For third time, Illinois lawmakers fail to pass Karina’s Bill aimed at protecting domestic violence victims (2024)

A few months ago, Monica Alvarez traveled from Chicago to Springfield.

She was joined by dozens of advocates with various gun violence prevention groups. Alvarez was there to push for Karina’s Bill. At a rally outside of the Capitol building, she said it was both painful and heartbreaking for her to be there.

“But I stand here today because my cousin Karina and Daniela were murdered on July 3, 2023,” Alvarez said.

Karina Gonzalez and her 15-year-old daughter Daniela were shot and killed in their Little Village home — allegedly by Karina’s husband. The court had ordered her husband to stay away from Karina and her family, citing drug use and threatening behavior. And while his firearm owners ID card was confiscated, his firearms were not.

“And it wasn’t enough, an order of protection was not enough,” Alvarez said. “I urge lawmakers, law enforcement agencies and community leaders to reassess and strengthen our domestic violence laws.”

The lawmakers, however, wrapped up their legislative session last month once again without passing Karina’s bill, or even calling it for a full vote on the Senate floor. The measure would have required judges to order the confiscation of guns from people who have emergency restraining orders against them.

Despite a coalition of over 40 advocacy groups leading the charge for this bill on the grassroots level, and buy-in from both Republican and Democratic lawmakers, the bill failed to pass for the third time in a row, leaving advocates disappointed and forced to once again look forward to the next legislative session.

‘We’re on the same side on this’

The murders took place just a few blocks from Democratic state Sen. Celina Villanueva’s district office in Chicago. She soon after became the chief Senate sponsor of Karina’s bill.

“We’ve seen stories [like this] continuously,” Villaneuva said in an interview with WBEZ. “And with each and every one of those stories, like my heart hurts.”

She said part of the holdup is a case before the U.S. Supreme Court that’s considering whether forbidding someone who is under domestic-violence restraining orders from possessing firearms violates the Second Amendment right to bear arms. Villanueva said they are watching and waiting to see how the court rules.

The other issue, she says, is concerns from law enforcement groups, like the Illinois Association of Chiefs of Police. John Millner is its director of government relations, and he said their main concern is capacity.

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The bill’s requirement that officers only have four days after a protective order is issued to remove the guns, he said, is too burdensome for smaller departments in rural areas. Millner said it’s best practice to have at least four officers execute the search, which may be difficult for smaller departments within a four-day window. And, he said, there’s the question of where smaller precincts will store confiscated weapons.

“Law enforcement understands the exigent circ*mstances, but you can’t just run full-speed ahead, like a bull in a china shop, and just crash into things as you get to your destination,” Millner said. “We have to make sure it’s done safely, not just for the police officers, but for the victims of those crimes, as well as the neighborhood.”

However, Millner said their concerns could easily be addressed, and overall, police chiefs like the legislation and what it aims to accomplish.

“We’re on the same side on this,” Millner said. “We want to do what we can to prevent any more domestic violence situations from occurring. And if we can find some common ground and make this work, let’s do it.”

Advocates say time is of the essence

The problem, Millner said, is that so far he’s been invited to just one roundtable meeting with lawmakers, police groups and bill advocates to hammer out the details.

Villanueva defended the infrequency of meetings as a byproduct of tight schedules and competing priorities at the statehouse.

“I mean, like, my schedule is also all over the place,” Villanueva said.

But advocates for domestic violence survivors and gun control policies say time is of the essence. After the legislative session ended, Yolanda Androzzo, director of One Aim Illinois, released a statement saying her group was “deeply saddened by the Illinois Legislature’s failure to pass Karina’s Bill.”

“The data doesn’t lie — the risk of intimate partner homicide increases … with the presence of a firearm. Yet the Illinois Legislature won’t stand up to protect these survivors,” Androzzo said in the statement.

For third time, Illinois lawmakers fail to pass Karina’s Bill aimed at protecting domestic violence victims (1)

Anthony Vazquez/Sun-Times

Maralea Negron, director of policy and research for the Network, an umbrella group of over 40 domestic violence survivor groups, said deaths from domestic violence shootings in Illinois are on the rise. According to data from nonprofit research group Gun Violence Archive victim deaths increased by 30 percent between 2021 and 2022. Negron said they expect an upward trend in 2024.

“The intersection of firearms and domestic violence is well known to be high lethality and high risk,” Negron said.

Negron stood beside Monica and Manny Alvarez, Karina’s son who survived the shooting, at the rally in Springfield in April. Since Karina and Daniela’s murders, there have been a number of domestic violence-related shootings around the Chicago area, including one in Villa Park.

Negron said her group is willing to do the work to get Karina’s Bill across the finish line during the fall legislative session.

“It has been disappointing working on this to see all of the momentum and all of the coalition of support that we received for ... the bill not to move forward,” Negron said.

Mawa Iqbal is a statehouse reporter for WBEZ. Follow @mawa_iqbal.

For third time, Illinois lawmakers fail to pass Karina’s Bill aimed at protecting domestic violence victims (2024)
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