Public Act 104-0245
 
HB2690 EnrolledLRB104 07332 RLC 17372 b

    AN ACT concerning criminal law.
 
    Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
represented in the General Assembly:
 
    Section 5. The Sex Offender Management Board Act is
amended by changing Section 10 as follows:
 
    (20 ILCS 4026/10)
    Sec. 10. Definitions. In this Act, unless the context
otherwise requires:
    (a) "Board" means the Sex Offender Management Board
created in Section 15.
    (b) "Sex offender" means any person who is convicted or
found delinquent in the State of Illinois, or under any
substantially similar federal law or law of another state, of
any sex offense or attempt of a sex offense as defined in
subsection (c) of this Section, or any former statute of this
State that defined a felony sex offense, or who has been
declared as a sexually dangerous person under the Sexually
Dangerous Persons Act or declared a sexually violent person
under the Sexually Violent Persons Commitment Act, or any
substantially similar federal law or law of another state.
    (c) "Sex offense" means any felony or misdemeanor offense
described in this subsection (c) as follows:
        (1) indecent solicitation of a child, in violation of
    Section 11-6 of the Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal
    Code of 2012;
        (2) indecent solicitation of an adult, in violation of
    Section 11-6.5 of the Criminal Code of 1961 or the
    Criminal Code of 2012;
        (3) public indecency, in violation of Section 11-9 or
    11-30 of the Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of
    2012;
        (4) sexual exploitation of a child, in violation of
    Section 11-9.1 of the Criminal Code of 1961 or the
    Criminal Code of 2012;
        (5) sexual relations within families, in violation of
    Section 11-11 of the Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal
    Code of 2012;
        (6) promoting juvenile prostitution or soliciting for
    a juvenile prostitute, in violation of Section 11-14.4 or
    11-15.1 of the Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code
    of 2012;
        (7) promoting juvenile prostitution or keeping a place
    of juvenile prostitution, in violation of Section 11-14.4
    or 11-17.1 of the Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal
    Code of 2012;
        (8) patronizing a juvenile prostitute, in violation of
    Section 11-18.1 of the Criminal Code of 1961 or the
    Criminal Code of 2012;
        (9) promoting juvenile prostitution or juvenile
    pimping, in violation of Section 11-14.4 or 11-19.1 of the
    Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012;
        (10) promoting juvenile prostitution or exploitation
    of a child, in violation of Section 11-14.4 or 11-19.2 of
    the Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012;
        (11) child sexual abuse material or child pornography,
    in violation of Section 11-20.1 of the Criminal Code of
    1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012;
        (11.5) aggravated child pornography, in violation of
    Section 11-20.1B or 11-20.3 of the Criminal Code of 1961;
        (12) harmful material, in violation of Section 11-21
    of the Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012;
        (13) criminal sexual assault, in violation of Section
    11-1.20 or 12-13 of the Criminal Code of 1961 or the
    Criminal Code of 2012;
        (13.5) grooming, in violation of Section 11-25 of the
    Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012;
        (14) aggravated criminal sexual assault, in violation
    of Section 11-1.30 or 12-14 of the Criminal Code of 1961 or
    the Criminal Code of 2012;
        (14.5) traveling to meet a minor or traveling to meet
    a child, in violation of Section 11-26 of the Criminal
    Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012;
        (15) predatory criminal sexual assault of a child, in
    violation of Section 11-1.40 or 12-14.1 of the Criminal
    Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012;
        (16) criminal sexual abuse, in violation of Section
    11-1.50 or 12-15 of the Criminal Code of 1961 or the
    Criminal Code of 2012;
        (17) aggravated criminal sexual abuse, in violation of
    Section 11-1.60 or 12-16 of the Criminal Code of 1961 or
    the Criminal Code of 2012;
        (18) ritualized abuse of a child, in violation of
    Section 12-33 of the Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal
    Code of 2012;
        (19) an attempt to commit any of the offenses
    enumerated in this subsection (c); or
        (20) any felony offense under Illinois law that is
    sexually motivated.
    (d) "Management" means treatment, and supervision of any
sex offender that conforms to the standards created by the
Board under Section 15.
    (e) "Sexually motivated" means one or more of the facts of
the underlying offense indicates conduct that is of a sexual
nature or that shows an intent to engage in behavior of a
sexual nature.
    (f) "Sex offender evaluator" means a person licensed under
the Sex Offender Evaluation and Treatment Provider Act to
conduct sex offender evaluations.
    (g) "Sex offender treatment provider" means a person
licensed under the Sex Offender Evaluation and Treatment
Provider Act to provide sex offender treatment services.
    (h) "Associate sex offender provider" means a person
licensed under the Sex Offender Evaluation and Treatment
Provider Act to provide sex offender evaluations and to
provide sex offender treatment under the supervision of a
licensed sex offender evaluator or a licensed sex offender
treatment provider.
(Source: P.A. 100-428, eff. 1-1-18.)
 
    Section 10. The Medical School Matriculant Criminal
History Records Check Act is amended by changing Section 5 as
follows:
 
    (110 ILCS 57/5)
    Sec. 5. Definitions. In this Act:
    "Matriculant" means an individual who is conditionally
admitted as a student to a medical school located in Illinois,
pending the medical school's consideration of his or her
criminal history records check under this Act.
    "Sex offender" means any person who is convicted pursuant
to Illinois law or any substantially similar federal, Uniform
Code of Military Justice, sister state, or foreign country law
with any of the following sex offenses set forth in the
Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012:
        (1) Indecent solicitation of a child.
        (2) Sexual exploitation of a child.
        (3) Custodial sexual misconduct.
        (4) Exploitation of a child.
        (5) Child sexual abuse material or child pornography.
        (6) Aggravated child pornography.
    "Violent felony" means any of the following offenses, as
defined by the Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of
2012:
        (1) First degree murder.
        (2) Second degree murder.
        (3) Predatory criminal sexual assault of a child.
        (4) Aggravated criminal sexual assault.
        (5) Criminal sexual assault.
        (6) Aggravated arson.
        (7) Aggravated kidnapping.
        (8) Kidnapping.
        (9) Aggravated battery resulting in great bodily harm
    or permanent disability or disfigurement.
(Source: P.A. 96-1551, eff. 7-1-11; 97-1150, eff. 1-25-13.)
 
    Section 15. The Child Care Act of 1969 is amended by
changing Section 3.3 as follows:
 
    (225 ILCS 10/3.3)
    Sec. 3.3. Requirements for criminal background checks for
adoption-only homes. In approving an adoption-only home
pursuant to Section 3.2 of this Act, if an adult resident has
an arrest or conviction record, the licensed child welfare
agency:
        (1) shall thoroughly investigate and evaluate the
    criminal history of the resident and, in so doing, include
    an assessment of the applicant's character and, in the
    case of the prospective adoptive parent, the impact that
    the criminal history has on the prospective adoptive
    parent's ability to parent the child; the investigation
    should consider the type of crime, the number of crimes,
    the nature of the offense, the age at time of crime, the
    length of time that has elapsed since the last conviction,
    the relationship of the crime to the ability to care for
    children, and any evidence of rehabilitation;
        (2) shall not approve the home if the record reveals a
    felony conviction for crimes against a child, including,
    but not limited to, child abuse or neglect, child sexual
    abuse material or child pornography, rape, sexual assault,
    or homicide;
        (3) shall not approve the home if the record reveals a
    felony conviction within the last 5 years, including, but
    not limited to, for physical assault, battery,
    drug-related offenses, or spousal abuse; and
        (4) shall not approve the home if the record reveals a
    felony conviction for homicide, rape, or sexual assault.
(Source: P.A. 103-22, eff. 8-8-23.)
 
    Section 20. The Abused and Neglected Child Reporting Act
is amended by changing Sections 4.5 and 11.1 as follows:
 
    (325 ILCS 5/4.5)
    Sec. 4.5. Electronic and information technology workers;
reporting child sexual abuse material pornography.
    (a) In this Section:
    "Child sexual abuse material pornography" means child
sexual abuse material pornography as described in Section
11-20.1 of the Criminal Code of 2012.
    "Electronic and information technology equipment" means
equipment used in the creation, manipulation, storage,
display, or transmission of data, including internet and
intranet systems, software applications, operating systems,
video and multimedia, telecommunications products, kiosks,
information transaction machines, copiers, printers, and
desktop and portable computers.
    "Electronic and information technology equipment worker"
means a person who in the scope and course of the person's
employment or business installs, repairs, or otherwise
services electronic and information technology equipment for a
fee but does not include (i) an employee, independent
contractor, or other agent of a telecommunications carrier or
telephone or telecommunications cooperative, as those terms
are defined in the Public Utilities Act, or (ii) an employee,
independent contractor, or other agent of a provider of
commercial mobile radio service, as defined in 47 CFR 20.3.
    (b) If an electronic and information technology equipment
worker discovers any depiction of child sexual abuse material
pornography while installing, repairing, or otherwise
servicing an item of electronic and information technology
equipment, that worker or the worker's employer shall
immediately report the discovery to the local law enforcement
agency or to the Cyber Tipline at the National Center for
Missing and Exploited Children.
    (c) If a report is filed in accordance with the
requirements of 42 U.S.C. 13032, the requirements of this
Section 4.5 will be deemed to have been met.
    (d) An electronic and information technology equipment
worker or electronic and information technology equipment
worker's employer who reports a discovery of child sexual
abuse material pornography as required under this Section is
immune from any criminal, civil, or administrative liability
in connection with making the report, except for willful or
wanton misconduct.
    (e) Failure to report a discovery of child sexual abuse
material pornography as required under this Section is a
business offense subject to a fine of $1,001.
(Source: P.A. 103-22, eff. 8-8-23; 103-605, eff. 7-1-24.)
 
    (325 ILCS 5/11.1)  (from Ch. 23, par. 2061.1)
    Sec. 11.1. Access to records.
    (a) A person shall have access to the records described in
Section 11 only in furtherance of purposes directly connected
with the administration of this Act or the Intergovernmental
Missing Child Recovery Act of 1984. Those persons and purposes
for access include:
        (1) Department staff in the furtherance of their
    responsibilities under this Act, or for the purpose of
    completing background investigations on persons or
    agencies licensed by the Department or with whom the
    Department contracts for the provision of child welfare
    services.
        (2) A law enforcement agency investigating known or
    suspected child abuse or neglect, known or suspected
    involvement with child sexual abuse material pornography,
    known or suspected criminal sexual assault, known or
    suspected criminal sexual abuse, or any other sexual
    offense when a child is alleged to be involved.
        (3) The Illinois State Police when administering the
    provisions of the Intergovernmental Missing Child Recovery
    Act of 1984.
        (4) A physician who has before the physician a child
    whom the physician reasonably suspects may be abused or
    neglected.
        (5) A person authorized under Section 5 of this Act to
    place a child in temporary protective custody when such
    person requires the information in the report or record to
    determine whether to place the child in temporary
    protective custody.
        (6) A person having the legal responsibility or
    authorization to care for, treat, or supervise a child, or
    a parent, prospective adoptive parent, foster parent,
    guardian, or other person responsible for the child's
    welfare, who is the subject of a report.
        (7) Except in regard to harmful or detrimental
    information as provided in Section 7.19, any subject of
    the report, and if the subject of the report is a minor,
    the minor's guardian or guardian ad litem.
        (8) A court, upon its finding that access to such
    records may be necessary for the determination of an issue
    before such court; however, such access shall be limited
    to in camera inspection, unless the court determines that
    public disclosure of the information contained therein is
    necessary for the resolution of an issue then pending
    before it.
        (8.1) A probation officer or other authorized
    representative of a probation or court services department
    conducting an investigation ordered by a court under the
    Juvenile Court Act of 1987.
        (9) A grand jury, upon its determination that access
    to such records is necessary in the conduct of its
    official business.
        (10) Any person authorized by the Director, in
    writing, for audit or bona fide research purposes.
        (11) Law enforcement agencies, coroners or medical
    examiners, physicians, courts, school superintendents and
    child welfare agencies in other states who are responsible
    for child abuse or neglect investigations or background
    investigations.
        (12) The Department of Financial and Professional
    Regulation, the State Board of Education and school
    superintendents in Illinois, who may use or disclose
    information from the records as they deem necessary to
    conduct investigations or take disciplinary action, as
    provided by law.
        (13) A coroner or medical examiner who has reason to
    believe that a child has died as the result of abuse or
    neglect.
        (14) The Director of a State-operated facility when an
    employee of that facility is the perpetrator in an
    indicated report.
        (15) The operator of a licensed child care facility or
    a facility licensed by the Department of Human Services
    (as successor to the Department of Alcoholism and
    Substance Abuse) in which children reside when a current
    or prospective employee of that facility is the
    perpetrator in an indicated child abuse or neglect report,
    pursuant to Section 4.3 of the Child Care Act of 1969.
        (16) Members of a multidisciplinary team in the
    furtherance of its responsibilities under subsection (b)
    of Section 7.1. All reports concerning child abuse and
    neglect made available to members of such
    multidisciplinary teams and all records generated as a
    result of such reports shall be confidential and shall not
    be disclosed, except as specifically authorized by this
    Act or other applicable law. It is a Class A misdemeanor to
    permit, assist or encourage the unauthorized release of
    any information contained in such reports or records.
    Nothing contained in this Section prevents the sharing of
    reports or records relating or pertaining to the death of
    a minor under the care of or receiving services from the
    Department of Children and Family Services and under the
    jurisdiction of the juvenile court with the juvenile
    court, the State's Attorney, and the minor's attorney.
        (17) The Department of Human Services, as provided in
    Section 17 of the Rehabilitation of Persons with
    Disabilities Act.
        (18) Any other agency or investigative body, including
    the Department of Public Health and a local board of
    health, authorized by State law to conduct an
    investigation into the quality of care provided to
    children in hospitals and other State regulated care
    facilities.
        (19) The person appointed, under Section 2-17 of the
    Juvenile Court Act of 1987, as the guardian ad litem of a
    minor who is the subject of a report or records under this
    Act; or the person appointed, under Section 5-610 of the
    Juvenile Court Act of 1987, as the guardian ad litem of a
    minor who is in the custody or guardianship of the
    Department or who has an open intact family services case
    with the Department and who is the subject of a report or
    records made pursuant to this Act.
        (20) The Department of Human Services, as provided in
    Section 10 of the Early Intervention Services System Act,
    and the operator of a facility providing early
    intervention services pursuant to that Act, for the
    purpose of determining whether a current or prospective
    employee who provides or may provide direct services under
    that Act is the perpetrator in an indicated report of
    child abuse or neglect filed under this Act.
    (b) Nothing contained in this Act prevents the sharing or
disclosure of information or records relating or pertaining to
juveniles subject to the provisions of the Serious Habitual
Offender Comprehensive Action Program when that information is
used to assist in the early identification and treatment of
habitual juvenile offenders.
    (c) To the extent that persons or agencies are given
access to information pursuant to this Section, those persons
or agencies may give this information to and receive this
information from each other in order to facilitate an
investigation conducted by those persons or agencies.
(Source: P.A. 102-538, eff. 8-20-21; 103-22, eff. 8-8-23.)
 
    Section 25. The Abused and Neglected Child Reporting Act
is amended by changing Section 3 as follows:
 
    (325 ILCS 15/3)  (from Ch. 23, par. 2083)
    Sec. 3. The functions and goals of the programs to be
developed and provided by the Department of Children and
Family Services shall include:
    (a) Provision of counseling, treatment, rehabilitation and
assistance to sexually abused and exploited children and their
families, particularly to victims of predatory criminal sexual
assault of a child, aggravated criminal sexual assault,
criminal sexual assault, aggravated criminal sexual abuse and
criminal sexual abuse and child sexual abuse material
pornography, and provision of training and education and
professional counseling to other persons responsible for the
child's welfare, personnel of the Department responsible for
the licensure of facilities under the Child Care Act of 1969,
and persons required to file reports and conduct
investigations of such reports under the Abused and Neglected
Child Reporting Act;
    (b) Hastening the process of reconstituting the family and
the marriage, where such would be in the interest of the child;
    (c) Marshaling and coordinating the services of all
agencies responsible for the detection of a sexually abused
and exploited child and for serving such a child, the child's
family, or others responsible for the child's welfare, as well
as for the development of other resources necessary to ensure
a comprehensive program for the prevention of such abuse and
exploitation, supportive case management;
    (d) Responding to individual physical, emotional, and
social needs of clients so that supportive services are
individually tailored and applied as long as necessary;
    (e) Informing the public at large and professional
agencies about the problem of child sexual abuse and
exploitation, methods of detecting and responding to such
incidents, including those established under the Abused and
Neglected Child Reporting Act, the availability of State
service and other resources for responding to victims of such
abuse and exploitation, and about the existence and supportive
approach of treatment center programs; and
    (f) Development of informational and training materials
and seminars to assure the availability of such programs and
services throughout the State, emphasizing the need for
cooperation and coordination with all appropriate elements of
the criminal justice system and law enforcement system.
(Source: P.A. 89-428, eff. 12-13-95; 89-462, eff. 5-29-96.)
 
    Section 30. The Intergovernmental Missing Child Recovery
Act of 1984 is amended by changing Section 2 as follows:
 
    (325 ILCS 40/2)  (from Ch. 23, par. 2252)
    Sec. 2. As used in this Act:
    (a) (Blank).
    (b) "Director" means the Director of the Illinois State
Police.
    (c) "Unit of local government" is defined as in Article
VII, Section 1 of the Illinois Constitution and includes both
home rule units and units which are not home rule units. The
term is also defined to include all public school districts
subject to the provisions of the School Code.
    (d) "Child" means a person under 21 years of age.
    (e) A "LEADS terminal" is an interactive computerized
communication and processing unit which permits a direct
on-line communication with the Illinois State Police's central
data repository, the Law Enforcement Agencies Data System
(LEADS).
    (f) A "primary contact agency" means a law enforcement
agency which maintains a LEADS terminal, or has immediate
access to one on a 24-hour-per-day, 7-day-per-week basis by
written agreement with another law enforcement agency.
    (g) (Blank).
    (h) "Missing child" means any person under 21 years of age
whose whereabouts are unknown to his or her parents or legal
guardian.
    (i) "Exploitation" means activities and actions which
include, but are not limited to, child sexual abuse material
pornography, aggravated child pornography, child prostitution,
child sexual abuse, drug and substance abuse by children, and
child suicide.
    (j) (Blank).
(Source: P.A. 102-538, eff. 8-20-21.)
 
    Section 35. The Illinois Child Online Exploitation
Reporting Act is amended by changing Section 10 as follows:
 
    (325 ILCS 47/10)
    Sec. 10. Registration. Any entity, subject to the
reporting requirements of 42 U.S.C. 13032, while engaged in
providing an electronic communications service or a remote
computing service to the public, must provide the following
information to the Cyber Tipline at the National Center for
Missing and Exploited Children in order to facilitate the
required reporting of child sexual abuse material pornography
crimes, pursuant to 42 U.S.C. 13032:
    (a) the agent's name, phone number, and email address; and
    (b) the name of the agent's employer.
(Source: P.A. 95-983, eff. 10-3-08.)
 
    Section 40. The Criminal and Traffic Assessment Act is
amended by changing Section 15-70 as follows:
 
    (705 ILCS 135/15-70)
    Sec. 15-70. Conditional assessments. In addition to
payments under one of the Schedule of Assessments 1 through 13
of this Act, the court shall also order payment of any of the
following conditional assessment amounts for each sentenced
violation in the case to which a conditional assessment is
applicable, which shall be collected and remitted by the Clerk
of the Circuit Court as provided in this Section:
        (1) arson, residential arson, or aggravated arson,
    $500 per conviction to the State Treasurer for deposit
    into the Fire Prevention Fund;
        (2) child sexual abuse material pornography under
    Section 11-20.1 of the Criminal Code of 1961 or the
    Criminal Code of 2012, $500 per conviction, unless more
    than one agency is responsible for the arrest in which
    case the amount shall be remitted to each unit of
    government equally:
            (A) if the arresting agency is an agency of a unit
        of local government, $500 to the treasurer of the unit
        of local government for deposit into the unit of local
        government's General Fund, except that if the Illinois
        State Police provides digital or electronic forensic
        examination assistance, or both, to the arresting
        agency then $100 to the State Treasurer for deposit
        into the State Crime Laboratory Fund; or
            (B) if the arresting agency is the Illinois State
        Police, $500 to the State Treasurer for deposit into
        the State Crime Laboratory Fund;
        (3) crime laboratory drug analysis for a drug-related
    offense involving possession or delivery of cannabis or
    possession or delivery of a controlled substance as
    defined in the Cannabis Control Act, the Illinois
    Controlled Substances Act, or the Methamphetamine Control
    and Community Protection Act, $100 reimbursement for
    laboratory analysis, as set forth in subsection (f) of
    Section 5-9-1.4 of the Unified Code of Corrections;
        (4) DNA analysis, $250 on each conviction in which it
    was used to the State Treasurer for deposit into the State
    Crime Laboratory Fund as set forth in Section 5-9-1.4 of
    the Unified Code of Corrections;
        (5) DUI analysis, $150 on each sentenced violation in
    which it was used as set forth in subsection (f) of Section
    5-9-1.9 of the Unified Code of Corrections;
        (6) drug-related offense involving possession or
    delivery of cannabis or possession or delivery of a
    controlled substance, other than methamphetamine, as
    defined in the Cannabis Control Act or the Illinois
    Controlled Substances Act, an amount not less than the
    full street value of the cannabis or controlled substance
    seized for each conviction to be disbursed as follows:
            (A) 12.5% of the street value assessment shall be
        paid into the Youth Drug Abuse Prevention Fund, to be
        used by the Department of Human Services for the
        funding of programs and services for drug-abuse
        treatment, and prevention and education services;
            (B) 37.5% to the county in which the charge was
        prosecuted, to be deposited into the county General
        Fund;
            (C) 50% to the treasurer of the arresting law
        enforcement agency of the municipality or county, or
        to the State Treasurer if the arresting agency was a
        state agency, to be deposited as provided in
        subsection (c) of Section 10-5;
            (D) if the arrest was made in combination with
        multiple law enforcement agencies, the clerk shall
        equitably allocate the portion in subparagraph (C) of
        this paragraph (6) among the law enforcement agencies
        involved in the arrest;
        (6.5) Kane County or Will County, in felony,
    misdemeanor, local or county ordinance, traffic, or
    conservation cases, up to $30 as set by the county board
    under Section 5-1101.3 of the Counties Code upon the entry
    of a judgment of conviction, an order of supervision, or a
    sentence of probation without entry of judgment under
    Section 10 of the Cannabis Control Act, Section 410 of the
    Illinois Controlled Substances Act, Section 70 of the
    Methamphetamine Control and Community Protection Act,
    Section 12-4.3 or subdivision (b)(1) of Section 12-3.05 of
    the Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012,
    Section 10-102 of the Illinois Alcoholism and Other Drug
    Dependency Act, or Section 10 of the Steroid Control Act;
    except in local or county ordinance, traffic, and
    conservation cases, if fines are paid in full without a
    court appearance, then the assessment shall not be imposed
    or collected. Distribution of assessments collected under
    this paragraph (6.5) shall be as provided in Section
    5-1101.3 of the Counties Code;
        (7) methamphetamine-related offense involving
    possession or delivery of methamphetamine or any salt of
    an optical isomer of methamphetamine or possession of a
    methamphetamine manufacturing material as set forth in
    Section 10 of the Methamphetamine Control and Community
    Protection Act with the intent to manufacture a substance
    containing methamphetamine or salt of an optical isomer of
    methamphetamine, an amount not less than the full street
    value of the methamphetamine or salt of an optical isomer
    of methamphetamine or methamphetamine manufacturing
    materials seized for each conviction to be disbursed as
    follows:
            (A) 12.5% of the street value assessment shall be
        paid into the Youth Drug Abuse Prevention Fund, to be
        used by the Department of Human Services for the
        funding of programs and services for drug-abuse
        treatment, and prevention and education services;
            (B) 37.5% to the county in which the charge was
        prosecuted, to be deposited into the county General
        Fund;
            (C) 50% to the treasurer of the arresting law
        enforcement agency of the municipality or county, or
        to the State Treasurer if the arresting agency was a
        state agency, to be deposited as provided in
        subsection (c) of Section 10-5;
            (D) if the arrest was made in combination with
        multiple law enforcement agencies, the clerk shall
        equitably allocate the portion in subparagraph (C) of
        this paragraph (6) among the law enforcement agencies
        involved in the arrest;
        (8) order of protection violation under Section 12-3.4
    of the Criminal Code of 2012, $200 for each conviction to
    the county treasurer for deposit into the Probation and
    Court Services Fund for implementation of a domestic
    violence surveillance program and any other assessments or
    fees imposed under Section 5-9-1.16 of the Unified Code of
    Corrections;
        (9) order of protection violation, $25 for each
    violation to the State Treasurer, for deposit into the
    Domestic Violence Abuser Services Fund;
        (10) prosecution by the State's Attorney of a:
            (A) petty or business offense, $4 to the county
        treasurer of which $2 deposited into the State's
        Attorney Records Automation Fund and $2 into the
        Public Defender Records Automation Fund;
            (B) conservation or traffic offense, $2 to the
        county treasurer for deposit into the State's Attorney
        Records Automation Fund;
        (11) speeding in a construction zone violation, $250
    to the State Treasurer for deposit into the Transportation
    Safety Highway Hire-back Fund, unless (i) the violation
    occurred on a highway other than an interstate highway and
    (ii) a county police officer wrote the ticket for the
    violation, in which case to the county treasurer for
    deposit into that county's Transportation Safety Highway
    Hire-back Fund;
        (12) supervision disposition on an offense under the
    Illinois Vehicle Code or similar provision of a local
    ordinance, 50 cents, unless waived by the court, into the
    Prisoner Review Board Vehicle and Equipment Fund;
        (13) victim and offender are family or household
    members as defined in Section 103 of the Illinois Domestic
    Violence Act of 1986 and offender pleads guilty or no
    contest to or is convicted of murder, voluntary
    manslaughter, involuntary manslaughter, burglary,
    residential burglary, criminal trespass to residence,
    criminal trespass to vehicle, criminal trespass to land,
    criminal damage to property, telephone harassment,
    kidnapping, aggravated kidnaping, unlawful restraint,
    forcible detention, child abduction, indecent solicitation
    of a child, sexual relations between siblings,
    exploitation of a child, child sexual abuse material
    pornography, assault, aggravated assault, battery,
    aggravated battery, heinous battery, aggravated battery of
    a child, domestic battery, reckless conduct, intimidation,
    criminal sexual assault, predatory criminal sexual assault
    of a child, aggravated criminal sexual assault, criminal
    sexual abuse, aggravated criminal sexual abuse, violation
    of an order of protection, disorderly conduct, endangering
    the life or health of a child, child abandonment,
    contributing to dependency or neglect of child, or cruelty
    to children and others, $200 for each sentenced violation
    to the State Treasurer for deposit as follows: (i) for
    sexual assault, as defined in Section 5-9-1.7 of the
    Unified Code of Corrections, when the offender and victim
    are family members, one-half to the Domestic Violence
    Shelter and Service Fund, and one-half to the Sexual
    Assault Services Fund; (ii) for the remaining offenses to
    the Domestic Violence Shelter and Service Fund;
        (14) violation of Section 11-501 of the Illinois
    Vehicle Code, Section 5-7 of the Snowmobile Registration
    and Safety Act, Section 5-16 of the Boat Registration and
    Safety Act, or a similar provision, whose operation of a
    motor vehicle, snowmobile, or watercraft while in
    violation of Section 11-501, Section 5-7 of the Snowmobile
    Registration and Safety Act, Section 5-16 of the Boat
    Registration and Safety Act, or a similar provision
    proximately caused an incident resulting in an appropriate
    emergency response, $1,000 maximum to the public agency
    that provided an emergency response related to the
    person's violation, or as provided in subsection (c) of
    Section 10-5 if the arresting agency was a State agency,
    unless more than one agency was responsible for the
    arrest, in which case the amount shall be remitted to each
    unit of government equally;
        (15) violation of Section 401, 407, or 407.2 of the
    Illinois Controlled Substances Act that proximately caused
    any incident resulting in an appropriate drug-related
    emergency response, $1,000 as reimbursement for the
    emergency response to the law enforcement agency that made
    the arrest, or as provided in subsection (c) of Section
    10-5 if the arresting agency was a State agency, unless
    more than one agency was responsible for the arrest, in
    which case the amount shall be remitted to each unit of
    government equally;
        (16) violation of reckless driving, aggravated
    reckless driving, or driving 26 miles per hour or more in
    excess of the speed limit that triggered an emergency
    response, $1,000 maximum reimbursement for the emergency
    response to be distributed in its entirety to a public
    agency that provided an emergency response related to the
    person's violation, or as provided in subsection (c) of
    Section 10-5 if the arresting agency was a State agency,
    unless more than one agency was responsible for the
    arrest, in which case the amount shall be remitted to each
    unit of government equally;
        (17) violation based upon each plea of guilty,
    stipulation of facts, or finding of guilt resulting in a
    judgment of conviction or order of supervision for an
    offense under Section 10-9, 11-14.1, 11-14.3, or 11-18 of
    the Criminal Code of 2012 that results in the imposition
    of a fine, to be distributed as follows:
            (A) $50 to the county treasurer for deposit into
        the Circuit Court Clerk Operation and Administrative
        Fund to cover the costs in administering this
        paragraph (17);
            (B) $300 to the State Treasurer who shall deposit
        the portion as follows:
                (i) if the arresting or investigating agency
            is the Illinois State Police, into the State
            Police Law Enforcement Administration Fund;
                (ii) if the arresting or investigating agency
            is the Department of Natural Resources, into the
            Conservation Police Operations Assistance Fund;
                (iii) if the arresting or investigating agency
            is the Secretary of State, into the Secretary of
            State Police Services Fund;
                (iv) if the arresting or investigating agency
            is the Illinois Commerce Commission, into the
            Transportation Regulatory Fund; or
                (v) if more than one of the State agencies in
            this subparagraph (B) is the arresting or
            investigating agency, then equal shares with the
            shares deposited as provided in the applicable
            items (i) through (iv) of this subparagraph (B);
            and
            (C) the remainder for deposit into the Specialized
        Services for Survivors of Human Trafficking Fund;
        (18) weapons violation under Section 24-1.1, 24-1.2,
    or 24-1.5 of the Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code
    of 2012, $100 for each conviction to the State Treasurer
    for deposit into the Trauma Center Fund; and
        (19) violation of subsection (c) of Section 11-907 of
    the Illinois Vehicle Code, $250 to the State Treasurer for
    deposit into the Scott's Law Fund, unless a county or
    municipal police officer wrote the ticket for the
    violation, in which case to the county treasurer for
    deposit into that county's or municipality's
    Transportation Safety Highway Hire-back Fund to be used as
    provided in subsection (j) of Section 11-907 of the
    Illinois Vehicle Code; and .
        (20) violation of Section 15-109.1 of the Illinois
    Vehicle Code, $150 to be distributed as follows:
            (A) 50% to the county treasurer for deposit into
        the county general fund; and
            (B) 50% to the treasurer of the arresting law
        enforcement agency of the municipality or county or to
        the State Treasurer, if the arresting agency was a
        State agency, to be deposited as provided in
        subsection (c) of Section 10-5.
    Except for traffic violations, fines, and assessments,
such as fees or administrative costs authorized in this
Section, shall not be ordered or imposed on a minor subject to
Article III, IV, or V of the Juvenile Court Act of 1987, or a
minor under the age of 18 transferred to adult court or
excluded from juvenile court jurisdiction under Article V of
the Juvenile Court Act of 1987, or the minor's parent,
guardian, or legal custodian.
(Source: P.A. 102-145, eff. 7-23-21; 102-505, eff. 8-20-21;
102-538, eff. 8-20-21; 102-813, eff. 5-13-22; 103-379, eff.
7-28-23; 103-730, eff. 1-1-25; revised 11-23-24.)
 
