Illinois Code § 730 ILCS 5/3-3-14

Procedure for medical release.
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(a) Definitions.
 
 
(1) As used in this Section, "medically 
 
incapacitated" means that a petitioner has any diagnosable medical condition, including dementia and severe, permanent medical or cognitive disability, that prevents the petitioner from completing more than one activity of daily living without assistance or that incapacitates the petitioner to the extent that institutional confinement does not offer additional restrictions, and that the condition is unlikely to improve noticeably in the future.
 
 
(2) As used in this Section, "terminal illness" means 
 
a condition that satisfies all of the following criteria: 
 
 
 
(i) the condition is irreversible and incurable; 
 
 
and
 
 
 
(ii) in accordance with medical standards and a 
 
 
reasonable degree of medical certainty, based on an individual assessment of the petitioner, the condition is likely to cause death to the petitioner within 18 months. 
 
(b) The Prisoner Review Board shall consider an application for compassionate release on behalf of any petitioner who meets any of the following:
 
 
(1) is suffering from a terminal illness; or
 
 
(2) has been diagnosed with a condition that will 
 
result in medical incapacity within the next 6 months; or
 
 
(3) has become medically incapacitated subsequent to 
 
sentencing due to illness or injury. 
 
(c) Initial application. 
 
 
(1) An initial application for medical release may be 
 
filed with the Prisoner Review Board by the petitioner, a prison official, a medical professional who has treated or diagnosed the petitioner, or the petitioner's spouse, parent, guardian, grandparent, aunt or uncle, sibling, child over the age of eighteen years, or attorney. If the initial application is made by someone other than the petitioner, the petitioner, or if the petitioner is medically unable to consent, the guardian or family member designated to represent the petitioner's interests must consent to the application at the time of the institutional hearing.
 
 
(2) Application materials shall be maintained on the 
 
Prisoner Review Board's website and the Department of Corrections' website and maintained in a clearly visible place within the law library and the infirmary of every penal institution and facility operated by the Department of Corrections. 
 
 
(3) The initial application need not be notarized, 
 
can be sent via email or facsimile, and must contain the following information: 
 
 
 
(i) the petitioner's name and Illinois Department 
 
 
of Corrections number;
 
 
 
(ii) the petitioner's diagnosis;
 
 
 
(iii) a statement that the petitioner meets one 
 
 
of the following diagnostic criteria: 
 
 
 
 
(A) the petitioner is suffering from a 
 
 
 
terminal illness;
 
 
 
 
(B) the petitioner has been diagnosed with a 
 
 
 
condition that will result in medical incapacity within the next 6 months; or
 
 
 
 
(C) the petitioner has become medically 
 
 
 
incapacitated subsequent to sentencing due to illness or injury. 
 
 
(3.5) The Prisoner Review Board shall place no 
 
additional restrictions, limitations, or requirements on applications from petitioners. 
 
 
(4) Upon receiving the petitioner's initial 
 
application, the Board shall order the Department of Corrections to have a physician or nurse practitioner evaluate the petitioner and create a written evaluation within ten days of the Board's order. The evaluation shall include but need not be limited to: 
 
 
 
(i) a concise statement of the petitioner medical 
 
 
diagnosis, including prognosis, likelihood of recovery, and primary symptoms, to include incapacitation; and
 
 
 
(ii) a statement confirming or denying that the 
 
 
petitioner meets one of the criteria stated in subsection (b) of this Section. 
 
 
(5) Upon a determination that the petitioner is 
 
eligible for a hearing, the Prisoner Review Board shall:
 
 
 
(i) provide public notice of the petitioner's 
 
 
name, docket number, counsel, and hearing date; and
 
 
 
(ii) provide a copy of the evaluation and any 
 
 
medical records provided by the Department of Corrections to the petitioner or the petitioner's attorney upon scheduling the institutional hearing.
 
(d) Institutional hearing. Hearings are public unless the petitioner requests a non-public hearing. The petitioner has a right to attend the hearing and to speak on the petitioner's own behalf. The petitioner may be represented by counsel and may present witnesses to the Board members. Hearings shall be governed by the Open Parole Hearings Act. Members of the public shall be permitted to freely attend public hearings without restriction. 
 
(e) Voting procedure. Petitions shall be considered by three-member panels, and decisions shall be made by simple majority. Voting shall take place during the public hearing. 
 
