Chicago's NPR News Source

Death In Illinois Prisons: He Didn’t Have A Death Sentence, But That’s What He Got

A year and a half after her son’s death in an Illinois prison, Sheila Fane got a call. The nephew she’d raised like a son, had now also died behind bars. She went looking for answers.




Razor wire lines a walkway at an Illinois prison on Dec. 22, 2009.

Razor wire lines a walkway at an Illinois prison on Dec. 22, 2009.

AP Photo/M. Spencer Green

When Sheila Fane got the call that her 26-year-old nephew, who she’d raised as a son, had died while incarcerated at an Illinois prison, she said, “You have to be f-ing kidding me.” It was the second time she’d gotten a call like this.

Just a year and half earlier, her son had also died in a prison.

About eight people die inside Illinois prisons every month. And in many of those cases, the Department of Corrections doesn’t keep basic records, like the cause of death.

WBEZ’s Shannon Heffernan has been looking into why some of those people died and she went out to talk to Sheila Fane who was trying to piece together what had happened to her son and nephew. To hear what she found, click play above.

The Latest
“Street tracks are different every year, no matter where you go,” Shane van Gisbergen said. “The burial location is always different, whether inside the curb or on top of it. The track always changes.”
NASCAR has unveiled its first electric racecar in Chicago. One test driver said the sound and smell were unlikely anything he’d previously experienced.
NASCAR Chicago Street Race begins this weekend, and sections of DuSable Lake Shore Drive and Michigan Avenue have closed to make way for the event.
Some small business owners said they plan to close during the two-day event, but others are excited about the race and the boost in pedestrian traffic that could bring more sales.
The San Diego-based chain is planning to open eight 24-hour restaurants in the city and suburbs in 2025 and 2026. One will be near Midway Airport, with the rest in the suburbs.