Republicans announce effort to repeal SAFE-T Act, Democrats call it ‘all
for show’
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[January 21, 2022]
By BETH HUNDSDORFER
Capitol News Illinois
bhundsdorfer@capitolnewsillinois.com
Republicans are calling for their
Democratic counterparts in the Illinois House to join them in efforts to
repeal criminal justice reforms, known as the Safety, Accountability,
Fairness and Equity-Today Act, commonly known as the SAFE-T Act.
Reps. Patrick Windhorst, R-Metropolis, Ryan Spain, R-Peoria, and Deanne
Mazzochi, R-Elmhurst, joined House GOP Leader Jim Durkin, R-Western
Springs, at a news conference Thursday to announce their support for
legislation, House Bill 4499, introduced a week ago, to repeal the
SAFE-T Act.
Spain called the SAFE-T Act “damaging and dangerous with real
consequences for the people of the state of Illinois.”
Democratic proponents of the SAFE-T Act, who called the effort by super
minority Republicans “all for show,” pointed out that many of the
substantive changes created by the bill had not yet taken effect.
That includes a measure that would eliminate cash bail in favor of a
pre-trial detention method that prioritizes aspects such as the level of
danger a suspect poses rather than their ability to post bail. The exact
parameters for pre-trial detention will be determined by the courts.
That measure takes effect in January 2023.
The original SAFE-T Act also changed use-of-force guidelines for law
enforcement, created a new police certification system and expanded
detainee rights.
Spain said crime has skyrocketed in Illinois with increases in retail
theft, carjacking and murders, citing 800 murders last year in Chicago.
“Illinois has become the wild, wild Midwest,” Durkin said.
Tweaks to the bill, including a measure passed last year diluting some
of the use-of-force language in the original bill, aren’t good enough,
the Republicans said on Thursday, and the SAFE-T Act should be repealed
entirely. Mazzochi said it would only take a few Democrats to cross over
to get it done.
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Rep. Patrick Windhorst, R-Metropolis, introduced a
resolution to repeal the SAFE-T Act last week, one year after it
passed the House. Windhorst is pictured here participating in a
virtual news conference about the legislation Thursday. (Credit:
blueroomstream.com)
“Repeal is a realistic solution. The original, underlying legislation
passed with a bare minimum of 60 votes,” Mazzochi said. “ … It almost
didn’t pass the first time.”
The bill, supported by the Illinois Legislative Black Caucus, passed on
Jan. 13, 2021, one year to the day the bill to repeal it was filed.
The Black Caucus countered the SAFE-T Act made the justice system fairer
for minorities, according to statement released after the press
conference on Thursday. The statement went on to say they continue to
work with law enforcement groups, including by passing two follow-up
measures.
“Many provisions of the SAFE-T Act have not even gone into effect yet,
proving the Republican gambit is all for show,” the statement said. “In
fact, when fully implemented, experts say the SAFE-T Act will help
improve public safety by supporting a more holistic approach for
first-responders. Instead of coming up with solutions to address crime,
Republicans are just trying the same racial scare tactics we see across
the country.”
Durkin and Windhorst, both former prosecutors, said the bill made the
state more dangerous. Durkin said Democrats would have to answer to
their constituents for the bill’s passage and Republicans would use
public safety as an issue in upcoming elections.
Earlier this month, an amendment passed to clarify issues related to
detainee phone calls, pretrial services and moving back effective dates
for body cameras and police decertification. The House voted 67-42 to
approve the Senate amendment.
Spain said the Safe-T Act will leave half of the county sheriffs in
Illinois leaving their posts and has left city and county police
departments scrambling to recruit and retain officers after a wave of
resignations in the wake of the bill’s passage.
Capitol News Illinois is a nonprofit, nonpartisan news service covering
state government and distributed to more than 400 newspapers statewide.
It is funded primarily by the Illinois Press Foundation and the Robert
R. McCormick Foundation. |