Tamara Holder Talk: Tamara Holder, Esquire
General Information

Tamara N. Holder is an Illinois defense attorney and TV/radio legal analyst. She has no shortage of opinions, many of which she shares with you here.

Criminal Defense * Criminal Record Clearing * Governor's Pardons * Discrimination * Police Brutality * Public Policy

www.xpunged.com

 



Entries in Illinois (32)

Monday
16Nov2009

OF ALL THE PRISONS IN THE COUNTRY, WHY IS ILLINOIS' VACANT PRISON THE ONLY VIABLE OPTION? ANSWER: VACANCY EASIER TO DISCUSS THAN OVER-CROWDING!

A cell house at Thomson Correctional Center is seen from one of the guard towers at the facility north of Thomson. (AP)Our politicians have a history of refusing to discuss American prison issues...until recently. And, the only reason why they are talking about prisons is because the issue surrounds VACANT, WASTE-OF-MONEY-TO-BUILD, FEDERAL-MONEY-FOR-GITMO-DETAINEES PRISONS.

A newly-built but empty Thompson Correctional Facility located rural Illinois was in the news today (article here) as the most viable option for Gitmo detainees. It is estimated to bring 300 or so jobs to the area. Big deal! It also will bring in 1500 armed forces, i.e. men and women that can be deployed anywhere in the entire country. Why displace them to the middle of nowhere? There are plenty of other prisons that can be used!

THE OTHER PRISON ISSUE - WHAT TO DO ABOUT OUR AMERICAN INMATES

Here's an idea: why not discuss why is there no room for Gitmo detainees in most other prisons? Why are we only looking at vacant prisons? Well, the reason why is our prison system has become industrialized; the more prisoners, the more money for privatized prisons and corporations with contracts at the prisons. Our politicians refuse to discuss why we are the most incarcerating country in the world; our politicians refuse to look at other alternatives for non-violent offenders. The over-crowding of prisons is an issue for another day, it seems. Right now, our politicians would rather talk about Gitmo detainees intead of rehabilitating and releasing non-violent drug offenders.

BRINGING GITMO DETAINEES TO AMERICAN SOIL IS A BAD IDEA

I do not like the idea of bringing Gitmo to America. Are the prisoners going to be spread throughout the country or will they all just be chillin' in one spot? Will they be housed with American inmates?

The United States has been so concerned with fighting the war on terrorism abroad. We have done very little to weed out cells in America (Ft. Hood killer who posted blogs and was being watched by Feds proves my point). I think it is silly to bring known terrorists back here. We are just feeding the monster by doing so.

I'm not worried about an inmate escaping. The American "home" will be so secured they ain't goin' nowhere. But, they will be afforded the rights of other inmates. They will be allowed visitors, they will get mail. They will be living in the place that they want to see destroyed. They will find a way to share information.

Out of sight, out of mind. We bring them here to America and those prison lights will be shining ever so brightly on our enemies. The moths will be that much more attracted to the flame...

 

Wednesday
11Nov2009

Tamara in The Wall Street Journal: "More Job Seekers Scramble To Erase Their Criminal Past" by Douglas Belkin

The Wall Street Journal NOVEMBER 11, 2009

More Job Seekers Scramble To Erase Their Criminal Past

By DOUGLAS BELKIN

U.S. job seekers are crashing into the worst employment market in years and background checks that reach deeper than ever into their pasts.

The result: a surge of people seeking to legally clear their criminal records.

In Michigan, state police estimate they'll set aside 46% more convictions this year than last. Oregon is on track to set aside 33% more. Florida sealed and expunged nearly 15,000 criminal records in the fiscal year ended June 30, up 43% from the previous year. The courts of Cook County, which includes Chicago and nearby suburbs, received about 7,600 expungement requests in the year's first three quarters, nearly double the pace from the year before.

One petitioner is Wally Camis Jr., who wanted to clear the air about the time he threatened two men with a hairbrush.

Setting the Record Straight

Sally Ryan for The Wall Street Journal

Wally Camis Jr. works as a cook and classroom helper at a day care center in Naperville, Ill.

Mr. Camis was hungry for work amid a divorce last fall. The 41-year-old Air Force veteran, who had worked as a security guard and owned a restaurant, filled out an application for temporary employment in Eugene, Ore., checking a box saying he had never been arrested.

