Posts Tagged ‘Law Enforcement’
Appeals court won’t release detained immigrants amid warrantless arrest scrutiny
Split opinion allows consent decree to continue but says lower judge erred.
Read MoreNew laws: Gun storage, police background check changes take effect in 2026
Gun owners must store their firearms in secure boxes when children are around under a new state law.
Read MoreSean Grayson’s attorneys seek new trial after murder conviction
Defense says judge should have barred video that showed Grayson’s course description of Sonya Massey following the shooting.
Read MorePritzker signs bills addressing gun storage, tracing of firearms
Under new laws signed by Gov. JB Pritzker, firearm owners will soon be required to keep their weapons stored securely and out of the hands of minors while law enforcement agencies will be required to trace the ownership of all firearms they recover from crime scenes. (Capitol News Illinois photo by Andrew Campbell)
Illinois adopts tougher gun laws while courts grow increasingly skeptical.
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Federal housing credit expansion could increase affordable rental units in Illinois: report
Affordable housing advocates say Illinois lawmakers should enact a state low-income housing tax credit to complement more federal funding.
The post Federal housing credit expansion could increase affordable rental units in Illinois: report appeared first on Capitol News Illinois
Following state rep’s encounter, Pritzker signs ‘squatter bill’ into law
Gov. JB Pritzker signs bill cracking down on squatters after people illegally move in next to state representative.
The post Following state rep’s encounter, Pritzker signs ‘squatter bill’ into law appeared first on Capitol News Illinois
Illinois license plate cameras used illegally by out-of-state police, Giannoulias says
Capitol News Illinois
CHICAGO — The state of Illinois is investigating an automatic license plate reader system used in a northwest suburb after a Texas sheriff accessed the system to look for a woman who recently had an abortion.
This and hundreds of other searches, according to Secretary of State Alexi Giannoulias, violated Illinois law.
Law enforcement agencies seeking to access license plate reader data collected in Illinois would first have to attest in writing that they wouldn’t use it to enforce other state’s laws relating to abortion or immigration.
“There is concern that other law enforcement agencies are breaking the law, whether they’re doing it maliciously or unintentionally — that’s almost irrelevant,” Giannoulias said at a Thursday news conference.
Police in Mount Prospect, a village in suburban Cook County, set up a license plate reader system in such a way that allowed other law enforcement agencies to access data without providing written attestations. In addition to the Texas case, Giannoulias’ office said Mount Prospect’s system had been searched 262 times for immigration-related reasons between mid-January and the end of April.
The Texas case came to light after a report from the tech outlet 404 Media found the search impacted more than 83,000 license plate reader cameras in multiple states.
Giannoulias also noted that 46 out-of-state law enforcement agencies conducted searches of Illinois records that violated state law.
In response, Giannoulias’ office — which generally handles policy surrounding license plate readers and data sharing — announced it had instructed Flock Safety, a company that operates license plate readers in Mount Prospect, to shut off access to the system to out-of-state agencies. Giannoulias said he is also working with the Illinois attorney general to investigate further.
The secretary of state’s office said it will also establish an auditing system and additional safeguards.
“Automatic license plate readers are there to prevent violent crime, to prevent carjacking, to find stolen vehicles and to help when there’s a kidnapping, right?” Giannoulias said. “That’s what they are used for. When this data is being used to track people getting abortions or for ICE (Immigration and Customs Enforcement) to use to track down individuals based on immigration policy. That is a very slippery slope.”
Advocates for immigration rights and reproductive rights applauded the state’s move.
“Our statewide policies are only as strong as the counties, cities and municipalities that implement these policies across Illinois,” Illinois Coalition for Immigrant and Refugee Rights Executive Director Lawrence Benito said Thursday. “When we are not on the same page, the misalignment can harm those in Illinois who are merely seeking the dignity and respect not afforded to them elsewhere.”
Capitol News Illinois is a nonprofit, nonpartisan news service that distributes state government coverage to hundreds of news outlets statewide. It is funded primarily by the Illinois Press Foundation and the Robert R. McCormick Foundation.
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