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Illinois Whistleblower
Reward and Protection Act
Section
175/1. Short title.
175/2. Definitions.
175/3. False claims.
175/4. Civil actions for
false claims.
175/5. False claims
procedure.
175/6. Civil investigative
demands.
175/7. Procedure.
175/8. Funds-Grants.
175/1
Short title
§
1. This Act may be cited as the Whistleblower
Reward and Protection Act.
175/2
Definitions
§
2. Definitions. As used in this Act:
(a)
"State" means the State of Illinois.
(b)
"Guard" means the Illinois National
Guard.
(c)
"Investigation" means any inquiry
conducted by any investigator for the purpose of
ascertaining whether any person is or has been
engaged in any violation of this Act.
(d)
"Investigator" means a person who is
charged by the Department of State Police with
the duty of conducting any investigation under
this Act, or any officer or employee of the State
acting under the direction and supervision of the
Department of State Police, through the Division
of Criminal Investigation or the Division of
Internal Investigation, with an investigation.
(e)
"Documentary material" includes the
original or any copy of any book, record, report,
memorandum, paper, communication, tabulation.
chart, or other document, or data compilations
stored in or accessible through computer or other
information retrieval systems, together with
instructions and all other materials necessary to
use or interpret such data compilations, and any
product of discovery.
(f)
"Custodian" means the custodian, or any
deputy custodian, designated by the Attorney
General under subsection (i)(1) of Section 6.
(g)
"Product of discovery" includes:
(1)
the original or duplicate of any deposition,
interrogatory, document, thing, result of the
inspection of land or other property.
examination, or admission, which is obtained by
any method of discovery in any judicial or
administrative proceeding of an adversarial
nature;
(2)
any digest, analysis, selection, compilation, or
derivation of any item listed in paragraph (1);
and
(3)
any index or other manner of access to any item
listed in paragraph (I)
1.75/3
False claims
§
3. False claims.
(a)
Liability for certain acts. Any person who:
(1)
knowingly presents, or causes to be presented, to
an officer or employee of the State or a member
of the Guard a false or fraudulent claim for
payment or approval;
(2)
knowingly makes, uses, or causes to be made or
used, a false record or statement to get a false
or fraudulent claim paid or approved by the
State:
(3)
conspires to defraud the State by getting a false
or fraudulent claim allowed or paid;
(4)
has possession, custody, or control of property
or money used, or to be used, by the State and,
intending to defraud the State or willfully to
conceal the property. delivers, or causes to be
delivered, less property than the amount for
which the person receives a certificate or
receipt;
(5)
authorized to make or deliver a document
certifying receipt of property used, or to be
used, by the State and, intending to defraud the
State, makes or delivers the receipt without
completely knowing that the information on the
,receipt is true;
(6)
knowingly buys, or receives as a pledge of an
obligation or debt, public property from an
officer or employee of the State, or a member of
the Guard, who lawfully may not sell or pledge
the property; or
(7)
knowingly makes, uses, or causes to be made or
used, a false record or statement to conceal,
avoid or decrease an obligation to pay or
transmit money or property to the State, is
liable to the State for a civil penalty of not
less than $5,000 and not more than $10,000, plus
3 times the amount of damages which the State
sustains because of the act of that person. A
person violating this subsection (a) shall also
be liable to the State for the costs of a civil
action brought to recover any such penalty or
damages.
(b) Knowing and
knowingly defined. As used in this Section, the
terms "knowing" and
"knowingly" mean that a person, with
respect to information:
(1) has actual
knowledge of the information;
(2) acts in
deliberate ignorance of the truth or falsity of
the information: or
(3) acts in
reckless disregard of the truth or falsity of the
information, and no proof of specific intent to
defraud is required.
(c) Claim
defined. As used in this Section,
"claim" includes any request or demand,
whether under a contract or otherwise, for money
or property which is made to a contractor,
grantee, or other recipient if the State provides
any portion of the money or property which is
requested or demanded, or if the State will
reimburse such contractor, grantee, or other
recipient for any portion of the money or
property which is requested or demanded.
(d) Exclusion.
This Section does not apply to claims, records,
or statements made under the Illinois Income Tax
Act.'
Civil actions
for false claims
§ 4. Civil
actions for false claims.
(a)
Responsibilities of the Attorney General and the
Department of State Police. The Department of
State Police shall diligently investigate a civil
violation under Section 3. If the Department of
State Police finds that a person has violated or
is violating Section 3, the Attorney General may
bring a civil action under this Section against
the person.
(b) Actions by
private persons. (1) A person may bring a civil
action for a violation of Section 3 for the
person and for the State. The action shall be
brought in the name of the State. The action may
be dismissed only if the court and the Attorney
General give written consent to the dismissal and
their reasons for consenting.
