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Dwight Correctional Center

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stuffed animals, toys, certain knickknacks, cosmetics, and jewelry. He reduced restrictions on the dress code and the excessiveness of the former administration's lesbianism-prevention program, stating that it got in the way of casual friendships. Abuse of privileges would be dealt with, he said, on a case-by-case basis. Buchanan stated that there was no need to punish all inmates for the infractions of a few. Infractions would be addressed by denying the inmate recreation time, or in serious cases, isolating the inmate for no more than 15 days. There would be no corporal punishment. He stated that inmates should be given the right to medical treatment, counseling, vocational development, and academic resources as provided for people on the outside and that his programs would be top-notch. Adjustments to the daily schedule allowed inmates to obtain education without giving up recreation, and greater freedom was given to moving around on campus. Buchanan did not agree, however, with the report's recommendation that headcounts should be taken less than five times daily, because of the increased freedom of the inmates. Buchanan also proposed to improve the rehabilitative climate and normalize life in the prison by making it co-ed and began transferring men from Vienna into DCC.
1294:. Rutherford blamed the prison for not asking for more employees or filling vacant positions. The union stated that high absenteeism accounted for some of the overtime, as did the discipline for refusing a shift, which was to take a day without pay. Some guards, anticipating overtime, would schedule themselves for an additional 2–3 overtime shifts per week to have predictable time off, but even this strategy failed from time to time. A temporary solution was to transfer guards from Pontiac, effectively shifting the overtime issues to that prison, but retirements and resignations at DCC would soon make the arrangement a break-even. In 2000 there were just 8 nurses on staff and two more were expected to leave at the end of the year. These nurses were expected to treat over 1,000 inmates at DCC. The facility in which the nurses was working was also inadequate, and they were exhausted from working 12–16 hour shifts 2–3 days a week. 1357:
State Police investigation. The woman, who had been denied access to anyone to whom she could appeal—prison officials, an attorney, or the media, stated that she had been raped 29 times by at least seven guards. The second woman said that a male guard had observed her gynecological exam and subsequently sexually harassed her. When she complained, she was placed in isolation, denied educational opportunities, and given reduced visiting hours. The punishment was later determined to have been improper. The attorney who filed the suits stated that she had heard comparable stories from a number of women the previous ten years. The IDOC responded by installing 200 video cameras throughout the prison and by posting the names and contact information of prison officials to whom the inmates could appeal confidentially to report abuse.
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investigative officer, which was in a cottage. Inmates alleged that the sexual abuse had been reported when Sutliff first arrived, but an investigation cleared the accused men. In the 1979 report, other inmates, who were given lie detector tests, backed up the allegations of the two making the complaint. The two staff members were suspended and eventually terminated. Sutliff, whom the director of corrections described as "a good warden" and innocent of any wrongdoing, resigned on September 14. Lawsuits were filed by the two inmates in July 1980 against the two officers, Sutliff, the Assistant Director of Corrections, Linda Giesen, and the Director of Corrections for $ 9,999 each. The court found in favor of the administrators, and a
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concerns over lesbian relationships. Inmates were locked in their rooms between 6:00 p.m. and 6:00 a.m. and had to use chamber pots in their rooms during those hours. The report also told of complaints by inmates of inadequate nutrition, and it observed that most staff members were "white, poorly educated, rural-oriented," and communicated racial biases in their administration of inmate rights and privileges. The Society also noted that the women were unable to pass the state licensing exam for beauty school even after 1500 hours of training, and inmates had inadequate medical, legal, and drug recovery services. There were no mental health resources at all. One inmate described the prison as "a living hell."
396:. Another man, she stated, had "a mean tongue and he's a gossip". She said that she felt vulnerable because she was new to the position. The investigators reported their conclusions in May. They stated that the qualifications of the staff and superintendent would be investigated, that the inmates who were criminally insane would be moved to state hospitals, and that Whitney had not been in her position long enough to be judged. The committee also reported that problems at the reformatory had begun when Elizabeth Mann became acting superintendent at the time of Hazard's resignation in 1950, and employees, taking advantage of her inexperience, "began running the reformatory to suit themselves". 340:
Doors of rooms were fitted with peepholes to allow observation of the inmate while she was locked in her room. Ingoing and outgoing mail was censored, and frequency of visitations was based on the inmate's record of compliance. The inmates were under lock and key whenever they were in their rooms, which during the day amounted to no more than about 15 minutes. Inmates were classified according to merits and demerits and were given a hearing every 3–4 months to voice complaints and review classification. Infractions could result in solitary confinement, which was achieved by stripping their room of all furnishings except a mattress and feeding them only bread, water, coffee, and tea.
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filth, who can take the hand of a forger and read more than a name other than her own, look into the eyes of a murderess and see more than a knife, gun or bottle; who can understand something of the emotions of the homo-sexualist or open violations of sex sanity, and detect more than licentiousness or prostitution." The governor of the state, at the facility's dedication, stated that the reformatory was "a far cry from the days of the rack and thumb screw." Staff members of the reformatory were to be people who would say to parolees, "Go thy way, and sin no more." Workers were expected to follow the inmate through her period of incarceration and to prepare her for release.
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could employ. In the spring of 1989 the prison was finally authorized to add 22 more staff members to manage the population, which by then had grown to 770. By March 1990 the IDOC doubled the number of staff at DCC, but additional actions of double-celling women at both Logan and Dixon co-ed correctional centers, seeking or building a facility which could provide an additional 200–250 beds, and urging legislation expanding "good time" provisions for the early release of inmates convicted of armed robbery could not alleviate the consequences of the "explosive" growth of females in the penal system or the limits of the sewage system at DCC.
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hold persons awaiting trial, not for women needing long-term rehabilitation. On April 23 a civil rights action lawsuit was filed to block the transfer until the county institution had services and facilities equal to those at the DCC, including exercise areas indoors and outdoors, a library, educational programs, and privileges such as women being allowed to wear their own clothing. Citizens of Pontiac also objected to the change. After the meeting, Allyn R. Sielaff, Director of the IDOC, reversed his January decision to make the prison all-male and announced it would remain co-ed. No date was set for moving more men into the DCC.
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mealtimes, as well as recreation, education, and library privileges. The women resided in a separate unit, which was at a minimal cost adapted to women's needs. To be eligible for the co-ed prison, the inmate had to be classified as medium security, have less than seven years left in her sentence, and have demonstrated the ability to adjust to new situations. Forty women volunteered to move, but it was expected that other inmates would eventually be moved involuntarily. The IDOC stated that it would likely be a temporary solution to the overcrowding problem that would continue plague Illinois prisons.
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dresser, rocking chair, and closet. Some furnishings were of wicker made by prisoners at Joliet. Each had a fireplace, as well as a piano and radio for entertainment, and each was staffed with a female warden. Only one cottage had bars, and it was used for inmates requiring discipline or identified as needing higher security. It also included a hospital section where new inmates would receive orientation and undergo medical, psychiatric and psychological evaluations before being admitted to the general population. The hospital was reputed to offer excellent service to prisoners.
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involve more people in decision-making because it promoted greater responsibility. She said, also, that she planned to construct two 50-unit residences and a new recreation center within two years and rejuvenate the existing buildings. She would continue her predecessor's programs, add more leisure time activities, and increase the population in the reformatory to its capacity. At the time of Sutliff's arrival the co-ed "experiment" was ended. By mid-June the remaining women at the Vienna Correctional Center were moved to DCC and the men at DCC to Vienna.
1197:, in the former Adolf Meyer Mental Health and Development Center, which had been adapted to address some of these female inmate needs. The new facility would eventually house 500 inmates, some of whom would be transferred from DCC. Linda Dillon, Assistant Deputy Director of the IDOC, stated that the Decatur facility would be "heavily programmed to try to reconnect women with their children before they return home". Eligible inmates would have about two years left in their sentences and would receive educational and vocational training provided by 592:
begin by February 1, and the complete transfer of women to other facilities by March. Women needing maximum security would be relocated to the Cook County Correctional Center, and women eligible for work-release would be transferred to a new facility in Chicago with supervision twenty-four hours a day. The remaining females would be placed in a co-ed facility in Vienna, IL, a minimum-security prison. On February 14 the administration of the DDC extended a farewell to the female inmates with a steak and chicken dinner for 200 and a co-ed dance.
536:, petitioned the Department of Public Safety for equal pay among male guards across the state after Joliet guards' salaries alone were raised by $ 50 per month. The union also requested that the salaries of female warders, whose starting pay was $ 100 less than male guards, be commensurate with the male guards'. Hollis McKnight, the Illinois state superintendent of prisons, vetoed the requests, citing funding limitations, the warder's different job descriptions, and the warders' need to call on male guards for help from time to time. 320:
advanced to high school classes. Inmates also gained practical skills such as typing, stenography, stenciling, and use of Dictaphone. Those inmates assigned to the garment factory made all the clothes worn by women at DCC, as well as clothing for female inmates at other prisons. Within a few years American flags for other state institutions were made, as well as dresses, pajamas and other items for inmates being released. The long-range plan was that garment-making would be the main industry at Oakdale.
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sexual abuse, and criminal custodial sexual misconduct were filed against a male guard by a female officer alleging that in March the guard cornered her in the prison's bakery, asked to see her breasts, and forcibly touched her breast through her shirt. The inmate charged that the guard had forcibly rubbed his penis against her buttocks in June. The guard was acquitted of the charges of sexually assaulting the guard in August 2005. At that time the incident with the inmate had not been resolved.
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reported that "the place (DCC) is ready to blow" because guards did not feel safe and the administration was neither consistent nor interested in relationships. In June a female guard was beaten by an inmate and was unable to summon help because there was no other guard in that maximum-security area and she was not equipped with a radio. She stated that she felt the administration was discriminating against her and that the beating was part of a larger pattern of harassment of guards.
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decrease in reporting crimes such as abortion and prostitution; the growing use of community-based drug programs; shorter, suspended, and probationary sentences; a greater sympathy for women by the judiciary; and a woman's lesser likelihood of committing violent crimes. A new IDOC code effective on January 1, 1973, however, boosted the population by admitting women having committed misdemeanors and who had been sentenced to more than 60 days, as well as women as young as 17.
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which would be converted to confine adult females. Rowe stated that converting DCC to an all-male prison would also reduce incidents of inmate romances, which, though prohibited, had resulted in two pregnancies. The population of women needing incarceration was swelling, however, which made the rearrangement of prison populations impractical. By April Rowe abandoned the plan for an all-male population, but also proposed ending the co-ed "experiment."
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expected to rise. The aging facility continued to necessitate major maintenance. In 1986 the water treatment and sewage plants were at capacity and improvements were needed in heating, plumbing, and energy efficiency. In 1987 the prison was allotted $ 2.5 million funding for the improvements, and by 1988 most of them were nearing completion. A drought in 1988 further strained the water supply at the prison, which was drawing water from wells.
650:. In September the chief guard, one of several male guards added when male inmates came, was fired after being observed by a female officer sexually abusing an inmate. Earlier in the year two female guards were fired because of kissing incidents. In the summer of 1977 two "rather petite inmates" who wanted to stay in the same cell beat their way through the brick wall between them, ripped sinks from the wall, broke windows, pulled a 1370:
that the proposed reductions would be accomplished through turnover and retirement of employees. He also announced a proposal to furlough workers on a rotating basis, which could save the state $ 86 million in the remaining fiscal year. AFSCME stated that furloughing employees would present a hardship on families and result in more overtime for employees on duty since the prisons continued to be severely understaffed.
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there was a waiting list for drug abuse groups, and that they experienced discrimination. Inmates at DCC were able to achieve Jr. College degrees limited mostly to cosmetology, office skills, and sewing, while male inmates in some prisons were able to get a 4-year degree. They also complained about poor administration of inmates' relationships with children. In March there was a widespread outbreak of
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investigation of conditions at the reformatory after hearing an increasing number of complaints and after the beating of a guard by an inmate known to be dangerous. Among charges were Whitney's frequent absences, lack of discipline, "lavish entertainment," a drinking party, and Whitney's frequent visits to a Pontiac tavern with "a man who had a strange accent." It was also reported that a car from
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more urgent. Women tended to have more health issues than men because of sexually transmitted diseases, poor nutrition, and drug abuse. Since a great percentage of inmates were also mothers with young children provision of suitable visiting space was a need, as well. Officials stated they were hesitant to make suggestions for adaptations because of lawmakers' resistance to "pampering" inmates.
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institution in the state, averaging 560 inmates each day, higher than the ideal capacity of 470 and design for 345. The prison was already contracting with county jails to house inmates and was considering the possibility of establishing work-release schools in the community. The plan for work-release facilities was stymied, however, by communities that wanted the prison, but not the prisoner.
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to keep order. Her immediate improvements were requiring female guards to accompany inmates to appointments, the placement of glass panels in interview rooms, specific schedules for guards, the moving of staff offices to more appropriate locations, a new segregation unit, new management positions to handle inmate complaints and discipline, new procedures for conducting searches and identifying
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that were not equipped to handle them. They further objected to inmates being incorrectly classified to justify transfers to prisons with lower security standards. At the end of August an arbitrator ruled that Quinn was violating terms of a legal agreement with the union to resolve concerns about employees' safety prior to closing, and a court placed a restraining order on the closure.
403:." The charge also said that there was tension at the reformatory and that a resolution was needed as soon as possible. Whitney was fired on January 28, 1953, and Helen Hazard was appointed the following day to take up the post again. Hazard again became ill and resigned in September. Mary Powers, the overseer of women in the Chicago police force, was then appointed to the position. 1172:
sociology" that allowed women in Illinois prisons to wear street clothes and issued in their place uniforms—white shirts and blue pants. The purpose of the uniform was to cut down on the time needed for security checks for contraband and to reduce confusion between inmates and visitors. The women were also issued 2' x 1' "property boxes" into which all personal items had to fit.
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extensive administrative experience with both inmates and employees and the management of funds. Morrissey stated that her primary purpose would be to transform the women into law-abiding citizens with compassion, humor, and "a genuine smile." The state superintendent of prisons, H. W. McKnight, stepped in as acting superintendent until Morrissey took her post on July 1.
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potential for committing future crimes. State Representative Dan Rutherford led the offense against the bill, saying that the state should not play "'nannies and nursemaids' to the offspring of women convicted of serious, sometimes violent crimes". Children's physical and psychological health could be at risk, he said, and money could be better spent in improving the
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John Howard Society criticized the state legislature for trying to "build your way" out of overcrowding issues, insisting that the legislature needed to address root causes of crime instead. Illinois, they noted, was the only state to double-cell inmates in maximum security. They cited increases in assaults on staff, inmate health problems (including a new form of
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days five days a week and were deployed as other volunteers helping residents with personal hygiene and feeding. Inmates were sometimes motivated to participate initially by a desire to leave the Correctional Center campus, but in some cases found a vocation they planned to pursue after release. The IDOC compensated the women $ 17.00 a month for their work.
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the 28–30 women in each cottage stretched the adequacy of the two toilets and two showers in each cottage. Biedermann also cited double-celling as a contributor to homosexual practices. The John Howard report stated that the population was expected to continue to increase. Biedermann recommended a larger, centralized building to replace the cottage model.
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arbitrator agreed with the union that it would be better to keep the prisons open. At the end of October, the Illinois Senate overrode Quinn's veto on the funding, Herald and Review (Decatur, Illinois) · Thu, Nov 29, 2012 · Page 1 but the House allowed it to stand, permitting Quinn to move forward with his plans unhindered by legislators.
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and that guards had been discouraged from hovering over the families." The president of the local AFSCME, Renee Bantista, further stated that "the female inmates of the '90's are equivalent to their male counterparts... more aggressive, gang-affiliated." By 2004 the camping program had been shortened to a one-day event.
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reformatory. Biedermann was credited with stepping up the educational program at Oakdale. Thirty-one inmates were enrolled in elementary courses and 46 in high school. Chicago City Junior College offered televised classes in social science, German, humanities, physical science, anthropology, and music appreciation.
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with sex offenders at Western State Hospital in Tacoma, WA. She had also worked in clinical services in the IDOC at Warrenville, IL. Williams stated that her goal was to reclaim the reputation of a model prison as it was at its founding. She said that programs improving parenting and mental health were important.
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Logan, namely construction, parenting, and nail technology. It was equally concerned for the stress overcrowding would produce for inmates and employees and the impact on family visitations to inmates, many of whom were from Chicago. Studies showed that visits helped deter inmates from committing future crimes.
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studying prison reforms because such visits were, they stated, "complete disasters", providing opportunities for the smuggling of contraband. The committee instead introduced legislation that would require inmates and visitors to be separated by security glass for the first 90 days of an inmate's incarceration.
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Funds were frozen by Governor Jim Edgar, however, for road rehabilitation and parking expansion, removal of underground storage tanks, and expanding the medical facility. A decision also to freeze spending on the chapel was met with a vigorous letter-writing campaign, however, and Edgar reversed his decision.
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Because the sexual misconduct law did not exist prior to July 7, 1977, and because a law about "official misconduct" (which included "socializing with committed persons") was, according to the circuit judge, "unconstitutionally vague," charges of official misconduct against three of the guards were dropped.