(f) Consideration. In considering a petition for release under the statute, the Prisoner Review Board may consider the following factors: 
 
 
 
(i) the petitioner's diagnosis and likelihood of 
 
 
recovery;
 
 
 
(ii) the approximate cost of health care to the 
 
 
State should the petitioner remain in custody;
 
 
 
(iii) the impact that the petitioner's continued 
 
 
incarceration may have on the provision of medical care within the Department;
 
 
 
(iv) the present likelihood of and ability to 
 
 
pose a substantial danger to the physical safety of a specifically identifiable person or persons;
 
 
 
(v) any statements by the victim regarding 
 
 
release; and
 
 
 
(vi) whether the petitioner's condition was 
 
 
explicitly disclosed to the original sentencing judge and taken into account at the time of sentencing. 
 
(f-1) Upon denying an eligible petitioner's application for medical release, the Prisoner Review Board shall publish a decision letter outlining the reason for denial. The decision letter must include an explanation of each statutory factor and the estimated annual cost of the petitioner's continued incarceration, including the petitioner's medical care. 
 
(g) Petitioners granted medical release shall be released on mandatory supervised release for a period of 5 years subject to Section 3-3-8, which shall operate to discharge any remaining term of years imposed upon him or her. However, in no event shall the eligible person serve a period of mandatory supervised release greater than the aggregate of the discharged underlying sentence and the mandatory supervised release period as set forth in Section 5-4.5-20.
 
(h) Within 90 days of the receipt of the initial application, the Prisoner Review Board shall conduct a hearing if a hearing is requested and render a decision granting or denying the petitioner's request for release.
 
(i) Nothing in this statute shall preclude a petitioner from seeking alternative forms of release, including clemency, relief from the sentencing court, post-conviction relief, or any other legal remedy.
 
(j) This act applies retroactively, and shall be applicable to all currently incarcerated people in Illinois.
 
(k) Data report. The Department of Corrections and the Prisoner Review Board shall release a report annually published on their websites that reports the following information about the Medical Release Program:
 
 
(1) The number of applications for medical release 
 
received by the Board in the preceding year, and information about those applications, including: 
 
 
 
(i) demographic data about the petitioner, 
 
 
including race or ethnicity, gender, age, and institution;
 
 
 
(ii) the highest class of offense for which the 
 
 
petitioner is incarcerated;
 
 
 
(iii) the relationship of the petitioner to the 
 
 
person completing the application;
 
 
 
(iv) whether the petitioner had applied for 
 
 
medical release before and been denied, and, if so, when;
 
 
 
(v) whether the petitioner applied as a person 
 
 
who is medically incapacitated or a person who is terminally ill;
 
 
 
(vi) a basic description of the underlying 
 
 
medical condition that led to the application ; and 
 
 
 
(vii) the institution in which the petitioner was 
 
 
confined at the time of the application. 
 
 
(2) The number of medical statements from the 
 
Department of Corrections received by the Board.
 
 
(3) The number of institutional hearings on medical 
 
release applications conducted by the Board including:
 
 
 
(i) whether the petitioner was represented by an 
 
 
attorney; and
 
 
 
(ii) whether the application was considered in a 
 
 
public or non-public hearing.
 
 
(4) The number of people approved for medical 
 
release, and information about them, including: 
 
 
 
(i) demographic data about the individual 
 
 
including race or ethnicity, gender, age, and zip code to which they were released;
 
 
 
(ii) whether the person applied as a person who 
 
 
is medically incapacitated or a person who is terminally ill;
 
 
 
(iii) a basic description of the underlying 
 
 
medical condition that led to the application;
 
 
 
(iv) a basic description of the medical setting 
 
 
the person was released to; 
 
 
 
(v) whether the petitioner was represented by an 
 
 
attorney; and
 
 
 
(vi) whether the application was considered in a 
 
 
public or non-public hearing. 
 
 
(5) The number of people released on the medical 
 
release program.
 
 
(6) The number of people approved for medical release 
 
who experienced more than a one-month delay between release decision and ultimate release, including: 
 
 
 
(i) demographic data about the individuals 
 
 
including race or ethnicity, gender and age;
 
 
 
(ii) the reason for the delay;
 
 
 
(iii) whether the person remains incarcerated; and
 
 
 
(iv) a basic description of the underlying 
 
 
medical condition of the applying person. 
 
