State of Illinois
91st General Assembly
Legislation

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91_HB2584

 
                                               LRB9104510RCks

 1        AN ACT in relation to prisons, amending named Acts.

 2        Be it enacted by the People of  the  State  of  Illinois,
 3    represented in the General Assembly:

 4        Section  5.  The Freedom of Information Act is amended by
 5    changing Section 7 as follows:

 6        (5 ILCS 140/7) (from Ch. 116, par. 207)
 7        Sec. 7.  Exemptions.
 8        (1)  The  following  shall  be exempt from inspection and
 9    copying:
10             (a)  Information   specifically   prohibited    from
11        disclosure   by   federal  or  State  law  or  rules  and
12        regulations adopted under federal or State law.
13             (b)  Information   that,   if    disclosed,    would
14        constitute  a  clearly  unwarranted  invasion of personal
15        privacy, unless the disclosure is consented to in writing
16        by the  individual  subjects  of  the  information.   The
17        disclosure of information that bears on the public duties
18        of public employees and officials shall not be considered
19        an  invasion  of  personal privacy.  Information exempted
20        under this  subsection  (b)  shall  include  but  is  not
21        limited to:
22                  (i)  files  and personal information maintained
23             with  respect  to  clients,   patients,   residents,
24             students  or  other  individuals  receiving  social,
25             medical,    educational,    vocational,   financial,
26             supervisory or custodial care or  services  directly
27             or   indirectly  from  federal  agencies  or  public
28             bodies;
29                  (ii)  personnel files and personal  information
30             maintained  with respect to employees, appointees or
31             elected officials of any public body  or  applicants
 
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 1             for those positions;
 2                  (iii)  files     and    personal    information
 3             maintained with respect to any applicant, registrant
 4             or licensee by any public body cooperating  with  or
 5             engaged     in    professional    or    occupational
 6             registration, licensure or discipline;
 7                  (iv)  information required of any  taxpayer  in
 8             connection  with the assessment or collection of any
 9             tax unless disclosure is otherwise required by State
10             statute; and
11                  (v)  information  revealing  the  identity   of
12             persons   who   file   complaints  with  or  provide
13             information to  administrative,  investigative,  law
14             enforcement  or  penal  agencies; provided, however,
15             that  identification   of   witnesses   to   traffic
16             accidents,  traffic  accident  reports,  and  rescue
17             reports   may  be  provided  by  agencies  of  local
18             government, except in a case for  which  a  criminal
19             investigation  is  ongoing,  without  constituting a
20             clearly unwarranted  per  se  invasion  of  personal
21             privacy under this subsection.
22             (c)  Records   compiled   by  any  public  body  for
23        administrative  enforcement  proceedings  and   any   law
24        enforcement  or  correctional  agency for law enforcement
25        purposes or for internal matters of a  public  body,  but
26        only to the extent that disclosure would:
27                  (i)  interfere  with  pending  or  actually and
28             reasonably contemplated law enforcement  proceedings
29             conducted  by  any  law  enforcement or correctional
30             agency;
31                  (ii)  interfere  with  pending   administrative
32             enforcement  proceedings  conducted  by  any  public
33             body;
34                  (iii)  deprive  a  person of a fair trial or an
 
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 1             impartial hearing;
 2                  (iv)  unavoidably disclose the  identity  of  a
 3             confidential   source  or  confidential  information
 4             furnished only by the confidential source;
 5                  (v)  disclose     unique     or     specialized
 6             investigative techniques other than those  generally
 7             used  and  known  or  disclose internal documents of
 8             correctional   agencies   related   to    detection,
 9             observation  or  investigation of incidents of crime
10             or misconduct;
11                  (vi)  constitute  an   invasion   of   personal
12             privacy under subsection (b) of this Section;
13                  (vii)  endanger  the life or physical safety of
14             law enforcement personnel or any other person; or
15                  (viii)  obstruct    an     ongoing     criminal
16             investigation.
17             Notwithstanding  the  provisions  of  this paragraph
18        (c), records of persons committed to  the  Department  of
19        Corrections  may be made available to probation officers,
20        State's Attorneys,  law  enforcement  officers,  and  the
21        courts  and  may  be  used  as factors in aggravation and
22        mitigation in subsequent sentencing.  A certified copy of
23        the record is sufficient for introduction of  the  record
24        in court.
25             (d)  Criminal  history record information maintained
26        by State or local criminal justice agencies,  except  the
27        following  which  shall be open for public inspection and
28        copying:
29                  (i)  chronologically     maintained      arrest
30             information,  such  as  traditional  arrest  logs or
31             blotters;
32                  (ii)  the name of a person in the custody of  a
33             law  enforcement  agency  and  the charges for which
34             that person is being held;
 
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 1                  (iii)  court records that are public;
 2                  (iv)  records  that  are  otherwise   available
 3             under State or local law; or
 4                  (v)  records  in  which the requesting party is
 5             the individual identified, except as provided  under
 6             part  (vii)  of  paragraph  (c) of subsection (1) of
 7             this Section.
 8             "Criminal history  record  information"  means  data
 9        identifiable   to   an   individual   and  consisting  of
10        descriptions  or  notations   of   arrests,   detentions,
11        indictments, informations, pre-trial proceedings, trials,
12        or  other formal events in the criminal justice system or
13        descriptions or notations of criminal charges  (including
14        criminal  violations  of  local municipal ordinances) and
15        the  nature  of  any   disposition   arising   therefrom,
16        including  sentencing, court or correctional supervision,
17        rehabilitation and release.  The term does not  apply  to
18        statistical  records and reports in which individuals are
19        not identified and from which their  identities  are  not
20        ascertainable,  or  to  information  that is for criminal
21        investigative or intelligence purposes.
22             (e)  Records that relate to or affect  the  security
23        of correctional institutions and detention facilities.
24             (f)  Preliminary   drafts,  notes,  recommendations,
25        memoranda  and  other  records  in  which  opinions   are
26        expressed,  or policies or actions are formulated, except
27        that a specific record or relevant portion  of  a  record
28        shall not be exempt when the record is publicly cited and
29        identified  by the head of the public body. The exemption
30        provided in this  paragraph  (f)  extends  to  all  those
31        records  of officers and agencies of the General Assembly
32        that pertain to the preparation of legislative documents.
33             (g)  Trade  secrets  and  commercial  or   financial
34        information  obtained from a person or business where the
 
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 1        trade secrets or information are proprietary,  privileged
 2        or confidential, or where disclosure of the trade secrets
 3        or  information may cause competitive harm, including all
 4        information determined to be confidential  under  Section
 5        4002  of  the Technology Advancement and Development Act.
 6        Nothing  contained  in  this  paragraph  (g)   shall   be
 7        construed to prevent a person or business from consenting
 8        to disclosure.
 9             (h)  Proposals  and bids for any contract, grant, or
10        agreement,  including  information  which  if   it   were
11        disclosed   would   frustrate   procurement  or  give  an
12        advantage  to  any  person  proposing  to  enter  into  a
13        contractor agreement with the body,  until  an  award  or
14        final  selection is made.  Information prepared by or for
15        the body in preparation of a bid  solicitation  shall  be
16        exempt until an award or final selection is made.
17             (i)  Valuable   formulae,   designs,   drawings  and
18        research data obtained or produced  by  any  public  body
19        when  disclosure  could reasonably be expected to produce
20        private gain or public loss.
21             (j)  Test  questions,   scoring   keys   and   other
22        examination   data   used   to   administer  an  academic
23        examination  or  determined  the  qualifications  of   an
24        applicant for a license or employment.
25             (k)  Architects'   plans  and  engineers'  technical
26        submissions for projects not constructed or developed  in
27        whole  or  in  part  with  public  funds and for projects
28        constructed or developed with public funds, to the extent
29        that disclosure would compromise security.
30             (l)  Library   circulation   and    order    records
31        identifying library users with specific materials.
32             (m)  Minutes  of meetings of public bodies closed to
33        the public as provided in the Open Meetings Act until the
34        public body makes the minutes  available  to  the  public
 
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 1        under Section 2.06 of the Open Meetings Act.
 2             (n)  Communications  between  a  public  body and an
 3        attorney or auditor representing  the  public  body  that
 4        would  not  be  subject  to  discovery in litigation, and
 5        materials prepared or compiled by or for a public body in
 6        anticipation  of  a  criminal,  civil  or  administrative
 7        proceeding upon the request of an attorney  advising  the
 8        public  body,  and  materials  prepared  or compiled with
 9        respect to internal audits of public bodies.
10             (o)  Information received by a primary or  secondary
11        school,  college  or  university under its procedures for
12        the evaluation  of  faculty  members  by  their  academic
13        peers.
14             (p)  Administrative    or    technical   information
15        associated with  automated  data  processing  operations,
16        including   but   not   limited  to  software,  operating
17        protocols,  computer  program  abstracts,  file  layouts,
18        source  listings,  object  modules,  load  modules,  user
19        guides,  documentation  pertaining  to  all  logical  and
20        physical  design  of   computerized   systems,   employee
21        manuals,  and  any  other information that, if disclosed,
22        would jeopardize the security of the system or  its  data
23        or the security of materials exempt under this Section.
24             (q)  Documents  or  materials relating to collective
25        negotiating  matters  between  public  bodies  and  their
26        employees  or  representatives,  except  that  any  final
27        contract or agreement shall be subject to inspection  and
28        copying.
29             (r)  Drafts,  notes,  recommendations  and memoranda
30        pertaining to the financing and marketing transactions of
31        the public body. The records of ownership,  registration,
32        transfer, and exchange of municipal debt obligations, and
33        of   persons  to  whom  payment  with  respect  to  these
34        obligations is made.
 
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 1             (s)  The records, documents and information relating
 2        to  real  estate  purchase   negotiations   until   those
 3        negotiations have been completed or otherwise terminated.
 4        With regard to a parcel involved in a pending or actually
 5        and  reasonably  contemplated  eminent  domain proceeding
 6        under  Article  VII  of  the  Code  of  Civil  Procedure,
 7        records,  documents  and  information  relating  to  that
 8        parcel shall be exempt except as  may  be  allowed  under
 9        discovery  rules  adopted  by the Illinois Supreme Court.
10        The records, documents and information relating to a real
11        estate sale shall be exempt until a sale is consummated.
12             (t)  Any and all proprietary information and records
13        related to the operation  of  an  intergovernmental  risk
14        management  association or self-insurance pool or jointly
15        self-administered  health  and  accident  cooperative  or
16        pool.
17             (u)  Information    concerning    a     university's
18        adjudication   of   student   or  employee  grievance  or
19        disciplinary cases, to the extent that  disclosure  would
20        reveal  the  identity  of  the  student  or  employee and
21        information concerning any public body's adjudication  of
22        student  or  employee  grievances  or disciplinary cases,
23        except for the final outcome of the cases.
24             (v)  Course materials or research materials used  by
25        faculty members.
26             (w)  Information  related  solely  to  the  internal
27        personnel rules and practices of a public body.
28             (x)  Information   contained   in   or   related  to
29        examination, operating, or condition reports prepared by,
30        on behalf of, or for the use of a public body responsible
31        for  the   regulation   or   supervision   of   financial
32        institutions or insurance companies, unless disclosure is
33        otherwise required by State law.
34             (y)  Information   the   disclosure   of   which  is
 
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 1        restricted under Section 5-108 of  the  Public  Utilities
 2        Act.
 3             (z)  Manuals  or instruction to staff that relate to
 4        establishment or collection of liability  for  any  State
 5        tax  or that relate to investigations by a public body to
 6        determine violation of any criminal law.
 7             (aa)  Applications, related documents,  and  medical
 8        records    received    by    the    Experimental    Organ
 9        Transplantation   Procedures   Board   and  any  and  all
10        documents or other records prepared by  the  Experimental
11        Organ  Transplantation  Procedures  Board  or  its  staff
12        relating to applications it has received.
13             (bb)  Insurance  or  self  insurance  (including any
14        intergovernmental risk  management  association  or  self
15        insurance   pool)   claims,   loss   or  risk  management
16        information, records, data, advice or communications.
17             (cc)  Information and records held by the Department
18        of  Public  Health  and  its  authorized  representatives
19        relating  to  known  or  suspected  cases   of   sexually
20        transmissible  disease  or any information the disclosure
21        of  which  is  restricted  under  the  Illinois  Sexually
22        Transmissible Disease Control Act.
23             (dd)  Information  the  disclosure   of   which   is
24        exempted under Section 30 of the Radon Industry Licensing
25        Act.
26             (ee)  Firm  performance evaluations under Section 55
27        of the Architectural,  Engineering,  and  Land  Surveying
28        Qualifications Based Selection Act.
29             (ff)  Security  portions  of  system  safety program
30        plans, investigation reports, surveys, schedules,  lists,
31        data,  or information compiled, collected, or prepared by
32        or  for  the  Regional  Transportation  Authority   under
33        Section 2.11 of the Regional Transportation Authority Act
34        or  the  State  of  Missouri  under  the Bi-State Transit
 
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 1        Safety Act.
 2             (gg)  Information  the  disclosure   of   which   is
 3        restricted  and exempted under Section 50 of the Illinois
 4        Prepaid Tuition Act.
 5             (hh)  Information  the  disclosure   of   which   is
 6        exempted under Section 80 of the State Gift Ban Act.
 7             (ii)  Beginning  July 1, 1999, (hh) information that
 8        would disclose or might lead to the disclosure of  secret
 9        or confidential information, codes, algorithms, programs,
10        or  private keys intended to be used to create electronic
11        or  digital  signatures  under  the  Electronic  Commerce
12        Security Act.
13        (2)  This  Section  does  not  authorize  withholding  of
14    information or limit  the  availability  of  records  to  the
15    public,  except  as  stated  in  this  Section  or  otherwise
16    provided in this Act.
17    (Source:  P.A.  90-262,  eff.  7-30-97; 90-273, eff. 7-30-97;
18    90-546, eff. 12-1-97;  90-655,  eff.  7-30-98;  90-737,  eff.
19    1-1-99; 90-759, eff. 7-1-99; revised 9-8-98.)