1314:. The president of AFSCME stated that the DCC was not to blame for the state's budget problems: "They have overspent, and they have to rectify it." A few months later in a 47–4 vote, lawmakers blocked the privatization plan. In 2003, as part of his plan to address the state's $ 4.8 billion deficit, Governor 1543:
On September 1, 2015, the State of Illinois began a five-year contract with the Dwight Fire Protection District to allow use of several cottages, the infirmary, and adjacent buildings for training in advance firefighting beginning in 2016. Sharing the grounds with the Romeo Fire Academy permitted the
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The last of the inmates were transferred to the Logan Correctional Center, located in Lincoln, IL. on March 26, 2013, five days before the March 31 deadline set for the facility's shut-down. Dwight Mayor Bill Wilkey stated that he hoped the facility would reopen: "It means getting a new governor, but
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By March 1, 2013 Quinn had prepared a 2013–2014 budget which did not include funding for DCC, a move that convinced employees of DCC that closure was inevitable. By then three hundred and nineteen employees of the correctional center took vacant positions in other facilities. Twelve employees retired
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By 2010 the statewide population of inmates was nearly 3,000 more than in 2009. The increase was attributed to Governor Quinn's suspension of two programs, The Meritorious Good Time Push program and Meritorious Good time, for what was reported to be political reasons. The latter had been in place for
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In March 2004 a federal lawsuit was filed by an inmate alleging a fondling incident in May 2003. A male guard, it said, approached the inmate while she was concluding a shower and fondled her. She sought $ 50,000 in damages for emotional pain and embarrassment. In August charges of battery, criminal
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By 2003 the overtime at the prisons statewide added up to an additional $ 19.3 million or the equivalent of 330 more full-time employees working 50 weeks per year. Two million of those dollars were spent at Dwight. In October 2003 the IDOC announced that a new class of prison guards would be assigned
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In May 1998 an inmate, Anita Esposito, filed a $ 5 million lawsuit against officers at DCC who had threatened to put her in segregation if she reported the August 1997 sexual misconduct of another officer. The inmate reported the incident to prison officials, who allegedly dismissed the complaint. As
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In 1992 Illinois prisons housed almost 30,000 inmates in space built for 20,000. Four facilities stood empty because the state lacked the means of funding them. To address increasing overcrowding Governor Jim Edgar formed a task force that was to recommend solutions that did not compromise safety or
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and had played a key role in notifying state officials of the sex abuse scandal stated that she planned to have an "open door" policy and be accessible. She stated a need for procedural guidelines and more objective operations. She said that she believed a system could be set up to prevent abuse and
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In June 1977, less than a year after taking the position at DCC, John Platt was reassigned to another post. Charlotte Sutliff, who had been trained in corrections and had previously served as the superintendent of the DuPage Youth Center, was appointed in his place. Sutliff stated that she planned to
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When in fall 1966 DCC celebrated its 35th anniversary, officials announced a plan for a $ 1 million centralized building for dining, recreation, storage, a 40-bed living area, and some administrative offices. The cottages that a new facility would replace would be vacated and used for other purposes.
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In 1957 the John Howard Association reported problems with overcrowding, inadequate facilities, and lagging morale. Biedermann noted that the reformatory had been built for less serious offenders. Habitual and serious offenders were sometimes placed in the same room as minor offenders. Double-celling
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Employees of the center and residents of DCC and neighboring counties also mounted an organized and intensive campaign to keep the doors open. Supporters were urged to contact any official with the power to impact the governor's decision and respectfully explain the personal impact the closure would
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The John Howard Association asked the state not to close DCC because of its historical commitment to creating a rehabilitative environment to meet unique female needs, many of which result from trauma and sexual, physical, and emotional abuse. The IDOC stated that programming would follow inmates to
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The prison itself made efforts to reduce costs by instituting a "Green" program. It was educational, as well. DCC saved $ 6,000 per year in dumpster costs. It expanded its garden to provide fresh produce for inmates. Laundry was monitored to limit items passing through each cycle, and mop heads were
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The bipartisan Commission on Government Forecasting and Accountability recommended that the prison stay open, and the General Assembly passed a budget including funding for the prisons, but this did not alter the course of Governor Quinn's plan for balancing the state's budget. AFSCME called Quinn's
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and sometimes sent to isolation as retribution. The IDOC denial of mishandling complaints were tantamount, they said, of "making it impossible for them (inmates) to complain". The recommendations of the watchdog groups included forbidding any sexual contact (including "consensual"), better screening
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In 1997 the National Institute of Justice estimated that 65% of female inmates had chronic or acute problems with drug or alcohol addiction prior to their incarceration. The DCC was already investing over $ 200,000 a year on its program of drug rehabilitation, and it received an additional $ 200,000
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In the summer of 1988 two guards were injured by four inmates in the isolation area of the prison when the guards attempted to seize contraband, which consisted of more personal items than inmates in isolation were allowed. One guard, who was hospitalized, was struck in head and leg and the other in
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inmates just outside the gates of the reformatory in November 1980. This was one of several incidents which Giesen faced during her tenure. In January 1981 inmates complained to a panel of corrections officials that there was no training for jobs, that jobs and vocational programs were limited, that
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On June 1, 1974, Buchanan was reassigned to serve as superintendent of the reception and diagnostic center of the IDOC. He was replaced by John Platt, who had served as superintendent of the Illinois Youth Center at Valley View since 1970. He was initially scheduled to serve as superintendent of the
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The report recommended the hiring of a superintendent who had professional training in penal system management. Margaret Morrissey resigned as superintendent in March, and the assistant superintendent, J. Wayne Algood, stepped in as interim until August 1, when a new superintendent, Robert Buchanan,
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Resources continued to include balanced meals and personal freedoms with respect to clothing, hairstyle, and choice of occupation. Inmates had some income which could be spent in the commissary and on mail orders. Inmates were expected to contribute to the welfare of the community through daily work
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Over 6% of the inmates at Oakdale were illiterate, and half of the women had under a "fifth grade intelligence rating." For these inmates the completion of an education was a full-time job. Women were expected to have at least a 6th grade education and urged to complete primary grades, and some were
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would be raised. Freedom of movement depended on a system of merits and demerits, which also impacted the length of the woman's sentence. The trusted inmates were designated outwardly by their white stockings. Those who had not earned trust wore black stockings and had to be accompanied at all times
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On November 24, 1930, Oakdale Reformatory received its first inmates. The initial plan was to receive only first offenders and women between the ages of 18 and 25, but within four years the institution had opened its program to any woman who had committed any crime. The population swelled when women
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Following the shuttering of DCC, Livingston County Sheriff Martin Meredith began conversations with the state to turn the newer cell blocks into a "profit-making overflow jail for the county" by leasing space to other counties. It would cost an additional $ 3–4 million to ready the facility for new
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There continued to be allegations of sexual misconduct, despite the 1997 state law prohibiting any sexual contact regardless of consent. Efforts by Des Plaines Lutheran Social Services to provide volunteer-based programming to connect children with their mothers were resisted by the House committee
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was built, and a commissary was provided for an employee break area. The IDOC also planned to add at least 100 more beds at the Kankakee facility to provide additional space for the 845 inmates residing in DCC facilities. The $ 8 million needed for improvements to the medical facility and to expand
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Several incidents of violence raised concerns about leniency in the prison. In one case a guard was stabbed with a fork after an inmate in segregation was denied recreation time. Despite the violence, the inmate was granted the recreation time later that day. In another, an inmate was released from
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had to be summoned. Furthermore, eight guards had been injured in the two weeks previous. The outbreaks were attributed to overcrowding and under-staffing. Huch stated that she was constantly asking for more staff, but was prevented by the General Assembly, which decided how many guards each prison
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In February 1980 a female guard reported being sexually assaulted by a male sergeant, an allegation supported by a lie detector test. She was placed on "authorized leave," and the male was kept on during the investigation. The female guard refused the leave and quit instead. An anonymous male guard
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The garment industry was producing drapes, towels, pajamas, robes, shifts, dresses, and blouses in 1980. The factory manager stated that the skills gained in sewing would translate into jobs on the outside, but a spokesperson from the Government Accountability Office said that their skills would be
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In 1976 inmates were given the opportunity to sign up for volunteer work at the William W. Fox Developmental Center in Dwight. The women received 512 hours of instruction and upon completion of the course were qualified to take the state civil service examination. The inmates worked or studied full
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An objection to the plans for the women, particularly those to be transferred to the Cook County facility, was raised by the Dwight Task Force, a women's advocacy group. The task force stated that the decision showed "disregard" for female inmates. The Cook County jail had been built, they said, to
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The report stated that inmates were not allowed to "wave, whistle, or sing" when passing between buildings. They were watched in the shower and bathrooms. They were prohibited from entering another inmate's room, sit close to another in the dining room, or touch in any way because of administrative
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conducted a review of the Dwight Reformatory, still considered a medium-security facility. The report was published in the spring of 1973 and was based on interviews with inmates, whose stories told of an administration overly focused on "obedience, docility, and subservience". The prison watch-dog
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The reformatory also assigned each inmate a job that contributed to the maintenance and quality of the facility and community. In the cottages inmates were expected to keep their own and shared space clean. They took turns setting tables in the dining room and preparing meals in the kitchens, which
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Inmates were assigned to the eight cottages, each of which housed 15to 28 women. Each cottage included a kitchen, living room, lavatory, shower, and sleeping quarters, which were secured at night. Each inmate had her own bedroom furnished with a bed with "deep springs and comfortable mattresses," a
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The founders of Oakdale Reformatory for Women described their task to be "the uplift of the unfortunate." Staff members were needed who could "understand fundamental causes, who can look at a storm and see something more than thunder and lightning, look into a mud puddle and see something more than
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In 2008 allegations of repeated instances of sexual misconduct and rape by male guards with the knowledge of administrators at DCC resulted in two lawsuits filed in the U.S. District Court in Chicago. In the first case, in 2007 a woman gave birth to a baby while in isolation, prompting an Illinois
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Prior to arriving at DCC Blakemore had served as superintendent of the youth center in Warrensville, IL. She began her career in corrections in 1974 as the assistant coordinator at youth center in St. Charles, IL. During her one-year term of service the IDOC announced the end of the "experiment in
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By the late 1990s the female inmate population at DCC, which had a capacity for 884, was over 1,100, was growing at about 17% per year, and was requiring a statewide shuffling of beds. The employee union was again objecting to conditions, citing safety issues and overworking of staff, who had been
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The DCC was by this time the most diverse prison in the state, with minimum, medium, and maximum-security inmates, along with provisions for inmates on death row, in protective custody, hospitalized, or needing psychiatric services. Klein-Acosta described the prison as a small town with its water
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In 1995 Governor Jim Edgar announced a plan to add a privately funded, 448-bed cell house at DCC which the state would then lease. The construction would begin in the spring of 1996. The $ 85 million facility opened on May 27, 1997, and was "X-shaped," requiring fewer guards than other models. The
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By 1988 DCC had an inmate population of 668 and a staff of 184. Morale among employees was low because they were required to work 16 hours a day in mandatory overtime. On one occasion an employee was scheduled for five consecutive 16-hour days, two of which the guard refused. The pressure on staff
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union protested the event because the reformatory was "a prison, not a campground." Further, they stated, the event increased the possibility of contraband entering the prison, an inmate escaping, or a child being harmed by other inmates on the grounds. They said that the area was not well-lighted
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Huch launched a drug abuse treatment program, which by 1989 was treating 27 women of all security classifications and had a waiting list. Funds were provided by a grant from the Chicago Gateway Foundation. Inmates in the program, which was spiritually based, were housed together in one cottage and
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Early in 1977, a new Director of Corrections, Charles J. Rowe, revisited the idea of converting DCC into an all-male prison. As in 1974, the goal was to address overcrowding and consequential inmate conflicts in the male prisons. In this plan, women would be transferred to the Geneva Youth Center,
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A decade into its operation the prison continued to base its program of reformation on kindness, but prison life was more restricted. All cottage windows and doors were equipped with bars discretely blended with the architecture. Armed guards were available, and an electric alarm system installed.
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for females above the age eighteen," but no funding was provided at that time. Proponents of the women's reformatory attempted for several years following to obtain an appropriation, but failed. In 1925 twelve state women's organizations representing 300,000 women formed the Illinois Women's Joint
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prison for adult females in the Illinois Department of Corrections (IDOC), inclusive of women on death row until the death penalty was abolished in Illinois in 2011. The name "Oakdale Reformatory for Women" fell out of common usage in the early 1970s when the IDOC's co-ed experiment began. The DCC
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On August 2, 2012, AFSCME filed a lawsuit to halt the prison closures because of the state's legal responsibility to provide safe working environments for employees. The union stated specific objections to transferring inmates, particularly maximum-security inmates, to already overcrowded prisons
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Employees of the center and residents of Dwight and neighboring counties also mounted an organized and intensive campaign to keep the doors open. Supporters were urged to contact any official with the power to impact the governor's decision and respectfully explain the personal impact the closure
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At the end of 2004 Governor Rod Blagojevich commissioned a panel to study recidivism. The aim of the study was to reduce the population of the prisons by offering services available to inmates upon release. He also proposed to reduce the number of positions in the IDOC by 367 positions. He stated
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In November 2004 Alyssa Williams was appointed warden. Williams had a bachelor's degree in psychology from Bradley University and a master's in marriage, child, and family therapy from Chapman University. She joined the IDOC in 2001 as a parole officer in East St. Louis. She had previously worked
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and the tendency of women to be more vocal than men in relationships made sleep difficult and contributed to stress. Inadequate facilities for counseling in the cell house meant that many of the women's emotional and psychological needs went unmet. Their histories of sex abuse made privacy issues
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In 1984 two new cell houses with a total of 96 new beds were added to the facility to relieve overcrowding, effectively increasing the capacity rating of the reformatory to 496 with two inmates per room. By the time inmates moved into the new cottages, however, the population stood at 518 and was
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The Director of Public Safety, Joseph Ragen, sought an educator to head the prison, but after more than 20 interviews was unable to find a qualified person. Ragen appointed Margaret Morrissey, a clerk/typist at the Statesville prison near Joliet, whom Ragen described as strict and fair and having
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Inmates who violated rules at the reformatory were punished in 7' by 11' isolation cells and fed water or milk and bread for the first two days. The assistant superintendent presided over a daily "court" where violations were reviewed and new classifications made. Inmates might be disciplined for
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Mary Powers resigned due to health concerns on June 7, 1954, just 9 months after assuming the position. Ruth Biedermann, who since 1947 had served as head of the Police Women's and Matrons Division of the Chicago Police Department, was hired on July 26. Biedermann had been screened by a citizens
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The reformation program also included recreation, which included parties, dancing, baseball, volleyball, and drama. A decade later the only sport was baseball, and that was in the summer only. In the winter the women read, sewed, or if behavior warranted, watched movies. Worship and Bible studies
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and set amid oaks and spruces. The administration building had slate roofs and full brass front doors. At the time of the dedication in 1930 there were eight cottages, as well as administration, industrial, service, and farm buildings. An easily climbed wire fence surrounded the whole tract, but
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In 2005 AFSCME reported that the ratio of guards to inmates in Illinois was the lowest in the nation. Assaults on guards and between inmates were increasing and prisons ran a higher risk of escapes. Dwight reported being short 100 employees—60 of which would be guards. The union also stated that
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proposed adding 28 more guards to the staff at DCC. According to the union fifty new officers were needed, however. A year later Ryan addressed the continuing budget crisis by suggesting that all prison employees take an unpaid day off (which would require another employee to work overtime), and
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Helping Paws Dog Assistance Program, a service-dog training program, was launched at DCC in May 2000. Volunteers from the Clarence Foundation provided dogs that were abandoned, abused, or in shelters and provided for associated costs of dog care. Lake Land College provided 300 hours of classroom
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policies compounded overcrowding problems at DCC and other Illinois prisons. Prior to passage of Illinois' law in August 1995, most inmates served between 35% and 50% of their sentences. The truth-in-sentencing law toughened sentencing, requiring those convicted of murder to serve 100% of their
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The state also allocated funds for needed building repairs and infrastructure improvement, including an upgrade to the locking system and replacement of roofing. A death row unit was completed in 1991 to house the first death row inmate since the death penalty was reinstated in Illinois in 1972.
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On January 22, 1974, the IDOC announced that the reformatory would become all-male. The plan would make the DCC a minimum security prison in order to reduce inmate populations in male maximum-security prisons and the complications from overcrowding. The transfer of men to the DCC was expected to
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Buchanan stated that returning to a rehabilitative model was a priority, as was increasing the population to fill all beds. He lifted the "silence system," allowing talking and singing if inmates did not use obscenities. He allowed items that the previous warden had labeled contraband, including
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As the 1960s drew to a close, Dwight reformatory, still the only female adult prison in Illinois, experienced a decline in inmate population to about 120 women, 200 fewer inmates than a decade before. The reduced number of inmates was attributed by those who worked closely with the system to the
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In 1967 Morrissey reported to the Department of Public Safety that the education program included elementary, high school, and college work via television. In 1970 DCC, along with other IDOC prisons, competed in a special series of the Emmy-award-winning quiz show for high school students, "It's
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offense. On February 1, 1997, a bill was introduced in the state legislature to make sexual contact with inmates a felony resulting in a prison sentence of 4–15 years and loss of pension benefits, regardless of whether "consent" had been obtained. The law was signed by Governor Edgar on July 7.
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In 1996 the IDOC was court-ordered to improve educational and vocational opportunities for women. Training at DCC, which was stretched to the limit because of over-population, was under fire also for limiting its curriculum to mostly "pink trades", and not toward development of skills that were
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The following year the IDOC announced a plan to transfer 75 women to the Logan Correctional Center in Lincoln, IL, where they would share public space with male inmates already there. By February 1987 the first women had moved, and after a period of incremental integration, men and women shared
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The steady increase in the number of women incarcerated at DCC—a 340% increase between 1975 and 1979—resulted in putting five women to a room and in a shortage of space for a fully effective reformation program. Plumbing and heating were poor, and the scattering of inmates in separate buildings
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In 1967 piecemeal repairs were made to some of the existing facilities, including the rehabilitation of a water storage tank. An investigation into state prisons in 1967 stated that at Dwight Reformatory the rooms of inmates, who were still living in the eight cottages, needed to be modernized.
1402:, which represented 9% of the current level of funding. Dwight, they said, needed $ 18.2 million for major maintenance, and $ 6 million of that would be needed immediately for urgent updates. An amount of $ 524,000 would be needed to segregate the maximum-security DCC inmates from those in the 1394:
announced plans to cease operations of 59 state institutions as a means of helping the state address its massive indebtedness. The DCC, by then the only Illinois facility capable of housing maximum security female inmates, was among those targeted and was slated for closure by August 31, 2013.
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In 1986 Governor James R. Thompson proposed the construction of three new prisons to address overcrowding in Illinois prisons for men. The plan would also reduce the population at older institutions by 3,854 beds, 26 of which would come from DCC. At that time the DCC was the most crowded penal
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on August 15, 1949. Her supporters stated that it was a "political" issue relating to her decision not to hire the son of the superintendent. The Detroit superintendent cited poor performance. Eight months into her superintendence, at the end of March 1951, a state senate committee launched an
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Other wardens appointed to DCC in its last decade included Mary Siglar, who retired from her position in 2009. She was followed by Caroline Trancoso, who had served as warden at Logan Correctional Center for the previous 4.5 years. Sheryl Thompson was warden from 2010 to the prison's closing.
