Illinois human trafficking bill focuses cross-agency coordination, victims

Leaders expect human trafficking numbers in state are higher than reports indicate

By BRIDGETTE FOX   
Capitol News Illinois  
bfox@capitolnewsillinois.com

SPRINGFIELD — A Senate committee passed a bill this week that would give specialized training on human trafficking and establish coordination across multiple state agencies and partners.

Human trafficking is defined by the U.S. Justice Department as “a crime that involves compelling or coercing a person to provide labor or services, or to engage in commercial sex acts.”

Senate Bill 2323 follows multiple recommendations from the state Joint Human Trafficking Working Group formed in 2023. The recommendations included victim screening, multi-agency coordination, victim-focused training and more.

Advocate and Chicago-native Brenda Myers-Powell, who was a victim of human trafficking for 25 years starting as a child, spoke at the state Capitol on Wednesday in support of the bill. 

“I wish someone had recognized the signs when I was vulnerable,” Myers-Powell said. “The expanded screening for youth in state care could have identified my situation before it escalated. The creation of standards of care means survivors like me won’t have inconsistent, sometimes retraumatizing responses I encountered.”

If the bill is implemented, multiple state agencies would have to make new units that work across jurisdictions and have specialized training to work with victims and potential future victims.

“As a transportation hub, Illinois ranks among the highest in the number of human trafficking cases in the whole United States,” Sen. Julie Morrison, D-Deerfield, the bill’s lead sponsor, said Wednesday. 

The Illinois Department of Children and Family Services, one of the agencies involved in the bill, would be required to maintain a human trafficking unit, which has the main goal of helping victims with case management and other services.

In a Senate committee hearing Tuesday, Illinois State Police Director Brendan Kelly said there were fewer than 600 victims of human trafficking reported to state agencies between 2021 and 2023. Another 966 possible cases of child trafficking were reported to DCFS over the same period. But Kelly said the reported numbers are likely only a fraction of the actual cases.

“We know that human trafficking exists in our state but is sometimes unrecognized, as victims aren’t identified, and underlying crimes are unreported,” Kelly said Wednesday. 

Kelly said law enforcement knows how to recognize “the bad guy” but is not always as good at recognizing that the person with a perpetrator might be being victimized.

“We have to have a comprehensive approach to this so that … when we encounter someone who's a victim, that there is a handshake between law enforcement and all these social service providers because it's simply not enough just to hand them a pamphlet or a phone number or just go on to the next bad guy,” Kelly said Wednesday. “We have to break the cycle but making sure we're better serving victims.”

The bill also repeatedly mentioned improving “victim-centered, trauma-informed” responses from law enforcement and other agencies.

Kelly said training on the complex trauma of human trafficking and taking input from survivors like Myers-Powell will make combatting the problem easier.

The bill now goes to the full Senate for a vote.


Capitol News Illinois is a nonprofit, nonpartisan news service that distributes state government coverage to hundreds of news outlets statewide. It is funded primarily by the Illinois Press Foundation and the Robert R. McCormick Foundation. 

From left: Sen. Dale Fowler, Brenda Myers-Powell and Sen. Julie Morrison show support for SB2323 on Wednesday, March 19, 2025. Myers-Powell was a victim of human trafficking for 25 years. (Capitol News Illinois photo by Bridgette Fox)

Illinois House panel advances bill to strengthen homeschooling oversight

Thousands pack the Capitol to voice their opposition to the measure

By MOLLY PARKER, BETH HUNDSDORFER,

And JADE AUBREY

Capitol News Illinois 

News@capitolnewsillinois.com

SPRINGFIELD — After nearly three hours of debate before a packed hearing room, a House committee on Wednesday voted to advance a bill that would impose new requirements on homeschooling, fueling a heated discussion over parental rights and government oversight in Illinois.