20        Section  10.   The  Criminal  Code  of 1961 is amended by
21    adding Sections 31A-2 and 31A-3 as follows:

22        (720 ILCS 5/31A-2 new)
23        Sec.  31A-2.  Visitor  to   Department   of   Corrections
24    facility; false identification.
25        (a)  It  is  unlawful  for  any visitor, other than a law
26    enforcement officer  or  correctional  officer,  to  a  penal
27    institution  of  the Department of Corrections to use a false
28    identification card or alias to  gain  access  to  the  penal
29    institution.
30        The  Department  shall  be  permitted  to use a biometric
31    device to determine identity.
32        (b)  Sentence.  A person who  violates  this  Section  is
 
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 1    guilty of a Class 4 felony.

 2        (720 ILCS 5/31A-3 new)
 3        Sec.   31A-3.  Criminal  offenses  in furtherance of gang
 4    activities.
 5        (a)  A criminal offense in furtherance of gang activities
 6    that is committed in a penal institution, on the grounds of a
 7    penal  institution,  or  within  1,000  feet   of   a   penal
 8    institution shall be punished as an offense that is one grade
 9    higher than the penalty imposed for the offense.
10        (b)  For purposes of this Section:
11             (1)  "Gang"  has  the  meaning  ascribed  to  it  in
12        Section  10  of the Illinois Streetgang Terrorism Omnibus
13        Prevention Act.
14             (2)  "One  grade  higher"  means  that  a  petty  or
15        business  offense  shall  be  punished  as  a   Class   C
16        misdemeanor, a Class C misdemeanor shall be punished as a
17        Class  B  misdemeanor,  a  Class  B  misdemeanor shall be
18        punished as a Class A misdemeanor, a Class A  misdemeanor
19        shall  be  punished as a Class 4 felony, a Class 4 felony
20        as a Class 3 felony, a  Class  3  felony  as  a  Class  2
21        felony,  a  Class 2 felony as a Class 1 felony, a Class 1
22        felony as a Class X felony, and a Class X felony or first
23        degree murder, if the death penalty is not imposed, as  a
24        sentence of natural life imprisonment.

25        Section  15.   The  Code of Criminal Procedure of 1963 is
26    amended by adding Section 115-21 as follows:

27        (725 ILCS 5/115-21 new)
28        Sec. 115-21.  Prima facie evidence.
29        (a)  It is prima facie evidence that a person committed a
30    Class A misdemeanor violation of Section 4  of  the  Cannabis
31    Control  Act  if  he  or  she  is an inmate of a correctional
 
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 1    institution of  the  Department  of  Corrections  and  tested
 2    positive for cannabis.
 3        (b)  It is prima facie evidence that a person committed a
 4    Class  4  felony  violation  of  Section  402 of the Illinois
 5    Controlled Substances Act if he or she  is  an  inmate  of  a
 6    correctional institution of the Department of Corrections and
 7    tested positive for a controlled substance.

 8        Section  20.  The  Unified Code of Corrections is amended
 9    by changing  Sections  3-4-3,  3-5-1,  3-6-2,  3-6-3,  3-7-2,
10    3-8-7,  3-12-2,  3-12-5,  3-12-7, 5-4-1, 5-5-6, and 5-8-4 and
11    adding  Sections  3-2-10,  3-2-11,  3-7-2.5  and  3-12-15  as
12    follows:

13        (730 ILCS 5/3-2-10 new)
14        Sec. 3-2-10.  Prison Oversight Commission.
15        (a)  There is created the  Prison  Oversight  Commission.
16    The  Commission  shall  consist  of  4 members of the General
17    Assembly, one each appointed by the President of the  Senate,
18    the  Minority  Leader of the Senate, the Speaker of the House
19    of Representatives, and the Minority Leader of the  House  of
20    Representatives.
21        (b)  The  members  of  the  Commission shall choose their
22    chair and such other officers as they deem appropriate.
23        (c)  The Commission shall have power to:
24             (1)  hire permanent staff;
25             (2)  expend  appropriations  made  by  the   General
26        Assembly  for  the purpose of carrying out its powers and
27        duties;
28             (3)  hold hearings, issue subpoenas, and compel  the
29        attendance of witnesses at those hearings;
30             (4)  visit  and  obtain  access  to institutions and
31        facilities of the Department of Corrections.
32        (d)(1)  The office  of  the  Executive  Director  of  the
 
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 1    Prison  Oversight  Commission  is  created  within the Prison
 2    Oversight Commission.
 3        (2)  The  principal  executive  officer  of  the   Prison
 4    Oversight  Commission  is the Executive Director who shall be
 5    appointed by and serve at the pleasure of the Commission.
 6        (3)  The  Commission  shall  establish   procedures   for
 7    approving  the  budget  of  the  office,  for expending funds
 8    thereof, and for the employment of personnel for  the  office
 9    who are subject to the approval by the House and Senate.
10        (4) (i)  The  Executive  Director  may investigate, under
11    procedures established by  the  Commission,  subject  to  the
12    ongoing  approval  of  the  Commission  which may include the
13    investigation of an administrative act which is alleged to be
14    contrary   to   law,   contrary   to   departmental   policy,
15    unaccompanied by an adequate statement or reason, or based on
16    irrelevant, immaterial, or erroneous grounds.
17        (ii)  Subject  to  approval  of   the   Commission,   the
18    Executive  Director  shall establish procedures for receiving
19    and processing complaints, conducting investigations, setting
20    up hearings for the Commission, and  reporting  the  findings
21    resulting from any investigations to the Commission.
22        (5) (i)  Upon  request,  the  Executive Director shall be
23    given access to all information, records,  and  documents  in
24    the  possession  of the Department which the Commission deems
25    necessary in an investigation.
26        (ii)  Upon  request  of  the  Commission,  the  Executive
27    Director shall be granted entrance to inspect at any time any
28    premises under the control of the Department.
29        (6)  The Commission may hold a  hearing.  The  Commission
30    may  administer  oaths,  subpoena  witnesses, and examine the
31    books  and  records  of  the  Department  or  of  a   person,
32    partnership, or corporation involved, in a matter which is or
33    was  a  proper  subject  of  investigation  by  the Executive
34    Director under this Act.
 
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 1        (7)  The Executive Director shall maintain  secrecy  with
 2    respect to all matters and the identities of the complainants
 3    or  persons  from whom information is acquired, except so far
 4    as disclosures may  be  necessary  to  enable  the  Executive
 5    Director  to  perform the duties of the office and to support
 6    any recommendations resulting from an investigation.
 7        (8)  The Executive Director shall prepare a report of the
 8    findings of all investigations and  make  recommendations  to
 9    the Commission.
10        (9)  The   Executive   Director   shall   submit  to  the
11    Commission and the General Assembly an annual report  on  the
12    conduct  of the office and any other reports requested by the
13    Commission on the conduct of the office.
14        (10) (i)  A complainant shall not be penalized in any way
15    by an official or the Department as  a  result  of  filing  a
16    complaint  or  cooperating with the Executive Director or the
17    Commission in investigating a complaint.
18        (ii)  A person or the Department  shall  not  hinder  the
19    lawful  actions of the Executive Director or employees of the
20    office, or wilfully refuse to comply with lawful  request  of
21    the office.
22        (11)  As used in this Section:
23             (i)  "Administrative   act"   includes   an  action,
24        omission, decision, recommendation,  practice,  or  other
25        procedure of the Department.
26             (ii)  "Commission"   means   the   Prison  Oversight
27        Commission established under Section 3-2-10 of this Code.
28             (iii)  "Department"   means   the   Department    of
29        Corrections.
30             (iv)  "Office"  means  the  Office  of the Executive
31        Director created under this Section.
32             (v)  "Executive  Director"   means   the   Executive
33        Director of the Prison Oversight Commission.
34             (vi)  "Prisoner"  means  a  person  committed  to or
 
                            -14-               LRB9104510RCks
 1        under the jurisdiction of the Department.
 2             (vii)  "Official" means an official or  employee  of
 3        the Department of Corrections.

 4        (730 ILCS 5/3-2-11 new)
 5        Sec. 3-2-11.  Gang Control Unit.
 6        (a)  There   is   created   within   the   Department  of
 7    Corrections a Gang Control Unit to develop new  programs  and
 8    to  coordinate  existing  programs  for  the control of gangs
 9    within State  Correctional  facilities.   Upon  request,  the
10    Executive  Director shall be given access to all information,
11    records, and documents in the possession of the Gang  Control
12    Unit   which   the   Commission   deems   necessary   in   an
13    investigation.    Any  reports  shall  be  forwarded  to  the
14    Commission. In addition,  the  Gang  Control  Unit  shall  be
15    responsible  for  working  with  the  Adult  Division and the
16    Juvenile  Division  to  monitor  the  effectiveness  of  gang
17    control programs.
18        (b)  There is created an advisory committee to  the  Gang
19    Control  Unit.   The  Advisory  Committee  shall consist of 8
20    members, 2 each appointed by the  President  of  the  Senate,
21    Minority  Leader  of  the  Senate,  Speaker  of  the House of
22    Representatives, and the Minority  Leader  of  the  House  of
23    Representatives.    A   chair   shall  be  elected  from  the
24    membership of the Committee.  Members of the Committee  shall
25    have  had  at  least  5 years of experience in the control of
26    gangs while working in the fields  of  penology,  corrections
27    work,  law  enforcement,  sociology, law education, or social
28    work.  The members of the  Advisory  Committee  shall  review
29    current  Department  programs that seek to eliminate gangs in
30    correctional facilities, shall research gang control programs
31    in  other  state  and  federal  facilities,  and  shall  make
32    recommendations  to  the  Gang  Control  Unit  regarding  new
33    programs  aimed  at  reducing   gang   influence   in   State
 
                            -15-               LRB9104510RCks
 1    correctional  facilities.  Each member of the Committee shall
 2    receive $200 for each meeting of the Committee and  shall  be
 3    reimbursed  for  expenses  incurred to attend meetings of the
 4    Advisory Committee.

 5        (730 ILCS 5/3-4-3) (from Ch. 38, par. 1003-4-3)
 6        Sec. 3-4-3.  Funds and Property of Persons Committed.
 7        (a)  The Department shall  establish  accounting  records
 8    with accounts for each person who has or receives money while
 9    in  an institution or facility of the Department and it shall
10    allow the withdrawal and disbursement of money by the  person
11    under  rules  and regulations of the Department. Any interest
12    or other income from moneys deposited with the Department by
13    a resident of the Juvenile Division in excess of  $200  shall
14    accrue to the individual's account, or in balances up to $200
15    shall   accrue  to  the  Residents'  Benefit  Fund.   For  an
16    individual  in  an  institution  or  facility  of  the  Adult
17    Division the interest shall accrue to the Residents'  Benefit
18    Fund.   The  Department  shall disburse all moneys so held no
19    later than the person's final discharge from the  Department.
20    Moneys  in  the  account  of  a  committed person who files a
21    lawsuit determined frivolous under Article XXII of  the  Code
22    of  Civil  Procedure  shall be deducted to pay for the filing
23    fees and cost of the suit as provided in  that  Article.  The
24    Department  shall  under  rules  and  regulations  record and
25    receipt  all  personal  property  not  allowed  to  committed
26    persons. The Department shall return  such  property  to  the
27    individual no later than the person's release on parole.
28        (b)  Any  money  held  in  accounts  of committed persons
29    separated  from  the  Department  by  death,  discharge,   or
30    unauthorized  absence  and  unclaimed  for a period of 1 year
31    thereafter by the person or his legal representative shall be
32    transmitted to the State Treasurer who shall deposit it  into
33    the  General  Revenue  Fund. Articles of personal property of
 
                            -16-               LRB9104510RCks
 1    persons so separated may be sold or used by the Department if
 2    unclaimed for a period  of  1  year  for  the  same  purpose.
 3    Clothing,  if  unclaimed  within  30  days,  may  be  used or
 4    disposed of as determined by the Department.
 5        (c)  Profits on sales from  commissary  stores  shall  be
 6    expended  by  the  Department  for  the  special  benefit  of
 7    committed  persons  which shall include but not be limited to
 8    the advancement of inmate payrolls, for the  special  benefit
 9    of  employees,  and  for  the advancement or reimbursement of
10    employee travel, provided that amounts expended for employees
11    shall not exceed the amount of  profits  derived  from  sales
12    made  to employees by such commissaries, as determined by the
13    Department.
14        (d)  The Department  shall  confiscate  any  unauthorized
15    currency  found in the possession of a committed person.  The
16    Department shall transmit the  confiscated  currency  to  the
17    State Treasurer who shall deposit it into the General Revenue
18    Fund.
19        (e)  The  Department shall restrict the personal property
20    of committed persons.  Committed persons may be authorized to
21    possess the following:
22             (1)  A Department approved storage box;
23             (2)  Legal materials;
24             (3)  Any approved reading  materials  that  can  fit
25        into the approved storage box;
26             (4)  Hygiene products including, but not limited to,
27        soap,    comb,   shampoo,   shaving   cream,   deodorant,
28        toothbrush, toothpaste, and female hygiene products;
29             (5)  Religious symbols, including  but  not  limited
30        to,  medallions,  scapula, headgear, and prayer beads not
31        to exceed $50 in value and 2 inches in height;
32             (6)  A watch not to exceed $100 in value;
33             (7)  A wedding ring not to  exceed  $100  in  value,
34        unless authorized by the Department;
 
                            -17-               LRB9104510RCks
 1             (8)  Equipment   items  including  headphones,  fan,
 2        television, radio,  cassette  player,  walkman,  electric
 3        shaver,   calculator,   typewriter,   and  nightlight  as
 4        authorized by the Department;
 5             (9)  Clothing and footwear;
 6             (10)  Approved commissary items;
 7             (11)  Bedding and linens;
 8             (12)  Medical and dental items  including,  but  not
 9        limited to, dentures, eyeglasses, and inhalers;
10             (13)  Court ordered property;
11             (14)  Other  property  items  as  authorized  by the
12        Department all  of  which  must  fit  into  a  Department
13        approved  storage  box  except  for  items  described  in
14        clauses (2), (8), (11), and (12) of this subsection (e).
15    (Source: P.A. 89-689, eff. 12-31-96; 90-505, eff. 8-19-97.)