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In 1994 legislators introduced a bill to allow children age 5 and under to live with their sole-custody inmate-mothers in special prison units, the purpose of which was to save a child in its formative of years from being shuffled between foster homes and consequently to reduce the children's
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stated that Eller was not a team player on the staff. Eller responded with the allegation that the system under Biedermann was "decadent", that Biederman's administration had "blood upon its hands" after the suicide of an inmate in isolation, and that Biedermann was "sick" and needed help. He
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were engaged. The reformatory was located 75 miles south of Chicago on a 160-acre tract of farmland and forest about two miles outside of the city of Dwight, Illinois, which was easily accessed from Route 66, now Interstate 55. The buildings were constructed of yellow brick and stone and were
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AFSCME's lawsuit to prevent the closing of DCC and other targeted facilities continued into 2013, even as facility adjustments were being made to Logan Correctional Center, which would become all female. The transfer to Logan required prisons to which males were transferred to use gymnasiums
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Also at the end of August, despite the restraining order and the unresolved AFSCME suit, Quinn vetoed lines in the budget that funded the targeted facilities. Late in October Quinn an arbitrator ruled that Quinn had "acted reasonably" in continuing to take steps toward closure, although the
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On September 21, 1998, Thornton was appointed to administrate female offender programs at the IDOC, and Donna J. Klein-Acosta was appointed in her place. Klein-Acosta, who had served as the assistant warden for programs at DCC since January 1992, earned a bachelor's degree in psychology and
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In September 1979 two senior staff members, an investigative officer and a security chief, were charged with sexually assaulting two inmates. The inmates also alleged that "sex parties" were being held, and that they were being arranged by an inmate secretary who worked in the office of the
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30 years. Hiring 500 more officers saved the state from overtime costs, but it was still delinquent by months in paying vendors, some of whom had stopped extending credit. There were no state funds to operate the newest prison, the Thompson maximum-security facility, built in recent years.
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The director of the IDOC, Donald Snyder, stated that the program was designed not only to provide inmates with marketable skills, but to reinforce, also, "a commitment of responsibility, the work ethic and compassion for others." The warden said that the Helping Paws program reinforced the
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Huch supported legislation to provide services to inmates and their children, including the creation of a new center where inmates could visit with their children, but the bills were not adopted. She nonetheless introduced inmate training for child nurture and development and management of
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Despite improvements, the prison struggled to maintain an environment conducive to positive change. In July 1976 twenty-one women refused to be locked in their rooms and "began brandishing chairs and throwing bottles, ashtrays, and other objects at correctional center officers" because the
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applauded the progress, noting improved and more economical housekeeping practices and food service, as well as a reduction in the per capita cost of inmates by nearly 40%. Increased recreational opportunities and an improved educational program contributed to "a feeling of promise" at the
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Fearing sexual assault by other inmates in September 1977, a 22-year old attempted an escape by climbing the DCC's fence. She stated that she saw lesbian activity in public spaces and had been told that 85% of the inmates were lesbians. She said she also feared that inmates would forcibly
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A charm program, which had high appeal to inmates, included classes on posture, good manners, and self-care. Morrissey stated that it taught inmates to "respond to the inner urge to do the right thing" and produced in the inmates greater confidence when appearing before the parole board.
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Helen Hazard earned her Bachelor's and master's degrees at Columbia University in New York City. She spent time in England and on continental Europe studying penal systems for women, and previously served as superintendent of the Niantic, Connecticut, reformatory for women and assistant
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In May 2003 Cahill-Masching took advantage of IDOC's early retirement program, leaving the post at DCC. The prison did not immediately hire a replacement because of a focus on reorganization in the IDOC. The day-to-day duties of the warden were taken up by the two assistant wardens.
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Morrissey inherited the issues with aging and inadequate facilities, as well as discontent among inmates and staff. In 1962, to address turnover and poor morale among staff members and to increase security, she reduced cottage worker's hours from 24-hour to 8-hour shifts. The local
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In 2012 the John Howard Association stated they had received reports of sexual harassment and abuse from DCC inmates. They said that more female guards needed to be recruited so that male guards would not be used in cell blocks, where showers and bathrooms were in the open.
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or reducing the two-to-a-cell arrangement to single cell. Neither recommendation was adopted. A bill to give AIDS tests to all inmates to segregate those who tested positive was defeated by the state judiciary committee because the money would be better used fighting crime.
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One guard was assaulted by cleaning chemicals. An inmate was beaten by two others. A kitchen knife was confiscated in an inmate skirmish, and a pair of scissors went missing for two weeks. Another guard was cut with glass, and yet another stabbed with a makeshift knife. A
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weekend camping event for moms and children at the nearby Green Valley Camp. Building on the success of that weekend, Huch applied for and received a 3-year grant from the federal government for a permanent campground on the reformatory campus, a project launched in 1986.
239:. In his address to the gathering, the governor reported that the structure being dedicated was built by the state at a cost of $ 850,000, with an additional $ 150,000 expected at that time to be spent on a "semi-security unit." He stated that the institution was not "a 804:
of Illinois, with the help of appropriations by the General Assembly, responded to Huch's vision of a multi-purpose chapel with a capacity of 200 by raising some of the $ 600,000 cost. Construction of the chapel began in 1991 and the building was dedicated in May 1993.
1229:," a potentially critical computer bug that would impact file storage and date-based applications. Fearing malfunction of electronic security devices and the administrative distraction, officials moved high-risk inmates to unfamiliar settings in other prisons, went on 476:
or set for a month after the injury. About the same time a complaint was made to the local union that Biedermann's firing of a typist in October was intended to injure the union. The union came to the typist's defense. Biedermann resigned voluntarily on March 3, 1962.
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and a master's degree in corrections from Chicago State University. She began employment with the IDOC in 1976 as a residence counselor at the Fox Valley Community Correctional Center and later as a reception unit administrator at the IDOC's St. Charles facility.
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In March 1996 two guards resigned after other correctional officers reported sexual relationships between some guards and inmates. As many as a dozen staff members, including lieutenants or captains, were allegedly involved. The alleged sex acts were described as
316:, harvested crops, and even laid tiles for drainage. Some herded the sheep on the farm, and others took care of the grounds. The women sawed wood for their fireplaces. The laundry occupied many with washing and ironing of prison attire, bedding, and other linens. 158:
Legislative Council and State Committee on an Illinois Reformatory for Women, which succeeded in securing $ 300,000 and begin building. At its founding the reformatory joined 22 other states in The United States which had separate reform facilities for women.
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and to learn cooking, sewing, cleaning, and serving, as well as reading and writing. When women were released back into the community, the reformatory sent them out with $ 10, a suitcase, clothing, cost of travel to their destination, and work references.
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assumed the permanent position. In the meantime, responding to the John Howard report, Algood stated that inmate complaints were either invalid or beyond his ability to solve, citing lack of funds as one reason certain grievances had not been addressed.
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at DCC and of juveniles in Chicago. She was appointed as DCC's assistant warden in 1980. Her goal as a warden, she stated, was to provide incentives for inmates to move to lower-security sections, build quality parenting programs, and expand education.
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failing to report to a location, talking and giggling all night, and not heeding staff warnings, One inmate received a ticket for "painting in the hospital and trying to talk to an inmate in quarantine." Inmates reported more "don'ts" than "dos."
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In 2011 Quinn's budget provided for no increases in employee salaries, despite an AFSCME contract that called for 2% for the remainder of 2011 and more in 2012. The union filed a federal lawsuit and stated a willingness to work with a mediator.
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L. Mara Dodge, "Whores and Thieves of the Worst Kind": A Study of Women, Crime, and Prisons, 1835–2000" (Dekalb, IL: Northern Illinois University Press, 2002) has 5 chapters on the history of Dwight and the experience of female prisoners and
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sentences and those convicted of sexual assault and other violent crimes to serve 85% of their sentences. It was estimated that the new law would increase the prison population by 60% and cost the state $ 320 million over the next 10 years.
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To address what the IDOC anticipated to be a swelling inmate population in 2013, Quinn instituted a politically unpopular early- release program, supported in generalities by lawmakers, which was anticipated to ease the population by 700.
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testified at the hearing on October 30 that Dwight didn't have the kind of human relationship program that promoted rehabilitation. He stated, "If a more human relationship were extended to prisoners, there would be less need for guns and
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Security instead consisted of a system of tracking the women's movements around the campus according to the time it would take to pass between a point of departure and a destination. If an inmate did not arrive within the time allowed, an
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On May 17, 1999, after just 9 months of employment at DCC, Klein-Acosta was appointed to IDOC's Women and Family Services to oversee all correctional center programming for women. Glenda M. Blakemore was appointed to assume her position.
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in November to the various prisons around the state. Of those 110 new guards, Dwight was to receive one. Further 32 employees were being transferred to other facilities. The IDOC promised, that additional guards were still in training.
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belonging to a man was parked in the reformatory's garage. Further, Whitney's new program "glorified inmates too much, causing them to feel equal to the employees." One complainant reported that the whole community of Dwight was upset.
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administration had imposed a precautionary rule prohibiting the women from visiting between rooms. Tear gas forced the women outside and law enforcement officers were summoned. Some of the women were indicted in December on charges of
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superintendent of the Alderson, West Virginia, institution for women. She began her duties at Oakdale on March 15, 1930, while the reformatory was still under construction so that she might bring a program perspective to the building.
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inmates, but could also create 56 more jobs. The plan would require a commitment from Cook County to make use of the facility. When Sheriff Meredith stepped down, conversations were expected to halt until a new sheriff was in place.
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were equipped with modern appliances. It was anticipated that many of the skills gained in daily life could translate into a vocation upon release. Inmates were also assigned to field work where "the women labored as men." There was
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and sewer treatment plants, school, residences, and industry. She stated her belief that prison reform led by role modeling and inspiration, education, and vocational training could stop the cycle of generation-to-generation crime.
692:"'technologically useless' because of the prison's antiquated equipment". Inmates could earn about $ 5.00 a day working 8:00 a.m. to 3:45 p.m. on weekdays, and some used the funds to help support their children at home. 1306:. The union said privatizing would result in job losses for 16 employees, serious security problems, and no financial gain for the state. The union took the matter to court, arguing that Ryan's privatization plan violated the 762:
On July 15, 1982, Giesen was transferred to the all-new male prison in Dixon, Illinois, as part of a major shift of administrations in Illinois prisons. Jane C. Huch, assistant warden at DCC since 1980, became the new warden.
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Lynn Cahill-Masching, a Streator, IL, native, started with the IDOC in 1978 after earning bachelor's degrees in criminology and business administration and a master's degree in education, both from Illinois State University.
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Sewing was the principal occupation, training and employing 100 women in beginning, advanced, single, and manifold classes. The inmate employees made a little money and were permitted to spend $ 10 per week of their pay.
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of the reformatory in 1930, the Superintendent of Prisons of the State of Illinois, Frank D. Whipp, stated that the program of reform would include training in "useful trades," including "domestic science, light forms of
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Entrance to the facility was neither guarded nor closed during the day, and inmates were locked in their bedrooms at night. Guards on campus were said to have been posted "to keep visitors out rather than inmates in."
1532:, who stated that a failure to perform basic outdoor maintenance such as mowing the tall grass and weeds was a blight on the community. Effective July 1, 2014, the IDOC transferred management of the property to the 445:
In 1959 a bill was introduced to the state legislature to budget $ 1,200,000 for the centralized facility which would house and feed 200 inmates—- the first new building on campus since 1933. The bill passed the
392:", some 60–70-year-old male guards were "incompetent and physically incapable of handling their jobs", and that one man was being cared for by the inmates themselves. None could be terminated because they were 462:
In February 1961 Biedermann fired Dwight psychologist, Albert E. Eller, for "conduct unbecoming a state employee, disrespect toward his superiors and the state penal system, and inefficiency." A former state
5199: 1201:. Another new facility in Hopkins Park, IL, was expected to provide an additional 1,800 beds, but was still three years away from opening. The DCC would continue to receive and classify all female inmates. 6897: 6045: 502:
training the inmates learned flower-arranging, gardening, and landscaping, and in farming the management of poultry, sheep, hogs, cattle, and horses. Some inmates were trained in routine nursing care and
779:, and taught in St. Louis, Missouri, and Springfield, Illinois, prior to her service at DCC. Stating that she wanted a change, Huch became a parole officer in Cook County and later an administrator of a 909:
discrimination lawsuit alleging that women were not provided substantially the same educational and vocational training as men and were housed together without regard to their security classification.
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in the towers." The sociologist at Dwight, Albert G. Lassuy, testified that Biedermann was "far too punitive". He also alleged negligence in the treatment of an inmate's broken jaw, which was not
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Many of the same complaints followed Whitney in the year ahead. There were charges of "mismanagement, favoritism, and neglect." Whitney was unavailable in the evenings and "a frequent patron of a
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Whitney accepted responsibility for some of the disciplinary issues, stating that a program of education and rehabilitation had failed. She also stated that inmates were violent, and some were
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On June 6, 1997, Guinevere Garcia, a death row inmate whose sentence was commuted to life just 14 hours before her execution several months before, attempted suicide by cutting a 2-inch long,
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Administrators stated that the X-shaped cell house design at DCC, modeled after cell houses at male prisons, had many shortcomings and that overcrowding aggravated the problems. The lack of
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By mid-1993 DCC was facing several issues related to safety. Physical violence between inmates and on guards was more and more commonplace, prompting prison guards to attend a rally at the
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was seriously impacting the prison population. The John Howard Association and Lutheran Social Services reported that 4% of all inmates in Illinois had either the disease or its precursor
327:
In a report by the Osborne Association, Inc., of New York City in 1933, Dwight was identified among the best women's institutions in the country. The report stated that the management was
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a result of her reporting she was charged by prison officials with sexual misconduct and placed in segregation for 30 days. Prison administrators were also named in Esposito's lawsuit.
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in Springfield in May 1994 to request funding to hire additional guards to address the growing violence. Guards were especially vulnerable because they were not allowed to carry guns,
1508:, objecting to the increased risk for guards in overcrowded prisons and in facilities that were designed for low risk inmates, not prisoners requiring a maximum security environment. 1084:". They stated that inmate claims of sexual misconduct generally were not treated seriously, even when evidence pointed to their veracity, and that complainants were given unreliable 6333: 1374:
overtime payment for guards was sometimes equal to or more than administrators and that employees preferred having time off. By 2009 overtime pay was costing the state $ 67 million.
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inch deep gash in her wrist with a broken light bulb. She was hospitalized briefly and returned to her cell. She stated that she preferred to die rather than serve a life sentence.
612:." Personal responsibility would be nurtured by giving the inmates more freedom, resources, and choices. The inmates were permitted to decorate their rooms as they wanted. Many had 495:
Academic." The IDOC believed it would impact the public's perception of inmates and prison reform. In the contest between DCC and Pontiac Correctional Center, Pontiac won, 440–120.
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was also occasionally referred to by other names, including Dwight Reformatory and Illinois Penitentiary for Women at Dwight. The facility is located at 23813 E. 3200 North Road in
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system. Nonetheless, Legal Aid to Incarcerated Mothers continued to urge state corrections officials to provide a place were non-violent inmates could live with younger children.
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would have on them and their communities. They were also encouraged to highlight DCC's unique role in IDOC with its long history of innovative vocational education programs.
6813: 1533: 421:. John C. McNamara, who had served as Assistant Superintendent of Prisons, was named acting superintendent at Dwight until the effective date of Biedermann's appointment. 102:
It was established in 1930 as the Oakdale Reformatory for Women. Over the course of its 83 years the reformatory maintained a commitment to the concept of rehabilitating
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and training of guards, and exit interviews with inmates. Before the year 1996 ended, thirteen employees had left employment at DCC because of sexual abuse of inmates.
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string. One was charged with biting an officer and another striking an officer with her purse. Fear of sexual assault by other inmates prompted one prisoner to escape.
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would be maintained. "It must be fair and just, but firm" and inmates would need to earn liberties available to them. Helen Hazard, a woman educated and experienced in
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relationship problems arising from incarceration and separation. She also created a "Children's Corner" where mothers and children could visit in a homey atmosphere.
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and telephone records and weekly headcounts and notified the administration that if they weren't resolved their budget for the next fiscal year could be affected.
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Dwight department to train their firefighters at no cost to the taxpayer. The plan also included future training for State Police, U.S. Army, and National Guard.
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her pregnancy. While lesbian activity was prohibited in the prison, a new regulation forbidding women from entering each other inmate's rooms was established.
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campus, "a noble experiment," "a monument to a handful of Illinois club women who fought for it for ten years," "the rich park of some multimillionaire," a "
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of New York found evidence of "sexual intercourse, sexual assault, inappropriate sexual contact" in the prison, as well as "constant and highly sexualized
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for positive and productive re-entry into society. Adaptations were made and experiments conducted as inmate populations and changing conditions required.
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directive the DCC was housing a total of 1,000 inmates and was the largest employer in the city of Dwight, providing jobs to about 350 people. A study by
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and that "in-jail transmission of AIDS was tantamount to handing 'unadjudicated death sentences to some prisoners.'" They recommended the distribution of
6130: 5893: 5223:, of one or two years or more (referred to as "prisons" in the United States, while the word "jail" normally refers to short-term confinement facilities) 755:
affecting more than 65 inmates that was not reported to authorities as required for two weeks after it began. An audit by the state found problems with
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group stated that the reformatory was administered by "nineteenth century standards" and that women were suffering "profound psychological oppression."
624:, exercise equipment, and other indoor services. Profit from commissary products were routed to an inmate benefit fund. Cottages could keep dogs, and 6797: 6009: 5835: 5270: 721:
On October 1, 1979, Linda Ann Giesen, the assistant warden of operations at DCC reformatory, assumed Sutliff's position. Giesen, who had a degree in
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add cost. A bill that would force closing of the Kankakee annex to DCC prison was halted, however, by action of the house appropriations committee.
