Public Act 100-1162
 
SB1993 EnrolledLRB100 10121 HEP 20295 b

    AN ACT concerning courts.
 
    Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
represented in the General Assembly:
 
    Section 5. The Juvenile Court Act of 1987 is amended by
changing Sections 1-3, 1-7, 1-8, 1-9, and 5-915 and by adding
Sections 5-920, 5-923, and 5-925 as follows:
 
    (705 ILCS 405/1-3)  (from Ch. 37, par. 801-3)
    (Text of Section before amendment by P.A. 100-689)
    Sec. 1-3. Definitions. Terms used in this Act, unless the
context otherwise requires, have the following meanings
ascribed to them:
    (1) "Adjudicatory hearing" means a hearing to determine
whether the allegations of a petition under Section 2-13, 3-15
or 4-12 that a minor under 18 years of age is abused, neglected
or dependent, or requires authoritative intervention, or
addicted, respectively, are supported by a preponderance of the
evidence or whether the allegations of a petition under Section
5-520 that a minor is delinquent are proved beyond a reasonable
doubt.
    (2) "Adult" means a person 21 years of age or older.
    (3) "Agency" means a public or private child care facility
legally authorized or licensed by this State for placement or
institutional care or for both placement and institutional
care.
    (4) "Association" means any organization, public or
private, engaged in welfare functions which include services to
or on behalf of children but does not include "agency" as
herein defined.
    (4.05) Whenever a "best interest" determination is
required, the following factors shall be considered in the
context of the child's age and developmental needs:
        (a) the physical safety and welfare of the child,
    including food, shelter, health, and clothing;
        (b) the development of the child's identity;
        (c) the child's background and ties, including
    familial, cultural, and religious;
        (d) the child's sense of attachments, including:
            (i) where the child actually feels love,
        attachment, and a sense of being valued (as opposed to
        where adults believe the child should feel such love,
        attachment, and a sense of being valued);
            (ii) the child's sense of security;
            (iii) the child's sense of familiarity;
            (iv) continuity of affection for the child;
            (v) the least disruptive placement alternative for
        the child;
        (e) the child's wishes and long-term goals;
        (f) the child's community ties, including church,
    school, and friends;
        (g) the child's need for permanence which includes the
    child's need for stability and continuity of relationships
    with parent figures and with siblings and other relatives;
        (h) the uniqueness of every family and child;
        (i) the risks attendant to entering and being in
    substitute care; and
        (j) the preferences of the persons available to care
    for the child.
    (4.1) "Chronic truant" shall have the definition ascribed
to it in Section 26-2a of the School Code.
    (5) "Court" means the circuit court in a session or
division assigned to hear proceedings under this Act.
    (6) "Dispositional hearing" means a hearing to determine
whether a minor should be adjudged to be a ward of the court,
and to determine what order of disposition should be made in
respect to a minor adjudged to be a ward of the court.
    (6.5) "Dissemination" or "disseminate" means to publish,
produce, print, manufacture, distribute, sell, lease, exhibit,
broadcast, display, transmit, or otherwise share information
in any format so as to make the information accessible to
others.
    (7) "Emancipated minor" means any minor 16 years of age or
over who has been completely or partially emancipated under the
Emancipation of Minors Act or under this Act.
    (7.03) "Expunge" means to physically destroy the records
and to obliterate the minor's name from any official index,
public record, or electronic database.
    (7.05) "Foster parent" includes a relative caregiver
selected by the Department of Children and Family Services to
provide care for the minor.
    (8) "Guardianship of the person" of a minor means the duty
and authority to act in the best interests of the minor,
subject to residual parental rights and responsibilities, to
make important decisions in matters having a permanent effect
on the life and development of the minor and to be concerned
with his or her general welfare. It includes but is not
necessarily limited to:
        (a) the authority to consent to marriage, to enlistment
    in the armed forces of the United States, or to a major
    medical, psychiatric, and surgical treatment; to represent
    the minor in legal actions; and to make other decisions of
    substantial legal significance concerning the minor;
        (b) the authority and duty of reasonable visitation,
    except to the extent that these have been limited in the
    best interests of the minor by court order;
        (c) the rights and responsibilities of legal custody
    except where legal custody has been vested in another
    person or agency; and
        (d) the power to consent to the adoption of the minor,
    but only if expressly conferred on the guardian in
    accordance with Section 2-29, 3-30, or 4-27.
    (8.1) "Juvenile court record" includes, but is not limited
to:
        (a) all documents filed in or maintained by the
    juvenile court pertaining to a specific incident,
    proceeding, or individual;
        (b) all documents relating to a specific incident,
    proceeding, or individual made available to or maintained
    by probation officers;
        (c) all documents, video or audio tapes, photographs,
    and exhibits admitted into evidence at juvenile court
    hearings; or
        (d) all documents, transcripts, records, reports, or
    other evidence prepared by, maintained by, or released by
    any municipal, county, or State agency or department, in
    any format, if indicating involvement with the juvenile
    court relating to a specific incident, proceeding, or
    individual.
    (8.2) "Juvenile law enforcement record" includes records
of arrest, station adjustments, fingerprints, probation
adjustments, the issuance of a notice to appear, or any other
records or documents maintained by any law enforcement agency
relating to a minor suspected of committing an offense, and
records maintained by a law enforcement agency that identifies
a juvenile as a suspect in committing an offense, but does not
include records identifying a juvenile as a victim, witness, or
missing juvenile and any records created, maintained, or used
for purposes of referral to programs relating to diversion as
defined in subsection (6) of Section 5-105.
    (9) "Legal custody" means the relationship created by an
order of court in the best interests of the minor which imposes
on the custodian the responsibility of physical possession of a
minor and the duty to protect, train and discipline him and to
provide him with food, shelter, education and ordinary medical
care, except as these are limited by residual parental rights
and responsibilities and the rights and responsibilities of the
guardian of the person, if any.
    (9.1) "Mentally capable adult relative" means a person 21
years of age or older who is not suffering from a mental
illness that prevents him or her from providing the care
necessary to safeguard the physical safety and welfare of a
minor who is left in that person's care by the parent or
parents or other person responsible for the minor's welfare.
    (10) "Minor" means a person under the age of 21 years
subject to this Act.
    (11) "Parent" means a father or mother of a child and
includes any adoptive parent. It also includes a person (i)
whose parentage is presumed or has been established under the
law of this or another jurisdiction or (ii) who has registered
with the Putative Father Registry in accordance with Section
12.1 of the Adoption Act and whose paternity has not been ruled
out under the law of this or another jurisdiction. It does not
include a parent whose rights in respect to the minor have been
terminated in any manner provided by law. It does not include a
person who has been or could be determined to be a parent under
the Illinois Parentage Act of 1984 or the Illinois Parentage
Act of 2015, or similar parentage law in any other state, if
that person has been convicted of or pled nolo contendere to a
crime that resulted in the conception of the child under
Section 11-1.20, 11-1.30, 11-1.40, 11-11, 12-13, 12-14,
12-14.1, subsection (a) or (b) (but not subsection (c)) of
Section 11-1.50 or 12-15, or subsection (a), (b), (c), (e), or
(f) (but not subsection (d)) of Section 11-1.60 or 12-16 of the
Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012, or similar
statute in another jurisdiction unless upon motion of any
party, other than the offender, to the juvenile court
proceedings the court finds it is in the child's best interest
to deem the offender a parent for purposes of the juvenile
court proceedings.
    (11.1) "Permanency goal" means a goal set by the court as
defined in subdivision (2) of Section 2-28.
    (11.2) "Permanency hearing" means a hearing to set the
permanency goal and to review and determine (i) the
appropriateness of the services contained in the plan and
whether those services have been provided, (ii) whether
reasonable efforts have been made by all the parties to the
service plan to achieve the goal, and (iii) whether the plan
and goal have been achieved.
    (12) "Petition" means the petition provided for in Section
2-13, 3-15, 4-12 or 5-520, including any supplemental petitions
thereunder in Section 3-15, 4-12 or 5-520.
    (12.1) "Physically capable adult relative" means a person
21 years of age or older who does not have a severe physical
disability or medical condition, or is not suffering from
alcoholism or drug addiction, that prevents him or her from
providing the care necessary to safeguard the physical safety
and welfare of a minor who is left in that person's care by the
parent or parents or other person responsible for the minor's
welfare.
    (12.2) "Post Permanency Sibling Contact Agreement" has the
meaning ascribed to the term in Section 7.4 of the Children and
Family Services Act.
    (12.3) "Residential treatment center" means a licensed
setting that provides 24-hour care to children in a group home
or institution, including a facility licensed as a child care
institution under Section 2.06 of the Child Care Act of 1969, a
licensed group home under Section 2.16 of the Child Care Act of
1969, a secure child care facility as defined in paragraph (18)
of this Section, or any similar facility in another state.
"Residential treatment center" does not include a relative
foster home or a licensed foster family home.
    (13) "Residual parental rights and responsibilities" means
those rights and responsibilities remaining with the parent
after the transfer of legal custody or guardianship of the
person, including, but not necessarily limited to, the right to
reasonable visitation (which may be limited by the court in the
best interests of the minor as provided in subsection (8)(b) of
this Section), the right to consent to adoption, the right to
determine the minor's religious affiliation, and the
responsibility for his support.
    (14) "Shelter" means the temporary care of a minor in
physically unrestricting facilities pending court disposition
or execution of court order for placement.
    (14.05) "Shelter placement" means a temporary or emergency
placement for a minor, including an emergency foster home
placement.
    (14.1) "Sibling Contact Support Plan" has the meaning
ascribed to the term in Section 7.4 of the Children and Family
Services Act.
    (15) "Station adjustment" means the informal handling of an
alleged offender by a juvenile police officer.
    (16) "Ward of the court" means a minor who is so adjudged
under Section 2-22, 3-23, 4-20 or 5-705, after a finding of the
requisite jurisdictional facts, and thus is subject to the
dispositional powers of the court under this Act.
    (17) "Juvenile police officer" means a sworn police officer
who has completed a Basic Recruit Training Course, has been
assigned to the position of juvenile police officer by his or
her chief law enforcement officer and has completed the
necessary juvenile officers training as prescribed by the
Illinois Law Enforcement Training Standards Board, or in the
case of a State police officer, juvenile officer training
approved by the Director of the Department of State Police.
    (18) "Secure child care facility" means any child care
facility licensed by the Department of Children and Family
Services to provide secure living arrangements for children
under 18 years of age who are subject to placement in
facilities under the Children and Family Services Act and who
are not subject to placement in facilities for whom standards
are established by the Department of Corrections under Section
3-15-2 of the Unified Code of Corrections. "Secure child care
facility" also means a facility that is designed and operated
to ensure that all entrances and exits from the facility, a
building, or a distinct part of the building are under the
exclusive control of the staff of the facility, whether or not
the child has the freedom of movement within the perimeter of
the facility, building, or distinct part of the building.
(Source: P.A. 99-85, eff. 1-1-16; 100-136, eff. 8-8-17;
100-229, eff. 1-1-18; 100-863, eff. 8-14-18.)
 