The measure, known as the Homeschool Act, would require families to notify their school districts when they decide to homeschool, and that parents or guardians who teach their kids at home have a high school diploma or equivalent. One of the most-contested pieces of the bill provides that if education officials suspect a child is not receiving proper instruction, they could demand proof of teaching materials and student work. 

The House Education Policy Committee voted 8-4 along party lines to move the bill to the House floor for a vote, with one Democrat lawmaker voting present. 

Rep. Terra Costa Howard, D-Glen Ellyn, introduced the bill following the publication of a Capitol News Illinois and ProPublica investigation, which revealed little accountability for parents who pull their kids from school and then fail to ensure they receive an education.

“Currently, Illinois has zero, I’m going to say it again, zero regulations,” said Costa Howard, the bill’s sponsor. “Thirty-eight states have regulations. Illinois is an outlier. This is not something we want to be an outlier on.”

The news organizations’ reporting documented cases where children endured severe abuse at home, unnoticed because they were not in school.

Read more: How Illinois’ hands-off approach to homeschooling leaves children at risk

One such case, referenced in Wednesday’s hearing, was that of Zion Staples, a 9-year-old boy from Rock Island who went missing in December 2022. His mother, who had a long history of abuse and neglect allegations, was able to homeschool him despite previously losing two children to foster care. Police later determined Zion had accidentally shot himself while playing with a gun. His mother hid his body in a trash can for months before authorities found him. She pleaded guilty to felony endangering the health of a child and was sentenced to two years in prison in April. 

Opponents, including homeschool advocates and religious groups, called the bill an unnecessary government intrusion. Thousands of homeschool families filled the Capitol — packing the committee room and spilling into hallways and the Capitol Rotunda where they sang hymns and patriotic songs.  

In addition to showing up in person, they submitted over 40,000 witness slips opposing the bill — a mechanism state lawmakers use to gather testimony and gauge support on bills. Nearly 1,000 people filed in support, including the Illinois State Board of Education, whose representative appeared to answer questions.  

Critics argued the bill would disproportionately burden low-income and minority families.  

“This bill targets homeschool parents and treats us as criminals, guilty until proven innocent,” said Aziza Butler, a former public school teacher who now homeschools her children in Chicago. 

Supporters pointed to cases of abuse, arguing that some parents use homeschooling as a shield for abuse and neglect. 

The Coalition for Responsible Home Education, a national child advocacy group, said some families pull their children from school to avoid scrutiny. 

“We have tracked over 500 cases of extreme abuse and neglect in homeschool settings where the abuse escalated because of the isolation afforded through homeschooling,” said Jonah Stewart, the group’s research director.

“I believe this bill will help protect abused and neglected children and leave in place the freedom of parents to decide how to best meet the educational needs of their children,” said Tanner Lovett, a homeschooling advocate who also testified in favor of the measure.

Opponents pushed back, arguing there is no evidence homeschool children are at greater risk of abuse than their public school peers. 

“The proponents claim that children who are being homeschooled are at greater risk of abuse and neglect. This is not supported by the two peer-reviewed studies that have been produced,” said Will Estrada, senior counsel at the Home School Legal Defense Association.

Some also warned the bill could lead to selective enforcement, particularly against marginalized families. 

“While we cannot clearly see how the bill will accomplish its stated goal of preventing abuse, it would certainly have many unintended negative consequences for homeschooling families and for local school districts and communities,” Butler said.

Lawmakers clashed over how the law would be enforced. Supporters said it would allow regional education offices to track homeschool students and investigate truancy. Opponents argued it could open the door to harassment.

Estrada said the bill would allow regional offices of education to request a homeschooling family's educational portfolio at any time, even as often as once a month. Costa Howard rejected that interpretation, saying such an investigation would only come if serious allegations arise. 

“That is simply not true, that is not in the bill, that is not what the law says. You are wrong,” she said.

Another point of contention was the impact on private schools. The bill would require all private elementary and secondary schools to register with the state and submit student information upon request.