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Biedermann was given the task of improving the rehabilitation rate and of reducing costs. After a visit to the reformatory a year later, Governor
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that had been smuggled from the prison pharmacy. The pharmacy's failure to crush pills as required as well as a shortage of staff were blamed.
822:. At the heart of the program was improving the self-esteem and problem-solving skills of inmates and training in restraint from use of drugs. 324:
were provided according to inmate's choice of denomination. The program also included discussions in current events and lessons in etiquette.
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air-dried. Inmates were issued mesh bags to replace paper bags. An Earth Day poster contest was held for each of the offender living units.
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and AIDS), and higher recidivism rates because inmates were not equipped through education and vocational programming to reenter society.
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After 13 years as superintendent, Hazard took leave of absence in August 1943 to join a women's branch of the military. Elizabeth Mann, a
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incarcerated at the women's prison at Joliet were transferred to DCC, joining the nearly 600 women who had resided there up to that time.
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have on them and their communities. They were also encouraged to highlight DCC's unique role in IDOC with its long history of innovative
901:
In November 1991 the IDOC opened a 200-bed minimum-security satellite facility for female inmates in the former Illinois Youth Center in
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decided to "streamline bureaucracy" in the IDOC by terminating the employment of middle-management. The DCC would lose 10 positions.
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The state prison guards' union stated concern for the impact the closings would have, particularly on small towns, and they filed a
447: 295:
by a white-stockinged inmate. Serious violations resulted in solitary confinement for a limited time and a diet of bread and water.
150: 141:
Interest in a reformed penal system for women arose as early as 1914 among women's service and advocacy groups in Illinois. In 1919
4861:
http://www.mywebtimes.com/news/local/dwight-prison-to-become-fire-training-center/article_f6e477b5-e7c4-50b1-8dbb-f8409cccd255.html
6249: 6239: 1286:
considered a bill to increase funding for the DCC, but stated that he wanted first to know why 248 officers worked 7,245 hours of
967:
segregation five days after a razor blade was found in her cell. The usual penalty for such an offense was a year in segregation.
6510: 6223: 5611: 5476: 5328: 5265: 5024: 6603: 5543: 6546: 6050: 5872: 5787: 5595: 5361: 5097: 4998: 1010: 600:
planned adult prison in Joliet, but was sent to the DCC when the plan for transferring women to other facilities fell through.
5522: 224:..." with the goal of "returning unfortunate girls and women to society, clean, healthful, and with character reconstructed." 6765: 6660: 6624: 6380: 6218: 6025: 5725: 5720: 5627: 5527: 5089: 235:
of the Oakdale Reformatory for Women was laid and the facility formally dedicated on November 19, 1931, by Illinois Governor
6396: 5366: 688:
created security issues and need for more staff. Barbed wire was added to the security fence to further discourage escapes.
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and constructive in programming. By 1934 Oakdale was considered a "model institution" by the National Reform Association.
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at Dwight, served as acting superintendent until 1946, when Hazard assumed her position once again. Hazard experienced a
6887: 6193: 6162: 5909: 5819: 5102: 5078: 5068: 5029: 4985: 1427: 1271:"fundamental ideas of rehabilitation and education for female inmates upon which Dwight Correctional Center was based." 372: 1274:
The Helping Paws Program was transferred to the Logan Correctional Center in Lincoln, IL, when the DCC closed in 2013.
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for the whole weekend, and took the precaution of having extra food and water on hand. No problems were encountered.
888:. The rebellion of the four ignited the fury of others in segregation, resulting in extensive damage to the cells. A 4904: 113:
The facility was closed in 2013 as the State of Illinois sought to balance its budget. At that time it was the only
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In 1994 Illinois' budget and Governor Edgar's release of funds allowed a few improvements to the DCC facility. The
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A lack of maintenance on the grounds under the management of the IDOC was raised as a concern by State Senator
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unit. The IDOC estimated that shutting operations of the DCC down would save the state $ 37.3 million a year.
6838:
Adults who commit felonies in the District of Columbia are sent to Federal Bureau of Prisons (BOP) facilities
1307: 454:
after Senator Everett M. Peters described Dwight as "the 'country club' of the state's penitentiary system."
1630: 1439: 944: 6474: 1559:- convicted of the 1976 murders of her mother, father and 13 yr old brother. She was sentenced to 300 years 1251:
education in care and training of the dogs and issued a certificate that would make inmates eligible to be
191:
to crime," a monument to the belief "that in time crime can be abolished," and in 1976, "a monument to the
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meetings. St. Leonard's House of Chicago held sessions to assist inmates with their reentry into society.
6438: 5128: 4915: 1862: 1851: 1795: 1721: 1656: 1252: 252: 1540:
used the gymnasium to house 2,200 metal file cabinets and placed three employees there to manage them.
388:. The facility was inadequate, and the staff was poorly trained. She said that two female guards were " 1556: 6448: 6428: 5668: 5652: 1513: 1022:
the cafeteria and education building was released in February 1997 after a two-year partisan battle.
889: 772: 512: 400: 4829: 963:. Other inmates joined the fray by throwing books and chairs on the officers from the higher level. 5502: 5486: 1093: 997: 801: 562: 425: 418: 172: 123: 1092:
While sexual contact with inmates was against prison rules, it was not prosecutable as a criminal
959:
inmate. In 1998 an inmate started a "near riot" when she became belligerent over the theft of her
6745: 6443: 5684: 1391: 1073: 659: 647: 504: 1017:
ramps for public access areas. Interior roads were improved, a computer system was installed, a
371:
Doris Whitney previously had been forced to resign as superintendent of the women's division at
1536:, which planned to appraise the property before offering to other state or local agencies. The 6526: 5219:
include facilities for post-trial long-term confinement of adult females and juvenile females
1572: 1311: 1226: 1214: 1210: 1129:
In December 1997 Ella May Scott, who also went by the name "Kim Ball," died of an overdose of
385: 352: 308:
work, which included the feeding of chickens and gathering of eggs. Some planted the gardens,
236: 1562: 823: 796:
Bids were also sought to repair a softball diamond, resurface the basketball court, and add
613: 377: 216: 204: 96: 1225:
As the new millennium approached, the IDOC shared the public's concerns for the impact of "
608:
John Platt stated he planned to build on the work of Buchanan and was not trying "to run a
6490: 4886: 4123:
Chicago Tribune (Chicago, Illinois) · Wed, Mar 15, 2000 · Main Edition · Pages 112 and 119
1592: 1529: 1315: 451: 146: 5177: 4231:
Chicago Tribune (Chicago, Illinois) · Wed, Nov 22, 2000 · Other Editions · Pages 129–132
826:
nurtured honesty in expression of emotions and provided an arena for airing grievances.
5414: 1283: 1181: 1066: 1056:
from the federal government that would be used to add 140 beds to the 90-bed facility.
835: 348: 6881: 5147: 1431: 1423: 1403: 1264: 747: 625: 617: 499: 464: 393: 389: 248: 240: 196: 2863:
The Edwardsville Intelligencer (Edwardsville, Illinois) · Tue, 22 May 1973 · Page 2
2278:
The Edwardsville Intelligencer (Edwardsville, Illinois) · Mon, Jun 19, 1950 · Page 3
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Northwest Herald (Woodstock, Illinois) · Sat, Jun 14, 2014 · Main Edition · Page 12
4393:
Chicago Tribune (Chicago, Illinois) · Wed, Mar 12, 2008 · Other Editions · Page 2-3
3961:
Chicago Tribune (Chicago, Illinois) · Fri, Feb 13, 1998 · Other Editions · Page 191
3421:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Sat, Apr 12, 1986 · FIRST EDITION · Page 4
1256: 1081: 1077: 1032: 940: 906: 902: 843: 780: 621: 180: 4747:
Morris Daily Herald (Morris, Illinois) · Fri, Feb 22, 2013 · Main Edition · Page 8
4738:
Morris Daily Herald (Morris, Illinois) · Fri, Feb 22, 2013 · Main Edition · Page 1
4729:
Morris Daily Herald (Morris, Illinois) · Fri, Feb 22, 2013 · Main Edition · Page 1
4384:
Chicago Tribune (Chicago, Illinois) · Tue, Mar 4, 2008 · Other Editions · Page 2-3
4366:
Chicago Tribune (Chicago, Illinois) · Fri, Mar 5, 2004 · Other Editions · Page 2-9
4087:
Chicago Tribune (Chicago, Illinois) · Fri, May 7, 1999 · Other Editions · Page 149
3934:
Chicago Tribune (Chicago, Illinois) · Mon, Jan 13, 1997 · Other Editions · Page 68
3151:
Arlington Heights Herald (Arlington Heights, Illinois)· Thu, Mar 3, 1977 · Page 13
498:
Inmates were vocationally trained in laundering, cooking, and clerical skills. In
4801:
Chicago Tribune (Chicago, Illinois) · Mon, Aug 27, 2012 · Main Edition · Page 1-7
4684:
Northwest Herald (Woodstock, Illinois) · Thu, Dec 6, 2012 · Main Edition · Page 6
4648:
Morris Daily Herald (Morris, Illinois) · Thu, Aug 9, 2012 · Main Edition · Page 3
4483:
Chicago Tribune (Chicago, Illinois) · Tue, Nov 23, 2010 · Main Edition · Page 1-4
511:
to transcribe materials. The reformatory offered moral guidance, counseling, and
166:
Once funding was secured, a location was identified for the new reformatory, and
5456: 3997:
Chicago Tribune (Chicago, Illinois) · Wed, Jun 11, 1997 · Main Edition · Page 33
3898:
Chicago Tribune (Chicago, Illinois) · Sun, Jan 28, 1996 · Main Edition · Page 53
3889:
Chicago Tribune (Chicago, Illinois) · Sun, Jan 28, 1996 · Main Edition · Page 53
1298: 1291: 1194: 1045: 1018: 1014: 952: 722: 360: 232: 221: 142: 107: 3574:
Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Sat, Apr 12, 1986 · FIRST EDITION · Page 4
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Freeport Journal-Standard (Freeport, Illinois) · Thu, Sep 22, 1977 · Page 11
3079:
Mt. Vernon Register-News (Mt Vernon, Illinois) · Tue, Nov 30, 1976 · Page 10
1479:
converted to provide bunk space, perpetuating AFSCME concerns for security.
1085: 956: 847: 655: 195:." The administration building was described as "something of a gentleman's 176:
served "merely to indicate the boundary lines of the reformatory property."
3214:
Chicago Tribune (Chicago, Illinois) · Sun, May 20, 1979 · Pages 286 and 288
2728:
St. Louis Post-Dispatch (St. Louis, Missouri) · Sun, Apr 24, 1966 · Page 21
2422:
Mt. Vernon Register-News (Mt Vernon, Illinois) · Sat, Jun 19, 1954 · Page 1
3007:
Galesburg Register-Mail (Galesburg, Illinois) · Fri, Feb 15, 1974 · Page 3
2530:
Mt. Vernon Register-News (Mt Vernon, Illinois) · Thu, May 2, 1957 · Page 2
2512:
Mt. Vernon Register-News (Mt Vernon, Illinois) · Thu, May 2, 1957 · Page 2
2413:
Galesburg Register-Mail (Galesburg, Illinois) · Wed, Jul 28, 1954 · Page 1
1833:
The Decatur Daily Review (Decatur, Illinois) · Sun, May 12, 1935 · Page 21
1193:
On January 24, 2000, a new minimum-security female facility was opened in
4952: 3871:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Sun, Jun 1, 1997 · Pages 5 and 6
1287: 1230: 797: 756: 710: 702: 651: 469: 313: 188: 130: 507:, and others tape-recorded text books for the blind. One inmate learned 4666:
Southern Illinoisan (Carbondale, Illinois) · Wed, Sep 26, 2012 · Page 7
4574:
https://www.illinois.gov/idoc/aboutus/Pages/DwightCCSustainability.aspx
4546:
Southern Illinoisan (Carbondale, Illinois) · Wed, Sep 26, 2012 · Page 7
3682:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Sat, Mar 20, 1993 · · Page 90
3637:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Sat, Mar 24, 1990 · · Page 95
3493:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Fri, Jan 16, 1987 · · Page 19
3475:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Sat, Mar 20, 1993 · · Page 90
3448:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Fri, Jan 16, 1987 · · Page 19
3403:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Fri, Jan 16, 1987 · · Page 19
2332:
Dixon Evening Telegraph (Dixon, Illinois) · Fri, Apr 13, 1951 · Page 20
2314:
Dixon Evening Telegraph (Dixon, Illinois) · Fri, Apr 13, 1951 · Page 20
1505: 984: 771:
Huch had trained as a teacher, attended college in New York, worked at
609: 508: 473: 305: 200: 4492:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Tue, Jul 12, 2011 · · Page 4
4213:
The Kinmundy Express (Kinmundy, Illinois) · Thu, Dec 14, 2000 · Page 3
4006:
Southern Illinoisan (Carbondale, Illinois) · Mon, Aug 4, 1997 · Page 7
3880:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Sat, Mar 26, 1994 · · Page 8
3853:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Tue, Aug 22, 1995 · · Page 1
3826:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Tue, Aug 22, 1995 · · Page 4
3817:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Fri, Apr 15, 1994 · · Page 3
3799:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Sat, Feb 24, 1996 · · Page 2
3772:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Fri, May 27, 1994 · · Page 3
3763:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Thu, May 19, 1994 · · Page 2
3754:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Wed, Jun 16, 1993 · · Page 4
3745:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Thu, May 19, 1994 · · Page 2
3718:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Tue, Mar 30, 1993 · · Page 7
3439:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Thu, Feb 27, 1986 · · Page 1
3196:
Southern Illinoisan (Carbondale, Illinois) · Wed, Jun 8, 1977 · Page 3
2395:
Alton Evening Telegraph (Alton, Illinois) · Fri, Aug 6, 1954 · Page 14
955:
accompanying a child on a visit to its mother was attacked by a front-
534:
American Federation of State, County, and Municipal Employees, AFL-CIO
4916:
http://dwight-historical-society.org/Documents/oakdale_dedication.pdf
4321:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Wed, May 8, 2002 · · Page 1
3988:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Sat, May 2, 1998 · · Page 1
3808:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Tue, Dec 7, 1993 · · Page 4
3727:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Fri, Feb 7, 1992 · · Page 4
3691:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Thu, Mar 8, 1990 · · Page 2
3664:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Thu, Jun 7, 1990 · · Page 2
3646:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Thu, Jun 7, 1990 · · Page 2
1863:
http://dwight-historical-society.org/Documents/oakdale_dedication.pdf
1852:
http://dwight-historical-society.org/Documents/oakdale_dedication.pdf
1796:
http://dwight-historical-society.org/Documents/oakdale_dedication.pdf
1722:
http://dwight-historical-society.org/Documents/oakdale_dedication.pdf
1657:
http://dwight-historical-society.org/Documents/oakdale_dedication.pdf
1399: 1130: 854: 776: 746:(Fuerzas Armadas de LiberaciĂłn Nacional) protested treatment of four 663: 533: 103: 4702:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Sat, Mar 23, 2013 · Page 44
4474:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Sun, Jun 14, 2009 · Page 11
4438:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Thu, Feb 17, 2005 · Page 12
4420:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Sat, Dec 25, 2004 · Page 11
4411:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Sun, Jan 29, 2012 · Page 45
4402:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Thu, Mar 20, 2008 · Page 37
4375:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Wed, Aug 18, 2004 · Page 11
4330:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Fri, May 23, 2003 · Page 14
4105:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Tue, May 18, 1999 · Page 49
4096:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Tue, May 18, 1999 · Page 49
4078:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Tue, Feb 23, 1999 · Page 42
4051:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Thu, Apr 22, 1999 · Page 51
3979:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Wed, Oct 15, 1997 · Page 52
3952:
The Daily Chronicle (De Kalb, Illinois) · Thu, May 15, 1997 · Page 3
3907:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Mon, Mar 31, 1997 · Page 34
3862:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Wed, May 28, 1997 · Page 43
3835:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Sat, Mar 12, 1994 · Page 78
3628:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Mon, Mar 27, 1989 · Page 66
3556:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Sun, May 10, 1998 · Page 12
3538:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Sun, May 10, 1998 · Page 12
3520:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Mon, Mar 28, 1988 · Page 69
3484:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Sun, Jan 22, 1984 · Page 33
3466:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Sat, Mar 23, 1991 · Page 71
3430:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Mon, Mar 27, 1989 · Page 66
3394:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Fri, Jul 16, 1982 · Page 36
3061:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Thu, Jul 25, 1974 · Page 14
3043:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Thu, Apr 25, 1974 · Page 19
3034:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Thu, Jul 25, 1974 · Page 14
3025:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Thu, Apr 25, 1974 · Page 19
2791:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Thu, Jan 18, 1973 · Page 36
2782:
The Daily Chronicle (De Kalb, Illinois) · Thu, Jan 4, 1973 · Page 10
2773:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Thu, Jan 18, 1973 · Page 36
2746:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Wed, Sep 13, 1967 · Page 36
2710:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Thu, Jan 18, 1973 · Page 36
2638:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Wed, Sep 13, 1967 · Page 36
2575:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Tue, Oct 31, 1961 · Page 16
2566:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Tue, Aug 29, 1961 · Page 13
2557:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Tue, Oct 31, 1961 · Page 16
2548:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Tue, Jun 30, 1959 · Page 21
2539:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Fri, Aug 31, 1956 · Page 12
2521:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Wed, Jun 24, 1959 · Page 11
2449:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Sat, Oct 29, 1955 · Page 10
2386:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Tue, Sep 15, 1953 · Page 11
2350:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Wed, May 16, 1951 · Page 39
2098:
The Decatur Herald (Decatur, Illinois) · Sun, Dec 13, 1931 · Page 17
2026:
The Decatur Herald (Decatur, Illinois) · Sun, Dec 13, 1931 · Page 17
2008:
The Decatur Herald (Decatur, Illinois) · Sun, Dec 13, 1931 · Page 17
1981:
The Decatur Herald (Decatur, Illinois) · Sun, Dec 13, 1931 · Page 17
1963:
The Decatur Herald (Decatur, Illinois) · Sun, Dec 13, 1931 · Page 17
1936:
The Decatur Herald (Decatur, Illinois) · Sun, Dec 13, 1931 · Page 17
1909:
The Decatur Herald (Decatur, Illinois) · Sun, Dec 13, 1931 · Page 17
6355:
Gloria McDonald Awaiting Trial Maximum and Medium Security Facility
4819:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Tue, Sep 10, 2013 · Page 5
4783:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Sat, Mar 30, 2013 · Page 3
4765:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Sat, Mar 30, 2013 · Page 3
4711:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Thu, Jan 31, 2013 · Page 5
4693:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Thu, Jan 31, 2013 · Page 5
4621:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Tue, Mar 6, 2012 · Page 12
4585:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Tue, Mar 6, 2012 · Page 12
4564:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Thu, Feb 23, 2012 · Page 3
4555:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Thu, Jun 21, 2012 · Page 1
4537:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Thu, Feb 23, 2012 · Page 3
4528:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Tue, Mar 6, 2012 · Page 12
4519:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Thu, Apr 5, 2012 · Page 10
4465:
Herald and Review (Decatur, Illinois) · Sun, Sep 24, 2006 · Page 15
4447:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Tue, Apr 19, 2005 · Page 3
4429:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Thu, Feb 17, 2005 · Page 1
4357:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Tue, Feb 17, 2004 · Page 3
4348:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Thu, Jul 10, 2003 · Page 7
4312:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Thu, Feb 14, 2002 · Page 1
4303:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Tue, Jan 22, 2002 · Page 9
4276:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Sat, Aug 26, 2000 · Page 1
4267:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Wed, Aug 16, 2000 · Page 3
4258:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Thu, Jul 19, 2012 · Page 3
4249:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Wed, Nov 22, 2000 · Page 6
4240:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Wed, Nov 22, 2000 · Page 6
4222:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Wed, Nov 22, 2000 · Page 6