    Section 45. The Juvenile Court Act of 1987 is amended by
changing Section 3-40 as follows:
 
    (705 ILCS 405/3-40)
    Sec. 3-40. Minors involved in electronic dissemination of
indecent visual depictions in need of supervision.
    (a) For the purposes of this Section:
    "Computer" has the meaning ascribed to it in Section
17-0.5 of the Criminal Code of 2012.
    "Electronic communication device" means an electronic
device, including but not limited to a wireless telephone,
personal digital assistant, or a portable or mobile computer,
that is capable of transmitting images or pictures.
    "Indecent visual depiction" means a depiction or portrayal
in any pose, posture, or setting involving a lewd exhibition
of the unclothed or transparently clothed genitals, pubic
area, buttocks, or, if such person is female, a fully or
partially developed breast of the person.
    "Minor" means a person under 18 years of age.
    (b) A minor shall not distribute or disseminate an
indecent visual depiction of another minor through the use of
a computer or electronic communication device.
    (c) Adjudication. A minor who violates subsection (b) of
this Section may be subject to a petition for adjudication and
adjudged a minor in need of supervision.
    (d) Kinds of dispositional orders. A minor found to be in
need of supervision under this Section may be:
        (1) ordered to obtain counseling or other supportive
    services to address the acts that led to the need for
    supervision; or
        (2) ordered to perform community service.
    (e) Nothing in this Section shall be construed to prohibit
a prosecution for disorderly conduct, public indecency, child
sexual abuse material pornography, a violation of Article 26.5
(Harassing and Obscene Communications) of the Criminal Code of
2012, or any other applicable provision of law.
(Source: P.A. 99-78, eff. 7-20-15.)
 
    Section 50. The Criminal Code of 2012 is amended by
changing Sections 3-5, 3-6, 11-0.1, 11-9.1, 11-9.3, 11-20.1,
11-20.2, 11-23, 11-25, 14-3, and 36-1 as follows:
 
    (720 ILCS 5/3-5)  (from Ch. 38, par. 3-5)
    Sec. 3-5. General limitations.
    (a) A prosecution for: (1) first degree murder, attempt to
commit first degree murder, second degree murder, involuntary
manslaughter, reckless homicide, a violation of subparagraph
(F) of paragraph (1) of subsection (d) of Section 11-501 of the
Illinois Vehicle Code for the offense of aggravated driving
under the influence of alcohol, other drug or drugs, or
intoxicating compound or compounds, or any combination thereof
when the violation was a proximate cause of a death, leaving
the scene of a motor vehicle crash involving death or personal
injuries under Section 11-401 of the Illinois Vehicle Code,
failing to give information and render aid under Section
11-403 of the Illinois Vehicle Code, concealment of homicidal
death, treason, arson, residential arson, aggravated arson,
forgery, child sexual abuse material or child pornography
under paragraph (1) of subsection (a) of Section 11-20.1, or
aggravated child pornography under paragraph (1) of subsection
(a) of Section 11-20.1B, or (2) any offense involving sexual
conduct or sexual penetration, as defined by Section 11-0.1 of
this Code may be commenced at any time.
    (a-5) A prosecution for theft of property exceeding
$100,000 in value under Section 16-1, identity theft under
subsection (a) of Section 16-30, aggravated identity theft
under subsection (b) of Section 16-30, financial exploitation
of an elderly person or a person with a disability under
Section 17-56; theft by deception of a victim 60 years of age
or older or a person with a disability under Section 16-1; or
any offense set forth in Article 16H or Section 17-10.6 may be
commenced within 7 years of the last act committed in
furtherance of the crime.
    (b) Unless the statute describing the offense provides
otherwise, or the period of limitation is extended by Section
3-6, a prosecution for any offense not designated in
subsection (a) or (a-5) must be commenced within 3 years after
the commission of the offense if it is a felony, or within one
year and 6 months after its commission if it is a misdemeanor.
(Source: P.A. 101-130, eff. 1-1-20; 102-244, eff. 1-1-22;
102-982, eff. 7-1-23.)
 
    (720 ILCS 5/3-6)  (from Ch. 38, par. 3-6)
    Sec. 3-6. Extended limitations. The period within which a
prosecution must be commenced under the provisions of Section
3-5 or other applicable statute is extended under the
following conditions:
    (a) A prosecution for theft involving a breach of a
fiduciary obligation to the aggrieved person may be commenced
as follows:
        (1) If the aggrieved person is a minor or a person
    under legal disability, then during the minority or legal
    disability or within one year after the termination
    thereof.
        (2) In any other instance, within one year after the
    discovery of the offense by an aggrieved person, or by a
    person who has legal capacity to represent an aggrieved
    person or has a legal duty to report the offense, and is
    not himself or herself a party to the offense; or in the
    absence of such discovery, within one year after the
    proper prosecuting officer becomes aware of the offense.
    However, in no such case is the period of limitation so
    extended more than 3 years beyond the expiration of the
    period otherwise applicable.
    (b) A prosecution for any offense based upon misconduct in
office by a public officer or employee may be commenced within
one year after discovery of the offense by a person having a
legal duty to report such offense, or in the absence of such
discovery, within one year after the proper prosecuting
officer becomes aware of the offense. However, in no such case
is the period of limitation so extended more than 3 years
beyond the expiration of the period otherwise applicable.
    (b-5) When the victim is under 18 years of age at the time
of the offense, a prosecution for involuntary servitude,
involuntary sexual servitude of a minor, or trafficking in
persons and related offenses under Section 10-9 of this Code
may be commenced within 25 years of the victim attaining the
age of 18 years.
    (b-6) When the victim is 18 years of age or over at the
time of the offense, a prosecution for involuntary servitude,
involuntary sexual servitude of a minor, or trafficking in
persons and related offenses under Section 10-9 of this Code
may be commenced within 25 years after the commission of the
offense.
    (b-7) When the victim is under 18 years of age at the time
of the offense, a prosecution for female genital mutilation
may be commenced at any time.
    (b-8) When the victim is under 17 years of age at the time
of the offense, a prosecution for grooming may be commenced
within 10 years after the victim attains 17 years of age.
    (c) (Blank).
    (d) A prosecution for child sexual abuse material or child
pornography, aggravated child pornography, indecent
solicitation of a child, soliciting for a juvenile prostitute,
juvenile pimping, exploitation of a child, or promoting
juvenile prostitution except for keeping a place of juvenile
prostitution may be commenced within one year of the victim
attaining the age of 18 years. However, in no such case shall
the time period for prosecution expire sooner than 3 years
after the commission of the offense.
    (e) Except as otherwise provided in subdivision (j), a
prosecution for any offense involving sexual conduct or sexual
penetration, as defined in Section 11-0.1 of this Code, where
the defendant was within a professional or fiduciary
relationship or a purported professional or fiduciary
relationship with the victim at the time of the commission of
the offense may be commenced within one year after the
discovery of the offense by the victim.
    (f) A prosecution for any offense set forth in Section 44
of the Environmental Protection Act may be commenced within 5
years after the discovery of such an offense by a person or
agency having the legal duty to report the offense or in the
absence of such discovery, within 5 years after the proper
prosecuting officer becomes aware of the offense.
    (f-5) A prosecution for any offense set forth in Section
16-30 of this Code may be commenced within 5 years after the
discovery of the offense by the victim of that offense.
    (g) (Blank).
    (h) (Blank).
    (i) Except as otherwise provided in subdivision (j), a
prosecution for criminal sexual assault, aggravated criminal
sexual assault, or aggravated criminal sexual abuse may be
commenced at any time. If the victim consented to the
collection of evidence using an Illinois State Police Sexual
Assault Evidence Collection Kit under the Sexual Assault
Survivors Emergency Treatment Act, it shall constitute
reporting for purposes of this Section.
    Nothing in this subdivision (i) shall be construed to
shorten a period within which a prosecution must be commenced
under any other provision of this Section.
    (i-5) A prosecution for armed robbery, home invasion,
kidnapping, or aggravated kidnaping may be commenced within 10
years of the commission of the offense if it arises out of the
same course of conduct and meets the criteria under one of the
offenses in subsection (i) of this Section.
    (j) (1) When the victim is under 18 years of age at the
time of the offense, a prosecution for criminal sexual
assault, aggravated criminal sexual assault, predatory
criminal sexual assault of a child, aggravated criminal sexual
abuse, felony criminal sexual abuse, or female genital
mutilation may be commenced at any time.
    (2) When in circumstances other than as described in
paragraph (1) of this subsection (j), when the victim is under
18 years of age at the time of the offense, a prosecution for
failure of a person who is required to report an alleged or
suspected commission of criminal sexual assault, aggravated
criminal sexual assault, predatory criminal sexual assault of
a child, aggravated criminal sexual abuse, or felony criminal
sexual abuse under the Abused and Neglected Child Reporting
Act may be commenced within 20 years after the child victim
attains 18 years of age.
    (3) When the victim is under 18 years of age at the time of
the offense, a prosecution for misdemeanor criminal sexual
abuse may be commenced within 10 years after the child victim
attains 18 years of age.
    (4) Nothing in this subdivision (j) shall be construed to
shorten a period within which a prosecution must be commenced
under any other provision of this Section.
    (j-5) A prosecution for armed robbery, home invasion,
kidnapping, or aggravated kidnaping may be commenced at any
time if it arises out of the same course of conduct and meets
the criteria under one of the offenses in subsection (j) of
this Section.
    (k) (Blank).
    (l) A prosecution for any offense set forth in Section
26-4 of this Code may be commenced within one year after the
discovery of the offense by the victim of that offense.
    (l-5) A prosecution for any offense involving sexual
conduct or sexual penetration, as defined in Section 11-0.1 of
this Code, in which the victim was 18 years of age or older at
the time of the offense, may be commenced within one year after
the discovery of the offense by the victim when corroborating
physical evidence is available. The charging document shall
state that the statute of limitations is extended under this
subsection (l-5) and shall state the circumstances justifying
the extension. Nothing in this subsection (l-5) shall be
construed to shorten a period within which a prosecution must
be commenced under any other provision of this Section or
Section 3-5 of this Code.
    (m) The prosecution shall not be required to prove at
trial facts which extend the general limitations in Section
3-5 of this Code when the facts supporting extension of the
period of general limitations are properly pled in the
charging document. Any challenge relating to the extension of
the general limitations period as defined in this Section
shall be exclusively conducted under Section 114-1 of the Code
of Criminal Procedure of 1963.
    (n) A prosecution for any offense set forth in subsection
(a), (b), or (c) of Section 8A-3 or Section 8A-13 of the
Illinois Public Aid Code, in which the total amount of money
involved is $5,000 or more, including the monetary value of
food stamps and the value of commodities under Section 16-1 of
this Code may be commenced within 5 years of the last act
committed in furtherance of the offense.
    (o) A prosecution for any offense based upon fraudulent
activity connected to COVID-19-related relief programs, to
include the Paycheck Protection Program, COVID-19 Economic
Injury Disaster Loan Program, and the Unemployment Benefit
Programs shall be commenced within 5 years after discovery of
the offense by a person having a legal duty to report such
offense, or in the absence of such discovery, within 5 years
after the proper prosecuting officer becomes aware of the
offense. However, in no such case is the period of limitation
so extended more than 10 years beyond the expiration of the
period otherwise applicable.
(Source: P.A. 102-558, eff. 8-20-21; 103-184, eff. 1-1-24.)
 
    (720 ILCS 5/11-0.1)
    Sec. 11-0.1. Definitions. In this Article, unless the
context clearly requires otherwise, the following terms are
defined as indicated:
    "Accused" means a person accused of an offense prohibited
by Section 11-1.20, 11-1.30, 11-1.40, 11-1.50, or 11-1.60 of
this Code or a person for whose conduct the accused is legally
responsible under Article 5 of this Code.
    "Adult obscenity or child sexual abuse material
pornography Internet site". See Section 11-23.
    "Advance prostitution" means:
        (1) Soliciting for a prostitute by performing any of
    the following acts when acting other than as a prostitute
    or a patron of a prostitute:
            (A) Soliciting another for the purpose of
        prostitution.
            (B) Arranging or offering to arrange a meeting of
        persons for the purpose of prostitution.
            (C) Directing another to a place knowing the
        direction is for the purpose of prostitution.
        (2) Keeping a place of prostitution by controlling or
    exercising control over the use of any place that could
    offer seclusion or shelter for the practice of
    prostitution and performing any of the following acts when
    acting other than as a prostitute or a patron of a
    prostitute:
            (A) Knowingly granting or permitting the use of
        the place for the purpose of prostitution.
            (B) Granting or permitting the use of the place
        under circumstances from which he or she could
        reasonably know that the place is used or is to be used
        for purposes of prostitution.
            (C) Permitting the continued use of the place
        after becoming aware of facts or circumstances from
        which he or she should reasonably know that the place
        is being used for purposes of prostitution.
    "Agency". See Section 11-9.5.
    "Arranges". See Section 11-6.5.
    "Bodily harm" means physical harm, and includes, but is
not limited to, sexually transmitted disease, pregnancy, and
impotence.
    "Care and custody". See Section 11-9.5.
    "Child care institution". See Section 11-9.3.
    "Child sexual abuse material pornography". See Section
11-20.1.
    "Child sex offender". See Section 11-9.3.
    "Community agency". See Section 11-9.5.
    "Conditional release". See Section 11-9.2.
    "Consent" means a freely given agreement to the act of
sexual penetration or sexual conduct in question. Lack of
verbal or physical resistance or submission by the victim
resulting from the use of force or threat of force by the
accused shall not constitute consent. The manner of dress of
the victim at the time of the offense shall not constitute
consent.
    "Custody". See Section 11-9.2.
    "Day care center". See Section 11-9.3.
    "Depict by computer". See Section 11-20.1.
    "Depiction by computer". See Section 11-20.1.
    "Disseminate". See Section 11-20.1.
    "Distribute". See Section 11-21.
    "Family member" means a parent, grandparent, child,
sibling, aunt, uncle, great-aunt, or great-uncle, whether by
whole blood, half-blood, or adoption, and includes a
step-grandparent, step-parent, or step-child. "Family member"
also means, if the victim is a child under 18 years of age, an
accused who has resided in the household with the child
continuously for at least 3 6 months.
    "Force or threat of force" means the use of force or
violence or the threat of force or violence, including, but
not limited to, the following situations:
        (1) when the accused threatens to use force or
    violence on the victim or on any other person, and the
    victim under the circumstances reasonably believes that
    the accused has the ability to execute that threat; or
        (2) when the accused overcomes the victim by use of
    superior strength or size, physical restraint, or physical
    confinement.
    "Harmful to minors". See Section 11-21.
    "Loiter". See Section 9.3.
    "Material". See Section 11-21.
    "Minor". See Section 11-21.
    "Nudity". See Section 11-21.
    "Obscene". See Section 11-20.
    "Part day child care facility". See Section 11-9.3.
    "Penal system". See Section 11-9.2.
    "Person responsible for the child's welfare". See Section
11-9.1A.
    "Person with a disability". See Section 11-9.5.
    "Playground". See Section 11-9.3.
    "Probation officer". See Section 11-9.2.
    "Produce". See Section 11-20.1.
    "Profit from prostitution" means, when acting other than
as a prostitute, to receive anything of value for personally
rendered prostitution services or to receive anything of value
from a prostitute, if the thing received is not for lawful
consideration and the person knows it was earned in whole or in
part from the practice of prostitution.
    "Public park". See Section 11-9.3.
    "Public place". See Section 11-30.
    "Reproduce". See Section 11-20.1.
    "Sado-masochistic abuse". See Section 11-21.
    "School". See Section 11-9.3.
    "School official". See Section 11-9.3.
    "Sexual abuse". See Section 11-9.1A.
    "Sexual act". See Section 11-9.1.
    "Sexual conduct" means any knowing touching or fondling by
the victim or the accused, either directly or through
clothing, of the sex organs, anus, or breast of the victim or
the accused, or any part of the body of a child under 13 years
of age, or any transfer or transmission of semen by the accused
upon any part of the clothed or unclothed body of the victim,
for the purpose of sexual gratification or arousal of the
victim or the accused.
    "Sexual excitement". See Section 11-21.
    "Sexual penetration" means any contact, however slight,
between the sex organ or anus of one person and an object or
the sex organ, mouth, or anus of another person, or any
intrusion, however slight, of any part of the body of one
person or of any animal or object into the sex organ or anus of
another person, including, but not limited to, cunnilingus,
fellatio, or anal penetration. Evidence of emission of semen
is not required to prove sexual penetration.
    "Solicit". See Section 11-6.
    "State-operated facility". See Section 11-9.5.
    "Supervising officer". See Section 11-9.2.
    "Surveillance agent". See Section 11-9.2.
    "Treatment and detention facility". See Section 11-9.2.
    "Unable to give knowing consent" includes, but is not
limited to, when the victim was asleep, unconscious, or
unaware of the nature of the act such that the victim could not
give voluntary and knowing agreement to the sexual act.
"Unable to give knowing consent" also includes when the
accused administers any intoxicating or anesthetic substance,
or any controlled substance causing the victim to become
unconscious of the nature of the act and this condition was
known, or reasonably should have been known by the accused.
"Unable to give knowing consent" also includes when the victim
has taken an intoxicating substance or any controlled
substance causing the victim to become unconscious of the
nature of the act, and this condition was known or reasonably
should have been known by the accused, but the accused did not
provide or administer the intoxicating substance. As used in
this paragraph, "unconscious of the nature of the act" means
incapable of resisting because the victim meets any one of the
following conditions:
        (1) was unconscious or asleep;
        (2) was not aware, knowing, perceiving, or cognizant
    that the act occurred;
        (3) was not aware, knowing, perceiving, or cognizant
    of the essential characteristics of the act due to the
    perpetrator's fraud in fact; or
        (4) was not aware, knowing, perceiving, or cognizant
    of the essential characteristics of the act due to the
    perpetrator's fraudulent representation that the sexual
    penetration served a professional purpose when it served
    no professional purpose.
    It is inferred that a victim is unable to give knowing
consent A victim is presumed "unable to give knowing consent"
when the victim:
        (1) is committed to the care and custody or
    supervision of the Illinois Department of Corrections
    (IDOC) and the accused is an employee or volunteer who is
    not married to the victim who knows or reasonably should
    know that the victim is committed to the care and custody
    or supervision of such department;
        (2) is committed to or placed with the Department of
    Children and Family Services (DCFS) and in residential
    care, and the accused employee is not married to the
    victim, and knows or reasonably should know that the
    victim is committed to or placed with DCFS and in
    residential care;
        (3) is a client or patient and the accused is a health
    care provider or mental health care provider and the
    sexual conduct or sexual penetration occurs during a
    treatment session, consultation, interview, or
    examination;
        (4) is a resident or inpatient of a residential
    facility and the accused is an employee of the facility
    who is not married to such resident or inpatient who
    provides direct care services, case management services,
    medical or other clinical services, habilitative services
    or direct supervision of the residents in the facility in
    which the resident resides; or an officer or other
    employee, consultant, contractor or volunteer of the
    residential facility, who knows or reasonably should know
    that the person is a resident of such facility; or
        (5) is detained or otherwise in the custody of a
    police officer, peace officer, or other law enforcement
    official who: (i) is detaining or maintaining custody of
    such person; or (ii) knows, or reasonably should know,
    that at the time of the offense, such person was detained
    or in custody and the police officer, peace officer, or
    other law enforcement official is not married to such
    detainee.
    "Victim" means a person alleging to have been subjected to
an offense prohibited by Section 11-1.20, 11-1.30, 11-1.40,
11-1.50, or 11-1.60 of this Code.
(Source: P.A. 102-567, eff. 1-1-22; 102-1096, eff. 1-1-23.)
 
    (720 ILCS 5/11-9.1)  (from Ch. 38, par. 11-9.1)
    Sec. 11-9.1. Sexual exploitation of a child.
    (a) A person commits sexual exploitation of a child if in
the presence or virtual presence, or both, of a child and with
knowledge that a child or one whom he or she believes to be a
child would view his or her acts, that person:
        (1) engages in a sexual act; or
        (2) exposes his or her sex organs, anus or breast for
    the purpose of sexual arousal or gratification of such
    person or the child or one whom he or she believes to be a
    child; or
        (3) knowingly entices, coerces, or persuades a child
    to participate in the production of the recording or
    memorializing a sexual act of persons ages 18 or older.
    (a-5) A person commits sexual exploitation of a child who
knowingly entices, coerces, or persuades a child to remove the
child's clothing for the purpose of sexual arousal or
gratification of the person or the child, or both.
    (b) Definitions. As used in this Section:
    "Sexual act" means masturbation, sexual conduct or sexual
penetration as defined in Section 11-0.1 of this Code.
    "Sex offense" means any violation of Article 11 of this
Code.
    "Child" means a person under 17 years of age.
    "Virtual presence" means an environment that is created
with software and presented to the user and or receiver via the
Internet, in such a way that the user appears in front of the
receiver on the computer monitor or screen or hand-held
portable electronic device, usually through a web camming
program. "Virtual presence" includes primarily experiencing
through sight or sound, or both, a video image that can be
explored interactively at a personal computer or hand-held
communication device, or both.
    "Webcam" means a video capturing device connected to a
computer or computer network that is designed to take digital
photographs or live or recorded video which allows for the
live transmission to an end user over the Internet.
    (c) Sentence.
        (1) Sexual exploitation of a child is a Class A
    misdemeanor. A second or subsequent violation of this
    Section or a substantially similar law of another state is
    a Class 4 felony.
        (2) Sexual exploitation of a child is a Class 4 felony
    if the person has been previously convicted of a sex
    offense.
        (3) Sexual exploitation of a child is a Class 4 felony
    if the victim was under 13 years of age at the time of the
    commission of the offense.
        (4) Sexual exploitation of a child is a Class 4 felony
    if committed by a person 18 years of age or older who is on
    or within 500 feet of elementary or secondary school
    grounds when children are present on the grounds.
        (5) A violation of paragraph (3) of subsection (a) is
    a Class 4 felony.
(Source: P.A. 102-168, eff. 7-27-21.)
 
    (720 ILCS 5/11-9.3)
    Sec. 11-9.3. Presence within school zone by child sex
offenders prohibited; approaching, contacting, residing with,
or communicating with a child within certain places by child
sex offenders prohibited.
    (a) It is unlawful for a child sex offender to knowingly be
present in any school building, on real property comprising
any school, or in any conveyance owned, leased, or contracted
by a school to transport students to or from school or a school
related activity when persons under the age of 18 are present
in the building, on the grounds or in the conveyance, unless
the offender is a parent or guardian of a student attending the
school and the parent or guardian is: (i) attending a
conference at the school with school personnel to discuss the
progress of his or her child academically or socially, (ii)
participating in child review conferences in which evaluation
and placement decisions may be made with respect to his or her
child regarding special education services, or (iii) attending
conferences to discuss other student issues concerning his or
her child such as retention and promotion and notifies the
principal of the school of his or her presence at the school or
unless the offender has permission to be present from the
superintendent or the school board or in the case of a private
school from the principal. In the case of a public school, if
permission is granted, the superintendent or school board
president must inform the principal of the school where the
sex offender will be present. Notification includes the nature
of the sex offender's visit and the hours in which the sex
offender will be present in the school. The sex offender is
responsible for notifying the principal's office when he or
she arrives on school property and when he or she departs from
school property. If the sex offender is to be present in the
vicinity of children, the sex offender has the duty to remain
under the direct supervision of a school official.
    (a-5) It is unlawful for a child sex offender to knowingly
be present within 100 feet of a site posted as a pick-up or
discharge stop for a conveyance owned, leased, or contracted
by a school to transport students to or from school or a school
related activity when one or more persons under the age of 18
are present at the site.
    (a-10) It is unlawful for a child sex offender to
knowingly be present in any public park building, a playground
or recreation area within any publicly accessible privately
owned building, or on real property comprising any public park
when persons under the age of 18 are present in the building or
on the grounds and to approach, contact, or communicate with a
child under 18 years of age, unless the offender is a parent or
guardian of a person under 18 years of age present in the
building or on the grounds.
    (b) It is unlawful for a child sex offender to knowingly
loiter within 500 feet of a school building or real property
comprising any school while persons under the age of 18 are
present in the building or on the grounds, unless the offender
is a parent or guardian of a student attending the school and
the parent or guardian is: (i) attending a conference at the
school with school personnel to discuss the progress of his or
her child academically or socially, (ii) participating in
child review conferences in which evaluation and placement
decisions may be made with respect to his or her child
regarding special education services, or (iii) attending
conferences to discuss other student issues concerning his or
her child such as retention and promotion and notifies the
principal of the school of his or her presence at the school or
has permission to be present from the superintendent or the
school board or in the case of a private school from the
principal. In the case of a public school, if permission is
granted, the superintendent or school board president must
inform the principal of the school where the sex offender will
be present. Notification includes the nature of the sex
offender's visit and the hours in which the sex offender will
be present in the school. The sex offender is responsible for
notifying the principal's office when he or she arrives on
school property and when he or she departs from school
property. If the sex offender is to be present in the vicinity
of children, the sex offender has the duty to remain under the
direct supervision of a school official.
    (b-2) It is unlawful for a child sex offender to knowingly
loiter on a public way within 500 feet of a public park
building or real property comprising any public park while
persons under the age of 18 are present in the building or on
the grounds and to approach, contact, or communicate with a
child under 18 years of age, unless the offender is a parent or
guardian of a person under 18 years of age present in the
building or on the grounds.
    (b-5) It is unlawful for a child sex offender to knowingly
reside within 500 feet of a school building or the real
property comprising any school that persons under the age of
18 attend. Nothing in this subsection (b-5) prohibits a child
sex offender from residing within 500 feet of a school
building or the real property comprising any school that
persons under 18 attend if the property is owned by the child
sex offender and was purchased before July 7, 2000 (the
effective date of Public Act 91-911).
    (b-10) It is unlawful for a child sex offender to
knowingly reside within 500 feet of a playground, child care
institution, day care center, part day child care facility,
day care home, group day care home, or a facility providing
programs or services exclusively directed toward persons under
18 years of age. Nothing in this subsection (b-10) prohibits a
child sex offender from residing within 500 feet of a
playground or a facility providing programs or services
exclusively directed toward persons under 18 years of age if
the property is owned by the child sex offender and was
purchased before July 7, 2000. Nothing in this subsection
(b-10) prohibits a child sex offender from residing within 500
feet of a child care institution, day care center, or part day
child care facility if the property is owned by the child sex
offender and was purchased before June 26, 2006. Nothing in
this subsection (b-10) prohibits a child sex offender from
residing within 500 feet of a day care home or group day care
home if the property is owned by the child sex offender and was
purchased before August 14, 2008 (the effective date of Public
Act 95-821).
    (b-15) It is unlawful for a child sex offender to
knowingly reside within 500 feet of the victim of the sex
offense. Nothing in this subsection (b-15) prohibits a child
sex offender from residing within 500 feet of the victim if the
property in which the child sex offender resides is owned by
the child sex offender and was purchased before August 22,
2002.
    This subsection (b-15) does not apply if the victim of the
sex offense is 21 years of age or older.
    (b-20) It is unlawful for a child sex offender to
knowingly communicate, other than for a lawful purpose under
Illinois law, using the Internet or any other digital media,
with a person under 18 years of age or with a person whom he or
she believes to be a person under 18 years of age, unless the
offender is a parent or guardian of the person under 18 years
of age.
    (c) It is unlawful for a child sex offender to knowingly
operate, manage, be employed by, volunteer at, be associated
with, or knowingly be present at any: (i) facility providing
programs or services exclusively directed toward persons under
the age of 18; (ii) day care center; (iii) part day child care
facility; (iv) child care institution; (v) school providing
before and after school programs for children under 18 years
of age; (vi) day care home; or (vii) group day care home. This
does not prohibit a child sex offender from owning the real
property upon which the programs or services are offered or
upon which the day care center, part day child care facility,
child care institution, or school providing before and after
school programs for children under 18 years of age is located,
provided the child sex offender refrains from being present on
the premises for the hours during which: (1) the programs or
services are being offered or (2) the day care center, part day
child care facility, child care institution, or school
providing before and after school programs for children under
18 years of age, day care home, or group day care home is
operated.
    (c-2) It is unlawful for a child sex offender to
participate in a holiday event involving children under 18
years of age, including but not limited to distributing candy
or other items to children on Halloween, wearing a Santa Claus
costume on or preceding Christmas, being employed as a
department store Santa Claus, or wearing an Easter Bunny
costume on or preceding Easter. For the purposes of this
subsection, child sex offender has the meaning as defined in
this Section, but does not include as a sex offense under
paragraph (2) of subsection (d) of this Section, the offense
under subsection (c) of Section 11-1.50 of this Code. This
subsection does not apply to a child sex offender who is a
parent or guardian of children under 18 years of age that are
present in the home and other non-familial minors are not
present.
    (c-5) It is unlawful for a child sex offender to knowingly
operate, manage, be employed by, or be associated with any
carnival, amusement enterprise, or county or State fair when
persons under the age of 18 are present.
    (c-6) It is unlawful for a child sex offender who owns and
resides at residential real estate to knowingly rent any
residential unit within the same building in which he or she
resides to a person who is the parent or guardian of a child or
children under 18 years of age. This subsection shall apply
only to leases or other rental arrangements entered into after
January 1, 2009 (the effective date of Public Act 95-820).
    (c-7) It is unlawful for a child sex offender to knowingly
offer or provide any programs or services to persons under 18
years of age in his or her residence or the residence of
another or in any facility for the purpose of offering or
providing such programs or services, whether such programs or
services are offered or provided by contract, agreement,
arrangement, or on a volunteer basis.
    (c-8) It is unlawful for a child sex offender to knowingly
operate, whether authorized to do so or not, any of the
following vehicles: (1) a vehicle which is specifically
designed, constructed or modified and equipped to be used for
the retail sale of food or beverages, including but not
limited to an ice cream truck; (2) an authorized emergency
vehicle; or (3) a rescue vehicle.
    (d) Definitions. In this Section:
        (1) "Child sex offender" means any person who:
            (i) has been charged under Illinois law, or any
        substantially similar federal law or law of another
        state, with a sex offense set forth in paragraph (2) of
        this subsection (d) or the attempt to commit an
        included sex offense, and the victim is a person under
        18 years of age at the time of the offense; and:
                (A) is convicted of such offense or an attempt
            to commit such offense; or
                (B) is found not guilty by reason of insanity
            of such offense or an attempt to commit such
            offense; or
                (C) is found not guilty by reason of insanity
            pursuant to subsection (c) of Section 104-25 of
            the Code of Criminal Procedure of 1963 of such
            offense or an attempt to commit such offense; or
                (D) is the subject of a finding not resulting
            in an acquittal at a hearing conducted pursuant to
            subsection (a) of Section 104-25 of the Code of
            Criminal Procedure of 1963 for the alleged
            commission or attempted commission of such
            offense; or
                (E) is found not guilty by reason of insanity
            following a hearing conducted pursuant to a
            federal law or the law of another state
            substantially similar to subsection (c) of Section
            104-25 of the Code of Criminal Procedure of 1963
            of such offense or of the attempted commission of
            such offense; or
                (F) is the subject of a finding not resulting
            in an acquittal at a hearing conducted pursuant to
            a federal law or the law of another state
            substantially similar to subsection (a) of Section
            104-25 of the Code of Criminal Procedure of 1963
            for the alleged violation or attempted commission
            of such offense; or
            (ii) is certified as a sexually dangerous person
        pursuant to the Illinois Sexually Dangerous Persons
        Act, or any substantially similar federal law or the
        law of another state, when any conduct giving rise to
        such certification is committed or attempted against a
        person less than 18 years of age; or
            (iii) is subject to the provisions of Section 2 of
        the Interstate Agreements on Sexually Dangerous
        Persons Act.
        Convictions that result from or are connected with the
    same act, or result from offenses committed at the same
    time, shall be counted for the purpose of this Section as
    one conviction. Any conviction set aside pursuant to law
    is not a conviction for purposes of this Section.
        (2) Except as otherwise provided in paragraph (2.5),
    "sex offense" means:
            (i) A violation of any of the following Sections
        of the Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of
        2012: 10-4 (forcible detention), 10-7 (aiding or
        abetting child abduction under Section 10-5(b)(10)),
        10-5(b)(10) (child luring), 11-1.40 (predatory
        criminal sexual assault of a child), 11-6 (indecent
        solicitation of a child), 11-6.5 (indecent
        solicitation of an adult), 11-9.1 (sexual exploitation
        of a child), 11-9.2 (custodial sexual misconduct),
        11-9.5 (sexual misconduct with a person with a
        disability), 11-11 (sexual relations within families),
        11-14.3(a)(1) (promoting prostitution by advancing
        prostitution), 11-14.3(a)(2)(A) (promoting
        prostitution by profiting from prostitution by
        compelling a person to be a prostitute),
        11-14.3(a)(2)(C) (promoting prostitution by profiting
        from prostitution by means other than as described in
        subparagraphs (A) and (B) of paragraph (2) of
        subsection (a) of Section 11-14.3), 11-14.4 (promoting
        juvenile prostitution), 11-18.1 (patronizing a
        juvenile prostitute), 11-20.1 (child sexual abuse
        material or child pornography), 11-20.1B (aggravated
        child pornography), 11-21 (harmful material), 11-25
        (grooming), 11-26 (traveling to meet a minor or
        traveling to meet a child), 12-33 (ritualized abuse of
        a child), 11-20 (obscenity) (when that offense was
        committed in any school, on real property comprising
        any school, in any conveyance owned, leased, or
        contracted by a school to transport students to or
        from school or a school related activity, or in a
        public park), 11-30 (public indecency) (when committed
        in a school, on real property comprising a school, in
        any conveyance owned, leased, or contracted by a
        school to transport students to or from school or a
        school related activity, or in a public park). An
        attempt to commit any of these offenses.
            (ii) A violation of any of the following Sections
        of the Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of
        2012, when the victim is a person under 18 years of
        age: 11-1.20 (criminal sexual assault), 11-1.30
        (aggravated criminal sexual assault), 11-1.50
        (criminal sexual abuse), 11-1.60 (aggravated criminal
        sexual abuse). An attempt to commit any of these
        offenses.
            (iii) A violation of any of the following Sections
        of the Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of
        2012, when the victim is a person under 18 years of age
        and the defendant is not a parent of the victim:
            10-1 (kidnapping),
            10-2 (aggravated kidnapping),
            10-3 (unlawful restraint),
            10-3.1 (aggravated unlawful restraint),
            11-9.1(A) (permitting sexual abuse of a child).
            An attempt to commit any of these offenses.
            (iv) A violation of any former law of this State
        substantially equivalent to any offense listed in
        clause (2)(i) or (2)(ii) of subsection (d) of this
        Section.
        (2.5) For the purposes of subsections (b-5) and (b-10)
    only, a sex offense means:
            (i) A violation of any of the following Sections
        of the Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of
        2012:
             10-5(b)(10) (child luring), 10-7 (aiding or
        abetting child abduction under Section 10-5(b)(10)),
        11-1.40 (predatory criminal sexual assault of a
        child), 11-6 (indecent solicitation of a child),
        11-6.5 (indecent solicitation of an adult), 11-9.2
        (custodial sexual misconduct), 11-9.5 (sexual
        misconduct with a person with a disability), 11-11
        (sexual relations within families), 11-14.3(a)(1)
        (promoting prostitution by advancing prostitution),
        11-14.3(a)(2)(A) (promoting prostitution by profiting
        from prostitution by compelling a person to be a
        prostitute), 11-14.3(a)(2)(C) (promoting prostitution
        by profiting from prostitution by means other than as
        described in subparagraphs (A) and (B) of paragraph
        (2) of subsection (a) of Section 11-14.3), 11-14.4
        (promoting juvenile prostitution), 11-18.1
        (patronizing a juvenile prostitute), 11-20.1 (child
        sexual abuse material or child pornography), 11-20.1B
        (aggravated child pornography), 11-25 (grooming),
        11-26 (traveling to meet a minor or traveling to meet a
        child), or 12-33 (ritualized abuse of a child). An
        attempt to commit any of these offenses.
            (ii) A violation of any of the following Sections
        of the Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of
        2012, when the victim is a person under 18 years of
        age: 11-1.20 (criminal sexual assault), 11-1.30
        (aggravated criminal sexual assault), 11-1.60
        (aggravated criminal sexual abuse), and subsection (a)
        of Section 11-1.50 (criminal sexual abuse). An attempt
        to commit any of these offenses.
            (iii) A violation of any of the following Sections
        of the Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of
        2012, when the victim is a person under 18 years of age
        and the defendant is not a parent of the victim:
            10-1 (kidnapping),
            10-2 (aggravated kidnapping),
            10-3 (unlawful restraint),
            10-3.1 (aggravated unlawful restraint),
            11-9.1(A) (permitting sexual abuse of a child).
            An attempt to commit any of these offenses.
            (iv) A violation of any former law of this State
        substantially equivalent to any offense listed in this
        paragraph (2.5) of this subsection.
        (3) A conviction for an offense of federal law or the
    law of another state that is substantially equivalent to
    any offense listed in paragraph (2) of subsection (d) of
    this Section shall constitute a conviction for the purpose
    of this Section. A finding or adjudication as a sexually
    dangerous person under any federal law or law of another
    state that is substantially equivalent to the Sexually
    Dangerous Persons Act shall constitute an adjudication for
    the purposes of this Section.
        (4) "Authorized emergency vehicle", "rescue vehicle",
    and "vehicle" have the meanings ascribed to them in
    Sections 1-105, 1-171.8 and 1-217, respectively, of the
    Illinois Vehicle Code.
        (5) "Child care institution" has the meaning ascribed
    to it in Section 2.06 of the Child Care Act of 1969.
        (6) "Day care center" has the meaning ascribed to it
    in Section 2.09 of the Child Care Act of 1969.
        (7) "Day care home" has the meaning ascribed to it in
    Section 2.18 of the Child Care Act of 1969.
        (8) "Facility providing programs or services directed
    towards persons under the age of 18" means any facility
    providing programs or services exclusively directed
    towards persons under the age of 18.
        (9) "Group day care home" has the meaning ascribed to
    it in Section 2.20 of the Child Care Act of 1969.
        (10) "Internet" has the meaning set forth in Section
    16-0.1 of this Code.
        (11) "Loiter" means:
            (i) Standing, sitting idly, whether or not the
        person is in a vehicle, or remaining in or around
        school or public park property.
            (ii) Standing, sitting idly, whether or not the
        person is in a vehicle, or remaining in or around
        school or public park property, for the purpose of
        committing or attempting to commit a sex offense.
            (iii) Entering or remaining in a building in or
        around school property, other than the offender's
        residence.
        (12) "Part day child care facility" has the meaning
    ascribed to it in Section 2.10 of the Child Care Act of
    1969.
        (13) "Playground" means a piece of land owned or
    controlled by a unit of local government that is
    designated by the unit of local government for use solely
    or primarily for children's recreation.
        (14) "Public park" includes a park, forest preserve,
    bikeway, trail, or conservation area under the
    jurisdiction of the State or a unit of local government.
        (15) "School" means a public or private preschool or
    elementary or secondary school.
        (16) "School official" means the principal, a teacher,
    or any other certified employee of the school, the
    superintendent of schools or a member of the school board.
    (e) For the purposes of this Section, the 500 feet
distance shall be measured from: (1) the edge of the property
of the school building or the real property comprising the
school that is closest to the edge of the property of the child
sex offender's residence or where he or she is loitering, and
(2) the edge of the property comprising the public park
building or the real property comprising the public park,
playground, child care institution, day care center, part day
child care facility, or facility providing programs or
services exclusively directed toward persons under 18 years of
age, or a victim of the sex offense who is under 21 years of
age, to the edge of the child sex offender's place of residence
or place where he or she is loitering.
    (f) Sentence. A person who violates this Section is guilty
of a Class 4 felony.
(Source: P.A. 102-997, eff. 1-1-23.)
 
