SPRINGFIELD, Ill. — Law enforcement agencies will be better equipped to vet potential officers and make independent, merit-based employment decisions under a new law backed by state Rep. Carol Ammons, D-Urbana, improving police hiring practices following the recent killing of an innocent woman in the Springfield area by an officer with a serious record of misconduct.

“Improving our police hiring standards is absolutely necessary to ensure that those entrusted with the law are the most capable, ethical and well-prepared for the job,” said Ammons. “The tragic killing of Sonya Massey tore apart Central Illinois communities and could have well been prevented had stricter background checks been in place. By prioritizing officers for their skills, judgement and integrity, not connections, our state and local police forces can better reflect the values of fairness and accountability so communities can trust those sworn to protect them.”

The new law delivers major reforms to police hiring practices in response to the murder of Sonya Massey, a Springfield-area resident shot and killed in her home by a Sangamon County Sheriff's deputy with a record of misconduct and criminal actions that should have disqualified him from service had the Sangamon County Sheriff’s Office reviewed his personnel files from other law enforcement agencies.

Working with law enforcement officials and criminal justice reformers, Ammons passed Senate Bill 1953, also known as the Sonya Massey Act. The new law cuts red tape to ensure departments can review a prospective officer's full personnel files from other law enforcement agencies — making performance evaluations, fitness records, and any findings of abuse or criminal wrongdoing known in the hiring process.

Additionally, the law takes additional steps to ensure county sheriffs’ offices adhere to independent, merit-based employment standards. Hiring and promotion decisions for sheriff's departments in large counties will be required to go through a merit commission, and voters in smaller counties will be empowered to implement similar commissions in their jurisdictions.

The bipartisan measure passed with the support of the Illinois Sheriffs Association, the Illinois Association of Chiefs of Police, the American Civil Liberties Union, and the Illinois National Organization of Women. The Massey family and the members of the Springfield-area Sonya Massey Commission were also instrumental in the development of this new law. The measure was signed by Gov. JB Pritzker.

Rep. Carol AmmonsRep. Carol Ammons

(D-Urbana)
103rd District

Visit Rep Carol Ammons website

Springfield Office:
243-E Stratton Office Building
Springfield, IL 62706
(217) 558-1009

District Office:
300 S. Broadway
Suite 154A
Urbana, IL 61820
(217) 531-1660
(217) 666-7521 FAX