4204:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Wed, Nov 22, 2000 · Page 6
4195:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Fri, Jun 13, 2003 · Page 3
4186:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Tue, Jan 4, 2000 · Page 12
4168:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Sat, Jan 29, 2000 · Page 7
4150:
Herald and Review (Decatur, Illinois) · Tue, Jan 25, 2000 · Page 31
4132:
Herald and Review (Decatur, Illinois) · Tue, Jan 25, 2000 · Page 31
4114:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Tue, Jun 29, 1999 · Page 5
4042:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Fri, Nov 27, 1998 · Page 5
4033:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Fri, Sep 25, 1998 · Page 7
4015:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Sat, Aug 2, 1997 · Page 50
3943:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Tue, Dec 10, 1996 · Page 7
3925:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Fri, Aug 9, 1996 · Page 12
3844:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Fri, Feb 14, 1997 · Page 5
3790:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Sun, Jan 21, 1996 · Page 1
3736:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Thu, Jun 18, 1992 · Page 2
3709:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Thu, Mar 21, 1991 · Page 5
3700:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Sat, Jan 27, 1990 · Page 2
3619:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Sun, Aug 21, 1988 · Page 2
3610:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Sun, Jul 31, 1988 · Page 1
3601:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Sun, Aug 21, 1988 · Page 2
3592:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Sun, Aug 21, 1988 · Page 2
3565:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Tue, Feb 17, 2004 · Page 3
3547:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Sat, May 16, 1998 · Page 2
3529:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Mon, Oct 25, 1999 · Page 3
3511:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Mon, Sep 16, 1985 · Page 1
3502:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Sun, Apr 30, 1989 · Page 2
3457:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Thu, Jul 14, 1988 · Page 2
3412:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Sat, Jan 26, 1985 · Page 4
3385:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Tue, Mar 17, 1981 · Page 2
3376:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Mon, Mar 16, 1981 · Page 2
3367:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Tue, Jan 27, 1981 · Page 2
3349:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Tue, Jan 27, 1981 · Page 2
3340:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Sun, Nov 30, 1980 · Page 3
3331:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Wed, Jun 18, 1980 · Page 1
3322:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Wed, Feb 13, 1980 · Page 3
3304:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Sun, Oct 21, 1979 · Page 2
3286:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Sun, Oct 21, 1979 · Page 2
3277:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Sat, May 28, 1983 · Page 3
3268:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Sat, Jul 12, 1980 · Page 1
3259:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Sat, Sep 15, 1979 · Page 3
3250:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Sun, Oct 21, 1979 · Page 2
3241:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Tue, Feb 21, 1978 · Page 3
3205:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Thu, Jun 16, 1977 · Page 2
3142:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Tue, Feb 21, 1978 · Page 3
3106:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Sun, Sep 26, 1976 · Page 3
2998:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Tue, Jan 22, 1974 · Page 3
2890:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Thu, Aug 9, 1973 · Page 14
2881:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Thu, Aug 9, 1973 · Page 14
2755:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Thu, Jul 7, 1966 · Page 27
2737:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Wed, Nov 16, 1966 · Page 5
2719:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Sat, Oct 20, 1962 · Page 5
2701:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Wed, Nov 23, 1966 · Page 5
2674:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Wed, Nov 30, 1966 · Page 6
2665:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Fri, Nov 25, 1966 · Page 5
2656:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Wed, Nov 23, 1966 · Page 5
2647:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Wed, Aug 5, 1970 · Page 11
2458:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Sun, Sep 18, 1960 · Page 5
2296:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Sat, Apr 21, 1951 · Page 5
2242:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Thu, Dec 11, 1941 · Page 3
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The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Sun, Mar 18, 1934 · Page 4
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The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Sun, Mar 18, 1934 · Page 4
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The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Sun, Mar 18, 1934 · Page 4
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The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Sun, Mar 18, 1934 · Page 4
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The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Thu, Dec 11, 1941 · Page 3
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The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Sun, Mar 18, 1934 · Page 4
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The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Sun, Mar 18, 1934 · Page 4
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The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Sun, Mar 18, 1934 · Page 4
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The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Sun, Mar 18, 1934 · Page 4
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The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Sun, Mar 18, 1934 · Page 4
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The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Sun, Mar 18, 1934 · Page 4
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The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Mon, Oct 25, 1999 · Page 3
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The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Tue, Mar 6, 2012 · Page 1
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Herald and Review (Decatur, Illinois) · Sun, Apr 7, 2013 · Page 11
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Herald and Review (Decatur, Illinois) · Sun, Apr 7, 2013 · Page 11
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The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Wed, Mar 6, 2013 · Page 4
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Herald and Review (Decatur, Illinois) · Wed, Jan 16, 2013 · Page 6
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The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Wed, Sep 5, 2012 · Page 1
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The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Tue, Mar 6, 2012 · Page 1
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The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Thu, Apr 5, 2012 · Page 1
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Herald and Review (Decatur, Illinois) · Sun, Apr 7, 2013 · Page 11
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The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Thu, Apr 5, 2012 · Page 1
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The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Tue, Mar 6, 2012 · Page 1
4456:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Tue, Nov 8, 2005 · Page 3
4339:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Fri, Oct 3, 2003 · Page 5
4294:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Fri, Mar 2, 2001 · Page 3
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The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Wed, Nov 1, 2000 · Page 2
4159:
Herald and Review (Decatur, Illinois) · Wed, Mar 31, 1999 · Page 4
4141:
Herald and Review (Decatur, Illinois) · Wed, Mar 31, 1999 · Page 4
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The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Tue, Dec 1, 1998 · Page 4
4060:
Herald and Review (Decatur, Illinois) · Wed, Mar 31, 1999 · Page 1
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The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Mon, Dec 8, 1997 · Page 5
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The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Tue, Jul 8, 1997 · Page 7
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The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Sat, Apr 4, 1998 · Page 2
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The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Thu, May 2, 1991 · Page 3
3583:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Tue, Feb 3, 1987 · Page 6
3313:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Tue, Oct 2, 1979 · Page 3
3295:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Tue, Oct 2, 1979 · Page 3
3160:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Wed, Sep 7, 1977 · Page 3
3115:
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Wed, Sep 7, 1977 · Page 3
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Southern Illinoisan (Carbondale, Illinois) 12 Jul 1973, Thu Page 1
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The Daily Herald (Chicago, Illinois) · Wed, Jan 27, 1971 · Page 86
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The Daily Herald (Chicago, Illinois) · Wed, Jan 27, 1971 · Page 86
2620:
Chicago Tribune (Chicago, Illinois) · Sun, Mar 15, 1964 · Page 180
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The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Tue, Mar 6, 1962 · Page 5
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The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Fri, Oct 6, 1961 · Page 7
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The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Sat, Dec 6, 1941 · Page 5
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The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Sat, Dec 6, 1941 · Page 5
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The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Tue, Dec 9, 1941 · Page 3
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The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Sat, Dec 6, 1941 · Page 5
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The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Tue, Dec 9, 1941 · Page 3
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The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Thu, Dec 4, 1941 · Page 5
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The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Tue, Dec 9, 1941 · Page 3
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The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Sat, Dec 6, 1941 · Page 5
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The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Sat, Dec 6, 1941 · Page 5
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The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) · Tue, Dec 9, 1941 · Page 3
905:. This action was taken after a federal court ruled in favor of a 885: 291: 4639:
Herald and Review (Decatur, Illinois) · Fri, Aug 3, 2012 · Page 5
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The Daily Leader (Pontiac, Illinois) · Fri, May 13, 1977 · Page 1
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The Daily Leader (Pontiac, Illinois) · Thu, Dec 15, 1977 · Page 9
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The Daily Leader (Pontiac, Illinois) · Sat, Nov 19, 1977 · Page 4
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The Daily Leader (Pontiac, Illinois) · Tue, Jul 13, 1976 · Page 1
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The Daily Leader (Pontiac, Illinois) · Wed, Oct 6, 1976 · Page 12
3052:
The Daily Leader (Pontiac, Illinois) · Tue, Apr 23, 1974 · Page 1
3016:
Chicago Tribune (Chicago, Illinois) · Tue, Apr 23, 1974 · Page 42
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The Daily Leader (Pontiac, Illinois) · Wed, Feb 6, 1974 · Page 13
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The Daily Leader (Pontiac, Illinois) · Tue, Jan 22, 1974 · Page 8
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The Daily Leader (Pontiac, Illinois) · Tue, Jan 22, 1974 · Page 8
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The Daily Leader (Pontiac, Illinois) · Fri, Aug 24, 1973 · Page 2
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The Daily Leader (Pontiac, Illinois) · Thu, Nov 15, 1973 · Page 2
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The Daily Leader (Pontiac, Illinois) · Thu, Nov 15, 1973 · Page 2
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The Daily Leader (Pontiac, Illinois) · Tue, Jan 22, 1974 · Page 8
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The Daily Leader (Pontiac, Illinois) · Fri, Nov 16, 1973 · Page 7
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The Daily Leader (Pontiac, Illinois) · Fri, Nov 16, 1973 · Page 7
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The Daily Leader (Pontiac, Illinois) · Thu, Nov 15, 1973 · Page 2
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The Daily Leader (Pontiac, Illinois) · Thu, Nov 15, 1973 · Page 2
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The Daily Leader (Pontiac, Illinois) · Fri, Oct 26, 1973 · Page 8
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The Daily Leader (Pontiac, Illinois) · Thu, Nov 15, 1973 · Page 2
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The Daily Leader (Pontiac, Illinois) · Tue, Apr 24, 1973 · Page 4
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The Daily Leader (Pontiac, Illinois) · Tue, Apr 24, 1973 · Page 4
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The Daily Leader (Pontiac, Illinois) · Tue, Apr 24, 1973 · Page 4
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Chicago Tribune (Chicago, Illinois) · Wed, Apr 12, 1967 · Page 41
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Chicago Tribune (Chicago, Illinois) · Sat, May 12, 1962 · Page 67
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Chicago Tribune (Chicago, Illinois) · Tue, Mar 24, 1959 · Page 24
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Chicago Tribune (Chicago, Illinois) · Wed, Oct 12, 1955 · Page 20
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Chicago Tribune (Chicago, Illinois) · Sun, Oct 18, 1953 · Page 14
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Chicago Tribune (Chicago, Illinois) · Wed, Mar 28, 1951 · Page 13
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Chicago Tribune (Chicago, Illinois) · Wed, Mar 28, 1951 · Page 13
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Chicago Tribune (Chicago, Illinois) · Wed, Mar 28, 1951 · Page 13
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Chicago Tribune (Chicago, Illinois) · Fri, Jul 15, 1949 · Page 14
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Chicago Tribune (Chicago, Illinois) · Wed, Mar 25, 1936 · Page 13
2017:
Chicago Tribune (Chicago, Illinois) · Wed, Mar 25, 1936 · Page 13
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Chicago Tribune (Chicago, Illinois) · Fri, Nov 20, 1931 · Page 14
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Chicago Tribune (Chicago, Illinois) · Fri, Nov 20, 1931 · Page 14
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Chicago Tribune (Chicago, Illinois) · Sun, Mar 23, 1947 · Page 10
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Chicago Tribune (Chicago, Illinois) · Sun, Mar 23, 1947 · Page 10
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Chicago Tribune (Chicago, Illinois) · Sun, Mar 23, 1947 · Page 10
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Chicago Tribune (Chicago, Illinois) · Fri, Nov 20, 1931 · Page 14
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The Daily Leader (Pontiac, Illinois) · Wed, Oct 6, 1976 · Page 12
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Chicago Tribune (Chicago, Illinois) · Fri, Nov 20, 1931 · Page 14
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Chicago Tribune (Chicago, Illinois) · Sun, Mar 23, 1947 · Page 10
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Chicago Tribune (Chicago, Illinois) · Wed, Mar 25, 1936 · Page 13
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The Daily Leader (Pontiac, Illinois) · Wed, Oct 6, 1976 · Page 12
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Chicago Tribune (Chicago, Illinois) · Sun, Mar 23, 1947 · Page 10
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Chicago Tribune (Chicago, Illinois) · Sun, Mar 23, 1947 · Page 10
359:, assumed the position of acting director until Doris Whitney of 355:
in 1949 and resigned in 1950. O.H. Lewis, a former warden at the
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Journal Gazette (Mattoon, Illinois) · Tue, Oct 30, 2012 · Page 3
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Journal Gazette (Mattoon, Illinois) · Tue, Oct 30, 2012 · Page 3
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Journal Gazette (Mattoon, Illinois) · Thu, Sep 16, 1999 · Page 7
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Chicago Tribune (Chicago, Illinois) · Tue, Aug 5, 1980 · Page 14
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Chicago Tribune (Chicago, Illinois) · Tue, Aug 5, 1980 · Page 14
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The Daily Leader (Pontiac, Illinois) · Sat, Jun 4, 1977 · Page 2
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The Daily Leader (Pontiac, Illinois) · Sat, Jun 4, 1977 · Page 1
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The Daily Leader (Pontiac, Illinois) · Wed, Dec 8, 1976 · Page 5
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Chicago Tribune (Chicago, Illinois) · Wed, Apr 4, 1973 · Page 37
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Chicago Tribune (Chicago, Illinois) · Wed, Apr 4, 1973 · Page 37
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Chicago Tribune (Chicago, Illinois) · Wed, Mar 7, 1962 · Page 44
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Chicago Tribune (Chicago, Illinois) · Sun, Mar 22, 1959 · Page 1
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Chicago Tribune (Chicago, Illinois) · Mon, Mar 23, 1959 · Page 1
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Chicago Tribune (Chicago, Illinois) · Sun, Mar 22, 1959 · Page 1
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Chicago Tribune (Chicago, Illinois) · Sun, Mar 22, 1959 · Page 6
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Chicago Tribune (Chicago, Illinois) · Wed, Jul 28, 1954 · Page 5
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Chicago Tribune (Chicago, Illinois) · Wed, Jul 28, 1954 · Page 5
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Chicago Tribune (Chicago, Illinois) · Thu, Jan 29, 1953 · Page 5
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Chicago Tribune (Chicago, Illinois) · Sat, Apr 21, 1951 · Page 7
2260:
Chicago Tribune (Chicago, Illinois) · Thu, Jan 29, 1953 · Page 5
1990:
Decatur Herald (Decatur, Illinois) · Sun, Dec 13, 1931 · Page 17
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Chicago Tribune (Chicago, Illinois) · Fri, Mar 30, 1934 · Page 1
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Chicago Tribune (Chicago, Illinois) · Mon, Mar 6, 1939 · Page 7
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Chicago Tribune (Chicago, Illinois) · Mon, Mar 6, 1939 · Page 7
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Chicago Tribune (Chicago, Illinois) · Mon, Mar 6, 1939 · Page 7
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Chicago Tribune (Chicago, Illinois) · Mon, Mar 6, 1939 · Page 7
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Garrett Clipper (Garrett, Indiana) · Thu, Sep 24, 1936 · Page 3
1600: 1398:
Quinn had directed the IDOC to shave $ 112 million from their
980: 834:
In September 1985 24 trusted inmates were allowed to attend a
628:
even called, offering the inmates a 40% discount on products.
6046:
Women's Eastern Reception, Diagnostic and Correctional Center
4830:"Brookline Reader Callout: Send Us Your Dads-and-Kids Photos" 3916:
The Dispatch (Moline, Illinois) · Sun, Mar 24, 1996 · Page 37
2377:
The Dispatch (Moline, Illinois) · Thu, Jan 29, 1953 · Page 10
1647:
Southern Illinoisan (Carbondale, IL) Oct 23, 1970, Fri Page 3
179:
The whole facility was at various times compared to a "swank
6360:
Dorothea Dix Minimum Security Facility / Bernadette Building
2251:
The Dispatch (Moline, Illinois) · Thu, Aug 19, 1943 · Page 8
1873:
The Dispatch (Moline, Illinois) · Tue, Nov 25, 1930 · Page 2
1842:
The Dispatch (Moline, Illinois) · Thu, Nov 19, 1931 · Page 1
1694:
The Dispatch (Moline, Illinois) · Thu, Nov 19, 1931 · Page 1
1676:
The Dispatch (Moline, Illinois) · Thu, Nov 19, 1931 · Page 1
1667:
The Dispatch (Moline, Illinois) · Thu, Nov 19, 1931 · Page 1
1565:– convicted of murdering her domestic partner, Rebecca Klein 616:. All had plumbing. There were snack and laundry rooms, two 4871:
Herald News (Joliet, Illinois) · Tue, Oct 6, 2015 · Page 13
4851:
Herald News (Joliet, Illinois) · Wed, Jul 9, 2014 · Page 19
3655:
The Dispatch (Moline, Illinois) · Thu, Jun 7, 1990 · Page 9
2584:
The Dispatch (Moline, Illinois) · Thu, Sep 7, 1961 · Page 7
2107:
The Dispatch (Moline, Illinois) · Fri, Dec 8, 1933 · Page 6
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The Dispatch (Moline, Illinois) · Sat, Feb 8, 1930 · Page 5
880:
was compounded by staff members who were no-shows or sick.
