Rep. Patrick Windhorst (R-Metropolis) introduced legislation to repeal SAFE-T Act | repwindhorst.com
Rep. Patrick Windhorst (R-Metropolis) introduced legislation to repeal SAFE-T Act | repwindhorst.com
State Rep. Patrick Windhorst (R-Harrisburg) says the state's rising crime rate proves the SAFE-T Act is wrong for Illinois.
“We’re now a year out from the passage of the excessively flawed SAFE-T Act and crime is up, our friends and neighbors are less safe and our law enforcement officers’ job is harder than it has ever been,” Windhorst said at a Jan. 20 news conference. “Ending cash bail for violent offenders, allowing detained subjects to make unmonitored phone calls, prohibiting arrest for certain criminal offenses and allowing unlimited anonymous complaints against police officers is the wrong path for criminal justice and public safety.”
Critics of the measure have pointed out since its passage a record number of officers have resigned, with more than half of the state’s 102 counties now having a vacancy in the sheriff's office.
Windhorst is joining other Republican lawmakers in pushing House Resolution 598, a measure calling for the repeal of SAFE-T.
“Before the passage of the SAFE-T Act, we warned them what would happen and it has,” he said. “Crime is rising, police officers are being shot and killed, murders are up across the state. Innocent victims are in even more dangerous positions than they were a year ago. Police departments, large and small, are seeing early retirements and struggling to recruit officers.”
Windhorst urges Democratic lawmakers to join him in the repeal effort.
“I welcome any House Democrat who voted for the original law and now recognizes the error they made to join us,” he said. “Let's make Illinois a safer place to live, work and raise a family once again. Sign on as a sponsor to repeal the SAFE-T Act.”
State Rep. Dan Caulkins (R-Decatur) is pushing a SAFE-T Act amendment bill that seeks to increase the penalties for criminals who use a gun in an aggravated carjacking. That bill will also require a district attorney and a judge to submit an explanation if they choose to allow a suspect to plead a gun case down to a lesser charge.
“If someone gets arrested, a felon in possession of a gun, or illegal discharge of a gun, or using the gun in commission of a crime, what we’re saying in this bill ... the public has a right to know why,” Caulkins said. “If they plead that out, and say we’re just getting you for aggravated battery and drop the gun charges, the public ought to know why that happened.”