    (Text of Section after amendment by P.A. 100-689)
    Sec. 1-3. Definitions. Terms used in this Act, unless the
context otherwise requires, have the following meanings
ascribed to them:
    (1) "Adjudicatory hearing" means a hearing to determine
whether the allegations of a petition under Section 2-13, 3-15
or 4-12 that a minor under 18 years of age is abused, neglected
or dependent, or requires authoritative intervention, or
addicted, respectively, are supported by a preponderance of the
evidence or whether the allegations of a petition under Section
5-520 that a minor is delinquent are proved beyond a reasonable
doubt.
    (2) "Adult" means a person 21 years of age or older.
    (3) "Agency" means a public or private child care facility
legally authorized or licensed by this State for placement or
institutional care or for both placement and institutional
care.
    (4) "Association" means any organization, public or
private, engaged in welfare functions which include services to
or on behalf of children but does not include "agency" as
herein defined.
    (4.05) Whenever a "best interest" determination is
required, the following factors shall be considered in the
context of the child's age and developmental needs:
        (a) the physical safety and welfare of the child,
    including food, shelter, health, and clothing;
        (b) the development of the child's identity;
        (c) the child's background and ties, including
    familial, cultural, and religious;
        (d) the child's sense of attachments, including:
            (i) where the child actually feels love,
        attachment, and a sense of being valued (as opposed to
        where adults believe the child should feel such love,
        attachment, and a sense of being valued);
            (ii) the child's sense of security;
            (iii) the child's sense of familiarity;
            (iv) continuity of affection for the child;
            (v) the least disruptive placement alternative for
        the child;
        (e) the child's wishes and long-term goals;
        (f) the child's community ties, including church,
    school, and friends;
        (g) the child's need for permanence which includes the
    child's need for stability and continuity of relationships
    with parent figures and with siblings and other relatives;
        (h) the uniqueness of every family and child;
        (i) the risks attendant to entering and being in
    substitute care; and
        (j) the preferences of the persons available to care
    for the child.
    (4.1) "Chronic truant" shall have the definition ascribed
to it in Section 26-2a of the School Code.
    (5) "Court" means the circuit court in a session or
division assigned to hear proceedings under this Act.
    (6) "Dispositional hearing" means a hearing to determine
whether a minor should be adjudged to be a ward of the court,
and to determine what order of disposition should be made in
respect to a minor adjudged to be a ward of the court.
    (6.5) "Dissemination" or "disseminate" means to publish,
produce, print, manufacture, distribute, sell, lease, exhibit,
broadcast, display, transmit, or otherwise share information
in any format so as to make the information accessible to
others.
    (7) "Emancipated minor" means any minor 16 years of age or
over who has been completely or partially emancipated under the
Emancipation of Minors Act or under this Act.
    (7.03) "Expunge" means to physically destroy the records
and to obliterate the minor's name from any official index,
public record, or electronic database.
    (7.05) "Foster parent" includes a relative caregiver
selected by the Department of Children and Family Services to
provide care for the minor.
    (8) "Guardianship of the person" of a minor means the duty
and authority to act in the best interests of the minor,
subject to residual parental rights and responsibilities, to
make important decisions in matters having a permanent effect
on the life and development of the minor and to be concerned
with his or her general welfare. It includes but is not
necessarily limited to:
        (a) the authority to consent to marriage, to enlistment
    in the armed forces of the United States, or to a major
    medical, psychiatric, and surgical treatment; to represent
    the minor in legal actions; and to make other decisions of
    substantial legal significance concerning the minor;
        (b) the authority and duty of reasonable visitation,
    except to the extent that these have been limited in the
    best interests of the minor by court order;
        (c) the rights and responsibilities of legal custody
    except where legal custody has been vested in another
    person or agency; and
        (d) the power to consent to the adoption of the minor,
    but only if expressly conferred on the guardian in
    accordance with Section 2-29, 3-30, or 4-27.
    (8.1) "Juvenile court record" includes, but is not limited
to:
        (a) all documents filed in or maintained by the
    juvenile court pertaining to a specific incident,
    proceeding, or individual;
        (b) all documents relating to a specific incident,
    proceeding, or individual made available to or maintained
    by probation officers;
        (c) all documents, video or audio tapes, photographs,
    and exhibits admitted into evidence at juvenile court
    hearings; or
        (d) all documents, transcripts, records, reports, or
    other evidence prepared by, maintained by, or released by
    any municipal, county, or State agency or department, in
    any format, if indicating involvement with the juvenile
    court relating to a specific incident, proceeding, or
    individual.
    (8.2) "Juvenile law enforcement record" includes records
of arrest, station adjustments, fingerprints, probation
adjustments, the issuance of a notice to appear, or any other
records or documents maintained by any law enforcement agency
relating to a minor suspected of committing an offense, and
records maintained by a law enforcement agency that identifies
a juvenile as a suspect in committing an offense, but does not
include records identifying a juvenile as a victim, witness, or
missing juvenile and any records created, maintained, or used
for purposes of referral to programs relating to diversion as
defined in subsection (6) of Section 5-105.
    (9) "Legal custody" means the relationship created by an
order of court in the best interests of the minor which imposes
on the custodian the responsibility of physical possession of a
minor and the duty to protect, train and discipline him and to
provide him with food, shelter, education and ordinary medical
care, except as these are limited by residual parental rights
and responsibilities and the rights and responsibilities of the
guardian of the person, if any.
    (9.1) "Mentally capable adult relative" means a person 21
years of age or older who is not suffering from a mental
illness that prevents him or her from providing the care
necessary to safeguard the physical safety and welfare of a
minor who is left in that person's care by the parent or
parents or other person responsible for the minor's welfare.
    (10) "Minor" means a person under the age of 21 years
subject to this Act.
    (11) "Parent" means a father or mother of a child and
includes any adoptive parent. It also includes a person (i)
whose parentage is presumed or has been established under the
law of this or another jurisdiction or (ii) who has registered
with the Putative Father Registry in accordance with Section
12.1 of the Adoption Act and whose paternity has not been ruled
out under the law of this or another jurisdiction. It does not
include a parent whose rights in respect to the minor have been
terminated in any manner provided by law. It does not include a
person who has been or could be determined to be a parent under
the Illinois Parentage Act of 1984 or the Illinois Parentage
Act of 2015, or similar parentage law in any other state, if
that person has been convicted of or pled nolo contendere to a
crime that resulted in the conception of the child under
Section 11-1.20, 11-1.30, 11-1.40, 11-11, 12-13, 12-14,
12-14.1, subsection (a) or (b) (but not subsection (c)) of
Section 11-1.50 or 12-15, or subsection (a), (b), (c), (e), or
(f) (but not subsection (d)) of Section 11-1.60 or 12-16 of the
Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012, or similar
statute in another jurisdiction unless upon motion of any
party, other than the offender, to the juvenile court
proceedings the court finds it is in the child's best interest
to deem the offender a parent for purposes of the juvenile
court proceedings.
    (11.1) "Permanency goal" means a goal set by the court as
defined in subdivision (2) of Section 2-28.
    (11.2) "Permanency hearing" means a hearing to set the
permanency goal and to review and determine (i) the
appropriateness of the services contained in the plan and
whether those services have been provided, (ii) whether
reasonable efforts have been made by all the parties to the
service plan to achieve the goal, and (iii) whether the plan
and goal have been achieved.
    (12) "Petition" means the petition provided for in Section
2-13, 3-15, 4-12 or 5-520, including any supplemental petitions
thereunder in Section 3-15, 4-12 or 5-520.
    (12.1) "Physically capable adult relative" means a person
21 years of age or older who does not have a severe physical
disability or medical condition, or is not suffering from
alcoholism or drug addiction, that prevents him or her from
providing the care necessary to safeguard the physical safety
and welfare of a minor who is left in that person's care by the
parent or parents or other person responsible for the minor's
welfare.
    (12.2) "Post Permanency Sibling Contact Agreement" has the
meaning ascribed to the term in Section 7.4 of the Children and
Family Services Act.
    (12.3) "Residential treatment center" means a licensed
setting that provides 24-hour care to children in a group home
or institution, including a facility licensed as a child care
institution under Section 2.06 of the Child Care Act of 1969, a
licensed group home under Section 2.16 of the Child Care Act of
1969, a secure child care facility as defined in paragraph (18)
of this Section, or any similar facility in another state.
"Residential treatment center" does not include a relative
foster home or a licensed foster family home.
    (13) "Residual parental rights and responsibilities" means
those rights and responsibilities remaining with the parent
after the transfer of legal custody or guardianship of the
person, including, but not necessarily limited to, the right to
reasonable visitation (which may be limited by the court in the
best interests of the minor as provided in subsection (8)(b) of
this Section), the right to consent to adoption, the right to
determine the minor's religious affiliation, and the
responsibility for his support.
    (14) "Shelter" means the temporary care of a minor in
physically unrestricting facilities pending court disposition
or execution of court order for placement.
    (14.05) "Shelter placement" means a temporary or emergency
placement for a minor, including an emergency foster home
placement.
    (14.1) "Sibling Contact Support Plan" has the meaning
ascribed to the term in Section 7.4 of the Children and Family
Services Act.
    (14.2) "Significant event report" means a written document
describing an occurrence or event beyond the customary
operations, routines, or relationships in the Department of
Children of Family Services, a child care facility, or other
entity that is licensed or regulated by the Department of
Children of Family Services or that provides services for the
Department of Children of Family Services under a grant,
contract, or purchase of service agreement; involving children
or youth, employees, foster parents, or relative caregivers;
allegations of abuse or neglect or any other incident raising a
concern about the well-being of a minor under the jurisdiction
of the court under Article II of the Juvenile Court Act;
incidents involving damage to property, allegations of
criminal activity, misconduct, or other occurrences affecting
the operations of the Department of Children of Family Services
or a child care facility; any incident that could have media
impact; and unusual incidents as defined by Department of
Children and Family Services rule.
    (15) "Station adjustment" means the informal handling of an
alleged offender by a juvenile police officer.
    (16) "Ward of the court" means a minor who is so adjudged
under Section 2-22, 3-23, 4-20 or 5-705, after a finding of the
requisite jurisdictional facts, and thus is subject to the
dispositional powers of the court under this Act.
    (17) "Juvenile police officer" means a sworn police officer
who has completed a Basic Recruit Training Course, has been
assigned to the position of juvenile police officer by his or
her chief law enforcement officer and has completed the
necessary juvenile officers training as prescribed by the
Illinois Law Enforcement Training Standards Board, or in the
case of a State police officer, juvenile officer training
approved by the Director of the Department of State Police.
    (18) "Secure child care facility" means any child care
facility licensed by the Department of Children and Family
Services to provide secure living arrangements for children
under 18 years of age who are subject to placement in
facilities under the Children and Family Services Act and who
are not subject to placement in facilities for whom standards
are established by the Department of Corrections under Section
3-15-2 of the Unified Code of Corrections. "Secure child care
facility" also means a facility that is designed and operated
to ensure that all entrances and exits from the facility, a
building, or a distinct part of the building are under the
exclusive control of the staff of the facility, whether or not
the child has the freedom of movement within the perimeter of
the facility, building, or distinct part of the building.
(Source: P.A. 99-85, eff. 1-1-16; 100-136, eff. 8-8-17;
100-229, eff. 1-1-18; 100-689, eff. 1-1-19; 100-863, eff.
8-14-18.)
 
