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Legislative Action
By JENNIFER HALPERIN "Nearly everyone is talking about crime," said state Sen. Penny Severns (D-51, Decatur) during a recent press conference on prison-related legislation she has filed. Well, if not everyone is, at least those running for public office are. Since this year's campaign season began, political observers have watched liberal Democrats match conservative Republicans in both enthusiasm and legislative proposals for getting dangerous criminals off the streets. And it's not only statewide candidates who have been pushing tough-on-crime bills; those in difficult House and Senate races have their own crime-fighting agendas. While some studies have reported mixed findings on whether violent crimes in general have increased, there are some frightening statistics to which politicians can point. The Illinois Department of Public Health reported not long ago that between 1987 and 1992, the annual number of firearm deaths in the state rose by 394 to a startling 1,559. And Severns, who hopes to be the Democrats' nominee for lieutenant governor, needed to look no further than her own backyard: A record 13 murders were committed in Decatur last year. Most prominent and controversial among the crime-fighting initiatives has been the chorus of calls for a ban on the manufacture, sale and possession of assault weapons. Some type of proposal involving the ban of these guns became almost a prerequisite for the major gubernatorial hopefuls this year.
March 1994/Illinois Issues/25 tions of violence, abuse or harrassment. In addition, the accused in these cases would their Firearm Owner's Identification cards suspended for the duration of the restraining order. • Requiring that parolees report twice a month for the first six months of their parole and once a month for the rest of their parole periods. Current law requires that they report once a month for six months. • Changing the crime for illegal possession of a firearm or ammunition by a minor from a Class A misdemeanor to a Class 4 felony, which is punishable by a prison term of one to three years and/or a fine of up to $10,000. The bill also would change the crime and therefore the penalty (a Class A misdemeanor would become a Class 4 felony) for knowingly selling a firearm to someone who is under 21 and has been convicted of a misdemeanor. • Trying juveniles age 15 or older as adults for any crime committed with a weapon. Juveniles now are tried as adults only in cases of first-degree murder, aggravated sexual assault, armed robbery with a firearm or unlawful use of a weapon in or near a school. Other measures are aimed at reforming juveniles convicted of crimes rather than trying them as adults. These include the establishment of juvenile training programs, which would include a 60-day physical training and discipline program ("boot camps") and then a one-year "community reintegration" program, including such things as community service, job training or work toward a high school diploma. Whether any or all of these proposals have merit as methods of fighting crime, the fact is that many of them are intended to put more criminals in prisons to serve longer sentences. That takes money that just isn't there. Other proposals, such as requiring trigger-lock devices on new guns, likely will take a beating from gun control opponents. Gun control advocates (and those straddling the fence but in fear of losing support from voters) probably will end up selecting their battles carefully and rallying around the assault weapons bans, which have broad bases of Democratic and Republican support. In the end, a heavy platter of crime-fighting proposals could end up stuck in legislative committees — but fodder, nonetheless, for campaign brochures. 26/March 1994/Illinois Issues
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