16        (730 ILCS 5/3-5-1) (from Ch. 38, par. 1003-5-1)
17        Sec. 3-5-1. Master Record File.
18        (a)  The  Department  shall maintain a master record file
19    on each person committed  to  it,  which  shall  contain  the
20    following information:
21             (1)  all information from the committing court;
22             (2)  reception summary;
23             (3)  evaluation    and    assignment   reports   and
24        recommendations;
25             (4)  reports as to program assignment and progress;
26             (5)  reports   of   disciplinary   infractions   and
27        disposition;
28             (6)  any parole plan;
29             (7)  any parole reports;
30             (8)  the date and circumstances of final  discharge;
31        and  any  other  pertinent  data  concerning the person's
32        background,    conduct,    associations    and     family
33        relationships  as  may  be  required by the Department. A
 
                            -18-               LRB9104510RCks
 1        current summary index shall be maintained  on  each  file
 2        which  shall  include  the person's known active and past
 3        gang affiliations and ranks.
 4        (b)  All files shall be confidential and access shall  be
 5    limited  to  authorized  personnel  of  the  Department,  law
 6    enforcement  agencies, probation officers, State's Attorneys,
 7    and the court. Personnel of other  correctional,  welfare  or
 8    law enforcement agencies may have access to files under rules
 9    and  regulations of the Department. The Department shall keep
10    a record of all outside personnel who have access  to  files,
11    the files reviewed, any file material copied, and the purpose
12    of  access.  If  the  Department or the Prisoner Review Board
13    makes a determination  under  this  Code  which  affects  the
14    length  of  the  period  of  confinement  or  commitment, the
15    committed person and his counsel shall be advised of  factual
16    information  relied  upon  by the Department or Board to make
17    the determination, provided  that  the  Department  or  Board
18    shall  not  be  required  to advise a person committed to the
19    Juvenile Division any such information which in  the  opinion
20    of  the  Department  or  Board  would  be  detrimental to his
21    treatment or rehabilitation.
22        (c)  The master file  shall  be  maintained  at  a  place
23    convenient  to  its  use  by  personnel  of the Department in
24    charge of the person. When custody of a person is transferred
25    from the  Department  to  another  department  or  agency,  a
26    summary  of  the  file  shall  be  forwarded to the receiving
27    agency  with  such  other  information  required  by  law  or
28    requested by the agency under rules and  regulations  of  the
29    Department.
30        (d)  The master file of a person no longer in the custody
31    of  the Department shall be placed on inactive status and its
32    use shall be restricted subject to rules and  regulations  of
33    the Department.
34        (e)  All  public  agencies  may  make  available  to  the
 
                            -19-               LRB9104510RCks
 1    Department   on   request  any  factual  data  not  otherwise
 2    privileged as a matter of law in their possession in  respect
 3    to individuals committed to the Department.
 4    (Source: P.A. 89-688, eff. 6-1-97; 89-689, eff. 12-31-96.)

 5        (730 ILCS 5/3-6-2) (from Ch. 38, par. 1003-6-2)
 6        Sec. 3-6-2.  Institutions and Facility Administration.
 7        (a)  Each  institution  and  facility  of  the Department
 8    shall be  administered  by  a  chief  administrative  officer
 9    appointed  by  the  Director.  A chief administrative officer
10    shall  be  responsible  for  all  persons  assigned  to   the
11    institution  or  facility.  The  chief administrative officer
12    shall administer the  programs  of  the  Department  for  the
13    custody and treatment  of such persons.
14        (b)  The  chief  administrative  officer  shall have such
15    assistants as the Department may assign.
16        (c)  The Director or Assistant Director  shall  have  the
17    emergency  powers to temporarily transfer individuals without
18    formal procedures to any State, county, municipal or regional
19    correctional or detention  institution  or  facility  in  the
20    State,   subject   to   the   acceptance  of  such  receiving
21    institution or  facility,  or  to  designate  any  reasonably
22    secure  place in the State as such an institution or facility
23    and to make transfers thereto. However, transfers made  under
24    emergency  powers  shall  be  reviewed as soon as practicable
25    under Article 8, and shall be subject to Section 5-905 of the
26    Juvenile Court Act of 1987.  This Section shall not apply  to
27    transfers  to  the  Department  of  Human  Services which are
28    provided for under Section 3-8-5 or Section 3-10-5.
29        (d)  The Department shall  provide  educational  programs
30    for  all  committed  persons  so  that  all  persons  have an
31    opportunity to attain the achievement level equivalent to the
32    completion of the twelfth grade in the public  school  system
33    in  this  State.  Other  higher levels of attainment shall be
 
                            -20-               LRB9104510RCks
 1    encouraged and professional instruction shall  be  maintained
 2    wherever  possible.  The Department may establish programs of
 3    mandatory education and may establish rules  and  regulations
 4    for  the  administration of such programs. A person committed
 5    to the Department who,  during  the  period  of  his  or  her
 6    incarceration,   participates   in   an  educational  program
 7    provided by  or  through  the  Department  and  through  that
 8    program  is  awarded  or  earns the number of hours of credit
 9    required for the award of  an  associate,  baccalaureate,  or
10    higher   degree   from   a  community  college,  college,  or
11    university located in Illinois  shall  reimburse  the  State,
12    through  the  Department, for the costs incurred by the State
13    in providing that person during his or her incarceration with
14    the education that qualifies him or her for the award of that
15    degree.  The costs for which reimbursement is required  under
16    this  subsection  shall  be  determined  and  computed by the
17    Department  under  rules  and  regulations  that   it   shall
18    establish for that purpose.  However, interest at the rate of
19    6%  per  annum shall be charged on the balance of those costs
20    from time to time remaining unpaid,  from  the  date  of  the
21    person's  parole,  mandatory  supervised  release, or release
22    constituting a final termination of his or her commitment  to
23    the Department until paid.
24        (e)  A  person committed to the Department who becomes in
25    need of medical or surgical treatment  but  is  incapable  of
26    giving consent thereto shall receive such medical or surgical
27    treatment  by  the chief administrative officer consenting on
28    the person's behalf. Before the chief administrative  officer
29    consents,  he  or  she shall obtain the advice of one or more
30    physicians licensed to practice medicine in all its  branches
31    in this State.  If such physician or physicians advise:
32             (1)  that immediate medical or surgical treatment is
33        required  relative  to  a  condition threatening to cause
34        death, damage  or  impairment  to  bodily  functions,  or
 
                            -21-               LRB9104510RCks
 1        disfigurement; and
 2             (2)  that  the  person  is  not  capable  of  giving
 3        consent  to  such  treatment;  the  chief  administrative
 4        officer  may  give  consent  for such medical or surgical
 5        treatment, and such consent shall be  deemed  to  be  the
 6        consent  of  the  person for all purposes, including, but
 7        not limited to, the authority of a physician to give such
 8        treatment.
 9        (f)  In the event that the person requires  medical  care
10    and  treatment  at  a  place  other  than  the institution or
11    facility,  the  person  may  be   removed   therefrom   under
12    conditions prescribed by the Department. The Department shall
13    require  the  committed  person  receiving  medical or dental
14    services on a non-emergency basis to pay a $2  co-payment  to
15    the  Department for each visit for medical or dental services
16    at a place other  than  the  institution  or  facility.   The
17    amount   of  each  co-payment  shall  be  deducted  from  the
18    committed person's individual account. A committed person who
19    is indigent is exempt from the $2 co-payment and is  entitled
20    to  receive medical or dental services on the same basis as a
21    committed person  who  is  financially  able  to  afford  the
22    co-payment.
23        (g)  Any  person  having  sole  custody of a child at the
24    time of commitment or any woman giving birth to a child after
25    her  commitment,  may  arrange  through  the  Department   of
26    Children  and  Family  Services for suitable placement of the
27    child outside of the Department of Corrections. The  Director
28    of the Department of Corrections may determine that there are
29    special  reasons why the child should continue in the custody
30    of the mother until the child is 6 years old.
31        (h)  The Department  may  provide  Family  Responsibility
32    Services  which  may  consist  of,  but not be limited to the
33    following:
34             (1)  family advocacy counseling;
 
                            -22-               LRB9104510RCks
 1             (2)  parent self-help group;
 2             (3)  parenting skills training;
 3             (4)  parent and child overnight program;
 4             (5)  parent  and  child  reunification   counseling,
 5        either  separately  or  together,  preceding the inmate's
 6        release; and
 7             (6)  a prerelease reunification  staffing  involving
 8        the   family    advocate,  the  inmate  and  the  child's
 9        counselor, or both and the inmate.
10        (i)  Prior to  the  release  of  any  inmate  who  has  a
11    documented  history  of  intravenous  drug  use, and upon the
12    receipt  of  that  inmate's  written  informed  consent,  the
13    Department shall provide for the testing of such  inmate  for
14    infection  with  human  immunodeficiency  virus (HIV) and any
15    other identified causative agent of acquired immunodeficiency
16    syndrome (AIDS). The testing provided under  this  subsection
17    shall consist of an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA)
18    test  or  such  other test as may be approved by the Illinois
19    Department of Public Health. If the test result is  positive,
20    the  Western  Blot  Assay  or more reliable confirmatory test
21    shall be administered. All inmates tested in accordance  with
22    the  provisions  of  this  subsection  shall be provided with
23    pre-test  and  post-test  counseling.   Notwithstanding   any
24    provision  of this subsection to the contrary, the Department
25    shall not be required to conduct the testing  and  counseling
26    required  by this subsection unless sufficient funds to cover
27    all costs of such testing and counseling are appropriated for
28    that purpose by the General Assembly.
29        (j)  The  Department   shall   establish   policies   and
30    procedures  to  prevent  the  hoarding  or  nonmedical use of
31    medications   which   the   Department   determines   to   be
32    particularly dangerous or likely to be  diverted  from  their
33    intended purpose.  Those procedures can include, but need not
34    be  limited  to,  inspection  of the consumption of unit dose
 
                            -23-               LRB9104510RCks
 1    drugs or the crushing of medications, or both.
 2        (k)  Every committed person  shall  be  tested  6  months
 3    prior  to  being  released  from  a Department institution or
 4    facility for infection with the human immunodeficiency  virus
 5    (HIV)  or  any  other  identified causative agent of acquired
 6    immunodeficiency syndrome  (AIDS).   Any  such  medical  test
 7    shall  be  performed  only  by appropriately licensed medical
 8    practitioners and may include an analysis of any body  fluids
 9    as  well  as  an  examination of the committed person's body.
10    The Department  shall  report  as  required  by  law  to  the
11    Department  of  Public  Health  or  other  agencies as may be
12    required.  A statistical summary of all HIV  positives  shall
13    be  submitted to the Commission annually.  Any inmate testing
14    positive shall be  celled  singly  with  other  HIV  positive
15    inmates.
16        (l)  Every  committed  person  shall  be  tested  for the
17    presence of drugs at least once per year.  In addition, there
18    shall also be a random selection of additional inmates to  be
19    tested for drugs.
20    (Source:  P.A.  89-507,  eff.  7-1-97;  89-659,  eff. 1-1-97;
21    90-14, eff. 7-1-97; 90-590, eff. 1-1-99.)

