Illinois data shows inmates with violent records from shuttered prison
sent to medium-security sites
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[February 13, 2025]
By JOHN O'CONNOR
SPRINGFIELD, Ill. (AP) — Among the approximately 400 inmates transferred
when Illinois' decrepit Stateville prison closed over the summer, 278
were convicted of murder and 100 more are serving time for other violent
offenses.
Yet, nearly four in five of the offenders formerly housed at the
suburban Chicago lockup were not shipped to top-level maximum-security
prisons, where the toughest criminals, troublemakers and escape risks
are housed. Instead, they went to mid-level medium-security facilities,
according to an Associated Press analysis of Illinois Department of
Corrections data.
Prison employees believe housing for the transferred inmates was based
on which facilities had bed space and sufficient personnel who are
adequately trained in a critically understaffed system.
All transfers properly placed, prison agency says
Corrections spokesperson Naomi Puzzello said all of the transfers from
Stateville are appropriately housed and that none was reclassified to a
lower security level to match that of the receiving prison. She
acknowledged scores of maximum-security beds are vacant but said
corrections' understaffing played no role in the transfers.
However, the AP obtained minutes from a meeting at a separate facility
nearly a year before Stateville's shutdown in which administrators
discouraged staff from bumping troublemakers up to a higher risk level
because “maximum security beds are in short supply.”
And the AP found that in more than half of the relocations, ex-Stateville
inmates were transferred without regard to a corrections guideline that
those serving sentences of 30 years or more be housed in max prisons.
Opened in 1925, Stateville was targeted for closure in the spring when
Gov. JB Pritzker set aside $900 million to replace it and Logan
Correctional Center, the deteriorating women’s facility in central
Illinois. A federal judge, accelerating the plan by declaring Stateville
uninhabitable and inaccessible, ordered it shuttered by Sept. 30.
Security staff shortages a national problem
Prison staff shortages are a problem nationally. Wisconsin has seen a
spate of inmate deaths while it struggles with vacant posts. “Grossly
inadequate” staffing was among problems listed last fall in a searing
Justice Department critique of violence, drugs and sexual abuse in
Georgia prisons.
Data compiled by the nonprofit Safer Prisons, Safer Communities shows
that the number of state-employed corrections officers dropped from
237,000 in 2012 to 182,000 in 2023.
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Simply put, it's a tough job, said Wanda Bertram of the Prison Policy
Initiative, a nonprofit, nonpartisan research and advocacy group that
espouses decarceration.
“You’re going to witness violence, you might witness serious mental
illness," Bertram said. “You’re going to be around a lot of drug use and
these things have a measurable impact on corrections workers.”
400 job openings, 1,750 open max beds
The Illinois Department of Corrections is 396 frontline security
officers short of what was budgeted, according to October department
staffing numbers. Total current officers are more than 2,800 shy of the
authorized headcount, or the number needed to operate without
substantial overtime.
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Under the Illinois public records law, AP obtained a list of 406
inmates housed at Stateville as of August 2024 and matched each with
the prison to which they’d been transferred, noting its security
level. Corrections denied a request for the accompanying
pre-transfer security levels of each inmate.
Statewide, there are 1,750 currently unoccupied beds in max prisons,
Puzzello said. However, the majority are in cells designed for two
inmates and most prisoners are in single-occupancy cells, so short
staffing isn't to blame, she maintained. The agency continues to
vigorously recruit security cadets.
Improperly placed inmates pose a risk
Employees are unconvinced and believe some inmates who qualify for
max security have been diverted to less secure places, posing a risk
to inmates as well as staff.
Although not part of the latest transfers, an offender moved to
Sheridan Correctional Center in north-central Illinois from
Stateville in November 2023 viciously attacked a prison educator,
who required facial reconstruction surgery, according to the
employees' union, the American Federation of State, County and
Municipal Employees Council 31.
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There have been at least two suspected homicides of inmates since
mid-2024, but corrections denied the AP's public records request for
information on them. The news agency is appealing that decision.
‘Maximum security beds are in short supply’
High-security bed space appears to have been an issue months before
Stateville's shutdown. In minutes obtained by the AP from a December
2023 management meeting at Dixon Correctional Center in northern
Illinois, administrators advised staff to “use good judgment” before
upgrading a troublemaker's risk level to maximum, necessitating a
transfer.
“Maximum security beds throughout the state are in short supply,"
the minutes say. "If we try to transfer all the max security
individuals, they will more than likely just end up at another
medium security facility.”
Puzzello reiterated that none of the Stateville transfers had
security downgrades. She said transfers are based not only on
criminal background but on programming needs, medical and mental
health treatment and staffing ratios at the receiving facility.
“This ensures each individual’s classification is appropriate and
tailored to their specific risk factors, behaviors and needs,
supporting a safe and secure correctional environment," Puzzello
said.
However, a general corrections guideline is that any offender
serving a sentence of 30 or more years be housed in a
maximum-security cell. Those with 10 to 30 years go to medium,
according to the guideline.
Of ex-Stateville inmates, 261 — or 64% — locked up for 30 or more
years are now sitting in medium-security prisons, according to the
AP review.
AFSCME spokesperson Anders Lindall said prison counselors who
evaluated each inmate for an appropriate transfer location believed
management had already decided where each would go. Puzzello denied
that happened.
Lindall said the union received reports of “ongoing instances of
recommendations made at the facility level -- by employees whose job
it is to evaluate, classify and place the offenders who they know
best — being overruled by departmental management.”
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