(2) A copy of
the complaint and written disclosure of
substantially all material evidence and
information the person possesses shall be served
on the State. The complaint shall be filed in
camera, shall remain under seal for at least 60
days, and shall not be served on the defendant
until the court so orders. The State may elect to
intervene and proceed with the action within 60
days after it receives both the complaint and the
material evidence and information.
(3) The State
may, for good cause shown, move the court for
extensions of the time during which the complaint
remains under seal under paragraph (2). Any such
motions may be supported by affidavits or other
submissions in camera. The defendant shall not be
required to respond to any complaint filed under
this Section until 20 days after the complaint is
unsealed and served upon the defendant.
(4) Before the
expiration of the 60-day period or any extensions
obtained under paragraph (3), the State shall:
(A) proceed with
the action, in which case the action shall be
conducted by the State, or
(B) notify the
court that if declines to take over the action,
in which case the person bringing the action
shall have the fight to conduct the action.
(5) When a
person brings an action under this subsection
(b), no person other than the State may intervene
or bring a related action based on the facts
underlying the pending action.
(c) Rights of
the parties to Qui Tam actions. (1) If the State
proceeds with the action, it shall have the
primary responsibility for prosecuting the
action, and shall not be bound by an act of the
person bringing the action. Such person shall
have the fight to continue as a party to the
action, subject to the limitations set forth in
paragraph (2).
(2)(A) The State
may dismiss the action notwithstanding the
objections of the person initiating the action if
the person has been notified by the State of the
filing of the motion and the court has provided
the person with an opportunity for a hearing on
the motion.
(B) The State
may settle the action with the defendant
notwithstanding the objections of the person
initiating the action if the court determines,
after a hearing, that the proposed settlement is
fair, adequate, and reasonable under all the
circumstances. Upon a showing of good cause, such
hearing may be held in camera.
(C) Upon a
showing by the State that unrestricted
participation during the course of the litigation
by the person initiating the action would
interfere with or unduly delay the State's
prosecution of the case, or would be repetitious,
irrelevant, or for purposes of harassment, the
court may, in its discretion, impose limitations
on the person's participation, such as
(i) limiting the
number of witnesses the person may call,
(ii) limiting
the length of the testimony of such witnesses
(iii) limiting
the person's cross-examination of witnesses: or
(iv) otherwise
limiting the participation by the person in the
litigation.
(D) Upon a
showing by the defendant that unrestricted
participation during the course of the litigation
by the person initiating the action would be for
purposes of harassment or would cause the
defendant undue burden or unnecessary expense,
the court may limit the participation by the
person in the litigation.
(3) If the State
elects not to proceed with the action, the person
who initiated the action shall have the right to
conduct the action. If the State so requests, it
shall be served with copies of all pleadings
filed in the action and shall be supplied with
copies of all deposition transcripts (at the
State's expense). When a person proceeds with the
action, the court. without limiting the status
and rights of the person initiating the action,
may nevertheless permit the State to intervene at
a later date upon a showing of good cause.
(4) Whether or
not the State proceeds with the action, upon a
showing by the State that certain actions of
discovery by the person initiating the action
would interfere with the State's investigation or
prosecution of a criminal or civil matter arising
out of the same facts, the court may stay such
discovery for a period of not more than 60 days.
Such a showing shall be conducted in camera. The
court may extend the 60-day period upon a further
showing in camera that the State has pursued the
criminal or civil investigation or proceedings
with reasonable diligence and any proposed
discovery in the civil action will interfere with
the ongoing criminal or civil investigation or
proceedings.
(5)
Notwithstanding subsection (b), the State may
elect to pursue its claim through any alternate
remedy available to the State, including any
administrative proceeding to determine a civil
money penalty. If any such alternate remedy is
pursued in another proceeding, the person
initiating the action shall have the same rights
in such proceeding as such person would have had
if the action had continued under this Section.
Any finding of fact or conclusion of law made in
such other proceeding that has become final shall
be conclusive on all parties to an action under
this Section. For purposes of the preceding
sentence, a finding or conclusion is final if it
has been finally determined on appeal to the
appropriate court, if all time for filing such an
appeal with respect to the finding or conclusion
has expired, or if the finding or conclusion is
not subject to judicial review.
(d) Award to Qui
Tam plaintiff. (1) If the State proceeds with an
action brought by a person under subsection (b),
such person shall, subject to the second sentence
of this paragraph, receive at least 15% but not
more than 25% of the proceeds of the action or
settlement of the claim, depending upon the
extent to which the person substantially
contributed to the prosecution of the action.
