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Former Ill. Gov. Ryan released from prison

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He is confined to his home except for work—if he decides to get a job — or other approved movements, including church and medical visits. Burke, the BOP spokesman, said “certain social functions” can be approved.

Between now and the end of his sentence in early July, Ryan cannot visit others in their homes, and if he goes to a public place, he has to bring a receipt or other written proof of where he was, according to Thompson.

“It’s like being in the halfway house,” Thompson said.

Ryan is home for the first time since wife Lura Lynn died, and his oldest grandson will be staying with him, Thompson said.

“I imagine it’s very hard,” Thompson said. “Just as I imagine it’s been very hard ever since she died and it’s been very hard ever since he left her (for prison). At least he’s got closure now with his family.”

Ryan’s long career in public life came to a stunning crash with his 2006 conviction for fraud, racketeering and other charges for steering millions of dollars in state business to lobbyists and friends in return for vacations, gifts and other benefits to him and his family.. He is one of four former Illinois governors convicted of federal crimes over the last four decades.

Once a small-town pharmacist, Ryan played politics as a consummate insider, a proponent of backroom deal-making and influence peddling as an accepted part of the political culture. The Kankakee native rose from speaker of the Illinois House to win statewide election as lieutenant governor, secretary of state and then one term as governor.

As governor, he wanted to be known as a deal maker and builder, the father of a multibillion-dollar public works program known as Illinois First. Instead, he spent the entirety of his single term on the defensive, fending off a spreading federal probe known as Operation Safe Road.

Despite his legal problems, Ryan became a hero to some for abandoning Republican orthodoxy and taking a stand as governor against Illinois’ death penalty, ultimately declaring a moratorium on executions and commuting the sentences of all Death Row inmates in the final days of his term. Death penalty advocates still trumpet him for the Nobel Peace Prize.

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