Quantcast

Kankakee Times

Friday, November 22, 2024

4 inmates sentenced in Iroquois County to be released from Illinois Department of Corrections during Q4

Adobestock 43323128

There were four inmates sentenced to jail in Iroquois County that will be released from the custody of the Illinois Department of Corrections during the fourth quarter.

The inmate being released that served the longest time was Mark Oberloh for child pornography. Mark Oberloh spent more than four years incarcerated.

According to The Institute for Illinois’ Fiscal Sustainability, Illinois spends about $37,000 a year per incarcerated person. In a study by Prison Policy Initiative, Illinois’ incarceration rate was at 564 per 100,000, higher than every industrialized country, except the United States. When compared with its surrounding states, Illinois was the lowest. Kentucky and Missouri have rates over 850 per 100,000.

One of the issues is how pretrial detainees are now handled. The Vera Institute of Justice noted that pretrial detainees made up 71% of the total jail population.

Most prison inmates are released on some condition of supervised monitoring upon reentering civilian life. This monitoring can last from 1 year to the rest of someone’s life.

Inmates being released who were sentenced in Iroquois County
NameOffenseSupervised Release DateHolding Facility
Dustin J. Lynchaiding with the possession or selling of a stolen vehicle2021-10-08Stateville Correctional Center
Dylan Blairaiding with the possession or selling of a stolen vehicle2021-10-11Shawnee Correctional Center
Mark Oberlohchild pornography2021-11-01Danville Correctional Center
Theodore A. Herronaggravated criminal sexual abuse against a victim under 52021-11-11Robinson Correctional Center

ORGANIZATIONS IN THIS STORY

!RECEIVE ALERTS

The next time we write about any of these orgs, we’ll email you a link to the story. You may edit your settings or unsubscribe at any time.
Sign-up

DONATE

Help support the Metric Media Foundation's mission to restore community based news.
Donate

MORE NEWS