Where the action is one which the court finds to
be based primarily on disclosures of specific
information (other than information provided by
the person bringing the action) relating to
allegations or transactions in a criminal, civil,
or administrative hearing, in a legislative,
administrative, or Auditor General's report,
hearing, audit, or investigation, or from the
news media. the court may award such sums as it
considers appropriate, but in no case more than
10% of the proceeds, taking into account the
significance of the information and the role of
the person bringing the action in advancing the
case to litigation. Any payment to a person under
the first or second sentence of this paragraph (
I ) shall be made from the proceeds. Any such
person shall also receive an amount for
reasonable expenses which the court finds to have
been necessarily incurred, plus reasonable
attorneys' fees and costs. The State shall also
receive an amount for reasonable expenses which
the court finds to have been necessarily incurred
by the Attorney General, including reasonable
attorneys' fees and costs, and the amount
received shall be deposited in the Whistleblower
Reward and protection Fund created under this
Act. All such expenses, fees, and costs shall be
awarded against the defendant.
(2) If the State
does not proceed with an action under this
Section, the person bringing the action or
settling the claim shall receive an amount which
the court decides is reasonable for collecting
the civil penalty and damages. The amount shall
be not less than 25% and not more than 30% of the
proceeds of the action or settlement and shall be
paid out of such proceeds. Such person shall also
receive an amount for reasonable expenses which
the court finds to have been necessarily
incurred, plus reasonable attorneys' fees and
costs. All such expenses, fees, and costs shall
be awarded against the defendant.
(3) Whether or
not the State proceeds with the action, if the
court finds that the action was brought by a
person who planned and initiated the violation of
Section 3 upon which the action was brought, then
the court may, to the extent the court considers
appropriate, reduce the share of the proceeds of
the action which the person would otherwise
receive under paragraph (1) or (2) of this
subsection (d), taking into account the role of
that person in advancing the case to litigation
and any relevant circumstances pertaining to the
violation. If the person bringing the action is
convicted of criminal conduct arising from his or
her role in the violation of Section 3, that
person shall be dismissed from the civil action
and shall not receive any share of the proceeds
of the action. Such dismissal shall not prejudice
the right of the State to continue the action.
(4) If the State
does not proceed with the action and the person
bringing the action conducts the action, the
court may award to the defendant its reasonable
attorneys' fees and expenses if the defendant
prevails in the action and the court finds that
the claim of the person bringing the action was
clearly frivolous, clearly vexatious, or brought
primarily for purposes of harassment.
(e) Certain
actions barred. (1) No court shall have
jurisdiction over an action brought by a former
or present member of the Guard under subsection
(b) of this Section against a member of the Guard
arising out of such person's service in the
Guard.
(2)(A) No court
shall have jurisdiction over an action brought
under subsection (b) against a member of the
General Assembly, a member of the judiciary, or
an exempt official if the action is based on
evidence or information known to the State when
the action was brought.
(B) For purposes
of this paragraph (2), "exempt
official" means any of the following
officials in State service: directors of
departments established under the Civil
Administrative Code of Illinois, the Adjutant
General, the Assistant Adjutant General, the
Director of the State Emergency Services and
Disaster Agency, members of the boards and
commissions, and all other positions appointed by
the Governor by and with the consent of the
Senate.
(3) In no event
may a person bring an action under subsection (b)
which is based upon allegations or transactions
which are the subject of a civil suit or an
administrative civil money penalty proceeding in
which the State is already a party.
(4)(A) No court
shall have jurisdiction over an action under this
Section based upon the public disclosure of
allegations or transactions in a criminal, civil,
or administrative hearing, in a legislative,
administrative, or Auditor General's report,
hearing, audit, or investigation, or from the
news media, unless the action is brought by the
Attorney General or the person bringing the
action is an original source of the information.
(B) For purposes
of this paragraph (4), "original
source" means an individual who has direct
and independent knowledge of the information on
which the allegations are based and has
voluntarily provided the information to the State
before filing an action under this Section which
is based on the information.
(f) State not
liable for certain expenses. The State is not
liable for expenses which a person incurs in
bringing an action under this Section.
(g) Any employee
who is discharged, demoted, suspended,
threatened, harassed, or in any other manner
discriminated against in the terms and conditions
of employment by his or her employer because of
lawful acts done by the employee on behalf of the
employee or others in furtherance of an action
under this Section. including investigation for,
initiation of, testimony for, or assistance in an
action filed or to be filed under this Section,
shall be entitled to all relief necessary to make
the employee whole. Such relief shall include
reinstatement with the seniority status such
employee would have had but for the
discrimination, 2 times the amount of back pay,
interest on the back pay, and compensation for
any special damages sustained as a result of the
discrimination, including litigation costs and
reasonable attorneys' fees. An employee may bring
an action in the appropriate circuit court for
the relief provided in this subsection (g).