The Catholic Conference of Illinois opposed the measure, saying it would force religious schools to hand over confidential data. Bob Gilligan, the organization’s executive director, said he understands the aim of the legislation is to ensure homeschooled children are safe and receive a sufficient education but doesn’t believe the measure would accomplish that. 

“It is unclear how this bill will advance either of those goals,” he said. 

Costa Howard defended the measure as a necessary safeguard. 

“This bill is about the thousands of children whose voices are not heard,” she said. “I am the voice of the voiceless here today, and I will continue to fight for them.”

Capitol News Illinois is a nonprofit, nonpartisan news service that distributes state government coverage to hundreds of news outlets statewide. It is funded primarily by the Illinois Press Foundation and the Robert R. McCormick Foundation.  

A woman holds a sign, which is just one of the many signs held by the thousands of people who gathered in the Statehouse on Wednesday to oppose a bill relating to homeschoolers. (Capitol News Illinois photo by Jade Aubrey)

Federal DOJ launches probe into Illinois’ treatment of people with disabilities 

Investigation includes Choate and other state-operated developmental living centers 

By BETH HUNDSDORFER AND MOLLY PARKER  
Capitol News Illinois 
news@capitolnewsillinois.com  

(This article was produced for ProPublica’s Local Reporting Network in partnership with Capitol News Illinois.)

The U.S. Department of Justice has opened a wide-ranging investigation into Illinois' treatment of people with developmental disabilities, examining whether the state provides adequate resources for community living and protects residents from harm in public institutions.

Tonya Piephoff, director of the Illinois Department of Human Services’ Division of Developmental Disabilities, informed employees of the investigation in a letter last week that was obtained by Capitol News Illinois. 

“The investigation will examine whether the state unnecessarily institutionalizes, or puts at serious risk of institutionalization, adults with intellectual and developmental disabilities,” the letter stated. 

The letter said the investigation also will probe abuse and neglect allegations of patients at the Choate, Jack Mabley and Samuel Shapiro developmental centers, three of the seven state-operated residential institutions operated by IDHS.

Illinois long has had one of the highest populations of people with developmental and intellectual disabilities living in state-run institutions in the nation. Choate is located in Anna in rural southern Illinois, Mabley in the small upstate town of Dixon, and Shaprio in Kankakee, 60 miles south of Chicago.

A spokesperson for Gov. JB Pritzker declined to comment on the investigation.

The Department of Human Services issued a written statement Wednesday: As always, the department will cooperate in full with the independent investigation and continue, as permitted and appropriate, to keep staff and interested stakeholders updated,” the statement read.

“IDHS has made unprecedented investments in home and community-based options to empower Illinoisans with disabilities to live in the least restrictive setting of their choosing.”

A spokesperson for the Department of Justice did not respond to a request for comment. 

The latest investigation also promises to be far broader than a previous Justice Department investigation, reviewing how the state provides services to all people with intellectual or developmental disabilities, including those who live in the community or at home.

 The DOJ had previously investigated Choate in 2007. In a report released two years later it found the facility had not provided proper transition planning for those wanting to move into the community; and for those living inside state-run facilities, had failed to protect residents from abuse and neglect, and did not meet their health, education and treatment needs, in violation of constitutional and federal statutory rights. DOJ ended its monitoring in 2013.

In an investigative series beginning in late 2022, Capitol News Illinois and ProPublica launched an investigation after the high-profile arrests of Choate staff members for abuse and neglect of residents. The news stories documented horrific instances of abuse and neglect by staff against Choate residents. The reporting detailed cases documented in internal reports and police and court records where staff had beaten, choked, whipped, sexually assaulted and humiliated residents. 

Those cases included the beating by staff of a man with intellectual disabilities for failing to pull up his pants, and verbal abuse of another resident, including a threat by staff to break the finger of a man with developmental disabilities, inadvertently captured on a recorded 911 line, according to court records, police reports and IDHS watchdog findings. The reporting also documented a culture of covering up abuse and neglect at the facility, findings later echoed by IDHS’ Office of Inspector General — the watchdog arm that investigates abuse and neglect allegations at state-run facilities and provides agency oversight. 