    (705 ILCS 405/1-7)  (from Ch. 37, par. 801-7)
    Sec. 1-7. Confidentiality of juvenile law enforcement and
municipal ordinance violation records.
    (A) All juvenile law enforcement records which have not
been expunged are confidential sealed and may never be
disclosed to the general public or otherwise made widely
available. Juvenile law enforcement Sealed records may be
obtained only under this Section and Section Sections 1-8 and
Part 9 of Article V 5-915 of this Act, when their use is needed
for good cause and with an order from the juvenile court, as
required by those not authorized to retain them. Inspection,
and copying, and disclosure of juvenile law enforcement records
maintained by law enforcement agencies or records of municipal
ordinance violations maintained by any State, local, or
municipal agency that relate to a minor who has been
investigated, arrested, or taken into custody before his or her
18th birthday shall be restricted to the following:
        (0.05) The minor who is the subject of the juvenile law
    enforcement record, his or her parents, guardian, and
    counsel.
        (0.10) Judges of the circuit court and members of the
    staff of the court designated by the judge.
        (0.15) An administrative adjudication hearing officer
    or members of the staff designated to assist in the
    administrative adjudication process.
        (1) Any local, State, or federal law enforcement
    officers or designated law enforcement staff of any
    jurisdiction or agency when necessary for the discharge of
    their official duties during the investigation or
    prosecution of a crime or relating to a minor who has been
    adjudicated delinquent and there has been a previous
    finding that the act which constitutes the previous offense
    was committed in furtherance of criminal activities by a
    criminal street gang, or, when necessary for the discharge
    of its official duties in connection with a particular
    investigation of the conduct of a law enforcement officer,
    an independent agency or its staff created by ordinance and
    charged by a unit of local government with the duty of
    investigating the conduct of law enforcement officers. For
    purposes of this Section, "criminal street gang" has the
    meaning ascribed to it in Section 10 of the Illinois
    Streetgang Terrorism Omnibus Prevention Act.
        (2) Prosecutors, public defenders, probation officers,
    social workers, or other individuals assigned by the court
    to conduct a pre-adjudication or pre-disposition
    investigation, and individuals responsible for supervising
    or providing temporary or permanent care and custody for
    minors under pursuant to the order of the juvenile court,
    when essential to performing their responsibilities.
        (3) Federal, State, or local prosecutors Prosecutors,
    public defenders, and probation officers, and designated
    staff:
            (a) in the course of a trial when institution of
        criminal proceedings has been permitted or required
        under Section 5-805; or
            (b) when institution of criminal proceedings has
        been permitted or required under Section 5-805 and the
        such minor is the subject of a proceeding to determine
        the amount of bail; or
            (c) when criminal proceedings have been permitted
        or required under Section 5-805 and the such minor is
        the subject of a pre-trial investigation, pre-sentence
        investigation, fitness hearing, or proceedings on an
        application for probation; or .
            (d) in the course of prosecution or administrative
        adjudication of a violation of a traffic, boating, or
        fish and game law, or a county or municipal ordinance.
        (4) Adult and Juvenile Prisoner Review Board.
        (5) Authorized military personnel.
        (5.5) Employees of the federal government authorized
    by law.
        (6) Persons engaged in bona fide research, with the
    permission of the Presiding Judge of the Juvenile Court and
    the chief executive of the respective law enforcement
    agency; provided that publication of such research results
    in no disclosure of a minor's identity and protects the
    confidentiality of the minor's record.
        (7) Department of Children and Family Services child
    protection investigators acting in their official
    capacity.
        (8) The appropriate school official only if the agency
    or officer believes that there is an imminent threat of
    physical harm to students, school personnel, or others who
    are present in the school or on school grounds.
            (A) Inspection and copying shall be limited to
        juvenile law enforcement records transmitted to the
        appropriate school official or officials whom the
        school has determined to have a legitimate educational
        or safety interest by a local law enforcement agency
        under a reciprocal reporting system established and
        maintained between the school district and the local
        law enforcement agency under Section 10-20.14 of the
        School Code concerning a minor enrolled in a school
        within the school district who has been arrested or
        taken into custody for any of the following offenses:
                (i) any violation of Article 24 of the Criminal
            Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012;
                (ii) a violation of the Illinois Controlled
            Substances Act;
                (iii) a violation of the Cannabis Control Act;
                (iv) a forcible felony as defined in Section
            2-8 of the Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal
            Code of 2012;
                (v) a violation of the Methamphetamine Control
            and Community Protection Act;
                (vi) a violation of Section 1-2 of the
            Harassing and Obscene Communications Act;
                (vii) a violation of the Hazing Act; or
                (viii) a violation of Section 12-1, 12-2,
            12-3, 12-3.05, 12-3.1, 12-3.2, 12-3.4, 12-3.5,
            12-5, 12-7.3, 12-7.4, 12-7.5, 25-1, or 25-5 of the
            Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012.
            The information derived from the juvenile law
        enforcement records shall be kept separate from and
        shall not become a part of the official school record
        of that child and shall not be a public record. The
        information shall be used solely by the appropriate
        school official or officials whom the school has
        determined to have a legitimate educational or safety
        interest to aid in the proper rehabilitation of the
        child and to protect the safety of students and
        employees in the school. If the designated law
        enforcement and school officials deem it to be in the
        best interest of the minor, the student may be referred
        to in-school or community-based community based social
        services if those services are available.
        "Rehabilitation services" may include interventions by
        school support personnel, evaluation for eligibility
        for special education, referrals to community-based
        agencies such as youth services, behavioral healthcare
        service providers, drug and alcohol prevention or
        treatment programs, and other interventions as deemed
        appropriate for the student.
            (B) Any information provided to appropriate school
        officials whom the school has determined to have a
        legitimate educational or safety interest by local law
        enforcement officials about a minor who is the subject
        of a current police investigation that is directly
        related to school safety shall consist of oral
        information only, and not written juvenile law
        enforcement records, and shall be used solely by the
        appropriate school official or officials to protect
        the safety of students and employees in the school and
        aid in the proper rehabilitation of the child. The
        information derived orally from the local law
        enforcement officials shall be kept separate from and
        shall not become a part of the official school record
        of the child and shall not be a public record. This
        limitation on the use of information about a minor who
        is the subject of a current police investigation shall
        in no way limit the use of this information by
        prosecutors in pursuing criminal charges arising out
        of the information disclosed during a police
        investigation of the minor. For purposes of this
        paragraph, "investigation" means an official
        systematic inquiry by a law enforcement agency into
        actual or suspected criminal activity.
        (9) Mental health professionals on behalf of the
    Illinois Department of Corrections or the Department of
    Human Services or prosecutors who are evaluating,
    prosecuting, or investigating a potential or actual
    petition brought under the Sexually Violent Persons
    Commitment Act relating to a person who is the subject of
    juvenile law enforcement records or the respondent to a
    petition brought under the Sexually Violent Persons
    Commitment Act who is the subject of the juvenile law
    enforcement records sought. Any juvenile law enforcement
    records and any information obtained from those juvenile
    law enforcement records under this paragraph (9) may be
    used only in sexually violent persons commitment
    proceedings.
        (10) The president of a park district. Inspection and
    copying shall be limited to juvenile law enforcement
    records transmitted to the president of the park district
    by the Department of Illinois State Police under Section
    8-23 of the Park District Code or Section 16a-5 of the
    Chicago Park District Act concerning a person who is
    seeking employment with that park district and who has been
    adjudicated a juvenile delinquent for any of the offenses
    listed in subsection (c) of Section 8-23 of the Park
    District Code or subsection (c) of Section 16a-5 of the
    Chicago Park District Act.
        (11) Persons managing and designated to participate in
    a court diversion program as designated in subsection (6)
    of Section 5-105.
        (12) The Public Access Counselor of the Office of the
    Attorney General, when reviewing juvenile law enforcement
    records under its powers and duties under the Freedom of
    Information Act.
        (13) Collection agencies, contracted or otherwise
    engaged by a governmental entity, to collect any debts due
    and owing to the governmental entity.
    (B)(1) Except as provided in paragraph (2), no law
enforcement officer or other person or agency may knowingly
transmit to the Department of Corrections, or the Department of
State Police, or to the Federal Bureau of Investigation any
fingerprint or photograph relating to a minor who has been
arrested or taken into custody before his or her 18th birthday,
unless the court in proceedings under this Act authorizes the
transmission or enters an order under Section 5-805 permitting
or requiring the institution of criminal proceedings.
    (2) Law enforcement officers or other persons or agencies
shall transmit to the Department of State Police copies of
fingerprints and descriptions of all minors who have been
arrested or taken into custody before their 18th birthday for
the offense of unlawful use of weapons under Article 24 of the
Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012, a Class X
or Class 1 felony, a forcible felony as defined in Section 2-8
of the Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012, or a
Class 2 or greater felony under the Cannabis Control Act, the
Illinois Controlled Substances Act, the Methamphetamine
Control and Community Protection Act, or Chapter 4 of the
Illinois Vehicle Code, pursuant to Section 5 of the Criminal
Identification Act. Information reported to the Department
pursuant to this Section may be maintained with records that
the Department files pursuant to Section 2.1 of the Criminal
Identification Act. Nothing in this Act prohibits a law
enforcement agency from fingerprinting a minor taken into
custody or arrested before his or her 18th birthday for an
offense other than those listed in this paragraph (2).
    (C) The records of law enforcement officers, or of an
independent agency created by ordinance and charged by a unit
of local government with the duty of investigating the conduct
of law enforcement officers, concerning all minors under 18
years of age must be maintained separate from the records of
arrests and may not be open to public inspection or their
contents disclosed to the public. For purposes of obtaining
documents under this Section, a civil subpoena is not an order
of the court.
        (1) In cases where the law enforcement, or independent
    agency, records concern a pending juvenile court case, the
    party seeking to inspect the records shall provide actual
    notice to the attorney or guardian ad litem of the minor
    whose records are sought.
        (2) In cases where the records concern a juvenile court
    case that is no longer pending, the party seeking to
    inspect the records shall provide actual notice to the
    minor or the minor's parent or legal guardian, and the
    matter shall be referred to the chief judge presiding over
    matters pursuant to this Act.
        (3) In determining whether the records should be
    available for inspection, the court shall consider the
    minor's interest in confidentiality and rehabilitation
    over the moving party's interest in obtaining the
    information. Any records obtained in violation of this
    subsection (C) shall not be admissible in any criminal or
    civil proceeding, or operate to disqualify a minor from
    subsequently holding public office or securing employment,
    or operate as a forfeiture of any public benefit, right,
    privilege, or right to receive any license granted by
    public authority.
    (D) Nothing contained in subsection (C) of this Section
shall prohibit the inspection or disclosure to victims and
witnesses of photographs contained in the records of law
enforcement agencies when the inspection and disclosure is
conducted in the presence of a law enforcement officer for the
purpose of the identification or apprehension of any person
subject to the provisions of this Act or for the investigation
or prosecution of any crime.
    (E) Law enforcement officers, and personnel of an
independent agency created by ordinance and charged by a unit
of local government with the duty of investigating the conduct
of law enforcement officers, may not disclose the identity of
any minor in releasing information to the general public as to
the arrest, investigation or disposition of any case involving
a minor.
    (F) Nothing contained in this Section shall prohibit law
enforcement agencies from communicating with each other by
letter, memorandum, teletype, or intelligence alert bulletin
or other means the identity or other relevant information
pertaining to a person under 18 years of age if there are
reasonable grounds to believe that the person poses a real and
present danger to the safety of the public or law enforcement
officers. The information provided under this subsection (F)
shall remain confidential and shall not be publicly disclosed,
except as otherwise allowed by law.
    (G) Nothing in this Section shall prohibit the right of a
Civil Service Commission or appointing authority of any federal
government, state, county or municipality examining the
character and fitness of an applicant for employment with a law
enforcement agency, correctional institution, or fire
department from obtaining and examining the records of any law
enforcement agency relating to any record of the applicant
having been arrested or taken into custody before the
applicant's 18th birthday.
    (G-5) Information identifying victims and alleged victims
of sex offenses shall not be disclosed or open to the public
under any circumstances. Nothing in this Section shall prohibit
the victim or alleged victim of any sex offense from
voluntarily disclosing his or her own identity.
    (H) The changes made to this Section by Public Act 98-61
apply to law enforcement records of a minor who has been
arrested or taken into custody on or after January 1, 2014 (the
effective date of Public Act 98-61).
    (H-5) Nothing in this Section shall require any court or
adjudicative proceeding for traffic, boating, fish and game
law, or municipal and county ordinance violations to be closed
to the public.
    (I) Willful violation of this Section is a Class C
misdemeanor and each violation is subject to a fine of $1,000.
This subsection (I) shall not apply to the person who is the
subject of the record.
    (J) A person convicted of violating this Section is liable
for damages in the amount of $1,000 or actual damages,
whichever is greater.
(Source: P.A. 99-298, eff. 8-6-15; 100-285, eff. 1-1-18;
100-720, eff. 8-3-18; 100-863, eff. 8-14-18; revised 10-3-18.)
 
    (705 ILCS 405/1-8)  (from Ch. 37, par. 801-8)
    Sec. 1-8. Confidentiality and accessibility of juvenile
court records.
    (A) A juvenile adjudication shall never be considered a
conviction nor shall an adjudicated individual be considered a
criminal. Unless expressly allowed by law, a juvenile
adjudication shall not operate to impose upon the individual
any of the civil disabilities ordinarily imposed by or
resulting from conviction. Unless expressly allowed by law,
adjudications shall not prejudice or disqualify the individual
in any civil service application or appointment, from holding
public office, or from receiving any license granted by public
authority. All juvenile court records which have not been
expunged are sealed and may never be disclosed to the general
public or otherwise made widely available. Sealed juvenile
court records may be obtained only under this Section and
Section 1-7 and Part 9 of Article V Section 5-915 of this Act,
when their use is needed for good cause and with an order from
the juvenile court, as required by those not authorized to
retain them. Inspection and copying of juvenile court records
relating to a minor who is the subject of a proceeding under
this Act shall be restricted to the following:
        (1) The minor who is the subject of record, his or her
    parents, guardian, and counsel.
        (2) Law enforcement officers and law enforcement
    agencies when such information is essential to executing an
    arrest or search warrant or other compulsory process, or to
    conducting an ongoing investigation or relating to a minor
    who has been adjudicated delinquent and there has been a
    previous finding that the act which constitutes the
    previous offense was committed in furtherance of criminal
    activities by a criminal street gang.
        Before July 1, 1994, for the purposes of this Section,
    "criminal street gang" means any ongoing organization,
    association, or group of 3 or more persons, whether formal
    or informal, having as one of its primary activities the
    commission of one or more criminal acts and that has a
    common name or common identifying sign, symbol or specific
    color apparel displayed, and whose members individually or
    collectively engage in or have engaged in a pattern of
    criminal activity.
        Beginning July 1, 1994, for purposes of this Section,
    "criminal street gang" has the meaning ascribed to it in
    Section 10 of the Illinois Streetgang Terrorism Omnibus
    Prevention Act.
        (3) Judges, hearing officers, prosecutors, public
    defenders, probation officers, social workers, or other
    individuals assigned by the court to conduct a
    pre-adjudication or pre-disposition predisposition
    investigation, and individuals responsible for supervising
    or providing temporary or permanent care and custody for
    minors under pursuant to the order of the juvenile court
    when essential to performing their responsibilities.
        (4) Judges, federal, State, and local prosecutors,
    public defenders, and probation officers, and designated
    staff:
            (a) in the course of a trial when institution of
        criminal proceedings has been permitted or required
        under Section 5-805; or
            (b) when criminal proceedings have been permitted
        or required under Section 5-805 and a minor is the
        subject of a proceeding to determine the amount of
        bail; or
            (c) when criminal proceedings have been permitted
        or required under Section 5-805 and a minor is the
        subject of a pre-trial investigation, pre-sentence
        investigation or fitness hearing, or proceedings on an
        application for probation; or
            (d) when a minor becomes 18 years of age or older,
        and is the subject of criminal proceedings, including a
        hearing to determine the amount of bail, a pre-trial
        investigation, a pre-sentence investigation, a fitness
        hearing, or proceedings on an application for
        probation.
        (5) Adult and Juvenile Prisoner Review Boards.
        (6) Authorized military personnel.
        (6.5) Employees of the federal government authorized
    by law.
        (7) Victims, their subrogees and legal
    representatives; however, such persons shall have access
    only to the name and address of the minor and information
    pertaining to the disposition or alternative adjustment
    plan of the juvenile court.
        (8) Persons engaged in bona fide research, with the
    permission of the presiding judge of the juvenile court and
    the chief executive of the agency that prepared the
    particular records; provided that publication of such
    research results in no disclosure of a minor's identity and
    protects the confidentiality of the record.
        (9) The Secretary of State to whom the Clerk of the
    Court shall report the disposition of all cases, as
    required in Section 6-204 of the Illinois Vehicle Code.
    However, information reported relative to these offenses
    shall be privileged and available only to the Secretary of
    State, courts, and police officers.
        (10) The administrator of a bonafide substance abuse
    student assistance program with the permission of the
    presiding judge of the juvenile court.
        (11) Mental health professionals on behalf of the
    Illinois Department of Corrections or the Department of
    Human Services or prosecutors who are evaluating,
    prosecuting, or investigating a potential or actual
    petition brought under the Sexually Violent Persons
    Commitment Act relating to a person who is the subject of
    juvenile court records or the respondent to a petition
    brought under the Sexually Violent Persons Commitment Act,
    who is the subject of juvenile court records sought. Any
    records and any information obtained from those records
    under this paragraph (11) may be used only in sexually
    violent persons commitment proceedings.
        (12) Collection agencies, contracted or otherwise
    engaged by a governmental entity, to collect any debts due
    and owing to the governmental entity.
    (A-1) Findings and exclusions of paternity entered in
proceedings occurring under Article II of this Act shall be
disclosed, in a manner and form approved by the Presiding Judge
of the Juvenile Court, to the Department of Healthcare and
Family Services when necessary to discharge the duties of the
Department of Healthcare and Family Services under Article X of
the Illinois Public Aid Code.
    (B) A minor who is the victim in a juvenile proceeding
shall be provided the same confidentiality regarding
disclosure of identity as the minor who is the subject of
record.
    (C) Juvenile court records shall not be made available to
the general public. For purposes of inspecting documents under
this Section, a civil subpoena is not an order of the court.
        (0.1) In cases where the records concern a pending
    juvenile court case, the requesting party seeking to
    inspect the juvenile court records shall provide actual
    notice to the attorney or guardian ad litem of the minor
    whose records are sought.
        (0.2) In cases where the juvenile court records concern
    a juvenile court case that is no longer pending, the
    requesting party seeking to inspect the juvenile court
    records shall provide actual notice to the minor or the
    minor's parent or legal guardian, and the matter shall be
    referred to the chief judge presiding over matters pursuant
    to this Act.
        (0.3) In determining whether juvenile court records
    should be made available for inspection and whether
    inspection should be limited to certain parts of the file,
    the court shall consider the minor's interest in
    confidentiality and rehabilitation over the requesting
    party's interest in obtaining the information. The State's
    Attorney, the minor, and the minor's parents, guardian, and
    counsel shall at all times have the right to examine court
    files and records.
        (0.4) Any records obtained in violation of this Section
    shall not be admissible in any criminal or civil
    proceeding, or operate to disqualify a minor from
    subsequently holding public office, or operate as a
    forfeiture of any public benefit, right, privilege, or
    right to receive any license granted by public authority.
    (D) Pending or following any adjudication of delinquency
for any offense defined in Sections 11-1.20 through 11-1.60 or
12-13 through 12-16 of the Criminal Code of 1961 or the
Criminal Code of 2012, the victim of any such offense shall
receive the rights set out in Sections 4 and 6 of the Bill of
Rights for Victims and Witnesses of Violent Crime Act; and the
juvenile who is the subject of the adjudication,
notwithstanding any other provision of this Act, shall be
treated as an adult for the purpose of affording such rights to
the victim.
    (E) Nothing in this Section shall affect the right of a
Civil Service Commission or appointing authority of the federal
government, or any any state, county, or municipality examining
the character and fitness of an applicant for employment with a
law enforcement agency, correctional institution, or fire
department to ascertain whether that applicant was ever
adjudicated to be a delinquent minor and, if so, to examine the
records of disposition or evidence which were made in
proceedings under this Act.
    (F) Following any adjudication of delinquency for a crime
which would be a felony if committed by an adult, or following
any adjudication of delinquency for a violation of Section
24-1, 24-3, 24-3.1, or 24-5 of the Criminal Code of 1961 or the
Criminal Code of 2012, the State's Attorney shall ascertain
whether the minor respondent is enrolled in school and, if so,
shall provide a copy of the dispositional order to the
principal or chief administrative officer of the school. Access
to the dispositional order such juvenile records shall be
limited to the principal or chief administrative officer of the
school and any guidance counselor designated by him or her.
    (G) Nothing contained in this Act prevents the sharing or
disclosure of information or records relating or pertaining to
juveniles subject to the provisions of the Serious Habitual
Offender Comprehensive Action Program when that information is
used to assist in the early identification and treatment of
habitual juvenile offenders.
    (H) When a court Court hearing a proceeding under Article
II of this Act becomes aware that an earlier proceeding under
Article II had been heard in a different county, that court
Court shall request, and the court Court in which the earlier
proceedings were initiated shall transmit, an authenticated
copy of the juvenile court Court record, including all
documents, petitions, and orders filed therein and the minute
orders, transcript of proceedings, and docket entries of the
court Court.
    (I) The Clerk of the Circuit Court shall report to the
Department of State Police, in the form and manner required by
the Department of State Police, the final disposition of each
minor who has been arrested or taken into custody before his or
her 18th birthday for those offenses required to be reported
under Section 5 of the Criminal Identification Act. Information
reported to the Department under this Section may be maintained
with records that the Department files under Section 2.1 of the
Criminal Identification Act.
    (J) The changes made to this Section by Public Act 98-61
apply to juvenile law enforcement records of a minor who has
been arrested or taken into custody on or after January 1, 2014
(the effective date of Public Act 98-61).
    (K) Willful violation of this Section is a Class C
misdemeanor and each violation is subject to a fine of $1,000.
This subsection (K) shall not apply to the person who is the
subject of the record.
    (L) A person convicted of violating this Section is liable
for damages in the amount of $1,000 or actual damages,
whichever is greater.
(Source: P.A. 100-285, eff. 1-1-18; 100-720, eff. 8-3-18;
revised 10-3-18.)
 