22        (730 ILCS 5/3-6-3) (from Ch. 38, par. 1003-6-3)
23        Sec. 3-6-3.  Rules and Regulations for Early Release.
24             (a)(1)  The   Department   of   Corrections    shall
25        prescribe  rules and regulations for the early release on
26        account of good  conduct  of  persons  committed  to  the
27        Department  which  shall  be  subject  to  review  by the
28        Prisoner Review Board.
29             (2)  The rules  and  regulations  on  early  release
30        shall  provide,  with respect to offenses committed on or
31        after June 19, 1998 the effective date of this amendatory
32        Act of 1998, the following:
33                  (i)  that a prisoner who is serving a  term  of
 
                            -24-               LRB9104510RCks
 1             imprisonment  for  first degree murder shall receive
 2             no good conduct credit and shall  serve  the  entire
 3             sentence imposed by the court;
 4                  (ii)  that  a  prisoner  serving a sentence for
 5             attempt to commit first degree murder,  solicitation
 6             of   murder,   solicitation   of  murder  for  hire,
 7             intentional homicide of an unborn  child,  predatory
 8             criminal  sexual  assault  of  a  child,  aggravated
 9             criminal  sexual  assault,  criminal sexual assault,
10             aggravated kidnapping,  aggravated  battery  with  a
11             firearm,  heinous  battery,  aggravated battery of a
12             senior citizen, or aggravated  battery  of  a  child
13             shall  receive no more than 4.5 days of good conduct
14             credit for each month of  his  or  her  sentence  of
15             imprisonment; and
16                  (iii)  that  a  prisoner serving a sentence for
17             home invasion, armed robbery,  aggravated  vehicular
18             hijacking,  aggravated  discharge  of  a firearm, or
19             armed violence with a category I weapon or  category
20             II  weapon,  when  the  court has made and entered a
21             finding, pursuant to  subsection  (c-1)  of  Section
22             5-4-1  of  this  Code,  that  the conduct leading to
23             conviction for the enumerated  offense  resulted  in
24             great bodily harm to a victim, shall receive no more
25             than  4.5 days of good conduct credit for each month
26             of his or her sentence of imprisonment.
27             (2.1)  For all offenses, other than those enumerated
28        in subdivision (a)(2) committed on or after June 19, 1998
29         the effective date of this amendatory Act of  1998,  and
30        other than the offense of reckless homicide as defined in
31        subsection  (e)  of  Section  9-3 of the Criminal Code of
32        1961 committed on or after January 1, 1999, the rules and
33        regulations shall provide that a prisoner who is  serving
34        a  term  of  imprisonment  shall  receive one day of good
 
                            -25-               LRB9104510RCks
 1        conduct credit for each day of his  or  her  sentence  of
 2        imprisonment  or  recommitment  under Section 3-3-9. Each
 3        day of good conduct credit shall reduce by  one  day  the
 4        prisoner's  period  of imprisonment or recommitment under
 5        Section 3-3-9.
 6             (2.2)  A prisoner serving a  term  of  natural  life
 7        imprisonment  or  a  prisoner  who  has been sentenced to
 8        death shall receive no good conduct credit.
 9             (2.3)  The rules and regulations  on  early  release
10        shall  provide  that a prisoner who is serving a sentence
11        for reckless homicide as defined  in  subsection  (e)  of
12        Section  9-3 of the Criminal Code of 1961 committed on or
13        after January 1, 1999 shall receive no more than 4.5 days
14        of good conduct credit for  each  month  of  his  or  her
15        sentence of imprisonment.
16             (3)  The  rules  and  regulations shall also provide
17        that the Director may award up  to  180  days  additional
18        good  conduct  credit for meritorious service in specific
19        instances as the Director deems proper;  except  that  no
20        more  than 90 days of good conduct credit for meritorious
21        service shall be awarded to any prisoner who is serving a
22        sentence for conviction of first degree murder,  reckless
23        homicide  while  under  the  influence  of alcohol or any
24        other drug, aggravated kidnapping, kidnapping,  predatory
25        criminal  sexual  assault of a child, aggravated criminal
26        sexual assault, criminal sexual assault,  deviate  sexual
27        assault,  aggravated  criminal  sexual  abuse, aggravated
28        indecent liberties with a child, indecent liberties  with
29        a  child,  child pornography, heinous battery, aggravated
30        battery of a spouse, aggravated battery of a spouse  with
31        a  firearm,  stalking,  aggravated  stalking,  aggravated
32        battery  of  a child, endangering the life or health of a
33        child, cruelty to  a  child,  or  narcotic  racketeering.
34        Notwithstanding  the  foregoing,  good conduct credit for
 
                            -26-               LRB9104510RCks
 1        meritorious service shall not be awarded on a sentence of
 2        imprisonment imposed for conviction of: (i)  one  of  the
 3        offenses   enumerated  in  subdivision  (a)(2)  when  the
 4        offense is committed on or after June 19,  1998  or  (ii)
 5        reckless homicide as defined in subsection (e) of Section
 6        9-3  of  the  Criminal  Code  of 1961 when the offense is
 7        committed on or after January 1, 1999 the effective  date
 8        of this amendatory Act of 1998.
 9             (4)  The  rules  and  regulations shall also provide
10        that the good conduct  credit  accumulated  and  retained
11        under  paragraph  (2.1) of subsection (a) of this Section
12        by any inmate during specific periods of  time  in  which
13        such  inmate  is  engaged  full-time  in  substance abuse
14        programs,   correctional   industry    assignments,    or
15        educational  programs  provided  by  the Department under
16        this  paragraph  (4)  and  satisfactorily  completes  the
17        assigned program as determined by the  standards  of  the
18        Department,  shall  be multiplied by a factor of 1.25 for
19        program participation before August 11, 1993 and 1.50 for
20        program participation on or after that date.  However, no
21        inmate shall be eligible for the additional good  conduct
22        credit  under this paragraph (4) while assigned to a boot
23        camp, mental health unit, or electronic detention, or  if
24        convicted of an offense enumerated in paragraph (a)(2) of
25        this Section that is committed on or after June 19, 1998
26        the  effective date of this amendatory Act of 1998, or if
27        convicted of reckless homicide as defined  in  subsection
28        (e)  of  Section  9-3 of the Criminal Code of 1961 if the
29        offense is committed on or  after  January  1,  1999,  or
30        first  degree  murder,  a Class X felony, criminal sexual
31        assault,  felony  criminal   sexual   abuse,   aggravated
32        criminal sexual abuse, aggravated battery with a firearm,
33        or any predecessor or successor offenses with the same or
34        substantially the same elements, or any inchoate offenses
 
                            -27-               LRB9104510RCks
 1        relating  to  the foregoing offenses.  No inmate shall be
 2        eligible for the additional  good  conduct  credit  under
 3        this  paragraph  (4)  who  (i)  has  previously  received
 4        increased  good  conduct  credit under this paragraph (4)
 5        and has subsequently been convicted of a felony, or  (ii)
 6        has  previously  served  more  than one prior sentence of
 7        imprisonment  for  a  felony  in  an  adult  correctional
 8        facility.
 9             Educational,   vocational,   substance   abuse   and
10        correctional industry programs under which  good  conduct
11        credit may be increased under this paragraph (4) shall be
12        evaluated  by  the  Department on the basis of documented
13        standards.  The Department shall report  the  results  of
14        these   evaluations  to  the  Governor  and  the  General
15        Assembly by September 30th of  each  year.   The  reports
16        shall  include data relating to the recidivism rate among
17        program participants.
18             Availability of these programs shall be  subject  to
19        the  limits  of  fiscal  resources  appropriated  by  the
20        General  Assembly  for  these purposes.  Eligible inmates
21        who are denied immediate admission shall be placed  on  a
22        waiting   list   under   criteria   established   by  the
23        Department. The inability of any inmate to become engaged
24        in any such programs by reason  of  insufficient  program
25        resources  or  for any other reason established under the
26        rules and regulations of  the  Department  shall  not  be
27        deemed  a  cause  of action under which the Department or
28        any employee or agent of the Department shall  be  liable
29        for damages to the inmate.
30             (5)  Whenever  the  Department  is  to  release  any
31        inmate earlier than it otherwise would because of a grant
32        of  good  conduct credit for meritorious service given at
33        any time during  the  term,  the  Department  shall  give
34        reasonable advance notice of the impending release to the
 
                            -28-               LRB9104510RCks
 1        State's  Attorney  of the county where the prosecution of
 2        the inmate took place.
 3        (b)  Whenever a person is or  has  been  committed  under
 4    several  convictions,  with separate sentences, the sentences
 5    shall be  construed  under  Section  5-8-4  in  granting  and
 6    forfeiting of good time.
 7        (c)  The Department shall prescribe rules and regulations
 8    for  revoking  good conduct credit, or suspending or reducing
 9    the rate of accumulation of good conduct credit for  specific
10    rule   violations,  during  imprisonment.   These  rules  and
11    regulations shall provide that no  inmate  may  be  penalized
12    more  than  one  year  of  good  conduct  credit  for any one
13    infraction.
14        When the Department seeks to revoke,  suspend  or  reduce
15    the  rate  of accumulation of any good conduct credits for an
16    alleged infraction of  its  rules,  it  shall  bring  charges
17    therefor  against  the  prisoner  sought to be so deprived of
18    good conduct credits before  the  Prisoner  Review  Board  as
19    provided  in  subparagraph  (a)(4)  of  Section 3-3-2 of this
20    Code, if the amount of credit at issue  exceeds  30  days  or
21    when  during  any  12  month period, the cumulative amount of
22    credit revoked exceeds 30 days except where the infraction is
23    committed or discovered within 60 days of scheduled  release.
24    In  those  cases, the Department of Corrections may revoke up
25    to 30 days of good conduct credit. The Board may subsequently
26    approve the revocation of additional good conduct credit,  if
27    the  Department seeks to revoke good conduct credit in excess
28    of 30 days.  However, the Board shall  not  be  empowered  to
29    review  the Department's decision with respect to the loss of
30    30 days of good conduct credit within any calendar  year  for
31    any  prisoner  or  to  increase any penalty beyond the length
32    requested by the Department.
33        The  Director  of  the  Department  of  Corrections,   in
34    appropriate  cases,  may  restore  up to 30 days good conduct
 
                            -29-               LRB9104510RCks
 1    credits  which  have  been  revoked,  suspended  or  reduced;
 2    provided, that no more than 50% of lost good  conduct  credit
 3    may  be restored.  Any restoration of good conduct credits in
 4    excess of 30 days shall be subject to review by the  Prisoner
 5    Review Board. However, the Board may not restore good conduct
 6    credit in excess of the amount requested by the Director.  No
 7    more  than 50% of lost good conduct credit may be restored by
 8    the Board.
 9        Nothing contained in  this  Section  shall  prohibit  the
10    Prisoner  Review  Board  from  ordering,  pursuant to Section
11    3-3-9(a)(3)(i)(B), that a prisoner serve up to  one  year  of
12    the  sentence imposed by the court that was not served due to
13    the accumulation of good conduct credit.
14        (d)  If a lawsuit is filed by a prisoner in  an  Illinois
15    or  federal  court  against  the  State,  the  Department  of
16    Corrections,  or the Prisoner Review Board, or against any of
17    their officers or employees, and the court makes  a  specific
18    finding  that a pleading, motion, or other paper filed by the
19    prisoner is frivolous, the Department  of  Corrections  shall
20    conduct  a  hearing  to revoke up to 180 days of good conduct
21    credit by bringing charges against the prisoner sought to  be
22    deprived  of  the  good  conduct  credits before the Prisoner
23    Review Board as provided in subparagraph  (a)(8)  of  Section
24    3-3-2  of  this Code. If the prisoner has not accumulated 180
25    days of good conduct credit at the time of the finding,  then
26    the  Prisoner Review Board may revoke all good conduct credit
27    accumulated by the prisoner.
28        For purposes of this subsection (d):
29             (1)  "Frivolous" means that a pleading,  motion,  or
30        other  filing which purports to be a legal document filed
31        by a prisoner in his or her lawsuit meets any or  all  of
32        the following criteria:
33                  (A)  it  lacks  an arguable basis either in law
34             or in fact;
 
                            -30-               LRB9104510RCks
 1                  (B)  it is being  presented  for  any  improper
 2             purpose,  such  as to harass or to cause unnecessary
 3             delay  or  needless  increase   in   the   cost   of
 4             litigation;
 5                  (C)  the  claims,  defenses,  and  other  legal
 6             contentions  therein  are  not warranted by existing
 7             law or by a nonfrivolous argument for the extension,
 8             modification, or reversal of  existing  law  or  the
 9             establishment of new law;
10                  (D)  the    allegations   and   other   factual
11             contentions do not have evidentiary support  or,  if
12             specifically  so  identified, are not likely to have
13             evidentiary support after a  reasonable  opportunity
14             for further investigation or discovery; or
15                  (E)  the denials of factual contentions are not
16             warranted  on  the  evidence,  or if specifically so
17             identified, are not reasonably based on  a  lack  of
18             information or belief.
19             (2)  "Lawsuit"  means a petition for post-conviction
20        relief  under  Article  122  of  the  Code  of   Criminal
21        Procedure  of 1963, a motion pursuant to Section 116-3 of
22        the Code of Criminal Procedure of 1963, a  habeas  corpus
23        action  under Article X of the Code of Civil Procedure or
24        under federal law (28 U.S.C. 2254), a petition for  claim
25        under  the  Court  of  Claims  Act or an action under the
26        federal Civil Rights Act (42 U.S.C. 1983).
27        (e)  Nothing in this amendatory Act of 1998  affects  the
28    validity of Public Act 89-404.  and other than the offense of
29    reckless homicide as defined in subsection (e) of Section 9-3
30    of  the  Criminal  Code  of  1961  committed  on or after the
31    effective date of this amendatory Act  of  1998,  (2.3)   The
32    rules  and  regulations on early release shall provide that a
33    prisoner who is serving sentence  for  reckless  homicide  as
34    defined in subsection (e) of Section 9-3 of the Criminal Code
 
                            -31-               LRB9104510RCks
 1    of  1961  committed  on  or  after the effective date of this
 2    amendatory Act of 1998 shall receive no more than 4.5 days of
 3    good conduct credit for each month of his or her sentence  of
 4    imprisonment.:  (i)  or  (ii) reckless homicide as defined in
 5    subsection (e) of Section 9-3 of the Criminal  Code  of  1961
 6    when  the offense is committed on or after the effective date
 7    of this amendatory Act of 1998 or if  convicted  of  reckless
 8    homicide  as  defined in subsection (e) of Section 9-3 of the
 9    Criminal Code of 1961 if the offense is committed on or after
10    the effective date of this amendatory Act of 1998,
11    (Source: P.A. 90-592, eff.  6-19-98;  90-593,  eff.  6-19-98;
12    90-655, eff. 7-30-98; 90-740, eff. 1-1-99; revised 11-25-98.)