Though the problems at Choate detailed in the reporting mirrored the DOJ’s report released a decade and a half earlier, there was no federal intervention until this recent action.

In the wake of the reporting, Pritzker called the abuse detailed in the stories “awful” and “deeply concerning”. The agency promised to make systemic changes to keep Choate home to the nearly 230 people with developmental disabilities who lived there at the time. 

But as the news organizations continued to report on abuse and neglect at Choate documented in internal and state police reports, Pritzker and his leadership team at IDHS changed course, announcing plans to move at least half of Choate’s residents elsewhere.

“We are at a point today where all of those things weren’t working to the degree we wanted them to, so today we are making transformational changes,” he told reporters at a news conference. 

As part of the planned transformation of Choate, residents with developmental and intellectual disabilities would be moved to community placements or to one of the six other state-operated facilities.  

But in December, Equip for Equality, a legal advocacy organization monitoring the transition of Choate residents, found the state falling short of its promises, with many individuals ending up in other institutions instead of community settings, according to a report released earlier this year.

Long wait times, lack of available community-based providers and decisions made by guardians rather than the individuals themselves have slowed progress and led to frustration, the report found. And while Illinois has taken steps to improve options, the report said far more effort and resources are needed to make community living a real choice.

“Illinois’ service system for people with developmental disabilities continues to serve thousands of people in institutions — an antiquated and oppressive model of serving people with developmental disabilities,” said Andrea Rizor, an Equip for Equality attorney. “It is our hope the Department of Justice’s investigation will not only shed light on this antiquated system, but bring the expertise and resources to the table that Illinois so desperately needs to ensure people with developmental disabilities truly have the opportunity to successfully live as part of their communities.”


Reports of abuse and neglect continue

Accusations of abuse and neglect also continued to grow, at Choate and across the system. A December 2024 Office of Inspector General report said it had received over 15,000 complaints from individuals in institutions and community-based settings, a 24% increase from the previous year and an 80% jump since fiscal year 2020.

The office has struggled to keep up, even after growing from 73 to 91 employees in a year. The report said the Office of Inspector General “still lacks enough staff to handle rising caseloads efficiently, estimating it needs at least 120 workers.”

The U.S. Supreme Court found in 1999 that holding people with disabilities in state institutions constituted discrimination. In Olmstead v. L.C., the court decided that patients with mental disabilities should be placed in community settings if they are medically cleared to do so and expressed a desire to live outside a facility. 

In 2011, a federal judge put Illinois under a federal consent decree for failing to provide services that would allow people with intellectual and developmental disabilities to live in the community. As part of an agreement to settle a lawsuit filed 20 years ago, the state agreed to beef up services. 

Today, two years after Pritzker’s announcement that patients with intellectual or developmental disabilities would be moved out of Choate, 160 residents continue to live there. Sixty-three of those said they wanted to explore placement in the community, according to a March 2025 IDHS report. 

There currently are nearly 1,600 people with developmental disabilities living in state-operated developmental centers in Illinois, with 242 residents stating they want to explore living in the community. 

Last year, the state asked a judge to end federal oversight, stating they had done what they had promised and acknowledged the system would “never be perfect.” A federal judge rejected the state’s effort to end the consent decree and found the state still had more to do. 

The current administration pointed to a budget stalemate in the previous administration as one of the reasons for the failure to build out group home placements, especially for individuals in crisis or with higher behavioral or medical needs. 

Sen. Terri Bryant, a Murphysboro Republican, whose district neighbors Choate in southern Illinois, and who has advocated to ensure the facility stays open, said IDHS informed her of the investigation a few days ago. “We always welcome an extra review monitoring our most vulnerable citizens and look forward to seeing what the DOJ reports,” she said. 