    (705 ILCS 405/1-9)  (from Ch. 37, par. 801-9)
    Sec. 1-9. Expungement of law enforcement and juvenile court
records.
    (1) Expungement of law enforcement and juvenile court
delinquency records shall be governed by Part 9 of Article V of
this Act Section 5-915.
    (2) This subsection (2) applies to expungement of law
enforcement and juvenile court records other than delinquency
proceedings. Whenever any person has attained the age of 18 or
whenever all juvenile court proceedings relating to that person
have been terminated, whichever is later, the person may
petition the court to expunge law enforcement records relating
to incidents occurring before his 18th birthday or his juvenile
court records, or both, if the minor was placed under
supervision pursuant to Sections 2-20, 3-21, or 4-18, and such
order of supervision has since been successfully terminated.
    (3) The chief judge of the circuit in which an arrest was
made or a charge was brought or any judge of that circuit
designated by the chief judge may, upon verified petition of a
person who is the subject of an arrest or a juvenile court
proceeding pursuant to subsection (2) of this Section, order
the law enforcement records or juvenile court records, or both,
to be expunged from the official records of the arresting
authority and the clerk of the circuit court. Notice of the
petition shall be served upon the State's Attorney and upon the
arresting authority which is the subject of the petition for
expungement.
    (4) The changes made to this Section by this amendatory Act
of the 98th General Assembly apply to law enforcement and
juvenile court records of a minor who has been arrested or
taken into custody on or after the effective date of this
amendatory Act.
(Source: P.A. 98-61, eff. 1-1-14.)
 
    (705 ILCS 405/5-915)
    (Text of Section before amendment by P.A. 100-987)
    Sec. 5-915. Expungement of juvenile law enforcement and
juvenile court records.
    (0.05) (Blank). For purposes of this Section:
    "Dissemination" or "disseminate" means to publish,
produce, print, manufacture, distribute, sell, lease, exhibit,
broadcast, display, transmit, or otherwise share information
in any format so as to make the information accessible to
others.
    "Expunge" means to physically destroy the records and to
obliterate the minor's name and juvenile court records from any
official index, public record, or electronic database. No
evidence of the juvenile court records may be retained by any
law enforcement agency, the juvenile court, or by any
municipal, county, or State agency or department. Nothing in
this Act shall require the physical destruction of the internal
office records, files, or databases maintained by a State's
Attorney's Office or other prosecutor, public defender,
probation officer, or by the Office of the Secretary of State.
    "Juvenile court record" includes, but is not limited to:
        (a) all documents filed in or maintained by the
    juvenile court pertaining to a specific incident,
    proceeding, or individual;
        (b) all documents relating to a specific incident,
    proceeding, or individual made available to or maintained
    by probation officers;
        (c) all documents, video or audio tapes, photographs,
    and exhibits admitted into evidence at juvenile court
    hearings; or
        (d) all documents, transcripts, records, reports or
    other evidence prepared by, maintained by, or released by
    any municipal, county, or State agency or department, in
    any format, if indicating involvement with the juvenile
    court relating to a specific incident, proceeding, or
    individual.
    "Law enforcement record" includes, but is not limited to,
records of arrest, station adjustments, fingerprints,
probation adjustments, the issuance of a notice to appear, or
any other records or documents maintained by any law
enforcement agency relating to a minor suspected of committing
an offense or evidence of interaction with law enforcement.
    (0.1) (a) Except as otherwise provided in subsection (0.15)
of this Section, the The Department of State Police and all law
enforcement agencies within the State shall automatically
expunge, on or before January 1 of each year, all juvenile law
enforcement records relating to events occurring before an
individual's 18th birthday if:
        (1) one year or more has elapsed since the date of the
    arrest or law enforcement interaction documented in the
    records;
        (2) no petition for delinquency or criminal charges
    were filed with the clerk of the circuit court relating to
    the arrest or law enforcement interaction documented in the
    records; and
        (3) 6 months have elapsed since the date of the arrest
    without an additional subsequent arrest or filing of a
    petition for delinquency or criminal charges whether
    related or not to the arrest or law enforcement interaction
    documented in the records.
    (b) If the law enforcement agency is unable to verify
satisfaction of conditions (2) and (3) of this subsection
(0.1), records that satisfy condition (1) of this subsection
(0.1) shall be automatically expunged if the records relate to
an offense that if committed by an adult would not be an
offense classified as Class 2 felony or higher, an offense
under Article 11 of the Criminal Code of 1961 or Criminal Code
of 2012, or an offense under Section 12-13, 12-14, 12-14.1,
12-15, or 12-16 of the Criminal Code of 1961.
    (0.15) If a juvenile law enforcement record meets paragraph
(a) of subsection (0.1) of this Section, a juvenile law
enforcement record created:
        (1) prior to January 1, 2018, but on or after January
    1, 2013 shall be automatically expunged prior to January 1,
    2020;
        (2) prior to January 1, 2013, but on or after January
    1, 2000, shall be automatically expunged prior to January
    1, 2023; and
        (3) prior to January 1, 2000 shall not be subject to
    the automatic expungement provisions of this Act.
Nothing in this subsection (0.15) shall be construed to
restrict or modify an individual's right to have his or her
juvenile law enforcement records expunged except as otherwise
may be provided in this Act.
    (0.2) (a) Upon dismissal of a petition alleging delinquency
or upon a finding of not delinquent, the successful termination
of an order of supervision, or the successful termination of an
adjudication for an offense which would be a Class B
misdemeanor, Class C misdemeanor, or a petty or business
offense if committed by an adult, the court shall automatically
order the expungement of the juvenile court records and
juvenile law enforcement records. The clerk shall deliver a
certified copy of the expungement order to the Department of
State Police and the arresting agency. Upon request, the
State's Attorney shall furnish the name of the arresting
agency. The expungement shall be completed within 60 business
days after the receipt of the expungement order.
    (b) If the chief law enforcement officer of the agency, or
his or her designee, certifies in writing that certain
information is needed for a pending investigation involving the
commission of a felony, that information, and information
identifying the juvenile, may be retained in an intelligence
file until the statute of limitations for the felony has
expired. If the chief law enforcement officer of the agency, or
his or her designee, certifies in writing that certain
information is needed with respect to an internal investigation
of any law enforcement office, that information and information
identifying the juvenile may be retained within an intelligence
file until the investigation is terminated or the disciplinary
action, including appeals, has been completed, whichever is
later the investigation is terminated or for one additional
year, whichever is sooner. Retention of a portion of a
juvenile's law enforcement record does not disqualify the
remainder of his or her record from immediate automatic
expungement.
    (0.3) (a) Upon an adjudication of delinquency based on any
offense except a disqualified offense, the juvenile court shall
automatically order the expungement of the juvenile court and
law enforcement records 2 years after the juvenile's case was
closed if no delinquency or criminal proceeding is pending and
the person has had no subsequent delinquency adjudication or
criminal conviction. The clerk shall deliver a certified copy
of the expungement order to the Department of State Police and
the arresting agency. Upon request, the State's Attorney shall
furnish the name of the arresting agency. The expungement shall
be completed within 60 business days after the receipt of the
expungement order. In For the purposes of this subsection
(0.3), "disqualified offense" means any of the following
offenses: Section 8-1.2, 9-1, 9-1.2, 9-2, 9-2.1, 9-3, 9-3.2,
10-1, 10-2, 10-3, 10-3.1, 10-4, 10-5, 10-9, 11-1.20, 11-1.30,
11-1.40, 11-1.50, 11-1.60, 11-6, 11-6.5, 12-2, 12-3.05,
12-3.3, 12-4.4a, 12-5.02, 12-6.2, 12-6.5, 12-7.1, 12-7.5,
12-20.5, 12-32, 12-33, 12-34, 12-34.5, 18-1, 18-2, 18-3, 18-4,
18-6, 19-3, 19-6, 20-1, 20-1.1, 24-1.2, 24-1.2-5, 24-1.5,
24-3A, 24-3B, 24-3.2, 24-3.8, 24-3.9, 29D-14.9, 29D-20, 30-1,
31-1a, 32-4a, or 33A-2 of the Criminal Code of 2012, or
subsection (b) of Section 8-1, paragraph (4) of subsection (a)
of Section 11-14.4, subsection (a-5) of Section 12-3.1,
paragraph (1), (2), or (3) of subsection (a) of Section 12-6,
subsection (a-3) or (a-5) of Section 12-7.3, paragraph (1) or
(2) of subsection (a) of Section 12-7.4, subparagraph (i) of
paragraph (1) of subsection (a) of Section 12-9, subparagraph
(H) of paragraph (3) of subsection (a) of Section 24-1.6,
paragraph (1) of subsection (a) of Section 25-1, or subsection
(a-7) of Section 31-1 of the Criminal Code of 2012.
    (b) If the chief law enforcement officer of the agency, or
his or her designee, certifies in writing that certain
information is needed for a pending investigation involving the
commission of a felony, that information, and information
identifying the juvenile, may be retained in an intelligence
file until the investigation is terminated or for one
additional year, whichever is sooner. Retention of a portion of
a juvenile's juvenile law enforcement record does not
disqualify the remainder of his or her record from immediate
automatic expungement.
    (0.4) Automatic expungement for the purposes of this
Section shall not require law enforcement agencies to
obliterate or otherwise destroy juvenile law enforcement
records that would otherwise need to be automatically expunged
under this Act, except after 2 years following the subject
arrest for purposes of use in civil litigation against a
governmental entity or its law enforcement agency or personnel
which created, maintained, or used the records. However these
juvenile law enforcement records shall be considered expunged
for all other purposes during this period and the offense,
which the records or files concern, shall be treated as if it
never occurred as required under Section 5-923.
    (0.5) Subsection (0.1) or (0.2) of this Section does not
apply to violations of traffic, boating, fish and game laws, or
county or municipal ordinances.
    (0.6) Juvenile law enforcement records of a plaintiff who
has filed civil litigation against the governmental entity or
its law enforcement agency or personnel that created,
maintained, or used the records or juvenile law enforcement
records that contain information related to the allegations set
forth in the civil litigation may not be expunged until after 2
years have elapsed after the conclusion of the lawsuit,
including any appeal.
    (0.7) Officer-worn body camera recordings shall not be
automatically expunged except as otherwise authorized by the
Law Enforcement Officer-Worn Body Camera Act.
    (1) Nothing in this subsection (1) precludes an eligible
minor from obtaining expungement under subsection (0.1),
(0.2), or (0.3). Whenever a person has been arrested, charged,
or adjudicated delinquent for an incident occurring before his
or her 18th birthday that if committed by an adult would be an
offense, and that person's juvenile law enforcement and
juvenile court records are not eligible for automatic
expungement under subsection (0.1), (0.2), or (0.3), the person
may petition the court at any time for expungement of juvenile
law enforcement records and juvenile court records relating to
the incident and, upon termination of all juvenile court
proceedings relating to that incident, the court shall order
the expungement of all records in the possession of the
Department of State Police, the clerk of the circuit court, and
law enforcement agencies relating to the incident, but only in
any of the following circumstances:
        (a) the minor was arrested and no petition for
    delinquency was filed with the clerk of the circuit court;
        (a-5) the minor was charged with an offense and the
    petition or petitions were dismissed without a finding of
    delinquency;
        (b) the minor was charged with an offense and was found
    not delinquent of that offense;
        (c) the minor was placed under supervision under
    pursuant to Section 5-615, and the order of supervision has
    since been successfully terminated; or
        (d) the minor was adjudicated for an offense which
    would be a Class B misdemeanor, Class C misdemeanor, or a
    petty or business offense if committed by an adult.
    (1.5) The Department of State Police shall allow a person
to use the Access and Review process, established in the
Department of State Police, for verifying that his or her
juvenile law enforcement records relating to incidents
occurring before his or her 18th birthday eligible under this
Act have been expunged.
    (1.6) (Blank).
    (1.7) (Blank).
    (1.8) (Blank).
    (2) Any person whose delinquency adjudications are not
eligible for automatic expungement under subsection (0.3) of
this Section may petition the court to expunge all juvenile law
enforcement records relating to any incidents occurring before
his or her 18th birthday which did not result in proceedings in
criminal court and all juvenile court records with respect to
any adjudications except those based upon first degree murder
or an offense under Article 11 of the Criminal Code of 2012 if
the person is required to register under the Sex Offender
Registration Act at the time he or she petitions the court for
expungement; provided that:
        (a) (blank); or
        (b) 2 years have elapsed since all juvenile court
    proceedings relating to him or her have been terminated and
    his or her commitment to the Department of Juvenile Justice
    under this Act has been terminated.
    (2.5) If a minor is arrested and no petition for
delinquency is filed with the clerk of the circuit court at the
time the minor is released from custody, the youth officer, if
applicable, or other designated person from the arresting
agency, shall notify verbally and in writing to the minor or
the minor's parents or guardians that the minor shall have an
arrest record and shall provide the minor and the minor's
parents or guardians with an expungement information packet,
information regarding this State's expungement laws including
a petition to expunge juvenile law enforcement and juvenile
court records obtained from the clerk of the circuit court.
    (2.6) If a minor is referred to court then at the time of
sentencing or dismissal of the case, or successful completion
of supervision, the judge shall inform the delinquent minor of
his or her rights regarding expungement and the clerk of the
circuit court shall provide an expungement information packet
to the minor, written in plain language, including information
regarding this State's expungement laws and a petition for
expungement, a sample of a completed petition, expungement
instructions that shall include information informing the
minor that (i) once the case is expunged, it shall be treated
as if it never occurred, (ii) he or she may apply to have
petition fees waived, (iii) once he or she obtains an
expungement, he or she may not be required to disclose that he
or she had a juvenile law enforcement or juvenile court record,
and (iv) if petitioning he or she may file the petition on his
or her own or with the assistance of an attorney. The failure
of the judge to inform the delinquent minor of his or her right
to petition for expungement as provided by law does not create
a substantive right, nor is that failure grounds for: (i) a
reversal of an adjudication of delinquency, (ii) a new trial;
or (iii) an appeal.
    (2.7) (Blank).
    (2.8) (Blank). The petition for expungement for subsection
(1) and (2) may include multiple offenses on the same petition
and shall be substantially in the following form:
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF ......, ILLINOIS
........ JUDICIAL CIRCUIT

