Jury selection took place Thursday in the case against Milwaukee County Judge Hannah Dugan, who's accused of helping a man evade U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement.
Wisconsin's Supreme Court will take up a case that challenges the practice of holding people in local Wisconsin jails at the request of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement.
The Wisconsin Elections Commission has agreed to adjust an order that governs how Madison should run its elections after the city discovered nearly 200 uncounted absentee ballots.
Madison's Lake Mendota is chock full of very, very old canoes. That includes one that's more than 5,000 years old that was partially unearthed by archaeologists this year.
If you or someone you know is considering suicide, call or text the three-digit suicide and crisis lifeline at 988. Resources are availableΒ online here.
AΒ recently released reportΒ details problems at Wisconsin prisons including high staff turnover, overcrowding and issues with solitary confinement. Β
Wisconsinβs Department of Corrections paid the firm Falcon, Inc. roughly $500,000 to complete the yearlong review of the prison systemβs adult facilities.
Among other issues, the report zeroed in on the departmentβs policies for solitary confinement, officially known as restrictive housing.
Alarms raised about solitary confinement of people with serious mental health struggles
The report raised concerns about how often people are locked up in solitary confinement while dealing with serious mental health issues.
βIndividuals with SMI (serious mental illness) placed in restrictive housing are more likely to become violent and, if released from restrictive housing, are more likely to return,β the reportβs authors noted, citing outside research. βThose individuals housed in restrictive housing are also more likely to die by suicide than those living in other housing settings.β
On the last day of March 2025, 872 adults were locked up in solitary confinement through the DOC, making up close to 4% of the prison population. That was roughly on par with the percentage of inmates in solitary confinement six years prior.
A significant number of those in solitary confinement β 101 people on the day measured in March 2025 β were classified as having a serious mental health issue.
Dusk falls on Columbia Correctional Institution on June 18, 2025, in Portage, Wis. (Joe Timmerman / Wisconsin Watch)
The report noted that people who spend extended periods of time in solitary confinement are more likely to be part of the DOCβs mental health caseload, meaning theyβve been referred for mental health needs of varying severity. Sixty-nine percent of the people locked up in solitary confinement for more than 120 days were part of the DOCβs mental health caseload. By comparison, 46% of the general prison population was on that mental health caseload.
The report did commend the DOC for attempting to limit extended stays in solitary confinement by adopting a May 2024 policy that requires a higher-up to approve solitary confinement stays longer than 120 days.
It urged DOC to change its solitary confinement policies by creating βalternativeβ units for people with serious mental illness, βso they can automatically be diverted from restrictive housing.β
DOC urged to change practice of using solitary confinement for people on suicide watch
Per its policies, the DOC can send people to solitary confinement as βdisciplinary separation,β which is punishment for bad behavior.
It also sends people to solitary confinement through what it calls βadministrative confinement,β which is when people are deemed a threat to themselves or others if theyβre kept with the general prison population. Typically, that extends to people who are flagged for βsuicide watch,β if theyβre deemed to be at risk for suicide.
But putting suicidal people into solitary confinement cells is likely making the situation worse, the report warns.
βObservation cells are typically in restrictive housing units, which is problematic,β the report notes. βIndividuals on observation status are not allowed therapeutic items, visits, phone calls, or recreation.β
The report urges the DOC to stop that practice and instead move its areas for observing at-risk people to βmore appropriate environments that support therapeutic care and patient safety.β
Protesters call on the short-staffed Wisconsin Department of Corrections to improve prisoner conditions and lift restrictions on prisonersβ movement during a protest on Oct. 10, 2023, at the State Capitol in Madison, Wis. (Meryl Hubbard / Wisconsin Watch)
Marianne Oleson, an activist with Ex-Incarcerated People Organizing of Wisconsin, described the DOCβs existing solitary confinement policies as barbaric. She spent five years incarcerated in Wisconsin.
βItβs torture,β Oleson said of solitary confinement. βAs someone who has spent time in their quote-unquote βrestrictive housingβ unit for being suicidal, youβre only compounding the harm and the hurt.β
She said solitary confinement left her with permanent psychological scars.