Rep. Charlie Meier, R-Okawville, has long been a proponent of the state-operated developmental facility. He told a reporter Tuesday that he welcomed the federal investigation. 

“We need these facilities, but we need them to be at their best,” he said.  

Piephoff’s letter stated DOJ’s investigation would continue until early fall with a report to follow.  

Capitol News Illinois is a nonprofit, nonpartisan news service that distributes state government coverage to hundreds of news outlets statewide. It is funded primarily by the Illinois Press Foundation and the Robert R. McCormick Foundation.   

Choate Mental Health and Developmental Center in rural Anna, Illinois, was built more than 150 years ago. (Whitney Curtis for ProPublica)

Bleyer Updates School Board On Potential Cell Phone Ban

A bill to ban cell phones in Illinois schools is quickly making its way through the legislature. But what exactly does a potential ban look? Wabash District #348 Superintendent Dr. Chuck Bleyer told the school board last night the answer to that question isn’t quite clear yet…

DR. CHUCK BLEYER CELL PHONE BAN #1

Bleyer said a cell phone ban at the state level would take pressure off of school boards…

CHUCK BLEYER CELL PHONE BAN #2

The proposed cell phone would apply only to students and not to school staff and administrators.

Pair Face Multiple Charges In Connection To Mine Break In

On 03.19.25 at 8:36 a.m., a vigilant Wabash County resident alerted the Sheriff's Office to a possible trespasser at the Peabody property located at 7614 N 900 Blvd. Mt. Carmel. 

The Sheriff's Office responded and found a 2008 white Chevy Tahoe parked inside one of the buildings behind the locked gate on the property. The driver (owner) of the vehicle was taken into custody and an investigation was started. Evidence of burglary, theft, criminal damage to property, criminal trespass, possession of burglary tools and possession of methamphetamine was found. 

Two other individuals were thought to be in the area. The Sheriff's Office deployed their drone in an attempt to locate the other suspects. Mt. Carmel Police responded and deployed K9 Eleven.

After searching the area for some time search efforts were terminated. 

The driver, 46-year-old Tara M. Cottrill of Centralia was transported to the Wabash County Jail and charged with:

Possession of Methamphetamine

Burglary

Possession of Burglary tools

Theft more than $500 but less than $10k

Criminal damage to Property

Criminal Trespass to Real Property

Later in the afternoon another community member reported a man walking towards Keensburg. The Sheriff's Office responded and found a white male on Main Street in Keensburg. The subject advised he had been hiking but didn't know where the others in his group went. The male was dirty and advised he was from Odin, IL. The male was identified as 30-year-old Kyle A. Hall and subsequently taken into custody and transported to the Wabash County Jail. 

Hall was charged with:

Burglary

Possession of Burglary tools

Theft more than $500 but less than $10k

Criminal Damage to Property

Criminal Trespass to Real Property

Both subjects were processed and later released due to Illinois Safety Act requirements, as the abovementioned offenses are not detainable.

The investigation continues and another suspect is being sought. The Wabash County Sheriff's Office was assisted by the Mt. Carmel Police Department , the Marion County Sheriff's Office, and Glenn's Towing. 

If you have information on this incident, or would like to report any other crime call the Sheriff's Office at 618-262-4186 or submit a tip through the #wabashcountysheriffapp that is available to download for FREE in your Android or Apple store.

Drug investigation nets arrest of two women

On March 18, 2025, at 6:25 p.m. Gibson County Central Dispatch received a 911 report of active drug activity at the apartment complex located in the 100 block of West Short Street.  Deputies Wes Baumgart and Sgt. Loren Barchett arrived on scene and located the source of the drug activity.  Deputy Baumgart was familiar with this residence as he had recovered Marijuana in February from the apartment and had not filed charges in the past.  Upon making contact with the residents in the apartment they advised that there was no longer any illegal drugs in the residence since the Marijuana had been recovered on the prior investigation.  Deputy Baumgart could smell the odor of fresh burnt Marijuana and began a drug investigation into the odor.  During the investigation Methamphetamines, Drug Paraphernalia, and Marijuana were seized.  At the conclusion of the investigation two individuals were taken in custody and transported to the Gibson County Jail.
 