 
IN THE INTEREST OF )    NO.
                   )
                   )
...................)
(Name of Petitioner)
 
PETITION TO EXPUNGE JUVENILE RECORDS
(705 ILCS 405/5-915 (SUBSECTION 1 AND 2))
Now comes ............., petitioner, and respectfully requests
that this Honorable Court enter an order expunging all juvenile
law enforcement and court records of petitioner and in support
thereof states that: Petitioner was arrested on ..... by the
....... Police Department for the offense or offenses of
......., and:
(Check All That Apply:)
( ) a. no petition or petitions were filed with the Clerk of
the Circuit Court.
( ) b. was charged with ...... and was found not delinquent of
the offense or offenses.
( ) c. a petition or petitions were filed and the petition or
petitions were dismissed without a finding of delinquency on
.....
( ) d. on ....... placed under supervision pursuant to Section
5-615 of the Juvenile Court Act of 1987 and such order of
supervision successfully terminated on ........
( ) e. was adjudicated for the offense or offenses, which would
have been a Class B misdemeanor, a Class C misdemeanor, or a
petty offense or business offense if committed by an adult.
( ) f. was adjudicated for a Class A misdemeanor or felony,
except first degree murder or an offense under Article 11 of
the Criminal Code of 2012 if the person is required to register
under the Sex Offender Registration Act, and 2 years have
passed since the case was closed.
Petitioner .... has .... has not been arrested on charges in
this or any county other than the charges listed above. If
petitioner has been arrested on additional charges, please list
the charges below:
Charge(s): ......
Arresting Agency or Agencies: ...........
Disposition/Result: (choose from a. through f., above): .....
WHEREFORE, the petitioner respectfully requests this Honorable
Court to (1) order all law enforcement agencies to expunge all
records of petitioner to this incident or incidents, and (2) to
order the Clerk of the Court to expunge all records concerning
the petitioner regarding this incident or incidents.
 
......................
Petitioner (Signature)

 
..........................
Petitioner's Street Address

 
.....................
City, State, Zip Code

 
.............................
Petitioner's Telephone Number

 
Pursuant to the penalties of perjury under the Code of Civil
Procedure, 735 ILCS 5/1-109, I hereby certify that the
statements in this petition are true and correct, or on
information and belief I believe the same to be true.
 
......................
Petitioner (Signature)
    (3) (Blank). The chief judge of the circuit in which an
arrest was made or a charge was brought or any judge of that
circuit designated by the chief judge may, upon verified
petition of a person who is the subject of an arrest or a
juvenile court proceeding under subsection (1) or (2) of this
Section, order the law enforcement records or official court
file, or both, to be expunged from the official records of the
arresting authority, the clerk of the circuit court and the
Department of State Police. The person whose records are to be
expunged shall petition the court using the appropriate form
containing his or her current address and shall promptly notify
the clerk of the circuit court of any change of address. Notice
of the petition shall be served upon the State's Attorney or
prosecutor charged with the duty of prosecuting the offense,
the Department of State Police, and the arresting agency or
agencies by the clerk of the circuit court. If an objection is
filed within 45 days of the notice of the petition, the clerk
of the circuit court shall set a date for hearing after the
45-day objection period. At the hearing the court shall hear
evidence on whether the expungement should or should not be
granted. Unless the State's Attorney or prosecutor, the
Department of State Police, or an arresting agency objects to
the expungement within 45 days of the notice, the court may
enter an order granting expungement. The clerk shall forward a
certified copy of the order to the Department of State Police
and deliver a certified copy of the order to the arresting
agency.
    (3.1) (Blank). The Notice of Expungement shall be in
substantially the following form:
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF ....., ILLINOIS
.... JUDICIAL CIRCUIT

 
IN THE INTEREST OF )    NO.
                   )
                   )
...................)
(Name of Petitioner)
 
NOTICE
TO:  State's Attorney
TO:  Arresting Agency
................
................
................
................
TO:  Illinois State Police
.....................
.....................
ATTENTION: Expungement
You are hereby notified that on ....., at ....., in courtroom
..., located at ..., before the Honorable ..., Judge, or any
judge sitting in his/her stead, I shall then and there present
a Petition to Expunge Juvenile records in the above-entitled
matter, at which time and place you may appear.
......................
Petitioner's Signature
...........................
Petitioner's Street Address
.....................
City, State, Zip Code
.............................
Petitioner's Telephone Number
PROOF OF SERVICE
On the ....... day of ......, 20..., I on oath state that I
served this notice and true and correct copies of the
above-checked documents by:
(Check One:)
delivering copies personally to each entity to whom they are
directed;
or
by mailing copies to each entity to whom they are directed by
depositing the same in the U.S. Mail, proper postage fully
prepaid, before the hour of 5:00 p.m., at the United States
Postal Depository located at .................
.........................................
Signature
Clerk of the Circuit Court or Deputy Clerk
Printed Name of Delinquent Minor/Petitioner: ....
Address: ........................................
Telephone Number: ...............................
    (3.2) (Blank). The Order of Expungement shall be in
substantially the following form:
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF ....., ILLINOIS
.... JUDICIAL CIRCUIT

 
IN THE INTEREST OF )    NO.
                   )
                   )
...................)(Name of Petitioner)
 
DOB ................
Arresting Agency/Agencies ......
ORDER OF EXPUNGEMENT
(705 ILCS 405/5-915 (SUBSECTION 3))
This matter having been heard on the petitioner's motion and
the court being fully advised in the premises does find that
the petitioner is indigent or has presented reasonable cause to
waive all costs in this matter, IT IS HEREBY ORDERED that:
    ( ) 1. Clerk of Court and Department of State Police costs
are hereby waived in this matter.
    ( ) 2. The Illinois State Police Bureau of Identification
and the following law enforcement agencies expunge all records
of petitioner relating to an arrest dated ...... for the
offense of ......
Law Enforcement Agencies:
.........................
.........................
    ( ) 3. IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that the Clerk of the Circuit
Court expunge all records regarding the above-captioned case.
ENTER: ......................
JUDGE
DATED: .......
Name:
Attorney for:
Address: City/State/Zip:
Attorney Number:
    (3.3) (Blank). The Notice of Objection shall be in
substantially the following form:
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF ....., ILLINOIS
....................... JUDICIAL CIRCUIT

 
IN THE INTEREST OF )    NO.
                   )
                   )
...................)
(Name of Petitioner)
 
NOTICE OF OBJECTION
TO:(Attorney, Public Defender, Minor)
.................................
.................................
TO:(Illinois State Police)
.................................
.................................
TO:(Clerk of the Court)
.................................
.................................
TO:(Judge)
.................................
.................................
TO:(Arresting Agency/Agencies)
.................................
.................................
ATTENTION: You are hereby notified that an objection has been
filed by the following entity regarding the above-named minor's
petition for expungement of juvenile records:
( ) State's Attorney's Office;
( ) Prosecutor (other than State's Attorney's Office) charged
with the duty of prosecuting the offense sought to be expunged;
( ) Department of Illinois State Police; or
( ) Arresting Agency or Agencies.
The agency checked above respectfully requests that this case
be continued and set for hearing on whether the expungement
should or should not be granted.
DATED: .......
Name:
Attorney For:
Address:
City/State/Zip:
Telephone:
Attorney No.:
FOR USE BY CLERK OF THE COURT PERSONNEL ONLY
This matter has been set for hearing on the foregoing
objection, on ...... in room ...., located at ....., before the
Honorable ....., Judge, or any judge sitting in his/her stead.
(Only one hearing shall be set, regardless of the number of
Notices of Objection received on the same case).
A copy of this completed Notice of Objection containing the
court date, time, and location, has been sent via regular U.S.
Mail to the following entities. (If more than one Notice of
Objection is received on the same case, each one must be
completed with the court date, time and location and mailed to
the following entities):
( ) Attorney, Public Defender or Minor;
( ) State's Attorney's Office;
( ) Prosecutor (other than State's Attorney's Office) charged
with the duty of prosecuting the offense sought to be expunged;
( ) Department of Illinois State Police; and
( ) Arresting agency or agencies.
Date: ......
Initials of Clerk completing this section: .....
    (4) (Blank). (a) Upon entry of an order expunging records
or files, the offense, which the records or files concern shall
be treated as if it never occurred. Law enforcement officers
and other public offices and agencies shall properly reply on
inquiry that no record or file exists with respect to the
person.
    (a-5) Local law enforcement agencies shall send written
notice to the minor of the expungement of any records within 60
days of automatic expungement or the date of service of an
expungement order, whichever applies. If a minor's court file
has been expunged, the clerk of the circuit court shall send
written notice to the minor of the expungement of any records
within 60 days of automatic expungement or the date of service
of an expungement order, whichever applies.
    (b) Except with respect to authorized military personnel,
an expunged juvenile record may not be considered by any
private or public entity in employment matters, certification,
licensing, revocation of certification or licensure, or
registration. Applications for employment within the State
must contain specific language that states that the applicant
is not obligated to disclose expunged juvenile records of
adjudication or arrest. Employers may not ask, in any format or
context, if an applicant has had a juvenile record expunged.
Information about an expunged record obtained by a potential
employer, even inadvertently, from an employment application
that does not contain specific language that states that the
applicant is not obligated to disclose expunged juvenile
records of adjudication or arrest, shall be treated as
dissemination of an expunged record by the employer.
    (c) A person whose juvenile records have been expunged is
not entitled to remission of any fines, costs, or other money
paid as a consequence of expungement.
    (5) (Blank).
    (5.5) Whether or not expunged, records eligible for
automatic expungement under subdivision (0.1)(a), (0.2)(a), or
(0.3)(a) may be treated as expunged by the person who is the
individual subject of to the records.
    (6) (Blank). Nothing in this Section shall be construed to
prohibit the maintenance of information relating to an offense
after records or files concerning the offense have been
expunged if the information is kept in a manner that does not
enable identification of the individual. This information may
only be used for anonymous statistical and bona fide research
purposes.
    (6.5) The Department of State Police or any employee of the
Department shall be immune from civil or criminal liability for
failure to expunge any records of arrest that are subject to
expungement under this Section because of inability to verify a
record. Nothing in this Section shall create Department of
State Police liability or responsibility for the expungement of
juvenile law enforcement records it does not possess.
    (7) (Blank). (a) The State Appellate Defender shall
establish, maintain, and carry out, by December 31, 2004, a
juvenile expungement program to provide information and
assistance to minors eligible to have their juvenile records
expunged.
    (b) The State Appellate Defender shall develop brochures,
pamphlets, and other materials in printed form and through the
agency's World Wide Web site. The pamphlets and other materials
shall include at a minimum the following information:
        (i) An explanation of the State's juvenile expungement
    laws, including both automatic expungement and expungement
    by petition;
        (ii) The circumstances under which juvenile
    expungement may occur;
        (iii) The juvenile offenses that may be expunged;
        (iv) The steps necessary to initiate and complete the
    juvenile expungement process; and
        (v) Directions on how to contact the State Appellate
    Defender.
    (c) The State Appellate Defender shall establish and
maintain a statewide toll-free telephone number that a person
may use to receive information or assistance concerning the
expungement of juvenile records. The State Appellate Defender
shall advertise the toll-free telephone number statewide. The
State Appellate Defender shall develop an expungement
information packet that may be sent to eligible persons seeking
expungement of their juvenile records, which may include, but
is not limited to, a pre-printed expungement petition with
instructions on how to complete the petition and a pamphlet
containing information that would assist individuals through
the juvenile expungement process.
    (d) The State Appellate Defender shall compile a statewide
list of volunteer attorneys willing to assist eligible
individuals through the juvenile expungement process.
    (e) This Section shall be implemented from funds
appropriated by the General Assembly to the State Appellate
Defender for this purpose. The State Appellate Defender shall
employ the necessary staff and adopt the necessary rules for
implementation of this Section.
    (7.5) (Blank). (a) Willful dissemination of any
information contained in an expunged record shall be treated as
a Class C misdemeanor and punishable by a fine of $1,000 per
violation.
    (b) Willful dissemination for financial gain of any
information contained in an expunged record shall be treated as
a Class 4 felony. Dissemination for financial gain by an
employee of any municipal, county, or State agency, including
law enforcement, shall result in immediate termination.
    (c) The person whose record was expunged has a right of
action against any person who intentionally disseminates an
expunged record. In the proceeding, punitive damages up to an
amount of $1,000 may be sought in addition to any actual
damages. The prevailing party shall be entitled to costs and
reasonable attorney fees.
    (d) The punishments for dissemination of an expunged record
shall never apply to the person whose record was expunged.
    (8)(a) (Blank). An expunged juvenile record may not be
considered by any private or public entity in employment
matters, certification, licensing, revocation of certification
or licensure, or registration. Applications for employment
must contain specific language that states that the applicant
is not obligated to disclose expunged juvenile records of
adjudication, conviction, or arrest. Employers may not ask if
an applicant has had a juvenile record expunged. Effective
January 1, 2005, the Department of Labor shall develop a link
on the Department's website to inform employers that employers
may not ask if an applicant had a juvenile record expunged and
that application for employment must contain specific language
that states that the applicant is not obligated to disclose
expunged juvenile records of adjudication, arrest, or
conviction.
    (b) (Blank).
    (c) The expungement of juvenile law enforcement or juvenile
court records under subsection (0.1), (0.2), or (0.3) 0.1, 0.2,
or 0.3 of this Section shall be funded by the additional fine
imposed under Section 5-9-1.17 of the Unified Code of
Corrections.
    (9) (Blank).
    (10) (Blank).
(Source: P.A. 99-835, eff. 1-1-17; 99-881, eff. 1-1-17;
100-201, eff. 8-18-17; 100-285, eff. 1-1-18; 100-720, eff.
8-3-18; 100-863, eff. 8-14-18.)
 
