CD CORR-EARNED REENTRY
Illinois creates earned reentry: Prisoner Review Board may terminate long sentences (incl. life terms) after 20–35 years served, retroactive, with MSR, effective Jan 1, 2026.
Illinois creates earned reentry: Prisoner Review Board may terminate long sentences (incl. life terms) after 20–35 years served, retroactive, with MSR, effective Jan 1, 2026.
Note: the materials provided include text from two different HB 2764 drafts (an Arizona proposal declaring “Howdy” the official state greeting and an Illinois bill on corrections). The substantive summary below focuses on the Illinois measure introduced by Rep. Carol Ammons (and multiple cosponsors) that establishes an “earned reentry” process for long-term and life‑sentenced prisoners.
To create a statutory mechanism by which people serving long prison terms — including life sentences — may become eligible for termination of their sentence (“earned reentry”) after a specified period of incarceration. The intent stated in the bill is to reduce excessive and racially disparate sentences, safely reduce prison populations and costs, incentivize rehabilitation, and use existing review mechanisms to improve public safety and reentry outcomes.
(For reference: the materials also included an unrelated Arizona House draft titled “State greeting; HOWDY,” which is not part of the Illinois earned‑reentry measure.)
Compiled from official sources — confirm details with the bill’s official record.
Sign in to ask a question.