There are five inmates sentenced in Williamson County set to be released from prison in January, according to the Illinois Department of Corrections.
Joseph E. Poore, who served the longest sentence among them, spent more than two years incarcerated for an offense recorded as ‘possession of meth under 5 grams’.
Data from the Illinois Department of Corrections shows the state spends about $52,843 a year per incarcerated person. A separate study by the Prison Policy Initiative estimates that about 53,000 people from Illinois are behind bars and shows that the state recorded an incarceration rate of 433 inmates per 100,000 people in 2023, a level higher than almost every democratic nation in the world.
Another study by the Prison Policy Initiative highlighted that the number of unconvicted individuals was more than two times higher than that of convicted individuals, possibly one of the leading causes of prison population growth in the state.
Most prison inmates are released on some condition of supervised monitoring upon reentering civilian life. This monitoring can last from one year to the rest of someone’s life.
| Name | Offense | Supervised Release Date | Holding Facility |
|---|---|---|---|
| Montez D. Avant | AGGRAVATED BATTERY/STRANGLE | 01/01/2026 | Sheridan Correctional Center |
| Joseph E. Poore | POSS OF METH < 5 GRAMS | 01/16/2026 | Sheridan Correctional Center |
| Darian L. Miller | AGG BATTERY/PEACE OFFICER | 01/18/2026 | Decatur Correctional Center |
| Jace A. Hanson | ATTEMPT MANU/DEL CANNABIS/2000<5000 GRAMS | 01/25/2026 | Vienna Correctional Center |
| Shawn L. Rogers | UUW-FELON POSS/USE WEAPON/FIREARM | 01/30/2026 | Menard Correctional Center |
Information in this article was obtained from the Illinois Department of Corrections. The source data can be found here.

