Probationer fell through cracks before fatal crash.
If Rockie Douglas’ probation agents in Wisconsin had known he’d been charged with multiple crimes in Illinois, he might have been in prison Dec. 21. Instead, authorities allege, he fled police in a stolen car that barreled into an SUV in Chicago, killing an 11-year-old boy.
Douglas was free that day after years of lying to probation agents and sliding through gaps in monitoring and communication between authorities in Wisconsin and Illinois, records and interviews show. Wisconsin probation officials say Illinois authorities didn’t alert them to Douglas’ arrests, and his probation agents didn’t learn of them on their own. And some Illinois officials didn’t know Douglas was on probation in Wisconsin.
The Tribune has shown in past investigations that Cook County has failed to monitor dangerous convicts, and the county Adult Probation Department’s chief was removed this month. But the problem isn’t strictly with offenders in Cook County — Douglas’ recent past shows the risk posed by convicts supervised outside Illinois who travel between states. Read More
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