    (720 ILCS 5/11-20.1)  (from Ch. 38, par. 11-20.1)
    Sec. 11-20.1. Child sexual abuse material pornography.
    (a) Recognizing the enormous negative societal impact that
sexually explicit visual depictions of children engaged in
sexual abuse activities have on the children who are abused,
and the overarching broader impact these materials and imagery
have at various levels to the public, especially when this
material is disseminated, we are changing all references in
Illinois statutes from "child pornography" to "child sexual
abuse material". It is important that the statutes of the
State of Illinois reflect the content and realities of these
materials as the sexual abuse and exploitation of children.
The word "pornography" implied legality involving "consent" of
which this imagery is not, as children can never "consent" to
sexual abuse and sexual exploitation. This name change is not
a change in meaning, definitions, statutes or application of
the laws of this State and all previous references to "child
pornography" are now encapsulated in "child sexual abuse
materials".
    A person commits child sexual abuse material pornography
who:
        (1) films, videotapes, photographs, or otherwise
    depicts or portrays by means of any similar visual medium
    or reproduction or depicts by computer any child whom he
    or she knows or reasonably should know to be under the age
    of 18 or any person with a severe or profound intellectual
    disability where such child or person with a severe or
    profound intellectual disability is:
            (i) actually or by simulation engaged in any act
        of sexual penetration or sexual conduct with any
        person or animal; or
            (ii) actually or by simulation engaged in any act
        of sexual penetration or sexual conduct involving the
        sex organs of the child or person with a severe or
        profound intellectual disability and the mouth, anus,
        or sex organs of another person or animal; or which
        involves the mouth, anus or sex organs of the child or
        person with a severe or profound intellectual
        disability and the sex organs of another person or
        animal; or
            (iii) actually or by simulation engaged in any act
        of masturbation; or
            (iv) actually or by simulation portrayed as being
        the object of, or otherwise engaged in, any act of lewd
        fondling, touching, or caressing involving another
        person or animal; or
            (v) actually or by simulation engaged in any act
        of excretion or urination within a sexual context; or
            (vi) actually or by simulation portrayed or
        depicted as bound, fettered, or subject to sadistic,
        masochistic, or sadomasochistic abuse in any sexual
        context; or
            (vii) depicted or portrayed in any pose, posture
        or setting involving a lewd exhibition of the
        unclothed or transparently clothed genitals, pubic
        area, buttocks, or, if such person is female, a fully
        or partially developed breast of the child or other
        person; or
        (2) with the knowledge of the nature or content
    thereof, reproduces, disseminates, offers to disseminate,
    exhibits or possesses with intent to disseminate any film,
    videotape, photograph or other similar visual reproduction
    or depiction by computer of any child or person with a
    severe or profound intellectual disability whom the person
    knows or reasonably should know to be under the age of 18
    or to be a person with a severe or profound intellectual
    disability, engaged in any activity described in
    subparagraphs (i) through (vii) of paragraph (1) of this
    subsection; or
        (3) with knowledge of the subject matter or theme
    thereof, produces any stage play, live performance, film,
    videotape or other similar visual portrayal or depiction
    by computer which includes a child whom the person knows
    or reasonably should know to be under the age of 18 or a
    person with a severe or profound intellectual disability
    engaged in any activity described in subparagraphs (i)
    through (vii) of paragraph (1) of this subsection; or
        (4) solicits, uses, persuades, induces, entices, or
    coerces any child whom he or she knows or reasonably
    should know to be under the age of 18 or a person with a
    severe or profound intellectual disability to appear in
    any stage play, live presentation, film, videotape,
    photograph or other similar visual reproduction or
    depiction by computer in which the child or person with a
    severe or profound intellectual disability is or will be
    depicted, actually or by simulation, in any act, pose or
    setting described in subparagraphs (i) through (vii) of
    paragraph (1) of this subsection; or
        (5) is a parent, step-parent, legal guardian or other
    person having care or custody of a child whom the person
    knows or reasonably should know to be under the age of 18
    or a person with a severe or profound intellectual
    disability and who knowingly permits, induces, promotes,
    or arranges for such child or person with a severe or
    profound intellectual disability to appear in any stage
    play, live performance, film, videotape, photograph or
    other similar visual presentation, portrayal or simulation
    or depiction by computer of any act or activity described
    in subparagraphs (i) through (vii) of paragraph (1) of
    this subsection; or
        (6) with knowledge of the nature or content thereof,
    possesses any film, videotape, photograph or other similar
    visual reproduction or depiction by computer of any child
    or person with a severe or profound intellectual
    disability whom the person knows or reasonably should know
    to be under the age of 18 or to be a person with a severe
    or profound intellectual disability, engaged in any
    activity described in subparagraphs (i) through (vii) of
    paragraph (1) of this subsection; or
        (7) solicits, or knowingly uses, persuades, induces,
    entices, or coerces, a person to provide a child under the
    age of 18 or a person with a severe or profound
    intellectual disability to appear in any videotape,
    photograph, film, stage play, live presentation, or other
    similar visual reproduction or depiction by computer in
    which the child or person with a severe or profound
    intellectual disability will be depicted, actually or by
    simulation, in any act, pose, or setting described in
    subparagraphs (i) through (vii) of paragraph (1) of this
    subsection.
    (a-5) The possession of each individual film, videotape,
photograph, or other similar visual reproduction or depiction
by computer in violation of this Section constitutes a single
and separate violation. This subsection (a-5) does not apply
to multiple copies of the same film, videotape, photograph, or
other similar visual reproduction or depiction by computer
that are identical to each other.
    (b)(1) It shall be an affirmative defense to a charge of
child sexual abuse material pornography that the defendant
reasonably believed, under all of the circumstances, that the
child was 18 years of age or older or that the person was not a
person with a severe or profound intellectual disability but
only where, prior to the act or acts giving rise to a
prosecution under this Section, he or she took some
affirmative action or made a bonafide inquiry designed to
ascertain whether the child was 18 years of age or older or
that the person was not a person with a severe or profound
intellectual disability and his or her reliance upon the
information so obtained was clearly reasonable.
    (1.5) Telecommunications carriers, commercial mobile
service providers, and providers of information services,
including, but not limited to, Internet service providers and
hosting service providers, are not liable under this Section
by virtue of the transmission, storage, or caching of
electronic communications or messages of others or by virtue
of the provision of other related telecommunications,
commercial mobile services, or information services used by
others in violation of this Section.
    (2) (Blank).
    (3) The charge of child sexual abuse material pornography
shall not apply to the performance of official duties by law
enforcement or prosecuting officers or persons employed by law
enforcement or prosecuting agencies, court personnel or
attorneys, nor to bonafide treatment or professional education
programs conducted by licensed physicians, psychologists or
social workers. In any criminal proceeding, any property or
material that constitutes child sexual abuse material
pornography shall remain in the care, custody, and control of
either the State or the court. A motion to view the evidence
shall comply with subsection (e-5) of this Section.
    (4) If the defendant possessed more than one of the same
film, videotape or visual reproduction or depiction by
computer in which child sexual abuse material pornography is
depicted, then the trier of fact may infer that the defendant
possessed such materials with the intent to disseminate them.
    (5) The charge of child sexual abuse material pornography
does not apply to a person who does not voluntarily possess a
film, videotape, or visual reproduction or depiction by
computer in which child sexual abuse material pornography is
depicted. Possession is voluntary if the defendant knowingly
procures or receives a film, videotape, or visual reproduction
or depiction for a sufficient time to be able to terminate his
or her possession.
    (6) Any violation of paragraph (1), (2), (3), (4), (5), or
(7) of subsection (a) that includes a child engaged in,
solicited for, depicted in, or posed in any act of sexual
penetration or bound, fettered, or subject to sadistic,
masochistic, or sadomasochistic abuse in a sexual context
shall be deemed a crime of violence.
    (c) If the violation does not involve a film, videotape,
or other moving depiction, a violation of paragraph (1), (4),
(5), or (7) of subsection (a) is a Class 1 felony with a
mandatory minimum fine of $2,000 and a maximum fine of
$100,000. If the violation involves a film, videotape, or
other moving depiction, a violation of paragraph (1), (4),
(5), or (7) of subsection (a) is a Class X felony with a
mandatory minimum fine of $2,000 and a maximum fine of
$100,000. If the violation does not involve a film, videotape,
or other moving depiction, a violation of paragraph (3) of
subsection (a) is a Class 1 felony with a mandatory minimum
fine of $1500 and a maximum fine of $100,000. If the violation
involves a film, videotape, or other moving depiction, a
violation of paragraph (3) of subsection (a) is a Class X
felony with a mandatory minimum fine of $1500 and a maximum
fine of $100,000. If the violation does not involve a film,
videotape, or other moving depiction, a violation of paragraph
(2) of subsection (a) is a Class 1 felony with a mandatory
minimum fine of $1000 and a maximum fine of $100,000. If the
violation involves a film, videotape, or other moving
depiction, a violation of paragraph (2) of subsection (a) is a
Class X felony with a mandatory minimum fine of $1000 and a
maximum fine of $100,000. If the violation does not involve a
film, videotape, or other moving depiction, a violation of
paragraph (6) of subsection (a) is a Class 3 felony with a
mandatory minimum fine of $1000 and a maximum fine of
$100,000. If the violation involves a film, videotape, or
other moving depiction, a violation of paragraph (6) of
subsection (a) is a Class 2 felony with a mandatory minimum
fine of $1000 and a maximum fine of $100,000.
    (c-5) Where the child depicted is under the age of 13, a
violation of paragraph (1), (2), (3), (4), (5), or (7) of
subsection (a) is a Class X felony with a mandatory minimum
fine of $2,000 and a maximum fine of $100,000. Where the child
depicted is under the age of 13, a violation of paragraph (6)
of subsection (a) is a Class 2 felony with a mandatory minimum
fine of $1,000 and a maximum fine of $100,000. Where the child
depicted is under the age of 13, a person who commits a
violation of paragraph (1), (2), (3), (4), (5), or (7) of
subsection (a) where the defendant has previously been
convicted under the laws of this State or any other state of
the offense of child sexual abuse material or child
pornography, aggravated child pornography, aggravated criminal
sexual abuse, aggravated criminal sexual assault, predatory
criminal sexual assault of a child, or any of the offenses
formerly known as rape, deviate sexual assault, indecent
liberties with a child, or aggravated indecent liberties with
a child where the victim was under the age of 18 years or an
offense that is substantially equivalent to those offenses, is
guilty of a Class X felony for which the person shall be
sentenced to a term of imprisonment of not less than 9 years
with a mandatory minimum fine of $2,000 and a maximum fine of
$100,000. Where the child depicted is under the age of 13, a
person who commits a violation of paragraph (6) of subsection
(a) where the defendant has previously been convicted under
the laws of this State or any other state of the offense of
child sexual abuse material or child pornography, aggravated
child pornography, aggravated criminal sexual abuse,
aggravated criminal sexual assault, predatory criminal sexual
assault of a child, or any of the offenses formerly known as
rape, deviate sexual assault, indecent liberties with a child,
or aggravated indecent liberties with a child where the victim
was under the age of 18 years or an offense that is
substantially equivalent to those offenses, is guilty of a
Class 1 felony with a mandatory minimum fine of $1,000 and a
maximum fine of $100,000. The issue of whether the child
depicted is under the age of 13 is an element of the offense to
be resolved by the trier of fact.
    (d) If a person is convicted of a second or subsequent
violation of this Section within 10 years of a prior
conviction, the court shall order a presentence psychiatric
examination of the person. The examiner shall report to the
court whether treatment of the person is necessary.
    (e) Any film, videotape, photograph or other similar
visual reproduction or depiction by computer which includes a
child under the age of 18 or a person with a severe or profound
intellectual disability engaged in any activity described in
subparagraphs (i) through (vii) of or paragraph (1) 1 of
subsection (a), and any material or equipment used or intended
for use in photographing, filming, printing, producing,
reproducing, manufacturing, projecting, exhibiting, depiction
by computer, or disseminating such material shall be seized
and forfeited in the manner, method and procedure provided by
Section 36-1 of this Code for the seizure and forfeiture of
vessels, vehicles and aircraft.
    In addition, any person convicted under this Section is
subject to the property forfeiture provisions set forth in
Article 124B of the Code of Criminal Procedure of 1963.
    (e-5) Upon the conclusion of a case brought under this
Section, the court shall seal all evidence depicting a victim
or witness that is sexually explicit. The evidence may be
unsealed and viewed, on a motion of the party seeking to unseal
and view the evidence, only for good cause shown and in the
discretion of the court. The motion must expressly set forth
the purpose for viewing the material. The State's Attorney
attorney and the victim, if possible, shall be provided
reasonable notice of the hearing on the motion to unseal the
evidence. Any person entitled to notice of a hearing under
this subsection (e-5) may object to the motion.
    (f) Definitions. For the purposes of this Section:
        (1) "Disseminate" means (i) to sell, distribute,
    exchange or transfer possession, whether with or without
    consideration or (ii) to make a depiction by computer
    available for distribution or downloading through the
    facilities of any telecommunications network or through
    any other means of transferring computer programs or data
    to a computer.
        (2) "Produce" means to direct, promote, advertise,
    publish, manufacture, issue, present or show.
        (3) "Reproduce" means to make a duplication or copy.
        (4) "Depict by computer" means to generate or create,
    or cause to be created or generated, a computer program or
    data that, after being processed by a computer either
    alone or in conjunction with one or more computer
    programs, results in a visual depiction on a computer
    monitor, screen, or display.
        (5) "Depiction by computer" means a computer program
    or data that, after being processed by a computer either
    alone or in conjunction with one or more computer
    programs, results in a visual depiction on a computer
    monitor, screen, or display.
        (6) "Computer", "computer program", and "data" have
    the meanings ascribed to them in Section 17.05 of this
    Code.
        (7) For the purposes of this Section, "child sexual
    abuse material pornography" includes a film, videotape,
    photograph, or other similar visual medium or reproduction
    or depiction by computer that is, or appears to be, that of
    a person, either in part, or in total, under the age of 18
    or a person with a severe or profound intellectual
    disability, regardless of the method by which the film,
    videotape, photograph, or other similar visual medium or
    reproduction or depiction by computer is created, adopted,
    or modified to appear as such. "Child sexual abuse
    material pornography" also includes a film, videotape,
    photograph, or other similar visual medium or reproduction
    or depiction by computer that is advertised, promoted,
    presented, described, or distributed in such a manner that
    conveys the impression that the film, videotape,
    photograph, or other similar visual medium or reproduction
    or depiction by computer is of a person under the age of 18
    or a person with a severe or profound intellectual
    disability. "Child sexual abuse material pornography"
    includes the depiction of a part of an actual child under
    the age of 18 who, by manipulation, creation, or
    modification, appears to be engaged in any activity
    described in subparagraphs (i) through (vii) of paragraph
    (1) of subsection (a). "Child sexual abuse material
    pornography" does not include images or materials in which
    the creator of the image or materials is the sole subject
    of the depiction.
    (g) Re-enactment; findings; purposes.
        (1) The General Assembly finds and declares that:
            (i) Section 50-5 of Public Act 88-680, effective
        January 1, 1995, contained provisions amending the
        child sexual abuse material pornography statute,
        Section 11-20.1 of the Criminal Code of 1961. Section
        50-5 also contained other provisions.
            (ii) In addition, Public Act 88-680 was entitled
        "AN ACT to create a Safe Neighborhoods Law". (A)
        Article 5 was entitled JUVENILE JUSTICE and amended
        the Juvenile Court Act of 1987. (B) Article 15 was
        entitled GANGS and amended various provisions of the
        Criminal Code of 1961 and the Unified Code of
        Corrections. (C) Article 20 was entitled ALCOHOL ABUSE
        and amended various provisions of the Illinois Vehicle
        Code. (D) Article 25 was entitled DRUG ABUSE and
        amended the Cannabis Control Act and the Illinois
        Controlled Substances Act. (E) Article 30 was entitled
        FIREARMS and amended the Criminal Code of 1961 and the
        Code of Criminal Procedure of 1963. (F) Article 35
        amended the Criminal Code of 1961, the Rights of Crime
        Victims and Witnesses Act, and the Unified Code of
        Corrections. (G) Article 40 amended the Criminal Code
        of 1961 to increase the penalty for compelling
        organization membership of persons. (H) Article 45
        created the Secure Residential Youth Care Facility
        Licensing Act and amended the State Finance Act, the
        Juvenile Court Act of 1987, the Unified Code of
        Corrections, and the Private Correctional Facility
        Moratorium Act. (I) Article 50 amended the WIC Vendor
        Management Act, the Firearm Owners Identification Card
        Act, the Juvenile Court Act of 1987, the Criminal Code
        of 1961, the Wrongs to Children Act, and the Unified
        Code of Corrections.
            (iii) On September 22, 1998, the Third District
        Appellate Court in People v. Dainty, 701 N.E. 2d 118,
        ruled that Public Act 88-680 violates the single
        subject clause of the Illinois Constitution (Article
        IV, Section 8 (d)) and was unconstitutional in its
        entirety. As of the time this amendatory Act of 1999
        was prepared, People v. Dainty was still subject to
        appeal.
            (iv) Child sexual abuse material pornography is a
        vital concern to the people of this State and the
        validity of future prosecutions under the child sexual
        abuse material pornography statute of the Criminal
        Code of 1961 is in grave doubt.
        (2) It is the purpose of this amendatory Act of 1999 to
    prevent or minimize any problems relating to prosecutions
    for child sexual abuse material pornography that may
    result from challenges to the constitutional validity of
    Public Act 88-680 by re-enacting the Section relating to
    child sexual abuse material pornography that was included
    in Public Act 88-680.
        (3) This amendatory Act of 1999 re-enacts Section
    11-20.1 of the Criminal Code of 1961, as it has been
    amended. This re-enactment is intended to remove any
    question as to the validity or content of that Section; it
    is not intended to supersede any other Public Act that
    amends the text of the Section as set forth in this
    amendatory Act of 1999. The material is shown as existing
    text (i.e., without underscoring) because, as of the time
    this amendatory Act of 1999 was prepared, People v. Dainty
    was subject to appeal to the Illinois Supreme Court.
        (4) The re-enactment by this amendatory Act of 1999 of
    Section 11-20.1 of the Criminal Code of 1961 relating to
    child sexual abuse material pornography that was amended
    by Public Act 88-680 is not intended, and shall not be
    construed, to imply that Public Act 88-680 is invalid or
    to limit or impair any legal argument concerning whether
    those provisions were substantially re-enacted by other
    Public Acts.
(Source: P.A. 102-567, eff. 1-1-22; 103-825, eff. 1-1-25.)
 
    (720 ILCS 5/11-20.2)  (from Ch. 38, par. 11-20.2)
    Sec. 11-20.2. Duty of commercial film and photographic
print processors or computer technicians to report sexual
depiction of children.
    (a) Any commercial film and photographic print processor
or computer technician who has knowledge of or observes,
within the scope of his professional capacity or employment,
any film, photograph, videotape, negative, slide, computer
hard drive or any other magnetic or optical media which
depicts a child whom the processor or computer technician
knows or reasonably should know to be under the age of 18 where
such child is:
        (i) actually or by simulation engaged in any act of
    sexual penetration or sexual conduct with any person or
    animal; or
        (ii) actually or by simulation engaged in any act of
    sexual penetration or sexual conduct involving the sex
    organs of the child and the mouth, anus, or sex organs of
    another person or animal; or which involves the mouth,
    anus or sex organs of the child and the sex organs of
    another person or animal; or
        (iii) actually or by simulation engaged in any act of
    masturbation; or
        (iv) actually or by simulation portrayed as being the
    object of, or otherwise engaged in, any act of lewd
    fondling, touching, or caressing involving another person
    or animal; or
        (v) actually or by simulation engaged in any act of
    excretion or urination within a sexual context; or
        (vi) actually or by simulation portrayed or depicted
    as bound, fettered, or subject to sadistic, masochistic,
    or sadomasochistic abuse in any sexual context; or
        (vii) depicted or portrayed in any pose, posture or
    setting involving a lewd exhibition of the unclothed or
    transparently clothed genitals, pubic area, buttocks, or,
    if such person is female, a fully or partially developed
    breast of the child or other person;
shall report or cause a report to be made pursuant to
subsections (b) and (c) as soon as reasonably possible.
Failure to make such report shall be a business offense with a
fine of $1,000.
    (b) Commercial film and photographic film processors shall
report or cause a report to be made to the local law
enforcement agency of the jurisdiction in which the image or
images described in subsection (a) are discovered.
    (c) Computer technicians shall report or cause the report
to be made to the local law enforcement agency of the
jurisdiction in which the image or images described in
subsection (a) are discovered or to the Illinois Child
Exploitation e-Tipline at reportchildporn@atg.state.il.us.
    (d) Reports required by this Act shall include the
following information: (i) name, address, and telephone number
of the person filing the report; (ii) the employer of the
person filing the report, if any; (iii) the name, address and
telephone number of the person whose property is the subject
of the report, if known; (iv) the circumstances which led to
the filing of the report, including a description of the
reported content.
    (e) If a report is filed with the Cyber Tipline at the
National Center for Missing and Exploited Children or in
accordance with the requirements of 42 U.S.C. 13032, the
requirements of this Act will be deemed to have been met.
    (f) A computer technician or an employer caused to report
child sexual abuse material pornography under this Section is
immune from any criminal, civil, or administrative liability
in connection with making the report, except for willful or
wanton misconduct.
    (g) For the purposes of this Section, a "computer
technician" is a person who installs, maintains,
troubleshoots, repairs or upgrades computer hardware,
software, computer networks, peripheral equipment, electronic
mail systems, or provides user assistance for any of the
aforementioned tasks.
(Source: P.A. 95-983, eff. 6-1-09; 96-1551, eff. 7-1-11.)
 
