Pritzker announces progress in processing rape case evidence, signs
highway camera expansion
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[June 04, 2022]
By JERRY NOWICKI
Capitol News Illinois
jnowicki@capitolnewsillinois.com
SPRINGFIELD – The Illinois State Police announced Friday that all sexual
assault evidence is being processed within the 180-day timeframe
outlined in state law – bringing to zero the number of legally
“backlogged” cases that rose as high as 1,815 in March 2019.
It’s the first time all such evidence is being processed within 180 days
as required by a 2010 law, according to the governor’s office.
“We have finally reached this mark that the General Assembly put down,
this mark of 180 days, over a decade ago. Complying with that, and
finally getting under 180 days, is just the first phase of that
enterprise and we are going to be holding ourselves accountable to
reaching the 90-day mark in the next phase,” Illinois State Police
Director Brendan Kelly said at a news conference.
Pritzker joined Kelly and local elected officials in Belleville, where
ISP is establishing the Illinois State Police Forensic Science Institute
to house a portion of the ISP forensic science training program.
The governor’s office said over the past two years, ISP reduced its
total forensic backlog by 72 percent, while the backlog in drug
chemistry evidence processing decreased by 90 percent from Feb. 2019 to
the end of 2021.
Kelly said ISP has a goal of bringing a sense of closure to crime
victims by processing the evidence that may lead to an arrest.
“That's why I'm pleased to report in the forensic discipline of trace
chemistry, 2021 ended with the lowest backlog in eight years,” Kelly
said. “In biology, the lowest backlog in 11 years. In toxicology with
the lowest backlog in 15 years. Firearms with the lowest backlog in 18
years. Footwear with the lowest backlog in 20 years. Chemistry with the
lowest backlog in 28 years, and latent prints with the lowest backlog in
31 years.”
Carrie Ward, executive director of the Illinois Coalition Against Sexual
Assault, praised “significant progress” from ISP.
She said when ICASA first became part of a task force addressing the
backlogs, “the horror stories of evidence collection backlogs were
numerous.”
“Kits were found untested across the state. The wait time for results
from kits that were tested stretched into years instead of months or
weeks,” she said. “Today we can acknowledge substantial progress.”
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Illinois State Police Director Brendan Kelly speaks
at a news conference Friday about the state's progress in processing
forensic evidence. (Credit: Illinois.gov)
“But our work here isn't done,” she added. “We must continue to address
the barriers both internal and external that prompt us to recognize six
months, or 180 days, as cause for celebration, because six months is
still a long time for survivors to wait. We cannot be complacent with
our progress.”
The Rebuild Illinois capital infrastructure plan signed in 2019 included
$76.6 million for a new combined crime laboratory and administrative
facility in Joliet. This year’s budget also included $5.4 million for
increased staffing and equipment at a new ISP forensic lab in Decatur.
Highway cameras
The governor also signed a pair of bills Friday that expand the state’s
highway camera monitoring program.
House Bill 4481 expands a Cook County roadway camera pilot program to
state highways and expressways in the counties of Boone, Bureau,
Champaign, DeKalb, DuPage, Grundy, Henry, Kane, Kendall, Lake, LaSalle,
Macon, Madison, McHenry, Morgan, Peoria, Rock Island, Sangamon, St.
Clair, Will and Winnebago.
Previously, ISP received a $12.5 million grant to bring the number of
cameras on Chicago expressways to 300, starting on the Dan Ryan
expressway.
While an added 6,300 miles of roadway – on top of about 230 miles in the
pilot program – will be eligible for cameras under the expanded program,
the new legislation contains no guidance for which roadways would
receive them.
The budget contains $20 million from the Road Fund for the expansion.
House Bill 260 allows police to use camera footage to also investigate
hijacking and forcible felonies such as murder, criminal sexual assault,
robbery, burglary, arson, kidnapping and aggravated battery.
Previous law only allowed the footage to be used to investigate firearm
offenses and to monitor roadway conditions.
The expansion also gives the attorney general’s office authority to
prosecute forcible felony, gunrunning and firearms offenses on
camera-monitored expressways.
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Foundation and the Robert R. McCormick Foundation. |