Advocate calls for stronger IDOC oversight after payroll fraud guilty plea
(The Center Square) – Calls for stronger oversight of the Illinois Department of Corrections are growing after a former department payroll employee pleaded guilty to stealing nearly $125,000 by falsifying her husband’s overtime and holiday pay records.
Jennifer Vollen-Katz, executive director of the John Howard Association, said the case highlights the need for broader transparency and accountability within the agency, extending beyond financial oversight.
The John Howard Association thinks legislators should be calling for far more transparency and accountability over the Illinois Department of Corrections in a lot of different ways, not just financial accounting,” Vollen-Katz told The Center Square.
The Illinois Department of Corrections received nearly $2.6 billion in taxpayer funds in the fiscal year 2027 operating budget.
Vollen-Katz said lawmakers should demand greater insight into how those taxpayer dollars are spent and strengthen measures that hold the agency accountable.
“This situation is deeply concerning,” she said, noting that recent inspector general audits identified other deficiencies in the department’s financial practices. “This isn’t the only situation that’s been identified where financial accounting practices haven’t been particularly effective in ensuring that tax dollars are not being wasted.”
Vollen-Katz said the payroll fraud represents more than an isolated theft because it diverted taxpayer money for personal gain.
“This person was stealing money from the Illinois taxpayers because it is our dollars that fund state agencies,” she said. “The problem here is the illegal skimming of funds, redirecting them to places they do not belong for individual financial gain.”
She argued lawmakers should expand their oversight beyond payroll practices, pointing to aging prison facilities, inmate treatment, ongoing litigation and prison healthcare.
Vollen-Katz criticized the state’s prison healthcare system, saying Illinois continues to spend significant taxpayer dollars while many medical positions remain vacant.
“We’re paying $500 million, and what are we getting?” she said, referring to the state’s contract with prison health care provider, Centurion. “I think legislators are well-positioned to ask those questions and get responses from the Illinois Department of Corrections.”
She said Illinois should establish an independent prison oversight body through state law to improve transparency and identify problems more quickly.
“I think Illinois needs to create stand-alone, independent prison oversight that is authorized, empowered by the state through statute and resource so that more of these issues will be caught more quickly and corrected in a more expedient manner,” Vollen-Katz said.
State Sen. Terri Bryant, R-Murphysboro, a 20-year veteran of the Illinois Department of Corrections and former IDOC auditor, said the case demonstrates that existing auditing procedures ultimately worked.
“It is unfortunate when people think they can game the system and never get caught,” Bryant said in a statement. “As a former auditor for IDOC, I’m glad to see the audit system worked. Justice is being served.”
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