Amos Yee, 27, is a Singaporean who first rose to prominence due to his online content.
After facing charges in Singapore for religiously sensitive material, Yee was granted asylum in the United States in 2017, citing persecution for his posts.
He fled Singapore in December 2016, a day before a scheduled medical check-up ahead of his compulsory national service enlistment.
US Conviction and Imprisonment
Yee’s situation shifted dramatically after his December 2021 conviction in Illinois for child pornography and grooming charges.
The Cook County Circuit Court handed Yee a six-year prison sentence, with the term backdated to his October 2020 arrest. He was initially placed in the Illinois River Correctional Center, a medium-security facility in Illinois.
Yee has been placed on the country’s sex offender registry, with his name, crime, and residential address publicly accessible online.
Parole History and Violations
Yee was first released on parole on 7 October 2023, three years ahead of his scheduled 2026 release date. However, he was returned to prison in November 2023 for undisclosed parole violations.
In May 2025, the Illinois Department of Corrections confirmed that Yee’s parole eligibility was delayed after the Illinois Prisoner Review Board determined he had violated the terms of his release. No further details were provided regarding the nature of the violations. While
Yee was initially scheduled for release on 24 April 2025, his parole date was pushed to 7 November 2025.
Recent Parole and Immediate Readmission
Records from the Illinois Department of Corrections show Yee was discharged on 7 November 2025. However, in a subsequent update, the IDC confirmed that Yee was readmitted the same day, citing compliance breaches with the terms of his parole.
Yee is currently held at Danville Correctional Center. His projected discharge date, marking the end of his mandatory supervised release under Illinois state law, now ranges from three years to life, depending on future assessments.

Yee continues to face strict restrictions related to his conviction while awaiting further administrative review.
