Illinois Youth Lockup Is 'No Place for Children,' According to ACLU Lawsuit
Children held in the Franklin County Juvenile Detention Center are routinely subjected to solitary confinement, inadequate meals, and filthy cells, according to legal documents.

An Illinois youth lockup is "no place for children," argued a lawsuit filed by the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) in June. A new ProPublica and Capitol News Illinois analysis of documents from the lawsuit and several state audits, among other records, found that incarcerated children have frequently been subject to "troubling conditions" in more than a dozen youth detention centers in Illinois.
In these facilities, youth have been "tased, pepper sprayed and roughed up by staff and law enforcement officers; forced into isolation for days at a time," according to the ProPublica and Capitol News Illinois analysis. Incarcerated youth have also been "denied access to their psychotropic medications and mental health treatment; and received little or no schooling, despite state and federal laws mandating that the youth receive educational services while incarcerated."
Despite widespread issues, one facility stands out: "Perhaps nowhere are concerns as extensive as those documented at the 32-bed youth lockup in Benton," the analysis reads, pointing to the Franklin County Juvenile Detention Center (FCJDC).
The ACLU's complaint alleges that conditions at the FCJDC are dire. "Solitary confinement is the rule, not the exception, for children at FCJDC. Day in and day out, these children spend between 20 and 23 hours per day confined in their cells. Defendants often eliminate even the brief window of time these children are allowed to leave their cells, imposing 24-hour 'lockdown' solitary confinement as an enhanced form of punishment."
The suit also alleges that the FCJDC leaves the fluorescent lights on in children's cells for 24 hours a day and that the cells themselves are frequently dirty and infested with black mold.
According to the ACLU, a particularly disturbing incident took place last December in which a boy's arm was broken when police officers in the facility attempted to restrain him. Instead of immediately receiving medical care, the boy alleged that he was kept in handcuffs and had to wait for two hours before he was taken to the hospital—while staff made dinner and took other youth to recreation activities.
"The officer asked me about my arm and I said 'You know it's broken. You heard it snap,'" the boy said in a signed statement, according to ProPublica. "They still kept me handcuffed [and] put me in my room that way."
"For years, Defendants have maintained these conditions in the face of multiple public warnings that the facility is an unfit environment for children," reads the ACLU complaint. "Some judges and state's attorneys from neighboring counties reportedly have refused to commit children for detention at FCJDC due to the conditions there."
In 2022, a state audit found that the facility was "in crisis." The report detailed staggering solitary confinement practices and noted that "the staffing levels at the facility are extremely low and directly impact conditions of confinement for youth that are well-below minimum standards. On the date of the inspection, the facility only employed eight full-time staff and four part-time staff."
According to ProPublica and Capital News Illinois, a driving cause behind the dismissal conditions is a widespread lack of accountability for individual facilities.
"Under state law, the [Illinois Department of Juvenile Justice (IDJJ)] cannot mandate corrective action plans, issue fines or shut down detention centers found in repeated violation of the rules," reads the analysis. "Instead, the IDJJ reports are sent back to the county detention facilities' staff and to the chief judges of each judicial circuit, under whose authority they operate. Neither the staff nor the judges are obligated to respond."
Under this status quo, it's hardly surprising how such dismal conditions for incarcerated youth can continue—or why a federal lawsuit has been launched to force improved practices at FCJDC in particular.
"The Franklin County [audit] reports were pretty scathing, and we would have expected more action in response to those reports," Kevin Fee, an attorney with the ACLU of Illinois told ProPublica. "But we didn't see any, which is why we felt the need to bring the lawsuit."
Illinois is hardly alone in incarcerating youth in abysmal conditions. In a particularly galling example, a Texas facility came under fire last year for keeping children similarly locked in their cells for long stretches of time, leaving youth without access to bathrooms for as long as 22 hours on end. Currently, Philadelphia is mounting a lawsuit against the state of Pennsylvania after overcrowding in a Philadelphia-area juvenile jail has caused filthy conditions and increased violence within the facility.
Editor's Note: As of February 29, 2024, commenting privileges on reason.com posts are limited to Reason Plus subscribers. Past commenters are grandfathered in for a temporary period. Subscribe here to preserve your ability to comment. Your Reason Plus subscription also gives you an ad-free version of reason.com, along with full access to the digital edition and archives of Reason magazine. We request that comments be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment and ban commenters for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Please
to post comments
Illinois is no place for children. FTFY.
all downhill since Bozo the Clown was canceled.
Rod Blagojevich cried.
JB Pritzker ate.
Did he eat Bozo or Blago?
and the brats.
Making every month extra dollars by doing an easy job Online. Last month i have earned and received $18539 from this home based job just by giving this only mine 2 hrs a day. Easy to do work even a child can get this and start making money Online. Get this today by follow instructions on this website.................> > http://Www.Smartcareer1.com
One has to ask what these kids to do deserve to be locked up.
Say that the 2020 election was stolen?
Deny that President Trump colluded with the Russians®™ to steal the 2016 election?
Assuming the allegations are true, and assuming the kids did something to deserve detention, it sounds like all these places do is harden the kids into adult criminals. There ought to be some basic law that if your actions exacerbate the problem you were supposed to solve, you go to jail. But of course, if there were such a law, and if it were enforced, 99% of government employees and politicians would be in jail.
Yeah, I can’t even imagine what “children” have to do to get incarcerated in the current Planet of the Apes the American voter seems ok to be living with.
Speaking of 'no place for children', it looks like SPB2 has been busy:
Germany passes "Children's Rights" amendment promoting "sexual self-determination" that was written by serial pedophile
https://twitter.com/ReduxxMag/status/1723712830065512907
Sadly, there are too many people like this in America.
https://ethicsalarms.com/2016/05/02/yecchh-the-daily-caller-and-its-commenters-cheer-on-sexual-predator-teachers/
Sadly and tragically, people like pluggo are far more common than we would like to admit.
Boys having their sausages chopped off would be the wurst.
That's pretty frank. If caught, would they spill the beans?
Only the brats would.
They are a bunch of brats.
For my part*, German sexual mores are das Gift that keeps on giving.
*More first hand/Less SFW links getting clipped by Reason
So, what age are these “children”?
17? 19?
https://ijjc.illinois.gov/wp-content/uploads/2021/08/IJJC-CY-2019-Detention-Report.pdf
In these facilities, youth have been “tased, pepper sprayed and roughed up by staff and law enforcement officers; forced into isolation for days at a time,” according to the ProPublica and Capitol News Illinois analysis.
But at least none of them were tried as adults like they do in Wisconsin, eh, Emma?!
Nearly identical criticisms blossomed when Governor Pinchot chose NOT to fund a kiddie-lockup in July of 1931.
The aclu also filed a brief support the imprisonment of Mackey, so if the aclu is against it, it's probably a good thing
Meanwhile
https://twitter.com/ericmmatheny/status/1724044276659519888?t=WxfUsaZBh4VbmFH3TzskCQ&s=19
Bubba Wallace’s garage door pulley drew more national outrage than this young man’s murder.
[Link]
Exhibit #142,364 that the US media picks and chooses what we get outraged over. The only reason it got in the non-mainstream news is because the fucking sub-humans recorded it on their phones and posted it.
BTW, the attack itself was nearly two weeks ago.
“The media's the most powerful entity on earth. They have the power to make the innocent guilty and to make the guilty innocent, and that's power. Because they control the minds of the masses.” - Malcom X
So, another zero-research, zero-corroboration "according to the plaintiff" special from Emma Camp.
If the ACLU is against it, I'm for it.