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Executive Report Illinois' newest amendment: no bail for serious offenses ILLINOIS' NEWEST amendment to the state Constitution gives judges the power to deny pretrial bail to persons accused of crimes for which the sentence is life imprisonment. The amendment, approved November 2 and effective immediately, adds a line to Section 9 of Article 1, which deals with bail. With the change, the section says, "All persons shall be bailable by sufficient sureties, except for capital offenses and offenses for which a sentence of life imprisonment may be imposed as a consequence of conviction. . . ." Seen as a way to reduce the number of violent crimes committed by persons released on bail, the amendment was approved by an overwhelming 85 percent (1,389,796 votes) of those who voted on it in November. Only the second amendment to the 1970 Constitution, it easily met the 60 percent constitutional requirement for passage. Not even the popular cutback amendment, passed in 1980 by a 68.7 percent margin, came close. Sponsored in the Senate by Philip Rock (D-8, Oak Park), the amendment was the product of a two-year study by the Illinois Bar Association. It easily passed the House and Senate last spring. Only one representative voted against it; no senators did. The amendment expands judges' power to deny bail, which was previously limited to cases involving the death penalty. The rationale for denying bail is that persons facing life in prison, or the death penalty, have a higher probability of not showing up for the trial. A few groups, including the Illinois chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union and the Chicago Bar Association, oppose the amendment. They say that denying bail on the supposition that a person might commit another crime erodes the presumption of being innocent until proven guilty. There is also some confusion about the wording of the amendment. Proponents say judges may deny bail; opponents say they must deny bail. Only time will tell if the new amendment will provide additional protection to citizens while still upholding the rights of the accused, as its backers say; or if it is as unnecessary measure which will be ineffective in curbing crime, as its opponents suggest. Nora Newman Jurgem IHC grants go to projects around the state GRANTS from the Illinois Humanities Council were awarded for 14 projects throughout the state, which include $15,225 to support a summer exhibit at Chicago's Adler Planetarium: "Star Gods of the Ancient Americans," assembled and curated by the Museum of the American Indian, New York City, surveys astronomies and cosmologies of five Native American cultures. April 1983 | Illinois Issues | 36 Awards totaling $130,000 were announced in February by the council, which is affiliated with the National Endowment for the Humanities. Other programs awarded grants include:
Marie Conner April 1983 | Illinois Issues | 37 |
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