Pritzker signs bills protecting sexual assault victims
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[June 17, 2022]
By PETER HANCOCK
Capitol News Illinois
phancock@capitolnewsillinois.com
SPRINGFIELD – Gov. JB Pritzker signed two
bills into law Thursday aimed at protecting the victims of sexual
assault.
One of those new laws allows victims to press charges, even if they were
voluntarily intoxicated at the time of the attack. Another expands where
survivors can access treatment and for how long, as well as requiring
Federally Qualified Health Centers to provide medical forensic services
by trained professionals.
“We cannot have a justice system that re-traumatizes the people who need
to utilize it,” Pritzker said at a bill signing ceremony in Chicago.
“Yet that's been the reality for far too long.”
House Bill 5441 closes what many people called a “loophole” in existing
law that prevented victims from filing charges if they were intoxicated
at the time of the attack but the intoxicating substance was not
administered by the accused individual.
It inserts new language into the law that says a person is unable to
knowingly give consent when intoxicated if they are “unconscious of the
nature of the act, and this condition was known or reasonably should
have been known by the accused,” even if the accused individual did not
administer the substance.
That language was inspired by a young woman, Kaylyn Anh, who spoke at
the bill signing about how she was raped by someone she knew in July
2021 after she had voluntarily become intoxicated at a friend’s house.
Three months after the attack, she said, she reported it to police but
was told that they would not investigate the incident because, under
Illinois law, it did not qualify as rape.
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Gov. JB Pritzker signs two bills into law aimed at
protecting victims of sexual assault during a signing ceremony
Thursday in Chicago. (Credit: Blueroomstream.com)
“He told me there was absolutely no way the prosecutor would ever pick
up my case,” she said. “When I asked him if there were any other legal
options to pursue, he said, ‘The only thing you can do now is just try
to not let it happen again and move on.’ This is my defiant refusal to
do so.”
Senate Bill 3023 amends the Sexual Assault Survivors Emergency Treatment
Act, which governs the health care that hospitals are required to
provide to victims of sexual assault. It doubles the amount of time a
victim can access care under the act to 180 days and guarantees that
victims seeking treatment will have access to a trained medical forensic
examiner as well as other medical staff trained to care for victims of
sexual assault.
It also authorizes the Department of Public Health to designate up to
six Federally Qualified Health Centers, located in geographically
diverse areas of the state, to develop sexual assault treatment plans
and to offer on-site services during their regular operating hours. It
also requires them to employ a sexual assault nurse examiner
coordinator.
“Survivors of sexual assault need the system to work a lot better for
them to seek and receive health care services as they process the trauma
they’ve been through,” state Sen. Mike Simmons, D-Chicago, one of the
cosponsors of the bill, said in a statement. “This measure provides a
significant improvement by removing costs, bills, and increases the
timeline during which survivors can access treatment.”
Both bills passed unanimously out of both chambers of the General
Assembly earlier this year.
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Foundation and the Robert R. McCormick Foundation. |