HB 3521

  • Illinois House Bill
  • 104th Regular Session
  • Introduced in House
  • House
  • Senate
  • Governor

Unreliable Statements Inadmiss

Abstract

Amends the Juvenile Court Act of 1987 and the Code of Criminal Procedure of 1963. Provides that unreliable statements to law enforcement made during a custodial interrogation conducted at a police station or other place of detention by a defendant are inadmissible at trial in any criminal court proceeding or juvenile court proceeding for the prosecution of a homicide. Provides that in any proceeding under this provision, the prosecution shall timely disclose prior to any relevant evidentiary hearing or trial its intent to introduce a statement made during a custodial interrogation conducted at a place of detention. Provides that at that time, the prosecution must tender any electronic recordings of the statement and any documents relating to the circumstances under which the statement was obtained and any other evidence the State intends to rely upon to determine the statement's reliability. Provides that before trial, a defendant may move to exclude a statement alleged to be unreliable. Provides that the defendant shall specifically identify the statement or statements alleged to be unreliable. Provides that at the hearing, it shall be the burden of the prosecutor to prove by a preponderance of the evidence that the statement is reliable. Provides that when deciding a statement's reliability, a court should consider: (1) whether the details in the statement fit with the evidence known before the interrogation, especially details that describe unusual or not easily guessed facts of the crime that had not been made public; (2) whether the statement provides any new details or any new evidence not known before the interrogation that can be independently corroborated after the interrogation; (3) whether facts of the crime were disclosed to the defendant rather than originated with the defendant; (4) whether the defendant recanted the defendant's statement at any time and the circumstances of that recantation; (5) whether the statement was electronically recorded; and (6) any other information relevant to the reliability of the statement.

Bill Sponsors (13)

Votes


Actions


Apr 11, 2025

House

Added Chief Co-Sponsor Rep. William "Will" Davis

House

Rule 19(a) / Re-referred to Rules Committee

Apr 10, 2025

House

Added Co-Sponsor Rep. Robert "Bob" Rita

Apr 09, 2025

House

Added Chief Co-Sponsor Rep. Jehan Gordon-Booth

Apr 08, 2025

House

Added Co-Sponsor Rep. Marcus C. Evans, Jr.

House

Added Co-Sponsor Rep. Nicolle Grasse

House

Added Co-Sponsor Rep. Kam Buckner

House

Added Co-Sponsor Rep. Sonya M. Harper

House

Added Co-Sponsor Rep. Kelly M. Cassidy

House

Added Co-Sponsor Rep. Rita Mayfield

Apr 07, 2025

House

Added Co-Sponsor Rep. Elizabeth "Lisa" Hernandez

Mar 26, 2025

House

Second Reading - Standard Debate

House

Held on Calendar Order of Second Reading - Standard Debate

Mar 24, 2025

House

Added Co-Sponsor Rep. Maurice A. West, II

Mar 21, 2025

House

Placed on Calendar 2nd Reading - Standard Debate

Mar 20, 2025

House

Do Pass / Standard Debate Judiciary - Criminal Committee; 008-006-000

House

Added Co-Sponsor Rep. Theresa Mah

Mar 11, 2025

House

Assigned to Judiciary - Criminal Committee

Feb 18, 2025

House

First Reading

House

Referred to Rules Committee

Feb 07, 2025

House

Filed with the Clerk by Rep. Justin Slaughter

Bill Text

Bill Text Versions Format
Introduced HTML PDF

Related Documents

Document Format
No related documents.

Sources

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