Gov. Pat Quinn has named an assistant director from the Department of Corrections to be its new acting chief.
Quinn on Friday named Gladyse Taylor to replace outgoing Director Michael Randle.
Randle became a political liability for Quinn because of a secret prisoner release program he oversaw.
The governor’s office says Taylor has worked in state government for five years. She became an acting assistant director in the Corrections Department in May. Before that, she was deputy director of the governor’s budget office.
Randle will return to Ohio, where he had been assistant director of the state prison system, to run a community correctional facility in Cleveland for a not-for-profit agency. He will be taking a huge pay cut.
Randle’s departure comes after a review last month of the early release program that found the Corrections Department didn’t consider possible dangers to the public when it tried to save money by letting prisoners out early, including some who were violent.
Quinn canceled MGT Push — named for the “meritorious good time” that was granted to prisoners — after The Associated Press revealed the program’s existence last fall. By then, some 1,700 inmates had been granted early release, including hundreds of prisoners with records of violence.
Quinn, a Democrat who is running for his first full term as governor, heaped most of the blame on Randle, and Randle confirmed that Quinn had ordered that violent offenders not be part of the program.
“He did some good things here in Illinois. I honor those. You know, we had a big mistake that was made and was corrected,” Quinn told reporters Thursday.
Quinn said a new director will be announced soon. “And we will march on. This happens in government, private life. People come, they go,” Quinn said.
Republicans, however, criticized Quinn for keeping a director who acknowledged making a serious mistake and not following the governor’s orders. Quinn should have fired Randle last year, they said.
“Another example of failed leadership,” said Pat Brady, chairman of the Illinois Republican Party.
Randle, 44, will take over as director of a 200-bed community correctional center for Oriana House Inc. which will open in Cleveland in January, Bernie Rochford, Oriana executive vice president, told the AP.
The facility will be one of about 20 in Ohio where judges send mostly low-level violent offenders to keep them closer to home instead of shipping them to state prison, Rochford said.