Policy

Wisconsin Senate votes to increase parole commission transparency

The Wisconsin Senate gave its approval to a Republican-authored bill that would require the state's parole commission to post its decisions online about who has been granted and denied parole.

Associated Press

June 7, 2023

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A driveway in front of the Wisconsin Department of Corrections headquarters stands empty on April 14, 2022. Wisconsin’s parole commission would be forced to post its decisions online about who has been granted and denied parole under a Republican-authored bill up for approval in the state Senate on June 7, 2023.   (Credit: PBS Wisconsin)

Leafless trees stand in front of and to the side of a two-story concrete-masonry building with a central entrance topped by signage with the seal of the state of Wisconsin and the words "Department of Corrections."


AP News

MADISON, Wis. (AP) — Wisconsin’s parole commission would be forced to post its decisions online about who has been granted and denied parole under a Republican-authored bill that the Legislature passed with bipartisan support on June 7 and now heads to Gov. Tony Evers.

The Assembly passed a previous version of the bill with bipartisan support in March. The Senate voted 29-4 to pass the bill with some changes that the Assembly also approved on June 7, sending the measure to Evers.

Under the bill, the Department of Corrections would be required to post the names of individuals granted parole, denied parole or returned to prison following the revocation of parole. It would also have to post monthly and annual aggregate totals for each of those categories. Commission agendas currently don’t list parole applicants’ names.

Republicans criticized the commission after it decided to parole convicted murderer Douglas Balsewicz in 2022. He had served 25 years of an 80-year sentence for fatally stabbing his wife. Her family insisted that they weren’t notified of the decision until only a few days before he was set to be released.

The commission’s chairperson, John Tate, ultimately rescinded Balsewicz’s parole at Evers’ request and resigned a few weeks later, again at the governor’s request.

Evers has not said whether he would sign the bill into law.


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