False claims
procedure
§ 5.
False claims procedure.
(a) A subpoena
requiring the attendance of a witness at a trial
or hearing conducted under Section 4 of this Act
may be served at any place in the State.
(b) A civil
action under Section 4 may not be brought:
(1) more than 6
years after the date on which the violation of
Section 3 is committed, or
(2) more than 3
years after the date when facts material to the
right of action are known or reasonably should
have been known by the official of the State
charged with responsibility to act in the
circumstances, but in no event more than 10 years
after the date on which the violation is
committed.
whichever occurs
last.
(c) In any
action brought under Section 4, the State shall
be required to prove all essential elements of
the cause of action, including damages, by a
preponderance of the evidence.
(d)
Notwithstanding any other provision of law, a
final judgment rendered in favor of the State in
any criminal proceeding charging fraud or false
statements, whether upon a verdict after trial or
upon a plea of guilty, shall estop the defendant
from denying the essential elements of the
offense in any action which involves the same
transaction as in the criminal proceeding and
which is brought under subsection (a) or (b) of
Section 4.
175/6 Civil
investigative demands
§ 6.
Civil investigative demands.
(a) In general.
(1) 4ssuance and service. Whenever the Attorney
General has reason to believe that any person may
be in possession, custody, or control of any
documentary material or information relevant to
an investigation, the Attorney General may,
before commencing a civil proceeding under this
Act, issue in writing and cause to be served upon
such person, a civil investigative demand
requiring such person:
(A) to produce
such documentary material for inspection and
copying,
(B) to answer,
in writing, written interrogatories with respect
to such documentary material or information,
(C) to give oral
testimony concerning such documentary material or
information, or
(D) to furnish
any combination of such material, answers, or
testimony.
The Attorney
General shall delegate the authority to issue
civil investigative demands under this subsection
(a) to the Department of State Police. Whenever a
civil investigative demand is an express demand
for any product of discovery, the Attorney
General, an Assistant Attorney General or the
delegate of the Department of State Police shall
cause to be served, in any manner authorized by
this Section, a copy of such demand upon the
person from whom the discovery was obtained and
shall notify the person to whom such demand is
issued of the date on which such copy was served.
(2) Contents and
deadlines. (A) Each civil investigative demand
issued under paragraph (1) shall state the nature
of the conduct constituting an alleged violation
which is under investigation, and the applicable
provision of law alleged to be violated.
(B) If such
demand is for the production of documentary
material, the demand shall:
(i) describe
each class of documentary material to be produced
with such definiteness and certainty as to permit
such material to be fairly identified;
(ii) prescribe a
return date for each such class which will
provide a reasonable period of time within which
the material so demanded may be assembled and
made available for inspection and copying; and
(iii) identify
the investigator to whom such material shall be
made available.
(C) If such
demand is for answers to written interrogatories,
the demand shall:
(i) set forth
with specificity the written interrogatories to
be answered:
(ii) prescribe
dates at which time answers to written
interrogatories shall be submitted; and
(iii) identify
the investigator to whom such answers shall be
submitted.
(D) If such
demand is for the giving of oral testimony, the
demand shall:
(i) prescribe a
date, time, and place at which oral testimony
shall be commenced
(ii) identify an
investigator who shall conduct the examination
and the custodian to whom the transcript of such
examination shall be submitted;
(iii) specify
that such attendance and testimony are necessary
to the conduct of the investigation;
(iv) notify the
person receiving the demand of the fight to be
accompanied by an attorney and any other
representative; and
(v) describe the
general purpose for which the demand is being
issued and the general nature of the testimony,
including the primary areas of inquiry, which
will be taken pursuant to the demand.
(E) Any civil
investigative demand issued under this Section
which is an express demand for any product of
discovery shall not be returned or returnable
until 20 days after a copy of such demand has
been served upon the person from whom the
discovery was obtained.
(F) The date
prescribed for the commencement of oral testimony
pursuant to a civil investigative demand issued
under this Section shall be a date which is not
less than 7 days after the date on which demand
is received, unless the Attorney General or an
Assistant Attorney General designated by the
Attorney General or the delegate of the
Department of State Police determines that
exceptional circumstances are present which
warrant the commencement of such testimony within
a lesser period of time.
(G) The Attorney
General or the delegate of the Department of
State Police shall not authorize the issuance
under this Section of more than one civil
investigative demand for oral testimony by the
same person unless the person requests otherwise
or unless the Attorney General or the delegate of
the Department of State Police, after
investigation, notifies that person in writing
that an additional demand for oral testimony is
necessary. The Attorney General shall authorize
the performance by the delegate of the Department
of State Police by any function vested in the
Attorney General under this subparagraph (G).
