There are two inmates sentenced in Crawford County set to be released from prison during the week ending Feb. 21, according to the Illinois Department of Corrections.
In total, one man and one woman are set to be released over this period. The longest-serving individual among them is a 23-year-old male convicted of aiding with the possession or selling of a stolen vehicle in 2024.
Most prison inmates are released on some condition of supervised monitoring upon reentering civilian life. This monitoring can last from one year to the rest of someone’s life.
According to the Illinois Department of Corrections’ Fiscal Year 2025 financial impact statement, the cost of incarcerating an individual in a state correctional facility was about $52,843 per year. Analyses by the Illinois Sentencing Policy Advisory Council show that when personnel, fixed facility costs and administrative overhead are included, the true annual cost to house a state inmate can exceed $80,000, suggesting the financial impact of incarceration extends beyond the basic per-person figure reported by IDOC.
A 2024 Prison Policy Initiative update on local jails notes that, nationally, people held before conviction made up roughly seven in ten of all jail inmates, underscoring how pretrial detention contributes to rising incarceration counts.
| Name | Offense | Supervised Release Date | Holding Facility |
|---|---|---|---|
| Logan M. Chastain | Aiding with the possession or selling of a stolen vehicle | 02/21/2026 | Danville Correctional Center |
| Shelly R. Crews | Possession of meth, under five grams | 02/21/2026 | Decatur Correctional Center |
Information in this article was obtained from the Illinois Department of Corrections. The source data can be found here.

