Cabello, a Rockford police detective on leave while he serves in the General
Assembly, was among the lead negotiators of Senate Bill 1307, which Gov. Bruce
Rauner signed into law Wednesday.
Lawmakers from both sides of the aisle, the governor, police groups and the
American Civil Liberties Union endorsed the legislation, with many calling it a
blueprint for states to follow.
Cabello said he thinks the bill does a good job of building the police-community
relationship and makings sure police officers are accountable while respecting
the need for officer safety.
“Police work nowadays is nowhere near where it was even when I started 20 years
ago,” said Cabello, R-Machesney Park.
While the bill might not thrill everyone, it is strong and does represent real
progress as a result of good-faith negotiating, he said.
The lead taken by police groups also encouraged proponents including Cabello,
Rep. John Anthony, R-Plainfield, and Rep. Elgie Sims Jr., D-Chicago.
“I think this bill is colorblind,” Sims said. “It addresses the delivery of
police services.”
“We’ve come a long way, and I think we’ve done a very good job of improving
along the way,” said Cabello, adding police are committed to continued
improvement.
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The measure, among other things:
-Authorizes, but does not require, the use of police body cameras throughout the
state.
-Sets protocols for police use of the cameras and the retention of data.
-Mandates fair-policing training and re-training for officers.
-Starts a grant program funded by a $5 charge on traffic tickets to help fund
the cameras and data storage.
-Establishes a database of officers fired for misconduct or who resigned while
under criminal investigation.
-Requires involvement of independent agency investigators in officer-involved
deaths.
“We have some of greatest training standards in nation,” said John Anthony, a
former police officer and sheriff’s deputy.
Sen. Kwame Raoul, D-Chicago, lead sponsor of the bill, said while everyone tends
to focus on body cameras, this legislation goes further and seeks to address
issues including use of force, cultural bias and procedural justice.
Raoul and other sponsors said they did not make the body cameras mandatory
because the state cannot fund that right now, but the grant fund and, hopefully,
federal dollars to come will mean more officers are wearing the cameras daily.
The $5 fee will be added to speeding and other traffic offenses starting in
January of 2016.
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