(b) Protected
material or information. (1) In general. A civil
investigative demand issued under subsection (a)
may not require the production of any documentary
material, the submission of any answers to
written interrogatories, or the giving of any
oral testimony if such material, answers. or
testimony would be protected from disclosure
under:
(A) the
standards applicable to subpoenas or subpoenas
duces tecum issued by a court of this State to
aid in a grand jury investigations or
(B) the
standards applicable to discovery requests under
the Code of Civil Procedure, to the extent that
the application of such standards to any such
demand is appropriate and consistent with the
provisions and purposes of this Section.
(2) Effect on
other orders, rules, and laws. Any such
demand which is an express demand for any product
of discovery supersedes any inconsistent order.
rule, or provision of law (other than this
Section) preventing or restraining disclosure of
such product of discovery to any person.
Disclosure of any product of discovery pursuant
to any such express demand does not constitute a
waiver of any right or privilege which the person
make such disclosure may be entitled to invoke to
resist discovery of trial preparation materials.
(c) Service;
jurisdiction. (1) By whom served. Any civil
investigative demand issued under subsection (a)
may be served by an investigator, or by any
person authorized to serve process on individuals
within Illinois.
(2) Service in
foreign countries. Any such demand or any
petition filed under subsection (j) may be served
upon any person who is not found within Illinois
in such manner as the Code of Civil Procedure
prescribes for service of process outside
Illinois. To the extent that the courts of this
State can assert jurisdiction over any such
person consistent with due process, the courts of
this State shall have the same jurisdiction to
take any action respecting compliance with this
Section by any such person that such court would
have if such person were personally within the
jurisdiction of such court.
(d) Service upon
legal entities and natural persons. (1) Legal
entities. Service of any civil investigative
demand issued under subsection (a) or of any
petition filed under subsection (j) may be made
upon a partnership, corporation, association, or
other legal entity by:
(A) delivering
an executed copy of such demand or petition to
any partner, executive officer, managing agent,
general agent, or registered agent of the
partnership, corporation, association or entity;
(B) delivering
an executed copy of such demand or petition to
the principal office or place of business of the
partnership, corporation, association, or entity
or
(C) depositing
an executed copy of such demand or petition in
the United States mails by registered or
certified mail, with a return receipt requested,
addressed to such partnership, corporation,
association, or entity as its principal office or
place of business.
(2) Natural
person. Service of any such demand or petition
may be made upon any natural person by:
(A) delivering
an executed copy of such demand or petition to
the person; or
(B) depositing
an executed copy of such demand or petition in
the United States mails by registered or
certified mail, with a return receipt requested,
addressed to the person at the person's residence
or principal office or place of business.
(e) Proof
service. A verified return by the individual
serving any civil investigative demand issued
under subsection (a) or any petition filed under
subsection (j) setting forth the manner of such
service shall be proof of such service. In the
case of service by registered or certified mail,
such return shall be accompanied by the return
post office receipt of delivery of such demand.
(f) Documentary
material. (1) Sworn certificates. The production
of documentary material in response to a civil
investigative demand served under this Section
shall be made under a sworn certificate, in such
form as the demand designates, by:
(A) in the case
of a natural person, the person to whom the
demand is directed, or
(B) in the case
of a person other than a natural person, a person
having knowledge of the facts and circumstances
relating to such production and authorized to act
on behalf of such person.
The certificate
shall state that all of the documentary material
required by the demand and in the possession,
custody, or control of the person to whom the
demand is directed has been produced and made
available to the investigator identified in the
demand.
(2) Production
of materials. Any person upon whom any civil
investigative demand for the production of
documentary material has been served under this
Section shall make such material available for
inspection and copying to the investigator
identified in such demand at the principal place
of business of such person, or at such other
place as the investigator and the person
thereafter may agree and prescribe in writing, or
as the court may direct under subsection (j)(1).
Such material shall be made so available on the
return date specified in such demand, or on such
later date as the investigator may prescribe in
writing. Such person may, upon written agreement
between the person and the investigator,
substitute copies for originals of all or any
part of such material.
(g)
Interrogatories. Each interrogatory in a civil
investigative demand served under this Section
shall be answered separately and fully in writing
under oath and shall be submitted under a sworn
certificate, in such form as the demand
designates by:
(1) in the case
of a natural person, the person to whom the
demand is directed, or
(2) in the case
of a person other than a natural person, the
person or persons responsible for answering each
interrogatory.
