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Individual in custody information is available to the general public and private organizations (non-state and governmental) by calling the Department of Corrections: 217-558-2200. Government and Law Enforcement agencies/officials only may call: 1-888-446-9103.
Individual in custody information is available to the general public and private organizations (non-state and governmental) by calling the Department of Corrections: 217-558-2200. Government and Law Enforcement agencies/officials only may call: 1-888-446-9103.
Illinois Deaths in Custody Project seeks to document, archive, highlight and mourn the deaths of all people in custody in Illinois. Approximately 80-100 people die in custody in Illinois prisons every year.
- When Is A Death Considered In-Custody?
- How Do Incidents Get Reported?
- What Information Is Collected from Each Incident?
- Can Reporting Agencies Provide Information Directly to Icjia?
- How Will Information Be Made Available to The Public?
- What Is The Timeframe of The Available Data?
In general, a death in custody is a death of a person while in the custody of a law enforcement or correctional agency. For both the Illinois Reporting of Deaths in Custody Act and federal Death in Custody Reporting Act, deaths that occur while a law enforcement officer is making an arrest are included. That is, the death need not occur in a police...
Every Illinois law enforcement agency, Illinois Department of Corrections facility, Illinois Department of Juvenile Justice Youth Center, and county juvenile detention center must document death in custody incidents. A separate report is completed for each decedent, although incidents involving multiple decedents in the same incident are historical...
The Illinois Reporting of Deaths in Custody Act and Death in Custody Reporting Act both list data elements that must be reported. Additionally, the federal Bureau of Justice Assistance has developed a reporting template for Death in Custody Reporting Act reporting that provides exact data fields and measurement requirements. Reporting agencies and ...
Reporting agencies are compliant with the Illinois Reporting of Deaths in Custody Act and Death in Custody Reporting Act simply by complying with the reporting requirements of centralized state agencies in their domain. However, ICJIA also hosts a web-based reporting form. Reporting agencies may use the form at their discretion. Use the link below ...
In addition to the Data Table and Dashboard, ICJIA will also publishes death in custody annual reports, as required by the Illinois Reporting of Deaths in Custody Act:
The available dataset currently includes data from 2019 through present and is updated on a quarterly basis.
This is a complete list of all inmates executed in Illinois since the reinstatement of the Death Penalty in 1976.
Search results are displayed below the search options. If no options are checked, the search will display all executions. To download the database as a spreadsheet (csv format), click here. To find the numerical rank of an execution since 1976, click on the inmate’s name.
The Illinois Department of Corrections maintains a searchable public database of all of the inmates they have in custody. The prison that an inmate is assigned to depends on factors such as security classification, remaining time of their sentence, gang affiliation, and location of their residence.