When he followed up a week later, the temp agency told him no thanks -- they'd turned up a 1986 conviction. Stunned, Mr. Camis recalled the night the two men threatened him and he pulled a silver brush from his back pocket, saying it was a knife. He called the police, he says, and later pleaded guilty to aggravated assault with a deadly weapon, a misdemeanor. The judge entered a "no judgment" finding and ordered Mr. Camis to pay a $60 fine.

"I thought that was the end of it," he says.

Instead, 22 years later, Mr. Camis found himself fighting to erase traces of the arrest, joining the growing ranks of Americans who hope that clearing their records of minor crimes will boost their odds in a tough job market. To help, entrepreneurs have set up record-clearing services and local governments have passed laws to speed the expungement process.

Civil-rights organizations have long complained that young black men are disproportionately hindered when prospective employers ask about applicants' arrests or convictions. But attorneys say past offenses are increasingly catching up with blue-collar and middle-class applicants with solid work histories.

"This is affecting a whole new group," says Michael Hornung, a defense attorney in Fort Myers, Fla., who charges $1,000 to help clients clear records. "I've had more people come in to talk to me about having their records expunged in the last year than I have had in the previous 13 combined."

The increase comes as unemployment has risen above 10%, allowing potential employers to be choosier than they have been in decades. More Americans have criminal records now, criminologists say, in part because a generation has come of age since the start of the war on drugs.

[Tainted Resumes]

These convictions are increasingly coming to employers' attention. Background checks have become more commonplace in the years after the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, and cheaper. More than 80% of companies performed such checks in 2006, compared with fewer than 50% in 1998, according to the Society for Human Resource Management, an association of HR professionals.

Erased, Sealed, Blocked

Though the definition, terminology and methods of expungement vary by state, its general intent is to restore people to the legal status they enjoyed before a brush with the law -- often giving them the right to answer "no" when a prospective employer asks if they've been arrested or convicted. Most felonies, such as sexual assault or armed robberies, can't be removed. But in many states, some lesser crimes can. After a successful appeal, official records may be shredded, erased, sealed or blocked from view by anyone except entities such as police or schools.

Expungement doesn't wipe away all traces. Local news Web sites routinely post arrest mug shots, which are nearly impossible to eradicate from the Internet. Search engines can turn up a smattering of decades-old news and police reports, plus caches of newer ones. Arrests that have been legally expunged may remain on databases that data-harvesting companies offer to prospective employers; such background companies are under no legal obligation to erase them.

Some employers say background checks provide vital red flags at a time when liability fears run high. Workplace theft cost retailers $15.5 billion last year, according to the National Retail Federation. On-the-job violence costs billions in legal costs and lost work hours, says the Workplace Violence Research Institute, a California consulting firm.

"If I have a guy with four arrests and bad credit versus someone who has never been in trouble in his life, who am I going to hire? It's not rocket science," says Louis DeFalco, corporate director of safety, security and investigations at ABC Fine Wine & Spirits in Florida, which has 175 stores.

Though some employers acknowledge that workers with convictions can become trusted employees, the risk of passing over these applicants is far outweighed by the benefit of culling high-risk applicants from stacks of resumes. Companies can make hiring decisions based on conviction records, but not on arrests that haven't resulted in convictions, according to the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission.

Some lawyers have created services to help clients clear records, including Chicago attorney Tamara Holder's www.xpunged.com. Legal-aid organizations have created or stepped up programs to help guide people through the process. The public defender's office in San Jose, Calif., is among public organizations using federal stimulus money to hire additional attorneys to process the influx of clients.

State lawmakers have taken note. In Pennsylvania, where the state pardons board faces a three-year backlog of record-clearing requests, Democratic Rep. Tim Solobay was author of a bill permitting local courts to process the petitions as well. It passed into law last year. This year, Mr. Solobay is pushing legislation that would expand the class of misdemeanors that can be expunged to include disorderly conduct and possession of small amounts of marijuana.

Mr. Solobay says he wrote the bill after a friend told him that his son, who was convicted of disorderly conduct in college, had been turned down for several jobs.

"It kept coming back time and again and haunting him," Mr. Solobay says of his friend's son, suggesting that eventually the punishment ceased to fit the crime. "The job market is tough enough, and he's competing against people with a clean record. So he's getting disqualified."

Millions of Americans are in a similar position. In 1967, 50% of American men had been arrested. Since then, arrests made in connection with domestic violence and illegal drugs have pushed the number to 60%, estimates Alfred Blumstein, a criminologist at Carnegie Mellon University. The annual number of arrests for possession of marijuana more than tripled to 1.8 million from 1980 to 2007, according to the U.S. Department of Justice.