1410:
plans "reckless" because of existing overcrowding issues.
1430:
reported that closure of the facility would result in a
6898:
Buildings and structures in Livingston County, Illinois
1297:
The overtime issues persisted into 2001, at which time
654:
out of the floor, tore up beds, and beat guards with a
1552:
Notable inmates incarcerated at the facility include:
545:
The construction was expected to be complete in 1967.
6270:
Dakota Women's Correctional and Rehabilitation Center
1290:(or 990 shifts) in July—the first month of Illinois' 6806: 6790: 6774: 6758: 6738: 6722: 6689: 6673: 6653: 6637: 6617: 6596: 6575: 6555: 6539: 6519: 6503: 6483: 6457: 6421: 6405: 6389: 6368: 6347: 6326: 6310: 6294: 6278: 6262: 6232: 6206: 6181: 6155: 6139: 6123: 6107: 6091: 6075: 6059: 6038: 6018: 6002: 5986: 5970: 5962:
Massachusetts Correctional Institution – Framingham
5954: 5938: 5922: 5902: 5886: 5865: 5849: 5828: 5812: 5796: 5775: 5755: 5734: 5713: 5697: 5677: 5661: 5640: 5620: 5604: 5588: 5572: 5556: 5536: 5515: 5495: 5469: 5444: 5428: 5407: 5391: 5375: 5354: 5319: 5299: 5241: 5121: 4965: 1434:loss of 629 jobs and $ 53.7 million (or 5%) of the 64: 56: 48: 40: 28: 6334:State Correctional Institution – Cambridge Springs 5875:(reopened as Southeast State Correctional Complex) 5580:Delores J. Baylor Women's Correctional Institution 1237:2000 – 2003 Lynn Cahill-Masching's superintendence 6214:North Carolina Correctional Institution for Women 1302:mandating that food and housekeeping services be 713:was declared in the case of one of the officers. 1137:1998 – 1999 Donna Klein-Acosta's superintendence 6376:Camille Griffin Graham Correctional Institution 842:Initially held on Fridays through Sundays from 1167:1999 – 2000 Glenda Blakemore's superintendence 800:A 46-bed mental health unit was also created. 662:and one an attempted murder of a guard with a 481:1962–1973 Margaret Morrissey's superintendence 6168:Bedford Hills Correctional Facility for Women 5286:Federal Correctional Institution, Tallahassee 5193: 4935: 767:1982–1992 Jane Huch (Higgins) superintendence 679:1977–1979 Charlotte Sutliff's superintendence 8: 6250:North Piedmont Correctional Center for Women 6240:Black Mountain Correctional Center for Women 6099:Florence McClure Women's Correctional Center 5256:Federal Correctional Institution, Aliceville 1308:Private Correctional Facility Moratorium Act 670:All-male prison proposed and again abandoned 35:Nevada Township, Livingston County, Illinois 19: 6832:Incarceration of women in the United States 5946:Maryland Correctional Institution for Women 5307:Federal Reformatory for Women in Seagoville 4882:"Murderer Mom Tries to Kill Self in Prison" 1072:A study by the John Howard Association and 578:1973–1974 Robert Buchanan's superintendence 407:1954–1962 Ruth Biedermann's superintendence 16:Prison for women in Illinois, United States 6735: 6710: 6650: 6614: 6604:Mission Creek Corrections Center for Women 6552: 6516: 6454: 6229: 6178: 6131:Edna Mahan Correctional Facility for Women 6015: 5994:Minnesota Correctional Facility – Shakopee 5978:Women's Huron Valley Correctional Facility 5899: 5894:Louisiana Correctional Institute for Women 5846: 5752: 5658: 5601: 5533: 5492: 5425: 5342: 5296: 5229: 5200: 5186: 5178: 5144:Jesse 'Ma' Houston Adult Transition Center 4942: 4928: 4920: 18: 6798:Escuela Industrial para Mujeres Vega Alta 6547:Chittenden Regional Correctional Facility 6010:Central Mississippi Correctional Facility 5836:Kentucky Correctional Institute for Women 5399:Arizona State Prison Complex – Perryville 5271:Federal Correctional Institution, Danbury 5155:Southern Illinois Adult Transition Center 5083:Southwestern Illinois Correctional Center 1155:scheduled for 2–3 extra shifts per week. 540:Aging facilities and dwindling population 89:Illinois Penitentiary for Women at Dwight 6814:Golden Grove Adult Correctional Facility 6147:New Mexico Women's Correctional Facility 5930:Maine Correctional Center Women's Center 5669:Georgia Women's Correctional Institution 5291:Federal Correctional Institution, Waseca 5276:Federal Correctional Institution, Dublin 717:1979–1982 Linda Giesen's superintendence 259:1930–1950 Helen Hazard's superintendence 95:, United States, outside the village of 6625:Pine Lodge Corrections Center for Women 6609:Washington Corrections Center for Women 6219:Swannanoa Correctional Center for Women 5804:Iowa Correctional Institution for Women 5726:South Boise Women's Correctional Center 1612: 1060:Protection of inmates from sexual abuse 6588:Virginia Correctional Center for Women 6583:Fluvanna Correctional Center for Women 6339:State Correctional Institution – Muncy 6245:Fountain Correctional Center for Women 6083:Nebraska Correctional Center for Women 5544:Colorado Women's Correctional Facility 5208:Prisons for women in the United States 1631:"Illinois Abolishes the Death Penalty" 809:Parenting and substance abuse programs 730:, and a new system for tracking keys. 604:1974–1977 John Platt's superintendence 357:Pontiac (Illinois) Correctional Center 5866:Closed and reopened as men's facility 5857:Western Kentucky Correctional Complex 5721:Pocatello Women's Correctional Center 5705:Women's Community Correctional Center 1348:Charges of criminal sexual misconduct 1278:Dwight and the Illinois budget crisis 7: 6115:New Hampshire State Prison for Women 5523:Denver Women's Correctional Facility 5281:United States Penitentiary, Hazelton 5113:Western Illinois Correctional Center 1080:of prisoners and unwarranted visual 658:. Several inmates were charged with 6681:Taycheedah Correctional Institution 5482:Central California Women's Facility 5383:Hiland Mountain Correctional Center 4973:Big Muddy River Correctional Center 1601:John Howard Association of Illinois 1492:or resigned, and 19 were laid off. 1310:, and the judge issued a temporary 1005:Facility expansion and improvements 632:William W. Fox Developmental Center 527:Poor morale among inmates and staff 367:1950–1953 Whitney's superintendence 6913:2013 disestablishments in Illinois 6645:Lakin Correctional Center and Jail 6318:Coffee Creek Correctional Facility 5020:Illinois River Correctional Center 4958:Illinois Department of Corrections 4909:Illinois Department of Corrections 897:Kankakee satellite facility opened 417:group under the leadership of the 69:Illinois Department of Corrections 14: 6716:District and insular area prisons 6302:Mabel Bassett Correctional Center 5053:Pinckneyville Correctional Center 1571:– murdered her 3-year-old son in 1500:Employee and community resistance 1246:Helping Paws service-dog training 448:Illinois House of Representatives 373:Detroit (MI) House of Corrections 99:. It operated from 1930 to 2013. 6511:Utah State Correctional Facility 6224:Eastern Correctional Institution 5612:Broward Correctional Institution 5477:California Institution for Women 5329:Naval Consolidated Brig, Miramar 5266:Federal Medical Center, Carswell 5094:Stateville Minimum Security Unit 5025:Jacksonville Correctional Center 4951: 1585: 1534:Department of Central Management 587:The all-male plan and objections 6908:1930 establishments in Illinois 6458:Converted into men's facilities 6051:Chillicothe Correctional Center 5873:Otter Creek Correctional Center 5850:Converted into men's facilities 5788:Rockville Correctional Facility 5662:Converted into men's facilities 5596:Lowell Correctional Institution 5496:Converted into men's facilities 5362:Julia Tutwiler Prison for Women 5300:Converted into men's facilities 5133:Decatur Adult Transition Center 5098:Taylorville Correctional Center 5086:Southwestern Illinois Work Camp 4999:East Moline Correctional Center 1236: 1176:Problems with cell house design 1166: 1136: 1011:Americans with Disabilities Act 921:1993–1998 Gwendolyn V. Thornton 788:Facility expansion and upgrades 716: 678: 603: 577: 480: 406: 366: 258: 6893:Capital punishment in Illinois 6661:Pruntytown Correctional Center 6381:Leath Correctional Institution 6026:Mississippi State Penitentiary 5628:Union Correctional Institution 5528:La Vista Correctional Facility 5152:Kankakee Minimum-Security Unit 5090:Stateville Correctional Center 5003:East Moline Work Camps 1 and 2 1365:Governor Blagojevich vs AFSCME 1282:In August 2000 Representative 363:, was appointed in July 1950. 222:agriculture, and stock raising 153:that would establish "a State 1: 6730:See Federal Bureau of Prisons 6189:Bayview Correctional Facility 6173:Taconic Correctional Facility 5564:York Correctional Institution 5503:Valley State Prison for Women 5436:Arkansas State Farm for Women 5251:Federal Prison Camp, Alderson 4978:Centralia Correctional Center 1013:required the installation of 557:1973 – The John Howard report 85:Oakdale Reformatory for Women 6194:Beacon Correctional Facility 6163:Albion Correctional Facility 5910:Louisiana State Penitentiary 5820:Topeka Correctional Facility 5103:Vandalia Correctional Center 5079:Sheridan Correctional Center 5069:Robinson Correctional Center 5065:Pontiac Medium Security Unit 5030:Lawrence Correctional Center 4986:Danville Correctional Center 1538:Department of Human Services 1428:Northern Illinois University 1122:Less than two months later, 996:A national movement to pass 696:Sexual assaults and lawsuits 251:, was hired to be its first 6903:Women's prisons in Illinois 6654:Women removed from facility 6397:South Dakota Women's Prison 6019:Women removed from facility 5903:Women removed from facility 5742:Decatur Correctional Center 5621:Women removed from facility 5445:Women removed from facility 5367:Montgomery Women's Facility 5167:Thomson Correctional Center 5163:Tamms Minimum Security Unit 5074:Shawnee Correctional Center 5061:Pontiac Correctional Center 5049:Menard Medium Security Unit 5035:Lincoln Correctional Center 4990:Decatur Correctional Center 4914:Oakdale Dedication Event – 1330:2003 – 2013 The last decade 1052:needed outside the prison. 437:Centralized facility needed 193:Women's liberation movement 162:Building of the reformatory 93:Livingston County, Illinois 32:23813 E. 3200 North Road 3 6929: 6413:Tennessee Prison for Women 6286:Ohio Reformatory for Women 5763:Dwight Correctional Center 5261:Federal Prison Camp, Bryan 5137:Dwight Correctional Center 5108:Vienna Correctional Center 5045:Menard Correctional Center 5007:Graham Correctional Center 4905:Dwight Correctional Center 1390:In February 2012 Illinois 1199:Richland Community College 91:, was a women's prison in 81:Dwight Correctional Center 20:Dwight Correctional Center 6826: 6713: 6709: 5747:Logan Correctional Center 5345: 5341: 5243:Federal Bureau of Prisons 5232: 5228: 5213: 5159:Tamms Correctional Center 5040:Logan Correctional Center 4994:Dixon Correctional Center 1144:Illinois State University 490:Reformation and education 24: 6782:Northern Marianas Prison 6775:Northern Mariana Islands 5420:Hawkins Center for Women 5015:Hill Correctional Center 1261:non-profit organizations 151:House of Representatives 6484:Women removed from unit 5487:Folsom Women’s Facility 5141:Hardin County Work Camp 5011:Greene County Work Camp 742:One hundred members of 394:civil service employees 299:The reformation program 6697:Wyoming Women's Center 6067:Montana Women's Prison 5783:Indiana Women's Prison 5648:Arrendale State Prison 1436:gross regional product 1189:Decatur facility opens 6864:41.09750°N 88.47611°W 6563:Dale Woman's Facility 6439:William P. Hobby Unit 5321:Department of Defense 5129:Alton Military Prison 1496:I see it happening." 