13        (730 ILCS 5/3-7-2) (from Ch. 38, par. 1003-7-2)
14        Sec. 3-7-2. Facilities.
15        (a)  Except  as  otherwise  provided in subsection (i) of
16    this  Section,  all  institutions  and  facilities   of   the
17    Department  shall  provide every committed person with access
18    to toilet facilities, barber facilities,  bathing  facilities
19    at least once each week, and a library of legal materials.  A
20    committed  person  may have access to and published materials
21    including newspapers and magazines approved by  the  Director
22    that  can  fit  into  the  approved storage box.  A committed
23    person may not receive any materials that the Director  deems
24    pornographic.
25        (b)  (Blank).
26        (c)  Except  as  otherwise  provided in subsection (i) of
27    this  Section,  all  institutions  and  facilities   of   the
28    Department  shall  provide  facilities  for  every  committed
29    person  to  leave  his  cell  for  at least one hour each day
30    unless the chief administrative officer  determines  that  it
31    would  be  harmful  or dangerous to the security or safety of
32    the institution or facility.
33        (d)  Except as otherwise provided in  subsection  (i)  of
 
                            -32-               LRB9104510RCks
 1    this   Section,   all  institutions  and  facilities  of  the
 2    Department  shall  provide  every  committed  person  with  a
 3    wholesome and nutritional diet at regularly scheduled  hours,
 4    drinking  water, Department issued uniforms clothing adequate
 5    for the season, bedding, soap  and  towels  and  medical  and
 6    dental  care.   A  committed  person shall be allowed to wear
 7    only Department issued uniforms except for court hearings  or
 8    medical  reasons.   A  committed  person  shall  not wear any
 9    streetgang colors.  A committed  person  shall  be  issued  a
10    picture identification card.
11        (e)  Except  as  otherwise  provided in subsection (i) of
12    this  Section,  all  institutions  and  facilities   of   the
13    Department  shall  permit  every committed person to send and
14    receive an unlimited number of uncensored letters,  provided,
15    however,  that  the Director may order that mail be inspected
16    and read for reasons of the security, safety or morale of the
17    institution or facility.
18        (f)  Except as otherwise provided in  subsection  (i)  of
19    this  Section,  all of the institutions and facilities of the
20    Department shall permit every  committed  person  to  receive
21    visitors,  except  in case of abuse of the visiting privilege
22    or when the chief administrative officer determines that such
23    visiting would be  harmful  or  dangerous  to  the  security,
24    safety  or  morale of the institution or facility.  The chief
25    administrative officer  shall  have  the  right  to  restrict
26    visitation  to  non-contact  visits  for  reasons  of safety,
27    security,  and  order,  including,  but   not   limited   to,
28    restricting  contact  visits for committed persons engaged in
29    gang activity.  Each visitor to an institution or facility of
30    the Department, including a  vendor,  any  delivery  made  by
31    vendors, and each mail package shall be adequately searched.
32        (g)  All  institutions  and  facilities of the Department
33    shall permit religious ministrations  and  sacraments  to  be
34    available  to  every  committed  person,  but  attendance  at
 
                            -33-               LRB9104510RCks
 1    religious services shall not be required.
 2        (h)  Within   90   days  after  December  31,  1996,  the
 3    Department   shall   prohibit   the    use    of    curtains,
 4    cell-coverings,  or any other matter or object that obstructs
 5    or otherwise impairs the line  of  vision  into  a  committed
 6    person's cell.
 7        (i)  Every committed person who begins his or her term of
 8    incarceration  in  a Department institution or facility shall
 9    for the first 6 months of his or her incarceration be  placed
10    in impact isolation.  During this period of incarceration the
11    committed person shall have only the following privileges:
12             (1)  Personal visitors and phone calls by his or her
13        parents,  spouse,  children,  siblings,  legal guardians,
14        counselors,  attorneys,  clergy,  and   other   religious
15        personnel.   The  committed  person shall be allowed only
16        one phone call per month and one visit to the  commissary
17        per  month;  however, a committed person may have contact
18        visits with a physician, lawyer, and dentist and may make
19        more  than  one  phone  call  per  month  to  contact  an
20        attorney,  physician  or  dentist.   The  Department   of
21        Corrections  shall determine the maximum number of visits
22        and phone calls allowed.  These  visits,  other  than  by
23        attorneys,  physicians, and dentists, shall be no contact
24        visits and must be behind a partition.
25             (2)  Viewing television programs that  are  approved
26        by  the  Director  dealing  with  educational, religious,
27        informational,  or  training  programs.   The   committed
28        person  shall  not  be  allowed  to view entertainment or
29        sports on television.
30             (3)  The committed person  shall  be  permitted  one
31        hour  of  recreation  and hygiene outside his or her cell
32        per day.  A committed person shall be locked  in  his  or
33        her cell for the other 23 hours of each day.
34             (4)  The  committed  person shall only eat in his or
 
                            -34-               LRB9104510RCks
 1        her cell and not in a common mess area or cafeteria.
 2             (5)  A committed person shall  have  access  to  the
 3        prison law library as directed by the Department.
 4             (6)  The  Department  shall  conduct  any  necessary
 5        medical,   dental,   or   psychological   evaluation  and
 6        treatment of the committed person.
 7             (7)  The   Department   shall    determines    which
 8        correctional  institution  or facility a committed person
 9        shall be sent.
10             (8)  Any program approved by the Director  for  drug
11        rehabilitation.
12             (9)  If  a  committed person who is placed in impact
13        isolation  violates  any  of  the  provisions   of   this
14        subsection (i), the 6 month impact isolation period shall
15        begin anew.
16        (j)  The  chief  administrative  officer of each facility
17    and institution of the Department shall keep a log  of  every
18    visit  a committed person makes to the administration offices
19    of the correctional institution or facility.  The  log  shall
20    record (1) each use of the telephone a committed person makes
21    in those offices, (2) who was present, (3) date and time, and
22    (4) length of stay in the office.
23        (k)  Any committed person engaging in activities that are
24    in  furtherance  of  the  criminal  objectives  of  a gang as
25    defined in Section 10 of the  Illinois  Streetgang  Terrorism
26    Omnibus  Prevention  Act  shall be placed in impact isolation
27    and be subject to the restriction imposed by  subsection  (i)
28    of  this Section.  A leader of a gang who is committed to the
29    Department shall be assigned to a maximum  or  super  maximum
30    security prison.
31        (l)  No  committed  person in a maximum security facility
32    or  super  maximum  security  facility  or  on   disciplinary
33    segregation shall be allowed contact visits.
34        (m)  No picnics shall be allowed at any facility.
 
                            -35-               LRB9104510RCks
 1    (Source:  P.A.  89-609,  eff.  1-1-97;  89-659,  eff. 1-1-97;
 2    89-688, eff.  6-1-97;  89-689,  eff.  12-31-96;  90-14,  eff.
 3    7-1-97.)

 4        (730 ILCS 5/3-7-2.5 new)
 5        Sec. 3-7-2.5.  Drug testing in Department facilities.
 6        (a)  Twenty  percent  of all employees and administrative
 7    officers of a Department facility shall  be  randomly  tested
 8    for  the  presence of drugs once per year.  Beginning July 1,
 9    2,000, 50% shall be tested once per year.
10             (1)  Any refusal to take a drug test or  a  positive
11        test shall result in the employee or officer's suspension
12        without pay for 15 days for the first offense.
13             (2)  Any  refusal  to take a drug test or a positive
14        test shall result in the employee or officer's suspension
15        without pay for one month for the second offense.
16             (3)  Any refusal to take a drug test or  a  positive
17        test for a third offense shall result in a dismissal from
18        the Department of Corrections.
19             (4)  Any  employee dismissed from the Department for
20        failure to take a test or  for  a  positive  test  result
21        shall  not  be  rehired for a period of 4 years and shall
22        provide proof of  completion  of  a  drug  rehabilitation
23        program.
24        (b)  Every  person,  including  a correctional officer or
25    administrative officer, entering a Department facility  shall
26    be  searched for drugs and contraband, either in person, by a
27    machine, or by a drug dog.
28        (c)  A  person  observed  committing  a  crime  shall  be
29    referred to the State's Attorney's  Office  for  prosecution.
30    Every  violation  shall  be  reported to the Prison Oversight
31    Commission.
32        (d)  A notice shall be posted at each Department facility
33    that anyone entering the facility can be subject  to  a  body
 
                            -36-               LRB9104510RCks
 1    cavity search.
 2        (e)  Any  person  who refuses to be searched shall not be
 3    allowed to enter the Department facility until he or  she  is
 4    searched.

 5        (730 ILCS 5/3-8-7) (from Ch. 38, par. 1003-8-7)
 6        Sec. 3-8-7. Disciplinary Procedures.)
 7        (a)  All  disciplinary  action  shall  be consistent with
 8    this Chapter.  Rules of behavior and conduct,  the  penalties
 9    for  violation  thereof,  and  the  disciplinary procedure by
10    which such penalties may be imposed  shall  be  available  to
11    committed persons.
12        (b)  (1)  Corporal     punishment     and    disciplinary
13        restrictions on diet,  medical  or  sanitary  facilities,
14        mail or access to legal materials are prohibited.
15             (2)  (Blank).
16             (3)  (Blank).
17        (c)  Review  of  disciplinary  action  imposed under this
18    Section shall be provided by means of the grievance procedure
19    under  Section  3-8-8.   The  Department  shall   provide   a
20    disciplined  person  with a review of his or her disciplinary
21    action in a timely manner as required by law.
22        (d)  All  institutions  and  facilities  of   the   Adult
23    Division  shall  establish,  subject  to  the approval of the
24    Director, procedures for hearing  disciplinary  cases  except
25    those   that  may  involve  the  imposition  of  disciplinary
26    segregation and isolation; the loss of good time credit under
27    Section 3-6-3 or eligibility to earn good time credit.
28        (e)  In  disciplinary  cases  which   may   involve   the
29    imposition  of  disciplinary  segregation  and isolation, the
30    loss of good time credit or eligibility  to  earn  good  time
31    credit,  the Director shall establish disciplinary procedures
32    consistent with the following principles:
33             (1)  Any  person   or   persons   who   initiate   a
 
                            -37-               LRB9104510RCks
 1        disciplinary  charge against a person shall not determine
 2        the  disposition  of  the  charge.   The   Director   may
 3        establish  one  or  more  disciplinary boards to hear and
 4        determine charges.
 5             (2)  Any committed person charged with  a  violation
 6        of  Department rules of behavior shall be given notice of
 7        the  charge  including  a  statement  of  the  misconduct
 8        alleged and of the  rules  this  conduct  is  alleged  to
 9        violate.
10             (3)  Any person charged with a violation of rules is
11        entitled  to  a  hearing  on that charge at which time he
12        shall have an opportunity to appear  before  and  address
13        the person or persons deciding the charge.
14             (4)  The   person   or   persons   determining   the
15        disposition  of the charge may also summon to testify any
16        witnesses or other persons with relevant knowledge of the
17        incident.
18             (5)  If the charge is sustained, the person  charged
19        is entitled to a written statement of the decision by the
20        persons  determining  the disposition of the charge which
21        shall  include  the  basis  for  the  decision  and   the
22        disciplinary action, if any, to be imposed.
23             (6)  (Blank).
24        (f)  Every  disciplinary action taken against a committed
25    person shall be numbered.  The  Department  shall  provide  a
26    detailed  description of every disciplinary disposition which
27    shall be submitted to the Prison Oversight Commission.
28        (g)  Any initial report of a crime shall be sent  to  the
29    Attorney  General's  Office and the Internal Affairs Division
30    of the  Department.   The  Internal  Affairs  Division  shall
31    investigate  the incident and shall report the disposition to
32    the Attorney General's office.  The Attorney General's Office
33    shall provide  quarterly  reports  to  the  Prison  Oversight
34    Commission of all dispositions.
 
                            -38-               LRB9104510RCks
 1        (h)  A report of a civil suit filed by a committed person
 2    against  the  Department  shall  be transmitted to the Prison
 3    Oversight Commission.
 4    (Source: P.A. 89-688, eff. 6-1-97.)

 5        (730 ILCS 5/3-12-2) (from Ch. 38, par. 1003-12-2)
 6        Sec. 3-12-2. Types of employment.
 7        (a)  The Department may establish,  maintain,  train  and
 8    employ  committed persons in industries for the production of
 9    articles, materials or  supplies  for  resale  to  authorized
10    purchasers.  It  may  also employ committed persons on public
11    works, buildings and property, the  conservation  of  natural
12    resources  of  the  State,  anti-pollution  or  environmental
13    control  projects,  or  for  other  public  purposes, for the
14    maintenance of the Department's buildings and properties  and
15    for  the  production  of  food  or  other necessities for its
16    programs.  The Department may establish, maintain and  employ
17    committed  persons  in the production of vehicle registration
18    plates.  A  committed  person's  labor  shall  not  be  sold,
19    contracted  or  hired out by the Department except under this
20    Article and under Section 3-9-2.
21        (b)  Works of art, literature, handicraft, embroidery, or
22    other items produced by committed persons as an avocation and
23    not as a product of a work program of the Department  may  be
24    sold to the public under rules and regulations established by
25    the  Department.   All  products  must  comply with copyright
26    laws.  The cost of selling such products may be deducted from
27    the proceeds, and  the  balance  shall  be  credited  to  the
28    person's  account  under Section 3-4-3.  The Department shall
29    notify the Attorney General of the existence of any  proceeds
30    which  it  believes should be applied towards a satisfaction,
31    in whole or in part, of the person's incarceration costs.
32    (Source: P.A. 88-669, eff. 11-29-94; 88-679, eff. 7-1-95.)
 