If any
interrogatory is objected to, the reasons for the
objection shall be stated in the certificate
instead of an answer. The certificate shall state
that all information required by the demand and
in the possession, custody, control, or knowledge
of the person to whom the demand is directed has
been submitted. To the extent that any
information is not furnished, the information
shall be identified and reasons set forth with
particularity regarding the reasons why the
information was not fumished.
(h) Oral
examinations. (1) Procedures. The examination of
any person pursuant to a civil investigative
demand for oral testimony served under this
Section shall be taken before an officer
authorized to administer oaths and affirmations
by the laws of the State or of the place where
the examination is held. The officer before whom
the testimony is to be taken shall put the
witness on oath or affirmation and shall,
personally or by someone acting under the
direction of the officer and in the officer's
presence, record the testimony of the witness.
The testimony shall be taken stenographically and
shall be transcribed. When the testimony is fully
transcribed, the officer before whom the
testimony is taken shall promptly transmit a copy
of the transcript of the testimony to the
custodian. This subsection shall not preclude the
taking of testimony by any means authorized by,
and in a manner consistent with, the Code of
Civil Procedure.
(2) Persons
present. The investigator conducting the
examination shall exclude from the place where
the examination is held all persons except the
person giving the testimony, the attorney for and
any other representative of the person giving the
testimony, the attorney for the State, any person
who may be agreed upon by the attorney for the
State and the person giving the testimony, the
officer before whom the testimony is to be taken,
and any stenographer taking such testimony.
(3) Where
testimony taken. The oral testimony of any person
taken pursuant to a civil investigative demand
served under this Section shall be taken in the
county within which such person resides, is
found, or transacts business, or in such other
place as may be agreed upon by the investigator
conducting the examination and such person.
(4) Transcript
of testimony. When the testimony is fully
transcribed, the investigator or the officer
before whom the testimony is taken shall afford
the witness, who may be accompanied by counsel, a
reasonable opportunity to examine and read the
transcript, unless such examination and reading
are waived by the witness. Any changes in form or
substance which the witness desires to make shall
be entered and identified upon the transcript by
the officer or the investigator, with a
statement of the reasons given by the witness for
making such changes. The transcript shall then be
signed by the witness. unless the witness in
writing waives the signaling, is ill. cannot be
found, or refuses to sign. If the transcript is
not signed by the witness within 30 days after
being afforded a reasonable opportunity to
examine it, the officer or investigator shall
sign it and state on the record the fact of the
waiver, illness. absence of the witness, or the
refusal to sign, together with the reasons. if
any, given therefor.
(5)
Certification and delivery to custodian. The
officer before whom the testimony is taken shall
certify on the transcript that the witness was
swom by the officer and that the transcript is a
true record of the testimony given by the
witness. and the officer or investigator shall
promptly deliver the transcript, or send the
transcript by registered or certified mail, to
the custodian.
(6) Furnishing
or inspection of transcript by witness. Upon
payment of reasonable charges therefor, the
investigator shall furnish a copy of the
transcript to the witness only, except that the
Attorney General, an Assistant Attorney General
or employee of the Department of State Police
may, for good cause, limit such witness to
inspection of the official transcript of the
witness' testimony.
Conduct of oral
testimony. (A) Any person compelled to appear for
oral testimony under a civil investigative demand
issued under subsection (a) may be accompanied,
represented, and advised by counsel. Counsel may
advise such person. in confidence, with respect
to any question asked of such person. Such person
or counsel may object on the record to any
question. in whole or in part, and shall briefly
state for the record the reason for the
objection. An objection may be made, received,
and entered upon the record when it is claimed
that such person is entitled to refuse to answer
the question on the grounds of any constitutional
or other legal right or privilege, including the
privilege against self-incrimination. If such
person refuses to answer any question, a petition
may be filed in circuit court under subsection
(j)( I) for an order compelling such person to
answer such question.
(B) If such
person refuses any question on the grounds of the
privilege against self-incrimination, the
testimony of such person may be compelled in
accordance with Article 106 of the Code of
Criminal Procedure of 1963.
(8) Witness fees
and allowances. Any person appearing for oral
testimony under a civil investigative demand
issued under subsection (a) shall be entitled to
the same fees and allowances which are paid to
witnesses in the circuit court.
(i) Custodians
of documents, answers, and transcripts.
(1) Designation.
The Attorney General shall designate the
Department of State Police to serve as custodian
of documentary material, answers to
interrogatories. and transcripts of oral
testimony received under this Section, and shall
designate additional employees of the Department
of State Police as the Attorney General
determines from time to time to be necessary to
serve as deputies to the custodian.
(2)
Responsibility for materials; disclosure. (A) An
investigator who receives any documentary
material, answers to interrogatories, or
transcripts of oral testimony under this Section
shall transmit them to the custodian. The
custodian shall take physical possession of such
material, answers, or transcripts and shall be
responsible for the use made of them and for the
return of documentary material under paragraph
(4).