    (720 ILCS 5/11-23)
    Sec. 11-23. Posting of identifying or graphic information
on a pornographic Internet site or possessing graphic
information with pornographic material.
    (a) A person at least 17 years of age who knowingly
discloses on an adult obscenity or child sexual abuse material
pornography Internet site the name, address, telephone number,
or e-mail address of a person under 17 years of age at the time
of the commission of the offense or of a person at least 17
years of age without the consent of the person at least 17
years of age is guilty of posting of identifying information
on a pornographic Internet site.
    (a-5) Any person who knowingly places, posts, reproduces,
or maintains on an adult obscenity or child sexual abuse
material pornography Internet site a photograph, video, or
digital image of a person under 18 years of age that is not
child sexual abuse material pornography under Section 11-20.1,
without the knowledge and consent of the person under 18 years
of age, is guilty of posting of graphic information on a
pornographic Internet site. This provision applies even if the
person under 18 years of age is fully or properly clothed in
the photograph, video, or digital image.
    (a-10) Any person who knowingly places, posts, reproduces,
or maintains on an adult obscenity or child sexual abuse
material pornography Internet site, or possesses with obscene
or child pornographic material a photograph, video, or digital
image of a person under 18 years of age in which the child is
posed in a suggestive manner with the focus or concentration
of the image on the child's clothed genitals, clothed pubic
area, clothed buttocks area, or if the child is female, the
breast exposed through transparent clothing, and the
photograph, video, or digital image is not child sexual abuse
material pornography under Section 11-20.1, is guilty of
posting of graphic information on a pornographic Internet site
or possessing graphic information with pornographic material.
    (b) Sentence. A person who violates subsection (a) of this
Section is guilty of a Class 4 felony if the victim is at least
17 years of age at the time of the offense and a Class 3 felony
if the victim is under 17 years of age at the time of the
offense. A person who violates subsection (a-5) of this
Section is guilty of a Class 4 felony. A person who violates
subsection (a-10) of this Section is guilty of a Class 3
felony.
    (c) Definitions. For purposes of this Section:
        (1) "Adult obscenity or child sexual abuse material
    pornography Internet site" means a site on the Internet
    that contains material that is obscene as defined in
    Section 11-20 of this Code or that is child sexual abuse
    material pornography as defined in Section 11-20.1 of this
    Code.
        (2) "Internet" has the meaning set forth in Section
    16-0.1 of this Code.
(Source: P.A. 96-1551, eff. 7-1-11; 97-1150, eff. 1-25-13.)
 
    (720 ILCS 5/11-25)
    Sec. 11-25. Grooming.
    (a) A person commits grooming when, being 5 years or more
older than a child, or holding a position of trust, authority,
or supervision in relation to the child at the time of the
offense, he or she knowingly:
        (1) uses a computer on-line service, Internet service,
    local bulletin board service, or any other device capable
    of electronic data storage or transmission, performs an
    act in person or by conduct through a third party, or uses
    written communication to seduce, solicit, lure, or entice,
    or attempt to seduce, solicit, lure, or entice, a child, a
    child's guardian, or another person believed by the person
    to be a child or a child's guardian, to commit any sex
    offense as defined in Section 2 of the Sex Offender
    Registration Act, to distribute photographs depicting the
    sex organs of the child, or to otherwise engage in any
    unlawful sexual conduct with a child or with another
    person believed by the person to be a child; or .
        (2) engages in a pattern of conduct that seduces,
    solicits, lures, or entices, or attempts to seduce,
    solicit, lure, or entice, a child to engage or participate
    in unlawful sexual conduct that is for the purpose of
    sexual gratification or arousal of the victim, the
    accused, or another.
    (a-5) As used in this Section: ,
    "Child" "child" means a person under 17 years of age.
    "Pattern" means 2 or more instances of conduct.
    "Sex offense" means any violation of Article 11 of this
Code.
    "Sexual conduct" means masturbation, sexual conduct, or
sexual penetration as defined in Section 11-0.1 of this Code.
    (a-6) Illinois has a compelling interest in effective
education and "grooming" does not include conduct that serves
a legitimate educational purpose pursuant to Section 27-9.1a
of the School Code.
    (b) Sentence. Grooming is a Class 4 felony.
(Source: P.A. 102-676, eff. 6-1-22.)
 
    (720 ILCS 5/14-3)
    Sec. 14-3. Exemptions. The following activities shall be
exempt from the provisions of this Article:
        (a) Listening to radio, wireless electronic
    communications, and television communications of any sort
    where the same are publicly made;
        (b) Hearing conversation when heard by employees of
    any common carrier by wire incidental to the normal course
    of their employment in the operation, maintenance or
    repair of the equipment of such common carrier by wire so
    long as no information obtained thereby is used or
    divulged by the hearer;
        (c) Any broadcast by radio, television or otherwise
    whether it be a broadcast or recorded for the purpose of
    later broadcasts of any function where the public is in
    attendance and the conversations are overheard incidental
    to the main purpose for which such broadcasts are then
    being made;
        (d) Recording or listening with the aid of any device
    to any emergency communication made in the normal course
    of operations by any federal, state or local law
    enforcement agency or institutions dealing in emergency
    services, including, but not limited to, hospitals,
    clinics, ambulance services, fire fighting agencies, any
    public utility, emergency repair facility, civilian
    defense establishment or military installation;
        (e) Recording the proceedings of any meeting required
    to be open by the Open Meetings Act, as amended;
        (f) Recording or listening with the aid of any device
    to incoming telephone calls of phone lines publicly listed
    or advertised as consumer "hotlines" by manufacturers or
    retailers of food and drug products. Such recordings must
    be destroyed, erased or turned over to local law
    enforcement authorities within 24 hours from the time of
    such recording and shall not be otherwise disseminated.
    Failure on the part of the individual or business
    operating any such recording or listening device to comply
    with the requirements of this subsection shall eliminate
    any civil or criminal immunity conferred upon that
    individual or business by the operation of this Section;
        (g) With prior notification to the State's Attorney of
    the county in which it is to occur, recording or listening
    with the aid of any device to any conversation where a law
    enforcement officer, or any person acting at the direction
    of law enforcement, is a party to the conversation and has
    consented to it being intercepted or recorded under
    circumstances where the use of the device is necessary for
    the protection of the law enforcement officer or any
    person acting at the direction of law enforcement, in the
    course of an investigation of a forcible felony, a felony
    offense of involuntary servitude, involuntary sexual
    servitude of a minor, or trafficking in persons under
    Section 10-9 of this Code, an offense involving
    prostitution, solicitation of a sexual act, or pandering,
    a felony violation of the Illinois Controlled Substances
    Act, a felony violation of the Cannabis Control Act, a
    felony violation of the Methamphetamine Control and
    Community Protection Act, any "streetgang related" or
    "gang-related" felony as those terms are defined in the
    Illinois Streetgang Terrorism Omnibus Prevention Act, or
    any felony offense involving any weapon listed in
    paragraphs (1) through (11) of subsection (a) of Section
    24-1 of this Code. Any recording or evidence derived as
    the result of this exemption shall be inadmissible in any
    proceeding, criminal, civil or administrative, except (i)
    where a party to the conversation suffers great bodily
    injury or is killed during such conversation, or (ii) when
    used as direct impeachment of a witness concerning matters
    contained in the interception or recording. The Director
    of the Illinois State Police shall issue regulations as
    are necessary concerning the use of devices, retention of
    tape recordings, and reports regarding their use;
        (g-5) (Blank);
        (g-6) With approval of the State's Attorney of the
    county in which it is to occur, recording or listening
    with the aid of any device to any conversation where a law
    enforcement officer, or any person acting at the direction
    of law enforcement, is a party to the conversation and has
    consented to it being intercepted or recorded in the
    course of an investigation of child sexual abuse material
    pornography, aggravated child pornography, indecent
    solicitation of a child, luring of a minor, sexual
    exploitation of a child, aggravated criminal sexual abuse
    in which the victim of the offense was at the time of the
    commission of the offense under 18 years of age, or
    criminal sexual abuse by force or threat of force in which
    the victim of the offense was at the time of the commission
    of the offense under 18 years of age. In all such cases, an
    application for an order approving the previous or
    continuing use of an eavesdropping device must be made
    within 48 hours of the commencement of such use. In the
    absence of such an order, or upon its denial, any
    continuing use shall immediately terminate. The Director
    of the Illinois State Police shall issue rules as are
    necessary concerning the use of devices, retention of
    recordings, and reports regarding their use. Any recording
    or evidence obtained or derived in the course of an
    investigation of child sexual abuse material pornography,
    aggravated child pornography, indecent solicitation of a
    child, luring of a minor, sexual exploitation of a child,
    aggravated criminal sexual abuse in which the victim of
    the offense was at the time of the commission of the
    offense under 18 years of age, or criminal sexual abuse by
    force or threat of force in which the victim of the offense
    was at the time of the commission of the offense under 18
    years of age shall, upon motion of the State's Attorney or
    Attorney General prosecuting any case involving child
    sexual abuse material pornography, aggravated child
    pornography, indecent solicitation of a child, luring of a
    minor, sexual exploitation of a child, aggravated criminal
    sexual abuse in which the victim of the offense was at the
    time of the commission of the offense under 18 years of
    age, or criminal sexual abuse by force or threat of force
    in which the victim of the offense was at the time of the
    commission of the offense under 18 years of age be
    reviewed in camera with notice to all parties present by
    the court presiding over the criminal case, and, if ruled
    by the court to be relevant and otherwise admissible, it
    shall be admissible at the trial of the criminal case.
    Absent such a ruling, any such recording or evidence shall
    not be admissible at the trial of the criminal case;
        (h) Recordings made simultaneously with the use of an
    in-car video camera recording of an oral conversation
    between a uniformed peace officer, who has identified his
    or her office, and a person in the presence of the peace
    officer whenever (i) an officer assigned a patrol vehicle
    is conducting an enforcement stop; or (ii) patrol vehicle
    emergency lights are activated or would otherwise be
    activated if not for the need to conceal the presence of
    law enforcement.
        For the purposes of this subsection (h), "enforcement
    stop" means an action by a law enforcement officer in
    relation to enforcement and investigation duties,
    including but not limited to, traffic stops, pedestrian
    stops, abandoned vehicle contacts, motorist assists,
    commercial motor vehicle stops, roadside safety checks,
    requests for identification, or responses to requests for
    emergency assistance;
        (h-5) Recordings of utterances made by a person while
    in the presence of a uniformed peace officer and while an
    occupant of a police vehicle including, but not limited
    to, (i) recordings made simultaneously with the use of an
    in-car video camera and (ii) recordings made in the
    presence of the peace officer utilizing video or audio
    systems, or both, authorized by the law enforcement
    agency;
        (h-10) Recordings made simultaneously with a video
    camera recording during the use of a taser or similar
    weapon or device by a peace officer if the weapon or device
    is equipped with such camera;
        (h-15) Recordings made under subsection (h), (h-5), or
    (h-10) shall be retained by the law enforcement agency
    that employs the peace officer who made the recordings for
    a storage period of 90 days, unless the recordings are
    made as a part of an arrest or the recordings are deemed
    evidence in any criminal, civil, or administrative
    proceeding and then the recordings must only be destroyed
    upon a final disposition and an order from the court.
    Under no circumstances shall any recording be altered or
    erased prior to the expiration of the designated storage
    period. Upon completion of the storage period, the
    recording medium may be erased and reissued for
    operational use;
        (i) Recording of a conversation made by or at the
    request of a person, not a law enforcement officer or
    agent of a law enforcement officer, who is a party to the
    conversation, under reasonable suspicion that another
    party to the conversation is committing, is about to
    commit, or has committed a criminal offense against the
    person or a member of his or her immediate household, and
    there is reason to believe that evidence of the criminal
    offense may be obtained by the recording;
        (j) The use of a telephone monitoring device by either
    (1) a corporation or other business entity engaged in
    marketing or opinion research or (2) a corporation or
    other business entity engaged in telephone solicitation,
    as defined in this subsection, to record or listen to oral
    telephone solicitation conversations or marketing or
    opinion research conversations by an employee of the
    corporation or other business entity when:
            (i) the monitoring is used for the purpose of
        service quality control of marketing or opinion
        research or telephone solicitation, the education or
        training of employees or contractors engaged in
        marketing or opinion research or telephone
        solicitation, or internal research related to
        marketing or opinion research or telephone
        solicitation; and
            (ii) the monitoring is used with the consent of at
        least one person who is an active party to the
        marketing or opinion research conversation or
        telephone solicitation conversation being monitored.
        No communication or conversation or any part, portion,
    or aspect of the communication or conversation made,
    acquired, or obtained, directly or indirectly, under this
    exemption (j), may be, directly or indirectly, furnished
    to any law enforcement officer, agency, or official for
    any purpose or used in any inquiry or investigation, or
    used, directly or indirectly, in any administrative,
    judicial, or other proceeding, or divulged to any third
    party.
        When recording or listening authorized by this
    subsection (j) on telephone lines used for marketing or
    opinion research or telephone solicitation purposes
    results in recording or listening to a conversation that
    does not relate to marketing or opinion research or
    telephone solicitation; the person recording or listening
    shall, immediately upon determining that the conversation
    does not relate to marketing or opinion research or
    telephone solicitation, terminate the recording or
    listening and destroy any such recording as soon as is
    practicable.
        Business entities that use a telephone monitoring or
    telephone recording system pursuant to this exemption (j)
    shall provide current and prospective employees with
    notice that the monitoring or recordings may occur during
    the course of their employment. The notice shall include
    prominent signage notification within the workplace.
        Business entities that use a telephone monitoring or
    telephone recording system pursuant to this exemption (j)
    shall provide their employees or agents with access to
    personal-only telephone lines, which may be pay
    telephones, that are not subject to telephone monitoring
    or telephone recording.
        For the purposes of this subsection (j), "telephone
    solicitation" means a communication through the use of a
    telephone by live operators:
            (i) soliciting the sale of goods or services;
            (ii) receiving orders for the sale of goods or
        services;
            (iii) assisting in the use of goods or services;
        or
            (iv) engaging in the solicitation, administration,
        or collection of bank or retail credit accounts.
        For the purposes of this subsection (j), "marketing or
    opinion research" means a marketing or opinion research
    interview conducted by a live telephone interviewer
    engaged by a corporation or other business entity whose
    principal business is the design, conduct, and analysis of
    polls and surveys measuring the opinions, attitudes, and
    responses of respondents toward products and services, or
    social or political issues, or both;
        (k) Electronic recordings, including but not limited
    to, a motion picture, videotape, digital, or other visual
    or audio recording, made of a custodial interrogation of
    an individual at a police station or other place of
    detention by a law enforcement officer under Section
    5-401.5 of the Juvenile Court Act of 1987 or Section
    103-2.1 of the Code of Criminal Procedure of 1963;
        (l) Recording the interview or statement of any person
    when the person knows that the interview is being
    conducted by a law enforcement officer or prosecutor and
    the interview takes place at a police station that is
    currently participating in the Custodial Interview Pilot
    Program established under the Illinois Criminal Justice
    Information Act;
        (m) An electronic recording, including but not limited
    to, a motion picture, videotape, digital, or other visual
    or audio recording, made of the interior of a school bus
    while the school bus is being used in the transportation
    of students to and from school and school-sponsored
    activities, when the school board has adopted a policy
    authorizing such recording, notice of such recording
    policy is included in student handbooks and other
    documents including the policies of the school, notice of
    the policy regarding recording is provided to parents of
    students, and notice of such recording is clearly posted
    on the door of and inside the school bus.
        Recordings made pursuant to this subsection (m) shall
    be confidential records and may only be used by school
    officials (or their designees) and law enforcement
    personnel for investigations, school disciplinary actions
    and hearings, proceedings under the Juvenile Court Act of
    1987, and criminal prosecutions, related to incidents
    occurring in or around the school bus;
        (n) Recording or listening to an audio transmission
    from a microphone placed by a person under the authority
    of a law enforcement agency inside a bait car surveillance
    vehicle while simultaneously capturing a photographic or
    video image;
        (o) The use of an eavesdropping camera or audio device
    during an ongoing hostage or barricade situation by a law
    enforcement officer or individual acting on behalf of a
    law enforcement officer when the use of such device is
    necessary to protect the safety of the general public,
    hostages, or law enforcement officers or anyone acting on
    their behalf;
        (p) Recording or listening with the aid of any device
    to incoming telephone calls of phone lines publicly listed
    or advertised as the "CPS Violence Prevention Hotline",
    but only where the notice of recording is given at the
    beginning of each call as required by Section 34-21.8 of
    the School Code. The recordings may be retained only by
    the Chicago Police Department or other law enforcement
    authorities, and shall not be otherwise retained or
    disseminated;
        (q)(1) With prior request to and written or verbal
    approval of the State's Attorney of the county in which
    the conversation is anticipated to occur, recording or
    listening with the aid of an eavesdropping device to a
    conversation in which a law enforcement officer, or any
    person acting at the direction of a law enforcement
    officer, is a party to the conversation and has consented
    to the conversation being intercepted or recorded in the
    course of an investigation of a qualified offense. The
    State's Attorney may grant this approval only after
    determining that reasonable cause exists to believe that
    inculpatory conversations concerning a qualified offense
    will occur with a specified individual or individuals
    within a designated period of time.
        (2) Request for approval. To invoke the exception
    contained in this subsection (q), a law enforcement
    officer shall make a request for approval to the
    appropriate State's Attorney. The request may be written
    or verbal; however, a written memorialization of the
    request must be made by the State's Attorney. This request
    for approval shall include whatever information is deemed
    necessary by the State's Attorney but shall include, at a
    minimum, the following information about each specified
    individual whom the law enforcement officer believes will
    commit a qualified offense:
            (A) his or her full or partial name, nickname or
        alias;
            (B) a physical description; or
            (C) failing either (A) or (B) of this paragraph
        (2), any other supporting information known to the law
        enforcement officer at the time of the request that
        gives rise to reasonable cause to believe that the
        specified individual will participate in an
        inculpatory conversation concerning a qualified
        offense.
        (3) Limitations on approval. Each written approval by
    the State's Attorney under this subsection (q) shall be
    limited to:
            (A) a recording or interception conducted by a
        specified law enforcement officer or person acting at
        the direction of a law enforcement officer;
            (B) recording or intercepting conversations with
        the individuals specified in the request for approval,
        provided that the verbal approval shall be deemed to
        include the recording or intercepting of conversations
        with other individuals, unknown to the law enforcement
        officer at the time of the request for approval, who
        are acting in conjunction with or as co-conspirators
        with the individuals specified in the request for
        approval in the commission of a qualified offense;
            (C) a reasonable period of time but in no event
        longer than 24 consecutive hours;
            (D) the written request for approval, if
        applicable, or the written memorialization must be
        filed, along with the written approval, with the
        circuit clerk of the jurisdiction on the next business
        day following the expiration of the authorized period
        of time, and shall be subject to review by the Chief
        Judge or his or her designee as deemed appropriate by
        the court.
        (3.5) The written memorialization of the request for
    approval and the written approval by the State's Attorney
    may be in any format, including via facsimile, email, or
    otherwise, so long as it is capable of being filed with the
    circuit clerk.
        (3.10) Beginning March 1, 2015, each State's Attorney
    shall annually submit a report to the General Assembly
    disclosing:
            (A) the number of requests for each qualified
        offense for approval under this subsection; and
            (B) the number of approvals for each qualified
        offense given by the State's Attorney.
        (4) Admissibility of evidence. No part of the contents
    of any wire, electronic, or oral communication that has
    been recorded or intercepted as a result of this exception
    may be received in evidence in any trial, hearing, or
    other proceeding in or before any court, grand jury,
    department, officer, agency, regulatory body, legislative
    committee, or other authority of this State, or a
    political subdivision of the State, other than in a
    prosecution of:
            (A) the qualified offense for which approval was
        given to record or intercept a conversation under this
        subsection (q);
            (B) a forcible felony committed directly in the
        course of the investigation of the qualified offense
        for which approval was given to record or intercept a
        conversation under this subsection (q); or
            (C) any other forcible felony committed while the
        recording or interception was approved in accordance
        with this subsection (q), but for this specific
        category of prosecutions, only if the law enforcement
        officer or person acting at the direction of a law
        enforcement officer who has consented to the
        conversation being intercepted or recorded suffers
        great bodily injury or is killed during the commission
        of the charged forcible felony.
        (5) Compliance with the provisions of this subsection
    is a prerequisite to the admissibility in evidence of any
    part of the contents of any wire, electronic or oral
    communication that has been intercepted as a result of
    this exception, but nothing in this subsection shall be
    deemed to prevent a court from otherwise excluding the
    evidence on any other ground recognized by State or
    federal law, nor shall anything in this subsection be
    deemed to prevent a court from independently reviewing the
    admissibility of the evidence for compliance with the
    Fourth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution or with Article
    I, Section 6 of the Illinois Constitution.
        (6) Use of recordings or intercepts unrelated to
    qualified offenses. Whenever any private conversation or
    private electronic communication has been recorded or
    intercepted as a result of this exception that is not
    related to an offense for which the recording or intercept
    is admissible under paragraph (4) of this subsection (q),
    no part of the contents of the communication and evidence
    derived from the communication may be received in evidence
    in any trial, hearing, or other proceeding in or before
    any court, grand jury, department, officer, agency,
    regulatory body, legislative committee, or other authority
    of this State, or a political subdivision of the State,
    nor may it be publicly disclosed in any way.
        (6.5) The Illinois State Police shall adopt rules as
    are necessary concerning the use of devices, retention of
    recordings, and reports regarding their use under this
    subsection (q).
        (7) Definitions. For the purposes of this subsection
    (q) only:
            "Forcible felony" includes and is limited to those
        offenses contained in Section 2-8 of the Criminal Code
        of 1961 as of the effective date of this amendatory Act
        of the 97th General Assembly, and only as those
        offenses have been defined by law or judicial
        interpretation as of that date.
            "Qualified offense" means and is limited to:
                (A) a felony violation of the Cannabis Control
            Act, the Illinois Controlled Substances Act, or
            the Methamphetamine Control and Community
            Protection Act, except for violations of:
                    (i) Section 4 of the Cannabis Control Act;
                    (ii) Section 402 of the Illinois
                Controlled Substances Act; and
                    (iii) Section 60 of the Methamphetamine
                Control and Community Protection Act; and
                (B) first degree murder, solicitation of
            murder for hire, predatory criminal sexual assault
            of a child, criminal sexual assault, aggravated
            criminal sexual assault, aggravated arson,
            kidnapping, aggravated kidnapping, child
            abduction, trafficking in persons, involuntary
            servitude, involuntary sexual servitude of a
            minor, or gunrunning.
            "State's Attorney" includes and is limited to the
        State's Attorney or an assistant State's Attorney
        designated by the State's Attorney to provide verbal
        approval to record or intercept conversations under
        this subsection (q).
        (8) Sunset. This subsection (q) is inoperative on and
    after January 1, 2027. No conversations intercepted
    pursuant to this subsection (q), while operative, shall be
    inadmissible in a court of law by virtue of the
    inoperability of this subsection (q) on January 1, 2027.
        (9) Recordings, records, and custody. Any private
    conversation or private electronic communication
    intercepted by a law enforcement officer or a person
    acting at the direction of law enforcement shall, if
    practicable, be recorded in such a way as will protect the
    recording from editing or other alteration. Any and all
    original recordings made under this subsection (q) shall
    be inventoried without unnecessary delay pursuant to the
    law enforcement agency's policies for inventorying
    evidence. The original recordings shall not be destroyed
    except upon an order of a court of competent jurisdiction;
    and
        (r) Electronic recordings, including but not limited
    to, motion picture, videotape, digital, or other visual or
    audio recording, made of a lineup under Section 107A-2 of
    the Code of Criminal Procedure of 1963.
(Source: P.A. 101-80, eff. 7-12-19; 102-538, eff. 8-20-21;
102-918, eff. 5-27-22.)
 
    (720 ILCS 5/36-1)  (from Ch. 38, par. 36-1)
    Sec. 36-1. Property subject to forfeiture.
    (a) Any vessel or watercraft, vehicle, or aircraft is
subject to forfeiture under this Article if the vessel or
watercraft, vehicle, or aircraft is used with the knowledge
and consent of the owner in the commission of or in the attempt
to commit as defined in Section 8-4 of this Code:
        (1) an offense prohibited by Section 9-1 (first degree
    murder), Section 9-3 (involuntary manslaughter and
    reckless homicide), Section 10-2 (aggravated kidnaping),
    Section 11-1.20 (criminal sexual assault), Section 11-1.30
    (aggravated criminal sexual assault), Section 11-1.40
    (predatory criminal sexual assault of a child), subsection
    (a) of Section 11-1.50 (criminal sexual abuse), subsection
    (a), (c), or (d) of Section 11-1.60 (aggravated criminal
    sexual abuse), Section 11-6 (indecent solicitation of a
    child), Section 11-14.4 (promoting juvenile prostitution
    except for keeping a place of juvenile prostitution),
    Section 11-20.1 (child sexual abuse material pornography),
    paragraph (a)(1), (a)(2), (a)(4), (b)(1), (b)(2), (e)(1),
    (e)(2), (e)(3), (e)(4), (e)(5), (e)(6), or (e)(7) of
    Section 12-3.05 (aggravated battery), Section 12-7.3
    (stalking), Section 12-7.4 (aggravated stalking), Section
    16-1 (theft if the theft is of precious metal or of scrap
    metal), subdivision (f)(2) or (f)(3) of Section 16-25
    (retail theft), Section 18-2 (armed robbery), Section 19-1
    (burglary), Section 19-2 (possession of burglary tools),
    Section 19-3 (residential burglary), Section 20-1 (arson;
    residential arson; place of worship arson), Section 20-2
    (possession of explosives or explosive or incendiary
    devices), subdivision (a)(6) or (a)(7) of Section 24-1
    (unlawful possession of weapons), Section 24-1.2
    (aggravated discharge of a firearm), Section 24-1.2-5
    (aggravated discharge of a machine gun or a firearm
    equipped with a device designed or used for silencing the
    report of a firearm), Section 24-1.5 (reckless discharge
    of a firearm), Section 28-1 (gambling), or Section
    29D-15.2 (possession of a deadly substance) of this Code;
        (2) an offense prohibited by Section 21, 22, 23, 24 or
    26 of the Cigarette Tax Act if the vessel or watercraft,
    vehicle, or aircraft contains more than 10 cartons of such
    cigarettes;
        (3) an offense prohibited by Section 28, 29, or 30 of
    the Cigarette Use Tax Act if the vessel or watercraft,
    vehicle, or aircraft contains more than 10 cartons of such
    cigarettes;
        (4) an offense prohibited by Section 44 of the
    Environmental Protection Act;
        (5) an offense prohibited by Section 11-204.1 of the
    Illinois Vehicle Code (aggravated fleeing or attempting to
    elude a peace officer);
        (6) an offense prohibited by Section 11-501 of the
    Illinois Vehicle Code (driving while under the influence
    of alcohol or other drug or drugs, intoxicating compound
    or compounds or any combination thereof) or a similar
    provision of a local ordinance, and:
            (A) during a period in which his or her driving
        privileges are revoked or suspended if the revocation
        or suspension was for:
                (i) Section 11-501 (driving under the
            influence of alcohol or other drug or drugs,
            intoxicating compound or compounds or any
            combination thereof),
                (ii) Section 11-501.1 (statutory summary
            suspension or revocation),
                (iii) paragraph (b) of Section 11-401 (motor
            vehicle crashes involving death or personal
            injuries), or
                (iv) reckless homicide as defined in Section
            9-3 of this Code;
            (B) has been previously convicted of reckless
        homicide or a similar provision of a law of another
        state relating to reckless homicide in which the
        person was determined to have been under the influence
        of alcohol, other drug or drugs, or intoxicating
        compound or compounds as an element of the offense or
        the person has previously been convicted of committing
        a violation of driving under the influence of alcohol
        or other drug or drugs, intoxicating compound or
        compounds or any combination thereof and was involved
        in a motor vehicle crash that resulted in death, great
        bodily harm, or permanent disability or disfigurement
        to another, when the violation was a proximate cause
        of the death or injuries;
            (C) the person committed a violation of driving
        under the influence of alcohol or other drug or drugs,
        intoxicating compound or compounds or any combination
        thereof under Section 11-501 of the Illinois Vehicle
        Code or a similar provision for the third or
        subsequent time;
            (D) he or she did not possess a valid driver's
        license or permit or a valid restricted driving permit
        or a valid judicial driving permit or a valid
        monitoring device driving permit; or
            (E) he or she knew or should have known that the
        vehicle he or she was driving was not covered by a
        liability insurance policy;
        (7) an offense described in subsection (g) of Section
    6-303 of the Illinois Vehicle Code;
        (8) an offense described in subsection (e) of Section
    6-101 of the Illinois Vehicle Code; or
        (9)(A) operating a watercraft under the influence of
    alcohol, other drug or drugs, intoxicating compound or
    compounds, or combination thereof under Section 5-16 of
    the Boat Registration and Safety Act during a period in
    which his or her privileges to operate a watercraft are
    revoked or suspended and the revocation or suspension was
    for operating a watercraft under the influence of alcohol,
    other drug or drugs, intoxicating compound or compounds,
    or combination thereof; (B) operating a watercraft under
    the influence of alcohol, other drug or drugs,
    intoxicating compound or compounds, or combination thereof
    and has been previously convicted of reckless homicide or
    a similar provision of a law in another state relating to
    reckless homicide in which the person was determined to
    have been under the influence of alcohol, other drug or
    drugs, intoxicating compound or compounds, or combination
    thereof as an element of the offense or the person has
    previously been convicted of committing a violation of
    operating a watercraft under the influence of alcohol,
    other drug or drugs, intoxicating compound or compounds,
    or combination thereof and was involved in an accident
    that resulted in death, great bodily harm, or permanent
    disability or disfigurement to another, when the violation
    was a proximate cause of the death or injuries; or (C) the
    person committed a violation of operating a watercraft
    under the influence of alcohol, other drug or drugs,
    intoxicating compound or compounds, or combination thereof
    under Section 5-16 of the Boat Registration and Safety Act
    or a similar provision for the third or subsequent time.
    (b) In addition, any mobile or portable equipment used in
the commission of an act which is in violation of Section 7g of
the Metropolitan Water Reclamation District Act shall be
subject to seizure and forfeiture under the same procedures
provided in this Article for the seizure and forfeiture of
vessels or watercraft, vehicles, and aircraft, and any such
equipment shall be deemed a vessel or watercraft, vehicle, or
aircraft for purposes of this Article.
    (c) In addition, when a person discharges a firearm at
another individual from a vehicle with the knowledge and
consent of the owner of the vehicle and with the intent to
cause death or great bodily harm to that individual and as a
result causes death or great bodily harm to that individual,
the vehicle shall be subject to seizure and forfeiture under
the same procedures provided in this Article for the seizure
and forfeiture of vehicles used in violations of clauses (1),
(2), (3), or (4) of subsection (a) of this Section.
    (d) If the spouse of the owner of a vehicle seized for an
offense described in subsection (g) of Section 6-303 of the
Illinois Vehicle Code, a violation of subdivision (d)(1)(A),
(d)(1)(D), (d)(1)(G), (d)(1)(H), or (d)(1)(I) of Section
11-501 of the Illinois Vehicle Code, or Section 9-3 of this
Code makes a showing that the seized vehicle is the only source
of transportation and it is determined that the financial
hardship to the family as a result of the seizure outweighs the
benefit to the State from the seizure, the vehicle may be
forfeited to the spouse or family member and the title to the
vehicle shall be transferred to the spouse or family member
who is properly licensed and who requires the use of the
vehicle for employment or family transportation purposes. A
written declaration of forfeiture of a vehicle under this
Section shall be sufficient cause for the title to be
transferred to the spouse or family member. The provisions of
this paragraph shall apply only to one forfeiture per vehicle.
If the vehicle is the subject of a subsequent forfeiture
proceeding by virtue of a subsequent conviction of either
spouse or the family member, the spouse or family member to
whom the vehicle was forfeited under the first forfeiture
proceeding may not utilize the provisions of this paragraph in
another forfeiture proceeding. If the owner of the vehicle
seized owns more than one vehicle, the procedure set out in
this paragraph may be used for only one vehicle.
    (e) In addition, property subject to forfeiture under
Section 40 of the Illinois Streetgang Terrorism Omnibus
Prevention Act may be seized and forfeited under this Article.
(Source: P.A. 102-982, eff. 7-1-23; 103-822, eff. 1-1-25.)
 