Arrests and convictions are also easier for employers to learn about. Even 10 years ago, background checks tended to be cursory or expensive. Now, database providers can quickly access information from the country's approximately 3,100 court jurisdictions, charging $10 or less for simple checks.

One Chicago 53-year-old, who has worked for an overnight delivery service and as a bricklayer, is nervous that his record's sole smudge may come back to haunt him.

In 1974, he says, he was walking down a street near his Chicago home rolling a marijuana cigarette. He was arrested by an undercover police officer and convicted of possession. "That was back in the days when I had hair, and I just said, 'Forget about it.' I was like 17 or 18 years old -- what did I care?"

His employers never learned of the conviction, he says, nor have his own children. But, hoping to coach high-school basketball when he retires in a few years, he's working with a Chicago attorney to clear his record. "Nowadays they look for anything so I figured I better take care of this," he says.

One employer that has taken on candidates with criminal records in recent years is the U.S. military. From 2006 through 2008, the four armed-forces branches issued conduct waivers for more than 2,000 recruits with felony convictions, 3,000 recruits with felony arrests and 42,000 recruits with serious misdemeanors, according to the Department of Defense.

Now, some veterans returning from Iraq and Afghanistan are finding their service may not make up for earlier offenses.

Osvaldo Hernandez of New York served in the Army for 15 months in Afghanistan, then, upon his return to the U.S., scored in the 98th percentile on his civil- service exam, says his attorney, Jim Harmon. Mr. Hernandez, 27, has been unable to land a job with the New York City Police Department because of a 2002 conviction of illegal possession of a gun, Mr. Harmon said.

Mr. Hernandez hasn't sought expungement because his crime doesn't qualify for it in New York. An NYPD spokesman said the department has a policy against hiring felons.

Mr. Hernandez is now serving another overseas tour, hoping "that serving twice in combat will overcome the prior conviction issue," Mr. Harmon says.

Mr. Camis, meanwhile, spent months trying to undo the legacy of one night in 1986.

Then 18, Mr. Camis was leaving his job at a movie theater in Woodridge, Ill., when he says two men threatened him. He flashed the handle of his 5-inch-long brush, he says.

The men fled. Mr. Camis says he called the police. Officers apprehended the men, who accused Mr. Camis of being the aggressor. Before a circuit court judge in Illinois's DuPage County, Mr. Camis admitted he threatened to cut the men -- assault without the battery -- and paid his fine.

'Never Had a Problem'

The next year he joined the Air Force, where he serviced F-15s in Okinawa, Japan, and earned an honorable discharge. He later worked as a guard, railroad brakeman, exterminator and restaurateur, he says, passing two criminal background checks along the way. "I never had a problem," he said.

In fall 2008, he says, he approached Cardinal Services Inc. in Oregon. An agent at the temp service said he had openings that might be suitable. Mr. Camis turned in his application.

Cardinal says it paid a background-search firm about $10 to examine his past. It turned up the DuPage no-judgment order -- which the court had posted online in 2004, among other records.

When Mr. Camis followed up with Cardinal a week after applying, he says, an agent there accused him of lying about his criminal history. Cardinal wouldn't help him find work, the agent said.

Cardinal Services' manager and general counsel Mike Lehman says the company's application asks prospective workers about arrests, as well as convictions. Mr. Lehman called Mr. Camis's denial of his arrest a "red flag."

"If someone has a criminal history, we can work with them," Mr. Lehman says. "But if they have one and lie to us, that's pretty ominous."

'No Judgment'

Mr. Camis says he had forgotten about the incident and, even when reminded, thought the "no judgment" ruling had cleared him.

A few weeks later, he called Ms. Holder of Xpunged.com. She filed an expungement petition with the DuPage court.

In April, Mr. Camis flew from Oregon to Illinois for a five-minute hearing in front of a DuPage circuit judge. The judge agreed to seal the record. Ms. Holder added that under Illinois law, Mr. Camis's charge wasn't technically a conviction.

On Sept. 8, the records supervisor of the Woodridge Police Department signed an affidavit swearing that she had shredded all identifying materials connected to case 86CM4967, "People of the State of Illinois vs. Wallace E. Camis Jr." The destroyed documents would have included the police report with details of the arrest.

Mr. Camis is back in Illinois, taking education courses and logging full-time hours at a day-care center where he is the cook and a classroom helper. He says he eventually hopes to be a teacher.

Of his police record, Mr. Camis says: "Hopefully it's gone for good."

