[8] The General Assembly also passed the Firearm Concealed Carry Act (FCCA), a change to Illinois gun law that made Illinois the last state in the country to enact concealed carry.
[9] Passed over the governor's veto, the FCCA took effect "mere hours before the seventh circuit's deadline" in Moore v.
[9] Late in the legislative session, the General Assembly passed a bill that changes the original Illinois wiretapping law adding that in order to commit a criminal offense, a person must be recording "in a surreptitious manner".
[10] On December 30, 2014, Governor Quinn signed the bill into law as Public Act 098-1142.
[11] The bill's sponsors, Elaine Nekritz and Kwame Raoul, claimed the law upholds the rights of citizens to record in public.