                            -39-               LRB9104510RCks
 1        (730 ILCS 5/3-12-5) (from Ch. 38, par. 1003-12-5)
 2        Sec. 3-12-5. Compensation.   Persons  performing  a  work
 3    assignment under subsection (a) of Section 3-12-2 may receive
 4    wages   under  rules  and  regulations of the Department.  In
 5    determining  rates  of  compensation,  the  Department  shall
 6    consider the effort, skill and economic  value  of  the  work
 7    performed.     Compensation  may  be  given  to  persons  who
 8    participate in other programs  of  the  Department.   Of  the
 9    compensation  earned  pursuant  to this Section, at least 50%
10    shall be held in an account administered by the Department to
11    be transmitted to the committed person upon release from  the
12    Department   facility   a   portion,  as  determined  by  the
13    Department, shall be used to offset the cost of the committed
14    person's incarceration.  If  the  committed  person  files  a
15    lawsuit  determined  frivolous under Article XXII of the Code
16    of Civil Procedure, 50% of the compensation shall be used  to
17    offset  the  filing fees and costs of the lawsuit as provided
18    in that Article until all fees and costs are  paid  in  full.
19    All  other  wages  shall  be  deposited  in  the individual's
20    account under rules and regulations of the  Department.   The
21    Department   shall   notify   the  Attorney  General  of  any
22    compensation applied towards a satisfaction, in whole  or  in
23    part, of the person's incarceration costs.
24    (Source: P.A. 90-505, eff. 8-19-97.)

25        (730 ILCS 5/3-12-7) (from Ch. 38, par. 1003-12-7)
26        Sec.  3-12-7.  Purchasers; Allocation. (a) The State, its
27    political units, its agencies and public  institutions  shall
28    purchase   from   the  Department  all  articles,  materials,
29    industry related services, food stuffs, and supplies required
30    by  them  which  are  produced  or  manufactured  by  persons
31    confined in institutions and facilities  of  the  Department.
32    Political  units  do not include political action committees.
33    The Secretary of  State  may  purchase  from  the  Department
 
                            -40-               LRB9104510RCks
 1    vehicle  registration  plates produced by persons confined in
 2    institutions and facilities of the Department.  The Secretary
 3    shall determine reasonable specifications and prices of  such
 4    vehicle   registration   plates   as  agreed  upon  with  the
 5    Department. Not-for-profit corporations chartered in Illinois
 6    or other States may purchase such goods and services.   Units
 7    of  the  Federal  government and units of government in other
 8    States  may  also  purchase  such  goods  and  services.  All
 9    entities which contract with the State, its political  units,
10    its  agencies,  its  public  institutions  or  not-for-profit
11    corporations  chartered  in  Illinois,  may purchase goods or
12    services  from  the  Department  which  are   used   in   the
13    performance  of  such  contracts.   The  Department shall not
14    donate any products to a political action committee.  Nothing
15    shall prohibit the Department from bidding on portions  of  a
16    State   contract  which  are  subcontracted  by  the  primary
17    contractor.  The public may purchase  crushed  limestone  and
18    lime  dust  for  agricultural  and horticultural purposes and
19    hardwood.  The  Department  may  also  sell  grain  from  its
20    agricultural  operations  on  the  open  market.   All  other
21    articles, materials, industry related services,  food  stuffs
22    and  supplies  which  are produced or manufactured by persons
23    confined in institutions and  facilities  of  the  Department
24    shall be available for sale on the open market.
25        (b)  Allocation  of  goods shall be made in the following
26    manner:
27        (1)  first, for needs of the Department;
28        (2)  second, for  the  State,  its  agencies  and  public
29    institutions;
30        (3)  third, for those political subdivisions of the State
31    and  their  agencies  in  which  the producing institution or
32    facility of the Department is located;
33        (4)  fourth, for  other  political  subdivisions  of  the
34    State and their agencies and public institutions;
 
                            -41-               LRB9104510RCks
 1        (5)  fifth, for sale on the open market;
 2        (6)  sixth,  for not for profit corporations chartered in
 3    Illinois;
 4        (7)  seventh, for units of government in other states;
 5        (8)  eighth, for units of the Federal government;
 6        (9)  ninth, for not-for-profit organizations chartered in
 7    other states;
 8        (10)  tenth, all other permitted purchasers.
 9        (c)  Exemption  from  required  purchases  shall  be   on
10    certification  of the Department that the items requested are
11    not then available.
12    (Source: P.A. 86-450.)

13        (730 ILCS 5/3-12-15 new)
14        Sec. 3-12-15.  Special Task Force on Prison Industries.
15        (a)  There is created a  Special  Task  Force  on  Prison
16    Industries. The Special Task Force on Prison Industries shall
17    be  composed of 15 members appointed by the Governor from the
18    Department of Corrections;  corporations;  unions;  community
19    leaders;  business;  non-profit  groups and retail merchants.
20    The Task Force shall:
21             (i)  Find products that can be produced by committed
22        persons, but do not take jobs from local communities.
23             (ii)  Find  community  projects  for  the  committed
24        persons  to  help   local   communities   and   religious
25        institutions.
26             (iii)  Develop  and  implement  a  plan  for  prison
27        industry expansion in Illinois.
28             (iv)  Identify  appropriate profitable markets which
29        prison industries may develop or expand, or both.
30             (v)  Resolve potential conflicts to  expansion  such
31        as  union  objections, existing laws and regulations, and
32        private sector competition.
33             (vi)  Review current State  and  private  non-profit
 
                            -42-               LRB9104510RCks
 1        agencies'  purchasing  as  it  relates to prison industry
 2        goods and services.
 3             (vii)  Assist  in  reducing  the  tax   burden   for
 4        escalating correctional costs and related costs.
 5             (viii)  Increase  public,  business, and legislative
 6        awareness of prison industry and to solicit their support
 7        for expansion.
 8             (ix)  Examine  and  make  recommendations  regarding
 9        public or private joint ventures.
10        (b)  Members of the Task Force shall receive a  per  diem
11    for  their services as provided by law and shall report their
12    findings to the Governor and General Assembly  by  March  15,
13    2001.

14        (730 ILCS 5/5-4-1) (from Ch. 38, par. 1005-4-1)
15        Sec. 5-4-1.  Sentencing Hearing.
16        (a)  Except  when  the  death  penalty  is  sought  under
17    hearing procedures otherwise specified, after a determination
18    of  guilt,  a  hearing  shall be held to impose the sentence.
19    However, prior to the imposition of sentence on an individual
20    being sentenced for an offense based  upon  a  charge  for  a
21    violation of Section 11-501 of the Illinois Vehicle Code or a
22    similar  provision  of a local ordinance, the individual must
23    undergo a professional evaluation to determine if an  alcohol
24    or  other  drug abuse problem exists and the extent of such a
25    problem.  Programs  conducting  these  evaluations  shall  be
26    licensed  by  the  Department of Human Services.  However, if
27    the individual is not a resident of Illinois, the court  may,
28    in its discretion, accept an evaluation from a program in the
29    state  of  such  individual's residence. The court may in its
30    sentencing order approve an eligible defendant for  placement
31    in  a  Department of Corrections impact incarceration program
32    as provided in Section 5-8-1.1.  At  the  hearing  the  court
33    shall:
 
                            -43-               LRB9104510RCks
 1             (1)  consider  the  evidence,  if any, received upon
 2        the trial;
 3             (2)  consider any presentence reports;
 4             (3)  consider the financial impact of  incarceration
 5        based  on  the  financial impact statement filed with the
 6        clerk of the court by the Department of Corrections;
 7             (4)  consider evidence and  information  offered  by
 8        the parties in aggravation and mitigation;
 9             (5)  hear arguments as to sentencing alternatives;
10             (6)  afford  the defendant the opportunity to make a
11        statement in his own behalf;
12             (7)  afford the victim  of  a  violent  crime  or  a
13        violation of Section 11-501 of the Illinois Vehicle Code,
14        or a similar provision of a local ordinance, committed by
15        the   defendant  the  opportunity  to  make  a  statement
16        concerning the impact on the victim and to offer evidence
17        in aggravation or mitigation; provided that the statement
18        and evidence offered in aggravation  or  mitigation  must
19        first  be  prepared  in  writing  in conjunction with the
20        State's Attorney before it may be presented orally at the
21        hearing. Any sworn testimony offered  by  the  victim  is
22        subject  to  the  defendant's right to cross-examine. All
23        statements and evidence offered under this paragraph  (7)
24        shall become part of the record of the court; and
25             (8)  in   cases  of  reckless  homicide  afford  the
26        victim's spouse, guardians, parents  or  other  immediate
27        family members an opportunity to make oral statements.
28        (b)  All  sentences  shall  be imposed by the judge based
29    upon his independent assessment  of  the  elements  specified
30    above  and  any  agreement  as  to  sentence  reached  by the
31    parties.  The judge who presided at the trial  or  the  judge
32    who  accepted  the  plea  of guilty shall impose the sentence
33    unless he is no longer sitting as  a  judge  in  that  court.
34    Where  the judge does not impose sentence at the same time on
 
                            -44-               LRB9104510RCks
 1    all defendants  who  are  convicted  as  a  result  of  being
 2    involved  in  the  same offense, the defendant or the State's
 3    Attorney may advise the sentencing court of  the  disposition
 4    of any other defendants who have been sentenced.
 5        (c)  In imposing a sentence for a violent crime or for an
 6    offense  of  operating  or  being  in  physical  control of a
 7    vehicle while under the influence of alcohol, any other  drug
 8    or any combination thereof, or a similar provision of a local
 9    ordinance,  when such offense resulted in the personal injury
10    to someone other than the defendant, the  trial  judge  shall
11    specify  on  the record the particular evidence, information,
12    factors in mitigation and aggravation or other  reasons  that
13    led to his sentencing determination. The full verbatim record
14    of  the  sentencing  hearing shall be filed with the clerk of
15    the court and shall be a public record.
16        (c-1)  In  imposing  a  sentence  for  the   offense   of
17    aggravated   kidnapping  for  ransom,  home  invasion,  armed
18    robbery, aggravated vehicular hijacking, aggravated discharge
19    of a firearm, or armed violence with a category I  weapon  or
20    category  II  weapon, the trial judge shall make a finding as
21    to whether the conduct leading to conviction for the  offense
22    resulted  in  great  bodily harm to a victim, and shall enter
23    that finding and the basis for that finding in the record.
24        (c-2)  If the defendant is  sentenced  to  prison,  other
25    than  when  a  sentence  of  natural  life  imprisonment or a
26    sentence of death is imposed, at the  time  the  sentence  is
27    imposed the judge shall state on the record in open court the
28    approximate  period  of  time  the  defendant  will  serve in
29    custody according to the then  current  statutory  rules  and
30    regulations  for  early  release  found  in Section 3-6-3 and
31    other related provisions of this  Code.   This  statement  is
32    intended  solely to inform the public, has no legal effect on
33    the defendant's actual release, and may not be relied  on  by
34    the defendant on appeal.
 
                            -45-               LRB9104510RCks
 1        The  judge's statement, to be given after pronouncing the
 2    sentence, other than when the sentence is imposed for one  of
 3    the offenses enumerated in paragraph (a)(3) of Section 3-6-3,
 4    shall include the following:
 5        "The purpose of this statement is to inform the public of
 6    the  actual  period of time this defendant is likely to spend
 7    in prison as a result of this sentence.  The actual period of
 8    prison time served is determined by the statutes of  Illinois
 9    as  applied  to  this  sentence by the Illinois Department of
10    Corrections and the Illinois Prisoner Review Board.  In  this
11    case,  assuming the defendant receives all of his or her good
12    conduct credit, the period of estimated actual custody is ...
13    years and ... months, less up to  180  days  additional  good
14    conduct  credit  for  meritorious service.  If the defendant,
15    because of his or her own misconduct  or  failure  to  comply
16    with  the  institutional  regulations, does not receive those
17    credits, the actual time served in  prison  will  be  longer.
18    The  defendant  may  also  receive an additional one-half day
19    good  conduct  credit  for  each  day  of  participation   in
20    vocational,   industry,   substance  abuse,  and  educational
21    programs as provided for by Illinois statute."
22        When the sentence is imposed  for  one  of  the  offenses
23    enumerated  in  paragraph (a)(3) of Section 3-6-3, other than
24    when  the  sentence  is  imposed  for  one  of  the  offenses
25    enumerated in paragraph (a)(2) of Section 3-6-3 committed  on
26    or  after June 19, 1998 the effective date of this amendatory
27    Act of 1998, and other than when the sentence is imposed  for
28    reckless homicide as defined in subsection (e) of Section 9-3
29    of  the Criminal Code of 1961 if the offense was committed on
30    or after January 1, 1999, the judge's statement, to be  given
31    after pronouncing the sentence, shall include the following:
32        "The purpose of this statement is to inform the public of
33    the  actual  period of time this defendant is likely to spend
34    in prison as a result of this sentence.  The actual period of
 
