Senator Sally Turner
Controversial SAFE-T Act undergoes changes, but public safety
concerns remain
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[December 10, 2022]
In the final week of the annual fall veto session,
legislators took up an amendment to House Bill 1095, which made some
changes to the controversial SAFE-T Act.
The SAFE-T Act is a major criminal justice rewrite that was passed,
despite bipartisan opposition, in a late-night lame-duck session on
January 13, 2021. Since its passage, Senate Republicans joined
state’s attorneys and law enforcement personnel from across Illinois
to sound the alarm on how the law threatens the safety of their
communities.
One of the more controversial provisions includes the elimination of
cash bail, which is set to take effect statewide beginning January
1, 2023.
Despite the changes approved by the General Assembly last week,
which include expanding the types of offenses that are eligible for
pre-trial detention, Senate Republicans said the bill still does not
go near far enough to fix the many concerns found in the law.
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State Senator Sally Turner noted,
among other concerns, that judges still won’t have the broad
discretion they need to be able to hold certain dangerous people
in jail ahead of their trial. Additionally, the changes found in
House Bill 1095 still don’t address the millions of dollars this
law will cost local governments and police departments.
House Bill 1095 was approved by a strictly partisan vote and is
now awaiting the Governor’s action.
[State Senator Sally Turner]
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