Chicago Sun-Times (Sunday)

CONVICTED CHICAGO CHILD KILLER PAROLED, AMONG THE RISING NUMBER OF AGED CONVICTS TO BE RELEASED

- BY FRANK MAIN, STAFF REPORTER fmain@suntimes.com | @FrankMainN­ews

A 76-year-old man convicted of killing a teenager in a Northwest Side forest preserve in 1972 has been paroled.

Ray Larsen is the latest inmate serving an indefinite prison term — a so-called “C-number” inmate — the Illinois Prisoner Review Board has ordered released, a list that also includes a double ax-murderer.

Larsen had been serving a sentence of 100 to 300 years in prison after confessing he killed 16-year-old Frank Casolari in the Schiller Woods Forest Preserve near O’Hare Airport on May 17, 1972.

He was paroled May 13, according to state correction­s records, which also show his last name spelled “Larson.”

At the time of the killing, Larsen was 27 and on furlough from the Stateville Correction­al Center near Joliet, where he was doing time for robbery. He was in a program that allowed inmates with good prison records to visit their families and was supposed to be spending a three-day weekend with his grandmothe­r.

Casolari was fishing in the forest preserve when he was shot to death and his body buried.

In prison, Larsen was classified with a Cnumber — the prison identifica­tion that was given in Illinois to convicts sentenced before 1978, when the state did away with indetermin­ate sentences that gave a range for a prison term rather than a set number of years.

Today, those who are convicted of first-degree murder in Illinois are required to serve their full sentences without the possibilit­y of parole.

But killers, like Larsen, who were convicted

before the law was changed in 1978 can get repeated shots at parole. Under the law as it stood when they were sentenced, they are entitled to a parole hearing at least every five years.

In recent years, the Illinois Prisoner Review Board — which approved Larsen’s parole on a 9-3 vote — increasing­ly has granted parole to C-number inmates.

One of the most infamous of the recent C-number parolees is Chester Weger, accused of the 1960 killings of three women at Starved Rock State Park southwest of Chicago. He was convicted of killing one of the women after he confessed.

Early last year, Weger was released from prison at 80. He’d been the longest-serving inmate in Illinois. Weger has said he was innocent and was coerced into confessing.

Larsen was serving his sentence at the Pontiac Correction­al Center.

His registered address now is on the Far South Side.

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Ray Larsen

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