When “Clean Slate” Becomes a Blindfold; New Concerns from Inside Illinois’ Criminal Justice System
By Chief Tom Weitzel (Ret.), Fellow of Law Enforcement at Awake Illinois
June 24th, 2026
Editor’s Note: This column is reposted with the express permission of Tom Weitzel
I previously wrote about the Clean Slate Act published at Awake Illinois. Since then, new information has emerged from prosecutors, circuit clerks, law enforcement professionals, and court personnel working inside Illinois’ criminal justice system. The picture is not encouraging.
The Clean Slate Act, in its current form, is flawed and unworkable for police, courts, court staff, judges, employers, and the public. Illinois has developed a reputation for passing sweeping criminal justice reforms that prioritize political optics over operational reality. Public safety too often takes a backseat to messaging. The Clean Slate Act appears to follow that same pattern.
Illinois State Police will carry much of the implementation load. According to discussions with law enforcement professionals and internal communications, ISP must identify eligible records and transmit them to each of Illinois’ 102 county circuit clerks for sealing.
This is a massive undertaking. It requires combing through decades of records across 102 counties with different record-keeping systems, varying levels of digitization, and inconsistent data quality. It is unclear whether ISP currently has the staffing or technology to complete this task accurately and on time.
At the county level, the challenges are even greater. The Clerk of the Circuit Court of Cook County has long struggled with backlogs. Even the more limited cannabis expungement effort left many convictions visible on NCIC and other databases years after the law changed. If that narrower reform could not be executed cleanly, there is little reason to believe a far broader, near-automatic sealing process across most felony categories will go smoothly.
This is an unfunded mandate placed on circuit clerks. No clear enforcement mechanism exists if they fall behind. The silence from state leadership on these practical questions is not reassuring.
The consequences go well beyond logistics.
Under Clean Slate, prior felony retail theft convictions may no longer be available to enhance future charges. Reduced domestic battery cases — frequently pled down from more serious offenses — could be sealed, removing them as propensity evidence in later prosecutions. Some domestic violence advocacy groups did not oppose the bill, even as they have supported other victims’ rights measures. The long-term effect on victims could be significant.
One of the most troubling implications involves firearm-related charges.
Consider this scenario: A defendant is convicted of felony Unlawful Restraint in 2019 and completes probation in 2021. Under Clean Slate, that conviction becomes eligible for automatic sealing. In 2026, the same individual is arrested while carrying a firearm. If prosecutors cannot readily access the prior felony conviction, charging Unlawful Use of a Weapon by a Felon or Armed Habitual Criminal becomes far more difficult — or impossible. Enhanced accountability disappears not because a judge assessed the risk, but because an administrative process sealed the record.
Extended-term sentencing and other enhancements often depend on accessible prior convictions. When those records are sealed and unavailable to prosecutors, meaningful sentencing options shrink. Outside of homicide, certain shootings, and select sex offenses, the system’s ability to impose appropriate accountability could erode quickly.
This is not reform. It is blindfolding the justice system.
Supporters of Clean Slate argue it gives deserving individuals a second chance. Illinois already had a second-chance process. Individuals could petition to seal or expunge eligible records. An assistant state’s attorney reviewed the request, and a judge made the final determination after verifying waiting periods and offense classifications. There was case-by-case oversight.
Clean Slate largely shifts that gatekeeping function to administrative review inside the Illinois State Police. What happens if a disqualifying offense is missed or a waiting period is miscalculated? Once a record is sealed and relied upon by employers, courts, or law enforcement, correcting the error becomes far more difficult. When sealing decisions move out of open court and individual judicial review, transparency suffers.
I have long supported thoughtful criminal justice reform, including diversion and rehabilitation programs. But reform must be practical, adequately resourced, and grounded in operational reality — not just good intentions.
Illinois has repeatedly passed broad legislation, celebrated the headlines, and left law enforcement, clerks, and courts to manage the resulting disorder. Public safety policy should not be performative.
The Clean Slate Act may have been well-intentioned, but good intentions alone do not produce good law. Without sufficient resources, transparent oversight, and careful attention to unintended consequences, this legislation risks weakening accountability while creating widespread administrative problems.
