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The return of “sensible” penalty enhancements

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* Some April, 2018 background on this topic is here if you need it. My statewide syndicated newspaper column

About a year ago, I attended a hearing of the Illinois House Judiciary-Criminal Law Committee and watched the Democratic majority vote down one Republican-sponsored criminal penalty enhancement bill after another.

One would’ve made recruiting street gang members a Class 4 felony instead of the current Class 3. A bill to prevent child sex offenders from moving within a mile of their victims went down. The Democrats even killed a bill to enhance criminal penalties for anyone who knowingly harmed a police dog.

The legislative massacre was staged after Rep. Tony McCombie (R-Savanna) rose on the House floor to complain that she couldn’t get a hearing for one of her bills because the Democrats had bottled it up in subcommittee along with other Republican-backed penalty enhancement proposals.

McCombie’s measure would’ve enhanced the criminal penalty for assaulting DCFS workers to bring it into line with the already enhanced penalty for knowingly assaulting police, firefighters, corrections workers and some Department of Human Service workers.

It seemed like a no-brainer bill, especially since one of Rep. McCombie’s DCFS worker constituents was literally beaten to death while attempting to take a child into protective custody. In years past, that AFSCME-backed bill would’ve sailed through the General Assembly and been signed into law.

Judiciary-Criminal has for years been a bulwark against penalty enhancement bills. The Black Caucus and former committee chair Rep. Elaine Nekritz derailed most of them by sending them to subcommittee to quietly die.

Lawmakers slowly increased the penalties on countless crimes over the decades. And their pace increased after Illinois passed a so-called “Truth in Sentencing” law in the 1990s, which drastically limited the amount of time that inmates could earn to reduce their sentences while in prison.

Eventually, people started waking up and realizing the very real damage this was doing. It wasn’t just expensive to pay for prisons; the laws were contributing to the cycle of crime and violence and were locking up a whole lot of people of color. Republicans actually took the lead on criminal justice reform in other states and former Gov. Bruce Rauner signed quite a large number of reform bills during his term in office.

But reforming existing laws was only part of the process. Preventing the passage of “press release” bills to enhance penalties after high-profile crimes was also important.

After Nekritz retired, Rep. Art Turner, a member of House Democratic leadership, eventually took the panel’s helm and the hammer came down even harder, culminating in that hearing last spring. Rep. Turner (D-Chicago) is probably one of the nicest people you’ll ever meet, but not when it comes to this topic.

House Speaker Michael Madigan decreed at the beginning of this year that members of his leadership team could no longer chair committees, so Turner was replaced by Rep. Justin Slaughter (D-Chicago).

Chairman Slaughter has taken a different approach and four penalty enhancement bills have been approved by his committee this year.

After her stinging defeat last year, Rep. McCombie started working her bill hard, and even managed to get herself appointed to Judiciary-Criminal. She refiled her bill and added enhanced penalties for knowingly physically attacking Adult Protective Service employees at the Illinois Department on Aging.

Last week, Judiciary-Criminal unanimously approved Rep. McCombie’s new bill. Rep. Turner even co-sponsored the bill this time, as did Chairman Slaughter.

Slaughter told me he’s willing to consider “sensible” penalty enhancement bills like McCombie’s.

“We decided this year to consider, respectfully, those penalty enhancements that were sensible that didn’t have anything to do with some of the ‘Truth in Sentencing” punitive policies,” Slaughter said.

Last year’s hearing clearly got out of hand. Democratic leadership wanted to punish McCombie and other Republicans for speaking out, so they staged that dramatic hearing to kill their bills. A new Madigan chief of staff who isn’t constantly looking for drama-filled confrontation in a new post-Rauner era also likely contributed to the currently changed atmosphere. They can disagree without being so disagreeable.

And keep an eye on a new topic that is almost sure to surface. As I write this, 15 Illinois State Police troopers have been struck by motorists since the beginning of January. Two troopers have been killed.

The penalty for drivers who don’t move over or slow down for emergency vehicles is just a fine and possible loss of license. Somebody in the Legislature will surely try to pass an enhancement bill, and this one will be tough to stop — and, frankly, shouldn’t be stopped if properly drafted.

The day after I submitted my column, another ISP trooper was killed.

posted by Rich Miller
Monday, Apr 1, 19 @ 10:16 am

Comments

  1. Enhancing Scott’s law for hitting a cop or emergency worker to be equivalent to hitting a construction worker makes sense.

    Comment by Huh? Monday, Apr 1, 19 @ 10:29 am

  2. How could going from a Class 3 to a Class 4 be an enhancement? Class 4 is the lowest level of felony, Class 3 is one level higher.

    Comment by Just another Anon Monday, Apr 1, 19 @ 10:37 am

  3. Is intentionally harming police dogs a real problem in actual human society? Or did some back-bench Republican forget to turn in his homework assignment and try to throw something in at the last minute?

    Comment by PJ Monday, Apr 1, 19 @ 10:44 am

  4. For a sentence enhancement to be sensible, there should be a compelling account of what it aims to accomplish—as well as an argument that the enhancement is essential to achieving that purpose. One clear purpose of sentence enhancements is that it allow legislators to express how much they disapprove of certain crimes or often a particular high-profile crime—which is why these laws will often bear a victim’s name. Beyond that symbolic achievement—and the popular support it generates—I’ve never seen any evidence that these kinds of laws have any public safety benefit that couldn’t be achieved under the existing criminal code, which typically affords multiple ways to severely offending behavior.

    Comment by Interested Observer Monday, Apr 1, 19 @ 10:52 am

  5. Someone tell me why the number of Trooper related accidents and deaths have risen so abruptly in the last three months? What is different? This must stop, people seem to be driving more carelessly every day. Enhancing some penalties may be of some assistance.

    Comment by Uncle Ernie Monday, Apr 1, 19 @ 11:15 am

  6. Yeah, throw the book at them if they don’t move over, but why not have officers approach from the passenger side? In this day and age power windows make driver side approach unnecessary.

    Comment by Anonymous Monday, Apr 1, 19 @ 11:15 am

  7. ===why not have officers approach from the passenger side===

    Or, whenever feasible, direct them to the next exit, then ticket them there.

    Comment by PublicServant Monday, Apr 1, 19 @ 12:07 pm

  8. “why not have officers approach from the passenger side?”

    It is the rare stop that I see in my travels where ISP is not on the off side of the car. In the last 10 years, I have been stopped twice on the interstate and both times the trooper came to the side of the car furthest from traffic.

    We don’t know the ISP rules for approaching a stopped vehicle. I am sure that this has been an ISP topic of discussion for many years.

    Comment by Huh? Monday, Apr 1, 19 @ 12:56 pm

  9. Huh… that has not been my observation…state nor local

    Comment by Anonymous Monday, Apr 1, 19 @ 1:41 pm

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