STATE OF ILLINOIS
FOURTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT
FOURTH AMENDED ADMINISTRATIVE ORDER NO. 2020-4
Out of an abundance of caution and in response to the recent outbreak of COVID-19, the Fourth Judicial Circuit is amending its procedures in an attempt to reduce the possibility of spreading the disease.
The following procedures will be in effect until at least May 15, 2020:
The following cases will be continued to a different date to be determined by the court:
- All Traffic cases, including Driving Under the Influence;
- All Criminal Misdemeanor cases;
- All Ordinance cases;
- All Small Claims cases;
- All Family court cases
- All Child Support cases;
- All Pay or Appears and compliance hearings;
- All Marriages.
- All Evictions will cease until the expiration of this Order.
The following cases will be held as usual:
- All In-Custody cases, including bond settings;
- All Criminal Felony cases with time constraints;
- All Juvenile Detention and Shelter Care hearings;
- All hearings involving Emergency and Plenary Orders of Protection;
- Any other emergency-type hearings at the discretion of the Resident Circuit Judge of each county.
- All of the above hearings may be handled using remote video conferencing, if possible, and in compliance with Administrative Order 2020-11 which was entered on April 27, 2020. All in-custody hearings shall be conducted by remote video conferencing.
The Probation Departments, State’s Attorney offices and Public Defender offices will continue to meet the needs of their clients. In-person contacts will be reduced as determined by the Department Heads and the Resident Circuit Judge of each county in the Fourth Judicial Circuit.
The Resident Circuit Judges of each county in the Fourth Circuit are afforded discretion to handle issues not covered by this Order as he or she deems appropriate.
The Fourth Circuit will continue to provide a court reporter for any hearings that will occur per this Order.
An Order of the Illinois Supreme Court was entered on March 20, 2020, allowing the Chief Judge of each circuit to continue all trials, including in-custody trials, for the next 60 days and until further order of the Illinois Supreme Court without the continuance being attributable to the State or the Defendant for purposes of Section 103-5 of the Code of Criminal Procedure of 1963 (725 ILCS 5/103-5);
A subsequent Order of the Illinois Supreme Court was entered on April 3, 2020, allowing the Chief Judge of each circuit to continue all trials, including in-custody trials, until further order of the Illinois Supreme Court;
Therefore: all criminal jury trials in the Fourth Judicial Circuit are continued until June 15, 2020 or until further Order of the Illinois Supreme Court and the Fourth Judicial Circuit without this delay being attributed to the State or the Defendant.
Additionally, all civil jury trials currently scheduled in 2020 shall be vacated and are to be re-set to a date after January 1, 2021.
The Circuit Clerk will provide notice to all litigants of the dates their cases will be continued to.
No Persons shall be allowed access to the courthouses in the Fourth Judicial Circuit if:
a.) You have flu-like symptoms including fever, cough or shortness of breath;
b.) Been diagnosed with COVID 19 (or someone close to you has):
c.) Been directed to quarantine, isolate or self-monitor at home by any medical provider;
d.) Traveled within the last 21 days, to any country designated by the CDC as a high-risk location for COVID-19: or
e.) Had close contact with anyone who has traveled to any of these high risk locations.
Entered: April 27, 2020
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Kimberly G. Koester, Chief Judge
Fourth Judicial Circuit
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STATE OF ILLINOIS
FOURTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT
ADMINISTRATIVE ORDER NO. 2020-11
Pursuant to action by the circuit judges, the following procedures regarding remote video conferencing hearings will be in effect until further order of the court. See attached rule and procedures.
Entered: April 27, 2020
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Kimberly G. Koester, Chief Judge
Fourth Judicial Circuit
Rule 10-8, new
10-8 Remote Appearances
- Authorization: To increase the efficiencies of the court and reduce costs to participants, and to the full extent authorized by Supreme Court Rules 185 and 241, by Supreme Court Rule 21(b), by other Orders entered by the Supreme Court from time to time, and by the Court’s inherent authority, remote appearances shall be permitted as set forth herein or by separate order.
- Vendor: All remote appearances shall be initiated through the designated remote appearance vendor of the Fourth Circuit. The current designated remote appearance vendor is Zoom or as otherwise designated by the Chief Judge from time to time by Administrative Order. Status hearings and other proceedings may be conducted by telephone only, without use of the designated vendor, on such terms as designated by the presiding judge. Appearances by county jail inmates may be made using other platforms or products adopted by each county of this Circuit for use between the courtroom and jail.
- Scheduling: Remote appearances may be requested by either party or scheduled by the court. Upon a finding of good cause, or as otherwise authorized by Supreme Court Rule, all proceedings in a case shall be conduced by remote hearing. If scheduled by the court and without prior consent or request of either party, each party shall have until the start of the hearing to object to its being conducted remotely. If then proceeding without objection, it shall be assumed that each party consents to, requests, and agrees that good cause exists for conducting any hearing or trial remotely.
- Initiation of Remote Appearance: Except for status hearings conducted by phone only, and except as otherwise designated by the Court, remote appearances shall be initiated by the Court through the designated vendor at such times as may be designated by the Court, appropriately noticed for hearing by a party upon coordination with the Circuit Clerk, or otherwise noticed or assigned by the Circuit Clerk.
- Responsibilities: For any remote hearing, it shall be the responsibility of each party, and any attorney for a party, to ensure access to the necessary technology for a remote appearance and to timely appear for the remote hearing through the noticed platform or product. It shall also be the responsibility of each party to ensure that any witness for that party also has access to the necessary technology and will timely appear for the remote hearing through the noticed platform or product. If any party does not have access to the necessary technology or has a witness who will not have the necessary technology, that party shall contact the Circuit Clerk at least 24 hours in advance of the scheduled remote hearing with a request to have the hearing rescheduled for an in person appearance at the appropriate physical courtroom. Requests for a continuance to another date or for an in-person appearance at the appropriate physical courtroom shall be made by a timely filed and properly noticed motion to continue.