    Section 55. The Code of Criminal Procedure of 1963 is
amended by changing Sections 106B-10, 115-7, 115-7.3, 124B-10,
124B-100, 124B-420, and 124B-500 as follows:
 
    (725 ILCS 5/106B-10)
    Sec. 106B-10. Conditions for testimony by a victim or
witness who is under 18 years of age or an a child or a
moderately, severely, or profoundly intellectually disabled
person or a person affected by a developmental disability. The
In a prosecution of criminal sexual assault, predatory
criminal sexual assault of a child, aggravated criminal sexual
assault, criminal sexual abuse, aggravated criminal sexual
abuse, or any violent crime as defined in subsection (c) of
Section 3 of the Rights of Crime Victims and Witnesses Act, the
court may set any conditions it finds just and appropriate on
the taking of testimony of a victim or witness who is under 18
years of age or an intellectually disabled person or a person
affected by a developmental disability victim who is a child
under the age of 18 years or a moderately, severely, or
profoundly intellectually disabled person or a person affected
by a developmental disability, involving the use of a facility
dog in any criminal proceeding involving that offense. When
deciding whether to permit the child or person to testify with
the assistance of a facility dog, the court shall take into
consideration the age of the child or person, the rights of the
parties to the litigation, and any other relevant factor that
would facilitate the giving of testimony by the child or the
person. As used in this Section, "facility dog" means a dog
that is a graduate of an assistance dog organization that is a
member of Assistance Dogs International.
(Source: P.A. 102-22, eff. 6-25-21.)
 
    (725 ILCS 5/115-7)  (from Ch. 38, par. 115-7)
    Sec. 115-7. a. In prosecutions for predatory criminal
sexual assault of a child, aggravated criminal sexual assault,
criminal sexual assault, aggravated criminal sexual abuse,
criminal sexual abuse, involuntary servitude, involuntary
sexual servitude of a minor, or trafficking in persons or
criminal transmission of HIV; and in prosecutions for battery
and aggravated battery, when the commission of the offense
involves sexual penetration or sexual conduct as defined in
Section 11-0.1 of the Criminal Code of 2012; and with the trial
or retrial of the offenses formerly known as rape, deviate
sexual assault, indecent liberties with a child, and
aggravated indecent liberties with a child, the prior sexual
activity or the reputation of the alleged victim or
corroborating witness under Section 115-7.3 of this Code is
inadmissible except (1) as evidence concerning the past sexual
conduct of the alleged victim or corroborating witness under
Section 115-7.3 of this Code with the accused when this
evidence is offered by the accused upon the issue of whether
the alleged victim or corroborating witness under Section
115-7.3 of this Code consented to the sexual conduct with
respect to which the offense is alleged; or (2) when
constitutionally required to be admitted.
    b. No evidence admissible under this Section shall be
introduced unless ruled admissible by the trial judge after an
offer of proof has been made at a hearing to be held in camera
in order to determine whether the defense has evidence to
impeach the witness in the event that prior sexual activity
with the defendant is denied. Such offer of proof shall
include reasonably specific information as to the date, time
and place of the past sexual conduct between the alleged
victim or corroborating witness under Section 115-7.3 of this
Code and the defendant. Unless the court finds that reasonably
specific information as to date, time or place, or some
combination thereof, has been offered as to prior sexual
activity with the defendant, counsel for the defendant shall
be ordered to refrain from inquiring into prior sexual
activity between the alleged victim or corroborating witness
under Section 115-7.3 of this Code and the defendant. The
court shall not admit evidence under this Section unless it
determines at the hearing that the evidence is relevant and
the probative value of the evidence outweighs the danger of
unfair prejudice. The evidence shall be admissible at trial to
the extent an order made by the court specifies the evidence
that may be admitted and areas with respect to which the
alleged victim or corroborating witness under Section 115-7.3
of this Code may be examined or cross examined.
(Source: P.A. 96-1551, eff. 7-1-11; 97-1150, eff. 1-25-13.)
 
    (725 ILCS 5/115-7.3)
    Sec. 115-7.3. Evidence in certain cases.
    (a) This Section applies to criminal cases in which:
        (1) the defendant is accused of predatory criminal
    sexual assault of a child, aggravated criminal sexual
    assault, criminal sexual assault, aggravated criminal
    sexual abuse, criminal sexual abuse, child sexual abuse
    material pornography, aggravated child pornography,
    involuntary servitude, involuntary sexual servitude of a
    minor, trafficking in persons, criminal transmission of
    HIV, or child abduction as defined in paragraph (10) of
    subsection (b) of Section 10-5 of the Criminal Code of
    1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012;
        (2) the defendant is accused of battery, aggravated
    battery, first degree murder, or second degree murder when
    the commission of the offense involves sexual penetration
    or sexual conduct as defined in Section 11-0.1 of the
    Criminal Code of 2012; or
        (3) the defendant is tried or retried for any of the
    offenses formerly known as rape, deviate sexual assault,
    indecent liberties with a child, or aggravated indecent
    liberties with a child.
    (b) If the defendant is accused of an offense set forth in
paragraph (1) or (2) of subsection (a) or the defendant is
tried or retried for any of the offenses set forth in paragraph
(3) of subsection (a), evidence of the defendant's commission
of another offense or offenses set forth in paragraph (1),
(2), or (3) of subsection (a), or evidence to rebut that proof
or an inference from that proof, may be admissible (if that
evidence is otherwise admissible under the rules of evidence)
and may be considered for its bearing on any matter to which it
is relevant.
    (c) In weighing the probative value of the evidence
against undue prejudice to the defendant, the court may
consider:
        (1) the proximity in time to the charged or predicate
    offense;
        (2) the degree of factual similarity to the charged or
    predicate offense; or
        (3) other relevant facts and circumstances.
    (d) In a criminal case in which the prosecution intends to
offer evidence under this Section, it must disclose the
evidence, including statements of witnesses or a summary of
the substance of any testimony, at a reasonable time in
advance of trial, or during trial if the court excuses
pretrial notice on good cause shown.
    (e) In a criminal case in which evidence is offered under
this Section, proof may be made by specific instances of
conduct, testimony as to reputation, or testimony in the form
of an expert opinion, except that the prosecution may offer
reputation testimony only after the opposing party has offered
that testimony.
    (f) In prosecutions for a violation of Section 10-2,
11-1.20, 11-1.30, 11-1.40, 11-1.50, 11-1.60, 12-3.05, 12-4,
12-13, 12-14, 12-14.1, 12-15, 12-16, or 18-5 of the Criminal
Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012, involving the
involuntary delivery of a controlled substance to a victim, no
inference may be made about the fact that a victim did not
consent to a test for the presence of controlled substances.
(Source: P.A. 97-1109, eff. 1-1-13; 97-1150, eff. 1-25-13;
98-160, eff. 1-1-14.)
 
    (725 ILCS 5/124B-10)
    Sec. 124B-10. Applicability; offenses. This Article
applies to forfeiture of property in connection with the
following:
        (1) A violation of Section 10-9 or 10A-10 of the
    Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012
    (involuntary servitude; involuntary servitude of a minor;
    or trafficking in persons).
        (2) A violation of subdivision (a)(1) of Section
    11-14.4 of the Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code
    of 2012 (promoting juvenile prostitution) or a violation
    of Section 11-17.1 of the Criminal Code of 1961 (keeping a
    place of juvenile prostitution).
        (3) A violation of subdivision (a)(4) of Section
    11-14.4 of the Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code
    of 2012 (promoting juvenile prostitution) or a violation
    of Section 11-19.2 of the Criminal Code of 1961
    (exploitation of a child).
        (4) A second or subsequent violation of Section 11-20
    of the Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012
    (obscenity).
        (5) A violation of Section 11-20.1 of the Criminal
    Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012 (child sexual
    abuse material pornography).
        (6) A violation of Section 11-20.1B or 11-20.3 of the
    Criminal Code of 1961 (aggravated child pornography).
        (6.5) A violation of Section 11-23.5 of the Criminal
    Code of 2012.
        (7) A violation of Section 12C-65 of the Criminal Code
    of 2012 or Article 44 of the Criminal Code of 1961
    (unlawful transfer of a telecommunications device to a
    minor).
        (8) A violation of Section 17-50 or Section 16D-5 of
    the Criminal Code of 2012 or the Criminal Code of 1961
    (computer fraud).
        (9) A felony violation of Section 17-6.3 or Article
    17B of the Criminal Code of 2012 or the Criminal Code of
    1961 (WIC fraud).
        (10) A felony violation of Section 48-1 of the
    Criminal Code of 2012 or Section 26-5 of the Criminal Code
    of 1961 (dog fighting).
        (11) A violation of Article 29D of the Criminal Code
    of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012 (terrorism).
        (12) A felony violation of Section 4.01 of the Humane
    Care for Animals Act (animals in entertainment).
(Source: P.A. 97-897, eff. 1-1-13; 97-1108, eff. 1-1-13;
97-1109, eff. 1-1-13; 97-1150, eff. 1-25-13; 98-1138, eff.
6-1-15.)
 
    (725 ILCS 5/124B-100)
    Sec. 124B-100. Definition; "offense". For purposes of this
Article, "offense" is defined as follows:
        (1) In the case of forfeiture authorized under Section
    10A-15 of the Criminal Code of 1961 or Section 10-9 of the
    Criminal Code of 2012, "offense" means the offense of
    involuntary servitude, involuntary servitude of a minor,
    or trafficking in persons in violation of Section 10-9 or
    10A-10 of those Codes.
        (2) In the case of forfeiture authorized under
    subdivision (a)(1) of Section 11-14.4, or Section 11-17.1,
    of the Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012,
    "offense" means the offense of promoting juvenile
    prostitution or keeping a place of juvenile prostitution
    in violation of subdivision (a)(1) of Section 11-14.4, or
    Section 11-17.1, of those Codes.
        (3) In the case of forfeiture authorized under
    subdivision (a)(4) of Section 11-14.4, or Section 11-19.2,
    of the Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012,
    "offense" means the offense of promoting juvenile
    prostitution or exploitation of a child in violation of
    subdivision (a)(4) of Section 11-14.4, or Section 11-19.2,
    of those Codes.
        (4) In the case of forfeiture authorized under Section
    11-20 of the Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of
    2012, "offense" means the offense of obscenity in
    violation of that Section.
        (5) In the case of forfeiture authorized under Section
    11-20.1 of the Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code
    of 2012, "offense" means the offense of child sexual abuse
    material pornography in violation of Section 11-20.1 of
    that Code.
        (6) In the case of forfeiture authorized under Section
    11-20.1B or 11-20.3 of the Criminal Code of 1961,
    "offense" means the offense of aggravated child
    pornography in violation of Section 11-20.1B or 11-20.3 of
    that Code.
        (7) In the case of forfeiture authorized under Section
    12C-65 of the Criminal Code of 2012 or Article 44 of the
    Criminal Code of 1961, "offense" means the offense of
    unlawful transfer of a telecommunications device to a
    minor in violation of Section 12C-65 or Article 44 of
    those Codes.
        (8) In the case of forfeiture authorized under Section
    17-50 or 16D-5 of the Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal
    Code of 2012, "offense" means the offense of computer
    fraud in violation of Section 17-50 or 16D-5 of those
    Codes.
        (9) In the case of forfeiture authorized under Section
    17-6.3 or Article 17B of the Criminal Code of 1961 or the
    Criminal Code of 2012, "offense" means any felony
    violation of Section 17-6.3 or Article 17B of those Codes.
        (10) In the case of forfeiture authorized under
    Section 29D-65 of the Criminal Code of 1961 or the
    Criminal Code of 2012, "offense" means any offense under
    Article 29D of that Code.
        (11) In the case of forfeiture authorized under
    Section 4.01 of the Humane Care for Animals Act, Section
    26-5 of the Criminal Code of 1961, or Section 48-1 of the
    Criminal Code of 2012, "offense" means any felony offense
    under either of those Sections.
        (12) In the case of forfeiture authorized under
    Section 124B-1000(b) of the Code of Criminal Procedure of
    1963, "offense" means an offense in violation of the
    Criminal Code of 1961, the Criminal Code of 2012, the
    Illinois Controlled Substances Act, the Cannabis Control
    Act, or the Methamphetamine Control and Community
    Protection Act, or an offense involving a
    telecommunications device possessed by a person on the
    real property of any elementary or secondary school
    without authority of the school principal.
(Source: P.A. 96-712, eff. 1-1-10; 96-1551, eff. 7-1-11;
97-897, eff. 1-1-13; 97-1108, eff. 1-1-13; 97-1109, eff.
1-1-13; 97-1150, eff. 1-25-13.)
 
    (725 ILCS 5/124B-420)
    Sec. 124B-420. Distribution of property and sale proceeds.
    (a) All moneys and the sale proceeds of all other property
forfeited and seized under this Part 400 shall be distributed
as follows:
        (1) 50% shall be distributed to the unit of local
    government whose officers or employees conducted the
    investigation into the offense and caused the arrest or
    arrests and prosecution leading to the forfeiture, except
    that if the investigation, arrest or arrests, and
    prosecution leading to the forfeiture were undertaken by
    the sheriff, this portion shall be distributed to the
    county for deposit into a special fund in the county
    treasury appropriated to the sheriff. Amounts distributed
    to the county for the sheriff or to units of local
    government under this paragraph shall be used for
    enforcement of laws or ordinances governing obscenity and
    child sexual abuse material pornography. If the
    investigation, arrest or arrests, and prosecution leading
    to the forfeiture were undertaken solely by a State
    agency, however, the portion designated in this paragraph
    shall be paid into the State treasury to be used for
    enforcement of laws governing obscenity and child sexual
    abuse material pornography.
        (2) 25% shall be distributed to the county in which
    the prosecution resulting in the forfeiture was
    instituted, deposited into a special fund in the county
    treasury, and appropriated to the State's Attorney for use
    in the enforcement of laws governing obscenity and child
    sexual abuse material pornography.
        (3) 25% shall be distributed to the Office of the
    State's Attorneys Appellate Prosecutor and deposited into
    the Obscenity Profits Forfeiture Fund, which is hereby
    created in the State treasury, to be used by the Office of
    the State's Attorneys Appellate Prosecutor for additional
    expenses incurred in prosecuting appeals arising under
    Sections 11-20, 11-20.1, 11-20.1B, and 11-20.3 of the
    Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012. Any
    amounts remaining in the Fund after all additional
    expenses have been paid shall be used by the Office to
    reduce the participating county contributions to the
    Office on a pro-rated basis as determined by the board of
    governors of the Office of the State's Attorneys Appellate
    Prosecutor based on the populations of the participating
    counties.
    (b) Before any distribution under subsection (a), the
Attorney General or State's Attorney shall retain from the
forfeited moneys or sale proceeds, or both, sufficient moneys
to cover expenses related to the administration and sale of
the forfeited property.
(Source: P.A. 96-712, eff. 1-1-10; 96-1551, eff. 7-1-11;
97-1150, eff. 1-25-13.)
 
    (725 ILCS 5/124B-500)
    Sec. 124B-500. Persons and property subject to forfeiture.
A person who commits child sexual abuse material pornography,
aggravated child pornography, obscene depiction of a purported
child, non-consensual dissemination of private sexual images,
or non-consensual dissemination of sexually explicit digitized
depictions under Section 11-20.1, 11-20.1B, 11-20.3, 11-20.4,
11-23.5, or 11-23.7 of the Criminal Code of 1961 or the
Criminal Code of 2012 shall forfeit the following property to
the State of Illinois:
        (1) Any profits or proceeds and any property the
    person has acquired or maintained in violation of Section
    11-20.1, 11-20.1B, 11-20.3, 11-20.4, 11-23.5, or 11-23.7
    of the Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012
    that the sentencing court determines, after a forfeiture
    hearing under this Article, to have been acquired or
    maintained as a result of child sexual abuse material
    pornography, aggravated child pornography, obscene
    depiction of a purported child, non-consensual
    dissemination of private sexual images, or non-consensual
    dissemination of sexually explicit digitized depictions.
        (2) Any interest in, securities of, claim against, or
    property or contractual right of any kind affording a
    source of influence over any enterprise that the person
    has established, operated, controlled, or conducted in
    violation of Section 11-20.1, 11-20.1B, 11-20.3, 11-20.4,
    11-23.5, or 11-23.7 of the Criminal Code of 1961 or the
    Criminal Code of 2012 that the sentencing court
    determines, after a forfeiture hearing under this Article,
    to have been acquired or maintained as a result of child
    sexual abuse material pornography, aggravated child
    pornography, obscene depiction of a purported child,
    non-consensual dissemination of private sexual images, or
    non-consensual dissemination of sexually explicit
    digitized depictions.
        (3) Any computer that contains a depiction of child
    sexual abuse material pornography or an obscene depiction
    of a purported child in any encoded or decoded format in
    violation of Section 11-20.1, 11-20.1B, 11-20.3, or
    11-20.4 of the Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code
    of 2012. For purposes of this paragraph (3), "computer"
    has the meaning ascribed to it in Section 17-0.5 of the
    Criminal Code of 2012.
(Source: P.A. 103-825, eff. 1-1-25.)
 
    Section 60. The Statewide Grand Jury Act is amended by
changing Sections 2 and 3 as follows:
 
    (725 ILCS 215/2)  (from Ch. 38, par. 1702)
    Sec. 2. (a) County grand juries and State's Attorneys have
always had and shall continue to have primary responsibility
for investigating, indicting, and prosecuting persons who
violate the criminal laws of the State of Illinois. However,
in recent years organized terrorist activity directed against
innocent civilians and certain criminal enterprises have
developed that require investigation, indictment, and
prosecution on a statewide or multicounty level. The criminal
enterprises exist as a result of the allure of profitability
present in narcotic activity, the unlawful sale and transfer
of firearms, and streetgang related felonies and organized
terrorist activity is supported by the contribution of money
and expert assistance from geographically diverse sources. In
order to shut off the life blood of terrorism and weaken or
eliminate the criminal enterprises, assets, and property used
to further these offenses must be frozen, and any profit must
be removed. State statutes exist that can accomplish that
goal. Among them are the offense of money laundering,
violations of Article 29D of the Criminal Code of 1961 or the
Criminal Code of 2012, the Narcotics Profit Forfeiture Act,
and gunrunning. Local prosecutors need investigative personnel
and specialized training to attack and eliminate these
profits. In light of the transitory and complex nature of
conduct that constitutes these criminal activities, the many
diverse property interests that may be used, acquired directly
or indirectly as a result of these criminal activities, and
the many places that illegally obtained property may be
located, it is the purpose of this Act to create a limited,
multicounty Statewide Grand Jury with authority to
investigate, indict, and prosecute: narcotic activity,
including cannabis and controlled substance trafficking,
narcotics racketeering, money laundering, violations of the
Cannabis and Controlled Substances Tax Act, and violations of
Article 29D of the Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code
of 2012; the unlawful sale and transfer of firearms;
gunrunning; and streetgang related felonies.
    (b) A Statewide Grand Jury may also investigate, indict,
and prosecute violations facilitated by the use of a computer
of any of the following offenses: indecent solicitation of a
child, sexual exploitation of a child, soliciting for a
juvenile prostitute, keeping a place of juvenile prostitution,
juvenile pimping, child sexual abuse material pornography,
aggravated child pornography, or promoting juvenile
prostitution except as described in subdivision (a)(4) of
Section 11-14.4 of the Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal
Code of 2012.
    (c) A Statewide Grand Jury may also investigate, indict,
and prosecute violations of organized retail crime.
(Source: P.A. 101-593, eff. 12-4-19; 102-757, eff. 5-13-22.)
 
    (725 ILCS 215/3)  (from Ch. 38, par. 1703)
    Sec. 3. Written application for the appointment of a
Circuit Judge to convene and preside over a Statewide Grand
Jury, with jurisdiction extending throughout the State, shall
be made to the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court. Upon such
written application, the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court
shall appoint a Circuit Judge from the circuit where the
Statewide Grand Jury is being sought to be convened, who shall
make a determination that the convening of a Statewide Grand
Jury is necessary.
    In such application the Attorney General shall state that
the convening of a Statewide Grand Jury is necessary because
of an alleged offense or offenses set forth in this Section
involving more than one county of the State and identifying
any such offense alleged; and
        (a) that he or she believes that the grand jury
    function for the investigation and indictment of the
    offense or offenses cannot effectively be performed by a
    county grand jury together with the reasons for such
    belief, and
        (b)(1) that each State's Attorney with jurisdiction
    over an offense or offenses to be investigated has
    consented to the impaneling of the Statewide Grand Jury,
    or
        (2) if one or more of the State's Attorneys having
    jurisdiction over an offense or offenses to be
    investigated fails to consent to the impaneling of the
    Statewide Grand Jury, the Attorney General shall set forth
    good cause for impaneling the Statewide Grand Jury.
    If the Circuit Judge determines that the convening of a
Statewide Grand Jury is necessary, he or she shall convene and
impanel the Statewide Grand Jury with jurisdiction extending
throughout the State to investigate and return indictments:
        (a) For violations of any of the following or for any
    other criminal offense committed in the course of
    violating any of the following: Article 29D of the
    Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012, the
    Illinois Controlled Substances Act, the Cannabis Control
    Act, the Methamphetamine Control and Community Protection
    Act, or the Narcotics Profit Forfeiture Act; a streetgang
    related felony offense; Section 16-25.1, 24-2.1, 24-2.2,
    24-3, 24-3A, 24-3.1, 24-3.3, 24-3.4, 24-4, or 24-5 or
    subsection 24-1(a)(4), 24-1(a)(6), 24-1(a)(7),
    24-1(a)(9), 24-1(a)(10), or 24-1(c) of the Criminal Code
    of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012; or a money laundering
    offense; provided that the violation or offense involves
    acts occurring in more than one county of this State; and
        (a-5) For violations facilitated by the use of a
    computer, including the use of the Internet, the World
    Wide Web, electronic mail, message board, newsgroup, or
    any other commercial or noncommercial on-line service, of
    any of the following offenses: indecent solicitation of a
    child, sexual exploitation of a child, soliciting for a
    juvenile prostitute, keeping a place of juvenile
    prostitution, juvenile pimping, child sexual abuse
    material pornography, aggravated child pornography, or
    promoting juvenile prostitution except as described in
    subdivision (a)(4) of Section 11-14.4 of the Criminal Code
    of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012; and
        (b) For the offenses of perjury, subornation of
    perjury, communicating with jurors and witnesses, and
    harassment of jurors and witnesses, as they relate to
    matters before the Statewide Grand Jury.
    "Streetgang related" has the meaning ascribed to it in
Section 10 of the Illinois Streetgang Terrorism Omnibus
Prevention Act.
    Upon written application by the Attorney General for the
convening of an additional Statewide Grand Jury, the Chief
Justice of the Supreme Court shall appoint a Circuit Judge
from the circuit for which the additional Statewide Grand Jury
is sought. The Circuit Judge shall determine the necessity for
an additional Statewide Grand Jury in accordance with the
provisions of this Section. No more than 2 Statewide Grand
Juries may be empaneled at any time.
(Source: P.A. 101-593, eff. 12-4-19; 102-757, eff. 5-13-22.)
 
    Section 65. The Unified Code of Corrections is amended by
changing Sections 3-1-2, 5-5-3, 5-5-3.2, 5-8-1, 5-8-4,
5-9-1.7, and 5-9-1.8 as follows:
 
    (730 ILCS 5/3-1-2)  (from Ch. 38, par. 1003-1-2)
    Sec. 3-1-2. Definitions.
    (a) "Chief Administrative Officer" means the person
designated by the Director to exercise the powers and duties
of the Department of Corrections in regard to committed
persons within a correctional institution or facility, and
includes the superintendent of any juvenile institution or
facility.
    (a-3) "Aftercare release" means the conditional and
revocable release of a person committed to the Department of
Juvenile Justice under the Juvenile Court Act of 1987, under
the supervision of the Department of Juvenile Justice.
    (a-5) "Sex offense" for the purposes of paragraph (16) of
subsection (a) of Section 3-3-7, paragraph (10) of subsection
(a) of Section 5-6-3, and paragraph (18) of subsection (c) of
Section 5-6-3.1 only means:
        (i) A violation of any of the following Sections of
    the Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012:
    10-7 (aiding or abetting child abduction under Section
    10-5(b)(10)), 10-5(b)(10) (child luring), 11-6 (indecent
    solicitation of a child), 11-6.5 (indecent solicitation of
    an adult), 11-14.4 (promoting juvenile prostitution),
    11-15.1 (soliciting for a juvenile prostitute), 11-17.1
    (keeping a place of juvenile prostitution), 11-18.1
    (patronizing a juvenile prostitute), 11-19.1 (juvenile
    pimping), 11-19.2 (exploitation of a child), 11-20.1
    (child sexual abuse material pornography), 11-20.1B or
    11-20.3 (aggravated child pornography), 11-1.40 or 12-14.1
    (predatory criminal sexual assault of a child), or 12-33
    (ritualized abuse of a child). An attempt to commit any of
    these offenses.
        (ii) A violation of any of the following Sections of
    the Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012:
    11-1.20 or 12-13 (criminal sexual assault), 11-1.30 or
    12-14 (aggravated criminal sexual assault), 11-1.60 or
    12-16 (aggravated criminal sexual abuse), and subsection
    (a) of Section 11-1.50 or subsection (a) of Section 12-15
    (criminal sexual abuse). An attempt to commit any of these
    offenses.
        (iii) A violation of any of the following Sections of
    the Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012 when
    the defendant is not a parent of the victim:
            10-1 (kidnapping),
            10-2 (aggravated kidnapping),
            10-3 (unlawful restraint),
            10-3.1 (aggravated unlawful restraint).
            An attempt to commit any of these offenses.
        (iv) A violation of any former law of this State
    substantially equivalent to any offense listed in this
    subsection (a-5).
    An offense violating federal law or the law of another
state that is substantially equivalent to any offense listed
in this subsection (a-5) shall constitute a sex offense for
the purpose of this subsection (a-5). A finding or
adjudication as a sexually dangerous person under any federal
law or law of another state that is substantially equivalent
to the Sexually Dangerous Persons Act shall constitute an
adjudication for a sex offense for the purposes of this
subsection (a-5).
    (b) "Commitment" means a judicially determined placement
in the custody of the Department of Corrections on the basis of
delinquency or conviction.
    (c) "Committed person" is a person committed to the
Department, however a committed person shall not be considered
to be an employee of the Department of Corrections for any
purpose, including eligibility for a pension, benefits, or any
other compensation or rights or privileges which may be
provided to employees of the Department.
    (c-5) "Computer scrub software" means any third-party
added software, designed to delete information from the
computer unit, the hard drive, or other software, which would
eliminate and prevent discovery of browser activity,
including, but not limited to, Internet history, address bar
or bars, cache or caches, and/or cookies, and which would
over-write files in a way so as to make previous computer
activity, including, but not limited to, website access, more
difficult to discover.
    (c-10) "Content-controlled tablet" means any device that
can only access visitation applications or content relating to
educational or personal development.
    (d) "Correctional institution or facility" means any
building or part of a building where committed persons are
kept in a secured manner.
    (d-5) "Correctional officer" means: an employee of the
Department of Corrections who has custody and control over
committed persons in an adult correctional facility; or, for
an employee of the Department of Juvenile Justice, direct care
staff of persons committed to a juvenile facility.
    (e) "Department" means both the Department of Corrections
and the Department of Juvenile Justice of this State, unless
the context is specific to either the Department of
Corrections or the Department of Juvenile Justice.
    (f) "Director" means both the Director of Corrections and
the Director of Juvenile Justice, unless the context is
specific to either the Director of Corrections or the Director
of Juvenile Justice.
    (f-5) (Blank).
    (g) "Discharge" means the final termination of a
commitment to the Department of Corrections.
    (h) "Discipline" means the rules and regulations for the
maintenance of order and the protection of persons and
property within the institutions and facilities of the
Department and their enforcement.
    (i) "Escape" means the intentional and unauthorized
absence of a committed person from the custody of the
Department.
    (j) "Furlough" means an authorized leave of absence from
the Department of Corrections for a designated purpose and
period of time.
    (k) "Parole" means the conditional and revocable release
of a person committed to the Department of Corrections under
the supervision of a parole officer.
    (l) "Prisoner Review Board" means the Board established in
Section 3-3-1(a), independent of the Department, to review
rules and regulations with respect to good time credits, to
hear charges brought by the Department against certain
prisoners alleged to have violated Department rules with
respect to good time credits, to set release dates for certain
prisoners sentenced under the law in effect prior to February
1, 1978 (the effective date of Public Act 80-1099), to hear and
decide the time of aftercare release for persons committed to
the Department of Juvenile Justice under the Juvenile Court
Act of 1987 to hear requests and make recommendations to the
Governor with respect to pardon, reprieve or commutation, to
set conditions for parole, aftercare release, and mandatory
supervised release and determine whether violations of those
conditions justify revocation of parole or release, and to
assume all other functions previously exercised by the
Illinois Parole and Pardon Board.
    (m) Whenever medical treatment, service, counseling, or
care is referred to in this Unified Code of Corrections, such
term may be construed by the Department or Court, within its
discretion, to include treatment, service, or counseling by a
Christian Science practitioner or nursing care appropriate
therewith whenever request therefor is made by a person
subject to the provisions of this Code.
    (n) "Victim" shall have the meaning ascribed to it in
subsection (a) of Section 3 of the Rights of Crime Victims and
Witnesses Act.
    (o) "Wrongfully imprisoned person" means a person who has
been discharged from a prison of this State and has received:
        (1) a pardon from the Governor stating that such
    pardon is issued on the ground of innocence of the crime
    for which he or she was imprisoned; or
        (2) a certificate of innocence from the Circuit Court
    as provided in Section 2-702 of the Code of Civil
    Procedure.
(Source: P.A. 102-558, eff. 8-20-21; 102-616, eff. 1-1-22.)
 