    (Text of Section after amendment by P.A. 100-987)
    Sec. 5-915. Expungement of juvenile law enforcement and
juvenile court records.
    (0.05) (Blank). For purposes of this Section:
    "Dissemination" or "disseminate" means to publish,
produce, print, manufacture, distribute, sell, lease, exhibit,
broadcast, display, transmit, or otherwise share information
in any format so as to make the information accessible to
others.
    "Expunge" means to physically destroy the records and to
obliterate the minor's name and juvenile court records from any
official index, public record, or electronic database. No
evidence of the juvenile court records may be retained by any
law enforcement agency, the juvenile court, or by any
municipal, county, or State agency or department. Nothing in
this Act shall require the physical destruction of the internal
office records, files, or databases maintained by a State's
Attorney's Office or other prosecutor, public defender,
probation officer, or by the Office of the Secretary of State.
    "Juvenile court record" includes, but is not limited to:
        (a) all documents filed in or maintained by the
    juvenile court pertaining to a specific incident,
    proceeding, or individual;
        (b) all documents relating to a specific incident,
    proceeding, or individual made available to or maintained
    by probation officers;
        (c) all documents, video or audio tapes, photographs,
    and exhibits admitted into evidence at juvenile court
    hearings; or
        (d) all documents, transcripts, records, reports or
    other evidence prepared by, maintained by, or released by
    any municipal, county, or State agency or department, in
    any format, if indicating involvement with the juvenile
    court relating to a specific incident, proceeding, or
    individual.
    "Law enforcement record" includes, but is not limited to,
records of arrest, station adjustments, fingerprints,
probation adjustments, the issuance of a notice to appear, or
any other records or documents maintained by any law
enforcement agency relating to a minor suspected of committing
an offense or evidence of interaction with law enforcement.
    (0.1) (a) The Department of State Police and all law
enforcement agencies within the State shall automatically
expunge, on or before January 1 of each year, all juvenile law
enforcement records relating to events occurring before an
individual's 18th birthday if:
        (1) one year or more has elapsed since the date of the
    arrest or law enforcement interaction documented in the
    records;
        (2) no petition for delinquency or criminal charges
    were filed with the clerk of the circuit court relating to
    the arrest or law enforcement interaction documented in the
    records; and
        (3) 6 months have elapsed since the date of the arrest
    without an additional subsequent arrest or filing of a
    petition for delinquency or criminal charges whether
    related or not to the arrest or law enforcement interaction
    documented in the records.
    (b) If the law enforcement agency is unable to verify
satisfaction of conditions (2) and (3) of this subsection
(0.1), records that satisfy condition (1) of this subsection
(0.1) shall be automatically expunged if the records relate to
an offense that if committed by an adult would not be an
offense classified as Class 2 felony or higher, an offense
under Article 11 of the Criminal Code of 1961 or Criminal Code
of 2012, or an offense under Section 12-13, 12-14, 12-14.1,
12-15, or 12-16 of the Criminal Code of 1961.
    (0.15) If a juvenile law enforcement record meets paragraph
(a) of subsection (0.1) of this Section, a juvenile law
enforcement record created:
        (1) prior to January 1, 2018, but on or after January
    1, 2013 shall be automatically expunged prior to January 1,
    2020;
        (2) prior to January 1, 2013, but on or after January
    1, 2000, shall be automatically expunged prior to January
    1, 2023; and
        (3) prior to January 1, 2000 shall not be subject to
    the automatic expungement provisions of this Act.
Nothing in this subsection (0.15) shall be construed to
restrict or modify an individual's right to have his or her
juvenile law enforcement records expunged except as otherwise
may be provided in this Act.
    (0.2) (a) Upon dismissal of a petition alleging delinquency
or upon a finding of not delinquent, the successful termination
of an order of supervision, or the successful termination of an
adjudication for an offense which would be a Class B
misdemeanor, Class C misdemeanor, or a petty or business
offense if committed by an adult, the court shall automatically
order the expungement of the juvenile court records and
juvenile law enforcement records. The clerk shall deliver a
certified copy of the expungement order to the Department of
State Police and the arresting agency. Upon request, the
State's Attorney shall furnish the name of the arresting
agency. The expungement shall be completed within 60 business
days after the receipt of the expungement order.
    (b) If the chief law enforcement officer of the agency, or
his or her designee, certifies in writing that certain
information is needed for a pending investigation involving the
commission of a felony, that information, and information
identifying the juvenile, may be retained in an intelligence
file until the statute of limitations for the felony has run.
If the chief law enforcement officer of the agency, or his or
her designee, certifies in writing that certain information is
needed with respect to an internal investigation of any law
enforcement office, that information and information
identifying the juvenile may be retained within an intelligence
file until the investigation is terminated or the disciplinary
action, including appeals, has been completed, whichever is
later the investigation is terminated or for one additional
year, whichever is sooner. Retention of a portion of a
juvenile's law enforcement record does not disqualify the
remainder of his or her record from immediate automatic
expungement.
    (0.3) (a) Upon an adjudication of delinquency based on any
offense except a disqualified offense, the juvenile court shall
automatically order the expungement of the juvenile court and
law enforcement records 2 years after the juvenile's case was
closed if no delinquency or criminal proceeding is pending and
the person has had no subsequent delinquency adjudication or
criminal conviction. The clerk shall deliver a certified copy
of the expungement order to the Department of State Police and
the arresting agency. Upon request, the State's Attorney shall
furnish the name of the arresting agency. The expungement shall
be completed within 60 business days after the receipt of the
expungement order. In For the purposes of this subsection
(0.3), "disqualified offense" means any of the following
offenses: Section 8-1.2, 9-1, 9-1.2, 9-2, 9-2.1, 9-3, 9-3.2,
10-1, 10-2, 10-3, 10-3.1, 10-4, 10-5, 10-9, 11-1.20, 11-1.30,
11-1.40, 11-1.50, 11-1.60, 11-6, 11-6.5, 12-2, 12-3.05,
12-3.3, 12-4.4a, 12-5.02, 12-6.2, 12-6.5, 12-7.1, 12-7.5,
12-20.5, 12-32, 12-33, 12-34, 12-34.5, 18-1, 18-2, 18-3, 18-4,
18-6, 19-3, 19-6, 20-1, 20-1.1, 24-1.2, 24-1.2-5, 24-1.5,
24-3A, 24-3B, 24-3.2, 24-3.8, 24-3.9, 29D-14.9, 29D-20, 30-1,
31-1a, 32-4a, or 33A-2 of the Criminal Code of 2012, or
subsection (b) of Section 8-1, paragraph (4) of subsection (a)
of Section 11-14.4, subsection (a-5) of Section 12-3.1,
paragraph (1), (2), or (3) of subsection (a) of Section 12-6,
subsection (a-3) or (a-5) of Section 12-7.3, paragraph (1) or
(2) of subsection (a) of Section 12-7.4, subparagraph (i) of
paragraph (1) of subsection (a) of Section 12-9, subparagraph
(H) of paragraph (3) of subsection (a) of Section 24-1.6,
paragraph (1) of subsection (a) of Section 25-1, or subsection
(a-7) of Section 31-1 of the Criminal Code of 2012.
    (b) If the chief law enforcement officer of the agency, or
his or her designee, certifies in writing that certain
information is needed for a pending investigation involving the
commission of a felony, that information, and information
identifying the juvenile, may be retained in an intelligence
file until the investigation is terminated or for one
additional year, whichever is sooner. Retention of a portion of
a juvenile's juvenile law enforcement record does not
disqualify the remainder of his or her record from immediate
automatic expungement.
    (0.4) Automatic expungement for the purposes of this
Section shall not require law enforcement agencies to
obliterate or otherwise destroy juvenile law enforcement
records that would otherwise need to be automatically expunged
under this Act, except after 2 years following the subject
arrest for purposes of use in civil litigation against a
governmental entity or its law enforcement agency or personnel
which created, maintained, or used the records. However these
juvenile law enforcement records shall be considered expunged
for all other purposes during this period and the offense,
which the records or files concern, shall be treated as if it
never occurred as required under Section 5-923.
    (0.5) Subsection (0.1) or (0.2) of this Section does not
apply to violations of traffic, boating, fish and game laws, or
county or municipal ordinances.
    (0.6) Juvenile law enforcement records of a plaintiff who
has filed civil litigation against the governmental entity or
its law enforcement agency or personnel that created,
maintained, or used the records, or juvenile law enforcement
records that contain information related to the allegations set
forth in the civil litigation may not be expunged until after 2
years have elapsed after the conclusion of the lawsuit,
including any appeal.
    (0.7) Officer-worn body camera recordings shall not be
automatically expunged except as otherwise authorized by the
Law Enforcement Officer-Worn Body Camera Act.
    (1) Nothing in this subsection (1) precludes an eligible
minor from obtaining expungement under subsection (0.1),
(0.2), or (0.3). Whenever a person has been arrested, charged,
or adjudicated delinquent for an incident occurring before his
or her 18th birthday that if committed by an adult would be an
offense, and that person's juvenile law enforcement and
juvenile court records are not eligible for automatic
expungement under subsection (0.1), (0.2), or (0.3), the person
may petition the court at any time for expungement of juvenile
law enforcement records and juvenile court records relating to
the incident and, upon termination of all juvenile court
proceedings relating to that incident, the court shall order
the expungement of all records in the possession of the
Department of State Police, the clerk of the circuit court, and
law enforcement agencies relating to the incident, but only in
any of the following circumstances:
        (a) the minor was arrested and no petition for
    delinquency was filed with the clerk of the circuit court;
        (a-5) the minor was charged with an offense and the
    petition or petitions were dismissed without a finding of
    delinquency;
        (b) the minor was charged with an offense and was found
    not delinquent of that offense;
        (c) the minor was placed under supervision under
    pursuant to Section 5-615, and the order of supervision has
    since been successfully terminated; or
        (d) the minor was adjudicated for an offense which
    would be a Class B misdemeanor, Class C misdemeanor, or a
    petty or business offense if committed by an adult.
    (1.5) The Department of State Police shall allow a person
to use the Access and Review process, established in the
Department of State Police, for verifying that his or her
juvenile law enforcement records relating to incidents
occurring before his or her 18th birthday eligible under this
Act have been expunged.
    (1.6) (Blank).
    (1.7) (Blank).
    (1.8) (Blank).
    (2) Any person whose delinquency adjudications are not
eligible for automatic expungement under subsection (0.3) of
this Section may petition the court to expunge all juvenile law
enforcement records relating to any incidents occurring before
his or her 18th birthday which did not result in proceedings in
criminal court and all juvenile court records with respect to
any adjudications except those based upon first degree murder
or an offense under Article 11 of the Criminal Code of 2012 if
the person is required to register under the Sex Offender
Registration Act at the time he or she petitions the court for
expungement; provided that:
        (a) (blank); or
        (b) 2 years have elapsed since all juvenile court
    proceedings relating to him or her have been terminated and
    his or her commitment to the Department of Juvenile Justice
    under this Act has been terminated.
    (2.5) If a minor is arrested and no petition for
delinquency is filed with the clerk of the circuit court at the
time the minor is released from custody, the youth officer, if
applicable, or other designated person from the arresting
agency, shall notify verbally and in writing to the minor or
the minor's parents or guardians that the minor shall have an
arrest record and shall provide the minor and the minor's
parents or guardians with an expungement information packet,
information regarding this State's expungement laws including
a petition to expunge juvenile law enforcement and juvenile
court records obtained from the clerk of the circuit court.
    (2.6) If a minor is referred to court then at the time of
sentencing or dismissal of the case, or successful completion
of supervision, the judge shall inform the delinquent minor of
his or her rights regarding expungement and the clerk of the
circuit court shall provide an expungement information packet
to the minor, written in plain language, including information
regarding this State's expungement laws and a petition for
expungement, a sample of a completed petition, expungement
instructions that shall include information informing the
minor that (i) once the case is expunged, it shall be treated
as if it never occurred, (ii) he or she may apply to have
petition fees waived, (iii) once he or she obtains an
expungement, he or she may not be required to disclose that he
or she had a juvenile law enforcement or juvenile court record,
and (iv) if petitioning he or she may file the petition on his
or her own or with the assistance of an attorney. The failure
of the judge to inform the delinquent minor of his or her right
to petition for expungement as provided by law does not create
a substantive right, nor is that failure grounds for: (i) a
reversal of an adjudication of delinquency, (ii) a new trial;
or (iii) an appeal.
    (2.7) (Blank).
    (2.8) (Blank). The petition for expungement for subsection
(1) and (2) may include multiple offenses on the same petition
and shall be substantially in the following form:
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF ......, ILLINOIS
........ JUDICIAL CIRCUIT

