A state legislative oversight committee has permitted the adoption of permanent rules allowing the Illinois Department of Corrections (IDOC) to scan and digitize the mail of prison inmates.
The rule was originally introduced and backed by 51st District Republican State Senator Chapin Rose and 102nd District Republican State Representative Adam Niemerg and the prison employee's union after the duo toured prisons in their districts including the Lawrence Correctional Center near Sumner after a series of substance exposures in the fall of 2024 left correctional staff sickened and hospitalized. It was implemented on an emergency basis in August of 2025.
The IDOC had sought to make the rule permanent, saying it was necessary to help keep drugs and other dangerous substances from being smuggled into the prisons via the mail. Critics, however, say there is little evidence that supports the rule and that it violates the civil rights of incarcerated inmates.
American Red Cross urges the public to donate bood
USDA launches Lender Lens Dashboard to promote data transparency
Cancer Action Day at the Indiana Statehouse: Advocates call for legislation to reduce the burden of cancer
Six sentenced in sweeping multi‑million‑dollar cargo heist
Students evacuated after bomb threat at Peru Jr/Sr High School
U.S. Rep. Yakym’s bipartisan BARCODE Efficiency Act Advances
Spartz to run for re-election
State Senator J.D. Ford announces campaign for U.S. House of Representatives
