Chicago Sun-Times

Two months after being gutted over accusation­s of being soft on crime, parole board frees two men convicted of area killings

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

The Illinois Prisoner Review Board — which was crippled earlier this year when state senators rejected two of Gov. J.B. Pritzker’s nominees — voted Thursday to parole two men convicted of Chicago-area killings and denied parole to six other inmates.

It was the first time the parole board has met since Senate Republican­s and Democrats voted in March to reject the appointmen­ts of interim members Jeffrey Mears and Eleanor Kaye Wilson, who faced accusation­s of being soft on crime. A third interim member, Oreal James, resigned before the Senate could vote on his appointmen­t.

During the Pritzker administra­tion, the board has voted to grant parole in about onethird of the cases it has heard. The approval rate was far lower under previous governors.

After Mears, Wilson and James stepped aside, the board didn’t have enough members to hold a full meeting.

In April, Pritzker nominated two lawyers, Rodger Heaton, former U.S. attorney for central Illinois and a former chief of staff to Republican Gov. Bruce Rauner, and Robin Shoffner, a former Cook County judge. The Senate has approved their appointmen­ts.

On Thursday, Heaton, Shoffner and six other board members met in Springfiel­d to consider parole recommenda­tions for eight inmates.

They voted 6-2 to parole Richard West, 65, convicted in the shotgun killing of his father in Chicago in 1974.

They voted 5-3 to parole Patrick Inocencio, 40, who was convicted of killing a gang rival and wounding three others in an Aurora hotel room in 1999. Chicago attorney Jorge Montes, a former chairman of the parole board, represente­d Inocencio.

Montes told the board that Inocencio cooperated with prosecutor­s against a co-defendant who got a 76-year sentence for his role in the shootings. Montes also pointed out that Inocencio was 16 years old at the time of the crime.

Inocencio was serving a 32-year sentence for murder and aggravated battery. Last year, Pritzker granted a commutatio­n that allowed him to seek parole for his murder conviction.

The Kane County state’s attorney’s office had objected to Inocencio’s parole.

In West’s case, the board repeatedly has rejected his requests for parole.

On Thursday, the board was reminded that West was among those inmates who took four guards hostage at Stateville Correction­al Center in 1983. And his disciplina­ry record in prison included being found in possession of illegal weapons, starting fires and assaulting a correction­al officer.

But the board also was told that the case against West was built primarily on witness statements and that no physical evidence tied him to his father’s killing, casting doubt on his guilt.

Another factor it considered was that West was 17 when he was arrested.

His sister Katrina West Beard told the board his family “misses him dearly. We’re all getting older, and it’s time for him to come home.”

When the board voted to parole West, she shouted, “Thank you, God!”

 ?? ?? Patrick Inocencio
Patrick Inocencio
 ?? AP FILE ??
AP FILE

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