βMy mind was my weapon,β Oleson said. βMy mind was destroying me, and the answer they gave me was to lock me down with that weapon. And I nearly broke. Iβve seen women break, honestly.β
In an email, DOC spokesperson Beth Hardkte acknowledged that most observation cells for people on suicide watch are located in the restrictive housing units of prisons, although she said there is no specific DOC policy requiring them to be located there.
βObservation cells are specially designed to ensure safety and property can be restricted to prevent self-harm,β she said. βObservation status also requires more intensive staffing and availability of psychological or health care staff.β
Report also highlights issues with overcrowding, high staff turnover
Also noted in the report are struggles with βstaff attritionβ and a large proportion of inexperienced staff members.
βWIDOC has experienced a great deal of staffing changes, with a significant number of the current staff hired during or after the COVID19 pandemic,β the report notes.
And it detailed the DOCβs struggles with overcrowding. Nearly every state prison is holding more people than it was designed for. On average, menβs prisons were at 130% capacity, and womenβs prisons were at 166% capacity.
That overcrowding is leading to delays for people who are supposed to be transferred from one prison to another, the report notes. In some cases, that means people arenβt locked up according to their designated security level, such as men classified as medium-security remaining in a maximum-security prison.
Currently, there are more than 23,000 adults locked up in Wisconsinβs prisons β making them over capacity by more than 5,000 people. The stateβs prison population is now roughly at pre-pandemic levels, which is more than triple the size of the prison population in 1990.
Oleson said the report highlights the need for policy and legislative changes to cut back on the number of Wisconsinites behind bars.
βIt confirms what we have said for years,β Oleson said. βWisconsinβs prisons are dangerously overcrowded, under-resourced and in desperate need of healing.β
Security cameras are mounted on barbed wire fence at Taycheedah Correctional Institution, a maximum- and medium-security womenβs prison, June 24, 2025, in Fond du Lac, Wis. (Joe Timmerman / Wisconsin Watch)
Wisconsinβs Democratic Gov. Tony Evers, who first took office in 2019, has said he wants to decrease Wisconsinβs prison population, although that reduction hasnβt happened in practice.Β Some Republican members of the GOP-controlled LegislatureΒ have said they oppose his goals of eventually decreasing prison beds and expanding certain early release programs.
In a statement, DOC Secretary Jared Hoy says the report by Falcon, Inc. shows the prison system is βmoving in the right direction.β
βFalcon experts recognized the work of countless dedicated DOC employees to modernize our health care and restrictive housing policies,β Hoyβs statement said. βAs much as weβve done, we can always do more, do better and the recommendations in the report provide a guide for our agency.β
Wisconsin's Department of Corrections paid the firm Falcon, Inc. to complete a year-long review of the prison system. The firm's report detailed issues with overcrowding and solitary confinement.
Updated versions of the COVID-19 vaccine became available this fall, and many Wisconsinites have questions about the timing of when they should get vaccinated.
One Wisconsin resident reached out to WHYsconsin with a crop-related mystery that's been puzzling her ever since she was a child. To get to the root of her question, WPR hopped in the car with a plant expert.
Democratic Gov. Tony Evers has vetoed a GOP-backed bill that would have ordered tens of thousands of state employees to work in-person most of the time.
Currently, 14 Wisconsin counties and more than 50 municipalities impose a vehicle registration fee, also known as a wheel tax. If the bill becomes law, those fees would be repealed unless they're approved by voters within 18 months.
The City of Madison has cleared Civil Rights Director Norman Davis of violating city policies, after multiple employees alleged he discriminated against them on the basis of gender and disability. A report released Friday, however, says his leadership style resulted in a "severe lack of trust" within his department.
The State Building Commission has agreed to release $15 million for "planning and design" as part of the governor's plan to reorganize Wisconsin's prison system.
A former Milwaukee teacher's aide is among the people suing over a change in federal immigration policy. The lawsuit accuses ICE of breaking federal laws and policies that are intended to protect crime victims.