Lawmakers pass second follow-up measure to last year’s criminal justice
reform
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[January 07, 2022]
By GRACE KINNICUTT
Capitol News Illinoisans
gkinnicutt@capitolnewsillinois.com
SPRINGFIELD – Illinois lawmakers this week
passed a bill clarifying issues around the massive criminal justice
reform bill that passed with the support of the Illinois Legislative
Black Caucus last year.
On a 67-42 vote, the House voted Wednesday to accept a senate amendment
to House Bill 3512, clarifying issues relating to pretrial services,
detainee phone calls and moving back effective dates in the police
decertification system and body camera footage labeling.
Rep. Justin Slaughter, D-Chicago, the lead House sponsor of the bill,
said it’s intended to help facilitate the implementation of the Safety,
Accountability, Fairness and Equity-Today, or SAFE-T Act that was passed
in January 2021.
During the debate, Republicans voiced their frustrations regarding
language used for detainee phone calls and pretrial services.
The bill outlines that when someone is detained, law enforcement must
allow them to make up to three phone calls within three hours of being
detained. If the individual is moved from one detention center to the
next, the three phone calls and three hours will restart.
But House Minority Leader Jim Durkin, R-Western Springs, argued that the
bill did not provide enough clarification between the words “police
custody” and “detention”.
“Police custody means that they’re not free to leave. That means that
they’re sitting in a squad car and under the way you’ve drafted your
bill, that means that the police have to give that person three phone
calls,” Durkin said.
But the bill clarifies that the definition of “detention” is police
stations, places that operate municipal police departments, county
police departments and other law enforcement agencies.
Slaughter also clarified that the time on phone calls will begin at the
place of detention.
It also notes that a record of the phone calls made must be maintained
while an individual is in custody. If no calls are made, the detainee
must give a statement to the police as to why the person detained did
not make any calls.
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Rep. Patrick Windhorst,
R-Metropolis, said the three phone calls, three hours restarting
when someone is transferred, created “an additional burden on law
enforcement,” especially in rural areas.
The three-hour requirement for phone calls will not
apply when the individual is asleep, unconscious or not complying
with officers. A document must be noted within the police report
that details the noncompliance.
Slaughter also noted that the bill puts forth agreed language in
which it will promote the hiring and training for pretrial services
in counties where they do not yet exist.
“This allows 53 circuits in Illinois who are currently without
pretrial services to establish them as required by the Illinois
Pretrial Services Act of 1987. We’re 34 years late,” Slaughter said.
The Pretrial Services Act provides the legal framework for the
pretrial process in Illinois. It provides that “each circuit shall
establish a pretrial services agency”.
Requested by the courts for help with implementation of the act, HB
3512 would allow the state to begin to comply with the requirement.
“When you look at what we’re doing on pretrial fairness and detainee
rights, it signifies to cities all across the state, especially
communities of color, that we’re serious about addressing the need
for the many disparities that we see in our criminal justice
system,” Slaughter said.
The original SAFE-T Act provided for the end of cash bail in
Illinois in favor of a yet-to-be-determined pretrial detention
system that prioritizes risk over a person’s ability to make bail.
The state’s courts are to create an administrative code outlining
the new pretrial detention system by January 2023. That provision is
unchanged in the latest follow-up bill.
The trailer bill passed Wednesday also pushes back the effective
dates for the police decertification system to July 1, 2022. It also
clarifies that labeling body camera footage is not considered
“altering” footage for as it pertains to language in the original
SAFE-T Act.
Due to the pandemic, the Illinois Law Enforcement Training and
Standards Board asked the date to be pushed back in order to provide
more time with hiring and building the new division.
The bill passed the Senate in October and needs only a signature
from the governor to become law.
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Foundation and the Robert R. McCormick Foundation. |