 
(7) For those individuals released on mandatory 
 
supervised release due to a granted application for medical release: 
 
 
 
(i) the number of individuals who were serving 
 
 
terms of mandatory supervised release because of medical release applications during the previous year; 
 
 
 
(ii) the number of individuals who had their 
 
 
mandatory supervised release revoked; and
 
 
 
(iii) the number of individuals who died during 
 
 
the previous year. 
 
 
(8) Information on seriously ill individuals 
 
incarcerated at the Department of Corrections, including: 
 
 
 
(i) the number of people currently receiving 
 
 
full-time one-on-one medical care or assistance with activities of daily living within Department of Corrections facilities and whether that care is provided by a medical practitioner or an incarcerated person, along with the institutions at which they are incarcerated; and
 
 
 
(ii) the number of people who spent more than one 
 
 
month in outside hospital care during the previous year and their home institutions. 
 
All the information provided in this report shall be provided in aggregate, and nothing shall be construed to require the public dissemination of any personal medical information. 

incapacitated" means that a petitioner has any diagnosable medical condition, including dementia and severe, permanent medical or cognitive disability, that prevents the petitioner from completing more than one activity of daily living without assistance or that incapacitates the petitioner to the extent that institutional confinement does not offer additional restrictions, and that the condition is unlikely to improve noticeably in the future.
a condition that satisfies all of the following criteria:
and
reasonable degree of medical certainty, based on an individual assessment of the petitioner, the condition is likely to cause death to the petitioner within 18 months.
result in medical incapacity within the next 6 months; or
sentencing due to illness or injury.
filed with the Prisoner Review Board by the petitioner, a prison official, a medical professional who has treated or diagnosed the petitioner, or the petitioner's spouse, parent, guardian, grandparent, aunt or uncle, sibling, child over the age of eighteen years, or attorney. If the initial application is made by someone other than the petitioner, the petitioner, or if the petitioner is medically unable to consent, the guardian or family member designated to represent the petitioner's interests must consent to the application at the time of the institutional hearing.
Prisoner Review Board's website and the Department of Corrections' website and maintained in a clearly visible place within the law library and the infirmary of every penal institution and facility operated by the Department of Corrections.
can be sent via email or facsimile, and must contain the following information:
of Corrections number;
of the following diagnostic criteria:
terminal illness;
condition that will result in medical incapacity within the next 6 months; or
incapacitated subsequent to sentencing due to illness or injury.
additional restrictions, limitations, or requirements on applications from petitioners.
application, the Board shall order the Department of Corrections to have a physician or nurse practitioner evaluate the petitioner and create a written evaluation within ten days of the Board's order. The evaluation shall include but need not be limited to:
diagnosis, including prognosis, likelihood of recovery, and primary symptoms, to include incapacitation; and
petitioner meets one of the criteria stated in subsection (b) of this Section.
eligible for a hearing, the Prisoner Review Board shall:
name, docket number, counsel, and hearing date; and
medical records provided by the Department of Corrections to the petitioner or the petitioner's attorney upon scheduling the institutional hearing.
recovery;
State should the petitioner remain in custody;
incarceration may have on the provision of medical care within the Department;
pose a substantial danger to the physical safety of a specifically identifiable person or persons;
release; and
explicitly disclosed to the original sentencing judge and taken into account at the time of sentencing.
received by the Board in the preceding year, and information about those applications, including:
including race or ethnicity, gender, age, and institution;
petitioner is incarcerated;
person completing the application;
medical release before and been denied, and, if so, when;
who is medically incapacitated or a person who is terminally ill;
medical condition that led to the application ; and
confined at the time of the application.
Department of Corrections received by the Board.
release applications conducted by the Board including:
attorney; and
public or non-public hearing.
release, and information about them, including:
including race or ethnicity, gender, age, and zip code to which they were released;
is medically incapacitated or a person who is terminally ill;
medical condition that led to the application;
the person was released to;
attorney; and
public or non-public hearing.
release program.
who experienced more than a one-month delay between release decision and ultimate release, including:
including race or ethnicity, gender and age;
medical condition of the applying person.
supervised release due to a granted application for medical release:
terms of mandatory supervised release because of medical release applications during the previous year;
mandatory supervised release revoked; and
the previous year.
incarcerated at the Department of Corrections, including:
full-time one-on-one medical care or assistance with activities of daily living within Department of Corrections facilities and whether that care is provided by a medical practitioner or an incarcerated person, along with the institutions at which they are incarcerated; and
month in outside hospital care during the previous year and their home institutions.

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