(720 ILCS 5/12-9) (from Ch. 38, par. 12-9)
Sec. 12-9. Threatening public officials; human service providers.
(a) A person commits threatening a public official or human service provider when:
(1) that person knowingly delivers or conveys, |
| directly or indirectly, to a public official or human service provider by any means a communication:
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(i) containing a threat that would place the
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| public official or human service provider or a member of his or her immediate family in reasonable apprehension of immediate or future bodily harm, sexual assault, confinement, or restraint; or
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(ii) containing a threat that would place the
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| public official or human service provider or a member of his or her immediate family in reasonable apprehension that damage will occur to property in the custody, care, or control of the public official or his or her immediate family; and
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(2) the threat was conveyed because of the
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| performance or nonperformance of some public duty or duty as a human service provider, because of hostility of the person making the threat toward the status or position of the public official or the human service provider, or because of any other factor related to the official's public existence.
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(a-5) For purposes of a threat to a sworn law enforcement officer, the threat must contain specific facts indicative of a unique threat to the person, family or property of the officer and not a generalized threat of harm.
(a-6) For purposes of a threat to a social worker, caseworker, investigator, or human service provider, the threat must contain specific facts indicative of a unique threat to the person, family or property of the individual and not a generalized threat of harm.
(b) For purposes of this Section:
(1) "Public official" means a person who is elected
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| to office in accordance with a statute or who is appointed to an office which is established, and the qualifications and duties of which are prescribed, by statute, to discharge a public duty for the State or any of its political subdivisions or in the case of an elective office any person who has filed the required documents for nomination or election to such office. "Public official" includes a duly appointed assistant State's Attorney, assistant Attorney General, or Appellate Prosecutor; a sworn law enforcement or peace officer; a social worker, caseworker, attorney, or investigator employed by the Department of Healthcare and Family Services, the Department of Human Services, the Department of Children and Family Services, or the Guardianship and Advocacy Commission; or an assistant public guardian, attorney, social worker, case manager, or investigator employed by a duly appointed public guardian.
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(1.5) "Human service provider" means a social
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| worker, case worker, or investigator employed by an agency or organization providing social work, case work, or investigative services under a contract with or a grant from the Department of Human Services, the Department of Children and Family Services, the Department of Healthcare and Family Services, or the Department on Aging.
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(2) "Immediate family" means a public official's
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| spouse or child or children.
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(c) Threatening a public official or human service provider is a Class 3 felony for a
first offense and a Class 2 felony for a second or subsequent offense.
(Source: P.A. 100-1, eff. 1-1-18 .)
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(720 ILCS 5/12-10.3) Sec. 12-10.3. False representation to a tattoo or body piercing business as the parent or legal guardian of a minor. (a) A person, other than the parent or legal guardian of a minor, commits the offense of false representation to a tattoo or body piercing business as the parent or legal guardian of a minor when he or she falsely represents himself or herself as the parent or legal guardian of the minor to an owner or employee of a tattoo or body piercing business for the purpose of: (1) accompanying the minor to a business that |
| provides tattooing as required under Section 12-10 of this Code (tattooing body of minor);
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(2) accompanying the minor to a business that
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| provides body piercing as required under Section 12-10.1 of this Code (piercing the body of a minor); or
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(3) furnishing the written consent required under
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| Section 12-10.1 of this Code (piercing the body of a minor).
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(b) Sentence. False representation to a tattoo or body piercing business as the parent or legal guardian of a minor is a Class C misdemeanor.
(Source: P.A. 96-1311, eff. 1-1-11.)
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(720 ILCS 5/12-20) (from Ch. 38, par. 12-20)
Sec. 12-20. Sale of body parts.
(a) Except as provided in subsection
(b), any person who knowingly buys or sells, or offers to buy or sell, a
human body or any part of a human body, is guilty of a Class A misdemeanor
for the first conviction and a Class 4 felony for subsequent convictions.
(b) This Section does not prohibit:
(1) An anatomical gift made in accordance with the |
| Illinois Anatomical Gift Act.
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(2) (Blank).
(3) Reimbursement of actual expenses incurred by a
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| living person in donating an organ, tissue or other body part or fluid for transplantation, implantation, infusion, injection, or other medical or scientific purpose, including medical costs, loss of income, and travel expenses.
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(4) Payments provided under a plan of insurance or
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| other health care coverage.
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(5) Reimbursement of reasonable costs associated with
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| the removal, storage or transportation of a human body or part thereof donated for medical or scientific purposes.
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(6) Purchase or sale of blood, plasma, blood products
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| or derivatives, other body fluids, or human hair.
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(7) Purchase or sale of drugs, reagents or other
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| substances made from human bodies or body parts, for use in medical or scientific research, treatment or diagnosis.
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(Source: P.A. 96-1551, eff. 7-1-11 .)