(B) The
custodian may cause the preparation of such
copies of such documentary material, answers to
interrogatories, or transcripts of oral testimony
as may be required for official use by any
investigator, or other officer or employee of the
Attorney General or employee of the Department of
State Police who is authorized for such use under
regulations which the Attorney General shall
issue. Such material, answers, and transcripts
may be used by any such authorized investigator
or other officer or employee in connection with
the taking of oral testimony under this Section.
(C) Except as
otherwise provided in this subsection (i), no
documentary material, answers to interrogatories,
or transcripts of oral testimony, or copies
thereof, while in the possession of the
custodian, shall be available for examination by
any individual other than an investigator or
other officer or employee of the Attorney General
or employee of the Department of State Police
authorized under subparagraph (B). The
prohibition in the preceding sentence on the
availability of material, answers, or transcripts
shall not apply if consent is given by the person
who produced such material, answers, or
transcripts, or, in the case of any product of
discovery produced pursuant to an express demand
for such material, consent is given by the person
from whom the discovery was obtained. Nothing in
this subparagraph is intended to prevent
disclosure to the General Assembly, including any
committee or subcommittee of the General
Assembly, or to any other State agency for use by
such agency in furtherance of its statutory
responsibilities. Disclosure of information to
any such other agency shall be allowed only upon
application, made by the Attorney General to a
circuit court. showing substantial need for the
use of the information by such agency in
furtherance of its statutory responsibilities.
(D) While in the
possession of the custodian and under such
reasonable terms and conditions as the Attorney
General shall prescribe:
(i) documentary
material and answers to interrogatories shall be
available for examination by the person who
produced such material or answers, or by a
representative for that person authorized by that
person to examine such material and answers; and
(ii) transcripts
of oral testimony shall be available for
examination by the person who produced such
testimony, or by a representative of that person
authorized by that person to examine such
transcripts.
(3) Use of
material, answers, or transcripts in other
proceedings. Whenever any attorney of the office
of the Attorney General, or State's Attorney upon
a referral has been designated to appear before
any court, grand jury, or State agency in any
case or proceeding, the custodian of any
documentary material, answers to interrogatories,
or transcripts of oral testimony received under
this Section may deliver to such attorney such
material. answers, or transcripts for official
use in connection with any such case or
proceeding as such attorney determines to be
required. Upon the completion of any such case or
proceeding, such attorney shall return to the
custodian any such material, answers, or
transcripts so delivered which have not passed
into the control of such court, grand jury, or
agency through introduction into the record of
such case or proceeding.
(4) Conditions
for return of material. If any documentary
material has been produced by any person in the
course of any investigation pursuant to a civil
investigative demand under this Section and:
(A) any case or
proceeding before the court or grand jury
arising out of such investigation, or any
proceeding before any State agency involving such
material, has been completed, or
(B) no case or
proceeding in which such material may be used has
been commenced within a reasonable time after
completion of the examination and analysis of all
documentary material and other information
assembled in the course of such investigation,
the custodian
shall, upon written request of the person who
produced such material, return to such person any
such material (other than copies furnished to the
investigator under subsection (f)(2) or made for
the Attorney General or employee of the
Department of State Police under paragraph
(2)(B)) which has not passed into the control of
any court, grand jury, or agency through
introduction into the record of such case or
proceeding.
(5) Appointment
of successor custodians. In the event of the
death, disability, or separation from service in
the Department of State Police of the custodian
of any documentary material, answers to
interrogatories, or transcripts of oral testimony
produced pursuant to a civil investigative demand
under this Section, or in the event of the
official relief of such custodian from
responsibility for the custody and control of
such material, answers, or transcripts, the
Attorney General shall promptly:
(A) designate
another employee of the Department of State
Police to serve as custodian of such material,
answers, or transcripts, and
(B) transmit in
writing to the person who produced such material,
answers, or testimony notice of the identity and
address of the successor so designated.
Any person who
is designated to be a successor under this
paragraph (5) shall have, with regard to such
material, answers, or transcripts, the same
duties and responsibilities as were imposed by
this Section upon that person's predecessor in
office, except that the successor shall not be
held responsible for any default or dereliction
which occurred before that designation.
(j) Judicial
proceedings. (1) Petition for enforcement.
Whenever any person fails to comply with any
civil investigative demand issued under
subsection (a), or whenever satisfactory copying
or reproduction of any material requested in such
demand cannot be done and such person refuses to
surrender such material, the Attorney General may
file, in the circuit court of any county in which
such person resides, is found, or transacts
business, and serve upon such person a petition
for an order of such court for the enforcement of
the civil investigative demand.
