Jailers have released a mugshot of Dennis Hastert after he checked in for electronic monitoring following his early release from prison.

The 75-year-old disgraced former Speaker of the House looked haggard as he posed for the camera, just hours after he was freed from a federal prison in Minnesota.

He was behind bars for 13 months - two months short of his full sentence - for paying $3.5million in hush money to a man who accused him of sexual assault.

The picture was taken Monday as the once powerful politician checked-in to the Lake County Jail in Waukegan for electronic monitoring.

Former Speaker of the House Dennis Hastert had his latest mug shot published on Tuesday

In April 2016, Hastert was sentenced to 15-months in jail for banking violations related to a scheme to pay hush money to teenage boys he sexually abused while coaching wrestling at a high school in Yorkville, Illinois in the 1960s and 1970s.

The records did not make clear when Hastert had been transferred.

Hastert, the longest-serving Republican House speaker in history, pleaded guilty in 2015 to the crime of structuring, which is a form of money laundering that involves withdrawing a large sum of money in small increments to avoid detection.

The lawmaker was taking the money out of his bank accounts to pay a promised $3.5 million in compensation for pain and suffering to one of his five sexual abuse victims of wrestlers he coached, he admitted in his plea agreement and at his sentencing hearing.

The ex-politician was incarcerated in 2016 after pleading guilty for a financial crime tied to sex abuse (Hastert pictured during his tenure as a wrestling coach in the 1960s)

Hastert plead guilty for a financial crime tied to tied to sex abuse in 2015

Hastert was never charged with sex abuse due to the statute of limitations

Scott Cross, one of Hastert's victims who stayed silent for 37 years about the abuse, said he was 'disappointed' to find out that the ex-lawmaker would be released two months early.

'I was a little surprised,' Cross told CNN's Jake Taper on The Lead Tuesday. 'I was a little, to be honest, a little disappointed in the sentence that was given out.'

'You think about shame, guilt, embarrassment, humiliation -- the Hasterts of the world have so much trust and respect over you that you really have a hard time processing and understanding it,' Cross added.

In a memo written in advance of his 2016 sentencing hearing, prosecutors spelled out in graphic detail how Hastert sexually molested or inappropriately touched five teenagers who trusted him as their wrestling coach.

And as Hastert rose to power, believing that his wrongdoing would never be made public, his victims struggled with the effects of the abuse, prosecutors wrote.

'He made them feel alone, ashamed, guilty and devoid of dignity,' prosecutors wrote. 'While defendant achieved great success, reaping all the benefits that went with it, these boys struggled, and all are still struggling now with what defendant did to them.'

Hastert was never charged with sex abuse, because the statute of limitations on his alleged crimes had expired.

At the time of sentencing, US District Judge Thomas Durkin said he would have given him a longer sentence if it had not been for his age and poor health.