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Former Gov. George Ryan is halfway home

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All residents are expected to find a job within three weeks — and classes are offered to help. Resumes, online job searches, interview skills and appropriate interview dress are listed on the website as topics of discussion.

The trick to moving out of the halfway house, Fawell said, is securing a job. He arrived with paperwork showing that he had a consulting job lined up, and he suspects Ryan, who once oversaw thousands of Illinois jobs, will do the same.

“He won’t be there that long,” Fawell predicted. “He will be there maybe three or four weeks. As long as you have a job and a place to live. A lot of people will put him on the payroll.”

But the wait can be much longer. Former Alderman Wallace Davis spent six months in the halfway house after his conviction in 1988 for accepting bribes and kickbacks from a relative and constituents in his West Side 27th Ward. He was sentenced to 81/2 years in prison and was released from prison in 1992.

“That place is around the corner from my old ward office,” Davis, now 61, said of the halfway house. “I could practically see it from my room.”

In an interview last week at his restaurant, Wallace’s Catfish Corner in East Garfield Park, Davis said the building doesn’t appear to have changed since he was there two decades ago.

Davis said the halfway house represented a culture shock for him after spending more than three years at the high-security federal prison in Milan, Mich., which has been home to many convicted Chicago-area mobsters, drug dealers and bank robbers over the years. He said Ryan, who served his sentence in a low-security prison camp, might actually find the halfway house to be more constrictive in many ways.

“It might be more like a prison for George now than it was when he was in the camp,” Davis said. “There’s no movement after certain hours, where in the camp you can move around. At least in the beginning, it might feel like he’s on lockdown.”

Davis said Ryan will have to undergo random drug screenings and check in regularly with his probation officer. And as Fawell said, as long as the former governor has a job lined up, his conditions could improve rapidly. Restrictions will likely be lifted quickly after an initial probationary period, Davis said.

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