the Juvenile Court Act
24    of 1987, the Probate Act of 1985, the Revised Uniform
25    Reciprocal Enforcement of Support Act, the Uniform
26    Interstate Family Support Act, the Expedited Child Support

 

 

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1    Act of 1990, any judicial, administrative, or other act of
2    another state or territory, any other Illinois statute, or
3    by any foreign nation establishing the father and child
4    relationship, any other proceeding substantially in
5    conformity with the Personal Responsibility and Work
6    Opportunity Reconciliation Act of 1996 (Pub. L. 104-193),
7    or where both parties appeared in open court or at an
8    administrative hearing acknowledging under oath or
9    admitting by affirmation the existence of a father and
10    child relationship. Absent such an adjudication, finding,
11    or acknowledgement, no putative father shall be granted
12    temporary custody of the minor child, visitation with the
13    minor child, or physical care and possession of the minor
14    child, nor shall an order of payment for support of the
15    minor child be entered.
16    (d) Balance of hardships; findings. If the court finds that
17the balance of hardships does not support the granting of a
18remedy governed by paragraph (2), (3), (10), (11), or (16) of
19subsection (b) of this Section, which may require such
20balancing, the court's findings shall so indicate and shall
21include a finding as to whether granting the remedy will result
22in hardship to respondent that would substantially outweigh the
23hardship to petitioner from denial of the remedy. The findings
24shall be an official record or in writing.
25    (e) Denial of remedies. Denial of any remedy shall not be
26based, in whole or in part, on evidence that:

 

 

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1        (1) Respondent has cause for any use of force, unless
2    that cause satisfies the standards for justifiable use of
3    force provided by Article 7 of the Criminal Code of 2012;
4        (2) Respondent was voluntarily intoxicated;
5        (3) Petitioner acted in self-defense or defense of
6    another, provided that, if petitioner utilized force, such
7    force was justifiable under Article 7 of the Criminal Code
8    of 2012;
9        (4) Petitioner did not act in self-defense or defense
10    of another;
11        (5) Petitioner left the residence or household to avoid
12    further abuse, neglect, or exploitation by respondent;
13        (6) Petitioner did not leave the residence or household
14    to avoid further abuse, neglect, or exploitation by
15    respondent;
16        (7) Conduct by any family or household member excused
17    the abuse, neglect, or exploitation by respondent, unless
18    that same conduct would have excused such abuse, neglect,
19    or exploitation if the parties had not been family or
20    household members.
21(Source: P.A. 96-701, eff. 1-1-10; 96-1239, eff. 1-1-11;
2297-158, eff. 1-1-12; 97-294, eff. 1-1-12; 97-813, eff. 7-13-12;
2397-1131, eff. 1-1-13; 97-1150, eff. 1-25-13.)
 
24    Section 999. Effective date. This Act takes effect upon
25becoming law.

 

 

SB2384- 174 -LRB098 09455 MRW 41105 b

1 INDEX
2 Statutes amended in order of appearance
3    New Act
4    5 ILCS 140/7.5
5    20 ILCS 2605/2605-300was 20 ILCS 2605/55a in part
6    20 ILCS 2605/2605-595 new
7    20 ILCS 2610/25 new
8    30 ILCS 105/5.826 new
9    30 ILCS 105/5.206 rep.
10    430 ILCS 65/1.1from Ch. 38, par. 83-1.1
11    430 ILCS 65/2from Ch. 38, par. 83-2
12    430 ILCS 65/3from Ch. 38, par. 83-3
13    430 ILCS 65/5from Ch. 38, par. 83-5
14    430 ILCS 65/5.1 new
15    430 ILCS 65/9from Ch. 38, par. 83-9
16    430 ILCS 65/12from Ch. 38, par. 83-12
17    430 ILCS 65/13.2from Ch. 38, par. 83-13.2
18    720 ILCS 5/21-6from Ch. 38, par. 21-6
19    720 ILCS 5/24-1from Ch. 38, par. 24-1
20    720 ILCS 5/24-1.6
21    720 ILCS 5/24-1.9 new
22    720 ILCS 5/24-1.10 new
23    720 ILCS 5/24-2
24    720 ILCS 5/24-3from Ch. 38, par. 24-3
25    720 ILCS 5/24-3.1from Ch. 38, par. 24-3.1

 

 

SB2384- 175 -LRB098 09455 MRW 41105 b

1    720 ILCS 5/24-3A
2    720 ILCS 5/24-4.1 new
3    720 ILCS 5/24-9
4    725 ILCS 5/112A-14from Ch. 38, par. 112A-14
5    730 ILCS 5/5-6-3from Ch. 38, par. 1005-6-3
6    740 ILCS 21/80
7    750 ILCS 60/214from Ch. 40, par. 2312-14