Write to Douglas Belkin at doug.belkin@wsj.com

Printed in The Wall Street Journal, page A1

Copyright 2009 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved

This copy is for your personal, non-commercial use only. Distribution and use of this material are governed by our Subscriber Agreement and by copyright law. For non-personal use or to order multiple copies, please contact Dow Jones Reprints at 1-800-843-0008 or visit

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Wednesday
04Nov2009

MY PLEA TO GOVERNOR QUINN: PARDON THOSE CONVICTED BY "OPERATION GREYLORD" JUDGES

Dear Governor Quinn:

I am requesting you pardon and expunge the records of hundreds, if not thousands, of people who were convicted and sentenced by "Operation Greylord" judges. Several Greylord Judges (Courtesty of FBI)The FBI was successful at rooting out the evils of 17 Cook County judges; however, those who were the victims of the judges' convictions and sentencings were completely ignored.

Operation Greylord is the name of an FBI investigation in the 80's that spanned over the course of 3 1/2 years. As you know, Operation Greylord is still recognized to this day as one of the FBI's most successful undercover investigations. The first listening device ever placed in a judge's chambers occurred in the undercover phase, when the narcotics court chambers of Cook County Circuit Court Judge Wayne Olson were bugged. Over 100 people were indicted. The last conviction was that of Judge Thomas Maloney, who was convicted of fixing three murder cases. Maloney was released from federal prison in 2008. A total of 92 people were indicted, including 17 judges, 48 lawyers, ten deputy sheriffs, eight policemen, eight court officials, and a member of the Illinois Legislature. (See Wikipedia for further information.)

As a result of the corruption within Cook County, many people were wrongly convicted and sentenced to crimes they did not commit or they were not given a fair trial because of their attorney and/or judge's involvement in their case.

Judge Ciavarella Your pardoning and expunging the records of these individuals would follow suit of the Pennsylvania Supreme Court. On October 29, 2009, the Court ruled that almost all juvenile cases heard by Luzerne County Judge Mark Ciavarella from Jan. 1, 2003 to May 31, 2008 must be thrown out. Judge Ciavearella has been indicted for "taking millions of dollars in kickbacks from owners of private detention centers in exchange for placing juvenile defendants at their facilities, often for minor crimes." Article here.

Over 6500 juveniles will have their records expunged. Many states automatically expunge a juvenile's criminal record; however, Pennsylvania does not. (Here, in Illinois, juvenile records are also not automatically expunged; instead, a petition must be filed and the judge must enter an order to expunge the juvenile record.)

Greylord judges were not juvenile judges but the issue is still the same: like Judge Ciavearella, Greylord judges did not act impartially but instead had a vested interest in cases by getting paid by defense attorneys in exchange for favorable sentence.

For example, one man pleaded guilty to a crime he did not commit because his attorney (whom he met when the attorney approached him in the hallway the first day of court) told him that if he signed over his bond money, the attorney would "make the case go away." Little did the man know that he was pleading guilty to felony probation and would be a convicted felon for the rest of his life.

Each person's story is different, of course, but in the fairness of justice, I believe it is only appropriate to remove the crimes of those convicted by the 17 Greylord judges. Too many lives have been permanently ruined by corrupt judges. The incarceration of the Greylord judges is only one piece of righting their wrongs. The victims in these cases should also be rehabilitated by an pardon and or expungement of any case heard before the Greylord judges.

Governor Quinn, thousands of Illinois residents were affected by the Greylord corruption. The FBI did an incredible job at rooting out the evils within the justice system but rehabilitating the victims somehow was dismissed.

I know you are incredibly busy dealing with other serious matters; however, the power to pardon is an enumerated power given soley to you, our Governor.  Political backlash often follows after a pardon is granted but, in this case, your actions are would be clearly reasonable and justified. I look forward to hearing your response to my request.

Sincerely,

Tamara N. Holder - Attorney for and on behalf of Greylord victims

www.xpunged.com

Sunday
11Oct2009

AS NUMBER OF JOBLESS INCREASES, NUMBER OF THOSE IN NEED OF GOVERNOR'S PARDON INCREASES

The jobless crisis brings another dimension to the discussion: those with criminal records, whether a felony conviction or a simple misdemeanor arrest, are going to have a tougher time getting a job. In Illinois, people with misdemeanor arrests can generally expunge or seal their records from the general public view. But, in Illinois, felony convictions (besides a special type of probation given to a select class of drug or prostitution offenders) are permanently on your record...unless...the Governor grants you a pardon, otherwise known as executive clemency.