1253:veterinary assistants 1105:Suicides and overdose 171:architecturally of a 83:(DCC), also known as 6723:District of Columbia 6449:Dr. Lane Murray Unit 6429:Christina Crain Unit 5653:Pulaski State Prison 5057:Pittsfield Work Camp 1514:vocational education 1299:Governor George Ryan 1265:special needs people 781:work release program 561:In January 1972 the 513:Alcoholics Anonymous 450:, but failed in the 412:Biedermann appointed 137:1930 – Establishment 6888:Prisons in Illinois 6869:41.09750; -88.47611 6860: /  6807:U.S. Virgin Islands 5221:sentenced as adults 5215:This list template 1422:At the time of the 1094:official misconduct 998:truth-in-sentencing 992:Truth-in-sentencing 802:Church Women United 563:John Howard Society 426:William G. Stratton 419:John Howard Society 173:French Norman style 21: 6746:Lorton Reformatory 6444:Mountain View Unit 5685:Metro State Prison 5235:Federal facilities 1487:Closing inevitable 1392:Governor Pat Quinn 1078:verbal degradation 1074:Human Rights Watch 853:In 1998 the local 660:aggravated battery 648:aggravated battery 458:Biedermann resigns 145:was passed by the 6843: 6842: 6822: 6821: 6754: 6753: 6705: 6704: 6669: 6668: 6633: 6632: 6571: 6570: 6535: 6534: 6527:Utah State Prison 6499: 6498: 6258: 6257: 6202: 6201: 6034: 6033: 5918: 5917: 5882: 5881: 5771: 5770: 5693: 5692: 5636: 5635: 5552: 5551: 5511: 5510: 5465: 5464: 5337: 5336: 5315: 5314: 5175: 5174: 4982:Clayton Work Camp 1573:Chicago, Illinois 1312:restraining order 1215:Mattoon, Illinois 1211:Lake Land College 1142:corrections from 734:Tensions escalate 386:criminally insane 353:nervous breakdown 335:The second decade 272:The cottage model 237:Louis L. Emmerson 127:Livingston County 74: 73: 6920: 6875: 6874: 6872: 6871: 6870: 6865: 6861: 6858: 6857: 6856: 6853: 6766:Women's Facility 6736: 6711: 6651: 6615: 6553: 6517: 6455: 6230: 6179: 6016: 5900: 5847: 5841:Ross-Cash Center 5753: 5659: 5602: 5534: 5493: 5426: 5343: 5297: 5230: 5202: 5195: 5188: 5179: 4956: 4955: 4944: 4937: 4930: 4921: 4892: 4891: 4878: 4872: 4869: 4863: 4858: 4852: 4849: 4843: 4840: 4834: 4833: 4826: 4820: 4817: 4811: 4808: 4802: 4799: 4793: 4790: 4784: 4781: 4775: 4772: 4766: 4763: 4757: 4754: 4748: 4745: 4739: 4736: 4730: 4727: 4721: 4718: 4712: 4709: 4703: 4700: 4694: 4691: 4685: 4682: 4676: 4673: 4667: 4664: 4658: 4655: 4649: 4646: 4640: 4637: 4631: 4628: 4622: 4619: 4613: 4610: 4604: 4601: 4595: 4592: 4586: 4583: 4577: 4571: 4565: 4562: 4556: 4553: 4547: 4544: 4538: 4535: 4529: 4526: 4520: 4517: 4511: 4508: 4502: 4499: 4493: 4490: 4484: 4481: 4475: 4472: 4466: 4463: 4457: 4454: 4448: 4445: 4439: 4436: 4430: 4427: 4421: 4418: 4412: 4409: 4403: 4400: 4394: 4391: 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6844: 6839: 6834: 6818: 6802: 6786: 6770: 6750: 6734: 6718: 6701: 6685: 6665: 6649: 6629: 6613: 6592: 6567: 6551: 6531: 6515: 6495: 6491:Huntsville Unit 6479: 6453: 6417: 6401: 6385: 6364: 6343: 6322: 6306: 6290: 6274: 6254: 6228: 6198: 6177: 6151: 6135: 6119: 6103: 6087: 6071: 6055: 6030: 6014: 5998: 5982: 5966: 5950: 5934: 5914: 5898: 5878: 5861: 5845: 5824: 5808: 5792: 5767: 5751: 5730: 5709: 5689: 5673: 5657: 5632: 5616: 5600: 5584: 5568: 5548: 5532: 5507: 5491: 5461: 5440: 5424: 5403: 5387: 5371: 5350: 5333: 5311: 5295: 5237: 5224: 5209: 5206: 5176: 5171: 5117: 4961: 4950: 4948: 4901: 4896: 4895: 4887:Chicago Tribune 4880: 4879: 4875: 4870: 4866: 4859: 4855: 4850: 4846: 4841: 4837: 4828: 4827: 4823: 4818: 4814: 4809: 4805: 4800: 4796: 4791: 4787: 4782: 4778: 4773: 4769: 4764: 4760: 4755: 4751: 4746: 4742: 4737: 4733: 4728: 4724: 4719: 4715: 4710: 4706: 4701: 4697: 4692: 4688: 4683: 4679: 4674: 4670: 4665: 4661: 4656: 4652: 4647: 4643: 4638: 4634: 4629: 4625: 4620: 4616: 4611: 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1614: 1609: 1593:Illinois portal 1591: 1586: 1584: 1581: 1550: 1548:Notable inmates 1530:Jason Barickman 1522: 1502: 1489: 1464: 1462:Quinn vs AFSCME 1420: 1380: 1378:The doors close 1367: 1350: 1337: 1332: 1316:Rod Blagojevich 1280: 1248: 1239: 1223: 1209:In August 1999 1207: 1205:College program 1191: 1178: 1169: 1139: 1115: 1111: 1110: 1107: 1086:polygraph tests 1062: 1041: 1039:Inmate advocacy 1028: 1007: 994: 973: 933: 928: 923: 899: 877: 875:Staff hardships 864: 832: 830:Camping program 811: 790: 769: 736: 719: 698: 681: 672: 643: 634: 606: 589: 580: 559: 542: 529: 492: 483: 460: 439: 414: 409: 369: 337: 301: 283: 274: 261: 213: 164: 147:Illinois Senate 139: 120:Nevada Township 77: 33: 17: 12: 11: 5: 6926: 6924: 6916: 6915: 6910: 6905: 6900: 6895: 6890: 6880: 6879: 6841: 6840: 6827: 6824: 6823: 6820: 6819: 6817: 6816: 6810: 6808: 6804: 6803: 6801: 6800: 6794: 6792: 6788: 6787: 6785: 6784: 6778: 6776: 6772: 6771: 6769: 6768: 6762: 6760: 6756: 6755: 6752: 6751: 6749: 6748: 6742: 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6253: 6252: 6247: 6242: 6236: 6234: 6227: 6226: 6221: 6216: 6210: 6208: 6207:North Carolina 6204: 6203: 6200: 6199: 6197: 6196: 6191: 6185: 6183: 6176: 6175: 6170: 6165: 6159: 6157: 6153: 6152: 6150: 6149: 6143: 6141: 6137: 6136: 6134: 6133: 6127: 6125: 6121: 6120: 6118: 6117: 6111: 6109: 6105: 6104: 6102: 6101: 6095: 6093: 6089: 6088: 6086: 6085: 6079: 6077: 6073: 6072: 6070: 6069: 6063: 6061: 6057: 6056: 6054: 6053: 6048: 6042: 6040: 6036: 6035: 6032: 6031: 6029: 6028: 6022: 6020: 6013: 6012: 6006: 6004: 6000: 5999: 5997: 5996: 5990: 5988: 5984: 5983: 5981: 5980: 5974: 5972: 5968: 5967: 5965: 5964: 5958: 5956: 5952: 5951: 5949: 5948: 5942: 5940: 5936: 5935: 5933: 5932: 5926: 5924: 5920: 5919: 5916: 5915: 5913: 5912: 5906: 5904: 5897: 5896: 5890: 5888: 5884: 5883: 5880: 5879: 5877: 5876: 5869: 5867: 5863: 5862: 5860: 5859: 5853: 5851: 5844: 5843: 5838: 5832: 5830: 5826: 5825: 5823: 5822: 5816: 5814: 5810: 5809: 5807: 5806: 5800: 5798: 5794: 5793: 5791: 5790: 5785: 5779: 5777: 5773: 5772: 5769: 5768: 5766: 5765: 5759: 5757: 5750: 5749: 5744: 5738: 5736: 5732: 5731: 5729: 5728: 5723: 5717: 5715: 5711: 5710: 5708: 5707: 5701: 5699: 5695: 5694: 5691: 5690: 5688: 5687: 5681: 5679: 5675: 5674: 5672: 5671: 5665: 5663: 5656: 5655: 5650: 5644: 5642: 5638: 5637: 5634: 5633: 5631: 5630: 5624: 5622: 5618: 5617: 5615: 5614: 5608: 5606: 5599: 5598: 5592: 5590: 5586: 5585: 5583: 5582: 5576: 5574: 5570: 5569: 5567: 5566: 5560: 5558: 5554: 5553: 5550: 5549: 5547: 5546: 5540: 5538: 5531: 5530: 5525: 5519: 5517: 5513: 5512: 5509: 5508: 5506: 5505: 5499: 5497: 5490: 5489: 5484: 5479: 5473: 5471: 5467: 5466: 5463: 5462: 5460: 5459: 5454: 5448: 5446: 5442: 5441: 5439: 5438: 5432: 5430: 5423: 5422: 5417: 5415:McPherson Unit 5411: 5409: 5405: 5404: 5402: 5401: 5395: 5393: 5389: 5388: 5386: 5385: 5379: 5377: 5373: 5372: 5370: 5369: 5364: 5358: 5356: 5352: 5351: 5346: 5339: 5338: 5335: 5334: 5332: 5331: 5325: 5323: 5317: 5316: 5313: 5312: 5310: 5309: 5303: 5301: 5294: 5293: 5288: 5283: 5278: 5273: 5268: 5263: 5258: 5253: 5247: 5245: 5239: 5238: 5233: 5226: 5225: 5214: 5211: 5210: 5207: 5205: 5204: 5197: 5190: 5182: 5173: 5172: 5170: 5169: 5164: 5161: 5156: 5153: 5150: 5145: 5142: 5139: 5134: 5131: 5125: 5123: 5119: 5118: 5116: 5115: 5110: 5105: 5100: 5095: 5092: 5087: 5084: 5081: 5076: 5071: 5066: 5063: 5058: 5055: 5050: 5047: 5042: 5037: 5032: 5027: 5022: 5017: 5012: 5009: 5004: 5001: 4996: 4991: 4988: 4983: 4980: 4975: 4969: 4967: 4963: 4962: 4949: 4947: 4946: 4939: 4932: 4924: 4912: 4911: 4900: 4899:External links 4897: 4894: 4893: 4873: 4864: 4853: 4844: 4835: 4821: 4812: 4803: 4794: 4785: 4776: 4767: 4758: 4749: 4740: 4731: 4722: 4713: 4704: 4695: 4686: 4677: 4668: 4659: 4650: 4641: 4632: 4623: 4614: 4605: 4596: 4587: 4578: 4566: 4557: 4548: 4539: 4530: 4521: 4512: 4503: 4494: 4485: 4476: 4467: 4458: 4449: 4440: 4431: 4422: 4413: 4404: 4395: 4386: 4377: 4368: 4359: 4350: 4341: 4332: 4323: 4314: 4305: 4296: 4287: 4278: 4269: 4260: 4251: 4242: 4233: 4224: 4215: 4206: 4197: 4188: 4179: 4170: 4161: 4152: 4143: 4134: 4125: 4116: 4107: 4098: 4089: 4080: 4071: 4062: 4053: 4044: 4035: 4026: 4017: 4008: 3999: 3990: 3981: 3972: 3963: 3954: 3945: 3936: 3927: 3918: 3909: 3900: 3891: 3882: 3873: 3864: 3855: 3846: 3837: 3828: 3819: 3810: 3801: 3792: 3783: 3774: 3765: 3756: 3747: 3738: 3729: 3720: 3711: 3702: 3693: 3684: 3675: 3666: 3657: 3648: 3639: 3630: 3621: 3612: 3603: 3594: 3585: 3576: 3567: 3558: 3549: 3540: 3531: 3522: 3513: 3504: 3495: 3486: 3477: 3468: 3459: 3450: 3441: 3432: 3423: 3414: 3405: 3396: 3387: 3378: 3369: 3360: 3351: 3342: 3333: 3324: 3315: 3306: 3297: 3288: 3279: 3270: 3261: 3252: 3243: 3234: 3225: 3216: 3207: 3198: 3189: 3180: 3171: 3162: 3153: 3144: 3135: 3126: 3117: 3108: 3099: 3090: 3081: 3072: 3063: 3054: 3045: 3036: 3027: 3018: 3009: 3000: 2991: 2982: 2973: 2964: 2955: 2946: 2937: 2928: 2919: 2910: 2901: 2892: 2883: 2874: 2865: 2856: 2847: 2838: 2829: 2820: 2811: 2802: 2793: 2784: 2775: 2766: 2757: 2748: 2739: 2730: 2721: 2712: 2703: 2694: 2685: 2676: 2667: 2658: 2649: 2640: 2631: 2622: 2613: 2604: 2595: 2586: 2577: 2568: 2559: 2550: 2541: 2532: 2523: 2514: 2505: 2496: 2487: 2478: 2469: 2460: 2451: 2442: 2433: 2424: 2415: 2406: 2397: 2388: 2379: 2370: 2361: 2352: 2343: 2334: 2325: 2316: 2307: 2298: 2289: 2280: 2271: 2262: 2253: 2244: 2235: 2226: 2217: 2208: 2199: 2190: 2181: 2172: 2163: 2154: 2145: 2136: 2127: 2118: 2109: 2100: 2091: 2082: 2073: 2064: 2055: 2046: 2037: 2028: 2019: 2010: 2001: 1992: 1983: 1974: 1965: 1956: 1947: 1938: 1929: 1920: 1911: 1902: 1893: 1884: 1875: 1866: 1855: 1844: 1835: 1826: 1817: 1808: 1799: 1788: 1779: 1770: 1761: 1752: 1743: 1734: 1725: 1714: 1705: 1696: 1687: 1678: 1669: 1660: 1649: 1640: 1622: 1611: 1610: 1608: 1605: 1604: 1603: 1597: 1596: 1580: 1577: 1576: 1575: 1569:Amanda Wallace 1566: 1560: 1549: 1546: 1521: 1518: 1501: 1498: 1488: 1485: 1463: 1460: 1419: 1416: 1379: 1376: 1366: 1363: 1349: 1346: 1336: 1333: 1331: 1328: 1284:Dan Rutherford 1279: 1276: 1247: 1244: 1238: 1235: 1222: 1219: 1206: 1203: 1190: 1187: 1182:sound-proofing 1177: 1174: 1168: 1165: 1138: 1135: 1124:Amanda Wallace 1106: 1103: 1061: 1058: 1040: 1037: 1027: 1026:New cell house 1024: 1006: 1003: 993: 990: 972: 969: 932: 929: 927: 924: 922: 919: 898: 895: 876: 873: 863: 860: 836:Salvation Army 831: 828: 810: 807: 789: 786: 768: 765: 735: 732: 718: 715: 697: 694: 680: 677: 671: 668: 642: 639: 633: 630: 618:bowling alleys 605: 602: 588: 585: 579: 576: 558: 555: 541: 538: 528: 525: 505:lab technology 491: 488: 482: 479: 459: 456: 438: 435: 413: 410: 408: 405: 368: 365: 349:parole officer 336: 333: 300: 297: 282: 279: 273: 270: 260: 257: 253:superintendent 212: 211:Aims of reform 209: 163: 160: 138: 135: 124:unincorporated 76: 72: 71: 66: 62: 61: 58: 54: 53: 50: 46: 45: 42: 38: 37: 30: 26: 25: 15: 13: 10: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 6925: 6914: 6911: 6909: 6906: 6904: 6901: 6899: 6896: 6894: 6891: 6889: 6886: 6885: 6883: 6876: 6873: 6837: 6833: 6830: 6825: 6815: 6812: 6811: 6809: 6805: 6799: 6796: 6795: 6793: 6789: 6783: 6780: 6779: 6777: 6773: 6767: 6764: 6763: 6761: 6757: 6747: 6744: 6743: 6741: 6737: 6731: 6728: 6727: 6725: 6721: 6717: 6712: 6708: 6698: 6695: 6694: 6692: 6688: 6682: 6679: 6678: 6676: 6672: 6662: 6659: 6658: 6656: 6652: 6646: 6643: 6642: 6640: 6638:West Virginia 6636: 6626: 6623: 6622: 6620: 6616: 6610: 6607: 6605: 6602: 6601: 6599: 6595: 6589: 6586: 6584: 6581: 6580: 6578: 6574: 6564: 6561: 6560: 6558: 6554: 6548: 6545: 6544: 6542: 6538: 6528: 6525: 6524: 6522: 6518: 6512: 6509: 6508: 6506: 6502: 6492: 6489: 6488: 6486: 6482: 6476: 6473: 6471: 6468: 6466: 6463: 6462: 6460: 6456: 6450: 6447: 6445: 6442: 6440: 6437: 6435: 6432: 6430: 6427: 6426: 6424: 6420: 6414: 6411: 6410: 6408: 6404: 6398: 6395: 6394: 6392: 6388: 6382: 6379: 6377: 6374: 6373: 6371: 6367: 6361: 6358: 6356: 6353: 6352: 6350: 6346: 6340: 6337: 6335: 6332: 6331: 6329: 6325: 6319: 6316: 6315: 6313: 6309: 6303: 6300: 6299: 6297: 6293: 6287: 6284: 6283: 6281: 6277: 6271: 6268: 6267: 6265: 6261: 6251: 6248: 6246: 6243: 6241: 6238: 6237: 6235: 6231: 6225: 6222: 6220: 6217: 6215: 6212: 6211: 6209: 6205: 6195: 6192: 6190: 6187: 6186: 6184: 6180: 6174: 6171: 6169: 6166: 6164: 6161: 6160: 6158: 6154: 6148: 6145: 6144: 6142: 6138: 6132: 6129: 6128: 6126: 6122: 6116: 6113: 6112: 6110: 6108:New Hampshire 6106: 6100: 6097: 6096: 6094: 6090: 6084: 6081: 6080: 6078: 6074: 6068: 6065: 6064: 6062: 6058: 6052: 6049: 6047: 6044: 6043: 6041: 6037: 6027: 6024: 6023: 6021: 6017: 6011: 6008: 6007: 6005: 6001: 5995: 5992: 5991: 5989: 5985: 5979: 5976: 5975: 5973: 5969: 5963: 5960: 5959: 5957: 5955:Massachusetts 5953: 5947: 5944: 5943: 5941: 5937: 5931: 5928: 5927: 5925: 5921: 5911: 5908: 5907: 5905: 5901: 5895: 5892: 5891: 5889: 5885: 5874: 5871: 5870: 5868: 5864: 5858: 5855: 5854: 5852: 5848: 5842: 5839: 5837: 5834: 5833: 5831: 5827: 5821: 5818: 5817: 5815: 5811: 5805: 5802: 5801: 5799: 5795: 5789: 5786: 5784: 5781: 5780: 5778: 5774: 5764: 5761: 5760: 5758: 5754: 5748: 5745: 5743: 5740: 5739: 5737: 5733: 5727: 5724: 5722: 5719: 5718: 5716: 5712: 5706: 5703: 5702: 5700: 5696: 5686: 5683: 5682: 5680: 5676: 5670: 5667: 5666: 5664: 5660: 5654: 5651: 5649: 5646: 5645: 5643: 5639: 5629: 5626: 5625: 5623: 5619: 5613: 5610: 5609: 5607: 5603: 5597: 5594: 5593: 5591: 5587: 5581: 5578: 5577: 5575: 5571: 5565: 5562: 5561: 5559: 5555: 5545: 5542: 5541: 5539: 5535: 5529: 5526: 5524: 5521: 5520: 5518: 5514: 5504: 5501: 5500: 5498: 5494: 5488: 5485: 5483: 5480: 5478: 5475: 5474: 5472: 5468: 5458: 5455: 5453: 5450: 5449: 5447: 5443: 5437: 5434: 5433: 5431: 5427: 5421: 5418: 5416: 5413: 5412: 5410: 5406: 5400: 5397: 5396: 5394: 5390: 5384: 5381: 5380: 5378: 5374: 5368: 5365: 5363: 5360: 5359: 5357: 5353: 5349: 5348:State prisons 5344: 5340: 5330: 5327: 5326: 5324: 5322: 5318: 5308: 5305: 5304: 5302: 5298: 5292: 5289: 5287: 5284: 5282: 5279: 5277: 5274: 5272: 5269: 5267: 5264: 5262: 5259: 5257: 5254: 5252: 5249: 5248: 5246: 5244: 5240: 5236: 5231: 5227: 5222: 5218: 5212: 5203: 5198: 5196: 5191: 5189: 5184: 5183: 5180: 5168: 5165: 5162: 5160: 5157: 5154: 5151: 5149: 5148:Joliet Prison 5146: 5143: 5140: 5138: 5135: 5132: 5130: 5127: 5126: 5124: 5120: 5114: 5111: 5109: 5106: 5104: 5101: 5099: 5096: 5093: 5091: 5088: 5085: 5082: 5080: 5077: 5075: 5072: 5070: 5067: 5064: 5062: 5059: 5056: 5054: 5051: 5048: 5046: 5043: 5041: 5038: 5036: 5033: 5031: 5028: 5026: 5023: 5021: 5018: 5016: 5013: 5010: 5008: 5005: 5002: 5000: 4997: 4995: 4992: 4989: 4987: 4984: 4981: 4979: 4976: 4974: 4971: 4970: 4968: 4966:State prisons 4964: 4959: 4954: 4945: 4940: 4938: 4933: 4931: 4926: 4925: 4922: 4918: 4917: 4910: 