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SB 2361

A BILL for an Act to amend and reenact sections 11-11-70, 40-05-26, and 47-01-09 of the North Dakota Century Code, relating to ownership of land and development projects by a foreign adversary; and to provide for a legislative management report.

69th Legislative Assembly (2025-26) Introduced by Jose Castaneda and 5 co-sponsors

Strengthens Illinois’ response to child trafficking by expanding police training, tightening penalties for minor trafficking, and expunging records for young victims.

Second reading, failed to pass, yeas 1 nays 44
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Bill Summary · SB 2361

Summary — SB 2361 (2025) — Human Trafficking (as introduced)

Note on discrepancies: The metadata supplied includes a different bill title (“Conditional medical release; revise authority of MDOC”) and a status of “Died In Committee.” The legislative text excerpt and the bill history included with this request, however, describe an Illinois Senate Bill (SB2361, LRB10403861RLC13885b) introduced by Sen. Jason Plummer concerning human trafficking and police training, with legislative action records showing passage and a Governor’s signature on 2025-05-27. This summary focuses on the substantive provisions contained in the bill text provided.

Purpose / Intent

SB2361 seeks to strengthen Illinois law and practice related to human trafficking by (1) expanding law enforcement training to better identify and investigate trafficking (including domestic minor sex trafficking), (2) clarifying statutory treatment and protections for child trafficking victims, and (3) reforming criminal, juvenile, victim-compensation, and sex-offender statutory provisions tied to trafficking.

Key provisions

  • Police training (Illinois Police Training Act)

    • Requires minimum police academy curriculum to include training on investigating domestic minor sex trafficking, trauma‑informed and age‑sensitive interviewing, victim rights, and recognition of trafficking indicators.
    • Adds instruction on interacting with persons with autism/developmental disabilities and considerations for child welfare during arrests of family members.
  • Abused and Neglected Child Reporting Act

    • A child who is a human trafficking victim is to be considered abused regardless of who the perpetrator is (broadening the statutory definition for reporting/protection purposes).
  • Juvenile Court / Records

    • Provides for immediate expungement of juvenile court and law enforcement records for minors who are trafficking victims and were involved in prostitution (to reduce collateral consequences).
  • Criminal Code changes

    • Revises human-trafficking/involuntary‑servitude provisions: purchasing sexual services of a minor is explicitly included as involuntary sexual servitude of a minor, whether purchased from the trafficker or the minor directly.
    • Eliminates certain mistake‑of‑age defenses: it is not a defense that the accused reasonably believed the victim was 18+ for involuntary sexual servitude of a minor; related age‑based defenses for grooming/patronizing minors engaged in prostitution are also removed.
    • Designates victims of involuntary sexual servitude of a minor as crime victims eligible for protections.
  • Criminal procedure

    • Permits motions to vacate delinquency adjudications for human trafficking victims who engaged in prostitution.
  • Sex Offender Registration Act

    • Adds trafficking, involuntary servitude, and related offenses to the list of registrable offenses.
  • Crime Victims Compensation Act

    • Specifies that a trafficking victim under age 18 is not subject to the Act’s filing and eligibility requirements (intended to ease access to compensation for minor trafficking victims).

Who is affected

  • Law enforcement agencies and police training schools (new curriculum requirements).
  • Minors who are victims of human trafficking — enhanced protections, potential record expungement, access to victim services/compensation.
  • Persons who purchase sexual services from minors — subject to stricter criminal liability (no mistake‑of‑age defense).
  • Courts and juvenile justice system — new vacatur/expungement mechanisms.
  • Sex offender registry administrators — expanded registerable offenses.

Procedural / timeline notes

  • Bill text identifies introduction by Sen. Jason Plummer (LRB draft dated Feb. 7, 2025).
  • Provided legislative history shows extensive legislative action (committee reports, amendments, House/Senate passage) and a Governor’s signature dated 2025-05-27, with a remark noting an effective date (not specified in the excerpt).
  • However, the header metadata supplied with the request lists a different title and a status of “Died In Committee.” Users should verify the correct bill number/title and final status in the official Illinois General Assembly or legislative records before relying on enactment or effective-date details.

If you want, I can prepare a short one-page cheat sheet or compare this bill to its companion HB 5150.

Compiled from official sources — confirm details with the bill’s official record.

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