Background checks are becoming more and more prevalent. Employers are using the background check as a tool to easily weed out potential employees. Recent studies show that there are six applicants per one job opening. If you have a criminal record, the employer is probably very likely to toss you from the pile and move on to the other applicants.

In Illinois, Governor Blagojevich left approximately 2500 pardon petitions on his desk when he was tossed from office. Since Governor Quinn has stepped in, almost a year ago, he has granted just 18 pardons. Keep in mind, the backlog has grown even more - the Illinois Prisoner Review Board hears cases four times a year. So I bet there are at least an additional 500 stacked up for Governor Quinn.

That doesn't mean you shouldn't ask for a pardon if you need one. Hey, you don't get unless you ask. Or, you can always retain me and I'll do the asking for you!

In April 2009, Governor Quinn called the backlog "shameful" and vowed to start answering the petitions. But, since then, he has only granted 18.

People need pardons, especially in this poor economic time. Many people think a pardon is just for the serial killer or child rapist who served time in prison. Not true! Did you know that if you ever pleaded guilty or were found guilty of a felony and were sentenced to probation -- besides a few exceptions -- you are a convicted felon and you need a pardon if you want a cleared record! We must change the way society thinks about a pardon. The majority of my clients are seeking a pardon for a stupid mistake they made in their early 20's. Now, 10, 20, 30 years later, the person wants to move forward in their life and the felony probation keeps popping up on a background check.

Those who made a mistake should not have to pay for it for their entire life.

Our Governor, and governors across the country, can send a signal to society by granting pardons - We must be a more forgiving and less punitive society. Those who can prove rehabilitation should be entitled to eventually wipe their slate clean and leave the past in the past.

I cannot explain the feeling I get when I see the pain in an entire family's eyes, just because of a loved one's mistake. I cannot explain the feeling I get when I see a client who regrets making a stupid decision and has lost so much confidence because he cannot get a job. One of my clients recently applied for over 50 jobs in 8 months. Each time, his felony theft from over 10 years ago pops up.

Pardons are not just for the "underbelly" of society. You would be surprised to know most people in need of a pardon look just like you and me.

The Governor is the only person who can grant a pardon. He has a specific, enumerated power given to him; therefore, he must act on those requests. It is unfortunate the the Illinois Prisoner Review Board continues to do their job: they hear countless cases, stories, reasons, etc. from countless petitioners and countless parents. Unfortunately, all they can do is "recommend" denial or granting and then move onto the next case. Governor Quinn must start acting on that "shameful" backlog.

www.xpunged.com and www.tamaraholder.com

Tuesday
15Sep2009

RE-LAUNCH OF WWW.XPUNGED.COM - CLEARING YOUR ILLINOIS CRIMINAL RECORD

I just want to remind you that I re-launched my website www.xpunged.com last week.  We are really trying to get the word out that IF YOU HAVE EVER BEEN FINGERPRINTED BY THE POLICE, YOU HAVE A RECORD THAT IS ACCESSIBLE TO THE PUBLIC! There is no such thing as your record disappearing if your case was dismissed, or if a certain period of time has passed. No matter what someone has told you, even if that someone was a judge or a lawyer, you have a record unless it has been expunged, sealed or pardoned.

I have a page with tons of info on expungement here and pardons here. Please visit our new page and allow us to pull your record and identify how we can clear it!

www.xpunged.com and www.tamaraholder.com

Thursday
04Jun2009

PATTI BLAGOJEVICH: FEEL SORRY FOR HER OR NOT-SO-MUCH?

Patti Blagojevich - photo courtesy of NBC.comLast night, I finally broke down and watched "I'm a Celebrity...Get Me Out of Here" with friends. I must say, Mrs. Patti B appears to be a likeable lady. (Maybe that's because my friends kept me happy with M&M's and vino?) She was the only female team member to stick her hands in something icky to get an object and other members voted to keep her on the team. Her image on this show is quite different than what you hear on those FBI tapped calls of her screaming and dropping F-Bombs.

Patti is standing by her man & bringing home the bacon

A good wife sticks by her man's side. Shoot, many women bounce after their husband's arrest! (In fact, I think she got pretty lucky by not being slapped with some handcuffs herself.) Not that I'm suggesting she's a criminal, but, she was in the home all those hours that Blags was doing "business" on the bugged family phone while sitting on the couch in his jogging suit.

