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Former Ill. Gov. Ryan released from prison

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(MCT) — CHICAGO—Former Illinois Gov. George Ryan was let out of a federal prison in Indiana in the dead of night Wednesday and checked briefly into a Chicago halfway house before he was released—in a surprise decision—to his residence to finish out his 61/2-year sentence on home confinement.

The quick turn of events allowed Ryan, who turns 79 next month, to elude a horde of media gathered at the prison in Terre Haute, Ind., and then slip from the halfway house on the Near West Side undetected several hours later.

By 10:30 a.m., Ryan had an emotional reunion with his children and grandchildren at his longtime Kankakee residence, according to his attorney, former Gov. Jim Thompson. Later in the day, Ryan’s daughter, Jeanette, smiled as she left through a rear entrance. “We are very happy he’s home,” she said.

Home confinement for Ryan means he won’t have to face weeks or months at the Salvation Army halfway house where many of the state’s other disgraced politicians have had to take up residence.

The move struck some as one more backroom deal cut by a longtime political insider, but Thompson and U.S. Bureau of Prison officials denied Ryan received any special treatment.

Thompson said he was surprised by the accommodation and did not know it was being planned for Ryan until Wednesday morning.

“It’s not something I asked for, it’s not something he (Ryan) asked for, so it is in no way preferential treatment,” Thompson said.

A BOP spokesman in Washington declined to say how many inmates like Ryan go directly to home confinement in the final months of their sentence, but the agency’s web site made it clear that the ordinary route would to be to go first to a halfway house.

The BOP won’t discuss specific inmates, but spokesman Chris Burke said BOP officials decide each inmate’s placement on an individual basis after doing a complete work-up on everything from financial stability and family ties to any specific emotional or medical health issues such as drug or alcohol addiction.

As for the dramatic overnight departure, Burke said BOP officials consider the disruption to the prison as well as inmate safety.

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