summary
Introduced
01/21/2025
01/21/2025
In Committee
01/28/2025
01/28/2025
Crossed Over
Passed
Dead
Introduced Session
104th General Assembly
Bill Summary
Creates the Public Safety and Justice Privacy Act. Defines terms. Provides that governmental agencies, persons, businesses, and associations shall not publicly post or display publicly available content that includes a first responder's, member or former member of the Illinois General Assembly's, prosecutor's, public defender's, or probation officer's ("officials") personal information, provided that the governmental agency, person, business, or association has received a written request from the person that it refrain from disclosing the person's personal information. Provides injunctive or declaratory relief if the Act is violated. Includes procedures for a written request. Provides that it is a Class 3 felony for any person to knowingly and publicly post on the Internet the personal information of an official or an official's immediate family under specified circumstances. Excludes criminal penalties for employees of governmental agencies who publish information in good faith during the ordinary course of carrying out public functions. Provides that the Act and any rules adopted to implement the Act shall be construed broadly to favor the protection of the personal information of officials. Amends various Acts and Codes allowing an official to list a business address rather than a home address. Makes conforming changes. Effective immediately.
AI Summary
This bill creates the Public Safety and Justice Privacy Act, which provides comprehensive protections for personal information of certain public safety and government officials, including first responders, members of the Illinois General Assembly, prosecutors, public defenders, and probation officers. The bill defines "personal information" and establishes procedures for officials to request that their home addresses and other sensitive personal details be kept private. Specifically, governmental agencies, businesses, and individuals are prohibited from publicly posting an official's personal information if they receive a written request not to do so. The bill mandates that such agencies remove personal information within 5 business days of receiving a request and imposes criminal penalties for knowingly and publicly posting an official's personal information in a way that poses an imminent threat to their health and safety. The legislation makes these protections a Class 3 felony and allows officials to seek injunctive or declaratory relief if their personal information is improperly disclosed. The bill also amends several existing laws to allow officials to use work addresses instead of home addresses on various official documents, such as identification cards and vehicle registrations, further protecting their personal privacy. Importantly, the bill is designed to be broadly interpreted to favor protecting officials' personal information, with specific exemptions for governmental employees acting in good faith during the ordinary course of their work.
Sponsors (19)
Nicole La Ha (R)*,
Mike Coffey (R),
C.D. Davidsmeyer (R),
Regan Deering (R),
Amy Elik (R),
Brad Fritts (R),
Amy Grant (R),
Jackie Haas (R),
Norine Hammond (R),
Jeff Keicher (R),
Tony McCombie (R),
Jennifer Sanalitro (R),
Kevin Schmidt (R),
Brandun Schweizer (R),
Patrick Sheehan (R),
Ryan Spain (R),
Brad Stephens (R),
Dan Ugaste (R),
Travis Weaver (R),
Last Action
Added Co-Sponsor Rep. Travis Weaver (on 06/24/2025)
bill text
bill summary
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bill summary
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bill summary
| Document Type | Source Location |
|---|---|
| State Bill Page | https://www.ilga.gov/legislation/BillStatus.asp?DocNum=1468&GAID=18&DocTypeID=HB&SessionID=114&GA=104 |
| BillText | https://www.ilga.gov/legislation/104/HB/10400HB1468.htm |
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