Go ahead, call Blags a scumbag criminal.  As you know, I disagree.  Gov. Blagojevich is not a Gov. Spitzer nor is he a member of the Gambino crime family.  He does not have offshore accounts and he does not have cash tied up in real estate.  Follow the paper trail...um, it doesn't exist! Blago is a wannabe criminal at best. 

Like her or not, Patti is taking one for the Blags team by doing this silly show.  Blago's defense attorneys need to be paid and her kids need to go to school.  And, Patti needs to create an image separate from that of Mrs. Rod Blagojevich because, no matter how much Rod wants to be compared to Ghandi, it ain't happenin'.

Careful what you say, Patti

But do not think Patti is only on the show for the money; clearly, she has a plan: she wants use the national platform to attempt to sway the public opinion about her husband's case. As I suggested in my interview with the Today Show (when she announced her participation in the show), she has to be careful what she says about her hubby.  Obviously Patti didn't listen to my advice because on the June 1 episode she says, "I can't really get into it too much, except that, yeah, they made a big hoopla about something that wasn't even the truth. My husband was governor for six years, and you know was always about doing the right thing for people." Keep your mouth shut, Patti. Play the jungle game and tell your fellow team members, "I would rather not talk about the case."

If Patti is really just doing the show soley for the money (and image makeover) then the "my poor hubby" pity party cannot be mixed in with chillin' with the Baldwin brothers while playing with tarantulas.  Your job is to get some cash and fix the public's opinion of you. Leave the Gov. Blago persuasion up to his attorneys for their closing arguments before the jury.

www.tamaraholder.com and www.xpunged.com

Friday
10Apr2009

FINALLY! NEW ILLINOIS GOVERNOR QUINN MAKES GRANTING PARDONS A PRIORITY!

Gov. Pat Quinn (David Carson - stltoday.com)Today, Gov. Pat Quinn pardoned 11 people; these are the first pardons of our new Governor.  Thank you, Gov. Quinn! Article here.

The pardon power is an enumerated power of the Governor; it is a function of Government.  The issue here is not whether one agrees/disagrees that a person should be pardoned for a criminal indiscretion of the past; instead, the issue is that the Governor has the sole power to pardon and that power must not be blatantly ignored.  If a Governor is totally against pardoning any person, then the Governor must deny all pardons; the Governor cannot simply ignore the requests. On the other hand, if the Governor is not entirely against granting pardons, and a petitioner  has a compelling case for being pardoned, then the Governor must make a decision and either grant or deny the pardon.  Essentially, a Governor shall not allow pardon petitions to sit indefinitely without a decision, one way or another.

Ex-IL Governor Blagojevich promised many people he would make decisions on pardons. He lied. Instead, he allowed approximately 2500 pardons to pile up on his desk for the 6 years that he was in office.  People's lives were in limbo as they waited, hoped and prayed for an answer. As of April 2008, he had only granted 67.  He then granted about 24 more.  Regardless, he granted a total of less than 100 pardons - that is embarassing.  And according to the IL Prisoner Review Board last April, Blagojevich had approximately 1500 on his desk.  According to Gov. Quinn, there are an additional 1000; he stated there is a backlog of over 2500!

In Illinois, a person seeking a pardon, clemency or reprieve must first petition the IL Prisoner Review Board.  After the petition has been submitted, the petitioner has an opportunity for a hearing where he makes his case before the Board as to why he should be pardoned. Then, the Board makes a confidential recommendation to the Governor, whether they think the person should be pardoned.  Lastly, the petition sits in the hands of the Governor and awaits final denial or approval.  By law, the Governor is not required to make a decision within any period of time.  (That should be obvious! Blagojevich allowed thousands to pile up on his desk.) Thus, the petitioner must wait and wait and wait for a decision. There is nothing one can do to get an answer.  The person cannot even re-petition the Governor if no decision has been made.  The only time a person can re-petition is if the person is denied and he waits a year after denial and files again.

We need to pardon people who made a mistake and have since rehabilitated themselves.  I am not talking about the convicted murderer who has a lengthy, violent past.  Not all felons are those who have done time in prison.  Many are people who made a stupid mistake as a kid and were given probation.  At the time, they did not know that their mistake would follow them for life, even though they did not go to jail.  Keep in mind, in IL, once a felon, always a felon, unless you are granted a pardon. 

Thank you, Governor Quinn, for making decisions on yet another matter that ex-Governor Blagojevich refused to handle.  By granting the 11 pardons, you have restored the lives of not just 11 people but of 11 people's families and their communities.

www.xpunged.com and www.tamaraholder.com