This article is an update to the , which was produced by , Chicago鈥檚 NPR news station, and , a nonprofit news organization in Chicago focused on issues of equity and justice in the court system.
Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker defended the number of dying and disabled prisoners released under a landmark law that went into effect early last year at .
鈥淭he Coleman Act is, in fact, being carried out as it should be,鈥 Pritzker told reporters in response to , which found only 52 prisoners had been granted release under the law 鈥 far below the hundreds of terminally ill and incapacitated prisoners advocates say could have been released by now.
The Prisoner Review Board 鈥 a state body whose members are appointed by Pritzker 鈥 denied nearly two-thirds of requests from ailing prisoners made under the law, known as the Joe Coleman Medical Release Act, as of mid-August.
Pritzker acknowledged some medical release applicants 鈥渞eally can鈥檛 function鈥 and are unlikely to commit another crime if released. But 鈥渏ust because the person is ill, doesn鈥檛 mean that there aren鈥檛 factors that are being considered and need to be considered about a case and whether somebody should be released or not,鈥 he said.
The Joe Coleman Medical Release Act was expected to have freed hundreds of terminally ill and medically incapacitated prisoners in Illinois by now. But only a few dozen have been released, an investigation from Injustice Watch and WBEZ reveals.
鈥淲e鈥檙e not just going to push everybody out the door just because there鈥檚 somebody who complains that we haven鈥檛 done it the way they would like it done.鈥Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker in response to an Injustice Watch and WBEZ investigation
In order to have their case heard by the board, medical release applicants must first be found by medical staff in the Illinois Department of Corrections to have less than 18 months to live or to need help with more than one activity of daily living, such as eating or bathing. At least 146 people have been found qualified since last year, but the board has denied 94 of those requests.
鈥淚鈥檝e encouraged the Prisoner Review Board to do the right thing, to encourage release wherever it鈥檚 appropriate,鈥 Pritzker said. 鈥淏ut we鈥檙e not just going to push everybody out the door just because there鈥檚 somebody who complains that we haven鈥檛 done it the way they would like it done.鈥
But that outlook undermines the intent behind the Coleman Act, said Jennifer Soble, the act鈥檚 main author and executive director of the Illinois Prison Project, a nonprofit legal group in Chicago that鈥檚 represented dozens of medical release applicants.
鈥淭he eligibility conditions are extremely strict and narrowly tailored to apply to only the sickest and most expensive people in the prison healthcare system,鈥 she said. 鈥淲ith that in mind, almost every eligible person should be released if we are to realize the Coleman Act鈥檚 purpose.鈥
In recent years, the Prisoner Review Board has become mired in the politics of criminal justice reform, as Republicans and some Senate Democrats have blocked several of Pritzker鈥檚 nominees to the board.
Injustice Watch and WBEZ found the board鈥檚 decisions in medical release cases often depend on which of the board鈥檚 dozen members are assigned to the three-person panel that hears each case. Republicans , but they鈥檝e voted in more medical release cases than the board鈥檚 six Democrats and one independent 鈥 and they are also more likely to deny release.
But Pritzker expressed confidence Thursday that board members 鈥渁re people who care deeply about criminal justice reform (and) who care deeply about making sure that we鈥檙e being fair to prisoners 鈥 and to the community in which we鈥檙e releasing people.鈥
In a statement sent in response to follow-up questions, Pritzker鈥檚 spokesperson said the governor was expressing 鈥渇rustration with the characterization that progress in the right direction isn鈥檛 enough.鈥 But she also said 鈥渢here are undoubtedly improvements that should be discussed among stakeholders and the General Assembly as the law continues to be implemented.鈥
WBEZ reporter Alex Degman contributed reporting.