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Ex-Ill. governor returns to family after prison

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Family members of former Gov. George Ryan watch as Ryan's attorney, former Gov. Jim Thompson, talks to the media Wednesday outside the home in Kankakee, where the 78-year-old Ryan will be under home confinement following his release from prison. (AP photo)

CHICAGO – Former Gov. George Ryan was released from prison before dawn Wednesday, stopping only briefly at a halfway house before he was allowed to travel home to serve the rest of his sentence for corruption.

By midday, the 78-year-old was sitting in the living room of his spacious home in a leafy northern Illinois neighborhood in Kankakee, beaming and surrounded by his children and grandchildren, said Ryan's attorney and also a former governor, Jim Thompson.

"If you could see his and his grandkids' smiling faces," said Thompson, speaking by phone from Ryan's house. "He is surrounded by happy faces."

Amid an already emotion-packed day for Ryan, a grandchild handed him an urn shortly after his arrival at home that held the ashes of his wife, Lura Lynn, who died in 2011, Thompson said. He and his wife had raised their children in the same house.

Ryan's discharge to home confinement just hours after arriving at the halfway house seemed to surprise even Thompson, who insisted Ryan got no special treatment. He said officials simply determined he didn't need the services halfway homes provide such as assistance in writing checks and interviewing for jobs.

"The bureau of prisons is tough," Thompson said. "They don't play favorites." He noted that prison officials refused to bend the rules, for instance, when Ryan asked to attend his wife's funeral; the request was denied.

Ryan, a Republican, served five-plus years behind bars for multiple corruption convictions, walking out of his federal prison in Terre Haute, Ind. at around 1 a.m. Wednesday – his son driving him the 200 miles north to Chicago.

His first stop after getting to the Chicago area was at Thompson's house, where the two had coffee and Ryan changed from sweat pants into a business suit and put on the first tie he'd worn in years, Thompson said.

Later, looking relaxed and thinner than before prison, he walked past throngs of reporters into a Chicago halfway house just before 7 a.m. on Wednesday. Ryan smiled faintly but didn't speak to reporters.

Ryan was mostly quiet during the long drive from Indiana to Chicago, making a detour to Michigan Avenue to take in the Christmas lights still up along the city's iconic shopping street, Thompson said.

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