                            -46-               LRB9104510RCks
 1    prison time served is determined by the statutes of  Illinois
 2    as  applied  to  this  sentence by the Illinois Department of
 3    Corrections and the Illinois Prisoner Review Board.  In  this
 4    case,  assuming the defendant receives all of his or her good
 5    conduct credit, the period of estimated actual custody is ...
 6    years and ... months, less up  to  90  days  additional  good
 7    conduct  credit  for  meritorious service.  If the defendant,
 8    because of his or her own misconduct  or  failure  to  comply
 9    with  the  institutional  regulations, does not receive those
10    credits, the actual time served in  prison  will  be  longer.
11    The  defendant  may  also  receive an additional one-half day
12    good  conduct  credit  for  each  day  of  participation   in
13    vocational,   industry,   substance  abuse,  and  educational
14    programs as provided for by Illinois statute."
15        When the sentence is imposed  for  one  of  the  offenses
16    enumerated  in  paragraph (a)(2) of Section 3-6-3, other than
17    first degree murder, and the  offense  was  committed  on  or
18    after June 19, 1998 the effective date of this amendatory Act
19    of  1998,  and  when  the  sentence  is  imposed for reckless
20    homicide as defined in subsection (e) of Section 9-3  of  the
21    Criminal  Code  of  1961  if  the offense was committed on or
22    after January 1, 1999, the judge's  statement,  to  be  given
23    after pronouncing the sentence, shall include the following:
24        "The purpose of this statement is to inform the public of
25    the  actual  period of time this defendant is likely to spend
26    in prison as a result of this sentence.  The actual period of
27    prison time served is determined by the statutes of  Illinois
28    as  applied  to  this  sentence by the Illinois Department of
29    Corrections and the Illinois Prisoner Review Board.  In  this
30    case, the defendant is entitled to no more than 4 1/2 days of
31    good  conduct credit for each month of his or her sentence of
32    imprisonment.  Therefore, this defendant will serve at  least
33    85%  of his or her sentence.  Assuming the defendant receives
34    4 1/2 days credit for each month of his or her sentence,  the
 
                            -47-               LRB9104510RCks
 1    period  of  estimated  actual  custody  is  ... years and ...
 2    months.   If  the  defendant,  because  of  his  or  her  own
 3    misconduct  or  failure  to  comply  with  the  institutional
 4    regulations receives lesser credit, the actual time served in
 5    prison will be longer."
 6        When a sentence of  imprisonment  is  imposed  for  first
 7    degree  murder and the offense was committed on or after June
 8    19, 1998 the effective date of this amendatory Act  of  1998,
 9    the  judge's  statement,  to  be  given after pronouncing the
10    sentence, shall include the following:
11        "The purpose of this statement is to inform the public of
12    the actual period of time this defendant is likely  to  spend
13    in prison as a result of this sentence.  The actual period of
14    prison  time served is determined by the statutes of Illinois
15    as applied to this sentence by  the  Illinois  Department  of
16    Corrections  and the Illinois Prisoner Review Board.  In this
17    case, the defendant is not entitled to good  conduct  credit.
18    Therefore,  this  defendant  will  serve  100%  of his or her
19    sentence."
20        (d)  When the defendant is committed to the Department of
21    Corrections, the State's Attorney shall and counsel  for  the
22    defendant may file a statement with the clerk of the court to
23    be  transmitted  to  the department, agency or institution to
24    which the defendant is committed to furnish such  department,
25    agency or institution with the facts and circumstances of the
26    offense  for which the person was committed together with all
27    other factual information accessible to them in regard to the
28    person prior  to  his  commitment  relative  to  his  habits,
29    associates,  gang affiliation, disposition and reputation and
30    any  other  facts  and  circumstances  which  may  aid   such
31    department,  agency or institution during its custody of such
32    person.  The clerk shall within 10 days after  receiving  any
33    such statements transmit a copy to such department, agency or
34    institution and a copy to the other party, provided, however,
 
                            -48-               LRB9104510RCks
 1    that  this  shall  not  be  cause  for delay in conveying the
 2    person to the department, agency or institution to  which  he
 3    has been committed.
 4        (e)  The   clerk   of   the   court   shall   transmit  a
 5    typed-written statement sealed by the court, stamp, order, or
 6    judge's signature to the department, agency  or  institution,
 7    if any, to which the defendant is committed, the following:
 8             (1)  an original or certified copy of a standardized
 9        sentencing  order  signed  by the committing judge, which
10        shall include the name of the defendant, the case number,
11        the  date  of  birth  of  the  defendant,  the  statutory
12        citation of the crime or crimes, and  the  class  of  the
13        crime  or  crimes;  along with other pertinent sentencing
14        information.
15             (1)  the sentence imposed;
16             (2)  any statement by the court  of  the  basis  for
17        imposing the sentence;
18             (3)  any presentence reports;
19             (4)  the number of days, if any, which the defendant
20        has  been  in  custody  and  for  which he is entitled to
21        credit against the sentence, which information  shall  be
22        provided to the clerk by the sheriff;
23             (4.1)  any  finding of great bodily harm made by the
24        court with respect to an offense enumerated in subsection
25        (c-1);
26             (5)  all statements filed under  subsection  (d)  of
27        this Section;
28             (6)  any   medical   or  mental  health  records  or
29        summaries of the defendant;
30             (7)  the  municipality  where  the  arrest  of   the
31        offender  or  the commission of the offense has occurred,
32        and the municipality the offender resided in at the  time
33        of  the commission of the offense where such municipality
34        has a population of more than 25,000 persons;
 
                            -49-               LRB9104510RCks
 1             (8)  any gang membership of the defendant;
 2             (9) (8)  all statements made  and  evidence  offered
 3        under  paragraph  (7)  of subsection (a) of this Section;
 4        and
 5             (10) (9)  all additional  matters  which  the  court
 6        directs the clerk to transmit.
 7        (f)  All  documentation  required to be transmitted under
 8    subsections (d) and (e) of this Section including a statement
 9    of facts shall be provided  to  the  department,  agency,  or
10    institution  to  which the defendant is committed at the time
11    the defendant is transported to that  department,  agency  or
12    institution.    However,  failure  to  provide  documentation
13    required by subsection (d) of this Section shall not be cause
14    for delay in conveying the person to the department,  agency,
15    or institution to which he or she has been committed.
16        (g)  The  Department of Corrections may by rule establish
17    procedures and periodically update any accepted  standardized
18    sentencing  order  to  be  used for Department of Corrections
19    commitments,  as  approved  by   the   Joint   Committee   on
20    Administrative   Rules.   Future  material  changes  must  be
21    approved by the Joint Committee on Administrative Rules.
22        (h)  The Department  of  Corrections  shall  provide  the
23    necessary forms as determined by the Director. and other than
24    when the sentence is imposed for reckless homicide as defined
25    in subsection (e) of Section 9-3 of the Criminal Code of 1961
26    if  the  offense was committed on or after the effective date
27    of this amendatory Act of 1998,  and  when  the  sentence  is
28    imposed for reckless homicide as defined in subsection (e) of
29    Section  9-3  of the Criminal Code of 1961 if the offense was
30    committed on or after the effective date of  this  amendatory
31    Act of 1998,
32    (Source:  P.A.  89-404,  eff.  8-20-95;  89-507, eff. 7-1-97;
33    90-592, eff. 6-19-98;  90-593,  eff.  6-19-98;  90-740,  eff.
34    1-1-99; revised 9-16-98.)
 
                            -50-               LRB9104510RCks
 1        (730 ILCS 5/5-5-6) (from Ch. 38, par. 1005-5-6)
 2        Sec. 5-5-6.  In all convictions for offenses in violation
 3    of the Criminal Code of 1961 in which the person received any
 4    injury  to  their  person or damage to their real or personal
 5    property as a result of the criminal act  of  the  defendant,
 6    the  court  shall  order  restitution  as  provided  in  this
 7    Section.   When the offender is sentenced to make restitution
 8    the Court shall determine the restitution as hereinafter  set
 9    forth:
10             (a)  At   the  sentence  hearing,  the  court  shall
11        determine whether the property may be restored in kind to
12        the possession of the owner or  the  person  entitled  to
13        possession thereof; or whether the defendant is possessed
14        of  sufficient  skill  to  repair  and  restore  property
15        damaged;  or  whether the defendant should be required to
16        make restitution in  cash,  for  out-of-pocket  expenses,
17        damages,   losses,   or   injuries  found  to  have  been
18        proximately caused by the conduct  of  the  defendant  or
19        another  for  whom  the  defendant is legally accountable
20        under the provisions of Article V of the Criminal Code of
21        1961.
22             (b)  In fixing the amount of restitution to be  paid
23        in  cash,  the  court  shall  allow  credit  for property
24        returned in kind, for  property  damages  ordered  to  be
25        repaired by the defendant, and for property ordered to be
26        restored by the defendant; and after granting the credit,
27        the court shall assess the actual out-of-pocket expenses,
28        losses,  damages,  and  injuries  suffered  by the victim
29        named in the charge and any other victims  who  may  also
30        have  suffered  out-of-pocket  expenses, losses, damages,
31        and injuries proximately  caused  by  the  same  criminal
32        conduct of the defendant, and insurance carriers who have
33        indemnified  the  named  victim  or other victims for the
34        out-of-pocket expenses,  losses,  damages,  or  injuries,
 
                            -51-               LRB9104510RCks
 1        provided that in no event shall restitution be ordered to
 2        be paid on account of pain and suffering.  If a defendant
 3        is  placed  on supervision for, or convicted of, domestic
 4        battery,  the  defendant  shall  be   required   to   pay
 5        restitution to any domestic violence shelter in which the
 6        victim  and  any  other family or household members lived
 7        because of the  domestic  battery.   The  amount  of  the
 8        restitution  shall  equal  the  actual  expenses  of  the
 9        domestic  violence  shelter  in providing housing and any
10        other services for the victim and  any  other  family  or
11        household  members living at the shelter.  If a defendant
12        fails to pay restitution in the manner or within the time
13        period specified by the court, the  court  may  enter  an
14        order directing the sheriff to seize any real or personal
15        property  of  a  defendant  to  the  extent  necessary to
16        satisfy the order  of  restitution  and  dispose  of  the
17        property  by public sale.  All proceeds from such sale in
18        excess of the amount of restitution plus court costs  and
19        the  costs of the sheriff in conducting the sale shall be
20        paid to the defendant.
21             (c)  In cases  where  more  than  one  defendant  is
22        accountable for the same criminal conduct that results in
23        out-of-pocket  expenses,  losses,  damages,  or injuries,
24        each defendant shall be ordered to pay restitution in the
25        amount  of  the  total  actual  out-of-pocket   expenses,
26        losses,  damages,  or  injuries to the victim proximately
27        caused by the conduct of all of the  defendants  who  are
28        legally accountable for the offense.
29                  (1)  In  no  event shall the victim be entitled
30             to recover  restitution  in  excess  of  the  actual
31             out-of-pocket    expenses,   losses,   damages,   or
32             injuries, proximately caused by the conduct  of  all
33             of the defendants.
34                  (2)  As  between  the defendants, the court may
 
                            -52-               LRB9104510RCks
 1             apportion  the  restitution  that  is   payable   in
 2             proportion to each co-defendant's culpability in the
 3             commission of the offense.
 4                  (3)  In   the   absence  of  a  specific  order
 5             apportioning the restitution, each  defendant  shall
 6             bear his pro rata share of the restitution.
 7                  (4)  As  between the defendants, each defendant
 8             shall be entitled to a pro  rata  reduction  in  the
 9             total  restitution required to be paid to the victim
10             for  amounts  of  restitution   actually   paid   by
11             co-defendants,  and  defendants  who shall have paid
12             more than their pro rata share shall be entitled  to
13             refunds  to  be  computed by the court as additional
14             amounts are paid by co-defendants.
15             (d)  In instances where a defendant  has  more  than
16        one criminal charge pending against him in a single case,
17        or more than one case, and the defendant stands convicted
18        of  one  or  more charges, a plea agreement negotiated by
19        the State's Attorney and the defendants may  require  the
20        defendant  to make restitution to victims of charges that
21        have been dismissed or which it is contemplated  will  be
22        dismissed  under  the  terms  of  the plea agreement, and
23        under the agreement, the court may impose a  sentence  of
24        restitution  on  the  charge  or  charges  of  which  the
25        defendant  has  been  convicted  that  would  require the
26        defendant  to  make  restitution  to  victims  of   other
27        offenses as provided in the plea agreement.
28             (e)  The  court  may  require the defendant to apply
29        the balance of the cash  bond,  after  payment  of  court
30        costs, and any fine that may be imposed to the payment of
31        restitution.
32             (f)  Taking  into  consideration  the ability of the
33        defendant to  pay,  the  court  shall  determine  whether
34        restitution  shall  be  paid  in  a  single payment or in
 
                            -53-               LRB9104510RCks
 1        installments, and shall fix  a  period  of  time  not  in
 2        excess of 5 years, or if the defendant is incarcerated in
 3        a Department of Corrections facility for a period of time
 4        not   in  excess  of  10  years  following  release,  not
 5        including periods of incarceration, within which  payment
 6        of  restitution  is  to  be paid in full. However, if the
 7        court deems it necessary and in the best interest of  the
 8        victim, the court may extend beyond 5 years the period of
 9        time  within  which  the  payment of restitution is to be
10        paid. If the defendant is ordered to pay restitution  and
11        the  court  orders  that restitution is to be paid over a
12        period greater than 6 months, the court shall order  that
13        the  defendant make monthly payments; the court may waive
14        this requirement of monthly payments only if there  is  a
15        specific finding of good cause for waiver.
16             (g)  The  court  shall,  after  determining that the
17        defendant has the ability to pay, require  the  defendant
18        to pay for the victim's counseling services if:
19                  (1)  the  defendant was convicted of an offense
20             under  Sections  11-19.2,  11-20.1,  12-13,   12-14,
21             12-14.1,  12-15  or  12-16  of  the Criminal Code of
22             1961, or was charged with such an  offense  and  the
23             charge  was reduced to another charge as a result of
24             a  plea  agreement  under  subsection  (d)  of  this
25             Section, and
26                  (2)  the victim was under 18 years  of  age  at
27             the  time  the  offense  was  committed and requires
28             counseling as a result of the offense.
29             The payments shall be made by the defendant  to  the
30        clerk  of  the circuit court and transmitted by the clerk
31        to the appropriate person or agency as  directed  by  the
32        court.   The  order  may require such payments to be made
33        for a period not to exceed 5 years after  sentencing,  or
34        10  years  if  the  defendant  has been incarcerated in a
 
