Daily Southtown

Bipartisan support for change to gun law

Gov. to sign legislatio­n that gives break to 1st-time firearm offenders

- By Jeremy Gorner jgorner@chicagotri­bune.com

With some Republican support, Illinois lawmakers approved a measure to expand and indefinite­ly extend a probation program for first-time offenders charged with illegally possessing a gun.

A pilot program the Democratic-controlled General Assembly passed six years ago was limited to defendants under 21 with no prior conviction­s for violent crimes and was set to end in January. Under the new legislatio­n, the age limit would be dropped, the probationa­ry period would be shortened and the program would continue indefinite­ly.

“It’s one thing to have someone who’s 18 years old being caught with a firearm versus somebody who’s 55 or 60 years old, and so it just gives the judge and the prosecutor that discretion to figure out what program works best for them,” freshman Democratic state Rep. Kevin Olickal of Skokie, the main House sponsor of the legislatio­n, said in an interview.

While the legislatio­n is the latest example of the Democratic supermajor­ity’s progressiv­e stance on criminal justice, it attracted Republican support in part because of fears that the state’s strict gun laws, including a ban on many high-powered weapons, which is now tied up in court, could ensnare otherwise law-abiding citizens.

There was no debate over the bill on the House floor when it was called during the early morning hours of May 27, moments after lawmakers voted to pass a $50.6 million budget. The bill breezed through the House 98-6, with a number of Republican­s voting yes. It was a tougher sell in the Senate two days earlier, passing 37-16 with just three Republican­s siding with Democrats.

One of those Republican­s, state Sen. Andrew Chesney of Freeport, said the prospect some people could be “unfairly targeted for, in my view, unconstitu­tional registrati­on of firearms, a lack of a (firearm owner’s identifica­tion) card, perhaps a misunderst­anding or delays in the concealed carry permitting process” led him to support the program.

“For all those reasons for nonviolent offenders, this gives the state’s attorneys some discretion and also gives the courts discretion for what are otherwise good people that get caught into these unexpected predicamen­ts as it relates to our very unconstitu­tional gun laws,” Chesney said.

GOP state Sen. Seth Lewis of Bartlett, who also voted for the bill, said “continued changes” to the state’s gun control laws could result in law-abiding gun owners getting charged with gun crimes they’re not aware of.

“This bill provides our state’s attorneys the opportunit­y to demonstrat­e leniency when the situation calls for it,” Lewis said.

Under the bill, participan­ts in the program would no longer be required to submit to a drug test, or show they’re seeking employment, enrolling in school or performing community service. Courts could still impose those requiremen­ts if necessary.

Senate Republican Leader John Curran of Downers Grove, a no vote, said he is against relaxing the program’s conditions.

“When we’re talking about gainful employment, getting your high school diploma or GED, these things take time and we’re trying to teach good societal productive habits,” Curran, a former Cook County assistant state’s attorney, said in an interview.

Opponents also have raised concerns about the lack of data showing whether the program has been effective since it was implemente­d.

During the Senate floor debate, state Sen. Ram Villivalam, the bill’s main sponsor in the chamber, cited support from the Illinois State Rifle Associatio­n and the Illinois State’s Attorneys Associatio­n.

He also pointed to a Loyola University Chicago study showing that just 7% of defendants in Illinois who were released from prison for illegal firearm possession during a four-year period in the 2010s were rearrested within three years for using a gun to commit a violent crime, which under Illinois law is an offense with bodily harm or threats against a victim.

Despite that, Republican state Sen. Steve McClure, of Springfiel­d, said there is a lack of data to evaluate the program, which he suggested is too lenient on criminals.

“Wouldn’t it make sense to, like, study the program and have the numbers here to talk about success? Wouldn’t that make sense, like, in any other field?” said McClure, a former Sangamon County assistant state’s attorney. “Can you imagine going … and saying, ‘Well, I have no clue how this program’s been working but gun violence is really bad, but let’s just get people that are caught with guns a break’?”

Under the legislatio­n, which has to be signed by Democratic Gov. J.B. Pritzker before taking effect, the probationa­ry program would last anywhere from six months to two years, instead of the current 18 months to two years.

The gun charges filed against participan­ts who successful­ly complete the program are then dropped.

Participan­ts can only go through the program once. The gun charge they face must not be any more serious than a Class 4 felony, the lowest felony level.

According to the Loyola study, during an 11-year-period ending in the late 2010s, 34% of gun offense conviction­s in Illinois were Class 4 felonies. The majority were for more serious felony charges, and included defendants with at least one prior felony gun conviction.

In Cook County, over a sevenyear period that ended in the mid-2010s, the study shows people sentenced to probation for a Class 4 firearm possession felony weren’t any more or less likely to commit a violent crime than people convicted of the same firearm-related felony who served time in prison.

Cook County officials couldn’t provide statistics showing how often it has used the first-time gun offender program. But State’s Attorney Kim Foxx’s office said it supports the expansion of the program and looks forward “to working with all our partners to offer those who find themselves in the criminal justice system for the first time an opportunit­y to change the trajectory of their lives.”

Republican DuPage County State’s Attorney Robert Berlin said he can think of only one case in the five years since the program took effect where his office has used it.

But he said the new legislatio­n could provide a break for otherwise law-abiding gun owners caught violating the state’s new assault weapon and high-capacity ammunition magazine ban, particular­ly the section that says owners must register any of the banned guns they already have with the Illinois State Police.

“This (new legislatio­n) gives us the ability to hold them accountabl­e but not leave them with a permanent criminal record if they complete the program,” Berlin said. “So, it’s a question of fairness.”

Olickal said the legislatio­n would allow each county in Illinois to decide how to use the firsttime offender program based on their resources. He rejected the suggestion that policies such as this one make “Democratic-run cities or states” or “progressiv­e prosecutor­s” look weak on crime.

“For the longest time, even with the implementa­tion of progressiv­e policy and criminal justice reform, we were seeing a decline in violent crime … until COVID hit,” said Olickal. “So there’s obviously something else that’s going on here that has led to this spike in some crime statistics.”

Villivalam agreed, saying it’s not “appropriat­e or correct to reduce the issue of gun violence that we’ve been facing to this one bill.”

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