Government leaders statewide call for cashless bail reform after CPD
officer killed
[April 30, 2026]
By Sean Reed | The Center Square
(The Center Square) – Critics on both sides of the aisle in Illinois
government are calling for changes to the SAFE-T Act after a man was
charged with killing a Chicago Police Officer and critically wounding
his partner Saturday.
High-ranking state officials, Statehouse Republicans and multiple
Chicago Aldermen have all called for immediate changes to the SAFE-T
Act.
A portion of the law gives judges the discretion over granting people
charged with crimes supervised release through electronic monitoring.
Critics of the law have said it grants release to people with histories
of violent actions and felony crime convictions.
Critics said the SAFE-T Act is what allowed 26-year-old Chicago resident
Alphanso Talley – a seven-time convicted felon – to escape electronic
monitoring and shoot two Chicago police officers inside Swedish
Hospital, killing officer John Bartholomew and critically injuring his
partner.
Talley now faces 20 felony charges in connection to the shooting,
including first-degree murder, attempted murder, aggravated kidnapping
and aggravated battery, according to CPD.
House Minority Leader Tony McCombie, R-Savanna, and Senate Minority
Leader John Curran, R-Lemont, met midday Wednesday to call on their
colleagues to act.

“The question is no longer if reform is needed. It's how many more
tragedies need to happen before action is taken place. With just four
weeks left in session, the time for conversation is over. The time for
action is now,” McCombie said.
Curran said recent incidents have happened because of the SAFE-T Act,
though the nature of the act was meant to allow for offenders to be
released under supervision instead of being left in jail because they
can’t afford to pay bail.
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Illinois Comptroller Susana Mendoza attends an event. Photo: Greg
Bishop / The Center Square

“Any society where killing law enforcement is not taken seriously is
not a functioning, safe, democratic society,” Cornyn said.
Curran introduced Senate Bill 4195 Wednesday on the floor. If passed
into law, the bill would revoke the pre-trial release of a person if
they are found to have committed a felony while on release.
Illinois Comptroller Susana Mendoza told The Center Square the
provision allowing people charged with violent crimes to be released
before trial should have never been included in the SAFE-T Act.
“There's no shame in admitting that you made a mistake. There is in
not correcting the mistake. And in this case, these mistakes have
proven to be very deadly,” Mendoza said.
Mendoza also said she thinks lawmakers can and should pass a fix to
the law soon, if not by the end of the spring legislative session,
then in the fall veto session.
Gov. JB Pritzker, however, shifted blame away from the act as a
whole, saying many cases have been because judges have made improper
determinations.
“In most of the cases where Republicans have complained about the
SAFE-T Act, it's actually been a bad decision by an elected judge in
Illinois or no hearing at all because the prosecutor didn't bring it
to the judge,” Pritzker said. “A judge can make this decision, a
judge should have made the decision to keep that person in jail.”
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