Pritzker signs ban on deceptive interrogation of minors, other criminal
justice reforms
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[July 16, 2021]
By JERRY NOWICKI
Capitol News Illinois
jnowicki@capitolnewsillinois.com
SPRINGFIELD – Terrill Swift spent 15 years
in prison, convicted of a rape and murder which DNA evidence later
proved he did not commit.
On Thursday, he appeared alongside lawmakers and criminal justice reform
advocates in support of a bill signed by Democratic Gov. JB Pritzker to
ban deceptive police interrogation of minors. The measure, Senate Bill
2122, was unanimously approved by lawmakers earlier this year, and
Illinois has been hailed as the first state in the nation to enact such
a law.
“When it was first brought to me, it touched me in that sense that it
could have saved my life,” Swift said at a news conference in Chicago.
“But the reality is I can't get what I got back. So moving forward, I
want to try and help and make sure that this doesn't happen again.”
Swift and three other teens known as the “Englewood Four” – Vincent
Thames, Harold Richardson and Michael Saunders – were each charged and
sentenced in connection with the 1994 rape and murder of Nina Glover.
Swift, who was 17 at the time of the crime, and the others all signed
written confessions, but later argued they were coerced. No other
physical evidence linking the men to the crime was presented at trial,
but all were eventually found guilty based on the confessions.
Each of the four men served more than a decade in prison until
authorities retried DNA evidence in 2011 that linked the semen found in
Glover’s body to another man – Johnny Douglas – who was the first
suspect questioned in Glover’s death but was later released. Douglas, a
convicted murderer and sex offender, was fatally shot in 2008 by a woman
who claimed self-defense and was later acquitted.
Swift, recounting his experience Thursday, said law enforcement
officials at the time asked him to come to the police station, then told
his father and uncle they were bringing him to a different station than
where he ended up.
“Then when I get there, I get hit with a series of lies that I raped and
murdered someone who I did not even know,” he said. “I'm accused of
raping and murdering someone with people whom I didn't even know.
…Michael Saunders. …That's my brother now, but back then we were kids,
we didn't even know each other.”
Laura Nirider, a law professor and co-director of the Center on Wrongful
Convictions at the Northwestern University Pritzker School of Law where
the bill was signed, said in Illinois alone there have been at least 100
recorded wrongful convictions that have been based on false confessions,
including 31 cases in which a child falsely confessed.
“Many children who falsely confess do so because they are told downright
falsehoods during interrogation, statements like ‘your DNA was found at
the scene,’ or ‘if you confess, you'll get to go home,’” Nirider said.
The new law, which takes effect in January, makes such a confession by a
person under the age of 18 inadmissible in court if the officer who
conducted the interrogation “knowingly engages in deception.”
Cook County State’s Attorney Kimberly Foxx, who spoke during the bill
signing Thursday, said false confessions inevitably lead to the real
perpetrators walking free and potentially committing other crimes.
“This is about public safety, trust and legitimacy in our criminal
justice system,” she said, adding that’s “how we get people who would be
reluctant to engage with us to engage.”
Rep. Justin Slaughter, D-Chicago, who sponsored the bill in the House,
said aside from the obvious justice and public safety aspects of the
bill, it is also prudent from a fiscal perspective.
During floor debate of the bill in May, he pointed out that government
entities have paid the Englewood Four more than $30 million collectively
in restitution for the wrongful incarceration.
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Terrill Swift, who spent 15 years in prison after
being coerced into confessing to a crime he did not commit, speaks
at a news conference Thursday in favor of a law that bans the
deceptive interrogation of minors by law enforcement. (Credit:
Blueroomstream.com)
“Taxpayers have been paying millions and millions of
dollars for the cost of these settlements, and then secondly there's
the unnecessary costs stemming from incarcerating an individual
who's innocent,” Slaughter said Thursday.
The deceptive interrogations ban was one of four bills signed
Thursday by Pritzker, all of which were carried in the Senate by
Sen. Robert Peters, D-Chicago.
“There cannot be justice if those in power are
allowed to deceive,” Peters said. “It is time that we move towards a
new era of public safety, public safety for all, public safety by
the people, public safety that belongs to us. What does this
reimagining public safety look like? It looks like what we have done
in Illinois.”
Other measures signed
Senate Bill 2129: Pritzker also signed a measure allowing a state’s
attorney to file a motion to resentence a defendant if the original
sentence “no longer advances the interests of justice.”
“This bill allows prosecutors to consider factors including prison
disciplinary records, proof of rehabilitation, and being a reduced
risk to society due to age or health and to ensure that we continue
to address mass incarceration and overly punitive sentences,”
Pritzker said.
The process does not allow for a reopening of a conviction or for a
longer sentence than what was initially given, and victims of the
crime will still be afforded rights outlined in the Rights of Crime
Victims and Witness Act.
It passed the House on a 61-48 vote and the Senate by a 31-17 vote,
each with no Republican support.
Senate Bill 64: Another measure aims to encourage restorative
justice by making “anything said or done” in the course of a
restorative justice practice “privileged,” meaning it cannot be used
“in any civil, criminal, juvenile, or administrative proceeding.”
Illinois first began using restorative justice courts in 2017.
According to the Illinois State Bar Association, restorative justice
is meant to bring together the offenders, victims and communities to
“address and repair the harm.”
The legislation defines this practice as when “parties who have
caused harm or who have been harmed and community stakeholders
collectively gather to identify and repair harm to the extent
possible, address trauma, reduce the likelihood of further harm, and
strengthen community ties.”
That measure passed the Senate 39-17 with only Democratic support
and the House 82-32 with bipartisan support.
House Bill 3587: The final bill signed by Pritzker creates a
Resentencing Task Force to “study innovative ways to reduce the
prison population in Illinois from initiations of resentencing
motions filed by incarcerated individuals, state's attorneys, the
Illinois Department of Corrections and the judicial branch,”
according to the legislation.
That measure passed the Senate 51-0 and the House 113-5.
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