- Rules and Procedures: The following rules and procedures shall apply to all remote hearings:
- Except as otherwise provided in this Rule, all proceedings conducted by way of remote hearing shall be conducted to the same standards as hearings in a physical courtroom and in accordance with the Illinois Rules of Civil Procedure or the Illinois Rules of Criminal Procedure, as applicable, Illinois Supreme Court Rules, local Rules of Practice of the Circuit Court for the Fourth Judicial Circuit, and all other applicable rules or laws
- Attorneys, parties and witnesses shall sign in to the remote hearing using both their first and their last names, with attorneys adding “Attorney” in front of their first name (e.g., an attorney named John Doe would use “Attorney John” for a first name and “Doe for a last name).
- The precise method in which a remote hearing is conducted remains within the discretion of the presiding judge or the judge specially assigned to the case, within the bounds of applicable rules, laws and practice procedures.
- Remote hearings require proper planning and preparation. All proposed exhibits, proposed orders, fully signed agreed orders, agreements or stipulations, and all other documents that any party intends to present to the court for review or consideration shall be submitted at least 48 hours prior to the scheduled remote hearing through the county efiling system or to a designated Dropbox account, as designated by the Court or the Circuit Clerk, as follows:
- All submissions shall be submitted in PDF format;
- The subject line for a submission email shall include the case number and the last name of at least one party;
- Each proposed exhibit shall be submitted as a separate file with a file name that reflects the party offering it and the exhibit number (e.g., PlaintiffExhibit1, PetitionerExhibit2, DefendantExhibit3, RespondentExhibit4, etc.);
- Each proposed order, fully signed agreed order, agreement, stipulation or other document shall be submitted as a separate file with a file name that reflects the party offering it and the nature of the document (e.g., Plaintiff proposed order, Petitioner agreed order, Defendant stipulation, Respondent cases in support, etc.);
- An index of exhibits, if any, shall be included that states the number of pages for each exhibit; and
- For any exhibit or other document greater than four pages long, page numbers must be inserted electronically within the PDF (not handwritten).
- Notwithstanding the provisions of this rule, the presiding judge or the judge specifically assigned to a case may, in that judge’s discretion, waive the requirements for submitting any document in advance.
- Once an exhibit is admitted into evidence during the hearing, the Circuit Clerk shall upload the exhibit into the official court record through the designated case management program for the Fourth Circuit, currently PCJIMS. The Circuit Clerk shall also upload into the official court record through the designated case management program for the Fourth Circuit any orders, agreements or stipulations or other document as directed by the presiding judge or the judge specifically assigned to the case during the remote hearing. Upon conclusion of the hearing, the Circuit Clerk shall not be obligated to maintain any proposed exhibits, proposed orders, fully signed agreed orders, agreements or stipulations or other documents submitted by a party to the designated email address that were not made a part of the official court record and may delete them at the Circuit Clerk’s convenience.
- Any defendant in criminal proceedings who appears for a remote hearing while in the custody of jail or prison personnel shall appear alone in a secure room with doors closed in such a manner as will enable confidential communications between the defendant and his attorney as may be requested and allowed before, during and after that defendant’s proceedings.
- Witnesses called to testify at a remote hearing shall be sworn or affirmed by the judge prior to the commencement of their testimony. Each witness shall, during that witnesses sworn testimony, be alone in a secure room with doors closed. The judge should make a record as to these conditions.
- All persons attending a remote hearing, including attorneys, parties, witnesses, members of the general public, and media, shall wear appropriate attire and present themselves in compliance with court rules as they would if appearing in a physical courtroom.
- All attorneys, parties, witnesses and other direct participants in a remote hearing shall ensure that there will be no interruptions or distractions for the duration of their appearance at the remote hearing.
- The court reporter is the only person authorized to record the remote hearing by electronic means, stenography or other means. Any recording of the remote hearing by an attorney, party, witness, member of the general public, media or any other person without the permission of the court is strictly prohibited.
- Attorneys shall be permitted to communication directly with their client using any private chat feature available through the designated remote appearance vendor. Any other use of the chat feature, private or group, during a remote hearing is strictly prohibited. Requests for a private conversation through the use of breakout room or similar feature may be granted in the discretion of the presiding judge or the judge specifically assigned to hear a case.
- All attorneys, parties and witnesses attending a remote hearing should ensure that they have a good connection sufficient to avoid a breakdown in the connection during the remote hearing. A poor video connection for an attorney or party alone is not grounds to continue a remote hearing.
- The presiding judge or the judge specifically assigned to a case shall retain the right at all times to remove any person from the remote hearing for the same reasons that a person would be removed from a physical courtroom
- The presiding judge or the judge specifically assigned to a case shall retain the right at all times to continue a remote hearing to a different time or place, including a physical courtroom, for good cause, including but not limited to an unmanageable number of participants in the hearing, poor connections or other conditions that interfere with the ability of the court to conduct the remote hearing, or any other condition that unduly interferes with the rights of a party to a fair hearing.
- American courts are generally open to the public and it remains highly desirable that the operations of the courts are as transparent as possible. Within this context, the courts and the parties must consider how the media and the general public can have access to the remote hearing. The daily court schedule shall reflect that the hearing is remote. Members of the media or the general public who desire to observe a remote hearing should contact the Circuit Clerk for directions on how to attend. Observers are prohibited from speaking to witnesses or potential witnesses concerning any testimony or evidence until after the evidence has closed.
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