    (730 ILCS 5/5-5-3)
    Sec. 5-5-3. Disposition.
    (a) (Blank).
    (b) (Blank).
    (c)(1) (Blank).
    (2) A period of probation, a term of periodic imprisonment
or conditional discharge shall not be imposed for the
following offenses. The court shall sentence the offender to
not less than the minimum term of imprisonment set forth in
this Code for the following offenses, and may order a fine or
restitution or both in conjunction with such term of
imprisonment:
        (A) First degree murder.
        (B) Attempted first degree murder.
        (C) A Class X felony.
        (D) A violation of Section 401.1 or 407 of the
    Illinois Controlled Substances Act, or a violation of
    subdivision (c)(1.5) of Section 401 of that Act which
    relates to more than 5 grams of a substance containing
    fentanyl or an analog thereof.
        (D-5) A violation of subdivision (c)(1) of Section 401
    of the Illinois Controlled Substances Act which relates to
    3 or more grams of a substance containing heroin or an
    analog thereof.
        (E) (Blank).
        (F) A Class 1 or greater felony if the offender had
    been convicted of a Class 1 or greater felony, including
    any state or federal conviction for an offense that
    contained, at the time it was committed, the same elements
    as an offense now (the date of the offense committed after
    the prior Class 1 or greater felony) classified as a Class
    1 or greater felony, within 10 years of the date on which
    the offender committed the offense for which he or she is
    being sentenced, except as otherwise provided in Section
    40-10 of the Substance Use Disorder Act.
        (F-3) A Class 2 or greater felony sex offense or
    felony firearm offense if the offender had been convicted
    of a Class 2 or greater felony, including any state or
    federal conviction for an offense that contained, at the
    time it was committed, the same elements as an offense now
    (the date of the offense committed after the prior Class 2
    or greater felony) classified as a Class 2 or greater
    felony, within 10 years of the date on which the offender
    committed the offense for which he or she is being
    sentenced, except as otherwise provided in Section 40-10
    of the Substance Use Disorder Act.
        (F-5) A violation of Section 24-1, 24-1.1, or 24-1.6
    of the Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012
    for which imprisonment is prescribed in those Sections.
        (G) Residential burglary, except as otherwise provided
    in Section 40-10 of the Substance Use Disorder Act.
        (H) Criminal sexual assault.
        (I) Aggravated battery of a senior citizen as
    described in Section 12-4.6 or subdivision (a)(4) of
    Section 12-3.05 of the Criminal Code of 1961 or the
    Criminal Code of 2012.
        (J) A forcible felony if the offense was related to
    the activities of an organized gang.
        Before July 1, 1994, for the purposes of this
    paragraph, "organized gang" means an association of 5 or
    more persons, with an established hierarchy, that
    encourages members of the association to perpetrate crimes
    or provides support to the members of the association who
    do commit crimes.
        Beginning July 1, 1994, for the purposes of this
    paragraph, "organized gang" has the meaning ascribed to it
    in Section 10 of the Illinois Streetgang Terrorism Omnibus
    Prevention Act.
        (K) Vehicular hijacking.
        (L) A second or subsequent conviction for the offense
    of hate crime when the underlying offense upon which the
    hate crime is based is felony aggravated assault or felony
    mob action.
        (M) A second or subsequent conviction for the offense
    of institutional vandalism if the damage to the property
    exceeds $300.
        (N) A Class 3 felony violation of paragraph (1) of
    subsection (a) of Section 2 of the Firearm Owners
    Identification Card Act.
        (O) A violation of Section 12-6.1 or 12-6.5 of the
    Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012.
        (P) A violation of paragraph (1), (2), (3), (4), (5),
    or (7) of subsection (a) of Section 11-20.1 of the
    Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012.
        (P-5) A violation of paragraph (6) of subsection (a)
    of Section 11-20.1 of the Criminal Code of 1961 or the
    Criminal Code of 2012 if the victim is a household or
    family member of the defendant.
        (P-6) A violation of paragraph (2) of subsection (b)
    of Section 11-20.4 of the Criminal Code of 2012.
        (Q) A violation of subsection (b) or (b-5) of Section
    20-1, Section 20-1.2, or Section 20-1.3 of the Criminal
    Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012.
        (R) A violation of Section 24-3A of the Criminal Code
    of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012.
        (S) (Blank).
        (T) (Blank).
        (U) A second or subsequent violation of Section 6-303
    of the Illinois Vehicle Code committed while his or her
    driver's license, permit, or privilege was revoked because
    of a violation of Section 9-3 of the Criminal Code of 1961
    or the Criminal Code of 2012, relating to the offense of
    reckless homicide, or a similar provision of a law of
    another state.
        (V) A violation of paragraph (4) of subsection (c) of
    Section 11-20.1B or paragraph (4) of subsection (c) of
    Section 11-20.3 of the Criminal Code of 1961, or paragraph
    (6) of subsection (a) of Section 11-20.1 of the Criminal
    Code of 2012 when the victim is under 13 years of age and
    the defendant has previously been convicted under the laws
    of this State or any other state of the offense of child
    sexual abuse material or child pornography, aggravated
    child pornography, aggravated criminal sexual abuse,
    aggravated criminal sexual assault, predatory criminal
    sexual assault of a child, or any of the offenses formerly
    known as rape, deviate sexual assault, indecent liberties
    with a child, or aggravated indecent liberties with a
    child where the victim was under the age of 18 years or an
    offense that is substantially equivalent to those
    offenses.
        (V-5) A violation of paragraph (1) of subsection (b)
    of Section 11-20.4 of the Criminal Code of 2012 when the
    victim is under 13 years of age and the defendant has
    previously been convicted under the laws of this State or
    any other state of the offense of child pornography,
    aggravated child pornography, aggravated criminal sexual
    abuse, aggravated criminal sexual assault, predatory
    criminal sexual assault of a child, or any of the offenses
    formerly known as rape, deviate sexual assault, indecent
    liberties with a child, or aggravated indecent liberties
    with a child if the victim was under the age of 18 years or
    an offense that is substantially equivalent to those
    offenses.
        (W) A violation of Section 24-3.5 of the Criminal Code
    of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012.
        (X) A violation of subsection (a) of Section 31-1a of
    the Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012.
        (Y) A conviction for unlawful possession of a firearm
    by a street gang member when the firearm was loaded or
    contained firearm ammunition.
        (Z) A Class 1 felony committed while he or she was
    serving a term of probation or conditional discharge for a
    felony.
        (AA) Theft of property exceeding $500,000 and not
    exceeding $1,000,000 in value.
        (BB) Laundering of criminally derived property of a
    value exceeding $500,000.
        (CC) Knowingly selling, offering for sale, holding for
    sale, or using 2,000 or more counterfeit items or
    counterfeit items having a retail value in the aggregate
    of $500,000 or more.
        (DD) A conviction for aggravated assault under
    paragraph (6) of subsection (c) of Section 12-2 of the
    Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012 if the
    firearm is aimed toward the person against whom the
    firearm is being used.
        (EE) A conviction for a violation of paragraph (2) of
    subsection (a) of Section 24-3B of the Criminal Code of
    2012.
    (3) (Blank).
    (4) A minimum term of imprisonment of not less than 10
consecutive days or 30 days of community service shall be
imposed for a violation of paragraph (c) of Section 6-303 of
the Illinois Vehicle Code.
    (4.1) (Blank).
    (4.2) Except as provided in paragraphs (4.3) and (4.8) of
this subsection (c), a minimum of 100 hours of community
service shall be imposed for a second violation of Section
6-303 of the Illinois Vehicle Code.
    (4.3) A minimum term of imprisonment of 30 days or 300
hours of community service, as determined by the court, shall
be imposed for a second violation of subsection (c) of Section
6-303 of the Illinois Vehicle Code.
    (4.4) Except as provided in paragraphs (4.5), (4.6), and
(4.9) of this subsection (c), a minimum term of imprisonment
of 30 days or 300 hours of community service, as determined by
the court, shall be imposed for a third or subsequent
violation of Section 6-303 of the Illinois Vehicle Code. The
court may give credit toward the fulfillment of community
service hours for participation in activities and treatment as
determined by court services.
    (4.5) A minimum term of imprisonment of 30 days shall be
imposed for a third violation of subsection (c) of Section
6-303 of the Illinois Vehicle Code.
    (4.6) Except as provided in paragraph (4.10) of this
subsection (c), a minimum term of imprisonment of 180 days
shall be imposed for a fourth or subsequent violation of
subsection (c) of Section 6-303 of the Illinois Vehicle Code.
    (4.7) A minimum term of imprisonment of not less than 30
consecutive days, or 300 hours of community service, shall be
imposed for a violation of subsection (a-5) of Section 6-303
of the Illinois Vehicle Code, as provided in subsection (b-5)
of that Section.
    (4.8) A mandatory prison sentence shall be imposed for a
second violation of subsection (a-5) of Section 6-303 of the
Illinois Vehicle Code, as provided in subsection (c-5) of that
Section. The person's driving privileges shall be revoked for
a period of not less than 5 years from the date of his or her
release from prison.
    (4.9) A mandatory prison sentence of not less than 4 and
not more than 15 years shall be imposed for a third violation
of subsection (a-5) of Section 6-303 of the Illinois Vehicle
Code, as provided in subsection (d-2.5) of that Section. The
person's driving privileges shall be revoked for the remainder
of his or her life.
    (4.10) A mandatory prison sentence for a Class 1 felony
shall be imposed, and the person shall be eligible for an
extended term sentence, for a fourth or subsequent violation
of subsection (a-5) of Section 6-303 of the Illinois Vehicle
Code, as provided in subsection (d-3.5) of that Section. The
person's driving privileges shall be revoked for the remainder
of his or her life.
    (5) The court may sentence a corporation or unincorporated
association convicted of any offense to:
        (A) a period of conditional discharge;
        (B) a fine;
        (C) make restitution to the victim under Section 5-5-6
    of this Code.
    (5.1) In addition to any other penalties imposed, and
except as provided in paragraph (5.2) or (5.3), a person
convicted of violating subsection (c) of Section 11-907 of the
Illinois Vehicle Code shall have his or her driver's license,
permit, or privileges suspended for at least 90 days but not
more than one year, if the violation resulted in damage to the
property of another person.
    (5.2) In addition to any other penalties imposed, and
except as provided in paragraph (5.3), a person convicted of
violating subsection (c) of Section 11-907 of the Illinois
Vehicle Code shall have his or her driver's license, permit,
or privileges suspended for at least 180 days but not more than
2 years, if the violation resulted in injury to another
person.
    (5.3) In addition to any other penalties imposed, a person
convicted of violating subsection (c) of Section 11-907 of the
Illinois Vehicle Code shall have his or her driver's license,
permit, or privileges suspended for 2 years, if the violation
resulted in the death of another person.
    (5.4) In addition to any other penalties imposed, a person
convicted of violating Section 3-707 of the Illinois Vehicle
Code shall have his or her driver's license, permit, or
privileges suspended for 3 months and until he or she has paid
a reinstatement fee of $100.
    (5.5) In addition to any other penalties imposed, a person
convicted of violating Section 3-707 of the Illinois Vehicle
Code during a period in which his or her driver's license,
permit, or privileges were suspended for a previous violation
of that Section shall have his or her driver's license,
permit, or privileges suspended for an additional 6 months
after the expiration of the original 3-month suspension and
until he or she has paid a reinstatement fee of $100.
    (6) (Blank).
    (7) (Blank).
    (8) (Blank).
    (9) A defendant convicted of a second or subsequent
offense of ritualized abuse of a child may be sentenced to a
term of natural life imprisonment.
    (10) (Blank).
    (11) The court shall impose a minimum fine of $1,000 for a
first offense and $2,000 for a second or subsequent offense
upon a person convicted of or placed on supervision for
battery when the individual harmed was a sports official or
coach at any level of competition and the act causing harm to
the sports official or coach occurred within an athletic
facility or within the immediate vicinity of the athletic
facility at which the sports official or coach was an active
participant of the athletic contest held at the athletic
facility. For the purposes of this paragraph (11), "sports
official" means a person at an athletic contest who enforces
the rules of the contest, such as an umpire or referee;
"athletic facility" means an indoor or outdoor playing field
or recreational area where sports activities are conducted;
and "coach" means a person recognized as a coach by the
sanctioning authority that conducted the sporting event.
    (12) A person may not receive a disposition of court
supervision for a violation of Section 5-16 of the Boat
Registration and Safety Act if that person has previously
received a disposition of court supervision for a violation of
that Section.
    (13) A person convicted of or placed on court supervision
for an assault or aggravated assault when the victim and the
offender are family or household members as defined in Section
103 of the Illinois Domestic Violence Act of 1986 or convicted
of domestic battery or aggravated domestic battery may be
required to attend a Partner Abuse Intervention Program under
protocols set forth by the Illinois Department of Human
Services under such terms and conditions imposed by the court.
The costs of such classes shall be paid by the offender.
    (d) In any case in which a sentence originally imposed is
vacated, the case shall be remanded to the trial court. The
trial court shall hold a hearing under Section 5-4-1 of this
Code which may include evidence of the defendant's life, moral
character and occupation during the time since the original
sentence was passed. The trial court shall then impose
sentence upon the defendant. The trial court may impose any
sentence which could have been imposed at the original trial
subject to Section 5-5-4 of this Code. If a sentence is vacated
on appeal or on collateral attack due to the failure of the
trier of fact at trial to determine beyond a reasonable doubt
the existence of a fact (other than a prior conviction)
necessary to increase the punishment for the offense beyond
the statutory maximum otherwise applicable, either the
defendant may be re-sentenced to a term within the range
otherwise provided or, if the State files notice of its
intention to again seek the extended sentence, the defendant
shall be afforded a new trial.
    (e) In cases where prosecution for aggravated criminal
sexual abuse under Section 11-1.60 or 12-16 of the Criminal
Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012 results in conviction
of a defendant who was a family member of the victim at the
time of the commission of the offense, the court shall
consider the safety and welfare of the victim and may impose a
sentence of probation only where:
        (1) the court finds (A) or (B) or both are
    appropriate:
            (A) the defendant is willing to undergo a court
        approved counseling program for a minimum duration of
        2 years; or
            (B) the defendant is willing to participate in a
        court approved plan, including, but not limited to,
        the defendant's:
                (i) removal from the household;
                (ii) restricted contact with the victim;
                (iii) continued financial support of the
            family;
                (iv) restitution for harm done to the victim;
            and
                (v) compliance with any other measures that
            the court may deem appropriate; and
        (2) the court orders the defendant to pay for the
    victim's counseling services, to the extent that the court
    finds, after considering the defendant's income and
    assets, that the defendant is financially capable of
    paying for such services, if the victim was under 18 years
    of age at the time the offense was committed and requires
    counseling as a result of the offense.
    Probation may be revoked or modified pursuant to Section
5-6-4; except where the court determines at the hearing that
the defendant violated a condition of his or her probation
restricting contact with the victim or other family members or
commits another offense with the victim or other family
members, the court shall revoke the defendant's probation and
impose a term of imprisonment.
    For the purposes of this Section, "family member" and
"victim" shall have the meanings ascribed to them in Section
11-0.1 of the Criminal Code of 2012.
    (f) (Blank).
    (g) Whenever a defendant is convicted of an offense under
Sections 11-1.20, 11-1.30, 11-1.40, 11-1.50, 11-1.60, 11-14,
11-14.3, 11-14.4 except for an offense that involves keeping a
place of juvenile prostitution, 11-15, 11-15.1, 11-16, 11-17,
11-18, 11-18.1, 11-19, 11-19.1, 11-19.2, 12-13, 12-14,
12-14.1, 12-15, or 12-16 of the Criminal Code of 1961 or the
Criminal Code of 2012, the defendant shall undergo medical
testing to determine whether the defendant has any sexually
transmissible disease, including a test for infection with
human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) or any other identified
causative agent of acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS).
Any such medical test shall be performed only by appropriately
licensed medical practitioners and may include an analysis of
any bodily fluids as well as an examination of the defendant's
person. Except as otherwise provided by law, the results of
such test shall be kept strictly confidential by all medical
personnel involved in the testing and must be personally
delivered in a sealed envelope to the judge of the court in
which the conviction was entered for the judge's inspection in
camera. Acting in accordance with the best interests of the
victim and the public, the judge shall have the discretion to
determine to whom, if anyone, the results of the testing may be
revealed. The court shall notify the defendant of the test
results. The court shall also notify the victim if requested
by the victim, and if the victim is under the age of 15 and if
requested by the victim's parents or legal guardian, the court
shall notify the victim's parents or legal guardian of the
test results. The court shall provide information on the
availability of HIV testing and counseling at Department of
Public Health facilities to all parties to whom the results of
the testing are revealed and shall direct the State's Attorney
to provide the information to the victim when possible. The
court shall order that the cost of any such test shall be paid
by the county and may be taxed as costs against the convicted
defendant.
    (g-5) When an inmate is tested for an airborne
communicable disease, as determined by the Illinois Department
of Public Health, including, but not limited to, tuberculosis,
the results of the test shall be personally delivered by the
warden or his or her designee in a sealed envelope to the judge
of the court in which the inmate must appear for the judge's
inspection in camera if requested by the judge. Acting in
accordance with the best interests of those in the courtroom,
the judge shall have the discretion to determine what if any
precautions need to be taken to prevent transmission of the
disease in the courtroom.
    (h) Whenever a defendant is convicted of an offense under
Section 1 or 2 of the Hypodermic Syringes and Needles Act, the
defendant shall undergo medical testing to determine whether
the defendant has been exposed to human immunodeficiency virus
(HIV) or any other identified causative agent of acquired
immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS). Except as otherwise provided
by law, the results of such test shall be kept strictly
confidential by all medical personnel involved in the testing
and must be personally delivered in a sealed envelope to the
judge of the court in which the conviction was entered for the
judge's inspection in camera. Acting in accordance with the
best interests of the public, the judge shall have the
discretion to determine to whom, if anyone, the results of the
testing may be revealed. The court shall notify the defendant
of a positive test showing an infection with the human
immunodeficiency virus (HIV). The court shall provide
information on the availability of HIV testing and counseling
at Department of Public Health facilities to all parties to
whom the results of the testing are revealed and shall direct
the State's Attorney to provide the information to the victim
when possible. The court shall order that the cost of any such
test shall be paid by the county and may be taxed as costs
against the convicted defendant.
    (i) All fines and penalties imposed under this Section for
any violation of Chapters 3, 4, 6, and 11 of the Illinois
Vehicle Code, or a similar provision of a local ordinance, and
any violation of the Child Passenger Protection Act, or a
similar provision of a local ordinance, shall be collected and
disbursed by the circuit clerk as provided under the Criminal
and Traffic Assessment Act.
    (j) In cases when prosecution for any violation of Section
11-1.20, 11-1.30, 11-1.40, 11-1.50, 11-1.60, 11-6, 11-8, 11-9,
11-11, 11-14, 11-14.3, 11-14.4, 11-15, 11-15.1, 11-16, 11-17,
11-17.1, 11-18, 11-18.1, 11-19, 11-19.1, 11-19.2, 11-20.1,
11-20.1B, 11-20.3, 11-20.4, 11-21, 11-30, 11-40, 12-13, 12-14,
12-14.1, 12-15, or 12-16 of the Criminal Code of 1961 or the
Criminal Code of 2012, any violation of the Illinois
Controlled Substances Act, any violation of the Cannabis
Control Act, or any violation of the Methamphetamine Control
and Community Protection Act results in conviction, a
disposition of court supervision, or an order of probation
granted under Section 10 of the Cannabis Control Act, Section
410 of the Illinois Controlled Substances Act, or Section 70
of the Methamphetamine Control and Community Protection Act of
a defendant, the court shall determine whether the defendant
is employed by a facility or center as defined under the Child
Care Act of 1969, a public or private elementary or secondary
school, or otherwise works with children under 18 years of age
on a daily basis. When a defendant is so employed, the court
shall order the Clerk of the Court to send a copy of the
judgment of conviction or order of supervision or probation to
the defendant's employer by certified mail. If the employer of
the defendant is a school, the Clerk of the Court shall direct
the mailing of a copy of the judgment of conviction or order of
supervision or probation to the appropriate regional
superintendent of schools. The regional superintendent of
schools shall notify the State Board of Education of any
notification under this subsection.
    (j-5) A defendant at least 17 years of age who is convicted
of a felony and who has not been previously convicted of a
misdemeanor or felony and who is sentenced to a term of
imprisonment in the Illinois Department of Corrections shall
as a condition of his or her sentence be required by the court
to attend educational courses designed to prepare the
defendant for a high school diploma and to work toward a high
school diploma or to work toward passing high school
equivalency testing or to work toward completing a vocational
training program offered by the Department of Corrections. If
a defendant fails to complete the educational training
required by his or her sentence during the term of
incarceration, the Prisoner Review Board shall, as a condition
of mandatory supervised release, require the defendant, at his
or her own expense, to pursue a course of study toward a high
school diploma or passage of high school equivalency testing.
The Prisoner Review Board shall revoke the mandatory
supervised release of a defendant who wilfully fails to comply
with this subsection (j-5) upon his or her release from
confinement in a penal institution while serving a mandatory
supervised release term; however, the inability of the
defendant after making a good faith effort to obtain financial
aid or pay for the educational training shall not be deemed a
wilful failure to comply. The Prisoner Review Board shall
recommit the defendant whose mandatory supervised release term
has been revoked under this subsection (j-5) as provided in
Section 3-3-9. This subsection (j-5) does not apply to a
defendant who has a high school diploma or has successfully
passed high school equivalency testing. This subsection (j-5)
does not apply to a defendant who is determined by the court to
be a person with a developmental disability or otherwise
mentally incapable of completing the educational or vocational
program.
    (k) (Blank).
    (l)(A) Except as provided in paragraph (C) of subsection
(l), whenever a defendant, who is not a citizen or national of
the United States, is convicted of any felony or misdemeanor
offense, the court after sentencing the defendant may, upon
motion of the State's Attorney, hold sentence in abeyance and
remand the defendant to the custody of the Attorney General of
the United States or his or her designated agent to be deported
when:
        (1) a final order of deportation has been issued
    against the defendant pursuant to proceedings under the
    Immigration and Nationality Act, and
        (2) the deportation of the defendant would not
    deprecate the seriousness of the defendant's conduct and
    would not be inconsistent with the ends of justice.
    Otherwise, the defendant shall be sentenced as provided in
this Chapter V.
    (B) If the defendant has already been sentenced for a
felony or misdemeanor offense, or has been placed on probation
under Section 10 of the Cannabis Control Act, Section 410 of
the Illinois Controlled Substances Act, or Section 70 of the
Methamphetamine Control and Community Protection Act, the
court may, upon motion of the State's Attorney to suspend the
sentence imposed, commit the defendant to the custody of the
Attorney General of the United States or his or her designated
agent when:
        (1) a final order of deportation has been issued
    against the defendant pursuant to proceedings under the
    Immigration and Nationality Act, and
        (2) the deportation of the defendant would not
    deprecate the seriousness of the defendant's conduct and
    would not be inconsistent with the ends of justice.
    (C) This subsection (l) does not apply to offenders who
are subject to the provisions of paragraph (2) of subsection
(a) of Section 3-6-3.
    (D) Upon motion of the State's Attorney, if a defendant
sentenced under this Section returns to the jurisdiction of
the United States, the defendant shall be recommitted to the
custody of the county from which he or she was sentenced.
Thereafter, the defendant shall be brought before the
sentencing court, which may impose any sentence that was
available under Section 5-5-3 at the time of initial
sentencing. In addition, the defendant shall not be eligible
for additional earned sentence credit as provided under
Section 3-6-3.
    (m) A person convicted of criminal defacement of property
under Section 21-1.3 of the Criminal Code of 1961 or the
Criminal Code of 2012, in which the property damage exceeds
$300 and the property damaged is a school building, shall be
ordered to perform community service that may include cleanup,
removal, or painting over the defacement.
    (n) The court may sentence a person convicted of a
violation of Section 12-19, 12-21, 16-1.3, or 17-56, or
subsection (a) or (b) of Section 12-4.4a, of the Criminal Code
of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012 (i) to an impact
incarceration program if the person is otherwise eligible for
that program under Section 5-8-1.1, (ii) to community service,
or (iii) if the person has a substance use disorder, as defined
in the Substance Use Disorder Act, to a treatment program
licensed under that Act.
    (o) Whenever a person is convicted of a sex offense as
defined in Section 2 of the Sex Offender Registration Act, the
defendant's driver's license or permit shall be subject to
renewal on an annual basis in accordance with the provisions
of license renewal established by the Secretary of State.
(Source: P.A. 102-168, eff. 7-27-21; 102-531, eff. 1-1-22;
102-813, eff. 5-13-22; 102-1030, eff. 5-27-22; 103-51, eff.
1-1-24; 103-825, eff. 1-1-25.)
 