 
IN THE INTEREST OF )    NO.
                   )
                   )
...................)
(Name of Petitioner)
 
PETITION TO EXPUNGE JUVENILE RECORDS
(705 ILCS 405/5-915 (SUBSECTION 1 AND 2))
Now comes ............., petitioner, and respectfully requests
that this Honorable Court enter an order expunging all juvenile
law enforcement and court records of petitioner and in support
thereof states that: Petitioner was arrested on ..... by the
....... Police Department for the offense or offenses of
......., and:
(Check All That Apply:)
( ) a. no petition or petitions were filed with the Clerk of
the Circuit Court.
( ) b. was charged with ...... and was found not delinquent of
the offense or offenses.
( ) c. a petition or petitions were filed and the petition or
petitions were dismissed without a finding of delinquency on
.....
( ) d. on ....... placed under supervision pursuant to Section
5-615 of the Juvenile Court Act of 1987 and such order of
supervision successfully terminated on ........
( ) e. was adjudicated for the offense or offenses, which would
have been a Class B misdemeanor, a Class C misdemeanor, or a
petty offense or business offense if committed by an adult.
( ) f. was adjudicated for a Class A misdemeanor or felony,
except first degree murder or an offense under Article 11 of
the Criminal Code of 2012 if the person is required to register
under the Sex Offender Registration Act, and 2 years have
passed since the case was closed.
Petitioner .... has .... has not been arrested on charges in
this or any county other than the charges listed above. If
petitioner has been arrested on additional charges, please list
the charges below:
Charge(s): ......
Arresting Agency or Agencies: ...........
Disposition/Result: (choose from a. through f., above): .....
WHEREFORE, the petitioner respectfully requests this Honorable
Court to (1) order all law enforcement agencies to expunge all
records of petitioner to this incident or incidents, and (2) to
order the Clerk of the Court to expunge all records concerning
the petitioner regarding this incident or incidents.
 
......................
Petitioner (Signature)

 
..........................
Petitioner's Street Address

 
.....................
City, State, Zip Code

 
.............................
Petitioner's Telephone Number

 
Pursuant to the penalties of perjury under the Code of Civil
Procedure, 735 ILCS 5/1-109, I hereby certify that the
statements in this petition are true and correct, or on
information and belief I believe the same to be true.
 
......................
Petitioner (Signature)
    (3) (Blank). The chief judge of the circuit in which an
arrest was made or a charge was brought or any judge of that
circuit designated by the chief judge may, upon verified
petition of a person who is the subject of an arrest or a
juvenile court proceeding under subsection (1) or (2) of this
Section, order the law enforcement records or official court
file, or both, to be expunged from the official records of the
arresting authority, the clerk of the circuit court and the
Department of State Police. The person whose records are to be
expunged shall petition the court using the appropriate form
containing his or her current address and shall promptly notify
the clerk of the circuit court of any change of address. Notice
of the petition shall be served upon the State's Attorney or
prosecutor charged with the duty of prosecuting the offense,
the Department of State Police, and the arresting agency or
agencies by the clerk of the circuit court. If an objection is
filed within 45 days of the notice of the petition, the clerk
of the circuit court shall set a date for hearing after the
45-day objection period. At the hearing the court shall hear
evidence on whether the expungement should or should not be
granted. Unless the State's Attorney or prosecutor, the
Department of State Police, or an arresting agency objects to
the expungement within 45 days of the notice, the court may
enter an order granting expungement. The clerk shall forward a
certified copy of the order to the Department of State Police
and deliver a certified copy of the order to the arresting
agency.
    (3.1) (Blank). The Notice of Expungement shall be in
substantially the following form:
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF ....., ILLINOIS
.... JUDICIAL CIRCUIT

 
IN THE INTEREST OF )    NO.
                   )
                   )
...................)
(Name of Petitioner)
 
NOTICE
TO:  State's Attorney
TO:  Arresting Agency
................
................
................
................
TO:  Illinois State Police
.....................
.....................
ATTENTION: Expungement
You are hereby notified that on ....., at ....., in courtroom
..., located at ..., before the Honorable ..., Judge, or any
judge sitting in his/her stead, I shall then and there present
a Petition to Expunge Juvenile records in the above-entitled
matter, at which time and place you may appear.
......................
Petitioner's Signature
...........................
Petitioner's Street Address
.....................
City, State, Zip Code
.............................
Petitioner's Telephone Number
PROOF OF SERVICE
On the ....... day of ......, 20..., I on oath state that I
served this notice and true and correct copies of the
above-checked documents by:
(Check One:)
delivering copies personally to each entity to whom they are
directed;
or
by mailing copies to each entity to whom they are directed by
depositing the same in the U.S. Mail, proper postage fully
prepaid, before the hour of 5:00 p.m., at the United States
Postal Depository located at .................
.........................................
Signature
Clerk of the Circuit Court or Deputy Clerk
Printed Name of Delinquent Minor/Petitioner: ....
Address: ........................................
Telephone Number: ...............................
    (3.2) (Blank). The Order of Expungement shall be in
substantially the following form:
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF ....., ILLINOIS
.... JUDICIAL CIRCUIT

 
IN THE INTEREST OF )    NO.
                   )
                   )
...................)
(Name of Petitioner)
 
DOB ................
Arresting Agency/Agencies ......
ORDER OF EXPUNGEMENT
(705 ILCS 405/5-915 (SUBSECTION 3))
This matter having been heard on the petitioner's motion and
the court being fully advised in the premises does find that
the petitioner is indigent or has presented reasonable cause to
waive all costs in this matter, IT IS HEREBY ORDERED that:
    ( ) 1. Clerk of Court and Department of State Police costs
are hereby waived in this matter.
    ( ) 2. The Illinois State Police Bureau of Identification
and the following law enforcement agencies expunge all records
of petitioner relating to an arrest dated ...... for the
offense of ......
Law Enforcement Agencies:
.........................
.........................
    ( ) 3. IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that the Clerk of the Circuit
Court expunge all records regarding the above-captioned case.
ENTER: ......................
JUDGE
DATED: .......
Name:
Attorney for:
Address: City/State/Zip:
Attorney Number:
    (3.3) (Blank). The Notice of Objection shall be in
substantially the following form:
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF ....., ILLINOIS
....................... JUDICIAL CIRCUIT

 
IN THE INTEREST OF )    NO.
                   )
                   )
...................)
(Name of Petitioner)
 
NOTICE OF OBJECTION
TO:(Attorney, Public Defender, Minor)
.................................
.................................
TO:(Illinois State Police)
.................................
.................................
TO:(Clerk of the Court)
.................................
.................................
TO:(Judge)
.................................
.................................
TO:(Arresting Agency/Agencies)
.................................
.................................
ATTENTION: You are hereby notified that an objection has been
filed by the following entity regarding the above-named minor's
petition for expungement of juvenile records:
( ) State's Attorney's Office;
( ) Prosecutor (other than State's Attorney's Office) charged
with the duty of prosecuting the offense sought to be expunged;
( ) Department of Illinois State Police; or
( ) Arresting Agency or Agencies.
The agency checked above respectfully requests that this case
be continued and set for hearing on whether the expungement
should or should not be granted.
DATED: .......
Name:
Attorney For:
Address:
City/State/Zip:
Telephone:
Attorney No.:
FOR USE BY CLERK OF THE COURT PERSONNEL ONLY
This matter has been set for hearing on the foregoing
objection, on ...... in room ...., located at ....., before the
Honorable ....., Judge, or any judge sitting in his/her stead.
(Only one hearing shall be set, regardless of the number of
Notices of Objection received on the same case).
A copy of this completed Notice of Objection containing the
court date, time, and location, has been sent via regular U.S.
Mail to the following entities. (If more than one Notice of
Objection is received on the same case, each one must be
completed with the court date, time and location and mailed to
the following entities):
( ) Attorney, Public Defender or Minor;
( ) State's Attorney's Office;
( ) Prosecutor (other than State's Attorney's Office) charged
with the duty of prosecuting the offense sought to be expunged;
( ) Department of Illinois State Police; and
( ) Arresting agency or agencies.
Date: ......
Initials of Clerk completing this section: .....
    (4) (Blank). (a) Upon entry of an order expunging records
or files, the offense, which the records or files concern shall
be treated as if it never occurred. Law enforcement officers
and other public offices and agencies shall properly reply on
inquiry that no record or file exists with respect to the
person.
    (a-5) Local law enforcement agencies shall send written
notice to the minor of the expungement of any records within 60
days of automatic expungement or the date of service of an
expungement order, whichever applies. If a minor's court file
has been expunged, the clerk of the circuit court shall send
written notice to the minor of the expungement of any records
within 60 days of automatic expungement or the date of service
of an expungement order, whichever applies.
    (b) Except with respect to authorized military personnel,
an expunged juvenile record may not be considered by any
private or public entity in employment matters, certification,
licensing, revocation of certification or licensure, or
registration. Applications for employment within the State
must contain specific language that states that the applicant
is not obligated to disclose expunged juvenile records of
adjudication or arrest. Employers may not ask, in any format or
context, if an applicant has had a juvenile record expunged.
Information about an expunged record obtained by a potential
employer, even inadvertently, from an employment application
that does not contain specific language that states that the
applicant is not obligated to disclose expunged juvenile
records of adjudication or arrest, shall be treated as
dissemination of an expunged record by the employer.
    (c) A person whose juvenile records have been expunged is
not entitled to remission of any fines, costs, or other money
paid as a consequence of expungement.
    (5) (Blank).
    (5.5) Whether or not expunged, records eligible for
automatic expungement under subdivision (0.1)(a), (0.2)(a), or
(0.3)(a) may be treated as expunged by the individual subject
to the records.
    (6) (Blank). Nothing in this Section shall be construed to
prohibit the maintenance of information relating to an offense
after records or files concerning the offense have been
expunged if the information is kept in a manner that does not
enable identification of the individual. This information may
only be used for anonymous statistical and bona fide research
purposes.
    (6.5) The Department of State Police or any employee of the
Department shall be immune from civil or criminal liability for
failure to expunge any records of arrest that are subject to
expungement under this Section because of inability to verify a
record. Nothing in this Section shall create Department of
State Police liability or responsibility for the expungement of
juvenile law enforcement records it does not possess.
    (7) (Blank). (a) The State Appellate Defender shall
establish, maintain, and carry out, by December 31, 2004, a
juvenile expungement program to provide information and
assistance to minors eligible to have their juvenile records
expunged.
    (b) The State Appellate Defender shall develop brochures,
pamphlets, and other materials in printed form and through the
agency's World Wide Web site. The pamphlets and other materials
shall include at a minimum the following information:
        (i) An explanation of the State's juvenile expungement
    laws, including both automatic expungement and expungement
    by petition;
        (ii) The circumstances under which juvenile
    expungement may occur;
        (iii) The juvenile offenses that may be expunged;
        (iv) The steps necessary to initiate and complete the
    juvenile expungement process; and
        (v) Directions on how to contact the State Appellate
    Defender.
    (c) The State Appellate Defender shall establish and
maintain a statewide toll-free telephone number that a person
may use to receive information or assistance concerning the
expungement of juvenile records. The State Appellate Defender
shall advertise the toll-free telephone number statewide. The
State Appellate Defender shall develop an expungement
information packet that may be sent to eligible persons seeking
expungement of their juvenile records, which may include, but
is not limited to, a pre-printed expungement petition with
instructions on how to complete the petition and a pamphlet
containing information that would assist individuals through
the juvenile expungement process.
    (d) The State Appellate Defender shall compile a statewide
list of volunteer attorneys willing to assist eligible
individuals through the juvenile expungement process.
    (e) This Section shall be implemented from funds
appropriated by the General Assembly to the State Appellate
Defender for this purpose. The State Appellate Defender shall
employ the necessary staff and adopt the necessary rules for
implementation of this Section.
    (7.5) (Blank). (a) Willful dissemination of any
information contained in an expunged record shall be treated as
a Class C misdemeanor and punishable by a fine of $1,000 per
violation.
    (b) Willful dissemination for financial gain of any
information contained in an expunged record shall be treated as
a Class 4 felony. Dissemination for financial gain by an
employee of any municipal, county, or State agency, including
law enforcement, shall result in immediate termination.
    (c) The person whose record was expunged has a right of
action against any person who intentionally disseminates an
expunged record. In the proceeding, punitive damages up to an
amount of $1,000 may be sought in addition to any actual
damages. The prevailing party shall be entitled to costs and
reasonable attorney fees.
    (d) The punishments for dissemination of an expunged record
shall never apply to the person whose record was expunged.
    (8)(a) (Blank). An expunged juvenile record may not be
considered by any private or public entity in employment
matters, certification, licensing, revocation of certification
or licensure, or registration. Applications for employment
must contain specific language that states that the applicant
is not obligated to disclose expunged juvenile records of
adjudication, conviction, or arrest. Employers may not ask if
an applicant has had a juvenile record expunged. Effective
January 1, 2005, the Department of Labor shall develop a link
on the Department's website to inform employers that employers
may not ask if an applicant had a juvenile record expunged and
that application for employment must contain specific language
that states that the applicant is not obligated to disclose
expunged juvenile records of adjudication, arrest, or
conviction.
    (b) (Blank).
    (c) The expungement of juvenile law enforcement or juvenile
court records under subsection (0.1), (0.2), or (0.3) 0.1, 0.2,
or 0.3 of this Section shall be funded by appropriation by the
General Assembly for that purpose.
    (9) (Blank).
    (10) (Blank).
(Source: P.A. 99-835, eff. 1-1-17; 99-881, eff. 1-1-17;
100-201, eff. 8-18-17; 100-285, eff. 1-1-18; 100-720, eff.
8-3-18; 100-863, eff. 8-14-18; 100-987, eff. 7-1-19; revised
10-3-18.)
 