Arrested on Scene:
58 year old Cinda Flachbart, Owensville:
Possession of Methamphetamines
Possession of Marijuana
Possession of Paraphernalia
Maintaining a Common Nuisance
 
36 year old Kandice Dillon, Owensville:
Possession of Methamphetamines
Possession of Marijuana
Possession of Paraphernalia
 
Assisting arresting officer Deputy Eric Powell in his investigation was Deputy Wes Baumgart. 
 
 
All criminal defendants are to be presumed innocent until, and unless proven guilty beyond a reasonable doubt in a court of law.

36 year old Kandice Dillon, Owensville:
Possession of Methamphetamines
Possession of Marijuana
Possession of Paraphernalia

58 year old Cinda Flachbart, Owensville:
Possession of Methamphetamines
Possession of Marijuana
Possession of Paraphernalia
Maintaining a Common Nuisance

Vincennes man arrested for DUI

On March 19, 2025, at 1:53 a.m. Gibson County Deputy Levi Sims conducted a traffic stop on a White 2007 Chevy Monte Carlo after observing the vehicle speeding and failing to maintain its lane of travel on US 41 near Princeton.  Upon stopping the vehicle on US 41 and Richland Creek Drive Deputy Sims identified the driver as 28 year old Daniel Martin of Vincennes.  While speaking with Mr. Martin Deputy Sims detected clues that Mr. Martin was under the influence of alcohol.  At that point Deputy Sims began a roadside DUI investigation.  Mr. Martin was placed into custody at the conclusion of the investigation and transported to the Gibson County Jail where he was charged with Operating a Vehicle While Intoxicated. 
 
Assisting Deputy Sims in his investigation was Deputy Michael Bates.
 
 
All criminal defendants are to be presumed innocent until, and unless proven guilty beyond a reasonable doubt in a court of law.

Prisoner Review Board sued for negligence a year after released prisoner killed Chicago boy

Lawsuit claims systemic failures on part of PRB, Dept. of Corrections, Chicago Police, others

By HANNAH MEISEL
Capitol News Illinois
hmeisel@capitolnewsillinois.com

The family of an 11-year-old Chicago boy murdered last year by his mother’s ex-boyfriend the day after he was released from prison is suing the state — including the embattled Prisoner Review Board and Illinois Department of Corrections— for negligence.

Jayden Perkins, an accomplished young dancer, was stabbed to death last March while his mother, Laterria Smith, sustained “multiple life-threatening stab wounds to her neck, back, and chest while desperately trying to protect her children,” according to one of the lawsuits she filed last week. Smith was pregnant at the time, while her then-5-year-old son witnessed the stabbing.

Ahead of the one-year anniversary of the attack last week, Smith filed a pair of complaints — one against the PRB in the Illinois Court of Claims and another in Cook County Circuit Court. The latter lawsuit names not only the PRB, but also its former chair and another member who resigned after the murder, plus an executive director appointed in the aftermath.

Read more: Prisoner Review Board chair, member resign in wake of boy’s fatal stabbing by released inmate

Additionally, the suit names IDOC, its acting director, the city of Chicago, the Chicago Police Department, Cook County, its Sheriff’s Department and elected sheriff. The filing claims that together, the defendants represented a system that failed to prevent Jayden’s death.

“Every single Defendant in this case had the power — and the legal duty — to intervene and stop this tragedy,” the lawsuit said. “Each of them failed.”

The complaint described the boy’s final moments as having been “filled with unimaginable agony and terror, knowing that he was dying, knowing that no one was coming to save him, and knowing that the very system that was supposed to protect him had abandoned him.”