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(720 ILCS 5/12-20.5)
Sec. 12-20.5. Dismembering a human body.
(a) A person commits dismembering a human body
when he or she knowingly dismembers, severs, separates,
dissects, or mutilates any body part of a deceased's body.
(b) This Section does not apply to:
(1) an anatomical gift made in accordance with the |
| Illinois Anatomical Gift Act;
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(2) (blank);
(3) the purchase or sale of drugs, reagents, or other
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| substances made from human body parts, for the use in medical or scientific research, treatment, or diagnosis;
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(4) persons employed by a county medical examiner's
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| office or coroner's office acting within the scope of their employment while performing an autopsy;
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(5) the acts of a licensed funeral director or
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| embalmer while performing acts authorized by the Funeral Directors and Embalmers Licensing Code;
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(6) the acts of emergency medical personnel or
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| physicians performed in good faith and according to the usual and customary standards of medical practice in an attempt to resuscitate a life; or
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(7) physicians licensed to practice medicine in all
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| of its branches or holding a visiting professor, physician, or resident permit under the Medical Practice Act of 1987, performing acts in accordance with usual and customary standards of medical practice, or a currently enrolled student in an accredited medical school in furtherance of his or her education at the accredited medical school.
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(c) It is not a defense to a violation of this Section that the decedent
died due to
natural, accidental, or suicidal causes.
(d) Sentence. Dismembering a human body is a Class X felony.
(Source: P.A. 95-331, eff. 8-21-07; 96-1551, eff. 7-1-11 .)
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(720 ILCS 5/12-20.6) Sec. 12-20.6. Abuse of a corpse. (a) In this Section: "Corpse" means the dead body of a human being. "Sexual conduct" has the meaning ascribed to the term in Section 11-0.1 of this Code. (b) A person commits abuse of a corpse if he or she intentionally: (1) engages in sexual conduct with a corpse or |
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(2) removes or carries away a corpse and is not
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| authorized by law to do so.
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(c) Sentence.
(1) A person convicted of violating paragraph (1) of
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| subsection (b) of this Section is guilty of a Class 2 felony.
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(2) A person convicted of violating paragraph (2) of
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| subsection (b) of this Section is guilty of a Class 4 felony.
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(d) Paragraph (2) of subsection (b) of this Section does not apply to:
(1) persons employed by a county medical examiner's
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| office or coroner's office acting within the scope of their employment;
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(2) the acts of a licensed funeral director or
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| embalmer while performing acts authorized by the Funeral Directors and Embalmers Licensing Code;
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(3) cemeteries and cemetery personnel while
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| performing acts pursuant to a bona fide request from the involved cemetery consumer or his or her heirs, or pursuant to an interment or disinterment permit or a court order, or as authorized under Section 14.5 of the Cemetery Protection Act, or any other actions legally authorized for cemetery employees;
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(4) the acts of emergency medical personnel or
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| physicians performed in good faith and according to the usual and customary standards of medical practice in an attempt to resuscitate a life;
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(5) physicians licensed to practice medicine in all
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| of its branches or holding a visiting professor, physician, or resident permit under the Medical Practice Act of 1987, performing acts in accordance with usual and customary standards of medical practice, or a currently enrolled student in an accredited medical school in furtherance of his or her education at the accredited medical school; or
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(6) removing or carrying away a corpse by the
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| employees, independent contractors, or other persons designated by the federally designated organ procurement agency engaged in the organ and tissue procurement process.
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(Source: P.A. 97-1072, eff. 8-24-12 .)
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(720 ILCS 5/12-21.6-5) Sec. 12-21.6-5. Parent or guardian leaving custody or control of child with child sex offender. (a) For the purposes of this Section, "minor" means a person under 18 years of age; and "child sex offender" means a sex offender who is required to register under the Sex Offender Registration Act and is a child sex offender as defined in Sections 11-9.3 and 11-9.4 of this Code. (b) It is unlawful for a parent or guardian of a minor to knowingly leave that minor in the custody or control of a child sex offender, or allow the child sex offender unsupervised access to the minor. (c) This Section does not apply to leaving the minor in the custody or control of, or allowing unsupervised access to the minor by: (1) a child sex offender who is the parent of the |
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(2) a person convicted of a violation of subsection
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| (c) of Section 12-15 of this Code; or
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(3) a child sex offender who is married to and
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| living in the same household with the parent or guardian of the minor.
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This subsection (c) shall not be construed to allow a child sex offender to knowingly reside within 500 feet of the minor victim of the sex offense if prohibited by subsection (b-6) of Section 11-9.4 of this Code.
(d) Sentence. A person who violates this Section is guilty of a Class A misdemeanor.
(e) Nothing in this Section shall prohibit the filing of a petition or the instituting of any proceeding under Article II of the Juvenile Court Act of 1987 relating to abused minors.
(Source: P.A. 96-1094, eff. 1-1-11.)
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