4906: 4903: 4902: 4898: 4889: 4888: 4883: 4877: 4874: 4868: 4865: 4862: 4857: 4854: 4848: 4845: 4839: 4836: 4831: 4825: 4822: 4816: 4813: 4807: 4804: 4798: 4795: 4789: 4786: 4780: 4777: 4771: 4768: 4762: 4759: 4753: 4750: 4744: 4741: 4735: 4732: 4726: 4723: 4717: 4714: 4708: 4705: 4699: 4696: 4690: 4687: 4681: 4678: 4672: 4669: 4663: 4660: 4654: 4651: 4645: 4642: 4636: 4633: 4627: 4624: 4618: 4615: 4609: 4606: 4600: 4597: 4591: 4588: 4582: 4579: 4575: 4570: 4567: 4561: 4558: 4552: 4549: 4543: 4540: 4534: 4531: 4525: 4522: 4516: 4513: 4507: 4504: 4498: 4495: 4489: 4486: 4480: 4477: 4471: 4468: 4462: 4459: 4453: 4450: 4444: 4441: 4435: 4432: 4426: 4423: 4417: 4414: 4408: 4405: 4399: 4396: 4390: 4387: 4381: 4378: 4372: 4369: 4363: 4360: 4354: 4351: 4345: 4342: 4336: 4333: 4327: 4324: 4318: 4315: 4309: 4306: 4300: 4297: 4291: 4288: 4282: 4279: 4273: 4270: 4264: 4261: 4255: 4252: 4246: 4243: 4237: 4234: 4228: 4225: 4219: 4216: 4210: 4207: 4201: 4198: 4192: 4189: 4183: 4180: 4174: 4171: 4165: 4162: 4156: 4153: 4147: 4144: 4138: 4135: 4129: 4126: 4120: 4117: 4111: 4108: 4102: 4099: 4093: 4090: 4084: 4081: 4075: 4072: 4066: 4063: 4057: 4054: 4048: 4045: 4039: 4036: 4030: 4027: 4021: 4018: 4012: 4009: 4003: 4000: 3994: 3991: 3985: 3982: 3976: 3973: 3967: 3964: 3958: 3955: 3949: 3946: 3940: 3937: 3931: 3928: 3922: 3919: 3913: 3910: 3904: 3901: 3895: 3892: 3886: 3883: 3877: 3874: 3868: 3865: 3859: 3856: 3850: 3847: 3841: 3838: 3832: 3829: 3823: 3820: 3814: 3811: 3805: 3802: 3796: 3793: 3787: 3784: 3778: 3775: 3769: 3766: 3760: 3757: 3751: 3748: 3742: 3739: 3733: 3730: 3724: 3721: 3715: 3712: 3706: 3703: 3697: 3694: 3688: 3685: 3679: 3676: 3670: 3667: 3661: 3658: 3652: 3649: 3643: 3640: 3634: 3631: 3625: 3622: 3616: 3613: 3607: 3604: 3598: 3595: 3589: 3586: 3580: 3577: 3571: 3568: 3562: 3559: 3553: 3550: 3544: 3541: 3535: 3532: 3526: 3523: 3517: 3514: 3508: 3505: 3499: 3496: 3490: 3487: 3481: 3478: 3472: 3469: 3463: 3460: 3454: 3451: 3445: 3442: 3436: 3433: 3427: 3424: 3418: 3415: 3409: 3406: 3400: 3397: 3391: 3388: 3382: 3379: 3373: 3370: 3364: 3361: 3355: 3352: 3346: 3343: 3337: 3334: 3328: 3325: 3319: 3316: 3310: 3307: 3301: 3298: 3292: 3289: 3283: 3280: 3274: 3271: 3265: 3262: 3256: 3253: 3247: 3244: 3238: 3235: 3229: 3226: 3220: 3217: 3211: 3208: 3202: 3199: 3193: 3190: 3184: 3181: 3175: 3172: 3166: 3163: 3157: 3154: 3148: 3145: 3139: 3136: 3130: 3127: 3121: 3118: 3112: 3109: 3103: 3100: 3094: 3091: 3085: 3082: 3076: 3073: 3067: 3064: 3058: 3055: 3049: 3046: 3040: 3037: 3031: 3028: 3022: 3019: 3013: 3010: 3004: 3001: 2995: 2992: 2986: 2983: 2977: 2974: 2968: 2965: 2959: 2956: 2950: 2947: 2941: 2938: 2932: 2929: 2923: 2920: 2914: 2911: 2905: 2902: 2896: 2893: 2887: 2884: 2878: 2875: 2869: 2866: 2860: 2857: 2851: 2848: 2842: 2839: 2833: 2830: 2824: 2821: 2815: 2812: 2806: 2803: 2797: 2794: 2788: 2785: 2779: 2776: 2770: 2767: 2761: 2758: 2752: 2749: 2743: 2740: 2734: 2731: 2725: 2722: 2716: 2713: 2707: 2704: 2698: 2695: 2689: 2686: 2680: 2677: 2671: 2668: 2662: 2659: 2653: 2650: 2644: 2641: 2635: 2632: 2626: 2623: 2617: 2614: 2608: 2605: 2599: 2596: 2590: 2587: 2581: 2578: 2572: 2569: 2563: 2560: 2554: 2551: 2545: 2542: 2536: 2533: 2527: 2524: 2518: 2515: 2509: 2506: 2500: 2497: 2491: 2488: 2482: 2479: 2473: 2470: 2464: 2461: 2455: 2452: 2446: 2443: 2437: 2434: 2428: 2425: 2419: 2416: 2410: 2407: 2401: 2398: 2392: 2389: 2383: 2380: 2374: 2371: 2365: 2362: 2356: 2353: 2347: 2344: 2338: 2335: 2329: 2326: 2320: 2317: 2311: 2308: 2302: 2299: 2293: 2290: 2284: 2281: 2275: 2272: 2266: 2263: 2257: 2254: 2248: 2245: 2239: 2236: 2230: 2227: 2221: 2218: 2212: 2209: 2203: 2200: 2194: 2191: 2185: 2182: 2176: 2173: 2167: 2164: 2158: 2155: 2149: 2146: 2140: 2137: 2131: 2128: 2122: 2119: 2113: 2110: 2104: 2101: 2095: 2092: 2086: 2083: 2077: 2074: 2068: 2065: 2059: 2056: 2050: 2047: 2041: 2038: 2032: 2029: 2023: 2020: 2014: 2011: 2005: 2002: 1996: 1993: 1987: 1984: 1978: 1975: 1969: 1966: 1960: 1957: 1951: 1948: 1942: 1939: 1933: 1930: 1924: 1921: 1915: 1912: 1906: 1903: 1897: 1894: 1888: 1885: 1879: 1876: 1870: 1867: 1864: 1859: 1856: 1853: 1848: 1845: 1839: 1836: 1830: 1827: 1821: 1818: 1812: 1809: 1803: 1800: 1797: 1792: 1789: 1783: 1780: 1774: 1771: 1765: 1762: 1756: 1753: 1747: 1744: 1738: 1735: 1729: 1726: 1723: 1718: 1715: 1709: 1706: 1700: 1697: 1691: 1688: 1682: 1679: 1673: 1670: 1664: 1661: 1658: 1653: 1650: 1644: 1641: 1636: 1632: 1626: 1623: 1616: 1613: 1606: 1602: 1599: 1598: 1594: 1583: 1578: 1574: 1570: 1567: 1564: 1561: 1558: 1555: 1554: 1553: 1547: 1545: 1541: 1539: 1535: 1531: 1526: 1519: 1517: 1515: 1509: 1507: 1499: 1497: 1493: 1486: 1484: 1480: 1476: 1472: 1468: 1461: 1459: 1455: 1453: 1449: 1445: 1441: 1437: 1433: 1432:ripple effect 1429: 1425: 1424:gubernatorial 1417: 1415: 1411: 1407: 1405: 1404:mental health 1401: 1396: 1393: 1388: 1384: 1377: 1375: 1371: 1364: 1362: 1358: 1354: 1347: 1345: 1341: 1334: 1329: 1327: 1323: 1319: 1317: 1313: 1309: 1305: 1300: 1295: 1293: 1289: 1285: 1277: 1275: 1272: 1268: 1266: 1262: 1258: 1254: 1245: 1243: 1234: 1232: 1228: 1220: 1218: 1216: 1212: 1204: 1202: 1200: 1196: 1188: 1186: 1183: 1175: 1173: 1164: 1160: 1156: 1152: 1148: 1145: 1134: 1132: 1127: 1125: 1120: 1104: 1102: 1098: 1095: 1090: 1087: 1083: 1079: 1075: 1070: 1068: 1059: 1057: 1053: 1049: 1047: 1038: 1036: 1034: 1025: 1023: 1020: 1016: 1012: 1004: 1002: 999: 991: 989: 986: 982: 978: 970: 968: 964: 962: 958: 954: 953:social worker 948: 946: 942: 938: 930: 926:Safety issues 925: 920: 918: 914: 910: 908: 904: 896: 894: 891: 890:tactical unit 887: 881: 874: 872: 868: 861: 859: 856: 851: 849: 845: 840: 837: 829: 827: 825: 821: 815: 808: 806: 803: 799: 794: 787: 785: 782: 778: 774: 766: 764: 760: 758: 754: 749: 745: 740: 733: 731: 729: 724: 714: 712: 706: 704: 695: 693: 689: 685: 676: 669: 667: 665: 661: 657: 653: 649: 641:Inmate unrest 640: 638: 631: 629: 627: 623: 620:, a place to 619: 615: 611: 601: 597: 593: 586: 584: 575: 571: 567: 564: 556: 554: 550: 546: 539: 537: 535: 526: 524: 520: 516: 514: 510: 506: 501: 500:horticultural 496: 489: 487: 478: 475: 471: 466: 465:criminologist 457: 455: 453: 449: 443: 436: 434: 430: 427: 422: 420: 411: 404: 402: 397: 395: 391: 390:feeble minded 387: 382: 379: 374: 364: 362: 358: 354: 350: 345: 341: 334: 332: 330: 325: 321: 317: 315: 311: 307: 298: 296: 293: 287: 280: 278: 271: 269: 265: 256: 254: 250: 249:penal systems 246: 242: 241:Sunday School 238: 234: 229: 225: 223: 218: 210: 208: 207:in America." 206: 202: 198: 194: 190: 186: 182: 177: 174: 169: 161: 159: 156: 152: 148: 144: 136: 134: 132: 128: 125: 121: 116: 111: 109: 108:misdemeanants 105: 100: 98: 94: 90: 86: 82: 78: 70: 67: 63: 59: 55: 51: 47: 43: 39: 36: 31: 27: 23: 6845: 6835: 6828: 6729: 6715: 6475:Johnson Farm 6465:Eastham Unit 6434:Hilltop Unit 6390:South Dakota 6348:Rhode Island 6327:Pennsylvania 6263:North Dakota 5762: 5452:Cummins Unit 5347: 5234: 5220: 5216: 5136: 4913: 4885: 4876: 4867: 4856: 4847: 4838: 4824: 4815: 4806: 4797: 4788: 4779: 4770: 4761: 4752: 4743: 4734: 4725: 4716: 4707: 4698: 4689: 4680: 4671: 4662: 4653: 4644: 4635: 4626: 4617: 4608: 4599: 4590: 4581: 4576:January 2012 4569: 4560: 4551: 4542: 4533: 4524: 4515: 4506: 4497: 4488: 4479: 4470: 4461: 4452: 4443: 4434: 4425: 4416: 4407: 4398: 4389: 4380: 4371: 4362: 4353: 4344: 4335: 4326: 4317: 4308: 4299: 4290: 4281: 4272: 4263: 4254: 4245: 4236: 4227: 4218: 4209: 4200: 4191: 4182: 4173: 4164: 4155: 4146: 4137: 4128: 4119: 4110: 4101: 4092: 4083: 4074: 4065: 4056: 4047: 4038: 4029: 4020: 4011: 4002: 3993: 3984: 3975: 3966: 3957: 3948: 3939: 3930: 3921: 3912: 3903: 3894: 3885: 3876: 3867: 3858: 3849: 3840: 3831: 3822: 3813: 3804: 3795: 3786: 3777: 3768: 3759: 3750: 3741: 3732: 3723: 3714: 3705: 3696: 3687: 3678: 3669: 3660: 3651: 3642: 3633: 3624: 3615: 3606: 3597: 3588: 3579: 3570: 3561: 3552: 3543: 3534: 3525: 3516: 3507: 3498: 3489: 3480: 3471: 3462: 3453: 3444: 3435: 3426: 3417: 3408: 3399: 3390: 3381: 3372: 3363: 3354: 3345: 3336: 3327: 3318: 3309: 3300: 3291: 3282: 3273: 3264: 3255: 3246: 3237: 3228: 3219: 3210: 3201: 3192: 3183: 3174: 3165: 3156: 3147: 3138: 3129: 3120: 3111: 3102: 3093: 3084: 3075: 3066: 3057: 3048: 3039: 3030: 3021: 3012: 3003: 2994: 2985: 2976: 2967: 2958: 2949: 2940: 2931: 2922: 2913: 2904: 2895: 2886: 2877: 2868: 2859: 2850: 2841: 2832: 2823: 2814: 2805: 2796: 2787: 2778: 2769: 2760: 2751: 2742: 2733: 2724: 2715: 2706: 2697: 2688: 2679: 2670: 2661: 2652: 2643: 2634: 2625: 2616: 2607: 2598: 2589: 2580: 2571: 2562: 2553: 2544: 2535: 2526: 2517: 2508: 2499: 2490: 2481: 2472: 2463: 2454: 2445: 2436: 2427: 2418: 2409: 2400: 2391: 2382: 2373: 2364: 2355: 2346: 2337: 2328: 2319: 2310: 2301: 2292: 2283: 2274: 2265: 2256: 2247: 2238: 2229: 2220: 2211: 2202: 2193: 2184: 2175: 2166: 2157: 2148: 2139: 2130: 2121: 2112: 2103: 2094: 2085: 2076: 2067: 2058: 2049: 2040: 2031: 2022: 2013: 2004: 1995: 1986: 1977: 1968: 1959: 1950: 1941: 1932: 1923: 1914: 1905: 1896: 1887: 1878: 1869: 1858: 1847: 1838: 1829: 1820: 1811: 1802: 1791: 1782: 1773: 1764: 1755: 1746: 1737: 1728: 1717: 1708: 1699: 1690: 1681: 1672: 1663: 1652: 1643: 1634: 1625: 1615: 1551: 1542: 1527: 1523: 1520:2013–present 1510: 1503: 1494: 1490: 1481: 1477: 1473: 1469: 1465: 1456: 1421: 1412: 1408: 1397: 1389: 1385: 1381: 1372: 1368: 1359: 1355: 1351: 1342: 1338: 1324: 1320: 1296: 1281: 1273: 1269: 1263:in homes of 1257:dog groomers 1249: 1240: 1224: 1208: 1192: 1179: 1170: 1161: 1157: 1153: 1149: 1140: 1128: 1121: 1108: 1099: 1091: 1082:surveillance 1071: 1063: 1054: 1050: 1042: 1033:tuberculosis 1029: 1008: 995: 974: 965: 949: 934: 915: 911: 907:class action 903:Kankakee, IL 900: 882: 878: 869: 865: 862:Overcrowding 852: 844:Memorial Day 841: 833: 816: 812: 795: 791: 770: 761: 748:Puerto Rican 741: 737: 720: 707: 699: 690: 686: 682: 673: 644: 635: 622:roller skate 607: 598: 594: 590: 581: 572: 568: 560: 551: 547: 543: 530: 521: 517: 497: 493: 484: 461: 444: 440: 431: 423: 415: 398: 383: 370: 346: 342: 338: 326: 322: 318: 302: 288: 284: 275: 266: 262: 230: 226: 214: 181:country club 178: 165: 140: 112: 101: 88: 84: 80: 79: 75: 6867: / 6791:Puerto Rico 6003:Mississippi 5557:Connecticut 5457:Tucker Unit 1292:fiscal year 1195:Decatur, IL 1046:foster care 1019:water tower 1015:wheel chair 945:nightsticks 818:treated as 723:criminology 361:Detroit, MI 329:progressive 243:" and that 233:cornerstone 143:legislation 6882:Categories 6855:88°28′34″W 6852:41°05′51″N 6597:Washington 6470:Goree Unit 6140:New Mexico 6124:New Jersey 5470:California 4960:facilities 1607:References 1516:programs. 1454:counties. 1452:Livingston 1304:privatized 1067:consensual 961:soft drink 820:inpatients 798:bleachers. 773:Head Start 753:salmonella 728:contraband 245:discipline 217:dedication 185:ivy-league 168:architects 155:sanitarium 65:Managed by 6829:See also: 6674:Wisconsin 6406:Tennessee 5987:Minnesota 5887:Louisiana 848:Labor Day 656:lead pipe 401:roadhouse 6576:Virginia 6295:Oklahoma 6156:New York 6076:Nebraska 6039:Missouri 5971:Michigan 5939:Maryland 5829:Kentucky 5735:Illinois 5573:Delaware 5516:Colorado 5408:Arkansas 1579:See also 1444:Kankakee 1288:overtime 1231:lockdown 975:By 1993 931:Violence 757:pharmacy 711:mistrial 652:radiator 470:tear gas 378:New York 314:harrowed 281:Security 189:monument 131:Illinois 29:Location 6690:Wyoming 6540:Vermont 6060:Montana 5776:Indiana 5641:Georgia 5589:Florida 5392:Arizona 5355:Alabama 1506:lawsuit 1448:LaSalle 1335:Wardens 1114:⁄ 985:condoms 937:Capitol 610:dungeon 509:Braille 474:x-rayed 306:poultry 215:At the 201:England 199:in old 6739:Closed 6618:Closed 6556:Closed 6520:Closed 6311:Oregon 6233:Closed 6182:Closed 6092:Nevada 5813:Kansas 5756:Closed 5698:Hawaii 5678:Closed 5605:Closed 5537:Closed 5429:Closed 5376:Alaska 5122:Closed 1620:staff. 1450:, and 1440:Grundy 1418:Impact 1400:budget 1131:Elavil 957:cuffed 855:AFSCME 777:Harlem 664:guitar 452:Senate 310:plowed 203:and a 197:estate 183:," an 104:felons 87:, and 57:Closed 49:Opened 44:closed 41:Status 6836:Note: 6422:Texas 5923:Maine 5714:Idaho 943:, or 886:groin 703:abort 292:alarm 6759:Guam 6504:Utah 6279:Ohio 5797:Iowa 5217:only 977:AIDS 971:AIDS 941:mace 884:the 744:FALN 626:Avon 312:and 231:The 149:and 106:and 60:2013 52:1930 1635:NPR 1438:in 1227:Y2K 1221:Y2K 1213:of 981:HIV 846:to 775:in 6884:: 4907:– 4884:. 1633:. 1446:, 1442:, 1267:. 1255:, 947:. 255:. 133:. 129:, 122:, 5201:e 5194:t 5187:v 4943:e 4936:t 4929:v 4890:. 4832:. 1116:2 1112:1 1065:"

Index

Nevada Township, Livingston County, Illinois
Illinois Department of Corrections
Livingston County, Illinois
Dwight, Illinois
felons
misdemeanants
maximum security
Nevada Township
unincorporated
Livingston County
Illinois
legislation
Illinois Senate
House of Representatives
sanitarium
architects
French Norman style
country club
ivy-league
monument
Women's liberation movement
estate
England
fraternity house
dedication
agriculture, and stock raising
cornerstone
Louis L. Emmerson
Sunday School
discipline

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