Smith’s ex, Crosetti Brand, had been out of prison on GPS monitoring since the PRB granted him mandatory supervised release in October 2023 after he’d served roughly half of his 16-year sentence related to his attack of another woman in 2015. 

As part of his release, he was ordered not to contact his 2015 victim or Smith, but in late January of last year, Brand allegedly threatened Smith via text message. Two days later, Brand allegedly showed up to her apartment, “attempting to force his way inside — a clear and direct violation of his protection order and parole conditions,” according to the lawsuit.

The suit alleges the Chicago Police officers who responded to Smith’s call for help refused to enforce her order of protection against Brand and told her to go to court for a new one.

Brand turned himself in the next day and was sent back to Stateville Correctional Center near Joliet while Smith’s allegations were investigated. In mid-February, Smith appeared before a Cook County judge who ruled that she wasn’t eligible for an emergency order of protection because Brand was in custody at the time, so the situation “did not amount to an emergency,” according to the complaint. 

The judge scheduled a hearing for March 13, 2024 — the morning of the attack. But in the interim, a PRB panel heard Brand’s case and voted to release him, citing lack of evidence corroborating Smith’s allegations. Brand was released from Stateville on March 12, 2024.

The next day, Brand forced his way into Smith’s apartment as she was leaving to drop her two sons off at school, according to reporting from the Chicago Tribune at the time.

Smith’s lawsuit details her son’s actions as he allegedly stood in front of her and took the brunt of Brand’s stabbings.

“For his bravery, Jayden’s small body was torn apart by the very man the system had freed,” the complaint said. “He experienced every second of excruciating pain. He lay on the floor in a pool of his own blood, his little brother screaming in terror, his mother fighting for her life.”

Two weeks after Jayden’s death, Gov. JB Pritzker’s office announced the resignations of then-PRB Chair Donald Shelton and member LeAnn Miller, who had conducted Brand’s hearing.

Six of the 31 counts in Smith’s Cook County lawsuit are filed against the PRB, while six more single out Shelton and Miller as individuals. 

In the first count, Smith accuses the PRB of “state-created danger and deliberate indifference,” alleging the agency “acted with ... an utter disregard for human life.” Other counts claim negligence, “gross negligence and willful and wanton misconduct,” and even “intentional infliction of emotional distress.”

“Brand’s history of violence against women and disregard for legal restrictions established him as a significant and ongoing threat to those around him,” the lawsuit said. “Despite this, Defendant IPRB recklessly and knowingly granted parole to Brand, placing him back into the very community where his victim resided, ignoring overwhelming evidence that he remained a lethal threat.”

A spokesperson for the PRB declined to comment on pending litigation.

A set of reforms aimed at the agency stalled out in the waning days of the General Assembly’s 2024 spring session.

Read more: Stalled bills: ‘Dignity in Pay Act,’ Prisoner Review Board changes fail to move

The lawsuit had similar strong words for IDOC and its acting director, LaToya Hughes. She and her agency are named in nine counts of the lawsuit, claiming they “had a constitutional duty to intervene and prevent foreseeable harm when they had actual knowledge of a direct and escalating threat to” Smith.

“Instead, they deliberately turned a blind eye to Crosetti Brand’s repeated violations of parole, choosing bureaucratic inaction over intervention,” the complaint said.

A spokesperson for IDOC did not respond to a request for comment.

The complaint seeks a minimum of $50,000 for each of the 31 counts, while the suit filed in the Illinois Court of Claims seeks damages under the Illinois Crime Victims Compensation Act.

Brand is currently awaiting trial for Jayden’s killing at Lawrence Correctional Center in southeast Illinois. A Cook County judge set an initial hearing on Smith’s lawsuit for May 7.


Capitol News Illinois is a nonprofit, nonpartisan news service that distributes state government coverage to hundreds of news outlets statewide. It is funded primarily by the Illinois Press Foundation and the Robert R. McCormick Foundation.

The Prisoner Review Board office in Springfield in 2024. (Capitol News Illinois file photo by Andrew Campbell)