‘Eavesdropping’ rules head to Illinois
governor
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[December 08, 2014]
By Greg Bishop
SPRINGFIELD — The Illinois Senate
concurs with the House: Illinois needs protections for private
communications. However, the issue of body cameras was not addressed
in the legislation, something lawmakers say they plan on coming back
to in the spring to address.
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Senator Tim Bivins said police-worn body cameras must be addressed because of
events in the past few months.
“We talked earlier on other bills about a sense of urgency,” he said. “If ever
there was a sense of urgency in our country it’s right now and the body camera
language needs to be addressed as soon as possible to protect not only our
police officers but our citizens. Body cameras cut both ways, they can exonerate
or they can indict and it’s important people are demanding and expecting this.
It’s protection that we need.”
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Bivins said delaying the discussion any further is a disservice.
Sponsor in the senate Kwame Raoul says members of the House and
Senate understand the urgency to address body cameras and they plan
to do so under the new General Assembly beginning next month.
After the Illinois Supreme Court overturned Illinois’ decades old
eavesdropping law, the new eavesdropping legislation passed the
state Senate with only four voting “no.”
[This
article courtesy of
Watchdog.]
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