(2) Petition to
modify or set aside demand. (A) Any person who
has received a civil investigative demand issued
under subsection (a) may file, in the circuit
court of any county within which such person
resides, is found, or transacts business, and
serve upon the investigator identified in such
demand a petition for an order of the court to
modify or set aside such demand. In the case of a
petition addressed to an express demand for any
product of discovery, a petition to modify or set
aside such demand may be brought only in the
circuit court of the county in which the
proceeding in which such discovery was obtained
is or was last pending. Any petition under this
subparagraph (A) must be filed:
(i) within 20
days after the date of service of the civil
investigative demand, or at any time before the
return date specified in the demand, whichever
date is earlier, or
(ii) within such
longer period as may be prescribed in writing by
any investigator identified in the demand.
(B) The petition
shall specify each ground upon which the
petitioner relies in seeking relief under
subparagraph (A), and may be based upon any
failure of the demand to comply with the
provisions of this Section or upon any
constitutional or other legal right or privilege
of such person. During the pendency of the
petition in the court, the court may stay, as it
deems proper, the running of the time allowed for
compliance with the demand, in whole or in part,
except that the person filing the petition shall
comply with any portion of the demand not sought
to be modified or set aside.
(3) Petition to
modify or set aside demand for product of
discovery. (A) In the case of any civil
investigative demand issued under subsection (a)
which is an express demand for any product of
discovery, the person from whom such discovery
was obtained may file, in the circuit court of
the county in which the proceeding in which such
discovery was obtained is or was last pending,
and serve upon any investigator identified in the
demand and upon the recipient of the demand, a
petition for an order of such court to modify or
set aside those portions of the demand requiring
production of any such product of discovery. Any
petition under this subparagraph (A) must be
filed:
(i) within 20
days after the date of service of the civil
investigative demand, or at any time before the
return date specified in the demand, whichever
date is earlier, or
(ii) within such
longer period as may be prescribed in writing by
any investigator identified in the demand.
(B) The petition
shall specify each ground upon which the
petitioner relies in seeking relief upon
subparagraph (A), and may be based upon any
failure of the portions of the demand from which
relief is sought to comply with the provisions of
this Section, or upon any constitutional or other
legal right or privilege of the petitioner.
During the pendency of the petition, the court
may stay, as it deems proper, compliance with the
demand and the running of the time allowed from
compliance with the demand.
(4) Petition to
require performance by custodian of duties. At
any time during which any custodian is in custody
or control of any documentary material or answers
to interrogatories produced, or transcripts of
oral testimony given, by any person in compliance
with any civil investigative demand issued under
subsection (a), such person, and in the case of
an express demand for any product of discovery,
the person from whom such discovery was obtained,
may file, in the circuit court of the county
within which the office of such custodian is
situated, and serve upon such custodian, a
petition for an order of such court to require
the performance by the custodian of any duty
imposed upon the custodian by this Section.
(5)
Jurisdiction. Whenever any petition is filed in
any circuit court under this subsection (j), such
court shall have jurisdiction to hear and
determine the matter so presented, and to enter
such orders as may be required to carry out the
provisions of this Section. Any final order so
entered shall be subject to appeal in the same
manner as appeals of other final orders in civil
matters. Any disobedience of any final order
entered under this Section by any court shall be
punished as a contempt of the court.
(k) Disclosure
exemption. Any documentary material, answers to
written interrogatories, or oral testimony
provided under any civil investigative demand
issued under subsection (a) shall be exempt from
disclosure under the Illinois Administrative
Procedure Act.
175/7 Procedure
§ 7.
Procedure. The Code of Civil Procedure shall
apply to all proceedings under this Act, except
when that Code is inconsistent with this Act.
175/8 Funds-Grants
§ 8.
Funds; Grants.
(a) There is
hereby created the Whistleblower Reward and
Protection Fund as a special fund in the State
Treasury. All proceeds of an action or settlement
of a claim brought under this Act shall be
deposited in the Fund.
(b) Monies in
the Fund shall be allocated, subject to
appropriation, as follows: One-sixth of the
monies shall be paid to the Attorney General and
one-sixth of the monies shall be paid to the
Department of State Police for State law
enforcement purposes. The remaining two-thirds of
the monies in the Fund shall be used for payment
of awards to Qui Tam plaintiffs, for attorneys'
fees and expenses, and as otherwise specified in
this Act. The Attorney General shall direct the
State Treasurer to make disbursement of funds as
provided in court orders setting those awards,
fees, and expenses. The State Treasurer shall
transfer any fund balances in excess of those
required for these purposes to the General
Revenue Fund.
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