summary
Introduced
01/24/2025
01/24/2025
In Committee
03/21/2025
03/21/2025
Crossed Over
Passed
Dead
Introduced Session
104th General Assembly
Bill Summary
Amends the Code of Criminal Procedure of 1963 concerning a defendant's commitment for mental health treatment. Provides that if the Department of Human Services does not provide placement within the 20 days of transmittal from the circuit court clerk, the Department shall provide payment to the sheriff, as prescribed by the sheriff, including, but not limited to, housing and mental health services for each day after 20 days have passed from the time the defendant was first placed in the sheriff's custody. Provides that the sheriff shall not be held liable for any issues encountered after the 20th day the defendant remains in his or her care. Deletes provision that Department shall admit the defendant to a secure facility within 60 days of the transmittal of the court's placement order, unless the Department can demonstrate good faith efforts at placement and a lack of bed and placement availability. Deletes if placement cannot be made within 60 days of the transmittal of the court's placement order and the Department has demonstrated good faith efforts at placement and a lack of bed and placement availability, the Department shall provide an update to the ordering court every 30 days until the defendant is placed.
AI Summary
This bill amends the Code of Criminal Procedure of 1963 to modify procedures for mental health treatment of criminal defendants. The key changes relate to how defendants are placed in mental health facilities when deemed unfit to stand trial. Specifically, if the Department of Human Services does not provide placement for a defendant within 20 days of receiving a court order, the Department must now pay the sheriff for housing and mental health services for each day beyond the 20-day period. The bill removes previous provisions that required the Department to admit a defendant to a secure facility within 60 days and provide updates to the court every 30 days if placement was delayed. Instead, the new language shifts financial responsibility to the Department and explicitly states that the sheriff will not be liable for any issues after the 20th day of the defendant's custody. The bill aims to expedite mental health treatment placement for defendants and provide clear guidelines for handling delays in the placement process, with a focus on reducing the burden on local law enforcement while ensuring defendants receive necessary medical attention.
Committee Categories
Budget and Finance
Sponsors (24)
Dennis Tipsword (R)*,
Jason Bunting (R),
Kelly Cassidy (D),
Sharon Chung (D),
C.D. Davidsmeyer (R),
David Friess (R),
Brad Fritts (R),
Amy Grant (R),
Norine Hammond (R),
Paul Jacobs (R),
Jeff Keicher (R),
Nicole La Ha (R),
Tony McCombie (R),
Charlie Meier (R),
Kyle Moore (R),
Jennifer Sanalitro (R),
Kevin Schmidt (R),
Brandun Schweizer (R),
Patrick Sheehan (R),
Dan Swanson (R),
Dan Ugaste (R),
Travis Weaver (R),
Tom Weber (R),
Patrick Windhorst (R),
Last Action
Added Co-Sponsor Rep. Patrick Sheehan (on 03/31/2025)
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=1743&GAID=18&DocTypeID=HB&SessionID=114&GA=104 |
BillText | https://www.ilga.gov/legislation/104/HB/10400HB1743.htm |
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