                            -54-               LRB9104510RCks
 1        Department of Corrections facility following release, not
 2        including periods of incarceration.
 3             (h)  The judge may enter an order of withholding  to
 4        collect the amount of restitution owed in accordance with
 5        Part 8 of Article XII of the Code of Civil Procedure.
 6             (i)  A  sentence  of  restitution may be modified or
 7        revoked by the court  if  the  offender  commits  another
 8        offense,  or  the  offender  fails to make restitution as
 9        ordered by the court, but no sentence to make restitution
10        shall be revoked unless the court  shall  find  that  the
11        offender   has   had   the   financial  ability  to  make
12        restitution, and he has wilfully refused to  do  so.   If
13        the  court  shall  find  that the defendant has failed to
14        make restitution and that the failure is not wilful,  the
15        court  may  impose  an  additional  period of time within
16        which to make restitution.  The length of the  additional
17        period  shall  not be more than 2 years.  The court shall
18        retain all of the incidents  of  the  original  sentence,
19        including   the   authority  to  modify  or  enlarge  the
20        conditions, and to revoke or further modify the  sentence
21        if  the  conditions  of  payment  are violated during the
22        additional period.
23             (j)  The procedure upon the filing of a Petition  to
24        Revoke  a  sentence to make restitution shall be the same
25        as the procedures set forth in Section 5-6-4 of this Code
26        governing  violation,  modification,  or  revocation   of
27        Probation, of Conditional Discharge, or of Supervision.
28             (k)  Nothing   contained   in   this  Section  shall
29        preclude the right of any party to  proceed  in  a  civil
30        action  to  recover  for  any damages incurred due to the
31        criminal misconduct of the defendant.
32             (l)  Restitution ordered under  this  Section  shall
33        not be subject to disbursement by the circuit clerk under
34        Section 27.5 of the Clerks of Courts Act.
 
                            -55-               LRB9104510RCks
 1             (m)  A  restitution  order  under  this Section is a
 2        judgment lien in favor of the victim that:
 3                  (1)  Attaches to the  property  of  the  person
 4             subject to the order;
 5                  (2)  May  be  perfected  in  the same manner as
 6             provided in Part 3  of  Article  9  of  the  Uniform
 7             Commercial Code;
 8                  (3)  May  be  enforced  to  satisfy any payment
 9             that is delinquent under the  restitution  order  by
10             the person in whose favor the order is issued or the
11             person's assignee; and
12                  (4)  Expires  in  the same manner as a judgment
13             lien created in a civil proceeding.
14             When  a  restitution  order  is  issued  under  this
15        Section, the issuing court shall send a certified copy of
16        the order to the clerk of the circuit court in the county
17        where the charge was filed.  Upon  receiving  the  order,
18        the  clerk shall enter and index the order in the circuit
19        court judgment docket.
20             (n)  An order of restitution under this Section does
21        not bar a civil action for:
22                  (1)  Damages that the court did not require the
23             person to pay to the victim  under  the  restitution
24             order  but  arise from an injury or property damages
25             that is the basis  of  restitution  ordered  by  the
26             court; and
27                  (2)  Other damages suffered by the victim.
28        The restitution order is not discharged by the completion
29    of the sentence imposed for the offense.
30        A  restitution order under this Section is not discharged
31    by the liquidation of a person's estate  by  a  receiver.   A
32    restitution  order  under this Section may be enforced in the
33    same manner as judgment liens are enforced under Article  XII
34    of the Code of Civil Procedure.
 
                            -56-               LRB9104510RCks
 1        The  provisions  of  Section  2-1303 of the Code of Civil
 2    Procedure, providing for  interest  on  judgments,  apply  to
 3    judgments for restitution entered under this Section.
 4             (o)  A  restitution  order may require the defendant
 5        to pay an amount not to exceed 25%  of  his  or  her  net
 6        income to satisfy the restitution payment.
 7    (Source: P.A.  89-198,  eff.  7-21-95;  89-203, eff. 7-21-95;
 8    89-428, eff. 12-13-95; 89-462,  eff.  5-29-96;  89-689,  eff.
 9    12-31-96; 90-465, eff. 1-1-98.)

10        (730 ILCS 5/5-8-4) (from Ch. 38, par. 1005-8-4)
11        Sec.   5-8-4.    Concurrent   and  Consecutive  Terms  of
12    Imprisonment.
13        (a)  When multiple sentences of imprisonment are  imposed
14    on  a  defendant  at  the  same  time,  or  when  a  term  of
15    imprisonment is imposed on a defendant who is already subject
16    to  sentence  in  this  State  or  in another state, or for a
17    sentence imposed by any district court of the United  States,
18    the  sentences  shall  run  concurrently  or consecutively as
19    determined by the court.  When  a  term  of  imprisonment  is
20    imposed  on  a defendant by an Illinois circuit court and the
21    defendant is subsequently sentenced to a term of imprisonment
22    by another state or by a district court of the United States,
23    the Illinois circuit court which  imposed  the  sentence  may
24    order  that the Illinois sentence be made concurrent with the
25    sentence imposed by the other state or district court of  the
26    United  States. The defendant must apply to the circuit court
27    within 30 days after the defendant's sentence imposed by  the
28    other  state  or  district of the United States is finalized.
29    The court shall not impose consecutive sentences for offenses
30    which were committed as part of a single  course  of  conduct
31    during which there was no substantial change in the nature of
32    the criminal objective, unless, one of the offenses for which
33    defendant  was  convicted was a Class X or Class 1 felony and
 
                            -57-               LRB9104510RCks
 1    the defendant inflicted severe bodily injury,  or  where  the
 2    defendant  was  convicted  of  a  violation of Section 12-13,
 3    12-14, or 12-14.1 of the Criminal  Code  of  1961,  in  which
 4    event  the  court shall enter sentences to run consecutively.
 5    Sentences shall run concurrently unless  otherwise  specified
 6    by the court.
 7        (b)  The  court  shall  not impose a consecutive sentence
 8    except as provided  for  in  subsection  (a)  unless,  having
 9    regard to the nature and circumstances of the offense and the
10    history  and character of the defendant, it is of the opinion
11    that such a term is  required  to  protect  the  public  from
12    further  criminal  conduct  by  the  defendant, the basis for
13    which the court shall set forth in the record; except that no
14    such finding or opinion is required when  multiple  sentences
15    of  imprisonment are imposed on a defendant for offenses that
16    were not committed as part of  a  single  course  of  conduct
17    during which there was no substantial change in the nature of
18    the criminal objective, and one of the offenses for which the
19    defendant  was  convicted was a Class X or Class 1 felony and
20    the defendant inflicted severe bodily  injury,  or  when  the
21    defendant  was  convicted  of  a  violation of Section 12-13,
22    12-14, or 12-14.1 of the Criminal  Code  of  1961,  in  which
23    event the Court shall enter sentences to run consecutively.
24        (c) (1)  For  sentences imposed under law in effect prior
25        to February 1, 1978 the aggregate maximum of  consecutive
26        sentences  shall  not  exceed the maximum term authorized
27        under Section 5-8-1  for  the  2  most  serious  felonies
28        involved.   The  aggregate  minimum period of consecutive
29        sentences shall  not  exceed  the  highest  minimum  term
30        authorized  under  Section  5-8-1  for the 2 most serious
31        felonies involved. When sentenced only for  misdemeanors,
32        a  defendant shall not be consecutively sentenced to more
33        than the maximum for one Class A misdemeanor.
34             (2)  For sentences imposed under the law  in  effect
 
                            -58-               LRB9104510RCks
 1        on   or   after   February  1,  1978,  the  aggregate  of
 2        consecutive sentences for offenses that were committed as
 3        part of a single course of conduct during which there was
 4        no substantial change  in  the  nature  of  the  criminal
 5        objective  shall  not exceed the sum of the maximum terms
 6        authorized under Section 5-8-2 for  the  2  most  serious
 7        felonies involved, but no such limitation shall apply for
 8        offenses  that  were  not  committed  as part of a single
 9        course of conduct during which there was  no  substantial
10        change  in  the  nature  of  the criminal objective. When
11        sentenced only for misdemeanors, a defendant shall not be
12        consecutively sentenced to more than the maximum for  one
13        Class A misdemeanor.
14        (d)  An offender serving a sentence for a misdemeanor who
15    is  convicted of a felony and sentenced to imprisonment shall
16    be transferred to the  Department  of  Corrections,  and  the
17    misdemeanor  sentence shall be merged in and run concurrently
18    with the felony sentence.
19        (e)  In  determining  the  manner  in  which  consecutive
20    sentences of imprisonment, one or more  of  which  is  for  a
21    felony,  will  be served, the Department of Corrections shall
22    treat the offender as though he  had  been  committed  for  a
23    single term with the following incidents:
24             (1)  the  maximum  period  of a term of imprisonment
25        shall consist of the aggregate of  the  maximums  of  the
26        imposed  indeterminate  terms, if any, plus the aggregate
27        of the imposed determinate sentences  for  felonies  plus
28        the  aggregate  of  the imposed determinate sentences for
29        misdemeanors subject to paragraph (c) of this Section;
30             (2)  the parole or mandatory supervised release term
31        shall be as provided in paragraph (e) of Section 5-8-1 of
32        this Code for the most serious of the offenses involved;
33             (3)  the minimum period of imprisonment shall be the
34        aggregate of  the  minimum  and  determinate  periods  of
 
                            -59-               LRB9104510RCks
 1        imprisonment  imposed  by the court, subject to paragraph
 2        (c) of this Section; and
 3             (4)  the offender shall be  awarded  credit  against
 4        the aggregate maximum term and the aggregate minimum term
 5        of  imprisonment  for  all  time served in an institution
 6        since the commission of the offense or offenses and as  a
 7        consequence  thereof  at  the  rate  specified in Section
 8        3-6-3 of this Code.
 9        (f)  A  sentence  of  an  offender   committed   to   the
10    Department  of  Corrections  at the time of the commission of
11    the offense shall be served consecutive to the sentence under
12    which he is held by the Department of  Corrections.  However,
13    in  case  such  offender  shall be sentenced to punishment by
14    death, the sentence shall be executed at  such  time  as  the
15    court may fix without regard to the sentence under which such
16    offender may be held by the Department.
17        (g)  A   sentence  under  Section  3-6-4  for  escape  or
18    attempted escape shall be served  consecutive  to  the  terms
19    under  which  the  offender  is  held  by  the  Department of
20    Corrections.
21        (h)  If a person charged with a felony commits a separate
22    felony while on pre-trial release or in pretrial detention in
23    a county jail facility  or  county  detention  facility,  the
24    sentences  imposed upon conviction of these felonies shall be
25    served consecutively regardless of the  order  in  which  the
26    judgments of conviction are entered.
27        (i)  If a person admitted to bail following conviction of
28    a felony commits a separate felony while free on bond or if a
29    person detained in a county jail facility or county detention
30    facility  following conviction of a felony commits a separate
31    felony while in detention, any sentence following  conviction
32    of  the  separate  felony shall be consecutive to that of the
33    original sentence for which the  defendant  was  on  bond  or
34    detained.
 
                            -60-               LRB9104510RCks
 1        (j)  Notwithstanding  any other provision of this Section
 2    to the contrary, a person convicted  of  a  criminal  offense
 3    committed  as  an  inmate  in  a  Department  of  Corrections
 4    facility  shall be served consecutive to the term under which
 5    the offender is held by the Department of Corrections.
 6    (Source: P.A. 89-428, eff. 12-13-95;  89-462,  eff.  5-29-96;
 7    90-128, eff. 7-22-97.)
 
                            -61-               LRB9104510RCks
 1                                INDEX
 2               Statutes amended in order of appearance
 3    5 ILCS 140/7              from Ch. 116, par. 207
 4    720 ILCS 5/31A-2 new
 5    720 ILCS 5/31A-3 new
 6    725 ILCS 5/115-21 new
 7    730 ILCS 5/3-2-10 new
 8    730 ILCS 5/3-2-11 new
 9    730 ILCS 5/3-4-3          from Ch. 38, par. 1003-4-3
10    730 ILCS 5/3-5-1          from Ch. 38, par. 1003-5-1
11    730 ILCS 5/3-6-2          from Ch. 38, par. 1003-6-2
12    730 ILCS 5/3-6-3          from Ch. 38, par. 1003-6-3
13    730 ILCS 5/3-7-2          from Ch. 38, par. 1003-7-2
14    730 ILCS 5/3-7-2.5 new
15    730 ILCS 5/3-8-7          from Ch. 38, par. 1003-8-7
16    730 ILCS 5/3-12-2         from Ch. 38, par. 1003-12-2
17    730 ILCS 5/3-12-5         from Ch. 38, par. 1003-12-5
18    730 ILCS 5/3-12-7         from Ch. 38, par. 1003-12-7
19    730 ILCS 5/3-12-15 new
20    730 ILCS 5/5-4-1          from Ch. 38, par. 1005-4-1
21    730 ILCS 5/5-5-6          from Ch. 38, par. 1005-5-6
22    730 ILCS 5/5-8-4          from Ch. 38, par. 1005-8-4

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