    (705 ILCS 405/5-920 new)
    Sec. 5-920. Petitions for expungement.
    (a) The petition for expungement for subsections (1) and
(2) of Section 5-915 may include multiple offenses on the same
petition and shall be substantially in the following form:
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF ......, ILLINOIS
........ JUDICIAL CIRCUIT

 
IN THE INTEREST OF )    NO.
                   )
                   )
...................)
(Name of Petitioner)
 
PETITION TO EXPUNGE JUVENILE RECORDS
(Section 5-915 of the Juvenile Court Act of 1987 (Subsections 1
and 2))
Now comes ............., petitioner, and respectfully requests
that this Honorable Court enter an order expunging all juvenile
law enforcement and court records of petitioner and in support
thereof states that: Petitioner was arrested on ..... by the
....... Police Department for the offense or offenses of
......., and:
(Check All That Apply:)
( ) a. no petition or petitions were filed with the Clerk of
the Circuit Court.
( ) b. was charged with ...... and was found not delinquent of
the offense or offenses.
( ) c. a petition or petitions were filed and the petition or
petitions were dismissed without a finding of delinquency on
.....
( ) d. on ....... placed under supervision pursuant to Section
5-615 of the Juvenile Court Act of 1987 and such order of
supervision successfully terminated on ........
( ) e. was adjudicated for the offense or offenses, which would
have been a Class B misdemeanor, a Class C misdemeanor, or a
petty offense or business offense if committed by an adult.
( ) f. was adjudicated for a Class A misdemeanor or felony,
except first degree murder or an offense under Article 11 of
the Criminal Code of 2012 if the person is required to register
under the Sex Offender Registration Act, and 2 years have
passed since the case was closed.
Petitioner .... has .... has not been arrested on charges in
this or any county other than the charges listed above. If
petitioner has been arrested on additional charges, please list
the charges below:
Charge(s): ......
Arresting Agency or Agencies: ...........
Disposition/Result: (choose from a. through f., above): .....
WHEREFORE, the petitioner respectfully requests this Honorable
Court to (1) order all law enforcement agencies to expunge all
records of petitioner to this incident or incidents, and (2) to
order the Clerk of the Court to expunge all records concerning
the petitioner regarding this incident or incidents.
 
......................
Petitioner (Signature)

 
..........................
Petitioner's Street Address

 
.....................
City, State, Zip Code

 
.............................
Petitioner's Telephone Number

 
Pursuant to the penalties of perjury under the Code of Civil
Procedure, 735 ILCS 5/1-109, I hereby certify that the
statements in this petition are true and correct, or on
information and belief I believe the same to be true.
 
......................
Petitioner (Signature)
    (b) The chief judge of the circuit in which an arrest was
made or a charge was brought or any judge of that circuit
designated by the chief judge may, upon verified petition of a
person who is the subject of an arrest or a juvenile court
proceeding under subsection (1) or (2) of Section 5-915, order
the juvenile law enforcement records or official court file, or
both, to be expunged from the official records of the arresting
authority, the clerk of the circuit court and the Department of
State Police. The person whose juvenile law enforcement record,
juvenile court record, or both, are to be expunged shall
petition the court using the appropriate form containing his or
her current address and shall promptly notify the clerk of the
circuit court of any change of address. Notice of the petition
shall be served upon the State's Attorney or prosecutor charged
with the duty of prosecuting the offense, the Department of
State Police, and the arresting agency or agencies by the clerk
of the circuit court. If an objection is filed within 45 days
of the notice of the petition, the clerk of the circuit court
shall set a date for hearing after the 45-day objection period.
At the hearing, the court shall hear evidence on whether the
expungement should or should not be granted. Unless the State's
Attorney or prosecutor, the Department of State Police, or an
arresting agency objects to the expungement within 45 days of
the notice, the court may enter an order granting expungement.
The clerk shall forward a certified copy of the order to the
Department of State Police and deliver a certified copy of the
order to the arresting agency.
    (c) The Notice of Expungement shall be in substantially the
following form:
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF ....., ILLINOIS
.... JUDICIAL CIRCUIT

 
IN THE INTEREST OF )    NO.
                   )
                   )
...................)
(Name of Petitioner)
 
NOTICE
TO:  State's Attorney
TO:  Arresting Agency
................
................
................
................
TO:  Illinois State Police
.....................
.....................
ATTENTION: Expungement
You are hereby notified that on ....., at ....., in courtroom
..., located at ..., before the Honorable ..., Judge, or any
judge sitting in his/her stead, I shall then and there present
a Petition to Expunge Juvenile Records in the above-entitled
matter, at which time and place you may appear.
......................
Petitioner's Signature
...........................
Petitioner's Street Address
.....................
City, State, Zip Code
.............................
Petitioner's Telephone Number
PROOF OF SERVICE
On the ....... day of ......, 20..., I on oath state that I
served this notice and true and correct copies of the
above-checked documents by:
(Check One:)
delivering copies personally to each entity to whom they are
directed;
or
by mailing copies to each entity to whom they are directed by
depositing the same in the U.S. Mail, proper postage fully
prepaid, before the hour of 5:00 p.m., at the United States
Postal Depository located at .................
.........................................
Signature
Clerk of the Circuit Court or Deputy Clerk
Printed Name of Delinquent Minor/Petitioner: ....
Address: ........................................
Telephone Number: ...............................
    (d) The Order of Expungement shall be in substantially the
following form:
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF ....., ILLINOIS
.... JUDICIAL CIRCUIT

 
IN THE INTEREST OF )    NO.
                   )
                   )
...................)
(Name of Petitioner)
 
DOB ................
Arresting Agency/Agencies ......
ORDER OF EXPUNGEMENT
(Section 5-920 of the Juvenile Court Act of 1987 (Subsection
c))
This matter having been heard on the petitioner's motion and
the court being fully advised in the premises does find that
the petitioner is indigent or has presented reasonable cause to
waive all costs in this matter, IT IS HEREBY ORDERED that:
    ( ) 1. Clerk of Court and Department of State Police costs
are hereby waived in this matter.
    ( ) 2. The Illinois State Police Bureau of Identification
and the following law enforcement agencies expunge all records
of petitioner relating to an arrest dated ...... for the
offense of ......
Law Enforcement Agencies:
.........................
.........................
    ( ) 3. IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that the Clerk of the Circuit
Court expunge all records regarding the above-captioned case.
ENTER: ......................
JUDGE
DATED: .......
Name:
Attorney for:
Address: City/State/Zip:
Attorney Number:
    (e) The Notice of Objection shall be in substantially the
following form:
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF ....., ILLINOIS
....................... JUDICIAL CIRCUIT

 
IN THE INTEREST OF )    NO.
                   )
                   )
...................)
(Name of Petitioner)
 
NOTICE OF OBJECTION
TO:(Attorney, Public Defender, Minor)
.................................
.................................
TO:(Illinois State Police)
.................................
.................................
TO:(Clerk of the Court)
.................................
.................................
TO:(Judge)
.................................
.................................
TO:(Arresting Agency/Agencies)
.................................
.................................
ATTENTION: You are hereby notified that an objection has been
filed by the following entity regarding the above-named minor's
petition for expungement of juvenile records:
( ) State's Attorney's Office;
( ) Prosecutor (other than State's Attorney's Office) charged
with the duty of prosecuting the offense sought to be expunged;
( ) Department of Illinois State Police; or
( ) Arresting Agency or Agencies.
The agency checked above respectfully requests that this case
be continued and set for hearing on whether the expungement
should or should not be granted.
DATED: .......
Name:
Attorney For:
Address:
City/State/Zip:
Telephone:
Attorney No.:
FOR USE BY CLERK OF THE COURT PERSONNEL ONLY
This matter has been set for hearing on the foregoing
objection, on ...... in room ...., located at ....., before the
Honorable ....., Judge, or any judge sitting in his/her stead.
(Only one hearing shall be set, regardless of the number of
Notices of Objection received on the same case).
A copy of this completed Notice of Objection containing the
court date, time, and location, has been sent via regular U.S.
Mail to the following entities. (If more than one Notice of
Objection is received on the same case, each one must be
completed with the court date, time and location and mailed to
the following entities):
( ) Attorney, Public Defender or Minor;
( ) State's Attorney's Office;
( ) Prosecutor (other than State's Attorney's Office) charged
with the duty of prosecuting the offense sought to be expunged;
( ) Department of Illinois State Police; and
( ) Arresting agency or agencies.
Date: ......
Initials of Clerk completing this section: .....
 
    (705 ILCS 405/5-923 new)
    Sec. 5-923. Dissemination and retention of expunged
records.
    (a) Upon entry of an order expunging the juvenile law
enforcement record or juvenile court record, or both, the
records or files for that offense shall be treated as if it
never occurred. Law enforcement officers and other public
offices and agencies shall properly reply on inquiry that no
record or file exists with respect to the person. A person
whose juvenile records have been expunged is not entitled to
remission of any fines, costs, or other money paid as a
consequence of expungement.
    (b) Local law enforcement agencies shall send written
notice to the minor of the expungement of any juvenile law
enforcement records within 60 days of automatic expungement or
the date of service of an expungement order, whichever applies.
If a minor's court file has been expunged, the clerk of the
circuit court shall send written notice to the minor of the
expungement of any juvenile court records within 60 days of
automatic expungement or the date of service of an expungement
order, whichever applies. Notice to minors of the expungement
of any juvenile law enforcement records created prior to 2016
may be satisfied by public notice. The names of persons whose
records are being expunged shall not be published in this
public notice.
    (c) Except with respect to authorized military personnel,
an expunged juvenile law enforcement record or expunged
juvenile court record may not be considered by any private or
public entity in employment matters, certification, licensing,
revocation of certification or licensure, or registration.
Applications for employment within the State must contain
specific language that states that the applicant is not
obligated to disclose expunged juvenile records of
adjudication or arrest. Employers may not ask, in any format or
context, if an applicant has had a juvenile record expunged.
Information about an expunged record obtained by a potential
employer, even inadvertently, from an employment application
that does not contain specific language that states that the
applicant is not obligated to disclose expunged juvenile
records of adjudication or arrest, shall be treated as
dissemination of an expunged record by the employer. The
Department of Labor shall develop a link on the Department's
website to inform employers that employers may not ask if an
applicant had a juvenile law enforcement or juvenile court
record expunged and that application for employment must
contain specific language that states that the applicant is not
obligated to disclose expunged juvenile records of
adjudication, arrest, or conviction.
    (d) Nothing in this Act shall be construed to prohibit the
maintenance of information relating to an offense after records
or files concerning the offense have been expunged if the
information is kept in a manner that does not enable
identification of the individual. This information may only be
used for anonymous statistical and bona fide research purposes.
    (d-5) The expungement of juvenile law enforcement or
juvenile court records shall not be subject to the record
retention provisions of the Local Records Act.
    (d-10) No evidence of the juvenile law enforcement or
juvenile court records may be retained by any law enforcement
agency, the juvenile court, or by any municipal, county, or
State agency or department unless specifically authorized by
this Act. However, non-personal identifying data of a
statistical, crime, or trend analysis nature such as the date,
time, location of incident, offense type, general demographic
information, including gender, race, and ethnicity
information, and all other similar information that does not
identify a specific individual may be retained. Nothing in this
Act shall require the physical destruction of the internal
office records, files, or databases maintained by a State's
Attorney's Office or other prosecutor, a public defender, a
probation officer, or the Office of the Secretary of State.
    (e) Willful dissemination of any information contained in
an expunged record shall be treated as a Class C misdemeanor
and punishable by a fine of $1,000 per violation. Willful
dissemination for financial gain of any information contained
in an expunged record shall be treated as a Class 4 felony.
Dissemination for financial gain by an employee of any
municipal, county, or State agency, including law enforcement,
shall result in immediate termination. The person whose record
was expunged has a right of action against any person who
intentionally disseminates an expunged record. In the
proceeding, punitive damages up to an amount of $1,000 may be
sought in addition to any actual damages. The prevailing party
shall be entitled to costs and reasonable attorney fees. The
punishments for dissemination of an expunged record shall never
apply to the person whose record was expunged.
 
    (705 ILCS 405/5-925 new)
    Sec. 5-925. State Appellate Defender juvenile expungement
program.
    (a) The State Appellate Defender shall establish,
maintain, and carry out a juvenile expungement program to
provide information and assistance to minors eligible to have
their juvenile law enforcement or juvenile court records
expunged.
    (b) The State Appellate Defender shall develop brochures,
pamphlets, and other materials in printed form and through the
agency's World Wide Web site. The pamphlets and other materials
shall include at a minimum the following information:
        (1) an explanation of the State's juvenile expungement
    laws, including both automatic expungement and expungement
    by petition;
        (2) the circumstances under which juvenile expungement
    may occur;
        (3) the juvenile offenses that may be expunged;
        (4) the steps necessary to initiate and complete the
    juvenile expungement process; and
        (5) directions on how to contact the State Appellate
    Defender.
    (c) The State Appellate Defender shall establish and
maintain a statewide toll-free telephone number that a person
may use to receive information or assistance concerning the
expungement of juvenile law enforcement or juvenile court
records. The State Appellate Defender shall advertise the
toll-free telephone number statewide. The State Appellate
Defender shall develop an expungement information packet that
may be sent to eligible persons seeking expungement of their
juvenile law enforcement or court records, which may include,
but is not limited to, a pre-printed expungement petition with
instructions on how to complete the petition and a pamphlet
containing information that would assist individuals through
the juvenile expungement process.
    (d) The State Appellate Defender shall compile a statewide
list of volunteer attorneys willing to assist eligible
individuals through the juvenile expungement process.
    (e) This Section shall be implemented from funds
appropriated by the General Assembly to the State Appellate
Defender for this purpose. The State Appellate Defender shall
employ the necessary staff and adopt the necessary rules for
implementation of this Section.
 
    Section 95. No acceleration or delay. Where this Act makes
changes in a statute that is represented in this Act by text
that is not yet or no longer in effect (for example, a Section
represented by multiple versions), the use of that text does
not accelerate or delay the taking effect of (i) the changes
made by this Act or (ii) provisions derived from any other
Public Act.
 
    Section 99. Effective date. This Act takes effect upon
becoming law.