General Assembly approves criminal sentencing reforms for minors
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[May 12, 2023]
By ANDREW ADAMS
Capitol News Illinois
aadams@capitolnewsillinois.com
CHICAGO – Illinois lawmakers have approved a measure that reforms
criminal sentencing for minors, particularly victims of child sex
trafficking.
House Bill 3414 adds to the factors that judges must consider in the
process of sentencing children found guilty of a crime. The bill would
require a judge to consider a child’s involvement in the child welfare
system, whether they have a history of domestic abuse or sexual
exploitation and the results of any mental health evaluations the child
has gone through. This is in addition to existing factors that judges
already consider, such as age, maturity and potential for
rehabilitation.
The bill also creates a method for judges to depart from sentencing
guidelines, including mandatory minimums, or to transfer a minor
offender to juvenile court for sentencing.
This would only be allowed if the child commits a crime against a person
who had, in the previous three years, been convicted of one of several
specific crimes including aggravated sexual abuse, sexual abuse of a
child or engaging a child in prostitution, among other crimes.
The bill also adds to the factors judges must consider when a prosecutor
asks to transfer a case to adult court. These new factors include
whether the child has any involvement in the child welfare system,
whether the child was subjected to “outside pressure” and the child’s
degree of participation in the crime.
The measure passed 33-20 in the Senate Wednesday after passing the House
on a 67-40 vote on March 22. It can become law with a signature from the
governor.
Proponents of the bill say it is part of a nationwide movement to
include protections in law for victims of child sex trafficking. These
laws are sometimes called “Sara’s Law” after Sara Kruzan, a survivor of
child sex trafficking who killed her trafficker in 1995. After being
sentenced to life in prison, Kruzan’s sentence was later commuted,
allowing her to be paroled in 2013. In 2022, Kruzan was granted a pardon
by California Gov. Gavin Newsom.
“We’re giving the courts extra opportunities to check and see: Was this
victim brought into this situation because of some sort of trauma?” the
bill’s sponsor, Sen. Mike Simmons, D-Chicago, said in an interview.
The bill was supported by a coalition of state and national advocacy
groups including the Juvenile Justice Initiative, the Women’s Justice
Institute, Rights4Girls, the Illinois Coalition Against Domestic
Violence and the Illinois Coalition Against Sexual Assault.
The Chicago Alliance Against Sexual Assault, or CAASE, took a leading
role in pushing for the bill.
“There’s an understanding that youth require more support and more
compassion than our system gives them,” Madeleine Behr, CAASE’s policy
director, said in an interview.
Behr also said the bill is part of an ongoing movement toward racial
justice in the criminal legal system.
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State Sen. Mike Simmons, D-Chicago,
speaks on the floor of the state Senate. He passed a measure this
week that would reform criminal sentencing for minors. (Capitol News
Illinois photo by Jerry Nowicki)
“This is going to be really important for Black and brown girls in
particular,” Behr said.
A U.S. Bureau of Justice Statistics report from 2011 found that over a
two-year period, victims of sex trafficking were disproportionately
Black and disproportionately Hispanic.
In the past few years Illinois has passed several high-profile criminal
justice reform laws, including the broad-ranging SAFE-T Act that is
currently under review by the Illinois Supreme Court. The high court
heard oral arguments in March around several constitutional questions
related to the bill.
Republicans in the Senate raised concerns with the bill, mostly around
the fact that judges will have to consider additional factors even when
the perpetrator has not been the victim of abuse or trafficking.
“The crimes we are talking about, where a person is being transferred to
adult court, these are not retail theft,” Sen. Steve McClure,
R-Springfield, said. “These are not minor crimes. These are the worst of
the worst.”
McClure added that some of the provisions in the bill already have
similar considerations in law, such as if there was involvement in the
Department of Children and Family Services or if the parent had been
found to be neglectful or abusive.
“In situations where there should be leniency, the tools are already in
our statute to provide for leniency,” he said.
Sen. Jason Plummer, R-Edwardsville, said the bill is a
“get-out-of-jail-free card” for young offenders.
Senate Minority Leader John Curran, R-Downers Grove, said the bill would
make it more difficult for prosecutors to crack down on things like
carjacking in the city and suburbs, something he called “an epidemic of
violence.”
“This bill is going to make it more difficult in prosecuting and
enforcing those crimes,” Curran said.
Curran also criticized the expanded list of factors judges would have to
consider in sentencing.
“This bill now has a factor that a judge must consider: Was the accused
offender subject to peer pressure? Not sure how that’s relevant,” he
said.
Simmons defended the bill after it passed by saying it would not require
judges to do anything other than take more information into
consideration.
“This legislation gives judges the space to look at these other
categories,” Simmons said. “But the legislation does not put a thumb on
the scales of justice.”
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