Illinois
Related: About this forumFormer Illinois Gov. George Ryan dies at 91. He halted executions and went to prison for corruption
Source: Associated Press
Former Illinois Gov. George Ryan dies at 91. He halted executions and went to prison for corruption
By JOHN OCONNOR and CHRISTOPHER WILLS
Updated 5:21 PM EDT, May 2, 2025
SPRINGFIELD, Ill. (AP) Former Illinois Gov. George Ryan, disgraced by a corruption scandal that landed him in prison yet heralded by some for clearing the states death row, has died. He was 91.
Kankakee County Coroner Robert Gessner, a family friend, said Ryan died Friday afternoon at his home in Kankakee, where he was receiving hospice care.
Ryan started out a small-town pharmacist but wound up running one of the countrys largest states. Along the way, the tough-on-crime Republican experienced a conversion on the death penalty and won international praise by halting executions as governor and, eventually, emptying death row.
He served only one term as governor, from 1999 to 2003, that ended amid accusations he used government offices to reward friends, win elections and hide corruption that played a role in the fiery deaths of six children. Eventually, Ryan was convicted of corruption charges and sentenced to 6½ years in federal prison.
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Read more: https://apnews.com/article/illinois-governor-george-ryan-hospice-executions-46a5ec5191e8820dd6905d57c8e3cd8a

SheltieLover
(67,231 posts)
Beringia
(5,033 posts)ShazzieB
(20,447 posts)In January 2000, "Illinois Governor George Ryan appointed a 14-member Commission on Capital Punishment to closely examine Illinoiss death penalty, due to concerns about the Illinois capital punishment systems being fraught with error, to the point of having "come close to the ultimate nightmare, the states taking of innocent life. At that time, he put in place a moratorium on executions until the review was completed.
Ryan would eventually commute the death sentences of all 167 death-row prisoners in Illinois in 2003, after studying each case closely and concluding that too many innocent people were being convicted of murder and sentenced to death in Illinois. Whatever one may think about the death penalty in theory, it was costing the state millions of dollars every year to convict these people, incarcerate them, and fight the appeals that often resulted in sentences being overturned. Ryan didn't like that, and he hated the idea of an innocent person being wrongfully executed. He later detailed the process by whuch he went from being supportive of the death penalty to opposing it in a book titled Until I Could Be Sure: How I Stopped the Death Penalty in Illinois.
Eliminating the death penalty in Illinois altogether took longer, but legislation to do that was finally passed and signed into law by then Governor Pat Quinn in 2011. When Quinn's Republican successor Bruce Rauner proposed reinstating the death penalty in the state for individuals who kill law enforcement officers or murder two or more people, the General Assembly chose not to act on his proposal, leaving Illinois a capital punishment free state to this day.
This story is a good example of why I feel that the majority of people in this world are not ALL good or ALL bad. Many are mostly one or the other, but "good" people can and do make mistakes while a "bad" person can sometimes do something good. George Ryan did bad things, and he went to prison for his misdeeds. While acknowledging that, I believe he also deserves credit for doing a very good thing that I believe has made this state a better place.