    (730 ILCS 5/5-5-3.2)
    Sec. 5-5-3.2. Factors in aggravation and extended-term
sentencing.
    (a) The following factors shall be accorded weight in
favor of imposing a term of imprisonment or may be considered
by the court as reasons to impose a more severe sentence under
Section 5-8-1 or Article 4.5 of Chapter V:
        (1) the defendant's conduct caused or threatened
    serious harm;
        (2) the defendant received compensation for committing
    the offense;
        (3) the defendant has a history of prior delinquency
    or criminal activity;
        (4) the defendant, by the duties of his office or by
    his position, was obliged to prevent the particular
    offense committed or to bring the offenders committing it
    to justice;
        (5) the defendant held public office at the time of
    the offense, and the offense related to the conduct of
    that office;
        (6) the defendant utilized his professional reputation
    or position in the community to commit the offense, or to
    afford him an easier means of committing it;
        (7) the sentence is necessary to deter others from
    committing the same crime;
        (8) the defendant committed the offense against a
    person 60 years of age or older or such person's property;
        (9) the defendant committed the offense against a
    person who has a physical disability or such person's
    property;
        (10) by reason of another individual's actual or
    perceived race, color, creed, religion, ancestry, gender,
    sexual orientation, physical or mental disability, or
    national origin, the defendant committed the offense
    against (i) the person or property of that individual;
    (ii) the person or property of a person who has an
    association with, is married to, or has a friendship with
    the other individual; or (iii) the person or property of a
    relative (by blood or marriage) of a person described in
    clause (i) or (ii). For the purposes of this Section,
    "sexual orientation" has the meaning ascribed to it in
    paragraph (O-1) of Section 1-103 of the Illinois Human
    Rights Act;
        (11) the offense took place in a place of worship or on
    the grounds of a place of worship, immediately prior to,
    during or immediately following worship services. For
    purposes of this subparagraph, "place of worship" shall
    mean any church, synagogue or other building, structure or
    place used primarily for religious worship;
        (12) the defendant was convicted of a felony committed
    while he was on pretrial release or his own recognizance
    pending trial for a prior felony and was convicted of such
    prior felony, or the defendant was convicted of a felony
    committed while he was serving a period of probation,
    conditional discharge, or mandatory supervised release
    under subsection (d) of Section 5-8-1 for a prior felony;
        (13) the defendant committed or attempted to commit a
    felony while he was wearing a bulletproof vest. For the
    purposes of this paragraph (13), a bulletproof vest is any
    device which is designed for the purpose of protecting the
    wearer from bullets, shot or other lethal projectiles;
        (14) the defendant held a position of trust or
    supervision such as, but not limited to, family member as
    defined in Section 11-0.1 of the Criminal Code of 2012,
    teacher, scout leader, baby sitter, or day care worker, in
    relation to a victim under 18 years of age, and the
    defendant committed an offense in violation of Section
    11-1.20, 11-1.30, 11-1.40, 11-1.50, 11-1.60, 11-6, 11-11,
    11-14.4 except for an offense that involves keeping a
    place of juvenile prostitution, 11-15.1, 11-19.1, 11-19.2,
    11-20.1, 11-20.1B, 11-20.3, 12-13, 12-14, 12-14.1, 12-15
    or 12-16 of the Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code
    of 2012 against that victim;
        (15) the defendant committed an offense related to the
    activities of an organized gang. For the purposes of this
    factor, "organized gang" has the meaning ascribed to it in
    Section 10 of the Streetgang Terrorism Omnibus Prevention
    Act;
        (16) the defendant committed an offense in violation
    of one of the following Sections while in a school,
    regardless of the time of day or time of year; on any
    conveyance owned, leased, or contracted by a school to
    transport students to or from school or a school related
    activity; on the real property of a school; or on a public
    way within 1,000 feet of the real property comprising any
    school: Section 10-1, 10-2, 10-5, 11-1.20, 11-1.30,
    11-1.40, 11-1.50, 11-1.60, 11-14.4, 11-15.1, 11-17.1,
    11-18.1, 11-19.1, 11-19.2, 12-2, 12-4, 12-4.1, 12-4.2,
    12-4.3, 12-6, 12-6.1, 12-6.5, 12-13, 12-14, 12-14.1,
    12-15, 12-16, 18-2, or 33A-2, or Section 12-3.05 except
    for subdivision (a)(4) or (g)(1), of the Criminal Code of
    1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012;
        (16.5) the defendant committed an offense in violation
    of one of the following Sections while in a day care
    center, regardless of the time of day or time of year; on
    the real property of a day care center, regardless of the
    time of day or time of year; or on a public way within
    1,000 feet of the real property comprising any day care
    center, regardless of the time of day or time of year:
    Section 10-1, 10-2, 10-5, 11-1.20, 11-1.30, 11-1.40,
    11-1.50, 11-1.60, 11-14.4, 11-15.1, 11-17.1, 11-18.1,
    11-19.1, 11-19.2, 12-2, 12-4, 12-4.1, 12-4.2, 12-4.3,
    12-6, 12-6.1, 12-6.5, 12-13, 12-14, 12-14.1, 12-15, 12-16,
    18-2, or 33A-2, or Section 12-3.05 except for subdivision
    (a)(4) or (g)(1), of the Criminal Code of 1961 or the
    Criminal Code of 2012;
        (17) the defendant committed the offense by reason of
    any person's activity as a community policing volunteer or
    to prevent any person from engaging in activity as a
    community policing volunteer. For the purpose of this
    Section, "community policing volunteer" has the meaning
    ascribed to it in Section 2-3.5 of the Criminal Code of
    2012;
        (18) the defendant committed the offense in a nursing
    home or on the real property comprising a nursing home.
    For the purposes of this paragraph (18), "nursing home"
    means a skilled nursing or intermediate long term care
    facility that is subject to license by the Illinois
    Department of Public Health under the Nursing Home Care
    Act, the Specialized Mental Health Rehabilitation Act of
    2013, the ID/DD Community Care Act, or the MC/DD Act;
        (19) the defendant was a federally licensed firearm
    dealer and was previously convicted of a violation of
    subsection (a) of Section 3 of the Firearm Owners
    Identification Card Act and has now committed either a
    felony violation of the Firearm Owners Identification Card
    Act or an act of armed violence while armed with a firearm;
        (20) the defendant (i) committed the offense of
    reckless homicide under Section 9-3 of the Criminal Code
    of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012 or the offense of
    driving under the influence of alcohol, other drug or
    drugs, intoxicating compound or compounds or any
    combination thereof under Section 11-501 of the Illinois
    Vehicle Code or a similar provision of a local ordinance
    and (ii) was operating a motor vehicle in excess of 20
    miles per hour over the posted speed limit as provided in
    Article VI of Chapter 11 of the Illinois Vehicle Code;
        (21) the defendant (i) committed the offense of
    reckless driving or aggravated reckless driving under
    Section 11-503 of the Illinois Vehicle Code and (ii) was
    operating a motor vehicle in excess of 20 miles per hour
    over the posted speed limit as provided in Article VI of
    Chapter 11 of the Illinois Vehicle Code;
        (22) the defendant committed the offense against a
    person that the defendant knew, or reasonably should have
    known, was a member of the Armed Forces of the United
    States serving on active duty. For purposes of this clause
    (22), the term "Armed Forces" means any of the Armed
    Forces of the United States, including a member of any
    reserve component thereof or National Guard unit called to
    active duty;
        (23) the defendant committed the offense against a
    person who was elderly or infirm or who was a person with a
    disability by taking advantage of a family or fiduciary
    relationship with the elderly or infirm person or person
    with a disability;
        (24) the defendant committed any offense under Section
    11-20.1 of the Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code
    of 2012 and possessed 100 or more images;
        (25) the defendant committed the offense while the
    defendant or the victim was in a train, bus, or other
    vehicle used for public transportation;
        (26) the defendant committed the offense of child
    sexual abuse material pornography or aggravated child
    pornography, specifically including paragraph (1), (2),
    (3), (4), (5), or (7) of subsection (a) of Section 11-20.1
    of the Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012
    where a child engaged in, solicited for, depicted in, or
    posed in any act of sexual penetration or bound, fettered,
    or subject to sadistic, masochistic, or sadomasochistic
    abuse in a sexual context and specifically including
    paragraph (1), (2), (3), (4), (5), or (7) of subsection
    (a) of Section 11-20.1B or Section 11-20.3 of the Criminal
    Code of 1961 where a child engaged in, solicited for,
    depicted in, or posed in any act of sexual penetration or
    bound, fettered, or subject to sadistic, masochistic, or
    sadomasochistic abuse in a sexual context;
        (26.5) the defendant committed the offense of obscene
    depiction of a purported child, specifically including
    paragraph (2) of subsection (b) of Section 11-20.4 of the
    Criminal Code of 2012 if a child engaged in, solicited
    for, depicted in, or posed in any act of sexual
    penetration or bound, fettered, or subject to sadistic,
    masochistic, or sadomasochistic abuse in a sexual context;
        (27) the defendant committed the offense of first
    degree murder, assault, aggravated assault, battery,
    aggravated battery, robbery, armed robbery, or aggravated
    robbery against a person who was a veteran and the
    defendant knew, or reasonably should have known, that the
    person was a veteran performing duties as a representative
    of a veterans' organization. For the purposes of this
    paragraph (27), "veteran" means an Illinois resident who
    has served as a member of the United States Armed Forces, a
    member of the Illinois National Guard, or a member of the
    United States Reserve Forces; and "veterans' organization"
    means an organization comprised of members of which
    substantially all are individuals who are veterans or
    spouses, widows, or widowers of veterans, the primary
    purpose of which is to promote the welfare of its members
    and to provide assistance to the general public in such a
    way as to confer a public benefit;
        (28) the defendant committed the offense of assault,
    aggravated assault, battery, aggravated battery, robbery,
    armed robbery, or aggravated robbery against a person that
    the defendant knew or reasonably should have known was a
    letter carrier or postal worker while that person was
    performing his or her duties delivering mail for the
    United States Postal Service;
        (29) the defendant committed the offense of criminal
    sexual assault, aggravated criminal sexual assault,
    criminal sexual abuse, or aggravated criminal sexual abuse
    against a victim with an intellectual disability, and the
    defendant holds a position of trust, authority, or
    supervision in relation to the victim;
        (30) the defendant committed the offense of promoting
    juvenile prostitution, patronizing a prostitute, or
    patronizing a minor engaged in prostitution and at the
    time of the commission of the offense knew that the
    prostitute or minor engaged in prostitution was in the
    custody or guardianship of the Department of Children and
    Family Services;
        (31) the defendant (i) committed the offense of
    driving while under the influence of alcohol, other drug
    or drugs, intoxicating compound or compounds or any
    combination thereof in violation of Section 11-501 of the
    Illinois Vehicle Code or a similar provision of a local
    ordinance and (ii) the defendant during the commission of
    the offense was driving his or her vehicle upon a roadway
    designated for one-way traffic in the opposite direction
    of the direction indicated by official traffic control
    devices;
        (32) the defendant committed the offense of reckless
    homicide while committing a violation of Section 11-907 of
    the Illinois Vehicle Code;
        (33) the defendant was found guilty of an
    administrative infraction related to an act or acts of
    public indecency or sexual misconduct in the penal
    institution. In this paragraph (33), "penal institution"
    has the same meaning as in Section 2-14 of the Criminal
    Code of 2012; or
        (34) the defendant committed the offense of leaving
    the scene of a crash in violation of subsection (b) of
    Section 11-401 of the Illinois Vehicle Code and the crash
    resulted in the death of a person and at the time of the
    offense, the defendant was: (i) driving under the
    influence of alcohol, other drug or drugs, intoxicating
    compound or compounds or any combination thereof as
    defined by Section 11-501 of the Illinois Vehicle Code; or
    (ii) operating the motor vehicle while using an electronic
    communication device as defined in Section 12-610.2 of the
    Illinois Vehicle Code.
    For the purposes of this Section:
    "School" is defined as a public or private elementary or
secondary school, community college, college, or university.
    "Day care center" means a public or private State
certified and licensed day care center as defined in Section
2.09 of the Child Care Act of 1969 that displays a sign in
plain view stating that the property is a day care center.
    "Intellectual disability" means significantly subaverage
intellectual functioning which exists concurrently with
impairment in adaptive behavior.
    "Public transportation" means the transportation or
conveyance of persons by means available to the general
public, and includes paratransit services.
    "Traffic control devices" means all signs, signals,
markings, and devices that conform to the Illinois Manual on
Uniform Traffic Control Devices, placed or erected by
authority of a public body or official having jurisdiction,
for the purpose of regulating, warning, or guiding traffic.
    (b) The following factors, related to all felonies, may be
considered by the court as reasons to impose an extended term
sentence under Section 5-8-2 upon any offender:
        (1) When a defendant is convicted of any felony, after
    having been previously convicted in Illinois or any other
    jurisdiction of the same or similar class felony or
    greater class felony, when such conviction has occurred
    within 10 years after the previous conviction, excluding
    time spent in custody, and such charges are separately
    brought and tried and arise out of different series of
    acts; or
        (2) When a defendant is convicted of any felony and
    the court finds that the offense was accompanied by
    exceptionally brutal or heinous behavior indicative of
    wanton cruelty; or
        (3) When a defendant is convicted of any felony
    committed against:
            (i) a person under 12 years of age at the time of
        the offense or such person's property;
            (ii) a person 60 years of age or older at the time
        of the offense or such person's property; or
            (iii) a person who had a physical disability at
        the time of the offense or such person's property; or
        (4) When a defendant is convicted of any felony and
    the offense involved any of the following types of
    specific misconduct committed as part of a ceremony, rite,
    initiation, observance, performance, practice or activity
    of any actual or ostensible religious, fraternal, or
    social group:
            (i) the brutalizing or torturing of humans or
        animals;
            (ii) the theft of human corpses;
            (iii) the kidnapping of humans;
            (iv) the desecration of any cemetery, religious,
        fraternal, business, governmental, educational, or
        other building or property; or
            (v) ritualized abuse of a child; or
        (5) When a defendant is convicted of a felony other
    than conspiracy and the court finds that the felony was
    committed under an agreement with 2 or more other persons
    to commit that offense and the defendant, with respect to
    the other individuals, occupied a position of organizer,
    supervisor, financier, or any other position of management
    or leadership, and the court further finds that the felony
    committed was related to or in furtherance of the criminal
    activities of an organized gang or was motivated by the
    defendant's leadership in an organized gang; or
        (6) When a defendant is convicted of an offense
    committed while using a firearm with a laser sight
    attached to it. For purposes of this paragraph, "laser
    sight" has the meaning ascribed to it in Section 26-7 of
    the Criminal Code of 2012; or
        (7) When a defendant who was at least 17 years of age
    at the time of the commission of the offense is convicted
    of a felony and has been previously adjudicated a
    delinquent minor under the Juvenile Court Act of 1987 for
    an act that if committed by an adult would be a Class X or
    Class 1 felony when the conviction has occurred within 10
    years after the previous adjudication, excluding time
    spent in custody; or
        (8) When a defendant commits any felony and the
    defendant used, possessed, exercised control over, or
    otherwise directed an animal to assault a law enforcement
    officer engaged in the execution of his or her official
    duties or in furtherance of the criminal activities of an
    organized gang in which the defendant is engaged; or
        (9) When a defendant commits any felony and the
    defendant knowingly video or audio records the offense
    with the intent to disseminate the recording.
    (c) The following factors may be considered by the court
as reasons to impose an extended term sentence under Section
5-8-2 (730 ILCS 5/5-8-2) upon any offender for the listed
offenses:
        (1) When a defendant is convicted of first degree
    murder, after having been previously convicted in Illinois
    of any offense listed under paragraph (c)(2) of Section
    5-5-3 (730 ILCS 5/5-5-3), when that conviction has
    occurred within 10 years after the previous conviction,
    excluding time spent in custody, and the charges are
    separately brought and tried and arise out of different
    series of acts.
        (1.5) When a defendant is convicted of first degree
    murder, after having been previously convicted of domestic
    battery (720 ILCS 5/12-3.2) or aggravated domestic battery
    (720 ILCS 5/12-3.3) committed on the same victim or after
    having been previously convicted of violation of an order
    of protection (720 ILCS 5/12-30) in which the same victim
    was the protected person.
        (2) When a defendant is convicted of voluntary
    manslaughter, second degree murder, involuntary
    manslaughter, or reckless homicide in which the defendant
    has been convicted of causing the death of more than one
    individual.
        (3) When a defendant is convicted of aggravated
    criminal sexual assault or criminal sexual assault, when
    there is a finding that aggravated criminal sexual assault
    or criminal sexual assault was also committed on the same
    victim by one or more other individuals, and the defendant
    voluntarily participated in the crime with the knowledge
    of the participation of the others in the crime, and the
    commission of the crime was part of a single course of
    conduct during which there was no substantial change in
    the nature of the criminal objective.
        (4) If the victim was under 18 years of age at the time
    of the commission of the offense, when a defendant is
    convicted of aggravated criminal sexual assault or
    predatory criminal sexual assault of a child under
    subsection (a)(1) of Section 11-1.40 or subsection (a)(1)
    of Section 12-14.1 of the Criminal Code of 1961 or the
    Criminal Code of 2012 (720 ILCS 5/11-1.40 or 5/12-14.1).
        (5) When a defendant is convicted of a felony
    violation of Section 24-1 of the Criminal Code of 1961 or
    the Criminal Code of 2012 (720 ILCS 5/24-1) and there is a
    finding that the defendant is a member of an organized
    gang.
        (6) When a defendant was convicted of unlawful
    possession of weapons under Section 24-1 of the Criminal
    Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012 (720 ILCS 5/24-1)
    for possessing a weapon that is not readily
    distinguishable as one of the weapons enumerated in
    Section 24-1 of the Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal
    Code of 2012 (720 ILCS 5/24-1).
        (7) When a defendant is convicted of an offense
    involving the illegal manufacture of a controlled
    substance under Section 401 of the Illinois Controlled
    Substances Act (720 ILCS 570/401), the illegal manufacture
    of methamphetamine under Section 25 of the Methamphetamine
    Control and Community Protection Act (720 ILCS 646/25), or
    the illegal possession of explosives and an emergency
    response officer in the performance of his or her duties
    is killed or injured at the scene of the offense while
    responding to the emergency caused by the commission of
    the offense. In this paragraph, "emergency" means a
    situation in which a person's life, health, or safety is
    in jeopardy; and "emergency response officer" means a
    peace officer, community policing volunteer, fireman,
    emergency medical technician-ambulance, emergency medical
    technician-intermediate, emergency medical
    technician-paramedic, ambulance driver, other medical
    assistance or first aid personnel, or hospital emergency
    room personnel.
        (8) When the defendant is convicted of attempted mob
    action, solicitation to commit mob action, or conspiracy
    to commit mob action under Section 8-1, 8-2, or 8-4 of the
    Criminal Code of 2012, where the criminal object is a
    violation of Section 25-1 of the Criminal Code of 2012,
    and an electronic communication is used in the commission
    of the offense. For the purposes of this paragraph (8),
    "electronic communication" shall have the meaning provided
    in Section 26.5-0.1 of the Criminal Code of 2012.
    (d) For the purposes of this Section, "organized gang" has
the meaning ascribed to it in Section 10 of the Illinois
Streetgang Terrorism Omnibus Prevention Act.
    (e) The court may impose an extended term sentence under
Article 4.5 of Chapter V upon an offender who has been
convicted of a felony violation of Section 11-1.20, 11-1.30,
11-1.40, 11-1.50, 11-1.60, 12-13, 12-14, 12-14.1, 12-15, or
12-16 of the Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012
when the victim of the offense is under 18 years of age at the
time of the commission of the offense and, during the
commission of the offense, the victim was under the influence
of alcohol, regardless of whether or not the alcohol was
supplied by the offender; and the offender, at the time of the
commission of the offense, knew or should have known that the
victim had consumed alcohol.
(Source: P.A. 102-558, eff. 8-20-21; 102-982, eff. 7-1-23;
103-822, eff. 1-1-25; 103-825, eff. 1-1-25; revised 11-26-24.)
 
    (730 ILCS 5/5-8-1)  (from Ch. 38, par. 1005-8-1)
    Sec. 5-8-1. Natural life imprisonment; enhancements for
use of a firearm; mandatory supervised release terms.
    (a) Except as otherwise provided in the statute defining
the offense or in Article 4.5 of Chapter V, a sentence of
imprisonment for a felony shall be a determinate sentence set
by the court under this Section, subject to Section 5-4.5-115
of this Code, according to the following limitations:
        (1) for first degree murder,
            (a) (blank),
            (b) if a trier of fact finds beyond a reasonable
        doubt that the murder was accompanied by exceptionally
        brutal or heinous behavior indicative of wanton
        cruelty or, except as set forth in subsection
        (a)(1)(c) of this Section, that any of the aggravating
        factors listed in subparagraph (b-5) are present, the
        court may sentence the defendant, subject to Section
        5-4.5-105, to a term of natural life imprisonment, or
            (b-5) a A defendant who at the time of the
        commission of the offense has attained the age of 18 or
        more and who has been found guilty of first degree
        murder may be sentenced to a term of natural life
        imprisonment if:
                (1) the murdered individual was an inmate at
            an institution or facility of the Department of
            Corrections, or any similar local correctional
            agency and was killed on the grounds thereof, or
            the murdered individual was otherwise present in
            such institution or facility with the knowledge
            and approval of the chief administrative officer
            thereof;
                (2) the murdered individual was killed as a
            result of the hijacking of an airplane, train,
            ship, bus, or other public conveyance;
                (3) the defendant committed the murder
            pursuant to a contract, agreement, or
            understanding by which he or she was to receive
            money or anything of value in return for
            committing the murder or procured another to
            commit the murder for money or anything of value;
                (4) the murdered individual was killed in the
            course of another felony if:
                    (A) the murdered individual:
                        (i) was actually killed by the
                    defendant, or
                        (ii) received physical injuries
                    personally inflicted by the defendant
                    substantially contemporaneously with
                    physical injuries caused by one or more
                    persons for whose conduct the defendant is
                    legally accountable under Section 5-2 of
                    this Code, and the physical injuries
                    inflicted by either the defendant or the
                    other person or persons for whose conduct
                    he is legally accountable caused the death
                    of the murdered individual; and (B) in
                    performing the acts which caused the death
                    of the murdered individual or which
                    resulted in physical injuries personally
                    inflicted by the defendant on the murdered
                    individual under the circumstances of
                    subdivision (ii) of clause (A) of this
                    clause (4), the defendant acted with the
                    intent to kill the murdered individual or
                    with the knowledge that his or her acts
                    created a strong probability of death or
                    great bodily harm to the murdered
                    individual or another; and
                    (B) in performing the acts which caused
                the death of the murdered individual or which
                resulted in physical injuries personally
                inflicted by the defendant on the murdered
                individual under the circumstances of
                subdivision (ii) of clause (A) of this clause
                (4), the defendant acted with the intent to
                kill the murdered individual or with the
                knowledge that his or her acts created a
                strong probability of death or great bodily
                harm to the murdered individual or another;
                and
                    (C) the other felony was an inherently
                violent crime or the attempt to commit an
                inherently violent crime. In this clause (C),
                "inherently violent crime" includes, but is
                not limited to, armed robbery, robbery,
                predatory criminal sexual assault of a child,
                aggravated criminal sexual assault, aggravated
                kidnapping, aggravated vehicular hijacking,
                aggravated arson, aggravated stalking,
                residential burglary, and home invasion;
                (5) the defendant committed the murder with
            intent to prevent the murdered individual from
            testifying or participating in any criminal
            investigation or prosecution or giving material
            assistance to the State in any investigation or
            prosecution, either against the defendant or
            another; or the defendant committed the murder
            because the murdered individual was a witness in
            any prosecution or gave material assistance to the
            State in any investigation or prosecution, either
            against the defendant or another; for purposes of
            this clause (5), "participating in any criminal
            investigation or prosecution" is intended to
            include those appearing in the proceedings in any
            capacity such as trial judges, prosecutors,
            defense attorneys, investigators, witnesses, or
            jurors;
                (6) the defendant, while committing an offense
            punishable under Section 401, 401.1, 401.2, 405,
            405.2, 407, or 407.1 or subsection (b) of Section
            404 of the Illinois Controlled Substances Act, or
            while engaged in a conspiracy or solicitation to
            commit such offense, intentionally killed an
            individual or counseled, commanded, induced,
            procured, or caused the intentional killing of the
            murdered individual;
                (7) the defendant was incarcerated in an
            institution or facility of the Department of
            Corrections at the time of the murder, and while
            committing an offense punishable as a felony under
            Illinois law, or while engaged in a conspiracy or
            solicitation to commit such offense, intentionally
            killed an individual or counseled, commanded,
            induced, procured, or caused the intentional
            killing of the murdered individual;
                (8) the murder was committed in a cold,
            calculated and premeditated manner pursuant to a
            preconceived plan, scheme, or design to take a
            human life by unlawful means, and the conduct of
            the defendant created a reasonable expectation
            that the death of a human being would result
            therefrom;
                (9) the defendant was a principal
            administrator, organizer, or leader of a
            calculated criminal drug conspiracy consisting of
            a hierarchical position of authority superior to
            that of all other members of the conspiracy, and
            the defendant counseled, commanded, induced,
            procured, or caused the intentional killing of the
            murdered person;
                (10) the murder was intentional and involved
            the infliction of torture. For the purpose of this
            clause (10), torture means the infliction of or
            subjection to extreme physical pain, motivated by
            an intent to increase or prolong the pain,
            suffering, or agony of the victim;
                (11) the murder was committed as a result of
            the intentional discharge of a firearm by the
            defendant from a motor vehicle and the victim was
            not present within the motor vehicle;
                (12) the murdered individual was a person with
            a disability and the defendant knew or should have
            known that the murdered individual was a person
            with a disability. For purposes of this clause
            (12), "person with a disability" means a person
            who suffers from a permanent physical or mental
            impairment resulting from disease, an injury, a
            functional disorder, or a congenital condition
            that renders the person incapable of adequately
            providing for his or her own health or personal
            care;
                (13) the murdered individual was subject to an
            order of protection and the murder was committed
            by a person against whom the same order of
            protection was issued under the Illinois Domestic
            Violence Act of 1986;
                (14) the murdered individual was known by the
            defendant to be a teacher or other person employed
            in any school and the teacher or other employee is
            upon the grounds of a school or grounds adjacent
            to a school, or is in any part of a building used
            for school purposes;
                (15) the murder was committed by the defendant
            in connection with or as a result of the offense of
            terrorism as defined in Section 29D-14.9 of this
            Code;
                (16) the murdered individual was a member of a
            congregation engaged in prayer or other religious
            activities at a church, synagogue, mosque, or
            other building, structure, or place used for
            religious worship; or
                (17)(i) the murdered individual was a
            physician, physician assistant, psychologist,
            nurse, or advanced practice registered nurse;
                (ii) the defendant knew or should have known
            that the murdered individual was a physician,
            physician assistant, psychologist, nurse, or
            advanced practice registered nurse; and
                (iii) the murdered individual was killed in
            the course of acting in his or her capacity as a
            physician, physician assistant, psychologist,
            nurse, or advanced practice registered nurse, or
            to prevent him or her from acting in that
            capacity, or in retaliation for his or her acting
            in that capacity.
            (c) the court shall sentence the defendant to a
        term of natural life imprisonment if the defendant, at
        the time of the commission of the murder, had attained
        the age of 18, and:
                (i) has previously been convicted of first
            degree murder under any state or federal law, or
                (ii) is found guilty of murdering more than
            one victim, or
                (iii) is found guilty of murdering a peace
            officer, fireman, or emergency management worker
            when the peace officer, fireman, or emergency
            management worker was killed in the course of
            performing his official duties, or to prevent the
            peace officer or fireman from performing his
            official duties, or in retaliation for the peace
            officer, fireman, or emergency management worker
            from performing his official duties, and the
            defendant knew or should have known that the
            murdered individual was a peace officer, fireman,
            or emergency management worker, or
                (iv) is found guilty of murdering an employee
            of an institution or facility of the Department of
            Corrections, or any similar local correctional
            agency, when the employee was killed in the course
            of performing his official duties, or to prevent
            the employee from performing his official duties,
            or in retaliation for the employee performing his
            official duties, or
                (v) is found guilty of murdering an emergency
            medical technician - ambulance, emergency medical
            technician - intermediate, emergency medical
            technician - paramedic, ambulance driver, or other
            medical assistance or first aid person while
            employed by a municipality or other governmental
            unit when the person was killed in the course of
            performing official duties or to prevent the
            person from performing official duties or in
            retaliation for performing official duties and the
            defendant knew or should have known that the
            murdered individual was an emergency medical
            technician - ambulance, emergency medical
            technician - intermediate, emergency medical
            technician - paramedic, ambulance driver, or other
            medical assistant or first aid personnel, or
                (vi) (blank), or
                (vii) is found guilty of first degree murder
            and the murder was committed by reason of any
            person's activity as a community policing
            volunteer or to prevent any person from engaging
            in activity as a community policing volunteer. For
            the purpose of this Section, "community policing
            volunteer" has the meaning ascribed to it in
            Section 2-3.5 of the Criminal Code of 2012.
            For purposes of clause (v), "emergency medical
        technician - ambulance", "emergency medical technician -
         intermediate", and "emergency medical technician -
        paramedic", have the meanings ascribed to them in the
        Emergency Medical Services (EMS) Systems Act.
            (d)(i) if the person committed the offense while
            armed with a firearm, 15 years shall be added to
            the term of imprisonment imposed by the court;
            (ii) if, during the commission of the offense, the
        person personally discharged a firearm, 20 years shall
        be added to the term of imprisonment imposed by the
        court;
            (iii) if, during the commission of the offense,
        the person personally discharged a firearm that
        proximately caused great bodily harm, permanent
        disability, permanent disfigurement, or death to
        another person, 25 years or up to a term of natural
        life shall be added to the term of imprisonment
        imposed by the court.
        (2) (blank);
        (2.5) for a person who has attained the age of 18 years
    at the time of the commission of the offense and who is
    convicted under the circumstances described in subdivision
    (b)(1)(B) of Section 11-1.20 or paragraph (3) of
    subsection (b) of Section 12-13, subdivision (d)(2) of
    Section 11-1.30 or paragraph (2) of subsection (d) of
    Section 12-14, subdivision (b)(1.2) of Section 11-1.40 or
    paragraph (1.2) of subsection (b) of Section 12-14.1,
    subdivision (b)(2) of Section 11-1.40 or paragraph (2) of
    subsection (b) of Section 12-14.1 of the Criminal Code of
    1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012, the sentence shall be a
    term of natural life imprisonment.
    (b) (Blank).
    (c) (Blank).
    (d) Subject to earlier termination under Section 3-3-8,
the parole or mandatory supervised release term shall be
written as part of the sentencing order and shall be as
follows:
        (1) for first degree murder or for the offenses of
    predatory criminal sexual assault of a child, aggravated
    criminal sexual assault, and criminal sexual assault if
    committed on or before December 12, 2005, 3 years;
        (1.5) except as provided in paragraph (7) of this
    subsection (d), for a Class X felony except for the
    offenses of predatory criminal sexual assault of a child,
    aggravated criminal sexual assault, and criminal sexual
    assault if committed on or after December 13, 2005 (the
    effective date of Public Act 94-715) and except for the
    offense of aggravated child pornography under Section
    11-20.1B, 11-20.3, or 11-20.1 with sentencing under
    subsection (c-5) of Section 11-20.1 of the Criminal Code
    of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012, if committed on or
    after January 1, 2009, and except for the offense of
    obscene depiction of a purported child with sentencing
    under subsection (d) of Section 11-20.4 of the Criminal
    Code of 2012, 18 months;
        (2) except as provided in paragraph (7) of this
    subsection (d), for a Class 1 felony or a Class 2 felony
    except for the offense of criminal sexual assault if
    committed on or after December 13, 2005 (the effective
    date of Public Act 94-715) and except for the offenses of
    manufacture and dissemination of child sexual abuse
    material pornography under clauses (a)(1) and (a)(2) of
    Section 11-20.1 of the Criminal Code of 1961 or the
    Criminal Code of 2012, if committed on or after January 1,
    2009, and except for the offense of obscene depiction of a
    purported child under paragraph (2) of subsection (b) of
    Section 11-20.4 of the Criminal Code of 2012, 12 months;
        (3) except as provided in paragraph (4), (6), or (7)
    of this subsection (d), for a Class 3 felony or a Class 4
    felony, 6 months; no later than 45 days after the onset of
    the term of mandatory supervised release, the Prisoner
    Review Board shall conduct a discretionary discharge
    review pursuant to the provisions of Section 3-3-8, which
    shall include the results of a standardized risk and needs
    assessment tool administered by the Department of
    Corrections; the changes to this paragraph (3) made by
    Public Act 102-1104 this amendatory Act of the 102nd
    General Assembly apply to all individuals released on
    mandatory supervised release on or after December 6, 2022
    (the effective date of Public Act 102-1104) this
    amendatory Act of the 102nd General Assembly, including
    those individuals whose sentences were imposed prior to
    December 6, 2022 (the effective date of Public Act
    102-1104) this amendatory Act of the 102nd General
    Assembly;
        (4) for defendants who commit the offense of predatory
    criminal sexual assault of a child, aggravated criminal
    sexual assault, or criminal sexual assault, on or after
    December 13, 2005 (the effective date of Public Act
    94-715), or who commit the offense of aggravated child
    pornography under Section 11-20.1B, 11-20.3, or 11-20.1
    with sentencing under subsection (c-5) of Section 11-20.1
    of the Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012,
    manufacture of child sexual abuse material pornography, or
    dissemination of child sexual abuse material pornography
    after January 1, 2009, or who commit the offense of
    obscene depiction of a purported child under paragraph (2)
    of subsection (b) of Section 11-20.4 of the Criminal Code
    of 2012 or who commit the offense of obscene depiction of a
    purported child with sentencing under subsection (d) of
    Section 11-20.4 of the Criminal Code of 2012, the term of
    mandatory supervised release shall range from a minimum of
    3 years to a maximum of the natural life of the defendant;
        (5) if the victim is under 18 years of age, for a
    second or subsequent offense of aggravated criminal sexual
    abuse or felony criminal sexual abuse, 4 years, at least
    the first 2 years of which the defendant shall serve in an
    electronic monitoring or home detention program under
    Article 8A of Chapter V of this Code;
        (6) for a felony domestic battery, aggravated domestic
    battery, stalking, aggravated stalking, and a felony
    violation of an order of protection, 4 years;
        (7) for any felony described in paragraph (a)(2)(ii),
    (a)(2)(iii), (a)(2)(iv), (a)(2)(vi), (a)(2.1), (a)(2.3),
    (a)(2.4), (a)(2.5), or (a)(2.6) of Article 5, Section
    3-6-3 of the Unified Code of Corrections requiring an
    inmate to serve a minimum of 85% of their court-imposed
    sentence, except for the offenses of predatory criminal
    sexual assault of a child, aggravated criminal sexual
    assault, and criminal sexual assault if committed on or
    after December 13, 2005 (the effective date of Public Act
    94-715) and except for the offense of aggravated child
    pornography under Section 11-20.1B, 11-20.3, or 11-20.1
    with sentencing under subsection (c-5) of Section 11-20.1
    of the Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012,
    if committed on or after January 1, 2009, and except for
    the offense of obscene depiction of a purported child with
    sentencing under subsection (d) of Section 11-20.4 of the
    Criminal Code of 2012, and except as provided in paragraph
    (4) or paragraph (6) of this subsection (d), the term of
    mandatory supervised release shall be as follows:
            (A) Class X felony, 3 years;
            (B) Class 1 or Class 2 felonies, 2 years;
            (C) Class 3 or Class 4 felonies, 1 year.
    (e) (Blank).
    (f) (Blank).
    (g) Notwithstanding any other provisions of this Act and
of Public Act 101-652: (i) the provisions of paragraph (3) of
subsection (d) are effective on July 1, 2022 and shall apply to
all individuals convicted on or after the effective date of
paragraph (3) of subsection (d); and (ii) the provisions of
paragraphs (1.5) and (2) of subsection (d) are effective on
July 1, 2021 and shall apply to all individuals convicted on or
after the effective date of paragraphs (1.5) and (2) of
subsection (d).
(Source: P.A. 102-28, eff. 6-25-21; 102-687, eff. 12-17-21;
102-694, eff. 1-7-22; 102-1104, eff. 12-6-22; 103-51, eff.
1-1-24; 103-825, eff. 1-1-25; revised 10-24-24.)
 
