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South Cook News

Thursday, November 21, 2024

Q1 Recap: 7 parolees from Cook County convicted of public safety violations set for supervised release

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Alyssa Williams, Assistant Director at IDOC | Illinois Department of Corrections oficial website

Alyssa Williams, Assistant Director at IDOC | Illinois Department of Corrections oficial website

There were seven offenders convicted of public safety violations living in Cook County released on parole during the first quarter of 2024, according to Illinois Department of Corrections data obtained by the South Cook News.

The data shows that all of the released offenders among the parolees were men. The median age of the parolees sentenced for public safety violations was 35. The youngest parolee was a 21-year-old man sentenced in 2024, and the oldest was a 52-year-old man sentenced in 2023.

The offender who had been incarcerated the longest was Damon M. Deboer. He was convicted in 2022 when he was 35 years old. He is now 37.

Commonly referred to as parole in Illinois, Mandatory Supervised Release (MSR) is a post-prison supervision period, in which individuals must follow specific rules like check-ins with parole officers; violations can lead to re-incarceration. Unlike parole, MSR is automatically required for all individuals released after serving a prison sentence.

In 2023, Gov. JB Pritzker signed a bill to reform Illinois’ Mandatory Supervised Release program. The law aims to reduce recidivism and reportedly create a more effective and equitable supervision system by incentivizing education, streamlining the review process, and expanding virtual check-ins.

“Our current supervision system too often operates unfairly, with rules that make it simply a revolving door back to jail,” Pritzker said at a bill signing ceremony in Chicago. “In fact, more than 25% of people who are released from prison in Illinois end up back behind bars, not because they’re recidivists, but instead for a noncriminal technical violation.”

A 2018 report from the Illinois Sentencing Policy Advisory Council indicated that 43% of released prisoners in Illinois return to prison within three years, costing taxpayers an estimated $152,000 per recidivism event.

Prisoners convicted of public safety violations paroled in Q1 2024
CountyTotal Number of Parolees% Women% MenMedian age
Cook County70%100%35
Christian County10%100%38
Clinton County10%100%61
DeWitt County10%100%48
Henry County10%100%33
Kankakee County10%100%32
Macon County10%100%29
Marshall County10%100%41
McHenry County10%100%35
Ogle County10%100%29
Peoria County10%100%41
St. Clair County10%100%27

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