Illinois does not need symbolic reform. It needs reform that actually works.
I encourage you to save this column. Bookmark it. Send it to others.
The next time you see a headline about a violent offender in Chicago, Cook County, or elsewhere in Illinois who was released and then committed another serious crime, come back and read it again. These outcomes rarely happen in a vacuum. When prior convictions are hidden from view, prosecutors and judges lose critical tools that once helped protect the public.
The Clean Slate Act shields significant portions of criminal history from scrutiny. When the system cannot see the full picture, it cannot make fully informed decisions.
Public safety depends on clarity and accountability — not selective blindness.
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Tom Weitzel is a retired Chief of Police from Riverside, Illinois, concluding a distinguished 37-year career in law enforcement. He now serves as a national advocate for officer safety, responsible media practices, and principled leadership in policing. Weitzel is a Fellow of Law Enforcement at Awake Illinois, contributing his expertise to statewide public‑safety initiatives and policy development. He publishes “The Memo” on Substack and “Chief Weitzel’s Dispatch” for Awake Illinois, both focused on restoring balance in policing narratives and advancing ethical, evidence-based reform. He can be reached at tqweitzel@outlook.com -you can follow him on X at @chiefweitzel, TikTok at tiktok.com/discover/chief-tom-weitzel-ret and Substack at chieftomweitzelret.substack.com -and Awake Illinois at awakeil.com/fellowtomweitzel
Comments 11
Someone once said the road to hell is paved with good intentions. Unfunded mandate hmmm. Where have I heard that before? ISP to be the review body. I guess having trained troopers pushing paper is more important than doing real police work AND keeping our highways safe. For downstate communities troopers assist local agencies with CSI and regular investigative work along with police misconduct. What COULD go wrong? So glad I’m in a red state now. Well done Chief.
Federal law is rife with good intentions gone awry, too. Fortunately, we have a SC that follows the Constitution most of the time and is trying to right the ship of state in some important ways.
Forgiveness and empathy are virtues that when mindlessly doubled down on here become deadly vices.
The virtue selfies politicians take when publishing these schemes matter far more than outcomes.
Clean Slate Act? So an offender who appears before a judge for some criminal act, the judge the assesses the risk, looks at his past record, and does not see that the criminal before him has an extensive criminal past. The defense attorney points out to the judge the defendant has a “clean record” and should be given a break because he has a no record of previous crimes. So he is released to go out and repeat the cycle again and again thereby putting the public at risk of being exposed to this criminal who is the beneficiary of the Clean Slate Act. I prefer to call it the Bloody Slate Act…or better called the BSAct.
Great column Chief, spelling out the obvious : ILLINOIS IS THE MOST CRIME FRIENDLY STATE IN THE COUNTRY. HATE HAS NO HOME HERE BUT CRIME CERTAINLY DOES.
Very well said that Illinois under democratic rule is crime filled.
Nambi
In the tech world we have the acronym GIGO, or Garbage In Garbage Out. Blindfolding the justice system is the equivalent of sending “garbage in”, so it’s no wonder our IL communities suffer from “garbage out” of our judicial system.
Politicians, please be sure to pat yourselves on the back for your great work here and earning your paychecks.
Public Flagging is the one effective solution for these elected officials who are trying to cover up their bottoms by screwing up the system.
-Nambi
As many of my South and West side friends have said. “There is no justice, there’s just us!”
Good work here Chief. Thanks for letting John use it.
All kidding aside, Chief Weitzel is the only person with any sense logically laying out the very serious ramifications of passing another atrocious law designed to hamper law enforcement. Just like the so called ” SafeT Act” , this does the public at large no favors. Another horrible act by Illinois politicians to encourage more people to move out of the state. A few years ago the CEO of McDonald’s had a giant case of buyers remorse for having relocated his companys HQ to crime ridden Chicago. Not only does Illinois chase out it’s citizens, it chases out businesses. Downward spiral is what we’re witnessing. And the degradation of society.
Democrats support things like Clean Slate, Safe T, DEI, Trans, no discipline or standards in the schools, not only unlimited, but illegal immigration, even though less than 25% of their voters endorse any of that.
Clearly not a party of the people. This is how you get Trump. And the next one will be much worse