    (730 ILCS 5/5-8-4)  (from Ch. 38, par. 1005-8-4)
    Sec. 5-8-4. Concurrent and consecutive terms of
imprisonment.
    (a) Concurrent terms; multiple or additional sentences.
When an Illinois court (i) imposes multiple sentences of
imprisonment on a defendant at the same time or (ii) imposes a
sentence of imprisonment on a defendant who is already subject
to a sentence of imprisonment imposed by an Illinois court, a
court of another state, or a federal court, then the sentences
shall run concurrently unless otherwise determined by the
Illinois court under this Section.
    (b) Concurrent terms; misdemeanor and felony. A defendant
serving a sentence for a misdemeanor who is convicted of a
felony and sentenced to imprisonment shall be transferred to
the Department of Corrections, and the misdemeanor sentence
shall be merged in and run concurrently with the felony
sentence.
    (c) Consecutive terms; permissive. The court may impose
consecutive sentences in any of the following circumstances:
        (1) If, having regard to the nature and circumstances
    of the offense and the history and character of the
    defendant, it is the opinion of the court that consecutive
    sentences are required to protect the public from further
    criminal conduct by the defendant, the basis for which the
    court shall set forth in the record.
        (2) If one of the offenses for which a defendant was
    convicted was a violation of Section 32-5.2 (aggravated
    false personation of a peace officer) of the Criminal Code
    of 1961 (720 ILCS 5/32-5.2) or a violation of subdivision
    (b)(5) or (b)(6) of Section 17-2 of the Criminal Code of
    1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012 (720 ILCS 5/17-2) and the
    offense was committed in attempting or committing a
    forcible felony.
        (3) If a person charged with a felony commits a
    separate felony while on pretrial release or in pretrial
    detention in a county jail facility or county detention
    facility, then the sentences imposed upon conviction of
    these felonies may be served consecutively regardless of
    the order in which the judgments of conviction are
    entered.
        (4) If a person commits a battery against a county
    correctional officer or sheriff's employee while serving a
    sentence or in pretrial detention in a county jail
    facility, then the sentence imposed upon conviction of the
    battery may be served consecutively with the sentence
    imposed upon conviction of the earlier misdemeanor or
    felony, regardless of the order in which the judgments of
    conviction are entered.
        (5) If a person admitted to pretrial release following
    conviction of a felony commits a separate felony while
    released pretrial or if a person detained in a county jail
    facility or county detention facility following conviction
    of a felony commits a separate felony while in detention,
    then any sentence following conviction of the separate
    felony may be consecutive to that of the original sentence
    for which the defendant was released pretrial or detained.
        (6) If a person is found to be in possession of an item
    of contraband, as defined in Section 31A-0.1 of the
    Criminal Code of 2012, while serving a sentence in a
    county jail or while in pretrial detention in a county
    jail, the sentence imposed upon conviction for the offense
    of possessing contraband in a penal institution may be
    served consecutively to the sentence imposed for the
    offense for which the person is serving a sentence in the
    county jail or while in pretrial detention, regardless of
    the order in which the judgments of conviction are
    entered.
        (7) If a person is sentenced for a violation of a
    condition of pretrial release under Section 32-10 of the
    Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012, any
    sentence imposed for that violation may be served
    consecutive to the sentence imposed for the charge for
    which pretrial release had been granted and with respect
    to which the defendant has been convicted.
    (d) Consecutive terms; mandatory. The court shall impose
consecutive sentences in each of the following circumstances:
        (1) One of the offenses for which the defendant was
    convicted was first degree murder or a Class X or Class 1
    felony and the defendant inflicted severe bodily injury.
        (2) The defendant was convicted of a violation of
    Section 11-1.20 or 12-13 (criminal sexual assault),
    11-1.30 or 12-14 (aggravated criminal sexual assault), or
    11-1.40 or 12-14.1 (predatory criminal sexual assault of a
    child) of the Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of
    2012 (720 ILCS 5/11-20.1, 5/11-20.1B, 5/11-20.3,
    5/11-1.20, 5/12-13, 5/11-1.30, 5/12-14, 5/11-1.40, or
    5/12-14.1).
        (2.5) The defendant was convicted of a violation of
    paragraph (1), (2), (3), (4), (5), or (7) of subsection
    (a) of Section 11-20.1 (child sexual abuse material or
    child pornography) or of paragraph (1), (2), (3), (4),
    (5), or (7) of subsection (a) of Section 11-20.1B or
    11-20.3 (aggravated child pornography) of the Criminal
    Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012; or the defendant
    was convicted of a violation of paragraph (6) of
    subsection (a) of Section 11-20.1 (child sexual abuse
    material or child pornography) or of paragraph (6) of
    subsection (a) of Section 11-20.1B or 11-20.3 (aggravated
    child pornography) of the Criminal Code of 1961 or the
    Criminal Code of 2012, when the child depicted is under
    the age of 13.
        (2.6) The defendant was convicted of:
            (A) a violation of paragraph (2) of subsection (b)
        of Section 11-20.4 of the Criminal Code of 2012; or
            (B) a violation of paragraph (1) of Section
        11-20.4 of the Criminal Code of 2012 when the
        purported child depicted is under the age of 13.
        (3) The defendant was convicted of armed violence
    based upon the predicate offense of any of the following:
    solicitation of murder, solicitation of murder for hire,
    heinous battery as described in Section 12-4.1 or
    subdivision (a)(2) of Section 12-3.05, aggravated battery
    of a senior citizen as described in Section 12-4.6 or
    subdivision (a)(4) of Section 12-3.05, criminal sexual
    assault, a violation of subsection (g) of Section 5 of the
    Cannabis Control Act (720 ILCS 550/5), cannabis
    trafficking, a violation of subsection (a) of Section 401
    of the Illinois Controlled Substances Act (720 ILCS
    570/401), controlled substance trafficking involving a
    Class X felony amount of controlled substance under
    Section 401 of the Illinois Controlled Substances Act (720
    ILCS 570/401), a violation of the Methamphetamine Control
    and Community Protection Act (720 ILCS 646/), calculated
    criminal drug conspiracy, or streetgang criminal drug
    conspiracy.
        (4) The defendant was convicted of the offense of
    leaving the scene of a motor vehicle crash involving death
    or personal injuries under Section 11-401 of the Illinois
    Vehicle Code (625 ILCS 5/11-401) and either: (A)
    aggravated driving under the influence of alcohol, other
    drug or drugs, or intoxicating compound or compounds, or
    any combination thereof under Section 11-501 of the
    Illinois Vehicle Code (625 ILCS 5/11-501), (B) reckless
    homicide under Section 9-3 of the Criminal Code of 1961 or
    the Criminal Code of 2012 (720 ILCS 5/9-3), or (C) both an
    offense described in item (A) and an offense described in
    item (B).
        (5) The defendant was convicted of a violation of
    Section 9-3.1 or Section 9-3.4 (concealment of homicidal
    death) or Section 12-20.5 (dismembering a human body) of
    the Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012 (720
    ILCS 5/9-3.1 or 5/12-20.5).
        (5.5) The defendant was convicted of a violation of
    Section 24-3.7 (use of a stolen firearm in the commission
    of an offense) of the Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal
    Code of 2012.
        (6) If the defendant was in the custody of the
    Department of Corrections at the time of the commission of
    the offense, the sentence shall be served consecutive to
    the sentence under which the defendant is held by the
    Department of Corrections.
        (7) A sentence under Section 3-6-4 (730 ILCS 5/3-6-4)
    for escape or attempted escape shall be served consecutive
    to the terms under which the offender is held by the
    Department of Corrections.
        (8) (Blank).
        (8.5) (Blank).
        (9) (Blank).
        (10) (Blank).
        (11) (Blank).
    (e) Consecutive terms; subsequent non-Illinois term. If an
Illinois court has imposed a sentence of imprisonment on a
defendant and the defendant is subsequently sentenced to a
term of imprisonment by a court of another state or a federal
court, then the Illinois sentence shall run consecutively to
the sentence imposed by the court of the other state or the
federal court. That same Illinois court, however, may order
that the Illinois sentence run concurrently with the sentence
imposed by the court of the other state or the federal court,
but only if the defendant applies to that same Illinois court
within 30 days after the sentence imposed by the court of the
other state or the federal court is finalized.
    (f) Consecutive terms; aggregate maximums and minimums.
The aggregate maximum and aggregate minimum of consecutive
sentences shall be determined as follows:
        (1) For sentences imposed under law in effect prior to
    February 1, 1978, the aggregate maximum of consecutive
    sentences shall not exceed the maximum term authorized
    under Section 5-8-1 (730 ILCS 5/5-8-1) or Article 4.5 of
    Chapter V for the 2 most serious felonies involved. The
    aggregate minimum period of consecutive sentences shall
    not exceed the highest minimum term authorized under
    Section 5-8-1 (730 ILCS 5/5-8-1) or Article 4.5 of Chapter
    V for the 2 most serious felonies involved. When sentenced
    only for misdemeanors, a defendant shall not be
    consecutively sentenced to more than the maximum for one
    Class A misdemeanor.
        (2) For sentences imposed under the law in effect on
    or after February 1, 1978, the aggregate of consecutive
    sentences for offenses that were committed as part of a
    single course of conduct during which there was no
    substantial change in the nature of the criminal objective
    shall not exceed the sum of the maximum terms authorized
    under Article 4.5 of Chapter V for the 2 most serious
    felonies involved, but no such limitation shall apply for
    offenses that were not committed as part of a single
    course of conduct during which there was no substantial
    change in the nature of the criminal objective. When
    sentenced only for misdemeanors, a defendant shall not be
    consecutively sentenced to more than the maximum for one
    Class A misdemeanor.
    (g) Consecutive terms; manner served. In determining the
manner in which consecutive sentences of imprisonment, one or
more of which is for a felony, will be served, the Department
of Corrections shall treat the defendant as though he or she
had been committed for a single term subject to each of the
following:
        (1) The maximum period of a term of imprisonment shall
    consist of the aggregate of the maximums of the imposed
    indeterminate terms, if any, plus the aggregate of the
    imposed determinate sentences for felonies, plus the
    aggregate of the imposed determinate sentences for
    misdemeanors, subject to subsection (f) of this Section.
        (2) The parole or mandatory supervised release term
    shall be as provided in paragraph (e) of Section 5-4.5-50
    (730 ILCS 5/5-4.5-50) for the most serious of the offenses
    involved.
        (3) The minimum period of imprisonment shall be the
    aggregate of the minimum and determinate periods of
    imprisonment imposed by the court, subject to subsection
    (f) of this Section.
        (4) The defendant shall be awarded credit against the
    aggregate maximum term and the aggregate minimum term of
    imprisonment for all time served in an institution since
    the commission of the offense or offenses and as a
    consequence thereof at the rate specified in Section 3-6-3
    (730 ILCS 5/3-6-3).
    (h) Notwithstanding any other provisions of this Section,
all sentences imposed by an Illinois court under this Code
shall run concurrent to any and all sentences imposed under
the Juvenile Court Act of 1987.
(Source: P.A. 102-350, eff. 8-13-21; 102-982, eff. 7-1-23;
102-1104, eff. 12-6-22; 103-825, eff. 1-1-25.)
 
    (730 ILCS 5/5-9-1.7)  (from Ch. 38, par. 1005-9-1.7)
    Sec. 5-9-1.7. Sexual assault fines.
    (a) Definitions. The terms used in this Section shall have
the following meanings ascribed to them:
        (1) "Sexual assault" means the commission or attempted
    commission of the following: sexual exploitation of a
    child, criminal sexual assault, predatory criminal sexual
    assault of a child, aggravated criminal sexual assault,
    criminal sexual abuse, aggravated criminal sexual abuse,
    indecent solicitation of a child, public indecency, sexual
    relations within families, promoting juvenile
    prostitution, soliciting for a juvenile prostitute,
    keeping a place of juvenile prostitution, patronizing a
    juvenile prostitute, juvenile pimping, exploitation of a
    child, obscenity, child sexual abuse material pornography,
    aggravated child pornography, harmful material, or
    ritualized abuse of a child, as those offenses are defined
    in the Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012.
        (2) (Blank).
        (3) "Sexual assault organization" means any
    not-for-profit organization providing comprehensive,
    community-based services to victims of sexual assault.
    "Community-based services" include, but are not limited
    to, direct crisis intervention through a 24-hour response,
    medical and legal advocacy, counseling, information and
    referral services, training, and community education.
    (b) (Blank).
    (c) Sexual Assault Services Fund; administration. There is
created a Sexual Assault Services Fund. Moneys deposited into
the Fund under Section 15-20 and 15-40 of the Criminal and
Traffic Assessment Act shall be appropriated to the Department
of Public Health. Upon appropriation of moneys from the Sexual
Assault Services Fund, the Department of Public Health shall
make grants of these moneys from the Fund to sexual assault
organizations with whom the Department has contracts for the
purpose of providing community-based services to victims of
sexual assault. Grants made under this Section are in addition
to, and are not substitutes for, other grants authorized and
made by the Department.
(Source: P.A. 100-987, eff. 7-1-19.)
 
    (730 ILCS 5/5-9-1.8)
    Sec. 5-9-1.8. Child sexual abuse material pornography
fines. Beginning July 1, 2006, 100% of the fines in excess of
$10,000 collected for violations of Section 11-20.1 of the
Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012 shall be
deposited into the Child Abuse Prevention Fund. Moneys in the
Fund resulting from the fines shall be for the use of the
Department of Children and Family Services for grants to
private entities giving treatment and counseling to victims of
child sexual abuse.
(Source: P.A. 102-1071, eff. 6-10-22.)
 
    Section 70. The Sex Offender Registration Act is amended
by changing Section 2 as follows:
 
    (730 ILCS 150/2)  (from Ch. 38, par. 222)
    Sec. 2. Definitions.
    (A) As used in this Article, "sex offender" means any
person who is:
        (1) charged pursuant to Illinois law, or any
    substantially similar federal, Uniform Code of Military
    Justice, sister state, or foreign country law, with a sex
    offense set forth in subsection (B) of this Section or the
    attempt to commit an included sex offense, and:
            (a) is convicted of such offense or an attempt to
        commit such offense; or
            (b) is found not guilty by reason of insanity of
        such offense or an attempt to commit such offense; or
            (c) is found not guilty by reason of insanity
        pursuant to Section 104-25(c) of the Code of Criminal
        Procedure of 1963 of such offense or an attempt to
        commit such offense; or
            (d) is the subject of a finding not resulting in an
        acquittal at a hearing conducted pursuant to Section
        104-25(a) of the Code of Criminal Procedure of 1963
        for the alleged commission or attempted commission of
        such offense; or
            (e) is found not guilty by reason of insanity
        following a hearing conducted pursuant to a federal,
        Uniform Code of Military Justice, sister state, or
        foreign country law substantially similar to Section
        104-25(c) of the Code of Criminal Procedure of 1963 of
        such offense or of the attempted commission of such
        offense; or
            (f) is the subject of a finding not resulting in an
        acquittal at a hearing conducted pursuant to a
        federal, Uniform Code of Military Justice, sister
        state, or foreign country law substantially similar to
        Section 104-25(a) of the Code of Criminal Procedure of
        1963 for the alleged violation or attempted commission
        of such offense; or
        (2) declared as a sexually dangerous person pursuant
    to the Illinois Sexually Dangerous Persons Act, or any
    substantially similar federal, Uniform Code of Military
    Justice, sister state, or foreign country law; or
        (3) subject to the provisions of Section 2 of the
    Interstate Agreements on Sexually Dangerous Persons Act;
    or
        (4) found to be a sexually violent person pursuant to
    the Sexually Violent Persons Commitment Act or any
    substantially similar federal, Uniform Code of Military
    Justice, sister state, or foreign country law; or
        (5) adjudicated a juvenile delinquent as the result of
    committing or attempting to commit an act which, if
    committed by an adult, would constitute any of the
    offenses specified in item (B), (C), or (C-5) of this
    Section or a violation of any substantially similar
    federal, Uniform Code of Military Justice, sister state,
    or foreign country law, or found guilty under Article V of
    the Juvenile Court Act of 1987 of committing or attempting
    to commit an act which, if committed by an adult, would
    constitute any of the offenses specified in item (B), (C),
    or (C-5) of this Section or a violation of any
    substantially similar federal, Uniform Code of Military
    Justice, sister state, or foreign country law.
    Convictions that result from or are connected with the
same act, or result from offenses committed at the same time,
shall be counted for the purpose of this Article as one
conviction. Any conviction set aside pursuant to law is not a
conviction for purposes of this Article.
     For purposes of this Section, "convicted" shall have the
same meaning as "adjudicated".
    (B) As used in this Article, "sex offense" means:
        (1) A violation of any of the following Sections of
    the Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012:
            11-20.1 (child sexual abuse material or child
        pornography),
            11-20.1B or 11-20.3 (aggravated child
        pornography),
            11-6 (indecent solicitation of a child),
            11-9.1 (sexual exploitation of a child),
            11-9.2 (custodial sexual misconduct),
            11-9.5 (sexual misconduct with a person with a
        disability),
            11-14.4 (promoting juvenile prostitution),
            11-15.1 (soliciting for a juvenile prostitute),
            11-18.1 (patronizing a juvenile prostitute),
            11-17.1 (keeping a place of juvenile
        prostitution),
            11-19.1 (juvenile pimping),
            11-19.2 (exploitation of a child),
            11-25 (grooming),
            11-26 (traveling to meet a minor or traveling to
        meet a child),
            11-1.20 or 12-13 (criminal sexual assault),
            11-1.30 or 12-14 (aggravated criminal sexual
        assault),
            11-1.40 or 12-14.1 (predatory criminal sexual
        assault of a child),
            11-1.50 or 12-15 (criminal sexual abuse),
            11-1.60 or 12-16 (aggravated criminal sexual
        abuse),
            12-33 (ritualized abuse of a child).
            An attempt to commit any of these offenses.
        (1.5) A violation of any of the following Sections of
    the Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012,
    when the victim is a person under 18 years of age, the
    defendant is not a parent of the victim, the offense was
    sexually motivated as defined in Section 10 of the Sex
    Offender Evaluation and Treatment Act, and the offense was
    committed on or after January 1, 1996:
            10-1 (kidnapping),
            10-2 (aggravated kidnapping),
            10-3 (unlawful restraint),
            10-3.1 (aggravated unlawful restraint).
        If the offense was committed before January 1, 1996,
    it is a sex offense requiring registration only when the
    person is convicted of any felony after July 1, 2011, and
    paragraph (2.1) of subsection (c) of Section 3 of this Act
    applies.
        (1.6) First degree murder under Section 9-1 of the
    Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012,
    provided the offense was sexually motivated as defined in
    Section 10 of the Sex Offender Management Board Act.
        (1.7) (Blank).
        (1.8) A violation or attempted violation of Section
    11-11 (sexual relations within families) of the Criminal
    Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012, and the offense
    was committed on or after June 1, 1997. If the offense was
    committed before June 1, 1997, it is a sex offense
    requiring registration only when the person is convicted
    of any felony after July 1, 2011, and paragraph (2.1) of
    subsection (c) of Section 3 of this Act applies.
        (1.9) Child abduction under paragraph (10) of
    subsection (b) of Section 10-5 of the Criminal Code of
    1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012 committed by luring or
    attempting to lure a child under the age of 16 into a motor
    vehicle, building, house trailer, or dwelling place
    without the consent of the parent or lawful custodian of
    the child for other than a lawful purpose and the offense
    was committed on or after January 1, 1998, provided the
    offense was sexually motivated as defined in Section 10 of
    the Sex Offender Management Board Act. If the offense was
    committed before January 1, 1998, it is a sex offense
    requiring registration only when the person is convicted
    of any felony after July 1, 2011, and paragraph (2.1) of
    subsection (c) of Section 3 of this Act applies.
        (1.10) A violation or attempted violation of any of
    the following Sections of the Criminal Code of 1961 or the
    Criminal Code of 2012 when the offense was committed on or
    after July 1, 1999:
            10-4 (forcible detention, if the victim is under
        18 years of age), provided the offense was sexually
        motivated as defined in Section 10 of the Sex Offender
        Management Board Act,
            11-6.5 (indecent solicitation of an adult),
            11-14.3 that involves soliciting for a prostitute,
        or 11-15 (soliciting for a prostitute, if the victim
        is under 18 years of age),
            subdivision (a)(2)(A) or (a)(2)(B) of Section
        11-14.3, or Section 11-16 (pandering, if the victim is
        under 18 years of age),
            11-18 (patronizing a prostitute, if the victim is
        under 18 years of age),
            subdivision (a)(2)(C) of Section 11-14.3, or
        Section 11-19 (pimping, if the victim is under 18
        years of age).
        If the offense was committed before July 1, 1999, it
    is a sex offense requiring registration only when the
    person is convicted of any felony after July 1, 2011, and
    paragraph (2.1) of subsection (c) of Section 3 of this Act
    applies.
        (1.11) A violation or attempted violation of any of
    the following Sections of the Criminal Code of 1961 or the
    Criminal Code of 2012 when the offense was committed on or
    after August 22, 2002:
            11-9 or 11-30 (public indecency for a third or
        subsequent conviction).
        If the third or subsequent conviction was imposed
    before August 22, 2002, it is a sex offense requiring
    registration only when the person is convicted of any
    felony after July 1, 2011, and paragraph (2.1) of
    subsection (c) of Section 3 of this Act applies.
        (1.12) A violation or attempted violation of Section
    5.1 of the Wrongs to Children Act or Section 11-9.1A of the
    Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012
    (permitting sexual abuse) when the offense was committed
    on or after August 22, 2002. If the offense was committed
    before August 22, 2002, it is a sex offense requiring
    registration only when the person is convicted of any
    felony after July 1, 2011, and paragraph (2.1) of
    subsection (c) of Section 3 of this Act applies.
        (2) A violation of any former law of this State
    substantially equivalent to any offense listed in
    subsection (B) of this Section.
    (C) A conviction for an offense of federal law, Uniform
Code of Military Justice, or the law of another state or a
foreign country that is substantially equivalent to any
offense listed in subsections (B), (C), (E), and (E-5) of this
Section shall constitute a conviction for the purpose of this
Article. A finding or adjudication as a sexually dangerous
person or a sexually violent person under any federal law,
Uniform Code of Military Justice, or the law of another state
or foreign country that is substantially equivalent to the
Sexually Dangerous Persons Act or the Sexually Violent Persons
Commitment Act shall constitute an adjudication for the
purposes of this Article.
    (C-5) A person at least 17 years of age at the time of the
commission of the offense who is convicted of first degree
murder under Section 9-1 of the Criminal Code of 1961 or the
Criminal Code of 2012, against a person under 18 years of age,
shall be required to register for natural life. A conviction
for an offense of federal, Uniform Code of Military Justice,
sister state, or foreign country law that is substantially
equivalent to any offense listed in subsection (C-5) of this
Section shall constitute a conviction for the purpose of this
Article. This subsection (C-5) applies to a person who
committed the offense before June 1, 1996 if: (i) the person is
incarcerated in an Illinois Department of Corrections facility
on August 20, 2004 (the effective date of Public Act 93-977),
or (ii) subparagraph (i) does not apply and the person is
convicted of any felony after July 1, 2011, and paragraph
(2.1) of subsection (c) of Section 3 of this Act applies.
    (C-6) A person who is convicted or adjudicated delinquent
of first degree murder as defined in Section 9-1 of the
Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012, against a
person 18 years of age or over, shall be required to register
for his or her natural life. A conviction for an offense of
federal, Uniform Code of Military Justice, sister state, or
foreign country law that is substantially equivalent to any
offense listed in subsection (C-6) of this Section shall
constitute a conviction for the purpose of this Article. This
subsection (C-6) does not apply to those individuals released
from incarceration more than 10 years prior to January 1, 2012
(the effective date of Public Act 97-154).
    (D) As used in this Article, "law enforcement agency
having jurisdiction" means the Chief of Police in each of the
municipalities in which the sex offender expects to reside,
work, or attend school (1) upon his or her discharge, parole or
release or (2) during the service of his or her sentence of
probation or conditional discharge, or the Sheriff of the
county, in the event no Police Chief exists or if the offender
intends to reside, work, or attend school in an unincorporated
area. "Law enforcement agency having jurisdiction" includes
the location where out-of-state students attend school and
where out-of-state employees are employed or are otherwise
required to register.
    (D-1) As used in this Article, "supervising officer" means
the assigned Illinois Department of Corrections parole agent
or county probation officer.
    (E) As used in this Article, "sexual predator" means any
person who, after July 1, 1999, is:
        (1) Convicted for an offense of federal, Uniform Code
    of Military Justice, sister state, or foreign country law
    that is substantially equivalent to any offense listed in
    subsection (E) or (E-5) of this Section shall constitute a
    conviction for the purpose of this Article. Convicted of a
    violation or attempted violation of any of the following
    Sections of the Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code
    of 2012:
            10-5.1 (luring of a minor),
            11-14.4 that involves keeping a place of juvenile
        prostitution, or 11-17.1 (keeping a place of juvenile
        prostitution),
            subdivision (a)(2) or (a)(3) of Section 11-14.4,
        or Section 11-19.1 (juvenile pimping),
            subdivision (a)(4) of Section 11-14.4, or Section
        11-19.2 (exploitation of a child),
            11-20.1 (child sexual abuse material or child
        pornography),
            11-20.1B or 11-20.3 (aggravated child
        pornography),
            11-1.20 or 12-13 (criminal sexual assault),
            11-1.30 or 12-14 (aggravated criminal sexual
        assault),
            11-1.40 or 12-14.1 (predatory criminal sexual
        assault of a child),
            11-1.60 or 12-16 (aggravated criminal sexual
        abuse),
            12-33 (ritualized abuse of a child);
        (2) (blank);
        (3) declared as a sexually dangerous person pursuant
    to the Sexually Dangerous Persons Act or any substantially
    similar federal, Uniform Code of Military Justice, sister
    state, or foreign country law;
        (4) found to be a sexually violent person pursuant to
    the Sexually Violent Persons Commitment Act or any
    substantially similar federal, Uniform Code of Military
    Justice, sister state, or foreign country law;
        (5) convicted of a second or subsequent offense which
    requires registration pursuant to this Act. For purposes
    of this paragraph (5), "convicted" shall include a
    conviction under any substantially similar Illinois,
    federal, Uniform Code of Military Justice, sister state,
    or foreign country law;
        (6) (blank); or
        (7) if the person was convicted of an offense set
    forth in this subsection (E) on or before July 1, 1999, the
    person is a sexual predator for whom registration is
    required only when the person is convicted of a felony
    offense after July 1, 2011, and paragraph (2.1) of
    subsection (c) of Section 3 of this Act applies.
    (E-5) As used in this Article, "sexual predator" also
means a person convicted of a violation or attempted violation
of any of the following Sections of the Criminal Code of 1961
or the Criminal Code of 2012:
        (1) Section 9-1 (first degree murder, when the victim
    was a person under 18 years of age and the defendant was at
    least 17 years of age at the time of the commission of the
    offense, provided the offense was sexually motivated as
    defined in Section 10 of the Sex Offender Management Board
    Act);
        (2) Section 11-9.5 (sexual misconduct with a person
    with a disability);
        (3) when the victim is a person under 18 years of age,
    the defendant is not a parent of the victim, the offense
    was sexually motivated as defined in Section 10 of the Sex
    Offender Management Board Act, and the offense was
    committed on or after January 1, 1996: (A) Section 10-1
    (kidnapping), (B) Section 10-2 (aggravated kidnapping),
    (C) Section 10-3 (unlawful restraint), and (D) Section
    10-3.1 (aggravated unlawful restraint); and
        (4) Section 10-5(b)(10) (child abduction committed by
    luring or attempting to lure a child under the age of 16
    into a motor vehicle, building, house trailer, or dwelling
    place without the consent of the parent or lawful
    custodian of the child for other than a lawful purpose and
    the offense was committed on or after January 1, 1998,
    provided the offense was sexually motivated as defined in
    Section 10 of the Sex Offender Management Board Act).
    (E-10) As used in this Article, "sexual predator" also
means a person required to register in another State due to a
conviction, adjudication or other action of any court
triggering an obligation to register as a sex offender, sexual
predator, or substantially similar status under the laws of
that State.
    (F) As used in this Article, "out-of-state student" means
any sex offender, as defined in this Section, or sexual
predator who is enrolled in Illinois, on a full-time or
part-time basis, in any public or private educational
institution, including, but not limited to, any secondary
school, trade or professional institution, or institution of
higher learning.
    (G) As used in this Article, "out-of-state employee" means
any sex offender, as defined in this Section, or sexual
predator who works in Illinois, regardless of whether the
individual receives payment for services performed, for a
period of time of 10 or more days or for an aggregate period of
time of 30 or more days during any calendar year. Persons who
operate motor vehicles in the State accrue one day of
employment time for any portion of a day spent in Illinois.
    (H) As used in this Article, "school" means any public or
private educational institution, including, but not limited
to, any elementary or secondary school, trade or professional
institution, or institution of higher education.
    (I) As used in this Article, "fixed residence" means any
and all places that a sex offender resides for an aggregate
period of time of 5 or more days in a calendar year.
    (J) As used in this Article, "Internet protocol address"
means the string of numbers by which a location on the Internet
is identified by routers or other computers connected to the
Internet.
(Source: P.A. 100-428, eff. 1-1-18.)
 
    Section 75. The Trafficking Victims Protection Act is
amended by changing Section 10 as follows:
 
    (740 ILCS 128/10)
    Sec. 10. Definitions. As used in this Act:
    "Human trafficking" means a violation or attempted
violation of subsection (d) of Section 10-9 of the Criminal
Code of 2012.
    "Involuntary servitude" means a violation or attempted
violation of subsection (b) of Section 10-9 of the Criminal
Code of 2012.
    "Sex trade" means a violation or attempted violation of
any of the following Sections of the Criminal Code of 1961 or
the Criminal Code of 2012: 11-14.3 (promoting prostitution);
11-14.4 (promoting juvenile prostitution); 11-15 (soliciting
for a prostitute); 11-15.1 (soliciting for a juvenile
prostitute); 11-16 (pandering); 11-17 (keeping a place of
prostitution); 11-17.1 (keeping a place of juvenile
prostitution); 11-19 (pimping); 11-19.1 (juvenile pimping and
aggravated juvenile pimping); 11-19.2 (exploitation of a
child); 11-20 (obscenity); 11-20.1 (child sexual abuse
material pornography); 11-20.1B or 11-20.3 (aggravated child
pornography); or subsection (c) of Section 10-9 (involuntary
sexual servitude of a minor).
    "Sex trade" activity may involve adults and youth of all
genders and sexual orientations.
    "Victim of the sex trade" means, for the following sex
trade acts, the person or persons indicated:
        (1) soliciting for a prostitute: the prostitute who is
    the object of the solicitation;
        (2) soliciting for a juvenile prostitute: the juvenile
    prostitute, or person with a severe or profound
    intellectual disability, who is the object of the
    solicitation;
        (3) promoting prostitution as described in subdivision
    (a)(2)(A) or (a)(2)(B) of Section 11-14.3 of the Criminal
    Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012, or pandering:
    the person intended or compelled to act as a prostitute;
        (4) keeping a place of prostitution: any person
    intended or compelled to act as a prostitute, while
    present at the place, during the time period in question;
        (5) keeping a place of juvenile prostitution: any
    juvenile intended or compelled to act as a prostitute,
    while present at the place, during the time period in
    question;
        (6) promoting prostitution as described in subdivision
    (a)(2)(C) of Section 11-14.3 of the Criminal Code of 1961
    or the Criminal Code of 2012, or pimping: the prostitute
    from whom anything of value is received;
        (7) promoting juvenile prostitution as described in
    subdivision (a)(2) or (a)(3) of Section 11-14.4 of the
    Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012, or
    juvenile pimping and aggravated juvenile pimping: the
    juvenile, or person with a severe or profound intellectual
    disability, from whom anything of value is received for
    that person's act of prostitution;
        (8) promoting juvenile prostitution as described in
    subdivision (a)(4) of Section 11-14.4 of the Criminal Code
    of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012, or exploitation of a
    child: the juvenile, or person with a severe or profound
    intellectual disability, intended or compelled to act as a
    prostitute or from whom anything of value is received for
    that person's act of prostitution;
        (9) obscenity: any person who appears in or is
    described or depicted in the offending conduct or
    material;
        (10) child sexual abuse material pornography or
    aggravated child pornography: any child, or person with a
    severe or profound intellectual disability, who appears in
    or is described or depicted in the offending conduct or
    material; or
        (11) involuntary sexual servitude of a minor as
    defined in subsection (c) of Section 10-9 of the Criminal
    Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012.
(Source: P.A. 99-143, eff. 7-27-15; 100-939, eff. 1-1-19.)
INDEX
Statutes amended in order of appearance
    20 ILCS 4026/10
    110 ILCS 57/5
    225 ILCS 10/3.3
    325 ILCS 5/4.5
    325 ILCS 5/11.1from Ch. 23, par. 2061.1
    325 ILCS 15/3from Ch. 23, par. 2083
    325 ILCS 40/2from Ch. 23, par. 2252
    325 ILCS 47/10
    705 ILCS 135/15-70
    705 ILCS 405/3-40
    720 ILCS 5/3-5from Ch. 38, par. 3-5
    720 ILCS 5/3-6from Ch. 38, par. 3-6
    720 ILCS 5/11-0.1
    720 ILCS 5/11-9.1from Ch. 38, par. 11-9.1
    720 ILCS 5/11-9.3
    720 ILCS 5/11-20.1from Ch. 38, par. 11-20.1
    720 ILCS 5/11-20.2from Ch. 38, par. 11-20.2
    720 ILCS 5/11-23
    720 ILCS 5/11-25
    720 ILCS 5/14-3
    720 ILCS 5/36-1from Ch. 38, par. 36-1
    725 ILCS 5/106B-10
    725 ILCS 5/115-7from Ch. 38, par. 115-7
    725 ILCS 5/115-7.3
    725 ILCS 5/124B-10
    725 ILCS 5/124B-100
    725 ILCS 5/124B-420
    725 ILCS 5/124B-500
    725 ILCS 215/2from Ch. 38, par. 1702
    725 ILCS 215/3from Ch. 38, par. 1703
    730 ILCS 5/3-1-2from Ch. 38, par. 1003-1-2
    730 ILCS 5/5-5-3
    730 ILCS 5/5-5-3.2
    730 ILCS 5/5-8-1from Ch. 38, par. 1005-8-1
    730 ILCS 5/5-8-4from Ch. 38, par. 1005-8-4
    730 ILCS 5/5-9-1.7from Ch. 38, par. 1005-9-1.7
    730 ILCS 5/5-9-1.8
    730 ILCS 150/2from Ch. 38, par. 222
    740 ILCS 128/10