Senate rejects Prisoner Review Board appointee
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[March 23, 2022]
By BETH HUNDSDORFER
Capitol News Illinois
bhundsdorfer@capitolnewsillinois.com
SPRINGFIELD – The Senate Executive
Appointments Committee moved six appointees to the Illinois Prisoner
Review Board through committee on Tuesday, but the only appointee of
Gov. JB Pritzker that came for a vote before the full Senate was
rejected.
The 15-member Prisoner Review Board decides on the release and
conditions of release for offenders from the Illinois Department of
Corrections. The governor appoints the board, the Executive Appointments
Committee votes on whether to recommend those appointments, and the full
Senate determines whether the members will be approved.
On Tuesday morning, PRB member Jeff Mears was recommended by the Senate
Executive Appointments Committee, but by late Tuesday afternoon he
failed to reach the 30-vote threshold for approval by the full Senate.
In addition to 18 Republicans who voted no, 18 Democrats did not vote.
Sen. Patrick Joyce, D-Essex, joined the GOP and voted no.
Mears is a former Illinois Department of Corrections employee from
southern Illinois. He has voted on more than 40 cases for the PRB while
awaiting Senate action.
Pritzker spokesperson Jordan Abudayyeh in an email blamed Republicans
for the denial Tuesday and touted Mears’ resume.
“Republicans have set out on a mission to dismantle a constitutional
function of government, just like the previous governor,” she said in a
statement. “We remain committed to ensuring that highly qualified
nominees fill these roles, especially because we must fulfill our
constitutional obligations for justice and cannot jeopardize key public
safety functions of the board like revoking parole for those who violate
the terms of their release.”
The statement was referring to the approximately 4,500 parole revocation
hearings held by the PRB each year at locations around the state about
15 to 20 times per month. Three board members must be present at each
hearing to render a decision on whether to terminate an offender’s
parole, otherwise the offender would be released and deemed not in
violation of parole.
Pritzker had sent a letter to Executive Appointments Chair Sen. Laura
Murphy, D-Des Plaines, and Sen. Jason Plummer, R-Edwardsville, on March
15 urging them to act on appointments to address the potential of not
having enough board members for the revocation hearings.
PRB members Ken Tupy, Jared Bohland and LeAnn Miller were also
recommended by the committee, with Tupy and Bohland receiving unanimous
support.
The Senate did not take up those appointees but has until the end of
session on Monday to vote on them before they are automatically approved
due to a provision in the Illinois Constitution that sets a
60-session-day timer for action.
Two other PRB appointees, Oreal James and Eleanor Kaye Wilson, were
passed along for Senate consideration without recommendation from the
committee. These appointments, too, must go before the Senate by end of
session Monday for a vote or they will be automatically approved.
PRB Scrutiny
The PRB appointment process has come under scrutiny by Republican
members of the Senate in the past year. James and Wilson were appointed
on April 2, 2019, but Pritzker pulled their appointments on March 19,
2021. They were reappointed two days later.
The governor can withdraw nominations and reappoint the same appointee
to restart the 60-session-day clock in which their appointments could be
heard by the Senate. This practice is allowed under Senate rules and has
been used by previous governors.
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Plummer, the Edwardsville
Republican, has long raised concerns about the number of PRB members
who were voting on offender releases without being confirmed by the
Senate.
“There are a checks and balances,” he said. “The governor appoints
and we advise and consent. The way the governor wants it to be
handled is he appoints and that's the end of it.”
Plummer said Pritzker’s appointees, “generally
speaking, have been very extreme.”
“And so instead of doing the right thing by appointing more
mainstream people that we would agree with, he just hides them from
the Senate,” he said.
Pritzker, meanwhile, has blamed the Senate for failing to act.
Appointee scrutiny
The strategy of pulling and reappointing was used on Mears, who
Abudayyeh, Pritzker’s spokesperson, said has 20 years of experience
at the Shawnee Correctional Center.
“While his official role is a union painter,
facility wardens and administrative staff have asked Mears to be a
hostage negotiations coordinator and member of the elite
negotiations team and statewide audit review team,” she said. “His
experience in de-escalation and crisis intervention speaks to his
skills in collaboration, communication and thoughtful approach to
complex issues.”
Mears told the committee Tuesday morning that he was on his way to
appear before the committee on May 31, 2021, when he got a call
telling him his appointment was pulled. Bohland told the committee
that he was “dressed and ready to go” on the same day when he was
told that his appointment had been pulled as well.
During the hearing, Plummer stated that the PRB jobs have an annual
salary of roughly $90,000 and that by failing to go before the
committee and the Senate, the members had less job security and less
autonomy.
“I vote with integrity regardless of my personal circumstances,”
Bohland replied.
Some PRB members faced scrutiny for votes they had taken while on
the board.
James, who holds a law degree from DePaul University, came under
questioning for his vote last year to parole Paula Sims, who was
convicted in 1990 of murdering her newborn daughter, Heather. She
also admitted to causing the death of her infant daughter, Loralei,
in 1986. Sims was sentenced to life in prison. Her attorneys had
argued that Sims suffered from post-partum psychosis.
James said that he considered the needs assessment conducted by the
Illinois Department of Corrections, the parole plan, the original
crime and sentence, previous criminal history of the offender and
the institutional adjustment of the offender when considering an
offender for parole.
Sen. Terri Bryant, R-Murphysboro, pointed to the Sims case one of
the more hot-button decisions.
“Their votes speak more about their values than their qualifications
on paper,” Bryant said of the PRB appointees.
Wilson is a longtime educator who was director of DePaul
University’s School for New Learning, as well as director of urban
programs at Chicago City Wide College. She is also godmother to the
children of former President Barack Obama.
Last week, Pritzker withdrew his appointment of PRB member Max Cerda.
Cerda was convicted of a double murder when he was 16 years old. He
was released from prison when he was 35 and began working with
offenders transitioning into life outside of prison.
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