AP: Prisons shave terms, secretly release inmates

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SPRINGFIELD – Repeat drunken drivers, drug users, and even people convicted of battery and weapons violations are serving less than three weeks’ total time behind bars under a secret change in policy by Gov. Pat Quinn’s prison system, The Associated Press has learned.

Quinn suspended the program Sunday after seeing the AP report.

Records obtained and analyzed by the AP show that since September, more than 850 inmates have been released weeks earlier than they ordinarily would be.

The Corrections Department is saving money by abandoning a policy that requires inmates to serve at least 61 days and awarding them discretionary good-conduct credit immediately upon entering prison.

That means some prisoners have enough good-conduct days to qualify for release almost immediately – before they’ve had a chance to demonstrate any conduct at all, good or bad. The inmates are kept at the department’s prison processing centers and released after as few as 11 days.

So Jorge Bogas spent just 18 days behind bars for aggravated driving under the influence after he hit two cars, hospitalizing one motorist for weeks, while driving the wrong direction on Interstate 57. Bogas sat five days in Cook County Jail, was transferred to the processing center at State­ville Correctional Center in Joliet, and released 13 days later.

James Walker-Bey, sentenced to a year for violating probation for carrying a .25 caliber pistol in Alsip, was confined for just over two weeks – three days in Cook County and 14 at Stateville prison.

And Antoine Garrett, previously convicted of armed robbery and illegal firearms possession by a felon, got a one-year sentence after Chicago police saw him drop a bag of cocaine on the street as they approached, but spent just 21 days locked up.

“That’s outrageous,” said DuPage County State’s Attorney Joseph Birkett, whose office has convicted 22 people who have been released early since September. “Good-conduct credits are intended to be awarded to those people who demonstrate through their behavior that they merit those credits.”

On Sunday, Quinn ordered an exam by his chief of staff and Department of Corrections Director Michael Randle.

“The public’s safety always comes first,” Quinn said in a statement. “A top-to-bottom review of this program will make sure that we never waver from this all-important goal.”

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